northern Italy, produced in the following year (554)
a general insurrection spreading beyond the two tribes
immediately threatened, the Boii and Insubres.
The Ligurians were driven to arms by the nearer approach
of the danger, and even the youth of the Cenomani
on this occasion listened less to the voice of their
cautious chiefs than to the urgent appeal of their
kinsmen who were in peril. Of “the two
barriers against the raids of the Gauls,” Placentia
and Cremona, the former was sacked—not
more than 2000 of the inhabitants of Placentia saved
their lives—and the second was invested.
In haste the legions advanced to save what they could.
A great battle took place before Cremona. The
dexterous management and the professional skill of
the Phoenician leader failed to make up for the deficiencies
of his troops; the Gauls were unable to withstand
the onset of the legions, and among the numerous dead
who covered the field of battle was the Carthaginian
officer. The Celts, nevertheless, continued
the struggle; the same Roman army which had conquered
at Cremona was next year (555), chiefly through the
fault of its careless leader, almost destroyed by
the Insubres; and it was not till 556 that Placentia
could be partially re-established. But the league
of the cantons associated for the desperate struggle
suffered from intestine discord; the Boii and Insubres
quarrelled, and the Cenomani not only withdrew from
the national league, but purchased their pardon from
the Romans by a disgraceful betrayal of their countrymen;
during a battle in which the Insubres engaged the Romans
on the Mincius, the Cenomani attacked in rear, and
helped to destroy, their allies and comrades in arms
(557). Thus humbled and left in the lurch, the
Insubres, after the fall of Comum, likewise consented
to conclude a separate peace (558). The conditions,
which the Romans prescribed to the Cenomani and Insubres,
were certainly harder than they had been in the habit
of granting to the members of the Italian confederacy;
in particular, they were careful to confirm by law
the barrier of separation between Italians and Celts,
and to enact that never should a member of these two
Celtic tribes be capable of acquiring the citizenship
of Rome. But these Transpadane Celtic districts
were allowed to retain their existence and their national
constitution—so that they formed not town-domains,
but tribal cantons—and no tribute, as it
would seem, was imposed on them. They were intended
to serve as a bulwark for the Roman settlements south
of the Po, and to ward off from Italy the incursions
of the migratory northern tribes and the aggressions
of the predatory inhabitants of the Alps, who were
wont to make regular razzias in these districts.
The process of Latinizing, moreover, made rapid progress
in these regions; the Celtic nationality was evidently
far from able to oppose such resistance as the more
civilized nations of Sabellians and Etruscans.
The celebrated Latin comic poet Statius Caecilius,
who died in 586, was a manumitted Insubrian; and Polybius,
who visited these districts towards the close of the
sixth century, affirms, not perhaps without some exaggeration,
that in that quarter only a few villages among the
Alps remained Celtic. The Veneti, on the other
hand, appear to have retained their nationality longer.