and sword to his opponent, and even entered into relations
of friendship and hospitality with him. Twenty
years after the close of the second Punic war, the
little Celtiberian community of Complega (in the neighbourhood
of the sources of the Tagus) sent a message to the
Roman general, that unless he sent to them for every
man that had fallen a horse, a mantle, and a sword,
it would fare ill with him. Proud of their military
honour, so that they frequently could not bear to
survive the disgrace of being disarmed, the Spaniards
were nevertheless disposed to follow any one who should
enlist their services, and to stake their lives in
any foreign quarrel. The summons was characteristic,
which a Roman general well acquainted with the customs
of the country sent to a Celtiberian band righting
in the pay of the Turdetani against the Romans—either
to return home, or to enter the Roman service with
double pay, or to fix time and place for battle.
If no recruiting officer made his appearance, they
met of their own accord in free bands, with the view
of pillaging the more peaceful districts and even
of capturing and occupying towns, quite after the manner
of the Campanians. The wildness and insecurity
of the inland districts are attested by the fact that
banishment into the interior westward of Cartagena
was regarded by the Romans as a severe punishment,
and that in periods of any excitement the Roman commandants
of Further Spain took with them escorts of as many
as 6000 men. They are still more clearly shown
by the singular relations subsisting between the Greeks
and their Spanish neighbours in the Graeco-Spanish
double city of Emporiae, at the eastern extremity
of the Pyrenees. The Greek settlers, who dwelt
on the point of the peninsula separated on the landward
side from the Spanish part of the town by a wall, took
care that this wall should be guarded every night
by a third of their civic force, and that a higher
official should constantly superintend the watch at
the only gate; no Spaniard was allowed to set foot
in the Greek city, and the Greeks conveyed their merchandise
to the natives only in numerous and well-escorted
companies.
Wars between the Romans and Spaniards
These natives, full of restlessness and fond of war—full
of the spirit of the Cid and of Don Quixote—were
now to be tamed and, if possible, civilized by the
Romans. In a military point of view the task
was not difficult. It is true that the Spaniards
showed themselves, not only when behind the walls
of their cities or under the leadership of Hannibal,
but even when left to themselves and in the open field
of battle, no contemptible opponents; with their short
two-edged sword which the Romans subsequently adopted
from them, and their formidable assaulting columns,
they not unfrequently made even the Roman legions
waver. Had they been able to submit to military
discipline and to political combination, they might
perhaps have shaken off the foreign yoke imposed on