after the Roman state had once interfered in Hellenic
affairs as it had done, a necessary consequence of
this policy. Whether it was the right course
for Rome to undertake the protectorate over the Hellenes
collectively, may certainly be called in question;
but regarded from the point of view which Flamininus
and the majority led by him had now taken up, the overthrow
of the Galatians was in fact a duty of prudence as
well as of honour. Better founded was the objection
that there was not at the time a proper ground of
war against them; for they had not been, strictly speaking,
in alliance with Antiochus, but had only according
to their wont allowed him to levy hired troops in
their country. But on the other side there fell
the decisive consideration, that the sending of a
Roman military force to Asia could only be demanded
of the Roman burgesses under circumstances altogether
extraordinary, and, if once such an expedition was
necessary, everything told in favour of carrying it
out at once and with the victorious army that was now
stationed in Asia. So, doubtless under the influence
of Flamininus and of those who shared his views in
the senate, the campaign into the interior of Asia
Minor was undertaken in the spring of 565. The
consul started from Ephesus, levied contributions from
the towns and princes on the upper Maeander and in
Pamphylia without measure, and then turned northwards
against the Celts. Their western canton, the
Tolistoagii, had retired with their belongings to Mount
Olympus, and the middle canton, the Tectosages, to
Mount Magaba, in the hope that they would be able
there to defend themselves till the winter should
compel the strangers to withdraw. But the missiles
of the Roman slingers and archers—which
so often turned the scale against the Celts unacquainted
with such weapons, almost as in more recent times
firearms have turned the scale against savage tribes—forced
the heights, and the Celts succumbed in a battle,
such as had often its parallels before and after on
the Po and on the Seine, but here appears as singular
as the whole phenomenon of this northern race emerging
amidst the Greek and Phrygian nations. The number
of the slain was at both places enormous, and still
greater that of the captives. The survivors
escaped over the Halys to the third Celtic canton
of the Trocmi, which the consul did not attack.
That river was the limit at which the leaders of
Roman policy at that time had resolved to halt.
Phrygia, Bithynia, and Paphlagonia were to become
dependent on Rome; the regions lying farther to the
east were left to themselves.
The affairs of Asia Minor were regulated partly by the peace with Antiochus (565), partly by the ordinances of a Roman commission presided over by the consul Volso. Antiochus had to furnish hostages, one of whom was his younger son of the same name, and to pay a war-contribution—proportional in amount to the treasures of Asia—of 15,000 Euboic talents (3,600,000 pounds), a fifth of which