Celtic tribes, and settled on the Apennines from above
Arezzo and Pisa westward, occupied the region of the
sources of the Po. The eastern portion of the
plain north of the Po, nearly from Verona to the coast,
was possessed by the Veneti, a race different from
the Celts and probably of Illyrian extraction.
Between these and the western mountains were settled
the Cenomani (about Brescia and Cremona) who rarely
acted with the Celtic nation and were probably largely
intermingled with Veneti, and the Insubres (around
Milan). The latter was the most considerable
of the Celtic cantons in Italy, and was in constant
communication not merely with the minor communities
partly of Celtic, partly of non-Celtic extraction,
that were scattered in the Alpine valleys, but also
with the Celtic cantons beyond the Alps. The
gates of the Alps, the mighty stream navigable for
230 miles, and the largest and most fertile plain
of the then civilized Europe, still continued in the
hands of the hereditary foes of the Italian name,
who, humbled indeed and weakened, but still scarce
even nominally dependent and still troublesome neighbours,
persevered in their barbarism, and, thinly scattered
over the spacious plains, continued to pasture their
herds and to plunder. It was to be anticipated
that the Romans would hasten to possess themselves
of these regions; the more so as the Celts gradually
began to forget their defeats in the campaigns of
471 and 472 and to bestir themselves again, and, what
was still more dangerous, the Transalpine Celts began
anew to show themselves on the south of the Alps.
Celtic Wars
In fact the Boii had already renewed the war in 516,
and their chiefs Atis and Galatas had—without,
it is true, the authority of the general diet—summoned
the Transalpine Gauls to make common cause with them.
The latter had numerously answered the call, and in
518 a Celtic army, such as Italy had not seen for
long, encamped before Ariminum. The Romans,
for the moment much too weak to attempt a battle,
concluded an armistice, and to gain time allowed envoys
from the Celts to proceed to Rome, who ventured in
the senate to demand the cession of Ariminum—it
seemed as if the times of Brennus had returned.
But an unexpected incident put an end to the war before
it had well begun. The Boii, dissatisfied with
their unbidden allies and afraid probably for their
own territory, fell into variance with the Transalpine
Gauls. An open battle took place between the
two Celtic hosts; and, after the chiefs of the Boii
had been put to death by their own men, the Transalpine
Gauls returned home. The Boii were thus delivered
into the hands of the Romans, and the latter were at
liberty to expel them like the Senones, and to advance
at least to the Po; but they preferred to grant the
Boii peace in return for the cession of some districts
of their land (518). This was probably done,
because they were just at that time expecting the renewed
outbreak of war with Carthage; but, after that war