ventured to advance into the Alps themselves, but
had posted himself below Trent on the left bank of
the Adige, and had secured in any event his retreat
to the right bank by the construction of a bridge.
When the Cimbri, however, pushed forward in dense
masses from the mountains, a panic seized the Roman
army, and legionaries and horsemen ran off, the latter
straight for the capital, the former to the nearest
height which seemed to afford security. With
great difficulty Catulus brought at least the greater
portion of his army by a stratagem back to the river
and over the bridge, before the enemy, who commanded
the upper course of the Adige and were already floating
down trees and beams against the bridge, succeeded
in destroying it and thereby cutting off the retreat
of the army. But the general had to leave behind
a legion on the other bank, and the cowardly tribune
who led it was already disposed to capitulate, when
the centurion Gnaeus Petreius of Atina, struck him
down and cut his way through the midst of the enemy
to the main army on the right bank of the Adige.
Thus the army, and in some degree even the honour
of their arms, was saved; but the consequences of the
neglect to occupy the passes and of the too hasty
retreat were yet very seriously felt Catulus was obliged
to withdraw to the right bank of the Po and to leave
the whole plain between the Po and the Alps in the
power of the Cimbri, so that communication was maintained
with Aquileia only by sea. This took place in
the summer of 652, about the same time when the decisive
battle between the Teutones and the Romans occurred
at Aquae Sextiae. Had the Cimbri continued their
attack without interruption, Rome might have been greatly
embarrassed; but on this occasion also they remained
faithful to their custom of resting in winter, and
all the more, because the rich country, the unwonted
quarters under the shelter of a roof, the warm baths,
and the new and abundant supplies for eating and drinking
invited them to make themselves comfortable for the
moment. Thereby the Romans gained time to encounter
them with united forces in Italy. It was no
season to resume—as the democratic general
would perhaps otherwise have done—the interrupted
scheme of conquest in Gaul, such as Gaius Gracchus
had probably projected. From the battle-field
of Aix the victorious army was conducted to the Po;
and after a brief stay in the capital, where Marius
refused the triumph offered to him until he had utterly
subdued the barbarians, he arrived in person at the
united armies. In the spring of 653 they again
crossed the Po, 50,000 strong, under the consul Marius
and the proconsul Catulus, and marched against the
Cimbri, who on their part seem to have marched up
the river with a view to cross the mighty stream at
its source.
Battle on the Raudine Plain