influenced by its outward relations. As in Greece
the Lacedaemonian party combined with Persia against
the Athenians, so the Romans from their first appearance
beyond the Alps had found a support against the Arverni,
who were then the ruling power among the southern
Celts, in their rivals for the hegemony, the Haedui:
and with the aid of these new “brothers of the
Roman nation” they had not merely reduced to
subjection the Allobroges and a great portion of the
indirect territory of the Arverni, but had also, in
the Gaul that remained free, occasioned by their influence
the transference of the hegemony from the Arverni
to these Haedui. But while the Greeks were threatened
with danger to their nationality only from one side,
the Celts found themselves hard pressed simultaneously
by two national foes; and it was natural that they
should seek from the one protection against the other,
and that, if the one Celtic party attached itself
to the Romans, their opponents should on the contrary
form alliance with the Germans. This course
was most natural for the Belgae, who were brought by
neighbourhood and manifold intermixture into closer
relation to the Germans who had crossed the Rhine,
and moreover, with their less-developed culture, probably
felt themselves at least as much akin to the Suebian
of alien race as to their cultivated Allobrogian or
Helvetic countryman. But the southern Celts
also, among whom now as already mentioned, the considerable
canton of the Sequani (about Besangon) stood at the
head of the party hostile to the Romans, had every
reason at this very time to call in the Germans against
the Romans who immediately threatened them; the remiss
government of the senate and the signs of the revolution
preparing in Rome, which had not remained unknown
to the Celts, made this very moment seem suitable
for ridding themselves of the Roman influence and
primarily for humbling the Roman clients, the Haedui.
A rupture had taken place between the two cantons
respecting the tolls on the Saone, which separated
the territory of the Haedui from that of the Sequani,
and about the year 683 the German prince Ariovistus
with some 15,000 armed men had crossed the Rhine as
condottiere of the Sequani.
Ariovistus on the Middle Rhine
The war was prolonged for some years with varying
success; on the whole the results were unfavourable
to the Haedui. Their leader Eporedorix at length
called out their whole clients, and marched forth
with an enormous superiority of force against the Germans.
These obstinately refused battle, and kept themselves
under cover of morasses and forests. It was
not till the clans, weary of waiting, began to break
up and disperse, that the Germans appeared in the
open field, and then Ariovistus compelled a battle
at Admagetobriga, in which the flower of the cavalry
of the Haedui were left on the field. The Haedui,
forced by this defeat to conclude peace on the terms
which the victor proposed, were obliged to renounce
the hegemony, and to consent with their whole adherents
to become clients of the Sequani; they had to bind
themselves to pay tribute to the Sequani or rather
to Ariovistus, and to furnish the children of their
principal nobles as hostages; and lastly they had
to swear that they would never demand back these hostages
nor invoke the intervention of the Romans.