took no deep root in the newly acquired land and by
no means assumed the shape of exclusive possession.
How matters stood in the Alps, and to what extent
Celtic settlers became mingled there with earlier
Etruscan or other stocks, our unsatisfactory information
as to the nationality of the later Alpine peoples
does not permit us to ascertain; only the Raeti in
the modern Grisons and Tyrol may be described as a
probably Etruscan stock. The Umbrians retained
the valleys of the Apennines, and the Veneti, speaking
a different language, kept possession of the north-eastern
portion of the valley of the Po. Ligurian tribes
maintained their footing in the western mountains,
dwelling as far south as Pisa and Arezzo, and separating
the Celt-land proper from Etruria. The Celts
dwelt only in the intermediate flat country, the Insubres
and Cenomani to the north of the Po, the Boii to the
south, and—not to mention smaller tribes
—the Senones on the coast of the Adriatic,
from Ariminum to Ancona, in the so-called “country
of the Gauls” (-ager Gallicus-). But even
there Etruscan settlements must have continued partially
at least to subsist, somewhat as Ephesus and Miletus
remained Greek under the supremacy of the Persians.
Mantua at any rate, which was protected by its insular
position, was a Tuscan city even in the time of the
empire, and Atria on the Po also, where numerous discoveries
of vases have been made, appears to have retained
its Etruscan character; the description of the coasts
that goes under the name of Scylax, composed about
418, calls the district of Atria and Spina Tuscan land.
This alone, moreover, explains how Etruscan corsairs
could render the Adriatic unsafe till far into the
fifth century, and why not only Dionysius of Syracuse
covered its coasts with colonies, but even Athens,
as a remarkable document recently discovered informs
us, resolved about 429 to establish a colony in the
Adriatic for the protection of seafarers against the
Tyrrhene pirates.
But while more or less of an Etruscan character continued
to mark these regions, it was confined to isolated
remnants and fragments of their earlier power; the
Etruscan nation no longer reaped the benefit of such
gains as were still acquired there by individuals in
peaceful commerce or in maritime war. On the
other hand it was probably from these half-free Etruscans
that the germs proceeded of such civilization as we
subsequently find among the Celts and Alpine peoples
in general.(10) The very fact that the Celtic hordes
in the plains of Lombardy, to use the language of
the so-called Scylax, abandoned their warrior-life
and took to permanent settlement, must in part be
ascribed to this influence; the rudiments moreover
of handicrafts and arts and the alphabet came to the
Celts in Lombardy, and in fact to the Alpine peoples
as far as the modern Styria, through the medium of
the Etruscans.
Etruria Proper at Peace and on the Decline