had been averted by the cession of Sardinia, true
policy required the Roman government to take possession
as speedily and entirely as possible of the country
up to the Alps. The constant apprehensions on
the part of the Celts as to such a Roman invasion
were therefore sufficiently justified; but the Romans
were in no haste. So the Celts on their part
began the war, either because the Roman assignations
of land on the east coast (522), although not a measure
immediately directed against them, made them apprehensive
of danger; or because they perceived that a war with
Rome for the possession of Lombardy was inevitable;
or, as is perhaps most probable, because their Celtic
impatience was once more weary of inaction and preferred
to arm for a new warlike expedition. With the
exception of the Cenomani, who acted with the Veneti
and declared for the Romans, all the Italian Celts
concurred in the war, and they were joined by the
Celts of the upper valley of the Rhone, or rather by
a number of adventurers belonging to them, under the
leaders Concolitanus and Aneroestus.(15) With 50,000
warriors on foot, and 20,000 on horseback or in chariots,
the leaders of the Celts advanced to the Apennines
(529). The Romans had not anticipated an attack
on this side, and had not expected that the Celts,
disregarding the Roman fortresses on the east coast
and the protection of their own kinsmen, would venture
to advance directly against the capital. Not
very long before a similar Celtic swarm had in an
exactly similar way overrun Greece. The danger
was serious, and appeared still more serious than
it really was. The belief that Rome’s destruction
was this time inevitable, and that the Roman soil
was fated to become the property of the Gauls, was
so generally diffused among the multitude in Rome
itself that the government reckoned it not beneath
its dignity to allay the absurd superstitious belief
of the mob by an act still more absurd, and to bury
alive a Gaulish man and a Gaulish woman in the Roman
Forum with a view to fulfil the oracle of destiny.
At the same time they made more serious preparations.
Of the two consular armies, each of which numbered
about 25,000 infantry and 1100 cavalry, one was stationed
in Sardinia under Gaius Atilius Regulus, the other
at Ariminum under Lucius Aemilius Papus. Both
received orders to repair as speedily as possible
to Etruria, which was most immediately threatened.
The Celts had already been under the necessity of
leaving a garrison at home to face the Cenomani and
Veneti, who were allied with Rome; now the levy of
the Umbrians was directed to advance from their native
mountains down into the plain of the Boii, and to inflict
all the injury which they could think of on the enemy
upon his own soil. The militia of the Etruscans
and Sabines was to occupy the Apennines and if possible
to obstruct the passage, till the regular troops could
arrive. A reserve was formed in Rome of 50,000
men. Throughout all Italy, which on this occasion
recognized its true champion in Rome, the men capable
of service were enrolled, and stores and materials
of war were collected.