the coast between the Italian conquests of Rome and
her acquisitions on the other shore. On the
other hand the Celts in the districts south of the
Po were doomed irretrievably to destruction; for, owing
to the looseness of the ties connecting the Celtic
nation, none of the northern Celtic cantons took part
with their Italian kinsmen except for money, and the
Romans looked on the latter not only as their national
foes, but as the usurpers of their natural heritage.
The extensive assignations of land in 522 had already
filled the whole territory between Ancona and Ariminum
with Roman colonists, who settled here without communal
organization in market-villages and hamlets.
Further measures of the same character were taken,
and it was not difficult to dislodge and extirpate
a half-barbarous population like the Celtic, only
partially following agriculture, and destitute of
walled towns. The great northern highway, which
had been, probably some eighty years earlier, carried
by way of Otricoli to Narni, and had shortly before
been prolonged to the newly-founded fortress of Spoletium
(514), was now (534) carried, under the name of the
“Flaminian” road, by way of the newly-established
market-village Forum Flaminii (near Foligno), through
the pass of Furlo to the coast, and thence along the
latter from Fanum (Fano) to Ariminum; it was the first
artificial road which crossed the Apennines and connected
the two Italian seas. Great zeal was manifested
in covering the newly-acquired fertile territory
with Roman townships. Already, to cover the
passage of the Po, the strong fortress of Placentia
(Piacenza) had been founded on the right bank; not
far from it Cremona had been laid out on the left
bank, and the building of the walls of Mutina (Modena),
in the territory taken away from the Boii, had far
advanced —already preparations were being
made for further assignations of land and for continuing
the highway, when sudden event interrupted the Romans
in reaping the fruit of their successes.
Notes for Chapter III
1. III. II. Evacuation of Africa
2. That the cession of the islands lying between
Sicily and Italy, which the peace of 513 prescribed
to the Carthaginians, did not include the cession
of Sardinia is a settled point (iii. II.
Remarks On the Roman Conduct of the War); but the
statement, that the Romans made that a pretext for
their occupation of the island three years after the
peace, is ill attested. Had they done so, they
would merely have added a diplomatic folly to the
political effrontery.
3. III. II. The War on the Coasts of
Sicily and Sardinia
4. III. VIII. Changes in Procedure
5. II. I. Restrictions on the Delegation
of Powers
6. That this was the case may be gathered partly
from the appearance of the “Siculi” against
Marcellus (Liv. xxvi. 26, seq.), partly from the “conjoint
petitions of all the Sicilian communities” (Cicero,
Verr. ii. 42, 102; 45, 114; 50, 146; iii. 88, 204),
partly from well-known analogies (Marquardt, Handb.
iii. i, 267). Because there was no -commercium-
between the different towns, it by no means follows
that there was no -concilium-.