War with Insubres and Boii and Gaesatae
After these defeats the Gauls maintained an unbroken
note
peace with Rome for forty-five years. But when the generation which had witnessed the actual struggle had passed away,
and a younger generation of men had taken their places, filled
with unreflecting hardihood, and who had neither experienced
nor seen any suffering or reverse, they began, as was natural, to
disturb the settlement; and on the one hand
to let trifling causes exasperate them against
Rome, and on the other to invite the Alpine Gauls to join the
fray. At first these intrigues were carried on by their chiefs
without the knowledge of the tribesmen; and accordingly,
when an armed host of Transalpine Gauls arrived at Ariminum,
the Boii were suspicious; and forming a conspiracy against their
own leaders, as well as against the new-comers, they put their
own two kings Atis and Galatus to death, and cut each other
to pieces in a pitched battle. Just then the Romans, alarmed
at the threatened invasion, had despatched an army; but learning that the Gauls had committed this act of self-destruction, it
returned home again. In the fifth year after this alarm, in
the Consulship of Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, the Romans
-- 119 --
divided among their citizens the territory of Picenum, from
which they had ejected the Senones when they
conquered them: a democratic measure introduced by Gaius Flaminius, and a policy which we must
pronounce to have been the first step in the demoralisation of
the people, as well as the cause of the next Gallic war. note For
many of the Gauls, and especially the Boii whose lands were
coterminous with the Roman territory, entered upon that war
from the conviction that the object of Rome in her wars with
them was no longer supremacy and empire over them, but
their total expulsion and destruction.