During the 3rd-2nd centuries BC, the Belli joined the
Celtiberian confederacy alongside the
Arevaci,
Lusones and
Titii, with whom they developed close political and military ties – in 153 BC the Numantines even elected the Belli General Caros as leader of the Celtiberian coalition army that ambushed the
Consul Quintus Fulvius Nobilior at the
battle of Vulcanalia (
Ribarroya), at the
Baldano river valley in the beginning of the first
Numantine War. Prior to that, they had been forced in 181 BC to accept Roman suzerainty by
Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, but this did not prevent them from resisting further Roman encroachment of their lands as well as fighting off
Turboletae raids and the Iberian
Lobetani people.
Romanization Defeated in 143 BC by Proconsul
Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus, and faced with the fall of
Numantia in 133 BC and the subsequent collapse of the
Celtiberian confederacy, the Belli territory was incorporated into
Hispania Citerior province though little is known of their history afterwards. The Belli appear to have remained independent until the
Sertorian Wars of the early 1st Century BC, when they sided with
Quintus Sertorius and provided auxiliary troops to his army. During that conflict, the Belli found themselves being gradually pushed back from the upper
Jiloca by the
Edetani who seized Beligiom, Belgeda, Damania and Orosis, therefore losing all the lands east of the
Huerva River. Around 72 BC they and their Titii allies merged with the pro-
Roman Uraci,
Cratistii and
Olcades tribes to form the
Late Celtiberian people (
Latin:
Celtiberi) of romanized southern
Celtiberia. ==See also==