One version of the story states that the argument about the weights had so delayed matters that the exiled
dictator Marcus Furius Camillus had extra time to muster an army, return to Rome and expel the Gauls, saving both the city and the treasury, and telling Brennus, "
Non auro, sed ferro, recuperanda est patria", which translates to "not by gold, but by iron, is the nation to be recovered". According to
Plutarch, following initial combat through Rome's streets, the Gauls were first ejected from the city then utterly annihilated in a regular engagement eight miles outside of town on the road to
Gabii. Camillus was hailed by his troops as another
Romulus, father of his country '
Pater Patriae' and second founder of Rome. Livy states that the Senones besieging the Capitoline Hill were afflicted with an illness and thus were in a weakened state when they were forced to retreat. This is plausible as dysentery and other sanitation issues have incapacitated and killed large numbers of combat soldiers up until and including modern times.
Silius Italicus claims that
Hannibal's
Boii cavalrymen were led by a descendant of Brennus named
Crixus, who fell in the
Battle of Ticinus. ==Cultural depictions==