Great expedition of 279 BC The Celtic military pressure toward Greece in the southern Balkans reached its turning point in 281 BC. The collapse of
Lysimachus' successor kingdom in Thrace opened the way for the migration. The cause for this is explained by
Pausanias as greed for loot, by
Justin as a result of overpopulation, and by
Memnon as the result of famine. According to
Pausanias, an initial probing raid led by Cambaules withdrew when they realized they were too few in numbers. left
Pannonia, split into three divisions, and marched south in a great expedition to Macedon and
central Greece. Under the leadership of
Cerethrius, 20,000 men moved against the Thracians and Triballi. Another division, led by
Brennus and
Acichorius moved against the
Paionians, while the third division, headed by
Bolgios, aimed for the
Macedonians and
Illyrians. However, Bolgios' contingent was repulsed by the Macedonian nobleman
Sosthenes, and satisfied with the loot they had won, Bolgios' contingents turned back. Sosthenes, in turn, was attacked and defeated by Brennus and his division, who were then free to ravage the country. After these expeditions returned home, Brennus urged and persuaded them to mount a third united expedition against central Greece, led by himself and Acichorius. The actual number of horsemen has to be intended half as big:
Pausanias describes how they used a tactic called
trimarcisia, where each cavalryman was supported by two mounted servants, who could supply him with a spare horse should he have to be dismounted, or take his place in the battle, should he be killed or wounded.
Battle of Thermopylae (279 BC) A Greek coalition made up of
Aetolians,
Boeotians,
Athenians,
Phocians, and other Greeks north of
Corinth took up quarters at the narrow pass of
Thermopylae, on the east coast of central
Greece. During the initial assault, Brennus' forces suffered heavy losses. Hence he decided to send a large force under Acichorius against
Aetolia. The Aetolian detachment, as Brennus hoped, left Thermopylae to defend their homes. The Aetolians joined the defence
en masse – the old and women joining the fight. Realizing that the Gallic sword was dangerous only at close quarters, the Aetolians resorted to
skirmishing tactics.
Cursed gold of Delphi In spite of the Greek accounts about the defeat of the Gauls, the
Roman literary tradition preferred a far different version.
Strabo reports a story told in his time of a semi-legendary treasure – the
aurum Tolosanum, fifteen thousand talents (450 metric
tonnes/990,000 pounds) of gold and silver – supposed to have been the cursed gold looted during the sack of Delphi and brought back to Tolosa (modern
Toulouse,
France) by the
Tectosages, who were said to have been part of the invading army. More than a century and a half after the alleged sack, the Romans ruled
Gallia Narbonensis. In 105 BC, while marching to
Arausio, the
Proconsul of
Cisalpine Gaul Quintus Servilius Caepio plundered the sanctuaries of the town of
Tolosa, whose inhabitants had joined the
Cimbri, finding over 50,000 15 lb. bars of gold and 10,000 15 lb. bars of silver. The riches of Tolosa were shipped back to Rome, but only the silver made it: the gold was stolen by a band of marauders, who were believed to have been hired by Caepio himself and to have killed the legion guarding it. The Gold of Tolosa was never found, and was said to have been passed all the way down to the last heir of the Servilii Caepiones,
Marcus Junius Brutus. In 105 BC, Caepio refused to co-operate with his superior officer,
Gnaeus Mallius Maximus, because he thought of him as a
novus homo, deciding by himself to engage in battle against the
Cimbri, on the
Rhone. There, the Roman army suffered a crushing defeat and complete destruction, in the so-called
Battle of Arausio (modern
Orange). Upon his return to Rome, Caepio was tried for "the loss of his Army" and
embezzlement. He was convicted and given the harshest sentence allowable; he was stripped of his
Roman citizenship, forbidden fire and water within 800 miles of Rome, fined 15,000
talents (about 825,000 lb) of gold, and forbidden from seeing or speaking to his friends or family until he had left for
exile. He spent the rest of his life in exile in
Smyrna in
Asia Minor. His defeat and ensuing ruin were looked upon as a punishment for his sacrilegious theft. Strabo distances himself from this account, arguing that the defeated Gauls were in no position to carry off such spoils, and that, in any case, Delphi had already been despoiled of its treasure by the
Phocians during the
Third Sacred War in the previous century. However, Brennus' legendary pillage of Delphi is presented as fact by some popular modern historians. == After the Greek campaigns ==