Early history The Salyes settled in the hinterland of
Massalia at the latest in the 6th century BC. According to a legend recounted by
Livy, they fought against the
Phocaean settlers at the time of the foundation of
Massalia ca. 600, but were defeated by the roving armies of
Bellovesus. During the 5th century BC, the Salyes remained a small tribal group, although they controlled an important trade route that went through the valley of the
Arc. By the time of the
Second Punic War (218–201 BC), they also controlled areas as far south as the coastal mountains near Massalia. Conflicts between Rome and the Salyes lasted during nearly eighty years from the end of the Second Punic War (201 BC), during which the eastern part of Iberia came under Roman control and Massalia remained a faithful ally of Rome, up until the rendition of the Salluvian chief town Entremont ca. 122 BC. Involved in piracy and raids, the Ligurians threatened throughout the 2nd century BC the Massaliotes colonies along the Mediterranean coast, and more generally the trade route between the Iberian Peninsula and Italy. This culminated in a Roman military intervention in 154 BC against the
Deciates and
Oxybii, two Ligurian tribes that were presumably part of the Salluvian confederation.
Roman conquest In 125 BC, the Salyes waged war on Massalia, leading the
Roman Senate to send the consul
Marcus Fulvius Flaccus to Massalia's assistance. The establishment of a Greek colony at Glanum, on Salluvian territory, may have been the
casus belli. Flaccus defeated the Salyes, along with the
Vocontii and some other Ligurian tribes presumably part of the Salluvian confederation on the eastern borders of the Massaliote territory, then celebrated his triumph in Rome in 123 BC. Shortly after, another consul,
Gaius Sextius Calvinus, sacked their chief town,
Entremont, and established near its ruin a Roman
garrison post, thereafter to be known as Aquae Sextiae (modern
Aix-en-Provence). Sextius also forced the Salyes to cede the areas they controlled near the Mediterranean coast; part of their territory was granted to the Massaliotes. During the conflict, the leaders of the Salyes, including their king
Toutomotulos (or Teutomalius), fled with the rest of their armies to their allies the
Allobroges, who refused to hand them over to Rome. A further and larger Roman force, including
war elephants, was sent under the command of
Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus, who defeated the Allobroges at the
Battle of Vindalium in 121 BC. In August of the same year, the Roman army, strengthened by the troops of
Quintus Fabius Maximus, inflicted a decisive defeat on a massive combined force of Allobroges,
Arveni and the remaining Salyes at the
Battle of the Isère River. Toutomotulus' followers were killed, enslaved, or driven into exile, while Crato, the Salluvian leader of the pro-Graeco-Roman faction, secured the release of 900 of his fellow citizens from slavery. Some time between 120 and 117, the territory of the Salyes was incorporated into the
Roman province of
Gallia Transalpina.
Early Roman period During the
Cimbrian War (113–101 BC), the
Battle of Aquae Sextiae was fought in their territory in 102 BC. A revolt of the Salyes was suppressed by the consul
Gaius Coelius Caldus in 90 BC, and another uprising was crushed in 83 BC. After the foundation of a
colonia romana at
Arelate (modern
Arles) in 46 BC, a large area west of
Aquae Sextiae, including much of the Salluvian lands that had been handed over to Massalia around 122 BC, became subject to Arelate. == Culture ==