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      • All of this suggests that Reitia, or Her cult, was potentially influenced by the neighbouring Gauls. There is evidence that the Gauls also took up the worship of Her. There are several ways to adapt Reitia more fully into a Gaulish worldview; one way is to give Her Gaulish epithets that speak to Her qualities and roles.
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  2. Feb 15, 2024 · February 15, 2024. The Roman Republic was booming in the beginning of the fourth century B.C. Wealthy and powerful, it had just defeated the Etruscan city of Veii, amassed an immense war chest ...

  3. All of this suggests that Reitia, or Her cult, was potentially influenced by the neighbouring Gauls. There is evidence that the Gauls also took up the worship of Her. There are several ways to adapt Reitia more fully into a Gaulish worldview; one way is to give Her Gaulish epithets that speak to Her qualities and roles.

  4. Gaul was an important early center of Latin Christianity during late antiquity and the Merovingian period . By the middle of the 3rd century, there were several churches organized in Roman Gaul, and soon after the cessation of persecution, the bishops of the Latin world assembled at Arles in AD 314. The Church of Gaul passed through three ...

  5. It is extremely unlikely the Gallic Wars caused the death of a third of the Gaulish population and the enslavement of another third (i.e. roughly 6 millions, give or take two, on the current estimation of 10 to 12 millions) : in spite of the conquest and the relatively swift transformation of the region over the Ist and IInd centuries, elements of demographic and social continuity seems to ...

  6. The Gauls had little acquaintance with siege-works save what they learned to their cost in the course of the war. For the most part they were not veterans, but men hastily levied for a specific purpose. The speed with which they mustered great numbers was equaled only by the speed of their dispersal, often rendered imperative through lack of ...

  7. Now the Romans could very easily contain the Gauls and counter them when they attempted to depart from the gates of the oppidum. At this stage, there was little the Gauls could have done inside the walls to stop the Romans. In open battle, they were already weaker, and now the Romans had a series of fortifications to face them.

  8. The wealth of the aristocracy all came from landed estates. The reason that the battle of Allia was fought in the first place, and the Romans didn't just sit behind the walls for the city was to protect the farms and the food supply. In classical warfare, once a city was invested with a siege, the defenders rarely ever sallied out (alone) and won.

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