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brought him great distinction; for Gaul under his sway grew so rich in corn and so populous, that it seemed hardly possible to govern so great a multitude. The king, who was now an old man and wished to relieve his kingdom of a burdensome throng, announced that he meant to send
Bellovesus and Segovesus, his sister's sons, two enterprising young men, to find such homes as the gods might assign to them by augury; and promised them that they should head as large a number of emigrants as they themselves desired, so that no tribe might be able to prevent their settlement. Whereupon to Segovesus were by lot assigned the Hercynian highlands; but to Bellovesus the gods proposed a far pleasanter road, into Italy.
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While
Tarquinius Priscus reigned at Rome, the Celts, who make up one of the three divisions of Gaul, were under the domination of the Bituriges, and this tribe supplied the Celtic nation with a king. Ambigatus was then the man, and his talents, together with his own and the general good fortune, had
158:, gives archeological credit to the essence of the tradition reported by Livy evoking the power of the people of the region well before his own time. Kruta further contends that the story "is probably the legendary construction of a 'myth of origins', likely
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Although the background of the story is anachronistic, for the historical Celtic invasion of the
Italian Peninsula occurred between the end of the 5th century and the middle of the 4th century BC, in the context of the
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often show this confusion between /k/ and /g/, since
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in search of new lands to settle because of overpopulation in their homeland. Segovesus headed towards the
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Les Celtes, histoire et dictionnaire : des origines à la romanisation et au christianisme
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Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise: Une approche linguistique du vieux-celtique continental
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Busse, Peter E.; Koch, John T. (2006). "Biturīges". In
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note that
Gaulish names that entered Latin through the
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during the legendary reign of the fifth king of Rome,
41:: 'He who fights in both directions') is a legendary
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73:(616–579 BC), where he allegedly conquered the
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446:Spickermann, Wolfgang (2006). "Ambigatus".
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385:Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia
292:Euskirchen, Marion (2006). "Bellovesus".
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166:and Etrusco-Italian."
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199:Ab Urbe Condita Libri
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109:formed with the root
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144:Battle of the Allia
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431:. Robert Laffont.
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409:. Errance.
468:Categories
329:Kruta 2000
280:Kruta 2000
265:Kruta 2000
211:References
164:Massaliote
79:Mediolanum
55:Bellovesus
216:Citations
195:Livy 2019
160:Insubrian
103:Ambicatus
99:Ambigatus
75:Etruscans
67:Po Valley
59:Segovesus
47:Bituriges
35:Ambigatus
31:Ambicatus
18:Ambigatus
427:(2000).
405:(2003).
349:(2019).
192:—
148:Massalia
107:compound
383:(ed.).
178:in his
152:Bourges
131:cladios
127:gladius
95:Gaulish
39:Gaulish
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413:
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137:Origin
43:Gallic
170:Story
83:Milan
433:ISBN
411:ISBN
389:ISBN
357:ISBN
347:Livy
316:link
203:5.34
176:Livy
115:catu
111:ambi
93:The
89:Name
57:and
51:Livy
452:doi
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33:or
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