Chapter 2
Shadows that Loom
January 307 BC. The uneasy peace that settled after the Second Samnite War has been in place for only a few short months. A climate of fear lingers over Italy as the great city of Rome still cowers under the siege maintained by the powerful Semnones horde.
Against this backdrop, Spurius Horatius Gorgonius of the Military faction is elected as Etruria's new Consul.

Etruria's new Consul, Gorgonius
Gorgonius's mandate for his 2 year term in office is to strengthen and protect the Republic's northern frontier against further potential barbarian attacks, giving it time to consolidate its new settlements in Bononia.
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STRATEGIC SITUATION JANUARY 307 BC:
The new Etruscan settlements in northern Bononia are already well established. To the south, the beleaguered city of Rome is at the mercy of the Gauls. In desperation, Rome has offered citizenship to the peoples of Sabini on the central Apennines mountains in an attempt to bolster their manpower outside the city walls. So far no help has arrived.

Dark times for the Roman Republic
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Gorgonius's first act as Consul is an attempt to reform the Auxilia. He passes a major new law, the Lex Civitas Deses, to encourage wider recruitment for the army and instil greater discipline through more regular drills and training.

The need to reform the army soon becomes clear. In June, anxious whispers spread word that another great horde has arrived to pillage Italy. A chilling total of 15,000 Germanic warriors from the Quadi tribe have crossed the Alps and are marching south. The Republic's settlements in Bononia are suddenly in mortal danger. Gorgonius summons General Octavius and orders him to intercept the horde before it can threaten the Bononian colonists.
Despite facing seemingly insurmountable odds, Octavius rallies his forces to defeat the Quadi during several savage assaults, forcing them to return to their homelands empty-handed. The Republic has once again been saved...for now.

Octavius defeats waves of Quadi attacks in the valiant defence of Bononia
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Rome is not so fortunate. On 28th October, the Semnones finally break through the beleaguered city’s defences. The Gauls storm into the city in their thousands and inflict a brutal sack of the entire area. For days, the citizens of Rome are subjected to mass slaughter, rape and enslavement by the merciless Gallic conquerors. The Sack of Rome (307 BC) would be a devastating blow to Roman power and prestige. With their glorious city irreparably damaged and its people cowed into submission beneath Gallic savagery, it remained to be seen whether Rome would ever recover from this great catastrophe. The Semnones leave Rome a shadow of its former self and, weighed down with Roman loot, they march deeper into Italy and lay waste to much of Samnium before they are finally wiped out in another pitched battle by Samnite General Brutus.

Romans attempt to recover from the Sack of Rome (307 BC) while Samnite General Brutus finally annihilates the rampaging Semnones
South of these events, the Lucani exploit the distractions caused by the Semnones to quietly annex their neighbours in Ager Brutii, practically doubling their holdings in Italy.

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Gorgonius completes the remainder of his term successfully, having defended the Republic from the Quadi and strengthened the Auxilia Etruria.
In January 305 BC, new elections are held and Tertius Vitellius Vitalis, a Propraetor (former Praetor) and distant relative of former Consul Valens, becomes elected Consul for the coming two years under the mandate of maintaining the peace begun under Valens's leadership, which has now been in place for several years.

Vitellius, a prominent member of the Civic faction
The majority of Vitellius's Consulship passes without major incident. While successfully maintaining the peace, Vitellius expands the Auxilia Etruria to 7,000 men.

The reorganised and expanded Auxilia Etruria
He also passes a major law of his own; the Lex Aelia et Fufia, to encourage more favourable omens.

In January 304 BC, a weakened Rome re-establishes diplomatic ties with Picentis as the two formally declare a new alliance.
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Going into his final year in office, Vitellius hoped to maintain the well received period of calm and make a dignified exit from the Consulship.
His hopes would be dashed in terrible and spectacular fashion.
In September, another gargantuan horde of Gauls from the Allobroges tribe make a quiet crossing of the Alps into north-western Liguria and immediately embark on a determined march towards Volaterrae, a major Etruscan town north of the capital. The horde is estimated to be 17,000 strong, making it the largest ever to enter Etrurian territory and surely posessing the might to sweep away General Octavius's modest forces.
But Octavius cleverly shadows the Gallic horde right until they arrive outside the walls of Volaterrae. When the Gauls move to storm the walls, Octavius launches his attack and manages to take the Gauls by surprise, forcing them to retreat back to the north. The humiliated Gauls regroup at the base of the Alps to plot their revenge.

Octavius succeeds in driving away the Allobroges
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303 BC. By the turn of the year, the barbarians remain skulking around the base of the Alps but have yet to make a second attack. With the Allobroges still a major threat to the Republic the Senate elects Secundus Claudius Mercator as the new Consul. Mercator is the leader of the Military faction and a respected Army Quaestor who is considered the best candidate to lead the nation to safety with his leadership skills and good military knowledge.

Consul Mercator, a popular and proficient military leader
A bold and decisive leader, Mercator sees his chance to gain glory for himself and immediately announces that Quintus Octavius Ignatius is to be replaced as General of the Auxilia, with Mercator himself taking personal command. The new Consul then demonstrates his ability by defeating the second assault by the Allobroges in early February.

However, by now the Republic’s valiant soldiers have been wearied by repeated attacks and the Gauls inflict a decisive and costly defeat on the Auxilia during their third assault with over 3,000 men (half the Republic's army) left dead on the field.

General Mercator retreats to Bononia after suffering a heavy defeat
Mercator rallies his troops to once again drive the horde away from Etrurian settlements in September but the victory is a costly one, with the Auxilia again sustaining heavy casualties.

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302 BC. Despite being kept at bay, the persistence of the Allobroges inspires other tribal groups in the area and in May 2,000 men of the Menapii muster in Bononia, only to be quickly driven back towards the Alps by Mercator’s forces.
With the Auxilia weakened and weary, disaster is looming and eventually occurs in July. The fourth assault by the Allobroges completely overwhelms Mercator’s forces despite a valiant defence in which thousands of Gauls were slaughtered. As Mercator is forced to retreat south to Tarquinia, the Allobroges lay Volaterrae to siege while the Menapii in the north return to Bononia to besiege the Etruscan settlements there.

Following costly defeats, the Republic is now in grave peril
With everything north of Tarquinia now under barbarian siege the Republic finds itself standing upon a precipice. Panic spreads like wildfire throughout the realm. The Auxilia Etruria is in full retreat to the capital, battered and demoralised. Several costly battles have depleted the Republic's manpower reserves and confidence in new General Mercator has been shaken. This is indeed a time of great crisis. The Republic could soon be extinguished for good.