What Is Gaul? > The Five Gauls
You may have heard that all Gaul was divided into three parts. While borders changed and not all ancient writers on the topic of Gaul are consistent, it is probably more accurate to say all Gaul was divided into five parts. Gaul was mostly north of the Italian Alps, the Pyrenees and the Mediterranean Sea. To the east of Gaul lived the Germanic tribes. To the west was what is now the English Channel (La Manche) and the Atlantic Ocean.
The 5 Gauls:
"Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres, quarum unam incolunt Belgae, aliam Aquitani, tertiam qui ipsorum lingua Celtae, nostra Galli appellantur."These three Gauls were in addition to the two with which Rome already had extensive dealings.All Gaul is divided into three parts, in one of which the Belgae live, in another, the Aquitaines, and in the third, the Celts (in their own language), [but] called the Galli [Gauls] in ours [Latin].
Cisalpine Gaul:
Over-population driven migration into the Italic peninsula, according to legend reported by Livy, who came from Cisalpine Gaul, came at the time Rome was ruled by the first Etruscan king, Tarquinius Priscus. Led by Bellovesus, the Gallic tribe of Insubres defeated the Etruscans in the plains around the Po River and settled in the area of Milan. There were other waves of martial Gauls -- Cenomani, Libui, Salui, Boii, Lingones, and Senones. In around 390 B.C., Senones, living in what was later called the ager Gallicus strip along the Adriatic, led by Brennus, defeated the Romans at the banks of the Allia before capturing the city of Rome and besieging the Capitol. They were persuaded to leave with a hefty payment of gold. About a century later, Rome defeated the Galli and their Italian allies, the Samnites, as well as Etruscans and Umbrians, on Gallic territory. In 283, the Romans defeated the Galli Senones and established their first Gallic colony (Sena). In 269, they set up another colony, Ariminum. It wasn't until 223 that the Romans crossed the Po to battle successfully against the Gallic Insubres. In 218, Rome established two new Gallic colonies: Placentia to the south of the Po, and Cremona. It was these disaffected Italian Gauls that Hannibal hoped would help with his efforts to defeat Rome.
Sources:
- "Gallia Cisalpina" Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) William Smith, LLD, Ed.
- The Beginnings of Rome, by T.J. Cornell (1995).
Transalpine Gaul:
The 3 Gauls:
The 10 Gauls:
1. Alpes Maritimae
2. Regnum Cottii
3. Alpes Graiae
4. Vallis Poenina
II. GAUL PROPER
1. Narbonensis
2. Aquitania
3. Lugdunensis
4. Belgica
5. Germania inferior
6. Germania superior
Source:
"Keatika: Being Prolegomena to a Study of the Dialects of Ancient Gaul"
Joshua Whatmough
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Vol. 55, (1944), pp. 1-85.
References:
Extant ancient sources on the five Gauls: Ausonius, Julius Caesar, Cicero, Diodorus Siculus, Dionysus of Halicarnassus, Livy, Pliny, Plutarch, Polybius, Strabo, and Tacitus.
See these resources on Caesar's Gallic War and the Latin AP Exam - Caesar


