…the Gauls defeat a Roman army at…
393 BCE to 382 BCE
…the Gauls defeat a Roman army at the Allia River in July of 390 and storm Rome, capturing all except the citadel and the Temple of Jupiter on the Capitoline Hill.
According to legend, Brennus’ sneak attack on the Capitoline Hill fails when the cries of the sacred geese of Juno alert the Romans.
During the plundering of the city, many of Rome’s chiefly wooden buildings burn to the ground amid rampant looting and murder.
Unable to conquer the hill after several months, and learning that the Italian Venetii tribe now threaten their holdings in the Po Valley, the Gauls accept dictator Camillus’ offer of a large payment of tribute—one thousand pounds of gold—to secure their withdrawal.
When the Gauls are found by a tribune to be cheating in weighing the gold ingots paid by Rome, Brennus is said to have added his sword to the scales, justifying his action with the words “Vae victis” ("Woe to the vanquished").
As Etruria weakens, Rome continues to dominate more Italian territory, taking the Etruscan cities of …