Celtillus was an Gallic nobleman of the Arvernian people and the father of Vercingetorix. He obtained the status of principatum Galliae ('foremost man of all Gaul'), perhaps referring to the office of vergobret, the supreme magistracy exercised through a temporary elective mandate.[1] He was murdered by members of his own people for attempting to replace the existing oligarchic system with kingship.[2]

Celtillus
King of the Arverni
Personal details
BornUnknown
Unknown
DiedUnknown
Cause of deathExecution
ChildrenVercingetorix

Name

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The Gaulish name Celtillus is an -illus derivative of the stem celt-, as in keltos ('Celt'); the precise meaning of the suffix remains uncertain, though it may have a diminutive value.[3][4]

Life

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Some time around 70–60 BC,[5] Celtillus was murdered by members of his people for attempting to established a kingship regime, a more dictatorial form of rule over the tribe.[2] Celtillus belonged to a group of Gallic populist strongmen who sought to establish monarchies within their communities, comparable to figures such as Orgetorix among the Helvetii.[6]

There, using a similar argument,6 the Arvernian Vercingetorix, Celtillus’ son, a young man with a huge amount of clout—his father had held predominance in Gaul as a whole and was therefore killed by his community, because he was after kingship—, easily inflamed his assembled dependents.

Caesar, Gallic Wars, VII.2, transl. Loeb

References

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  1. Kruta 2000, pp. 349, 530–531.
  2. 1 2 Barlow 1998, pp. 152–153.
  3. Evans 1967, pp. 121–122.
  4. Kruta 2000, p. 73.
  5. Kruta 2000, p. 531.
  6. Thorne 2013.

Primary sources

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Bibliography

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