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Gallic Wars

The Gallic Wars[a] were waged between 58 and 50 BC by the Roman general Julius Caesar against the peoples of Gaul (present-day France, Belgium, Germany and Switzerland). Gallic, Germanic, and British tribes fought to defend their homelands against an aggressive Roman campaign. The Wars culminated in the decisive Battle of Alesia in 52 BC, in which a complete Roman victory resulted in the expansion of the Roman Republic over the whole of Gaul. Though the Gallic military was as strong as the Romans, the Gallic tribes' internal divisions eased victory for Caesar. Gallic chieftain Vercingetorix's attempt to unite the Gauls under a single banner came too late. Caesar portrayed the invasion as being a preemptive and defensive action, but historians agree that he fought the Wars primarily to boost his political career and to pay off his debts. Still, Gaul was of significant military importance to the Romans. Native tribes in the region, both Gallic and Germanic, had attacked Rome several times. Conquering Gaul allowed Rome to secure the natural border of the river Rhine.

Gallic Wars

Vercingetorix Throws Down His Arms at the Feet of Julius Caesar, 1899, by Lionel Noel Royer
Date58–50 BC
Location
Result Roman victory
Territorial
changes
  • Gaul annexed by Roman Republic
  • Local client kings and tributaries set up in Britain
Belligerents
Roman Republic
Commanders and leaders
Strength

Modern estimates:

  • 58 BC: 6 legions (understrength, 24–30,000 troops, including cavalry auxiliaries)[1]
  • 57 BC: 8 legions (32–40,000 troops)
  • 55 BC: 2 legions (~10,000 troops) in Britain, the rest left on the continent
  • 54 BC: 5 legions (~25,000 troops) & 2,000 auxiliaries in Britain
  • 53 BC: 10 legions (40–50,000 troops)
  • 52 BC: 11 legions & 10,000+ auxiliaries,[2][3] 60–75,000 troops total by the siege of Alesia

Modern estimates:

  • 58 BC: 20,000–50,000, of which 8,000 or more were civilians
  • 52 BC: 70,000–100,000 Gallic combatants at Alesia
Casualties and losses
Credibly estimated at 30,000+ killed and 10,000+ wounded

All contemporary numbers are considered not credible by Henige[8]

The Wars began with conflict over the migration of the Helvetii in 58 BC, which drew in neighboring tribes and the Germanic Suebi. By 57 BC, Caesar had resolved to conquer all of Gaul. He led campaigns in the east, where the Nervii almost defeated him. In 56 BC, Caesar defeated the Veneti in a naval battle and took most of northwest Gaul. In 55 BC, Caesar sought to boost his public image. He undertook first-of-their-kind expeditions across the Rhine and the English Channel. Rome hailed Caesar as a hero upon his return from Britain, though he had achieved little beyond landing because his army had been too small. The next year, he returned with a proper army and conquered much of Britain. Tribes rose up on the continent, and the Romans suffered a humiliating defeat. 53 BC saw a brutal pacification campaign. This failed, and Vercingetorix led a revolt in 52 BC. Gallic forces won a notable victory at the Battle of Gergovia, but the Romans' indomitable siege works at the Battle of Alesia crushed the Gallic coalition.

In 51 BC and 50 BC, there was little resistance, and Caesar's troops were mostly mopping up. Gaul was conquered, although it would not become a Roman province until 27 BC, and resistance would continue until as late as 70 AD. There is no clear end-date for the war, but the imminent Roman Civil War led to the withdrawal of Caesar's troops in 50 BC. Caesar's wild successes in the war had made him wealthy and provided a legendary reputation. The Gallic Wars were a key factor in Caesar's ability to win the Civil War and make himself dictator, which culminated in the end of the Roman Republic and the establishment of the Roman Empire.

Julius Caesar described the Gallic Wars in his book Commentarii de Bello Gallico. It is the primary source for the conflict, but modern historians consider it prone to exaggeration. Caesar makes impossible claims about the number of Gauls killed (over a million), while claiming almost zero Roman casualties. Modern historians believe that Gallic forces were far smaller than the Romans claimed, and that the Romans suffered significant casualties. Historian David Henige regards the entire account as clever propaganda meant to boost Caesar's image, and suggests it is of minimal historical accuracy. Regardless of the accuracy of the Commentarii, the campaign was still exceptionally brutal. Untold numbers of Gauls were killed, enslaved, or mutilated, including large numbers of civilians.

Background

Sociopolitical

The tribes of Gaul were civilized and wealthy. Most had contact with Roman merchants and some, such as the Aedui, who were governed by republics, had enjoyed stable political alliances with Rome in the past. During the first century, parts of Gaul were becoming urbanized, which concentrated wealth and population centers, inadvertently making Roman conquest easier. Though the Romans considered the Gauls to be barbarians, their cities mirrored those of the Mediterranean. They struck coins and traded extensively with Rome, providing iron, grain, and many slaves. In exchange, the Gauls accumulated much wealth and developed a taste for Roman wine. The contemporary writer Diodoros explains that part of the conception of Gallic barbarity was because they drank their wine straight, unlike the supposedly civilized Romans who watered down their wine first. However, the Romans realized the Gauls were a powerful fighting force, and considered some of the most "barbaric" tribes to be the fiercest warriors, as they were uncorrupted by Roman luxuries.[10]

Military

 
A modern re-enactor in 2012 wearing the gear that a VII legion standard bearer would have during the Gallic Wars era.
 
A modern re-enactor in 2018 with the typical panoply of a wealthier Gallic warrior.

The Gauls and the Romans had significantly different military strategies. The Roman army was a professional army armed and outfitted by the state, extremely disciplined, and kept standing between conflicts. However, the professional army consisted mostly of heavy infantry; any auxiliary units were fielded from the less disciplined Roman allies, which as the war progressed would include some Gauls. By comparison, the Gauls were an irregular and less disciplined fighting force. Individual Gauls outfitted themselves; thus, while wealthy Gauls were well equipped and rivalled the Roman soldiers, the average Gallic warrior was poorly equipped compared to a Roman. This was not an inherent disadvantage: unlike the Romans, the Gauls were a warrior culture. They prized acts of bravery and individual courage; frequent raiding of neighboring tribes kept their fighting skills sharp. Compared to the Romans, the Gauls carried longer swords and had far superior cavalry. The Gauls were generally taller than the Romans (a fact that seems to have embarrassed the Romans) and this combined with their longer swords gave them a reach advantage in combat. Both sides used archers and slingers. Little is known about Gallic battle strategy, and the effectiveness of Gallic slingers and archers is unknown. What is known indicates that battle strategy varied between tribes, although engagement in pitched battle was frequent, to prove bravery. Not all tribes engaged the Romans directly, as Rome was a formidable enemy. The Gauls frequently used attrition warfare against them. While the Gauls had much more flair in combat (such as fighting in intricately decorated armor, or even in the nude), the superior discipline and formation of the Romans, combined with uniformly excellent equipment, generally gave them an advantage in hand-to-hand fighting.[11]

The Wars cemented the Roman use of the cohort, which had been established by the Marian reforms, passed by Gaius Marius (uncle and father figure to Julius Caesar). That the cohort tactic was kept was likely due to Caesar (and his relationship with Marius). A cohort replaced the previous military unit, the maniple, typically a quarter the size of a cohort, which had proved too small and ineffective. The cohort was an effective counterbalance to Gallic and Germanic tactics. The system diversified the ranks by combining men from different socio-economic ranks: unlike in the maniple system, rich and poor fought alongside each other in a single uniform unit, greatly increasing overall morale by removing resentment.[12] A cohort held 480 men. Ten cohorts, combined with a small cavalry unit, engineers, and officers, made a legion of around 5,000 men.[12][13]

The Marian reforms had also changed the practices of the army's baggage train, though they would prove insufficient at times during the Wars. Each legionary was required to carry a substantial amount of his own gear, including weapons, and rations enough to operate independently of the baggage train for a few days. This cut down the size of the baggage train greatly, and allowed for a legion to temporarily march well ahead of its baggage. Still, a legion usually had around a thousand beasts of burden to carry the tents, siege equipment, reserve food, entrenching tools, records, personal effects, and all other items a large army needed. While on march, the average legion with train stretched out for about 2.5 mi (4.0 km). Such a large number of animals also required a great deal of grazing or fodder; this limited campaigning to times when there was grass or adequate supplies. The logistical challenges of the baggage train forced the Romans' hand many times during the wars.[14]

The Romans respected and feared the Gallic tribes. In 390 BC, the Gauls had sacked Rome, which left an existential dread of barbarian conquest the Romans never forgot. In 121 BC, Rome conquered a group of southern Gauls, and established the province of Transalpine Gaul in the conquered lands.[15] Only 50 years before the Gallic Wars, in 109 BC, Italy had been invaded from the north and saved by Gaius Marius only after several bloody and costly battles. Around 63 BC, when a Roman client state, the Gallic Arverni, conspired with the Gallic Sequani and the Germanic Suebi nations east of the Rhine to attack the Gallic Aedui, a strong Roman ally, Rome turned a blind eye. The Sequani and the Arverni defeated the Aedui in 63 BC at the Battle of Magetobriga.[16][17][18]

Julius Caesar

 
The Tusculum portrait of Julius Caesar

Rising politician and general Julius Caesar was the Roman commander and agonist of the war. As a result of the financial burdens of being consul (the highest office in the Roman Republic) in 59 BC, Caesar had incurred significant debts. To strengthen Rome's position among the Gauls, he had paid substantial money to Ariovistus, king of the Suebi, to cement an alliance.[19][20] Through his influence as part of the First Triumvirate (the political alliance which comprised Marcus Licinius Crassus, Pompey, and himself) during his consulship, Caesar had secured his assignment as proconsul (governor) to two provinces, Cisalpine Gaul and Illyricum, by passage of the Lex Vatinia.[19] When the governor of Transalpine Gaul, Metellus Celer, died unexpectedly, the province was also awarded to Caesar at the suggestion of Pompey and Caesar's father-in-law, Lucius Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus. In the law granting him command of the provinces, Caesar was given a five-year term as proconsul.[21] This was longer than the traditional one-year term that consuls received, enabling him to engage in a military campaign without fear of command turnover.[22][23]

Caesar had four veteran legions under his direct command initially: Legio VII, Legio VIII, Legio IX Hispana, and Legio X. As he had been governor of Hispania Ulterior in 61 BC and had campaigned successfully with them against the Lusitanians, Caesar knew most, perhaps even all, of the legions personally. He also had the legal authority to levy additional legions and auxiliary units as he saw fit. The assignment of the province that comprises what is now Northern Italy was helpful to his ambitions: the Po Valley and the adjoining regions had large numbers of Roman citizens, who could be enticed to sign up for legionary service.[21]

His ambition was to conquer and plunder some territories to get himself out of debt. It is possible that Gaul was not his initial target; he may have been planning a campaign against the Kingdom of Dacia in the Balkans instead.[24] However, a mass migration of Gallic tribes in 58 BC provided a convenient casus belli, and Caesar prepared for war.[20]

Beginning of the Wars – campaign against the Helvetii

 
Multi-year overview of the Gallic Wars. The general routes taken by Caesar's army are indicated by the arrows.

The Helvetii were a confederation of about five related Gallic tribes that lived on the Swiss plateau, hemmed in by the mountains and the rivers Rhine and Rhône. They had come under increased pressure from Germanic tribes to the north and the east and began planning for a migration around 61 BC. They intended to travel across Gaul to the west coast of northern Italy, a route that would have taken them around the Alps and through lands of the Aedui (a Roman ally) into the Roman province of Transalpine Gaul. As word of the migration spread, neighboring tribes grew concerned, and Rome sent ambassadors to several tribes to convince them not to join the Helvetii. Concern grew in Rome that the Germanic tribes would fill in the lands vacated by the Helvetii. The Romans much preferred the Gauls to the Germanic tribes as neighbors. One of the consuls of 60 (Metellus) and one of 59 BC (Caesar) both wanted to lead a campaign against the Gauls, though neither had a casus belli at the time.[25]

On 28 March in 58 BC, the Helvetii began their migration, bringing along all their peoples and livestock. They burned their villages and stores to ensure the migration could not be reversed. Upon reaching Transalpine Gaul, where Caesar was governor, they asked permission to cross the Roman lands. Caesar entertained the request but ultimately denied it. The Gauls turned north instead, entirely avoiding Roman lands. The threat to Rome was seemingly over, but Caesar led his army over the border and attacked the Helvetii unprovoked. So began what historian Kate Gilliver describes as "an aggressive war of expansion led by a general who was seeking to advance his career".[25]

Caesar's consideration of the Gallic request to enter Rome was not indecision, but a play for time. He was in Rome when news of the migration arrived, and he rushed to Transalpine Gaul, raising two legions and some auxiliaries along the way. He delivered his refusal to the Gauls, and then promptly returned to Italy to gather the legions he had raised on his previous trip and three veteran legions. Caesar now had between 24,000 and 30,000 legionary troops, and some quantity of auxiliaries, many of whom were themselves Gauls. He marched north to the river Saône, where he caught the Helvetii in the middle of crossing. Some three-quarters had crossed; he slaughtered those who had not. Caesar then crossed the river in one day using a pontoon bridge. He followed the Helvetii, but chose not to engage in combat, waiting for ideal conditions. The Gauls attempted to negotiate, but Caesar's terms were draconian (likely on purpose, as he may have used it as another delaying tactic). Caesar's supplies ran thin on 20 June, forcing him to travel towards allied territory in Bibracte. While his army had easily crossed the Saône, his supply train still had not. The Helvetii could now outmaneuver the Romans and had time to pick up Boii and Tulingi allies. They used this moment to attack Caesar's rearguard.[26]

Battle of Bibracte

In the ensuing Battle of Bibracte, the Gauls and Romans fought for the better part of the day. After a hotly contested battle, the Romans eventually gained victory. Caesar had set up his legions on the slope of a hill, which put the Gauls at a disadvantage as they had to fight uphill. The Helvetii started the battle with a probable feint, which the Romans easily repulsed. However, the Boii and Tulingi then outmaneuvered the Romans and attacked their right flank. At this point, the Romans were surrounded. A heated battle ensued. The men in the legion's last line were ordered to turn their backs around. They now fought on two fronts instead of just being attacked in the rear, which Gilliver describes as a brilliant tactical decision. Eventually, the Helvetii were routed and fled. The Romans chased the now outnumbered Boii and Tulingi back to their encampments, killing the fighters as well as slaying the women and children.[26]

Caesar's army rested for three days to tend to the wounded. They then gave chase to the Helvetii, who surrendered. Caesar ordered them back on their lands to provide a buffer between Rome and the even more feared Germanic tribes.[26] In the captured Helvetian camp Caesar claims that a census written in Greek was found and studied: of a total of 368,000 Helvetii, of whom 92,000 were able-bodied men, only 110,000 survivors remained to return home. Historians believe the total was likely between 20,000–50,000, with the excess exaggerated by Caesar for propaganda purposes.[27][26] (See historiography section below for a detailed accounting).

Bibracte, then the commercial hub of the Gallic Aedui tribe, would again play a crucial role during the Gallic uprising of 52 BC. Vercingetorix himself met with other Gallic leaders there to plot the rebellion against Caesar and the Romans. After Vercingetorix's revolt failed, Bibracte was slowly abandoned for other more prosperous settlements nearby.[28]

Campaign against the Suebi

 
The campaigns of 58 BC (In Italian). Note the Roman territory in yellow does not yet include modern day France, the Low Countries, or Germany. Caesar's expeditions are a red line, with battles noted. Celtic cities are in green, Germanic cities in orange.

Caesar then turned his attention to the Germanic Suebi, whom he also wished to conquer. The Senate had declared Ariovistus, king of the Suebi, a "friend and ally of the Roman people" in 59 BC, so Caesar needed a convincing casus belli to betray the Suebi.[29][30] He found his excuse following victory over the Helvetii. A group of Gallic tribes congratulated him and sought to meet in a general assembly, hoping to leverage the Romans against other Gauls.[31] Diviciacus, the head of the Aeduan government and spokesmen for the Gallic delegation, expressed concern over Ariovistus' conquests and for the hostages he had taken.[32][33] Not only did Caesar have a responsibility to protect the longstanding allegiance of the Aedui, but this proposition presented an opportunity to expand Rome's borders, strengthen loyalty within Caesar’s army and establish him as the commander of Rome’s troops abroad.[33] With the attack of the Harudes (an apparent Suebi ally) on the Aedui and the report that a hundred clans of Suebi were trying to cross the Rhine into Gaul, Caesar had the justification he needed to wage war against Ariovistus in 58 BC.[34][35]

Learning that Ariovistus intended to seize Vesontio, the largest Sequani town, Caesar marched towards it and arrived before Ariovistus.[36] Ariovistus sent emissaries to Caesar requesting a meeting. They met under a truce at a knoll outside of town. The truce was violated when Germanic horsemen edged towards the knoll and threw stones at Caesar's mounted escort.[37] Two days later, Ariovistus requested another meeting. Hesitant to send senior officials, Caesar dispatched Valerius Procillus, his trusted friend, and Caius Mettius, a merchant who had traded successfully with Ariovistus. Insulted, Ariovistus threw the envoys in chains.[38][39] Ariovistus marched for two days and made camp two miles (3.2 km) miles behind Caesar, thus cutting off his communication and supply lines with the allied tribes. Unable to entice Ariovistus into battle, Caesar ordered a second smaller camp built near Ariovistus' position.[40]

The next morning Caesar assembled his allied troops in front of the second camp and advanced his legions in towards Ariovistus. Each of Caesar's five legates and his quaestor were given command of a legion. Caesar lined up on the right flank.[41] Ariovistus countered by lining up his seven tribal formations. Caesar was victorious in the ensuing battle due in large part to the charge made by Publius Crassus, son of Marcus Crassus. As the Germanic tribesmen began to drive back the Roman left flank, Crassus led his cavalry in a charge to restore balance and ordered up the cohorts of the third line. As a result, the whole Germanic line broke and began to flee.[42][43] Caesar claims that most of Ariovistus' one-hundred and twenty thousand men were killed. He and what remained of his troops escaped and crossed the Rhine, never to engage Rome in battle again. The Suebi camping near the Rhine returned home. Caesar was victorious.[44][45] In one year he had defeated two of Rome's most feared enemies. After this busy campaigning season, he returned to Transalpine Gaul to deal with the non-military aspects of his governorship. At this point it is possible he had already decided he would conquer all of Gaul.[46]

57 BC: Campaigns in the east

Caesar's stunning victories in 58 BC had unsettled the Gallic tribes. Many rightly predicted Caesar would seek to conquer all of Gaul, and some sought alliance with Rome. As the campaigning season of 57 BC dawned, both sides were busy recruiting new soldiers. Caesar set off with two more legions than the year before, with 32,000 to 40,000 men, along with a contingent of auxiliaries. The exact number of men the Gauls raised is unknown, but Caesar claims he would fight 200,000.[47]

Intervening again in an intra-Gallic conflict, Caesar marched against the Belgae tribal confederation, who inhabited the area roughly bounded by modern-day Belgium. They had recently attacked a tribe allied with Rome and before marching with his army to meet them, Caesar ordered the Remi and other neighboring Gauls to investigate the Belgae's actions.[48] The Belgae and the Romans encountered each other near Bibrax. The Belgae attempted to take the fortified oppidum (main settlement) from the Remi but were unsuccessful and chose instead to raid the nearby countryside. Each side tried to avoid battle, as both were short on supplies (a continuing theme for Caesar, who gambled and left his baggage train behind several times). Caesar ordered fortifications built, which the Belgae understood would give them a disadvantage. Instead of making battle, the Belgic army simply disbanded, as it could be re-assembled easily.[47]

Caesar realized an opportunity was presenting itself: if he could beat the men from the army home, he could take their lands with ease. His armies' travel speed proved to be a crucial aspect of his ensuing victories. He rushed to the Belgic Suessiones' oppidum at what is now Villeneuve-Saint-Germain and laid siege to it. The Belgic army nullified Caesar's advantage by sneaking back into the city under cover of darkness. The Roman siege preparations proved to be the decisive factor: grand Roman-style siege warfare was unknown to the Gauls, and the might of the Romans' preparations drove the Gauls to surrender promptly. This had a ripple effect: the nearby Bellovaci and Ambiones surrendered immediately afterward, realizing the Romans had defeated a powerful army without any combat. Not all the tribes were so cowed though. The Nervii allied with the Atrebates and Viromandui, and planned to ambush the Romans. The ensuing battle of the Sabis was nearly a humiliating defeat for Caesar, and the Roman victory was very hard-won.[47]

Nervii ambush: the battle of the Sabis

 
Campaign map of 57 BC. Territory conquered the previous year is shaded red.

The Nervii set up an ambush along the river Sambre, lying in wait for the Romans who arrived and started setting up camp. The Romans detected the Nervii, and the battle began with the Romans sending a light cavalry and infantry force across the river to keep the Nervii at bay while the main force fortified its camp. The Nervii easily repulsed the attack. In an uncharacteristic move for Caesar, he made a serious tactical error by not setting up an infantry screen to protect the entrenching force. The Nervii took ample advantage of this, and their entire force crossed the river quickly and caught the Romans off-guard and unprepared. As the battle began, two legions had not even arrived, whereas the Nervii had at least 60,000 fighters.[47] The reserve legions were stuck at the end of the column, 15 km (9.3 mi) back, with the 8,000 animals of the baggage train. However, because the soldiers could operate independently of the train, the forwards legions were still ready for battle.[49]

The Romans' superior discipline and experience came in use and they quickly formed lines of battle. Their center and left wings were successful and chased the Atrebates across the river. To the tribes' advantage, this exposed the half-built camp, and they took it easily. To make matters worse for the Romans, the right wing was in serious trouble. It had been outflanked, its line of battle had become too tight to swing a sword, and multiple officers were dead. The situation was so critical Caesar took up his shield and joined the front line of the legion. His mere presence greatly increased morale, and he ordered his men to form a defensive square to open the ranks and protect them from all sides. What turned the tide of battle was Caesar's reinforcements, the X legion which returned from chasing the Atrebates, and the two straggler legions that finally arrived. The strong stand by the X legion and the timely arrival of reinforcements enabled Caesar to regroup, redeploy and eventually repulse the Nervii once the Atrebates and Viromandui were put to flight.[47]

Caesar's cockiness had nearly ended in defeat, but the legions' experience combined with his personal role in combat turned a disaster into an incredible victory. The Belgae were broken, and most of the Germanic tribes offered submission to Rome. The end of the campaigning season saw Caesar conquer tribes along the Atlantic coast, and deal with the Atuatuci, who were allies of the Nervii but had broken the terms of surrender. Caesar punished the Atuatuci by selling 53,000 of them into slavery. By law, the profits were Caesar's alone. He saw a minor setback towards winter as he sent one of his officers to the Great St Bernard Pass, where local tribes fought back fiercely; he abandoned the campaign. But overall, Caesar had seen monumental success in 57 BC. He had accumulated great wealth to pay off his debts and increased his stature to heroic levels. Upon his return, the senate granted him a 15-day thanksgiving (supplicatio), longer than any before. His political reputation was now formidable. Again, he returned to Transalpine Gaul for the winter to see to the civil affairs of the province. He wintered his troops in northern Gaul, where the tribes were forced to house and feed them.[47]

56 BC: Campaign against the Veneti

 
Denarius minted by Decimus Brutus in 48 BC, recalling his service in Gaul. The obverse features the head of Mars, and the reverse shows Gallic carnyces and shields.[50]

The Gauls were embittered at being forced to feed the Roman troops over the winter. The Romans sent out officers to requisition grain from the Veneti, a group of tribes in northwest Gaul, but the Veneti had other ideas and captured the officers. This was a calculated move: they knew this would anger Rome and prepared by allying with the tribes of Armorica, fortifying their hill settlements, and preparing a fleet. The Veneti and the other peoples along the Atlantic coast were versed in sailing and had vessels suitable for the rough waters of the Atlantic. By comparison, the Romans were hardly prepared for naval warfare on the open ocean. The Veneti also had sails, whereas the Romans relied on oarsmen. Rome was a feared naval power in the Mediterranean, but there the waters were calm, and less sturdy ships could be used. Regardless, the Romans understood that to defeat the Veneti they would need a fleet: many of the Venetic settlements were isolated and best accessible by sea.[51] Decimus Brutus was appointed prefect of the fleet.[52]

Caesar wished to sail as soon as the weather permitted and ordered new boats and recruited oarsmen from the already conquered regions of Gaul to ensure the fleet would be ready as soon as possible. The legions were dispatched by land, but not as a single unit. Gilliver regards this as evidence that Caesar's claims the prior year that Gaul was at peace were untrue, as the legions were apparently being dispatched to prevent or deal with rebellion. A cavalry force was sent to hold down the Germanic and Belgic tribes. Troops under Publius Crassus were sent to Aquitania, and Quintus Titurius Sabinus took forces to Normandy. Caesar led the remaining four legions overland to meet up with his recently raised fleet near the mouth of the river Loire.[51]

The Veneti held the upper hand for much of the campaign. Their ships were well-suited to the region, and when their hill forts were under siege, they could simply evacuate them by sea. The less sturdy Roman fleet was stuck in harbor for much of the campaign. Despite having the superior army and great siege equipment, the Romans were making little progress. Caesar realized that the campaign could not be won on land and halted the campaign until the seas calmed enough for the Roman vessels to be most useful.[51]

Battle of Morbihan

 
Battle of Morbihan (in French, Rome is in red, Veneti in green)

At last, the Roman fleet sailed, and encountered the Venetic fleet off the coast of Brittany in the Gulf of Morbihan. They engaged in a battle that lasted from late in the morning until sundown. On paper, the Veneti appeared to have the superior fleet. Their ships' sturdy oak beam construction meant they were effectively immune to ramming, and their high-profile protected their occupants from projectiles. The Veneti had some 220 ships, although Gilliver notes many were likely not much more than fishing boats. Caesar did not report the number of Roman ships. The Romans had one advantage—grappling hooks. These allowed them to shred the rigging and sails of the Venetic ships that got close enough rendering them inoperable. The hooks also allowed them to pull ships close enough to board. The Veneti realized the grappling hooks were an existential threat and retreated. However, the wind dropped, and the Roman fleet (which did not rely on sails) was able to catch up. The Romans could now use their superior soldiers to board ships en masse and overwhelm the Gauls at their leisure. Just as the Romans had beaten the superior forces of Carthage in the First Punic War by using the corvus boarding device, a simple technological advantage—the grappling hook—allowed them to defeat the superior Venetic fleet.[51][53][54]

The Veneti, now without a navy, had been bested. They surrendered, and Caesar made an example of the tribal elders by executing them. He sold the rest of the Veneti into slavery. Caesar now turned his attention to the Morini and Menapii along the coast.[51][53]

Caesar's subordinates and mopping up

 
Campaign map of 56 BC. Note Caesar's foray into the north of Gaul, Crassus' campaigns in the south, and the Battle of Morbihan off the west Atlantic coast.

During the Venetic campaign, Caesar's subordinates had been busy pacifying Normandy and Aquitania. A coalition of Lexovii, Coriosolites, and Venelli charged Sabinus while he was entrenched atop a hill. This was a poor tactical move by the tribes. By the time they had reached the top, they were exhausted, and Sabinus defeated them with ease. The tribes consequently surrendered, yielding up all of Normandy to the Romans. Crassus did not have such an easy time in facing the Aquitania. With only one legion and some cavalry, he was outnumbered. He raised additional forces from Provence and marched south to what is now the border of modern Spain and France. Along the way, he fought off the Sotiates, who attacked while the Romans were marching. Defeating the Vocates and Tarusates proved a tougher task. Having allied with the rebel Roman general Quintus Sertorius during his uprising in 70 BC, these tribes were well versed in Roman combat, and had learned guerilla tactics from the war. They avoided frontal battle and harassed supply lines and the marching Romans. Crassus realized he would have to force battle and located the Gallic encampment of some 50,000. However, they had only fortified the front of the camp, and Crassus simply circled it and attacked the rear. Taken by surprise, the Gauls attempted to flee. However, Crassus' cavalry pursued them. According to Crassus, only 12,000 survived the overwhelming Roman victory. The tribes surrendered, and Rome now controlled most of southwest Gaul.[51]

Caesar finished the campaign season by trying to take out the coastal tribes who had allied with the Veneti. However, they outmaneuvered the Romans. Due to superior knowledge of the local terrain, which was heavily forested and marshy, and a strategy of withdrawing there, they avoided battle with the Romans. Poor weather worsened the situation, and Caesar could do little more than raid the countryside. Realizing he would not meet the Gauls in battle, he withdrew for the winter. This was a setback for Caesar, as not pacifying the tribes would slow his campaigns the next year. The legions overwintered between the rivers Saône and Loire on the lands which they had conquered during the year. This was Caesar's punishment to the tribes for having fought against the Romans.[51] Non-military business for Caesar during the year included the politically pivotal Luca Conference in April, which gave him another 5 years as governor, allowing time to finish his conquest of Gaul. In exchange, Pompey and Crassus would share the consulship for 55 BC, which further cemented the First Triumvirate.[55][56]

55 BC: Crossing the Rhine and the English Channel

 
Caesar's Rhine Bridge, by John Soane (1814)

A need for prestige more than tactical concerns likely determined Caesar's campaigns in 55 BC, due to Pompey and Crassus' consulship. On the one hand, they were Caesar's political allies, and Crassus's son had fought under him the year before. But they were also his rivals, and had formidable reputations (Pompey was a great general, and Crassus was fabulously wealthy). Since the consuls could easily sway and buy public opinion, Caesar needed to stay in the public eye. His solution was to cross two water bodies no Roman army had attempted before: the Rhine and the English Channel. Crossing the Rhine was a consequence of Germanic/Celtic unrest. The Suebi had recently forced the Celtic Usipetes and Tencteri from their lands, who resultingly had crossed the Rhine in search of a new home. Caesar, however, had denied their earlier request to settle in Gaul, and the issue turned to war. The Celtic tribes sent out a cavalry force of 800 against a Roman auxiliary force of 5,000 made up of Gauls, and won a surprising victory. Caesar retaliated by attacking the defenseless Celtic camp, and slaughtering the men, women, and children. Caesar claims he killed 430,000 people in the camp. Modern historians find this number impossibly high (see historiography below), but it is apparent that Caesar killed a great many Celts.[57] So cruel were his actions, his enemies in the Senate wished to prosecute him for war crimes once his tenure as governor was up and he was no longer immune from prosecution.[58] After the massacre, Caesar led the first Roman army across the Rhine in a lightning campaign that lasted just 18 days.[57]

 
Campaign map of 55 BC. Note Caesar's crossing of the Rhine, with Germanic counter movements in orange. Aside from the crossing of the Channel, few other actions were carried out that year.

Historian Kate Gilliver considers all of Caesar's actions in 55 BC to be a "publicity stunt" and suggests that the basis for continuing the Celtic/Germanic campaign was a desire to gain prestige. This also explains the campaign's brief time span. Caesar wanted to impress the Romans and scare the Germanic tribesmen, and he did this by crossing the Rhine in style. Instead of using boats or pontoons as he had in earlier campaigns, he built a timber bridge in a mere ten days. He walked across, raided the Suebic countryside, and retreated across the bridge before the Suebic army could mobilize. He then burned the bridge and turned his attentions to another feat no Roman army had accomplished before—landing in Britain. The nominal reason to attack Britain was the Britonic tribes had been assisting the Gauls, but like most of Caesar's casus belli it was just an excuse to gain stature in the eyes of the Roman people.[57]

 
Illustration of the Romans landing in Britain, featuring the standard bearer of the X legion

Caesar's first trip into Britain was less an invasion than an expedition. He took only two legions; his cavalry auxiliaries were unable to make the crossing despite several attempts. Caesar crossed late in the season, and in great haste, leaving well after midnight on 23 August.[59][57] Initially, he planned to land somewhere in Kent, but the Britons were waiting for him. He moved up the coast and landed—modern archeological finds suggest at Pegwell Bay[60]—but the Britons had kept pace and fielded an impressive force, including cavalry and chariots. The legions were hesitant to go ashore. Eventually, the X legion's standard bearer jumped into the sea and waded to shore. To have the legion's standard fall in combat was the greatest humiliation, and the men disembarked to protect the standard bearer. After some delay, a battle line was finally formed, and the Britons withdrew. Because the Roman cavalry had not made the crossing, Caesar could not chase down the Britons. The Romans' luck did not improve, and a Roman foraging party was ambushed. The Britons took this as a sign of Roman weakness and amassed a large force to assault them. A short battle ensued, though Caesar provides no details beyond indicating the Romans prevailed. Again, the lack of cavalry to chase down the fleeing Britons prevented a decisive victory. The campaigning season was now nearly over, and the legions were in no condition to winter on the coast of Kent. Caesar withdrew back across the Channel.[57]

Gilliver notes that Caesar once again narrowly escaped disaster. Taking an understrength army with few provisions to a far-off land was a poor tactical decision, which easily could have led to Caesar's defeat – yet he survived. While he had achieved no significant gains in Britain, he had accomplished a monumental feat simply by landing there. It was a fabulous propaganda victory as well, which was chronicled in Caesar's ongoing Commentarii de Bello Gallico. The writings in the Commentarii fed Rome a steady update of Caesar's exploits (with his own personal spin on events). Caesar's goal of prestige and publicity succeeded enormously: upon his return to Rome, he was hailed as a hero and given an unprecedented 20-day thanksgiving. He now began planning for a proper invasion of Britain.[57]

54 BC: Invading Britain, unrest in Gaul

Caesar's approach towards Britain in 54 BC was far more comprehensive and successful than his initial expedition. New ships had been built over the winter, and Caesar now took five legions and 2,000 cavalry. He left the rest of his army in Gaul to keep order. Gilliver notes that Caesar took with him a good number of Gallic chiefs whom he considered untrustworthy so he could keep an eye on them, a further sign that he had not comprehensively conquered Gaul. A series of revolts there late in the year were proof of continued Gallic instability.[61]

Caesar landed without resistance and immediately went to find the Britonic army. The Britons used guerilla tactics to avoid a direct confrontation. This allowed them to gather a formidable army under Cassivellaunus, king of the Catuvellauni. The Britonic army had superior mobility due to its cavalry and chariots, which easily allowed them to evade and harass the Romans. The Britons attacked a foraging party, hoping to pick off the isolated group, but the party fought back fiercely and thoroughly defeated the Britons. They mostly gave up resistance at this point, and a great many tribes surrendered and offered tribute. The Romans assaulted Cassivellaunus' stronghold (likely modern day Wheathampstead), and he surrendered. Caesar extracted payment of grain, slaves, and an annual tribute to Rome. However, Britain was not particularly rich at the time; Marcus Cicero summed up Roman sentiment by saying, "It's also been established that there isn't a scrap of silver in the island and no hope of booty except for slaves – and I don't suppose you're expecting them to know much about literature or music!" Regardless, this second trip to Britain was a true invasion, and Caesar achieved his goals. He had beaten the Britons and extracted tribute; they were now effectively Roman subjects. Caesar was lenient towards the tribes as he needed to leave before the stormy season set in, which would make crossing the channel impossible.[61]

Revolts in Gaul

 
Campaign map of 54 BC. Tribes that revolted have flame icons near their name. Note the Gallic victory over Sabinus in northern Gaul, and Caesar's rush to relieve Cicero.

Things did not run so smoothly back on the continent during 54 BC. Harvests had failed in Gaul that year, but Caesar still wintered his legions there, and expected the Gauls to feed his troops. He did at least realize harvests had failed and spread his troops out so they would not overburden one tribe. But this isolated his legions, making them easier to attack. Gallic anger boiled over shortly after the legions made camp for the winter, and tribes rebelled.[61]

The Eburones, under the competent Ambiorix, had been forced to winter a legion and five cohorts under Quintus Titurius Sabinus and Lucius Aurunculeius Cotta. Ambiorix attacked the Roman camp and told Sabinus (falsely) that all of Gaul was revolting and that the Germanic tribes were also invading. He offered to give the Romans safe passage if they abandoned their camp and returned to Rome. In what Gilliver describes as an incredibly foolish move, Sabinus believed Ambiorix. As soon as Sabinus left the camp, his forces were ambushed in a steep valley. Sabinus had not chosen an appropriate formation for the terrain, and the green troops panicked. The Gauls won decisively, both Sabinus and Cotta were killed, and only a handful of Romans survived.[61]

The total defeat of Sabinus spread revolutionary fervor, and the Atuatuci, Nervii, and their allies also rebelled. They attacked the camp of Quintus Cicero, brother to Marcus Cicero – the famed orator and a key political player whom Caesar wished to keep as a loyal ally.[62][61] They also told Cicero the story that Ambiorix had related to Sabinus, but Cicero was not as gullible as Sabinus. He fortified the camp's defenses and attempted to get a messenger to Caesar. The Gauls began a fierce siege. Having previously captured a number of Roman troops as prisoners, they used the knowledge of the Romans' tactics to build siege towers and earthworks. They then assaulted the Romans nearly continuously for more than two weeks. Cicero's message finally reached Caesar, and he immediately took two legions and cavalry to relieve the siege. They went on a forced march through the lands of the Nervii, making some 20 miles (32 km) a day. Caesar defeated the 60,000 strong Gallic army and finally rescued Cicero's legion. The siege had led to the deaths of 90 percent of Cicero's men. Caesar's praise of Quintus Cicero's tenacity was unending.[61]

53 BC: Suppressing unrest

 
Denarius minted by L. Hostilius Saserna, 48 BC, showing the head of a captive Gaul, and a Britonic chariot on the reverse. Coin Expert Michael Crawford rejects the theory of several historians that the head on the obverse is that of Vercingetorix.[63]

The winter uprising of 54 BC had been a fiasco for the Romans. One legion had been lost entirely, and another almost destroyed. The revolts had shown the Romans were not truly in command of Gaul. Caesar set out on a campaign to subjugate the Gauls completely and forestall future resistance. Down to seven legions, he needed more men. Two more legions were recruited, and one was borrowed from Pompey. The Romans now had 40,000–50,000 men. Caesar began the brutal campaign early, before the weather had warmed. He focused on a non-traditional campaign, demoralizing populations and attacking civilians. He assaulted the Nervii and focused his energy on raiding, burning villages, stealing livestock, and taking prisoners. This strategy worked, and the Nervii promptly surrendered. The legions returned to their wintering spots until the campaign season started fully. Once the weather warmed, Caesar pulled a surprise attack on the Senones. Having had no time to prepare for a siege or even withdraw to their oppidum, the Senones also surrendered. Attention turned to the Menapii, where Caesar followed the same strategy of raiding he had used on the Nervii. It worked just as well on the Menapii, who surrendered quickly.[64]

 
Campaign map of 53 BC. Again, revolting tribes are shown with flame icons. Despite having been conquered the prior year, Britain is not shaded in red, as it was not a territorial acquisition: the Britons had only been made tributaries.

Caesar's legions had been split up to put down more tribes, and his lieutenant Titus Labienus had with him 25 cohorts (about 12,000 men) and a good deal of cavalry in the lands of the Treveri (led by Indutiomarus). The Germanic tribes had promised aid to the Treveri, and Labienus realized that his relatively small force would be at a serious disadvantage. Thus, he sought to bait the Treveri into an attack on his terms. He did so by feinting a withdrawal, and the Treveri took the bait. However, Labienus had made sure to feint up a hill, requiring the Treveri to run up it, so by the time they reached the top, they were exhausted. Labienus dropped the pretense of withdrawing and gave battle defeating the Treveri in minutes; the tribe surrendered shortly after. In the rest of Belgium, three legions raided the remaining tribes and forced widespread surrender, including the Eburones under Ambiorix.[64]

Caesar now sought to punish the Germanic tribes for daring to help the Gauls. He took his legions over the Rhine once more by building a bridge. But again, Caesar's supplies failed him, forcing him to withdraw to avoid engaging with the still mighty Suebi while short on supplies. Regardless, Caesar had exacted widespread surrender through a vicious retaliatory campaign that focused on destruction over battle. Northern Gaul was essentially flattened. At the end of the year, six legions were wintered, two each on the lands of the Senones, the Treveri, and the Lingones. Caesar aimed to prevent a repeat of the previous disastrous winter, but given the brutality of Caesar's actions that year, an uprising could not be stopped by garrisons alone.[64]

52 BC: Vercingetorix's revolt

 
Vercingétorix's Memorial in Alesia, where he made his last stand

Gallic existential concerns came to a head in 52 BC and caused the widespread revolt the Romans had long feared. The campaigns of 53 BC had been particularly harsh, and the Gauls feared for their prosperity. Previously, they had not been united, which had made them easy to conquer. But this changed in 53 BC, when Caesar announced that Gaul was now being treated as a Roman province, subject to Roman laws and religion. This was a subject of immense concern for the Gauls, who feared the Romans would destroy the Gallic holy land, which the Carnutes watched over. Each year the druids met there to mediate between the tribes on the lands considered the center of Gaul. A threat to their sacred lands was an issue that finally united the Gauls. Over the winter the charismatic king of the Arverni tribe, Vercingetorix, assembled an unprecedented grand coalition of Gauls.[65]

Caesar was still in Rome when news of the revolt reached him. He rushed to Gaul in an attempt to prevent the revolt from spreading, heading first to Provence to see to its defense, and then to Agedincum to counter the Gallic forces. Caesar took a winding route to the Gallic army to capture several oppida for food. Vercingetorix was forced to withdraw from his siege of the Boii capital of Gorgobina (the Boii had been allied to Rome since their defeat at Roman hands in 58 BC). However, it was still winter, and he realized the reason Caesar had detoured was that the Romans were low on supplies. Thus, Vercingetorix set out a strategy to starve the Romans. He avoided attacking them outright and raided foraging parties and supply trains instead. Vercingetorix abandoned a great many oppidum, seeking only to defend the strongest, and to ensure the others and their supplies could not fall into Roman hands. Once again, a lack of supplies forced Caesar's hand, and he sieged the oppidum of Avaricum where Vercingetorix had sought refuge.[65]

Originally, Vercingetorix had been opposed to defending Avaricum, but the Bituriges Cubi had persuaded him otherwise. The Gallic army was camped outside the settlement. Even while defending, Vercingetorix wished to abandon the siege and outrun the Romans. But the warriors of Avaricum were unwilling to leave it. Upon his arrival, Caesar promptly began construction of a defensive fortification. The Gauls continuously harassed the Romans and their foraging parties while they built their camp and attempted to burn it down. But not even the fierce winter weather could stop the Romans, and they built a very sturdy camp in just 25 days. The Romans built siege engines, and Caesar waited for an opportunity to attack the heavily fortified oppidum. He chose to attack during a rainstorm when the sentries were distracted. Siege towers were used to assault the fort, and ballista artillery battered the walls. Eventually, the artillery broke a hole in a wall, and the Gauls could not stop the Romans from taking the settlement. The Romans then looted and pillaged Avaricum; Caesar took no prisoners and claims the Romans slew 40,000. That the Gallic coalition did not fall apart after this defeat is a testament to the leadership of Vercingetorix. Even after losing Avaricum, the Aedui were willing to revolt and join the coalition. This was yet another setback to Caesar's supply lines, as he could no longer get supplies through the Aedui (though the taking of Avaricum had supplied the army for the moment).[65]

Vercingetorix now withdrew to Gergovia, the capital of his own tribe, which he was eager to defend. Caesar arrived as the weather warmed, and fodder finally became available, which somewhat eased supply issues. As usual, Caesar promptly set about building a fortification for the Romans. He captured territory closer to the oppidum. What happened in the ensuing Battle of Gergovia remains somewhat unclear. Caesar claims that he had just ordered his men to take a hill near the oppidum, and that he then sounded a retreat. But no such retreat occurred, and the Romans assaulted the settlement directly. Gilliver finds it probable that Caesar did not actually sound a retreat, and that it was his plan all along to take the settlement. Caesar's dubious claim was likely intended to distance himself from the ensuing and overwhelming Roman failure. Greatly outnumbered, the Roman assault ended in clear defeat. Caesar claims that 700 of his men died, including 46 centurions, although the actual numbers are likely much higher. Caesar withdrew from the siege, and Vercingetorix's victory attracted many more Gallic tribes to his cause. Despite their loss, the Romans still convinced numerous Germanic tribes to join them after the battle.[65]

 
Campaign map 52 BC. Most of south and central Gaul is in revolt. Note the Gallic victory at the battle of Gergovia, and Caesar's rush north from Rome.

Siege of Alesia, end of the revolt

 
Modern recreation of the Alesia fortifications, featuring rows of stakes in front of a moat, a high banked approach, and regular towers for Roman sentries

Vercingetorix chose to defend the Mandubii oppidum of Alesia next, in what would become the siege of Alesia. He assembled some 70,000–100,000 warriors.[1][66] After the poor performance at Gergovia, Caesar felt a direct assault on the Gauls was no longer a viable solution, so he opted to simply siege the settlement and starve out the defenders. Vercingetorix was fine with this, as he intended to use Alesia as a trap to lay a pincer attack on the Romans and sent a call for a relieving army at once. Vercingetorix likely did not expect the intensity of the Roman siege preparations. Although modern archeology suggests that Caesar's preparations were not as complete as he describes, it is apparent that he laid some incredible siege works. Over the span of a month, the Romans built some 25 miles (40 km) of fortifications. These included a trench for soldiers, an anti-cavalry moat, towers at regular intervals, and booby traps in front of the trenches. The fortifications were dug in two lines, one to protect from the defenders and one to protect from the relievers. Archeological evidence suggests the lines were not continuous as Caesar claims, and made much use of the local terrain, but it is apparent that they worked. Vercingetorix's relieving army arrived quickly, yet concerted coordinated attacks by both the defenders and relievers failed to oust the Romans.[65]

 
The fortifications built by Caesar in Alesia Inset: cross shows location of Alesia in Gaul (modern France). The circle shows the weakness in the north-western section of the fortifications

After multiple attacks, the Gauls realized they could not overcome the impressive Roman siege works. At this point, it became clear that the Romans would be able to outlast the defenders and that the revolt was doomed. The relieving army melted away. Vercingetorix surrendered and was held as a prisoner for the next six years until he was paraded through Rome and ceremonially garroted at the Tullianum in 46 BC.[65][67]

With the revolt crushed, Caesar set his legions to winter across the lands of the defeated tribes to prevent further rebellion. He sent troops to protect the Remi, who had been steadfast allies to the Romans throughout the campaign. But resistance was not entirely over: Caesar had not yet pacified southwest Gaul.[65]

51 and 50 BC: Pacification of the last Gauls

 
Campaign map of 51 BC. The last major revolts are put down, and mop-up operations occur in the southwest.

The spring of 51 BC saw the legions campaign among the Belgic tribes to snuff out any thoughts of an uprising, and the Romans achieved peace. But two chiefs in southwest Gaul, Drappes and Lucterius, remained openly hostile to the Romans and had fortified the formidable Cadurci oppidum of Uxellodunum. Gaius Caninius Rebilus surrounded the oppidum and set the siege of Uxellodunum, focusing on building a series of camps, a circumvallation, and disrupting Gallic access to water. A series of tunnels (of which archeological evidence has been found) were dug to the spring that fed the city. The Gauls attempted to burn down the Roman siege works, but to no avail. Eventually, the Roman tunnels reached the spring and diverted the water supply. Not realizing the Roman action, the Gauls believed the spring going dry was a sign from the Gods and surrendered. Caesar chose not to slaughter the defenders, and instead just cut off their hands as an example.[68]

The legions were again wintered in Gaul, but little unrest occurred. All of the tribes had surrendered to the Romans, and little campaigning took place in 50 BC.[68]

Caesar victorious

In the span of eight years, Caesar had conquered all of Gaul and part of Britain. He had become fabulously wealthy and achieved a legendary reputation. The Gallic Wars provided enough gravitas to Caesar that subsequently he was able to wage a civil war and declare himself dictator, in a series of events that would eventually lead to the end of the Roman Republic.[69]

 
Gaul in 50 BC: fully conquered.

The Gallic Wars lack a clear end date. Legions continued to be active in Gaul through 50 BC, when Aulus Hirtius took over the writing of Caesar's reports on the war. The campaigns might have continued into Germanic lands, if not for the impending Roman civil war. The legions in Gaul were eventually pulled out in 50 BC as the civil war drew near, for Caesar would need them to defeat his enemies in Rome. The Gauls had not been entirely subjugated and were not yet a formal part of the empire. But that task was not Caesar's, and he left that to his successors. Gaul would not be made formally into Roman provinces until the reign of Augustus in 27 BC. Several rebellions happened subsequently, and Roman troops were kept stationed throughout Gaul. Historian Gilliver thinks there could have been unrest in the region as late as 70 AD, but not to the level of Vercingetorix's revolt.[69]

The conquest of Gaul marked the beginning of almost five centuries of Roman rule, which would have profound cultural and historical impacts. Roman rule brought with it Latin, the language of the Romans. This would evolve into Old French, giving the modern French language its Latin roots.[70] Conquering Gaul enabled further expansion of the Empire into Northwestern Europe. Augustus would push into Germania and reach the Elbe, though settled on the Rhine as the imperial border following the disastrous Battle of the Teutoburg Forest.[71] In addition to facilitating the conquest of parts of Germania, the Roman conquest of Britain led in 43 AD by Claudius also built on Caesar's invasions.[72] The Roman hegemony would last, with only one interruption, until the Crossing of the Rhine in 406 AD.[73][74]

Historiography

Very few sources about the Gallic Wars survive. The Gauls did not record the history of their peoples and thus any Gallic perspective has been lost to time. The writings of Julius Caesar remain the main source of information, which complicates the task of historians as it is biased in his favor. Only a handful of other contemporary works refer to the conflict but none as in-depth as Caesar's, and most rely on Caesar's account. The fact that he conquered Gaul is certain. The details, however, are less clear.[75]

The Commentarii

 
Gold stater of Vercingetorix, 53–52 BC.[76]

The main contemporary source for the conflict is Julius Caesar's Commentarii de Bello Gallico, which was largely taken as truthful and accurate until the 20th century. As late as 1908, Camille Jullian wrote a comprehensive history of Gaul and took Caesar's account as unerring. But after World War II, historians began to question if Caesar's claims stood up.[8][77]

Historian David Henige takes issue with the supposed population and warrior counts. Caesar claims that he could estimate the population of the Helvetii because in their camp there was a census, written in Greek on tablets, which would have showed 263,000 Helvetii and 105,000 allies, of whom exactly one quarter (92,000) were combatants. But Henige points out that such a census would have been difficult to achieve by the Gauls, that it made no sense to be written in Greek by non-Greek tribes, and that carrying such a large quantity of stone or wood tablets on their migration would have been a monumental feat. Henige finds it oddly convenient that exactly one quarter were combatants, suggesting that the numbers were more likely exaggerated by Caesar than counted by census. Contemporary authors also estimated the population of the Helvetii and their allies was lower; Livy surmised that there were 157,000 overall (though Henige still believes this number is inaccurate).[8] Hans Delbrück estimates that there were at most 20,000 migrating Helvetii, of whom 12,000 were warriors.[27] Gilliver thinks there were no more than 50,000 Helvetii and allies.[26]

 
A page from an 1864 printing of the Commentarii, made by Parrish & Willingham, a Confederate publisher during the American Civil War

During the campaign against the Usipetes and the Tenceri, Caesar makes the incredible claim that the Romans attacked a camp of 430,000, their victory was total, they lost not a single soldier, and that upon losing the tribes committed mass suicide. Henige finds this entire story impossible, as did Ferdinand Lot, writing in 1947. Lot was one of the first modern authors who directly questioned the validity of these numbers, finding a fighting force of 430,000 to have been unbelievable for the time.[8] Gilliver also considers 430,000 to be absurd, but does note that it was likely the Romans killed tens of thousands, and finds the claim of zero Roman losses possible. Still, the action to annihilate a non-combatant camp was exceptionally brutal, even by Roman standards.[57] Ben Kiernan, while noting the 430,000 to be exaggerated, otherwise accepts Caesar's account and describes the action as genocide.[78]

Ultimately, modern scholars see the Commentarii as a very clever piece of propaganda written by Caesar, built to make Caesar appear far grander than he was. Henige notes that Caesar's matter-of-fact tone and easy-to-read writing made it all the easier to accept his outlandish claims. He sought to portray his fight as a justified defense against the barbarity of the Gauls (which was important, as Caesar had been the aggressor contrary to his claims). By making it appear that he had won against overwhelming odds and suffered minimal casualties, he further reinforced the belief that he and the Romans were protected by the gods and destined to win against the heathen barbarians of Gaul. Overall, Henige concludes that, "Julius Caesar must be considered one of history's earliest – and most durably successful – 'spin doctors'".[8] Gilliver also calls Caesar a "spin-doctor", noting that he realized the importance of keeping up appearances in Rome.[75]

Kurt Raaflaub argues, in contrast to Henige and Gilliver, that Caesar's campaign was not in fact exceptionally brutal compared to the standards of the day, even if it is considered ghoulish by modern standards. Raaflaub notes that Caesar generally tried to avoid battle where it was unnecessary, and tried to be more lenient than most generals of his time. Whether true or not, Caesar seems to go to great lengths to appear as having the moral high ground. This allows Caesar to compare himself favorably to the "barbarian" Gauls, and present himself, as Raaflaub puts it, as the "perfect Roman citizen". Raaflaub contends that Caesar's work is certainly full of propaganda, but that it has more truth to it than most authors believe. Above all, he argues that it shows how Caesar envisioned himself, and how he thought a leader ought to rule. Raaflaub notes that Caesar's subjugation of the Gauls would have been received favorably at home, and have been considered a just peace.[79][80]

In literature

Caesar's Commentarii de Bello Gallico, in Latin, is one of the best surviving examples of unadorned Latin prose. It has consequently been a subject of intense study for Latinists and is one of the classic prose sources traditionally used as a standard teaching text in modern Latin education.[81][82] It begins with the oft-quoted phrase "Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres", meaning "Gaul is a whole divided into three parts". The introduction is world-famed for its overview of Gaul.[83][84] The Gallic Wars have become a popular setting in modern historical fiction, especially that of France and Italy.[85] In addition, the comic Astérix is set shortly after the Gallic Wars, where the titular character's village is the last holdout in Gaul against Caesar's legions.[86]

Notes

  1. ^ The 58–50 BCE conflict is also named the "Second Transalpine War" to distinguish it from the First Transalpine War (125–121 BCE).[9]

References

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  60. ^ "In the Footsteps of Caesar: The archaeology of the first Roman invasions of Britain". University of Leicester. from the original on 30 November 2017. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
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  63. ^ Crawford 1974, pp. 463–464.
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Modern literature

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  • Henige, David (1998). "He came, he saw, we counted : the historiography and demography of Caesar's gallic numbers". Annales de Démographie Historique. 1998 (1): 215–242. doi:10.3406/adh.1998.2162. from the original on 11 November 2020.
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Ancient sources

  • Appian (23 March 2016). Delphi Complete Works of Appian (Illustrated). ISBN 978-1-78656-370-5. from the original on 25 November 2020.
  • Caesar, Julius (1982). The Conquest of Gaul. Translated by Handford, S. A. Revised by Jane F. Gardner. London: Penguin Classics. ISBN 978-0-14-044433-9. OCLC 21116188.

External links

  • GIS maps of the campaigns and battles at Dickinson College

gallic, wars, this, article, about, caesar, military, campaigns, julius, caesar, writings, commentarii, bello, gallico, earlier, romano, gallic, conflicts, roman, gallic, wars, were, waged, between, roman, general, julius, caesar, against, peoples, gaul, prese. This article is about Caesar s military campaigns of 58 to 50 BC For Julius Caesar s writings see Commentarii de Bello Gallico For the earlier Romano Gallic conflicts see Roman Gallic wars The Gallic Wars a were waged between 58 and 50 BC by the Roman general Julius Caesar against the peoples of Gaul present day France Belgium Germany and Switzerland Gallic Germanic and British tribes fought to defend their homelands against an aggressive Roman campaign The Wars culminated in the decisive Battle of Alesia in 52 BC in which a complete Roman victory resulted in the expansion of the Roman Republic over the whole of Gaul Though the Gallic military was as strong as the Romans the Gallic tribes internal divisions eased victory for Caesar Gallic chieftain Vercingetorix s attempt to unite the Gauls under a single banner came too late Caesar portrayed the invasion as being a preemptive and defensive action but historians agree that he fought the Wars primarily to boost his political career and to pay off his debts Still Gaul was of significant military importance to the Romans Native tribes in the region both Gallic and Germanic had attacked Rome several times Conquering Gaul allowed Rome to secure the natural border of the river Rhine Gallic WarsVercingetorix Throws Down His Arms at the Feet of Julius Caesar 1899 by Lionel Noel RoyerDate58 50 BCLocationGaul present day France Luxembourg Belgium Switzerland Britain 55 54 BC ResultRoman victoryTerritorialchangesGaul annexed by Roman Republic Local client kings and tributaries set up in BritainBelligerentsRoman RepublicGaulsGermaniBritonsAquitaniand others Commanders and leadersJulius CaesarTitus LabienusMark AntonyQuintus Tullius CiceroPublius Licinius CrassusDecimus Brutus AlbinusGaius TreboniusServius Sulpicius GalbaQuintus Titurius Sabinus Lucius Aurunculeius Cotta Vercingetorix POW AmbiorixIndutiomarus CommiusAriovistusCassivellaunusStrengthModern estimates 58 BC 6 legions understrength 24 30 000 troops including cavalry auxiliaries 1 57 BC 8 legions 32 40 000 troops 55 BC 2 legions 10 000 troops in Britain the rest left on the continent 54 BC 5 legions 25 000 troops amp 2 000 auxiliaries in Britain 53 BC 10 legions 40 50 000 troops 52 BC 11 legions amp 10 000 auxiliaries 2 3 60 75 000 troops total by the siege of AlesiaModern estimates 58 BC 20 000 50 000 of which 8 000 or more were civilians 52 BC 70 000 100 000 Gallic combatants at AlesiaCasualties and lossesCredibly estimated at 30 000 killed and 10 000 woundedPlutarch and Appian 1 000 000 Celts killed in battle 4 5 1 000 000 Celts captured or enslaved 5 800 towns destroyed 6 Julius Caesar 430 000 Germani killed 7 All contemporary numbers are considered not credible by Henige 8 The Wars began with conflict over the migration of the Helvetii in 58 BC which drew in neighboring tribes and the Germanic Suebi By 57 BC Caesar had resolved to conquer all of Gaul He led campaigns in the east where the Nervii almost defeated him In 56 BC Caesar defeated the Veneti in a naval battle and took most of northwest Gaul In 55 BC Caesar sought to boost his public image He undertook first of their kind expeditions across the Rhine and the English Channel Rome hailed Caesar as a hero upon his return from Britain though he had achieved little beyond landing because his army had been too small The next year he returned with a proper army and conquered much of Britain Tribes rose up on the continent and the Romans suffered a humiliating defeat 53 BC saw a brutal pacification campaign This failed and Vercingetorix led a revolt in 52 BC Gallic forces won a notable victory at the Battle of Gergovia but the Romans indomitable siege works at the Battle of Alesia crushed the Gallic coalition In 51 BC and 50 BC there was little resistance and Caesar s troops were mostly mopping up Gaul was conquered although it would not become a Roman province until 27 BC and resistance would continue until as late as 70 AD There is no clear end date for the war but the imminent Roman Civil War led to the withdrawal of Caesar s troops in 50 BC Caesar s wild successes in the war had made him wealthy and provided a legendary reputation The Gallic Wars were a key factor in Caesar s ability to win the Civil War and make himself dictator which culminated in the end of the Roman Republic and the establishment of the Roman Empire Julius Caesar described the Gallic Wars in his book Commentarii de Bello Gallico It is the primary source for the conflict but modern historians consider it prone to exaggeration Caesar makes impossible claims about the number of Gauls killed over a million while claiming almost zero Roman casualties Modern historians believe that Gallic forces were far smaller than the Romans claimed and that the Romans suffered significant casualties Historian David Henige regards the entire account as clever propaganda meant to boost Caesar s image and suggests it is of minimal historical accuracy Regardless of the accuracy of the Commentarii the campaign was still exceptionally brutal Untold numbers of Gauls were killed enslaved or mutilated including large numbers of civilians Contents 1 Background 1 1 Sociopolitical 1 2 Military 1 3 Julius Caesar 2 Beginning of the Wars campaign against the Helvetii 2 1 Battle of Bibracte 2 2 Campaign against the Suebi 3 57 BC Campaigns in the east 3 1 Nervii ambush the battle of the Sabis 4 56 BC Campaign against the Veneti 4 1 Battle of Morbihan 4 2 Caesar s subordinates and mopping up 5 55 BC Crossing the Rhine and the English Channel 6 54 BC Invading Britain unrest in Gaul 6 1 Revolts in Gaul 7 53 BC Suppressing unrest 8 52 BC Vercingetorix s revolt 8 1 Siege of Alesia end of the revolt 9 51 and 50 BC Pacification of the last Gauls 9 1 Caesar victorious 10 Historiography 10 1 The Commentarii 11 In literature 12 Notes 13 References 14 Bibliography 14 1 Modern literature 14 2 Ancient sources 15 External linksBackground EditSociopolitical Edit The tribes of Gaul were civilized and wealthy Most had contact with Roman merchants and some such as the Aedui who were governed by republics had enjoyed stable political alliances with Rome in the past During the first century parts of Gaul were becoming urbanized which concentrated wealth and population centers inadvertently making Roman conquest easier Though the Romans considered the Gauls to be barbarians their cities mirrored those of the Mediterranean They struck coins and traded extensively with Rome providing iron grain and many slaves In exchange the Gauls accumulated much wealth and developed a taste for Roman wine The contemporary writer Diodoros explains that part of the conception of Gallic barbarity was because they drank their wine straight unlike the supposedly civilized Romans who watered down their wine first However the Romans realized the Gauls were a powerful fighting force and considered some of the most barbaric tribes to be the fiercest warriors as they were uncorrupted by Roman luxuries 10 Military Edit A modern re enactor in 2012 wearing the gear that a VII legion standard bearer would have during the Gallic Wars era A modern re enactor in 2018 with the typical panoply of a wealthier Gallic warrior The Gauls and the Romans had significantly different military strategies The Roman army was a professional army armed and outfitted by the state extremely disciplined and kept standing between conflicts However the professional army consisted mostly of heavy infantry any auxiliary units were fielded from the less disciplined Roman allies which as the war progressed would include some Gauls By comparison the Gauls were an irregular and less disciplined fighting force Individual Gauls outfitted themselves thus while wealthy Gauls were well equipped and rivalled the Roman soldiers the average Gallic warrior was poorly equipped compared to a Roman This was not an inherent disadvantage unlike the Romans the Gauls were a warrior culture They prized acts of bravery and individual courage frequent raiding of neighboring tribes kept their fighting skills sharp Compared to the Romans the Gauls carried longer swords and had far superior cavalry The Gauls were generally taller than the Romans a fact that seems to have embarrassed the Romans and this combined with their longer swords gave them a reach advantage in combat Both sides used archers and slingers Little is known about Gallic battle strategy and the effectiveness of Gallic slingers and archers is unknown What is known indicates that battle strategy varied between tribes although engagement in pitched battle was frequent to prove bravery Not all tribes engaged the Romans directly as Rome was a formidable enemy The Gauls frequently used attrition warfare against them While the Gauls had much more flair in combat such as fighting in intricately decorated armor or even in the nude the superior discipline and formation of the Romans combined with uniformly excellent equipment generally gave them an advantage in hand to hand fighting 11 The Wars cemented the Roman use of the cohort which had been established by the Marian reforms passed by Gaius Marius uncle and father figure to Julius Caesar That the cohort tactic was kept was likely due to Caesar and his relationship with Marius A cohort replaced the previous military unit the maniple typically a quarter the size of a cohort which had proved too small and ineffective The cohort was an effective counterbalance to Gallic and Germanic tactics The system diversified the ranks by combining men from different socio economic ranks unlike in the maniple system rich and poor fought alongside each other in a single uniform unit greatly increasing overall morale by removing resentment 12 A cohort held 480 men Ten cohorts combined with a small cavalry unit engineers and officers made a legion of around 5 000 men 12 13 The Marian reforms had also changed the practices of the army s baggage train though they would prove insufficient at times during the Wars Each legionary was required to carry a substantial amount of his own gear including weapons and rations enough to operate independently of the baggage train for a few days This cut down the size of the baggage train greatly and allowed for a legion to temporarily march well ahead of its baggage Still a legion usually had around a thousand beasts of burden to carry the tents siege equipment reserve food entrenching tools records personal effects and all other items a large army needed While on march the average legion with train stretched out for about 2 5 mi 4 0 km Such a large number of animals also required a great deal of grazing or fodder this limited campaigning to times when there was grass or adequate supplies The logistical challenges of the baggage train forced the Romans hand many times during the wars 14 The Romans respected and feared the Gallic tribes In 390 BC the Gauls had sacked Rome which left an existential dread of barbarian conquest the Romans never forgot In 121 BC Rome conquered a group of southern Gauls and established the province of Transalpine Gaul in the conquered lands 15 Only 50 years before the Gallic Wars in 109 BC Italy had been invaded from the north and saved by Gaius Marius only after several bloody and costly battles Around 63 BC when a Roman client state the Gallic Arverni conspired with the Gallic Sequani and the Germanic Suebi nations east of the Rhine to attack the Gallic Aedui a strong Roman ally Rome turned a blind eye The Sequani and the Arverni defeated the Aedui in 63 BC at the Battle of Magetobriga 16 17 18 Julius Caesar Edit The Tusculum portrait of Julius Caesar Rising politician and general Julius Caesar was the Roman commander and agonist of the war As a result of the financial burdens of being consul the highest office in the Roman Republic in 59 BC Caesar had incurred significant debts To strengthen Rome s position among the Gauls he had paid substantial money to Ariovistus king of the Suebi to cement an alliance 19 20 Through his influence as part of the First Triumvirate the political alliance which comprised Marcus Licinius Crassus Pompey and himself during his consulship Caesar had secured his assignment as proconsul governor to two provinces Cisalpine Gaul and Illyricum by passage of the Lex Vatinia 19 When the governor of Transalpine Gaul Metellus Celer died unexpectedly the province was also awarded to Caesar at the suggestion of Pompey and Caesar s father in law Lucius Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus In the law granting him command of the provinces Caesar was given a five year term as proconsul 21 This was longer than the traditional one year term that consuls received enabling him to engage in a military campaign without fear of command turnover 22 23 Caesar had four veteran legions under his direct command initially Legio VII Legio VIII Legio IX Hispana and Legio X As he had been governor of Hispania Ulterior in 61 BC and had campaigned successfully with them against the Lusitanians Caesar knew most perhaps even all of the legions personally He also had the legal authority to levy additional legions and auxiliary units as he saw fit The assignment of the province that comprises what is now Northern Italy was helpful to his ambitions the Po Valley and the adjoining regions had large numbers of Roman citizens who could be enticed to sign up for legionary service 21 His ambition was to conquer and plunder some territories to get himself out of debt It is possible that Gaul was not his initial target he may have been planning a campaign against the Kingdom of Dacia in the Balkans instead 24 However a mass migration of Gallic tribes in 58 BC provided a convenient casus belli and Caesar prepared for war 20 Beginning of the Wars campaign against the Helvetii Edit Multi year overview of the Gallic Wars The general routes taken by Caesar s army are indicated by the arrows The Helvetii were a confederation of about five related Gallic tribes that lived on the Swiss plateau hemmed in by the mountains and the rivers Rhine and Rhone They had come under increased pressure from Germanic tribes to the north and the east and began planning for a migration around 61 BC They intended to travel across Gaul to the west coast of northern Italy a route that would have taken them around the Alps and through lands of the Aedui a Roman ally into the Roman province of Transalpine Gaul As word of the migration spread neighboring tribes grew concerned and Rome sent ambassadors to several tribes to convince them not to join the Helvetii Concern grew in Rome that the Germanic tribes would fill in the lands vacated by the Helvetii The Romans much preferred the Gauls to the Germanic tribes as neighbors One of the consuls of 60 Metellus and one of 59 BC Caesar both wanted to lead a campaign against the Gauls though neither had a casus belli at the time 25 On 28 March in 58 BC the Helvetii began their migration bringing along all their peoples and livestock They burned their villages and stores to ensure the migration could not be reversed Upon reaching Transalpine Gaul where Caesar was governor they asked permission to cross the Roman lands Caesar entertained the request but ultimately denied it The Gauls turned north instead entirely avoiding Roman lands The threat to Rome was seemingly over but Caesar led his army over the border and attacked the Helvetii unprovoked So began what historian Kate Gilliver describes as an aggressive war of expansion led by a general who was seeking to advance his career 25 Caesar s consideration of the Gallic request to enter Rome was not indecision but a play for time He was in Rome when news of the migration arrived and he rushed to Transalpine Gaul raising two legions and some auxiliaries along the way He delivered his refusal to the Gauls and then promptly returned to Italy to gather the legions he had raised on his previous trip and three veteran legions Caesar now had between 24 000 and 30 000 legionary troops and some quantity of auxiliaries many of whom were themselves Gauls He marched north to the river Saone where he caught the Helvetii in the middle of crossing Some three quarters had crossed he slaughtered those who had not Caesar then crossed the river in one day using a pontoon bridge He followed the Helvetii but chose not to engage in combat waiting for ideal conditions The Gauls attempted to negotiate but Caesar s terms were draconian likely on purpose as he may have used it as another delaying tactic Caesar s supplies ran thin on 20 June forcing him to travel towards allied territory in Bibracte While his army had easily crossed the Saone his supply train still had not The Helvetii could now outmaneuver the Romans and had time to pick up Boii and Tulingi allies They used this moment to attack Caesar s rearguard 26 Battle of Bibracte Edit In the ensuing Battle of Bibracte the Gauls and Romans fought for the better part of the day After a hotly contested battle the Romans eventually gained victory Caesar had set up his legions on the slope of a hill which put the Gauls at a disadvantage as they had to fight uphill The Helvetii started the battle with a probable feint which the Romans easily repulsed However the Boii and Tulingi then outmaneuvered the Romans and attacked their right flank At this point the Romans were surrounded A heated battle ensued The men in the legion s last line were ordered to turn their backs around They now fought on two fronts instead of just being attacked in the rear which Gilliver describes as a brilliant tactical decision Eventually the Helvetii were routed and fled The Romans chased the now outnumbered Boii and Tulingi back to their encampments killing the fighters as well as slaying the women and children 26 Caesar s army rested for three days to tend to the wounded They then gave chase to the Helvetii who surrendered Caesar ordered them back on their lands to provide a buffer between Rome and the even more feared Germanic tribes 26 In the captured Helvetian camp Caesar claims that a census written in Greek was found and studied of a total of 368 000 Helvetii of whom 92 000 were able bodied men only 110 000 survivors remained to return home Historians believe the total was likely between 20 000 50 000 with the excess exaggerated by Caesar for propaganda purposes 27 26 See historiography section below for a detailed accounting Bibracte then the commercial hub of the Gallic Aedui tribe would again play a crucial role during the Gallic uprising of 52 BC Vercingetorix himself met with other Gallic leaders there to plot the rebellion against Caesar and the Romans After Vercingetorix s revolt failed Bibracte was slowly abandoned for other more prosperous settlements nearby 28 Campaign against the Suebi Edit Main article Battle of Vosges 58 BC The campaigns of 58 BC In Italian Note the Roman territory in yellow does not yet include modern day France the Low Countries or Germany Caesar s expeditions are a red line with battles noted Celtic cities are in green Germanic cities in orange Caesar then turned his attention to the Germanic Suebi whom he also wished to conquer The Senate had declared Ariovistus king of the Suebi a friend and ally of the Roman people in 59 BC so Caesar needed a convincing casus belli to betray the Suebi 29 30 He found his excuse following victory over the Helvetii A group of Gallic tribes congratulated him and sought to meet in a general assembly hoping to leverage the Romans against other Gauls 31 Diviciacus the head of the Aeduan government and spokesmen for the Gallic delegation expressed concern over Ariovistus conquests and for the hostages he had taken 32 33 Not only did Caesar have a responsibility to protect the longstanding allegiance of the Aedui but this proposition presented an opportunity to expand Rome s borders strengthen loyalty within Caesar s army and establish him as the commander of Rome s troops abroad 33 With the attack of the Harudes an apparent Suebi ally on the Aedui and the report that a hundred clans of Suebi were trying to cross the Rhine into Gaul Caesar had the justification he needed to wage war against Ariovistus in 58 BC 34 35 Learning that Ariovistus intended to seize Vesontio the largest Sequani town Caesar marched towards it and arrived before Ariovistus 36 Ariovistus sent emissaries to Caesar requesting a meeting They met under a truce at a knoll outside of town The truce was violated when Germanic horsemen edged towards the knoll and threw stones at Caesar s mounted escort 37 Two days later Ariovistus requested another meeting Hesitant to send senior officials Caesar dispatched Valerius Procillus his trusted friend and Caius Mettius a merchant who had traded successfully with Ariovistus Insulted Ariovistus threw the envoys in chains 38 39 Ariovistus marched for two days and made camp two miles 3 2 km miles behind Caesar thus cutting off his communication and supply lines with the allied tribes Unable to entice Ariovistus into battle Caesar ordered a second smaller camp built near Ariovistus position 40 The next morning Caesar assembled his allied troops in front of the second camp and advanced his legions in towards Ariovistus Each of Caesar s five legates and his quaestor were given command of a legion Caesar lined up on the right flank 41 Ariovistus countered by lining up his seven tribal formations Caesar was victorious in the ensuing battle due in large part to the charge made by Publius Crassus son of Marcus Crassus As the Germanic tribesmen began to drive back the Roman left flank Crassus led his cavalry in a charge to restore balance and ordered up the cohorts of the third line As a result the whole Germanic line broke and began to flee 42 43 Caesar claims that most of Ariovistus one hundred and twenty thousand men were killed He and what remained of his troops escaped and crossed the Rhine never to engage Rome in battle again The Suebi camping near the Rhine returned home Caesar was victorious 44 45 In one year he had defeated two of Rome s most feared enemies After this busy campaigning season he returned to Transalpine Gaul to deal with the non military aspects of his governorship At this point it is possible he had already decided he would conquer all of Gaul 46 57 BC Campaigns in the east EditCaesar s stunning victories in 58 BC had unsettled the Gallic tribes Many rightly predicted Caesar would seek to conquer all of Gaul and some sought alliance with Rome As the campaigning season of 57 BC dawned both sides were busy recruiting new soldiers Caesar set off with two more legions than the year before with 32 000 to 40 000 men along with a contingent of auxiliaries The exact number of men the Gauls raised is unknown but Caesar claims he would fight 200 000 47 Intervening again in an intra Gallic conflict Caesar marched against the Belgae tribal confederation who inhabited the area roughly bounded by modern day Belgium They had recently attacked a tribe allied with Rome and before marching with his army to meet them Caesar ordered the Remi and other neighboring Gauls to investigate the Belgae s actions 48 The Belgae and the Romans encountered each other near Bibrax The Belgae attempted to take the fortified oppidum main settlement from the Remi but were unsuccessful and chose instead to raid the nearby countryside Each side tried to avoid battle as both were short on supplies a continuing theme for Caesar who gambled and left his baggage train behind several times Caesar ordered fortifications built which the Belgae understood would give them a disadvantage Instead of making battle the Belgic army simply disbanded as it could be re assembled easily 47 Caesar realized an opportunity was presenting itself if he could beat the men from the army home he could take their lands with ease His armies travel speed proved to be a crucial aspect of his ensuing victories He rushed to the Belgic Suessiones oppidum at what is now Villeneuve Saint Germain and laid siege to it The Belgic army nullified Caesar s advantage by sneaking back into the city under cover of darkness The Roman siege preparations proved to be the decisive factor grand Roman style siege warfare was unknown to the Gauls and the might of the Romans preparations drove the Gauls to surrender promptly This had a ripple effect the nearby Bellovaci and Ambiones surrendered immediately afterward realizing the Romans had defeated a powerful army without any combat Not all the tribes were so cowed though The Nervii allied with the Atrebates and Viromandui and planned to ambush the Romans The ensuing battle of the Sabis was nearly a humiliating defeat for Caesar and the Roman victory was very hard won 47 Nervii ambush the battle of the Sabis Edit Campaign map of 57 BC Territory conquered the previous year is shaded red The Nervii set up an ambush along the river Sambre lying in wait for the Romans who arrived and started setting up camp The Romans detected the Nervii and the battle began with the Romans sending a light cavalry and infantry force across the river to keep the Nervii at bay while the main force fortified its camp The Nervii easily repulsed the attack In an uncharacteristic move for Caesar he made a serious tactical error by not setting up an infantry screen to protect the entrenching force The Nervii took ample advantage of this and their entire force crossed the river quickly and caught the Romans off guard and unprepared As the battle began two legions had not even arrived whereas the Nervii had at least 60 000 fighters 47 The reserve legions were stuck at the end of the column 15 km 9 3 mi back with the 8 000 animals of the baggage train However because the soldiers could operate independently of the train the forwards legions were still ready for battle 49 The Romans superior discipline and experience came in use and they quickly formed lines of battle Their center and left wings were successful and chased the Atrebates across the river To the tribes advantage this exposed the half built camp and they took it easily To make matters worse for the Romans the right wing was in serious trouble It had been outflanked its line of battle had become too tight to swing a sword and multiple officers were dead The situation was so critical Caesar took up his shield and joined the front line of the legion His mere presence greatly increased morale and he ordered his men to form a defensive square to open the ranks and protect them from all sides What turned the tide of battle was Caesar s reinforcements the X legion which returned from chasing the Atrebates and the two straggler legions that finally arrived The strong stand by the X legion and the timely arrival of reinforcements enabled Caesar to regroup redeploy and eventually repulse the Nervii once the Atrebates and Viromandui were put to flight 47 Caesar s cockiness had nearly ended in defeat but the legions experience combined with his personal role in combat turned a disaster into an incredible victory The Belgae were broken and most of the Germanic tribes offered submission to Rome The end of the campaigning season saw Caesar conquer tribes along the Atlantic coast and deal with the Atuatuci who were allies of the Nervii but had broken the terms of surrender Caesar punished the Atuatuci by selling 53 000 of them into slavery By law the profits were Caesar s alone He saw a minor setback towards winter as he sent one of his officers to the Great St Bernard Pass where local tribes fought back fiercely he abandoned the campaign But overall Caesar had seen monumental success in 57 BC He had accumulated great wealth to pay off his debts and increased his stature to heroic levels Upon his return the senate granted him a 15 day thanksgiving supplicatio longer than any before His political reputation was now formidable Again he returned to Transalpine Gaul for the winter to see to the civil affairs of the province He wintered his troops in northern Gaul where the tribes were forced to house and feed them 47 56 BC Campaign against the Veneti Edit Denarius minted by Decimus Brutus in 48 BC recalling his service in Gaul The obverse features the head of Mars and the reverse shows Gallic carnyces and shields 50 The Gauls were embittered at being forced to feed the Roman troops over the winter The Romans sent out officers to requisition grain from the Veneti a group of tribes in northwest Gaul but the Veneti had other ideas and captured the officers This was a calculated move they knew this would anger Rome and prepared by allying with the tribes of Armorica fortifying their hill settlements and preparing a fleet The Veneti and the other peoples along the Atlantic coast were versed in sailing and had vessels suitable for the rough waters of the Atlantic By comparison the Romans were hardly prepared for naval warfare on the open ocean The Veneti also had sails whereas the Romans relied on oarsmen Rome was a feared naval power in the Mediterranean but there the waters were calm and less sturdy ships could be used Regardless the Romans understood that to defeat the Veneti they would need a fleet many of the Venetic settlements were isolated and best accessible by sea 51 Decimus Brutus was appointed prefect of the fleet 52 Caesar wished to sail as soon as the weather permitted and ordered new boats and recruited oarsmen from the already conquered regions of Gaul to ensure the fleet would be ready as soon as possible The legions were dispatched by land but not as a single unit Gilliver regards this as evidence that Caesar s claims the prior year that Gaul was at peace were untrue as the legions were apparently being dispatched to prevent or deal with rebellion A cavalry force was sent to hold down the Germanic and Belgic tribes Troops under Publius Crassus were sent to Aquitania and Quintus Titurius Sabinus took forces to Normandy Caesar led the remaining four legions overland to meet up with his recently raised fleet near the mouth of the river Loire 51 The Veneti held the upper hand for much of the campaign Their ships were well suited to the region and when their hill forts were under siege they could simply evacuate them by sea The less sturdy Roman fleet was stuck in harbor for much of the campaign Despite having the superior army and great siege equipment the Romans were making little progress Caesar realized that the campaign could not be won on land and halted the campaign until the seas calmed enough for the Roman vessels to be most useful 51 Battle of Morbihan Edit Battle of Morbihan in French Rome is in red Veneti in green At last the Roman fleet sailed and encountered the Venetic fleet off the coast of Brittany in the Gulf of Morbihan They engaged in a battle that lasted from late in the morning until sundown On paper the Veneti appeared to have the superior fleet Their ships sturdy oak beam construction meant they were effectively immune to ramming and their high profile protected their occupants from projectiles The Veneti had some 220 ships although Gilliver notes many were likely not much more than fishing boats Caesar did not report the number of Roman ships The Romans had one advantage grappling hooks These allowed them to shred the rigging and sails of the Venetic ships that got close enough rendering them inoperable The hooks also allowed them to pull ships close enough to board The Veneti realized the grappling hooks were an existential threat and retreated However the wind dropped and the Roman fleet which did not rely on sails was able to catch up The Romans could now use their superior soldiers to board ships en masse and overwhelm the Gauls at their leisure Just as the Romans had beaten the superior forces of Carthage in the First Punic War by using the corvus boarding device a simple technological advantage the grappling hook allowed them to defeat the superior Venetic fleet 51 53 54 The Veneti now without a navy had been bested They surrendered and Caesar made an example of the tribal elders by executing them He sold the rest of the Veneti into slavery Caesar now turned his attention to the Morini and Menapii along the coast 51 53 Caesar s subordinates and mopping up Edit Campaign map of 56 BC Note Caesar s foray into the north of Gaul Crassus campaigns in the south and the Battle of Morbihan off the west Atlantic coast During the Venetic campaign Caesar s subordinates had been busy pacifying Normandy and Aquitania A coalition of Lexovii Coriosolites and Venelli charged Sabinus while he was entrenched atop a hill This was a poor tactical move by the tribes By the time they had reached the top they were exhausted and Sabinus defeated them with ease The tribes consequently surrendered yielding up all of Normandy to the Romans Crassus did not have such an easy time in facing the Aquitania With only one legion and some cavalry he was outnumbered He raised additional forces from Provence and marched south to what is now the border of modern Spain and France Along the way he fought off the Sotiates who attacked while the Romans were marching Defeating the Vocates and Tarusates proved a tougher task Having allied with the rebel Roman general Quintus Sertorius during his uprising in 70 BC these tribes were well versed in Roman combat and had learned guerilla tactics from the war They avoided frontal battle and harassed supply lines and the marching Romans Crassus realized he would have to force battle and located the Gallic encampment of some 50 000 However they had only fortified the front of the camp and Crassus simply circled it and attacked the rear Taken by surprise the Gauls attempted to flee However Crassus cavalry pursued them According to Crassus only 12 000 survived the overwhelming Roman victory The tribes surrendered and Rome now controlled most of southwest Gaul 51 Caesar finished the campaign season by trying to take out the coastal tribes who had allied with the Veneti However they outmaneuvered the Romans Due to superior knowledge of the local terrain which was heavily forested and marshy and a strategy of withdrawing there they avoided battle with the Romans Poor weather worsened the situation and Caesar could do little more than raid the countryside Realizing he would not meet the Gauls in battle he withdrew for the winter This was a setback for Caesar as not pacifying the tribes would slow his campaigns the next year The legions overwintered between the rivers Saone and Loire on the lands which they had conquered during the year This was Caesar s punishment to the tribes for having fought against the Romans 51 Non military business for Caesar during the year included the politically pivotal Luca Conference in April which gave him another 5 years as governor allowing time to finish his conquest of Gaul In exchange Pompey and Crassus would share the consulship for 55 BC which further cemented the First Triumvirate 55 56 55 BC Crossing the Rhine and the English Channel EditSee also Caesar s invasions of Britain and Caesar s Rhine bridges Caesar s Rhine Bridge by John Soane 1814 A need for prestige more than tactical concerns likely determined Caesar s campaigns in 55 BC due to Pompey and Crassus consulship On the one hand they were Caesar s political allies and Crassus s son had fought under him the year before But they were also his rivals and had formidable reputations Pompey was a great general and Crassus was fabulously wealthy Since the consuls could easily sway and buy public opinion Caesar needed to stay in the public eye His solution was to cross two water bodies no Roman army had attempted before the Rhine and the English Channel Crossing the Rhine was a consequence of Germanic Celtic unrest The Suebi had recently forced the Celtic Usipetes and Tencteri from their lands who resultingly had crossed the Rhine in search of a new home Caesar however had denied their earlier request to settle in Gaul and the issue turned to war The Celtic tribes sent out a cavalry force of 800 against a Roman auxiliary force of 5 000 made up of Gauls and won a surprising victory Caesar retaliated by attacking the defenseless Celtic camp and slaughtering the men women and children Caesar claims he killed 430 000 people in the camp Modern historians find this number impossibly high see historiography below but it is apparent that Caesar killed a great many Celts 57 So cruel were his actions his enemies in the Senate wished to prosecute him for war crimes once his tenure as governor was up and he was no longer immune from prosecution 58 After the massacre Caesar led the first Roman army across the Rhine in a lightning campaign that lasted just 18 days 57 Campaign map of 55 BC Note Caesar s crossing of the Rhine with Germanic counter movements in orange Aside from the crossing of the Channel few other actions were carried out that year Historian Kate Gilliver considers all of Caesar s actions in 55 BC to be a publicity stunt and suggests that the basis for continuing the Celtic Germanic campaign was a desire to gain prestige This also explains the campaign s brief time span Caesar wanted to impress the Romans and scare the Germanic tribesmen and he did this by crossing the Rhine in style Instead of using boats or pontoons as he had in earlier campaigns he built a timber bridge in a mere ten days He walked across raided the Suebic countryside and retreated across the bridge before the Suebic army could mobilize He then burned the bridge and turned his attentions to another feat no Roman army had accomplished before landing in Britain The nominal reason to attack Britain was the Britonic tribes had been assisting the Gauls but like most of Caesar s casus belli it was just an excuse to gain stature in the eyes of the Roman people 57 Illustration of the Romans landing in Britain featuring the standard bearer of the X legion Caesar s first trip into Britain was less an invasion than an expedition He took only two legions his cavalry auxiliaries were unable to make the crossing despite several attempts Caesar crossed late in the season and in great haste leaving well after midnight on 23 August 59 57 Initially he planned to land somewhere in Kent but the Britons were waiting for him He moved up the coast and landed modern archeological finds suggest at Pegwell Bay 60 but the Britons had kept pace and fielded an impressive force including cavalry and chariots The legions were hesitant to go ashore Eventually the X legion s standard bearer jumped into the sea and waded to shore To have the legion s standard fall in combat was the greatest humiliation and the men disembarked to protect the standard bearer After some delay a battle line was finally formed and the Britons withdrew Because the Roman cavalry had not made the crossing Caesar could not chase down the Britons The Romans luck did not improve and a Roman foraging party was ambushed The Britons took this as a sign of Roman weakness and amassed a large force to assault them A short battle ensued though Caesar provides no details beyond indicating the Romans prevailed Again the lack of cavalry to chase down the fleeing Britons prevented a decisive victory The campaigning season was now nearly over and the legions were in no condition to winter on the coast of Kent Caesar withdrew back across the Channel 57 Gilliver notes that Caesar once again narrowly escaped disaster Taking an understrength army with few provisions to a far off land was a poor tactical decision which easily could have led to Caesar s defeat yet he survived While he had achieved no significant gains in Britain he had accomplished a monumental feat simply by landing there It was a fabulous propaganda victory as well which was chronicled in Caesar s ongoing Commentarii de Bello Gallico The writings in the Commentarii fed Rome a steady update of Caesar s exploits with his own personal spin on events Caesar s goal of prestige and publicity succeeded enormously upon his return to Rome he was hailed as a hero and given an unprecedented 20 day thanksgiving He now began planning for a proper invasion of Britain 57 54 BC Invading Britain unrest in Gaul EditCaesar s approach towards Britain in 54 BC was far more comprehensive and successful than his initial expedition New ships had been built over the winter and Caesar now took five legions and 2 000 cavalry He left the rest of his army in Gaul to keep order Gilliver notes that Caesar took with him a good number of Gallic chiefs whom he considered untrustworthy so he could keep an eye on them a further sign that he had not comprehensively conquered Gaul A series of revolts there late in the year were proof of continued Gallic instability 61 Caesar landed without resistance and immediately went to find the Britonic army The Britons used guerilla tactics to avoid a direct confrontation This allowed them to gather a formidable army under Cassivellaunus king of the Catuvellauni The Britonic army had superior mobility due to its cavalry and chariots which easily allowed them to evade and harass the Romans The Britons attacked a foraging party hoping to pick off the isolated group but the party fought back fiercely and thoroughly defeated the Britons They mostly gave up resistance at this point and a great many tribes surrendered and offered tribute The Romans assaulted Cassivellaunus stronghold likely modern day Wheathampstead and he surrendered Caesar extracted payment of grain slaves and an annual tribute to Rome However Britain was not particularly rich at the time Marcus Cicero summed up Roman sentiment by saying It s also been established that there isn t a scrap of silver in the island and no hope of booty except for slaves and I don t suppose you re expecting them to know much about literature or music Regardless this second trip to Britain was a true invasion and Caesar achieved his goals He had beaten the Britons and extracted tribute they were now effectively Roman subjects Caesar was lenient towards the tribes as he needed to leave before the stormy season set in which would make crossing the channel impossible 61 Revolts in Gaul Edit See also Ambiorix s revolt Campaign map of 54 BC Tribes that revolted have flame icons near their name Note the Gallic victory over Sabinus in northern Gaul and Caesar s rush to relieve Cicero Things did not run so smoothly back on the continent during 54 BC Harvests had failed in Gaul that year but Caesar still wintered his legions there and expected the Gauls to feed his troops He did at least realize harvests had failed and spread his troops out so they would not overburden one tribe But this isolated his legions making them easier to attack Gallic anger boiled over shortly after the legions made camp for the winter and tribes rebelled 61 The Eburones under the competent Ambiorix had been forced to winter a legion and five cohorts under Quintus Titurius Sabinus and Lucius Aurunculeius Cotta Ambiorix attacked the Roman camp and told Sabinus falsely that all of Gaul was revolting and that the Germanic tribes were also invading He offered to give the Romans safe passage if they abandoned their camp and returned to Rome In what Gilliver describes as an incredibly foolish move Sabinus believed Ambiorix As soon as Sabinus left the camp his forces were ambushed in a steep valley Sabinus had not chosen an appropriate formation for the terrain and the green troops panicked The Gauls won decisively both Sabinus and Cotta were killed and only a handful of Romans survived 61 The total defeat of Sabinus spread revolutionary fervor and the Atuatuci Nervii and their allies also rebelled They attacked the camp of Quintus Cicero brother to Marcus Cicero the famed orator and a key political player whom Caesar wished to keep as a loyal ally 62 61 They also told Cicero the story that Ambiorix had related to Sabinus but Cicero was not as gullible as Sabinus He fortified the camp s defenses and attempted to get a messenger to Caesar The Gauls began a fierce siege Having previously captured a number of Roman troops as prisoners they used the knowledge of the Romans tactics to build siege towers and earthworks They then assaulted the Romans nearly continuously for more than two weeks Cicero s message finally reached Caesar and he immediately took two legions and cavalry to relieve the siege They went on a forced march through the lands of the Nervii making some 20 miles 32 km a day Caesar defeated the 60 000 strong Gallic army and finally rescued Cicero s legion The siege had led to the deaths of 90 percent of Cicero s men Caesar s praise of Quintus Cicero s tenacity was unending 61 53 BC Suppressing unrest Edit Denarius minted by L Hostilius Saserna 48 BC showing the head of a captive Gaul and a Britonic chariot on the reverse Coin Expert Michael Crawford rejects the theory of several historians that the head on the obverse is that of Vercingetorix 63 The winter uprising of 54 BC had been a fiasco for the Romans One legion had been lost entirely and another almost destroyed The revolts had shown the Romans were not truly in command of Gaul Caesar set out on a campaign to subjugate the Gauls completely and forestall future resistance Down to seven legions he needed more men Two more legions were recruited and one was borrowed from Pompey The Romans now had 40 000 50 000 men Caesar began the brutal campaign early before the weather had warmed He focused on a non traditional campaign demoralizing populations and attacking civilians He assaulted the Nervii and focused his energy on raiding burning villages stealing livestock and taking prisoners This strategy worked and the Nervii promptly surrendered The legions returned to their wintering spots until the campaign season started fully Once the weather warmed Caesar pulled a surprise attack on the Senones Having had no time to prepare for a siege or even withdraw to their oppidum the Senones also surrendered Attention turned to the Menapii where Caesar followed the same strategy of raiding he had used on the Nervii It worked just as well on the Menapii who surrendered quickly 64 Campaign map of 53 BC Again revolting tribes are shown with flame icons Despite having been conquered the prior year Britain is not shaded in red as it was not a territorial acquisition the Britons had only been made tributaries Caesar s legions had been split up to put down more tribes and his lieutenant Titus Labienus had with him 25 cohorts about 12 000 men and a good deal of cavalry in the lands of the Treveri led by Indutiomarus The Germanic tribes had promised aid to the Treveri and Labienus realized that his relatively small force would be at a serious disadvantage Thus he sought to bait the Treveri into an attack on his terms He did so by feinting a withdrawal and the Treveri took the bait However Labienus had made sure to feint up a hill requiring the Treveri to run up it so by the time they reached the top they were exhausted Labienus dropped the pretense of withdrawing and gave battle defeating the Treveri in minutes the tribe surrendered shortly after In the rest of Belgium three legions raided the remaining tribes and forced widespread surrender including the Eburones under Ambiorix 64 Caesar now sought to punish the Germanic tribes for daring to help the Gauls He took his legions over the Rhine once more by building a bridge But again Caesar s supplies failed him forcing him to withdraw to avoid engaging with the still mighty Suebi while short on supplies Regardless Caesar had exacted widespread surrender through a vicious retaliatory campaign that focused on destruction over battle Northern Gaul was essentially flattened At the end of the year six legions were wintered two each on the lands of the Senones the Treveri and the Lingones Caesar aimed to prevent a repeat of the previous disastrous winter but given the brutality of Caesar s actions that year an uprising could not be stopped by garrisons alone 64 52 BC Vercingetorix s revolt Edit Vercingetorix s Memorial in Alesia where he made his last stand Gallic existential concerns came to a head in 52 BC and caused the widespread revolt the Romans had long feared The campaigns of 53 BC had been particularly harsh and the Gauls feared for their prosperity Previously they had not been united which had made them easy to conquer But this changed in 53 BC when Caesar announced that Gaul was now being treated as a Roman province subject to Roman laws and religion This was a subject of immense concern for the Gauls who feared the Romans would destroy the Gallic holy land which the Carnutes watched over Each year the druids met there to mediate between the tribes on the lands considered the center of Gaul A threat to their sacred lands was an issue that finally united the Gauls Over the winter the charismatic king of the Arverni tribe Vercingetorix assembled an unprecedented grand coalition of Gauls 65 Caesar was still in Rome when news of the revolt reached him He rushed to Gaul in an attempt to prevent the revolt from spreading heading first to Provence to see to its defense and then to Agedincum to counter the Gallic forces Caesar took a winding route to the Gallic army to capture several oppida for food Vercingetorix was forced to withdraw from his siege of the Boii capital of Gorgobina the Boii had been allied to Rome since their defeat at Roman hands in 58 BC However it was still winter and he realized the reason Caesar had detoured was that the Romans were low on supplies Thus Vercingetorix set out a strategy to starve the Romans He avoided attacking them outright and raided foraging parties and supply trains instead Vercingetorix abandoned a great many oppidum seeking only to defend the strongest and to ensure the others and their supplies could not fall into Roman hands Once again a lack of supplies forced Caesar s hand and he sieged the oppidum of Avaricum where Vercingetorix had sought refuge 65 Originally Vercingetorix had been opposed to defending Avaricum but the Bituriges Cubi had persuaded him otherwise The Gallic army was camped outside the settlement Even while defending Vercingetorix wished to abandon the siege and outrun the Romans But the warriors of Avaricum were unwilling to leave it Upon his arrival Caesar promptly began construction of a defensive fortification The Gauls continuously harassed the Romans and their foraging parties while they built their camp and attempted to burn it down But not even the fierce winter weather could stop the Romans and they built a very sturdy camp in just 25 days The Romans built siege engines and Caesar waited for an opportunity to attack the heavily fortified oppidum He chose to attack during a rainstorm when the sentries were distracted Siege towers were used to assault the fort and ballista artillery battered the walls Eventually the artillery broke a hole in a wall and the Gauls could not stop the Romans from taking the settlement The Romans then looted and pillaged Avaricum Caesar took no prisoners and claims the Romans slew 40 000 That the Gallic coalition did not fall apart after this defeat is a testament to the leadership of Vercingetorix Even after losing Avaricum the Aedui were willing to revolt and join the coalition This was yet another setback to Caesar s supply lines as he could no longer get supplies through the Aedui though the taking of Avaricum had supplied the army for the moment 65 Vercingetorix now withdrew to Gergovia the capital of his own tribe which he was eager to defend Caesar arrived as the weather warmed and fodder finally became available which somewhat eased supply issues As usual Caesar promptly set about building a fortification for the Romans He captured territory closer to the oppidum What happened in the ensuing Battle of Gergovia remains somewhat unclear Caesar claims that he had just ordered his men to take a hill near the oppidum and that he then sounded a retreat But no such retreat occurred and the Romans assaulted the settlement directly Gilliver finds it probable that Caesar did not actually sound a retreat and that it was his plan all along to take the settlement Caesar s dubious claim was likely intended to distance himself from the ensuing and overwhelming Roman failure Greatly outnumbered the Roman assault ended in clear defeat Caesar claims that 700 of his men died including 46 centurions although the actual numbers are likely much higher Caesar withdrew from the siege and Vercingetorix s victory attracted many more Gallic tribes to his cause Despite their loss the Romans still convinced numerous Germanic tribes to join them after the battle 65 Campaign map 52 BC Most of south and central Gaul is in revolt Note the Gallic victory at the battle of Gergovia and Caesar s rush north from Rome Siege of Alesia end of the revolt Edit Modern recreation of the Alesia fortifications featuring rows of stakes in front of a moat a high banked approach and regular towers for Roman sentriesVercingetorix chose to defend the Mandubii oppidum of Alesia next in what would become the siege of Alesia He assembled some 70 000 100 000 warriors 1 66 After the poor performance at Gergovia Caesar felt a direct assault on the Gauls was no longer a viable solution so he opted to simply siege the settlement and starve out the defenders Vercingetorix was fine with this as he intended to use Alesia as a trap to lay a pincer attack on the Romans and sent a call for a relieving army at once Vercingetorix likely did not expect the intensity of the Roman siege preparations Although modern archeology suggests that Caesar s preparations were not as complete as he describes it is apparent that he laid some incredible siege works Over the span of a month the Romans built some 25 miles 40 km of fortifications These included a trench for soldiers an anti cavalry moat towers at regular intervals and booby traps in front of the trenches The fortifications were dug in two lines one to protect from the defenders and one to protect from the relievers Archeological evidence suggests the lines were not continuous as Caesar claims and made much use of the local terrain but it is apparent that they worked Vercingetorix s relieving army arrived quickly yet concerted coordinated attacks by both the defenders and relievers failed to oust the Romans 65 The fortifications built by Caesar in Alesia Inset cross shows location of Alesia in Gaul modern France The circle shows the weakness in the north western section of the fortificationsAfter multiple attacks the Gauls realized they could not overcome the impressive Roman siege works At this point it became clear that the Romans would be able to outlast the defenders and that the revolt was doomed The relieving army melted away Vercingetorix surrendered and was held as a prisoner for the next six years until he was paraded through Rome and ceremonially garroted at the Tullianum in 46 BC 65 67 With the revolt crushed Caesar set his legions to winter across the lands of the defeated tribes to prevent further rebellion He sent troops to protect the Remi who had been steadfast allies to the Romans throughout the campaign But resistance was not entirely over Caesar had not yet pacified southwest Gaul 65 51 and 50 BC Pacification of the last Gauls Edit Campaign map of 51 BC The last major revolts are put down and mop up operations occur in the southwest The spring of 51 BC saw the legions campaign among the Belgic tribes to snuff out any thoughts of an uprising and the Romans achieved peace But two chiefs in southwest Gaul Drappes and Lucterius remained openly hostile to the Romans and had fortified the formidable Cadurci oppidum of Uxellodunum Gaius Caninius Rebilus surrounded the oppidum and set the siege of Uxellodunum focusing on building a series of camps a circumvallation and disrupting Gallic access to water A series of tunnels of which archeological evidence has been found were dug to the spring that fed the city The Gauls attempted to burn down the Roman siege works but to no avail Eventually the Roman tunnels reached the spring and diverted the water supply Not realizing the Roman action the Gauls believed the spring going dry was a sign from the Gods and surrendered Caesar chose not to slaughter the defenders and instead just cut off their hands as an example 68 The legions were again wintered in Gaul but little unrest occurred All of the tribes had surrendered to the Romans and little campaigning took place in 50 BC 68 Caesar victorious Edit In the span of eight years Caesar had conquered all of Gaul and part of Britain He had become fabulously wealthy and achieved a legendary reputation The Gallic Wars provided enough gravitas to Caesar that subsequently he was able to wage a civil war and declare himself dictator in a series of events that would eventually lead to the end of the Roman Republic 69 Gaul in 50 BC fully conquered The Gallic Wars lack a clear end date Legions continued to be active in Gaul through 50 BC when Aulus Hirtius took over the writing of Caesar s reports on the war The campaigns might have continued into Germanic lands if not for the impending Roman civil war The legions in Gaul were eventually pulled out in 50 BC as the civil war drew near for Caesar would need them to defeat his enemies in Rome The Gauls had not been entirely subjugated and were not yet a formal part of the empire But that task was not Caesar s and he left that to his successors Gaul would not be made formally into Roman provinces until the reign of Augustus in 27 BC Several rebellions happened subsequently and Roman troops were kept stationed throughout Gaul Historian Gilliver thinks there could have been unrest in the region as late as 70 AD but not to the level of Vercingetorix s revolt 69 The conquest of Gaul marked the beginning of almost five centuries of Roman rule which would have profound cultural and historical impacts Roman rule brought with it Latin the language of the Romans This would evolve into Old French giving the modern French language its Latin roots 70 Conquering Gaul enabled further expansion of the Empire into Northwestern Europe Augustus would push into Germania and reach the Elbe though settled on the Rhine as the imperial border following the disastrous Battle of the Teutoburg Forest 71 In addition to facilitating the conquest of parts of Germania the Roman conquest of Britain led in 43 AD by Claudius also built on Caesar s invasions 72 The Roman hegemony would last with only one interruption until the Crossing of the Rhine in 406 AD 73 74 Historiography EditVery few sources about the Gallic Wars survive The Gauls did not record the history of their peoples and thus any Gallic perspective has been lost to time The writings of Julius Caesar remain the main source of information which complicates the task of historians as it is biased in his favor Only a handful of other contemporary works refer to the conflict but none as in depth as Caesar s and most rely on Caesar s account The fact that he conquered Gaul is certain The details however are less clear 75 The Commentarii Edit Gold stater of Vercingetorix 53 52 BC 76 The main contemporary source for the conflict is Julius Caesar s Commentarii de Bello Gallico which was largely taken as truthful and accurate until the 20th century As late as 1908 Camille Jullian wrote a comprehensive history of Gaul and took Caesar s account as unerring But after World War II historians began to question if Caesar s claims stood up 8 77 Historian David Henige takes issue with the supposed population and warrior counts Caesar claims that he could estimate the population of the Helvetii because in their camp there was a census written in Greek on tablets which would have showed 263 000 Helvetii and 105 000 allies of whom exactly one quarter 92 000 were combatants But Henige points out that such a census would have been difficult to achieve by the Gauls that it made no sense to be written in Greek by non Greek tribes and that carrying such a large quantity of stone or wood tablets on their migration would have been a monumental feat Henige finds it oddly convenient that exactly one quarter were combatants suggesting that the numbers were more likely exaggerated by Caesar than counted by census Contemporary authors also estimated the population of the Helvetii and their allies was lower Livy surmised that there were 157 000 overall though Henige still believes this number is inaccurate 8 Hans Delbruck estimates that there were at most 20 000 migrating Helvetii of whom 12 000 were warriors 27 Gilliver thinks there were no more than 50 000 Helvetii and allies 26 A page from an 1864 printing of the Commentarii made by Parrish amp Willingham a Confederate publisher during the American Civil War During the campaign against the Usipetes and the Tenceri Caesar makes the incredible claim that the Romans attacked a camp of 430 000 their victory was total they lost not a single soldier and that upon losing the tribes committed mass suicide Henige finds this entire story impossible as did Ferdinand Lot writing in 1947 Lot was one of the first modern authors who directly questioned the validity of these numbers finding a fighting force of 430 000 to have been unbelievable for the time 8 Gilliver also considers 430 000 to be absurd but does note that it was likely the Romans killed tens of thousands and finds the claim of zero Roman losses possible Still the action to annihilate a non combatant camp was exceptionally brutal even by Roman standards 57 Ben Kiernan while noting the 430 000 to be exaggerated otherwise accepts Caesar s account and describes the action as genocide 78 Ultimately modern scholars see the Commentarii as a very clever piece of propaganda written by Caesar built to make Caesar appear far grander than he was Henige notes that Caesar s matter of fact tone and easy to read writing made it all the easier to accept his outlandish claims He sought to portray his fight as a justified defense against the barbarity of the Gauls which was important as Caesar had been the aggressor contrary to his claims By making it appear that he had won against overwhelming odds and suffered minimal casualties he further reinforced the belief that he and the Romans were protected by the gods and destined to win against the heathen barbarians of Gaul Overall Henige concludes that Julius Caesar must be considered one of history s earliest and most durably successful spin doctors 8 Gilliver also calls Caesar a spin doctor noting that he realized the importance of keeping up appearances in Rome 75 Kurt Raaflaub argues in contrast to Henige and Gilliver that Caesar s campaign was not in fact exceptionally brutal compared to the standards of the day even if it is considered ghoulish by modern standards Raaflaub notes that Caesar generally tried to avoid battle where it was unnecessary and tried to be more lenient than most generals of his time Whether true or not Caesar seems to go to great lengths to appear as having the moral high ground This allows Caesar to compare himself favorably to the barbarian Gauls and present himself as Raaflaub puts it as the perfect Roman citizen Raaflaub contends that Caesar s work is certainly full of propaganda but that it has more truth to it than most authors believe Above all he argues that it shows how Caesar envisioned himself and how he thought a leader ought to rule Raaflaub notes that Caesar s subjugation of the Gauls would have been received favorably at home and have been considered a just peace 79 80 In literature EditCaesar s Commentarii de Bello Gallico in Latin is one of the best surviving examples of unadorned Latin prose It has consequently been a subject of intense study for Latinists and is one of the classic prose sources traditionally used as a standard teaching text in modern Latin education 81 82 It begins with the oft quoted phrase Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres meaning Gaul is a whole divided into three parts The introduction is world famed for its overview of Gaul 83 84 The Gallic Wars have become a popular setting in modern historical fiction especially that of France and Italy 85 In addition the comic Asterix is set shortly after the Gallic Wars where the titular character s village is the last holdout in Gaul against Caesar s legions 86 Notes Edit The 58 50 BCE conflict is also named the Second Transalpine War to distinguish it from the First Transalpine War 125 121 BCE 9 References Edit a b Delbruck 1990 p 46 Dodge 1997 pp 276 295 Keppie 1998 p 97 Appian 2016 a b Fields 2010 McCarty 2008 Caesar 1982 p 15 a b c d e Henige 1998 Webster Jane 1996 Ethnographic barbarity colonial discourse and Celtic warrior societies In Cooper Nick ed Roman Imperialism Post Colonial Perspectives PDF School of Archaeological Studies University of Leicester pp 117 118 Retrieved 5 April 2023 Gilliver 2003 pp 7 13 15 Gilliver 2003 pp 18 29 a b Matthew 2009 p 35 37 Goldsworthy 2016 Matthew 2009 p 39 49 Gilliver 2003 p 11 Grant 1974 p 87 Walter 1952 p 159 Goldsworthy 2007 p 246 a b von Ungern Sternberg 2014 p 91 a b Gilliver 2003 pp 16 17 a b Chrissanthos 2019 p 73 Province ancient Roman government Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2 September 2021 Lord 2012a pp 23 24 Caesar 1982 p 7 16 a b Gilliver 2003 pp 30 32 a b c d e Gilliver 2003 pp 33 35 a b Delbruck 1990 pp 475 Caesar 1982 pp 25 29 Gilliver 2003 pp 33 36 Goldsworthy 2007 p 247 Walter 1952 p 158 Walter 1952 pp 158 161 a b Goldsworthy 2007 p 271 Walter 1952 pp 163 165 Goldsworthy 2007 p 272 Goldsworthy 2007 pp 274 275 Walter 1952 pp 173 176 Walter 1952 p 177 Goldsworthy 2007 p 277 Goldsworthy 2007 pp 277 278 Goldsworthy 2007 pp 279 280 Fuller 1965 p 109 Goldsworthy 2007 pp 280 281 Grant 1974 p 89 Goldsworthy 2007 p 281 Gilliver 2003 p 36 a b c d e f Gilliver 2003 pp 36 40 Ezov 1996 p 66 Matthew 2009 p 43 Crawford 1974 pp 466 a b c d e f g Gilliver 2003 pp 40 43 Broughton 1951 p 213 a b Hammond 1996 pp 60 61 Veneti Celtic people Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 1 August 2020 Beard Mary 2017 The conference at Lucca 56 BC Mary Beard A don s life TLS Retrieved 13 May 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Seager Robin Trans Plutarch 1996 Plutarch on the Lucca Conference Livius www livius org Retrieved 13 May 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d e f g Gilliver 2003 pp 43 49 Gilliver 2003 pp 46 Olson D W Doescher R L Beicker K N Gregory A F August 2008 Moon and tides at Caesar s invasion of Britain in 55 B C Sky and Telescope 116 2 18 23 In the Footsteps of Caesar The archaeology of the first Roman invasions of Britain University of Leicester Archived from the original on 30 November 2017 Retrieved 30 November 2017 a b c d e f Gilliver 2003 pp 49 50 Luibheid 1970 pp 88 94 Crawford 1974 pp 463 464 a b c Gilliver 2003 pp 50 51 a b c d e f g Gilliver 2003 pp 51 60 Revolt in Gaul Siege of Alesia UNRV Roman History Archived from the original on 17 October 2017 Fields 2014 a b Gilliver 2003 pp 60 65 a b Gilliver 2003 pp 83 88 Morcos Hannah The French language before 1200 British Library Retrieved 29 August 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Battle of the Teutoburg Forest Summary Facts amp Significance Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 29 August 2021 Roman Conquest of Britain Caesar s Expedition to Hadrian s Wall The Great Courses Daily 7 May 2020 Retrieved 29 August 2021 Heather 2009 pp 3 29 Time Life 1988 pp 38 a b Gilliver 2003 p 7 Delestree 2004 Grillo amp Krebs 2018 p 7 Kiernan Ben 2007 Blood and soil a world history of genocide and extermination from Sparta to Darfur New Haven Yale University Press p 59 ISBN 978 0 300 10098 3 OCLC 79860405 Grillo amp Krebs 2018 pp 20 27 Raaflaub Kurt 2021 Caesar and Genocide Confronting the Dark Side of Caesar s Gallic Wars New England Classical Journal 48 1 54 80 doi 10 52284 NECJ 48 1 article raaflaub S2CID 236550544 Herzfeld 1960 pp 214 Albrecht 1994 pp 332 334 Adema 2017 Caesar 1982 p 1 Snider John C 2003 Book Review The Druid King by Norman Spinrad SciFiDimensions Archived from the original on 19 January 2012 Cendrowicz 2009 Bibliography Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gallic War Modern literature Edit Adema Suzanne June 2017 Speech and Thought in Latin War Narratives BRILL doi 10 1163 9789004347120 ISBN 978 90 04 34712 0 Albrecht Michael von 1994 Geschichte der romischen Literatur Band 1 History of Roman Literature Volume 1 Second ed ISBN 342330099X Broughton Thomas Robert Shannon 1951 The Magistrates of the Roman Republic Volume II 99 B C 31 B C New York American Philogical Association ISBN 9780891308126 Cendrowicz Leo 19 November 2009 Asterix at 50 The Comic Hero Conquers the World Time Archived from the original on 8 September 2014 Retrieved 7 September 2014 Chrissanthos Stefan 2019 Julius and Caesar Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 1 4214 2969 4 OCLC 1057781585 Crawford Michael H 1974 Roman Republican coinage London Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 07492 4 OCLC 1288923 Dodge Theodore Ayrault 1997 Caesar New York Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 80787 9 Delbruck Hans 1990 History of the art of war Lincoln University of Nebraska Press p 475 ISBN 978 0 8032 6584 4 OCLC 20561250 Archived from the original on 25 November 2020 Delestree Louis Pol 2004 Nouvel atlas des monnaies gauloises Saint Germain en Laye Commios ISBN 2 9518364 0 6 OCLC 57682619 Ezov Amiram 1996 The Missing Dimension of C Julius Caesar Historia Franz Steiner Verlag 45 1 64 94 JSTOR 4436407 Fuller J F C 1965 Julius Caesar Man Soldier and Tyrant London Hachette Books ISBN 978 0 306 80422 9 Fields Nic June 2014 Aftermath Alesia 52 BC The final struggle for Gaul Campaign Osprey Publishing Fields Nic 2010 Warlords of Republican Rome Caesar versus Pompey Philadelphia PA Casemate ISBN 978 1 935149 06 4 OCLC 298185011 Gilliver Catherine 2003 Caesar s Gallic wars 58 50 BC New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 49484 4 OCLC 57577646 Goldsworthy Adrian 2007 Caesar Life of a Colossus London Orion Books ISBN 978 0 300 12689 1 Goldsworthy Adrian Keith 2016 In the name of Rome the men who won the Roman Empire New Haven ISBN 978 0 300 22183 1 OCLC 936322646 Grant Michael 1974 1969 Julius Caesar London Weidenfeld and Nicolson Grillo Luca Krebs Christopher B eds 2018 The Cambridge Companion to the Writings of Julius Caesar Cambridge United Kingdom ISBN 978 1 107 02341 3 OCLC 1010620484 Heather Peter 2009 Why Did the Barbarian Cross the Rhine Journal of Late Antiquity Johns Hopkins University Press 2 1 3 29 doi 10 1353 jla 0 0036 S2CID 162494914 Retrieved 2 September 2020 Henige David 1998 He came he saw we counted the historiography and demography of Caesar s gallic numbers Annales de Demographie Historique 1998 1 215 242 doi 10 3406 adh 1998 2162 Archived from the original on 11 November 2020 Herzfeld Hans 1960 Geschichte in Gestalten Ceasar Stuttgart Steinkopf ISBN 3 7984 0301 5 OCLC 3275022 Keppie Lawrende 1998 The Making of the Roman Army University of Oklahoma p 97 ISBN 978 0 415 15150 4 Lord Carnes 2012a Proconsuls Delegated Political Military Leadership from Rome to America Today Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 25469 4 Luibheid Colm April 1970 The Luca Conference Classical Philology 65 2 88 94 doi 10 1086 365589 ISSN 0009 837X S2CID 162232759 Matthew Christopher Anthony 2009 On the Wings of Eagles The Reforms of Gaius Marius and the Creation of Rome s First Professional Soldiers Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 1813 1 McCarty Nick 15 January 2008 Rome The Greatest Empire of the Ancient World Carlton Books ISBN 978 1 4042 1366 1 von Ungern Sternberg Jurgen 2014 The Crisis of the Republic In Flower Harriet ed The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Republic 2 ed Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CCOL0521807948 ISBN 978 1 139 00033 8 The Roman Decline Empires Besieged Amsterdam Time Life Books Inc 1988 p 38 ISBN 0705409740 Walter Gerard 1952 Caesar A Biography Translated by Craufurd Emma New York Charles Scribner s Sons OCLC 657705 Ancient sources Edit Appian 23 March 2016 Delphi Complete Works of Appian Illustrated ISBN 978 1 78656 370 5 Archived from the original on 25 November 2020 Caesar Julius 1982 The Conquest of Gaul Translated by Handford S A Revised by Jane F Gardner London Penguin Classics ISBN 978 0 14 044433 9 OCLC 21116188 De Bello Gallico and Other Commentaries at Project Gutenberg Hammond Carolyn ed 1996 Caesar The Gallic War Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 283120 0 External links EditGIS maps of the campaigns and battles at Dickinson College Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gallic Wars amp oldid 1153894892, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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