fbpx
Wikipedia

Battle of Gergovia

The Battle of Gergovia took place in 52 BC in Gaul at Gergovia, the chief oppidum (fortified town) of the Arverni. The battle was fought between a Roman Republican army, led by proconsul Julius Caesar, and Gallic forces led by Vercingetorix, who was also the Arverni chieftain. The Romans attempted to besiege Gergovia, but miscommunication ruined the Roman plan. The Gallic cavalry counterattacked the confused Romans and sent them to flight, winning the battle.

Battle of Gergovia
Part of the Gallic Wars

Ancient Gergovia was located on the plateau in the background. The main battlefield was the area in the image's center right
Date52 BC
Location
Gergovia, Gaul
(in modern Auvergne, France)
Result Gallic victory
Belligerents
Roman Republic Gallic tribes
Commanders and leaders
Gaius Julius Caesar Vercingetorix
Units involved
  • 6 Roman legions (Legio V, VI, VIII, X, XI, XIII)[1]
  • Auxiliary cavalry
  • Auxiliary light infantry (skirmishers, archers, slingers, javelineers)
  • Army of Vercingetorix
  • Militia of Gergovia
  • Strength

    Total: 20,000–45,000 Romans, auxiliaries and allies


    • 15,000–30,000 Roman legionaries[a]
    • 5,000-15,000 auxiliary (largely Aedui)
    30,000 Gauls, mostly Arverni
    Casualties and losses
    According to Julius Caesar: 46 centurions and 700 legionaries
    Modern estimates: Several thousand Roman and Aedui killed
    Unknown
    class=notpageimage|
    Location within France

    The site is identified with Merdogne, since renamed Gergovie, a village located on a hill within the town of La Roche-Blanche, near Clermont-Ferrand, in south central France. Some walls and earthworks still survive from the pre-Roman Iron Age. The battle is well known in France as an example of a Gallic victory.

    Prelude edit

    As with much of the conflict between Rome and Gaul in the first century BC, information about this battle comes principally from Julius Caesar's Commentaries on the Gallic War (De Bello Gallico). There are no surviving Gallic accounts.

    Vercingetorix had earlier been expelled from Gergovia, the capital of the Arverni, by its government. In winter 53 BC, while Caesar was gathering his forces for a strike against the Gauls, Vercingetorix came back to Gergovia but was now supported by the Arverni, his people. Caesar states that he was left with a difficult decision. He could have kept his forces safe over the winter, but would have shown Roman weakness in defending its allies the Aedui and thus losing their support. However, he chose to bring Vercingetorix to open battle but risked running out of supplies.

    Leaving two legions and all of his baggage train behind in Agedincum, Caesar led the remaining legions to Gergovia. His sieges of Vellaunodunum, Genabum, and Noviodunum en route caused Vercingetorix to march to meet Caesar in open battle at Noviodunum, which Caesar won. Caesar then besieged and captured Avaricum and resupplied there. After resting his forces at Avaricum, he sent his top legate, Titus Labienus, with four legions north; this to keep the northern Gauls from interfering with his campaign against the Arverni.

    Caesar then set out in the direction of Gergovia, which Vercingetorix was probably able to guess easily once he had remarked his direction. The heights of Gergovia stand 360 metres (1200 feet) above the plain that they overlook. It is a plateau that is 1500 metres long (0.9 mi) by 700 metres (0.4 mi) wide. It was an advantageous place to hold, as there was only one way in, and a small body of troops could hold the entrance to the place.[2]

    Vercingetorix therefore crossed the powerful river Elave (now Allier, a tributary to the Loire) at Nevers, and started marching up and down the bank, mirroring Caesar's movements and destroying all the bridges to keep him from crossing, the purpose presumably being to destroy part of his force as he attempted to cross. Realizing Vercingetorix's plan, Caesar resolved to trick him and cross under his very nose.[2]

    Caesar one night camped near the town of Varennes-sur-Allier,[2] where there had previously been a bridge before Vercingetorix had destroyed it. That night, he divided his force into two parts, one part being two thirds of the force, the other being one third of the force. He ordered the larger force to march in six corps as if it were really the full army of six legions.[2] He then ordered it to continue its march south. Vercingetorix, duped, took the bait and followed this part of the force.

    Caesar, with the two legions still at Varennes, speedily rebuilt the bridge that had been present there. He then sent for the other force, which the next day stole a march on Vercingetorix and completed a junction with the original force, and crossed the rebuilt bridge.[2] Realizing that he had been duped, Vercingetorix set out south to beat Caesar to Gergovia.

    Battle edit

     
    Wall remains at Gergovia
     
    Wall remains at Gergovia

    Five days later Caesar reached Gergovia, the first march being short because most of the troops were tired after marching up the river and back and the last march because the legions arrived at the town.[2] Realizing that its mountainous location made a frontal assault risky, he decided to rely on his superior siege tactics. Upon arriving, Caesar discovered that there was a small hill that the Gauls held that was essential to their holding Gergovia itself. From there, they were able to provide water, grain, and forage.

    Caesar took this in a night raid and swiftly stationed two legions there. He then linked it to his main camp by digging a double trench, twelve feet (3.6 metres) wide, with a parapet. The result was a barrier that kept the Gauls from their supplies, which they needed desperately.[2] They were forced to subsist on the meager stream that supplied water to Gergovia itself.[2]

    The loyalty of the Aedui to Rome was not entirely stable. Caesar suggests in his writing that Aeudui leaders were both bribed with gold and sent misinformation by emissaries of Vercingetorix.[2] Caesar had agreed with the Aedui that 10,000 men would protect his line of supplies. Vercingetorix convinced the chief, Convictolitavis, who had been made chief of the tribe by Caesar, to order the same men to join him upon their arrival at the oppidum.[2] They attacked the Romans who were accompanying their supply train, leaving Caesar in an embarrassing position.

    His rations threatened, Caesar took four legions from the siege, surrounded the Aedui army, and defeated it.[2] The pro-Roman faction retook control of the Aedui leadership, and Caesar returned to Gergovia with 10,000 pro-Roman Aedui horsemen. The two legions that he had left to continue the siege had been hard-pressed to keep Vercingetorix's much larger force at bay.[2]

    Caesar realized that his siege would fail unless he could get Vercingetorix off the high ground. He used one legion as a decoy while the rest moved onto better ground, capturing three Gallic camps in the process. He then ordered a general retreat to lure Vercingetorix off the high ground. However, the order was not heard by most of Caesar's force. Instead, spurred on by the ease with which they captured the camps, they pressed on toward the town and mounted a direct assault on it, exhausting themselves. The Romans were largely unable to escalade over the walls of Gergovia, lacking ladders. The Aedui arrived to support the Romans; however the Romans mistook them for enemies at first, proceeding to attack them. Caesar could do little more than cover the retreat.[3]

    The noise of the assault alerted Vercingetorix, who arrived and saw the Roman and Aedui in dissension just beneath the walls of Gergovia. Vercingetorix then led a cavalry charge that crushed the Roman lines. Then the warriors left their horses and joined the infantry in their fight against the Romans, who soon had suffered heavy casualties. Caesar's work records 46 centurions and 700 legionaries as losses. Modern historians are skeptical; the depiction of the battle as a rout, and one where there were 20,000-40,000 allied Roman soldiers deployed, leads to suspicion that Caesar was downplaying the casualty figures, even if his figures were excluding losses among allied auxiliaries.[4]

    Aftermath edit

     
    View of the Gergovia plateau

    Given his losses, Caesar ordered a retreat. In the wake of the battle, Caesar lifted his siege and retreated from the Arverni lands northeastwards in the direction of Aedui territory. Vercingetorix pursued Caesar's army, intent on destroying it. Because of this, Caesar had to quickly withdraw his army from Galia. Meanwhile, Labienus had finished his campaign in the north and marched back to Agedincum, Caesar's base in the centre of Gaul. After linking up with Labienus's corps, Caesar marched his united army from Agedincum to confront Vercingetorix's victorious army. The two armies met in the Battle of the Vingeanne, Caesar won the subsequent victory. Caesar then pursued Vercingetorix and the remnant of his army to Alesia where Caesar laid siege to and eventually won the Battle of Alesia, a decisive victory over Vercingetorix.

    Even under Roman control, Gergovia continued to be an influential stronghold for decades. In AD 10–20, the local capital was moved to Augustonemetum, and Gergovia's importance declined.[5]

    Legacy edit

    Emperor Napoleon III was a patron of archaeology and funded research into France's Gallic past, including the battles of Gergovia and Alesia.[4] As a result of the sponsored dig at Gergovia, the town of Merdogne, the closest to the commonly agreed likely site of the battle, was renamed to Gergovie in honor of its past in 1865. Interest has continued since the 1800s. On the plateau where the battle occurred, the Gergovie Monument was constructed in 1900 in honor of the event. An archaeological dig in the 1990s discovered what they believe to be the trench that Caesar describes being dug between the two Roman camps as well as various Roman artifacts from the period.[4] A new museum was constructed from 2015–2019 dedicated to the battle, the Musée de Gergovie; the museum opened in October 2019.[6]

    The famous French comic Asterix loosely references the battle in the 1967 book Asterix and the Chieftain's Shield.

    Notes edit

    1. ^ Caesar's legions were seldom at full strength. The 30,000 figure would be the absolute maximum. Caesar's legions are recorded to have strengths of 2,500–5,000 effectives.

    References edit

    1. ^ "Caesar's legions - Livius".
    2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Dodge, Theodore Ayrault (1892). Great Captains: Cæsar. Houghton Mifflin Company. p. 252–269. Retrieved 2011-11-11.
    3. ^ Goldsworthy, Caesar: Life of a Colossus, 332-333
    4. ^ a b c "RETRACING JULIUS CAESAR'S PATH THROUGH FRANCE". The Economist. December 18, 2021. Retrieved December 28, 2021.
    5. ^ A historic site
    6. ^ Puy-de-Dôme : Vercingétorix a son musée sur le plateau de Gergovie. October 22, 2019.

    External links edit

    •   The full text of Commentaries on the Gallic War/Book 7 at Wikisource, by Julius Caesar
    • Archaeological Museum of the Battle of Gergovia, official website

    45°42′30″N 3°7′30″E / 45.70833°N 3.12500°E / 45.70833; 3.12500

    battle, gergovia, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2023, lea. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Battle of Gergovia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Battle of Gergovia took place in 52 BC in Gaul at Gergovia the chief oppidum fortified town of the Arverni The battle was fought between a Roman Republican army led by proconsul Julius Caesar and Gallic forces led by Vercingetorix who was also the Arverni chieftain The Romans attempted to besiege Gergovia but miscommunication ruined the Roman plan The Gallic cavalry counterattacked the confused Romans and sent them to flight winning the battle Battle of GergoviaPart of the Gallic WarsAncient Gergovia was located on the plateau in the background The main battlefield was the area in the image s center rightDate52 BCLocationGergovia Gaul in modern Auvergne France ResultGallic victoryBelligerentsRoman RepublicGallic tribesCommanders and leadersGaius Julius CaesarVercingetorixUnits involved6 Roman legions Legio V VI VIII X XI XIII 1 Auxiliary cavalry Auxiliary light infantry skirmishers archers slingers javelineers Army of Vercingetorix Militia of GergoviaStrengthTotal 20 000 45 000 Romans auxiliaries and allies 15 000 30 000 Roman legionaries a 5 000 15 000 auxiliary largely Aedui 30 000 Gauls mostly ArverniCasualties and lossesAccording to Julius Caesar 46 centurions and 700 legionariesModern estimates Several thousand Roman and Aedui killedUnknownclass notpageimage Location within France The site is identified with Merdogne since renamed Gergovie a village located on a hill within the town of La Roche Blanche near Clermont Ferrand in south central France Some walls and earthworks still survive from the pre Roman Iron Age The battle is well known in France as an example of a Gallic victory Contents 1 Prelude 2 Battle 3 Aftermath 4 Legacy 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksPrelude editAs with much of the conflict between Rome and Gaul in the first century BC information about this battle comes principally from Julius Caesar s Commentaries on the Gallic War De Bello Gallico There are no surviving Gallic accounts Vercingetorix had earlier been expelled from Gergovia the capital of the Arverni by its government In winter 53 BC while Caesar was gathering his forces for a strike against the Gauls Vercingetorix came back to Gergovia but was now supported by the Arverni his people Caesar states that he was left with a difficult decision He could have kept his forces safe over the winter but would have shown Roman weakness in defending its allies the Aedui and thus losing their support However he chose to bring Vercingetorix to open battle but risked running out of supplies Leaving two legions and all of his baggage train behind in Agedincum Caesar led the remaining legions to Gergovia His sieges of Vellaunodunum Genabum and Noviodunum en route caused Vercingetorix to march to meet Caesar in open battle at Noviodunum which Caesar won Caesar then besieged and captured Avaricum and resupplied there After resting his forces at Avaricum he sent his top legate Titus Labienus with four legions north this to keep the northern Gauls from interfering with his campaign against the Arverni Caesar then set out in the direction of Gergovia which Vercingetorix was probably able to guess easily once he had remarked his direction The heights of Gergovia stand 360 metres 1200 feet above the plain that they overlook It is a plateau that is 1500 metres long 0 9 mi by 700 metres 0 4 mi wide It was an advantageous place to hold as there was only one way in and a small body of troops could hold the entrance to the place 2 Vercingetorix therefore crossed the powerful river Elave now Allier a tributary to the Loire at Nevers and started marching up and down the bank mirroring Caesar s movements and destroying all the bridges to keep him from crossing the purpose presumably being to destroy part of his force as he attempted to cross Realizing Vercingetorix s plan Caesar resolved to trick him and cross under his very nose 2 Caesar one night camped near the town of Varennes sur Allier 2 where there had previously been a bridge before Vercingetorix had destroyed it That night he divided his force into two parts one part being two thirds of the force the other being one third of the force He ordered the larger force to march in six corps as if it were really the full army of six legions 2 He then ordered it to continue its march south Vercingetorix duped took the bait and followed this part of the force Caesar with the two legions still at Varennes speedily rebuilt the bridge that had been present there He then sent for the other force which the next day stole a march on Vercingetorix and completed a junction with the original force and crossed the rebuilt bridge 2 Realizing that he had been duped Vercingetorix set out south to beat Caesar to Gergovia Battle edit nbsp Wall remains at Gergovia nbsp Wall remains at Gergovia Five days later Caesar reached Gergovia the first march being short because most of the troops were tired after marching up the river and back and the last march because the legions arrived at the town 2 Realizing that its mountainous location made a frontal assault risky he decided to rely on his superior siege tactics Upon arriving Caesar discovered that there was a small hill that the Gauls held that was essential to their holding Gergovia itself From there they were able to provide water grain and forage Caesar took this in a night raid and swiftly stationed two legions there He then linked it to his main camp by digging a double trench twelve feet 3 6 metres wide with a parapet The result was a barrier that kept the Gauls from their supplies which they needed desperately 2 They were forced to subsist on the meager stream that supplied water to Gergovia itself 2 The loyalty of the Aedui to Rome was not entirely stable Caesar suggests in his writing that Aeudui leaders were both bribed with gold and sent misinformation by emissaries of Vercingetorix 2 Caesar had agreed with the Aedui that 10 000 men would protect his line of supplies Vercingetorix convinced the chief Convictolitavis who had been made chief of the tribe by Caesar to order the same men to join him upon their arrival at the oppidum 2 They attacked the Romans who were accompanying their supply train leaving Caesar in an embarrassing position His rations threatened Caesar took four legions from the siege surrounded the Aedui army and defeated it 2 The pro Roman faction retook control of the Aedui leadership and Caesar returned to Gergovia with 10 000 pro Roman Aedui horsemen The two legions that he had left to continue the siege had been hard pressed to keep Vercingetorix s much larger force at bay 2 Caesar realized that his siege would fail unless he could get Vercingetorix off the high ground He used one legion as a decoy while the rest moved onto better ground capturing three Gallic camps in the process He then ordered a general retreat to lure Vercingetorix off the high ground However the order was not heard by most of Caesar s force Instead spurred on by the ease with which they captured the camps they pressed on toward the town and mounted a direct assault on it exhausting themselves The Romans were largely unable to escalade over the walls of Gergovia lacking ladders The Aedui arrived to support the Romans however the Romans mistook them for enemies at first proceeding to attack them Caesar could do little more than cover the retreat 3 The noise of the assault alerted Vercingetorix who arrived and saw the Roman and Aedui in dissension just beneath the walls of Gergovia Vercingetorix then led a cavalry charge that crushed the Roman lines Then the warriors left their horses and joined the infantry in their fight against the Romans who soon had suffered heavy casualties Caesar s work records 46 centurions and 700 legionaries as losses Modern historians are skeptical the depiction of the battle as a rout and one where there were 20 000 40 000 allied Roman soldiers deployed leads to suspicion that Caesar was downplaying the casualty figures even if his figures were excluding losses among allied auxiliaries 4 Aftermath edit nbsp View of the Gergovia plateau Given his losses Caesar ordered a retreat In the wake of the battle Caesar lifted his siege and retreated from the Arverni lands northeastwards in the direction of Aedui territory Vercingetorix pursued Caesar s army intent on destroying it Because of this Caesar had to quickly withdraw his army from Galia Meanwhile Labienus had finished his campaign in the north and marched back to Agedincum Caesar s base in the centre of Gaul After linking up with Labienus s corps Caesar marched his united army from Agedincum to confront Vercingetorix s victorious army The two armies met in the Battle of the Vingeanne Caesar won the subsequent victory Caesar then pursued Vercingetorix and the remnant of his army to Alesia where Caesar laid siege to and eventually won the Battle of Alesia a decisive victory over Vercingetorix Even under Roman control Gergovia continued to be an influential stronghold for decades In AD 10 20 the local capital was moved to Augustonemetum and Gergovia s importance declined 5 Legacy editEmperor Napoleon III was a patron of archaeology and funded research into France s Gallic past including the battles of Gergovia and Alesia 4 As a result of the sponsored dig at Gergovia the town of Merdogne the closest to the commonly agreed likely site of the battle was renamed to Gergovie in honor of its past in 1865 Interest has continued since the 1800s On the plateau where the battle occurred the Gergovie Monument was constructed in 1900 in honor of the event An archaeological dig in the 1990s discovered what they believe to be the trench that Caesar describes being dug between the two Roman camps as well as various Roman artifacts from the period 4 A new museum was constructed from 2015 2019 dedicated to the battle the Musee de Gergovie the museum opened in October 2019 6 The famous French comic Asterix loosely references the battle in the 1967 book Asterix and the Chieftain s Shield Notes edit Caesar s legions were seldom at full strength The 30 000 figure would be the absolute maximum Caesar s legions are recorded to have strengths of 2 500 5 000 effectives References edit Caesar s legions Livius a b c d e f g h i j k l Dodge Theodore Ayrault 1892 Great Captains Caesar Houghton Mifflin Company p 252 269 Retrieved 2011 11 11 Goldsworthy Caesar Life of a Colossus 332 333 a b c RETRACING JULIUS CAESAR S PATH THROUGH FRANCE The Economist December 18 2021 Retrieved December 28 2021 A historic site Puy de Dome Vercingetorix a son musee sur le plateau de Gergovie October 22 2019 External links edit nbsp The full text of Commentaries on the Gallic War Book 7 at Wikisource by Julius Caesar Archaeological Museum of the Battle of Gergovia official website nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Gergovia 45 42 30 N 3 7 30 E 45 70833 N 3 12500 E 45 70833 3 12500 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Gergovia amp oldid 1217021271, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

    , read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.