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 LIFE AND WARS OF JULIUS CAESAR.
           
 THE WARS IN GAUL
 CHAPTER I.
           CHAPTER II.
           CHAPTER III.
           CHAPTER IV.
           CHAPTER V. WAR AGAINST THE BELGAE. (Year
          of Rome 697.)
           CHAPTER VI. WAR OF THE VENETII.- VICTORY OVER THE UNELLI- . SUBMISSION OF AQUITAINE. MARCH
          AGAINST THE MORINI AND THE MENAPII. (Year of Rome 698.)
           
           CHAPTER
          I.
           POLITICAL
          CAUSES OF THE GALLIC WAR.
           
           There are peoples whose existence in the
          past only reveals itself by certain brilliant apparitions, unequivocal proofs
          of an energy which had been previously unknown. During the interval their
          history is involved in obscurity, and they resemble those long-silent
          volcanoes, which we should take to be extinct but for the eruptions which, at
          periods far apart, occur and expose to view the fire which smoulders in their bosom. Such had been the Gauls.
           The
          accounts of their ancient expeditions bear witness to an organisation already powerful, and to an ardent spirit of enterprise. Not to speak of migrations
          which date back perhaps nine or ten centuries before our era, we see, at the
          moment when Rome was beginning to aim at greatness, the Celts spreading
          themselves beyond their frontiers. In the time of Tarquin the Elder (Years of
          Rome, 138 to 176), two expeditions started from Celtic Gaul: one proceeded
          across the Rhine and Southern Germany, to descend upon Illyria and Pannonia
          (now Western Hungary); the other, scaling the Alps, established itself in
          Italy, in the country lying between those mountains and the Po. The invaders
          soon transferred themselves to the right bank of that river, and nearly the
          whole of the territory comprised between the Alps and the Apennines took the
          name of Cisalpine Gaul. More than two centuries afterwards, the descendants of
          those Gauls marched upon Rome, and burnt it all but the Capitol. Still a
          century later (475), we see new bands issuing from Gaul, reaching Thrace by the
          valley of the Danube, ravaging Northern Greece, and bringing back to Toulouse
          the gold plundered from the Temple of Delphi. Others, arriving at Byzantium,
          pass into Asia, establish their dominion over the whole region on this side
          Mount Taurus, since called Gallo-Graecia, or Galatia, and
          maintain in it a sort of military feudalism until the time of the war of
          Antiochus.
           These
          facts, obscure as they may be in history, prove the spirit of adventure and the
          warlike genius of the Gaulish race, which thus, in
          fact, inspired a general terror. During nearly two centuries, from 364 to 531,
          Rome struggled against the Cisalpine Gauls, and more than once the defeat of
          her armies placed her existence in danger. It was, as it were, foot by foot
          that the Romans effected the conquest of Northern Italy, strengthening it as
          they proceeded by the establishment of colonies.
   Let
          us here give a recapitulation of the principal wars against the Gauls,
          Cisalpine and Transalpine, which have already been spoken of in the first
          volume of the present work. In 531 the Romans took the offensive, crossed the
          Po, and subjugated a great part of the Cisalpine. But hardly had the north of
          Italy been placed under the supremacy of the Republic, when Hannibal’s invasion
          (536) caused anew an insurrection of the inhabitants of those countries; who
          helped to increase the numbers of his army; and even when that great captain
          was obliged to quit Italy, they continued to defend their independence during
          thirty-four years. The struggle, renewed in 554, ended only in 588, for we
          will not take into account the partial insurrections which followed. During
          this time, Rome had not only to combat the Cisalpines,
          assisted by the Gauls from beyond the Alps, but also to make war upon the men
          of their race in Asia (565) and in Illyria. In this last-mentioned province the
          colony of Aquileia was founded (571), and several wild tribes of Liguria, who
          held the defiles of the Alps, were subjugated (588).
           In
          600, the Romans, called to the assistance of the Greek town of Marseilles,
          which was attacked by the Oxybii and the Deciates, Ligurian tribes of the Maritime Alps, for the
          first time carried their arms to the other side of the Alps. They followed the
          course of the Corniche, and crossed the Var; but it took, according to Strabo,
          a struggle of eighty years before they obtained from the Ligures an extent of
          twelve stadia (2'22 kils.), a narrow passage on the
          coast of the sea, to enable them to pass through Gaul into Spain. Nevertheless,
          the legions pushed their encroachments between the Rhone and the Alps. The
          conquered territory was given to the people of Marseilles, who soon, attacked
          again by the peoples of the Maritime Alps, implored a second time the support
          of Rome. In 629, the Consul M. Fulvius Flaccus was sent against the Salluvii;
          and, three years afterwards, the proconsul C. Sextius Calvinus drove them back far from the sea-coast, and
          founded the town of Aix (Aquae Sextiae)
           The
          Romans, by protecting the people of Marseilles, had extended their dominion on
          the coast; by contracting other alliances, they penetrated into the interior.
          The Aedui were at war with the Allobroges and the Arverni. The proconsul Cn.
          Domitius Ahenobarbus united with the former, and defeated the Allobroges, in
          633, at Vindalium, on the Sorgue (Sulgas) not far from the Rhone. Subsequently,
          Q. Fabius Maximus, grandson of Paulus Aemilius,
          gained, at the confluence of the Isère and the Rhone, a decisive victory over
          the Allobroges, and over Bituitus, king of the Arverni.
          By this success Q. Fabius gained the surname of Allobrogicus.
          The Arverni pretended to be descendants of the Trojans, and boasted a common
          origin with the Romans; they remained independent, but their dominion, which
          extended from the banks of the Rhine to the neighbourhood of Narbonne and Marseilles, was limited to their ancient territory. The Ruteni, who had been their allies against Fabius, obtained
          similarly the condition of not being subjected to the Roman power, and were
          exempted from all tribute.
           In
          636, the Consul Q. Marcius Rex founded the colony of Narbo Marcius, which gave its name to the Roman province called Narbonensis.
   The
          movement which had long thrust the peoples of the north towards the south had
          slackened during several centuries, but in the seventh century of the
          foundation of Rome it seems to have recommenced with greater intensity than
          ever. The Cimbri and the Teutones, after ravaging Noricum and Illyria, and
          defeating the army of Papirius Carbo sent to protect
          Italy (641), had marched across Rhaetia, and penetrated by the valley of the
          Rhine to the country of the Helvetii. They drew with them a part of that
          people, spread into Gaul, and for several years carried there terror and
          desolation. The Belgae alone offered a vigorous resistance. Rome, to protect
          her province, sent against them, or against the tribes of the Helvetii, their
          allies, five generals, who were successively vanquished: the Consul M. Junius Silanus, in 645; M. Aurelius Scaurus,
          in 646; L. Cassius Longinus, in 647; lastly, in the year 649, the proconsul Q. Servilius Caepio and Cn. Manlius
          Maximus. The two last each lost his army. The very existence of Rome was
          threatened.
   Marius,
          by the victories gained at Aix over the Teutones (652), and at the Campi Raudii, not far from the
          Adige, over the Cimbri (653), destroyed the barbarians and saved Italy.
   The
          ancients often confounded the Gauls with the Cimbri and Teutones; sprung from a
          common origin, these peoples formed, as it Were, the rear-guard of the great
          army of invasion which, at an unknown epoch, had brought the Celts into Gaul
          from the shores of the Black Sea. Sallust ascribes to the Gauls the defeats of
          Q. Caepio and Cn. Manlius, and Cicero designates
          under the same name the barbarians who were destroyed by Marius. The fact is that
          all the peoples of the north were always ready to unite in the same effort when
          it was proposed to throw themselves upon the south of Europe.
           From
          653 to 684, the Romans, occupied with intestine wars, dreamt not of increasing
          their, power beyond the Alps; and, when internal peace was restored, their
          generals, such as Sylla, Metellus Creticus, Lucullus, and Pompey, preferred the easy
          and lucrative conquests of the East. The vanquished peoples were abandoned by
          the Senate to the exactions of governors, which explains the readiness with
          which the deputies of the Allobroges entered, in 691, into Catiline’s
          conspiracy; fear led them to denounce the plot, but they experienced no
          gratitude for their revelations.
           The
          Allobroges rose, seized the town of Vienne, which was devoted to the Romans,
          and surprised, in 693, Manlius Lentinus, lieutenant of C. Pomptinus,
          governor of the Narbonnese. Nevertheless, some time
          after, the latter finally defeated and subdued them. “Until the time of
          Caesar,” says Cicero, “our generals were satisfied with repelling the Gauls,
          thinking more of putting a stop to their aggressions than of carrying the war
          among them. Marius himself did not penetrate to their towns and homes, but
          confined himself to opposing a barrier to these torrents of peoples which were
          inundating Italy. C. Pomptinus, who suppressed the
          war raised by the Allobroges, rested after his victory. Caesar alone resolved
          to subject Gaul to our dominion.”
           It
          results from this summary of facts that the constant thought of the Romans was,
          during several centuries, to resist the Celtic peoples established bn either
          side of the Alps. Ancient authors proclaim aloud the fear which held Rome
          constantly on the watch. “The Romans,” says Sallust, “had then, as in our days,
          the opinion that all other peoples must yield to their courage; but that with
          the Gauls it was no longer for glory, but for safety, that they had to fight.”
          On his part, Cicero expresses himself thus: “From the beginning of our
          Republic, all our wise men have looked upon Gaul as the most redoubtable enemy
          of Rome. But the strength and multitude of those peoples had prevented us
          until now from combating them all.”
             In
          694, it will be remembered, rumours of an invasion
          of the Helvetii prevailed at Rome. AR political preoccupation ceased at once,
          and resort was had to the exceptional measures adopted under such circumstances.
          In fact, as a principle, whenever a war against the Gauls was imminent, a
          dictator was immediately nominated, and a levy en masse ordered. From that time no one was exempted from military service;
          and, as a provision against an attack of those barbarians, a special treasure
          had been deposited in the Capitol, which it was forbidden to touch except in
          that eventuality. Accordingly, when, in 705, Caesar seized upon it, he replied
          to the protests of the tribunes that, since Gaul was subjugated, this treasure
          had become useless.
           War
          against the peoples beyond the Alps was thus, for Rome, the consequence of a
          long antagonism, which must necessarily end in a desperate struggle, and the
          ruin of one of the two adversaries. This explains, at the same time, both
          Caesar’s ardour and the enthusiasm excited by his
          successes. Wars undertaken in accord with the traditional sentiment of a
          country have alone the privilege of moving deeply the fibre of the people, and the importance of a victory is measured by the greatness of
          the disaster which would have followed a defeat. Since the fall of Carthage,
          the conquests in Spain, in Africa, in Syria, in Asia, and in Greece, enlarged
          the Republic, but did not consolidate it, and a check in those different parts
          of the world would have diminished the power of Rome without compromising it.
          With the peoples of the North, on the contrary, her existence was at stake, and
          upon her reverses equally as upon her successes depended the triumph of
          barbarism or civilisation. If Caesar had been
          vanquished by the Helvetii or the Germans, who can say what would have become
          of Rome, assailed by the numberless hordes of the North rushing eagerly upon
          Italy?
           And
          thus no war excited the public feeling so intensely as that of Gaul. Though
          Pompey had carried the Roman eagles to the shores of the Caspian Sea, and, by
          the tributes he had imposed on the vanquished, doubled the revenues of the
          State, his triumphs had only obtained ten days of thanksgivings. The Senate
          decreed fifteen, and even twenty, (for Caesar’s victories, and, in honour of them, the people offered sacrifices during sixty
          days.
           When,
          therefore, Suetonius ascribes the inspiration of the campaigns of this great
          man to the mere desire of enriching himself with plunder, he is false to history
          and to good sense, and assigns the most vulgar motive to a noble design. When
          other historians ascribe to Caesar the sole intention of seeking in Gaul a
          means of rising to the supreme power by civil war, they show, as we have
          remarked elsewhere, a distorted view; they judge events by their final result,
          instead of calmly estimating the causes which have produced them.
             The
          sequel of this history will prove that all the responsibility of the civil war
          belongs not to Caesar, but to Pompey. And although the former had his eyes
          incessantly fixed on his enemies at Rome, none the less for that he pursued his
          conquests, without making them subordinate to his personal interests. If he had
          sought only his own elevation in his military successes, he would have
          followed an entirely opposite course. We should not have seen him sustain
          during eight years a desperate struggle, and incur the risks of enterprises
          such as those of Great Britain and Germany. After his first campaigns, he need
          only have returned to Rome to profit by the advantages he had acquired; for, as
          Cicero says,  he had already done enough for his glory, if he had not done
          enough for the Republic”; and the same orator adds: “Why would Caesar himself
          remain in his province, if it were not to deliver to the Roman people complete
          a work which was already nearly finished? Is he retained by the agreeableness
          of the country, by the beauty of the towns, by the politeness and amenity of
          the individuals and peoples, by the lust of victory, by the desire of extending
          the limits of our empire? Is there anything more uncultivated than those countries,
          ruder than those towns, more ferocious than those peoples, and more admirable
          than the multiplicity of Caesar’s victories? Can he find limits farther off
          than the ocean? Would his return to his country offend either the people who
          sent him or the Senate which has loaded him with honours?
          Would his absence increase the desire we have to see him? Would it not rather
          contribute, through lapse of time, to make people forget him, and to cause the
          laurels to fade which he had gathered in the midst of the greatest perils? If,
          then, there any who love not Caesar, it is not their policy to obtain his
          recall from his province, because that would be to recall him to glory, to
          triumph, to the congratulations and supreme honours of the Senate, to the favour of the equestrian order,
          to the affection of the people.”
           Thus,
          after the end of 698, he might have led his army back into Italy, claimed
          triumph, and obtained power, without having to seize upon it, as Sylla, Marius, Cinna, and even Crassus and Pompey, had done.
           If
          Caesar had accepted the government of Gaul with the sole aim of having an army
          devoted to his designs, it must be admitted that so experienced a general would
          have taken, to commence a civil war, the simplest of the measures suggested by
          prudence: instead of separating himself from his army, he would have kept it
          with him, or, at least, brought it near to Italy, and distributed it in such a
          manner that he could reassemble it quickly; he would have preserved, from the
          immense booty taken in Gaul, sums sufficient to supply the expenses of the war.
          Caesar, on the contrary, as we shall see in the sequel, sends first to Pompey,
          without hesitation, two legions which are required from him under the pretext
          of the expedition against the Parthians. He undertakes to disband his troops
          if Pompey will do the same, and he arrives at Ravenna at the head of a single
          legion, leaving the others beyond the Alps, distributed from the Sambre as far
          as the Saone. He keeps within the limit of his government without making any
          preparation which indicates hostile intentions, wishing, as Hirtius says, to
          settle the quarrel by justice rather than by arms. In fact, he has collected so
          little money in the military chest, that his soldiers club together to procure
          him the sums necessary for his enterprise, and that all voluntarily renounce
          their pay. Caesar offers Pompey an unconditional reconciliation, and it is only
          when he sees his advances rejected, and his adversaries meditating his ruin,
          that he boldly faces the forces of the Senate, and passes the Rubicon. It was
          not, then, the supreme power which Caesar went into Gaul to seek, but the pure
          and elevated glory which arises from a national war, made in the traditional
          interest of the country.
             In
          reproducing in the following chapters the relation of the war in Gaul, we have
          borne in mind the words of Cicero. “Caesar,” he says, “has written memoirs
          worthy of great praise. Deprived of all oratorical art, his style, like a
          handsome body stripped of clothing, presents itself naked, upright, and
          graceful. In his desire to furnish materials to future historians, he has,
          perhaps, done a thing agreeable to the little minds who will be tempted to load
          these natural graces with frivolous ornaments; but he has for
            ever deprived men of sense of the desire of writing, for nothing is more
          agreeable in history than a correct and luminous brevity.” Hirtius, on his
          part, expresses himself in the following terms: “These memoirs enjoy an approval
          so general, that Caesar has much more taken from others than given to them the
          power of writing the history of the events which they recount. We have still
          more reasons than all others for admiring it, for others know only how correct
          and accurate this book is; we know the facility and rapidity with which it was
          composed.”
             If
          we would act upon the advice of these writers, we must digress as little as
          possible from the “Commentaries,” but without restricting ourselves to a literal
          translation. We have, then, adopted the narrative of Caesar, though sometimes
          changing the order of the matter: we have abridged passages where there was a
          prodigality of details, and developed those which required elucidation. In
          order to indicate in a more precise manner the localities which witnessed so
          many battles, we have employed the modem names, especially in cases where
          ancient geography did not furnish corresponding names.
             The
          investigation of the battlefields and siege operations has led to the
          discovery of visible and certain traces of the Roman entrenchments. The
          reader, by comparing the plans of the excavations with the text, will be
          convinced of the rigorous accuracy of Caesar in describing the countries he
          passed over, and the works he caused to be executed.
             
           CHAPTER II.STATE OF GAUL IN THE TIME OF CAESAR.Transalpine Gaul had for its boundaries
          the ocean, the Pyrenees, the Mediterranean, the Alps, and the Rhine. This
          portion of Europe, so well marked out by nature,
          comprised what is now France, nearly the whole of Switzerland, the Rhine Provinces,
          Belgium, and the south of Holland. It had the form of an irregular pentagon,
          and the country of the Carnutes (the Orleanais) was
          considered to be its centre.
           An
          uninterrupted chain of heights divided Gaul, as it divides modern France, from
          north to south, into two parts. This line commences at the Monts Corbières, at the foot of the Eastern Pyrenees, is continued by the Southern
          Cevennes and by the mountains of the Vivarais,
          Lyonnais, and Beaujolais (called the Northern Cevennes), and declines continually
          with the mountains of the Charolais and the Cote-d’Or, until it reaches the
          plateau of Langres; after quitting this plateau, it
          leaves to the east the Monts Faucilles,
          which unite it to the Vosges, and, inclining towards the north-west, it follows,
          across the mountains of the Meuse, the western crests of the Argonne and the
          Ardennes, and terminates, in decreasing undulations, towards Cape Griz-Nez, in the Pas-de-Calais.
           This
          long and tortuous ridge, more or less interrupted, which may be called the
          backbone of the country, is the great line of the watershed. It separates two
          slopes. On the eastern slope flow the Rhine and the Rhone, in opposite directions,
          the first towards the Northern Sea, the second towards the Mediterranean; on
          the western slope rise the Seine, the Loire, and the Garonne, which go to throw
          themselves into the ocean. These rivers flow at the bottom of vast basins, the
          bounds of which, as is well known, are indicated by the lines of elevations
          connecting the sources of all the tributaries of the principal stream.
             The
          basin of the Rhine is separated from that of the Rhone by the Monts Faucilles, the southern extremity
          of the Vosges, called Le trouée de Belfort, the Jura, the Jorat (the heights which surround the Lake of Geneva on the
          north), and the lofty chain of the Helvetic Alps. In its upper part, it
          embraces nearly all Switzerland, of which the Rhine forms the northern
          boundary, in its course, from east to west, from the Lake of Constance to Bâle. Near this town the river turns abruptly towards the
          north. The basin widens, limited to the east by the mountains which separate it
          from the Danube and the Weser; to the west, by the northern part of the great
          line of watershed (the mountains of the Meuse, the Argonne, and the western
          Ardennes). It is intersected, from Mayence (Mains) to
          Bonn, by chains nearly parallel to the course of the river, which separate its
          tributaries. From Bonn to the point where the Rhine divides into two arms, the
          basin opens still more; it is flat, and has no longer a definite boundary. The
          southern arm bore already, in the time of Caesar, the name of Waal (Vahalis), and united with the Meuse below Nimeguen. To the west of the Ivasin of the Rhine, the Scheldt forms a secondary basin.
           The
          basin of the Rhone, in which is comprised that of the Saone, is sharply bounded
          on the north by the southern extremity of the Vosges and the Monts Faucilles; on the west, by
          the plateau of Langres, the Cote-d’Or, and the Cévennes;
          on the east, by the Jura, the Jorat, and the Alps.
          The Rhone crosses the Valais and the Lake of Geneva, follows an irregular
          course as far as Lyons, and runs thence from north to south to the
          Mediterranean. Among the most important of its secondary basins, we may reckon
          those of the Aude, the Hérault, and the Var.
           The
          three great basins of the western slope are comprised between the line of
          watershed of Gaul and the ocean. They are separated from each other by two
          chains branching from this line, and running from the south-east to the
          north-west. The basin of the Seine, which includes that of the Somme, is
          separated from the basin of the Loire by a line of heights which branches from
          the Cote-d’Or under the name of the mountains of the Morvan,
          and is continued by the very low hills of Le Perche to the extremity of Normandy.
          A series of heights, extending from north to south, from the hills of Le Perche
          to Nantes, enclose the basin of the Loire to the west, and leave outside the
          secondary basins of Brittany.
           The
          basin of the Loire is separated from that of the Garonne by a long chain
          starting from Mont Lozèere, comprising the mountains
          of Auvergne, those of the Limousin, the hills of
          Poitou, and the plateau of Gatine, and ending in flat
          country towards the coasts of La Vendée.                                      
   The
          basin of the Garonne, situated to the south of that of the Loire, extends to
          the Pyrenees. It comprises the secondary basins of the Adour and the Charente.
             The
          vast country we have thus described is protected on the north, west, and south
          by two seas, and by the Pyrenees. On the east, where it is exposed to
          invasions, Nature, not satisfied with the defences she had given it in the Rhine and the Alps, has further retrenched it behind
          three groups of interior mountains—first, the Vosges; second, the Jura; third,
          the mountains of Forez, the mountains of Auvergne,
          and the Cévennes.
           The
          Vosges run parallel to the Rhine, and are like a rampart in the rear of that
          river.
           The
          Jura, separated from the Vosges by the Gap (trouée) of Belfort, rises
          like a barrier in the interval left between the Rhine and the Rhone,
          preventing, as far as Lyons, the waters of this latter river from uniting with
          those of the Saone.
   The
          Cévennes and the mountains of Auvergne and Forez form, in the southern centre of Gaul, a sort of
          citadel, of which the Rhone might be considered as the advanced fosse. The
          ridges of this group of mountains start from a common centre,
          take opposite directions, and form the valleys whence flow, to the north, the
          Allier and the Loire; to the west, the Dordogne, the Lot, the Aveyron, and the Tarn; to the south, the Ardèche, the Gard,
          and the Hérault.
           The
          valleys, watered by navigable rivers, presented —thanks to the fruitfulness of
          their soil and to their easy access—natural ways of communication, favourable both to commerce and to war. To the north, the
          valley of the Meuse; to the east, the valley of the Rhine, conducting to that
          of the Saone, and thence to that of the Rhone, were the grand routes which
          armies followed to invade the south. Strabo, therefore, remarks justly that Sequania (Franche-Comté) has always been the road of the
          Germanic invasions from Gaul into Italy. From east to west the principal chain
          of the watershed might easily be crossed in its less elevated parts, such as
          the plateau of Langres and the mountains of
          Charolais, which have since furnished a passage to the Central Canal. Lastly,
          to penetrate from Italy into Gaul, the great lines of invasion were the valley
          of the Rhone and the valley of the Garonne, by which the mountainous mass of
          the Cévennes, Auvergne, and Forez is turned.
           Gaul
          presented the same contrast of climates which we observe between the north and
          south of France. While the Roman province enjoyed a mild temperature and an
          extreme fertility, the central and northern part was covered with vast
          forests, which rendered the climate colder than it is at present;  yet the centre produced in abundance wheat, rye, millet, and barley. The greatest of all these
          forests was that of the Ardennes. It extended, beginning from the Rhine, over a
          space of two hundred miles, on one side to the frontier of the Remi, crossing
          the country of the Treviri; and, on another side, to
          the Scheldt, across the country of the Nervii. The “Commentaries” speak also
          of forests existing among the Carnutes, in the neighbourhood of the Saone, among the Menapii and the Morini, and among the Eburones. In the north the breeding
          of cattle was the principal occupation, and the pastures of Belgic Gaul
          produced a race of excellent horses. In the centre and in the south the richness of the soil was augmented by productive mines of
          gold, silver, copper, iron, and lead.
           The
          country was, without any doubt, intersected by carriage roads, since the Gauls
          possessed a great number of all sorts of wagons, since there still remain
          traces of Celtic roads, and since Caesar makes known the existence of bridges
          on the Aisne, the Rhone, the Loirethe Allier, and the
          Seine. It is difficult to ascertain exactly the number of the population; yet
          we may presume, from the contingents famished by the different states, that it
          amounted to more than seven millions of souls.
           Gaul,
          according to Caesar, was divided into three great regions, distinct by
          language, manners, and laws: to the north, Belgic Gaul, between the Seine, the
          Marne, and the Rhine; in the centre, Celtic Gaul,
          between the Garonne and the Seine, extending from the ocean to the Alps, and
          comprising Helvetia; to the south, Aquitaine, between the Garonne and the
          Pyrenees. We must, nevertheless, comprise in Gaul the Roman province, or the Narbonnese, which began at Geneva, on the left bank of the
          Rhone, and extended in the south as far as Toulouse. It answered, as nearly as
          possible, to the limits of the countries known in modem times as Savoy, Dauphiné, Provence, Lower Languedoc, and Roussillon. The
          populations who inhabited it were of different origins: there were found there Aquitanians, Belgae, Ligures, Celts, who had all long
          undergone the influence of Greek civilisation, and
          especially establishments founded by the Phocaeans on the coasts of the Mediterranean.
           These
          three great regions were subdivided into many states, called civitates—an
          expression which, in the “Commentaries,” is synonymous with nations—that is,
          each of these states had its organisation and its own
          government. Among the peoples mentioned by Caesar, we may reckon twenty-seven
          in Belgic Gaul, forty-three in Celtic, and twelve in Aquitaine : in all,
          eighty-two in Gaul proper, and seven in the Narbonnese.
          Other authors, admitting, no doubt, smaller subdivisions, carry this number to
          three or four hundred; but it appears that under Tiberius there were only
          sixty-four states in Gaul. Perhaps, in this number, they reckoned only the
          sovereign, and not the dependent, states.
           1.  Belgic Gaul. The Belgae were
          considered more warlike than the other Gauls, because, strangers to the civilisation of the Roman province and hostile to commerce,
          they had not experienced the effeminating influence
          of luxury. Proud of having escaped the Gaulish enervation, they claimed with arrogance an origin which united them with the
          Germans their neighbours, with whom, nevertheless,
          they were continually at war. They boasted of having defended their territory
          against the Cimbri and the Teutones, at the time of the invasion of Gaul. The
          memory of the lofty deeds of their ancestors inspired them with a great
          confidence in themselves, and excited their warlike spirit.
           The
          most powerful nations among the Belgae were the Bellovaci, who could arm a
          hundred thousand men, and whose territory extended to the sea, the Nervii, the
          Remi, and the Treviri.
   2.     Celtic
          Gaul.The central part of Gaul,
          designated
            by the Greek writers under the name of Celtica,
            and the inhabitants of which constituted in the eyes of
              the Romans the Gauls properly so named (Galli), was the most extensive
              and most populous. Among the most important nations of Celtic Gaul were reckoned
              the Arverni, the Aedui, the Sequani, and the Helvetii. Tacitus informs us that
              the Helvetii had once occupied a part of Germany.
               These
          three first peoples often disputed the supremacy of Gaul. As to the Helvetii,
          proud of their independence, they acknowledged no authority superior to their
          own. In the centre and south of Celtic Gaul dwelt
          peoples who had also a certain importance. On the west and north-west were
          various maritime populations designated under the generic name of Armoricans,
          an epithet which had, in the Celtic tongue, the meaning of maritime. Small
          Alpine tribes inhabited the valleys of the upper course of the Rhone, at the
          eastern extremity of Lake Lémon, a country which now
          forms the Valais.
           3. Aquitaine.  Aquitaine commenced on
          the left bank of the Garonne: it was inhabited by several small tribes, and
          contained none of those agglomerations which were found among the Celts and the
          Belgae. The Aquitanians, who had originally occupied
          a vast territory to the north of the Pyrenees, having been pushed backward by
          the Celts, had but a rather limited portion of it in the time of Caesar.
   The
          three regions which composed Gaul were not only, as already stated, divided
          into a great number of states, but each state (civitas) was farther
          subdivided into pagi, representing, perhaps,
          the same thing as the tribe among the Arabs. The proof of the distinct
          character of these agglomerations is found in the fact that in the army each of
          them had its separate place, under the command of its own chieftains. The
          smallest subdivision was called vicus. Such, at least, are the
          denominations employed in the “Commentaries,” but which were certainly not
          those of the Celtic language. In each state there existed principal towns,
          called indifferently by Caesar urbs or oppidum; yet this last
          name was given by preference to considerable towns, difficult of access and
          carefully fortified, placed on heights or surrounded by
            marshes. It was to these oppida that, in case of attack, the Gauls transported
            their grain, their provisions, and their riches. Their habitations, established
            often in the forests or on the bank of a river, were constructed of wood, and
            tolerably spacious.
            The Gauls were tall in stature, their skin was
          white, their eyes blue, their hair fair or chestnut, which they dyed, in order
          to make the colour more brilliant. They let their
          beard grow; the nobles alone shaved, and preserved long moustaches. Trousers or
          breeches, very wide among the Belgae, but narrower among the southern Gauls,
          and a shirt with sleeves, descending to the middle of the thighs, composed
          their principal dress. They were clothed with a mantle or saie,
          magnificently embroidered with gold or
            silver among the rich, and held about the peck by means of a metal brooch. The
            lowest classes of the people used instead an animal’s skin. The Aquitanians covered themselves, probably according to the
            Iberic custom, with cloth of coarse wool unshorn.
             The
          Gauls wore collars, earrings, bracelets, and rings for the arms, of gold or
          copper, according to their rank; necklaces of amber, and rings, which they
          placed on the third finger.
           They
          were naturally agriculturists, and we may suppose that the institution of
          private property existed among them, because, on the one hand, all the
          citizens paid the tax, except the Druids, and, on the other, the latter were
          judges of questions of boundaries. They were not unacquainted with certain
          manufactures. In some countries they fabricated serges,
          which were in great repute, and cloths or felts; in others they worked the
          mines with skill, and employed themselves in the fabrication of metals. The Bituriges worked in iron, and were acquainted with the art
          of tinning. The artificers of Alesia plated copper with leaf-silver, to
          ornament horses’ bits and trappings.
           The
          Gauls fed especially on the flesh of swine, and their ordinary drinks were
          milk, ale, and mead. They were reproached with being inclined to drunkenness.
             They
          were frank and open in temper, and hospitable towards strangers, but vain and
          quarrelsome; fickle in their sentiments, and fond of novelties, they took
          sudden resolutions, regretting one day what they had rejected with disdain the
          day before; inclined to war and eager for adventures, they showed themselves
          hot in the attack, but quickly discouraged in defeat. Their language was very
          concise and figurative; in writing, they employed Greek letters.
           The
          men were not exempt from a shameful vice, which we might have believed less
          common in this country than among the peoples of the East. The women united an
          extraordinary beauty with remarkable courage and great physical force.
             The
          Gauls, according to the tradition preserved by the Druids, boasted of being
          descended from the god of the earth, or from Pluto (Dis), according to
          the expression of Caesar. It was for this reason that they took night for
          their starting-point in all their divisions of time. Among their other customs,
          they had one which was singular: they considered it as a thing unbecoming to
          appear in public with their children, until the latter had reached the age for
          carrying arms.
           When
          he married, the man took from his fortune a part equal to the dowry of the
          wife. This sum, placed as a common fund, was allowed to accumulate with
          interest, and the whole reverted to the survivor. The husband had the right of
          life and death over his wife and children. When the decease of a man of wealth
          excited any suspicion, his wives, as well as his slaves, were put to the
          torture, and burnt if they were found guilty.
           The
          extravagance of their funerals presented a contrast to the simplicity of their
          life. All that the defunct had cherished during his life, was thrown into the
          flames after his death; and even, before the Roman conquest, they joined with
          it his favourite slaves and clients.
           In
          the time of Caesar, the greater part of the peoples of Gaul were armed with
          long iron swords, two-edged, sheathed in scabbards similarly of iron, suspended
          to the side by chains. These swords were generally made to strike with the edge
          rather than to stab. The Gauls had also spears, the iron of which, very long
          and very broad, presented sometimes an undulated form (materis).
          They also made use of light javelins without amentum, of the bow, and of
          the sling. Their helmets were of metal, more or less precious, ornamented with
          the horns of animals, and with a crest representing some figures of birds or
          savage beasts, the whole surmounted by a high and bushy tuft of feathers. They
          carried a great buckler, a breastplate of iron or bronze, or a coat of mail—the
          latter a Gaulish invention. The Leuci and the Remi were celebrated for throwing the javelin. The Lingones had party-coloured breastplates. The Gaulish cavalry was superior to the infantry; it was
          composed of the nobles, followed by their clients; yet the Aquitanians,
          celebrated for their agility, enjoyed a certain reputation as good infantry. In
          general, the Gauls were very ready at imitating the tactics of their enemies.
          The habit of working mines gave them a remarkable dexterity in all underground
          operations, applicable to the attack and defence of
          fortified posts. Their armies dragged after them a multitude of wagons and baggage,
          even in the less important expeditions.
           Although
          they had reached, especially in the south of Gaul, a tolerably advanced degree
          of civilisation, they preserved very barbarous
          customs: they killed their prisoners. “When their army is ranged in battle,”
          says Diodorus, “some of them are often seen advancing from the ranks to
          challenge the bravest of their enemies to single combat. If their challenge is
          accepted, they chaunt a war-song, in which they boast of the great deeds of
          their forefathers, exalting their own valour and
          insulting their adversary. After the victory, they cut off their enemy’s head,
          hang it to their horse’s neck, and carry it off with songs of triumph. They
          keep these hideous trophies in their house, and the highest nobles preserve
          them with great care, bathed with oil of cedar, in coffers, which they show
          with pride to their guests.”
           When
          a great danger threatened the country, the chiefs convoked an armed council, to
          which the men were bound to repair, at the place and day indicated, to
          deliberate. The law required that the man who arrived last should be massacred
          without pity before the eyes of the assembly. As a means of intercommunication,
          men were placed at certain intervals through the country, and these, repeating
          the cry from one to another, transmitted rapidly news of importance to great
          distances. They often, also, stopped travellers on
          the roads, and compelled them to answer them questions.
           The
          Gauls were very superstitious. Persuaded that in the eyes of the gods the life
          of a man can only be redeemed by that of his fellow, they made a vow, in
          diseases and dangers, to immolate human beings by the ministry of the Druids.
          These sacrifices had even a public character. They sometimes constructed human
          figures of osier of colossal magnitude, which they filled with living men; to
          these they set fire, and the victims perished in the flames. These victims were
          generally taken from among the criminals, as being more agreeable to the gods;
          but if there were no criminals to be had, the innocent themselves were sacrificed.
             Caesar,
          who, according to the custom of his countrymen, gave to the divinities of
          foreign peoples the names of those of Rome, tells us that the Gauls honoured Mercury, above all others. They raised statues to
          him, regarded him as the inventor of the arts, the guide of travellers,
          and the protector of commerce. They also offered worship to divinities which
          the “Commentaries” assimilate to Apollo, Mars, Jupiter, and Minerva, without
          informing us of their Celtic names. From Lucan, we learn the names of three Gaulish divinities, Teutates (in whom, no doubt, we must recognise the Mercury of the “Commentaries”), Hesus or Esus, and Taranis.
          Caesar makes the remark that the Gauls had pretty much the same ideas with
          regard to their gods as other nations. Apollo cured the sick, Minerva taught
          the elements of the arts, Jupiter was the master of heaven, Mars the arbiter
          of war. Often, before fighting, they made a vow to consecrate to this god the
          spoils of the enemy, and, after the victory, they put to death all their prisoners.
          The rest of the booty was piled up in the consecrated
            places, and nobody would be so impious as to take anything away from it. The
            Gauls rendered also, as we learn from inscriptions and passages in different
            authors, worship to rivers, fountains, trees, and forests: they adored the
            Rhine as a god, and made a goddess of the Ardenne.
             There
          were in Gaul, says Caesar, only two classes who enjoyed public consideration
          and honours, the Druids and the knights. As to the
          people, deprived of all rights, oppressed with debts, crushed with taxes,
          exposed to the violences of the great, their
          condition was little better than that of slaves. The Druids, ministers of religion,
          presided over the sacrifices, and preserved the deposit of religious
          doctrines. The youth, greedy of instruction, pressed around them. The
          dispensers of rewards and punishments, they were the judges of almost all disputes,
          public or private. To private individuals, or even to magistrates, who
          rebelled against their decisions, they interdicted the sacrifices, a, sort of
          excommunication which sequestrated from society those who were struck by it,
          placed them in the rank of criminals, removed them from all honours,
          and deprived them even of the protection of the law. The Druids had a single
          head, and the power of this head was absolute. At his death, the next in
          dignity succeeded him; if there were several with equal titles, these priests
          had recourse to election, and sometimes even to a decision by force of arms.
          They assembled every year in the country of the Carnutes,
          in a consecrated place, there to judge disputes. Their doctrine, it was said,
          came from the isle of Britain, where, in the time of Caesar, they still went to
          draw it as at its source.
           The
          Druids were exempt from military service and from taxes. These privileges drew
          many disciples, whose novitiate, which lasted sometimes twenty years, consisted
          in learning by heart a great number of verses containing their religious
          precepts. It was forbidden to transcribe them. This custom had the double object
          of preventing the divulgation of their doctrine and of exercising the memory.
          Their principal dogma was the immortality of the soul and its transmigration
          into other bodies. A belief which banished the fear of death appeared to them
          fitted to excite courage. They explained also the movement of the planets, the
          greatness of the universe, the laws of nature, and the omnipotence of the
          immortal gods.
             “We
          may conceive,” says the eminent author of the Histoire des Gaulois“ what despotism must have been
          exercised over a superstitious nation by this caste of men, depositaries of all
          knowledge, authors and interpreters of all law, divine or human, remunerators,
          judges, and executioners.”
           The
          knights, when required by the necessities of war, and that happened almost
          yearly, were all bound to take up arms. Each, according to his birth and
          fortune, was accompanied by a greater or less number of attendants or clients.
          Those who were called ambacti performed in war
          the part of esquires. In Aquitaine, these followers were named soldures; they shared the good as well as the evil
          fortune of the chief to whom they were attached, and, when he died, not one of
          them would survive him. Their number was considerable: we shall see a king of
          the Sotiates possess no less than six hundred of them.
   The
          states were governed either by an assembly, which the Romans called a senate,
          or by a supreme magistrate, annual or for life, bearing the title of king,
          prince, or vergobret.
   The
          different tribes formed alliances among themselves, either permanent or
          occasional; the permanent alliances were founded, some on a community of territorial
          interests, others on affinities of races, or on treaties, or, lastly, on the
          right of patronage. The occasional alliances were the results of the necessity
          of union against a common danger.
             In
          Gaul, not only each state and each tribe (pagus),
          but even each family, was divided into two parties (factiones);
          at the head of these parties were chiefs, taken from among the most
          considerable and influential of the knights. Caesar calls them principes. All those who accepted their supremacy
          became their clients; and, although the principes did not exercise a regular magistracy, their authority was very extensive.
          This organisation had existed from a remote antiquity;
          its object was to offer to each man of the people a protection against the
          great, since each was thus placed under the patronage of a chief, whose duty it
          was to take his cause in hand, and who would have lost all credit if he had
          allowed one of his clients to be oppressed. We see in the “Commentaries” that
          this class of the principes enjoyed very great
          influence. On their decisions depended all important resolutions; and their
          meeting formed the assembly of the whole of Gaul (concium totius Galliae). In it
          everything was decided by majority of votes.
           Affairs
          of the state were allowed to be treated only in these assemblies. It
          appertained to the magistrates alone to publish or conceal events, according
          as they judged expedient; and it was a sacred duty for any
            one who learnt, either from without or from public rumour,
          any news which concerned the civitas, to give information of it to the
          magistrate, without revealing it to any other person. This measure had for its
          object to prevent rash or ignorant men from being led into error by false
          reports, and from rushing, under this first impression, into extravagant
          resolutions.
             In
          the same manner as each state was divided into two rival factions, so was the
          whole of Gaul (with the exception of Belgic Gaul and Helvetia) divided into two
          great parties, which exercised over the others a sort of sovereignty (principatus); and when, in extraordinary
          circumstances, the whole of Gaul acknowledged the pre-eminence of one particular
          state, the chief of the privileged state took the name of princeps totius Galliae, as had been
          the case with the Arvernan Celtillus,
          the father of Vercingetorix.
           This
          supremacy, nevertheless, was not permanent; it passed from one nation to
          another, and was the object of continual ambitions and sanguinary conflicts.
          The Druids, it is true, had succeeded in establishing a religious centre, but there existed no political centre.
          In spite of certain federative ties, each state had been more engaged in the
          consideration of its own individuality than in that of the country in general.
          This egoistic carelessness of their collective interests, this jealous rivality among the different tribes, paralysed the efforts of a few eminent men who were desirous of founding a nationality,
          and the Gauls soon furnished the enemy with an easy means of dividing and
          combating them. The Emperor Napoleon I was thus right in saying: “The principal
          cause of the weakness of Gaul was the spirit of isolation and locality which characterised the population; at this epoch the Gauls had
          no national spirit or even provincial spirit; they were governed by a spirit
          of town. It is the same spirit which has since forged chains for Italy. Nothing
          is more opposed to national spirit, to general ideas of liberty, than the
          particular spirit of family or of town. From this parcelling it resulted that the Gauls had no army of the line kept up and exercised; and
          therefore no art and no military science. Every nation which should lose sight
          of the importance of an army of the line perpetually on foot, and which should
          trust to levies or national armies, would experience the fate of the Gauls,
          without even having the glory of opposing the same resistance, which was the
          effect of the barbarism of the time and of the ground, covered with forests,
          marshes, and bogs, and without roads, which rendered it difficult to conquer
          and easy to defend.” Before Caesar came into Gaul, the Aedui and the Arverni
          were at the head of the two contending parties, each labouring to carry the day against his rival. Soon these latter united with the Sequani,
          who, jealous of the superiority of the Aedui, the allies of the Roman people,
          invoked the support of Ariovistus and the Germans. By dint of sacrifices and
          promises, they had succeeded in bringing them into their territory. With this
          aid the Sequani had gained the victory in several combats. The Aedui had lost
          their nobility, a part of their territory, nearly all their clients, and,
          after giving up as hostages their children and their chiefs, they had bound
          themselves by oath never to attack the Sequani, who had at length obtained the
          supremacy of all Gaul. It was under these circumstances that Divitiacus had
          gone to Rome to implore the succour of the Republic,
          but he had failed; the Senate was too much engaged with intestine quarrels to
          assume an energetic attitude towards the Germans. The arrival of Caesar was
          destined to change the face of things, and restore to the allies of Rome their
          old preponderance.
           
           CHAPTER IIICAMPAIGN AGAINST THE HELVETII.(Year of Rome 696)I.
           Caesar, as we have seen, had received  from the Projects of invasion Senate and
          people a command which comprised the two Gauls (Transalpine and Cisalpine) and
          Illyria. Yet the agitation which continued to reign in the Republic was retaining
          him at the gates of Rome, when suddenly, towards the spring of 696, news came
          that the Helvetii, returning to their old design, were preparing to invade the
          Roman province. This intelligence caused a great sensation.
             The
          Helvetii, proud of their former exploits, confident in their strength, and
          incommoded by excess of population, felt humiliated at living in a country the
          limits of which had been made narrow by nature, and for some years they
          meditated quitting it to repair into the south of Gaul.
             As
          early as 693, an ambitious chieftain, Orgetorix,
          found no difficulty in inspiring them with the desire to seek elsewhere a more
          fertile territory and a milder climate. They resolved to go and establish themselves
          in the country of the Santones (the Saintonge),
          situated on the shores of the ocean, to the north of the Gironde. Two years
          were to be employed in preparations, and, by a solemn engagement, the departure
          was fixed for the third year. But Orgetorix, sent to
          the neighbouring peoples to contract alliances,
          conspired with two influential personages—one of the country of the Sequani, the
          other of. that of the Aedui. He induced them to undertake to seize the supreme
          power, promised them the assistance of the Helvetii, and persuaded them that
          those three powerful nations, leagued together, would easily subjugate the
          whole of Gaul. This conspiracy failed, through the death of Orgetorix,
          accused in his own country of a design to usurp the sovereignty. The Helvetii
          persisted, nevertheless, in their project of emigration. They collected the
          greatest possible number of waggons and beasts of burden; and, in order to
          destroy all idea of returning, they burnt their twelve towns, their four
          hundred hamlets, and all the wheat they could not carry with them. Each
          furnished himself with meal for three months; and after persuading their neighbours, the Rauraci, the Tulingi, and the Latobriges, to imitate their example and
          follow them, and having drawn to them those of the Boii who had moved from
          Noricum to the neighbourhood of the Rhine, they fixed
          the rendezvous on the banks of the Rhone for the 5th of the Calends of April
          (the 24th of March, the day of the equinox).
           There
          were only two roads by which they could leave Helvetia; one crossed the country
          of the Sequani, the entrance to which was defended by a narrow and difficult
          defile, situated between the Rhone and the Jura (the Pas-de-l'Ecluse), and where the wagons could with difficulty
          pass one at a time. As this defile was commanded by a very lofty mountain, a
          handful of men was sufficient to prevent the access. The other road, less
          contracted and more easy, crossed the Roman province, after having passed the
          Rhone, which separated the Allobroges from the Helvetii, from Lake Léman to the
          Jura. Within this distance the river was fordable in several places. At Geneva,
          the extreme limit of the territory of the Allobroges towards Helvetia, a bridge
          established a communication between the two countries. The Helvetii decided
          on taking the most convenient road; they reckoned, moreover, on the
          co-operation of this neighbouring people, who, but
          recently subjugated, could have but doubtful sympathies for the Romans.
           Caesar,
          learning that the Helvetii intended to pass through the Roman province, left
          Rome hastily in the month of March, hurried by forced marches into Transalpine
          Gaul, and, according to Plutarch, reached Geneva in eight days. As he had in
          the province only a single legion, he ordered a levy of as many men as
          possible; and then destroyed the bridge of Geneva. Informed of his arrival, the
          Helvetii, who were probably not yet all assembled, sent their men of noblest
          rank to demand a passage  through the
          country of the Allobroges, promising to commit no injury there; they had, they
          said, no other road to quit their country. Caesar was inclined to refuse their
          demand at once, but he called to mind the defeat and death of the Consul L.
          Cassius; and wishing to obtain time to collect the troops of which he had
          ordered the levy, he gave them hopes of a favourable reply, and adjourned it to the Ides of April (8th of April). By this delay he
          gained a fortnight; it was employed in fortifying the left bank of the Rhone
          between Lake Léman and the Jura. If we estimate at 5,000 men the legion which
          was in the province, and at 5,000 or 6,000 the number of soldiers of the new
          levies, we see that Caesar had at his disposal, to defend the banks of the
          Rhone, about 10,000 or 11,000 infantry.
           The
          distance from Lake Léman to the Jura, following the sinuosities of the river, is the Rhone.
            29’5 kilometres. It is on the space comprised between
            these two points that a retrenchment was raised which is called in the
            “Commentaries” murus fossaque. This could not
            be a continuous work, as the ground to be defended is intersected by rivers and
            ravines, and the banks of the Rhone are almost everywhere so precipitous that
            it would have been useless to fortify; them. Caesar, pressed for time, can only
            have made retrenchments on the weakest points of the line where the passage of
            the river was easy; indeed, this is what Dio Cassius
            tells us. The labours of the Romans were only
            supplementary, on certain points, to the formidable natural obstacles which the
            Rhone presents in the greater part of its course. The only places where an
            attempt could be made to pass it, because the heights there sink towards the
            banks of the river into practicable declivities, are situated opposite the
            modern villages of Russin, Cartigny, Avully, Chancy, and Cologny.
            In these places they cut the upper part of the slope into a perpendicular, and
            afterwards hollowed a trench, the scarp of which thus gained an elevation of
            sixteen feet. These works, by uniting the escarpments of the Rhone, formed,
            from Geneva to the Jura, a continuous line, which presented an impassable
            barrier. Behind and along this line, at certain distances, posts and closed
            redoubts rendered it impregnable.
             This
          retrenchment, which required only from two to three days’ labour,
          was completed when the deputies returned, at the time appointed, to hear
          Caesar’s reply. He flatly refused the passage, declaring that he would
            oppose it with all his means.
             Meanwhile
          the Helvetii, and the people who took part in their enterprise, had assembled
          on the right bank of the Rhone. When they learnt that they must renounce the
          hope of quitting their country  sometimes, by night—they crossed the Rhone, some  by fording, others with the aid of boats
          joined together, or of a great number of rafts of timber, and attempted to
          carry the heights, but, arrested by the strength of the retrenchment (operis munitione),
          and by the efforts and missiles of the soldiers who hastened to the threatened
          points (concursu et telis),
          they abandoned the attack.
           The
          only road which now remained was that which lay across the country of the Sequani
          (the Pas-de-l’Ecluse); but this narrow defile could
          not be passed without the consent of its inhabitants; The Helvetii charged  the Aeduan Dumnorix,
          the son-in-law of Orgetorix,to solicit it for them.
          High in credit among the Sequani, Dumnorix obtained
          it; and the two peoples entered into an engagement, one to leave the passage
          free, the other to commit no disorder; and, as pledges of their convention,
          they exchanged hostages.
           When
          Caesar learned that the Helvetii were preparing to pass through the lands of
          the Sequani and the Aedui on their way to the Santones,
          he resolved to oppose them, unwilling to suffer the establishment of warlike
          and hostile men in a fertile and open country, neighbouring upon that of the Tolosates, which made part of the
          Roman province.
           But,
          as he had not at hand sufficient forces, he resolved on uniting all the troops
          he could dispose of in his vast command. He entrusts, therefore, the care of
          the retrenchments on the Rhone to his lieutenant T. Labienus,
          hastens into Italy by forced marches, raises there in great haste two legions
          (the 11th and 12th), brings from Aquileia, a town of Illyria, the three legions
          which were there in winter quarters (the 7th, 8th, and 9th), and, at the head
          of his army, takes across the Alps the shortest road to Transalpine Gaul. The Centrones, the Graioceli, and the Caturiges, posted on the heights, attempt to bar his
          road; but he overthrows them in several engagements, and from Ocalum (Usseau), the
          extreme point of the Cisalpine, reaches in seven days the territory of the Vocontii, making thus about twenty-five kilometres a day. He next penetrates into the country of the Allobroges, then into that of
          the Segusiavi, who bordered on the Roman province
          beyond the Rhone.
           These
          operations took two months; the same time had been employed by the Helvetii in
          negotiating the conditions of their passage through the country of the
          Sequani, moving from the Rhone to the Saone, and beginning to pass the latter
          river. They had passed the Pas-de-l’Ecluse, followed
          the right bank of the Rhone as far as Culoz, then
          turned to the east through Virieu-le-Grand, Tenay, and Saint-Rambert, and, thence crossing the plains
          of Amberieux, the river Ain, and the vast plateau of
          the Dombes, they had arrived at the Saone, the left
          bank of which they occupied from Trevoux to Villefranche. The slowness of their march need not surprise
          us if we consider that an agglomeration of 368,000 individuals, men, women, and
          children, dragging after them from 8,000 to 9,000 wagons, through a defile
          where carriages could only pass one abreast, would necessarily employ several
          weeks in passing it. Caesar, no doubt, calculated beforehand, with sufficient
          accuracy, the time it would take them to gain the banks of the Saone; and we may
          therefore suppose that, at the moment when he repaired into Italy, he hoped to
          bring thence his army in time to prevent them from passing that river.
           He
          established his camp near the confluence of the Rhone and the Saone, on the
          heights which command Sathonay; thence he could equally manoeuvre on the two banks of the Saone, take the Helvetii in flank as they marched
          towards that river, or prevent them, if they crossed it, from entering into the
          Roman province by the valley of the Rhone. It was probably at this point that Labienus joined him with the troops which had been left
          with him, and which raised to six the number of his legions. His cavalry,
          composed principally of Aedui and men raised in the Roman province, amounted to
          4,000 men. During this time the Helvetii were ravaging the lands of the Ambarri, those of the Aedui, and those which the Allobroges
          possessed on the right bank of the Rhone. These peoples implored the succour of Caesar. He was quite disposed to listen to their
          prayers.
           The
          Saone, which crossed the countries of the Aedui and the Sequani, flowed, then as
          now, in certain places with an extreme sluggishness. Caesar says that people
          could not distinguish the direction of the current. The Helvetii, who had not
          learned to make bridges, crossed the river, between Trevoux and Villefranche, on rafts and boats joined together.
          As soon as the Roman general had ascertained by his scouts that three-quarters
          of the barbarians were on the other side of the river, and the others were
          still on his side, he left his camp towards midnight (de terbia vigilia) with three legions, came upon those of the
          Helvetii who were still on the left bank, to the north of Trévoux, in the
          valley of the Formans, towards six o’clock in the
          morning, after a march of eighteen kilometres,
          attacked them by surprise in the midst of the confusion of passing the river,
          and slew a great number. Those who could escape dispersed, and concealed
          themselves in the neighbouring forests. This disaster
          fell upon the Tigurini (the inhabitants of the
            Cantons of Vaud, Friburg, and apart of the Canton of Berne), one of the four tribes of which the nation of the
          Helvetii was composed, the same which, in an expedition out of Helvetia, had
          formerly slain the Consul L. Cassius, and made his army pass under the yoke.
             After
          this combat, Caesar, in order to pursue the other part of the enemy’s army, and
          prevent its marching towards the south, threw a bridge across the Saone, and
          transported his troops to the right bank. The barques which followed him for the conveyance of provisions, would necessarily
          facilitate this operation. It is probable that a detachment established in the
          defiles on the right bank of the Saone, at the spot where Lyons now stands,
          intercepted the road which would have conducted the Helvetii towards the Roman
          province. As to the three legions which remained in the camp of Sathonay, they
          soon rejoined Caesar. The Helvetii, struck by his sudden approach, and by the
          rapidity with which he had effected, in one single day, a passage which had
          cost them twenty days’ labour, sent him a
          deputation, the chief of which, old Divico, had
          commanded in the wars against Cassius. In language full of boast and
          threatening, Divico reminded Caesar of the
          humiliation inflicted formerly on the Roman arms. The proconsul replied that he
          was not forgetful of old affronts, but that recent injuries were sufficient
          motives for his conduct. Nevertheless, he offered peace, on condition that they
          should give him hostages. “The Helvetii,” replied Divico,
          “have learned from their ancestors to receive, but not to give, hostages; the
          Romans ought to know that.” This proud reply closed the interview.
           Nevertheless,
          the Helvetii appear to have been desirous of avoiding battle, for next day
          they raised their camp, and, cut off from the possibility of following the
          course of the Saone to proceed towards the south, they took the easiest way to
          reach the country of the Santones, by directing their
          march towards the sources of the Dheune and the Bourbince. This broken country, moreover, permitted them to
          resist the Romans with advantage. They followed across the mountains of
          Charolais the Gaulish road, on the trace of which
          was, no doubt, subsequently constructed the Roman way from Lyons to Autun, vestiges of which still exist; the latter followed
          the course of the Saone as far as Belleville, where it parted from it abruptly,
          crossing over the Col d’Avenas, proceeding through
          the valley of the Grosne to Cluny, and continuing by
          Saint-Vallier to Autun. At
          Saint-Vallier they would quit this road, and march
          towards the Loire to pass it at Decize.
           Caesar
          followed the Helvetii, and sent before him all his cavalry to watch their
          march. These, too eager in the pursuit, came to blows with the enemy’s cavalry
          in a position of disadvantage, and experienced some loss. Proud of having
          repulsed 4,000 men with 500 horsemen, the Helvetii became sufficiently
          emboldened to venture sometimes to harass the Roman army. But Caesar avoided
          engaging his troops; he was satisfied with following, day by day, the enemies
          at a distance of five or six miles at most (about eight kilometres),
          opposing the devastations they committed on their passage, and waiting a favourable occasion inflict a defeat upon them.
           The
          two armies continued their march extremely slowly, and the days passed without
          offering the desired opportunity. Meanwhile, the provisionment of the Roman army began to inspire serious uneasiness; wheat arrived no longer
          by the Saone, for Caesar had been obliged to move from it in order to keep up
          with the Helvetii. On another hand, the Aedui delayed, under vain pretexts,
          sending the grain which they had promised. The harvest, too, was not yet ripe,
          and even forage failed. As the day for distribution approached, Caesar
          convoked the Aeduan chiefs, who were numerous in his camp, and overwhelmed them
          with reproaches. One of them, Liscus, occupied in his
          country the supreme magistracy, under the name of vergobret;
          he denounced Dumnorix, the brother of Divitiacus, as
          opposing the sending of provisions; it was the same Dumnorix who had heretofore secretly negotiated the passage of the Helvetii across the
          country of the Sequani, and who, placed at the head of the Aeduan contingent,
          had, in the last combat, by retreating with his men, led to the flight of the
          whole body of the cavalry. Caesar sent for Divitiacus, a man devoted to the
          Roman people, and revealed to him the culpable conduct of his brother, which
          merited an exemplary punishment. Divitiacus expressed the same opinion, but, in
          tears, implored the pardon of Dumnorix. Caesar
          granted it to him, and contented himself with placing him under surveillance.
          It was, indeed, good policy not to alienate the Aeduan people by any excessive
          severity against a man of power among them.
           The
          Helvetii, after advancing northward as far as Saint-Vallier,
          had turned to the west to reach the valley of the Loire. Arrived near Issy-l’Evêque,
          they encamped on the banks of a tributary of the Somme, at the foot of Mount Tauffrin, eight miles from the Roman army. Informed of this
          circumstance, Caesar judged that the moment had arrived for attacking them by
          surprise, and sent to reconnoitre by what circuits
          the heights might be reached. He learnt that the access was easy, and ordered Labienus to gain, with two legions, the summit of the
          mountain by bye-roads, without giving alarm to the enemy, and to wait till he
          himself, marching at the head of the four other legions, by the same road as
          the Helvetii, should appear near their camp; then both were to attack them at
          the same time. Labienus started at midnight, taking
          for guides the men who had just explored the roads. Caesar, on his part, began
          his march at two o’clock in the morning (de quarta vigilia), preceded by his cavalry. At the head of
          his scouts was P. Considius,
            whose former services under L. Sylla,
              and subsequently under M. Crassus, pointed him out as an experienced soldier.
   At
          break of day Labienus occupied the heights, and Caesar was no more than 1,500 paces from the
            camp of the barbarians; the latter suspected neither his approach nor that of
            his lieutenant. Suddenly Considius arrived at full
            gallop to announce that the mountain of which Labienus was to take possession was in the power of the Helvetii; he had recognised them, he said, by their arms and their military
            ensigns. At this news, Caesar, fearing that he was not in sufficient force
            against their whole army, with only four legions, chose a strong position on a neighbouring hill, and drew up his men in order of battle. Labienus, whose orders were not to engage in battle
            till he saw the troops of Caesar near the enemy’s camp, remained immovable,
            watching for him. It was broad daylight when Caesar learnt that his troops had
            made themselves masters of the mountain, and that the Helvetii had left their
            camp. They escaped him thus, through the false report of Considius,
            who had been blinded by a groundless terror.
             Admitting
          that the Helvetii had passed near Issy-l’Evêque, Mount Tauffrin,
          which rises at a distance of four kilometres to the
          west of that village, answers to the conditions of the text. There is nothing
          to contradict the notion that Labienus and Caesar
          may have, one occupied the summit, the other approached the enemy’s camp within
          1,500 paces, without being perceived; and the neighbouring ground presents heights which permitted the Roman army to form in order of
          battle.
           That
          day the Helvetii continued their advance to Remilly,
          on the Alène. Since the passage of the  Saone, they had inarched about a fortnight,
          making an average of not more than eleven or twelve kilometres a day. According to our reckoning, it must have been the end of the month of
          June. Caesar followed the Helvetii at the usual distance, and established his
          camp at three miles’ distance from theirs, on the Cressonne,
          near Ternant.
   Next
          day, as the Roman army had provisions left for no more than two days, and as,
          moreover, Bibracte (Mont Beuvray),
          the greatest and richest town of the Aedui, was not more than eighteen miles
          (twenty-seven kilometres) distant, Caesar, to
          provision his army, turned from the road which the Helvetii were following, and
          took that to Bibracte. The enemy was informed of this
          circumstance by some deserters from the troop of L. Emilius,
          decurion of the auxiliary cavalry. Believing that the Romans were going from
          them through fear, and hoping to cut them off from their provisions, they
          turned back, and began to harass the rear-guard.
           Caesar
          immediately led his troops to a neighbouring hill—that which rises between the two villages called the Grand-Marié and the Petit-Marié—and
          sent his cavalry to impede the enemies in their march, which gave him the time
          to form in order of battle. He ranged, half way up the slope of the hill his
          four legions of veterans, in three lines, and the two legions raised in the
          Cisalpine on the plateau above, along with the auxiliaries, so that his
          infantry covered the whole height. The heavy baggage, and the bundles (sarcinae) with which the soldiers were loaded, were
          collected on one point, which was defended by the troops of the reserve. While Caesar
          was making these dispositions, the Helvetii, who came followed by all their
          wagons, collected them in one place; they then, in close order, drove back the
          cavalry, formed in phalanxes, and, making their way up the slope of the hill
          occupied by the Roman infantry, advanced against the first line.
           Caesar,
          to make the danger equal, and to deprive all of the possibility of flight,
          sends away the horses of all the chiefs, and even his own, harangues his
          troops, and gives the signal for combat. The Romans, from their elevated
          position, hurl the break the enemy’s phalanxes, and rush upon them sword in
          hand. The engagement becomes general. The Helvetii soon become embarrassed in
          their movements : their bucklers, pierced and nailed together by the same pilum,
          the head of which, bending back, can no longer be withdrawn, deprive them of
          the use of their left arm; most of them, after having long agitated their arms
          in vain, throw down their bucklers, and fight without them. At last, covered
          with wounds, they give way, and retire to the mountain of the castle of La
          Garde, at a distance of about 1,000 paces; but while they are pursued, the Boii
          and the Tulingi, who, to the number of about 15,000,
          formed the last of the hostile columns, and composed the rear-guard, rush upon
          the Romans, and without halting attack their right flank. The Helvetii, who
          had taken refuge on the height, perceive this movement, return to the charge,
          and renew the combat. Caesar, to meet these two attacks, effects a change of
          front in his third line, and opposes it to the new assailants, while the first
          two lines resist the Helvetii who had already been repulsed.
           This
          double combat was long and furious. Unable to resist the impetuosity of their
          adversaries, the Helvetii were obliged to retire, as they had done before, to
          the mountain of the castle of La Garde; the Boii and Tulingi towards the baggage and wagons. Such was the intrepidity of these Gauls during
          the whole action, which lasted from one o’clock in the afternoon till evening,
          that not one turned his back. Far into the night there was still fighting about
          the baggage. The barbarians, having made a rampart of their wagons, some threw
          from above their missiles on the Romans; others, placed between the wheels,
          wounded them with long pikes. The women and children, too, shared desperately
          in the combat. At the end of an obstinate struggle, the camp and baggage were
          taken. The daughter and one of the sons of Orgetorix were made prisoners.
           This
          battle reduced the Gaulish emigration to 130,000
          individuals. They began their retreat that same evening, and, after marching
          without interruption day and night, they reached on the fourth day the
          territory of the Lingones, towards Tonnerre: they had, no doubt, passed by Moulins-en-Gilbert, Lormes, and Avallon. The Lingones were
          forbidden to furnish the fugitives with provisions or succour,
          under pain of being treated like them. At the end of three days, the Roman
          army, having taken care of their wounded and buried the dead, marched in
          pursuit of the enemy.
           The Helvetii, reduced to extremity,
          sent to Caesar to treat for their
            submission. The deputies met him on his march, threw themselves at his feet,
            and demanded peace in the most suppliant terms. He ordered them to say to their
            fellow-countrymen that they must halt on the spot they then occupied, and await
            his arrival; and they obeyed. As soon as Caesar overtook them, he required them
            to deliver hostages, their arms, and the fugitive slaves. While they were
            preparing to execute his orders, night coming on, about 6,000 men of a tribe
            named Verbigeni (Soleure, Argovie, Bucerne, and part
              of the Canton of Berne) fled, either through fear that, having once
            delivered up their arms, they should be massacred, or in the hope of escaping
            unperceived in the midst of so great a multitude. They directed their steps
            towards the Rhine and the frontiers of Germany.
               On
          receiving news of the flight of the Verbigeni, Caesar
          ordered the peoples whose territories they would cross to stop them and bring
          them back, under pain of being considered as accomplices. The fugitives were
          delivered up and treated as enemies; that is, put to the sword, or sold, as
          slaves. As to the others, Caesar accepted their submission: he compelled the
          Helvetii, the Tulingi, and the Latobriges to return
          to the localities they had abandoned, and to restore the towns and hamlets they
          had burnt; and since, after having lost all their crops, they had no more
          provisions of their own, the Allobroges were ordered to furnish them with
          wheat. These measures had for their object not to leave Helvetia without
          inhabitants, as the fertility of its soil might draw thither the Germans of the
          other side of the Rhine, who would thus become borderers upon the Roman
          province. He permitted the Boii, celebrated for their brilliant valour, to establish themselves in the country of the Aedui,
          who had asked permission to receive them. They gave them lands between the
          Allier and the Loire, and soon admitted them to a share in all their rights and
          privileges.
           In
          the camp of the Helvetii were found tablets on which was written, in Greek
          letters, the number of all those who had quitted their country: on one side,
          the number of men capable of bearing arms; and on the other, that of the
          children, old men, and women. The whole amounted to 263,000 Helvetii, 36,000 Tulingi, 14,000 Latobriges, 23,000 Rauraci,
          and 32,000 Boii—together, 368,000 persons, of whom 92,000 were men in a
          condition to fight. According to the census ordered by Caesar, the number of
          those who returned home was 110,000. The emigration was thus reduced to less
          than one-third.
   The
          locality occupied by the Helvetii when they made their submission is unknown;
          yet all circumstances seem to concur in placing the theatre of this event in
          the western part of the country of the Lingones. This
          hypothesis appears the more reasonable, as Caesar’s march, in the following
          campaign, can only be explained by supposing him to start from this region. We
          admit, then, that Caesar received the submission of the Helvetii on the Armangon, towards Tonnerre, and
          it is there that we suppose him to have been encamped during the events upon
          the recital of which we are now going to enter.
           The
          forces of the two armies opposed to each other in the battle of Bibracte were about  equal,
          for Caesar had six legions—the 10th, which he had found in the Roman province;
          the three old legions (7th, 8th, and 9th), which he had brought from Aquileia;
          and the two new ones (11th and 12th), raised in the Cisalpine. The effective
          force of each must have been near the normal number of 6,000 men, for the
          campaign had only begun, and their ranks must have been increased by the
          veterans and volunteers of whom we have spoken in the first volume. The number
          of the legionaries was thus 36,000. Adding 4,000 cavalry, raised in the Roman
          province and among the Aedui, and probably 20,000 auxiliaries, we shall have a
          total of 60,000 combatants, not including the men attached to the machines,
          those conducting the baggage, the army servants, &c. The Helvetii, on their
          side, did not count more than 69,000 combatants, since out of 92,000, they had
          lost one-fourth near the Saone.
           Tn
          this battle, it must be remarked, Caesar did not employ the two legions newly
          raised, which remained to guard the camp, and secure the retreat in case of
          disaster. Next year he assigned the same duty to the youngest troops. The
          cavalry did not pursue the enemies in their rout, doubtless because the mountainous
          nature of the locality made it impossible for it to act.
           
           CHAPTER
          IV.
          CAMPAIGN
          AGAINST ARIOVISTUS.
          (Year
          of Rome 696.)
  
 On the termination of the war against
          the Helvetii, the chiefs of nearly all Celtic Gaul went to congratulate Caesar,
          and thank him for having, at the same time, avenged their old injuries, and
          delivered their country from immense danger. They expressed the desire to
          submit to his judgment certain affairs, and, in order to concert matters,
          previously, they solicited his permission to convoke a general assembly.
          Caesar gave his consent.
             After
          the close of the deliberations, they returned, secretly and in tears, to
          solicit his support against the Germans and Ariovistus, one of their kings.
          These peoples were separated from the Gauls by the Rhine, from its mouth to the
          Lake of Constance. Among them the Suevi occupied the first rank. They were by
          much the most powerful and the most warlike. They were said to be divided into
          a hundred cantons, each of which furnished, every year, a thousand men for war
          and a thousand men for agriculture, taking each other’s place alternately: the labourers fed the soldiers. No boundary line, among the
          Suevi, separated the property of the fields, which remained common, and no
          one could prolong his residence on the same lands beyond a year. However, they
          hardly lived upon the produce of the soil: they consumed little wheat, and
          drank no wine; milk and flesh were their habitual food. When these failed, they
          were fed upon grass. Masters of themselves from infancy, intrepid hunters,
          insensible to the inclemency of the seasons, bathing in the cold waters of the
          rivers, they hardly covered a part of their bodies with thin skins. They were
          savages in manners, and of prodigious force and stature. They disdained
          commerce and foreign horses, which the Gauls sought with so much care. Their
          own horses, though mean-looking and ill-shaped, became indefatigable through
          exercise, and fed upon brushwood. Despising the use of the saddle, often, in
          engagements of cavalry, they jumped to the ground and fought on foot : their
          horses were taught to remain without moving. The belief in the dogma of the
          immortality of the soul, strengthened in them the contempt for life. They
          boasted of being surrounded by immense solitudes: this fact, as they pretended,
          showed that a great number of their neighbours had
          not been able to resist them: and it was reported, indeed, that on one side
          (towards the east) their territory was bounded, for an extent of 600 miles, by
          desert plains; on the other, they bordered upon the Ubii,
          their tributaries, the most civilised of the German
          peoples, because their situation on the banks of the Rhine placed them in
          relation with foreign merchants, and because, neighbours,
          to the Gauls, they had formed themselves to their manners.
           Two
          immense forests commenced not far from the Rhine, and extended, from west to
          east, across Germany; these were the Hercynian and Bacenis forests. The first,
          beginning from the Black Forest and the Odenwald, covered all the country situated
          between the Upper Danube and the Maine, and comprised, the mountains which,
          further towards the east, formed the northern girdle of the basin of the
          Danube; that is, the Boehmerwald, the mountains of
          Moravia, and the Little Carpathians. It had a breadth which Caesar represents
          by nine long days’ march. The other, of much less extent, took its rise in the
          forest of Thuringia; it embraced all the, mountains to the north of Bohemia,
          and that long chain which separates the basins of the Oder and the Vistula
          from that of the Danube.
           The
          Suevi inhabited, to the south of the forest Bacenis, the countries situated
          between the forest of Thuringia, the Boehmerwald, the
          Inn, and the Black Forest, which compose, in our days, the Duchies of
          Saxe-Meiningen and Saxe-Coburg, Bavaria, and the greater part of Wurtemberg. To the east of the Suevi were the Boii (partly
            in Bohemia and partly in the north-west of Austria), to the north, the Cherusci, separated from the Suevi by the forest Bacenis;
          to the west, the Marcomanni (the upper and middle course of the Maine)
          and the Sedusii (between the Maine and the Neckar); to the south, the
          Harudes (on the north of the Lake of Constance), the Tulingi,
          and the Latobriges (the southern part of the Grand Duchy of Baden).
           On
          the two banks of the Rhine dwelt the Rauraci (the
            territory of Bâle and part of the Brisgau),
          the Triboces (part of Alsace and of the Grand
            Duchy of Baden); on the right bank were the Nemetes (opposite Spire); the Vangiones (opposite Worms); the Ubii, from the Odenwald
              to the watershed of the Sieg and the Ruhr. To the
              north of the Ubii were the Sicambri, established in
              Sauerland, and nearly as far as the Lippe. Finally, the Usipetes and the Tencteri were still farther to the north,
              towards the mouth of the Rhine.
               The Gaulish chiefs who had come to solicit the succour of Caesar made the following complaints against
          Ariovistus: “The German king,” they said, “ had taken advantage of the quarrels
          which divided the different peoples of Gaul; called in formerly by the Arverni
          and the Sequani, he had gained, with their co-operation, several victories
          over the Aedui, in consequence of which the latter were subjected, to the most
          humiliating conditions. Shortly afterwards his yoke grew heavy on the Sequani
          themselves, to such a degree, that, though conquerors with him, they are now
          more wretched than the vanquished Aedui. Ariovistus has seized a third of their
          territory; another third is on the point of being given up, by his orders, to
          24,000 Harudes, who have joined him some months ago. There are 120,000 Germans
          in Gaul. The contingents of the Suevi have already arrived on the banks of the
          Rhine. In a few years the invasion of Gaul by the Germans will be general.
          Caesar alone can prevent it, by his prestige and that of the Roman name, by the
          force of his arms, and by the fame of his recent victory.”
             Gaul
          thus came voluntarily, in the persons of her chiefs, to throw herself into the
          arms of Caesar, take him for the arbiter of her destiny, and implore him to be
          her saviour. He spoke encouragingly, and promised
          them his support. Several considerations engaged him to act upon these
          complaints. He could not suffer the Aedui, allies of Rome, to be brought under
          subjection by the barbarians. He saw a substantial danger for the Republic in
          the numerous immigrations of fierce peoples who, once masters of Gaul, would
          not fail, in imitation of the Cimbri and Teutones, to invade the Roman
          province, and thence fall upon Italy. Resolved to prevent these dangers, he
          proposed an interview with Ariovistus, who was probably occupied, since the
          defeat of the Helvetii, in collecting an army among the Triboci (towards Strasbourg) as well to oppose the further designs of the Romans, as to
          defend the part of the country of the Sequani which he had seized. Ariovistus,
          it will be remembered, had been declared, under Caesar’s consulate, ally and
          friend of the Roman people; and this favour would
          encourage the expectation that the head of the Germans would be willing to
          treat; but he refused with disdain the proposed interview. Then Caesar sent
          messengers to him to reproach him with his ingratitude. “If Ariovistus cares to
          preserve his friendship, let him make reparation for all the injury he has
          inflicted upon the allies of Rome, and let him bring no more barbarians across
          the Rhine; if, on the contrary, he rejects these conditions, so many acts of
          violence will be punished in virtue of the decree rendered by the Senate,
          under the consulate of M. Messala and M. Piso, which authorises the
          governor of Gaul to do that which he judges for the advantage of the Republic,
          and enjoins him to defend the Aedui and the other allies of the Roman people.”
           By
          this language, Caesar wished to show that he did not violate the law, enacted a
          year before under his consulate, which forbade the governors to leave their
          provinces without an order of the Senate. He purposely appealed to an old
          decree, which gave unlimited powers to the governor of Gaul, a province the
          importance of which had always required exceptional laws. The reply of
          Ariovistus was equally proud:—
             “Caesar
          ought to know as well as he the right of the conqueror: he admits no
          interference in the treatment reserved for the vanquished; he has himself
          Causes of complaint against the proconsul, whose presence diminishes his
          revenues; he will not restore the hostages to the Aedui; the title of brothers
          and allies of the Roman people will be of little service to them. He cares
          little for threats. No one has ever braved Ariovistus with impunity. Let
          anybody attack him, and he will learn the valour of a
          people which, for fourteen years, has never sought shelter under a roof.”
           This
          arrogant reply, and news calculated to give alarm, hastened Caesar’s decision.
          In fact, on one side the Aedui complained to him of the devastation of their
          country by the Harudes; and, on the other, the Treviri announced that the hundred cantons of the Suevi were preparing to cross the
          Rhine. Caesar, wishing to prevent the junction of these new bands with the old
          troops of Ariovistus, hastened the collecting of provisions, and advanced
          against the Germans by forced marches. The negotiations having probably lasted during
          the month of July, it was now the beginning of August. Starting from the neighbourhood of Tonnerre, where
          we have supposed he was encamped, Caesar followed the road subsequently
          replaced by a Roman way of which vestiges are still found, and which, passing
          by Tanlay, Gland, Laignes, Etrochey, and Dancevoir, led to Langres. After three long days’ marches, on his arrival
          towards Arc-en-Barrois, he
          learnt that Ariovistus was moving with all his troops to seize Besançon, the
          most considerable place in Sequania, and that he had
          already advanced three days’ march beyond his territory. Caesar considered it a
          matter of urgency to anticipate him, for this place was abundantly pro tided
          with everything necessary for an army. Instead of continuing his march towards
          the Rhine, by way of Vesoul, Lure, and Belfort, he advanced, day and night, by
          forced marches, towards Besançon, obtained possession of it, and placed a
          garrison there.
           The
          following description, given in the Commentaries, is still applicable to the
          present town. “It was so well fortified by nature, that it offered every
          facility for sustaining war. The Doubs, forming a circle, surrounds it almost
          entirely, and the space of sixteen hundred feet, which is not bathed by the
          water, is occupied by a high mountain, the base of which reaches, on each side,
          to the edge of the river. The wall which encloses this mountain makes a citadel
          of it, and connects it with the oppidum”
             During
          this rapid movement of the Roman army on Besançon, Ariovistus had advanced very
          slowly. We must suppose, indeed, that he halted when he was informed of this
          march; for, once obliged to abandon the hope of taking that place, it was
          imprudent to separate himself any farther from his re-enforcements, and, above
          all, from the Suevi, who were ready to pass the Rhine towards Mayence, and await the Romans in the plains of Upper
          Alsace, where he could advantageously make use of his numerous cavalry.
           During
          the few days which Caesar passed at Besançon (the middle of August), in order
          to assure himself of provisions, a general panic took possession of his
          soldiers. Public rumour represented the Germans as
          men of gigantic stature, of unconquerable valour, and
          of terrible aspect. Now there were in the Roman, army many young men without
          experience in war, come from Rome, some out of friendship for Caesar, others in
          the hope of obtaining celebrity without trouble. Caesar could not help
          receiving them. It must have been difficult, indeed, for a general who wished
          to preserve his friends at Rome, to defend himself against the innumerable
          solicitations of influential people. This panic had begun with these
          volunteers; it soon gained the whole army. Every one made his will; the least
          timid alleged, as an excuse for their fear, the difficulty of the roads, the
          depth of the forests, the want of provisions, the impossibility of obtaining
          transports, and even the illegality of the enterprise.
           Caesar,
          surprised at this state of feeling, called a council, to which he admitted the
          centurions of all classes. He sharply reproached the assembled chiefs with
          wishing to penetrate his designs, and to seek information as to the country
          into which he intended to lead them. He reminded them that their fathers, under
          Marius, had driven out the Cimbri and the Teutones; that, still more recently,
          they had defeated the German race in the revolt of the slaves; that the
          Helvetii had often beaten the Germans, and that they, in their turn, had just
          beaten the Helvetii. As to those who, to disguise their fears, talk of the
          difficulty of the roads and the want of food, he finds it very insolent in
          them to suppose that their general will forget his duty, or to pretend to
          dictate it to him. The care of the war is his business: the Sequani, the Leuci, and the Lingones will
          furnish wheat; in fact, it is already ripe in the fields. As to the roads, they
          will soon have the opportunity of judging of them themselves. He is told the
          soldiers will not obey, or raise the ensigns (signa laturi).
          Words like these would not shake him; the soldier despises the voice of his
          chief only when the latter is, by his own fault, abandoned by fortune or
          convicted of cupidity or embezzlement. As to himself, his whole life proves
          his integrity ; the war of the Helvetii affords evidence of his favour with fortune; for which cause, without delay, he
          will break up the camp tomorrow morning, for he is impatient to know if, among
          his soldiers, fear will prevail over honour and duty.
          If the army should refuse to follow him, he will start alone, with the 10th
          legion, of which he will make his praetorian cohort. Caesar had always loved
          this legion, and, on account of its valor, had always the greatest confidence
          in it.
           This
          language, in which, without having recourse to the rigours of discipline, Caesar appealed to the honour of his
          soldiers, exciting at the same time the emulation both of those whom he loaded
          with praise and of those whose services he affected to disdain,—this proud
          assertion of his right to command produced a wonderful revolution in the minds
          of the men, and inspired the troops with great ardour for fighting. The 10th legion first charged its tribunes to thank him for the
          good opinion he had expressed towards them, and declared that they were ready
          to march. The other legions then sent their excuses by their tribunes and
          centurions of the first class, denied their hesitations and fears, and
          pretended that they had never given any judgment upon the war, as that
          appertained only to the general.
           This
          agitation having been calmed, Caesar sought information concerning the roads
          from Divitiacus, who, of all the Gauls, inspired him with the greatest amount
          of confidence. In order to proceed from Besançon to the valley of the Rhine,
          to meet Ariovistus, the Roman army had to cross the northern part of the Jura
          chain. This country is composed of two very distinct parts. The first
          comprises the valley of the Doubs from Besançon to Montbéliard,
          the valley of the Oignon, and the intermediate
          country, a mountainous district, broken, much covered with wood, and, without
          doubt, at the time of Caesar’s war in Gaul, more difficult than at present. The
          other part, which begins at the bold elbow made by the Doubs near Montbéliard, is composed of lengthened undulations, which
          diminish gradually, until they are lost in the plains of the Rhine. It is much
          less wooded than the first, and offers easier communications.
           Caesar,
          as he had announced, started early on the morrow of the day on which he had
          thus addressed his officers, and, determined on conducting his army through an
          open country, he turned the mountainous and difficult region just described,
          thus making a circuit of more than fifty miles (seventy-five kilometres), which is represented by a semi-circumference,
          the diameter of which would be the line drawn from Besançon to Arcey. It
          follows the present road from Besançon to Vesoul as far as Pennesières,
          and continues by Vallerois-le-Bois and Villersexel to Arcey. He could perform this
          distance in four days; then he resumed, on leaving Arcey, the direct road from Besançon
          to the Rhine by Belfort and Cernay.
           On
          the seventh day of a march uninterrupted since leaving Besançon, he learnt by
          his scouts that the troops of Ariovistus were at a distance of not more than
          twenty-four miles (36 kilometres).
   Supposing
          20 kilometres for the day’s march, the Roman army would have travelled over 140 kilometres in seven days, and would have arrived on the Thur, near Cernay. (By the road indicated,
            the distance from Besançon to the Thur is about 140 kilometres.) At this moment, Ariovistus would have been
            encamped at 36 kilometres from the Romans, to the
            north, near Colmar.
             Informed
          of the arrival of Caesar, Ariovistus sent him word “that he consented to an
          interview, now that the Roman general had come near, and that there was no
          longer any danger for him in going to him.” Caesar did not reject this
          overture, supposing that Ariovistus had returned to more reasonable sentiments.
           The
          interview was fixed for the fifth day following. In the interval,, while there
          was a frequent exchange of messages, Ariovistus, who feared some ambuscade,
          stipulated, as an express condition, that Caesar should bring with him no foot
          soldiers, but that, on both sides, they should confine themselves to an escort
          of cavalry. The latter, unwilling to furnish any pretext for a rupture,
          consented; but, not daring to entrust
            his personal safety to the Gaulish cavalry, he
            mounted on their horses men of the 10th legion, which gave rise to this jocular
            saying of one of the soldiers: “Caesar goes beyond his promise; he was to make
            us praetorians, and he makes us knights.”
             Between
          the two armies extended a vast plain, that which is crossed by the Ill and the Thur.  A tolerably large knoll rose in it at a
          nearly equal distance from either camp. This was the place of meeting of the two
          chieftains. Caesar posted his mounted legion at 200 paces from the knoll, and
          the cavalry of Ariovistus stood at the same distance. The latter demanded that
          the interview should take place on horseback, and that each of the two chiefs
          should be accompanied only by ten horsemen. When they met, Caesar reminded
          Ariovistus of his favours, of those of the Senate, of
          the interest which the Republic felt in the Aedui, of that constant policy of
          the Roman people which, far from suffering the abasement of its allies, sought
          incessantly their elevation. He repeated his first conditions.
           Ariovistus,
          instead of accepting them, put forward his own claims: “He had only crossed the
          Rhine at the prayer of the Gauls; the lands which he was accused of having
          seized, had been ceded to him; he had subsequently been attacked, and had
          scattered his enemies; if he has sought the friendship of the Roman people, it
          is in the hope of benefiting by it; if it becomes prejudicial to him, he
          renounces it; if he has carried so many Germans into Gaul, it is for his
          personal safety; the part he occupies belongs to him, as that occupied by the
          Romans belongs to them; his rights of conquest are older than those of the
          Roman army, which had never passed the limits of the province. Caesar is only
          in Gaul to ruin it. If he does not withdraw from it, he will regard him as an
          enemy, and he is certain that by his death he shall gain the gratitude of a great
          number of the first and most illustrious personages in Rome. They have informed
          him by their messengers that, at this price, he would gain their good-will and
          friendship. But if he be left in free possession of Gaul, he will assist in all
          the wars that Caesar may undertake.”
             Caesar
          insisted on the arguments he had already advanced: “It was not one of the
          principles of the Republic to abandon its allies; he did not consider that Gaul
          belonged to Ariovistus any more than to the Roman people. When formerly Q.
          Fabius Maximus vanquished The Arverni and the Ruteni,
          Rome pardoned them, and neither deduced them to provinces nor imposed tribute
          upon them. If, then, priority of conquest be invoked, the claims of the Romans
          to the empire of Gaul are the most just; and if it be thought preferable to
          refer to the Senate, Gaul ought to be free, since, after victory, the Senate
          had willed that she should preserve her own laws.”
           During
          this conversation, information was brought to Caesar that the cavalry of
          Ariovistus were approaching the knoll, and were throwing stones and darts at
          the Romans. Caesar immediately broke up the conference, withdrew to his
          escort, and forbade them to return the attack, not from fear of an engagement
          with his favourite legion, but in order to avoid, in
          case he should defeat his enemies, the suspicion that he might have, taken
          advantage of their good faith to surprise them in an interview. Nevertheless,
          the arrogance of Ariovistus, the disloyal attack of his cavalry, and the
          rupture of the conference, were soon known, and excited the ardour and impatience of the Roman troops. 
           Two
          days afterwards, Ariovistus made a proposal for a renewal of the conference, or
          for the sending to him of one of Caesar’s lieutenants. Caesar refused, the more
          so because, the day before, the Germans had again advanced and thrown their
          missiles at the Romans, and that thus his lieutenant would not have been safe
          from the attacks of the barbarians. He thought it more prudent to send as his
          deputy Valerius Procillus,
          the son of a Gaul who had become a Roman citizen, who spoke the Celtic
          language, and who was on familiar terms with Ariovistus, and M. Mettius, with whom the German king was bound by the rights
          of hospitality. They had hardly entered the camp of Ariovistus, when he ordered
          them to be thrown into fetters, under pretence that
          they were spies.
           The
          same day, the German king broke up his camp, and took another position at the
          foot of the Vosges, at a distance of   6,000 paces from that of Caesar, between Soultz and Feldkirch, not far
          from the Lauch. Next day he crossed the Thur, near its confluence with the Ill, ascended the left
          banks of the Ill and the Doller, and only halted at Heiningen,
          after having gone two miles (three kilometres) beyond
          the Roman camp. By this manoeuvre, Ariovistus cut off
          Caesar’s communication with Sequania and the Aeduan
          country, but he left open the communications with the country of the Leuci and the Lingones. The two
          armies thus encamped at a short distance from each other. During the five
          following days, Caesar drew out his troops each day, and formed them in order
          of battle at the head of his camp, but was not able to provoke the Germans to
          fight; all hostility was limited to cavalry skirmishes, in which the latter
          were much practised. To 6,000 horsemen was joined an
          equal number of picked men on foot, among whom each horseman had chosen one to
          watch over him in combat. According to circumstances, the horsemen fell back
          upon the footmen, or the latter advanced to their assistance. Such was their
          agility, that they kept up with the horses, running and holding by the mane.      .
   Caesar,
          seeing that Ariovistus persisted in shutting himself up in his camp and
          intercepting his communications, sought to re-establish them, chose an advantageous
          position about 600 paces (900 metres) beyond that
          occupied by the Germans, and led thither his army drawn up in three lines. He
          kept the first and second under arms, and employed the third on the retrenchments.
          The spot on which he established himself is perhaps the eminence situated on
          the Little Doller, to the north of Schweighausen.
          Ariovistus sent thither about 16,000 of his light troops and all his cavalry,
          to intimidate the Romans and impede the works. Nevertheless, the third line
          continued them, and the two others repelled the attack. The camp once
          fortified, Caesar left in it two legions and a part of the auxiliaries, and
          took back the four others to the principal camp. The two Roman camps were 3,600 metres distant from each other.
           Hitherto
          Caesar had been satisfied with drawing out his troops and backing them upon his
          retrenchments; the next day, persisting in his tactics of trying to provoke
          Ariovistus to fight, he drew them up at a certain distance in advance of the
          principal camp, and placed them in order of battle. In spite of this advanced
          position, Ariovistus persisted in not coming out. The Roman army re-entered the
          camp towards midday, and a part of the German troops immediately attacked the
          small camp. Both armies fought resolutely till evening, and there were many
          wounded on both sides. Astonished at seeing that, in spite of this engagement,
          Ariovistus still avoided a general battle, Caesar interrogated the prisoners,
          and learnt that the matrons charged with consulting destiny had declared that
          the Germans could not be conquerors if they fought before the new moon.
             Next
          day, leaving a sufficient guard in the two camps, Caesar placed all his auxiliaries
          in view of the enemy, in advance of the smaller camp; the number of the
          legionaries being less than that of the Germans, he sought to conceal his
          inferiority from the enemy by displaying other troops. While the Germans took
          these auxiliaries for the two legions which occupied the lesser camp, the
          latter left it by the Decuman gate, and, unperceived, went to rejoin, the other
          four. Then Caesar drew up his six legions in three lines, and, marching
          forward, he led them up to the enemy’s camp. This offensive movement allowed
          the Germans no longer the choice of avoiding battle: they quitted their camp,
          descended into the plain, drew up in line, by order of nations, at equal intervals—Harudes, Marcomanni, Suevi, Triboces, Vangiones, Nemetes, and Sedusii;
          and, to deprive themselves of all possibility of flight, inclosed themselves on the sides and in the rear by a circuit of carriages and wagons,
          on which they placed their women : dishevelled and
          in tears, these implored the warriors, as they marched to the battle, not to
          deliver them in slavery to the Romans. In this position, the Roman army faced
          the east, and the German army the west, and their lines extended over a space
          now partly covered by the forest of Nonnenbruch.
           Caesar,
          still more to animate his soldiers, determined to give them witnesses worthy
          of their courage, and placed at the head of each legion either one of his
          lieutenants or his quaestor. He led the attack in person, with his right wing,
          on the side where the Germans seemed weakest. The signal given, the legions
          dash forward; the enemy, on his side, rushes to the encounter. On both sides
          the impetuosity is so great that the Romans, not having time to use the pilum,
          throw it away, and fight hand to hand with the sword. But the Germans,
          according to their custom, to resist an attack of this kind, form rapidly in
          phalanxes of three or four hundred men, and cover their bare heads with their
          bucklers. They are pressed so close together, that even when dead they still
          remain standing. Such was the ardour of the
          legionaries, that many rushed upon these sort of tortoises, tearing away the
          bucklers, and striking the enemies from above. The short and sharp-pointed
          swords of the Romans had the advantage over the long swords of the Germans. Nevertheless,
          according to Appian, the legions owed their victory chiefly to the superiority
          of their tactics and the steadiness with which they kept their ranks. Ariovistus’s left did not resist long; but while it was
          driven back and put to flight, the right, forming in deep, masses, pressed the
          Romans hard. Young P. Crassus, commander of the cavalry placed at a distance
          from the thick of the battle, and better placed to judge of its incidents,
          perceived this, sent the third line to the succour of
          the wavering legions, and restored the combat. Soon Ariovistus’s right was obliged to give way in its turn; the rout then became general, and
          the Germans desisted from flight only when they reached the Rhine, fifty miles
          from the field of battle. They descended, no doubt, the valley of the Ill as
          far as Rhinau, thus retracing a part of the road by
          which they had come. Caesar sent his cavalry after them; all who were overtaken
          were cut to pieces; the rest attempted to swim across the river, or sought
          safety in boats. Among the latter was Ariovistus, who threw himself into a
          boat he found attached to the bank. According to Plutarch and Appian, 80,000
          men perished in the combat and during the pursuit. Two of the wives of the
          German king experienced the same fate; one was a Sueve,
          the other a Norician. Of his two daughters, one was
          killed and the other taken prisoner. Caesar says that, as he himself pursued
          the enemy with his cavalry, he experienced a pleasure equal to that given by
          victory when he recovered, first Procillus, loaded
          with a triple chain, and who had thrice seen the barbarians draw lots whether
          he should be burnt alive or not, and, subsequently, M. Mettius,
          both of whom, as we have seen, had been sent by him as messengers to
          Ariovistus.
           The
          report of this glorious exploit having spread beyond the Rhine, the Suevi, who
          had come to its banks, returned home. The Ubii, who
          dwelt near the river, pursued their terrified bands, and slew a considerable
          number of the fugitives.
   Caesar,
          having concluded two great wars in one single campaign, placed his army in
          winter quarters among the Sequani rather sooner than the season required— at
          the beginning of September—and left them under the command of Labienus. He then left, and went to hold the assemblies in
          Cisalpine Gaul.
           There
          are several things worthy of remark in this campaign:—
           1.
          The resolution taken by Caesar to gain possession of Besançon, and thus to
          anticipate Ariovistus. We see the importance which he attaches to that military position as a point of support
            and of supply.
   2.
          The facility with which a whole legion transforms itself into cavalry.
             3.
          The judicious use which Caesar makes of his light troops by assembling them in
          mass, so that the enemy should believe in a greater number of legions.
           4.
          Lastly, this singular circumstance, that the third line, which serves as
          reserve and decides the fate of the battle, receives from young P. Crassus, and
          not from the general-in-chief, the order to attack.
           The
          dates of the principal events of this year may be indicated in the following
          manner:—
           Rendezvous
          of the Helvetii on the banks of the Rhone (the day of the equinox) : March  24.
   Caesar
          refuses them a passage through the province : April 8.
           Arrival
          at the confluence of the Rhone and the Saone of the legions from Italy and
          Illyria  : June   7.
   Defeat
          of the Tigurini on the Saone : June 10.
   Passage
          of the Saone by Caesar : June 12.
           About
          fifteen days’ march From June 13 to June 27.
           Manoeuvre of Labienus to surprise the Helvetii : June   28.
           Battle
          of Bibracte : June 29.
   Caesar
          remains three days interring the dead; marches on the fourth; employs six days
          in his march from the field of battle to the country of the Lingones,
          and there overtakes the Helvetii in their retreat,
           From
          June 30 to July 8. Negotiations with Ariovistus (a month),
           From
          July 8 to August 8. Departure of Caesar (from Tonnerre,
          to meet Ariovistus) : August 10.
   Arrival
          of Caesar at Besançon : August 16.
           Abode
          of Caesar at Besançon,
           From
          August 16 to August 22. Departure from Besançon : August
          22.
             March
          of seven days from Besançon to the Rhine. From August 22 to August 28.
           Interview
          (five days afterwards) : September 2.
           Manoeuvres (about eight days),
           Battle
          of the Thur (fought before the new moon, which took
          place on the 18th of September) : September   10.
   
 CHAPTER V.
           WAR
          AGAINST THE BELGAE.
               (Year of Rome 697.)   ,
           The brilliant successes gained by Caesar
          over the Helvetii and the Germans had delivered the Republic from an immense
          danger,  but at the same time they had
          roused the distrust and jealousy of most of the nations of Gaul. These conceived
          fears for their independence, which were further increased by the presence of
          the Roman army in Sequania. The irritation was very
          great among the Belgae. They feared that their turn to be attacked would come
          when Celtic Gaul was once reduced to peace. Besides, they were excited by
          influential men who understood that, under Roman domination, they would have
          less chance of obtaining possession of the supreme power. The different
          tribes of Belgic Gaul entered into a formidable league, and reciprocally exchanged
          hostages.
           Caesar
          learnt these events in the Cisalpine province, through public rumour and the letters of Labienus.
          Alarmed at the news, he raised two legions in Italy, the 13th and 14th, and, in
          the beginning of spring, sent them into Gaul, under the command of the lieutenant
          Q. Pedius.  It
          is probable that these troops, to reach Sequania promptly, crossed the Great St. Bernard, for Strabo relates that one of the
          three routes which led from Italy into Gaul passed by Mount Poerinus (Great St. Bernard), after having traversed the country of the Salassi (Valley of Aosta),
          and that this latter people offered at first to assist Caesar’s troops in
          their passage by levelling the roads and throwing bridges across the torrents;
          but that, suddenly changing their tone, they had rolled masses of rock down
          upon them and pillaged their baggage. It was no doubt in the sequel of this defection
          that, towards the end of the year 697, Caesar, as we shall see farther on, sent
          Galba into the Valais, to take vengeance on the mountaineers for their perfidious
          conduct and to open a safe communication with Italy.
           As
          soon as forage was abundant, he rejoined his legions in person, probably at Besançon,
          since, as we have seen, they had been placed in winter quarters in Sequania. He charged the Senones and the other Celts who
          bordered upon Belgic Gaul to watch what was doing there and inform him of it.
          Their reports were unanimous: troops were being raised, and an army was
          assembling. Caesar then decided upon immediately entering into campaign.
           His
          army consisted of eight legions: they bore the numbers 7, 8, 9,10,11,12,13, and
          14. As their effective force, in consequence of marches and previous combats,
          cannot have been complete, we may admit a mean of 5,000 men to the legion,
          which would make 40,000 men of infantry. Adding to these one-third of
          auxiliaries, Cretan archers, slingers, and Numidians, the total of infantry
          would have been 53,000 men. There was, in addition to these, 5,000 cavalry and
          a body of Aeduan troops under the command of Divitiacus. Thus the army of
          Caesar amounted to at least 60,000 soldiers, without reckoning the servants for
          the machines, drivers, and valets; who, according to the instance cited by Orosius, amounted
            to a very considerable number.
           After
          securing provisions, Caesar started from Besançon, probably in the second fortnight
          in May, passed the Saone at Seveux, crossed the country
          of the Lingones in the direction of Langres, at Bar-sur-Aube, and entered, towards
          Vitry-le-François, on the territory of the Remi, having marched in about a
          fortnight 230 kilometres, the distance from Besançon
          to Vitry-le-François.
           The
          Remi were the first Belgic people he encountered in his road. Astonished at
          his sudden appearance, they sent two deputies, Iccius and Adecumborius, the first
          personages of their country, to make their submission, and offer provisions
          and every kind of succour. They informed Caesar that
          all the Belgae were in arms, and that the Germans on that side the Rhine had
          joined the coalition; for themselves, they had refused to take any part in it,
          but the excitement was so great that they had not been able to dissuade from
          their warlike projects the Suessiones themselves, who were united with them by
          community of origin, laws, and interests. “The Belgae,” they added, “proud of
          having been formerly the only people of Gaul who preserved their territory from
          the invasion of the Teutones and Cimbri, had the loftiest idea of their own valour. In their general assembly, each people had engaged
          to furnish the following contingents:—The Bellovaci, the most warlike, could
          send into the field 100,000 men; they have promised 60,000 picked troops, and
          claim the supreme direction of the war. The Suessiones, their neighbours, masters of a vast and fertile territory, in
          which are reckoned twelve towns, furnish 50,000 men; they have for their king
          Galba, who has been invested, by the consent of the allies, with the chief
          command. The Nervii, the most distant of all, and the most barbarous among
          these peoples, furnish the same number; the Atrebates, 15,000 ; the Ambiani, 10,000; the Morini,
          25,000; the Menapii, 7000; the Caletes, 10,000; the Veliocasses and the Veromandui,
          10,000; the Aduatuci, 19,000; lastly, the Condrusi, Eburones, Caeresi, and Psemani, comprised under the general name of Germans, are
          to send 40,000; in all, about 296,000 men.”
           Caesar
          could judge, from this information, the formidable character of the league
          which he had now to combat. His first care, was to try to divide the hostile
          forces, and, with this view, he induced Divitiacus, in spite of the friendly
          relations which had long united the Aedui with the Bellovaci, to invade and
          ravage the territory of the latter with the Aeduan troops. He then required the
          senate of the Remi to repair to his presence, and the children of the principes to be brought to him as hostages; and
          then, on information that Galba was marching to meet him, he resolved to move
          to the other side of the Aisne, which crossed the extremity of the territory of
          the Remi, and encamp there in a strong position, to await the enemy’s attack.
          The road he had hitherto followed led straight to the Aisne, and crossed it by
          a bridge at the spot where now stands the village of Berry-au-Bac. He marched
          in great haste towards this bridge, led his army across it, and fixed his camp
          on the right side of the road, on the hill situated between the Aisne and the Miette,
          a small stream with marshy banks, which makes a bend in that river between
          Berry-au-Bac and Pontavert. This hill, called Mauchamp, is of small elevation (about 25 metres) above the valley of the Aisne, and in its length,
          from east to west, it presents sufficient space for the Roman army to deploy.
          Laterally, it sinks to the level of the surrounding ground by slight undulations,
          and the side which looks upon the Miette descends by a gentle slope towards the
          banks of the stream. This position offered several advantages: the Aisne defended
          one side of the camp; the rear of the army was protected, and the transports of
          provisions could arrive in safety through the countries of the Remi and other
          friendly peoples. Caesar ordered a work to be constructed on the right bank of
          the Aisne, at the extremity of the bridge, where he established a post, and he
          left on the other side of the river the lieutenant Q. Titurius Sabinus with six cohorts. The camp was surrounded by a retrenchment twelve
          feet high, and by a fosse eighteen feet wide.
           Meanwhile
          the Belgae, after having concentrated their forces in the country of the Suessiones,
          to the north of the Aisne, had invaded the territory of the Remi. On their
          road, and at eight miles from the Roman camp, was a town of the Remi called Bibrax (Vieux-Laon). The Belgae attacked it
          vigorously, and it was defended with difficulty all day. These peoples, like
          the Celts, attacked fortresses by surrounding them with a crowd of combatants,
          throwing from every side a great quantity of stones, to drive the defenders
          away from the walls; then, forming the tortoise, they advanced against the
          gates and sapped the walls. When night had put a stop to the attack, Iccius,
          who commanded in the town, sent information to Caesar that he could hold out no
          longer, unless he received prompt succour. Towards
          midnight the latter sent him Numidians, Cretan archers, and Balearic slingers,
          who had the messengers of Iccius for their guides. This re-enforcement raised
          the courage of the besieged, and deprived the enemy of the hope of taking the
          town; and after remaining some time round Bibrax,
          laying, waste the land and burning the hamlets and houses, they marched towards
          Caesar, and halted at less than two miles from his camp. Their fires, kindled
          on the right bank of the Miette, indicated a front of more than 8,000 paces
          (twelve kilometres).
           The
          great numbers of the enemy, and their high renown for bravery, led the
          proconsul to resolve to postpone the battle. If his legions had in his eyes an incontestable
          superiority, he wished, nevertheless, to ascertain what he could expect from
          his cavalry, which was composed of Gauls. For this purpose, and to try, at the
          same time, the courage of the Belgae, he engaged them every day in cavalry
          combats in the undulated plain to the north of the camp. Once certain that his
          troops did not yield in valour to those of the enemy,
          he resolved to draw them into a general action. In front of the entrenchments
          was an extensive tract of ground, advantageous for ranging an army in order of
          battle. This commanding position was covered in front and on the left by the
          marshes of the Miette. The right only remained unsupported, and the Belgae
          might have taken the Romans in flank in the space between the camp and the
          stream, or turned them by passing between the camp and the Aisne. To meet this
          danger, Caesar made, on each of the two slopes of the hill, a fosse,
          perpendicular to the line of battle, about 400 paces (600 metres)
          in length, the first reaching from the camp to the Miette, the second joining
          it to the Aisne. At the extremity of these fosses he established redoubts, in
          which were placed military machines.
           Having
          made these dispositions, and having left in the camp his two newly-raised legions,
          to serve as a reserve in case of need, Caesar placed the six others in array of
          battle, the right resting on the retrenchments. The enemy also drew out his
          troops and deployed them in face of the Romans. The two armies remained in
          observation, each waiting till the other passed the marsh of the Miette, as
          the favourable moment for attack. Meanwhile, as they
          remained thus stationary, the cavalry were fighting on both sides. After a
          successful charge, Caesar, perceiving that the enemies persisted in not
          entering the marshes, withdrew his legions. The Belgae immediately left their
          position to move towards the Aisne, below the point where the Miette entered
          it. Their object was to cross the river between Gernicourt and Pontavert, where there were fords, with part of
          their troops, to carry, if they could, the redoubt commanded by the lieutenant
          Q. Titurius Sabinus, and to cut the bridge, or, at
          least, to intercept the convoys of provisions, and ravage the country of the
          Remi, to the south of the Aisne, whence the Romans drew their supplies.
           The
          barbarians were already approaching the river, when Sabinus perceived them from
          the heights of Berry-au-Bac; he immediately gave information to Caesar, who,
          with all his cavalry, the light-armed Numidians, the slingers, and the archers,
          passed the bridge, and, descending the left bank, marched to meet the enemies
          towards the place threatened. When he arrived there, some of them had already
          passed the Aisne. An obstinate struggle takes place. Surprised in their
          passage, the Belgae, after having experienced considerable loss, advance
          intrepidly over the corpses to cross the river, but are repulsed by a shower of
          missiles; those who had reached the left bank are surrounded by the cavalry and
          massacred.
             The
          Belgae having failed in taking the oppidum of Bibrax,
          in drawing the Romans upon disadvantageous ground, in crossing the river, and
          suffering, also, from want of provisions, decided on returning home, to be
          ready to assemble again to succour the country which
          might be first invaded by the Roman army. The principal cause of this decision
          was the news of the threatened invasion of the country of the Bellovaci by
          Divitiacus and the Aedui: the Bellovaci refused to lose a single instant in
          hurrying to the defence of their hearths.  Towards ten o’clock in the evening, the Belgae
          withdrew in such disorder that their departure resembled a flight. Caesar was
          informed immediately by his spies, but, fearing: that this retreat might
          conceal a snare, he retained his legions, and even his cavalry, in the camp.
          At break of day, better informed by his scouts, he sent all his cavalry, under
          the orders of the lieutenants Q. Pedius and L. Aurunculeius Cotta, and ordered Labienus,
          with three legions, to follow them. These troops fell upon the fugitives, and
          slew as many as the length of the day would permit. At sunset they gave up the
          pursuit, and, in obedience to the orders they had received, returned to the
          camp.
           The
          coalition of the Belgae, so renowned for their valour,
          was thus dissolved. Nevertheless, it was of importance to the Roman general, in
          order to secure the pacification of the country, to go and reduce to subjection
          in their homes the peoples who had dared to enter into league against him. The
          nearest were the Suessiones, whose territory bordered upon that of the Remi.
   The
          day after the flight of the enemy, before they had recovered from their fright,
          Caesar broke up his camp, crossed the Aisne, descended its left bank, invaded
          the country of the Suessiones, arrived after a long day’s march (45 kilometres) before Noviodunum (Soissons), and, informed that this town had a weak garrison, he attempted the
          same day to carry it by assault; he failed, through the breadth of the fosses
          and the height of the walls. He then retrenched his camp, ordered covered
          galleries to be advanced, and all things necessary for a siege to be collected.
          Nevertheless, the crowd of fugitive Suessiones threw themselves into the town
          during the following night. The galleries having been pushed rapidly towards
          the walls, the foundations of a terrace to pass the fosse were established, and
          towers were constructed. The Gauls, astonished at the greatness and novelty of
          these works, so promptly executed, offered to surrender. They obtained safety
          of life at the prayer of the Remi.
           Caesar
          received as hostages the principal chiefs of the country, and even the two sons
          of King Galba, exacted the surrender of all their arms, and accepted the
          submission of the Suessiones. He then conducted his army into the country of
          the Bellovaci, who had shut themselves up, with all they possessed, in the
          oppidum of Bratuspantium (Breteuil). The army
          was only at about five miles’ distance from it, when all the aged men, issuing
          from the town, came, with extended hands, to implore the generosity of the Roman
          general; when he had arrived under the walls of the place, and while he was
          establishing his camp, he saw the women and children also demanding peace as
          suppliants from the top of the walls.
   Divitiacus,
          in the name of the Aedui, interceded in their favour.
          After the retreat of the Belgae and the disbanding of his troops, he had
          returned to the presence of Caesar. The latter, who had, at the prayer of the
          Remi, just shown himself clement towards the Suessiones, displayed, at the
          solicitation of the Aedui, the same indulgence towards the Bellovaci. Thus
          obeying the same political idea of increasing among the Belgae the influence of
          the peoples allied to Rome, he pardoned them; but, as their nation was the most
          powerful in Belgic Gaul, he required from them all their arms and 600 hostages.
          The Bellovaci declared that the promoters of the war, seeing the misfortune
          they had drawn upon their country, had fled into the isle of Britain.
   It
          is curious to remark the relations which existed at this epoch between part of
          Gaul and England. We know, in fact, from the “Commentaries,” that a certain
          Divitiacus, an Aeduan chieftain, the most powerful in all Gaul, had formerly
          extended his power into the isle of Britain, and we have just seen that the
          chiefs in the last struggle against the Romans had found a refuge in the
          British isles.
             Caesar
          next marched from Bratuspantium against the Ambiani, who surrendered without resistance
   The
          Roman army was now to encounter more formidable adversaries. The Nervii occupied
          a vast territory, one extremity of which touched upon that of the Ambiani. This wild and intrepid people bitterly reproached
          the other Belgae for having submitted to foreigners and abjured the virtues of
          their fathers. They had resolved not to send deputies, nor to accept peace on
          any condition. Foreseeing the approaching invasion of the Roman army, the
          Nervii had drawn into alliance with them two neighbouring peoples, the Atrebates and the Veromandui, whom they
          had persuaded to risk with them the fortune of war: the Aduatuci,
          also, were already on the way to join the coalition. The women, and all those
          whose age rendered them unfit for fighting, had been placed in safety, in a
          spot defended by a marsh, and inaccessible to an army, no doubt at Mons.
           After
          the submission of the Ambiani, Caesar left Amiens to
          proceed to the country of the Nervii; and after three days’ march on their
          territory, he arrived probably at Bavay (Bagacum), which is considered to have been their
          principal town. There he learnt by prisoners that he was no more than ten miles
          (fifteen kilometres) distant from the Sambre, and
          that the enemy awaited him posted on the opposite bank of the river. He thus
          found himself on the left bank, and the Nervii were assembled on the right
          bank.
   In
          accordance with the informations he had received,
          Caesar sent out a reconnoitring party of scouts and
          centurions, charged with the selection of a spot favourable for the establishment of a camp. A certain number of the Belgae, who had
          recently submitted, and other Gauls, followed him, and accompanied him in his
          march. Some of them, as was known subsequently by the prisoners, having
          observed during the preceding days the usual order of march of the army,
          deserted during the night to the Nervii, and informed them that behind each of
          the legions there was a long column of baggage; that the legion which arrived
          first at the camp being separated by a great space from the others, it would be
          easy to attack the soldiers, still charged with their bundles (sarcinoe); that this legion once routed and its
          baggage captured, the others would not dare to offer any resistance. This plan
          of attack was the more readily embraced by the Belgae, as the nature of the
          locality favoured its execution. The Nervii, in
          fact, always weak in cavalry (their whole force was composed of infantry), were
          accustomed, in order to impede more easily the cavalry of their neighbours, to notch and bend horizontally young trees,
          the numerous branches of which, interlaced and mingled with brambles and brushwood,
          formed thick hedges, a veritable wall which nothing could pass through,
          impenetrable even to the eye. As this kind of obstacle was very embarrassing
          to the march of the Roman army, the Nervii resolved to hide themselves in the
          woods which then covered the heights of Haumont, to
          watch there the moment when it would debouch on the opposite  heights of the Sambre, to wait till they
          perceived the file of baggage, and then immediately to rush upon the troops
          which preceded.
           The
          centurions sent to reconnoitre had selected for the establishment
          of the camp the heights of Neuf-Mesnil. These descend in a uniform slope to the
          very banks of the river. Those of Boussières, to which they join, end, on the
          contrary, at the Sambre, in sufficiently bold escarpments, the elevation of
          which varies from five to fifteen metres, and which,
          inaccessible near Boussières, may be climbed a little lower, opposite the wood
          of Quesnoy. The Sambre, in all this extent, was no
          more than about three feet deep. On the right bank, the heights of Haumont, opposite those of Neuf-Mesnil, descend on all
          sides in gentle and regular slopes to the level of the river. In the lower
          part, they were bare for a breadth of about 200 Roman paces (300 metres), reckoning from the Sambre ; and then the woods
          began, which covered the upper parts. It was in these woods, impenetrable to
          the sight, that the Belgae remained concealed. They were there drawn up in
          order of battle: on the right, the Atrebates; in the centre,
          the Veromandui; on the left, the Nervii; these latter
          facing the escarpments of the Sambre. On the open part, along the river, they
          had placed some posts of cavalry.
           Caesar,
          ignorant of the exact position where the Belgae were encamped, directed his
          march towards the heights of Neuf-Mesnil. His cavalry preceded him, but the
          order of march was different from that which had been communicated to the
          Nervii by the deserters; as he approached the enemy, he had, according to his
          custom, united six legions, and placed the baggage in the tail of the column,
          under the guard of the two legions recently raised, who closed the march.
             The
          cavalry, slingers, and archers passed the Sambre and engaged the cavalry of the
          enemy, who at one moment took refuge in the woods, and at another resumed the
          offensive, nor were ever pursued beyond the open ground. Meanwhile, the six
          legions debouched. Arrived on the place chosen for the camp, they began to
          retrench, and shared the labour among them. Some proceeded
          to dig the fosses, while others spread themselves over the country in search
          of timber and turf. They had hardly begun their work, when the Belgae,
          perceiving the first portion of the baggage (which was the moment fixed for the
          attack), suddenly issue from the forest with all their forces, in the order of
          battle they had adopted, rush upon the cavalry and put it to rout, and run
          towards the Sambre with such incredible rapidity that they seem to be
          everywhere at once—at the edge of the wood, in the river, and in the midst of
          the Roman troops; then, with the same celerity, climbing the hill, they rush
          towards the camp, where the soldiers are at work at the retrenchments. The
          Roman army is taken off its guard.
           Caesar
          had to provide against everything at the same time. It was necessary to raise
          the purple standard as the signal for hastening to arms,  to sound the trumpets to recall the soldiers
          employed in the works, to bring in those who were at a distance, form the
          lines, harangue the troops, give the word of order. In this critical situation,
          the experience of the soldiers, acquired in so many combats, and the presence
          of the lieutenants with each legion, helped to supply the place of the general,
          and to enable each to take, by his own impulse, the dispositions he thought
          best. The impetuosity of the enemy is such that the soldiers have time neither
          to put on the ensigns, nor to take the covering from their bucklers, nor even
          to put on their helmets. Each, abandoning his labours,
          runs to range himself in the utmost haste under the first standard which
          presents itself.
           The
          army, constrained by necessity, was drawn up on the slope of the hill, much
          more in obedience to the nature of the ground and the exigencies of the moment
          than according to military rules. The legions, separated from one another by
          thick hedges, which intercepted their view, could not lend each other mutual succour; they formed an irregular and interrupted line:
          the 9th and 10th legions were placed on the left of the camp, the 8th and 11th
          in the centre, the 7th and 12th on the right. In this
          general confusion, in which it became as difficult to carry succour to the points threatened as to obey one single command, everything was ruled
          by accident.
           Caesar,
          after taking the measures most urgent, rushes towards the troops which chance
          presents first to him, takes them as he finds them in his way, harangues them,
          and, when he comes to the 10th legion, he recalls to its memory, in a few
          words, its ancient valour. As the enemy was already
          within reach of the missiles, he orders the attack; then, proceeding towards
          another point to encourage his troops, he finds them already engaged.
           The
          soldiers of the 9th and 10th legions throw the pilum, and fall, sword in
          hand, upon the Atrebates, who, fatigued by their rapid advance, out of breath,
          and pierced with wounds, are soon driven back from the hill they have just
          climbed. These two legions, led no doubt by Labienus,
          drive them into the Sambre, slay a great number, cross the river at their
          heels, and pursue them up the slopes of the right bank. The enemy, then
          thinking to take advantage of the commanding position, form again, and renew
          the combat; but the Romans repulse them anew, and, continuing their
          victorious march, take possession of the Gaulish camp. In the centre, the 8th and 11th legions,
          attacked by the Veromandui, had driven them back upon
          the banks of the Sambre, to the foot of the heights, where the combat still
          continued.
           While
          on the left and in the centre victory declared for
          the Romans, on the right wing, the 7th and 12th legions were in danger of being
          overwhelmed under the efforts of the whole army of the Nervii, composed of
          60,000 men. These intrepid warriors, led by their chief, Boduognatus, had
          dashed across the Sambre in face of the escarpments of the left bank; they had
          boldly climbed these, and thrown themselves, in close rank, upon the two
          legions of the right wing. These legions were placed in a position the more
          critical, as the victorious movements of the left and centre,
          by stripping almost entirely of troops that part of the field of battle, had
          left them without support. The Nervii take advantage of these circumstances:
          some move towards the summit of the heights to seize the camp, others outflank
          the two legions on the right wing.
           As
          chance would have it, at this same moment, the cavalry and light-armed foot,
          who had been repulsed at the first attack, regained pell-mell the camp;
          finding themselves unexpectedly in face of the enemy, they are confounded, and
          take to flight again in another direction. The valets
          of the army, who, from the Decuman gate and the summit of the hill, had seen
          the Romans cross the river victoriously, and had issued forth in hope of
          plunder, look back; perceiving the Nervii in the camp, they fly precipitately.
          The tumult is further increased by the cries of the baggage-drivers, who rush
          about in terror. Among the auxiliaries in the Roman army, there was a body of Treviran cavalry, who enjoyed among the Gauls a reputation
          for valour. When they saw the camp invaded, the
          legions pressed and almost surrounded, the valets, the cavalry, the slingers,
          the Numidians, separated, dispersed, and flying on all sides, they believed
          that all was lost, took the road for their own country, and proclaimed
          everywhere in their march that the Roman army was destroyed.
           Caesar
          had repaired from the left wing to the other points of the line. When he
          arrived at the right wing, he had found the 7th and 12th legions hotly engaged,
          the ensigns of the cohorts of the 12th legion collected on the same point, the
          soldiers pressed together and mutually embarrassing each other, all the
          centurions of the 4th cohort and the standard-bearer killed; the standard lost;
          in the other cohorts most of the centurions were either killed or wounded, and
          among the latter was the primipilus Sextius Baculus, a man of rare bravery, who was destined
          soon afterwards to save the legion of Galba in the Valais. The soldiers who
          still resisted were exhausted, and those of the last ranks were quitting the
          ranks to avoid the missiles; new troops of enemies continually climbed the
          hill, some advancing to the front against the Romans, the others turning them
          on the two wings. In this, extreme danger, Caesar judges that he can hope for succour only from himself: having arrived without buckler,
          he seizes that of a legionary of the last ranks and rushes to the first line;
          there, calling the centurions by their names and exciting the soldiers he draws
          the 12th legion forward, and causes more interval to be made between the files
          of the companies in order to facilitate the handling of their swords. His
          example and encouraging words restore hope to the combatants and revive their
          courage. Each man, under the eyes of his general, shows new energy, and this
          heroic devotedness begins to cool the impetuosity of the enemy. Not far
          thence, the 7th legion was pressed by a multitude of assailants. Caesar orders
          the tribunes gradually to bring the two legions back to back, so that each
          presented its front to the enemy in opposite directions. Fearing no longer to
          be taken in the rear, they resist with firmness, and fight with new ardour. While Caesar is thus occupied, the two legions of
          the rear-guard, which formed the escort of the baggage (the 13th and 14th),
          informed of what was taking place, arrive in haste, and appear in view of the
          enemy at the top of the hill. On his part, T. Labienus,
          who, at the head of the 9th and 10th legions, had made himself master of the
          enemy’s camp on the heights of Haumont, discovers
          what is passing in the Roman camp. He judges, by the flight of the cavalry and
          servants, the greatness of the danger with which Caesar is threatened, and
          sends the 10th legion to his succour, which,
          re-passing the Sambre, and climbing the slopes of Neuf-Mesnil, runs in haste to
          fall upon the rear of the Nervii.
           On
          the arrival of these re-enforcements, the whole aspect of things changes: the
          wounded raise themselves, and support themselves on their bucklers in order to
          take part in the action; the valets, seeing the terror of the enemy, throw
          themselves unarmed upon men who are armed; and the cavalry, to efface the
          disgrace of their flight, seek to outdo the legionaries in the combat.
          Meanwhile the Nervii fight with the courage of despair. When those of the first
          ranks fall, the nearest take their places, and mount upon their bodies; they
          are slain in their turn; the dead form heaps; the survivors throw, from the top
          of this mountain of corpses, their missiles upon the Romans, and send them back
          their own pila. “How can we, then, be astonished,” says Caesar, “that
          such men dared to cross a broad river, climb its precipitous banks, and
          overcome the difficulties of the ground, since nothing appeared too much for
          their courage They met death to the last man, and 60,000 corpses covered the
          field of battle so desperately fought, in which the fortune of Caesar had
          narrowly escaped wreck.      
           After
          this struggle, in which, according to the “Commentaries,” the race and name of
          the Nervii were nearly annihilated, the old men, women, and children, who had
          sought refuge in the middle of the marshes, finding no hopes of safety,
          surrendered. In dwelling on the misfortune of their country, they said that, of
          600 senators, there remained only three; and that, of 60,000 combatants, hardly
          500 had survived. Caesar, to show his clemency towards the unfortunate who
          implored it, treated these remains of the Nervii with kindness; he left them
          their lands and towns, and enjoined the neighbouring peoples not only not to molest them, but even to protect them from all outrage
          and violence.
           This
          victory was gained, no doubt, towards the end of July. Caesar detached the 7th legion,
          under the orders of young P. Crassus, to reduce the maritime peoples of the
          shores of the ocean: the Veneti, the Unelli, the Osismii, the Curiosolitae, the Essuvii, the Aulerci, and the Redones. He proceeded in person, with the seven other
          legions, following the course of the Sambre, to meet the Aduatuci,
          who, as we have seen above, were marching to join the Nervii. They were the
          descendants of those Cimbri and Teutones who, in their descent upon the Roman
          province and Italy in the year 652, had left on this side the Rhine 6,000 men
          in charge of as much of the baggage as was too heavy to be carried with them.
          After the defeat of their companions by Marius, and many vicissitudes, these
          Germans had established themselves towards the confluence of the Sambre and
          the Meuse, and had there formed a state.
           As
          soon as the Aduatuci were informed of the disaster
          of the Nervii, they returned to their own country, abandoned their towns and
          forts, and retired, with all they possessed, into one oppidum,
          remarkably fortified by nature. Surrounded in every direction by precipitous
          rocks of great elevation, it was accessible only on one side by a gentle slope,
          at most 100 feet wide, defended by a fosse and double wall of great height, on
          which they placed enormous masses of rock and pointed beams. The mountain on
          which the citadel of Namur is situated answers sufficiently to this
          description.
           On
          the arrival of the army, they made at first frequent sorties, and engaged in
          battles on a small scale. Later, when the place was surrounded by a counter-vallation
          of twelve feet high in a circuit of 15,000 feet, with numerous redoubts, they
          kept close in their oppidum. The Romans pushed forward their covered
          galleries, raised a terrace under shelter of these galleries, and constructed a
          tower of timber, intended to be pushed against the wall. At the sight of these
          preparations, the Aduatuci, who, like most of the
          Gauls, despised the Romans on account of their small stature, addressed the
          besiegers ironically from their walls, not understanding how a great machine,
          placed at a great distance, could be put in motion by men so diminutive. But
          when they saw this tower move and approach the walls, struck with a sight so
          strange and so new to them, they sent to implore peace, demanding, as the only
          condition, that they should be left in possession of their arms. Caesar refused
          this condition, but declared that, if they surrendered before the ram had
          struck their wall, they should be placed, like the Nervii, under the protection
          of the Roman people, and preserved from all violence. The besieged thereupon
          threw such a quantity of arms into, the fosses that they filled them almost
          to the height of the wall and the terrace; yet, as was afterwards discovered,
          they had retained about one-third. They threw open their gates, and that day
          remained quiet.
           The
          Romans had occupied the town; towards evening, Caesar ordered them to leave
          it, fearing the violences which the soldiers might
          commit on the inhabitants during the night. But these, believing that after
          the surrender of the place the posts of the countervallation would be guarded with less care, resume the arms they had concealed, furnish
          themselves with bucklers of bark of trees, or wicker, covered hastily with
          skins, and, at midnight, attack the part of the works which seems most easy of access. Fires, prepared by Caesar, soon announce
          the attack. The soldiers rush to the spot from the nearest redoubts; and,
          though the enemies fight with the obstinacy of despair, the missiles thrown
          from the entrenchments and the towers disperse them, and they are driven back
          into the town with a loss of 4,000 men. Next day the gates were broken in
          without resistance, and, the town once taken, the inhabitants were sold publicly
          to the number of 53,000.
           Towards
          the time of the conclusion of this siege (the first days of September), Caesar received
          letters from P. Crassus. This lieutenant announced that the maritime peoples on
          the coasts of the ocean, from the Loire to the Seine, had submitted. On the
          arrival of this news at Rome, the Senate decreed fifteen days of thanksgivings.
           These
          successful exploits, and Gaul entirely pacified, gave to the barbarian peoples
          so high an opinion of the Roman power, that the nations beyond the Rhine,
          particularly the Ubii, sent deputies to Caesar,
          offering hostages and obedience to his orders. Anxious to proceed to Italy and
          Illyria, he commanded the deputies to return to him at the commencement of the
          following spring, and placed his legions, with the exception of the 12th, in
          winter quarters, in the countries of the Carnutes,
          the Andes, and the Turones, neighbouring upon the localities where Crassus had been, making war. They were probably échelonnés in the valley of the Loire, between
          Orleans and Angers.
           Before
          he departed for Italy, Caesar sent Servius Galba, with a part of the cavalry
          and the 12th legion, into the country of the Nantuates,
          the Veragri, and the Seduni (peoples of Chablais and Lower and Upper Valais), whose territory
          extended from the country of the Allobroges, Lake Léman, and the Rhone, to the
          summit of the Alps. His object was to open an easy communication with Italy by
          way of these mountains, that is, by the Simplon and the St. Bernard, where travellers were continually subject to exactions and
          vexations. Galba, after some successful battles, by which all these peoples
          were subdued, obtained hostages, placed two cohorts among the Nantuates, and the rest of his legions in a town of the
          Veragri called Octodurus (Martigny).
          This town, situated in a little plain at the bottom of a glen surrounded by
          high mountains, was divided into two parts by a river (the Drance). Galba left one bank to the Gauls, and established
          his troops on the other, which he fortified with a fosse and rampart.
           Several
          days had passed in the greatest tranquillity, when
          Galba learnt suddenly that the Gauls had during the night evacuated the part
          of the town which they occupied, and that the Veragri and the Seduni were appearing in great numbers on the surrounding
          mountains. The situation was most critical; for not only could Galba reckon on
          no succour, but he had not even finished his
          retrenchments, or gathered in his provisions in sufficient quantity. He called
          together a council, in which it was decided, in spite of the opinions of some
          chiefs, who proposed to abandon the baggage and fight their way out, that they
          should defend the camp; but the enemies hardly gave the Romans time to make the
          necessary dispositions. Suddenly they rush from all sides towards the retrenchments,
          and throw a shower of darts and javelins (gaesa).
          The legionaries line the rampart, and retort. Having to defend themselves
          against forces which are continually renewed, they are obliged to fight all at
          once, and to move incessantly to the points that are most threatened. The men
          who are fatigued, and even the wounded, cannot quit the place. The combat had
          lasted six hours: the Romans were exhausted with fatigue. Already they began
          to be short of missiles; already the Gauls, with increasing audacity, were
          filling up the fosse and tearing down the palisades; already the Romans were
          reduced to the last extremity, when the primipilus, P. Sextius Baculus, the same who had shown so much
          energy in the battle of the Sambre, and C. Volusenus,
          tribune of the soldiers, advise Galba that the only hope which remained was in
          a sally. The suggestion is adopted. At the command of the centurions, the
          soldiers confine themselves to parrying the missiles, and take breath; then,
          when the signal is given, rushing on all sides to the gates, they fall upon the
          enemy, put him to rout, and make an immense slaughter. Of 30,000 Gauls, about
          10,000 were slain. In spite of this, Galba, not believing himself in safety ,
          in so difficult a country, in the midst of hostile populations, brought back
          the 12th legion into the country of the Allobroges, where it wintered.
           
           CHAPTER
          VI.
               (Year
          of Rome 698.)
               WAR
          OF THE VENETI—VICTORY OVER THE UNELLI—SUBMISSION OF AQUITAINE —MARCH AGAINST
          THE MORINI AND THE MENAPII.
          
           
           While Caesar was visiting Illyria and the
          different towns, of the Cisalpine, such as Ravenna and Lucca, war broke out
          anew in Gaul. The cause was this. Young P. Crassus was in winter quarters with
          the 7th legion among the Andes, near the ocean; as he fell short of wheat, he
          sent several prefects and military tribunes to ask for provisions from the neighbouring peoples. T. Terrasidius was deputed to the Unelli, M. Trebius Gallus to the Curiosolitae, and Quintus Velanius, with T. Silius, to the
          Veneti. This last people was the most powerful on the whole coast through its
          commerce and its navy. Its numerous ships served to carry on a traffic with the
          isle of Britain. Possessed of consummate skill in the art of navigation, it
          ruled over this part of the ocean. The Veneti first seized Silius and Velanius, in the hope of obtaining in exchange
          for them the return of the hostages given to Crassus.Their example was soon followed. The Unelli and the Curiosolitae seized, with the same design, Trebius and Terrasidius; they entered
          into an engagement with the Veneti, through their chiefs, to run the same
          fortune, excited the rest of the neighbouring maritime peoples to recover their liberty, and all together intimated to
          Crassus that he must send back the hostages if he wished his tribunes and
          prefects to be restored.
           Caesar,
          then very far distant from the scene of these events, learnt them from Crassus.
          He immediately ordered galleys to be constructed on the Loire, rowers to be
          fetched from the coast of the Mediterranean, and sailors and pilots to be
          procured. These, measures having been promptly executed, he repaired to the
          army as soon as the season permitted. At the news of his approach, the Veneti
          and their allies, conscious that they had been guilty of throwing into fetters
          envoys invested with a character which is inviolable, made preparations
          'proportionate to the. danger with which they saw they were threatened. Above
          all, they set to work making their ships ready for action. Their confidence was
          great: they knew that the tides would intercept the roads on the sea-coast;
          they reckoned on the difficulty of the navigation in those unknown latitudes,
          where the ports are few, and on the want of provisions, which would not permit
          the Romans to make a long stay in their country.
             Their
          determination once taken, they fortified their oppida, and transported to them
          the wheat from their fields. Persuaded that the country of the Veneti would be
          the first attacked, they gathered together all their ships, no doubt in the
          vast estuary formed by the river Auray in the Bay of Quiberon. They allied
          themselves with the maritime peoples of the coast, from the mouth of the Loire
          to that of the Scheldt, and demanded succour from the
          isle of Britain.
   In
          spite of the difficulties of this war, Caesar undertook it without hesitation.
          He was influenced by grave motives: the violation of the right of nations, the
          rebellion after submission, the coalition of so many peoples; above all, by the
          fear that their impunity would be an encouragement to others. If we believe
          Strabo, Caesar, as well as the Veneti, had other reasons to desire this war:
          on one side, the latter, possessed of the commerce of Britain, already
          suspected the design of the Roman general to pass into that island, and they
          sought to deprive him of the means; and, on the other, Caesar could not attempt
          the dangerous enterprise of a descent on England till after he had destroyed
          the fleet of the Veneti, the sole masters of the ocean.
             Be
          this as it may, in order to prevent new risings, Caesar divided his army so as
          to occupy the country militarily. The lieutenant T. Labienus,
          at the head of a part of the cavalry, was sent to the Treviri,
          with the mission to visit the Remi and other peoples of Belgic Gaul, to maintain
          them in their duty, and to oppose the passage of the Rhine by the Germans, who
          were said to have been invited by the Belgae. P. Crassus was ordered, with
          twelve legionary cohorts, and a numerous body of cavalry, to repair into
          Aquitaine, to prevent the inhabitants of that province from swelling the forces
          of the insurrection. The lieutenant Q. Titurius Sabinus was detached with three legions to restrain the Unelli, the Curiosolitae, and the Lexovii. The young D. Brutus, who had arrived from
          the Mediterranean with the galleys, received the command of the fleet, which
          was increased by the Gaulish ships borrowed from the Pictones, the Santones, and other
          peoples who had submitted. His instructions enjoined him to sail as soon as
          possible for the country of the Veneti. As to Caesar, he proceeded thither with
          the rest of the land army.
           The
          eight legions of the Roman army were then distributed thus: to the north of the
          Loire, three legions; in Aquitaine, with Crassus, a legion and two cohorts;
          one legion, no doubt, on the fleet; and two legions and eight cohorts with the
          general-in-chief, to undertake the war against the Veneti.
             We
          may admit that Caesar started from the neighbourhood of Nantes, and directed his march to the Roche-Bernard, where he crossed the Vilaine. Having arrived in the country of the Veneti, he
          resolved to profit by the time which must pass before the arrival of his fleet
          to obtain possession of the principal oppida where the inhabitants took
          refuge. Most of these petty fortresses on the coast of the Veneti were situated
          at the extremities of tongues of land or promontories; at high tide they could
          not be reached by land, while at low tide the approach was inaccessible to
          ships, which remained dry on the flats; a double obstacle to a siege.
           The
          Romans attacked them in the following manner : they constructed on the land,
          at low tide, two parallel dykes, at the same time serving for terraces, and
          forming approaches towards the place. During the course of construction, the
          space comprised between these two dykes continued to be inundated with water at
          every high tide; but as soon as they had succeeded in joining them up to the oppidum,
          this space, where the sea could no longer penetrate, remained finally dry, and
          then presented to the besiegers a sort of place of arms useful in the attack.
           With
          the aid of these long and laborious works, in which the height of the dykes
          finished by equalling that of the walls, the Romans
          succeeded in taking several of these oppida. But all their labours were thrown away; for, as soon as the Veneti thought themselves no longer safe,
          they evacuated the oppidum, embarked with all their goods on board their
          numerous vessels, and withdrew to the neighbouring oppida,
          the situations of which offered the same advantages for a new resistance.
   The
          greater part of the fine season had passed away in this manner. Caesar,
          convinced at length that the assistance of his ships was indispensable, came to
          the resolution of suspending these laborious and fruitless operations until the
          arrival of his fleet; and, that he might be near at hand to receive it, he
          encamped to the south of the Bay of Quiberon, near the coast, on the heights of
          Saint-Gildas.
   The
          vessels of the fleet, held back by contrary winds, had not yet been able to
          assemble at the mouth of the Loire. As the Veneti had foreseen, they navigated
          with difficulty on this vast sea, subject to high tides, and almost entirely
          unfurnished with ports. The inexperience of the sailors, and even the form of
          the ships, added to their difficulties.
             The
          enemy’s ships, on the contrary, were built and rigged in a manner to enable
          them to wrestle with all obstacles; flatter than those of the Romans, they had
          less to fear from the shallows and low tide. Built of oak, they supported the
          most violent shocks; the front and back, very lofty, were beyond the reach of
          the strongest missiles. The beams made of pieces of timber a foot thick, were
          fixed with iron nails, an inch in bigness; and the anchors were held by iron
          chains instead of cables; soft skins, made very thin, served for sails; either
          because those peoples were nearly or entirely unacquainted with linen, or
          because they regarded the ordinary sails as insufficient to support, with such
          heavy ships, the impetuosity of the winds of the ocean. The Roman ships were
          superior to them only in agility and the impulse of the oars. In everything
          else, those of the Veneti were better adapted to the nature of the localities
          and to the heavy seas. By the solidity of their construction they resisted the
          ships’ beaks, and by their elevation they were secure from the missiles, and
          were difficult to seize with the grappling-irons (copulae).
           The
          Roman fleet, thanks to a wind from the north-east, was at length enabled to set
          sail. It quitted the Loire, and directed its course towards the Bay of Quiberon
          and Point Saint-Jaques. As soon as the Veneti
          perceived it, they sent out from the port formed by the river Auray 220 ships well armed and well equipped, which advanced to encounter
          it. During this time, the Roman fleet reached Point Saint-Jaques,
          where it formed in order of battle near the shore. That of the Veneti drew up
          in front of it. The battle took place under the very eyes of Caesar and his
          troops, who occupied the heights on the shore.
           It
          was the first time that a Roman fleet appeared on the ocean. Everything
          conspired to disconcert Brutus, as well as the tribunes of the soldiers and the
          centurions who commanded each vessel: the impotence of the beaks against the Gaulish ships; the height of the enemy’s poops, which
          overlooked even the high towers of the Roman vessels; and lastly, the
          inefficiency of the missiles thrown upwards. The military chiefs were
          hesitating, and had already experienced some loss, when, to remedy this
          disadvantage, they imagined a method having some analogy  with that to which Duillius owed his victory over the Carthaginians in 492: they tried to disable the Gaulish vessels by the aid of hooks (falces)
          similar to those which were used in attacks on fortresses. The falces was an iron with a point and sharpened hook,
          fixed at the end of long poles, which, suspended to the masts by ropes,
          received an impulsion similar to that of the ram. One or more ships approached
          a Gaulish vessel, and, as soon as the crew had
          succeeded in catching with one of these hooks the ropes which attached the
          yards to the masts, the sailors rowed away with all their strength, so as to
          break or cut the cords. The yards fell; the disabled vessel was immediately
          surrounded by the Romans, who boarded it; and then all depended on mere valour. This manoeuvre was
          completely successful. The soldiers of the fleet, knowing that no act of
          courage could pass unperceived by Caesar and the land troops, emulated one
          another in zeal, and captured several of the enemy’s vessels. The Gauls
          prepared to seek their safety in flight. They had already swerved their ships
          to the wind, when suddenly there came on a dead calm. This unexpected
          occurrence decided the victory. Left without the possibility of moving, the
          heavy Gaulish vessels were captured one after
          another; a very small number succeeded in gaining the coast under favour of the night.
           The
          battle, which began at ten o’clock in the morning, had lasted till sunset. It
          terminated the war with the Veneti and the other maritime peoples of the ocean.
          They lost in it, at one blow, all their youth, all their principal citizens,
          and all their fleet; without refuge, without the means of defending any longer
          their oppida, they surrendered themselves, bodies and goods. Caesar, wishing to
          compel the Gauls in future to respect the rights of nations, caused the whole
          Senate to be put to death and the rest of the inhabitants to be sold for
          slaves.
           Caesar
          has been justly reproached with this cruel chastisement; yet this great man
          gave such frequent proofs of his clemency towards the vanquished, that he must
          have yielded to very powerful political motives to order an execution so
          contrary to his habits and temper. Moreover, it was a sad effect of the war to
          expose incessantly the chiefs of the Gallic states to the resentments of the
          conquerors and the fury of the mob. While the Roman general punished the Senate
          of the Veneti for its revolt and obstinate resistance, the Aulerci-Eburovices and the Lexovii slaughtered theirs because it laboured to prevent them from joining the insurrection.
           While
          these events were taking place among the Veneti, Q. Titutius Sabinus gained a decisive victory over the Unelli. At
          the head of this nation, and other states in revolt, was Viridovix,
          who had been joined, a few days before, by the Aulerci-Eburovices and the Lexovii. A multitude of men of no account,
          who had joined him from all parts of Gaul, in the hope of pillage, came to
          increase the number of his troops. Sabinus, starting, we believe, from the neighbourhood of Angers with his three legions, arrived in
          the country of the Unelli, and chose there for his
          camp a position which was advantageous in all respects. He established himself
          on a hill belonging to the line of heights which separates the basin of the
          See from that of the Celune, where we now find the
          vestiges of a camp called Du Chastellier. This hill
          is defended on the west by escarpments; to the north, the ground descends from
          the summit by a gentle slope of about 1,000 paces (1,500 metres)
          to the banks of the See. Viridovix came and took a
          position in face of the Roman camp, at a distance of two miles, on the heights
          of the right bank of the stream. Every day he deployed his troops and offered
          battle in vain. As Sabinus remained prudently shut up in his camp, his
          inaction drew upon him the sarcasms of his own soldiers, and to such a degree
          the contempt of the enemy, that the latter advanced to the foot of his entrenchments.
          He considered that, in face of so great a number of troops, it was not the
          duty of a lieutenant, in the absence of his general-in-chief, to give battle,
          without at least having in his favour all the
          chances of success. But, not satisfied with having convinced the enemies of his
          weakness, he determined further to make use of a stratagem; he persuaded a
          clever and cunning Gaul to repair to Viridovix, under pretence of being a deserter,
            and to spread the report that the Romans, during the following night, would
            quit secretly their camp, in order to go to the succour of Caesar. At this news, the barbarians cried out that they must seize the favourable opportunity to march against the Romans, and let
            none of them escape. Full of ardour, they compelled Viridovix to give the order for arming.
              Already confident of victory, they loaded themselves with branches and brushwood
              to fill up the fosses, and rushed to attack the retrenchments. In the hope of
              not giving time to the Romans to assemble and arm, they advance with rapidity,
              and arrive out of breath. But Sabinus was prepared, and, at the opportune
              moment, he gives the order to issue suddenly by the two gates, and to fall upon
              the enemies while they were encumbered with their burdens. The advantage of the
              locality, the unskilfulness and fatigue of the Gauls,
              and the valour of the Romans, all contributed to their
              success. The barbarians, pursued by the cavalry, were cut to pieces. The neighbouring peoples immediately submitted.
               Caesar
          and Sabinus received intelligence at the same time, one of the victory over the Unelli, the other of the result of the combat against
          the Veneti.
   Almost
          at the same time, P. Crassus, detached, as we have seen, with twelve cohorts
          and a body of  cavalry, arrived in
          Aquitaine, which, according to the “Commentaries,” formed the third part of
          Gaul. He believed that he could not display too much prudence in a country
          where, a few years before, the lieutenant L. Valerius Praeconinus had lost his army and his life, and the
          proconsul L. Mallius had experienced a great defeat.
          Having provided for supplies, assembled the auxiliaries, and chosen by name the
          most courageous men of Toulouse and Narbonne, he led his army into the lands
          of the Sotiates, who, very numerous, and strong especially
          in excellent cavalry, attacked the Roman army during its march. Their horsemen
          were at first repulsed and pursued; but, suddenly unmasking their infantry,
          which lay in ambush in a defile (in convalle),
          they charge the Romans as they were dispersed, and the battle recommenced with
          fury.
           Proud
          of their ancient victories, the Sotiates expected by
          their valour to save Aquitaine; on their side, the
          troops of Crassus sought to show what they could do under a young chief, at a
          distance from their general and the other legions. The victory in the end
          remained with the Romans. Crassus pursued his march, and having arrived before
          the oppidum of the Sotiates (the town of Sos), attempted to carry it by assault; but the
          vigorous resistance he met with obliged him to have recourse to covered
          galleries and towers. The enemies had recourse sometimes to sallies, sometimes
          to subterranean galleries, carried so far that they went under the works of the
          besiegers (a labour familiar to the Aquitanians on account of the numerous mines they worked);
          yet, all their efforts failing against the activity of the Roman soldiers, they
          made offers to surrender. Crassus accepted their submission, and the Sotiates delivered up their arms. During the capitulation, Adiatunnus, supreme chief of the country, followed by 600
          trusty men of the class called soldures,
          attempted a sally from another side of the town. At the clamours which arose, the Romans ran to arms, and, after a severe struggle, drove him
          back into the oppidum; nevertheless, Crassus
          granted him the same terms as the others.
           When
          he had received their arms and hostages, Crassus started for the countries of
          the Vasates and the Tarusates.
          But these barbarians, far from being discouraged by the so prompt fall of an oppidum fortified by nature and art, leagued together, raised troops, and demanded succour and chiefs of the peoples of Citeri or Spain, which joined upon Aquitaine. Formerly companions in arms of Q.
          Sertorius, these chiefs enjoyed a great military reputation, and, in their
          tactics as well as in their method of fortifying their camps, imitated the
          Romans. Crassus had too few troops to spread them far from him, while the
          enemies threw out detachments on all sides, who intercepted his provisions. At
          last, as he saw their numbers increasing daily, he became convinced that there
          was danger in deferring a battle. He assembled his council, Which was of the
          same opinion, and the combat was fixed for the morrow.
           At
          daybreak, the Roman troops issued from the camp and formed in two lines, with
          the auxiliaries in the centre; in this position they
          awaited the enemy. The latter, trusting in their numbers, full of recollections
          of their ancient glory, imagined that they could easily overpower the weak
          Roman army. Still they thought it more prudent to obtain the victory without a
          blow, persuaded that by intercepting his provisions they would force Crassus
          to a retreat, and that they should then attack with advantage in the confusion
          of his march. They therefore remained shut up in their camp, and let the Romans
          range their troops and offer battle. But this deliberate temporising,
          which had all the appearance of fear, kindled, on the contrary, that of the
          Romans : they demanded with loud cries to march against the enemy without
          delay. Crassus yields to their impatience, and leads them forward. Some fill
          the fosse, others drive away with a shower of missiles the barbarians who stand
          on the rampart. The auxiliaries, on whom Crassus placed little reliance for
          action, render, nevertheless, important services: they pass the stones and
          missiles, or carry heaps of turf to fill up the fosse. Meanwhile the enemy was
          offering an obstinate resistance, when some of the cavalry brought information
          to Crassus that, on the side of the Decuman gate, the camp was not so well
          fortified, and that the access was more easy. He then directs the prefects of
          the cavalry to excite the ardour of the soldiers with
          the hope of recompenses; orders them to take the cohorts who, left to guard the
          camp, had not yet been engaged in the battle, and to lead them by a long
          circuit to the place reported to be least defended. While the barbarians are solely
          occupied with the principal attack, these cohorts rush into the camp; on
          hearing the clamour which arises from this attack,
          the assailants, led by Crassus, redouble their efforts. The barbarians,
          surrounded on all sides, lose courage, rush out of the retrenchments, and seek
          their safety in flight. The cavalry overtook them in the open plain, and of 50.000 Aquitaniaas or Cantabrians, hardly one quarter
          escaped, who only reached the camp very late in the night.    
           At
          the news of this victory, the greater part of the peoples of Aquitaine submitted
          to Crassus, and sent spontaneously him hostages; some, nevertheless, who were
          more distant, and reckoned on the advanced period of the season, refused to
          make their, submission.
           Towards
          the same time, Caesar, in spite of the near approach of the end of the fine season,
          marched against the Morini and the Menapii, who
          alone, after the entire pacification of Gaul, remained in arms, and had not
          sent him deputies. These peoples had no towns: they dwelt in caverns or under
          the tent. Taught by the example of their neighbours,
          they avoided engaging in pitched battles, and withdrew into the recesses of
          woods and marshes. Caesar, when he arrived in their country, was attacked by
          surprise at the moment he was beginning to fortify his camp. He drove them back
          into the woods, but not without experiencing some loss; then, to open himself a
          wider road in the forest which had become their asylum, he caused the trees
          between him and the enemy to be cut down, and, heaping them up to the right and
          the left, he formed two ramparts, which secured him from attacks on the flank.
          This work was executed in a few days over a great space with incredible
          celerity. Caesar had already reached the place of refuge of the Morini and the Menapii, who retired further and further
          into the thickness of the forests; already he had captured their herds and
          baggage, which they were obliged to leave behind, when rain falling in
          torrents, no longer permitting the soldiers to remain under tents, compelled
          him to retire. He ravaged the country, burnt the habitations, and withdrew his
          army, which he placed in winter quarters (between the Seine and the Loire),
          among the Aulerci, the Lexovii,
          and the other peoples recently vanquished.
           The
          war of 698, directed almost exclusively against the peoples on the shores of
          the ocean, shows clearly that Caesar already, at that time, entertained the
          design of making an expedition into the isle of Britain, for he not only destroys
          the only important fleet that could be brought against him, that of the Veneti,
          but he subjugates, either in person or by his lieutenants, all the countries
          which extend from Bayonne to the mouth of the Scheldt.
             It
          is worthy of remark how much the Romans were superior to the barbarians, by
          discipline, tactics, and the art of sieges; with what facility they raised
          terraces, made dykes, or promptly cut down a forest to clear themselves a
          passage through it. Truly, it is to the genius of Caesar that the glory of all
          these brilliant successes belongs; but we must also acknowledge that he had
          under his orders the best army in the world, and the men most experienced in
          the military profession. Among these were the chiefs placed over the machines
          and siege operations, named praefecti fabrorum. They rendered him the most signal services.
          Mention is made of L. Cornelius Balbus, who prepared
          the material of his army during his consulate, and Mamurra,
          who, in spite of the bad character Catullus gives him in his satires, gave
          proof of his genius during the wars in Gaul.
           
 
 
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