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Gaius Julius Caesar - On the Gallic
War
Book VII
English translation
Here is the
introduction page of this work.
Go here for more about the author
Gaius Julius
Caesar.
|
1 Gaul being tranquil, Caesar,
as he had determined, sets out for Italy to hold the provincial
assizes. There he receives intelligence of the death of Clodius;
and, being informed of the decree of the senate, [to the effect]
that all the youth of Italy should take the military oath, he
determined to hold a levy throughout the entire province. Report of
these events is rapidly borne into Transalpine Gaul. The Gauls
themselves add to the report, and invent what the case seemed to
require, [namely] that Caesar was detained by commotions in the
city, and could not, amid so violent dissensions, come to his army.
Animated by this opportunity, they who already, previously to this
occurrence, were indignant that they were reduced beneath the
dominion of Rome, begin to organize their plans for war more openly
and daringly. The leading men of Gaul, having convened councils
among themselves in the woods, and retired places, complain of the
death of Acco: they point out that this fate may fall in turn on
themselves: they bewail the unhappy fate of Gaul; and by every sort
of promises and rewards, they earnestly solicit some to begin the
war, and assert the freedom of Gaul at the hazard of their lives.
They say that special care should be paid to this, that Caesar
should be cut off from his army before their secret plans should be
divulged. That this was easy, because neither would the legions, in
the absence of their general, dare to leave their winter quarters,
nor could the general reach his army without a guard: finally, that
it was better to be slain in battle, than not to recover their
ancient glory in war, and that freedom which they had received from
their forefathers.
2 While these things are in agitation, the Carnutes declare “that
they would decline no danger for the sake of the general safety,”
and promise “that they would be the first of all to begin the war;”
and since they can not at present take precautions, by giving and
receiving hostages, that the affair shall not be divulged, they
require that a solemn assurance be given them by oath and plighted
honor, their military standards being brought together (in which
manner their most sacred obligations are made binding), that they
should not be deserted by the rest of the Gauls on commencing the
war.
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3 When the appointed day came, the
Carnutes, under the command of Cotuatus and Conetodunus, desperate
men, meet together at Genabum, and slay the Roman citizens who had
settled there for the purpose of trading (among the rest, Caius
Fusius Cita, a distinguished Roman knight, who by Caesar’s orders
had presided over the provision department), and plunder their
property. The report is quickly spread among all the states of Gaul;
for, whenever a more important and remarkable event takes place,
they transmit the intelligence through their lands and districts by
a shout; the others take it up in succession, and pass it to their
neighbors, as happened on this occasion; for the things which were
done at Genabum at sunrise, were heard in the territories of the
Arverni before the end of the first watch, which is an extent of
more than a hundred and sixty miles.
4 There in like manner, Vercingetorix the son of Celtillus the
Arvernian, a young man of the highest power (whose father had held
the supremacy of entire Gaul, and had been put to death by his
fellow-citizens, for this reason, because he aimed at sovereign
power), summoned together his dependents, and easily excited them.
On his design being made known, they rush to arms: he is expelled
from the town of Gergovia, by his uncle Gobanitio and the rest of
the nobles, who were of opinion, that such an enterprise ought not
to be hazarded: he did not however desist, but held in the country a
levy of the needy and desperate. Having collected such a body of
troops, he brings over to his sentiments such of his fellow-citizens
as he has access to: he exhorts them to take up arms in behalf of
the general freedom, and having assembled great forces he drives
from the state his opponents, by whom he had been expelled a short
time previously. He is saluted king by his partisans; he sends
embassadors in every direction, he conjures them to adhere firmly to
their promise. He quickly attaches to his interests the Senones,
Parisii, Pictones, Cadurci, Turones, Aulerci, Lemovice, and all the
others who border on the ocean; the supreme command is conferred on
him by unanimous consent. On obtaining this authority, he demands
hostages from all these states, he orders a fixed number of soldiers
to be sent to him immediately; he determines what quantity of arms
each state shall prepare at home, and before what time; he pays
particular attention to the cavalry. To the utmost vigilance he adds
the utmost rigor of authority; and by the severity of his
punishments brings over the wavering: for on the commission of a
greater crime he puts the perpetrators to death by fire and every
sort of tortures; for a slighter cause, he sends home the offenders
with their ears cut off, or one of their eyes put out, that they may
be an example to the rest, and frighten others by the severity of
their punishment.
5 Having quickly collected an army by their punishments, he sends
Lucterius, one of the Cadurci, a man the utmost daring, with part of
his forces, into the territory of the Ruteni; and marches in person
into the country of the Bituriges. On his arrival, the Bituriges
send embassadors to the Aedui, under whose protection they were, to
solicit aid in order that they might more easily resist the forces
of the enemy. The Aedui, by the advice of the lieutenants whom
Caesar had left with the army, send supplies of horse and foot to
succor the Bituriges. When they came to the river Loire, which
separates the Bituriges from the Aedui, they delayed a few days
there, and, not daring to pass the river, return home, and send back
word to the lieutenants that they had returned through fear of the
treachery of the Bituriges, who, they ascertained, had formed this
design, that if the Aedui should cross the river, the Bituriges on
the one side, and the Arverni on the other, should surround them.
Whether they did this for the reason which they alleged to the
lieutenants, or influenced by treachery, we think that we ought not
to state as certain, because we have no proof. On their departure,
the Bituriges immediately unite themselves to the Arverni.
6 These affairs being announced to Caesar in Italy, at the time when
he understood that matters in the city had been reduced to a more
tranquil state by the energy of Cneius Pompey, he set out for
Transalpine Gaul. After he had arrived there, he was greatly at a
loss to know by what means he could reach his army. For if he should
summon the legions into the province, he was aware that on their
march they would have to fight in his absence; he foresaw too that
if he himself should endeavor to reach the army, he would act
injudiciously, in trusting his safety even to those who seemed to be
tranquilized.
7 In the mean time Lucterius the Cadurcan, having been sent into the
country of the Ruteni, gains over that state to the Arverni. Having
advanced into the country of the Nitiobriges, and Gabali, he
receives hostages from both nations, and, assembling a numerous
force, marches to make a descent on the province in the direction of
Narbo. Caesar, when this circumstance was announced to him, thought
that the march to Narbo ought to take the precedence of all his
other plans. When he arrived there, he encourages the timid and
stations garrisons among the Ruteni, in the province of the Volcae
Arecomici, and the country around Narbo which was in the vicinity of
the enemy; he orders a portion of the forces from the province, and
the recruits which he had brought from Italy, to rendezvous among
the Helvii who border on the territories of the Arverni.
8 These matters being arranged, and Lucterius now checked and forced
to retreat, because he thought it dangerous to enter the line of
Roman garrisons, Caesar marches into the country of the Helvii;
although mount Cevennes, which separates the Arverni from the Helvii,
blocked up the way with very deep snow, as it was the severest
season of the year; yet having cleared away the snow to the depth of
six feet, and having opened the roads, he reaches the territories of
the Arverni, with infinite labor to his soldiers. This people being
surprised, because they considered themselves defended by the
Cevennes as by a wall, and the paths at this season of the year had
never before been passable even to individuals, he orders the
cavalry to extend themselves as far as they could, and strike as
great a panic as possible into the enemy. These proceedings are
speedily announced to Vercingetorix by rumor and his messengers.
Around him all the Arverni crowd in alarm, and solemnly entreat him
to protect their property, and not to suffer them to be plundered by
the enemy, especially as he saw that all the war was transferred
into their country. Being prevailed upon by their entreaties he
moves his camp from the country of the Bituriges in the direction of
the Arverni.
9 Caesar, having delayed two days in that place, because he had
anticipated that, in the natural course of events, such would be the
conduct of Vercingetorix, leaves the army under pretense of raising
recruits and cavalry: he places Brutus, a young man, in command of
these forces; he gives him instructions that the cavalry should
range as extensively as possible in all directions; that he would
exert himself not to be absent from the camp longer than three days.
Having arranged these matters, he marches to Vienna by as long
journeys as he can, when his own soldiers did not expect him.
Finding there a fresh body of cavalry, which he had sent on to that
place several days before, marching incessantly night and day, he
advanced rapidly through the territory of the Aedui into that of the
Lingones, in which two legions were wintering, that, if any plan
affecting his own safety should have been organized by the Aedui, he
might defeat it by the rapidity of his movements. When he arrived
there, he sends information to the rest of the legions, and gathers
all his army into one place before intelligence of his arrival could
be announced to the Arverni. Vercingetorix, on hearing this
circumstance, leads back his army into the country of the Bituriges;
and after marching from it to Gergovia, a town of the Boii, whom
Caesar had settled there after defeating them in the Helvetian war,
and had rendered tributary to the Aedui, he determined to attack it.
10 This action caused great perplexity to Caesar in the selection of
his plans; [he feared] lest, if he should confine his legions in one
place for the remaining portion of the winter, all Gaul should
revolt when the tributaries of the Aedui were subdued, because it
would appear that there was in him no protection for his friends;
but if he should draw them too soon out of their winter quarters, he
might be distressed by the want of provisions, in consequence of the
difficulty of conveyance. It seemed better, however, to endure every
hardship than to alienate the affections of all his allies, by
submitting to such an insult. Having, therefore, impressed on the
Aedui the necessity of supplying him with provisions, he sends
forward messengers to the Boii to inform them of his arrival, and
encourage them to remain firm in their allegiance, and resist the
attack of the enemy with great resolution. Having left two legions
and the luggage of the entire army at Agendicum, he marches to the
Boii.
11 On the second day, when he came to Vellaunodunum, a town of the
Senones, he determined to attack it, in order that he might not
leave an enemy in his rear, and might the more easily procure
supplies of provisions, and draw a line of circumvallation around it
in two days: on the third day, embassadors being sent from the town
to treat of a capitulation, he orders their arms to be brought
together, their cattle to be brought forth, and six hundred hostages
to be given. He leaves Caius Trebonius his lieutenant, to complete
these arrangements; he himself sets out with the intention of
marching as soon as possible, to Genabum, a town of the Carnutes,
who having then for the first time received information of the siege
of Vellaunodunum, as they thought that it would be protracted to a
longer time, were preparing a garrison to send to Genabum for the
defense of that town. Caesar arrived here in two days; after
pitching his camp before the town, being prevented by the time of
the day, he defers the attack to the next day, and orders his
soldiers to prepare whatever was necessary for that enterprise; and
as a bridge over the Loire connected the town of Genabum with the
opposite bank, fearing lest the inhabitants should escape by night
from the town, he orders two legions to keep watch under arms. The
people of Genabum came forth silently from the city before midnight,
and began to cross the river. When this circumstance was announced
by scouts, Caesar, having set fire to the gates, sends in the
legions which he had ordered to be ready, and obtains possession of
the town so completely, that very few of the whole number of the
enemy escaped being taken alive, because the narrowness of the
bridge and the roads prevented the multitude from escaping. He
pillages and burns the town, gives the booty to the soldiers, then
leads his army over the Loire, and marches into the territories of
the Bituriges.
12 Vercingetorix, when he ascertained the arrival of Caesar,
desisted from the siege [of Gergovia], and marched to meet Caesar.
The latter had commenced to besiege Noviodunum; and when embassadors
came from this town to beg that he would pardon them and spare their
lives, in order that he might execute the rest of his designs with
the rapidity by which he had accomplished most of them, he orders
their arms to be collected, their horses to be brought forth, and
hostages to be given. A part of the hostages being now delivered up,
when the rest of the terms were being performed, a few centurions
and soldiers being sent into the town to collect the arms and
horses, the enemy’s cavalry which had outstripped the main body of
Vercingetorix’s army, was seen at a distance; as soon as the
townsmen beheld them, and entertained hopes of assistance, raising a
shout, they began to take up arms, shut the gates, and line the
walls. When the centurions in the town understood from the
signal-making of the Gauls that they were forming some new design,
they drew their swords and seized the gates, and recovered all their
men safe.
13 Caesar orders the horse to be drawn out of the camp, and
commences a cavalry action. His men being now distressed, Caesar
sends to their aid about four hundred German horse, which he had
determined, at the beginning, to keep with himself. The Gauls could
not withstand their attack, but were put to flight, and retreated to
their main body, after losing a great number of men. When they were
routed, the townsmen, again intimidated, arrested those persons by
whose exertions they thought that the mob had been roused, and
brought them to Caesar, and surrendered themselves to him. When
these affairs were accomplished, Caesar marched to the Avaricum,
which was the largest and best fortified town in the territories of
the Bituriges, and situated in a most fertile tract of country;
because he confidently expected that on taking that town, he would
reduce beneath his dominion the state of the Bituriges.
14 Vercingetorix, after sustaining such a series of losses at
Vellaunodunum, Genabum, and Noviodunum, summons his men to a
council. He impresses on them “that the war must be prosecuted on a
very different system from that which had been previously adopted;
but they should by all means aim at this object, that the Romans
should be prevented from foraging and procuring provisions; that
this was easy, because they themselves were well supplied with
cavalry, and were likewise assisted by the season of the year; that
forage could not be cut; that the enemy must necessarily disperse,
and look for it in the houses, that all these might be daily
destroyed by the horse. Besides that the interests of private
property must be neglected for the sake of the general safety; that
the villages and houses ought to be fired, over such an extent of
country in every direction from Boia, as the Romans appeared capable
of scouring in their search for forage. That an abundance of these
necessaries could be supplied to them, because they would be
assisted by the resources of those in whose territories the war
would be waged: that the Romans either would not bear the privation,
or else would advance to any distance from the camp with
considerable danger; and that it made no difference whether they
slew them or stripped them of their baggage, since, if it was lost,
they could not carry on the war. Besides that, the towns ought to be
burned which were not secured against every danger by their
fortifications or natural advantages; that there should not be
places of retreat for their own countrymen for declining military
service, nor be exposed to the Romans as inducements to carry off
abundance of provisions and plunder. If these sacrifices should
appear heavy or galling, that they ought to consider it much more
distressing that their wives and children should be dragged off to
slavery, and themselves slain; the evils which must necessarily
befall the conquered.
15 This opinion having been approved of by unanimous consent, more
than twenty towns of the Bituriges are burned in one day.
Conflagrations are beheld in every quarter; and although all bore
this with great regret, yet they laid before themselves this
consolation, that, as the victory was certain, they could quickly
recover their losses. There is a debate concerning Avaricum in the
general council, whether they should decide, that it should be
burned or defended. The Bituriges threw themselves at the feet of
all the Gauls, and entreat that they should not be compelled to set
fire with their own hands to the fairest city of almost the whole of
Gaul, which was both a protection and ornament to the state; they
say that “they could easily defend it, owing to the nature of the
ground, for, being inclosed almost on every side by a river and a
marsh, it had only one entrance, and that very narrow.” Permission
being granted to them at their earnest request, Vercingetorix at
first dissuades them from it, but afterward concedes the point,
owing to their entreaties and the compassion of the soldiers. A
proper garrison is selected for the town.
16 Vercingetorix follows closely upon Caesar by shorter marches, and
selects for his camp a place defended by woods and marshes, at the
distance of fifteen miles from Avaricum. There he received
intelligence by trusty scouts, every hour in the day, of what was
going on at Avaricum, and ordered whatever he wished to be done; he
closely watched all our expeditions for corn and forage, and
whenever they were compelled to go to a greater distance, he
attacked them when dispersed, and inflicted severe loss upon them;
although the evil was remedied by our men, as far as precautions
could be taken, by going forth at irregular times’ and by different
ways.
17 Caesar pitching his camp at that side of the town which was not
defended by the river and marsh, and had a very narrow approach, as
we have mentioned, began to raise the vineae and erect two towers:
for the nature of the place prevented him from drawing a line of
circumvallation. He never ceased to importune the Boii and Aedui for
supplies of corn; of whom the one [the Aedui], because they were
acting with no zeal, did not aid him much; the others [the Boii], as
their resources were not great, quickly consumed what they had.
Although the army was distressed by the greatest want of corn,
through the poverty of the Boii, the apathy of the Aedui, and the
burning of the houses, to such a degree, that for several days the
soldiers were without corn, and satisfied their extreme hunger with
cattle driven from the remote villages; yet no language was heard
from them unworthy of the majesty of the Roman people and their
former victories. Moreover, when Caesar addressed the legions, one
by one, when at work, and said that he would raise the siege, if
they felt the scarcity too severely, they unanimously begged him
“not to do so; that they had served for several years under his
command in such a manner that they never submitted to insult, and
never abandoned an enterprise without accomplishing it; that they
should consider it a disgrace if they abandoned the siege after
commencing it; that it was better to endure every hardship than to
not avenge the names of the Roman citizens who perished at Genabum
by the perfidy of the Gauls.” They intrusted the same declarations
to the centurions and military tribunes, that through them they
might be communicated to Caesar.
18 When the towers had now approached the walls, Caesar ascertained
from the captives that Vercingetorix after destroying the forage,
had pitched his camp nearer Avaricum, and that he himself with the
cavalry and light-armed infantry, who generally fought among the
horse, had gone to lay an ambuscade in that quarter, to which he
thought that our troops would come the next day to forage. On
learning these facts, he set out from the camp secretly at midnight,
and reached the camp of the enemy early in the morning. They having
quickly learned the arrival of Caesar by scouts, hid their cars and
baggage in the thickest parts of the woods, and drew up all their
forces in a lofty and open space: which circumstance being
announced, Caesar immediately ordered the baggage to be piled, and
the arms to be got ready.
19 There was a hill of a gentle ascent from the bottom; a dangerous
and impassable marsh, not more than fifty feet broad, begirt it on
almost every side. The Gauls, having broken down the bridges, posted
themselves on this hill, in confidence of their position, and being
drawn up in tribes according to their respective states, held all
the fords and passages of that marsh with trusty guards, thus
determined that if the Romans should attempt to force the marsh,
they would overpower them from the higher ground while sticking in
it, so that whoever saw the nearness of the position, would imagine
that the two armies were prepared to fight on almost equal terms;
but whoever should view accurately the disadvantage of position,
would discover that they were showing off an empty affectation of
courage. Caesar clearly points out to his soldiers, who were
indignant that the enemy could bear the sight of them at the
distance of so short a space, and were earnestly demanding the
signal for action, “with how great loss and the death of how many
gallant men the victory would necessarily be purchased: and when he
saw them so determined to decline no danger for his renown, that he
ought to be considered guilty of the utmost injustice if he did not
hold their life dearer than his personal safety.” Having thus
consoled his soldiers, he leads them back on the same day to the
camp, and determined to prepare the other things which were
necessary for the siege of the town.
20 Vercingetorix, when he had returned to his men, was accused of
treason, in that he had moved his camp nearer the Romans, in that he
had gone away with all the cavalry, in that he had left so great
forces without a commander, in that, on his departure, the Romans
had come at such a favorable season, and with such dispatch; that
all these circumstances could not have happened accidentally or
without design; that he preferred holding the sovereignty of Gaul by
the grant of Caesar to acquiring it by their favor. Being accused in
such a manner, he made the following reply to these charges:—“That
his moving his camp had been caused by want of forage, and had been
done even by their advice; that his approaching near the Romans had
been a measure dictated by the favorable nature of the ground, which
would defend him by its natural strength; that the service of the
cavalry could not have been requisite in marshy ground, and was
useful in that place to which they had gone; that he, on his
departure, had given the supreme command to no one intentionally,
lest he should be induced by the eagerness of the multitude to
hazard an engagement, to which he perceived that all were inclined,
owing to their want of energy, because they were unable to endure
fatigue any longer. That, if the Romans in the mean time came up by
chance, they [the Gauls] should feel grateful to fortune; if invited
by the information of some one they should feel grateful to him,
because they were enabled to see distinctly from the higher ground
the smallness of the number of their enemy, and despise the courage
of those who, not daring to fight, retreated disgracefully into
their camp. That he desired no power from Caesar by treachery, since
he could have it by victory, which was now assured to himself and to
all the Gauls; nay, that he would even give them back the command,
if they thought that they conferred honor on him, rather than
received safety from him. That you may be assured,” said he, “that I
speak these words with truth;—listen to these Roman soldiers!” He
produces some camp-followers whom he had surprised on a foraging
expedition some days before, and had tortured by famine and
confinement. They being previously instructed in what answers they
should make when examined, say, “That they were legionary soldiers,
that, urged by famine and want, they had recently gone forth from
the camp, [to see] if they could find any corn or cattle in the
fields; that the whole army was distressed by a similar scarcity,
nor had any one now sufficient strength, nor could bear the labor of
the work; and therefore that the general was determined, if he made
no progress in the siege, to draw off his army in three days.”
“These benefits,” says Vercingetorix, “you receive from me, whom you
accuse of treason—me, by whose exertions you see so powerful and
victorious an army almost destroyed by famine, without shedding one
drop of your blood; and I have taken precautions that no state shall
admit within its territories this army in its ignominious flight
from this place.”
21 The whole multitude raise a shout and clash their arms, according
to their custom, as they usually do in the case of him of whose
speech they approve; [they exclaim] that Vercingetorix was a
consummate general, and that they had no doubt of his honor; that
the war could not be conducted with greater prudence. They determine
that ten thousand men should be picked out of the entire army and
sent into the town, and decide that the general safety should not be
intrusted to the Bituriges alone, because they were aware that the
glory of the victory must rest with the Bituriges, if they made good
the defense of the town.
22 To the extraordinary valor of our soldiers, devices of every sort
were opposed by the Gauls; since they are a nation of consummate
ingenuity, and most skillful in imitating and making those things
which are imparted by any one; for they turned aside the hooks with
nooses, and when they had caught hold of them firmly, drew them on
by means of engines, and undermined the mound the more skillfully on
this account, because there are in their territories extensive iron
mines, and consequently every description of mining operations is
known and practiced by them. They had furnished, more over, the
whole wall on every side with turrets, and had covered them with
skins. Besides, in their frequent sallies by day and night, they
attempted either to set fire to the mound, or attack our soldiers
when engaged in the works; and, moreover, by splicing the upright
timbers of their own towers, they equaled the height of ours, as
fast as the mound had daily raised them, and countermined our mines,
and impeded the working of them by stakes bent and sharpened at the
ends, and boiling pitch and stones of very great weight, and
prevented them from approaching the walls.
23 But this is usually the form of all the Gallic walls. Straight
beams, connected lengthwise and two feet distant from each other at
equal intervals, are placed together on the ground; these are
mortised on the inside, and covered with plenty of earth. But the
intervals which we have mentioned, are closed up in front by large
stones. These being thus laid and cemented together, another row is
added above, in such a manner, that the same interval may be
observed, and that the beams may not touch one another, but equal
spaces intervening, each row of beams is kept firmly in its place by
a row of stones. In this manner the whole wall is consolidated,
until the regular height of the wall be completed. This work, with
respect to appearance and variety, is not unsightly, owing to the
alternate rows of beams and stones, which preserve their order in
right lines; and, besides, it possesses great advantages as regards
utility and the defense of cities; for the stone protects it from
fire, and the wood from the battering ram, since it [the wood] being
mortised in the inside with rows of beams, generally forty feet each
in length, can neither be broken through nor torn asunder.
24 The siege having been impeded by so many disadvantages, the
soldiers, although they were retarded during the whole time by the
mud, cold, and constant showers, yet by their incessant labor
overcame all these obstacles, and in twenty-five days raised a mound
three hundred and thirty feet broad and eighty feet high. When it
almost touched the enemy’s walls, and Caesar, according to his usual
custom, kept watch at the work, and encouraged the soldiers not to
discontinue the work for a moment: a little before the third watch
they discovered that the mound was sinking, since the enemy had set
it on fire by a mine; and at the same time a shout was raised along
the entire wall, and a sally was made from two gates on each side of
the turrets. Some at a distance were casting torches and dry wood
from the wall on the mound, others were pouring on it pitch, and
other materials, by which the flame might be excited, so that a plan
could hardly be formed, as to where they should first run to the
defense, or to what part aid should be brought. However, as two
legions always kept guard before the camp by Caesar’s orders, and
several of them were at stated times at the work, measures were
promptly taken, that some should oppose the sallying party, others
draw back the towers and make a cut in the rampart; and moreover,
that the whole army should hasten from the camp to extinguish the
flames.
25 When the battle was going on in every direction, the rest of the
night being now spent, and fresh hopes of victory always arose
before the enemy: the more so on this account because they saw the
coverings of our towers burnt away, and perceived, that we, being
exposed, could not easily go to give assistance, and they themselves
were always relieving the weary with fresh men, and considered that
all the safety of Gaul rested on this crisis; there happened in my
own view a circumstance which, having appeared to be worthy of
record, we thought it ought not to be omitted. A certain Gaul before
the gate of the town, who was casting into the fire opposite the
turret balls of tallow and fire which were passed along to him, was
pierced with a dart on the right side and fell dead. One of those
next him stepped over him as he lay, and discharged the same office:
when the second man was slain in the same manner by a wound from a
cross-bow, a third succeeded him, and a fourth succeeded the third:
nor was this post left vacant by the besieged, until, the fire of
the mound having been extinguished, and the enemy repulsed in every
direction, an end was put to the fighting.
26 The Gauls having tried every expedient, as nothing had succeeded,
adopted the design of fleeing from the town the next day, by the
advice and order of Vercingetorix. They hoped that, by attempting it
at the dead of night, they would effect it without any great loss of
men, because the camp of Vercingetorix was not far distant from the
town, and the extensive marsh which intervened, was likely to retard
the Romans in the pursuit. And they were now preparing to execute
this by night, when the matrons suddenly ran out-into the streets,
and weeping cast themselves at the feet of their husbands, and
requested of them, with every entreaty, that they should not abandon
themselves and their common children to the enemy for punishment,
because the weakness of their nature and physical powers prevented
them from taking to flight. When they saw that they (as fear does
not generally admit of mercy in extreme danger) persisted in their
resolution, they began to shout aloud, and give intelligence of
their flight to the Romans. The Gauls being intimidated by fear of
this, lest the passes should be pre-occupied by the Roman cavalry,
desisted from their design.
27 The next day Caesar, the tower being advanced, and the works
which he had determined to raise being arranged, a violent storm
arising, thought this no bad time for executing his designs, because
he observed the guards arranged on the walls a little too
negligently, and therefore ordered his own men to engage in their
work more remissly, and pointed out what he wished to be done. He
drew up his soldiers in a secret position within the vineae, and
exhorts them to reap, at least, the harvest of victory proportionate
to their exertions. He proposed a reward for those who should first
scale the walls, and gave the signal to the soldiers. They suddenly
flew out from all quarters and quickly filled the walls.
28 The enemy being alarmed by the suddenness of the attack, were
dislodged from the wall and towers, and drew up, in form of a wedge,
in the market place and the open streets, with this intention that,
if an attack should be made on any side, they should fight with
their line drawn up to receive it. When they saw no one descending
to the level ground, and the enemy extending themselves along the
entire wall in every direction, fearing lest every hope of flight
should be cut off, they cast away their arms, and sought, without
stopping, the most remote parts of the town. A part was then slain
by the infantry when they were crowding upon one another in the
narrow passage of the gates; and a part having got without the
gates, were cut to pieces by the cavalry: nor was there one who was
anxious for the plunder. Thus, being excited by the massacre at
Genabum and the fatigue of the siege, they spared neither those worn
out with years, women, or children. Finally, out of all that number,
which amounted to about forty thousand, scarcely eight hundred, who
fled from the town when they heard the first alarm, reached
Vercingetorix in safety: and he, the night being now far spent,
received them in silence after their flight (fearing that any
sedition should arise in the camp from their entrance in a body and
the compassion of the soldiers), so that, having arranged his
friends and the chiefs of the states at a distance on the road, he
took precautions that they should be separated and conducted to
their fellow countrymen, to whatever part of the camp had been
assigned to each state from the beginning.
29 Vercingetorix having convened an assembly on the following day,
consoled and encouraged his soldiers in the following words:—“That
they should not be too much depressed in spirit, nor alarmed at
their loss; that the Romans did not conquer by valor nor in the
field, but by a kind of art and skill in assault, with which they
themselves were unacquainted; that whoever expected every event in
the war to be favorable, erred; that it never was his opinion that
Avaricum should be defended, of the truth of which statement he had
themselves as witnesses, but that it was owing to the imprudence of
the Bituriges, and the too ready compliance of the rest, that this
loss was sustained; that, however, he would soon compensate it by
superior advantages; for that he would, by his exertions, bring over
those states which severed themselves from the rest of the Gauls,
and would create a general unanimity throughout the whole of Gaul,
the union of which not even the whole earth could withstand, and
that he had it already almost effected; that in the mean time it was
reasonable that he should prevail on them, for the sake of the
general safety, to begin to fortify their camp, in order that they
might the more easily sustain the sudden attacks of the enemy.”
30 This speech was not disagreeable to the Gauls, principally,
because he himself was not disheartened by receiving so severe a
loss, and had not concealed himself, nor shunned the eyes of the
people: and he was believed to possess greater foresight and sounder
judgment than the rest, because, when the affair was undecided, he
had at first been of opinion that Avaricum should be burnt, and
afterward that it should be abandoned. Accordingly, as ill success
weakens the authority of other generals, so, on the contrary, his
dignity increased daily, although a loss was sustained: at the same
time they began to entertain hopes, on his assertion, of uniting the
rest of the states to themselves, and on this occasion, for the
first time, the Gauls began to fortify their camps, and were so
alarmed that although they were men unaccustomed to toil, yet they
were of opinion that they ought to endure and suffer every thing
which should be imposed upon them.
31 Nor did Vercingetorix use less efforts than he had promised, to
gain over the other states, and [in consequence] endeavored to
entice their leaders by gifts and promises. For this object he
selected fitting emissaries, by whose subtle pleading or private
friendship, each of the nobles could be most easily influenced. He
takes care that those who fled to him on the storming of Avaricum
should be provided with arms and clothes. At the same time that his
diminished forces should be recruited, he levies a fixed quota of
soldiers from each state, and defines the number and day before
which he should wish them brought to the camp, and orders all the
archers, of whom there was a very great number in Gaul, to be
collected and sent to him. By these means, the troops which were
lost at Avaricum are speedily replaced. In the mean time, Teutomarus,
the son of Ollovicon, the king of the Nitiobriges, whose father had
received the appellation of friend from our senate, came to him with
a great number of his own horse and those whom he had hired from
Aquitania.
32 Caesar, after delaying several days at Avaricum, and, finding
there the greatest plenty of corn and other provisions, refreshed
his army after their fatigue and privation. The winter being almost
ended, when he was invited by the favorable season of the year to
prosecute the war and march against the enemy, [and try] whether he
could draw them from the marshes and woods, or else press them by a
blockade; some noblemen of the Aedui came to him as embassadors to
entreat “that in an extreme emergency he should succor their state;
that their affairs were in the utmost danger, because, whereas
single magistrates had been usually appointed in ancient times and
held the power of king for a single year, two persons now exercised
this office, and each asserted that he was appointed according to
their laws. That one of them was Convictolitanis, a powerful and
illustrious youth; the other Cotus, sprung from a most ancient
family, and personally a man of very great influence and extensive
connections. His brother Valetiacus had borne the same office during
the last year: that the whole state was up in arms; the senate
divided, the people divided; that each of them had his own
adherents; and that, if the animosity would be fomented any longer,
the result would be that one part of the state would come to a
collision with the other; that it rested with his activity and
influence to prevent it.”
33 Although Caesar considered it ruinous to leave the war and the
enemy, yet, being well aware what great evils generally arise from
internal dissensions, lest a state so powerful and so closely
connected with the Roman people, which he himself had always
fostered and honored in every respect, should have recourse to
violence and arms, and that the party which had less confidence in
its own power should summon aid from Vercingetorix, he determined to
anticipate this movement; and because, by the laws of the Aedui, it
was not permitted those who held the supreme authority to leave the
country, he determined to go in person to the Aedui, lest he should
appear to infringe upon their government and laws, and summoned all
the senate, and those between whom the dispute was, to meet him at
Decetia. When almost all the state had assembled there, and he was
informed that one brother had been declared magistrate by the other,
when only a few persons were privately summoned for the purpose, at
a different time and place from what he ought, whereas the laws not
only forbade two belonging to one family to be elected magistrates
while each was alive, but even deterred them from being in the
senate, he compelled Cotus to resign his office; he ordered
Convictolitanis, who had been elected by the priests, according to
the usage of the state, in the presence of the magistrates, to hold
the supreme authority.
34 Having pronounced this decree between [the contending parties],
he exhorted the Aedui to bury in oblivion their disputes and
dissensions, and, laying aside all these things, devote themselves
to the war, and expect from him, on the conquest of Gaul, those
rewards which they should have earned, and send speedily to him all
their cavalry and ten thousand infantry, which he might place in
different garrisons to protect his convoys of provisions, and then
divided his army into two parts: he gave Labienus four legions to
lead into the country of the Senones and Parisii; and led in person
six into the country of the Arverni, in the direction of the town of
Gergovia, along the banks of the Allier. He gave part of the cavalry
to Labienus and kept part to himself. Vercingetorix, on learning
this circumstance, broke down all the bridges over the river and
began to march on the other bank of the Allier.
35 When each army was in sight of the other, and was pitching their
camp almost opposite that of the enemy, scouts being distributed in
every quarter, lest the Romans should build a bridge and bring over
their troops; it was to Caesar a matter attended with great
difficulties, lest he should be hindered from passing the river
during the greater part of the summer, as the Allier can not
generally be forded before the autumn. Therefore, that this might
not happen, having pitched his camp in a woody place opposite to one
of those bridges which Vercingetorix had taken care should be broken
down, the next day he stopped behind with two legions in a secret
place; he sent on the rest of the forces as usual, with all the
baggage, after having selected some cohorts, that the number of the
legions might appear to be complete. Having ordered these to advance
as far as they could, when now, from the time of day, he conjectured
they had come to an encampment, he began to rebuild the bridge on
the same piles, the lower part of which remained entire. Having
quickly finished the work and led his legions across, he selected a
fit place for a camp, and recalled the rest of his troops.
Vercingetorix, on ascertaining this fact, went before him by forced
marches, in order that he might not be compelled to come to an
action against his will.
36 Caesar, in five days’ march, went from that place to Gergovia,
and after engaging in a slight cavalry skirmish that day, on viewing
the situation of the city, which, being built on a very high
mountain, was very difficult of access, he despaired of taking it by
storm, and determined to take no measures with regard to besieging
it before he should secure a supply of provisions. But Vercingetorix,
having pitched his camp on the mountain near the town, placed the
forces of each state separately and at small intervals around
himself, and having occupied all the hills of that range as far as
they commanded a view [of the Roman encampment], he presented a
formidable appearance; he ordered the rulers of the states, whom he
had selected as his council of war, to come to him daily at the
dawn, whether any measure seemed to require deliberation or
execution. Nor did he allow almost any day to pass without testing
in a cavalry action, the archers being intermixed, what spirit and
valor there was in each of his own men. There was a hill opposite
the town, at the very foot of that mountain, strongly fortified and
precipitous on every side (which if our men could gain, they seemed
likely to exclude the enemy from a great share of their supply of
water, and from free foraging; but this place was occupied by them
with a weak garrison): however, Caesar set out from the camp in the
silence of night, and dislodging the garrison before succor could
come from the town, he got possession of the place and posted two
legions there, and drew from the greater camp to the less a double
trench twelve feet broad, so that the soldiers could even singly
pass secure from any sudden attack of the enemy.
37 While these affairs were going on at Gergovia, Convictolanis, the
Aeduan, to whom we have observed the magistracy was adjudged by
Caesar, being bribed by the Arverni, holds a conference with certain
young men, the chief of whom were Litavicus and his brothers, who
were born of a most noble family. He shares the bribe with them, and
exhorts them to “remember that they were free and born for empire;
that the state of the Aedui was the only one which retarded the most
certain victory of the Gauls; that the rest were held in check by
its authority; and, if it was brought over, the Romans would not
have room to stand on in Gaul; that he had received some kindness
from Caesar, only so far, however, as gaining a most just cause by
his decision; but that he assigned more weight to the general
freedom; for, why should the Aedui go to Caesar to decide concerning
their rights and laws, rather than the Romans come to the Aedui?”
The young men being easily won over by the speech of the magistrate
and the bribe, when they declared that they would even be leaders in
the plot, a plan for accomplishing it was considered, because they
were confident their state could not be induced to undertake the war
on slight grounds. It was resolved that Litavicus should have the
command of the ten thousand, which were being sent to Caesar for the
war, and should have charge of them on their march, and that his
brothers should go before him to Caesar. They arrange the other
measures, and the manner in which they should have them done.
38 Litavicus, having received the command of the army, suddenly
convened the soldiers, when he was about thirty miles distant from
Gergovia, and, weeping, said, “Soldiers, whither are we going? All
our knights and all our nobles have perished. Eporedirix and
Viridomarus, the principal men of the state, being accused of
treason, have been slain by the Romans without any permission to
plead their cause. Learn this intelligence from those who have
escaped from the massacre; for I, since my brothers and all my
relations have been slain, am prevented by grief from declaring what
has taken place. Persons are brought forward whom he had instructed
in what he would have them say, and make the same statements to the
soldiery as Litavicus had made: that all the knights of the Aedui
were slain because they were said to have held conferences with the
Arverni; that they had concealed themselves among the multitude of
soldiers, and had escaped from the midst of the slaughter. The Aedui
shout aloud and conjure Litavicus to provide for their safety. As
if, said he, it were a matter of deliberation, and not of necessity,
for us to go to Gergovia and unite ourselves to the Arverni. Or have
we any reasons to doubt that the Romans, after perpetrating the
atrocious crime, are now hastening to slay us? Therefore, if there
be any spirit in us, let us avenge the death of those who have
perished in a most unworthy manner, and let us slay these robbers.”
He points to the Roman citizens, who had accompanied them, in
reliance on his protection. He immediately seizes a great quantity
of corn and provisions, cruelly tortures them, and then puts them to
death, sends messengers throughout the entire state of the Aedui,
and rouses them completely by the same falsehood concerning the
slaughter of their knights and nobles; he earnestly advises them to
avenge, in the same manner as he did, the wrongs, which they had
received.
39 Eporedirix, the Aeduan, a young man born in the highest rank and
possessing very great influence at home, and, along with Viridomarus,
of equal age and influence, but of inferior birth, whom Caesar had
raised from a humble position to the highest rank, on being
recommended to him by Divitiacus, had come in the number of horse,
being summoned by Caesar by name. These had a dispute with each
other for precedence, and in the struggle between the magistrates
they had contended with their utmost efforts, the one for
Convictolitanis, the other for Cotus. Of these Eporedirix, on
learning the design of Litavicus, lays the matter before Caesar
almost at midnight; he entreats that Caesar should not suffer their
state to swerve from the alliance with the Roman people, owing to
the depraved counsels of a few young men which he foresaw would be
the consequence if so many thousand men should unite themselves to
the enemy, as their relations could not neglect their safety, nor
the state regard it as a matter of slight importance.
40 Caesar felt great anxiety on this intelligence, because he had
always especially indulged the state of the Aedui, and, without any
hesitation, draws out from the camp four light-armed legions and all
the cavalry: nor had he time, at such a crisis, to contract the
camp, because the affair seemed to depend upon dispatch. He leaves
Caius Fabius, his lieutenant, with two legions to guard the camp.
When he ordered the brothers of Litavicus to be arrested, he
discovers that they had fled a short time before to the camp of the
enemy. He encouraged his soldiers “not to be disheartened by the
labor of the journey on such a necessary occasion,” and, after
advancing twenty-five miles, all being most eager, he came in sight
of the army of the Aedui, and, by sending on his cavalry, retards
and impedes their march; he then issues strict orders to all his
soldiers to kill no one. He commands Eporedirix and Viridomarus, who
they thought were killed, to move among the cavalry and address
their friends. When they were recognized and the treachery of
Litavicus discovered, the Aedui began to extend their hands to
intimate submission, and, laying down their arms, to deprecate
death. Litavicus, with his clansmen, who after the custom of the
Gauls consider it a crime to desert their patrons, even in extreme
misfortune, flees forth to Gergovia.
41 Caesar, after sending messengers to the state of the Aedui, to
inform them that they whom he could have put to death by the right
of war were spared through his kindness, and after giving three
hours of the night to his army for his repose, directed his march to
Gergovia. Almost in the middle of the journey, a party of horse that
were sent by Fabius stated in how great danger matters were, they
inform him that the camp was attacked by a very powerful army, while
fresh men were frequently relieving the wearied, and exhausting our
soldiers by the incessant toil, since on account of the size of the
camp, they had constantly to remain on the rampart; that many had
been wounded by the immense number of arrows and all kinds of
missiles; that the engines were of great service in withstanding
them; that Fabius, at their departure, leaving only two gates open,
was blocking up the rest, and was adding breast-works to the
ramparts, and was preparing himself for a similar casualty on the
following day. Caesar, after receiving this information, reached the
camp before sunrise owing to the very great zeal of his soldiers.
42 While these things are going on at Gergovia, the Aedui, on
receiving the first announcements from Litavicus, leave themselves
no time to ascertain the truth of those statements. Some are
stimulated by avarice, others by revenge and credulity, which is an
innate propensity in that race of men to such a degree that they
consider a slight rumor as an ascertained fact. They plunder the
property of the Roman citizens, and either massacre them or drag
them away to slavery. Convictolitanis increases the evil state of
affairs, and goads on the people to fury, that by the commission of
some outrage they may be ashamed to return to propriety. They entice
from the town of Cabillonus, by a promise of safety, Marcus Aristius,
a military tribune, who was on his march to his legion; they compel
those who had settled there for the purpose of trading to do the
same. By constantly attacking them on their march they strip them of
all their baggage; they besiege day and night those that resisted;
when many were slain on both sides, they excite a great number to
arms.
43 In the mean time, when intelligence was brought that all their
soldiers were in Caesar’s power, they run in a body to Aristius;
they assure him that nothing had been done by public authority; they
order an inquiry to be made about the plundered property; they
confiscate the property of Litavicus and his brothers; they send
embassadors to Caesar for the purpose of clearing themselves. They
do all this with a view to recover their soldiers; but being
contaminated by guilt, and charmed by the gains arising from the
plundered property, as that act was shared in by many, and being
tempted by the fear of punishment, they began to form plans of war
and stir up the other states by embassies. Although Caesar was aware
of this proceeding, yet he addresses the embassadors with as much
mildness as he can: “That he did not think worse of the state on
account of the ignorance and fickleness of the mob, nor would
diminish his regard for the Aedui.” He himself, fearing a greater
commotion in Gaul, in order to prevent his being surrounded by all
the states, began to form plans as to the manner in which he should
return from Gergovia and again concentrate his forces, lest a
departure arising from the fear of a revolt should seem like a
flight.
44 While he was considering these things an opportunity of acting
successfully seemed to offer. For, when he had come into the smaller
camp for the purpose of securing the works, he noticed that the hill
in the possession of the enemy was stripped of men, although, on the
former days, it could scarcely be seen on account of the numbers on
it. Being astonished, he inquires the reason of it from the
deserters, a great number of whom flocked to him daily. They all
concurred in asserting, what Caesar himself had already ascertained
by his scouts, that the back of that hill was almost level; but
likewise woody and narrow, by which there was a pass to the other
side of the town; that they had serious apprehensions for this
place, and had no other idea, on the occupation of one hill by the
Romans, than that, if they should lose the other, they would be
almost surrounded, and cut off from all egress and foraging; that
they were all summoned by Vercingetorix to fortify this place.
45 Caesar, on being informed of this circumstance, sends several
troops of horse to the place immediately after midnight; he orders
them to range in every quarter with more tumult than usual. At dawn
he orders a large quantity of baggage to be drawn out of the camp,
and the muleteers with helmets, in the appearance and guise of
horsemen, to ride round the hills. To these he adds a few cavalry,
with instructions to range more widely to make a show. He orders
them all to seek the same quarter by a long circuit; these
proceedings were seen at a distance from the town, as Gergovia
commanded a view of the camp, nor could the Gauls ascertain at so
great a distance, what certainty there was in the maneuver. He sends
one legion to the same hill, and after it had marched a little,
stations it in the lower ground, and congeals it in the woods. The
suspicion of the Gauls are increased, and all their forces are
marched to that place to defend it. Caesar, having perceived the
camp of the enemy deserted, covers the military insignia of his men,
conceals the standards, and transfers his soldiers in small bodies
from the greater to the less camp, and points out to the lieutenants
whom he had placed in command over the respective legions, what he
should wish to be done; he particularly advises them to restrain
their men from advancing too far, through their desire of fighting,
or their hope of plunder, he sets before them what disadvantages the
unfavorable nature of the ground carries with it; that they could be
assisted by dispatch alone: that success depended on a surprise, and
not on a battle. After stating these particulars, he gives the
signal for action, and detaches the Aedui at the same time by
another ascent on the right.
46 The town wall was 1200 paces distant from the plain and foot of
the ascent, in a straight line, if no gap intervened; whatever
circuit was added to this ascent, to make the hill easy, increased
the length of the route. But almost in the middle of the hill, the
Gauls had previously built a wall six feet high, made of large
stones, and extending in length as far as the nature of the ground
permitted, as a barrier to retard the advance of our men; and
leaving all the lower space empty, they had filled the upper part of
the hill, as far as the wall of the town, with their camps very
close to one another. The soldiers, on the signal being given,
quickly advance to this fortification, and passing over it, make
themselves masters of the separate camps. And so great was their
activity in taking the camps, that Teutomarus, the king of the
Nitiobriges, being suddenly surprised in his tent, as he had gone to
rest at noon, with difficulty escaped from the hands of the
plunderers, with the upper part of his person naked, and his horse
wounded.
47 Caesar, having accomplished the object which he had in view,
ordered the signal to be sounded for a retreat; and the soldiers of
the tenth legion, by which he was then accompanied, halted. But the
soldiers of the other legions, not hearing the sound of the trumpet,
because there was a very large valley between them, were however
kept back by the tribunes of the soldiers and the lieutenants,
according to Caesar’s orders; but being animated by the prospect of
speedy victory, and the flight of the enemy, and the favorable
battles of former periods, they thought nothing so difficult that
their bravery could not accomplish it; nor did they put an end to
the pursuit, until they drew nigh to the wall of the town and the
gates. But then, when a shout arose in every quarter of the city,
those who were at a distance being alarmed by the sudden tumult,
fled hastily from the town, since they thought that the enemy were
within the gates. The matrons begin to cast their clothes and silver
over the wall, and bending over as far as the lower part of the
bosom, with outstretched hands beseech the Romans to spare them, and
not to sacrifice to their resentment even women and children, as
they had done at Avaricum. Some of them let themselves down from the
walls by their hands, and surrendered to our soldiers. Lucius Fabius
a centurion of the eighth legion, who, it was ascertained, had said
that day among his fellow soldiers that he was excited by the
plunder of Avaricum, and would not allow any one to mount the wall
before him, finding three men of his own company, and being raised
up by them, scaled the wall. He himself, in turn, taking hold of
them one by one drew them up to the wall.
48 In the mean time those who had gone to the other part of the town
to defend it, as we have mentioned above, at first, aroused by
hearing the shouts, and, afterward, by frequent accounts, that the
town was in possession of the Romans, sent forward their cavalry,
and hastened in larger numbers to that quarter. As each first came
he stood beneath the wall, and increased the number of his
countrymen engaged in action. When a great multitude of them had
assembled, the matrons, who a little before were stretching their
hands from the walls to the Romans, began to beseech their
countrymen, and after the Gallic fashion to show their disheveled
hair, and bring their children into public view. Neither in position
nor in numbers was the contest an equal one to the Romans; at the
same time, being exhausted by running and the long continuation of
the fight, they could not easily withstand fresh and vigorous
troops.
49 Caesar, when he perceived that his soldiers were fighting on
unfavorable ground, and that the enemy’s forces were increasing,
being alarmed for the safety of his troops, sent orders to Titus
Sextius, one of his lieutenants, whom he had left to guard the
smaller camp, to lead out his cohorts quickly from the camp, and
post them at the foot of the hill, on the right wing of the enemy;
that if he should see our men driven from the ground, he should
deter the enemy from following too closely. He himself, advancing
with the legion a little from that place where he had taken his
post, awaited the issue of the battle.
50 While the fight was going on most vigorously, hand to hand, and
the enemy depended on their position and numbers, our men on their
bravery, the Aedui suddenly appeared on our exposed flank, as Caesar
had sent them by another ascent on the right, for the sake of
creating a diversion. These, from the similarity of their arms,
greatly terrified our men; and although they were discovered to have
their right shoulders bare, which was usually the sign of those
reduced to peace, yet the soldiers suspected that this very thing
was done by the enemy to deceive them. At the same time Lucius
Fabius the centurion, and those who had scaled the wall with him,
being surrounded and slain, were cast from the wall. Marcus Petreius,
a centurion of the same legion, after attempting to hew down the
gates, was overpowered by numbers, and, despairing of his safety,
having already received many wounds, said to the soldiers of his own
company who followed him: “Since I can not save you as well as
myself, I shall at least provide for your safety, since I, allured
by the love of glory, led you into this danger, do you save
yourselves when an opportunity is given.” At the same time he rushed
into the midst of the enemy, and slaying two of them, drove back the
rest a little from the gate. When his men attempted to aid him, “In
vain,” he says, “you endeavor to procure me safety, since blood and
strength are now failing me, therefore leave this, while you have
the opportunity, and retreat to the legion.” Thus he fell fighting a
few moments after, and saved his men by his own death.
51 Our soldiers, being hard pressed on every side, were dislodged
from their position, with the loss of forty-six centurions; but the
tenth legion, which had been posted in reserve on ground a little
more level, checked the Gauls in their eager pursuit. It was
supported by the cohorts of the thirteenth legion, which, being led
from the smaller camp, had, under the command of Titus Sextius,
occupied the higher ground. The legions, as soon as they reached the
plain, halted and faced the enemy. Vercingetorix led back his men
from the part of the hill within the fortifications. On that day
little less than seven hundred of the soldiers were missing.
52 On the next day, Caesar, having called a meeting, censured the
rashness and avarice of his soldiers, “In that they had judged for
themselves how far they ought to proceed, or what they ought to do,
and could not be kept back by the tribunes of the soldiers and the
lieutenants;” and stated, “what the disadvantage of the ground could
effect, what opinion he himself had entertained at Avaricum, when
having surprised the enemy without either general or cavalry, he had
given up a certain victory, lest even a trifling loss should occur
in the contest owing to the disadvantage of position. That as much
as he admired the greatness of their courage, since neither the
fortifications of the camp, nor the height of the mountain, nor the
wall of the town could retard them; in the same degree he censured
their licentiousness and arrogance, because they thought that they
knew more than their general concerning victory, and the issue of
actions: and that he required in his soldiers forbearance and
self-command, not less than valor and magnanimity.”
53 Having held this assembly, and having encouraged the soldiers at
the conclusion of his speech, “That they should not be dispirited on
this account, nor attribute to the valor of the enemy, what the
disadvantage of position had caused;” entertaining the same views of
his departure that he had previously had, he led forth the legions
from the camp, and drew up his army in order of battle in a suitable
place. When Vercingetorix, nevertheless, would not descend to the
level ground, a slight cavalry action, and that a successful one,
having taken place, he led back his army into the camp. When he had
done this, the next day, thinking that he had done enough to lower
the pride of the Gauls, and to encourage the minds of his soldiers,
he moved his camp in the direction of the Aedui. The enemy not even
then pursuing us, on the third day he repaired the bridge over the
river Allier, and led over his whole army.
54 Having then held an interview with Viridomarus and Eporedirix the
Aeduans, he learns that Litavicus had set out with all the cavalry
to raise the Aedui; that it was necessary that they too should go
before him to confirm the state in their allegiance. Although he now
saw distinctly the treachery of the Aedui in many things, and was of
opinion that the revolt of the entire state would be hastened by
their departure; yet he thought that they should not be detained,
lest he should appear either to offer an insult, or betray some
suspicion of fear. He briefly states to them when departing his
services toward the Aedui: in what a state and how humbled he had
found them, driven into their towns, deprived of their lands,
stripped of all their forces, a tribute imposed on them, and
hostages wrested from them with the utmost insult; and to what
condition and to what greatness he had raised them, [so much so]
that they had not only recovered their former position, but seemed
to surpass the dignity and influence of all the previous eras of
their history. After giving these admonitions he dismissed them.
55 Noviodunum was a town of the Aedui, advantageously situated on
the banks of the Loire. Caesar had conveyed hither all the hostages
of Gaul, the corn, public money, a great part of his own baggage and
that of his army; he had sent hither a great number of horses, which
he had purchased in Italy and Spain on account of this war. When
Eporedirix and Viridomarus came to this place, and received
information of the disposition of the state, that Litavicus had been
admitted by the Aedui into Bibracte, which is a town of the greatest
importance among them, that Convictolitanis the chief magistrate and
a great part of the senate had gone to meet him, that embassadors
had been publicly sent to Vercingetorix to negotiate a peace and
alliance; they thought that so great an opportunity ought not to be
neglected. Therefore, having put to the sword the garrison of
Noviodunum, and those who had assembled there for the purpose of
trading or were on their march, they divided the money and horses
among themselves; they took care that the hostages of the
[different] states should be brought to Bibracte, to the chief
magistrate; they burned the town to prevent its being of any service
to the Romans, as they were of opinion that they could not hold it;
they carried away in their vessels whatever corn they could in the
hurry, they destroyed the remainder, by [throwing it] into the river
or setting it on fire, they themselves began to collect forces from
the neighboring country, to place guards and garrisons in different
positions along the banks of the Loire, and to display the cavalry
on all sides to strike terror into the Romans, [to try] if they
could cut them off from a supply of provisions. In which expectation
they were much aided, from the circumstance that the Loire had
swollen to such a degree from the melting of the snows, that it did
not seem capable of being forded at all.
56 Caesar on being informed of these movements was of opinion that
he ought to make haste, even if he should run some risk in
completing the bridges, in order that he might engage before greater
forces of the enemy should be collected in that place. For no one
even then considered it an absolutely necessary act, that changing
his design he should direct his march into the Province, both
because the infamy and disgrace of the thing, and the intervening
mount Cevennes, and the difficulty of the roads prevented him; and
especially because he had serious apprehensions for the safety of
Labienus whom he had detached, and those legions whom he had sent
with him. Therefore, having made very long marches by day and night,
he came to the river Loire, contrary to the expectation of all; and
having by means of the cavalry, found out a ford, suitable enough
considering the emergency, of such depth that their arms and
shoulders could be above water for supporting their accoutrements,
he dispersed his cavalry in such a manner as to break the force of
the current, and having confounded the enemy at the first sight, led
his army across the river in safety; and finding corn and cattle in
the fields, after refreshing his army with them, he determined to
march into the country of the Senones.
57 While these things are being done by Caesar, Labienus, leaving at
Agendicum the recruits who had lately arrived from Italy, to guard
the baggage, marches with four legions to Lutetia (which is a town
of the Parisii, situated on an island on the river Seine ), whose
arrival being discovered by the enemy, numerous forces arrived from
the neighboring states. The supreme command is intrusted to
Camalugenus one of the Aulerci, who, although almost worn out with
age, was called to that honor on account of his extraordinary
knowledge of military tactics. He, when he observed that there was a
large marsh which communicated with the Seine, and rendered all that
country impassable, encamped there, and determined to prevent our
troops from passing it.
58 Labienus at first attempted to raise vineae, fill up the marsh
with hurdles and clay, and secure a road. After he perceived that
this was too difficult to accomplish, he issued in silence from his
camp at the third watch, and reached Melodunum by the same route by
which he came. This is a town of the Senones, situated on an island
in the Seine, as we have just before observed of Lutetia. Having
seized upon about fifty ships and quickly joined them together, and
having placed soldiers in them, he intimidated by his unexpected
arrival the inhabitants, of whom a great number had been called out
to the war, and obtains possession of the town without a contest.
Having repaired the bridge, which the enemy had broken down during
the preceding days, he led over his army, and began to march along
the banks of the river to Lutetia. The enemy, on learning the
circumstance from those who had escaped from Melodunum, set fire to
Lutetia, and order the bridges of that town to be broken down: they
themselves set out from the marsh, and take their position on the
banks of the Seine, over against Lutetia and opposite the camp of
Labienus.
59 Caesar was now reported to have departed from Gergovia;
intelligence was likewise brought to them concerning the revolt of
the Aedui, and a successful rising in Gaul; and that Caesar, having
been prevented from prosecuting his journey and crossing the Loire,
and having been compelled by the want of corn, had marched hastily
to the province. But the Bellovaci, who had been previously
disaffected of themselves, on learning the revolt of the Aedui,
began to assemble forces and openly to prepare for war. Then
Labienus, as the change in affairs was so great, thought that he
must adopt a very different system from what he had previously
intended, and he did not now think of making any new acquisitions,
or of provoking the enemy to an action; but that he might bring back
his army safe to Agendicum. For, on one side, the Bellovaci, a state
which held the highest reputation for prowess in Gaul, were pressing
on him; and Camulogenus, with a disciplined and well-equipped army,
held the other side; moreover, a very great river separated and cut
off the legions from the garrison and baggage. He saw that, in
consequence of such great difficulties being thrown in his way, he
must seek aid from his own energy of disposition.
60 Having, therefore, called a council of war a little before
evening, he exhorted his soldiers to execute with diligence and
energy such commands as he should give; he assigns the ships which
he had brought from Melodunum to Roman knights, one to each, and
orders them to fall down the river silently for four miles, at the
end of the fourth watch, and there wait for him. He leaves the five
cohorts, which he considered to be the most steady in action, to
guard the camp; he orders the five remaining cohorts of the same
legion to proceed a little after midnight up the river with all
their baggage, in a great tumult. He collects also some small boats;
and sends them in the same direction, with orders to make a loud
noise in rowing. He himself, a little after, marched out in silence,
and, at the head of three legions, seeks that place to which he had
ordered the ships to be brought.
61 When he had arrived there, the enemy’s scouts, as they were
stationed along every part of the river, not expecting an attack,
because a great storm had suddenly arisen, were surprised by our
soldiers: the infantry and cavalry are quickly transported, under
the superintendence of the Roman knights, whom he had appointed to
that office. Almost at the same time, a little before daylight,
intelligence was given to the enemy that there was an unusual tumult
in the camp of the Romans, and that a strong force was marching up
the river, and that the sound of oars was distinctly heard in the
same quarter, and that soldiers were being conveyed across in ships
a little below. On hearing these things, because they were of
opinion that the legions were passing in three different places, and
that the entire army, being terrified by the revolt of the Aedui,
were preparing for flight, they divided their forces also into three
divisions. For leaving a guard opposite to the camp and sending a
small body in the direction of Metiosedum, with orders to advance as
far as the ships would proceed, they led the rest of their troops
against Labienus.
62 By day-break all our soldiers were brought across, and the army
of the enemy was in sight. Labienus, having encouraged his soldiers
“to retain the memory of their ancient valor, and so many most
successful actions, and imagine Caesar himself, under whose command
they had so often routed the enemy, to be present,” gives the signal
for action. At the first onset the enemy are beaten and put to
flight in the right wing, where the seventh legion stood: on the
left wing, which position the twelfth legion held, although the
first ranks fell transfixed by the javelins of the Romans, yet the
rest resisted most bravely; nor did any one of them show the
slightest intention of flying. Camulogenus, the general of the
enemy, was present and encouraged his troops. But when the issue of
the victory was still uncertain, and the circumstances which were
taking place on the left wing were announced to the tribunes of the
seventh legion, they faced about their legion to the enemy’s rear
and attacked it: not even then did any one retreat, but all were
surrounded and slain. Camulogenus met the same fate. But those who
were left as a guard opposite the camp of Labienus, when they heard
that the battle was commenced, marched to aid their countrymen and
take possession of a hill, but were unable to withstand the attack
of the victorious soldiers. In this manner, mixed with their own
fugitives, such as the woods and mountains did not shelter were cut
to pieces by our cavalry. When this battle was finished, Labienus
returns to Agendicum, where the baggage of the whole army had been
left: from it he marched with all his forces to Caesar.
63 The revolt of the Aedui being known, the war grows more
dangerous. Embassies are sent by them in all directions: as far as
they can prevail by influence, authority, or money, they strive to
excite the state [to revolt]. Having got possession of the hostages
whom Caesar had deposited with them, they terrify the hesitating by
putting them to death. The Aedui request Vercingetorix to come to
them and communicate his plans of conducting the war. On obtaining
this request they insist that the chief command should be assigned
to them; and when the affair became a disputed question, a council
of all Gaul is summoned to Bibracte. They came together in great
numbers and from every quarter to the same place. The decision is
left to the votes of the mass; all to a man approve of Vercingetorix
as their general. The Remi, Lingones, and Treviri were absent from
this meeting; the two former because they attached themselves to the
alliance of Rome; the Treviri because they were very remote and were
hard pressed by the Germans; which was also the reason of their
being absent during the whole war, and their sending auxiliaries to
neither party. The Aedui are highly indignant at being deprived of
the chief command; they lament the change of fortune, and miss
Caesar’s indulgence toward them; however, after engaging in the war,
they do not dare to pursue their own measures apart from the rest.
Eporedirix and Viridomarus, youths of the greatest promise, submit
reluctantly to Vercingetorix.
64 The latter demands hostages from the remaining states; nay, more,
appointed a day for this proceeding; he orders all the cavalry,
fifteen thousand in number, to quickly assemble here; he says that
he will be content with the infantry which he had before, and would
not tempt fortune nor come to a regular engagement; but since he had
abundance of cavalry, it would be very easy for him to prevent the
Romans from obtaining forage or corn, provided that they themselves
should resolutely destroy their corn and set fire to their houses;
by which sacrifice of private property they would evidently obtain
perpetual dominion and freedom. After arranging these matters, he
levies ten thousand infantry on the Aedui and Segusiani, who border
on our province: to these he adds eight hundred horse. He sets over
them the brother of Eporedirix, and orders him to wage war against
the Allobroges. On the other side he sends the Gabali and the
nearest cantons of the Arverni against the Helvii; he likewise sends
the Ruteni and Cadurci to lay waste the territories of the Volcae
Arecomici. Besides, by secret messages and embassies, he tampers
with the Allobroges, whose minds, he hopes, had not yet settled down
after the excitement of the late war. To their nobles he promises
money, and to their state the dominion of the whole province.
65 The only guards provided against all these contingencies were
twenty-two cohorts, which were collected from the entire province by
Lucius Caesar, the lieutenant, and opposed to the enemy in every
quarter. The Helvii, voluntarily engaging in battle with their
neighbors, are defeated, and Caius Valerius Donotaurus, the son of
Caburus, the principal man of the state, and several others, being
slain, they are forced to retire within their towns and
fortifications. The Allobroges, placing guards along the course of
the Rhine, defend their frontiers with great vigilance and energy.
Caesar, as he perceived that the enemy were superior in cavalry, and
he himself could receive no aid from the Province or Italy, while
all communication was cut off, sends across the Rhine into Germany
to those states which he had subdued in the preceding campaigns, and
summons from them cavalry and the light-armed infantry, who were
accustomed to engage among them. On their arrival, as they were
mounted on unserviceable horses, he takes horses from the military
tribunes and the rest, nay, even from the Roman knights and
veterans, and distributes them among the Germans.
66 In the mean time, whilst these things are going on, the forces of
the enemy from the Arverni, and the cavalry which had been demanded
from all Gaul, meet together. A great number of these having been
collected, when Caesar was marching into the country of the Sequani,
through the confines of the Lingones, in order that he might the
more easily render aid to the province, Vercingetorix encamped in
three camps, about ten miles from the Romans: and having summoned
the commanders of the cavalry to a council, he shows that the time
of victory was come; that the Romans were fleeing into the Province
and leaving Gaul; that this was sufficient for obtaining immediate
freedom; but was of little moment in acquiring peace and
tranquillity for the future; for the Romans would return after
assembling greater forces and would not put an end to the war.
Therefore they should attack them on their march, when encumbered.
If the infantry should [be obliged to] relieve their cavalry, and be
retarded by doing so, the march could not be accomplished: if,
abandoning their baggage they should provide for their safety (a
result which, he trusted, was more like to ensue), they would lose
both property and character. For as to the enemy’s horse, they ought
not to entertain a doubt that none of them would dare to advance
beyond the main body. In order that they [the Gauls] may do so with
greater spirit, he would marshal all their forces before the camp,
and intimidate the enemy. The cavalry unanimously shout out, “That
they ought to bind themselves by a most sacred oath, that he should
not be received under a roof, nor have access to his children,
parents, or wife, who shall not twice have ridden through the
enemy’s army.”
67 This proposal receiving general approbation, and all being forced
to take the oath, on the next day the cavalry were divided into
three parts, and two of these divisions made a demonstration on our
two flanks; while one in front began to obstruct our march. On this
circumstance being announced, Caesar orders his cavalry also to form
three divisions and charge the enemy. Then the action commences
simultaneously in every part: the main body halts; the baggage is
received within the ranks of the legions. If our men seemed to be
distressed, or hard pressed in any quarter, Caesar usually ordered
the troops to advance, and the army to wheel round in that quarter;
which conduct retarded the enemy in the pursuit, and encouraged our
men by the hope of support. At length the Germans, on the right
wing, having gained the top of the hill, dislodge the enemy from
their position and pursue them even as far as the river at which
Vercingetorix with the infantry was stationed, and slay several of
them. The rest, on observing this action, fearing lest they should
be surrounded, betake themselves to flight. A slaughter ensues in
every direction, and three of the noblest of the Aedui are taken and
brought to Caesar: Cotus, the commander of the cavalry, who had been
engaged in the contest with Convictolitanis the last election,
Cavarillus, who had held the command of the infantry after the
revolt of Litavicus, and Eporedirix, under whose command the Aedui
had engaged in war against the Sequani, before the arrival of
Caesar.
68 All his cavalry being routed, Vercingetorix led back his troops
in the same order as he had arranged them before the camp, and
immediately began to march to Alesia, which is a town of the
Mandubii, and ordered the baggage to be speedily brought forth from
the camp, and follow him closely. Caesar, having conveyed his
baggage to the nearest hill, and having left two legions to guard
it, pursued as far as the time of day would permit, and after
slaying about three thousand of the rear of the enemy, encamped at
Alesia on the next day. On reconnoitering the situation of the city,
finding that the enemy were panic-stricken, because the cavalry in
which they placed their chief reliance, were beaten, he encouraged
his men to endure the toil, and began to draw a line of
circumvallation round Alesia.
69 The town itself was situated on the top of a hill, in a very
lofty position, so that it did not appear likely to be taken, except
by a regular siege. Two rivers, on two different sides, washed the
foot of the hill. Before the town lay a plain of about three miles
in length; on every other side hills at a moderate distance, and of
an equal degree of height, surrounded the town. The army of the
Gauls had filled all the space under the wall, comprising a part of
the hill which looked to the rising sun, and had drawn in front a
trench and a stone wall six feet high. The circuit of that
fortification, which was commenced by the Romans, comprised eleven
miles. The camp was pitched in a strong position, and twenty-three
redoubts were raised in it, in which sentinels were placed by day,
lest any sally should be made suddenly; and by night the same were
occupied by watches and strong guards.
70 The work having been begun, a cavalry action ensues in that
plain, which we have already described as broken by hills, and
extending three miles in length. The contest is maintained on both
sides with the utmost vigor; Caesar sends the Germans to aid our
troops when distressed, and draws up the legions in front of the
camp, lest any sally should be suddenly made by the enemy’s
infantry. The courage of our men is increased by the additional
support of the legions; the enemy being put to flight, hinder one
another by their numbers, and as only the narrower gates were left
open, are crowded together in them; then the Germans pursue them
with vigor even to the fortifications. A great slaughter ensues;
some leave their horses, and endeavor to cross the ditch and climb
the wall. Caesar orders the legions which he had drawn up in front
of the rampart to advance a little. The Gauls, who were within the
fortifications, were no less panic-stricken, thinking that the enemy
were coming that moment against them, and unanimously shout “to
arms;” some in their alarm rush into the town; Vercingetorix orders
the gates to be shut, lest the camp should be left undefended. The
Germans retreat, after slaying many and taking several horses.
71 Vercingetorix adopts the design of sending away all his cavalry
by night, before the fortifications should be completed by the
Romans. He charges them when departing “that each of them should go
to his respective state, and press for the war all who were old
enough to bear arms; he states his own merits, and conjures them to
consider his safety, and not surrender him who had deserved so well
of the general freedom, to the enemy for torture; he points out to
them that, if they should be remiss, eighty thousand chosen men
would perish with him; that upon making a calculation, he had barely
corn for thirty days, but could hold out a little longer by
economy.” After giving these instructions he silently dismisses the
cavalry in the second watch, [on that side] where our works were not
completed; he orders all the corn to be brought to himself; he
ordains capital punishment to such as should not obey; he
distributes among them, man by man, the cattle, great quantities of
which had been driven there by the Mandubii; he began to measure out
the corn sparingly, and by little and little; he receives into the
town all the forces which he had posted in front of it. In this
manner he prepares to await the succors from Gaul, and carry on the
war.
72 Caesar, on learning these proceedings from the deserters and
captives, adopted the following system of fortification; he dug a
trench twenty feet deep, with perpendicular sides, in such a manner
that the base of this trench should extend so far as the edges were
apart at the top. He raised all his other works at a distance of
four hundred feet from that ditch; [he did] that with this
intention, lest (since he necessarily embraced so extensive an area,
and the whole works could not be easily surrounded by a line of
soldiers) a large number of the enemy should suddenly, or by night,
sally against the fortifications; or lest they should by day cast
weapons against our men while occupied with the works. Having left
this interval, he drew two trenches fifteen feet broad, and of the
same depth; the innermost of them, being in low and level ground, he
filled with water conveyed from the river. Behind these he raised a
rampart and wall twelve feet high; to this he added a parapet and
battlements, with large stakes cut like stags’ horns, projecting
from the junction of the parapet and battlements, to prevent the
enemy from scaling it, and surrounded the entire work with turrets,
which were eighty feet distant from one another.
73 It was necessary, at one and the same time, to procure timber
[for the rampart], lay in supplies of corn, and raise also extensive
fortifications, and the available troops were in consequence of this
reduced in number, since they used to advance to some distance from
the camp, and sometimes the Gauls endeavored to attack our works,
and to make a sally from the town by several gates and in great
force. Caesar thought that further additions should be made to these
works, in order that the fortifications might be defensible by a
small number of soldiers. Having, therefore, cut down the trunks of
trees or very thick branches, and having stripped their tops of the
bark, and sharpened them into a point, he drew a continued trench
every where five feet deep. These stakes being sunk into this
trench, and fastened firmly at the bottom, to prevent the
possibility of their being torn up, had their branches only
projecting from the ground. There were five rows in connection with,
and intersecting each other; and whoever entered within them were
likely to impale themselves on very sharp stakes. The soldiers
called these “cippi.” Before these, which were arranged in oblique
rows in the form of a quincunx, pits three feet deep were dug, which
gradually diminished in depth to the bottom. In these pits tapering
stakes, of the thickness of a man’s thigh; sharpened at the top and
hardened in the fire, were sunk in such a manner as to project from
the ground not more than four inches; at the same time for the
purpose of giving them strength and stability, they were each filled
with trampled clay to the height of one foot from the bottom: the
rest of the pit was covered over with osiers and twigs, to conceal
the deceit. Eight rows of this kind were dug, and were three feet
distant from each other. They called this a lily from its
resemblance to that flower. Stakes a foot long, with iron hooks
attached to them, were entirely sunk in the ground before these, and
were planted in every place at small intervals; these they called
spurs.
74 After completing these works, saving selected as level ground as
he could, considering the nature of the country, and having inclosed
an area of fourteen miles, he constructed, against an external
enemy, fortifications of the same kind in every respect, and
separate from these, so that the guards of the fortifications could
not be surrounded even by immense numbers, if such a circumstance
should take place owing to the departure of the enemy’s cavalry; and
in order that the Roman soldiers might not be compelled to go out of
the camp with great risk, ho orders all to provide forage and corn
for thirty days.
75 While those things are carried on at Alesia, the Gauls, having
convened a council of their chief nobility, determine that all who
could bear arms should not be called out, which was the opinion of
Vercingetorix, but that a fixed number should be levied from each
state; lest, when so great a multitude assembled together, they
could neither govern nor distinguish their men, nor have the means
of supplying them with corn. They demand thirty-five thousand men
from the Aedui and their dependents, the Segusiani, Ambivareti, and
Aulerci Brannovices; an equal number from the Arverni in conjunction
with the Eleuteti Cadurci, Gabali, and Velauni, who were accustomed
to be under the command of the Arverni; twelve thousand each from
the Senones, Sequani, Bituriges, Sentones, Ruteni, and Carnutes; ten
thousand from the Bellovaci; the same number from the Lemovici;
eight thousand each from the Pictones, and Turoni, and Parisii, and
Helvii; five thousand each from the Suessiones, Ambiani,
Mediomatrici, Petrocorii, Nervii, Morini, and Nitiobriges; the same
number from the Aulerci Cenomani; four thousand from the Atrebates;
three thousand each from the Bellocassi, Lexovii, and Aulerci
Eburovices; thirty thousand from the Rauraci, and Boii; six thousand
from all the states together, which border on the Atlantic, and
which in their dialect are called Armoricae (in which number are
comprehended the Curisolites, Rhedones, Ambibari, Caltes, Osismii,
Lemovices, Veneti, and Unelli). Of these the Bellovaci did not
contribute their number, as they said that they would wage war
against the Romans on their own account, and at their own
discretion, and would not obey the order of any one: however, at the
request of Commius, they sent two thousand, in consideration of a
tie of hospitality which subsisted between him and them.
76 Caesar had, as we have previously narrated, availed himself of
the faithful and valuable services of this Commius, in Britain, in
former years: in consideration of which merits he had exempted from
taxes his [Commius’s] state, and had conferred on Commius himself
the country of the Morini. Yet such was the unanimity of the Gauls
in asserting their freedom, and recovering their ancient renown in
war, that they were influenced neither by favors, nor by the
recollection of private friendship; and all earnestly directed their
energies and resources to that war, and collected eight thousand
cavalry, and about two hundred and forty thousand infantry. These
were reviewed in the country of the Aedui, and a calculation was
made of their numbers: commanders were appointed: the supreme
command is intrusted to Commius the Atrebatian, Viridomarus and
Eporedirix the Aeduans, and Vergasillaunus the Arvernan, the
cousin-german of Vercingetorix. To them are assigned men selected
from each state, by whose advice the war should be conducted. All
march to Alesia, sanguine and full of confidence: nor was there a
single individual who imagined that the Romans could withstand the
sight of such an immense host: especially in an action carried on
both in front and rear, when [on the inside] the besieged would
sally from the town and attack the enemy, and on the outside so
great forces of cavalry and infantry would be seen.
77 But those who were blockaded at Alesia, the day being past, on
which they had expected auxiliaries from their countrymen, and all
their corn being consumed ignorant of what was going on among the
Aedui, convened an assembly and deliberated on the exigency of their
situation. After various opinions had been expressed among them,
some of which proposed a surrender, others a sally, while their
strength would support it, the speech of Critognatus ought not to be
omitted for its singular and detestable cruelty. He sprung from the
noblest family among the Arverni, and possessing great influence,
says, “I shall pay no attention to the opinion of those who call a
most disgraceful surrender by the name of a capitulation; nor do I
think that they ought to be considered as citizens, or summoned to
the council. My business is with those who approve of a sally: in
whose advice the memory of our ancient prowess seems to dwell in the
opinion of you all. To be unable to bear privation for a short time
is disgraceful cowardice, not true valor. Those who voluntarily
offer themselves to death are more easily found than those who would
calmly endure distress. And I would approve of this opinion (for
honor is a powerful motive with me), could I foresee no other loss,
save that of life; but let us, in adopting our design, look back on
all Gaul, which we have stirred up to our aid. What courage do you
think would our relatives and friends have, if eighty thousand men
were butchered in one spot, supposing that they should be forced to
come to an action almost over our corpses? Do not utterly deprive
them of your aid, for they have spurned all thoughts of personal
danger on account of your safety; nor by your folly, rashness, and
cowardice, crush all Gaul and doom it to an eternal slavery. Do you
doubt their fidelity and firmness because they have not come at the
appointed day? What then? Do you suppose that the Romans are
employed every day in the outer fortifications for mere amusement?
If you can not be assured by their dispatches, since every avenue is
blocked up, take the Romans as evidence that there approach is
drawing near; since they, intimidated by alarm at this, labor night
and day at their works. What, therefore, is my design? To do as our
ancestors did in the war against the Cimbri and Teutones, which was
by no means equally momentous who, when driven into their towns, and
oppressed by similar privations, supported life by the corpses of
those who appeared useless for war on account of their age, and did
not surrender to the enemy: and even if we had not a precedent for
such cruel conduct, still I should consider it most glorious that
one should be established, and delivered to posterity. For in what
was that war like this? The Cimbri, after laying Gaul waste, and
inflicting great calamities, at length departed from our country,
and sought other lands; they left us our rights, laws, lands, and
liberty. But what other motive or wish have the Romans, than,
induced by envy, to settle in the lands and states of those whom
they have learned by fame to be noble and powerful in war, and
impose on them perpetual slavery? For they never have carried on
wars on any other terms. But if you know not these things which are
going on in distant countries, look to the neighboring Gaul, which
being reduced to the form of a province, stripped of its rights and
laws, and subjected to Roman despotism, is oppressed by perpetual
slavery.”
78 When different opinions were expressed, they determined that
those who, owing to age or ill health, were unserviceable for war,
should depart from the town, and that themselves should try every
expedient before they had recourse to the advice of Critognatus:
however, that they would rather adopt that design, if circumstances
should compel them and their allies should delay, than accept any
terms of a surrender or peace. The Mandubii, who had admitted them
into the town, are compelled to go forth with their wives and
children. When these came to the Roman fortifications, weeping, they
begged of the soldiers by every entreaty to receive them as slaves
and relieve them with food. But Caesar, placing guards on the
rampart, forbade them to be admitted.
79 In the mean time, Commius and the rest of the leaders, to whom
the supreme command had been intrusted, came with all their forces
to Alesia, and having occupied the entire hill, encamped not more
than a mile from our fortifications. The following day, having led
forth their cavalry from the camp, they fill all that plain, which,
we have related, extended three miles in length, and drew out their
infantry a little from that place, and post them on the higher
ground. The town Alesia commanded a view of the whole plain. The
besieged run together when these auxiliaries were seen; mutual
congratulations ensue, and the minds of all are elated with joy.
Accordingly, drawing out their troops, they encamp before the town,
and cover the nearest trench with hurdles and fill it up with earth,
and make ready for a sally and every casualty.
80 Caesar, having stationed his army on both sides of the
fortifications, in order that, if occasion should arise, each should
hold and know his own post, orders the cavalry to issue forth from
the camp and commence action. There was a commanding view from the
entire camp, which occupied a ridge of hills; and the minds of all
the soldiers anxiously awaited the issue of the battle. The Gauls
had scattered archers and light-armed infantry here and there, among
their cavalry, to give relief to their retreating troops, and
sustain the impetuosity of our cavalry. Several of our soldiers were
unexpectedly wounded by these, and left the battle. When the Gauls
were confident that their countrymen were the conquerors in the
action, and beheld our men hard pressed by numbers, both those who
were hemmed in by the line of circumvallation and those who had come
to aid them, supported the spirits of their men by shouts and yells
from every quarter. As the action was carried on in sight of all,
neither a brave nor cowardly act could be concealed; both the desire
of praise and the fear of ignominy, urged on each party to valor.
After fighting from noon almost to sunset, without victory inclining
in favor of either, the Germans, on one side, made a charge against
the enemy in a compact body, and drove them back; and, when they
were put to flight, the archers were surrounded and cut to pieces.
In other parts, likewise, our men pursued to the camp the retreating
enemy, and did not give them an opportunity of rallying. But those
who had come forth from Alesia returned into the town dejected and
almost despairing of success.
81 The Gauls, after the interval of a day and after making, during
that time, an immense number of hurdles, scaling-ladders, and iron
hooks, silently went forth from the camp at midnight and approached
the fortifications in the plain. Raising a shout suddenly, that by
this intimation those who were besieged in the town might learn
their arrival, they began to cast down hurdles and dislodge our men
from the rampart by slings, arrows, and stones, and executed the
other movements which are requisite in storming. At the same time,
Vercingetorix, having heard the shout, gives the signal to his
troops by a trumpet, and leads them forth from the town. Our troops,
as each man’s post had been assigned him some days before, man the
fortifications; they intimidate the Gauls by slings, large stones,
stakes which they had placed along the works, and bullets. All view
being prevented by the darkness, many wounds are received on both
sides; several missiles, are thrown from the engines. But Marcus
Antonius, and Caius Trebonius, the lieutenants, to whom the defense
of these parts had been allotted, draughted troops from the redoubts
which were more remote, and sent them to aid our troops, in whatever
direction they understood that they were hard pressed.
82 While the Gauls were at a distance from the fortification, they
did more execution, owing to the immense number of their weapons:
after they came nearer, they either unawares empaled themselves on
the spurs, or were pierced by the mural darts from the ramparts and
towers, and thus perished. After receiving many wounds on all sides,
and having forced no part of the works, when day drew nigh, fearing
lest they should be surrounded by a sally made from the higher camp
on the exposed flank, they retreated to their countrymen. But those
within, while they bring forward those things which had been
prepared by Vercingetorix for a sally, fill up the nearest trenches;
having delayed a long time in executing these movements, they
learned the retreat of their countrymen before they drew nigh to the
fortifications. Thus they returned to the town without accomplishing
their object.
83 The Gauls, having been twice repulsed with great loss, consult
what they should do; they avail themselves of the information of
those who were well acquainted with the country; from them they
ascertain the position and fortification of the upper camp. There
was, on the north side, a hill, which our men could not include in
their works, on account of the extent of the circuit, and had
necessarily made their camp in ground almost disadvantageous, and
pretty steep. Caius Antistius Reginus, and Caius Caninius Rebilus,
two of the lieutenants, with two legions, were in possession of this
camp. The leaders of the enemy, having reconnoitered the country by
their scouts, select from the entire army sixty thousand men,
belonging to those states, which bear the highest character for
courage; they privately arrange among themselves what they wished to
be done, and in what manner; they decide that the attack should take
place when it should seem to be noon. They appoint over their forces
Vergasillaunus, the Arvernian, one of the four generals, and a near
relative of Vercingetorix. He, having issued from the camp at the
first watch, and having almost completed his march a little before
the dawn, hid himself behind the mountain, and ordered his soldiers
to refresh themselves after their labor during the night. When noon
now seemed to draw nigh, he marched hastily against that camp which
we have mentioned before; and, at the same time, the cavalry began
to approach the fortifications in the plain, and the rest of the
forces to make a demonstration in front of the camp.
84 Vercingetorix, having beheld his countrymen from the citadel of
Alesia, issues forth from the town; he brings forth from the camp
long hooks, movable pent-houses, mural hooks, and other things,
which he had prepared for the purpose of making a sally. They engage
on all sides at once and every expedient is adopted. They flocked to
whatever part of the works seemed weakest. The army of the Romans is
distributed along their extensive lines, and with difficulty meets
the enemy in every quarter. The shouts which were raised by the
combatants in their rear, had a great tendency to intimidate our
men, because they perceived that their danger rested on the valor of
others: for generally all evils which are distant most powerfully
alarm men’s minds.
85 Caesar, having selected a commanding situation, sees distinctly
whatever is going on in every quarter, and sends assistance to his
troops when hard pressed. The idea uppermost in the minds of both
parties is, that the present is the time in which they would have
the fairest opportunity of making a struggle; the Gauls despairing
of all safety, unless they should succeed in forcing the lines: the
Romans expecting an end to all their labors if they should gain the
day. The principal struggle is at the upper lines, to which as we
have said Vergasillaunus was sent. The least elevation of ground,
added to a declivity, exercises a momentous influence. Some are
casting missiles, others, forming a testudo, advance to the attack;
fresh men by turns relieve the wearied. The earth, heaped up by all
against the fortifications, gives the means of ascent to the Gauls,
and covers those works which the Romans had concealed in the ground.
Our men have no longer arms or strength.
86 Caesar, on observing these movements, sends Labienus with six
cohorts to relieve his distressed soldiers: he orders him, if he
should be unable to withstand them, to draw off the cohorts and make
a sally; but not to do this except through necessity. He himself
goes to the rest, and exhorts them not to succumb to the toil; he
shows them that the fruits of all former engagements depend on that
day and hour. The Gauls within, despairing of forcing the
fortifications in the plains on account of the greatness of the
works, attempt the places precipitous in ascent: hither they bring
the engines which they had prepared; by the immense number of their
missiles they dislodge the defenders from the turrets: they fill the
ditches with clay and hurdles, then clear the way; they tear down
the rampart and breast-work with hooks.
87 Caesar sends at first young Brutus, with six cohorts, and
afterward Caius Fabius, his lieutenant, with seven others: finally,
as they fought more obstinately, he leads up fresh men to the
assistance of his soldiers. After renewing the action, and repulsing
the enemy, he marches in the direction in which he had sent Labienus,
drafts four cohorts from the nearest redoubt, and orders part of the
cavalry to follow him, and part to make the circuit of the external
fortifications and attack the enemy in the rear. Labienus, when
neither the ramparts or ditches could check the onset of the enemy,
informs Caesar by messengers of what he intended to do. Caesar
hastens to share in the action.
88 His arrival being known from the color of his robe, and the
troops of cavalry, and the cohorts which he had ordered to follow
him being seen, as these low and sloping grounds were plainly
visible from the eminences, the enemy join battle. A shout being
raised by both sides, it was succeeded by a general shout along the
ramparts and whole line of fortifications. Our troops, laying aside
their javelins, carry on the engagement with their swords. The
cavalry is suddenly seen in the rear of the Gauls; the other cohorts
advance rapidly; the enemy turn their backs; the cavalry intercept
them in their flight, and a great slaughter ensues. Sedulius the
general and chief of the Lemovices is slain; Vergasillaunus the
Arvernian, is taken alive in the flight, seventy-four military
standards are brought to Caesar, and few out of so great a number
return safe to their camp. The besieged, beholding from the town the
slaughter and flight of their countrymen, despairing of safety, lead
back their troops from the fortifications. A flight of the Gauls
from their camp immediately ensues on hearing of this disaster, and
had not the soldiers been wearied by sending frequent
reinforcements, and the labor of the entire day, all the enemy’s
forces could have been destroyed. Immediately after midnight, the
cavalry are sent out and overtake the rear, a great number are taken
or cut to pieces, the rest by flight escape in different directions
to their respective states. Vercingetorix, having convened a council
the following day, declares, “That he had undertaken that war, not
on account of his own exigences, but on account of the general
freedom; and since he must yield to fortune, he offered himself to
them for either purpose, whether they should wish to atone to the
Romans by his death, or surrender him alive. Embassadors are sent to
Caesar on this subject. He orders their arms to be surrendered, and
their chieftains delivered up. He seated himself at the head of the
lines in front of the camp, the Gallic chieftains are brought before
him. They surrender Vercingetorix, and lay down their arms.
Reserving the Aedui and Arverni, [to try] if he could gain over,
through their influence, their respective states, he distributes one
of the remaining captives to each soldier, throughout the entire
army, as plunder.
90 After making these arrangements, he marches into the [country of
the] Aedui, and recovers that state. To this place embassadors are
sent by the Arveni, who promise that they will execute his commands.
He demands a great number of hostages. He sends the legions to
winter-quarters; he restores about twenty thousand captives to the
Aedui and Arverni; he orders Titus Labienus to march into the
[country of the] Sequani with two legions and the cavalry, and to
him he attaches Marcus Sempronius Rutilus; he places Caius Fabius,
and Lucius Minucius Basilus, with two legions in the country of the
Remi, lest they should sustain any loss from the Bellovaci in their
neighborhood. He sends Caius Antistius Reginus into the [country of
the] Ambivareti, Titus Sextius into the territories of the Bituriges,
and Caius Caninius Rebilus into those of the Ruteni, with one legion
each. He stations Quintus Tullius Cicero, and Publius Sulpicius
among the Aedui at Cabillo and Matisco on the Saone, to procure
supplies of corn. He himself determines to winter at Bibracte. A
supplication of twenty-days is decreed by the senate at Rome, on
learning these successes from Caesar’s dispatches.
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