Aug 12, 2017 - A movie of the video game 'Super Smash Bros.' For the N64 (Nintendo 64), created by 'Isaac Miell (Isotarge) & Michael Salino-Hugg (Mittenz)'. Asterix [All your Cartoon Favourites Version] (SLES-01748) Thanks to HOREUS for providing the game french front & back hires covers. We couldn't find some information and the proper covers for this game.
. The Gallic Wars were a series of waged by the against several. Rome's war against the Gallic tribes lasted from 58 BC to 50 BC and culminated in the decisive in 52 BC, in which a complete Roman victory resulted in the expansion of the over the whole of (mainly present-day and ). While militarily just as strong as the Romans, the internal division between the Gallic tribes helped ease victory for Caesar, and 's attempt to unite the Gauls against Roman invasion came too late.
The wars paved the way for Julius Caesar to become the sole ruler of the Roman Republic. Although Caesar portrayed this invasion as being a preemptive and defensive action, most historians agree that the wars were fought primarily to boost Caesar's political career and to pay off his massive debts.
Still, Gaul was of significant military importance to the Romans, as they had been attacked several times by native tribes both indigenous to Gaul and farther to the north. Conquering Gaul allowed Rome to secure the natural border of the river. The Gallic Wars are described by Julius Caesar in his book, which remains the most important historical source regarding the conflict. Contents. Political background As a result of the financial burdens of his in 59 BC, Caesar incurred significant debt. However, through his membership in the —the political alliance which comprised, and, and himself— Caesar had secured the of two provinces,.
When the Governor of, died unexpectedly, this province was also awarded to Caesar. Caesar's governorships were extended to a five-year period, a new idea at the time. Caesar had initially four legions under his direct command:,. As he had been Governor of in 61 BC and had campaigned successfully with them against the, Caesar knew personally most (perhaps even all) of these legions. Caesar also had the legal authority to levy additional legions and as he saw fit. His ambition was to conquer and plunder some territories to get himself out of debt, and it is possible that Gaul was not his initial target.
It is more likely that he was planning a campaign against the Kingdom of, located in the Balkans. The countries of Gaul were civilized and wealthy. Most had contact with Roman merchants and some, particularly those that were governed by republics such as the and, had enjoyed stable political alliances with Rome in the past. The Romans respected and feared the Gallic tribes.
Only fifty years before, in 109 BC, Italy had been invaded from the north and saved only after several bloody and costly battles. Around 62 BC, when a Roman client state, the, conspired with the and the nations east of the Rhine to attack the Aedui, a strong Roman ally, Rome turned a blind eye.
The Sequani and Arverni sought ’ aid and defeated the in 63 BC at the. The Sequani rewarded Ariovistus with land following his victory.
Ariovistus settled the land with 120,000 of his people. When 24,000 Harudes joined his cause, Ariovistus demanded that the Sequani give him more land to accommodate the Harudes people. This demand concerned because if the Sequani conceded, Ariovistus would be in a position to take all of the Sequani land and attack the rest of Gaul. They did not appear to be concerned about a conflict between non-client, client and allied states. By the end of the campaign, the non-client under the leadership of the belligerent, stood triumphant over both the Aedui and their co-conspirators.
Fearing another mass migration akin to the devastating, Rome, now keenly invested in the defense of Gaul, was irrevocably drawn into war. A map of in the 1st century BC, showing the relative positions of the and the Beginning of the war—campaign against the Helvetii The was a confederation of about five related Gallic tribes that lived on the Swiss plateau, hemmed in by the mountains as well as the Rhine and Rhone rivers. They began to come under increased pressure from German tribes to the north and east. By 58 BC, the were well on their way in the planning and provisioning for a mass migration under the leadership of. Caesar mentions as an additional reason their not being able to in turn raid for plunder themselves due to their location. (De Bello Gallico, I, 2) They planned to travel across Gaul to the west coast, a route that would have taken them through lands of the Aedui, a Roman ally, and the Roman province of Transalpine Gaul.
The Helvetii sent emissaries to neighboring tribes to negotiate peaceful transit. Orgetorix made an alliance with the Sequani chieftain and arranged the marriage of his daughter to an Aedui chieftain,. The three secretly planned to become kings of their respective tribes, and masters of the whole of Gaul (De Bello Gallico, I, 3). Orgetorix's personal ambitions were discovered and he was to be put on trial, with the penalty being death by fire if convicted.
Orgetorix escaped with the help of his many debtors, but he died during his flight. However, the death of Orgetorix was 'not without suspicion that he had decided upon death for himself' (committed suicide), as Caesar puts it (De Bello Gallico, I, 4). Caesar dated their departure to the 28 March, and mentions that they burned all their towns and villages so as to discourage thoughts among undecided client tribes and enemies of occupying their vacated realm. (De Bello Gallico, I, 5 and 6). Caesar was across the Alps in Italy when he received the news.
With only a single legion in, the endangered province, he immediately hurried to Geneva and ordered a levy of several auxiliary units and the destruction of the Rhone bridge. The Helvetii sent an embassy to negotiate a peaceful passage, promising to do no harm. Caesar stalled the negotiations for fifteen days, and used the time to fortify his position with a rampart nineteen miles long and a parallel (De Bello Gallico, I, 7 and 8). Main article: In 61 BC, chieftain of the Suebi tribe and a king from the Germanic peoples, resumed the tribe’s migration from eastern Germania to the Marne and Rhine region.
Despite the fact that this migration encroached on land, the Sequani sought Ariovistus’ allegiance against the and, in 61 BC, the Sequani rewarded Ariovistus with land following his victory in the. Ariovistus settled the land with 120,000 of his people. When 24,000 Harudes joined his cause, Ariovistus demanded that the Sequani give him more land to accommodate the Harudes people. This demand 'concerned' because if the Sequani conceded, Ariovistus would be in a position to take all of the Sequani land and attack the rest of Gaul. Following Caesar’s victory over the Helvetii, the majority of the Gallic tribes congratulated Caesar and sought to meet with him in a general assembly., the head of the Aeduan government and spokesmen for the Gallic delegation, expressed concern over Ariovistus’ conquests and the hostages he had taken. Diviciacus demanded that Caesar defeat Ariovistus and remove the threat of a Germanic invasion otherwise they would have to seek refuge in a new land. Not only did Caesar have a responsibility to protect the longstanding allegiance of the Aedui, but this proposition presented an opportunity to expand Rome’s borders, strengthen the loyalty within Caesar’s army and establish him as the commander of Rome’s troops abroad.
The senate had declared Ariovistus a 'king and friend of the Roman people' in 59 BC, so Caesar could not declare war on the Suebi tribe. Caesar said that he could not ignore the pain the Aedui had suffered and delivered an ultimatum to Ariovistus demanding that no German cross the, the return of Aedui hostages and the protection of the Aedui and other friends of Rome. Although Ariovistus assured Caesar that the Aedui hostages would be safe as long as they continued their yearly tribute, he took the position that he and the Romans were both conquerors and that Rome had no jurisdiction over his actions. With the attack of the Harudes on the Aedui and the report that a hundred clans of Suebi were trying to cross the Rhine into Gaul, Caesar had the justification he needed to wage war against Ariovistus in 58 BC. Caesar, learning that Ariovistus intended to seize, the largest town of the Sequani, commenced marching his troops toward Vesontio. Some of Caesar’s officers held their posts for political reasons only and had no war experience.
Consequently, they suffered from poor morale which threatened Caesar’s campaign. Caesar challenged the officers and their legions, saying that the only legion he could trust was the 10th. With their pride on the line, the other legions followed the 10th’s lead, determined not to be outdone. Consequently, Caesar arrived in Vesontio before Ariovistus. Ariovistus sent emissaries to Caesar requesting a meeting.
They met under a truce at a knoll on the plain. The truce was violated when Caesar learned that German horsemen were edging towards the knoll and throwing stones at his mounted escort. Two days later, Ariovistus requested another meeting. Hesitant to send senior officials, Caesar dispatched Valerius Procillus, his trusted friend, and Caius Mettius, a merchant who had successfully traded with Ariovistus. Insulted, Ariovistus threw the envoys in chains. Ariovistus marched for two days and made camp two miles behind Caesar, thus cutting off Caesar’s communication and supply lines with the allied tribes.
Unable to entice Ariovistus into battle, Caesar ordered a second smaller camp to be built near Ariovistus’ position. After the camp was completed, Caesar again challenged Ariovistus and was rewarded when Ariovistus attacked the smaller camp and was repulsed. The next morning Caesar assembled his allied troops in front of the second camp and advanced his legions in triplex acies (three lines of troops) towards Ariovistus. Each of Caesar’s five legates and his quaestor were given command of a legion. Caesar lined up on the right flank.
Ariovistus countered by lining up his seven tribal formations. Caesar was victorious in the battle that ensued due in large part to the charge made. As the Germans began to drive back the Roman left flank, Crassus led his cavalry in a charge to restore balance and ordered up the cohorts of the third line. As a result, the whole German line broke and began to flee. Most of Ariovistus’ one-hundred and twenty thousand men were killed. He and what remained of his troops escaped and crossed the Rhine, never to engage Rome in battle again.
The Suebi camping near the Rhine returned home. Caesar was victorious. Campaign against the Belgae In 57 BC Caesar once again intervened in an intra-Gallic conflict, marching against the, who inhabited the area roughly bounded by modern-day.
The Belgae had recently attacked a tribe allied with Rome and before marching out with his army to meet them, Caesar ordered the and other neighbouring Gauls to investigate the Belgae's actions. His army suffered a surprise attack in the while it was making camp near the river. The advanced so quickly that Caesar did not have the time to organise his forces and nearly suffered a humiliating defeat. Caesar admits to losing all of his standards and most his centurions dead or felled by wounds.
He himself was forced to take up a shield and personally rally his forces which were then threatened with envelopment and massacre. The strong stand by the X legion and the prompt arrival of reinforcements enabled Caesar to regroup, redeploy and eventually repulse the Nervii once the and Viromandui were put to flight. Caesar remarked that the warlike Nervii refused to yield their ground even after the Atrebates and Virumandui had been put into disarray. When finally surrounded by Roman reinforcements the Nerviians continued fighting as a pitiless hail of missiles rained down on them from the many archers and peltasts Caesar had brought from overseas. The peltasts, slingers and archers were brought for the specific purpose of confounding the Gallic proclivity for shield wall tactics, mass attack and individual close combat. The Nervii were especially renowned for skills at warfare. They ruled and subsisted by warfare and by taxing their dependent and client tribes while adhering to a heroic hoplitic tradition.
These Gallic conventions were something Caesar exploited as often as he could. Together with Caesar's prudent and unabashed use of fixed projectile weapons like the 'scorpion' and light ballista, the archers and peltasts took a heavy toll on the densely packed Nervii, who themselves shunned all projectile weapons but the lance. It is recorded in Caesar's war commentaries that as the battle raged, the Nervii caught Roman javelins in flight and hurled them back at legionnaires and that although all were eventually slain, not one of the Nervii was seen to flee. As the grim fighting wore on, the Nervii refused to yield and mounds of the fallen formed ramparts and Boduognatus' fighters fought from atop these hills of dead, clashing with the pressing Roman ranks again and again. The skill with which the veteran Roman legions executed their well practiced pilum barrage and gladius and scutum counter-attacks together with the prudent use of missile weapons was instrumental in defeating the skillful and daring Nervii and associated Belgae.
The Belgae suffered heavy losses and eventually surrendered when faced with the destruction of their towns. The Nervii were severely mauled and forced to flee; thereby all former client tribes surrendered to Caesar or likewise fled. Their absence gave Caesar control of most of what is now Belgium.
Punitive expeditions. See also: and The following year, 56 BC, Caesar turned his attention to the tribes of the seaboard, notably the tribe in (modern ), who had assembled a confederacy of anti-Roman tribes. The Veneti were a seafaring people and had built a sailing fleet in the, requiring the Romans to build galleys and undertake an unconventional land and sea campaign. Eventually Caesar was able to subdue these tribes after a protracted land and sea campaign. Caesar took his forces across the Rhine in 55 BC in a against the Germans, though the, against whom the expedition was mounted, were never engaged in battle. That same year, he then crossed the with two legions on his ships to mount a similar expedition against the. The British adventure nearly ended in defeat when bad weather wrecked much of their fleet and the unfamiliar sight of massed of the Britons caused confusion among their forces.
Caesar did manage to secure a promise of hostages, though only two of them were actually sent. He withdrew, but returned in 54 BC with a much larger force that successfully defeated the powerful, and forced them to pay tribute to Rome. The expeditions had little lasting effect, but were great propaganda victories for Caesar, keeping him in the public eye at home. The campaigns of 55 BC and early 54 BC have caused controversy for many centuries. They were controversial even at the time among Caesar's contemporaries, and especially among his political opponents, who decried them as a costly exercise in personal aggrandizement.
In modern times, commentators have been sharply divided between critics of Caesar's nakedly imperialist agenda and defenders of the benefits that the expansion of Roman power subsequently wrought in Gaul. Consolidation and Gallic offensives. Roman silver with the head of captive Gaul 48 BC, following the campaigns of Discontent among the subjugated Gauls prompted a major uprising in the winter of 54–53 BC, when the of north-eastern Gaul rose in arms under their leader. Fifteen Roman were wiped out at Atuatuca Tungrorum (modern in Belgium) and a garrison commanded by narrowly survived after being relieved by Caesar in the nick of time. The rest of 53 BC was occupied with a punitive campaign against the Eburones and their allies, who were said to have been all but exterminated by the Romans.
The uprising was, however, merely the prelude to a much bigger campaign led by, chief of the tribe of central Gaul, who successfully united many Gallic tribes and states under his leadership. Recognizing that the Romans had an upper hand on the battlefield due to their panoply and training, he declined to give battle against them and instead fought a ' campaign to deprive them of supplies. Caesar hurriedly returned from Italy to take charge of the campaign, pursuing the Gauls and capturing the town of (modern city of Bourges) but suffering a defeat at. Vercingetorix, instead of staying mobile and in the open, chose to hold out at (see ). Caesar successfully besieged him and beat off a huge Gallic relief force who ran out of food and had to disperse. This effectively marked the end of the Gallic Wars, although mopping-up actions took place throughout 51 BC. A number of lesser rebellions took place subsequently, but Roman control of Gaul was not seriously challenged again until the 2nd century AD.
The Gallic Wars in literature and culture. Denarius from 48 BC, thought to depict an allegory of Gaul with a on the obverse and with a stag on the reverse The primary historical source for the Gallic Wars is Caesar's in Latin, which is one of the best surviving examples of unadorned prose. It has consequently been a subject of intense study for Latinists, and is one of the classic prose sources traditionally used as a standard teaching text in modern Latin education. The Gallic Wars have become a popular setting in modern, especially that of. Claude Cueni wrote a semi-historical novel, The Caesar's Druid, about a fictional Celtic, servant of Caesar and recorder of Caesar's campaigns.
Morgan Llewelyn also wrote a book, Druids, about a Celtic druid who assisted Vercingetorix in his campaign against Julius Caesar. Similarly, 's follows the campaigns from 's perspective. In addition, the is set shortly after the Gallic Wars, where the titular character's village is the last holdout in Gaul against Caesar's legions.
A popular series by called, depicts the Gallic Wars in its third book,. The TV series begins during the conquest of Gaul, and protagonists and, are based on two historical centurions who fought during the Gallic Wars in Caesar's and are mentioned in Commentarii de Bello Gallico. The historical novel, by, gives a thorough, popular account of the Gallic Wars. The concept album by Swiss folk metal band, tells the story of the Gallic Wars through the eyes of the Helvetii. The 2001 film, starring Christopher Lambert as Vercingetorix, depicts the Gallic Wars from the Gallic perspective. The DLC campaign Caesar in Gaul for the strategy game is set during the Gallic Wars.