Gallic Wars
Julius Caesar's conquest of Gaul added a vast territory to Rome and provided the wealth and legions for his subsequent civil war. The siege of Alesia (52 BC) broke the resistance of Vercingetorix.
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Belligerents
- Roman Republic (Julius Caesar)
- Gallic tribes
Casualties
~1 million killed; 1 million enslaved (Caesar's own claim)
Key events
- 58 BC — Defeat of Helvetii
- 52 BC — Siege of Alesia (Vercingetorix surrenders)
Aftermath
Latinized Gaul for two millennia (modern France, Belgium, Switzerland speak Romance languages because of these wars). Caesar's wealth and veteran loyalty enabled him to cross the Rubicon and end the Republic.
Weapons & matériel
- Gladius hispaniensis
- Pilum
- Lorica hamata (mail)
- Scutum (curved shield)
- Onagers, ballistae
Economy
Caesar's De Bello Gallico claims 1M dead, 1M enslaved — modern estimates suggest ~1/3 these figures. Gallic gold flooded Rome
Cost
Caesar paid his troops from plunder; took ~1 million slaves to Italy. Personal fortune funded later civil war
Sources
- Caesar, Commentarii de Bello Gallico
- Plutarch
- Cassius Dio