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Politica de confidentialitate |
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• domnisoara hus • legume • istoria unui galban • metanol • recapitulare • profitul • caract • comentariu liric • radiolocatia • praslea cel voinic si merele da aur | |
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The Gallic Wars | ||||||
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t6f24fe (58-50 BCE) --------- The German Threat Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres... In 58 BC, he moved across the borders into Gaul, defeating the westward migration of the Helvetii and then crushing the Sueban mercenaries under Ariovistus. With his victory against the Germans, Caesar firmly cemented his position as Marius' heir. In the following year he subdued the Belgic tribes in the north, while his lieutenant Publius Licinius Crassus pacified present day Normandy and Brittany. The Meeting at Lucca Cicero first initiative was to procure the cura annonae (grain distribution rights) for Pompeius for a period of five years, an important concession which is unlikely to have pleased Caesar. The situation grew more tense when the Optimates, supported first by Clodius and later by Cicero, attacked the lex Julia Agraria (land bills) of 59. To bring the matters to a head, one of the potential consuls for 55 threatened to take away Caesar's command. In May 56, Caesar invited Pompeius and Crassus to a meeting at Lucca just inside the borders of Cisalpine Gaul, where he succeeded in patching up the alliance. Almost 200 senators participated in this meeting, including governors from Sardinia and Spain -- one would be forgiven for thinking the Senate had moved to the provinces. It was arranged that Pompeius and Crassus be Consuls for 55, and Caesar's command in Gaul was prolonged for a further five years. Pompeius received a five-year term in Spain and Crassus a similar tenure in Syria. In addition, it was agreed that Caesar would be allowed a second term as Consul upon the termination of his Gallic command. Despite bitter resistance from Cato and the Optimates, the elections of Crassus and Pompeius were secured and Caesar's command prolonged, after which Crassus travelled to the east leaving Pompeius to take on the duties of Consul alone. But by the end of the year Pompeius had difficulties controlling the Consular elections for 54. However skilled Pompeius might be on the battlefield, his skills did not extend to the political arena. Further Operations - The Channel Crossings The reality was that things were beginning to get out of hand. His expeditions to Germany and Britain had both been brief and Gaul was still far from pacified. It must have been dawning on him that something more than his previous (almost terrorist-like) lightning strikes would be required, if he were to subdue the Celts. Nevertheless, he prepared to launch a new expedition on Britain the next year. 800 ships and 5 Legions were invested in the second Channel crossing, a record which would stand until the Normandy landings of the Second World War. But as Plutarch laconically tells: He passed thither twice from that part of Gaul which lies over against it,
and in several battles which he fought did more hurt to the enemy than service
to himself, for the islanders were so miserably poor that they had nothing worth
being plundered of. When he found himself unable to put such an end to the war
as he wished, he was content to take hostages from the king, and to impose a
tribute, and then quitted the island. (Plutarch) However, neither Pompeius nor Caesar felt ready for the break that the Optimates were hoping for, and Pompeius readily complied with Caesar's request to raise 3 Legions for his campaigns against the Gauls in 53. In January 52, Clodius was murdered by the armed followers of the Optimate Titius Annius Milo and in the riots that followed, the Senate house burnt down. Finally, Pompeius intervened and forced the Optimates to choose between himself and Milo. He was elected sole Consul, with responsibility for re-establishing law and order. The Gallic Revolt Vercingetorix favored a "scorched earth" policy, but was unable to persuade his countrymen to adopt it wholeheartedly. Instead, the Bituriges insisted on standing siege in their town of Avaricum, which was taken by Caesar within a month. The Romans followed this by besieging Vercingetorix in Gergovia, but their attempt to storm Gergorvia was repulsed with heavy losses -- the first outright defeat that Caesar had suffered in Gaul. After repelling an attack while his army was on the march, he then laid siege to Vercingetorix in Alesia. Like Gergovia, Alesia was a position of great natural strength, but the relieving force was repulsed and dispersed by Caesar and Vercingetorix was forced to capitulate. This rebellion occurred at a time which was most fortunate for Caesar, so much that one may be tempted to allege that Vercingetorix was a Caesarean agent. In any case, the suppression of this revolt and others in 51 BC was so efficient that the province of Gaul remained pacified, even during the following decades of civil war. Caesar's approach in these years was a mixture of reconciliation and terror. When he captured the natural fortress of Uxellodunum he had the survivors' hands cut off. Whatever one may feel of his methods, the policy was effective and gave him the peace needed to concentrate on events in Rome. |
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