In attaining to the consulship, Caesar
had reached the highest point of elevation which it
was possible to reach as a mere citizen of Rome.
His ambition was, however, of course, not satisfied.
The only way to acquire higher distinction and to
rise to higher power was to enter upon a career of
foreign conquest. Caesar therefore aspired now
to be a soldier. He accordingly obtained the
command of an army, and entered upon a course of military
campaigns in the heart of Europe, which he continued
for eight years. These eight years constitute
one of the most important and strongly-marked periods
of his life. He was triumphantly successful in
his military career, and he made, accordingly, a vast
accession to his celebrity and power, in his own day,
by the results of his campaigns. He also wrote,
himself, an account of his adventures during this
period, in which the events are recorded in so lucid
and in so eloquent a manner, that the narrations have
continued to be read by every successive generation
of scholars down to the present day, and they have
had a great influence in extending and perpetuating
his fame.
The principal scenes of the exploits
which Caesar performed during the period of this his
first great military career, were the north of Italy,
Switzerland, France, Germany, and England, a great
tract of country, nearly all of which he overran and
conquered. A large portion of this territory
was called Gaul in those days; the part on the Italian
side of the Alps being named Cisalpine Gaul, while
that which lay beyond was designated as Transalpine.
Transalpine Gaul was substantially what is now France.
There was a part of Transalpine Gaul which had been
already conquered and reduced to a Roman province.
It was called The Province then, and has retained
the name, with a slight change in orthography, to
the present day. It is now known as Provence.
The countries which Caesar went to
invade were occupied by various nations and tribes,
many of which were well organized and war-like, and
some of them were considerably civilized and wealthy.
They had extended tracts of cultivated land, the slopes
of the hills and the mountain sides being formed into
green pasturages, which were covered with flocks of
goats, and sheep, and herds of cattle, while the smoother
and more level tracts were adorned with smiling vineyards
and broadly-extended fields of waving grain.
They had cities, forts, ships, and armies. Their
manners and customs would be considered somewhat rude
by modern nations, and some of their usages of war
were half barbarian. For example, in one of the
nations which Caesar encountered, he found, as he says
in his narrative, a corps of cavalry, as a constituent
part of the army, in which, to every horse, there
were two men, one the rider, and the other
a sort of foot soldier and attendant. If the battle
went against them, and the squadron were put to their
speed in a retreat, these footmen would cling to the
manes-of the horses, and then, half running, half
flying, they would be borne along over the field, thus
keeping always at the side of their comrades, and
escaping with them to a place of safety.
But, although the Romans were inclined
to consider these nations as only half civilized,
still there would be great glory, as Caesar thought,
in subduing them, and probably great treasure would
be secured in the conquest, both by the plunder and
confiscation of governmental property, and by the
tribute which would be collected in taxes from the
people of the countries subdued. Caesar accordingly
placed himself at the head of an army of three Roman
legions, which he contrived, by means of a great deal
of political maneuvering and management, to have raised
and placed under his command. One of these legions,
which was called the tenth legion, was his favorite
corps, on account of the bravery and hardihood which
they often displayed. At the head of these legions,
Caesar set out for Gaul. He was at this time not
far from forty years of age.
Caesar had no difficulty in finding
pretexts for making war upon any of these various
nations that he might desire to subdue. They were,
of course, frequently at war with each other, and
there were at all times standing topics of controversy
and unsettled disputes among them. Caesar had,
therefore, only to draw near to the scene of contention,
and then to take sides with one party or the other,
it mattered little with which, for the affair almost
always resulted, in the end, in his making himself
master of both. The manner, however, in which
this sort of operation was performed, can best be
illustrated by an example, and we will take for the
purpose the case of Ariovistus.
Ariovistus was a German king.
He had been nominally a sort of ally of the Romans.
He had extended his conquests across the Rhine into
Gaul, and he held some nations there as his tributaries.
Among these, the Aeduans were a prominent party, and,
to simplify the account, we will take their name as
the representative of all who were concerned.
When Caesar came into the region of the Aeduans, he
entered into some negotiations with them, in which
they, as he alleges, asked his assistance to enable
them to throw off the dominion of their German enemy.
It is probable, in fact, that there was some proposition
of this kind from them, for Caesar had abundant means
of inducing them to make it, if he was disposed, and
the receiving of such a communication furnished the
most obvious and plausible pretext to authorize and
justify his interposition.
Caesar accordingly sent a messenger
across the Rhine to Ariovistus, saying that he wished
to have an interview with him on business of importance,
and asking him to name a time which would be convenient
to him for the interview, and also to appoint some
place in Gaul where he would attend.
To this Ariovistus replied, that if
he had, himself, any business with Caesar, he would
have waited upon him to propose it; and, in the same
manner, if Caesar wished to see him, he must come into
his own dominions. He said that it would not
be safe for him to come into Gaul without an army,
and that it was not convenient for him to raise and
equip an army for such a purpose at that time.
Caesar sent again to Ariovistus to
say, that since he was so unmindful of his obligations
to the Roman people as to refuse an interview with
him on business of common interest, he would state
the particulars that he required of him. The
Aeduans, he said, were now his allies, and under his
protection; and Ariovistus must send back the hostages
which he held from them, and bind himself henceforth
not to send any more troops across the Rhine, nor
make war upon the Aeduans, or injure them in any way.
If he complied with these terms, all would be well.
If he did not, Caesar said that he should not himself
disregard the just complaints of his allies.
Ariovistus had no fear of Caesar.
Caesar had, in fact, thus far, not begun to acquire
the military renown to which he afterward attained
Ariovistus had, therefore, no particular cause to dread
his power. He sent him back word that he did
not understand why Caesar should interfere between
him and his conquered province.
“The Aeduans,” said he,
“tried the fortune of war with me, and were
overcome; and they must abide the issue. The Romans
manage their conquered provinces as they judge proper,
without holding themselves accountable to any one.
I shall do the same with mine. All that I can
say is, that so long as the Aeduans submit peaceably
to my authority, and pay their tribute, I shall not
molest them; as to your threat that you shall not
disregard their complaints, you must know that no one
has ever made war upon me but to his own destruction,
and, if you wish to see how it will turn out in your
case, you may make the experiment whenever you please.”
Both parties immediately prepared
for war. Ariovistus, instead of waiting to be
attacked, assembled his army, crossed the Rhine, and
advanced into the territories from which Caesar had
undertaken to exclude him.
As Caesar, however, began to make
his arrangements for putting his army in motion to
meet his approaching enemy, there began to circulate
throughout the camp such extraordinary stories of the
terrible strength and courage of the German soldiery
as to produce a very general panic. So great,
at length, became the anxiety and alarm, that even
the officers were wholly dejected and discouraged;
and as for the men, they were on the very eve of mutiny.
When Caesar understood this state
of things, he called an assembly of the troops, and
made an address to them. He told them that he
was astonished to learn to what an extent an unworthy
despondency and fear had taken possession of their
minds, and how little confidence they reposed in him,
their general. And then, after some further remarks
about the duty of a soldier to be ready to go wherever
his commander leads him, and presenting also some
considerations in respect to the German troops with
which they were going to contend, in order to show
them that they had no cause to fear, he ended by saying
that he had not been fully decided as to the time
of marching, but that now he had concluded to give
orders for setting out the next morning at three o’clock,
that he might learn, as soon as possible, who were
too cowardly to follow him. He would go himself,
he said, if he was attended by the tenth legion alone
He was sure that they would not shrink from any undertaking
in which he led the way.
The soldiers, moved partly by shame,
partly by the decisive and commanding tone which their
general assumed, and partly reassured by the courage
and confidence which he seemed to feel, laid aside
their fears, and vied with each other henceforth in
energy and ardor. The armies approached each
other. Ariovistus sent to Caesar, saying that
now, if he wished it, he was ready for an interview.
Caesar acceded to the suggestion, and the arrangements
for a conference were made, each party, as usual in
such cases, taking every precaution to guard against
the treachery of the other.
Between the two camps there was a
rising ground, in the middle of an open plain, where
it was decided that the conference should be held.
Ariovistus proposed that neither party should bring
any foot soldiers to the place of meeting, but cavalry
alone; and that these bodies of cavalry, brought by
the respective generals, should remain at the foot
of the eminence on either side, while Caesar and Ariovistus
themselves, attended each by only ten followers on
horseback, should ascend it. This plan was acceded
to by Caesar, and a long conference was held in this
way between the two generals, as they sat upon their
horses, on the summit of the hill.
The two generals, in their discussion,
only repeated in substance what they had said in their
embassages before, and made no progress toward coming
to an understanding. At length Caesar closed the
conference and withdrew. Some days afterward
Ariovistus sent a request to Caesar, asking that he
would appoint another interview, or else that he would
depute one of his officers to proceed to Ariovistus’s
camp and receive a communication which he wished to
make to him. Caesar concluded not to grant another
interview, and he did not think it prudent to send
any one of his principal officers as an embassador,
for fear that he might be treacherously seized and
held as a hostage. He accordingly sent an ordinary
messenger, accompanied by one or two men. These
men were all seized and put in irons as soon as they
reached the camp of Ariovistus, and Caesar now prepared
in earnest for giving his enemy battle.
He proved himself as skillful and
efficient in arranging and managing the combat as
he had been sagacious and adroit in the negotiations
which preceded it. Several days were spent in
maneuvers and movements, by which each party endeavored
to gain some advantage over the other in respect to
their position in the approaching struggle. When
at length the combat came, Caesar and his legions
were entirely and triumphantly successful. The
Germans were put totally to flight. Their baggage
and stores were all seized, and the troops themselves
fled in dismay by all the roads which led back to
the Rhine; and there those who succeeded in escaping
death from the Romans, who pursued them all the way,
embarked in boats and upon rafts, and returned to
their homes. Ariovistus himself found a small
boat, in which, with one or two followers, he succeeded
in getting across the stream.
As Caesar, at the head of a body of
his troops, was pursuing the enemy in this their flight,
he overtook one party who had a prisoner with them
confined by iron chains fastened to his limbs, and
whom they were hurrying rapidly along. This prisoner
proved to be the messenger that Caesar had sent to
Ariovistus’s camp, and whom he had, as Caesar
alleges, treacherously detained. Of course, he
was overjoyed to be recaptured and set at liberty.
The man said that three times they had drawn lots
to see whether they should burn him alive then, or
reserve the pleasure for a future occasion, and that
every time the lot had resulted in his favor.
The consequence of this victory was,
that Caesar’s authority was established triumphantly
over all that part of Gaul which he had thus freed
from Ariovistus’s sway. Other parts of the
country, too, were pervaded by the fame of his exploits,
and the people every where began to consider what
action it would be incumbent on them to take, in respect
to the new military power which had appeared so suddenly
among them. Some nations determined to submit
without resistance, and to seek the conqueror’s
alliance and protection. Others, more bold, or
more confident of their strength, began to form combinations
and to arrange plans for resisting him. But,
whatever they did, the result in the end was the same.
Caesar’s ascendency was every where and always
gaining ground. Of course, it is impossible in
the compass of a single chapter, which is all that
can be devoted to the subject in this volume, to give
any regular narrative of the events of the eight years
of Caesar’s military career in Gaul. Marches,
negotiations, battles, and victories mingled with
and followed each other in a long succession, the
particulars of which it would require a volume to detail,
every thing resulting most successfully for the increase
of Caesar’s power and the extension of his fame.
Caesar gives, in his narrative, very
extraordinary accounts of the customs and modes of
life of some of the people that he encountered.
There was one country, for example, in which all the
lands were common, and the whole structure of society
was based on the plan of forming the community into
one great martial band. The nation was divided
into a hundred cantons, each containing two thousand
men capable of bearing arms. If these were all
mustered into service together, they would form, of
course, an army of two hundred thousand men. It
was customary, however, to organize only one half
of them into an army, while the rest remained at home
to till the ground and tend the flocks and herds.
These two great divisions interchanged their work
every year, the soldiers becoming husbandmen, and
the husbandmen soldiers. Thus they all became
equally inured to the hardships and dangers of the
camp, and to the more continuous but safer labors
of agricultural toil. Their fields were devoted
to pasturage more than to tillage, for flocks and herds
could be driven from place to place, and thus more
easily preserved from the depredations of enemies
than fields of grain. The children grew up almost
perfectly wild from infancy, and hardened themselves
by bathing in cold streams, wearing very little clothing,
and making long hunting excursions among the mountains.
The people had abundance of excellent horses, which
the young men were accustomed, from their earliest
years, to ride without saddle or bridle, the horses
being trained to obey implicitly every command.
So admirably disciplined were they, that sometimes,
in battle, the mounted men would leap from their horses
and advance as foot soldiers to aid the other infantry,
leaving the horses to stand until they returned.
The horses would not move from the spot; the men,
when the object for which they had dismounted was accomplished,
would come back, spring to their seats again, and once
more become a squadron of cavalry.
Although Caesar was very energetic
and decided in the government of his army, he was
extremely popular with his soldiers in all these campaigns.
He exposed his men, of course, to a great many privations
and hardships, but then he evinced, in many cases,
such a willingness to bear his share of them, that
the men were very little inclined to complain.
He moved at the head of the column when his troops
were advancing on a march, generally on horseback,
but often on foot; and Suetonius says that he used
to go bareheaded on such occasions, whatever was the
state of the weather, though it is difficult to see
what the motive of this apparently needless exposure
could be, unless it was for effect, on some special
or unusual occasion. Caesar would ford or swim
rivers with his men whenever there was no other mode
of transit, sometimes supported, it was said, by bags
inflated with air, and placed under his arms.
At one time he built a bridge across the Rhine, to
enable his army to cross that river. This bridge
was built with piles driven down into the sand, which
supported a flooring of timbers. Caesar, considering
it quite an exploit thus to bridge the Rhine, wrote
a minute account of the manner in which the work was
constructed, and the description is almost exactly
in accordance with the principles and usages of modern
carpentry.
After the countries which were the
scene of these conquests were pretty well subdued,
Caesar established on some of the great routes of travel
a system of posts, that is, he stationed supplies
of horses at intervals of from ten to twenty miles
along the way, so that he himself, or the officers
of his army, or any couriers whore he might have occasion
to send with dispatches could travel with great speed
by finding a fresh horse ready at every stage.
By this means he sometimes traveled himself a hundred
miles in a day. This system, thus adopted for
military purposes in Caesar’s time, has been
continued in almost all countries of Europe to the
present age, and is applied to traveling in carriages
as well as on horseback. A family party purchase
a carriage, and arranging within it all the comforts
and conveniences which they will require on the journey,
they set out, taking these post horses, fresh at each
village, to draw them to the next. Thus they can
go at any rate of speed which they desire, instead
of being limited in their movements by the powers
of endurance of one set of animals, as they would be
compelled to be if they were to travel with their
own. This plan has, for some reason, never been
introduced into America, and it is now probable that
it never will be, as the railway system will doubtless
supersede it.
One of the most remarkable of the
enterprises which Caesar undertook during the period
of these campaigns was his excursion into Great Britain.
The real motive of this expedition was probably a love
of romantic adventure, and a desire to secure for
himself at Rome the glory of having penetrated into
remote regions which Roman armies had never reached
before. The pretext, however, which he made to
justify his invading the territories of the Britons
was, that the people of the island were accustomed
to come across the Channel and aid the Gauls in
their wars.
In forming his arrangements for going
into England, the first thing was, to obtain all the
information which was accessible in Gaul in respect
to the country. There were, in those days, great
numbers of traveling merchants, who went from one
nation to another to purchase and sell, taking with
them such goods as were most easy of transportation.
These merchants, of course, were generally possessed
of a great deal of information in respect to the countries
which they had visited, and Caesar called together
as many of them as he could find, when he had reached
the northern shores of France, to inquire about the
modes of crossing the Channel, the harbors on the
English side, the geographical conformation of the
country, and the military resources of the people.
He found, however, that the merchants could give him
very little information. They knew that Britain
was an island, but they did not know its extent or
its boundaries; and they could tell him very little
of the character or customs of the people. They
said that they had only been accustomed to land upon
the southern shore, and to transact all their business
there, without penetrating at all into the interior
of the country.
Caesar then, who, though undaunted
and bold in emergencies requiring prompt and decisive
action, was extremely cautious and wary at all other
times, fitted up a single ship, and, putting one of
his officers on board with a proper crew, directed
him to cross the Channel to the English coast, and
then to cruise along the land for some miles in each
direction, to observe where were the best harbors and
places for landing, and to examine generally the appearance
of the shore. This vessel was a galley, manned
with numerous oarsmen, well selected and strong, so
that it could retreat with great speed from any sudden
appearance of danger The name of the officer who had
the command of it was Volusenus. Volusenus set
sail, the army watching his vessel with great interest
as it moved slowly away from the shore. He was
gone five days, and then returned, bringing Caesar
an account of his discoveries.
In the mean time, Caesar had collected
a large number of sailing vessels from the whole line
of the French shore, by means of which he proposed
to transport his army across the Channel. He had
two legions to take into Britain, the remainder of
his forces having been stationed as garrisons in various
parts of Gaul. It was necessary, too, to leave
a considerable force at his post of debarkation, in
order to secure a safe retreat in case of any disaster
on the British side. The number of transport
ships provided for the foot soldiers which were to
be taken over was eighty. There were, besides
these, eighteen more, which were appointed to convey
a squadron of horse. This cavalry force was to
embark at a separate port, about eighty miles distant
from the one from which the infantry were to sail.
At length a suitable day for the embarkation
arrived; the troops were put on board the ships, and
orders were given to sail. The day could not
be fixed beforehand, as the time for attempting to
make the passage must necessarily depend upon the
state of the wind and weather. Accordingly, when
the favorable opportunity arrived, and the main body
of the army began to embark it took some time to send
the orders to the port where the cavalry had rendezvoused;
and there were, besides, other causes of delay which
occurred to detain this corps, so that it turned out,
as we shall presently see, that the foot soldiers
had to act alone in the first attempt at landing on
the British shore.
It was one o’clock in the morning
when the fleet set sail. The Britons had, in
the mean time, obtained intelligence of Caesar’s
threatened invasion, and they had assembled in great
force, with troops, and horsemen, and carriages of
war, and were all ready to guard the shore. The
coast, at the point where Caesar was approaching, consists
of a line of chalky cliffs, with valley-like openings
here and there between them, communicating with the
shore, and sometimes narrow beaches below. When
the Roman fleet approached the land, Caesar found the
cliffs every where lined with troops of Britons, and
every accessible point below carefully guarded.
It was now about ten o’clock in the morning,
and Caesar, finding the prospect so unfavorable in
respect to the practicability of effecting a landing
here, brought his fleet to anchor near the shore,
but far enough from it to be safe from the missiles
of the enemy.
Here he remained for several hours,
to give time for all the vessels to join him.
Some of them had been delayed in the embarkation, or
had made slower progress than the rest in crossing
the Channel. He called a council, too, of the
superior officers of the army on board his own galley,
and explained to them the plan which he now adopted
for the landing. About three o’clock in
the afternoon he sent these officers back to their
respective ships, and gave orders to make sail along
the shore. The anchors were raised and the fleet
moved on, borne by the united impulse of the wind
and the tide. The Britons, perceiving this movement,
put themselves in motion on the land, following the
motions of the fleet so as to be ready to meet their
enemy wherever they might ultimately undertake to
land. Their horsemen and carriages went on in
advance, and the foot soldiers followed, all pressing
eagerly forward to keep up with the motion of the
fleet, and to prevent Caesar’s army from having
time to land before they should arrive at the spot
and be ready to oppose them.
The fleet moved on until, at length,
after sailing about eight miles, they came to a part
of the coast where there was a tract of comparatively
level ground, which seemed to be easily accessible
from the shore. Here Caesar determined to attempt
to land; and drawing up his vessel, accordingly, as
near as possible to the beach, he ordered the men
to leap over into the water, with their weapons in
their hands. The Britons were all here to oppose
them, and a dreadful struggle ensued, the combatants
dyeing the waters with their blood as they fought,
half submerged in the surf which rolled in upon the
sand. Some galleys rowed up at the same time
near to the shore, and the men on board of them attacked
the Britons from the decks, by the darts and arrows
which they shot to the land. Caesar at last prevailed;
the Britons were driven away, and the Roman army established
themselves in quiet possession of the shore.
Caesar had afterward a great variety
of adventures, and many narrow escapes from imminent
dangers in Britain, and, though he gained considerable
glory by thus penetrating into such remote and unknown
regions, there was very little else to be acquired.
The glory, however, was itself of great value to Caesar.
During the whole period of his campaigns in Gaul,
Rome and all Italy in fact, had been filled with the
fame of his exploits, and the expedition into Britain
added not a little to his renown. The populace
of the city were greatly gratified to hear of the
continued success of their former favorite. They
decreed to him triumph after triumph, and were prepared
to welcome him, whenever he should return, with greater
honors and more extended and higher powers than he
had ever enjoyed before.
Caesar’s exploits in these campaigns
were, in fact, in a military point of view, of the
most magnificent character. Plutarch, in summing
up the results of them, says that he took eight hundred
cities, conquered three hundred nations, fought pitched
battles at separate times with three millions of men,
took one million of prisoners, and killed another
million on the field. What a vast work of destruction
was this for a man to spend eight years of his life
in performing upon his fellow-creatures, merely to
gratify his insane love of dominion.