From its origin as a city-state in
Italy in the 8th century
BC, to its rise as an
empire covering
much of
Eurasia and
North Africa and fall in the 5th century AD,
the political history of
Ancient Rome
was typically closely entwined with its
military history. The core of the
campaign history of the Roman military is an
aggregate of different accounts of the
Roman military's land battles, from its
initial defence against and subsequent conquest of the city's
hilltop neighbours in the
Italian
peninsula, to the ultimate struggle of the
Western Roman Empire for its existence
against invading
Huns,
Vandals and
Germanic
tribes after the empire's split into
East and
West. These accounts were written by
various authors throughout and after the history of the Empire.
Despite
the later Empire's encompassing of lands around the periphery of the Mediterranean
Sea
, naval battles were
typically less significant than land battles to the military
history of Rome, due to its largely unchallenged dominance of the
sea following fierce naval fighting during the First Punic War.
The Roman
army battled first against its tribal neighbours and Etruscan
towns within Italy, and later came to dominate much
of the Mediterranean and further afield, including the provinces of
Britannia and Asia Minor at the Empire's
height. As with most ancient civilisations, Rome's military
served the triple purposes of securing its borders, exploiting
peripheral areas through measures such as imposing
tribute on conquered peoples, and maintaining
internal order. From the outset, Rome's military typified this
pattern, and the majority of Rome's campaigns were characterised by
one of two types: the first is the territorial
expansionist campaign, normally begun as a
counter-offensive, in which each victory brought subjugation of
large areas of territory and allowed Rome to grow from a small town
to one of the
largest
empires in the ancient world, including a population of 55
million in the early empire when expansion was halted; the second
is the
civil war, examples of which
plagued Rome right from its foundation to its eventual
demise.
Roman armies were not invincible, despite their formidable
reputation and host of victories: over the centuries the Romans
"
produced their share of incompetents" who led Roman
armies into catastrophic defeats. Nevertheless, it was generally
the fate of even the greatest of Rome's enemies, such as
Pyrrhus and
Hannibal, to win the battle but lose the war. The
history of Rome's campaigning is, if nothing else, a history of
obstinate persistence overcoming appalling losses.
Kingdom (753 BC – 508 BC)
Rome is almost unique in the ancient world in that its history,
military and otherwise, is documented often in great detail almost
from
the city's very foundation
right through to its
eventual demise. Although some
histories have been lost, such as
Trajan's
account of the
Dacian Wars, and
others, such as Rome's earliest histories, are at least
semi-
apocryphal, the extant histories of
Rome's military history are extensive.
The very earliest history, from the time of Rome's founding as a
small tribal village, through to the downfall of Rome's kings, is
the least well preserved. This is because, although the early
Romans were literate to some degree, either they lacked the will to
record their history at this time or else such histories as they
did record were lost.
Although the Roman historian
Livy (59 BC – AD
17) lists a series of seven kings of early Rome in his work
Ab Urbe Condita, from its
establishment through its earliest years, the degree to which the
first four kings (
Romulus,
Numa,
Tullus
Hostilius and
Ancus Marcius) are
apocryphal is certainly open to question. A number of points of
view have been proposed over the long run of time.
Grant and others argue that prior to
the time when the Etruscan
kingdom of Rome was established under the
traditional fifth king, Tarquinius
Priscus, Rome would have been led by a religious leader of some
sort. Very little is known of Rome's military history during
this era, and what history has come down to us is of a
legendary rather than a known factual nature.
Traditionally, Romulus fortified one of the
first-settled of Rome's seven hills, the Palatine Hill
, after founding the city, and Livy states that
shortly after its founding Rome was "equal to any of the
surrounding cities in her prowess in war".
| "Events before the city was founded
or planned, which have been handed down more as pleasing poetic
fictions than as reliable records of historical events, I intend
neither to affirm nor to refute. To antiquity we grant the
indulgence of making the origins of cities more impressive by
comingling the human with the divine, and if any people should be
permitted to sanctify its inception and reckon the gods as its
founders, surely the glory of the Roman people in war is such that,
when it boasts Mars in particular as its parent... the nations of
the world would as easily acquiesce in this claim as they do in our
rule." |
| Livy, on
Rome's early history |
The first campaigns that were fought by the Romans in this
legendary account are the
wars with various Latin cities and the Sabines after the
Rape of the Sabine Women.
According to Livy, the Latin village of Caenina responded to the
event first by invading Roman territory, but were routed and their
village captured.
The Latins of Antemnae and those of Crustumerium
were defeated next in a similar fashion. The
remaining main body of the
Sabines attacked
Rome and briefly captured the citadel, but were then convinced to
conclude a treaty with the Romans under which the Sabines became
Roman citizens.
There was a further war in the
8th
century BC against
Fidenae
and Veii. In the
7th century BC
there was a
war with Alba
Longa, a
second war with Fidenae and Veii and a
second Sabine War.
Ancus Marcius led Rome
to victory against
the Latins and, according to the Fasti
Triumphales, over the Veientes
and Sabines also.
Under the Etruscan kings
Tarquinius
Priscus,
Servius Tullius and
Tarquinius Superbus, Rome
expanded to the north-west, coming into conflict again with the
Veientes after the expiry of the treaty that concluded their
earlier war.
There was a further campaign against the
Gabii
, and later against the Rutuli. The Etruscan kings were overthrown as
part of a wider reduction in Etruscan power in the region during
this period, and Rome reformed itself as a
republic, a form of government based on popular
representation and in contrast to its previous
autocratic kingship.
Republic
Early (508 BC – 274 BC)
Early Italian campaigns (458–396 BC)

Map showing Rome's Etruscan
neighbours
The first non-apocryphal Roman wars were wars of both expansion and
defence, aimed at protecting Rome itself from neighbouring cities
and nations and establishing its territory in the region. Florus
writes that at this time
Although sources disagree, it is possible that Rome itself was
twice invaded by Etruscan armies in this period, first in around
509 BC under the recently-overthrown king Tarquinius Superbus, and
again in 508 BC under the Etruscan
Lars
Porsenna.
Initially, Rome's immediate neighbours were either
Latin towns and villages on a tribal system similar
to that of Rome, or else tribal Sabines from the Apennine hills
beyond. One by one, Rome defeated both the persistent Sabines and
the local cities that were either under Etruscan control or else
Latin towns that had cast off their Etruscan rulers, as had Rome.
Rome
defeated the Lavinii
and Tusculi
in the
Battle of Lake Regillus in
496 BC, the Sabines in an Unknown Battle in
449 BC, the Aequi in the Battle of Mons Algidus in 458 BC and
the Battle of Corbione in 446 BC,
the Volsci in the Battle of Corbione in 446 BC and the
Capture of Antium in 377 BC, the
Aurunci in the Battle of Aricia, and the Veientes
in the
Battle of the Cremera in 477
BC, the Capture of Fidenae in 435
BC and the Siege of Veii in 396
BC. After defeating the Veientes, the Romans had effectively
completed the conquest of their immediate Etruscan neighbours, as
well as secured their position against the immediate threat posed
by the tribespeople of the Apennine hills.
However, Rome still controlled only a very limited area and the
affairs of Rome were minor even to those in Italy: the remains of
Veii, for instance, lie entirely within modern Rome's suburbs and
Rome's affairs were only just coming to the attention of the
Greeks, the dominant cultural force at the time. At this point the
bulk of Italy remained in the hands of
Latin,
Sabine,
Samnite and
other peoples in the central part of Italy,
Greek colonies to the south, and, notably,
the
Celtic people, including the
Gauls, to the north. The Celtic civilization at this
time was vibrant and growing in strength and territory, and
stretched, if incohesively, across much of mainland Europe. It is
at the hands of the Gallic Celts that Rome suffered a humiliating
defeat that temporarily set back its advance and was to imprint
itself upon the Roman consciousness.
Celtic invasion of Italia (390–387 BC)
By 390 BC, several Gallic tribes had begun invading Italy from the
north as their culture expanded throughout Europe. Most of this was
unknown to the Romans at this time, who still had purely local
security concerns, but the Romans were alerted when a particularly
warlike tribe, the
Senones, invaded the
Etruscan province of Siena from the north and attacked the town of
Clusium, not far from Rome's sphere of
influence. The Clusians, overwhelmed by the size of the enemy in
numbers and ferocity, called on Rome for help. Perhaps
unintentionally the Romans found themselves not just in conflict
with the Senones, but their primary target. The Romans met them in
pitched battle at the
Battle of the
Allia around 390–387 BC. The Gauls, under their chieftain
Brennus, defeated the Roman
army of around 15,000 troops and proceeded to pursue the fleeing
Romans back to Rome itself and partially sacked the town before
being either driven off or bought off.
Now that the Romans and Gauls had blooded one another, intermittent
warfare was to continue between the two in Italy for more than two
centuries, including the
Battle of
the Anio, the
Battle of Lake
Vadimo, the
Battle of
Faesulae in 225 BC, the
Battle of
Telamon in 224 BC, the
Battle
of Clastidium in 222 BC, the
Battle of Cremona in 200 BC, the
Battle of Mutina in 194
BC, the
Battle of Arausio in 105
BC, and the
Battle of Vercellae
in 101 BC.
The Celtic problem would not be resolved for
Rome until the final subjugation of all Gaul following the Battle of
Alesia
in 52 BC.
Expansion into Italia (343–282 BC)

Apennine hills around Samnium

Map showing Roman expansion in
Italy
After recovering surprisingly swiftly from the sack of Rome, the
Romans immediately resumed their expansion within Italy. Despite
their successes so far, their mastery of the whole of Italy was by
no means assured at this point: the
Samnites were a people just as martial and as rich
as the Romans and with an objective of their own of securing more
lands in the fertile Italian plains on which Rome itself lay. The
First Samnite War of between 343
BC and 341 BC that followed widespread Samnite incursions into
Rome's territory was a relatively short affair: the Romans beat the
Samnites in both the
Battle of
Mount Gaurus in 342 BC and the
Battle of Suessola in 341 BC but were
forced to withdraw from the war before they could pursue the
conflict further due to the revolt of several of their Latin allies
in the
Latin War.
Rome was therefore forced to contend by around 340 BC against both
Samnite incursions into their territory and, simultaneously, in a
bitter war against their former allies. Rome bested the Latins in
the
Battle of Vesuvius and again
in the
Battle of Trifanum, after
which the Latin cities were obliged to submit to Roman rule.
Perhaps due to Rome's lenient treatment of their defeated foe, the
Latins submitted largely amicably to Roman rule for the next 200
years.
The
Second Samnite War, from 327
BC to 304 BC, was a much longer and more serious affair for both
the Romans and Samnites, running for over twenty years and
incorporating twenty-four battles that led to massive casualties on
both sides. The fortunes of the two sides fluctuated throughout its
course: the Samnites seized Neapolis in the
Capture of Neapolis in 327 BC, which the
Romans then re-captured before losing at the
Battle of the Caudine Forks and
the
Battle of Lautulae. The
Romans then proved victorious at the
Battle of Bovianum and the tide turned
strongly against the Samnites from 314 BC onwards, leading them to
sue for peace with progressively
less generous terms. By 304 BC the Romans had effectively annexed
the greater degree of the Samnite territory, founding several
colonies. This pattern of meeting aggression in force and almost
inadvertently gaining territory in strategic counter-attacks was to
become a common feature of Roman military history.
Seven years after their defeat, with Roman dominance of the area
looking assured, the Samnites rose again and defeated the Romans at
the
Battle of Camerinum in 298
BC, to open the
Third Samnite War.
With this success in hand they managed to bring together a
coalition of several previous enemies of Rome, all of whom were
probably keen to prevent any one faction dominating the entire
region. The army that faced the Romans at the
Battle of Sentinum in 295 BC therefore
included Samnites, Gauls, Etruscans and Umbrians. When the Roman
army won a convincing victory over these combined forces it must
have become clear that little could prevent Roman dominance of
Italy. In the
Battle of
Populonia in 282 BC Rome finished off the last vestiges of
Etruscan power in the region.
Pyrrhic War (280–275 BC)

Route of Pyrrhus of Epirus
By the
beginning of the third century, Rome had established itself as a
major power on the Italian
Peninsula, but had not yet come into conflict with the dominant
military powers in the Mediterranean at the time: Carthage
and the Greek
kingdoms. Rome had all but completely defeated the
Samnites, mastered its fellow Latin towns,
and greatly reduced Etruscan
power in the region. However, the south of
Italy was controlled by the
Greek
colonies of
Magna Grecia who had been
allied to the Samnites, and continued Roman expansion brought the
two into inevitable conflict.
When a
diplomatic dispute between Rome and the Greek colony of Tarentum
erupted into open warfare in the naval Battle of Thurii, Tarentum appealed for
military aid to Pyrrhus, ruler of
Epirus. Motivated by his
diplomatic obligations to Tarentum, and a personal desire for
military accomplishment, Pyrrhus landed a Greek army of some 25,000
men and a contingent of
war elephants
on Italian soil in 280 B.C, where his forces were joined by some
Greek colonists and a portion of the
Samnites who revolted against Roman control.
The Roman army had not yet seen elephants in battle, and their
inexperience turned the tide in Pyrrhus' favour at the
Battle of Heraclea in 280 BC, and again
at the
Battle of Ausculum in 279
BC. Despite these victories, Pyrrhus found his position in Italy
untenable. Rome steadfastly refused to negotiate with Pyrrhus as
long as his army remained in Italy.
Furthermore, Rome entered into a treaty
of support with Carthage
, and Pyrrhus found that despite his expectations,
none of the other Italic
peoples would defect to the Greek and Samnite cause.
Facing
unacceptably heavy losses
with each encounter with the Roman army, and failing to find
further allies in Italy, Pyrrhus withdrew from the peninsula and
campaigned in
Sicily against Carthage,
abandoning his allies to deal with the Romans.
When his Sicilian campaign was also ultimately a failure, and at
the request of his Italian allies, Pyrrhus returned to Italy to
face Rome once more. In 275 BC, Pyrrhus again met the Roman army at
the
Battle of
Beneventum. This time the Romans had devised methods to deal
with the war elephants, including the use of javelins, fire and,
one source claims, simply hitting the elephants heavily on the
head. While Beneventum was indecisive, Pyrrhus realised that his
army had been exhausted and reduced by years of foreign campaigns,
and seeing little hope for further gains, he withdrew completely
from Italy.
The conflicts with Pyrrhus would have a great effect on Rome,
however. Rome had shown that it was capable of pitting its armies
successfully against the dominant military powers of the
Mediterranean, and further showed that the Greek kingdoms were
incapable of defending their colonies in Italy and abroad. Rome
quickly moved into southern Italia, subjugating and dividing Magna
Grecia. Effectively dominating the Italian peninsula, and with a
proven international military reputation, Rome now began to look
outwards at expansion from the Italian mainland.
Since the Alps formed
a natural barrier to the north, and Rome was none too keen to meet
the fierce Gauls in battle once more, the city's gaze turned to
Sicily and the islands of the Mediterranean, a policy that would
bring it into direct conflict with its former ally Carthage
.
Middle (274 BC – 148 BC)
Rome
first began to make war outside the Italian peninsula in the
Punic wars against Carthage
, a former Phoenician
colony on the north coast of Africa that had
developed into a powerful state. These wars, starting
in 264 BC were probably the largest conflicts of the ancient world
yet and saw Rome become the most powerful state of the Western
Mediterranean, with territory in Sicily,
North Africa, Iberia
, and with the end of the Macedonian wars (which ran concurrently with
the Punic wars) Greece
as
well. After the defeat of the Seleucid Emperor
Antiochus III the Great in the
Roman-Syrian War (Treaty of Apamea,
188 BC) in the eastern sea, Rome emerged as the dominant
Mediterranean power and the most powerful city in the classical
world.
Punic Wars (264–146 BC)

Theatre of Punic Wars
The
First Punic War began in 264 BC
when settlements on Sicily began to appeal to the two powers
between which they lay – Rome and Carthage – in order to solve
internal conflicts. The willingness of both Rome and Carthage to
become embroiled on the soil of a third party may indicate a
willingness to test each other's power without wishing to enter a
full war of annihilation; certainly there was considerable
disagreement within Rome about whether to prosecute the war at all.
The war saw land battles in Sicily early on such as the
Battle of Agrigentum but the theatre
shifted to naval battles around Sicily and Africa. For the Romans
naval warfare was a relatively unexplored concept.
Before the First Punic War in 264 BC there was no Roman
navy to speak of as all previous Roman wars had been fought on land
in Italy
.
The new
war in Sicily against Carthage
, a great naval power, forced Rome to quickly build
a fleet and train sailors.
Rome took
to naval warfare "like a brick to water" and the first few
naval battles of the First Punic War
such as the Battle of the
Lipari Islands were catastrophic disasters for Rome
, as might
fairly be expected from a city that had no real prior experience of
naval warfare. However, after training more sailors and
inventing a grappling engine known as a
Corvus, a Roman naval force under C.
Duillius was able to roundly defeat a Carthaginian fleet at the
Battle of Mylae. In just 4 years, a
state without any real naval experience had managed to better a
major regional maritime power in battle. Further naval victories
followed at the
Battle of
Tyndaris and
Battle of Cape
Ecnomus.
After having won control of the seas, a Roman force landed on the
African coast under
Regulus,
who was at first victorious, winning the
Battle of Adys and forcing Carthage to sue
for peace. However the terms of peace that Rome proposed were so
heavy that negotiations failed and, in response, the Carthaginians
hired
Xanthippus of Carthage,
a mercenary from the martial Greek city-state of Sparta, to
reorganise and lead their army. Xanthippus managed to cut off the
Roman army from its base by re-establishing Carthaginian naval
supremacy, then defeated and captured Regulus at the
Battle of Tunis.
Despite being defeated on African soil, with their newfound naval
abilities, the Romans roundly beat the Carthaginians in naval
battle again – largely through the tactical innovations of the
Roman fleet – at the
Battle of the Aegates Islands
and leaving Carthage without a fleet or sufficient coin to raise
one. For a maritime power the loss of their access to the
Mediterranean stung financially and psychologically, and the
Carthaginians again sued for peace, during which Rome battled the
Ligures tribe in the
Ligurian
War and the
Insubres in the
Gallic War.
Continuing distrust led to the renewal of
hostilities in the Second Punic War
when Hannibal Barca, a member of the
Barcid family of Carthaginian nobility,
attacked Saguntum
, a city with diplomatic ties to Rome.
Hannibal then raised an army in Iberia and famously crossed the
Italian Alps with elephants to invade Italy.
In the first battle
on Italian soil at Ticinus
in 218 BC Hannibal defeated the Romans under
Scipio the Elder in a small
cavalry fight. Hannibal's success continued with victories
in the Battle of
the Trebia
, the Battle of Lake Trasimene
, where he ambushed an unsuspecting Roman army, and
the Battle of
Cannae
, in what is considered one of the great
masterpieces of the tactical art, and for a while "Hannibal
seemed invincible", able to beat Roman armies at
will.
In the three battles of Nola, Roman general
Marcus Claudius Marcellus managed
to hold off Hannibal but then Hannibal smashed a succession of
Roman consular armies at the
First
Battle of Capua, the
Battle of
the Silarus, the
Second
Battle of Herdonia, the
Battle of
Numistro and the
Battle
of Asculum. By this time Hannibal's brother
Hasdrubal Barca sought to cross the Alps
into Italy and join his brother with a second army. Despite being
defeated in Iberia in the
Battle of
Baecula, Hasdrubal managed to break through into Italy only to
be defeated decisively by
Gaius
Claudius Nero and
Marcus
Livius Salinator on the
Metaurus River.
| "Apart from the romance of Scipio's
personality and his political importance as the founder of Rome's
world-dominion, his military work has a greater value to modern
students of war than that of any other great captain of the past..
His genius revealed to him that peace and war are the two wheels on
which the world runs." |
| BH
Liddell Hart on Scipio
Africanus Major |
Unable to defeat Hannibal himself on Italian soil, and with
Hannibal savaging the Italian countryside but unwilling or unable
to destroy Rome itself, the Romans boldly sent an army to Africa
with the intention of threatening the Carthaginian capital. In 203
BC at the
Battle of Bagbrades
the invading Roman army under
Scipio Africanus Major defeated the
Carthaginian army of
Hasdrubal Gisco
and
Syphax and Hannibal was recalled to
Africa. At the famous
Battle of Zama
Scipio decisively defeated – perhaps even
"annihilated" –
Hannibal's army in North Africa, ending the
Second Punic War.
Carthage never managed to recover after the Second Punic War and
the
Third Punic War that followed
was in reality a simple punitive mission to raze the city of
Carthage to the ground. Carthage was almost defenceless and when
besieged offered immediate surrender, conceding to a string of
outrageous Roman demands. The Romans refused the surrender,
demanding as their further terms of surrender the complete
destruction of the city and, seeing little to lose, the
Carthaginians prepared to fight. In the
Battle of Carthage the city
was stormed after a short siege and completely destroyed, its
culture "almost totally extinguished".
Conquest of the Iberian peninsula (218–19 BC)
Rome's
conflict with the Carthaginians
in the Punic Wars led
them into expansion in the Iberian peninsula
of modern-day Spain
and Portugal
. The Punic empire of the Carthaginian
Barcid family consisted of territories in
Iberia, many of which Rome gained control of during the Punic Wars.
Italy remained the main theatre of war for much of the
Second Punic War, but the Romans also aimed
to destroy the Barcid Empire in Iberia and prevent major Punic
allies from linking up with forces in Italy.
Over the
years Rome had gradually expanded along the southern Iberian coast
until in 211 BC it captured the city of Saguntum
. Following two major military expeditions to
Iberia, the Romans finally crushed Carthaginian control of the
peninsula in 206 BC, at the
Battle of
Ilipa, and the peninsula became a Roman province known as
Hispania. From 206 BC onwards the only
opposition to Roman control of the peninsula came from within the
native
Celtiberian tribes themselves,
the disunity of which prevented security from Roman
expansion.
Following two small-scale rebellions in 197 BC, in 195–194 BC, war
broke out in between the Romans and the
Lusitani people in the
Lusitanian War, in modern-day Portugal. By
179 BC, the Romans had mostly succeeded in pacifying the region and
bringing it under their control.
In around
154 BC, a major revolt was re-ignited in Numantia
, which is known as the First Numantine War, and a long war of
resistance was fought between the advancing forces of the Roman
Republic and the Lusitani tribes of Hispania. The
praetor Servius Sulpicius
Galba and the
proconsul Lucius Licinius Lucullus arrived in
151 BC and began the process of subduing the local population.
Galba betrayed the Lusitani leaders he had invited to peace talks
and had them killed in 150 BC, ingloriously ending the first phase
of the war.
The Lusitani revolted again in 146 BC under a new leader called
Viriathus, invading
Turdetania (southern Iberia) in a
guerilla war. The Lusitanians were initially
successful, defeating a Roman army at the
Battle of Tribola and going on to
sack nearby Carpetania, and then besting
a second Roman army at the
First Battle of Mount Venus
in 146 BC, again going on to
sack
another nearby city. In 144 BC, the general
Quintus Fabius Maximus
Aemilianus campaigned successfully against the Lusitani, but
failed in his attempts to arrest Viriathus.
In 144 BC, Viriathus formed a league against Rome with several
Celtiberian tribes and persuaded them to rise against Rome too, in
the
Second Numantine War.
Viriathus' new coalition bested Roman armies at the
Second Battle of Mount Venus
in 144 BC and again at the failed
Siege
of Erisone. In 139 BC, Viriathus was finally killed in his
sleep by three of his companions who had been promised gifts by
Rome. In 136 and 135 BC, more attempts were made to gain complete
control of the region of Numantia, but they failed. In 134 BC, the
Consul
Scipio Aemilianus finally
succeeded in suppressing the rebellion following the successful
Siege of Numantia.
Since the Roman invasion of the Iberian peninsula had begun in the
south in the territories around the Mediterranean controlled by the
Barcids, the last region of the peninsula to be subdued lay in the
far north.
The Cantabrian
Wars or Astur-Cantabrian Wars, from 29 BC to 19 BC, occurred
during the Roman conquest of these northern provinces of Cantabria
and Asturias
. Iberia was fully occupied by 25 BC and the
last revolt put down by 19 BC
Macedon, the Greek poleis, and Illyria (215–148 BC)

Map showing the southern Balkans and
western Asia Minor
Rome's
preoccupation with its war with Carthage provided an opportunity
for Philip V of the kingdom of
Macedon in northern Greece
, to attempt
to extend his power westward. Philip sent ambassadors to
Hannibal's camp in Italy, to negotiate an alliance as common
enemies of Rome. However, Rome discovered the agreement when
Philip's emissaries, along with emissaries from Hannibal, were
captured by a Roman fleet.
Desiring to prevent Philip from aiding
Carthage in Italy and elsewhere, Rome sought out land allies in
Greece to fight a proxy war against Macedon on its behalf and found
partners in the Aetolian League of
Greek city-states, the Illyrians to the
north of Macedon and the kingdom of
Pergamon and the city-state of Rhodes
, which lay
across the Aegean from Macedon.
The
First Macedonian War saw
the Romans involved directly in only limited land operations and
when the Aetolians sued for peace with Philip once more Rome's
small expeditionary force, with no more allies in Greece, but
having achieved their objective of pre-occupying Philip and
preventing him from aiding Hannibal, was ready to make peace. A
treaty was drawn up between Rome and Macedon at Phoenice in 205 BC
which promised Rome a small indemnity, formally ending the First
Macedonian War.
Macedon began to encroach on territory claimed by several other
Greek city states in 200 BC and these states pleaded for help from
their newfound ally Rome. Rome gave Philip an ultimatum that he
must submit Macedonia to being essentially a Roman province.
Philip, unsurprisingly, refused and, after initial internal
reluctance for further hostilities, Rome declared war against
Philip in the
Second Macedonian
War. In the
Battle of the
Aous Roman forces under
Titus Quinctius Flamininus
defeated the Macedonians, and in a second larger battle under the
same opposing commanders in 197 BC, in the
Battle of Cynoscephalae, Flamininus
again beat the Macedonians decisively. Macedonia was forced to sign
the
Treaty of Tempea, in which it
lost all claim to territory in Greece and Asia, and had to pay a
war indemnity to Rome.
Between the second and third Macedonian wars Rome faced further
conflict in the region due to a tapestry of shifting rivalries,
alliances and leagues all seeking to gain greater influence.
After the
Macedonians had been defeated in the Second Macedonian War in 197
BC, the Greek city-state of Sparta
stepped into
the partial power vacuum in Greece. Fearing the Spartans
would take increasing control of the region, the Romans drew on
help from allies to prosecute the
Roman-Spartan War, defeating a Spartan
army at the
Battle of Gythium in
195 BC.
They also fought their former allies the
Aetolian League in the Aetolian War,
against the Istrians
in the Istrian War,
against the Illyrians in the Illyrian
War, and against Achaia
in the
Achaean War.
Rome now turned its attentions to
Antiochus III of the
Seleucid Empire to the east. After campaigns
as far abroad as Bactria, India, Persia and Judea, Antiochus moved
to Asia Minor and Thrace to secure several coastal towns, a move
that brought him into conflict with Roman interests. A Roman force
under
Manius
Acilius Glabrio defeated Antiochus at the
Battle of Thermopylae and
forced him to evacuate Greece: the Romans then pursued the
Seleucids beyond Greece, beating them again in naval battles at the
Battle of the
Eurymedon and
Battle of
Myonessus, and finally in a decisive engagement of the
Battle of Magnesia.
In 179 BC Philip died and his talented and ambitious son,
Perseus of Macedon, took his throne and
showed a renewed interest in Greece. He also allied himself with
the warlike
Bastarnae, and both this and
his actions in Greece possibly violated the treaty signed with the
Romans by his father or, if not, certainly was not "
behaving as
[Rome considered] a subordinate ally should". Rome declared
war on Macedonia again, starting the
Third Macedonian War. Perseus initially
had greater military success against the Romans than his father,
winning the
Battle of
Callicinus against a Roman consular army. However, as with all
such ventures in this period, Rome responded by simply sending
another army.
The second consular army duly defeated the
Macedonians at the Battle of Pydna
in 168 BC and the Macedonians, lacking the reserve
of the Romans and with King Perseus captured, duly capitulated,
ending the Third Macedonian
War.
The Fourth Macedonian War, fought from 150 BC to 148 BC, was the
final war between Rome and Macedon and began when
Andriscus usurped the Macedonian throne. The
Romans raise a consular army under
Quintus Caecilius Metellus, who
swiftly defeated Andriscus at the
Second battle of Pydna.
Under
Lucius Mummius,
Corinth was destroyed following a
siege in 146 BC, leading to the surrender and thus conquest of the
Achaean League (see
Battle of Corinth).
Late (147 BC – 30 BC)
Jugurthine War (111–104 BC)
Rome had, in the earlier Punic Wars, gained large tracts of
territory in Africa, which they had consolidated in the following
centuries, and much of which had been granted to the kingdom of
Numidia, a kingdom on the north African coast approximating to
modern Algeria, in return for its past military assistance. The
Jugurthine War of 111–104 BC was fought between Rome and
Jugurtha of
Numidia and
constituted the final Roman pacification of Northern Africa, after
which Rome largely ceased expansion on the continent after reaching
natural barriers of desert and mountain. Following Jugurtha's
usurpation of the Numidian throne, a loyal ally of Rome since the
Punic Wars, Rome felt compelled to intervene. Jugurtha impudently
bribed the Romans into accepting his usurpation and was granted
half the kingdom. Following further aggression and further bribery
attempts, the Romans sent an army to tackle him. The Romans were
defeated at the
Battle of Suthul
but fared better at the
Battle of
the Muthul and finally defeated Jugurtha at the
Battle of Thala, the
Battle of Mulucha, and the
Battle of Cirta . Jugurtha was
finally captured not in battle but by treachery, ending the
war.
Resurgence of the Celtic threat (121 BC)
By 121 BC, memories of Rome itself being sacked by Celtic tribes
from Gaul were still prominent despite their historical distance,
having been made into a legendary account that was taught to each
generation of Roman youth. However, Rome was, unknown at the time,
to face a resurgent Celtic threat within the next year. In 121 BC,
Rome came into contact with the Celtic tribes of the
Allobroges and the
Arverni, both of which they defeated with apparent
ease in the
First
Battle of Avignon near the Rhone river and the
Second Battle of Avignon,
the same year.
New Germanic threat (113–101 BC)
The
Cimbrian War (113–101 BC) was a far
more serious affair than the earlier clashes of 121 BC. The
Germanic tribes of the
Cimbri and the
Teutons or
Teutones migrated from
northern Europe into Rome's northern territories, and clashed with
Rome and her allies.
The Cimbrian War was the first time since
the Second Punic War that Italia and Rome
itself had
been seriously threatened, and caused great fear in Rome for some
time. The
Battle of Noreia
in 112 BC, was the opening action of the Cimbrian War fought
between the Roman Republic and the migrating Proto-Germanic tribes
of the Cimbri and the Teutons. It ended in defeat, and near
disaster, for the Romans. In 105 BC the Romans suffered one of
their worst defeats ever at the
Battle
of Arausio.
It was the costliest defeat Rome had
suffered since the Battle of Cannae
. After the Cimbri inadvertently granted the
Romans a reprieve by diverting to plunder Iberia, Rome was given
the opportunity to carefully prepare for and successfully meet the
Cimbri and Teutons in battle in the
Battle of Aquae Sextiae and the
Battle of Vercellae where both
tribes were virtually annihilated, ending the threat.
Internal unrest (135–71 BC)
The extensive campaigning abroad by Roman generals, and the
rewarding of soldiers with plunder on these campaigns, led to a
general trend of soldiers becoming increasingly loyal to their
generals rather than to the state, and to a willingness to follow
their generals in battle against the state. Rome was also plagued
by several slave uprisings during this period, in part because in
the past century vast tracts of land had been given over to slave
farming in which the slaves greatly outnumbered their Roman
masters. In the last century BC at least twelve
civil wars and rebellions
occurred. This pattern did not break until Octavian (later
Caesar Augustus) ended it
by becoming a successful challenger to the Senate's authority, and
was made
princeps (emperor).
Between 135 BC and 71 BC there were three
Servile Wars involving slave uprisings
against the Roman state, the
third
uprising the most serious, - estimates of the numbers involved
include 120,000 and 150,000 revolting slaves. Additionally, in 91
BC the
Social War
broke out between Rome and its former allies in Italy, collectively
known as the
Socii, over dissent among the allies that
they shared the risk of Rome's military campaigns, but not its
rewards. Despite defeats such as the
Battle of Fucine Lake, Roman troops
defeated the Italian
militias in decisive
engagements, notably the
Battle of Asculum. Although they
lost militarily, the
Socii achieved their objectives with
the legal proclamations of the
Lex
Julia and
Lex Plautia
Papiria, which granted citizenship to more than 500,000
Italians.
The internal unrest reached its most serious, however, in the two
civil wars or marches upon Rome of the consul
Lucius Cornelius Sulla at the
beginning of 82 BC. In the
Battle of the Colline Gate at the
very door of the city of Rome, a Roman army under Sulla bested an
army of the Roman senate, along with some Samnite allies. Whatever
the rights and wrongs of his grievances against those in power of
the state, his actions marked a watershed of the willingness of
Roman troops to wage war against one another that was to pave the
way for the wars of the
triumvirate, the
overthrowing of the Senate as the
de facto head of the
Roman state, and the eventual
endemic
usurpation of the later Empire.
Conflicts with Mithridates (89–63 BC)
Mithridates the Great was the ruler of
Pontus, a large kingdom in Asia Minor
, from 120 to 63 BC. He is remembered as one
of Rome's most formidable and successful enemies who engaged three
of the most prominent generals of the late Roman Republic:
Sulla,
Lucullus, and
Pompey the Great. In a pattern familiar
from the Punic Wars, the Romans came into conflict with him after
the two states' spheres of influence began to overlap. Mithridates
antagonised Rome by seeking to expand his kingdom, and Rome for her
part seemed equally keen for war and the spoils and prestige that
it might bring.
After conquering western Anatolia
(modern Turkey) in 88 BC, Roman sources state that
Mithridates ordered the killing of the majority of the 80,000
Romans living there. The massacre may have been greatly
exaggerated by the Romans but it was the official reason given for
the commencement of hostilities in the
First Mithridatic War . The Roman
general
Lucius Cornelius
Sulla forced Mithridates out of Greece proper after the
Battle of Chaeronea and
later
Battle of Orchomenus but
then had to return to Italy to answer the internal threat posed by
his rival Marius; consequently, Mithridates VI was defeated but not
beaten. A peace was made between Rome and Pontus, but this proved
only a temporary lull.
The
Second Mithridatic War
began when Rome tried to annex Bithnyia as a province. In the
Third Mithridatic War, first
Lucius Licinius Lucullus
and then
Pompey the Great were sent
against Mithridates. Mithridates was finally defeated by Pompey in
the night-time
Battle of the
Lycus.
Campaign against the Cilician pirates (67 BC)
The Mediterranean had at this time fallen into the hands of
pirates, largely from
Cilicia. Rome had destroyed many of the states that
had previously policed the Mediterranean with fleets, but had
failed to step into the gap created. The pirates had seized the
opportunity of a relative power vacuum and had not only strangled
shipping lanes but had plundered many cities on the coasts of
Greece and Asia, and had even made descents upon Italy itself.
After the Roman admiral
Marcus
Antonius Creticus (father of the
triumvir Marcus
Antonius) failed to clear the pirates to the satisfaction of
the Roman authorities,
Pompey was nominated
his successor as commander of a special naval task force to
campaign against the pirates. It supposedly took Pompey just forty
days to clear the western portion of the sea of pirates, and
restore communication between Iberia, Africa, and Italy. Plutarch
describes how Pompey first swept their craft from the Mediterranean
in a series of small actions and through promise of honouring the
surrender of cities and craft.
He then followed the main body of the
pirates to their strongholds on the coast of Cilicia, and destroyed them there in the naval
Battle of
Korakesion
.
Caesar's early campaigns (59–50 BC)

Map of the Gallic Wars
During a term as praetor in Iberia, Pompey's contemporary
Julius Caesar of the Roman Julii clan defeated
the
Calaici and
Lusitani in battle. Following a consular term, he
was then appointed to a five year term as Proconsular Governor of
Transalpine Gaul (current southern France) and Illyria (the coast
of Dalmatia). Not content with an idle governorship, Caesar strove
to find reason to invade Gaul, which would give him the dramatic
military success he sought. To this end he stirred up popular
nightmares of the first sack of Rome by the Gauls and the more
recent spectre of the Cimbri and Teutones. When the
Helvetii and
Tigurini
tribes began to migrate on a route that would take them near (not
into) the Roman province of Transalpine Gaul, Caesar had the barely
sufficient excuse he needed for his
Gallic
Wars, fought between 58 BC and 49 BC. After slaughtering the
Helvetii tribe, Caesar prosecuted a
"long, bitter and
costly" campaign against other tribes across the breadth of
Gaul, many of whom had fought alongside Rome against their common
enemy the
Helvetii, and annexed their
territory to that of Rome. Plutarch claims that the campaign cost a
million Gallic lives. Although
"fierce and able" the Gauls
were handicapped by internal disunity and fell in a series of
battles over the course of a decade.
Caesar defeated the
Helvetii in 58
BC at the
Battle of the Arar and
Battle of Bibracte, the Belgic
confederacy known as the
Belgae at the
Battle of the Axona, the
Nervii
in 57 BC at the
Battle of the
Sabis, the
Aquitani,
Treviri,
Tencteri,
Aedui and
Eburones in unknown
battles, and the
Veneti in 56 BC. In 55 and 54 BC he made
two expeditions to
Britain.
In 52 BC, following the Siege of Avaricum and a string of
inconclusive battles, Caesar defeated a union of Gauls led by
Vercingetorix at the Battle of
Alesia
, completing the Roman conquest of Transalpine
Gaul. By 50 BC, the entirety of Gaul lay in Roman hands.
Caesar recorded his own accounts of these campaigns in
Commentarii de Bello
Gallico ("Commentaries on the Gallic War").
Gaul never regained its Celtic identity, never attempted another
nationalist rebellion, and remained loyal to Rome until the fall of
the Western Empire in 476. However, although Gaul itself was to
thereafter remain loyal, cracks were appearing in the political
unity of Rome's governing figures – partly over concerns over the
loyalty of Caesar's Gallic troops to his person rather than the
state – that were soon to drive Rome into a lengthy series of civil
wars.
Triumvirates, Caesarian ascension, and revolt (53–30 BC)
By 59 BC an unofficial political alliance known as the
First Triumvirate was formed between
Gaius Julius Caesar,
Marcus Licinius Crassus, and
Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus to
share power and influence. It was always an uncomfortable alliance
given that Crassus and Pompey intensely disliked one another. In 53
BC, Crassus launched a Roman invasion of the
Parthian Empire. After initial successes, he
marched his army deep into the desert; but here his army was cut
off deep in enemy territory, surrounded and slaughtered at the
Battle of Carrhae in
"the
greatest Roman defeat since Hannibal" in which Crassus himself
perished. The death of Crassus removed some of the balance in the
Triumvirate and, consequently, Caesar and Pompey began to move
apart. While Caesar was fighting against Vercingetorix in Gaul,
Pompey proceeded with a legislative agenda for Rome that revealed
that he was at best ambivalent towards Caesar and perhaps now
covertly allied with Caesar's political enemies. In 51 BC, some
Roman senators demanded that Caesar would not be permitted to stand
for Consul unless he turned over control of his armies to the
state, and the same demands were made of Pompey by other factions.
Relinquishing his army would leave Caesar defenceless before his
enemies. Caesar chose Civil War over laying down his command and
facing trial. The triumvirate was shattered and conflict was
inevitable.
Pompey initially assured Rome and the senate that he could defeat
Caesar in battle should he march on Rome. However, by the spring of
49 BC, when Caesar crossed the Rubicon river with his invading
forces and swept down the Italian peninsula towards Rome, Pompey
ordered the abandonment of Rome. Caesar's army was still
under-strength, with certain units remaining in Gaul, but on the
other hand Pompey himself only had a small force at his command,
and that with uncertain loyalty having served under Caesar. Tom
Holland attributes Pompey's willingness to abandon Rome to waves of
panicking refugees stirring ancestral fears of invasions from the
north. Pompey's forces retreated south towards Brundisium, and then
fled to Greece.
Caesar first directed his attention to the
Pompeian stronghold of Iberia but following campaigning by Caesar
in the Siege of Massilia and
Battle of
Ilerda
decided to tackle Pompey himself in Greece.
Pompey initially defeated Caesar at the
Battle of Dyrrachium in 48 BC
but failing to follow up on the victory, Pompey was decisively
defeated in the
Battle of
Pharsalus in 48 BC despite outnumbering Caesar's forces two to
one. Pompey fled again, this time to Egypt, where he was murdered
in an attempt to ingratiate the country with Caesar and avoid a war
with Rome.
Pompey's death did not see the end of the civil wars since
initially Caesar's enemies were manifold and Pompey's supporters
continued to fight on after his death. In 46 BC Caesar lost perhaps
as much as a third of his army when his former commander
Titus Labienus, who had defected to the
Pompeians several years earlier, defeated him at the
Battle of Ruspina. However, after this low
point Caesar came back to defeat the Pompeian army of
Metellus Scipio in the
Battle of Thapsus, after which the
Pompeians retreated yet again to Iberia. Caesar defeated the
combined forces of Titus Labienus and Gnaeus Pompey the Younger at
the
Battle of Munda in Iberia.
Labienus was killed in the battle and the Younger Pompey captured
and executed.
| "The Parthians began to shoot from
all sides. They did not pick any particular target since the Romans
were so close together that they could hardly miss...If they kept
their ranks they were wounded. If they tried to charge the enemy,
the enemy did not suffer more and they did not suffer less, because
the Parthians could shoot even as they fled...When Publius urged
them to charge the enemy's mail-clad horsemen, they showed him that
their hands were riveted to their shields and their feet nailed
through and through to the ground, so that they were helpless
either for flight or for self-defence." |
| Plutarch
on the Battle of Carrhae |
Despite his military success, or probably because of it, fear
spread of Caesar, now the primary figure of the Roman state,
becoming an autocratic ruler and ending the Roman Republic. This
fear drove a group of senators naming themselves
The Liberators to assassinate him in 44 BC.
Further civil war followed between those loyal to Caesar and those
who supported the actions of the Liberators. Caesar's supporter
Mark Antony condemned Caesar's assassins
and war broke out between the two factions. Antony was denounced as
a public enemy, and
Octavian was entrusted
with the command of the war against him.
In the Battle of Forum Gallorum Antony,
besieging Caesar's assassin Decimus Brutus in Mutina
, defeated
the forces of the consul Pansa, who was killed, but Antony was then
immediately defeated by the army of the other consul,
Hirtius. At the
Battle of
Mutina Antony was again defeated in battle by Hirtius, who was
killed. Although Antony failed to capture Mutina, Decimus Brutus
was murdered shortly thereafter.
Octavian betrayed his party, and came to terms with Caesarians
Antony and
Lepidus and on 26
November 43 BC the
Second
Triumvirate was formed, this time in an official capacity. In
42 BC
Triumvirs Mark
Antony and
Octavian fought the
indecisive
Battle of Philippi
with Caesar's assassins
Marcus Brutus
and
Cassius. Although Brutus
defeated Octavian, Antony defeated Cassius, who committed suicide.
Brutus also committed suicide shortly afterwards.
However, civil war flared again when the Second Triumvirate of
Octavian, Lepidus and
Mark Antony failed
just as the first had almost as soon as its opponents had been
removed. The ambitious Octavian built a power base and then
launched a campaign against Mark Antony. Together with Lucius
Antonius, Mark Antony's wife
Fulvia raised an
army in Italy to fight for Antony's rights against Octavian but she
was defeated by Octavian at the
Battle
of Perugia. Her death led to partial reconciliation between
Octavian and Anthony who went on to crush the army of
Sextus Pompeius, the last focus of
opposition to the second triumvirate, in the naval
Battle of Naulochus.
As before, once opposition to the triumvirate was crushed, it
started to tear at itself. The triumvirate expired on the last day
of 33 BC and was not renewed in law and in 31 BC, war began again.
At the
Battle of
Actium
, Octavian decisively
defeated Antony and Cleopatra
in a naval battle near Greece, using fire to destroy the enemy
fleet.
Octavian went on to become Emperor under the name Augustus and, in
the absence of political assassins or usurpers, was able to greatly
expand the borders of the Empire.
Empire
Early to Middle (30 BC – 180 AD)
Imperial expansion (40 BC – 117)
Under emperors secure from interior enemies, such as
Augustus and
Trajan, the
military achieved great territorial gains in both the East and the
West. In the West, following humiliating defeats at the hands of
the
Sugambri,
Tencteri and
Usipetes
tribes in 16 BC, Roman armies pushed north and east out of Gaul to
subdue much of Germania. The
Pannonian
revolt in AD 6 forced the Romans to cancel their plan to cement
their conquest of Germania by invading
Bohemia for the moment.
Despite the loss of a
large army almost to the man in Varus' famous defeat at the hands
of the Germanic leader Arminius in the
Battle of
the Teutoburg Forest
in AD 9, Rome recovered and continued its expansion
up to and beyond the borders of the known world. Roman
armies under
Germanicus pursued several
more campaigns against the Germanic tribes of the
Marcomanni,
Hermunduri,
Chatti,
Cherusci,
Bructeri, and
Marsi.
Overcoming several mutinies in the armies along the Rhine,
Germanicus defeated the Germanic tribes of Arminius in a series of
battles culminating in the
Battle of the Weser River.
After
preliminary low-scale
invasions of Britain, the Romans invaded Britain in force in 43 AD,
forcing their way inland through several battles against British
tribes, including the Battle of the Medway
, the Battle of the Thames, the Battle of Caer Caradoc and the
Battle of Mona. Following a general
uprising in which the Britons sacked Colchester
, St Albans
and London
, the Romans suppressed the rebellion in the
Battle of Watling Street
and went on to push as far north as central Scotland in the
Battle of Mons
Graupius. Tribes in modern-day Scotland and Northern
England repeatedly rebelled against Roman rule and two military
bases were established in Britannia to
protect against rebellion and incursions from the north, from which
Roman troops built and manned Hadrian's Wall
.
On the continent, the extension of the Empire's borders beyond the
Rhine hung in the balance for some time, with the emperor
Caligula apparently poised to invade Germania in AD
39, and
Cnaeus Domitius
Corbulo crossing the Rhine in AD 47 and marching into the
territory of the
Frisii and
Chauci before his successor
Claudius ordered the suspension of further attacks
across the Rhine, setting what was to become the permanent limit of
the Empire's expansion in this direction.
| "Never was there slaughter more cruel
than took place there in the marshes and woods, never were more
intolerable insults inflicted by barbarians, especially those
directed against the legal pleaders. They put out the eyes of some
of them and cut off the hands of others; they sewed up the mouth of
one of them after first cutting out his tongue, which one of the
barbarians held in his hand, exclaiming At last, you viper, you
have ceased to hiss!." |
| Florus on
the loss of Varus'
force |
Further east,
Trajan turned his attention to
Dacia, an area north of Macedon and Greece and
east of the Danube that had been on the Roman agenda since before
the days of Caesar when they had beaten a Roman army at the Battle
of Histria. In AD 85, the Dacians had swarmed over the Danube and
pillaged
Moesia and initially defeated an
army the Emperor
Domitian sent against
them, but the Romans were victorious in the
Battle of Tapae in AD 88 and a truce
was drawn up.
Emperor Trajan recommenced hostilities against Dacia and, following
an uncertain number of battles, defeated the Dacian general
Decebalus in the
Second Battle of Tapae in 101.
With
Trajan's troops pressing towards the Dacian capital Sarmizegethusa
, Decebalus once more sought terms. Decebalus
rebuilt his power over the following years and attacked Roman
garrisons again in 105. In response Trajan again marched into
Dacia, besieging the Dacian capital in the
Siege of Sarmizethusa, and razing it
to the ground. With Dacia quelled, Trajan subsequently
invaded the Parthian
empire to the east, his conquests taking the Roman Empire to
its greatest extent. Rome's borders in the east were indirectly
governed through a system of
client
states for some time, leading to less direct campaigning than
in the west in this period.
The land
of Armenia between the Black
Sea
and Caspian
Sea
became a focus of contention between Rome and the
Parthian Empire, and control of the region was repeatedly gained
and lost. The Parthians forced Armenia into submission from
AD 37 but in AD 47 the Romans retook control of the kingdom and
offered it
client kingdom status. Under
Nero, the Romans fought a
campaign between AD 55 and
63 against the Parthian Empire, which had again invaded
Armenia. After gaining Armenia once more in AD 60 and subsequently
losing it again in AD 62, the Romans sent
Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo in AD 63
into the territories of
Vologases I of
Parthia. Corbulo succeeded in returning
Armenia to Roman client status, where it remained for the next
century.
Year of the Four Emperors (69)
In 69 AD,
Marcus Salvius Otho
had the Emperor
Galba murdered and claimed the
throne for himself. However,
Vitellius,
governor of the province of
Germania
Inferior, had also claimed the throne and marched on Rome with
his troops. Following an inconclusive battle near Antipolis,
Vitellius' troops attacked the city of Placentia in the
Assault of Placentia, but were repulsed
by the Othonian garrison.
Otho left Rome on March 14, and marched north towards Placentia to
meet his challenger. In the
Battle of Locus Castrorum the
Othonians had the better of the fighting, and Vitellius' troops
retreated to Cremona. The two armies met again on the Via Postunia,
in the
First Battle of
Bedriacum, after which the Othonian troops fled back to their
camp in Bedriacum, and the next day surrendered to the Vitellian
forces. Otho decided to commit suicide rather than fight on.
Meanwhile, the forces stationed in the
Middle East provinces of Judaea
and
Syria had acclaimed Vespasian as emperor and the Danubian armies of
the provinces of Raetia and Moesia also acclaimed Vespasian as Emperor.
Vespasians' and Vitellius' armies met in the
Second Battle of Bedriacum, after
which the Vitellian troops were driven back into their camp outside
Cremona, which was taken. Vespasian's troops then attacked Cremona
itself, which surrendered.
Under pretence of siding with Vespasian,
Civilis of
Batavia had taken up arms and induced the
inhabitants of his native country to rebel. The rebelling Batavians
were immediately joined by several neighbouring German tribes
including the
Frisians.
These forces drove
out the Roman garrisons near the Rhine and defeated a Roman army at
the Battle of
Castra Vetera
, after which many Roman troops along the Rhine and
in Gaul defected to the Batavian cause. However, disputes
soon broke out amongst the different tribes, rendering co-operation
impossible; Vespasian, having successfully ended the civil war,
called upon Civilis to lay down his arms, and on his refusal his
legions met him in force, defeating him in the
Battle of Augusta
Treverorum.
Jewish revolts (66–135)
The first Jewish-Roman War, sometimes called The Great Revolt, was
the first of three major rebellions by the Jews of Judaea Province
against the Roman Empire. Judea was already a troubled region with
bitter violence among several competing Jewish sects and a long
history of rebellion The Jews' anger turned on Rome following
robberies from their temples and Roman insensitivity – Tacitus says
disgust and repulsion – towards their religion. The Jews began to
prepare for armed revolt. Earlier successes including the repulse
of the
First Siege of
Jerusalem and the
Battle
of Beth-Horon only attracted greater attention from Rome and
Emperor Nero appointed general Vespasian to crush the rebellion.
Vespasian led his forces in a methodical clearance of the areas in
revolt. By the year 68, Jewish resistance in the North had been
crushed.
A few towns and cities held out for a few
years before falling to the Romans, leading to the Siege of
Masada
in 73 AD and the Second Siege of
Jerusalem.
In 115, revolt broke out again in the province, leading to the
second Jewish-Roman war known as the
Kitos
War, and again in 132 in what is known as
Bar Kokhba's revolt. Both were brutally
crushed.
Struggle with Parthia (161–217)
By the second century AD the territories of Persia were controlled
by the Arsacid dynasty and known as the
Parthian Empire. Due in large part to their
employment of powerful heavy cavalry and mobile horse-archers,
Parthia was the most formidable enemy of the Roman Empire in the
east. As early as 53 BC, the Roman general Crassus had invaded
Parthia, but he was killed and his army was defeated at the
Battle of Carrhae. In the years
following Carrhae, the Romans were divided in civil war and hence
unable to campaign against Parthia. Trajan also campaigned against
the Parthians and briefly captured their capital, putting a puppet
ruler on the throne, but rebellions with the province and the
Jewish revolts in Judea made it difficult to maintain the captured
province and the territories were abandoned.
A revitalised Parthian Empire renewed its assault in 161, defeating
two Roman armies and invading Armenia and Syria. Emperor
Lucius Verus and general
Gaius Avidius Cassius were sent in 162
to counter the resurgent Parthia. In this war, the Parthian city of
Seleucia on the Tigris was destroyed and the palace at the capital
Ctesiphon was burned to the ground by
Avidius Cassius in 164. The Parthians made
peace but were forced to cede western Mesopotamia to the
Romans.
In 197, Emperor
Septimius Severus
waged a brief and successful war against the Parthian Empire in
retaliation for the support given to rival for the imperial throne
Pescennius Niger. The Parthian
capital Ctesiphon was sacked by the Roman army, and the northern
half of Mesopotamia was restored to Rome.
Emperor
Caracalla, the son of Severus,
marched on Parthia in 217 from Edessa to begin a war against them,
but he was assassinated while on the march. In 224, the Parthian
Empire was crushed not by the Romans but by the rebellious Persian
vassal king Ardashir, who revolted, leading to the establishment of
Sassanid Empire of Persia, which
replaced Parthia as Rome's major rival in the East.
Throughout the Parthian wars, tribal groups along the Rhine and
Danube took advantage of Rome's preoccupation with the eastern
frontier (and the plague that the Romans suffered from after
bringing it back form the east) and launched a series of raids and
incursions into Rome's territories, including the
Marcomannic Wars.
Late (180 AD – 476 AD)
Migration period (163–378)

Area settled by the Alamanni, and
sites of Roman-Alamannic battles, 3rd to 6th century
After Varus' defeat in Germania in the first century, Rome had
adopted a largely defensive strategy along the border with
Germania, constructing a line of defences known as
limes along the Rhine. Although the exact
historicity is unclear, since the Romans often assigned one name to
several distinct tribal groups, or conversely applied several names
to a single group at different times, some mix of Germanic peoples,
Celts, and tribes of mixed Celto-Germanic ethnicity were settled in
the lands of Germania from the first century onwards. The
Cherusci,
Bructeri,
Tencteri,
Usipi,
Marsi, and
Chatti of
Varus' time had by the third century either evolved into or been
displaced by a confederacy or alliance of Germanic tribes
collectively known as the
Alamanni, first
mentioned by Cassius Dio describing the campaign of Caracalla in
213.
In around 166 AD, several Germanic tribes pushed across the Danube,
striking as far as Italy itself in the
Siege of Aquileia in 166 AD, and the
heartland of Greece in the
Sack of
Eleusis.
Although the essential problem of large tribal groups on the
frontier remained much the same as the situation Rome faced in
earlier centuries, the third century saw a marked increase in the
overall threat, although there is disagreement over whether
external pressure increased, or Rome's ability to meet it declined.
The
Carpi and
Sarmatians whom Rome had held at bay were
replaced by the
Goths and likewise the
Quadi and
Marcomanni
that Rome had defeated were replaced by the greater confederation
of the
Alamanni.
The
assembled warbands of the Alamanni frequently crossed the
limes, attacking Germania Superior such that they were
almost continually engaged in conflicts with the Roman Empire,
whilst Goths attacked across the Danube in battles such as the
Battle of Beroa and Battle of Philippopolis in 250 and
the Battle of
Abrittus
in 251, and both Goths and Heruli ravaged the Aegean and, later, Greece, Thrace
and Macedonia. However, their first major assault deep into
Roman territory came in 268. In that year the Romans were forced to
denude much of their German frontier of troops in response to a
massive invasion by another new Germanic tribal confederacy, the
Goths, from the east. The pressure of tribal
groups pushing into the Empire was the end result of a chain of
migrations with its roots far to the east:
Huns
from the Russian steppe attacked the
Goths,
who in turn attacked the
Dacians,
Alans and
Sarmatians at or
inside Rome's borders. The Goths first appeared in history as a
distinct people in this invasion of 268 when they swarmed over the
Balkan peninsula and over-ran the Roman provinces of Pannonia and
Illyricum and even threatened Italia itself.
The Alamanni seized the opportunity to launch a major invasion of
Gaul and northern Italy.
However, the Visigoths were defeated in
battle that summer near the modern Italian-Slovenian border and
then routed in the Battle of Naissus
that September by Gallienus, Claudius and
Aurelian, who then turned and defeated the
Alemanni at the Battle of Lake
Benacus. Claudius' successor
Aurelian defeated the Goths twice more in the
Battle of Fanum Fortunae
and the
Battle of Ticinum. The
Goths remained a major threat to the Empire but directed their
attacks away from Italy itself for several years after their
defeat. By 284 AD, Gothic troops were serving on behalf of the
Roman military as federated troops.
The Alamanni on the other hand resumed their drive towards Italy
almost immediately. They defeated
Aurelian
at the
Battle of Placentia in
271 but were beaten back for a short time after they lost the
battles of
Fano and
Pavia later that year. They were
beaten again in 298 at the battles of
Lingones and
Vindonissa but fifty years later they
were resurgent again, making incursions in 356 at the
Battle of Reims, in 357 at the
Battle of Strasbourg, in 367 at
the
Battle of Solicinium and in
378 at
Battle of
Argentovaria.
In the same year the Goths inflicted a crushing defeat on the Eastern
Empire at the Battle of Adrianople
, in which the Eastern Emperor Valens was massacred along with tens of thousands of
Roman troops.
At the
same time, Franks raided through the North
Sea and the English
Channel
, Vandals pressed across the
Rhine, Iuthungi against the Danube,
Iazyges, Carpi and
Taifali harassed Dacia, and Gepids joined the Goths and Heruli in attacks round
the Black Sea. At around the same time, lesser-known tribes
such as the
Bavares,
Baquates and
Quinquegentanei raided Africa.
At the start of the fifth century AD, the pressure on Rome's
western borders was growing intense. However, it was not only the
western borders that were under threat: Rome was also under threat
both internally and on its eastern borders.
Usurpers (193–394)
A military that was often willing to support its commander over its
emperor meant that commanders could establish sole control of the
army they were responsible for and usurp the imperial throne. The
so-called
Crisis of the
Third Century describes the turmoil of murder, usurpation and
in-fighting that is traditionally seen as developing with the
murder of the Emperor
Alexander
Severus in 235. However,
Cassius Dio
marks the wider imperial decline as beginning in 180 AD with
ascension of
Commodus to the throne, a
judgement with which
Gibbon concurred,
and
Matyszak states that
"the
rot... had become established long before" even that.
Though the crisis of the third century was not the absolute
beginning of Rome's decline, nevertheless it did mark a severe
strain on the empire as Romans waged war on one another as they had
not done since the final days of the Republic. Within the space of
a single century, twenty-seven military officers claimed themselves
emperors and reigned over parts of the empire for months or days,
all but two meeting with a violent end. The time was characterised
by a Roman army that was as likely to be attacking itself as an
outside invader, reaching a low point around 258 AD. Ironically,
while it was these usurpations that led to the break up of the
Empire during the crisis, it was the strength of several frontier
generals that helped reunify the empire through force of
arms.
The situation was complex, often with 3 or more usurpers in
existence at once.
Septimius
Severus and
Pescennius Niger,
both rebel generals promoted as emperors by the troops they
commanded, clashed for the first time in 193 AD at the
Battle of Cyzicus, in which Niger
was defeated.
However, it took two further defeats at the
Battle of
Nicaea
later that year and the Battle of
Issus
the following year, for Niger to be
definitively defeated. Almost as soon as Niger's hopes of
the imperial crown had been laid to rest, Severus was forced to
deal with another rival for the throne in the person of
Clodius Albinus, who had originally been
allied to Severus. Albinus was proclaimed emperor by his troops in
Britain and, crossing over to Gaul, defeated Severus' general
Virius Lupus in battle, before being in
turn defeated and killed himself in the
Battle of Lugdunum by Severus
himself.
After this turmoil, Severus faced no more internal threats for the
rest of his reign, and the reign of his successor
Caracalla passed uninterrupted for a while until
he was murdered by
Macrinus, who proclaimed
himsef emperor in his place. Despite Macrinus having his position
ratified by the Roman senate, the troops of
Varius Avitus declared him to be emperor instead,
and the two met in battle at the
Battle of Antioch in 218 AD, in
which Macrinus was defeated. However, Avitus himself – taking the
imperial name Elagabalus – was murdered shortly afterwards and
Alexander Severus was proclaimed
emperor by both the Praetorian Guard and the senate who, after a
short reign, was murdered in turn. His murderers were working on
behalf of the army who were unhappy with their lot under his rule
and who raised in his place
Maximinus
Thrax. However, just as he had been raised by the army,
Maximinus was also brought down by them and despite winning the
Battle of Carthage against
the senate's newly-proclaimed
Gordian II,
he was murdered when it appeared to his forces as though he would
not be able to best the next senatorial candidate for the throne,
Gordian III.
Gordian III's fate is not certain, although he may have been
murdered by his own successor,
Philip
the Arab, who ruled for only a few years before the army again
raised a general to proclaimed emperor, this time
Decius, who defeated Philip in the
Battle of Verona to seize the throne.
Several succeeding generals avoided battling usurpers for the
throne chiefly by virtue of being murdered by their own troops
before battle could commence, which at least relieved the empire
momentarily of manpower losses to internal strife. The lone
exception to this rule was
Gallienus,
emperor from 260 AD to 268 AD, who saw a
remarkable array of usurpers, most of
whom he defeated in pitched battle. The army was therefore mostly
spared further infighting until around 273 AD, when Aurelian
defeated the Gallic usurper
Tetricus in
the
Battle of Chalons. The
next decade saw a barely credible number of usurpers, sometimes 3
at the same time, all vying for the imperial throne. Most of the
battles are not recorded, primarily due to the turmoil of the time,
until
Diocletian, a usurper himself,
defeated
Carinus at the
Battle of the Margus to become
emperor.
Some small measure of stability again returned at this point, with
the empire split into a Tetrarchy of two greater and two lesser
emperors, a system that staved off civil wars for a short time
until 312 AD. In that year, relations between the tetrarchy
collapsed for good and
Constantine I,
Licinius,
Maxentius and
Maximinus
jostled for control of the empire. In the
Battle of Turin Constantine defeated
Maxentius, and in the
Battle of
Tzirallum Licinius defeated
Maximinus.
From 314 AD onwards, Constantine defeated
Licinius in the Battle of Cibalae,
then the Battle of
Mardia
, and then again at the Battle of Adrianople, the
Battle of the Hellespont
and the Battle of
Chrysopolis.
Constantine then turned to Maxentius,
beating him in the Battle of
Verona and the Battle of Milvian Bridge
in the same year. Constantine's son
Constantius II inherited his father's
rule and later defeated the usurper
Magnentius in first the
Battle of Mursa Major and then the
Battle of Mons
Seleucus.
Successive emperors Valens and Theodosius I
also defeated usurpers in, respectively, the Battle of Thyatira, and the battles of
the Save and the
Frigidus
.
Struggle with the Sassanid Empire (230–363)
After overthrowing the Parthian confederacy, the
Sassanid Empire that arose from its remains
pursued a more aggressive expansionist policy than their
predecessors and continued to make war against Rome.
In 230 AD, the first
Sassanid emperor attacked Roman territory first in Armenia
and then in Mesopotamia
but Roman losses were largely restored by Severus within a few years. In 243,
Emperor
Gordian III's army retook the
Roman cities of Hatra, Nisibis and Carrhae from the Sassanids after
defeating the Sassanids at the
Battle
of Resaena but what happened next is unclear: Persian sources
claim that Gordian was defeated and killed in the
Battle of Misikhe but Roman sources
mention this battle only as an insignificant setback and suggest
that Gordian died elsewhere.
Certainly, the Sassanids had not been cowed by the previous battles
with Rome and in 253 the Sassanids under
Shapur
I penetrated deeply into Roman territory several times,
defeating a Roman force at the
Battle of Barbalissos and conquering
and plundering
Antiochia in 252 following
the
Siege of Antiochia. The
Romans recovered Antioch by 253 AD, and Emperor Valerian gathered
an army and marched eastward to the Sassanid borders. In 260 at the
Battle of Edessa the Sassanids
defeated the Roman army and captured the Roman Emperor
Valerian.
There was a lasting peace between Rome and the Sassanid Empire
between 297 and 337 following a treaty between
Narseh and Emperor
Diocletian. However, just before the death of
Constantine I in 337,
Shapur II broke the peace and began a twenty-six
year conflict, attempting with little success to conquer Roman
fortresses in the region.
After early Sassanid successes including the
Battle of
Amida
in 359 AD and the Siege of Pirisabora in 363 AD, Emperor
Julian met Shapur in 363 in the
Battle of
Ctesiphon
outside the walls of the Persian capital.
The Romans were victorious but were unable to take the city, and
were forced to retreat due to their vulnerable position in the
middle of hostile territory. Julian was killed in the
Battle of Samarra during the retreat,
possibly by one of his own men.
There were several future wars, although all brief and small-scale,
since both the Romans and the Sassanids were forced to deal with
threats from other directions during the fifth century. A war
against
Bahram V in 420 over the
persecution of the Christians in Persia led to a brief war that was
soon concluded by treaty and in 441 a war with
Yazdegerd II was again swiftly concluded by
treaty after both parties battled threats elsewhere.
Collapse of the Western Empire (402–476)

Europe in 476, from
Muir's
Historical Atlas (1911)
Many theories have been advanced in explanation of the
decline of the Roman Empire, and
many dates given for its fall, from the onset of its decline in the
third century to the fall of Constantinople in 1453. Militarily,
however, the Empire finally fell after first being overrun by
various non-Roman peoples and then having its heart in Italy seized
by Germanic troops in a revolt. The historicity and exact dates are
uncertain, and some historians do not consider that the Empire fell
at this point.
The Empire became gradually less Romanised and increasingly
Germanic in nature: although the Empire buckled under Visigothic
assault, the overthrow of the last Emperor
Romulus Augustus was carried out by
federated Germanic troops from within the Roman army rather than by
foreign troops. In this sense had Odoacer not renounced the title
of Emperor and named himself "King of Italy" instead, the Empire
might have continued in name. Its identity, however, was no longer
Roman – it was increasingly populated and governed by Germanic
peoples long before 476. The Roman people were by the fifth century
"
bereft of their military ethos" and the Roman army itself
a mere supplement to federated troops of Goths, Huns, Franks and
others fighting on their behalf.
Rome's last gasp began when the Visigoths revolted around 395 AD.
Led by
Alaric I, they attempted to seize
Constantinople, but were rebuffed and instead plundered much of
Thrace in northern Greece. In 402 AD they besieged Mediolanum, the
capital of Roman Emperor
Honorius, defended by Roman Gothic
troops. The arrival of the Roman
Stilicho
and his army forced Alaric to relieve the siege and move towards
Hasta (modern Asti) in western Italy, where Stilicho attacked it at
the
Battle of Pollentia,
capturing Alaric's camp. Stilicho offered to return the prisoners
in exchange for the Visigoths returning to Illyricum but upon
arriving at Verona, Alaric halted his retreat. Stilicho again
attacked at the
Battle of Verona
and again defeated Alaric, forcing him to withdraw from
Italy.
In 405 AD, the Ostrogoths invaded Italy itself, but were defeated.
However, in 406 AD an unprecedented number of tribes took advantage
of the freezing of the Rhine to cross
en masse: Vandals,
Suevi, Alans and Burgundians swept across the river and met little
resistance in the
Sack of
Moguntiacum and the
Sack of
Treviri, completely over-running Gaul. Despite this grave
danger, or perhaps because of it, the Roman army continued to be
wracked by usurpation, in one of which Stilicho, Rome's foremost
defender of the period, was put to death.
It is in this climate that, despite his earlier setback, Alaric
returned again in 410 and managed to
sack Rome.
The Roman capital had
by this time moved to the Italian city of Ravenna
, but some historians view 410 as an alternative
date for the true fall of the Roman Empire. Without
possession of Rome or many of its former provinces, and
increasingly Germanic in nature, the Roman Empire after 410 had
little in common with the earlier Empire. By 410 AD, Britain had
been mostly denuded of Roman troops, and by 425 AD was no longer
part of the Empire, and much of western Europe was beset "
by
all kinds of calamities and disasters", coming under barbarian
kingdoms ruled by
Vandals,
Suebians,
Visigoths and
Burgundians.
| "The fighting became hand-to-hand,
fierce, savage, confused and without the slightest respite....
Blood from the bodies of the slain turned a small brook which
flowed through the plain into a torrent. Those made desperately
thirsty by their injuries drank water so augmented with blood that
in their misery it seemed as though they were forced to drink the
very blood which had poured from their wounds" |
| Jordanes
on the Battle of the
Catalaunian Plains |
The remainder of Rome's territory, if not its nature, was defended
for several decades following 410 largely by
Flavius Aëtius, who managed to play off
each of Rome's barbarian invaders against one another. In 436 he
led a Hunnic army against the Visigoths at the
Battle of Arles, and again in 436 at the
Battle of Narbonne.
In 451 he
led a combined army, including his former enemy the Visigoths,
against the Huns at the Battle of the Catalaunian
Plains, beating them so soundly that although they later sacked
Concordia, Altinum
, Mediolanum, Ticinum, and Patavium
, they never again directly threatened Rome.
Despite being the only clear champion of the Empire at this point
Aëtius was slain by the Emperor
Valentinian III's own hand, leading
Sidonius Apollinaris to observe, "
I
am ignorant, sir, of your motives or provocations; I only know that
you have acted like a man who has cut off his right hand with his
left".
Carthage, the second largest city in the empire, was lost along
with much of North Africa in 439 AD to the Vandals, and the fate of
Rome seemed sealed. By 476, what remained of the Empire was
completely in the hands of federated Germanic troops and when they
revolted led by
Odoacer and deposed Emperor
Romulus Augustus there was nobody
to stop them. Odoacer happened to hold the part of the Empire
around Italy and Rome but other parts of the Empire were ruled by
Visigoths, Ostrogoths, Franks, Alans and others. The Empire in the
West had fallen, and its remnant in Italy was no longer Roman in
nature. The
Byzantine Empire and
the Goths continued to fight over Rome and the surrounding area for
many years, though by this point Rome's importance was negligible.
Following years of grinding war the city was by 540 AD
near-abandoned and desolate with much of its environment turned
into an unhealthy marsh, an inglorious end for a city that once
ruled much of the known world.
At this point in time, the Eastern Roman Empire stands alone, and
events in Roman military history fall under the category of
Byzantine military history.
Citations
- Trigger, Understanding Early Civilisations, p.
240
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
38
- Goldsmith, An Estimate of the Size and Structure of the
National Product of the Early Roman Empire, p. 263
- Johnson, The Dream of Rome, p. 8
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 15
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 31
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 96
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, first page of Chapter III.
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 23
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. IX, para. 3
- Ronald Syme,
following G. M.
Hirst, has argued for 64 BC–AD
12. For a presentation on the dates see Livy.
- Florus, Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch. 1
- Florus, Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch. 2
- Cassius Dio, The Roman History, Vol. 1, VII, 6
- Florus, Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch. 3
- Florus, Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch. 4
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. V, para. 1
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 21
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 13
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 3
- Cassius Dio, The Roman History, Vol. 1, VII, 9;
Livy, Ab urbe condita,
1:10-13
- Florus, Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch. 5
- Florus, Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch. 6
- Florus, Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch. 7
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 56
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 61
- Cassius Dio, The Roman History, Vol. 1, VII, 10
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 66
- Florus, Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch. 9
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 31
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. VI, para. 1
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 33
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 32
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 77
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, xxxi
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 80
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch.
11
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 38
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 37
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 89
- Cassius Dio, The Roman History, Vol. 1, VII, 17
- Cassius Dio, The Roman History, Vol. 1, VII, 16
- The Enemies of Rome, p. 13
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 39
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 96
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 41
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch.
12
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 42
- Cassius Dio, The Roman History, Vol. 1, VII, 20
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. II
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 44
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman History, Book 1, ch.
13
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. IX, para. 2
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 329
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 283
- Livy, The Rise of Rome, p. 330
- Appian, History of Rome, The Gallic Wars, §1
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. IX, para. 4
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. IX, para. 23
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 1, ch.
16
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 282
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. IX, para. 8
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 48
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. IX, para. 13
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 49
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. IX, para. 14
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 52
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 290
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 53
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 77
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 14
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 78
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 294
- Cantor, Antiquity, p. 151
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. X, para. 6
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 1, ch.
18
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 304
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 305
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 79
- Cassius Dio, The Roman history, Vol. 1, VIII, 3
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. X, para. 11
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 306
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 307
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. XI, para. 1
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 80
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 16
- Sallust, The Jugurthine War, XIX
- Cantor, Antiquity, p. 152
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 13
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p.68
- Cassius Dio, The Roman History, Vol. 1, VIII, 8
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. XII, para. 14
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 309
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 113
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 84
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 86
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 87
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 88
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 310
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 90
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 128
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 2, ch.
3
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 2, ch.
4
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 29
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 25
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. XIII, para. 15
- Cantor, Antiquity, p. 153
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 27
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 30
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 29
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 31
- Polybius, The Histories, 243
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 34
- Polybius, The Histories, 263
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 36
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 38
- Liddell Hart, Scipio Africanus, p. xiii
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 40
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 41
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. XV, para. 24
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 338
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 339
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 2, ch.
15
- Cantor, Antiquity, p. 154
- Goldsworthy, The Punic Wars, p. 12
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 2, ch.
17
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 122
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. XX, para. 2
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 54
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 56
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 57
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. XX, para. 4
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 58
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 61
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 123
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
8
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 47
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 115
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 116
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 48
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 71
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 49
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 72
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 73
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 117
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 325
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome. p. 51
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 2, ch.
9
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 2, ch.
10
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 2, ch.
13
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 2, ch.
16
- Pennell, Ancient Rome, Ch. XVII, para. 1
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 119
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 326
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 120
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 75
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 92
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 328
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 53
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
9
- Sallust, The Jugurthine War, V
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 29
- Sallust, The Jugurthine War, XII
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 64
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 65
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 3, ch.
1
- Sallust, The Jugurthine War, XIII
- Sallust, The Jugurthine War, XVIII
- Sallust, The Jugurthine War, LII
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 69
- Sallust, The Jugurthine War, LXXVI
- Sallust, The Jugurthine War, XCIV
- Sallust, The Jugurthine War, CI
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 153
- Sallust, The Jugurthine War, CXIII
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 71
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 152
- Appian, History of Rome, §6
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 75
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 6
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 3, ch.
3
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 39
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 77
- Appian, Civil Wars, 1, 117
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 43
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 156
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 351
- Cantor, Antiquity, p. 167
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 30
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 161
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 3, ch.
5
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 76
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 158
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 363
- Plutarch, Lives, Pompey
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 165
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 3, ch.
6
- Holland, Rubicon, p. 170
- Cicero, Pro Lege Manilia, 12 or De Imperio Cn. Pompei
(in favour of the Manilian Law on the command of Pompey), 66
BC.
- Plutarch, Lives, Caesar
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 58
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 187
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 117
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 191
- Florus, The Epitome of Roman history, Book 3,
ch.10
- Cantor, Antiquity, p. 162
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 48
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 116
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 59
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 201
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 60
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 204
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 78
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 62
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 212
- Cantor, Antiquity, p. 168
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 133
- Plutarch, Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans, p.
266
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 213
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 79
- Cantor, Antiquity, p. 169
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 271
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 214
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 215
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 398
- Holland, Rubicon, p. 299
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 216
- Holland, Rubicon, p. 298
- Holland, Rubicon, p. 303
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 402
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 217
- Julius Caesar, The Civil War, 81–92
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 218
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 220
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 227
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 403
- Holland, Rubicon, p. 312
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 404
- Plutarch, Life of Crassus, XXIII–V
- Cantor, Antiquity, p. 170
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 237
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
7
- Cassius Dio, The Roman History: The Reign of Augustus,
p. 61
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 244
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
37
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 208
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 245
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 159
- Clunn, In Quest of the Lost Legions, p. xv
- Tacitus, The Annals, Book 1, ch, 56
- Tacitus, The Annals, Book 1, ch. 60
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 143–144
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 248
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 260
- Churchill, A History of the English Speaking Peoples,
p. 1
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 379
- Churchill, A History of the English Speaking Peoples,
p. 4
- Churchill, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples,
p. 5
- Tacitus, Annals 14.29–39, Agricola 14–16
- Dio Cassius, Roman History, 62.1–12
- Churchill, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples,
p. 6
- Churchill, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples,
p. 7
- Welch, Britannia: The Roman Conquest & Occupation of
Britain, 1963, p. 107
- Tacitus, Annals, 14.37
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 189
- Fraser, The Roman Conquest Of Scotland: The Battle Of Mons
Graupius AD 84
- Churchill, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples,
p. 9
- Churchill, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples,
p. 10
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 269
- Clunn, In Quest of the Lost Legions, p. 303
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 322
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 213
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 215
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 216
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
53
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 217
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 219
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
54
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 329
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 222
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 223
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
39
- Tacitus, The Annals, Book 2, ch, 3
- Tacitus, The Histories, Book 1, ch. 41
- Plutarch, Lives, Galba
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
51
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 542
- Tacitus, The Histories, Book 1, ch. 57
- Plutarch, Lives, Otho
- Tacitus, The Histories, Book 1, ch. 14–15
- Tacitus, The Histories, Book 1, ch. 22
- Tacitus, The Histories, Book 1, ch, 26
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
52
- Tacitus, The Histories, Book 1, ch. 44
- Tacitus, The Histories, Book 1, ch. 49
- Tactitus, The Histories, Book 3, ch. 18
- Tactitus, The Histories, Book 3, ch. 25
- Tactitus, The Histories, Book 3, ch. 31
- Lane Fox, The Classical World, p. 543
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 294
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 192
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 194
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 295
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 146
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
3
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 292
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 273
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 279
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
128
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
146
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 282
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
150
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
147
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths, 103
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths, 108
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
624
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 270
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 322
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths, 121
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 196
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 285
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths, 110
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 344
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 345
- Ammianus Marcellinus, Historiae, book 31.
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths,
138.
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
534
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 284
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
149
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 280
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 226
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
113
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 227
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
133
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
129
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
130
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
131
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
135
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 283
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 234
- Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, p.
151
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 235
- Shapur, Deeds of the God-Emperor Shapur
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 236
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 237
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 358
- Procopius, History of the Wars, Book 1, Pt 1, Ch.
2
- Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 361
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 231
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 285
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths, 147
- Procopius, History of the Wars, Book 3, Pt 1, Ch.
2
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
551
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 260
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
563
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths, 154
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
565
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 263
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 324
- Grant, The History of Rome, p. 327
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths, 156
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 267
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
589
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
587
- Wood, In Search of the First Civilizations, p.
177
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
560
- Churchill, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples,
p. 16
- Churchill, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples,
p. 17
- Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens, p. 187
- Jordanes, History of the Goths, 207
- Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome, p. 276
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
489
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths, 197
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths, 222
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, ch.
35
- Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, p.
618
- Procopius, History of the Wars, Book 3, Pt 1, Ch.
4
- Jordanes, The Origins and Deeds of the Goths, 243
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