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Battle of Alesia
- What was the Battle of Alesia?
- Who were the main leaders in the Battle of Alesia?
- Where and when did the battle take place?
- Why did the Romans and Gauls fight at Alesia?
- How did Julius Caesar and his army win the battle?
- What happened to Gaul after the Battle of Alesia?
Battle of Alesia, (52bce), Roman military blockade ofAlesia, a city in easternGaul, during theGallic Wars. Roman forces under the command ofJulius Caesar besieged Alesia, within which sheltered the Gallic generalVercingetorix and his massive host. Caesar directed his troops to erect a series ofextensivefortifications, including two walls encircling the city, to keep the defenders in and potential reinforcements out. Vercingetorix’s resistance and eventual surrender marked the final major military engagement of the Gallic Wars, securing Roman authority over Gaul in its entirety.
Context
Beginning in 58 bce, Julius Caesar waged two military campaigns and suppressed a widespread revolt in an attempt to conquer and pacify the tribes of Gaul. However, in the early months of 52bce, Vercingetorix of theArverni inspired a second insurrection and rallied together a large number of tribes. Several conflicts resulted in the Roman sacking ofAvaricum, a major Gallic city belonging to theBituriges. Caesar later attempted to take Gergovia, a city controlled by the Arverni, but his army was rebuffed. The Romans thus abandoned their assault and marched south towardCisalpine Gaul with their 10 remaininglegions, summoning 10,000auxiliaries from Germania to form an estimated total of 60,000 soldiers. During this time, representatives from all but three Gallic tribesconvened atBibracte and elected Vercingetorix as general of their unified forces. He levied troops from each of them and dispatched hiscavalry to attack Caesar’s column, but the Gauls were thoroughly routed. As a result, Vercingetorix retreated with some 80,000 soldiers to the fortified town of Alesia, which belonged to the Mandubii.
Siege and battle
Upon pursuing Vercingetorix’s army to the outskirts of Alesia, Caesar observed that the town was situated atop a hill with rivers on either side; the Gauls had dug trenches and erected a stone wall around the settlement. Caesar determined that Alesia could only be taken bysiege and ordered his men to encircle the perimeter of the town with a line of circumvallation spanning approximately 11 Roman miles (16.7 km) that included 23 redoubts manned by sentinels and night watches.

Vercingetorix had accumulated barely 30 days of rations, so under cover of night he sent the remainder of his cavalry through the incomplete Roman fortifications to levy a relief force from the rest of Gaul. After learning of this plan from captives, Caesar reinforced his fortifications with a wide range of obstacles and traps designed to slow any large or sudden advances. To repel an external army, he directed his troops to construct a line of contravallation that was 3 miles (4.6 km) from the first and 14 miles (21.3 km) in length. Once complete, these siege works would protect the Romans from Gallic defenders andreinforcements alike.
In the meantime, the Gallic cavalry that had departed from Alesia succeeded in their task, having amassed a host numbering nearly 250,000 men. The Gauls appointed four generals over this army: Commius of the Atrebates, Viridomarus and Eporedirix of theAedui, and Vercassivellaunus of the Arverni. This force thus set out to break the siege. But the Alesian defenders, having heard nothing from the relief force and growing anxious about their situation, expelled those unfit for battle from the town. The women and children of the Mandubii were sent to the Roman encampment to offer themselves for enslavement in exchange for food, but Caesar refused them.
When the Gallic host were in sight of Alesia, they set up camp a short distance from the outer wall and assumed an offensive position. Vercingetorix and his men could see them from their hilltop and prepared for a sally. The following day, both armies advanced on the Romans, but the legionaries and Germanauxiliaries fought from noon to sunset and drove them back. On the second day, the Gauls attempted another assault on the Roman encampment, but the external army fell upon the siege works and retreated after many casualties; having received notice of their retreat, Vercingetorix’s forces fell back to Alesia. On the third day, Gallic scouts reported the presence of a gap in the outer wall on account of a steep hill. Vercassivellaunus led 60,000 soldiers through that gap and overcame the Roman fortifications. At the same time, Vercingetorix’s soldiers attempted to force their way over the inner wall on all sides. Caesar directed reinforcements to these areas, but, upon realizing the precariousness of their situation, he personally led four cohorts and acontingent of cavalry tocircumvent the outer wall and attack Vercassivellaunus’s army from behind. The Gauls in this section were quickly routed and cut down by the Roman cavalry; Vercassivellaunus himself was taken alive. The defenders of the city saw this disaster from their perch and called their soldiers back from the field. Those Gauls who survived the slaughter at the outer wall returned to their camp, causing the rest of the Gallic host to flee. That night the Roman cavalry attacked their rear, killing or capturing the remaining warriors.
On the next day,envoys from Alesia informed Caesar that Vercingetorix had convened the Gallic leaders so that they could decide how to proceed, whether they wished to execute or surrender him. Caesar demanded that they lay down their arms. The chieftains met him at the front of his camp, surrendered their weapons, and delivered Vercingetorix unto him. Having captured Alesia, Caesar gave one captive to each of his surviving soldiers as a reward.

The fall of Alesia did not mark the end of the Gallic Wars, but it was their final major conflict. Roman forces continued to eliminate remaining insurgent pockets for the next two summers, thus securing the whole of Gaul for the republic. As leader of this revolt, Vercingetorix was sent to Rome in chains, and the Senate honoured Caesar with a 20-daysupplicatio for his successes in the field.




