| Athena Review Vol.1,
no.1
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The Landings of Caesar in Britain, 55 and 54 BC | | | | |
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Deal Beach in Kent.
This
shoreline near Walmer Castle is probably in the area where Julius
Caesar and his troops landed during the two Roman excursions to Britain
of 55 and 54 BC. In the distance, the cliffs of Dover may be seen to
the south. The beach is made up of small stones or shingles.
. Fig.1: Area of Deal Beach where Caesar's ships probably landed (photo: Athena Review).
Caesar, the historian.
In 58 BC, Julius Caesar
became governor and military commander of the Roman province of Gaul,
which included modern France, Belgium, and portions of Switzerland,
Holland, and Germany west of the Rhine. For the next eight years,
Caesar led military campaigns involving both the Roman legions and
tribes in Gaul who were often competing among themselves. The story has
been preserved in Caesar's account, Commentaries on the Gallic Wars,
originally published in 50 BC.
In the first century BC, Britain was settled by Iron Age societies, many with long-term roots in Britain,
and others closely tied to tribes of northern France (fig.2). Commerce
was flourishing, populations were relatively large, and at least seven
different British tribes had their own coinages. Tribes in southwest
Britain and Wales controlled considerable mineral wealth in tin
deposits and copper mines.
For this period, Caesar is the only
extant source providing first-hand descriptions of Britain. His
observations, while confined to the southeast areas of Kent and the
lower Thames, are thus essential to understanding those regions. While
no doubt self-serving in a political sense when written, Caesar's
account is nevertheless regarded as basically accurate and historically
reliable both by earlier scholars such as C. Rice Holmes (1907), and by
more recent authorities including Sheppard Frere (1987). Both the 55 and 54 BC Roman expeditions left from Boulogne
(Portus Itius), and landed at Deal, a few miles northeast of Dover. In
55 BC, the Roman cavalry ships were forced back to Gaul by a storm, and
Caesar's troops were confined to the shore. In 54 BC, a larger Roman
expedition landed at Deal and penetrated inland along the River Thames. Fig.2: Map of the crossings of Caesar over the English Channel.
The first Roman landing in Britain (55 BC).
Caesar
probably planned an expedition to Britain in 56 BC, a year when the
Armorican tribes in the coast of Britanny revolted against the Romans
with aid from the tribes of southern Britain. The operation was further
delayed by battles with the Morini and Menapi, Belgic tribes who
controlled the Straits of Dover.
Finally, on August 26, 55 BC,
two Roman Legions (about 10,000 soldiers) under Caesar's personal
command crossed the channel in a group of transport ships leaving from
Portus Itius (today's Boulogne). By the next morning (August 27), as
Caesar reports, the Roman
ships were just off the chalky cliffs of Dover, whose upper banks were
lined with British warriors prepared to do battle. The Romans therefore
sailed several miles further northeast up the coastline and landed on
the flat, pebbly shore around Deal.
The Britons met the
legionaries at the beach with a large force, including warriors in
horse-drawn chariots, an antiquated fighting method not used by the
Roman military. After an initial skirmish, the British war leaders sought a truce, and handed over hostages.
Four
days later, however, when Roman ships with 500 cavalry soldiers and
horses also tried to make the channel crossing, they were driven back
to France by bad weather. The same storm seriously damaged many of the
Roman ships on the beach at Deal. This quirk of fate resulted in
Caesar's initial landing force having no cavalry, which seriously
restricted the mobility of the 55 BC operations. It was also disastrous
for the planned reconnaissance since the legionary soldiers were forced
to repair the ships and were vulnerable to the British forces who began
new attacks.
Thus immobilized, the Roman legions had to survive
in a coastal zone which they found both politically hostile, and
naturally fertile. The need to procure food locally resulted in
scouting and foraging missions into the adjacent countryside. Caesar
reports abundant grain crops along a heavily populated coastline; and
frequent encounters with British warriors in chariots. After repairing
most of the ships, Caesar ordered a return to Gaul, thus curtailing the
reconnaissance of 55 BC.
The second Roman expedition to Britain (54 BC).
The
next year saw the Romans organize a much larger expedition to Britain,
with a total of 800 ships used to transport five legions and 2000
cavalry troops, plus horses and a large baggage train. They sailed from
Boulogne at night on July 6, and landed unopposed the next day on the
beach between Deal and Sandwich.
Upon seeing the large size of
the Roman force, the Britons retreated inland to higher ground. Caesar
immediately marched inland with most of his troops to the Stour River,
about 12 miles from the beach landing camp. At daybreak on the 8th of
July, 54 BC, the Romans encountered British forces at a ford on the
Stour (later the town of Canterbury). The Romans easily dispersed the
Britons, who retreated to a hill fort or stronghold
(oppidum), which from Caesar's description, is probably the hill fort
at Bigbury, a site with earthwork and ditch enclosures mile and a half
from the river ford. The Seventh Roman legion attacked the hillfort but
were blocked out by trees piled in the entrance by the Britons. To
advance, the Roman troops filled in the outer ditch with earth and
brush, making a ramp across it, and then capturing the fort.
Bad
news came for the Romans, however, shortly thereafter from the beach
camp at Deal. An overnight storm had driven most of the Roman ships on
shore. The main body of troops returned to the beach, to find at least
forty boats completely wrecked. Security precautions required Caesar's
army to spend ten long daysbuilding a land fort
within which the entire fleet of 760 ships was transported. This, the
second catastrophe for Roman ships in as many years caused by storms on
the open beach, could have been averted had Caesar sailed only a few
miles further up the coast to the protected harbor at Richborough
(where the Romans landed when they next invaded Britain, in 43 AD).
Fig.3: Tribes in Northern Gaul during Caesar's excursions to Britain, 55-54 BC.
During
this ten day hiatus, a large British force was briefly united under a
single commander, Cassivellaunus, who ruled the Catuvellauni tribe on
the north side of the River Thames. The army of Cassivellaunus met the
Romans again at the Stour crossing. The Britons used
chariot warfare, with two horses pulling a driver and warrior, the
latter hurling javelins, then dismounting at close quarters to fight
infantry-style. After a hard-fought battle, the Romans eventually drove
back the Britons, and then pursued Cassivellaunus toward the Thames.
In
the wooded terrain north of the River Thames, Cassivellaunus adopted
scorched-earth, guerrilla-warfare methods, destroying local food
sources and using chariots to harrass the Roman legions. But
neighboring tribes who resented the domination by Cassivellaunus,
including the Trinovantes and their allies the Cenimagni, Segontiaci,
Ancalites, Bibroci and Cassi (the latter five tribes, known to us only
through Caesar's account) then went over to the Romans.
Caesar
thus learned from native informants the location of the secret
stronghold of Cassivellaunus, probably the hill fort at Wheathampstead,
located on the west bank of the River Lea, near St. Albans. Even as the
Roman army under Caesar were massing outside his fort's gates, however,
Cassivellaunus made the bold move of ordering his allies in Kent to
attack the Roman beach camp at Deal. This attack failed, and
Cassivellaunus then gave up. Yet the terms of surrender he negotiated
with the Romans seem to have been moderate, as Caesar had learned of
mounting problems back in Gaul, and wanted to return there. The Roman
legions left Britain in early September, 54 BC. They were not to return
again for 97 years, when the Claudian invasion of AD 43 began the
active Roman conquest of Britain. Caesar's two expeditions, meanwhile,
provided basic information on the terrain, inhabitants, and political,
economic and military customs of Britain, our only direct historical
record for that time period.
Sources:
* Caesar, Julius. (orig. 50 BC) Commentaries on the Gallic Wars. (transl. H.J. Edwards). Loeb Classical Library. * Frere, Sheppard. 1987. Britannia: A History of Roman Britain (3rd edition). London. Routledge & Kegan Paul. * Holmes, T. Rice. 1907. Ancient Britain and the Invasions of Julius Caesar. Oxford. Clarendon Press.
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