Authors: Stephen Dando-Collins
Tags: #Historical
Crew—144 rowers; 10 to 15 sailors; and 40 marines.
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furlough fees In camp, one legionary in four could take leave by paying a set fee to his centurion. In a.d. 69 the state took over the responsibility for paying centurions these fees.
gemina legion “Twin” legion formed by merger of two existing legions.
GLADIUS
Roman legionary sword twenty inches long, double-edged, with a pointed end.
golden spear Military bravery award, inferior to Civic Crown and torque.
IMPERATOR
Title. Literally, chief or master. Highest honor for a general. Became reserved for emperors after their armies’ victories. The title “emperor” grew from
imperator
.
imperial Relating to the period of Roman history from 27 b.c. to the fall of the empire.
legion Regiment. Main operational unit of the Roman army. From
legio
(levy, or draft). Republican legion nominal strength, 6,000 men; imperial, 5,345
enlisted men, 72 officers. Ten cohorts, plus, in imperial times, own cavalry unit of 124 men. At the beginning of the first century there were 28 legions, numbered 1 to 28. By a.d. 100 there were 30 legions, but in the intervening period 5 had been wiped out, 11 abolished, and 18 new legions formed.
legionary Soldier of a legion. Mostly a draftee, always a Roman citizen. Most recruited outside Italy in imperial times. Republican recruits were aged seventeen to twenty and served sixteen years. Imperial recruits were twenty, and from late in the reign of Augustus served twenty years.
lictors Attendants of senior Roman officials, carrying their fasces.
lustration The
Lustratio exercitatio,
or Purification Exercise, a religious ceremony performed by legions in March. Standards were purified with perfumes and garlands prior to new campaigns.
maniple Company. Legion subunit, of 160 men in imperial times. Three to a cohort.
mantlet Wooden shed, on wheels, used in siege works.
marching camp Fortified camp built by legions at the end of a day’s march.
marine A soldier with the navy. Freedman. Served twenty-six years; paid less than an auxiliary.
mural crown Crown of gold awarded to the first Roman soldier over an enemy city wall.
onager The “wild ass,” a heavy
Ballista
invented by Greeks in the third century b.c.
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g l o s s a r y
OPTIO
Sergeant major. Deputy to centurion and decurion. Unit records and training officer. One to a century, four to legion cavalry units.
ORBIS
The Ring; the Roman legion’s circular formation of last resort.
palatium Residence and military headquarters of the emperor at Rome. The first Palatium complex was established by Augustus on the Palatine Hill, from which the name derived. All emperors’ headquarters were thereafter called the Palatium, no matter where they were located. It is from Palatium that the word
“palace” originated.
PALUDAMENTUM
General’s cloak. Scarlet in republican times. In imperial times, legion commanders wore a scarlet cloak; commanders in chief, a purple cloak.
praetor Senior magistrate and major general. Commanded legions and armies.
praetorian gate Gate of a legion camp facing the enemy.
praetorian guard Founded by the Republic to guard Rome. Imperial military police force. Only unit usually based in Italy south of the Po River. Recruited in Italy, better paid and with a shorter enlistment period than legionaries—sixteen years in imperial times. From a.d. 23 based at
castra praetoria
at Rome. Varied between seven and fourteen cohorts of a thousand men, plus Praetorian Cavalry, strength unknown. Accompanied the emperor when he left Rome and took part in military campaigns he personally led.
PRAETORIUM
Headquarters in a legion camp.
prefect Commander of auxiliary units, Praetorian Guard, and City Guard; a citizen of Equestrian status. Prefects also governed Egypt and, between a.d. 6 and 41, Judea.
procurator Roman official superior to prefect; deputy of a provincial governor.
QUADRIGA
Roman chariot drawn by four horses. Golden
quadriga
used in Triumphs.
quaestor “Investigator.” Lowest-ranking Roman magistrate. Responsible for treasury matters. Minimum age thirty from 82 b.c. Served consuls and provincial governors—chief tax collector and quartermaster; forty in Caesar’s time, reduced to twenty by Augustus.
scorpion
Scorpio,
quick-firing artillery piece using metal-tipped spears, or
“bolts.”
second-enlistment men Legionaries who voluntarily served another sixteen-or twenty-year enlistment with their legion when their first enlistment expired.
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senate Rome’s most powerful elected body. Members needed a net worth of one million sesterces and qualified for legion commands and consulships. Minimum age thirty in imperial times.
SIGNIFER
Literally a signaler, the standard-bearer of legion subunits.
TESSERA
Small wax sheet on which was inscribed the legion or army watchword for the day.
TESSERARIUS
Legion guard/orderly sergeant. Distributed the
tessera
to his men.
TESTUDO
The “tortoise.” Legionaries locked shields over their heads and at their sides.
third-enlistment men Legionaries voluntarily serving a third enlistment.
TIRO
A legion recruit.
TOGA VIRILIS
Toga worn by young Roman men after coming of age in their fifteenth year.
torque A neckchain of gold, one of the Roman military’s highest bravery awards.
tribunal Reviewing stand in a legion camp; built in front of tribunes’ quarters.
tribune Legion and Praetorian Guard officer. Six of equal rank in republican legions shared command. In imperial legion, a junior tribune,
tribunus angusticlavius,
was an officer cadet serving a mandatory six months; five to a legion. One senior tribune,
tribunus laticlavius,
was a full colonel and second-in-command of his legion. Praetorian tribune numbers are unknown. Tribunes of the Plebs were elected officials at Rome; their republican powers were absorbed by the emperor.
triumph Prestigious parade through Rome in a golden
quadriga
by a victorious general, followed by his soldiers, prisoners, and spoils. Officially granted by a vote of the Senate.
triumphal decorations Crimson cloak, crown of bay leaves, and laurel branch awarded senior generals celebrating a Triumph. Later given in lieu of a Triumph.
watch Time in Roman military camps was divided into watches of three hours, at the end of which sentries changed, on a trumpet call. The officer of the watch was a tribune.
watchword Password in a Roman military camp. Changed daily, at sunset.
winter camp Permanent base where a legion usually spent October to March.
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:
Actium, Battle of, 185, 188–92, 198
Cleopatra liason, 188–89, 190–94
Acts of the Apostles, 298
grandson Germanicus, 199, 200
Adrianople, Battle of, 268
personality of, 87, 150
Aedui tribe, 13, 14, 15, 35, 42–43, 56
post-Pharsalus return to Rome, 131,
Aelia Capitolina, 266, 267
135, 136, 137, 145
Aemilius, Lucius, 15
in Second Triumvirate, 181–88
Afranius, Lucius, 79–86, 87, 153–54, 159,
suicide of, 194
163
tactical deficits, 100, 106, 185, 189
escape from Pharsalus, 128, 133
Appian, 294
escape from Spain, 103, 115
Ariovistus, king of the Suebi, 21–23
execution of, 164
Armenia, 107, 200, 201, 205, 207–10,
African War, The,
152, 154, 156, 159, 160
225, 226, 234, 279
Agricola, Julius, 260
Arminius (Hermann), 199, 200, 270
Agrippa, Marcus, 190, 191–92, 200, 286
Artabanus, king of Parthia, 201
Agrippina the Elder, 200, 202
Artaxias, king of Armenia, 200, 201
Albania, 74, 78, 93–103, 109, 133, 183.
Artemidorus of Cnidia, 177
See also
Durrës
Artorius, Marcus, 186
Albinus.
See
Brutus Albinus, Decimus Arverni tribe, 53–62
Albinus, Aulus, 87
Asprenas, Nonius, 2, 166, 167–68, 172
Alesia, siege of, 57–59, 60, 172
Atrebate tribe, 25–27, 31, 34–35, 40–41
Alexander, Tiberius, 232–34, 243, 252,
Atrius, Quintus, 44, 45, 48
277
Augustan Legions, 269–71
Alexander the Great, 7
Augustus (formerly Octavian), 150, 214,
Allobroges brothers, 105–6, 112, 114
219
Andalusia (formerly Baetica), 1–12,
Actium and, 185, 191–92
78–79, 165, 166–67, 211
administrative ability, 195
Antioch, 201, 202, 217, 218, 224, 228
Antony and, 180–81, 188–94
Antistius (physician), 178
legion bases, 217
Antonia Fortress, 198, 199, 238, 243, 246,
legion reforms, 195–97
248–49, 250, 251
organizational/tactical sense of, 189
Antony, Gaius, 78, 87–92, 107, 118, 137
Philippi and, 182, 183–88
Antony, Mark, 58, 174, 179–94, 261
Second Triumvirate and, 181–88
Augustus defeat of, 188–94, 282
Tiberius as successor, 199
background, 70
unpublished memoirs of, 185–86
as Caesar ally, 66, 70–73, 78, 86–106,
Avienus, Gaius, 122, 145, 156
115, 118, 128
Caesar’s annoyance with, 99–100, 150
Baal (deity), 207, 248
Caesar’s assassination and, 176–77
Baetica.
See
Andalusia
309
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310
i n d e x
Balbus, Lucius (nephew), 67
Dictator title, 89, 97, 175–78
Balbus, Lucius Cornelius, 7, 10, 17
engineering feats, 82, 102, 122, 244
Caesar’s memoirs and, 169, 292, 293
epileptic attacks, 162
Balkans, 76–78, 175.
See also
Illyricum first military reversal, 57
ballistics, 239
in First Triumvirate, 61
Bassus, Lucillus, 259, 260
in Gaul, 13–29, 61–66, 262
Bedriacum, Battle of, 216, 232
as hero, 11–12, 28, 60, 133, 165
Beirut, 198, 233, 274, 278
“I came . . . conquered” quote, 145, 268
Belgae tribes, 24–29, 31, 50–52
invasion of Italy, 67–75
Beth-horon, Battle of, 229, 238
laurel leaf crown, 6, 177
Bibulus, Marcus Calpurnius, 94–96, 98, 99
legions, 7, 49, 52, 65, 72, 76, 119, 120,
boar emblem, 267
136–37, 144, 149–52, 154–58,
Boduognatus, king of the Nervii, 25–28
165–69, 270–71, 281, 282.
See also
boiling oil defense, 226
specific numbered legions
booty.
See
plunder
luck of, 90, 93–94, 99, 108, 122, 154
Boudicca Revolt, 274
oratorical skill, 18, 91, 146–48
Boudicca’s chariot, 32
personal qualities, 21, 31, 67, 72–73,
Brindisi (Brundisium), 73–78, 87–99, 115,
142, 148, 150–51, 166
118, 122, 137, 150
poetry by, 38
Britain, 29, 30–49, 92, 198, 221, 274, 282
Pompey relationship, 7, 66–67, 69, 142,
Brutus, Marcus, 128, 136, 140
282
Antony’s campaign against, 180–88
Rubicon crossing, 67–70, 97
background, 131–32
scarlet cloak, 2, 59, 177
stabbing of Caesar by, 178
secret cipher, 38
Brutus, Marcus Junius (father), 131
stationed in Spain, 1–12, 282
Brutus Albinus, Decimus, 54, 58, 85–86,
strategic ruses, 52, 56, 67–68, 80, 92,
176, 179–81
93, 97, 109–10, 159
Bulgaria (Moesia), 221, 228, 247, 255,
tactics, 44, 68, 77, 122, 155, 157
269
watchwords, 168
bull emblem, 7, 18, 285
“You, too . . . ” quote, 178
Burrus, Sextus Afranius, 205
Zela battle, 32, 145, 268
Byzantine Empire, 267
Caesar, Lucius (the elder), 70–71
Caesar, Lucius (the younger), 70–71, 72,
Caecina, Aulus, 216
164
Caesar, Julius
Caesar, Sextus, 85
age and achievements, 121–22
Caesar’s memoirs, 292–93
ambition of, 31, 142
African War
and, 152, 154, 156, 159
appearance, 6
disparagement of Labienus, 73, 112
assassination “conspiracy” against, 73,
on Durrës defeat, 109
176–78, 282
Hirtius as editor, 67
British campaign, 29, 30–49, 92, 198
misrepresentations in, 5, 15, 73, 78,
as Brutus’s rumored father, 131–32
103, 104, 109, 131, 133, 136
Commentary. See
Caesar’s memoirs
on Pharsalus, 114, 120, 125
condemnation of Cato by, 164
on Spanish campaign, 85
conflict with Pompey.
See
civil war Caligula, Emperor, 117, 204, 215
daily newspaper founding by, 218
caligulae
(sandals), 215
defections/mutinies against, 3, 4, 72–73,
Cantabrian War, 198, 286
86–88, 105–6, 107, 110, 112, 114,
Capito, Insteius, 207
118, 130–31, 133–37, 145–47,
Carnute tribe, 54, 61, 62
155–57, 165, 166
Carrhae, Battle of, 35–36, 65, 111, 117,
dictation to secretaries, 37–40
175, 186, 208, 282
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