Gallic War

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A01=Caesar
adrian goldsworthy caesar
Alesia
Alps
Ambiorix
ancient britain
ancient ethnography
ancient france
ancient geography
ancient rome
ancient warfare
anthony everitt the rise of rome
Aquitani
Aquitania
Ariovistus
Author_Caesar
Avaricum
barry strauss masters of command
battlefield tactics
Belgae
belgium
Britain expeditions
Britannia
Britons
Caesar
caesar's campaigns
Category=NH
celtic society
Celts
christian meier caesar
Cisalpine
Civil War
classic military history
Commentarii
Crassus
diplomatic negotiations
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
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first triumvirate
Gallia
gallic tribes
Gallic War
Gallic Wars
Gaul
Gauls
Gergovia
Germania
Germans
H. J. Edwards
Helvetians
Helvetii
julius caesar
kate gilliver the roman art of war
Latin literature
latin prose
Loeb Classical Library
michael gilleland the cambridge companion to the roman republic
military campaigns
military commentaries
military leadership
military logistics
military strategy
Mithridatic wars
Pompey
Rhine
rhineland
Rhone
roman army
Roman commanders
roman conquest
roman expansion
roman history
roman imperialism
roman invasion
roman legion
roman military
roman politics
Roman prose
Roman reforms
roman republic
roman tactics
siege warfare
Sulla
three parts
Transalpine
tribal warfare
Uxellodunum
Vercingetorix

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674997745
  • Dimensions: 108 x 162mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Sep 2025
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The conquest that begot the Roman Empire.

Caesar (C. Iulius, 102–44 BC), statesman and soldier, defied the dictator Sulla; served in the Mithridatic wars and in Spain; entered Roman politics as a “democrat” against the senatorial government; was the real leader of the coalition with Pompey and Crassus; conquered all Gaul for Rome; attacked Britain twice; was forced into civil war; became master of the Roman world; and achieved wide-reaching reforms until his murder. We have his books of commentarii (notes): eight on his wars in Gaul from 58–52 BC, including the two expeditions to Britain in 55–54, and three on the civil war of 49–48. They are records of his own campaigns (with occasional digressions) in vigorous, direct, clear, unemotional style and in the third person.

Although the Gallic War in particular is carefully designed to present Caesar in the most favorable light as both commander and Roman citizen, it has long been revered as exemplary military history and a model of Latin prose style.

This edition of the Gallic War replaces the earlier Loeb Classical Library edition by H. J. Edwards (1917) with new text, translation, introduction, and bibliography. In the Loeb Classical Library edition of Caesar, Volume II is his Civil War; Volume III consists of Alexandrian War, African War, and Spanish War, commonly ascribed to Caesar by our manuscripts but of uncertain authorship.

Cynthia Damon is Professor of Classical Studies, Emerita, at the University of Pennsylvania.

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