Caesar in Britain II: There and Back Again (54 B.C.E.)

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  • čas přidán 13. 09. 2024
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    Music is:
    "Day Bird," by Broke For Free
    "Drums of the Deep," by Kevin MacLeod
    "Flood," by Jahzzar

Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @fablereader4486
    @fablereader4486 Před 7 lety +3726

    Really great video! One tiny thing - when the boats depart at about 17:40, one of the men is temporarily left behind.

    • @HistoriaCivilis
      @HistoriaCivilis  Před 7 lety +2740

      R.I.P

    • @loreguy8722
      @loreguy8722 Před 7 lety +208

      If this was posted 4 minutes ago, why are your comments from ~14-15 hours ago? Just curious, sorry if silly question like the 301 views of long ago.

    • @soconfused8031
      @soconfused8031 Před 7 lety +108

      ~No~ One man left behind!

    • @loreguy8722
      @loreguy8722 Před 7 lety +16

      Thanks!

    • @vesteel
      @vesteel Před 7 lety +30

      SORCERER!!!! BURN HIM

  • @vesteel
    @vesteel Před 7 lety +4277

    These boxes fighting are more intense than most action films

    • @czarenallyzamonisit4642
      @czarenallyzamonisit4642 Před 7 lety +34

      vesteel
      ikr

    • @Iason29
      @Iason29 Před 7 lety +116

      Its because of the great historical commentary which is down to earth reality instead of films which I practically call ALL of them historical fiction movies.
      I don't think humanity ever actually made a historical movie

    • @TheK1ngFiasco
      @TheK1ngFiasco Před 7 lety +23

      Iason29 go watch Waterloo. It's about as close as you can get. The combat at least.

    • @Iason29
      @Iason29 Před 7 lety +17

      Yea you're right the combat at least, because again the dialogue can get pretty lame in Waterloo. Still I think my theory is correct that there isn't any actual historical movie. Most today are made as soft propaganda, even though this isn't WW2. Yet people love feeling good about themselves

    • @shuriken188
      @shuriken188 Před 7 lety +12

      They were fighting? I just saw them move around and sometimes lines would appear around them or they would push the other boxes! Man, and I thought that was just to keep your attention while he told the story of Caesar's invasion of Britain!

  • @nebeskisrb7765
    @nebeskisrb7765 Před 7 lety +1856

    What I learned from Historia Civilis videos: his soldiers were 2/3s of Caesar's genius. Seriously, we consistently see them perform well under pressure and in unexpected situations, not to mention that they are outnumbered pretty much all the time.

    • @tomtesoro7994
      @tomtesoro7994 Před 5 lety +209

      THEY WERE PART SOLDIER AND PART BUILDERS.. AND THE WHOLE TRAINING BY ROME, created versatile men for war.. discipline was held together by a policy of 'decimation'.. i..e killing one man in ten of your team IF any desertion.. Roman soldiers.. engineers, carpenters, road builders..

    • @kevwhufc8640
      @kevwhufc8640 Před 5 lety +16

      What Tom Tesoro says is correct. Decimation

    • @kaktotak8267
      @kaktotak8267 Před 5 lety +251

      If you look carefully at the history of great military campaigns, that was pretty much always the case. Whenever you see a successful military leader, you see a lot of initiative among lower officers and great resilience and resourcefulness of soldiers. There is a bit of a chicken and egg problem, but I think the cohesion and motivation of the people are greatly underrated in the conventional view of military history. Alexander the Great relied on the troops and officers trained and raised by his father, Ceasar relied on the military culture and infrastructure of Rome, Napoleon rode on the spirit of the French Revolution. The military thinking usually attributes victories to different mechanical forces like strength in numbers, position, logistics, etc. Even the great upset of the contemporary military tradition by Napoleon was eventually explained by new "mechanical" theories. Yet there are still cases where such theories fail to explain the outcome of a battle.
      One of the greatest military commanders in history, and greatly underrated, is Alexander Suvorov. He had a lot of such "exceptional" battles. One such example is the siege of the Ottoman fortress Izmail in 1790. The Russians under Suvorov attacked the fortress in the morning on December 22. They had 31000 against 35000 Ottomans in the fortress with the 6.5 kilometer perimeter. The Ottomans were prepared for the assault because they were informed of it by traitors. By the end of the day, the Russians took the fortress. The Russians lost a little over 4000 men, the Turks lost 26 000. That's only one example of the kind of "miracles" Suvorov had done. The contemporary colleagues attributed his success to luck. More recent theorists see Suvorov as merely an innovative tactician. Yet, the guy had successfully fought Ottomans and revolutionary French forces and had never had a defeat. Clearly, his success was systematic and therefore followed the fundamental nature of war.
      And if you look at where he spent most of his efforts and attention, it's in training and preparing his army, improving their cohesion, initiative and moral qualities. He explicitly told his officers to disobey his orders if the situation dictated otherwise. He didn't separate himself from the regular soldiers, sleeping in the same conditions and eating the same food as them. He even promoted some of them into officers. That in the time when the soldiers were serfs (i.e. peasants locked to the land and basically slaves) and the officers were of nobility. The only military writings he left were training manuals for his troops, with core lessons distilled into simple sentences, some of which became common Russian proverbs that are still used to this day.

    • @SuitedFire
      @SuitedFire Před 5 lety +65

      Kakto Tak you have revolutionized the way I see history. Truly, I had always looked back on historical figures like Caeser and Alexander and attributed their successes in creating the worlds greatest empires to their genius. I understood that their armies used superior training and arms, but didn’t quite grasp that this was a result of factors having nothing to do with the commanders themselves, and the importance of these easily overlooked factors. I’d always been a history fanatic but today you’ve changed my view of history... just wanted to thank you for that, it’s made me realize that truly great men are fewer than I’d realized but rather, there are great societies whose legacies were crafted by great thinkers and engineers.

    • @kaktotak8267
      @kaktotak8267 Před 5 lety +17

      @@SuitedFire You're welcome :)

  • @thelurkingpanda3605
    @thelurkingpanda3605 Před 7 lety +945

    when 2k year old history can still be a cliffhanger :D

  • @mrmajikjr
    @mrmajikjr Před 7 lety +3893

    Guess who's back
    Back again
    Caesar's back
    For your land

    • @bdbs5618
      @bdbs5618 Před 7 lety +261

      Slim Caesar

    • @KonsulGando
      @KonsulGando Před 7 lety +215

      could da real Julius Caesar please stand up?

    • @VCYT
      @VCYT Před 7 lety +10

      We told him an others to piss off in 2016. :-)

    • @limon16025
      @limon16025 Před 7 lety +105

      Y'all act like you haven't seen a roman before

    • @ahmeddhunkaal2055
      @ahmeddhunkaal2055 Před 7 lety +2

      Lapland Well how would we? They died out years ago

  • @Tom_Skelton
    @Tom_Skelton Před 7 lety +536

    I love the Dumnorix quote so much. "I am a free man living in a free state." There is something primal, moving, and tragic about those last words.

    • @MidnightSvn
      @MidnightSvn Před 7 lety +17

      I don't see how it's primal......
      It is ironic and tragic how he said that while resisting and was immediately killed by romans

    • @Tom_Skelton
      @Tom_Skelton Před 7 lety +109

      You don't feel a primal and instinctual desire to govern yourself?

    • @englishteacher2711
      @englishteacher2711 Před 5 lety +51

      Some are only comfortable as slaves.

    • @iMajoraGaming
      @iMajoraGaming Před 5 lety +7

      @@englishteacher2711 wat

    • @englishteacher2711
      @englishteacher2711 Před 5 lety +31

      A wat is a temple in Thailand.

  • @alex_zetsu
    @alex_zetsu Před 6 lety +255

    The first British tribe to open to Caesar wasn't defecting due to Caesar burning villages and being scared by him. They were led by Mandubracius, son of a king deposed by Cassevillaunus who wanted his tribe's land to be restored and be brought to the throne. In other words, he wasn't intimidated into helping the Romans, he hated the guy who started the first organized resistance to Rome.

    • @karlkfoury2213
      @karlkfoury2213 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Yes he was he was a scared little britton, but yet the bravest of all britons

    • @Schizz76
      @Schizz76 Před 5 měsíci

      ⁠​⁠@@karlkfoury2213and I guess you’d also say the punics were greedy rats whilst the Iranians were savage barbarians? Seriously, what sort of incel statement was that?

  • @orlandofurioso392
    @orlandofurioso392 Před 7 lety +2227

    I'm now too curious to know how the Romans effectively conquered the island 100 years later.

    • @GutsLikesItInTheAss
      @GutsLikesItInTheAss Před 7 lety +399

      That was Roman's fault, they needlessly started killing and raping Briton civvies just to flaunt their authority, incredibly stupid thing to do and they deserved Boudica's rebellion.

    • @TheHangingWood
      @TheHangingWood Před 7 lety +127

      They lean't their lesson from Caesar and brought twice as many troops including elephants.

    • @PCGhoul
      @PCGhoul Před 7 lety +187

      I don't understand what Caesar gained from his adventures in Britain. He lost men & time, but for what? Loot? What loot did the Britons have? He didn't keep any land, the alliances didn't hold because there was no Roman presence left behind, so what was the point of it all, just very aggressive scouting? Adventure?

    • @CalvinDWalker
      @CalvinDWalker Před 7 lety +357

      Prestige and Honour in the eyes of the Roman people, probably. Knowing that he was attempting to expand the presence of the Roman Republic far beyond the reaches of the domain like this, and coming out "victorious" (aka, returning alive) meant that people would continue to honour him as a truly talented general. The last video mentioned this as well, to some extent, as well as the fact that he is ALSO the first Roman General to cross the Rhine successfully.
      Maybe to some extent, this was also partially (or consequentially, perhaps) an attempt to solidify control over the Gauls and establish all of Gaul as what would eventually be Roman Domain.

    • @kilpatrickkirksimmons5016
      @kilpatrickkirksimmons5016 Před 7 lety +272

      PC Ghoul You have to remember that generals during the Republican era were simultaneously politicians. Legates were senators and the military tribunes under their command were also elected. Glory is a powerful motivator for most men but when you throw in political considerations it's even more so. And the glory factor of Britain was thru the roof. Many people around the Mediterranean didn't believe Britain even existed, so it wasn't too far off from putting an army on the moon.

  • @HolbrookStark
    @HolbrookStark Před 5 lety +111

    I think one of the most powerful testaments to the power of Rome is at about 4:45 when they build their own camp right outside a fort implying the British fort is so inferior to what they can whip up in a few sleep deprived hours that it's worth it to take those few hours while sleep deprived

  • @adamlatosinski5475
    @adamlatosinski5475 Před 7 lety +487

    "We want hostages" was Ceasar's motto, wasn't it.

    • @danielvictor3262
      @danielvictor3262 Před 7 lety +140

      this guy's course of action in every campaign is basically:
      1. build a fort
      2. scout
      3. take hostages

    • @Wolfeson28
      @Wolfeson28 Před 7 lety +7

      Pretty sure his official motto is: "BLAAAARG!"

    • @SuperYoshikong
      @SuperYoshikong Před 6 lety +3

      @Youssef Yehya British woman were notably physically superior to Roman women, as was written by the Romans

    • @MrCushcam
      @MrCushcam Před 5 lety +1

      And burn villages

    • @gabri-immortale
      @gabri-immortale Před 5 lety +1

      @@alekzander2010 more enemy more honor

  • @renatopereira2315
    @renatopereira2315 Před 7 lety +421

    "I am a *free* man from a *free* State !" - Dumnorix's last words , as reported by Gaius Julius Caesar
    Dumnorix was one of the Gauls summoned by Caesar to serve in his cavalry auxilia (as explained in the start of this video) for this 2nd expedition to Britain. He didnt want to be a part of it. Among other things he spread the idea among other Gallic leaders that Caesar's request was a plot to have all the leaders of Gaul assassinated.
    He tried to escape and Caesar sent men after him with orders to put him to the sword if he resisted. He did resist and these were his words as the roman soldiers cut him down.
    One of the most symbolic momments of "The Gallic Wars" imho.

    • @MidnightSvn
      @MidnightSvn Před 7 lety +52

      Caesar wouldn't want him forgotten, as he made an example of him.

    • @lucialuppi5402
      @lucialuppi5402 Před 5 lety

      (0__0) ...ok.

    • @Galadrian70
      @Galadrian70 Před 5 lety +14

      @@MidnightSvn Yup, but he became a martyr. It is a double edge sword!

    • @j.h-j5j
      @j.h-j5j Před 5 lety +13

      I admire and respect Dumnorix. Defiant from the joke of roman rule till the end. More people should know about him.

    • @tribequest9
      @tribequest9 Před 5 lety +3

      I find it interesting that in that time period with so much land and the time it takes to travel they found him......even then it was hard for people to escape oppression.

  • @TechnikMeister2
    @TechnikMeister2 Před 5 lety +58

    In my final years of high school in the late 60s, I decided to study the classics instead of the sciences. One of the subjects was Latin and I studied his written text of this campaign. It was 140 pages of close set type in the book it was published. It was every bit as exciting as a war movie and he described everything in fine detail. It was the highlight of my education. In later life I also read his Invasion of Gaul, also in the original Latin.

    • @randomlyentertaining8287
      @randomlyentertaining8287 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yeah, I wish high schools were still like that. I would have loved to have learned Latin.

  • @WombatRock420
    @WombatRock420 Před 7 lety +272

    Always a highlight of my day when I see a new Historia Civilis video

  • @paulliu8502
    @paulliu8502 Před 7 lety +145

    I don't understand Caesar's move to cross the river and attack the wooded fort on the hill at the start. The Romans were sleepy and hungry, and crossing the river into a wooded fortified hill was a recipe for a disastrous ambush.

    • @knothead9802
      @knothead9802 Před 5 lety +42

      Caesar was a brilliant tactician. He knew if he put water behind his soldiers it would make them fight harder. All great generals knew this tactic.

    • @PrestigeNumismatics
      @PrestigeNumismatics Před 4 lety +21

      His army was vastly larger in number, plus he maybe thought that if they set up camp other Britons would come to the aid of the fort. Sometimes you have to strike when the irons hot.

    • @nykidxxx
      @nykidxxx Před 4 lety +4

      If you’re going to build a decent camp/fort, you’d want it on the enemys side of bad terrain.

    • @ryanbroguy
      @ryanbroguy Před 4 lety +18

      By this point it was clear that the Britons knew of Caesar being in Britain. Caesar had just marched nearly all his troops to this enemy camp. He risks an attack if he sets up camp, he risks an attack if he tries to sleep in the woods.
      Its also worth mentioning that this camp wouldve been a major obstacle for a prolonged presence in Britain. The Romans couldnt ignore it and go back, since a large army had just entered it, and would likely attack if Caesar let his guard down. He couldnt negotiate, you can figure out why. He couldnt just stand there and wait, as his troops needed sleep, and enemy reinforcements would likely be coming.
      Caesar only had one option, take the camp.

    • @13minutestomidnight
      @13minutestomidnight Před 2 lety +6

      @@ryanbroguy You make a good point: all of Caesar's other options did create vulnerabilities and risks for ambush. However the OP makes a good point too: if the Britons had thought ahead, they could have organised an ambush in that hillfort.
      ....Honestly, I have a suspicion Ceasar was either lying or misunderstood the situation. They were probably curious and unprepared civilians running back home to the fort and Caesar pursued. Why do I say that? Hillforts in the south of Britain are generally thought to be where the tribe lived, and it had a limited defensive capacity or use as a military structure (eh, that's what archeologists claim anyway).

  • @Ikxi
    @Ikxi Před rokem +109

    It's so weird imagining these scales
    We see around 10-15 ships, but those were actually 600 ships carrying tens of thousands of soldiers
    The sight of that must have been awesome (awesome in both meanings)

  • @ChannelRandomMy
    @ChannelRandomMy Před rokem +12

    The rectangles are literally my favorite visual representation of people of any history video I've ever watched. There's just so simple to see what's going on and I love when they spin around to represent retreat!

  • @armorking7258
    @armorking7258 Před 7 lety +408

    3:27, 3:46, 4:26 - "Our men flee the field of battle this a shamefull display!"
    4:19 - "The walls were breached!"
    4:25 - "The battle is turning into our favor."

  • @BensoftMedia
    @BensoftMedia Před 7 lety +486

    Out of curiosity are you going to eventually get around to the successful occupation of Britain? It's a fascinating period for me.

    • @kevcaratacus9428
      @kevcaratacus9428 Před 5 lety +24

      Claudius read about him , he invaded Britannia successfully a 100 years after Caesars failure.
      Britannia was part of empire for almost 400 years . Until Saxons came along .
      Brits have so much history 1000s n 1000s of years of different crazy history ..
      Vikings, Normans,
      Invading France captured French kings & put in the tower of London with Scottish kings they captured
      civil wars , chopping the kings head off! Gunpowder plot .. endless history ..

    • @TimeToMine830
      @TimeToMine830 Před 3 lety +6

      @@kevcaratacus9428 Well I mean comparatively, Brits have some of the least amount of history when compared to other Western European countries.

    • @kevwhufc8640
      @kevwhufc8640 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TimeToMine830 least amount of history in western Europe!? Compared to whom ?
      Paleolithic is pretty old ...

    • @kevwhufc8640
      @kevwhufc8640 Před 3 lety +3

      @@TimeToMine830 people came from east and west Europe to gather at Stonehenge, burials from people bear east)
      The first phase of Stonehenge started 500 years before the pyramids)
      Britain has some of the oldest constructions in Europe, Avebury, windmill hill, woodhenge, etc etc,
      From Paleolithic onwards .
      So what European countries have *considerably* more than Britain. ?
      I'd be interested to hear about all these other countries that have much older history, or older constructions that Britain..
      Some People think it was some backwater island, until they start reading about our past & place in paleolithic Europe.
      It was anything but a backwater ..

    • @tacolepaco
      @tacolepaco Před 3 lety +4

      @@kevwhufc8640 He means story wise, China has a bunch of written down stuff, that it will be impossible to know of it all, Britain has lots of history, but just not as much as well, the Romans and Greeks for example have tons and tons, it is legendary.

  • @RossMcDowall94
    @RossMcDowall94 Před 7 lety +541

    I bet that British guy was dead annoyed. Seemed he out played caeser a bunch only to be let down by his allies

    • @justsam100
      @justsam100 Před 5 lety +91

      Ross McDowall meh he didn’t really win any significant battle. He just used guerrilla tactics because he himself knew Caesar could not be beaten in a straight fight, so he resorted to harassing the Romans so they could never truly rest or get decent loot and food. That only backfired on him because Caesar realized this and literally countered that whole strategy by doing a scorched earth campaign. Caesar knew that burning down villages and crops would prevent the Britons to send additional reinforcements to the main army and cut off their food supply as well, while also dealing a massive blow to morale, basically showing that the Legions didn’t even give a shit about chariot raids and literally marched straight through Briton territory destroying everything AND simultaneously repelling ambushes ever few miles.
      That to me is amazing: he destabilize tribal unity and support while also making a statement that the Briton’s army wasn’t even enough of a threat to make the Romans form up and stop their march.

    • @gramursowanfaborden5820
      @gramursowanfaborden5820 Před 5 lety +116

      there is no such thing as a straight fight, tactics are tactics.

    • @justsam100
      @justsam100 Před 5 lety +19

      Gramersow well true tactics are tactics. There’s cheap tactics (short term/immediate results) vs strategy. Strategy wins war, tactics win battles, usually unimportant.
      That’s exactly what happened here. Caesar took his losses willingly because he knew he had to counterplay their guerrila style approach asap (which is quite effective when your enemy can’t commit war crimes, and back then there were no war crimes, so yeah)

    • @kevwhufc8640
      @kevwhufc8640 Před 5 lety +13

      @@justsam100 your info comes from where ? Your imagination or a friends?
      Quick education
      1, only evidence of Caesar is the south east coast of England in Kent,
      Defensive ditches were huge, can still be seen from aerial photos
      they needed to be huge to defend 30.000 legionaries.
      2, he never marched north he never went anywhere except back to his ships ..again.
      3, Caesar didn't defeat anyone, he never got out if Kent he didn't defeat a chieftain or his settlement.
      The area hes supposed to have marched along with his 30,000 men is relatively small, maybe 60, 80 miles at the most yet not one tiny ditch exists
      Not one loss not even a buckle or horse mount
      No evidence of camps , no ditches no fires , regarding the settlement ( there's a plaque on the wall saying it's where Caesar defeated the Celtic chieftain)
      Defeated & burnt / destroyed the settlement.
      Not a shred of evidence for a battle or any fighting no spear heads no arrows no burning no nothing .
      Thd only evidence for everything this utuber is saying & history books claim
      Comes from Caesar himself.
      Hes not gonna tell the truth & admit he got chased outa Britain not once but twice.
      Caesar lied , bc the lack of any archaeological evidence is evidence it didn't happen..

    • @justsam100
      @justsam100 Před 5 lety +5

      hammers kev you’re tripping it’s been accepted for years that Caesar’s accounts, though exaggerated and often neglecting to mention important pieces of info, are pretty much spot on.
      I don’t where you’re getting your facts from. The fact that traces of a (relatively) small roman army haven’t been found yet isn’t proof that they were never there. In fact there’s enough proof the suggest the opposite.
      Also keep in mind that they only recently found the massive ditch you’re talking about, pretty safe to say arrowheads might be harder to come by, yeah?

  • @jackdutfield6096
    @jackdutfield6096 Před 7 lety +63

    i can't overstate to you how much your videos fuel my passion for history, i cannot thank you enough!

  • @kylepickus5712
    @kylepickus5712 Před 4 lety +76

    7:47 when the trees start speaking Celtic.

  • @18mitndi
    @18mitndi Před 7 lety +18

    "After dealing with a minor uprising in Illyricum" Julius got around, I have to give him that.

  • @semynuke8774
    @semynuke8774 Před 7 lety +566

    can you make Cesar a different color. maybe red with a golden border ?

  • @Jablicek
    @Jablicek Před 5 lety +34

    Okay, I started by watching the first, then the second. Five minutes in, I wanted to know where Caesar landed his troops the second time around (and the first, for that matter), and from there, began reading about his de Bello Gallico on the Wikipedia, and now I'm digging out my Latin texts so I can slowly work my way through the originals.
    Thank you, I really needed this kick in the pants today!

  • @temeweckis
    @temeweckis Před 7 lety +589

    "Anything was better than starving to death on this God forsaken island"
    Aaaand every Brit on the planet systematically shows up to spew out dislikes.

    • @hjorturerlend
      @hjorturerlend Před 7 lety +17

      Perfidious Albion... ;)

    • @stefan_wsl3398
      @stefan_wsl3398 Před 7 lety +110

      TKWeckroth Nar Britain is pretty shit, and self deprication is kinda our thing

    • @saeedvazirian
      @saeedvazirian Před 6 lety +30

      I'm not a Brit but GB is absolutely wondrous in their production. Most of their industry is home-made. Don't fuck around with GB.

    • @stefanseniuk339
      @stefanseniuk339 Před 6 lety +16

      You must live a sad life, in all my travels not found anywhere better than the UK yet...

    • @CeleryMan666
      @CeleryMan666 Před 5 lety +22

      @@stefanseniuk339 your travels being your 3rd world country and shitland, great travels.

  • @choombi6721
    @choombi6721 Před 7 lety +12

    I'm rather feeling bad for Cassivellaunus here, getting his lands raided then having a bunch of his allies backstab him despite not making any serious mistakes.

    • @FemaleSniper86
      @FemaleSniper86 Před 4 lety +1

      Considering that the british leader at that time was himself most likely not a very kind person to the other british tribes that he had under him, it is no surprise they were so quick to abandon and backstab him... Back then, you rule by conquering. No different among the British tribes. Gaul ahd the same problems with their tribes, unable to fully trust each other was most likely the biggest problem the gallic army faced because of hundreds of years of fighting between themselves. Just like the british tribes.

  • @Ben-zg5xb
    @Ben-zg5xb Před 7 lety +241

    Anything can be a Caesar salad if you stab it enough

  • @ourtube4266
    @ourtube4266 Před 7 lety +13

    I have no idea why you're not bigger. These videos are better quality than the same topics by the history channel.

  • @Arkeze
    @Arkeze Před 5 lety +7

    I don’t think I’ve ever been so entertained looking at square boxes with X’s in them and a bunch of squiggly lines.

  • @ziyadalkilic
    @ziyadalkilic Před 7 lety +11

    Man, this was high quality... I remember rummaging through all your content way back, and all of a sudden wanted to check if u had anything new. Now the quality is better and narrative is also fantastic. Great to learn from big decisions of the past, and reinvigorate the other dimensions in war, logistics, politics, sociology, engineering, tactics, loyalty of men, leadership and more.

  • @craigmays3098
    @craigmays3098 Před 7 lety +85

    You do awesome videos. I hope some day this picks up enough for you to be able to make videos full time. I'll be sad when there are no more cool Caesar vids -_-

    • @craigmays3098
      @craigmays3098 Před 7 lety +1

      That all sounds great, but at this rate it'll be 2020 before we get to the end of Caesar's life!

    • @ethand2731
      @ethand2731 Před 7 lety +4

      It should be soon that he would be able to make these videos full time. With the lowest lv of adds on youtube (what he has right now) he is making $400ish per episode then through his Patreon he his making $900+ per episode. If he keeps on making videos every 3 weeks or so that is $22,000 a year not counting for any channel grow, if he adds more adds or something else.

    • @misterrees-vn9ti
      @misterrees-vn9ti Před 7 lety

      Dylan Mays go to Patreon and support him, even if it is for as little as the price of a coffee every month

    • @craigmays3098
      @craigmays3098 Před 7 lety

      mister.rees this channel would eventually become federally funded if the USA wasn't slashing all the funds!

    • @ethand2731
      @ethand2731 Před 7 lety

      Dylan Mays that is true but I could see some sort of historical society helping him out

  • @BigHeartBraveSchlong
    @BigHeartBraveSchlong Před 7 lety +83

    Caesar is so fucking badass and smart. God damn, thank you for these videos. I love you

    • @MidnightSvn
      @MidnightSvn Před 7 lety

      nobody mentioned Napoleon or alexander the great yet?

    • @nima4797
      @nima4797 Před 3 lety

      @@MidnightSvn and?

    • @zjotheglorious
      @zjotheglorious Před 3 lety +4

      @@MidnightSvn This series is about Caesar, and alot of people mentioned it

  • @raresdavid
    @raresdavid Před 7 lety +25

    It would be the best strategy video game ever to have a map like this with little rectagles and control them in real time to adapt your strategy.

  • @wyattrox03
    @wyattrox03 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I am really glad you did this series, I feel like most media focuses on Caesar's time in the civil war and his death but they are really missing out on the awesomeness of the Gallic Wars. Your earlier stuff is still my favorite.
    Im sure I am not the only one who has gotten into youtube history doc videos because of your channel, thank you HC.

  • @MrRico2xy
    @MrRico2xy Před 7 lety +12

    Oh my god, this is as exciting as a TV show or something! I can't wait for the next Episode!

  • @samlund8543
    @samlund8543 Před 7 lety +16

    If only we could get one of these every week instead of every month...

  • @Jonathan-lq4ch
    @Jonathan-lq4ch Před 7 lety +9

    Love how you teach historical events via a story format! Well done as usual.

  • @trygveplaustrum4634
    @trygveplaustrum4634 Před 7 lety +37

    Wait, so the shirt is just an infantry logo?
    ...I can dig that.

    • @MidnightSvn
      @MidnightSvn Před 7 lety +1

      dig fortifications?
      ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

  • @Mysucculentchinesemeal
    @Mysucculentchinesemeal Před 5 lety +5

    This is the best historical/tactical video I've seen on youtube. Very enjoyable.

  • @deaththekid416
    @deaththekid416 Před 7 lety +6

    Every time I see one of these my day gets much better

  • @francescoragghianti6068
    @francescoragghianti6068 Před 7 lety +5

    I just love how you make history feel alive! Thanks

  • @user-zp8ei6pi7p
    @user-zp8ei6pi7p Před 7 lety +5

    That feel when a new Historia Civilis video comes out feels like someone loves me.

  • @stevenkramer4263
    @stevenkramer4263 Před 7 lety +6

    You are the best what a storyteller can be!

  • @accretiansholiq
    @accretiansholiq Před 7 lety +4

    20 MIN OF HISTORIA CIVILIS!!!! what a blessing

  • @Jodonho
    @Jodonho Před 5 lety +76

    19:25
    "I am a free man living in a free state! "
    The first recorded sovereign citizen.

  • @srujanpalkar1
    @srujanpalkar1 Před 7 lety +2

    I was actually starting to miss you! And I'd started watching the older videos!! Great to have a new one 🙌

  • @Austin_Schulz
    @Austin_Schulz Před 4 lety +6

    I love how Caesar describes Roman retreat as "advancing to the rear."

  • @MrAdnanholy
    @MrAdnanholy Před 7 lety +1

    A NEW VIDEO JUST WHEN I GOT HOME! I'M SO LUCKY!

  • @brendanbrlit4467
    @brendanbrlit4467 Před 7 lety +90

    You say that they almost lost their eagle standards, what are the significance of losing the eagle standard?

    • @vguyver2
      @vguyver2 Před 7 lety +115

      Indeed. it as considered the ultimate humiliation. Crassus' defeat at Persia is one of the most infamous events to captured standards. As such Romans spread myths and insulting rumors about his death such as him being executed with Molten Gold being poured down his throat. Of course, he actually died in the battlefield from enemy cavalry along with his legion.

    • @kilpatrickkirksimmons5016
      @kilpatrickkirksimmons5016 Před 7 lety +96

      Brendan Brlit It'd be like an 18th-19th century regiment losing its colors, except even worse because they placed a minor degree of religious significance on their eagles. It was the personification of the legion's collective spirit.

    • @xtrucky
      @xtrucky Před 7 lety +70

      The standard had an almost holy significance; standards were personalised to their legion and had decorations and adornments detailing the legion's achievements. Like loosing a holy banner, it was both a rally point for the command and a demoralising humiliation if it was lost

    • @user-lq1jc6wf5m
      @user-lq1jc6wf5m Před 6 lety +42

      It can absolutely be compared to crusaders losing the True Cross

    • @lucialuppi5402
      @lucialuppi5402 Před 5 lety +14

      Or compared to a King losing his royal regalia.

  • @charlieo8020
    @charlieo8020 Před 7 lety +1

    i'm loving this new system of further apart, much longer videos. every time i see one out i make sure to sit down at my computer with a comfy meal to watch

  • @ailderwitha5591
    @ailderwitha5591 Před 7 lety +5

    A 20 minutes long video? PERFECT!

  • @VoidRDM
    @VoidRDM Před 7 lety +2

    These videos just keeps getting better and better

  • @Mankorra_Gomorrah
    @Mankorra_Gomorrah Před 7 lety +117

    Is it just me or does this seem like a similar, albeit reversed, situation with Hannibal? Caesar is the better commander with better troops and Cassivellanunus adopts a Fabian like stagey of shadowing and attacking smaller parties that get separated from the main contingent.

    • @magww1
      @magww1 Před 7 lety +11

      Mmm apples to oranges imo. The premise of the battle and the countries just dissimilar.

    • @gaiusjuliuscaesar8450
      @gaiusjuliuscaesar8450 Před 7 lety +5

      I imagine that was in the mind of the romans whos stopped charging the chariots.

    • @koolets3788
      @koolets3788 Před 7 lety +40

      I would say that Caesar got what Hannibal wanted, gaining some native tribes/leaders to revolt or at least help against the sovereign power. It was also great for Caesar that he was able to find and cut off Cassivellaunus' main supplies whilst Hannibal knew where their main supplies were coming from (Rome itself) but lack the manpower and siege weapons to take it. Hannibal and Caesar were both running out of supplies more than their opponents, making the Fabian strategy ever more deadly and morale breaking over time.

    • @Mankorra_Gomorrah
      @Mankorra_Gomorrah Před 7 lety +2

      indeed, the situations are similar but the ending was very different.

    • @orwasaker3913
      @orwasaker3913 Před 6 lety +1

      Caeser had much better units than Hannibal did, Hannibal had good effective cavalry but poor infantry

  • @pludoxp9
    @pludoxp9 Před 7 lety +2

    Been waiting on this vid for weeks mate, love your channel, thank you

  • @TrialByDance
    @TrialByDance Před 7 lety +51

    Alesia draws ever closer...

  • @nbrikha
    @nbrikha Před 6 lety

    Where were videos like this when I was in high school? This makes learning far more fun

  • @katherine7802
    @katherine7802 Před 7 lety +5

    Yay for the mailing list!

  • @MrFrankyAnd
    @MrFrankyAnd Před 7 lety +2

    Got excited seeing a new video uploaded, your my favourite channel on youtube currently

  • @casualyoutubeviewer9198
    @casualyoutubeviewer9198 Před 7 lety +334

    When you're in school so you can't watch it when you get notified :/

  • @Themrchilango
    @Themrchilango Před 7 lety +1

    You make the best educational videos!

  • @kodiak_qp614
    @kodiak_qp614 Před 7 lety +104

    Really good vid. just watched all your vids this weekend. I highly enjoyed them all. keep up the good work.
    BTW why u never did a naval battle one?

    • @johandjerf9054
      @johandjerf9054 Před 7 lety +17

      Jason Teeple The Romans were not very good at naval battles if I'm correct. As Historia Civilis said in this video, their boats were also not very good. Because of that I don't believe they fighted a lot on the sea.

    • @khyemadex-hefford2530
      @khyemadex-hefford2530 Před 7 lety +16

      Omega the first Punic war was mostly fought on the sea, and Rome developed many naval strategies and some of the greatest ships of their time.

    • @smoko1994
      @smoko1994 Před 7 lety +21

      Galactic Corgi Those great ships were just copies of what they saw worked for other Mediterranean peoples and most of the time they lost more ships than the opponents anyway, it's just that they had even more.

    • @smoko1994
      @smoko1994 Před 7 lety +9

      Jason Teeple Channel "THFE Productions" did a video on the Battle of Ecnomus (that's also how it's named), one of the largest naval battles in history, with a lot of background information. Quite a good watch if you're interested, although I personally prefer Historia Civilis's videos.

    • @jakobschoning7355
      @jakobschoning7355 Před 7 lety +1

      They had very good ships. but they where constructed for the calm mediterranian.

  • @cicero44bc
    @cicero44bc Před 7 lety +1

    Such a joy when a new one of your videos appears in my feed, they are so informative and enjoyable. A real pleasure. Thank you.

  • @IsThisRain
    @IsThisRain Před 5 lety +28

    13:08
    May I ask how the Romans were able to understand the Britons despite the little knowledge they had of the place?

    • @joaozin156
      @joaozin156 Před 5 lety +57

      The Britons conducted regular trade with the Gauls, so they obviously understood each other, and as such, Caesar could communicate with them via Gallic translators.

    • @cityslacker6221
      @cityslacker6221 Před 3 lety +10

      Britons were Celtic like the Gauls and the languages were related and Ceasar had translators who spoke and studied the variations of the Celtic languages. The Britonic language was also from the same branch of Celtic as the tribes in Brittany whom Ceasar had already dealt with.

  • @secularhumanist1520
    @secularhumanist1520 Před 7 lety +1

    ok now am officially addicted to this channel!!

    • @secularhumanist1520
      @secularhumanist1520 Před 7 lety

      χρονης κ. yeah i guess am addicted to ceasar too ...
      in the period betweeb ceaser in Britain 1 &2 i went and watched the entire tv series Rome LOL

  • @sarasamaletdin4574
    @sarasamaletdin4574 Před 7 lety +88

    The Romans discovered that Britain was pretty poor which is also why the invasions did not continu before later it was good politically to invade something. The Britons might have kept paying tribute but Caesar got busy with the civil war to enforce anything. Also when Caesar was in Britain his daughter Julia died in childbirth (and the child died) which was a big thing regarding his political alliance with Pompey (who she was married to), and obviously it was personally a loss to him when his only child died. But maybe it will be mentioned in a later more political video. I wonder if Ceaser and Pompey could have remained allied had she and her child lived.

    • @sarasamaletdin4574
      @sarasamaletdin4574 Před 7 lety +1

      Maybe I should check some biography later but now I just checked this from Wikipedia and it says she died in August 54 BC and that according to Seneca Caesar was in Britain at the time.

    • @bangtuhauptilagie4866
      @bangtuhauptilagie4866 Před 7 lety

      this guy had probably several more children in gaul. he probably gave a fuck about her or her child. it was just that this was the only child that could fill his foodsteps.

    • @MidnightSvn
      @MidnightSvn Před 7 lety +18

      If you have a kid you're hard wired to care about it even if your only goal is to be imperator. I'm sure that *caesar the man* was hit pretty hard by her death, even if *Caesar the Leader* was not.

    • @zckclaf
      @zckclaf Před 6 lety

      Sara Samaletdin pk

    • @someguythatlookslikeme8306
      @someguythatlookslikeme8306 Před 5 lety +3

      Its amazing to think how much history would have been changed had that alliance happened.
      Would there have been emperors?
      Romes eventual corrupted fall?
      The continued expansion of Rome?
      Would many of us be alive? Our ancestors would have been affected by this; who our great great grandparents were or the ancestors alive back then. How different, or was it all meant to be and history would eventually follow the same or very similar path.
      Strange.

  • @rickstinkt9930
    @rickstinkt9930 Před 7 lety +1

    your videos are always a delight

  • @danjennpilapil6595
    @danjennpilapil6595 Před 7 lety +5

    My day wouldn't get any better than this. My semester ended on a high note and Historia Civilis posting a Caesar video.

  • @MrJonyish
    @MrJonyish Před 7 lety +2

    What I love about your videos is your continuity they are well made and keep a familiar style. This makes them almost addictive to watch the continuity in your music helps this 🙂 I have never been so committed to rectangles and seen such intense geometric battles ;) keep up the good work!

  • @michealrey1
    @michealrey1 Před 7 lety +4

    omg dude i waited this for so long

  • @StoicFC
    @StoicFC Před 7 lety +2

    YUSS! One of my favorite channels with one of my history heroes, Julius Caesar.

  • @superactiontank
    @superactiontank Před 7 lety +6

    Even though he didn't conquer Britan, every episode with Caesar is very entertaining.

  • @CharlysBonada
    @CharlysBonada Před 7 lety +1

    I was waiting for this video! I love your channel man

  • @kingenfuuken
    @kingenfuuken Před 7 lety +17

    Another great video
    Even though most of this is from Caesar's own account, there's no denying he was a truly incredible general. Its almost like something out of a fantasy novel.

  • @kevinmichalak7622
    @kevinmichalak7622 Před 5 lety +2

    I love this channel. He does an amazing job teaching and making the content interesting with minimal visual aides and effects. Great job

  • @Twilleh
    @Twilleh Před 4 lety +4

    A Hobbits Tale by Caesar Baggins.

  • @RomanS401
    @RomanS401 Před 7 lety +2

    these are my favorite videos on CZcams. can't wait for more!

  • @zackariasringstedt8909
    @zackariasringstedt8909 Před 7 lety +3

    Ilove how this guys is able to make a cliff hanger at the end of the video even thou its historical facts which I know

  • @CthulhuSauce
    @CthulhuSauce Před 7 lety +1

    I look for your videos every day in my subscription feed. You have such a unique style of editing and narrating the action that makes each video absolutely engrossing and entertaining. Great job man, keep it up.

  • @SpazzyMcGee1337
    @SpazzyMcGee1337 Před 7 lety +3

    These are entertaining and informative.

  • @Flyingtart
    @Flyingtart Před 7 lety

    This channel is gold!

  • @kjetilsenNOWAY
    @kjetilsenNOWAY Před 7 lety +96

    Is Cæsar himself as an author the primary source for this video or other historians?

    • @moonknightish
      @moonknightish Před 7 lety +87

      Yes www.amazon.co.uk/Bello-Gallico-Parallel-English-Latin/dp/1453848991
      But of course, there are parts, the ones where he pretend he was magnanimous and better than his foes, that should be taken with a grain of salt. Expecially in the Bello Civili.

    • @sarasamaletdin4574
      @sarasamaletdin4574 Před 7 lety +83

      It is generally considered pretty reliable, but yes you need some grain of salt with it.

    • @Mankindatwar
      @Mankindatwar Před 7 lety +5

      Conquest of Gaul - Julius Caesar is my guess

    • @Ramschat
      @Ramschat Před 7 lety +41

      Yes, I for one used his work exclusively for the period. He is pretty reliable because he is has a lot of first-hand experience. Although he likes to exaggerate a little bit and act as if he had the best intentions, he couldn't lie outright since many men in his army were from aristocratic families who could expose him back in Rome. These reports were after all meant for the Roman Senate.

    • @itsfinnickbitch63
      @itsfinnickbitch63 Před 6 lety +1

      wait how did his journal survive for so long?

  • @ReneMatuscak
    @ReneMatuscak Před 7 lety +1

    +Historia Civilis I love these series please keep them up !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @Wolfy8668
    @Wolfy8668 Před 7 lety +29

    Chariots OP, NERF pls

  • @cloudmapper9501
    @cloudmapper9501 Před 7 lety +1

    Can't remember the last time I was so excited about watching a youtube video. Awesome channe

    • @CasperKersten
      @CasperKersten Před 7 lety

      I suspect that last time was when he released his previous video :D

  • @thekingof300
    @thekingof300 Před 7 lety +4

    this was probably a pretty interesting experience for the gauls who had previously fought against Cesar and the Romans. Now they were on the opposite side.

  • @czechnolike
    @czechnolike Před 7 lety +1

    Absolutely love this - love your graphics, visual depiction of the battles, maps, and narration. You have a great narration voice.

  • @jonathanschossig1276
    @jonathanschossig1276 Před 7 lety +68

    You don't hold down the fort. You hold the fort.

    • @greatalexander3820
      @greatalexander3820 Před 7 lety +10

      dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/hold-down-the-fort

    • @nosubscribe6233
      @nosubscribe6233 Před 7 lety +148

      maybe it was windy

    • @kaieden
      @kaieden Před 7 lety +3

      Just because people say it doesn't mean it makes sense. Check out David Mitchell's soapbox for more rants on asinine figures of speech.

    • @JohnDoe-ne4kg
      @JohnDoe-ne4kg Před 6 lety

      First-class (first-rate?) semantics!

    • @chrisrubin6445
      @chrisrubin6445 Před 5 měsíci

      "it doesn't actually rain cats and dogs" XD Idioms do not have to be literal my friend

  • @wnevin1626
    @wnevin1626 Před 7 lety +1

    I watch these all the time. Keep up the great work, should be a Netflix or Amazon special.

  • @miskaa6199
    @miskaa6199 Před 7 lety +3

    Great video once again 😊
    You're one of my favourite youtubers 👍😁

  • @nicolasde-brouwer2536
    @nicolasde-brouwer2536 Před 6 lety +1

    I like the background music you choose, it reminds me of Escape from New York; it gives the videos a sense of urgency

  • @zangwangdang
    @zangwangdang Před 7 lety +4

    20 minutes of Historia Civilis, holy shit.

  • @LillianKillThisMan
    @LillianKillThisMan Před 7 lety

    God, that music. Genuinely perfect. So comforting. Sighed in satisfaction as soon as I heard it.

  • @knittedgandhi4956
    @knittedgandhi4956 Před 4 lety +4

    Thanks for these. They're very interesting!
    I live in this area of Britain. I know the Dover Cliffs, and I tomorrow I'll be cycling past the (modern) memorial to Julius Caesar's likely landing site(s).
    Interestingly, I live near to the likely site of the 'Last Stand' of Casseavelious' allies' last stand (54bc)... and it is within a 15 minute walk of the last uprising on English Soil (31st May 1838, the Battle of Bossenden Wood)... and a 45 minute walk from what is arguably the last battle with a foreign enemy on English soil, (at Seasalter, when, during the Battle of Britain, the crew of a downed German Bomber removed their aircraft's machine guns and set up defensive positions on the Graveney Marshes and had a gun battle with a platoon of British Soldiers billeted in the local pun, ("The Sportsman"... a few years ago voted one of the best pub/restaurants in Britain!).
    Kent is riddled with military history. It is the English County with more castles than any other, (though English people never realise this!). On my walks around the local fields I've found everything from Stone Aged flints, through to Medieval crossbow bolts, through to WW2 bullets fired by both Allied and Axis aircraft.
    Kent is an amazing place to live!

  • @ciaranmccallion5719
    @ciaranmccallion5719 Před 7 lety +1

    So exciting every time i see a new video posted! Great work man, keep it!

  • @Kbksnake
    @Kbksnake Před 7 lety +4

    Historia Civilis releases another video. Hang on Professor, I'm listening to a real academic on CZcams.

  • @malingmann
    @malingmann Před 7 lety

    If you quit making these videos, I dont know what to do!
    I so enjoy watching this!
    Keep 'em comin'!

  • @SamIAmSXE
    @SamIAmSXE Před 7 lety +7

    Fun fact: The Britain's knew who Caesar was upon his arrival because of the Shakespearean play "Julius Caesar".

  • @getmeoutofsanfrancisco9917

    I absolutely love your methods of production and presentation in these videos. Its extremely good story telling.

  • @northman585
    @northman585 Před 6 lety +25

    Since the Britons did not write we only have Caesar's account, but basically he lost twice; it was only the third attempt that was successful.

    • @RetrousseRaptor
      @RetrousseRaptor Před 4 lety +1

      We watch the same video? Lmao

    • @fxckedup7250
      @fxckedup7250 Před 4 lety +2

      @@louiss2595 It wasent luck it was the will of the gods that the mighty Romans pacify Britain! Ave Iupiter!

    • @Matthew-Anthony
      @Matthew-Anthony Před 3 lety

      The first invasion was only a scouting expedition and Caesar only left because he lacked supplies.
      The second invasion was a success. He made allies and conqered his enemies.
      Neither invasion was any kind of loss or defeat.

  • @LordGabriel427
    @LordGabriel427 Před 5 lety +2

    You have a very interesting collection of documentaries of Ceasar. Thank you for providing the visuals, they never made learning history more interesting than you did. :)