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                <urn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:C.civilis_claudius_1</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="C"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="civilis-claudius-bio-1" n="civilis_claudius_1"><head><label><persName xml:lang="la"><addName full="yes">Civi'lis</addName>,
        <surname full="yes">Clau'dius</surname></persName></label></head><p>was the leader of the Batavi in their revolt from Rome, <date when-custom="69">A. D.
       69</date>-<date when-custom="70">70</date>. The Batavi were a people of Germanic origin, who had
      left the nation of the Catti, of which they were a part, and had settled in and about the
      island which is formed by the mouths of the Rhenus (Rhine) and Mesa (Maas). The important
      position which they occupied led the Romans to cultivate their friendship, and they rendered
      good service to Rome in the wars in Germany and Britain, under the early emperors. When Rome
      gave up the idea of subduing Germany, the nations west of the Rhine, especially those of
      Germanic origin, began to feel a hope of setting themselves free. The civil wars afforded an
      opportunity for the attempt, and the oppressions of the imperial legates furnished the
      provocation. It was out of such an act of oppression that the rebellion of Civilis sprung.
       <note anchored="true" place="margin">* In the following narrative it is necessary to bear in mind the
       distinction between <hi rend="ital">Germany,</hi> properly so called, and the two Gallic
       provinces on the left bank of the Rhine, which, from their population being chiefly of
       Germanic origin, were called <hi rend="ital">the Germanies</hi> (Germania Inferior, and
       Germania Superior). The scene of the war with Civilis was on the left bank of the Rhine, and
       chiefly in Germania Inferior.</note></p><p>Julius Paulus and Claudius Civilis were brothers <note anchored="true" place="margin">† Tacitus
        (<bibl n="Tac. Hist. 1.59">Tac. Hist. 1.59</bibl>) also calls Civilis Julius, and so do
       other writers. (Plut. <hi rend="ital">Erot.</hi> 25, p. 770: where, however, Julius Tutor is
       possibly meant, Frontin. <hi rend="ital">Strat.</hi> 4.3.14.)</note> of the Batavian royal
      race, and excelled all their nation in personal accomplishments. On a false charge of treason,
      Nero's legate, Fonteius Capito, put Julius Paulus to death, <date when-custom="67">A. D. 67</date>
      or 68, and sent Civilis in chains to Nero at Rome, where he was heard and acquitted by Galba.
      He was afterwards prefect of a cohort, but under Vitellius he became an object of suspicion to
      the army, who demanded his punishment. (Compare <bibl n="Tac. Hist. 1.59">Tac. Hist.
       1.59</bibl>.) He escaped the danger, but he did not forget the affront. He thought of
      Hannibal and Sertorius, like whom he had lost an eye; and, being endowed, says Tacitus, with
      greater mental power than is common among barbarians, he began the execution of his schemes of
      enmity to Rome under the pretence of supporting the cause of Vespasian. In order to understand
      the events which occurred at this period in the Germanies and Gaul, it must be remembered that
      the legions of Germany were Vitellius's own troops, who had called him to the purple, and who
      remained steadfast to his cause to the very last. The legates, on the other hand, early chose
      the side of Vespasian, and it was not without reason that they were accused by their soldiers
      of treasonable <pb n="759"/> connivance at the progress of the insurrection on the Rhine. (See
      especially <bibl n="Tac. Hist. 4.27">Tac. Hist. 4.27</bibl>.) Thus Civilis was urged by a
      letter from Antonius Primus, and by a personal request from Hordeonius Flaccus, to prevent the
      German legions from marching into Italy to the support of Vitellius, by the appearance of a
      Germanic insurrection; an appearance which Civilis himself resolved to convert into a reality.
      His designs were aided by an edict of Vitellius, calling for a levy of the Batavians, and
      still more by the harshness with which the command was executed; for feeble old men were
      compelled to pay for exemption from service, and beautiful boys were seized for the vilest
      purposes. Irritated by these cruelties, and urged by Civilis and his confederates, the
      Batavians refused the levy; and Civilis having, according to the ancient German custom, called
      a solemn meeting at night in a sacred grove, easily bound the chiefs of the Batavians by an
      oath to revolt. Messengers were sent to secure the assistance of the Canninefates, another
      Germanic tribe, living on the same island, and others to try the fidelity of the Batavian
      cohorts, which had formerly served in Britain, and were now stationed at Magontiacum, as a
      part of the Roman army on the Rhine. The first of these missions was completely successful.
      The Canninefates chose Brinno for their chief; and he, having joined to himself the Frisii, a
      nation beyond the Rhine, attacked the furthest winter quarters of the Romans, and compelled
      them to retire from their forts. Upon this, Civilis, still dissembling, accused the prefects,
      because they had deserted the camp, and declared that with his single cohort he would repress
      the revolt of the Canninefates, while the rest of the army might betake themselves quietly to
      their winter quarters. His treachery was, however, seen through, and he found himself
      compelled openly to join the insurgents. At the head of the Canninefates, Frisii, and Batavi,
      he engaged the Romans on the bank of the Rhine. In the midst of the battle, a cohort of the
      Tungri deserted to Civilis, and decided the battle on the land; while the Roman fleet, which
      had been collected on the river to co-operate with the legions, was carried over to the German
      bank by the rowers, many of whom wore Batavians, who overpowered the pilots and centurions.
      Civilis followed up his victory by sending messengers through the two Germanies and the
      provinces of Gaul, urging the people to rebellion; and aimed at the kingdom of the Germanies
      and Gauls. Hordeonius Flaccus, the governor of the Germanies, who had secretly encouraged the
      first efforts of Civilis, now ordered his legate, Mummius Lupercus, to march against the
      enemy. Civilis gave him battle; and Lupercus was immediately deserted by an <hi rend="ital">ala</hi> of Batavians; the rest of the auxiliaries fled; and the legionary soldiers were
      obliged to retreat into Vetera Castra, the great station which Augustus had formed on the left
      bank of the Rhine, as the head quarters for operations against Germany. About the same time
      some veteran cohorts of Batavians and Canninefates, who were on their march into Italy by the
      order of Vitellius, were induced by the emissaries of Civilis to mutiny and to march back into
      lower Germany, in order to join Civilis, which they were enabled to effect by the indecision
      of Hordeonius Flaccus; defeating, on their way, the forces of Herennius Gallus, who was
      stationed at Bonn, and who was forced by his soldiers to resist their march. Civilis was now
      at the head of a complete army; but, being still unwilling to commit himself to an open
      contest with the Roman power, he caused his followers to take the oath to Vespasian, and sent
      envoys to the two legions which, as above related, had taken refuge in Vetera Castra, to
      induce them to take the same oath. Enraged at their refusal, he called to arms the whole
      nation of the Batavi, who were joined by the Bructeri and Teucteri, while emissaries were sent
      into Germany to rouse the people. The Roman legates, Mummius Lupercus and Numisius Rufus,
      strengthened the fortifications of Vetera Castra. Civilis marched down both banks of the
      Rhine, having ships also on the river, and blockaded the camp, after a fruitless attempt to
      storm it. The operations of Hordeonius Flaccus were retarded by his weakness, his anxiety to
      serve Vespasian, and the mistrust of his soldiers, to whom this inclination was no secret; and
      he was at last compelled to give up the command to Dillius Vocula. The dissensions at this
      period in the Roman camp are described elsewhere. [<hi rend="smallcaps">HORDEONIUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">FLACCUS</hi>; <hi rend="smallcaps">HERENNIUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">GALLUS</hi> ; <hi rend="smallcaps">DILLIUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">VOCULA.</hi>] Civilis, in the meantime, having been joined by large
      forces from all Germany, proceeded to harass the tribes of Gaul west of the Mosa, even as far
      as the Menapii and Morini, on the sea shore, in order to shake their fidelity to the Romans.
      His efforts were more especially directed against the Treviri and the Ubii. The Ubii were firm
      in their faith, and suffered severely in consequence. He then pressed on the siege of Vetera
      Castra, and, yielding to the ardour of his new allies beyond the Rhine, tried again to storm
      it. The effort failed, and he had recourse to attempts to tamper with the besieged
      soldiery.</p><p>These events occurred towards the end of A. D. 69, before the battle of Cremona, which
      decided the victory of Vespasian over Vitellius. [<hi rend="smallcaps">VESPASIANUS.</hi>] When
      the news of that battle reached the Roman army on the Rhine, <hi rend="smallcaps">ALPINUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">MONTANUS</hi> was sent to Civilis to summon him to lay down his arms,
      since his professed object was now accomplished. The only result of this mission was, that
      Civilis sowed the seeds of disaffection in the envoy's mind. Civilis now sent against Vocula
      his veteran cohorts and the bravest of the Germans, under the command of Julius Maximus, and
      Claudius Victor, his sister's son, who, having taken on their march the winter quarters of an
      auxiliary <hi rend="ital">ala,</hi> at Asciburgium, fell suddenly upon the camp of Vocula,
      which was only saved by the arrival of unexpected aid. Civilis and Vocula are both blamed by
      Tacitus, the former for not sending a sufficient force, the latter for neglecting to follow up
      his victory. Civilis now attempted to gain over the legions who were besieged in Vetera
      Castra, by pretending that he had conquered Vocula, but one of the captives whom he paraded
      before the walls for this purpose, shouted out and revealed the truth, his credit, as Tacitus
      observes, being the more established by the fact, that he was stabbed to death by the Germans
      on the spot. Shortly afterwards, Vocula marched up to the relief of Vetera Castra, and
      defeated Civilis, but again neglected to follow up his victory, most probably from design.
       [<hi rend="smallcaps">VOCULA.</hi>] Civilis soon again reduced the Romans to great want of
      provisions, and forced them to retire to Gelduba, and thence to Novesium, while he again
      invested Vetera Castra, and took Gelduba. The Romans, paralyzed by new dissensions [<hi rend="smallcaps">HORDEONIUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">FLACCUS</hi>; <hi rend="smallcaps">VOCULA</hi>], suffered another defeat
      from Civilis; <pb n="760"/> but some of them, rallying under Vocula, retook Magontiacum.</p><p>At the beginning of the new year (<date when-custom="70">A. D. 70</date>), the war assumed a fresh
      and more formidable character. The news of the death of Vitellius exasperated the Roman
      soldiers, encouraged the insurgents, and shook the fidelity of the Gauls; while a rumour was
      moreover circulated that the winter quarters of the Moesian and Pannonian legions were
      besieged by the Dacians and Sarmatians; and above all the burning of the Capitol was esteemed
      an omen of the approaching end of the Roman empire. Civilis, whose last remnant of
      dissimulation was necessarily torn away by the death of Vitellius, gave his undivided energies
      to the war, and was joined by Classicus and Julius Tutor, who at length gained over the army
      of Vocula. [<hi rend="smallcaps">CLASSICUS</hi>; <hi rend="smallcaps">TUTOR</hi>; <hi rend="smallcaps">SABINUS.</hi>] The besieged legions at Vetera Castra could now hold out no
      longer; they capitulated to Civilis, and took the oath <hi rend="ital">to the empire of the
       Gauls</hi> (<hi rend="ital">in verba Galliarum</hi>), but as they marched away, they were all
      put to death by the Germans, probably not without the connivance of Civilis. That chieftain,
      having at length performed his vow of enmity to the Romans, now cut off his hair which,
      according to the custom of the Germans, he had suffered to grow since the beginning of his
      enterprise. (Tac. <hi rend="ital">Germ.</hi> 31.) Neither Civilis nor any others of the
      Batavians took the oath <hi rend="ital">in verbs Galliarum,</hi> which was the watchword of
      Classicus and Tutor, for they trusted that, after having disposed of the Romans, they should
      be able to overpower their Gallic allies. Civilis and Classicus now destroyed all the Roman
      winter camps, except those at Magontiacum and Vindonissa. The Germans demanded the destruction
      of Colonia Agrippinensis, but it was at length spared, chiefly through the gratitude of
      Civilis, whose son had been kept in safety there since the beginning of the war. Civilis now
      gained over several neighbouring states. He was opposed by his old enemy <hi rend="smallcaps">CLAUDIUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">LABEO</hi>, at the head of an irregular force of Betasii, Tungri, and
      Nervii; and, by a daring act of courage, he not only decided the victory, but gained the
      alliance of the Tungri and the other tribes. The attempt, however, to unite all Gaul in the
      revolt completely failed, the Treviri and the Lingones being the only people who joined the
      insurgents. [<hi rend="smallcaps">SABINUS.</hi>]</p><p>The reports of these events which were carried to Rome had at length roused Mucianus, who
      now sent an immense army to the Rhine, under Petilius Cerealis and Annius Gallus [<hi rend="smallcaps">CEREALIS</hi>; <hi rend="smallcaps">GALLUS, ANNIUS.</hi>] The insurgents
      were divided among themselves, Civilis was busy among the Belgae, trying to crush Claudius
      Labeo; Classicus was quietly enjoying his new empire; while Tutor neglected the important
      duty, which had been assigned to him, of guarding the Upper Rhine and the passes of the Alps.
      Cerealis had therefore little difficulty in overcoming the Treviri and regaining their
      capital. [<hi rend="smallcaps">TUTOR</hi>; <hi rend="smallcaps">VALENTINUS.</hi>] While he was
      stationed there he received a letter from Civilis and Classicus, informing him that Vespasian
      was dead, and offering him the empire of the Gauls. Civilis now wished to wait for succours
      from beyond the Rhine, but the opinion of Tutor and Classicus prevailed, and a battle was
      fought on the Mosella in which the Romans, though at first almost beaten, gained a complete
      victory, and destroyed the enemy's camp. Colonia Agrippinensis now came over to the Romans;
      but Civilis and Classicus still made a brave stand. The Canninefates destroyed the greater
      part of a Roman fleet, and defeated a body of the Nervii, who, after submitting to Fabius
      Priscus, the Roman legate, had of their own accord attacked their former allies. Having
      renewed his army from Germany, Civilis encamped at Vetera Castra, whither Cerealis also
      marched with increased forces, both leaders being eager for a decisive battle. It was soon
      fought, and Cerealis gained the victory by the treachery of a Batavian; but, as the Romans had
      no fleet, the Germans escaped across the Rhine. Here Civilis was joined by reinforcements from
      the Chauci; and, after making, with Verax, Classicus, and Tutor, one more effort which was
      partially successful, to hold his ground in the island of the Batavi, he was again defeated by
      Cerealis, and driven back across the Rhine. Emissaries were sent by Cerealis to make private
      offers of peace to the Batavians, and of pardon to Civilis, who found that he had no
      alternative but to surrender. He obtained an interview with Cerealis on a bridge of the river
      Vahalis. The <title>History</title> of Tacitus breaks off suddenly just after the commencement
      of his speech. (<bibl n="Tac. Hist. 4.12">Tac. Hist. 4.12</bibl>_<bibl n="Tac. Hist. 4.37">37</bibl>, <bibl n="Tac. Hist. 4.54">54</bibl>_<bibl n="Tac. Hist. 4.79">79</bibl>, <bibl n="Tac. Hist. 5.14">5.14</bibl>_<bibl n="Tac. Hist. 5.26">26</bibl>. Joseph. <hi rend="ital">Bell. Jud.</hi> 7.4.2; <bibl n="D. C. 66.3">D. C. 66.3</bibl>.) </p><byline>[<ref target="author.P.S">P.S</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
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