Chapter Field Works of Caesarians and Pompeians at Dyrrachium (48 BCE)

During the campaigns of the Gallic War and the Civil War, Gaius Julius Caesar repeatedly led siege operations, personally commanding at least 17 sieges. Caesar repeatedly demonstrated innovation during them, the most famous example of which is the construction of a double line of fortifications arou...

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Autor principal: Wilczyński, Michał
Formato: Online
Idioma:polonês
Publicado em: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego 2025
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Acesso em linha:ONIX_20250307_9788383313733_1984
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author Wilczyński, Michał
author_browse Wilczyński, Michał
author_facet Wilczyński, Michał
author_sort Wilczyński, Michał
collection Directory of Open Access Books
description During the campaigns of the Gallic War and the Civil War, Gaius Julius Caesar repeatedly led siege operations, personally commanding at least 17 sieges. Caesar repeatedly demonstrated innovation during them, the most famous example of which is the construction of a double line of fortifications around Alesia in 52 BCE, which allowed the Romans to repel the attacks of both the Gallic relief and the besieged. Siege operations undertaken by Caesar at Dyrrachium in 48 BC, to which this article is devoted, seems no less interesting. At that time, he showed particular creativity and boldness by surrounding the more numerous army of Gnaeus Pompey the Great with a belt of fortifications some 25 km long. The article analyses the following issues: the topography of the battle site; reasons for initiating the fortification effort by Caesar; types of fortifications erected by his soldiers; the fortification works carried out by the Pompeians and their actions to slow down the enemy's work; the factors enabling Pompey's army to break the blockade. In the conclusion, assessments of Caesar's undertaking were presented, and an attempt to answer the question about the uniqueness of the activities carried out under Dyrrachium from the point of view of the ancient art of war was made. The source basis for the analysis is the account of Book III of Caesar's Commentarii de bello civili (BC III, 41–54; 58–72), supplemented by the accounts of other ancient authors.
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language pol
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spelling doab-20.500.12854ir-1563342025-03-07T15:11:22Z Chapter Field Works of Caesarians and Pompeians at Dyrrachium (48 BCE) Wilczyński, Michał tools of war Blue Army Roman military ancient siege art Polish medieval cavalry urban arsenals guerrilla warfare military industry General Aleksander Litwinowicz imagology engineering troops war propaganda Middle East World War II Aviation Polish-Bolshevik war IRA Arab League During the campaigns of the Gallic War and the Civil War, Gaius Julius Caesar repeatedly led siege operations, personally commanding at least 17 sieges. Caesar repeatedly demonstrated innovation during them, the most famous example of which is the construction of a double line of fortifications around Alesia in 52 BCE, which allowed the Romans to repel the attacks of both the Gallic relief and the besieged. Siege operations undertaken by Caesar at Dyrrachium in 48 BC, to which this article is devoted, seems no less interesting. At that time, he showed particular creativity and boldness by surrounding the more numerous army of Gnaeus Pompey the Great with a belt of fortifications some 25 km long. The article analyses the following issues: the topography of the battle site; reasons for initiating the fortification effort by Caesar; types of fortifications erected by his soldiers; the fortification works carried out by the Pompeians and their actions to slow down the enemy's work; the factors enabling Pompey's army to break the blockade. In the conclusion, assessments of Caesar's undertaking were presented, and an attempt to answer the question about the uniqueness of the activities carried out under Dyrrachium from the point of view of the ancient art of war was made. The source basis for the analysis is the account of Book III of Caesar's Commentarii de bello civili (BC III, 41–54; 58–72), supplemented by the accounts of other ancient authors. 2025-03-07T15:11:20Z 2025-03-07T15:11:20Z 2023 chapter ONIX_20250307_9788383313733_1984 9788383313733 9788383313726 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/156334 pol image/jpeg Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International https://www.press.uni.lodz.pl/index.php/wul/catalog/book/815 Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego 10.18778/8331-372-6.02 During the campaigns of the Gallic War and the Civil War, Gaius Julius Caesar repeatedly led siege operations, personally commanding at least 17 sieges. Caesar repeatedly demonstrated innovation during them, the most famous example of which is the construction of a double line of fortifications around Alesia in 52 BCE, which allowed the Romans to repel the attacks of both the Gallic relief and the besieged. Siege operations undertaken by Caesar at Dyrrachium in 48 BC, to which this article is devoted, seems no less interesting. At that time, he showed particular creativity and boldness by surrounding the more numerous army of Gnaeus Pompey the Great with a belt of fortifications some 25 km long. The article analyses the following issues: the topography of the battle site; reasons for initiating the fortification effort by Caesar; types of fortifications erected by his soldiers; the fortification works carried out by the Pompeians and their actions to slow down the enemy's work; the factors enabling Pompey's army to break the blockade. In the conclusion, assessments of Caesar's undertaking were presented, and an attempt to answer the question about the uniqueness of the activities carried out under Dyrrachium from the point of view of the ancient art of war was made. The source basis for the analysis is the account of Book III of Caesar's Commentarii de bello civili (BC III, 41–54; 58–72), supplemented by the accounts of other ancient authors. 10.18778/8331-372-6.02 83bfe9c9-323d-4283-b087-d859fd9af314 9788383313733 9788383313726 11-24 open access
spellingShingle tools of war
Blue Army
Roman military
ancient siege art
Polish medieval cavalry
urban arsenals
guerrilla warfare
military industry
General Aleksander Litwinowicz
imagology engineering troops
war propaganda
Middle East
World War II
Aviation
Polish-Bolshevik war
IRA
Arab League
Wilczyński, Michał
Chapter Field Works of Caesarians and Pompeians at Dyrrachium (48 BCE)
title Chapter Field Works of Caesarians and Pompeians at Dyrrachium (48 BCE)
title_full Chapter Field Works of Caesarians and Pompeians at Dyrrachium (48 BCE)
title_fullStr Chapter Field Works of Caesarians and Pompeians at Dyrrachium (48 BCE)
title_full_unstemmed Chapter Field Works of Caesarians and Pompeians at Dyrrachium (48 BCE)
title_short Chapter Field Works of Caesarians and Pompeians at Dyrrachium (48 BCE)
title_sort chapter field works of caesarians and pompeians at dyrrachium 48 bce
topic tools of war
Blue Army
Roman military
ancient siege art
Polish medieval cavalry
urban arsenals
guerrilla warfare
military industry
General Aleksander Litwinowicz
imagology engineering troops
war propaganda
Middle East
World War II
Aviation
Polish-Bolshevik war
IRA
Arab League
topic_facet tools of war
Blue Army
Roman military
ancient siege art
Polish medieval cavalry
urban arsenals
guerrilla warfare
military industry
General Aleksander Litwinowicz
imagology engineering troops
war propaganda
Middle East
World War II
Aviation
Polish-Bolshevik war
IRA
Arab League
url ONIX_20250307_9788383313733_1984
work_keys_str_mv AT wilczynskimichał chapterfieldworksofcaesariansandpompeiansatdyrrachium48bce