Lions Led By Donkeys Podcast - Episode 380 - The Siege of Alesia
Episode Date: September 15, 2025SUPPORT THE SHOW ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/lionsledbydonkeys GET LIVESTREAM TICKETS FOR OCT 4TH https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/livestream-lions-led-by-donkeys-podcast-live-in-glasgow-4th-oc...tober-2025-tickets-1532091008449 Julius Caesar and the Gauls create a world's most murderous version of lasanga as regular siege becomes a double siege, turns into the final nail in the coffin of a rebellion against Rome. Sources: John Saddler, Rosie Serdiville. Caesar's Greatest Victory https://www.historynet.com/caesar-gaul-alesia/ https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/article/caesars-grand-siege-at-alesia/ https://www.historyonthenet.com/engines-of-destruction-roman-advancement-of-siege-warfare
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody, Joe here. Good news, I suppose. Our October 4th show in Glasgow, Scotland, is sold
out. We have sold out the second biggest venue we've ever done a show at. But good news, if you
still want to see us, we will be live streaming it. There's no limit on however many live stream
tickets are available. You can get it at the link below. It also comes with video on demand.
So if you can't stay up that late, depending on your time zone or whatever, you'll still have
the video available for you when you wake up and want to watch it at your own convenience. So
check out the show notes, see the live stream link, and get your tickets for October 4th.
Thanks. If you like what we do here on the show, consider supporting us on Patreon. Just
$5 a month gets you access to our entire bonus episode catalog as well as every regular
episode, one full week early. Access to all of our side series that are currently ongoing
and our back catalog of those as well.
Gets you e-books,
audiobooks,
first dibs on live show tickets
and merchandise
when they're available,
and also gets you access
to our Discord,
which has turned into a lovely little community.
So go to patreon.com
slash lions led by donkeys
and join the Legion of the Old Crow today.
Hello and welcome to the Lions at Buy Donkeys podcast.
I'm Joe and with me is Tom and Nate.
We are the triumvirate CEOs of Flesh.
You may know us from the world's first skin gig gathering app,
allowing you, our consumer, to sell bulk, discarded skin to us at wholesale
prices at any one of our four conveniently located drop spots in Cleveland, Akron, Cincinnati,
and the scenic West Bank settlement of Kfar WhatsApp, which is populated solely by sex offenders
from New York City. Like many new and upcoming tech CEOs, we have been inspired by the leadership
of Julius Caesar. However, we believe that those other CEOs simply did not go far enough. So we'd
like to introduce our new employment concept, slavery. Rather than going through the pain, logistical
nightmare of onboarding new employees, we have partnered with Peter Thiel's new company
Brown shirt. And for the small price of a cup of coffee, we can temporary hire local cops
to invade other smaller Silicon Valley businesses to kidnap their interns and steal their
passports. Thank you for attending our shareholder meeting. We look forward to seeing you all at our
next grand opening in Doha. Put the fucking lotion in the basket.
like as someone who like I recently started playing
cyberpunk 27 is like it's not that far off I didn't think a game released in
2019 would pre-figure what we're living in in 2025 but also as someone who got
hassled by the police on Wednesday for wearing a kaffia yep this is just the
reality we're gonna live in isn't the future fun fun fellas I've gathered you
here today to talk about that thing that all been our age eventually talking
about Julius Caesar because Rome is to middle-aged white guys as dinosaurs are to a six-year-old.
Also, it's a popular haircut for balding middle-aged men as well who want to hide their receding
hairlines. I'll do you one better. I was both into dinosaurs and then also into the Roman
Empire and Julius Caesar when I was like seven. So this is really ticking all the boxes for me.
So in your professional opinion, what kind of dinosaur would Julius Caesar be?
That's a tough one.
award-winning history podcast, folks.
Yeah, award-winning history podcast.
I don't know.
I feel like a stegasaur could probably be stabbed to death by a lot of people.
So, you know, at the end of the day, that sort of fits.
All the other ones, I mean, stabing might, I don't know, take too long.
Like, how do you stab a Diplodocus?
Like, you stab it like, like you're killing the wise old turtle and dark souls.
It takes you two years, just slashing over and over again.
Somewhere in Ohio, there's a tweaker floating in a bath that's doing like Midwest pre-cock
to figure out if your child's going to be gay.
I was like, are they into?
Julius Caesar, dinosaurs, what's the third thing that's going to make your child gay?
Hey, come on. That's a very mean summary of upstream color, Tom. I thought for somebody
as a film aficionado like you, you'd have a little more respect. I mean, I guess the third thing
for me would have been Pokemon a lot, but I was of the age, you know? Yeah, but also the thing
with Joe is that like everything that you have that's funny in that regard is like no one can point
to it. It'd be like, see, and that's what turned you into not heterosexual because like
you or Joe is like the, he's like the, what do they call it the reference group for this
podcast. He's the one who takes the placebo that doesn't make you gay.
Caesar inspired some of the worst fucking people were somehow dealing with today,
but also birthed the Roman Empire, dropped the sickest one upper lighted human history
while being stabbed to death, and of course, conquered Gaul for Rome.
Caesar was obviously born into a very, very important patrician family.
It was full of vast wealth, power and influence, which he all used to, you know, get
of why we know he exists.
So we're down playing the achievements of
Julius Caesar because he's a Nepo baby.
Julius Caesar's parents' names
blue in the engraved form of Wikipedia.
Wikipedia.
But also, that little
fact of conquering Gaul
really made everything
he did possible. I mean, it's the reason
why the place I'm living
is speaking French and not
Welsh, Manx,
Breton, some kind of Celtic language, some Mishmash,
you know what I mean?
Weirdly, Switzerland does come up in this episode.
Oh, really?
Yeah, cool.
Strangely not that.
The Switzerland was ruled, yeah, because Switzerland was all, like, Gaulish and Celtic tribes
at one point.
That's why this is a side note, which is dumb an interruption for me, but the Swiss
French call the Swiss Germans bourbon, which is like basically a Frenchification of
bookbinder or like bookbinders, because they're all just like nerds with their books and
obsessed with little details.
And the Swiss Germans call the Swiss French, the divetian, like the Welsh, the Celtics.
basically. It's like, fuck you.
He's like, oh, you're a bunch of nerds with little bookbinding print.
I think you small press. It's like, yeah, well, you're all Welsh.
Fuck you. Go eat some leaks, bitch.
Those are some deep cuts.
Yeah. So, but that, I mean, bring it back to the actual topic.
Yeah, at the time, even the name like Helvetica or, you know, Helvetic Confederation.
Fucking bloody L. It's Julius Caesar.
Comes from the Helveti, who were a Celtic tribe that lived here.
Yeah. But if there's one thing that Caesar did in Gaul that we still hear about today,
of course, horrific genocide.
But if there's two things we've heard about, it's the siege of Alessia, which was not just
any normal siege that we've talked about on the show before, but rather, like a rainbow
that was once weirdly popular on the internet, it was a double siege.
A double siege.
A military concept that really does not exist for a very good reason.
It's not something that happens very often.
Oh, when Julius Caesar does genocide, it's all good.
But when I, Benjamin WhatsApp do it, it's wrong.
Godfair.
Yeah.
Tel Aviv mayor, Benjamin Watson.
I reclaimed my ancestral family name when I emigrated to Israel.
I'm actually from Serbia.
That's WhatsAppovich.
Today's episode brings us to the era of the first triumvirate,
where Caesar, Krasis, and Pompeii formed a informal but formal alliance controlling Rome
through a network of influence peddling, outright voter fraud, and violence.
Thankfully, something that could certainly never happen again.
Caesar managed to leverage this deal,
promising to further the other two men's interests
if they backed them for the position of consul.
All three of them held their end of the deal,
and at the end of that consulship,
Caesar once again used the system to engineer himself
the position of pro-council,
which is effectively a governor,
of three different Roman provinces,
which is not something that normally happens.
He was made the pro-council of Sisylphine Gaul,
Elyricum, and Orranesis.
all things that sound like serious medical conditions.
No, they're sissifying gall.
No, they're doing sissing hit no one goal.
But it's just funny because there's cis alpine gall and there's also transalpine gall.
And it's like if you're like a cis and trans or made up internet words, it's like, tell Julius Caesar that.
Wow.
Yeah.
And he's got a really short sword.
He's jam it right into your zyphoid process and fucking be done with you.
One of the reasons that Caesar wanted these specific places was honestly quite simple.
it would benefit him wildly.
It didn't take a rocket scientist or,
I don't know what a Romans would use in this saying.
They didn't have rockets yet.
It didn't take the local horse cart engineer
to understand why this would benefit it.
Trebushé scientist, maybe.
I'll take that, yeah.
Trebusha guy.
It doesn't take a viaduct architect,
doesn't take a Dick statue carver.
It doesn't take the guy who chisels the,
dicks and all the statues to understand this. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It doesn't take a guy
whose last moment on earth when Mount Vesuvius was destroying Pompeii, uh, usually that to jack off
if he immortalizes jacking off. It doesn't take that guy to know this. He was wise, though.
Real dudes of history. It didn't take the, the Pompeii jacking off guy to know that the
triumvirate would not last forever. And Caesar would need to score some serious political points
over the other two, because Pompey had a, the guy not the city, had a, had a large
history of military victories. And Krasis was the richest man in Rome at the time who also
had a long list of military victories. Both men had had multiple triumphs at this point. So that
put Caesar and the annals of Roman political power at the time solidly third. I've always wondered
how to say this stuff because I never had a classics education. And it's like, is it Pompey?
Because Pompey to me sounds like a minor character in Paw Patrol. I don't want to say it.
So I said Pompey is fine. But yeah, it's Pompey.
Pump it. Yeah, I have no idea. I didn't go to British accent school where you learn nothing
but this. Pompy, the Paw Patrol guy who's stabbing the Gaulish Paul Patrol guys?
I mean, the Paw Patrol universe, weirdly popular outside of the United States, amongst small
kids, if they branch it off into Roman Empire shit, they would dominate that like six to eight
year old market. They have to have dinosaur paw patrol, dragon paw patrol, Roman Empire Paw Patrol,
ancient Greek, or no, ancient Egypt paw patrol, can you imagine? That's like you've got the entirety
It would also slap with the podcaster dads of these kids.
Oh, yeah, exactly.
You know, they'd be able to reify Paw Patrol.
We'd soften our ACAP stance.
Doing a military triumph for a tiny blue dog.
But Julian Caesar was smart enough to know that Gaul was ripe for the picking and would
eventually give him the opportunity to put some of the wind column for himself as this new
pro-council.
There was also this small problem that, despite having served as counsel, which is technically
the highest political position in Rome at the time.
being part of the triumvirate and now being pro-council of three different provinces.
Caesar was fucking broke.
A lot of this had to do with the politics of the popularist movement and the optimist movement,
but he was spending a crazy amount of money winning people over to the point that he had nothing left.
So he hoped as pro-council, he'd be able to leverage that into a way to make a fortune,
mostly in the form of war booty, namely slaves.
Huge slave situation here.
that's going to be how Caesar builds his vast amounts of wealth, but we'll get to that point.
And he knew that the three provinces that he was now pro-council also happened to border
a lot of parts of Gaul that were technically unconquered by Rome.
So, it's all open and for the taking.
And pretty much as soon as he takes the position, shit starts popping off.
The Helvetiai people who lived in what today would be the Swiss Alps decided that yield,
Switzerland sucked shit since nobody had stolen a bunch of gold yet and decided to move west.
directly into the territory of Aduai people, which would be Savoy today.
The Aduai happened to be a tribe with a Roman alliance.
So they quickly turn to the Romans and call for help.
That's like literally where I live now.
Like Savoy is what used to surround Geneva.
Like, yeah, when it was a city state.
Like that's wild.
So internecine Swiss beefs.
Well, also just, I think some of it too is just the fact that like the climate sucked.
It was awful.
It was incredible.
Like for a long time during this period, like, you know,
it was glaciers and whatnot were much further extent than they are now, and like they were
encroaching. They were just like, oh, winter was kind of bad. This week was kind of cold, so a glacier
crushed an entire village. Yeah. Almost like climate change has constantly caused the forced
migration of people. No need to look into that. Let's not talk about that. I don't want to get deported
from Switzerland, so I can't have that opinion, sorry. Caesar had four legions at his disposal,
owing to the fact that the Roman government gave him a much larger army and was normal due to the
fact that he was pro-council three places rather than the normal one. He also just began raising
more legions on his own, something he was allowed to do, which most people would not have been
allowed to do. So he quickly moved in, and while the government was much harder than he thought
it would be, Romans eventually win, and after negotiations, the Helvetiai people fuck off back
to the Alps. Can you imagine facing off between the Helvetiai and the Adwai, like, head to
head, but all of them like decked out in like, you know, Roman era Celtic battle regalia with
like so much weird butter hairstyles that it looks like Sunday morning in Harajuku, like
just fully like it's just absolute. It's like it's like motorcycle gang cosplay before these
people had had the concept of the wheel. The Swiss Basuzoku coming at the Roman legion.
Exactly. With the fucking huge ass hair and shit. Going to war with all my war charm laboos
hanging off my arm.
They're actually,
they're actually severed heads of your enemies.
Yeah, yeah.
Soon after that, however,
there was more unrest,
this time with the Subiye people,
who managed to mass an army
of possibly up to 100,000,
though Caesar upon learning
that the tribe was superstitious,
and they would not move during a full moon,
I assume due to the very real threat of
werewolves, he used this against them.
He simply attacked on the full moon.
And however, this is somewhat disputed.
A lot of this comes from Caesar's own written history,
which of course always makes him seem like the smartest boy in any given room.
So in reality, you can probably assume this is like 50,000, give or take.
And the superstition could have also been very, very real as well.
But you could always subtract about a quarter to a half of any number that Caesar gives in his notes.
That's probably closer to true.
But it's also interesting too because it's like, you know,
there's things that were very much true at the time that aren't true anymore about like land masses,
things that were later submerged, you know, climate things,
places that are now deserts that used to not be like this is long enough ago
that you had these huge changes.
So what if the superstition wasn't just superstition?
What if, like, the setting of altered beast was actually real?
And if the moon was full, that would actually happen.
Like, you could just have that sort of shit pop off in a graveyard randomly.
I mean, we have our first possible case of the historical moon Turk.
Exactly.
Before Turkey was even a thing, before the Ottomans were a thing,
before the Byzantines, any of that.
It was, I mean, yeah.
Yeah, well, then that begs the question.
If, like, werewolves are subsuriant to the immortal moon, Turk, then what side does
Van Helsing fall on?
Hmm.
This is going to require further study later.
Yes.
Subscribe to the Patreon.
Uh, you'll get, you'll get more thoughts like these.
We'll trace back all of the ancestry to determine that Van Helsing is actually Greek.
Van Helsing also invented coffee.
It's actually pronounced Van Helsing.
He's Dutch.
Von Helzopoulos.
Now, this constant stream.
of intertribal beefs benefited Caesar greatly.
There is no unified force of different Golic tribes,
so it allowed Rome to inch forward and pick them off one by one,
or failing that, weaker tribes facing pressure from stronger ones,
would enter into an alliance with the Romans,
which then would allow the Romans into their backyard so they would survive.
And also, once the Romans were allowed in, they would never leave.
In other cases, Caesar turned his army against those,
who had previously served with the Romans.
A different tribe called for help against the Ottawa and the Golic warlord that answered
was a guy named Ario Vistus, who previously worked so closely with Rome and Caesar
that Caesar once led the charge of the Roman Senate to award him the title of king and friend
of the Roman people.
Aerovistus probably assumed that the title would help him with his new local pro-council.
But it didn't.
Caesar turned his army around and went to war against them too.
Though much to Caesar's frustration,
Crassus also set his legions to crush Ariovistus,
and then his war bands were punched back over the Rhine River.
But still, over time, more and more tribes reached out to Rome for help,
because it's also important to remember that Rome just being there
makes all of their lives harder.
In turn, that makes it more likely that they're going to reach out to Rome for help
against other encroaching tribes.
Caesar knows this.
Now, Caesar turns down virtually nobody that asks for help.
slowly swallowing up more and more gall in the process, which in turn led to tribes revolting
against Roman rule because Caesar would use this opportunity to crush them even further.
This eventually took Caesar as far north as the sea, where they built boats, invaded Britain,
and began crushing people there for tribute money.
A pro-consul's term usually only lasts one year, but Caesar had become so wildly successful,
so wealthy from loot and slave trades, that not only did Rome, all but,
but control Gaul at this point,
but he had been allowed to remain pro-counsel
for years longer than it was legally allowed.
The Roman army being propped up by a Caesar's
British pay pigs.
I mean, that's kind of how the Roman army worked.
Like, yeah.
The Roman legions, everybody pictures in their head,
only existed thanks to constant expansion
and warfare of the Roman Republic and then the empire.
And then once that expansion stopped,
nobody wanted to be a soldier in Rome anymore.
like we get paid shit
the food sucks
all of our benefits are gone
thankfully no other military
will go through this in the future
Roman TikTok revealing
to Roman zoomers
that there's black mold in the barracks
like the Gauls who lived
outside of the original Roman
Golic provinces probably assumed
that he and his now massive army
of 10 legions
which is about 60,000 men
were only there temporarily
Rome would leave
after all this is
hardly the first time that the Romans had come to town.
And depending on which tribe you were,
the Romans being camped out nearby,
change your life for the worse or the better.
However, over time,
the number of tribes that saw the Romans as a good thing
began to dwindle.
The reason for this is,
to make a very long story short,
is winter.
This is separate from any ideas of oppression
or national liberation.
That kind of shit just didn't exist yet.
It was simply a pain in the ass
having suddenly tens of thousands of extra dudes outside
living on your land.
They were like a cloud of locust
stripping the land bear of food, water, and wood
for their camps. And it's not like they shared.
Not to mention Caesar demanded tribute
in gold, goods, and conscripts for his army
to serve as exiliaries. So, like,
not only are they literally taking food out of your mouth.
They're also stealing your son.
Yeah, I think that make people pretty mad.
all my son's gone
yeah they come in they take the pie
out the window they take the soup pot off
the stove they take your kid
sure like yeah I dislike this
I'm not a fan oh no my large son
he was destined to drive the plow
he drove the plows so good
eventually this came to a head in 53 BC
with a tribe called the Ebrones
who lived between the Rhine and the Muse
wait between the Rhine and the Muse
means where you are now
Yeah.
Yeah.
So basically Dutch,
the Dutch Celts are like,
okay,
the Swiss Celts,
whatever they're dealing
with it,
they're getting their chickens
and soups and pies and suns stolen.
But the Dutch Celts are like,
you didn't pay me 15 euro cents for that espresso pod.
They keep sending Caesar Tickey and he's simply never paying them.
It's like this is too much for me.
I can't handle it.
Because between the muse is like the more or less border northern France border with Belgium
and then the Ryan obviously runs into the Netherlands.
So yeah.
So it's you.
It's your home territory.
It's Luxembourg, one of those areas.
Who knows?
There is a really bad harvest, and that left them with virtually nothing.
And generally speaking, this would have been survivable in normal times, but now Caesar was in town demanding that these people give them a massive portion of their crops.
Because he had seven legions camped out in the area in three different camps spaced apart so they could support.
court one another, but also close to
population centers so they could
steal their food. And
when I say like that, because it's obviously like
Roman soldiers lived off the land,
in situations like this, that was sometimes
true. They would send out foraging parties
and whatever, but in situations like this,
off the land, literally
just meant stealing food from the locals.
They would go to a town like,
you owe us this many pounds
of fucking wheat or whatever,
or we'll start burning
shit. Chute. Sons.
just whatever it is, yeah.
Put it on the wagon.
Julius, she just
camped outside our town
and he's stolen all my blackberries.
Putting a short
sword to you and saying,
run me,
your progeny.
So once this
famine hit or this bad harvest hit,
Caesar didn't lower
his required amount of shit
that he was running on them.
And one of the reasons
why Caesar had a comparatively
easy time conquering golf thus far,
was because he was able to do it piecemeal, one tribe at a time, most of the time.
There's no real unification to speak of.
They didn't have a universal fuck-that-guy moment, as we say on the show.
However, this time around, this tribe and neighboring tribes were already talking,
planning, and plotting against the Romans.
Everyone in the neighborhood, not Gaul at large, but this specific neighborhood,
was sick of their shit.
That is when Ambreaks, the king of the Ambrones, marched north to a Roman camp,
where today would be liege and warn the commanders,
hey, there's a revolt out there.
I don't think you guys have heard about it yet.
But I heard that these fucking Germans are coming over to help.
So you should come out and crush it.
The two Roman commanders in the camp,
Kata and Sabinus,
immediately began arguing with one another.
Sabinus argued that the rebellion was coming
and they needed to withdraw from the fortified camp,
moved south towards the rest of the legions,
reinforced their position.
While Cata argued, we can't do that.
Caesar didn't give us orders to withdraw and we're supposed to stay here.
Also, this is a fortified camp.
Like a fortified Roman camp has walls, has ditches, has watchtowers, it's a decent position to fight from.
Why withdraw from that and march across open terrain in the middle of fucking winter?
However, Sabinus had more political and military pull in Cada due to who his family was.
so this meant
gotta lost
so Sabinus
and most of the force
packed up their shit
and began marching south
directly into an ambush
led by Ambrox
who was lying in wait
and they slaughtered
the Romans almost to a man
Is she bouncing on my Sabinus
until I ibrox
has got to get it out there
I mean I feel like
the tribe that almost sounds
like the gibronies
a guy named Sabinus
like ibrox kind of sounds
yeah it sounds like
like a weird alpine, you know,
foraging animal or like a shitty hair metal band
from Finland. Like, it could be
so much. This is a target
rich environment. The Gauls are keeping
Kfei with these names. That is
when the nerviae hit the Romans with
the eternal... They shut the fuck
off.
This is when the tribe
from Evangelion shows up.
Now, they hit the Romans
with the Eternal Uno reverse card.
These tribes have been fighting the
Romans for years before Caesar
really put the boot down on their collective necks? They had learned a lot from that process.
Namely, whenever the Romans caught them in camp or in a village, the Romans wouldn't assault
that position. They would build a ring of fortifications around them, trenches, walls,
palisades, watchtower, stuff like that. Turn a position of strength into a position of weakness.
You'd be trapped inside. The walls you're hiding behind in a siege become less important if you
also have walls trapping you in. And now the people on the outside simply have to wait
for you to starve. So that is what the Nervi
did, digging in around a man
named Quintus, Tullius, Cicero
and his men. Trenches,
walls, watchtowers, everything.
Just rapidly fortnight hopping
around the Romans in a
massive ring that measured three
miles in circumference. And
these walls were built strong. They were
10 feet high and soared by
15 foot wide trenches. Watching
these get popped up in front of them
probably made Cistero realize,
I might be fucked. He kept sending
runners out at night trying desperately
to get word to Caesar about what was going on
but they just kept getting captured
and being murdered in just about the most horrible
ways you can imagine. More than one
guy was set on fire. For example,
you could really
see the nervy eye and the other tribes
really taking their frustrations
out whenever they caught one of these runners.
They did a pressing
upon, which I'm not sure if you're
aware what that means. It means putting a big
piece of wood on you and then piling rocks
on top of it till you're crushed a test.
Do you know what?
I bet it feels real fucking good
about a millisecond before it kills you.
Yeah, I've often said that about the rack
when you're like getting pulled apart.
Like for there's like a split second in there,
you feel the most relief any human being
has ever had before you're like
ripped in twain.
Though eventually a messenger did get through.
Got to Caesar's camp and told him
what was going on.
They're about to be wiped out.
Motherfuckers are getting crushed with rocks
and sit on fire.
Please send help.
He quickly slapped together two leaves.
agent's worth of men and some auxiliary horsemen and marched out to break the Nervi siege.
The Nervi left their positions to go confront Caesar, but decided this is a bad idea.
They got the fuck out of there.
Once Caesar got his shit together, virtually every other tribe dropped their shit and went
home, giving the Romans effectively an apology for the whole revolt thing.
Only one tribe, the Iberones refused to kneel to Caesar.
So Caesar came up with a novel solution to this problem.
divide and conquer effectively rather than marching in and putting more men at risk he told
every other tribe in the area hey if you kill those guys you could steal all their stuff
the plan worked and the tribe was wiped out. Eberoni's last words like I thought we were
friends so by the end of 53 BC gall seemed handled so much so that as winter rolled
in Caesar arranged his legions in camps once more this time making sure that
They were closer together so that shit didn't happen again.
And then went back to Rome because he was still a political mover and chaker in Rome.
He couldn't just be gone for years at a time.
He frequently went back to keep a prize of the ongoing political bullshit there.
However, the Gauls were not in fact handled.
In fact, Caesar comfortable that he had taught everyone their lesson, that even when they worked together, Romans will still kill them,
was not worried about someone else trying to rise to the surface to unite the gullal.
people. Caesars often portrayed as being so smart, so intelligent that he fundamentally
understood the people of Gaul that he was conquering. I suppose, for a Roman, that might be true.
But in general, he absolutely did not. He thought the fallen king Amriarchs had unified the Gauls.
He thought this is as good as they could get, when in reality Amriarchs had only really unified
a couple tribes than one specific region. But soon, someone,
would come around to largely unite the Gauls as a whole.
Enter Versengetricks, king of the Avernii tribe.
Though at our introduction here, he's not a king, not yet.
He's a noble who, after Caesar's invasion of Gaul, constantly stood against him.
Where other tribal leaders said working with the Romans was okay to further their own lot,
Versengeterix refused.
It seemed he understood that once people let the Romans in, they would never leave,
Regardless of the benefits they temporarily brought you, it was always a bad idea.
As people began to understand this, they rallied around Versen Gettorix.
He and his anti-Roman group were exiled from the city of Grigovia by his own uncle who was king at the time.
So Versen Gettrix rallied his followers for mostly poor, common people that were impacted largely by the Roman incursions, and invaded his own hometown, ousted his uncle, and then was proclaimed.
claimed king by his own people. Immediately afterwards, Versen Gettrick sent writers out in every
direction, making contact with his fellow tribes. Selling them on this idea of a greater alliance
was the only possible way to peel themselves away from the Romans. Many tribes still suffering
from the same thing that they were before, a lack of food made worse by Roman demands, signed up,
and Versen Gettrix quickly became the leader of the largest Golic military alliance in history
up until this point.
A few tribes were worried
that standing against Rome
was asking for us with death
and they told Versen Gettrix this.
Versen Gettorix's counterpoint to this
as, well, I'm standing right
in front of you and if you don't ally with me,
I'll kill you first.
So they joined.
Amazing. Amazing.
Very persuasive argument, sir.
Yeah, how to win for instance
and influence people, Celtic version.
How to win friends
and cleft, Twas, and Twain.
The verse and Gettorix also knew
Caesar was in Rome, which was a handy bit of knowledge to have because they knew that he was
the one they had to worry about. Without their leader, the Romans were just, they didn't seem as
intimidating. And they needed to strike while he was away. The signal for a general uprising was
an attack on the Roman town of Senabum, home to the largest Roman grain store in the entire
province, which also happened to be home to mostly civilians, who were all butchered. The
Gauls then loaded the grain up and put everything else to the torch. A word of the
gets back to Caesar, who drops everything and rushes back to Gaul, only to run into a serious
problem. The Gauls had struck to the south, leaving his legions in their winter quarters
far to the north. Obviously sending a messenger north to tell them that they needed to meet was a bad
idea, and he could hardly run over there on his own. But Vercing Gederex was not looking to march out
and fight the Romans head to head. For starters, it was winter, and he knew how Romans worked. They
stayed in their camps and they lived off of the locals. This happened in small fortified towns
called Apita. These could act as forward operating bases, but were mostly supply dumps that were
close to Roman fortifications. So you had effectively a grain silo of people living around it whose whole
job was to constantly ferry you food, which grain you stole from those people, right? If the
Gauls were going to fight the Romans, the best thing they could do was dodge the Romans entirely
and burn these small towns. Fight Caesar with a literal scorched earth tactic. I just got to say,
I think bands like, you know, Sabaton and Ammoner Marth have had a monopoly for too long on writing
songs about historical battles. I want someone who sounds like Tommy Wright III to write a song
about Versen Getterix and the Gauls stealing all the grain. Like, I want a Memphis soul tape.
Oh, no, I got galls in my grain.
I want a soul tape with Versa Gettrix's soul
dropped in it.
The problem is that it's going to probably be a French guy
trying to do a soul song.
Yeah.
I mean, Versen Gettrix is definitely like something
that be French people all learn about.
So, yeah.
Another thing that he made sure to target was
where the Romans were the weakest,
their tribal allies.
This would force these to make one of two choices,
both of which were really, really bad.
Leave their tribal allies that face the Gaul alliance alone and make Rome look weak, which in turn would probably end with most of their Gaulic alliance switching sides, or leave their fortified camps and march in winter, away from the secure food supply.
This was a choice that Versen Gedricks was trying to force Caesar to make, because both sides of it are bad for the Romans.
Caesar managed to get around the Gauls and get back to his men, and he decided the only possible way to solve this issue was to go on the march.
He knew he couldn't leave his Gaulic allies to fight the Gauls, because they would almost certainly just switch sides.
Like, there was no way they would actually continue to fight for Rome if Rome did not help them.
Versen Gettrix was a talented leader, organizationally and logistically.
I mean, look what he pulled off so far.
But he had never commanded in the field.
against the Romans, certainly not against Caesar, so he's quickly taught a lesson in underestimating
his opponent. Rather than marching right at the Gauls, Caesar split his army into threes and advanced
on three of the Apida, including one for Sen Gedrerox already had under siege, forcing him to
break off the attack and regroup. After this, Caesar made for Avaricum, one of the largest cities
in Gaul, thinking that if he took it, it would force the Gauls to back down, put their swords up,
and go home. The tribe that controlled
the city quickly sent word to Versen Getturix
that the Romans were coming.
Explained that Avaricum was easily
defensible. It had strong walls
at a large grain supply
and beg them to come to the city
and defend it. Now,
Verst and Getturix absolutely
refused because he knew what a siege
entailed. Getting pinned in
in a siege against the Romans was
a sure fireway to die.
This is called foreshadowing.
Getting
a letter saying send help
Romans about to hit the back walls of
a varicom
I knew it
I knew it's coming
because when I said the name
you giggled a little bit
I saw the look on your face
I saw the little giggle
I was like I know where this is going
yes yes
Caesar's about to hit my back walls
remember when I said
Versen Gedricks
or a scorched earth policy
well he fucking meant it
every tribe in his alliance
was forced to burn down
dozens of their own
villages to include him. He burned down a lot of his own shit too, but the goal was, is like,
look, we all burn our shit down. We're all in this together. The idea, of course, maybe for people
who have never heard this tactic before, is deny the Romans everything. The Romans did not
bring their own food supply. They're not a modern military. They live off of taking your food
supply or living off the land. Torch it all. And they have to leave. They have no choice,
especially in the winter. And Vercing Gederex's scorch earth policy was incredibly thorough.
But when it came to Avaricum, that particular city, that tribe begged Versengettrix to allow them to not burn it,
calling it the gem of Gaul, and should they win, they need a royal city, a fact of like they need a city to
birth their new country around their new state, as much as one existed back then.
So Versengetericks agreed to spare the city, but warn them, if the Romans show up, you're on your
fucking own. So I don't know what they expected with that exact thing happened.
Caesar marched on towards the town and began building fortifications around it like he always did.
This is really hardgoing because of Aracom was actually very easily defendable, owing to the
fact it was built against rivers, it was constructed almost entirely on a swamp, and the only
way to set upon the city itself was climbing a ridge line. So it required the Romans to build an
entire earthwork because the city happened to be surrounded by something of a natural moat that was
dry. It was a really big pain in the ass. So it eventually forced the Romans and Roman engineers
to build earthworks 80 feet high in some places just to get into the city or at the city walls.
Yeah, for anyone listening at home, it's like bang in the center of France as well. If you're
thinking of where this is located. Yeah, yeah. So if you're familiar with France, it's like a little way south of
Paris. It's right near a town called a city called Bourge. Um, so yeah, like, like, we're no
longer in the low countries. We are, we are dead center like find the hexagon map of
France and put a dead center circle, like a point in the middle of it. And that's where you are
right now. So it's swamp land. Uh, it's cold in winter too. Yeah, it's cold as shit,
which is why Versengettrix force them to march. It's not Siberia cold, but it's fucking
cold in winter there. If you happen to be an army made up of a, of fucking Romans from
southern Italy or whatever. Like, this is not where you want to be in the winter.
This is anti-Togo weather. This is anti-Sandles weather. This is fucking anti-open-air garden party
discrimination. All right. They have to stay warm by slathering each other with olive oil.
They haven't invented immersion heaters. They haven't invented underfloor heating. They haven't
invented coal. It's cold. But they're used to it.
You frostbought your toes have fallen off. You look down to your feet. It's like,
I wish I was at home where it was covered in ants.
These guys actually, they just put butter all over themselves
and then the ants get on their feet, get stuck, die,
and become a layer of insulation.
Impromptu shoes.
Everybody knows traditional Roman Legion winter wears
to slide into a giant human-sized tortellini.
That's why they were actually doing the turtle shield
with all of the shields together to form like one big, you know,
sort of mass.
It's tortellini formation.
they just make a ravioli
and everyone was like
oh I remember my mom made raviola
was so good
when they were in there
like defending against
like halberds and axes
and spears and shit
they're all talking about
like good ass meals
they're going to have
when they get home
it was just like
ranger school
and when they come out
of the tortellini
it's like that scene
from Ace
Fantora when he's coming
out of the fake rhinos
but rather than covered
in sweat
he's just soaked in
marinara sauce
that's how Italians
are born
that kind of implies
that if you get a critical
mass of them
together and have them
all start talking about food that like they can
spontaneously generate marinara sauce.
Yeah, it's like sweat. It just comes out red.
Meanwhile, Versen Gedricks and his men camped out
16 miles away from the city, literally watching
the entire thing happen.
This is Italian nuclear efficient.
But they stuck to their plan
of letting the city die.
But they did see an opportunity to bleed
the Romans while not getting bogged down at first.
The Romans now engaged in a siege would only
survive via foraging parties, sending people out into the countryside to gather food, again,
mostly from stealing from other towns. So Versen Gettorix only sent his men out to ambush the
foraging parties and supply convoys desperately trying to reach the army from its original winter
corridors. Who knows if this plan would have actually worked, though it almost certainly would have
bloodied Caesar quite a fair amount, trapping him into maybe an even longer siege while simultaneously,
not risking many of Versen Gettrick's own men.
But Brousen Gettricks eventually decided that sitting back and playing the long game
wasn't good enough for him.
So under the cover of night, he slowly began to send his men into the city to reinforce the garrison.
They joined the defenders who were really giving the Romans hell.
Like, defenders were digging counter-sabotage tunnels under their own city walls
to collapse the Roman ones, while the Romans were repairing that.
And they reinforced their own town walls.
building them higher and higher and higher.
In another case,
Versen Gettricks used the bulk of his forces
that were still camped far away to march out
into the open,
which is like they call it offering battle.
They were standing in combat formation,
kind of goading Caesar to break the siege and attack them.
Caesar sees right through this, of course.
It doesn't work.
But this siege is bloody as hell for the Romans.
Eventually, Caesar gets inside the city
and just a wholesale slaughter of everyone.
one inside because it's revenge for
Senabum, which is how it's often framed.
They were also able to loot the city's
massive grain stores, which undid
a lot of Gauls successes so far,
which just goes to show that Versengetteryx
was right in the very beginning of this whole thing,
that the city did need to be burned down and the grain
needed to be taken away.
The Roman legionaires are just there posting money
spreads of grain.
How do you talk on the grain phone?
You know, the stack of cats.
It's like, no, you're holding the stalks of weev?
I need the accurate translation into colloquial vulgar Latin of Ibn had bushels.
After the Caesar commits one of his few mistakes.
He splits his army sending half to chase some of the Gauls allies,
while he leads an army to Versen Gettrix's capital, Gregovia.
Here, the Gauls managed to preempt the Romans coming siege.
While the Romans were still digging in,
the Gauls launched an immediate counterattack,
ending in a battlefield victory.
A thousand Roman soldiers are killed.
Caesar decides that maybe he went about this wrong.
He pulls up stakes and decides to come back later with his whole army.
To the Gauls, this is a massive victory.
They're like, we chased the Romans away from the city.
We won.
And Versen Gettrix immediately orders his cavalry to crash into the Roman rear as they withdraw
because that is generally how you'd use Light Horse,
only to not realize that he hadn't routed the Romans.
Caesar had simply ordered a tactical withdrawal for the time being.
So the Roman auxiliary cavalry turns around and smashes all of the Golic Calvary all at once.
It's an incredibly one-sided battle, but it forces Versan Gedricks to retreat from there, despite the fact he had just one.
And he retreats to the small town of Alessia.
It had a decent stockpile of supplies.
It was relatively defensible.
It was sitting on top of a 500-foot-tall hand.
Hill, and Caesar quickly made for the town, and as always, they get to work digging in around
it.
Versen Gettrix knew where this was going, and he used his last opening before the full Roman fortifications
closed in around him, to send a messenger through the unfinished Roman lines and put out
word for anyone who wants to stand against the Romans to hurry, gather your weapons, and come
relieve me.
Ferson Gettorix does not have a small army.
There's about 80,000 men inside this encirclement now.
Caesar had more or less the same amount.
However, by the time Versen Gettrick's reinforcements arrived,
Roman fortifications around Alessia were complete.
Two lines went 11 miles around the town,
another 14 miles around that first line.
The lines were made out of earth and wood
and supported by deep and wide ditches.
Though as the area was made up of rough, broken terrain,
had mountains, things like that,
Caesar left gaps in the line,
where he thought the train was simply too bad for anybody to dare to march through.
Between all of this was seven different army camps and dozens of other strong points and towers
scattered throughout.
In front of all of it was a series of obstacles.
For example, like the classic one is stakes sticking out of the ground to break up any
incoming charge.
Building all of that only took a month, which is about as long as it took for the Gauls
reinforcements to park itself outside.
100,000 men under the command of Kamias, the king of the Atribatier tribe.
The tribes dug in on the other side of the Romans, pitting them in.
So just so you can picture this in your head, you have Alessia in the middle with Versengetteryx,
being besieged by the Romans, who are now in turn being besieged by a different group of Gauls.
We have a very strange human sandwich situation.
Yeah, this is sort of like a siege warfare, one-upmanship.
a long enough timeline. It just starts to be coming like interlocking. It's like, let's make a
siege bullseye. Let's be like, what's the dumbest way we can play like tower defense game
on a mobile phone? Like, just keep slapping new encirclements, new concentric circles.
Hey, yo, this is Exhibit. We heard you like sieges, so we put a siege in your siege so you can siege
while you siege. Yo, dog, I heard you like balustrades. So we built a balustrade in front of your balustrade
so you can siege while you siege. But have you got any daughters that are
under the age of 17. I'm Westwood, baby.
Oh, no. That's legally been proven. So, you know what? We can say it all we want.
No man in his 50 should dress like that. I'm sorry.
Don't look at me. I'm 70.
No, Tim Westwood isn't in his 50s, Nate. He's in his 70s. I know he is, but in the 2000s when he was doing Pimp My Ride, UK, he was in his 50s and he was dressed like that.
I do remember when one of you showed me a picture of him for the first time and I was shook to my core.
He looks like you took
like a research astronomer from Oxford
and you slapped him in weird
like fucking Fubu and God they like
Mark Echo denim. It's the strangest thing
and Brits are like oh this guy is normal
this is a regular real guy who exists
and also his dad is a vicar as well
congratulations you manage to make exhibits
seem normal.
I do like the thing about Pimp My Ride
is everyone who reviewed their cars
afterwards like you buy cars a massive piece of shit now
thanks.
But then once the double siege gets locked in, Caesar then orders his men to turn around
and begin building outward fortifications, boxing themselves in.
So, like, in that situation, you have two options, immediately try to break out or double the
fuck down. Or this kid, I think it's like quadrupling down. I'm not entirely sure how many
times we're down at this point, but it's a lot. However, while the Romans are redigging
themselves in on the opposite side, things inside Alessia have been really, really bad.
I said they had a decent grain storage, which is true for a small town, but first in
Gettrick's parked 80,000 people inside of it, and that's not including camp followers and
families, which was normal for these soldiers to bring with them. So it's probably closer to
100,000. They were rapidly eating through everything, and now people were
starving. So Versen Gettricks ordered all the civilians to leave town an effort to extend his
supplies, but they have nowhere to go. They're behind like eight different levels of fortifications at
this point. Versen Gettrix assumes that the Romans would take them in as slaves or let them
leave, but either way they would have been fed. However, I pose to you guys, there's a secret third
option. Do you want to guess what it is? Kill everyone. Deploy Tim Westwood. Okay, there's a secret
fifth option.
And that is,
simply don't allow them to leave
nor enslave them.
So you now have tens of thousands of civilians
camped out of the no man's land
between the armies in the open,
in winter with no food.
Yeah.
Also, look at it like a topographical map
of the siege.
Alessia's like on a slight hill and it's just
oh, there's two rivers flowing directly
beside a parallel to each other.
And there's also, I mean, if you look at like a
19th century,
map, they are marking it out with the kind of like military map stuff. And it's like, it's all
swamp. Yeah. I will say the one benefit of making your winter camp in a swamp is the diseases
really aren't there that you'd have in the summer. Yeah. But it does mean you starve to death
instead. Like, I think like catching like dengue and dying would be faster. But yeah. It's not like
people can't, you know, swim naked across it. But like, you know, hypothermia is a thing. And if you're
wearing gear, you're going to drown. Like, you're going to get too tired. You're going to get
hyperthermia. You're going to fucking fall over and not able to get up. So like, you're basically
pin. You can't go that way. You will die. You will die.
in the swamp and succumb to the soup.
You'll become goop.
Yeah. If you get out the other side without becoming goop,
you'll just be stabbed in the face by an Italian man.
So that implies that the word goop is actually a portmanteau.
It means gaulish soup.
Yeah.
All goop is gaulish soup.
Gwyneth Paltzer doesn't want you to know this.
Yeah, exactly.
She's a big supporter of Versengetteryx.
Yeah. Angel investors versus Gettorix.
She got turned on to the real way of being one with the universe by reading
asterisk noblix.
No, Nate.
The angel investor is like
Versen Gadericks the 17th in the same way.
There's like a Napoleon running around claiming
that he's the holy Roman emperor.
Outside of Alessia, the Gauls
began to scout Roman defenses and
using locals who had been drafted in the
Roman labor pools as spies.
And they discovered that a gap in the
Roman lines was in a nearby mountain.
Because Caesar thought,
uh, nobody will be able to cross there.
So as winter was really closing in,
the men inside of Alessia began to starve.
Some were beginning to starve to death,
while others were just getting that Jesus on the cross look going on.
The Gauls launched a massive attack
from the outside of the siege
towards the inside at a gap near Mount Ray.
But just because a gap was left in the fortifications
did not just mean the Romans left it open.
Roman soldiers were still there,
waiting and posted,
and they managed to plug the gap
before the Gauls burst out the other side.
Tens of thousands of men charged down the hill
and began butchering one another.
Fun fact, included in this whole episode,
is Mark Antony, kind of in the middle of all of it.
Just chilling.
It'd be funny if it was Mark Anthony, uh, the singer,
but alas.
Yeah, a really, really bad time travel experiment.
It's like, I want to see the Roman Empire, you say.
I want to teach the Gauls Bichata.
Yeah, I want to, I want to see the Roman Empire.
It's my, my dream since I was seven and I couldn't shut the fuck up.
about it, and they're like, all right, your wish is granted, but we're sending you to the siege of
Alicia.
But Caesar watched the entire battle from his main command post, ordering in reinforcements
to plug the gap even further.
But it turned out all of this was a massive diversion.
The main gall attack went straight for the fortifications, and they were ready for them.
The galls were armed bundles of sticks to throw into the Roman ditches so they could cross
them, ladders to scale the walls and earthworks, and ropes and grappling hooks to throw
up onto the watch
towers and portions of the wall. And it would
be cooler if they were to a ninja climb up
it, but instead it's to literally just rip
them down with force. Now
none of this was communicated with Versen
Gettrix. Obviously there's no way to communicate
with him at this point. But
he sees the battle unfolding and it's like
oh shit. If we have any
hope of getting out of this cluster fuck still
alive, we have to go charge
to the gap at Mount Ray and meet a
like pin in the Romans on both sides so we don't
starve to death. Caesar watched the
Gauls marching from Mount Ray and immediately sent reinforcements, who happened to be on the command of
Decimus Brutus, that Brutus, the same one who would later plot his death.
This is just a series of that guys that's going to eventually fuck up Caesar shit.
What is interesting here is that both the Romans and the Gauls cycled their soldiers in
and out as they got tired, because you really don't want your soldiers getting a repetitive stress
injury from hacking a person's skull in half.
So as men locked themselves into this murderous blob, the real competition would come down to,
who has the better murder cardio?
The Gauls or the Romans.
And as she come as a surprise, that's only partially a joke.
That's legitimately how things worked in combat back then.
But as she comes as a surprise to nobody that the Romans were better in the situation.
They literally trained for this all the time.
Roman soldiers were kind of remarkable in how far they could march and how long they could fight
thanks to moving men up and down the line
so they were fresh and rested,
able to get water or whatever.
It was like you just got killed
or you got left to starve or die
if you didn't do it.
Like,
that's just the thing they did.
It's sort of like,
I don't know.
Once again,
it's like,
look at the army's strengths here.
It's sort of the modern equivalent
of like,
would you pin down a massive tactical decision
against, say,
the U.S.
military based on who can consume
the most energy drinks
and dipping tobacco.
No,
you probably wouldn't
because there's probably not very many
militaries out there
that can do those things
and not vomit so much
that they would become combat
ineffective, you know what I mean?
So, yeah,
the Romans marching until you die
kind of their thing.
Yeah, marching and fighting
for hours upon hours
at a time is like,
the Roman Legion was an incredibly
effective killing machine.
I'm not like gassing them up here.
It's just historically a fact.
A very professional military.
Fortunately slash,
unfortunately,
depending on where you happen to fall.
Another thing, too,
that you'll find when reading about this
is that like one of the decisions,
one of the sort of primary kind of points of focus for their commanders
was if they saw a situation that they might be able to nudge or influence
or a point in a direction that would lead to something where then the soldiers,
the legions would be then it would be appropriate to do the thing they trained on
all the fucking time.
That wasn't necessarily a surprise,
but like it is a bit of a surprise when it's like chaos and,
you know, unclear circumstances and just ambiguity of battle.
But it's like, right, but what they're trying to do is put it into a situation
get it into a position where then they can just be like, do this thing we trained you on for months
and basically killed you if you couldn't do it right? And then wouldn't you know it, their legions
can do that very, very well. I said this years ago during when we were doing the Rome cast
that HBO's Rome actually has a really good representation of what fighting in a Roman line
formation would look like in the very beginning, which was you only fought for a couple of minutes
at a time. Someone would give the signal to switch and you'd switch out. Yeah. It's a very
ingenious way to do this kind of fighting.
And not to mention once, at this point, possibly
up to 200,000 gulls are assaulting you from both directions
and you have them pinned in by trying to fight through that.
Caesar does something very simple and simply
sends the Roman auxiliary cavalry
to circle around and attack them from the rear.
Like once they have them pinned in and you're in that slaughter machine,
you start working the flanks with cavalry.
and exhausted after fighting the Romans for hours, the Gauls broke to the outside.
Now, Versen Gettrix, who was mostly attempting to break out of the siege in order to survive
rather than score a victory, saw he was fucked and ordered to retreat back to Elysia.
From there, he understood that surrender was his only option to not die.
And as people write about Versen Gettrix's personality, he was worried about leading all of his men to death.
Unfortunately, there's really no way out of that at this point.
And this is how his surrender went down, according to Plutarch.
Quote, Versen Gettorix, the supreme leader in the whole war, put on his most beautiful armor,
had his horse carefully groomed, and rode through the gates.
Caesar was sitting down and Verson Getturix after riding around him in a circle,
leapt down from his horse, stripped off his armor, and sat at Caesar's feet,
silent and motionless, until he was taken away under arrest, a prisoner,
reserved for the triumph.
So, yeah, he surrendered, like, a really sad dog.
But again, this account is also debated, like, other stories as, like,
Burson Gettrick's surrendered like you'd imagine a king would.
He didn't curl up on Caesar's, like, Caesar's feet into a ball and, like, go to sleep like a cat
or whatever, like...
Maybe he won't notice me if I just curl up.
It's like my dog, whatever, like, she thinks she's in trouble.
she just rolls on to her back and pees a little.
When my daughter is very obviously getting into something
she knows she's not supposed to and I say her name,
she moves with a start and then does these little quick steps like
trying to run away. Like I wasn't doing it. You didn't see it. I'm like,
I absolutely saw it. And that's why I said your name.
Versen Gettrick's running away from Caesar like a scolded toddler.
Like waddling back and forth.
Versen Gettrix basically doing the peevee dance running away.
Well, from there, regardless of the situation of the P.P. dance or the curled up dog,
Versen Gedericks and his army surrenders. The galls are put into chains. And so many
are enslaved by the Romans that Caesar gives one slave to each of his soldiers. And it's their
decision to keep them or sell them. And this is like a crazy amount of money for your average
soldier. And also, my God is that evil. Like, imagine if the Montgomery GI Bill was like just
three people in chains?
Like, what the fuck?
Spoils of the siege of Alessia
worth the entire GDP of Yemen.
Yeah.
The victory at Alessia
marked the end of the Golic Wars
and would chart the continued
and rapid assent of Caesar
into why we all know
who Julius Caesar is.
The death and destruction
that the war is brought to Gaul
is kind of hard to calculate.
Historians often argue about this.
I am not a Roman historian,
I should point out.
But generally,
It's agreed upon that about 15 million people were killed between the beginning of Roman
incursion until the end of the conquest, which includes the near total relocation or destruction
of the native Golic population.
It is one of the most thorough and extended genocides in recorded history.
Something that I found interesting about this is that I recognized the name sort of when
I saw the prompt for today because I lived right.
by the Rudalacia in Paris when I lived there 20 years ago. I didn't actually ever look
it up and know anything about it. It's just the name. It's the metro stop. But it's interesting
to me because obviously modern France has far more lineage to do with the Roman Empire that it
does with the Gauls. Pretty much every Western European country does. It's the reason why
French is a descendant of vulgar Latin. But it's just interesting because I'm pretty sure
it was named kind of in commemoration of the Gauls in the 1860.
So it's interesting, it's like, it's like, you know, famously those textbook used in the French
empire at every country that they occupied, you know, had like a primer for children, like an early
reading manual for children. It was started off with like, our ancestors to Gauls. It's like,
yeah, our ancestors are the Gauls who got extirpated by the Romans. And that's why we speak
a language that's based on Latin. Yep. Yep. As for the Battle of Alessi itself, the numbers are
quite honestly all over the place. Caesar himself writes about it. In his accounts, he claims he
killed nearly a quarter million
Gauls during the battle,
which seems quite high,
seeing how that was more Gauls
and were physically present at the time.
But if generally agreed, if you cut that number
and a half, pretty accurate.
As for Versen Gedricks,
he survived a lot longer than you probably
imagine he did. He was brought back to Rome
and imprisoned for six years.
The reason for that is he was being
kept in chains for Caesar's
triumph. So he could be
brought out and paraded around
at which point he was brought to the temple of Jupiter
and ritualistically strangled to death.
How do you ritualistically strangle someone to death?
Do you have to wear a pair of Javanchi gloves?
Exactly.
Yeah.
That's exactly what I was going to say.
You have to put on your murdering gloves.
Like, I personally killed 250,000 motherfuckers.
Like, sounds like a rapper boast,
but Julius Caesar was actually saying it.
Instead of holding up the money phone,
he's just holding up two slaves to each side of his head
boring Javanchi gloves.
I was going to say, yeah, I mean, like the Roman
equivalent of Javonci gloves. The Roman
equivalent of the Autobar's Piajei watch
that's worth the entire
GDP of Yemen. If I go broke,
the economy is going to fall and collapse. People are going to
die.
The end.
Because I have to end this on a nice, lighthearted
note. So, gentlemen,
we do a thing here called question from the
Legion. If you'd like to ask us a question,
you could support the show on Patreon.
and ask us on Patreon in Patreon DMs or on our Discord,
and we'll answer it on the show.
And today's question is you have retired to a cabin in the mountains.
A helicopter touches down,
and a fatherly but deadly commanding officer comes out.
He's recruiting you for one final mission based on your skills.
What are you being recruited for?
Being annoying.
I have to go to assassinate a guy that is like Rasput.
but the only way I can kill him is outdrink him
so we require your very specific
skill set. Nate is being
recruited to like, sir, we have
six different audio cables and we need them
categorized by where they come from
of their capabilities. You're the only man
who could do it. No, that's Nate
in the Mission Impossible situation of disarming
a bomb is like, but all the cables are
the same and you just see Nate come out of the background.
No, they're not the same. One of them is made from
copper alloy. The other one is made from
blah blah, blah. I mean, in fairness,
I'm thinking it would be more on the lines of, like, the cafe scene from Inglorious Bastards,
but I have to win over the confidence of some kind of, like, enemy commander by being
able to speak authoritatively on insane, fucking nonsense topics that he's just got really into on
Wikipedia.
That's only one guy we know who can do this.
You're just describing what every shift on staff duty looks like?
I mean, for me, it's like recruited for a thing.
Like, if I was being serious, it's probably just because of, like, having experience in a
certain thing or a certain place.
like, if someone's like, we need you to go do something in like this part of the
ville outside of Camp Casey Korea or, you know, whatever, you know, I have some experience
with that. But, but yeah, keeping with the joking tone of the show, it's like, yeah, it's
either like, we need you to go in and charm the most, the crustiest and most curmudgeonly venue
manager in order to make this thing come off. And it's like, yeah, yeah, yep. I find out this guy
famous for being a huge dickhead in this venue in Manchester, actually used to fucking, he, he helped
engineer and do
for some rehearsal sessions
for the Happy Mondays.
So I just get him talking about
the Happy Mondays and he fucking loves me.
Nate, if it was a combined mission between me and you
would be agents, your cover is
you are two employees of Ameba Records.
I'm honestly not sure what my mission would be.
I would say for Joe, it's like a combination
of like, you have to be
able to walk into a room
very unassumingly and be
able to like know the subject matter
incredibly well and like not,
not reveal, not blow your cover, but also just like blend in as someone who knows the subject
matter really well. And then the part two of your mission is stand outside in the rain for
12 hours motionless. And you'd be like, yep, I hate my life. This is what I do all day.
Yeah, my mission is, listen here, you have to chug a four pack of white monster and stand
outside unmoving in like February in a horrible part of the country. Unmoving and only complain in
your head. Like, yeah, I can do that.
It's really funny because Joe, you would have been like premium material to get recruited
into the old guard. And instead you just got to like do old guard shit of being miserable
and getting rained on nonstop. But like you weren't in the dress uniform, you know,
with caissons and stuff like that. Yeah. Yeah, it's true. Yeah.
I can stand in one place for so long guys. You have no idea. All right.
Fellas, I do believe that is an episode of the Lions and by Donkeys, uh, of this podcast.
We have casted one entire pod.
But you host other pods that you cast.
So plug those other pods.
Trash future.
Kill James Bond.
What a hell of a way to dad.
No gods, no mayors.
I'm either a host, co-host, producer, or executive something with all of them.
They're all funny.
They're all nice shows.
And they're all both free and have Patreon content.
So check those out, please.
Beneath the Skin, show about the history of everything told you, the history of tattoos.
And maybe by the time this episode comes out, I'll have announced.
there's a couple of projects I'm working on
as yet unannounced so keep an eye out
for those. This is the only thing
that I do. So thank you
for listening to it. Maybe
consider supporting us on Patreon.
Just $5 a month gets you absolutely everything.
Gets you years and years of bonus content.
Side series like lines led by robots
or the history of Armenia gets you
e-books of like the Hooligans
of Kandahar gets you audiobooks of the
hooligans of Kandar and others.
Get you Discord access every episode
early. First, there's some live show tickets
and merch. Leave us a review
and wherever you listen to the show
because it helps us immensely when we go to
get venues to do live shows.
So if you want us to come to your neck of the woods,
assuming we will not be detained at a border somewhere,
leave us a review
because it helps us people who own venues
care about that kind of stuff.
So good reviews.
And until next time.
If your haters surround you,
then just fucking get some other haters of your haters
and build a siege ball around them.
keep on going eventually
you will find who's got the most haters
on ending encirclement of haters
Eric Adams warned us
if you'll excuse me
I need to be ritualistically strangle
at the Temple of Jupiter
Bye