
Originally Posted by
Gaius Sempronius Gracchus
Many good points Geticus, and its particularly telling - within Caesar's Gallic Wars - that he refers to the martial cultures of the Gauls being corrupted, to varying degrees, by luxury. He refers to the Belgae as "the bravest of all the Gauls", for example, because they eschewed the luxury imports (Roman trade, essentially).
There was, it seems, at some point a united Gaul - under the hegemony of the Bituriges-Cubi confederation. That central authority had broken down, and various of the more powerful tribes sought to re-establish that authority. The two most powerful (as represented in EB1) were the Aedui and Arverni, but there were others.
At some point, there was a cultural shift within Gaul, away from martial 'ethics' and toward trading. Luxury, in other words. And the nobles of various tribes were attracted to that luxury, and so the Aedui, who were 'friends and kinsmen' of Rome, and so who likely had the greatest trading rights with their merchants, gained influence and power among those simlarly placed nobles within other tribes. Their confederacies and 'senates' were in place to avoid warfare - hence the limits on holding office referred to by Caesar. It was to avoid raiding and other martial pursuits. The nobility who lead many of the tribes at this time had become remarkably squeamish about war. It is telling that the main focus of what warring was occurring was regarding toll rights and trade routes. The Arverni were disrupting and interfering with the trade routes of the Aedui, and the Sequani and Aedui were at war over the toll rights to the Arar which ran between them - which resulted in them bringing in Ariovistus in to aid them in subjugating the Aedui...
This deterioration of the martial aspects of the culture of the Gallic nobles is probably what allowed those less 'civilised' Belgae, under the suzerainty of Diviciacus of the Suessiones, to gain ground in Gaul as a whole.
There were those within the various tribes who saw the need for a more martial response to foreign incursions. There was Orgetorix, Casticus, Dumnorix, Ambiorix, Galba and, of course, Vercingetorix. And to highlight a point you made, Geticus, Vercingetorix raised an 'army of the poor'..... farmers, farm workers - the dispossessed of Gallic trading culture.
What was lacking in Gaul was a centralised 'rallying' point. Rome had managed to attain that. But, they could so easily have gone the way of Gaul.... the Social Wars was won not just by military means, but also by giving way on political power within the Senate and the assemblies to those outlying Italian tribes.
It is telling that Roman culture saw land-owenership/farming as acceptable pursuits for their noblemen, while trading for the ruling classes was frowned upon. So, what differentiated the Roman Senate at this time from other 'civilisations' was that the members of that Senate were expected to possess martial skills and knowledge, so that political decisions would support military campaigning. We see the opposite with the Gauls, and also a marked difference with the Carthaginians - whose own senate often undermined military campaigns.
As to the idea that it is not 'accidental' that Rome persisted while others fell by the wayside.. for the reasons given here that's true to an extent. But the geography of Rome's position helped. In the middle of a peninsula. Once they'd gained hegemony over the Roman peninsula, and naval power through the Med and the Adriatic, they were not subject to attack from all sides - so it's interesting that the USA should be brought up as a modern day example (and the wars against the French, the war of independence, the wars against Mexico...all play a significant part in US power, as does the defeat of the secessionist South in the civil war). The Gauls were facing pressure from the North, from the distinct culture of the Belgae, from the East and North with the expansion of the Germanic tribes and from Rome. Rome's other enemies were also subject to incursions on many fronts. The various Greek factions were all merrily weakening each other, the Persians/Eastern Greeks were involved in their own blood-letting...
and, in terms of the Gauls, Caesar was only in Transalpine Gaul because of 'accident'; the man who should have been there died suddenly, and so Caesar was given command of it along with Cisalpine Gaul and Illyria. How differently might things have turned out had that 'accident' not occurred?
Rome's great political nouse was in understanding how to use existing political structures within conquered towns - both prior to and after - to facilitate their expansion; a strategy used later by the church in it's spread across Europe.. and how politics and military matters were one and the same thing. If the political will is not there, any military success will, ultimately, be futile.
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