Germanicus, Early Roman Empire (27-00-193), Roman Empire, Tiberius (78; r.14.09-37.03)

Early Roman Empire, Julio-Claudian Dynasty, 02 Tiberius: Germanicus

Germanicus Julius Caesar (=Germanicus; 34; fl.14-19)

Battle: Idistaviso (Weser)Germanicus/ArminiusAD 16
Battle: Angivarian WallGermanicus/ArminiusAD 16

Tiberius’ nephew Germanicus was collecting the taxes in Gaul when he heard of the trouble in Lower Germania. He set out at once and at Castra Vetera (Xanten) he confronted the mutineers, who had already killed some of their officers and thrown the others out. When he reprimanded the soldiers for their actions they bared their wounds and scars, some having served in thirty campaigns, and offered to support Germanicus if he should himself emperor, but this he refused to do. 

Germanicus ended up having to make concessions and to pay money from his own purse in order to regain the legions’ oath of loyalty. Their general Caecina then marched two legions to their winter quarters at the Ubii capital at Oppidum Ubiorum (Cologne), sixty miles south of Vetera; Germanicus went to the army in Upper Germany at Moguntiacum, where he re-affirmed the oath of loyalty from its four legions.

In the spring Germanicus campaigned in Lower Germania against the Chatti, Cherusci and Marsi. In the summer he attacked the Bructeri, reached the Teutoburg Forest, and recovered the legionary standards after an indecisive battle with the Cherusci under Arminius. For the main campaign of AD 16 a fleet was prepared and the troops were transported via his father’s canal to the Ems, whence they proceeded to the Weser and met Arminius’ army at Idistaviso, near modern Minden. Germanicus’ better trained and equipped legions inflicted huge casualties on the Germanic army but with only minor losses. A final battle was fought at the Angivarian Wall, west of modern Hanover, where the Romans seized a German-held position and then warded off a German furious counterattack.Germanicus claimed that one more campaign would defeat Germania, but Tiberius judged that the results did not justify the Roman losses and sent him to reorder the Eastern provinces. In AD 17 he reduced Cappadocia and Commagene to provincial status. Two years later on his return journey from Egypt he entered Syria and the enmity between him and its arrogant governor (AD 17-19) 16Calpurnius Piso (c.64; fl.07 BC-AD 20) led him to order Piso to leave the province. In the midst of all this Germanicus fell mysteriously ill and on 10 October he died near Antioch.

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