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CLAUDIUS CIVILIS

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 403 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CLAUDIUS CIVILIS  , or more correctly, JuLlus, leader of the Batavian revolt against Rome (A.D . 69-70) . He was twice imprisoned on a charge of
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rebellion, and narrowly escaped execution . During the disturbances that followed the
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death of
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Nero, he took up arms under pretence of siding with
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Vespasian and induced the inhabitants of his native country to rebel . The Batavians, who had rendered valuable aid under the early emperors, had been well treated in order to attach them to the cause of Rome . They were exempt from tribute, but were obliged to supply a large number of men for the army, and the burden of conscription and the oppressions of provincial
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governors were important incentives to revolt . The Batavians were immediately joined by several neighbouring German tribes, the most important of whom were the Frisians . The
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Roman garrisons near the Rhine were driven out, and twenty-four
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ships captured . Two legions under Mummius Lupercus were defeated at Castra Vetera (near the
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modern Xanten) and surrounded . Eight cohorts of Batavian veterans joined their countrymen, and the troops sent by Vespasian to the
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relief of Vetera threw in their lot with them . The result of these accessions to the forces of Civilis was a rising in Gaul . Hordeonius
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Flaccus was murdered by his troops (7o), and the whole of the Roman forces were induced by two commanders of the Gallic auxiliaries—Julius Classicus and
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Julius Tutor—to revolt from Rome and join Civilis .

The whole of Gaul thus practically declared itself

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independent, and the foundation of a new
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kingdom of Gaul was contemplated . The prophetess Vellleda predicted the
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complete success of Civilis and the fall of the Roman
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Empire . But disputes broke out amongst the different tribes and rendered co-operation impossible; Vespasian, having successfully ended the
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civil war, called upon Civilis to
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lay down his arms, and on his refusal resolved to take strong
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measures for the suppression of the revolt . The arrival of Petillius Cerialis with a strong force awed the Gauls and mutinous troops into submission; Civilis was defeated at
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Augusta Treverorum (Trier, Tresses) and Vetera, and forced to withdraw to the island of the Batavians . He finally came to an agreement with Cerialis whereby his country-men obtained certain advantages, and resumed amicable relations with Rome . From this time Civilis disappears from
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history . The chief authority for the history of the insurrection is Tacitus, Historiae, iv., v., whose account breaks off at the beginning of Civilis's speech to Cerialis; see also Josephus, Bellum Judaicum, vii . 4 . There is a monograph by E . Meyer, Der Freiheitskrieg der Bataver unter Civilis (1856) ; see also Merivale, Hist. of the Romans under the Empire, ch . 58; H . Schiller, Geschichte der romischen Xaiserzeit, bk. ii. ch. z, § 54 (1883) .

End of Article: CLAUDIUS CIVILIS
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