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HISTORIA The past and present of Legio VI Victrix Pia Fidelis Britannica LEGION SIX (CA)
Julius Caesar
founded the original Legio VI during his conquest of Gaul,
ca. 59-49 BC. The VI became one of his most reliable legions,
accompanying Caesar across the Rubicon
As far as we can tell, this Legio VI eventually
became
Legio VI Ferrata ("Ironsides") and was taken over by
Mark Antony after Caesar's
murder. Around 40 BC, Caesar's nephew and heir
Octavian founded a Legio VI of his own, perhaps using a core of veterans
from his uncle's original. This Legio VI fought with Octavian at Perusia in
41 BC against Mark Antony's wife and brother, in the Pannonian campaigns of AD 39-36, and at Actium, dashing Antony and Cleopatra's
dreams of empire. In the postwar settlement, Octavian (later
Augustus) stationed
Claudius
had launched the
conquest of Britain in AD 44, but it took another 40 years to bring most of the
island under Roman control. Even then, with three legions present, (II
Augusta,
IX Hispana and
XX Valeria Victrix), the province still proved
restive and vulnerable to raids from the barbarian tribes to the north and west.
A serious rebellion or invasion erupted ca. AD 119, and subsequent battles
dangerously depleted the ranks of IX Hispana. In response, the
Emperor Hadrian rushed VI Victrix from Germany to northern Britannia, basing them at
Eburacum, modern York. The arrival of VI Victrix restored the situation
and avenged the damage done to IX Hispana, which was shipped back to the
Rhine frontier to recuperate. Hadrian celebrated
a British victory in AD 119 and made a personal visit to Britannia
in AD 122, stopping in York to inspect VI Victrix and survey the route for an immense
new fortification that would bear his name. Shortly after this, the men of VI Victrix
commenced construction on
Hadrian's Wall, building the section
between Newcastle and Carlisle, as well as a massive stone bridge across the
Tyne.
More fighting occurred north of the wall in
AD 182-183, in which VI Victrix was successful enough that the
Emperor Commodus celebrated a British victor
Britannia rode out the chaos of the mid-third century in relative calm.
But in AD 287, the opportunistic general
Carausius
set
himself up as Emperor of northern Gaul and Britannia in revolt against the
legitimate rulers
Diocletian and
Maximian. Legio VI is
conspicuously absent from a series of coins struck by Carausius honoring
legions supporting his rebellion. This could mean that Legio VI remained
at its post in York and did not participate in the revolt. Britain remained in revolt for six years,
first under Carausius, then under his murderer and successor
Allectus.
Diocletian named the capable general
Constantius Chlorus as Caesar in AD
290 with the task of recovering Britannia. He successfully achieved
this with a carefully prepared invasion in AD 293. Legio VI
apparently stayed out of the fray, forcing Allectus to rely on barbarian
mercenaries to fight the disciplined legions of Constantius. Again,
the barbarians used civil war as an opportunity to overrun Hadrian's Wall
and ravage northern Britannia. The continuing strife led Constantius to
return to Britain in AD 305, this time to lead VI Victrix and supporting units against a new enemy in Scotland, the
ferocious Picts. The campaign was a success, but once again, as
in Severus' day, the emperor fell ill and returned to York, where
he summoned his eldest son to his side. On the death of Constantius on
July 25,
AD 306, Legio VI was among the units that acclaimed his son
Constantine as Emperor at
York, launching the career
of one of Rome's greatest rulers. Over the next 60 years, Britain
prospered under the rule of Constantine the Great and his heirs. As to the final fate of Legio VI, we have a single tantalizing clue: The late Roman poet Claudian, writing around AD 402 in a panegyric to the great general Stilicho, recounts that Stilicho withdrew "a legion" from Britain the previous year to use against the Visigoths under Alaric. Since Legios VI and II Augusta are only full-fledged legions named in Britain by the Notitia Dignitatum, it is tempting to conclude one or both may have been withdrawn by Stilicho. If so, Stilicho's strategic victory over Alaric in 402 may have been Legio VI's swan song. In the winter of AD 406-407, and enormous tide of barbarians swept over the frozen Rhine and Danube rivers and commenced ravaging Gaul and Italy. Stilicho, the last really capable Roman general in the West, was beheaded by the incompetent and treacherous Emperor Honorius. The Roman legions of the West, reduced to mere shadows of their former strength, simply disintegrated in the ensuing chaos. In AD 410, Alaric and his Visigoths sacked Rome. The Roman Empire of the West hung on as a steadily shrinking rump state before finally fading out with scarcely a whimper in AD 476.
If any Roman troops were left in Britain, they probably remained on
station for a time even after their regular pay chests stopped arriving.
Perhaps a lonely detachment of Legio VI continued to stand guard at Eburacum,
its home of three centuries, as darkness closed over Roman Britain and
the Western Empire. |
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