- Siege of Numantia
Infobox Military Conflict
caption=
partof=theNumantine War
conflict=Siege of Numantia
date=134 –133 BC , lasting either eight or sixteen months
place=Numantia , Iberia
result=Roman victory
combatant1=Roman Republic
combatant2=Celtiberians
commander1=Scipio Aemilianus
commander2=Avarus
strength1=60,000 legionaries
strength2=4,000 militia
casualties1=next to none
casualties2=almost all|The Siege of Numantia was the culminating and pacifying action of the long-runningNumantine War between the forces of theRoman Republic and those of the native Celtiberian population ofHispania Citerior . The Numantine War was the third of theCeltiberian Wars and it broke out in143 BC . A decade later, in133 BC , the Roman general and hero of theThird Punic War ,Scipio Aemilianus , subjugated the chief Celtiberian city ofNumantia .Roman preparation
In late 135, the
Roman Senate reappointed Scipioconsul on popular demand and sent him to Hispania to finish what lesser generals had failed to complete. Scipio found morale low among the troops stationed in Iberia. The chance of plunder being low, there were few enticements to enlistment. Scipio nevertheless raised an army of 20,000 with 40,000 allied and mercenary troops, especiallyNumidia ncavalry led byJugurtha . The troops were trained hard by constant marching and there were several successful skirmishes before Scipio began to surround the city of Numantia itself. He planned only to starve it out and not to storm it.iege works
Scipio's constructed two camps separated by a wall around the city (
circumvallation ). He dammed the nearby swamp to create a lake between the city walls and his own. From ten feet of the ground, his archers could shoot into Numantia from seven towers interspersed along the wall. He also built an outer wall to protect his camps (eventually five in total) from any relief forces (contravallation ).Scipio also engineered the isolation of the city from the
Duero . He towered the river at the points where it entered and exited the city and strung a cable across, with blades, to prevent both boats and swimmers from leaving or entering the city.Counterattack
The Numantines attempted one failed sally before their greatest warrior, Rhetogenes, successfully led a small band of men down the river past the blockade. Heading first to the
Arevaci , his pleas were ignored. He then went toLutia , where he was positively received by the youth, but the elders of the tribe warned Scipio, who marched from Numantia and arrested the 400 Lutian youths and cut off their hands. After Scipio's return, Avarus, the Numantine leader, began negotiations.urrender
The first ambassadors sent by Numantia asked for their liberty in return for complete surrender, but Scipio refused. They were killed upon return by the incredulous populace, who believed they had cut a deal with the Romans. The city refused to surrender and starvation set in. Cannibalism ensued and eventually some began to commit suicide with their whole families. The remnant population finally surrendered only after setting their city on fire. Scipio took it and had its ruins levelled. This was late in the summer of 133.
Legacy
The siege of Numantia was recorded by several Roman historians that admired the sense of freedom of the ancient Iberians and acknowledged their fighting skills against the Roman legions.
Miguel de Cervantes (author of "Don Quixote ") wrote a play about the event, "La Numancia ", which stands today as his most well-known dramatic work. More recently,Carlos Fuentes has written a short story about the event, "The Two Numantias," in his collection "The Orange Tree."ource
*Davis, Paul K. "Besieged: 100 Great Sieges from
Jericho toSarajevo ".Oxford University Press ,2001 .
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