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The Batavians lived along the great rivers in the Netherlands
on a large island between the rivers Waal Meuse, and Rhine.
The Batavi peoples came originally from the Chattan tribes from
the eastern banks of the Rhine and probably colonised the island
in the time of Drusus. A civil dissension among the Chatti,
a powerful German race within the Hercynian forest, resulted
in the expatriation of a portion of the people. The exiles sought
a new home in the empty Rhine island, called it "Bet-auw,"
or "good-meadow," and were themselves called, thereafter,
Batavi. Their name lives on in the present name of the
island, Betuwe. The Batavian 'capital' was Noviomagus Batavodurum
(present day Nijmegen).
It can never be satisfactorily ascertained who were islands
aboriginal inhabitants. The record does not reach beyond Caesar's
epoch, and he found the territory on the west of the Rhine mainly
tenanted by tribes of the Celtic family, which constituted the
bulk of its population.
The Island was a relatively poor country, which could not be
exploited financially by the Romans. Therefore, the Batavi contributed
only men and arms to the empire: eight auxiliary units of infantry,
one squadron of cavalry, and, until Galba, succeeding
to the purple upon the suicide of Nero, dismissed them,
the mounted bodyguard of the emperor. (Although these troops
were re-instated as bodyguards by the emperor Trajan).
The Batavian cavalry became famous throughout the Republic and
the Empire. They were the favorite troops of Caesar,
and with reason, for it was their valour which turned the tide
of battle at Pharsalia. The Batavian island was also
the basis of operations for the Classis Germanica in
the Roman wars with Gaul, Germany, and Britain.
The Batavians took no part in the preparations or execution
of the Varian disaster in AD 9. If Augustus,
under the first impression of the terrible news discharged
his Batavian guard, he soon became aware of the groundlessness
of his suspicions and the troop was reinstated shortly after.
Until the reign of Vespasian, the command of these
Batavian divisions was conferred exclusively upon the native
Batavi.
The Batavi were accounted indisputably not merely as the best
riders and swimmers of the army, but also as the model of
true soldiers. In this case certainly the good pay of the
bodyguard, as well as the privilege of the nobles to serve
as officers, considerably confirmed their loyalty to the Empire.
The Batavians, according to Tacitus, were the most
noble and brave of all the Germans. The Chatti, of
whom they formed a portion, were a pre-eminently warlike race.
"Others go to battle," says the historian,
"these go to war." Their bodies were more
hardy, their minds more vigorous, than those of other tribes.
In times of war their young men cut neither hair nor beard
till they had slain an enemy.
On the field of battle, in the midst of carnage and plunder,
they, for the first time, bared their faces. The cowardly
and sluggish, only, remained unshorn. They wore an iron ring,
too, upon their necks until they had performed the same achievement,
a symbol that they then threw away, as the emblem of sloth.
The Batavians were always spoken of by the Romans with entire
respect. They conquered the Belgians, they forced the free
Frisians to pay tribute, but they called the Batavi their
friends. The tax-gatherer never invaded their island. Honorable
alliance united them with the Romans.
"The barbarians thought the Romans would not be able
to cross this [the River Medway] without a bridge, and as
a result had pitched camp in a rather careless fashion on
the opposite bank. Aulus Plautius, however, sent across some
Celts who were practised in swimming with ease fully armed
across even the fastest of rivers. These fell unexpectedly
on the enemy".
Cassius Dio ' The History of Rome'.
One of the Batavians most renowned skills was the method they
employed to cross wide bodies of water en-masse, such as the
Ems during Germanicus' campaigns in Germany
and the Po in the civil wars of A.D.69. where several
foot soldiers would swim alongside a single cavalry soldier
and his horse, presumably keeping their weapons above water
by using the horse as a kind of living raft. Their tactics
have been identified in use under Aulus Plautius during
the Battle of the Medway in AD43 and also under the
governor G. Suetonius Paulinus. The auxiliary troops
who crossed the Menai Straits onto the Isle of Anglesey
to destroy the Druid stronghold there were in all likelihood
Batavian units. It is thought that in the army of Plautius
there were eight Batavian units, each five hundred strong.
The historian Cornelius Tacitus (c.55-c.120) refers
to the Batavians;
"He therefore prepared to attack the island of Mona
which had a powerful population and was a refuge for fugitives.
He built flat-bottomed vessels to cope with the shallows,
and uncertain depths of the sea. Thus the infantry crossed,
while the cavalry followed by fording, or, where the water
was deep, swam by the side of their horses."
Cornelius Tacitus 'The Annals of Imperial Rome'..
"Depositis omnis sarcinis lectissimos auxiliarium
quibus nota vada et patrius nandi usus, quo simul seque et
arma et equos regunt, ita repente inmisit, ut obstupefacti
hostes, qui classem, qui navis, qui mare expectabant, nihil
arduum aut invictum crediderint sic ad bellum venientibus".
"After dropping all baggage he quickly sent the most
elite of the auxiliaries, who were familiar with shallows
and traditionally used to swimming in such a manner that they
kept control over arms and horses, to the effect that the
flabbergasted barbarians, who expected a fleet, who expected
a ship across the sea believed that nothing was hard or insurmountable
to those who went to war in this fashion".
Tacitus 'Agricola' 18.4
Vegetius gives us some insight as to how the Batavians
achieved such a feat:
"Expediti vero equites fasces de cannis aridis vel
facere consueverunt, super quos loricas et arma, ne udentur,
inponunt; ipsi equique natando transeunt colligatosque secum
fasces pertrahunt loris".
"Battle ready horsemen though have been accustomed
to make bundles from dry reeds or, on these they put the body
armours and weapons, in order that they do not get wet; they
themselves and their horses cross by swimming and they draw
the packed bundles along with them with leather straps".
Vegetius, Epitoma rei militaris 3.7
Dio Cassius Comments upon Hadrian and the rigorous
training that he insisted his troops be tutored in. In one
passage he refers to the Batavians (Presumably the emperor's
personal horse guards) and their river-crossing abilities.
"So excellently, indeed, had his soldiery been trained
that the cavalry of the Batavians, as they were called, swam
the Ister with their arms. Seeing all this, the barbarians
stood in terror of the Romans, they employed Hadrian as an
arbitrator of their differences".
(Dio Cassius Liber LXIX 9.6)
The implication is that the Batavians possessed a unique skill.
However, there is a gravestone of a certain Soranus, a Syrian
trooper in a Batavian milliary cohort, again, possibly the
emperor's personal horseguard. Soranus' epitaph records that
in AD118 he, before the Emperor Hadrian, swam the Danube and
performed the following feats..
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CIL 03, 03676 (AE 1958, 0151).
Ille ego Pannoniis quondam notissimus
oris
inter mille viros fortis primusq(ue) Batavos
Hadriano potui qui iudice vasta profundi
aequora Danuvii cunctis transnare sub armis
emissumq(ue) arcu dum pendet in aere telum
ac redit ex alia fixi fregique sagitta
quem neque Romanus potuit nec barbarus unquam
non iaculo miles non arcu vincere Parthus
hic situs hic memori saxo mea facta sacravi
viderit an ne aliquis post me mea facta sequ[a]tur
exemplo mihi sum primus qui talia gessi
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"The man who, once very well known to the ranks in
Pannonia, brave and foremost among one thousand Batavians,
was able, with Hadrian as judge, to swim the wide waters of
the deep Danube in full battle kit. From my bow I fired an
arrow, and while it quivered still in the air and was falling
back, with a second arrow I hit and broke it. No Roman or
foreigner has ever managed to better this feat, no soldier
with a javelin, no Parthian with a bow. Here I lie, here I
have immortalised my deeds on an ever-mindful stone which
will see if anyone after me will rival my deeds. I set a precedent
for myself in being the first to achieve such feats".
The Batavians were a notable addition to the forces of the
Roman army from the reign of Caesar, until the reign of Romulus
Augustulus. They played an important role in the successes
of, and supplementation to, the Legions of the Roman army.
Our Batavian unit honours these men and perpetuates their
fine tradition.
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