Few of the battles of that age, in the 130-year gap between the period recorded by
Dio Cassius and
Ammianus Marcellinus, are in any degree adequately recorded. From what little is known, it seems that
Constantius Chlorus,
Caesar of
Gaul, was travelling in the open champagne country near
Lingones, (modern-day
Langres in the
Haute-Marne department of
France), with a small escort, when he was attacked by a barbarian army which had unexpectedly crossed the
Rhine. The heavily outnumbered Caesar was worsted in a sharp skirmish from which he barely escaped, apparently receiving a wound. He took shelter in Langres, where the enemy surrounded the remnants of his broken force. So hard on his heels was the barbarian pursuit, that the wounded Caesar was reportedly hauled up the walls by rope, the garrison refusing to open the gates in the presence of so dangerous an enemy. However, the garrisons of the surrounding cities quickly united to relieve the distressed city and emperor; the besieging camp was surprised and overrun, with sources claiming that as many as 60,000
Alemans fell in the massacre. ==References==