s stacked with fascines. Fascine bundles were used defensively for
revetting (shoring up) trenches or ramparts, especially around
artillery batteries, or offensively to fill in ditches and to cross obstacles on a battlefield.
Fascine bridges, a regularly attested feature of
Roman military engineering, would have been widespread in the ancient world due to their usefulness and ease of construction. During the
Siege of Alesia in 52 BCE, the Gauls attempted to repel the invading Romans by filling the Roman trenches in with fascines and covering their traps, to support their counter-assault. In mountainous terrain, such as in Syria, fascines could help to cross natural obstacles. In the
Battle of Zela in 47 BCE,
Caesar's legions worked overnight filling in whole valleys with "a great quantity of fascines" to quickly gain an advantageous position over the army of
Pharnaces II of Pontus, removing them afterwards to protect their own camp. Subsequently, the use of fascines by military engineers continued almost wherever armies were deployed and could be an incredibly cheap and effective "weapon" during a siege, both for attackers and for defenders. The
Battle of Narva in 1700 was a pivotal early battle in the
Great Northern War (1700–1721) between the Swedish army commanded by
Charles XII and the Russian army of Tsar
Peter I. The battle took place near the present-day border between Estonia and Russia. Protected by the
Narva River to their east, around the town the Russian Army had dug a trench six feet wide in front of an earth wall nine feet high. The Russian defenders had 140 cannon mounted around the walls, they outnumbered the exhausted Swedish army four to one and a blizzard had just broken out. Nonetheless, Charles advanced: "Throwing their fascines into the ditch, the Swedes swarmed across on top of them. Waving swords and bayonets, they climbed over the earthworks and threw themselves on the foe. Within fifteen minutes, a fierce hand-to-hand battle was taking place inside the works." A hundred years later, during the
Napoleonic Wars of 1803 to 1815, fascines were still in regular use
billhooks, used for cutting branches and saplings, were standard issue for riflemenbut appear to have been used defensively rather than for crossing trenches. In 1806–07 the French
General Vandamme besieged
Breslau with the assistance of his engineer Colonel Blein. When crossing enemy trenches, Blein used boats, trestles and ladders covered with boards to cross enemy entrenchmentswhen his account mentions fascines it is along with
gabions as a defensive element. ==World Wars==