'' (Trophy of the Alps), in La Turbie, near Monaco, built by
Augustus Caesar in 6 BC to commemorate the victory of Julius Caesar over the Ligurian tribes of the southern Alps. The monument marked the eastern border of Roman Provence. , 1st Century A.D.
Roman conquest of Provence In 218 BC, when
Hannibal marched the armies of
Carthage through Provence on their way to Italy to attack Rome, the Massalians and Romans became allies. The Romans sent sixty ships with two legions led by
Publius Cornelius Scipio to Massalia in an unsuccessful attempt to intercept Hannibal. In 207 BC, when
Hasdrubal Barca led another Carthaginian army to attack Rome, Rome and Massalia became allies again. The Roman orator
Cicero referred to Massalians as "The most faithful allies of the Romans." The Massalians had good trade relations with peoples throughout Gaul. They were not a great military power and often had difficult relations with their neighbors, the Ligurian and Celtic Gauls. In the 2nd century BC the Massalians appealed to Rome for help against the Gauls. They did not understand that Rome wanted subjects, not allies. In 181 BC at the request of Massalia, the Romans suppressed Ligurian
pirates based along the coast between
Genoa and
Albenga. Then, in 154 BC, when a Roman ambassador was abused and attacked at
Cagnes, the Roman
consul led an army into Provence and defeated the
Oxybii and the
Deciates. Rome re-established the authority of Massalia along the coast from the rock of
Monaco to the mouth of the
Argens river. In 125 BC, an alliance of Celtic peoples, the
Salyes, threatened Massalia itself. In 125 a Roman army led by the consul
Marcus Fulvius Flaccus crossed the Alps by either the
Col de Montgenèvre or
Col de Larche, marched along the valley of the Durance, and subdued the Ligures of
Barcelonette, the
Vocontii and the Salyes. The following year another Roman army, led by
Gaius Sextius Calvinus, marched into Provence and captured the capital of the Salyes, the hilltop fortress of
Oppidum d'Entremont, as well as the sanctuary of
Roquepertuse and the
oppida of
Saint-Blaise and Baou Roux. After the battle Sextus Calvinus destroyed the hilltop fortress of Entremont. At the foot of the hill, where
thermal springs were located, he founded a new town, called
Aquae Sextiae ("The Waters of Sextius"). Later it became known simply as Aix, then as
Aix-en-Provence. In 122 BC the Romans faced a new uprising of the Gauls, led by another Salye chief, Teutonmotulus, who was joined in his uprising by the
Arverni and the
Allobroges. A new Roman consul,
Dimitius Ahenobargus, met the Gauls with a new and terrifying weapon, elephants, and was able to defeat the much larger Gallic army at the battle of
Vindalium on the
Sorgue river. In 121 BC a new Roman army led by
Quintus Fabius Maximus Allobrogicus came to Provence to reinforce Domitius. Domitius defeated a Gallic army of Allobroges and Arverni on the plains of the Rhône Valley. One hundred thousand Gauls were killed in the battle. After the battle Domitius claimed the entire territory between Italy and Spain as a Roman province. In 118 BC, at the mouth of the
Aude river, his soldiers founded the first Roman colony outside of Italy, called
Narbo Martius (later
Narbonne). Within this territory, only the Greek port colony of Massalia remained independent. In 109 BC Provence faced a new invasion from the north. An enormous migration of Celto-Germanic tribes, the
Teutons and
Cimbri, left the
Baltic coast and moved south into Gaul, looking for a new homeland. They moved into the Rhône Valley and in 105 BC defeated the Roman legions of
Gnaeus Mallius Maximus and Servilus Caepio at
Arausio (the modern town of
Orange). The Romans sent one of their best generals,
Gaius Marius, to Provence with six legions to block the path of the Teutons and Cimbri toward Italy. Gaius Marius waited patiently for two years, while the Teutons and Cimbri ventured into Spain and northern Gaul. The Roman general kept his soldiers busy digging a canal next to the Rhône between Arles and
Fos, allowing his soldiers to be supplied from the sea and also making navigation much easier through the Rhône delta. In 102 BC the Cimbres went east while the Teutons and their new allies, the
Ambrones marched south through Provence, heading toward northern Italy. Gaius Marius met them near Aix in the autumn of 102 BC and defeated them, killing, according to
Plutarch, one hundred thousand Teutons and Ambrones. Italy and Provence were safe from invasion for a century afterward. The most famous of the proconsuls of the new province called
Narbonensis was
Julius Caesar, who governed it from 58 to 49 BC. He was rarely there, using Narbonensis as a supply base for his famous wars against the Gauls further north.(See
Gallic Wars.) Until this time the city of Massalia had guarded its independence and profited from its alliance with Rome. However, in 49 BC, when the struggle for the leadership of Rome began between
Pompey the Great and Julius Caesar, the leaders of Massalia made the fatal decision to back Pompey. (See
Caesar's Civil War). Caesar immediately sent an army to Massalia and besieged the city. He built long trenches around the town, as he had done against the Gauls at
Alesia; and cut down the sacred forests of the Ligures to build
siege towers. He also had a dozen warships built at
Arles and his new fleet, led by his
legate Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus, defeated the Massalian fleet off the isles of the
Frioul archipelago, and blockaded the city from the sea. Disease ravaged the population. In September 49 BC, the soldiers of Caesar's legate
Trebonius breached the walls of Massalia and captured it. The Massalians paid a heavy price for backing Pompey; the city lost its independence, had to surrender its warships and treasury, and was forced to give up all of its territories on the coast and interior, except for the
Stoechades islands and
Nice. The final phase of the Roman conquest of Provence took place between 24 BC and 14 BC, when the Emperor
Augustus Caesar sent an army to conquer the last Ligurian tribes, around modern
Sisteron,
Digne,
Castellane and other mountainous valleys, who still resisted Roman domination. In 8 BC the Emperor
Augustus built a triumphal monument at
La Turbie to commemorate the final pacification of the region.
The Pax Romana in Provence (2nd century AD) The
Pax Romana, or Roman Peace, in Provence lasted for nearly three centuries. During this period, all of Provence, from the Alps to the
Pyrenées, for the first time had the same language, administration, currency and culture. Residents of Provence felt secure enough to give up their fortified hilltop towns and move down into the plains.
Pliny the Elder wrote "it was more than a province, it was another Italy." In addition to the vast province of
Gallia Narbonensis, which reached all the way to Spain, with its capital at
Narbonne, in 7 BC the Emperor
Augustus created
Alpes Maritimae, where the Alps met the Mediterranean, with its capital at (now
Cimiez), in the hills above present-day
Nice; and also created a small client kingdom called
Alpes Cottiae, in the Alps along the Italian border further north, with its capital at
Segusium, the modern-day
Susa in
Piedmont. The Emperor
Nero officially made Alpes Cottiae a Roman province in 67 AD. The purpose of these new provinces was to secure the passes of the Alps for the passage of Roman armies and traders. The Romans established twenty-five towns and a common system of administration throughout Provence. Julius Caesar created three
coloniae, or colonies, for the veterans of his legions at Forum Julii (now
Fréjus),
Arles and Arausio (now
Orange, Vaucluse. Citizens of these towns had the full rights of Roman citizens, including the right to vote. The Emperor August founded seven more colonies of Roman army veterans at
Apt,
Avignon,
Carpentras,
Cavaillon Die,
Digne, and
Riez. Other types of towns, classified as either
municipia or
civitates, were founded throughout the rest of Provence. Some of the capital towns or villages of Gallic tribes were transformed into Roman
municipia; The capital of the
Brigantes tribe became the Roman
muncipium of
Briançon. The residents of these
muncipia and
civitates had most of the rights and obligations of Roman citizens, but no vote. To connect these towns and allow easy movement of Roman armies between Italy and Spain or up the Rhône Valley, Roman engineers constructed a series of new roads, solidly built and regularly maintained. The oldest was the
Via Domitia, built in 118 BC, which went all the way from the
Col de Montgenèvre, the easiest crossing point of the Alps, through
Sisteron,
Apt and
Cavaillon to
Tarascon on the Rhône, and then along the coast to
Narbonne and to Spain. The
Via Aurelia ran from Italy to the Rhône Valley, passing through Cimiez,
Fréjus, and Aix. The
Via Agrippa ran up the Rhône Valley from Arles to Lyon, through Avignon, Orange, and Valence. It was completely rebuilt six times during the height of the
Roman Empire. Arles and the other towns of Provence were the showcases of Roman wealth, culture and power. The Roman
amphitheater at Arles could seat twenty thousand spectators. Roman engineers and architects built monuments, theaters, baths, villas, fora, arenas and
aqueducts throughout Provence, many of which still exist. (See
Architecture of Provence.) The
Pax Romana in Provence lasted until the middle of the third century.
Germanic tribes invaded Provence in 257 and 275. At the beginning the 4th century, the court of Roman Emperor
Constantine (280-337) was forced to take refuge in Arles. By the end of the 5th century, Roman power in Provence had vanished, and an age of invasions, wars, and chaos began. ==The end of the Roman Empire and the arrival of Christianity (3rd-6th centuries AD) ==