Are there any good books written on the details of ...

Are there any good books written on the details of the bridge Caesar built across the Rhine?


Share Send to a friend Watch Report
 
 

Posted Answers

Order by
 
69 thumbs up

Roman Woodworking


by Roger B. Ulrich

Posted 1 year ago ( permalink )
In reply to louis's question
Rated as
#2 out of 3
0
1

Helpful?

line
line
line



 

Posted 1 year ago ( permalink )
In reply to louis's question
lilly was invited by Yedda to answer this question.

Rated as
Best Answer
0
2

Helpful?

line
line
line



 

As an ambitious general, Caesar wanted to cross the Rhine River for the purpose of attacking Germany [Gaul]. His soldiers transformed the surrounding trees into an expanding bridge that sustain the weight of 40,000 men.  The four-foot piles were connected with wooden beams of wood and then other timber laid across perpendicular to the piles. The soldiers finished the job with tightly wrapped bundles of sticks.  It wasn't the actual bridge that caused the excitment but rather the fact that it was build in ten days.

After Caesar and his army marched across the bridge, the German army was so impressed with the speed of the bridge building that they fled from Caesar's army.  He scoured the territory for eighteen days, recrossed the Rhine River on the bridge, dismantled it and went home.

A great book for the history of this bridge and the rest of the rise and fall of the Roman Empire is A History of the Roman Peoply by Allen Ward.

Hope this helps.   dorry

 


Posted 1 year ago ( permalink )
In reply to louis's question
catydorr224 was invited by Yedda to answer this question.

Rated as
#3 out of 3
0
0

Helpful?

line
line
line



Sign in to participate

Got an answer for louis? Would you like to comment on the posted answers, or vote for the one which you think is the best?

Sign up for a free account, or sign in (if you're already a member).

Explore Related Posts in Forums

History Website - Romans and Celts

I have developed a new History website which is aimed at school children. There a few interactives and the Roman Empires. Visitors can also take part in a virtual tour of a Roman Gold mine

history of the Roman Catholic Church

I realize the RC church dates itself back to Peter as the first pople. But when did the term "Roman Catholic Church" come into being. Obviously, Peter did not consider himself part of the Roman

Harry Potter and the Roman Mythology and History

There are some things that I detected, where JKR (probably) pulled from the Roman Mythology. 1 . Minerva McGonagall Minerva is the Roman Goddess for wisdom and crafts (and resembles Athene
» More...
Powered by
Feed - Subscribe to changes to this Q&A Blog

Explore Related Videos

'King Arthur' - First Look

See clips and behind-the-scenes footage as the filmmakers, the stars and a historian discuss how the real history of Arthur differs from the legend. Cast: Keira Knightley, Clive Owen, Ioan Gruffudd, Hugh Dancy, Stellan Skarsgard, Antoine Fuqua

King Arthur - Seize Your Freedom

A more historical and political, rather than mythical, look at the time Arthur would've lived in than has been seen heretofore onscreen. See what else is in theaters in the Summer Movie Guide!

Roman Rap

A rap about the history of Rome, "Roman Rap" should not be used to study, and/or quoted in internal/external citations for essays/papers. That being said, all information that sounds factual is indeed true, and is meant to be a quick walkthrough of one of history's greatest empires. If you're still reading, CONGRATULATIONS!- you get the real reason we made this video- our school was assigned a project to teach our class about part of Rome's culture, and of course, a rap was the obvious option. Mr. Young is cool.

Lining History: Roman Empire Part 1/6

Welcome to the Roman Empire

Opening a Roman Coffin

A remarkable Roman burial has been found at Boscombe Down, Wiltshire, UK. When we lifted the lid off a three tonne stone coffin we were surprised to discover that the coffin had not filled with soil. Instead, we found ourselves looking down on the skeleton of a woman who was cradling a young child in her arms. More information is available at the project's website: wessexarch.co.uk/projects/wiltshire/boscombe/preserved-roman-remains/index.html

Living History: Roman Empire Part 2/6

The Founding and Growth of Rome

Roman History

a movie we made for history class

Hidden History of the Roman Empire Part 3/4

Monty Python's Terry Jones discusses:Daily Life...

History Class

Basically my cast got bored and we just started goofing off. I don't really know how it all started, but this is one of the funniest moments in my life. Sorry that it's filmed sideways and that you can't understand any of us half the time because we are laughing so hard. THE CAST AND CREW Duffy - The angry History Teacher Operator #1 - "What was the TV doing in Rome?" Operator #2 - A+ student Geroge - Bulgaria loving student Myself - Shoe stealing/rubber band flinging student H.H. Operator - Camera Woman
» More...
Powered by