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{{Commons category|Legio VI Ferrata}}
{{Commons category|Legio VI Ferrata}}
* [http://legvi.tripod.com/ Legion VI Ferrata, Charleston, SC, Roman Re-enactment Group]
* [http://legvi.tripod.com/ Legion VI Ferrata, Charleston, SC, Roman Re-enactment Group]
*[http://legio6.com/ ('''fr''') LEGIO VI FERRATA groupe de reconstitution historique français - ARELATE (ARLES FRANCE)]

[[Category:Roman legions|06 Ferrata]]
[[Category:Roman legions|06 Ferrata]]
[[Category:52 BC establishments]]
[[Category:52 BC establishments]]

Revision as of 08:19, 13 December 2010

Legio VI Ferrata
Map of the Roman empire in AD 125, under emperor Hadrian, showing the LEGIO VI FERRATA stationed at Raphana (Abila, Jordan), in Syria province, from ca. AD 106 until ca. 138
Active65 BC to at least 215 AD
CountryRoman Republic and Roman Empire
TypeRoman legion (Marian)
RoleInfantry assault
Mascot(s)Bull
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Julius Caesar
Mark Antony
Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo
Legionary inscription: "VEXILLA TIO LEG VI FERR" ("Detachment of Legion VI Ferrata")

Legio sexta Ferrata (Sixth Ironclad Legion), was a Roman Legion formed in 65 BC,[citation needed] and in existence up to at least 3rd century. A Legio VI fought in the Roman Republican civil wars of the 40s and 30s BC. Sent to garrison the province of Judaea, it remained there for the next two centuries.

The Legion was also known as Fidelis Constans, meaning "Loyal and Steadfast".[citation needed] It is unclear when this title was given, but several sources[who?] indicate that it may have been in the 1st century AD. The symbol for Legio VI Ferrata was the bull. It also carried the symbolic she-wolf with Romulus and Remus.[citation needed]

History

Under Caesar

Later seeing action at battle of Pharsalus in 48 BC, Julius Caesar took the 6th to Alexandria to settle the dispute in Egypt with Cleopatra. Alexandria was besieged, and the 6th was suffered many casualties, losing almost two-thirds of its strength. Caesar eventually triumphed when reinforcements under Mithridates of Pergamum arrived.[1]

Caesar took his "Veteran Sixth Legion" with him to Syria and Pontus.[2]

"When Caesar reached Pontus he gathered all his forces together in one spot. They were modest in number and experience of war, with the exception of the veteran Sixth Legion, which he had brought with him from Alexandria; but this had gone through such toil and danger and been so reduced in size, in part by the difficulties of the marches and voyages, and in part by the frequency of campaigning, that it contained less than a thousand men..."[3]

The Legion served in Pontus under Caesar in 48 and 47 BC. This culminated in the battle of Zela where victory was won by Legio VI.

"The origin of our victory lay in the bitter and intense hand-to-hand battle joined on the right wing, where the veteran Sixth Legion was stationed".[3]
"Caesar was quite overjoyed at such a victory, although he had been victorious in many battles. He had brought a major war to an astonishingly rapid end... He ordered the Sixth Legion back to Italy to receive their rewards and honors..."[4]

During Caesar's African war against Scipio in 46 BC, the Sixth Legion deserted en masse from Scipio to reinforce Caesar and fought under him.[5]

Under Mark Antony

The legion was disbanded in 45 BC after the battle of Munda, establishing a colony at Arelate (Arles), but was re-formed by Lepidus the following year (44 BC) and was handed over to Mark Antony the year after. Following the defeat of the republican generals Cassius and Brutus in successive battles at Philippi in 42 BC and the subsequent division of control between Mark Antony and Caesar's nephew and heir Octavian, a colony was again formed from retired veterans at Beneventum in 41 BC, and the remainder of Legio VI Ferrata was taken by Mark Antony to the East where it garrisoned Judea.[6]

Two legions under Mark Antony and Octavian

Another Sixth Legion, Legio VI Victrix, evidently saw action at Perusia in 41 BC, which presents us with a problem because the official Legio VI Ferrata was at that moment with Mark Antony in the East;

"Octavian did not hesitate to duplicate legionary numerals already in use by Antony. The latter had serving with him Legio V Alaudae, Legio VI Ferrata and Legio X Equestris. Soon we find Octavian's army boasting of a Legio V (the later Macedonica), Legio VI (the later Victrix) and Legio X (soon to be Fretensis). Of these, Legio V and Legio X, and less certainly Legio VI, bore under the empire a bull-emblem which would normally indicate a foundation by Caesar; but the true Caesarian legions with these numerals (Alaudae, Ferrata and Equestris) were with Antony."[7]

It would seem, therefore, that Octavian had used the veterans of Caesar's Sixth Legion, this time from those left at Beneventum, to form the core of his own Sixth Legion used at Perusia.

Later Legio VI Ferrata fought in Antony's Parthian War in 36 BC.[6]

During the war between Antony and Octavian the Legio VI's Ferrata and Victrix found themselves on opposing sides at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC. Legio VI Ferrata was severely mauled by Octavian's forces. Following the battle, another colony of veterans seems to have been created at Byllis in Illyricum, probably together with soldiers from other legions, and the remainder of VI Ferrata was moved to Syria/Judea where it was to remain, while Legio VI Victrix was sent to Spain.

In Judea

From 54 AD to 68 AD the Sixth Legion Ferrata served under Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo at Artaxata and Tigranocerta against the Parthians.[8] In 69 AD the Sixth Legion returned to Judea and fought in the Jewish War. As the War wound down, it was placed under the command of Mucianus and fought against Vitellius. The Legion was largely responsible for Mucianis' victory over the forces of Vitellius during the brief Civil War following the death of Nero.[9]

In 106 AD a vexillatio of the legion participated at the final decisive battle against Dacia (seee battle of Sarmisegetusa). The main legion can be placed at Bostra in Nabatea under Aulus Cornelius Palma Frontonianus.[10] In 138 AD the Legion was stationed in Palestine, but was briefly sent to Africa during the reign of Antonius Pius.[8] In 150 AD the Legion was once again in Judea, and the last reference found to Legio VI Ferrata places them still there in 215 AD.[6]

Legacy

The Legion's long sojourn in Palestine left a lasting trace in the country's geography and culture, long past the end of the Legion itself and the Roman Empire in general, and up to the present. Being posted to guard the strategic pass at Meggido during the Bar Kokhba revolt, the place where it had its camp remained known throughout the centuries by the name "Lajun" (derived from "Legion"). In Ottoman times a Khan erected in that location was known as "Khan al-Lajun", and a Palestinian village of that name existed there until the creation of Israel in the 1948 war, when it was destroyed and replaced with Kibbutz Meggido. Former inhabitants of Lajun Village still conduct a kind of annual pilgrimage to its ruins and preserve the name for later generations born after the village was destroyed - though few remember the name's Roman origin.[11]

A popular Russian song called "Eagle of the 6th Legion" is dedicated to the 6th Legion.[12]

See also

References

Notes
  1. ^ The Alexandrian War, attributed to Caesar
  2. ^ The Alexandrian War, attributed to Caesar, 33
  3. ^ a b The Alexandrian War, attributed to Caesar, 76
  4. ^ The Alexandrian War, attributed to Caesar, 77
  5. ^ The African War, attributed to Caesar, 35 and 52
  6. ^ a b c Adkins & Adkins, Life in Ancient Rome
  7. ^ Lawrence Keppie, The Making of the Roman Army: From Republic to Empire, p.134
  8. ^ a b Graham Webster, The Roman Imperial Army, Adam & Charles Black, London, (1969)
  9. ^ Tacitus, Histories III, p.46
  10. ^ R.P. Longden, Notes on the Parthian Campaigns of Trajan, The Journal of Roman Studies Vol. 21 (1931), p.35
  11. ^ Dr. Yohai Sela, "History of al_Lajun" Template:He icon
  12. ^ http://www.ghostbuddy.ru/mp3/6_Legion.mp3
Bibliography