On Roman Military Matters
A 5th Century Training Manual in Organization,
Weapons and Tactics, as Practiced by the Roman Legions

By
Vegetius
Translated from the Latin by Lieutenant John Clarke
Red
and Black Publishers, St Petersburg, Florida
This
translation first published 1767
Red
and Black Publishers, PO Box 7542, St Petersburg, Florida,
33734
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us at: info@RedandBlackPublishers.com
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and manufactured in the United States of America
Contents
Preface to Book I 5
Book I: The
Selection and Training of New Levies
7
Preface to Book II 29
Book II: The Organization of the Legion
31
Preface to Book III 51
Book III: Dispositions
for Action
53
Preface To Book
I
To the Emperor Valentinian
It
has been an old custom for authors to offer to their Princes the fruits of their
studies in belles letters, from a persuasion that no work can be published with
propriety but under the auspices of the Emperor, and that the knowledge of a
Prince should be more general, and of the most important kind, as its influence
is felt so keenly by all his subjects. We have many instances of the favorable
reception which Augustus and his illustrious successors conferred on the works
presented to them; and this encouragement of the Sovereign made the sciences
flourish. The consideration of Your Majesty’s superior indulgence for attempts
of this sort, induced me to follow this example, and makes me at the same time
almost forget my own inability when compared with the ancient writers. One
advantage, however, I derive from the nature of this work, as it requires no
elegance of expression, or extraordinary share of genius, but only great care
and fidelity in collecting and explaining, for public use, the instructions and
observations of our old historians of military affairs, or those who wrote
expressly concerning them.
My design in this treatise is to exhibit in some order the peculiar customs and usages of the ancients in the choice and discipline of their new levies. Nor do I presume to offer this work to Your Majesty from a supposition that you are not acquainted with every part of its contents; but that you may see that the same salutary dispositions and regulations which your own wisdom prompts You to establish for the happiness of the Empire, were formerly observed by the founders thereof; and that Your Majesty may find with ease in this abridgement whatever is most useful on so necessary and important a subject.
BOOK
I
The
Selection and Training of New Levies
The Roman Discipline The Cause Of Their Greatness
Victory in war does not depend entirely upon numbers
or mere courage; only skill and discipline will insure it. We find that the
Romans owed the conquest of the world to no other cause than continual military
training, exact observance of discipline in their camps and unwearied
cultivation of the other arts of war. Without these, what chance would the
inconsiderable numbers of the Roman armies have had against the multitudes of
the Gauls? Or with what success would their small size have been opposed to the
prodigious stature of the Germans? The Spaniards surpassed us not only in
numbers, but in physical strength. We were always inferior to the Africans in
wealth and unequal to them in deception and stratagem. And the Greeks,
indisputably, were far superior to us in skill in arts and all kinds of
knowledge.
But
to all these advantages the Romans opposed unusual care in the choice of their
levies and in their military training. They thoroughly understood the importance
of hardening them by continual practice, and of training them to every maneuver
that might happen in the line and in action. Nor were they less strict in
punishing idleness and sloth. The courage of a soldier is heightened by his
knowledge of his profession, and he only wants an opportunity to execute what he
is convinced he has been perfectly taught. A handful of men, inured to war,
proceed to certain victory, while on the contrary numerous armies of raw and
undisciplined troops are but multitudes of men dragged to slaughter.
The Selection Of Recruits
To treat our subject with some method, we shall first
examine what provinces or nations are to be preferred for supplying the armies
with recruits. It is certain that every country produces both brave men and
cowards; but it is equally as certain that some nations are naturally more
warlike than others, and that courage, as well as strength of body, depends
greatly upon the influence of the different climates.
We
shall next examine whether the city or the country produces the best and most
capable soldiers. No one, I imagine, can doubt that the peasants are the most
fit to carry arms for they from their infancy have been exposed to all kinds of
weather and have been brought up to the hardest labor. They are able to endure
the greatest heat of the sun, are unacquainted with the use of baths, and are
strangers to the other luxuries of life. They are simple, content with little,
inured to all kinds of fatigue, and prepared in some measure for a military life
by their continual employment in their country-work, in handling the spade,
digging trenches and carrying burdens. In cases of necessity, however, they are
sometimes obliged to make levies in the cities. And these men, as soon as
enlisted, should be taught to work on entrenchments, to march in ranks, to carry
heavy burdens, and to bear the sun and dust. Their meals should be coarse and
moderate; they should be accustomed to lie sometimes in the open air and
sometimes in tents. After this, they should be instructed in the use of their
arms. And if any long expedition is planned, they should be encamped as far as
possible from the temptations of the city. By these precautions their minds, as
well as their bodies, will properly be prepared for the service.
I
realize that in the first ages of the Republic, the Romans always raised their
armies in the city itself, but this was at a time when there were no pleasures,
no luxuries to enervate them. The Tiber was then their only bath, and in it they
refreshed themselves after their exercises and fatigues in the field by
swimming. In those days the same man was both soldier and farmer, but a farmer
who, when occasion arose, laid aside his tools and put on the sword. The truth
of this is confirmed by the instance of Quintius Cincinnatus, who was following
the plow when they came to offer him the dictatorship. The chief strength of our
armies, then, should be recruited from the country. For it is certain that the
less a man is acquainted with the sweets of life, the less reason he has to be
afraid of death.
The Proper Age For Recruits
If we follow the ancient practice, the proper time
for enlisting youth into the army is at their entrance into the age of puberty.
At this time instructions of every kind are more quickly imbibed and more
lastingly imprinted on the mind. Besides this, the indispensable military
exercises of running and leaping must be acquired before the limbs are too much
stiffened by age. For it is activity, improved by continual practice, which
forms the useful and good soldier. Formerly, says Sallust, the Roman youth, as
soon as they were of an age to carry arms, were trained in the Strictest manner
in their camps to all the fatigues and exercises of war. For it is certainly
better that a soldier, perfectly disciplined, should, through emulation, repine
at his not being yet arrived at a proper age for action, than have the
mortification of knowing it is past. A sufficient time is also required for his
instruction in the different branches of the service. It is no easy matter to
train the horse or foot archer, or to form the legionary soldier to every part
of the drill, to teach him not to quit his post, to keep ranks, to take a proper
aim and throw his missile weapons with force, to dig trenches, to plant
palisades, how to manage his shield, glance off the blows of the enemy, and how
to parry a stroke with dexterity. A soldier, thus perfect in his business, so
far from showing any backwardness to engage, will be eager for an opportunity of
signaling himself.