book cover

H 255 x W 206 mm

256 pages

130 figures, 1 table (colour throughout)

Published Feb 2026

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781805832171

Digital: 9781805832188

DOI 10.32028/9781805832171

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Keywords
Roman Archaeology; Gaul; Hispania; Late Republic; Sieges; Artillery; Militia; Roman Republican Army

Related titles

Frontiers of the Roman Empire Supplementary Series 0

Roman Republican Sieges

Operations in Gaul and Hispania

Edited by Mike Dobson

Paperback
£38.00

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Sieges were central to Rome’s conquest of Gaul and Hispania. This book explores how Republican armies planned, built and fought sieges, from artillery and camps to environmental impact and human suffering. Moving beyond Caesar’s dramatic accounts, it reveals siege warfare as a familiar, adaptable and deeply human experience.

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Contents

Contributors 

Acknowledgements

Terms and Translations

Introduction – Mike Dobson

Chapter 1. A professional amateur militia: the late-Republican army – Mike Dobson

Chapter 2. Artillery of the later Roman Republic – Alan Wilkins

Chapter 3. Caesar in Gaul and the Hellenistic tradition – Michel Reddé

Chapter 4. The Roman Republican Army in Hispania: Sieges, Battlefields and Camps – Ángel Morillo Cerdán

Chapter 5. Win the siege before it kills us. Environmental warfare by and against a besieging army. – Mike Dobson

Bibliography

Index

About the Author

Mike Dobson is an Honorary Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion and Theology at the University of Exeter. He has long researched and published on the Roman Republican army and its fortifications. He is particularly interested in the Republican army in Spain, especially their campaigns against Numantia. He has been a collaborator in several Spanish research projects and visiting scholar to the Universidad de Alcalá de Henares. More recently, he has also been exploring the environmental and health impacts of ancient armies – warfare ecology. His books include The Army of the Roman Republic: The Second Century BC, Polybius and the Camps at Numantia, Spain (2008) and Rome and the North-Western Mediterranean. Integration and Connectivity c. 150–70 BC (2022, edited with Toni Ñaco and Jordi Principal).