334
Diodorus Siculus, V. 22. – Strabo, IV., p. 200.
335
336
337
338
Strabo, IV., p. 199.
339
340
Diodorus Siculus, V. 22.
341
Pliny,
342
Tacitus,
343
344
Tacitus,
345
Frontinus,
346
The account on page 213 confirms this interpretation, which is conformable to that of General Gœler.
347
348
Strabo, IV., p. 200.
349
Strabo, IV., p. 201.
350
From what will be seen further on, each transport ship, on its return, contained 150 men. Eighty ships could thus transport 12,000 men, but since, reduced to sixty-eight, they were enough to carry back the whole army to the continent, they can only have carried 10,200 men, which was probably the effective force of the two legions. The eighteen ships appropriated to the cavalry might transport 450 horses, at the rate of twenty-five horses each ship.
351
The port of Dover extended formerly from the site of the present town, between the cliffs which border the valley of the Dour or of Charlton. (
The proofs of the above assertion result from several facts related in different notices on the town of Dover. It is there said that in 1784 Sir Thomas Hyde Page caused a shaft to be sunk at a hundred yards from the shore, to ascertain the depth of the basin at a remote period; it proved that the ancient bed of the sea had been formerly thirty English feet below the present level of the high tide. In 1826, in sinking a well at a place called
The town built under the Emperors Adrian and Septimus Severus occupied a part of the port, which had already been covered with sand; yet the sea still entered a considerable distance inland. (
It would appear to have been about the year 950 that the old port was entirely blocked up with the maritime and fluvial alluvium which have been increasing till our day, and which at different periods have rendered it necessary to construct the dykes and quays which have given the port its present form.
352
“Constat enim aditus insulæ esse munitos mirificis molibus.” (Cicero,
353
Dio Cassius, XXXIX. 51.
354
The Emperor Julian (p. 70, edit. Lasius) makes Cæsar say that he had been the first to leap down from the ship.
355
It is in the text,
356
Dio Cassius, XXXIX. 51.
357
Cæsar himself had only carried three servants with him, as Cotta relates. (Athenæus,
358
Dio Cassius, XXXIX. 53.
359
At the battle of Arcola, in 1796, twenty-five horsemen had a great influence on the issue of the day. (
360
361
362
Dio Cassius, XL. 1. – See Strabo, IV., p. 162, edit. Didot.
363
364
Dio Cassius, XXXIX. 56. XL. 1.
365
This opinion has been already supported by learned archæologists. I will cite especially M. Mariette; Mr. Thomas Lewin, who has written a very interesting account of Cæsar’s invasions of England; and lastly, M. l’Abbé Haigneré, archivist of Boulogne, who has collected the best documents on this question.
366
Strabo, IV. 6, p. 173.
367
According to the Itinerary of Antoninus, the road started from Bagacum (
368
Suetonius,
369
Suetonius,
370
Ammianus Marcellinus, XX. 1.
371
Ammianus Marcellinus, XX. 7, 8.
372
Eumenius,
373
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, cited by Mr. Lewin.
374
“Qui tertia vigilia Morino solvisset a portu.” (Florus, III. 10.)
375
Strabo, IV. 5, p. 166.
376
“Ultimos Gallicarum gentium Morinos, nec portu quam Gesoriacum vocant quicquam notius habet.” (Pomponius Mela, III. 2.) – “Μορινὡν Γησοριακον ἑπἱνειον.” (Ptolemy, II. ix. 3.)
377
“Hæc [Britannia] abest a Gesoriaco Morinorum gentis litore proximo trajectu quinquaginta M.” (Pliny,
378
The