'Alesia' was the capital of the
Mandubii, one of the Gaulish tribes allied with the mighty
Aedui, and after
Julius Caesar's conquest a Roman town (
Oppidum) in
Gaul. There have been archeological excavations since the time of
Napoléon III in
Alise-Sainte-Reine in
Côte d'Or near
Dijon, which have claimed that the historical Alesia is located there. New discoveries are constantly being made about this
Gallo-Roman settlement on the plateau of Mont-Auxois. As a result of the latest excavation, a find was presented to the museum there with the inscription: ''IN ALISIIA'', which finally dispelled the doubts of some archeologists on the town's identity. Earlier there were other, less academically valid theories about Alesia's location that claimed it was in Franche-Comté or around
Salins-les-Bains in
Jura. The uncertainty surrounding Alesia's location is humorously parodied in the
Asterix volume
Asterix and the Chieftain's Shield, in which, in this case because of Gaulish pride, characters repeatedly deny that they know its location ("''I don't know where Alesia is! 'No one' knows where Alesia is!''").
Around
52 BC, Alesia was the site of the decisive
battle between the Romans under Julius Caesar and the
Gauls under
Vercingetorix. The battle's outcome determined the fate of all of Gaul. In winning the
battle, the Romans won both the
Gallic War and dominion over Gaul. The fight is described in detail by
Caesar in his ''
De Bello Gallico'' (Book 7, 68-69). The latest analysis at Alise-Sainte-Reine can corroborate the described siege in detail. The enormous measures taken there are impressive: in only six weeks a 15 km long fortification ring (''
circumvallation'') around Alesia and an additional 21 km long ring (''
contravallation'') around that to stop reinforcements (around 250,000 men according to Caesar) from reaching the Gauls. These have been identified by archeologists using aerial photography.
References
★ The information in this article is based on a translation of its German equivalent.