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FLAVIUS
VEGETIUS RENATUS BOOK
TWO MACHINES AND TOOLS OF THE LEGION The legion owes its success to its arms and machines, as well as to the number and bravery of its soldiers. In the first place every century has a balista mounted on a carriage drawn by mules and served by a mess, that is by ten men from the century to which it belongs. The larger these engines are, the greater distance they carry and with the greater force. They are used not only to defend the entrenchments of camps, but are also placed in the field in the rear of the heavy armed infantry. And such is the violence with which they throw the darts that neither the cuirasses of the horse nor shields of the foot can resist them. The number of these engines in a legion is fifty-five. Besides these are ten onagri, one for each cohort; they are drawn ready armed on carriages by oxen; in case of an attack, they defend the works of the camp by throwing stones as the balistae do darts. The legion carries with
it a number of small boats, each hollowed out of a single piece of timber, with
long cables and sometimes iron chains to fasten them together. These boats, joined
and covered with planks, serve as bridges over unfordable rivers, on which both
cavalry and infantry pass without danger. The legion is provided with iron hooks,
called wolves, and iron scythes fixed to the ends of long poles; and with forks,
spades, shovels, pickaxes, wheelbarrows and baskets for digging and transporting
earth; together with hatchets, axes and saws for cutting wood. Besides which,
a train of workmen attend on it furnished with all instruments necessary for the
construction of tortoises, musculi, rams, vines, moving towers and other machines
for the attack of places. As the enumeration of all the particulars of this sort
would be too tedious, I shall only observe that the legion should carry with it
wherever it moves, whatever is necessary for every kind of service so that the
encampments may have all the strength and conveniences of a fortified city.
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