The Gallic Women: Episode from the Roman Invasion
The Gallic Women: Episode from the Roman Invasion is a painting by Auguste-Barthélemy Glaize, from 1851. It is a very large oil on canvas work, with a height of 424 cm and a width of 651 cm. It was exhibited at the Salon of 1852 and purchased by the French state in 1853.
Description
The painting illustrates the siege of Gergovie, at which Julius Caesar established Roman rule over Gaul. According to Caesar's own account, Gallic women harangued and insulted the Romans. In the foreground on the right, a Roman horseman attacked by dogs, strikes women who have fallen to the ground. Dead or wounded Gallic soldiers lie on the left, and a woman is suffocating her children. Behind her, a group of Gallic women on a chariot stands at the centre of the composition. An old mother hides her daughter in her arms; another shakes her golden sickle while shouting; a third, implacable in her anger and in her hatred, holds the child she has just slaughtered to save him from the victors. Behind them, women gesticulate on a cart drawn by an ox. On the right, the Romans continue their bloodthirsty and pitiless advance. In the background, fighting continues in the Auvergne mountains.The painting is a work of rehabilitation. Classical authors mostly considered that the outstanding trait of Gallic women as that they showed great fighting spirit; they were thought of as wild and dishevelled, hence typically barbaric. In contrast, Julius Caesar, in his Commentarii de Bello Gallico emphasised the submissiveness of the woman of Gergovie, who had begged the Romans to spare them. Glaize’s work portrayed them as neither barbaric nor suppliant but bold and defiant. The theatrical postures and athletic bodies depicted recall the famous The Intervention of the Sabine Women by Jacques-Louis David.