The women of the Teutons defend the wagon fort by Heinrich Leutemann 1882

"There was quite as severe a struggle with the women-folk of the barbarians as with the men; for they had formed a barricade of their waggons and carts and, mounting on the top of it, fought with axes and pikes. Their death was as honourable as their resistance; for when, after sending a delegation to Marius, they had failed to secure their liberty and to be made priestesses — a request which could not lawfully be granted — they strangled all their infants or dashed them to pieces, and themselves either fell by wounds inflicted by one another, or else, making ropes of their own hair, hanged themselves on trees or the yokes of their waggons. Their king Boiorix fell fighting energetically in the forefront of the battle, and not without having inflicted vengeance on his foes."

-Lucius Annaeus Florus, Epitome 1.38.16–18

The women of the Teutons defend the wagon fort by Heinrich Leutemann 1882


Source:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Die_Frauen_der_Teutonen_verteidigen_die_Wagenburg_by_Heinrich_Leutemann.jpg

 

Quote:

http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Florus/Epitome/1J*.html#XXXVIII

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