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- "Come, enemy. Send an ambassador, for I have something to say which will benefit us both."
Ambiorix (? – c. 53 BC) was a king of the Gallic Eburones tribe in northeast Gaul, nowadays Belgium, who became infamous during the Gallic Wars for leading a revolt against the Roman forces commanded by Julius Caesar, managing to wipe out fifteen Roman cohorts before finally being defeated. He leads the Gauls in Civilization VI.
Ambiorix builds a swarm of units to overwhelm his foes via strategic construction of mines and his unique Oppidum district.
Intro[]
Your wits will serve you well, Ambiorix. Where the size of your armies fail, use your head and gilded tongue to reclaim your land. Your allies will follow your lead and your strong spear arm will shatter the resistance of your enemies. Fight, great warrior-king!
In-Game[]
Ambiorix's unique agenda is Scourge of Rome. He likes leaders with many military units and dislikes those with few military units.
His leader ability is King of the Eburones. He gains Culture equal to the 20% of the Production cost of each non-civilian unit he trains, and his melee, ranged, and anti-cavalry units (as well as recon units) receive +2 Combat Strength for each adjacent military unit.
Detailed Approach[]
The Gauls under Ambiorix have two main objectives: building mines and using this production to train an onslaught of units. Gaul's unique civilization trait gives mines adjacency bonuses as well as Culture and Tourism, meaning that building a lot of them is a must. In war, Ambiorix's unique trait gives strength to units adjacent to each other, meaning that the more units, the stronger the army. To make Gaulish armies more effective, the Gaesatae unit gains bonuses when attacking cities or units stronger than it, and the unique district, the Oppidum, unlocks early and also carries with it a high adjacency bonus. Gaul is very strong for those seeking a Domination Victory, but also can be made to be an effective Culture-focused civilization as well.
Lines[]
Ambiorix is voiced by Julien Boissaud. He speaks reconstructed Gaulish with a French accent,[1] the latter most probably considered substratum.
Voiced[]
Codename | Quote (English translation) | Quote (Gaulish) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Agenda-based Approval | So many troops! Ha ha! Look at them all! | Pi manti kingetona! Ha ha! Drike sos urosa! | |
Agenda-based Disapproval | Your lands are quiet and peaceful. And weak. | Dotirisa senti samasi da cacan. Etti plaga. | |
Attacked | Peace is stifling. Only in war can we see who is the greater chief. | Sidosta arta ti. Catus nat maiuson. Locisitti pisi pinonesi omaius. | |
Declares War | I have bested many enemies in war before, and finally I shall match my strength against yours! | Bietos cadtuson! Bietos cadtuson orwoclowiseos sen terseni, niti arpitti ancaran carati! | |
Defeated | Such power! Perhaps I underestimated you before. Now, in defeat, I will give you the respect you are due. | Nudei incindiare. Berazutoia armanzionan lictan. | |
Greeting | All you see is the land of the Gauls, and I am Ambiorix, their chief. | Papon, bizecio diros galationici! Ambiorir semi, esion benon. | |
Quote from Civilopedia | Come, enemy. Send an ambassador, for I have something to say which will benefit us both. | ? | "Ambassador" is derived from the Gaulish word ambaxtos, which means "servant." |
Unvoiced[]
Delegation: Our envoys carry with them salted hams, wild game, and barrels and barrels of wine! Come, let us feast!
Accepts Delegation from Player: I personally led your delegation on a hunt! They were adequate.
Rejects Delegation from Player: No, I will not open my gates for your men, regardless of how many gifts they bring.
Accepts Player's Declaration of Friendship: Well done! We stand as kin!
Rejects Player's Declaration of Friendship: I cannot put Gallic lives in your hands.
Requests Declaration of Friendship: Join hands with me, and together our people will crush our rivals!
Requests Alliance: Let us sign a binding agreement where no one can betray each other. I'm serious this time.
Player Accepts Declaration of Friendship: Welcome to my camp! I promise that there is no one hiding in the closet with a sword. At this time.
Player Rejects Declaration of Friendship: I understand. You must be careful.
Denounced by Player: All the Gauls spit at the sound of your name, at your dark deeds, at your many crimes. I shall tell all the world that you are our mortal enemy!
Denounces Player: You think deceit and cowardice are virtues, but I, Ambiorix, see you for what you are. In time, so shall the rest of the world!
Invitation to Capital: Will you come to my city? We have opened a cask of wine that is, I promise, entirely safe to drink and not at all poisoned.
Invitation to City: Come, I will tell you about the cities of Gaul, if you tell me about those of your lands.
Civilopedia entry[]
Ambiorix’s legacy survives through Caesar’s Gallic Wars. While his early life and what happened after he left Caesar’s notice is lost to history, his name lives on —or at least his title does, since Ambiorix is not a name but an epithet meaning “King in All Directions.”
Ambiorix was the co-ruler of the Eburone tribe of Gaul in what would become modern-day Belgium. He shared his kingship with Cativolcus, the elder leader of the tribe. Although Cativolcus was older (and perhaps wiser), he nevertheless bowed his head to Ambiorix when it came to handling the Roman occupation of Gaul. After the defeat of the Eburone’s Gallic overlords by Julius Caesear, the Eburones and Romans found themselves on relatively good terms - Roman intervention weakened the larger tribes and restored hostages to the Eburones. Ambiorix even directly benefitted since some of the hostages who were returned were family members of his.
But the Romans were still an invasive force on Gallic land. Ambiorix’s patience wore thin when winter came, and the Romans demanded that the tribes surrender some of their food to supply Roman garrisons, despite knowing that food was scarce due to an earlier drought. Indutiomarus, a fellow chief from a nearby tribe, finally decided that even friendly Romans were too many Romans, and urged Ambiorix and other Gauls to rise up against the Roman occupation.
The two kings attacked the Roman garrison under the command of Sabinus and Cotta. But the Gauls weren’t skilled in fighting a fortified camp. Ambiorix realized that outright warfare wouldn’t defeat his enemies here. He would have to use a different tactic. Ambiorix went to the gates and requested to negotiate with the Roman commanders. A consummate liar, Ambiorix put on a grand show when they arrived. It hadn’t been his idea to attack, Ambiorix wildly claimed. He was the leader of a small tribe, and he’d been bullied into submission—the Romans could understand that since they’d helped free some of his people from those dreadful bullies in the past. His own people were pressuring him to fight too, so what was a king to do? Ambiorix went on to warn the commanders of an impending attack. The Germans were coming, he cautioned, and their forces were much stronger and larger than what the Romans could face in this small garrison. Ambiorix advised them to leave the garrison to join up with their allies elsewhere and promised them safe passage through his lands along the way.
The Romans bought Ambiorix’s tale. They reasoned that the possibility of deception was low since the Eburones tribe was so small—why would a mouse attack a lion? They prepared to leave and make for another garrison. Meanwhile, Ambiorix prepared his attack. He set up a trap along the ravine on the path he knew that the Romans would march through. Sure enough, the Romans left their fort at dawn and followed the path that Ambiorix predicted they would, defenses low as they thought that the closest hostile army were these still far-off “Germans” of which Ambiorix spoke. They were wrong.
Ambiorix waited for half of the Roman forces to pass through the ravine, then started his attack. He launched volleys of javelins on the Romans, and by the time Sabinus realized what was happening, it was too late. He requested to speak with Ambiorix, who promised him safe passage if he would just come to the Gallic camp. But it seemed that Sabinus hadn’t learned his lesson. Ambiorix killed him upon arrival. Some survivors of the ambush fled back to their fort, but without the manpower needed to defend it, they committed suicide rather than be slaughtered or captured by the enemy. The other survivors escaped to a nearby garrison and warned the commander there of Ambiorix’s treachery. Even so, the word didn’t seem to spread to the rest of the Romans – namely, the Roman commander Cicero.
Ambiorix and his troops killed the forces outside of Cicero’s camp. However, once again, Ambiorix couldn’t breach the walls. Rather than continue to attack the gates, he decided to try and trick the commander like he did before. But this time it didn’t work. Cicero stated it wasn’t the Roman way to accept terms from the enemy and, while he stalled for time, secretly sent for help. Soon, Julius Caesar was on the march to face Ambiorix.
This time, it was the Roman’s turn to set a trap. Ambiorix was still feeling pretty good after his previous victory, and when he saw Caesar’s “small” army, he felt emboldened enough to attack. Caesar’s men seemed reluctant to fight, and the fort they’d built was small. Ambiorix ordered his men to attack, only to be surprised – the “small” fort had been hiding a large cavalry force. Most of Ambiorix’s army was wiped out, and he narrowly escaped capture. Ambiorix disappeared over the German border, taking with him only a few of his most trusted men. He was never heard from again.
Caesar, unfortunately, didn’t take well to being robbed of the satisfaction of killing Ambiorix. He also didn’t tolerate rebellion or trickery (unless it was his own, of course). He destroyed the Eburones with a combination of military repression and cutting off the Gauls’ food supplies, pushing the tribe to the point where its now-lone king, Cativolcus, poisoned himself, eradicating the last remnant of the forsaken tribe.
Trivia[]
- Ambiorix's diplomacy screen shows a large menhir in a forest clearing.
- Ambiorix's leader ability references his status as one of the two kings of the Eburones tribe during the Gallic Wars, while his leader agenda is a common nickname for those who inflicted significant defeats to the Roman Empire.
- Ambiorix's name derives from Gaulish prefix ambi- (around, on both sides) attached to -rix (king) and can thus be generally translated as "king of the surroundings" or "king of all directions."
- Ambiorix wears a torc, a metallic neck ring used as symbol of station and authority in Celtic culture.
- Ambiorix recycles some animations from Shaka.
- Ambiorix had a direct relationship with one other leader in Civilization VI: he and Julius Caesar fought each other during the Gallic Wars.
Gallery[]
Videos[]
Related achievements[]
Crom Laughs at Your Tanks
As Gaul, kill a Tank with a Gaesatae.
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Et tu, Gallia?
Win a regular game as Ambiorix.
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