Caesar Wins at Thapsus
The Republic's last defenders fall in Africa
On the sunbaked plains of North Africa, Julius Caesar's veteran legions crushed the combined forces of Metellus Scipio and Cato the Younger at the Battle of Thapsus. The victory was decisive and brutal -- Caesar's troops, ignoring his calls for mercy, slaughtered thousands of enemy soldiers. Cato, the Republic's most famous champion, chose suicide rather than submission. With this battle, Caesar effectively ended all organized resistance to his rule over Rome.
