Vercingetorix in Popular Culture

The ancient Gallic chieftain Vercingetorix (c. 82 BC–46 BC) has appeared many times in works of popular culture.

  • Vercingetorix appears in the Asterix series of comics, notably in Asterix and the Chieftain's Shield and Asterix the Gaul. He is seen at his surrender to Caesar, aloofly throwing his arms on (rather than at) Caesar's feet causing him to hobble, rather than walk, to his next conquest. Conversely, when Caesar himself relates the story of Vercingetorix's surrender to some of his minions, the Gallic chieftain is depicted as worn out and eager to give up.
  • Vercingetorix rose to prominence as a French nationalist hero during the 19th century, especially due to the efforts of Napoleon III and several "Celtomaniac" historians such as François Guizot and Augustin Thierry. His image was celebrated in numerous monumental bronze statues, paintings, works of literature, and school textbooks.
  • Vercingetorix appears in the third yearbook of the Marvel G.I. Joe comics, a short story titled "My Dinner with Serpentor" dealing with his surrender due to the origins of pizza.
  • Vercingetorix appears in the Alix comics series, notably in the album entitled Vercingetorix.
  • Vercingetorix is one of the Great Generals appearing in Civilization IV as well as Civilization V.
  • A 2001 French film, Vercingétorix, also known as Vercingétorix: la légende du druide roi ("Vercingetorix: the legend of the druid king"), released as Druids in English, was directed by Jacques Dorfmann and co-written by Dorfmann and Norman Spinrad, starring Christopher Lambert in the title role. It was neither a critical nor a box-office success, but did far better in Europe than the United States of America. Spinrad went on to write a novel, The Druid King, released in 2003.
  • In the French version of the Tintin book Explorers on the Moon, Captain Haddock calls Thomson and Thompson, "Espèces de Vercingétorix de Carnaval!" (Carnival Vercingetorix).
  • Johnny Rico mentions a smaller troop transport (those named for "foot sloggers", as he puts it) christened Vercingetorix in Robert A. Heinlein's Starship Troopers.
  • Vercingetorix appeared in the 2002 TNT television miniseries Julius Caesar, played by Heino Ferch.
  • Vercingetorix's campaign against Caesar is the subject of Morgan Llywelyn's 1992 novel Druids.
  • The "King of all the Gauls" appears in the 2005 HBO/BBC series Rome, played by Giovanni Calcagno. He is in the episodes "The Stolen Eagle" and "Triumph".
  • Vercingetorix appears as an enemy character in the computer games Praetorians and Age of Empires.
  • Vercingetorix is the name of a minor character in the manga series Air Gear by Oh! great.
  • In 62: A Model Kit, a novel by Julio Cortázar, a lead character sculpts a statue of Vercingetorix holding under his arm, as the character describes it, "his own decapitated head enlarged by history, changed into two thousand years of schoolboy compositions and the pretext for hollow speeches..."
  • Vercingetorix appears as a French warrior in the Anachronism card game.
  • Vercingetorix appears in the novel Emperor: The Field of Swords – a Novel of Julius Caesar, by Conn Iggulden.
  • Vercingetorix appears in the novel The Triumph of Caesar, by Steven Saylor ISBN 978-1-84529-567-7
  • Vercingetorix appears in the 1968 play Caesar at the Rubicon by Theodore H. White.
  • In The Simpsons episode LABF01 ("Take My Life, Please") Mr. Burns sarcastically remarks that Homer Simpson has "...the noble bearing of the barbarian leader Vercingetorix"
  • Vercingetorix is last of The Undying to be fought on Gran Pulse in Final Fantasy XIII.
  • In the 2nd Season of Robot Wars, a contesting robot was named Vercingetorix. In Robot Wars Extreme, they changed the name to Comengetorix, a pun on the original name.
  • The song Kingdom Come Undone by Eluveitie mentions Vercingetorix and the battle of Alesia.
  • Vercingetorix -or- VX is a vineyard just outside Newberg, Oregon.
  • Vercingetorix is the pseudonym of a popular blogger on the Denver Post website. He is also credited with formulating "Vercingetorix's law of inversely-proportionate vast conspiracies"; which states that "the vaster a conspiracy is, the more difficult it is to detect."
  • Vercingetorix is referenced several times in Katharine Kerr's "Deverry" novels, both by his own name and as "Gwercongetoryc" in the 'Deverrian dialect.'
  • Vercingetorix was portrayed by Mathew Baynton in a sketch on the popular BBC children's comedy program Horrible Histories, showing the Gaulish sentries' retreat in the rain at the siege of Avaricum.

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