A very good idea to start to want to re-establish historical truths, even if the author's conclusions must go against the so-called history "official." Too bad it went too lives in task! The famous Alesia, theater defeat of Vercingetorix before Caesar, is not to Alise-Sainte-Reine, it is more than plausible, but it is in the Jura Chaux-des-Crotenay, c ' is to disregard general labor eminently serious archaeologists, who have long deem this fanciful hypothesis. However, the thesis of Bernard Fevre in Guillon, to which science has unfortunately not interested until now, is completely ignored by Franck Ferrand, while all those who know the site agree that everything there is to César descriptions! How to explain this "forgetting" Ferrand otherwise than by a need to focus on the sensational work of essential background when you hear restore historical truth? I give three stars for the courage of the author to want to shake up an order which is perhaps too quickly established, but Alesia on the background investigation was clearly not carried out with the seriousness required.
Sylvain Tristan, author of "Golden Lines" (Alpheus 2005).