UNIVERSAL BIOGRAPHICAL LIBRARY
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LIFE AND WARS OF JULIUS CAESAR.
CHAPTER V. PUNIC
WARS AND WARS OF MACEDONIA AND ASIA.
(From
488 to 621.)
COMPARISON
BETWEEN ROME AND CARTHAGE.
Rome, having extended her dominion to the
southern extremity of Italy, found herself face to face with a power which, by
the force of circumstances, was to become her rival.
Carthage,
situated on the part of the African coast nearest to Sicily, was only separated
from it by the channel of Malta, which divides the great basin of the
Mediterranean in two. She had, during more than two centuries, concluded, from
time to time, treaties with Rome, and, with a want of foresight of the
future, congratulated the Senate every time it had gained great advantages over
the Etruscans or the Samnites.
The
superiority of Carthage at the beginning of the Punic wars was evident; yet the
constitution of the two cities might have led any one to foresee which in the
end must be the master. A powerful aristocracy reigned in both; but at Rome the
nobles, identified continually with the people, set an example of patriotism
and of all civic virtues, while at Carthage the leading families, enriched by
commerce, made effeminate by an unbridled luxury, formed a selfish and greedy
caste, distinct from the rest of the citizens. At Rome, the sole motive of
action was glory, the principal occupation war, and the first duty military
service. At Carthage, everything was sacrificed to interest and commerce; and
the defence of the fatherland was, as an insupportable burden, abandoned to
mercenaries. Hence, after a defeat, at Carthage the army was recruited with
difficulty; at Rome it immediately recruited itself, because the populace was
subject to the recruitment. If the poverty of the treasury caused the pay of
the troops to be delayed, the Carthaginian, soldiers mutinied, and placed the
State in danger; the Romans supported privations and suffering without a
murmur, out of mere love for their country.
The
Carthaginian religion made of the Divinity a jealous and malignant power, which
required to be appeased by horrible sacrifices or honored by shameful
practices; hence, manners depraved and cruel: at Rome, good sense or the
interest of the government moderated the brutality of paganism, and maintained
in religion the sentiments of morality.
And,
again, what a difference in their policies! Rome had subdued, by force of arms,
it is true, the people who surrounded her; but she had, so to say, obtained
pardon for her victories in offering to the vanquished a greater country and a
share in the rights of the metropolis. Moreover, as the inhabitants of the
peninsula were in general of one and the same race, she had found it easy to
assimilate them to herself. Carthage, on the contrary, had remained a foreigner
in the midst of the natives of Africa, from whom she was separated by origin,
language, and manners. She had made her rule hateful to her subjects and to her
tributaries by the mercantile spirit of her agents, and their habits of
rapacity; hence frequent insurrections, repressed with unexampled cruelty. Her
distrust of her subjects had engaged her to leave all the towns on her
territory open, in order that none of them might become a centre of support to
a revolt. Thus two hundred towns surrendered without resistance to Agathocles,
immediately he appeared in Africa. Rome, on the contrary, surrounded her
colonies with ramparts, and the walls of Placentia, Spoletum, Casilinum, and
Nola, contributed to arrest the invasion of Hannibal.
The
town of Romulus was at that time in all the vigor of youth, while Carthage had
reached that degree of corruption at which States are incapable of supporting
either the abuses which enervate them, or the remedy by which they might be
regenerated.
To
Rome, then, belonged the future. On one hand, a people of soldiers, restrained
by discipline, religion, and purity of manners, animated with the love of
their country, surrounded by devoted allies; on the other, a people of
merchants with dissolute manners, unruly mercenaries, and discontented
subjects.
FIRST
PUNIC war-(490-513).
These
two powers, of equal ambition, but so opposite in spirit, could not long remain
in presence without disputing the command of the rich basin of the
Mediterranean. Sicily especially was destined to excite their covetousness.
The possession of that island was then shared between Hiero, tyrant of Syracuse,
the Carthaginians, and the Mamertines. These last, descended from the old
adventurers, mercenaries of Agathocles, who came from Italy in 490 and settled
at Messina, proceeded to make war upon the Syracusans. They first sought the
assistance of the Carthaginians, and surrendered to them the acropolis of
Messina as the price of their protection ; but soon, disgusted with their too
exacting allies, they sent to demand succor of Rome under the name of a common
nationality, for most of them called themselves Italiots, and consequently
allies of the Republic; some even were or pretended to be Romans.
The
Senate hesitated; but public opinion carried the day, and, in spite of the
little interest inspired by the Mamertines, war was decided. A body of troops,
sent without delay to Messina, expelled the Carthaginians. Soon after, a
consular army crossed the Strait, defeated first the Syracusans and then the
Carthaginians, and effected a military settlement in the island. Thus commenced
the first Punic war.
Different
circumstances favored the Romans. The Carthaginians had made themselves
objects of hatred to the Sicilian Greeks. The towns still independent,
comparing the discipline of the legions with the excesses of all kinds which
had marked the progress of the mercenaries of Agathocles, Pyrrhus, and the
Carthaginian generals, received the consuls as liberators. Hiero, master of
Syracuse, the principal town in Sicily, had no sooner experienced the power of the Roman armies than
he foresaw the result of the struggle, and declared for the strongest. His
alliance, maintained faithfully during fifty years, was of great utility to the
Republic. With his support, the Romans at the end of the third year of the
war, had obtained possession of Agrigentum and the greater part of the towns of
the interior; but the fleets of the Carthaginians remained masters of the sea
and of the fortresses on the coast.
The
Romans were deficient in ships of war. They could, no doubt, procure transport
vessels, or, by their allies (socii navales), a few triremes; but they
had none of those ships with five ranks of oars, better calculated, by their
weight and velocity, to sink the ships of the enemy. An incomparable energy
supplied in a short time the insufficiency of the fleet: a hundred and twenty
galleys were constructed after the model of a Carthaginian quinquireme which
had been cast on the coast of Italy; and soldiers were exercised on land in the
handling of the oar. At the end of two months the crews were embarked, and the
Carthaginians were defeated at Mylae (494), and three years after at Tyndaris
(497). These two sea-fights deprived Carthage of the prestige of her maritime
superiority.
Still
the struggle continued on land without decisive results, when the two rivals
embraced the same resolution of making a final effort for the mastery of the
sea. Carthage fitted out three hundred and fifty decked vessels; Rome, three
hundred and thirty, of equal force. In 498 the two fleets met between Heraclea
Minoa and the cape of Ecnomus, and, in a memorable combat, in which 300,000
men contended, the victory remained with the Romans. The road to Africa was
open, and M. Atilius Regulus, inspired, no doubt, by the example of Agathocles,
formed the design of carrying the war thither. His first successes were so
great that Carthage, in her terror, and to avoid the siege with which she was
threatened, was ready to renounce her possessions in Sicily. Regulus, relying
too much on the feebleness of the resistance he had hitherto encountered,
thought he could impose upon Carthage the hardest conditions; but despair
restored to the Africans all their energy, and Xanthippus, a Greek adventurer,
but good general, placed himself at the head of the troops, defeated the
consul, and almost totally destroyed his army.
The
Romans never desponded in their reverses; they carried the war again into
Sicily, and recovered Panormus, the headquarters of the Carthaginian army. For
several years the fleets of the two countries ravaged, one the coast of Africa,
the other the Italian shores; in the interior of Sicily the Romans had the
advantage; on the coast, the Carthaginians. Twice the fleets of the Republic
were destroyed by tempests or by the enemy, and these disasters led the Senate
on two occasions to suspend all naval warfare. The struggle remained
concentrated during six years in a corner of Sicily: the Romans occupied Panormus;
the Carthaginians, Lilybaeum and Drepana. It might have been prolonged
indefinitely, if the Senate, in spite of the poverty of the treasury, had not
succeeded, by means of voluntary gifts, in equipping another fleet of two
hundred quinquiremes. Lutatius, who commanded it, dispersed the enemy’s ships
near the Aegates, and, master of the sea, threatened to starve the Carthaginians.
They sued for peace at the very moment when a great warrior, Hamilcar, had just
restored a prestige to their arms. The fact is, that the enormity of her
expenses and sacrifices for the last twenty-four years had discouraged
Carthage; while at Rome, patriotism, insensible to material losses, maintained
the national energy without change. The Carthaginians, obliged to give up all
their establishments in Sicily, paid an .indemnity of 2,200 talents. Q From
that time the whole island, with the exception of the kingdom of Hiero, became
tributary, and, for the first time, Rome had a subject province.
If,
in spite of this decided success, there were momentary checks, we must
attribute them in great part to the continual changes in the plans of campaign,
which varied annually with the generals. Several consuls, nevertheless, were
wanting neither in skill nor perseverance; and the Senate, always grateful,
gave them worthy recompense for their services. Some obtained the honors of the
triumph; among others, Duilius, who gained the first naval battle, and
Lutatius, whose victory decided peace. At Carthage, on the contrary, the best generals
fell victims to envy and ingratitude. Xanthippus, who vanquished Regulus, was
summarily removed through the jealousy of the nobles, whom he had saved; and
Hamilcar, calumniated by a rival faction, did not receive from his government
the support necessary for the execution of his great designs.
During
this contest of twenty-three years, the war often experienced the want of a
skilful and stable direction; but the legions lost nothing of their ancient
valor, and they were even seen one day proceeding to blows with the
auxiliaries, who had disputed with them the possession of the most dangerous
post. We may cite also the intrepidity of the Tribune Calpurnius Flamma, who
saved the legions shut up by Hamilcar in a defile. He covered the retreat with three
hundred men, and, found alive under a heap of dead bodies, received from the
consul a crown of leaves—a modest reward, but sufficient then to inspire
heroism. All noble sentiments were raised to such a point as even to do justice
to an enemy. The consul, L. Cornelius, gave magnificent funeral rites to Hanno,
a Carthaginian general, who had died valiantly in fighting against him.
During
the first Punic war, the Carthaginians had often threatened the coasts of
Italy, but never attempted a serious landing. They could find no allies among
the peoples recently subdued; neither the Samnites, nor the Lucanians who had
declared for Pyrrhus, nor the Greek towns in the south of the Peninsula, showed
any inclination to revolt. The Cisalpine Gauls, lately so restless, and whom we
shall soon see taking arms again, remained motionless. The disturbances which
broke out at the close of the Punic war among the Salentini and Falisci were
without importance, and appear to have had no connection with the great struggle
between Rome and Carthage.
This
resistance to all attempts at insurrection proves that the government of the
Republic was equitable, and that it had given satisfaction to the vanquished.
No complaint was heard, even after great disasters; and yet the calamities of
war bore cruelly upon the cultivators—incessantly obliged to quit their fields
to fill up the voids made in the legions. At home, the Senate had in its favor
a great prestige, and abroad it enjoyed a reputation of good faith which
insured sincere alliances.
The
first Punic war exercised a remarkable influence on manners. Until then the
Romans had not entertained continuous relations with the Greeks. The conquest
of Sicily rendered these relations numerous and active, and whatever Hellenic
civilization contained, whether useful or pernicious, made itself felt.
The
religious ideas of the two peoples were different, although Roman paganism had
great affinity with the paganism of Greece. This had its philosophers, its
sophists, and its free-thinkers. At Rome, nothing of the sort; there, creeds
were profound, simple, and sincere; and, moreover, from a very remote period,
the government had made religion subordinate to politics, and had labored to
give it a direction advantageous to the State.
The
Greeks of Sicily introduced into Rome two sects of philosophy, the germs of
which became developed at a later period, and which had, perhaps, more relation
with the instincts of the initiated than with those of the initiators.
Stoicism, fortified the practice of the civic virtues, but without modifying
their ancient roughness; Epicurism, much more extensively spread, soon
flung the nation into the search after material enjoyments. Both sects, by
inspiring contempt for death, gave a terrible power to the people who adopted
them.
The
war had exhausted the finances of Carthage. The mercenaries, whom she could
not pay, revolted in Africa and Sardinia at the same time. They were only
vanquished by the genius of Hamilcar. In Sardinia, the excesses of the
mutineers had caused an insurrection among the natives, who drove them out of
the country. The Romans did not let this opportunity for intervention escape
them; and, as before in the case of the Mamertines, the Senate, according to
all appearance, assumed as a pretext that there were Italiots among the
mercenaries in Sardinia. The island was taken, and the conquerors imposed a new
contribution on Carthage, for having captured some merchant vessels navigating
in those latitudes—a scandalous abuse of power, which Polybius loudly condemns.
Reduced to impotency by the loss of their navy and the revolt of their army,
the Carthaginians submitted to the conditions of the strongest. They had
quitted Sicily without leaving any regrets; but it was not the same with
Sardinia; there their government and dominion were popular, probably from the
community of religion and the Phoenician origin of some of the towns. For a
long time afterwards, periodical rebellions testified to the affection of the
Sardinians for their old masters. Towards the same epoch, the Romans took
possession of Corsica, and, from 516 to 518, repulsed the Ligures and the
Gaulish tribes, with whom they had been at peace for forty-five years.
WAR
OF ILLYRIA (525).
While
the Republic protected its northern frontiers against the Gauls and Ligures,
and combated the influence of Carthage in Sardinia and Corsica, she undertook,
against a small barbarous people, another expedition, less difficult, it is
true, but which was destined to have immense consequences. The war of Illyria,
in fact, was on the point of opening to the Romans the roads to Greece and
Asia, subjected to the successors of Alexander, and where Greek civilization
was dominant. Now become a great maritime power, Rome had henceforward among
her attributes the police of the seas. The inhabitants of the eastern coasts
of the Adriatic, addicted to piracy, were destructive to commerce. Several
times they had carried their depredations as far as Messenia, and defeated
Greek squadrons sent to repress their ravages. These pirates belonged to the
Illyrian nation. The Greeks considered them as barbarians, which meant
foreigners to the Hellenic race; it is probable, nevertheless, that they had a
certain affinity with it. Inconvenient allies of the kings of Macedonia, they
often took arms either for or against them; intrepid and fierce hordes, they
were ready to sell their services and blood to anyone who would pay them,
resembling, in this respect, the Albanians of the present day, believed by some
to be their descendants driven into the mountains by the invasions of the Slavs.
The
king of the Illyrians was a child, and his mother, Teuta, exercised the
regency. This fact alone reveals manners absolutely foreign to Hellenic and
Roman civilization. A chieftain of Pharos (Lesina), named Demetrius, in
the pay of Teuta, occupied as a fief the island of Corcyra Nigra (now Curzola),
and exercised the functions of prime minister. The Romans had no difficulty in
gaining him; moreover, the Illyrians furnished a legitimate cause of war by
assassinating an ambassador of the Republic. The Senate immediately dispatched
an army and a fleet to reduce them (525). Demetrius surrendered his island,
which served as a basis of operations against Apollonia, Dyrrachium, Nutria,
and a great part of the coast. After a resistance of some months, the Illyrians
submitted, entered into an engagement to renounce piracy, surrendered several
ports, and agreed to choose Demetrius, the ally of the Romans, for the guardian
of their king.
By
this expedition, the Republic gained great popularity throughout Greece; the
Athenians and the Achaian league especially were lavish of thanks, and began
from that time to consider the Romans as their protectors against their
dangerous neighbors, the kings of Macedonia. As to the Illyrians, the lesson
they had received was not sufficient to correct them of their piratical habits.
Ten years later another expedition was sent to chastise the Istrians at the
head of the Adriatic, and soon afterwards the disobedience of Demetrius to the
orders of the Senate brought war again upon Illyria. He was compelled to take
refuge with Philip of Macedon, while the young king became the ally or subject
of the Republic. In the meantime a new war attracted the attention of the
Romans.
INVASION
OF THE CISALPINES (528).
The
idea of the Senate was evidently to push its domination towards the north of
Italy, and thus to preserve it from the invasion of the Gauls. In 522, at the
proposal of the Tribune Flaminius, the Senones had been expelled from Picenum,
and their lands, declared public domain, were distributed among the plebeians.
This measure, a presage to the neighboring Gaulish tribes of the lot reserved
for them, excited among them great uneasiness, and they began to prepare for a
formidable invasion. In 528, they called from the other side of the Alps a mass
of barbarians of the warlike race of the Gesatae. The terror of Rome was great.
The same interests animated the peoples of Italy, and the fear of a danger
equally threatening for all began to inspire them with the same spirit. They
rushed to arms: an army of 150,000 infantry and 6,000 cavalry was sent into the
field, and the census of men capable of bearing arms amounted to nearly
800,000. The enumeration of the contingents of each country furnishes valuable
information on the general population of Italy, which appears at this period to
have been, without reckoning the slaves, about the same as at the present day—yet
with this difference, that the men capable of bearing arms were then in a much
greater proportion. These documents also
give rise to the remark that the Samnites, only forty years recovered from the
disasters of their sanguinary struggles, could still furnish 77,000 men.
The
Gauls penetrated to the centre of Tuscany, and at Fesulae defeated a Roman
army; but, intimidated by the unexpected arrival of the Consul L. Aemilius
coming from Rimini, they retired, when, meeting the other consul, Caius
Atilius, who, returning from Sardinia, had landed at Pisa, they were inclosed
between two armies, and were annihilated. In the following year, the Gaulish
tribes, successively driven back to the other side of the Po, were defeated
again on the banks of the Adda; the coalition of the Cisalpine peoples was
dissolved, without leading to the complete submission of the country. The
colonies of Cremona and Placentia contributed, nevertheless, to hold it in
check.
While
the north of Italy seemed sufficient to absorb the attention of the Romans,
grave events were passing in Spain.
SECOND
PUNIC war (536-552).
Carthage,
humiliated, had lost the empire of the sea, with Sicily and Sardinia. Rome, on
the contrary, had strengthened herself by her conquests in the Mediterranean,
in Illyria, and in the Cisalpine. Suddenly the scene changes: the dangers which
threatened the African town disappear, Carthage rises from her abasement, and
Rome, which had lately been able to count 800,000 men in condition to carry
arms, will soon tremble for her own existence. A change so unforeseen is
brought about by the mere appearance in the ranks of the Carthaginian army of a
man of genius, Hannibal.
His
father, Hamilcar, chief of the powerful faction of the Barcas, had saved
Carthage by suppressing the insurrection of the mercenaries. Charged afterwards
with the war in Spain, he had vanquished the most warlike peoples of that
country, and formed in silence a formidable army. Having discovered early the
merit of a young man named Asdrubal, he took him into his favor with the
intention of making him his successor. In taking him for his son-in-law, he
intrusted to him the education of Hannibal, on whom rested his dearest hopes.
Hamilcar having been slain in 526, Asdrubal had taken his place at the head of
the army.
The
progress of the Carthaginians in Spain, and the state of their forces in that
country, had alarmed the Senate, which, in 526, obliged the government of
Carthage to subscribe to a new treaty, prohibiting the Punic army from passing
the Ebro, and attacking the allies of the Republic. This last article
referred to the Saguntines, who had already had some disputes with the Carthaginians.
The Romans affected not to consider them as aborigines, and founded their plea
on a legend which represented this people as a colony from Ardea, contemporary
with the Trojan war. By a similar conduct Rome created allies in Spain to
watch her old adversaries, and this time, as in the case of the Mamertines, she
showed an interested sympathy in favor of a weak nation exposed to frequent
collisions with the Carthaginians. Asdrubal had received the order to carry
into execution the new treaty; but he was assassinated by a Gaul, in 534, and
the army, without waiting for orders from Carthage, chose by acclamation for
its chief Hannibal, then twenty-nine years of age. In spite of the rival
factions, this choice was ratified, and perhaps any hesitation on the part of
the council in Carthage would only have led to the revolt of the troops. The
party of the Barcas carried the question against the government, and
confirmed the power of the young general. Adored by the soldiers, who saw in
him their own pupil, Hannibal exercised over them an absolute authority, and
believed that with their old band he could venture upon any thing.
The
Saguntines were at war with the Turbuletae, allies or subjects of Carthage. In
contempt of the treaty of 526, Hannibal laid siege to Saguntum, and took it
after a siege of several months. He pretended that, in attacking his own
allies, the Saguntines had been the aggressors. The people of Saguntum hastened
to implore the succor of Rome. The Senate confined itself to dispatching
commissioners, some to Hannibal, who gave them no attention, and others to
Carthage, where they arrived only when Saguntum had ceased to exist. An immense
booty, sent by the conqueror, had silenced the faction opposed to the Barcas,
and the people, as well as the soldiers, elevated by success, breathed nothing
but war. The Roman ambassadors, sent to require indemnities, and even to demand
the head of Hannibal, were ill received, and returned, declaring hostilities
unavoidable.
Rome
declared for war with her usual firmness and energy. One of the consuls was
ordered to pass into Sicily, and thence into Africa; the other to lead an army
by sea to Spain, and expel the Carthaginians from that country. But, without
waiting the issue of negotiations, Hannibal was in full march to transfer the
war into Italy. Sometimes treating with the Celtiberian or Gaulish hordes to
obtain a passage through their territory, sometimes intimidating them by his
arms, he had reached the banks of the Rhone, when the consul charged with the
conquest of Spain, P. Cornelius Scipio, landing at the eastern mouth of that
river, learned that Hannibal had already entered the Alps. He then leaves his
army to his brother Cneius, returns promptly to Pisa, places himself at the
head of the troops destined to fight the Boii, crosses the Po with them—hoping
by this rapid movement to surprise the Carthaginian general at the moment when,
fatigued and weakened, he entered the plains of Italy.
The
two armies met on the banks of the Tessino (536). Scipio, defeated and wounded,
fell back on the colony of Placentia. Rejoined in the neighborhood of that town
by his colleague, Tib. Sempronius Longus, he again, on the Trebia, offered
battle to the Carthaginians. A brilliant victory placed Hannibal in possession
of a great part of Liguria and Cisalpine Gaul, the warlike hordes of which
received him with enthusiasm and re-enforced his army, reduced, after the
passage of the mountains, to less than 30,000 men. Flattered by the reception
of the Gauls, the Carthaginian general tried also to gain the Italiots, and,
announcing himself as the liberator of oppressed peoples, he took care, after
the victory, to set at liberty all the prisoners taken from the allies. He
hoped that these liberated captives would become for him useful emissaries. In
the spring of 537 he entered Etruria, crossed the marshes of the Vai di Chiana,
and, drawing the Roman army to the neighborhood of the lake Trasimenus, into an
unfavorable locality, destroyed it almost totally.
The
terror was great at Rome; yet the conqueror, after devastating Etruria, and
attacking Spoletum in vain, crossed the Apennines, threw himself into Umbria
and Picenum, and thence directed his march through Samnium towards the coast of
Apulia. In fact, having reached the centre of Italy, deprived of all
communication with the mother country, without the engines necessary for a
siege, with no assured line of retreat, having behind him the army
of Sempronius, what must Hannibal do? Place the Apennines between himself and
Rome, draw nearer to the populations more disposed in his favor, and then, by
the conquest of the southern provinces, establish a solid basis of operation in
direct communication with Carthage. In spite of the victory of Trasimenus, his
position was critical, for, except the Cisalpine Gauls, all the Italiot peoples
remained faithful to Rome, and so far no one had come to increase his army.
Thus Hannibal remained several months between Casilinum and Arpi, where Fabius,
by his skilful movements, would have succeeded in starving the Carthaginian
army, if the term of his command had not expired. Moreover, the popular party,
irritated at a system of temporizing which it accused of cowardice, raised to
the consulship, as the colleague of Aimilius Paulus, Varro, a man of no
capacity. Obliged to remain in Apulia, to procure subsistence for his troops,
Hannibal, being attacked imprudently, entirely defeated, near Cannae, two consular
armies composed of eight legions and of an equal number of allies, amounting to
87,000 men (538). One of the consuls perished, the other escaped, followed
only by a few horsemen. 40,000 Romans had been killed or taken, and Hannibal
sent to Carthage a bushel of gold rings taken from the fingers of knights who
lay on the field of battle. From that moment part of Samnium, Apulia, Lucania,
and Bruttium declared for the Carthaginians, while the Greek towns of the south
of the peninsula remained favorable to the Romans. About the same time, as an
increase of ill fortune, L. Postumus, sent against the Gauls, was defeated, and
his army cut to pieces.
The
Romans always showed themselves admirable in adversity; and thus the Senate,
by a skilful policy, went to meet the consul Varro, and thank him for not
having despaired of the Republic; it would, however, no longer employ the
troops which had retreated from the battle, but sent them into Sicily, with a
prohibition to return into Italy until the enemy had been driven out of it.
They refused to ransom the prisoners in Hannibal’s hands. The fatherland, they
said, had no need of men who allowed themselves to be taken arms in hand. This
reply made people report at Rome' that the man who possessed power was treated
very differently from the humble citizen.
The
idea of asking for peace presented itself to nobody. Each rivalled the other in
sacrifices and devotion. New legions were raised, and there were enrolled 8,000
slaves, who were restored to freedom after the first combat. The treasury being
empty, all the private fortunes were brought to its aid. The proprietors of
slaves taken for the army, the farmers of the revenue charged with the
furnishing of provisions, consented to be repaid only at the end of the war.
Every body, according to his means, maintained at his own expense freedmen to
serve on the galleys. After the example of the Senate, widows and minors
carried their gold and silver to the public treasury. It was forbidden for any
body to keep at home either jewels, plate, silver or copper money, above a
certain value, and, by the law Oppia, even the toilette of the ladies was
limited. Lastly, the duration of family mourning for relatives slain before the
enemy was restricted to thirty days.
After
the victory of Cannae it would have been more easy for Hannibal to march
straight upon Rome than after Trasimenus; yet, since so great a captain did not
think this possible to attempt, it is not uninteresting to inquire into his
motives. In the first place, his principal force was in Numidian cavalry, which
would have been useless in a siege; then, he had generally the inferiority in
attacking fortresses. Thus, after Trebia, he could not reduce Placentia; after
Trasimenus, he failed before Spoletum; three times he marched upon Naples,
without venturing to attack it; later still, he was obliged to abandon the
sieges of Nola, Cumae, and Casilinum. What, then, could be more natural than
his hesitation to attack Rome, defended by a numerous population, accustomed to
the use of arms ?
The
most striking proof of the genius of Hannibal is the fact of his having
remained sixteen years in Italy, left almost to his own forces, reduced to the
necessity of recruiting his army solely among his new allies, and of subsisting
at their expense, ill seconded by the Senate of his own country, having always
to face at least two consular armies, and, lastly, shut up in the peninsula by
the Roman fleets, which guarded its coasts to intercept re-enforcements from
Carthage. His constant thought, therefore, was to make himself master of some
important points of the coast, in order to open a communication with Africa.
After Cannae, he occupies Capua, seeks to gain the sea by Naples, Cumae, Puteoli;
unable to effect these objects, he seizes upon Arpi and Salapia, on the eastern
coast, where he hopes to meet the ambassadors of the King of Macedonia. He next
makes Bruttium his base of operation, and his attempts are directed against the
maritime places, now against Brundusium and Tarentum, now against Locri and
Rhegium.
All
the defeats sustained by the generals of the Republic had been caused, first,
by the superiority of the Numidian cavalry, and the inferiority of the hastily
levied Latin soldiers, opposed to old veteran troops; and, next, by excessive
rashness in face of an able captain, who drew his adversaries to the position
which he had chosen. Nevertheless, Hannibal, considerably weakened by his
victories, exclaimed, after Cannae, as Pyrrhus had done after Heraclea, that
such another success would be his ruin. Q. Fabius Maximus, recalled to power
(539), continued a system of methodical war; while Marcellus, his colleague,
bolder, assumed the offensive, and arrested the progress of the enemy, by
obliging him to shut himself up in a trapezium, formed on the north by Capua
and Arpi, on the south by Rhegium and Tarentum. In 543 the war was entirely
concentrated round two places; the citadel of Tarentum, blockaded by the
Carthaginians, and Capua, besieged by the two consuls. These had surrounded
themselves with lines of countervallation against the place, and of
circumvallation against the attacks from without. Hannibal, having failed in
his attempt to force these latter, marched upon Rome, in the hope of causing
the siege of Capua to be raised, and by separating the two consular armies,
defeating them one after the other in the plain country. Having arrived under
the walls of the capital, and foreseeing too many difficulties in the way of
making himself master of so large a town, he abandoned his plans of attack, and
fell back to the environs of Rhegium. His abode there was prolonged during
several years, with alternations of reverse and success, in the south of Italy,
the populations of which were favorable to him; avoiding engagements, keeping
near the sea, and not going beyond the southern extremity of the territory of
Samnium.
In
547, a great army, which had left Spain under the command of one of his
brothers, Asdrubal, had crossed the Alps, and was advancing to unite with him,
marching along the coast of the Adriatic. Two consular armies were charged with
the war against the Carthaginians: one, under the command of the Consul M.
Livius Salinator, in Umbria; the other, having at its head the Consul C.
Claudius Nero, held Hannibal in check in Lucania, and had even obtained an
advantage over him at Grumentum. Hannibal had advanced as far as Cariusium,
when the Consul Claudius Nero, informed of the numerical superiority of the
army of succor, leaves his camp under the guard of Q. Cassius, his lieutenant,
conceals his departure, effects his junction with his colleague, and defeats,
near the Metaurus, Asdrubal, who perished in the battle with all his army.
From that moment Hannibal foresees the fate of Carthage; he abandons Apulia,
and even Lucania, and retires into the only country which had remained
faithful, Bruttium. He remains shut up there five years more, in continual
expectation, of re-enforcements, and only quits Italy when his country,
threatened by the Roman legions, already on the African soil, calls him home to
her defence.
In
this war the marine of the two nations performed an important part. The Romans
strained every nerve to remain masters of the sea; their fleets, stationed at
Ostia, Brundusium, and Lilybaeum, kept incessantly the most active watch upon
the coasts of Italy; they even made cruises to the neighborhood of Carthage and
as far as Greece. The difficulty of the direct communications induced the
Carthaginians to send their troops by way of Spain and the Alps, where their
armies recruited on the road, rather than dispatch them to the southern coast
of Italy. Hannibal received but feeble re-enforcements; Livy mentions two
only: the first of 4,000 Numidians and 40 elephants; and the second, brought by
Bomilcar to the coast of the Ionian Gulf, near Locri. All the other convoys
appear to have been intercepted, and one of the most considerable, laden with
stores and troops, was destroyed on the coast of Sicily.
We
cannot but admire the constancy of the Romans in face of enemies who threatened
them on all sides. During the same period they repressed the Cisalpine Gauls
and the Etruscans, combated the King of Macedonia, the ally of Hannibal,
sustained a fierce war in Spain, and resisted in Sicily the attacks of the
Syracusans, who, after the death of Hiero, had declared against the Republic.
It took three years to reduce Syracuse, defended by Archimedes. Rome kept on
foot, as long as the second Punic war lasted, from sixteen to twenty-four
legions, recruited only in the town and in Latium. These twenty-three legions
represented an effective force of about 100,000 men, a number which will not
appear exaggerated if we compare it with the census of 534, which gave 270,213
men, and only comprised persons in a condition to bear arms.
In
the thirteenth year of the war, the chances seemed in favor of the Republic. P.
Cornelius Scipio, the son of the consul defeated at Trebia, had just expelled
the Carthaginians from Spain. The people, recognizing his genius, had conferred
upon him, six years before, the powers of proconsul, though he was only twenty-four years of age. On his return to Rome, Scipio, elected consul (549), passed
into Sicily, and from thence to Africa, where, after a campaign of two years,
he defeated Hannibal in the plains of Zama, and compelled the rival of Rome to
sue for peace (552). The Senate accorded to the conqueror the greatest honor
which a Republic can confer upon one of her citizens—she left it to him to
dictate terms to the vanquished. Carthage was compelled to give up her ships
and her elephants, to pay 10,000 talents, and, finally, to enter into the humiliating
engagement not to make war in future without the authorization of Rome.
RESULTS
OF THE SECOND PUNIC WAR.
The
second Punic war ended in the submission of Carthage and Spain, but it was at
the price of painful sacrifices. During this struggle of sixteen years, a great
number of the most distinguished citizens had perished; at Cannae alone two
thousand seven hundred knights, two questors, twenty-one tribunes of the
soldiers, and many old consuls, praetors, and aediles were slain; and so many
senators had fallen, that it was necessary to name a hundred and seventy-seven
new ones, taken from among those who had occupied the magistracies. But such
hard trials had tempered anew the national character. The Republic felt her
strength and her resources unfold themselves; she rejoiced in her victories
with a just pride, without yet experiencing the intoxication of a too great,
fortune, and new bonds were formed between the different peoples of Italy. War
against a foreign invasion, in fact, has always the immense advantage of
putting an end to internal dissensions, and unites the citizens against the
common enemy. The greater part of the allies gave unequivocal proofs of their
devotion. The Republic owed its safety, after the defeat of Cannae, to the
assistance of eighteen colonies, which furnished men and money. The fear of Hannibal had fortunately given
strength to concord, both in Rome and in Italy: no more quarrels between the
two orders, no more divisions between the governing and the governed. Sometimes
the Senate refers to the people the most serious questions; sometimes the
people, foil of trust in the Senate, submits beforehand to its decision.
It
was especially during the struggle against Hannibal that the inconvenience of
the duality and of the annual change of the consular powers became evident; but
this never-ceasing cause of weakness was, as we have seen before, compensated
by the spirit of patriotism. Here is a striking example: while Fabius was
prodictator, Minucius, chief of the cavalry, was, contrary to the usual
custom, invested with the same powers. Hurried on by his temper, he compromised
the army, which was saved by Fabius. He acknowledged his error, submitted
willingly to the orders of his colleague, and thus restored, by his own
voluntary act, the unity of the command. As to the continual change of the
military chiefs, the force of circumstances rendered it necessary to break
through this custom. The two Scipios remained seven years at the head of the
army of Spain; Scipio Africanus succeeded them for almost as long a period. The
Senate and the people had decided that, during the war of Italy, the powers of
the proconsuls and praetors might be prorogued, and that the same consuls
might be re-elected as often as might be thought fit. And subsequently, in the
campaign against Philip, the tribunes pointed out in the following terms the
disadvantage of such frequent changes: During the four years that the war of
Macedonia lasted, Sulpicius had passed the greater part of his consulship in
seeking Philip and his army; Villius had overtaken the enemy, but had been
recalled before giving battle; Quinctius, retained, the greater part of the
year at Rome by religious cares, would have pushed the war with sufficient
vigor to have entirely terminated it, if he could have arrived at his
destination before the season was so far advanced. He had hardly entered his
winter quarters, when he made preparations for recommencing the campaign with
the spring, with a view of finishing it successfully, provided no successor
came to snatch victory from him. These arguments prevailed, and the consul was
prorogued in his command.
Thus
continual wars tended to introduce the stability of military powers and the
permanence of armies. The same legions had passed ten years in Spain; others
had been nearly as long in Sicily; and though, at the expiration of their
service, the old soldiers were dismissed, the legions remained always under
arms. Hence arose the necessity of giving lands to the soldiers who had finished
their term of service; and, in 552, there were assigned to Scipio’s veterans,
for each year of service in Africa and Spain, two acres of the lands
confiscated from the Samnites and Apulia.
It
was the first time that Rome took foreign troops into her pay, sometimes
Celtiberians, at others Cretans sent by Hiero of Syracuse—in fact, mercenaries,
and a body of discontented Gauls who had abandoned the Carthaginan army.
Many
of the inhabitants of the allied towns were drawn to Rome where, in spite of the
sacrifices imposed by the wars, commerce and luxury increased. The spoils which
Marcellus brought from Sicily, and especially from Syracuse, had given
development to the taste for the arts, and this consul boasted of having been
the first who caused his countrymen to appreciate and admire the masterpieces
of Greece. The games of the circus, in the middle of the sixth century, began
to be more in favor. Junius and Decius Brutus had, in 490, exhibited for the
first time the combats of gladiators, the number of which was soon increased to
twenty-two pairs. Towards this period, also (559), theatrical representations
were first given by the ediles. The spirit of speculation had taken possession
of the high classes, as appears by the law forbidding the senators (law
Claudia, 536) to maintain at sea ships of a tonnage of more than three hundred
amphorae; as the public wealth increased, the knights, composed of the class
who paid most taxes, increased also, and tended to separate into two
categories, some serving in the cavalry, and possessing the horse furnished by
the State (equus publicus), the others devoting themselves to commerce
and financial operations. The knights had long been employed in civil commissions,
and were often called to the high magistracies; and therefore Perseus justly
called them “the nursery of the Senate, and the young nobility out of which
issued consuls and generals (imperatores)”. During the Punic wars they
had rendered great services by making large advances for the provisioning of
the armies; and if some, as undertakers of transports, had enriched themselves
at the expense of the State, the Senate hesitated in punishing their
embezzlements, for fear of alienating this class, already powerful. The
territorial wealth was partly in the hands of the great proprietors j this
appears from several facts, and, among others, from the hospitality given by a
lady of Apulia to 10,000 Roman soldiers, who had escaped from the battle of
Cannae, whom she entertained at her own private cost on her own lands.
Respect
for the higher classes had been somewhat shaken, as we learn from the adoption
of a measure of apparently little importance. Since the fall of the kingly
power, there had. been established in the public games no distinction between
the spectators. Deference for authority rendered all classification
superfluous, and “never would a plebeian,” says Valerius Maximus “have ventured
to place himself before a senator.” But, towards 560, a law was passed for
assigning to the members of the Senate reserved places. It is necessary, for
the good order of society, to increase the severity of the laws as the feeling
of the social hierarchy becomes weakened.
Circumstances
had brought other changes; the tribuneship, without being abolished, had become
an auxiliary of the aristocracy. The tribunes no longer exclusively
represented the plebeian order; they were admitted into the Senate; they formed
part of the government, and employed their authority in the interest of justice
and the fatherland. The three kinds of comitia still remained, but some
modifications had been introduced into them. The assembly of the curiae
consisted now of only useless formalities. Their attributes, more limited every
day, were reduced to the conferring of the imperium, and the deciding of
certain questions about auspices and religion. The comitia by centuries,
which, in their origin, were the assembly of the people in arms, voting in the
Campus Martius, and nominating their military chiefs, retained the same
privileges; only, the century had become a subdivision of the tribe. All the
citizens inscribed in each of the thirty-five tribes were separated into five
classes, according to their fortune; each class was divided into two centuries,
the one of the young men (Juniores), the other of the older men (seniores).
As
to the comitia by tribes, in which each voted without distinction of rank or
fortune, their legislative power continued to increase as that of the comitia
by centuries diminished.
Thus
the Roman institutions, while appearing to remain the same, were incessantly
changing. The political assemblies, the laws of the Twelve Tables, the classes
established by Servius Tullius, the yearly election to offices, the military
services, the tribuneship, the edileship, all seemed to remain as in the past,
and in reality all had changed through the force of circumstances.
Nevertheless, this appearance of immobility in the midst of progressing society
was one advantage of Roman manners. Religious observers of tradition and
ancient customs, the Romans did not appear to destroy what they displaced; they
applied ancient forms to new principles, and thus introduced innovations
without disturbance, and without weakening the prestige of institutions consecrated
by time.
THE
MACEDONIAN WAR (554).
During
the second Punic war, Philip III, King of Macedonia, had attacked the Roman
settlements in Illyria, invaded several provinces of Greece, and made an
alliance with Hannibal. Obliged to check these dangerous aggressions, the
Senate, from 540 to 548, maintained large forces on the coasts of Epirus and
Macedonia; and, united with the Aetolian league, and with Attalus, King of
Pergamus, had forced Philip to conclude peace. But in 553, after the victory of
Zama, when this prince again attacked the free cities of Greece and Asia allied
to Rome, war was declared against him. The Senate could not forget that at this
last battle a Macedonian contingent was found among the Carthaginian troops,
and that still there remained in Greece a large number of Roman citizens sold
for slaves after the battle of Cannae. Thus from each war was born
a new war, and every success was destined to force the Republic into the
pursuit of others. Now the Adriatic was to be passed, first, to curb the power
of the Macedonians, and then to call to liberty those famous towns, the cradles
of civilization. The destinies of Greece could not be a matter of indifference
to the Romans, who had borrowed her laws, her science, her literature, and her
arts.
Sulpicius,
appointed to combat Philip, landed on the coast of Epirus, and penetrated into
Macedonia, where he gained a succession of victories, whilst one of his
lieutenants, sent to Greece with the fleet, caused the siege of Athens to be
raised. During two years the war languished, but the Roman fleet, combined with
that of Attalus and the Rhodians, remained master of the sea (555). T.
Quinctius Flamininus, raised to the consulship while still young, justified, by
his intelligence and energy, the confidence of his fellow-citizens. He detached
the Achaians and Boeotians from their alliance with the King of Macedonia, and,
with the aid of the Aetolians, gained the battle of Cynoscephalae in Thessaly
(557), where the legion routed the celebrated phalanx of Philip II and
Alexander the Great. Philip III, compelled to make peace, was fain to accept
hard conditions; the first of which was the obligation to withdraw his
garrisons from the towns of Greece and Asia, and the prohibition to make war
without the permission of the Senate.
The
recital of Livy, which speaks of the decree proclaiming liberty to Greece,
deserves to be quoted. We see there what value the Senate then attached to
moral influence, and to that true popularity which the glory of having freed a
people gives:—
“The epoch of the celebration of the Isthmian games generally attracted a great
concourse of spectators, either because of the natural taste of the Greeks for
all sorts of games, or because of the situation of Corinth, which, seated on
two seas, offered easy access to the curious. But on this occasion an immense
multitude flocked thither from all parts, in expectation of the future fate of
Greece in general, and of each people in particular: this was the only subject
of thought and conversation. The Romans take their place, and the herald,
according to custom, advances into the middle of the arena, whence the games
are announced according to a solemn form. The trumpet sounds, silence is
proclaimed, and the herald pronounces these words: ‘The Roman Senate, and S. T.
Quinctius, imperator, conquerors of Philip and the Macedonians, re-establish in
the enjoyment of liberty, their laws, and privileges, the Corinthians, the
Phocians, the Locrians, the island of Euboea, the Magnetes, the Thessalians,
the Perrhaebi, and the Achaeans of Phthiotis.’ These were the names of all the
nations which had been under the dominion of Philip. At this proclamation, the
assembly was overcome with excess of joy. Hardly any body could believe what
he heard. The Greeks looked at each other as if they were still in the
illusions of a pleasant dream, to be dissipated on awakening, and distrusting
the evidence of their ears, they asked their neighbors if they were not
deceived. The herald is recalled, each man burning, not only to hear, but to
see the messenger of such good news; he reads the decree a second time. Then,
no longer able to doubt their happiness, they uttered cries of joy, and
bestowed on their liberator such loud and repeated applause as to make it easy
to see that, of all good, liberty is that which has most charm for the
multitude. Then the games were celebrated, but hastily, and without attracting
the looks or the attention of the spectators. One interest alone absorbed
their souls, and took from them the feeling of every other pleasure.
“The
games ended, the people rush towards the Roman general; everybody is anxious to
greet him, to take his hand, to cast before him crowns of flowers and of
ribbons, and the crowd was so great that he was almost suffocated. He was but
thirty-three years of age, and the vigor of life, joined with the intoxication
of a glory so dazzling, gave him strength to bear up against such a trial. The
joy of the peoples was not confined to the enthusiasm of the moment; the
impression was kept up long afterwards in their thoughts and speech. ‘There
was, then’, they said, ‘one nation upon earth, which, at its own cost, at the
price of fatigues and perils, made war for the liberty of peoples even though
removed from their frontiers and continent: this nation crossed the seas, in
order that there should not be in the whole world one single unjust government,
and that right, equity, and law should be everywhere dominant. The voice of a
herald had been sufficient to restore freedom to all the cities of Greece and
Asia. The idea alone of such a design supposed a rare greatness of soul; but to
execute it needed as much courage as fortune’. ”
There
was, however, a shadow on the picture. All Peloponnesus was not freed, and
Flamininus, after having taken several of his possessions from Nabis, King of
Sparta, had concluded peace with him, without continuing the siege of
Lacedaemon, of which he dreaded the length. He feared also the arrival of a
more dangerous enemy, Antiochus III, who had already reached Thrace, and
threatened to go over into Greece with a considerable army. For this the allied
Greeks, occupied only with their own interests, reproached the Roman consul
with having concluded peace too hastily with Philip, whom, in their opinion, he
could have annihilated. But Flamininus replied that he was not commissioned to
dethrone Philip, and that the existence of the kingdom of Macedonia was
necessary as a barrier against the barbarians of Thrace, Illyria, and Gaul. Meanwhile, accompanied even to their ships by
the acclamations of the people, the Roman troops evacuated the cities restored
to liberty (560), and Flamininus returned to a triumph at Rome, bringing with
him that glorious protectorate of Greece, so long an object of envy to the
successors of Alexander.
WAR
AGAINST ANTIOCHUS (563).
The
policy of the Senate had been to make Macedonia a rampart against the
Thracians, and Greece herself a rampart against Macedonia. But, though the
Romans had freed the Achaean league, they did not intend to create a formidable
power or confederation. Then, as formerly, the Athenians, the Spartans, the
Boeotians, the Aetolians, and, finally, the Achaeans, each endeavored to
constitute an Hellenic league for their own advantage; and each aspiring to
dominate over the others, turned alternately to those from whom it hoped the
most efficient support at the time. In the Hellenic peninsula, properly so
called, the Aetolians, to whose territory the Senate had promised to join
Phocis and Locris, coveted the cities of Thessaly, which the Romans obstinately
refused them.
Thus,
although reinstated in the possession of their independence, neither the Aetolians,
the Achaeans, nor yet the Spartans, were satisfied: they all dreamed of
aggrandizement. The Aetolians, more impatient, made, in 562, three simultaneous
attempts against Thessaly, the island of Euboea, and Peloponnesus. Having only
succeeded in seizing Demetrias, they called Antiochus III to Greece, that they
might place him at the head of the hegemony, which they sought in vain to
obtain from the Romans.
The
better part of the immense heritage left by Alexander the Great had fallen to
this prince. Already, some years before, Flamininus had given him notice that
it belonged to the honor of the Republic not to abandon Greece, of which the
Roman people had loudly proclaimed itself the liberator; and that after having
delivered it from the yoke of Philip, the Senate now wished to free from the
dominion of Antiochus all the Asian cities of Hellenic origin. Hannibal, who
had taken refuge with the King of Syria, encouraged him to resist, by engaging
him to carry the struggle into Italy, as he himself had done. War was then
declared by the Romans. To maintain the independence of Greece against an
Asiatic prince, was at once to fulfil treaties and undertake the defence of
civilization against barbarism. Thus, in proclaiming the most generous ideas,
the Republic justified its ambition.
The
services rendered by Rome were already forgotten. Antiochus thus found numerous
allies in Greece, secret or declared. He organized a formidable confederacy,
into which entered the Aetolians, the Athamanes, the Elians, and the Boeotians,
and, having landed at Chalcis, conquered Euboea and Thessaly. The Romans
opposed to him the King of Macedonia and the Achaeans. Beaten at Thermopylae,
in 563, by the Consul Acilius Glabrio, aided by Philip, the King of Syria
withdrew to Asia, and the Aetolians, left to themselves, demanded peace, which
was granted them in 563.
It
was not enough to have compelled Antiochus to abandon. Greece. L. Scipio,
having his brother, the vanquisher of Carthage, for his lieutenant, went in
564 to seek him out in his own territory. Philip favored the passage of the
Roman army, which crossed Macedonia, Thrace, and the Hellespont without
difficulty. The victories gained at Myonnesus by sea, and at Magnesia by land,
terminated the campaign, and compelled Antiochus to yield up all his provinces
on this side Mount Taurus, and pay 15,000 talents—a third more than the tax
imposed on Carthage after the second Punic war. The Senate, far from reducing
Asia then to a province, exacted only just and moderate conditions. All the
Greek towns of that country were declared free, and the Romans only occupied
certain important points, and enriched their allies at the expense of Syria.
The King of Pergamus and the Rhodian fleet had seconded the Roman army. Eumenes
II, the successor of Attalus I, saw his kingdom increased; Rhodes obtained
Lycia and Caria; Ariarathes, King of Cappadocia, who had given aid to
Antiochus, paid two hundred talents.
THE
WAR IN THE CISALPINE (558-579).
The
prompt submission of the East was a fortunate occurrence for the Republic, for
near at home, enemies, always eager and watchful, might at any moment,
supported or excited by their brethren on the other side of the Alps, attack
her in the very centre of her empire.
Indeed,
since the time of Hannibal, war had been perpetuated in the Cisalpine, the
bellicose tribes of which, though often beaten, engaged continually in new
insurrections. The settlement of the affairs of Macedonia left the Senate free
to act with more vigor, and in 558 the defeat of the Ligures, of the Boii, of
the Insubres, and of the Cenomani, damped the ardor of these barbarous peoples.
The Ligures and the Boii, however, continued the strife; but the
bloody battle of 561, fought near Modena, and, later, the ravages committed by
L. Flamininus, brother of the conqueror of Cynoscephalae, and Scipio Nasica,
during the following years, obliged the Boii to treat. Compelled to yield the
half of their territory, they retired towards the Danube in 564, and three
years afterwards Cisalpine Gaul was formed into a Roman province.
As
to the Ligures, they maintained a war of desperation to the end of the century.
Their resistance was such that Rome was obliged to meet it with measures of
excessive rigor; and in 574, more than 47,000 Ligures were transported into a
part of Samnium which had been left almost without inhabitants since the war
with Hannibal. In 581, lands beyond the Po were distributed to other Ligures. Every
year the frontiers receded more towards the north, and military roads, the
foundation of important colonies, secured the march of the armies—a system
which had been interrupted during the second Punic war, but was afterwards
adopted, and especially applied to the south of Italy and the Cisalpine.
In
achieving the submission of this last province, Rome had put an end to other
less important wars. In 577 she reduced the Istrians; in 579, the Sardinians
and the Corsicans; finally, from 569 to 573, she extended her conquests into
Spain, where she met the same enemies as Carthage had encountered.
WAR
AGAINST PERSIA (583).
For
twenty-six years had peace been maintained with Philip, the Aetolians
vanquished, the peoples of Asia subdued, and the greater part of Greece
restored to liberty. Profiting by its co-operation with the Romans against
Antiochus, the Achaean league had largely increased, and Philopoemen had
brought into it Sparta, Messene, and the island of Zacynthus; but these
countries, impatient of the Achaean rule, soon sought to free themselves from
it. Thus was realized the prediction of Philip, who told the Thessalian envoys,
after the battle of Cynoscephalae, that the Romans would soon repent of having
given liberty to peoples incapable of enjoying it, and whose dissensions and
jealousies would always keep up a dangerous agitation. In fact, Sparta and
Messene rebelled, and sued for help from Rome. Philopoemen, after having
cruelly punished the first of these cities, perished in his struggle with the
second. Thessaly and Aetolia were torn by anarchy and civil war.
Whilst
the Republic was occupied in restoring tranquillity to these countries, a new
adversary came to imprudently attract its wrath. One would say that Fortune,
while raising up so many enemies against Rome, took pleasure in delivering
them, one after the other, into her hands. The old legend of Horatius killing
the three Curiatii in succession was a lesson which the Senate had never
forgotten.
Perseus,
heir to his father’s crown and enmities, had taken advantage of the peace to
increase his army and his resources, to make allies, and to rouse up the kings
and the peoples of the East against Rome. Besides the warlike population of his
own country, he had at his beck barbarous people like the Illyrians, the
Thracians, and the Bastarnae, dwelling not far from the Danube. Notwithstanding
the treaty, which forbade Macedonia to make war without the consent of the
Senate, Perseus had silently aggrandized himself on the side of Thrace; he had
placed garrisons in the maritime cities of Oenoe and Maronia, excited the
Dardanians to war, brought under subjection the Dolopes, and advanced as far as
Delphi. He endeavored to draw the Achaeans into an alliance, and skilfully
obtained the good-will of the Greeks. Eumenes II, king of Pergamus, who, like
his father Attalus I., feared the encroachments of Macedonia, denounced at Rome
this infraction of the old treaties. The fear with which a powerful prince
inspired him, and the gratitude which he owed to the Republic for the
aggrandizement of his kingdom after the Asian war, obliged him to cultivate the
friendship of the Roman people. In 582 he came to Rome, and, honorably received
by the Senate, forgot nothing which might excite it against Perseus, whom he
accused of ambitious designs hostile to the Republic. This denunciation raised
violent enmities against Eumenes. On his way back to his kingdom, he was
attacked by assassins and dangerously wounded. Suspicion fell on the Macedonian
monarch, not without show of reason, and was taken by the Republic as
sufficient ground for declaring war on a prince whose power began to offend it.
Bold
in planning, Perseus displayed cowardice when it was necessary, to act. After
having from the first haughtily rejected the Roman claims, he waited in
Thessaly for their army, which, ill commanded and ill organized, was beaten by
his lieutenants and repulsed into mountain gorges, where it might have been
easily destroyed. He then offered peace to P. Licinus Crassus; but,
notwithstanding his check, the consul replied, with all the firmness of the
Roman character, that peace was only possible if Perseus would abandon his
person and his kingdom to the discretion of the Senate. Struck by so much
assurance, the king recalled his troops, and suffered the enemy to effect his
retreat undisturbed. The incapacity of the Roman generals, however, their
violences, and the want of discipline among the soldiers, had alienated the
Greeks, who naturally preferred a prince of their own race to a foreign
captain; moreover, they did not see the Macedonians get the better of the
Romans without a certain satisfaction. In their eyes, it was the Hellenic
civilization overthrowing the presumption of the Western barbarians.
The
campaigns of 584 and 585 were not more fortunate for the Roman arms. A consul
had the rash idea of invading Macedonia by the passes of Callipeuce, where his
army would have been annihilated if the king had had the courage to defend himself
At the approach of the legions he took to flight, and the Romans escaped from
their perilous position without loss. At length, the people, feeling the
necessity of having an eminent man at the head of the army, nominated Paulus Aemilius
consul, who had given many proofs of his military talents in the Cisalpine.
Already the greater part of the Gallo-Graeci were in treaty with Perseus. The
Illyrians and the people of the Danube offered to second him. The Rhodians, and
the king of Pergamus himself, persuaded that fortune was going to declare
herself for the king of Macedonia, made him. offers of alliance; he chaffered
with them with the most inexplicable levity. In the meantime, the Roman army,
ably conducted, advanced by forced marches. One single combat terminated the
war; and the battle of Pydna, in 586, once more proved the superiority of the
Roman legion over the phalanx. This, however, did not yield ingloriously; and
though abandoned by their king, who fled, the Macedonian hoplites died at their
post.
When
they heard of this defeat, Eumenes and the Rhodians hastened to wipe out the
remembrance of their ever having doubted the fortune of Rome by the swiftness
of their repentance. At the same time, L. Anicius conquered Elyria and seized
the person of Gentius. Macedonia was divided into four states, called free,
that is to say, presided over by magistrates chosen by themselves, but under
the protectorate of the Republic. By the law imposed on these new provinces,
all marriages, and all exchange of immovable property, were interdicted between
the citizens of different states, and the imports reduced one-half. As we see,
the Republic applied the system practised in 416 to dissolve the Latin
confederacy, and later, in 449, that of the Hernici. Illyria was also divided
into three parts. The towns which had first yielded were exempt from all
tribute, and the taxes of the others reduced to half.
It
is not uninteresting to recall to mind how Livy appreciates the institutions
which Macedonia and Illyria received at this epoch. “It was decreed,” he says,
“that liberty should be given to the Macedonians and Illyrians, to prove to
the whole universe that, in carrying their arms so far, the object of the
Romans was to deliver the enslaved peoples, not to enslave the free peoples; to
guarantee to these last their independence, to the nations subject to kings a
milder and more just government; and to convince them that, in the wars which
might break out between the Republic and their sovereigns, the result would be the
liberty of the peoples—Rome reserving to herself only the honor of victory.
Greece,
and, above all, Epirus, sacked by Paulus Aemilius, underwent the penalty of
defection. As to the Achaean league, the fidelity of which had appeared
doubtful, nearly a thousand of the principal citizens, guilty or suspected of
having favored the Macedonians, were sent as hostages to Rome.
MODIFICATION
OF ROMAN POLICY.
In
carrying her victorious arms through almost all the borders of the
Mediterranean, the Republic had hitherto obeyed either legitimate needs or
generous inspirations. Care for her future greatness, for her existence even,
made it absolute on her to dispute the empire of the sea with Carthage. Hence
the wars, of which Sicily, Sardinia, Spain, Italy, and Africa, by turns, became
the theatre. It was also her duty to combat the warlike peoples of the
Cisalpine, that she might insure the safety of her frontiers. As to the
expeditions of Macedonia and Asia, Rome had been drawn into them by the conduct
of foreign kings, their violation of treaties, their guilty plottings, and
their attacks on her allies.
To
conquer thus became to her an obligation, under pain of seeing fall to ruin the
edifice which she had built up at the price of so many sacrifices; and, what is
remarkable, she showed herself, after victory, magnificent towards her allies,
clement to the vanquished, and moderate in her pretensions. Leaving to the
kings all the glory of the throne, and to the nations their laws and liberties,
she had reduced to Roman provinces only a part of Spain, Sicily, Sardinia, and
Cisalpine Gaul. In Sicily she preserved the most intimate alliance with Hiero,
tyrant of Syracuse, for fifty years. The constant support of this prince must
have shown the Senate how much such alliances were preferable to direct
dominion. In Spain she augmented the territory of all the chiefs who consented
to become her allies. After the battle of Cynoscephalae, as after that of
Magnesia, she maintained on their thrones Philip and Antiochus, and imposed on
this last only the same conditions as those offered before the victory. If,
after the battle of Pydna, she overthrew Perseus, it was because he had openly
violated his engagements; but she gave equitable laws to Macedonia. Justice
then ruled her conduct, even towards her oldest rival; for when Masinissa asked
the help of the Senate in his quarrels with Carthage, he received for answer
that, even in his favor, justice could not be sacrificed.
In
Egypt her protection preserved the crown on the head of Ptolemy Philometor and
of his sister Cleopatra. Finally, when all the kings came, after the victory of
Pydna, to offer their congratulations to the Roman people, and to implore their
protection, the Senate regulated their demands with extreme justice. Eumenes,
himself an object of suspicion, sent his brother Attalus to Rome; and he,
willing to profit by the favorable impression he had made, thought to ask for
him a part of the kingdom of Pergamus. He was recommended to give up the
design. The Senate restored his son to Cotys, King of Thrace, without ransom,
saying that the Roman people did not make a traffic of their benefits.
Finally, in the disputes between Prusias, King of Bithynia, and the Gallo-Graecians,
it declared that justice alone could dictate its decision.
How,
then, did so much nobleness of views, so much magnanimity in success, so much
prudence in conduct seem to be belied, dating from that period of twenty-two
years which divides the war against Persia from the third Punic war? Because
too much success dazzles nations as well as kings. When the Romans began to
think that nothing could resist them in the future, because nothing had
resisted them in the past, they believed that all was permitted them. They no
longer made war to protect their allies, defend their frontiers, or destroy
coalitions, but to crush the weak, and use nations for their own profit. We
must also acknowledge that the inconstancy of the peoples, faithful in
appearance, but always plotting some defection, and the hatred of the kings,
concealing their resentment under a show of abasement, concurred to render the
Republic more suspicious and more exacting, and caused it to count from
henceforth rather on its subjects than on its allies. Vainly did the Senate
seek to follow the grand traditions of the past; it was no longer strong enough
to curb individual ambitions; and the same institutions which formerly brought
forth the virtues, now only protected the vices of aggrandized Rome. The generals
dared no longer to obey: thus, the Consul Cn. Manlius attacks the
Gallo-Graecians in Asia without the orders of the Senate; A. Manlius takes on
himself to make an expedition into Istria; the Consul C. Cassius abandons the
Cisalpine, his province, and attempts of his own accord to penetrate into
Macedonia by Illyria; the praetor Furius, on his own authority, disarms one of
the peoples of Cisalpine Gaul, the Cenomani, at peace with Rome; Popilius
Leenas attacks the Statiellates without cause, and sells ten thousand of them;
others also oppress the peoples of Spain. All these things doubtless incur the
blame of the Senate; the consuls and praetors are disavowed, even accused; but
their disobedience none the less remains unpunished, and the accusations
without result. In 599, it is true, L. Lentulus, consul in the preceding year,
underwent condemnation for exaction; but that did not prevent him from being
raised again to the chief honors.
As
long as the object was only to form men destined for a modest part on a narrow
theatre, nothing was better than the annual election of the consuls and
praetors, by which, in a certain space of time, a great number of the principal
citizens of both the patrician and plebeian nobility participated in the
highest offices. Powers thus exercised, under the eyes of their
fellow-citizens, rather for honor than interest, obliged them to be worthy of
their trust; but when, leading their legions into the most remote countries,
the generals, far from all control, and invested with absolute power, enriched
themselves by the spoils of the vanquished, dignities were sought merely, to
furnish them with wealth during their short continuance. The frequent
re-election of the magistrates, in multiplying the contests of candidates,
multiplied the ambitious, who scrupled at nothing to attain their object. Thus
Montesquieu justly observes, that good laws which have made a small republic great,
become a burden to it when it has increased; because their natural effect was
to create a grand people, and not to govern it.”
The
remedy for this overflowing of unruly passions would have been, on the one
hand, to moderate the desire for conquest; on the other, to diminish the number
of aspirants to power, by giving them a longer term of duration. But then the
people alone, guided by its instincts, felt the need of remedying this defect
in the institution, by retaining in authority those who had their confidence.
Thus, they wished to appoint Scipio Africanus perpetual, dictator; while
pretended reformers, such as Portius Cato, enslaved to old customs, and in a
spirit of exaggerated rigorism, made laws to interdict the same man from
aspiring twice to the consulship and to advance the age at which it was lawful
to try for this high office.
All
these measures were contrary to' the object at which they aimed. In maintaining
annual elections, the way was left free to vulgar covetousness; in excluding
youth from high functions, they repressed the impulses of those choice natures
which early reveal themselves, and the exceptional elevation of which had so
often saved Rome from the greatest disasters. Have we not seen, for example, in
406, Marcus Valerius Corvus, raised to the consulate at twenty-three years of
age, gain the battle of Mount Gaurus against the Samnites; Scipio Africanus,
nominated proconsul at twenty-four, conquer Spain, and humiliate Carthage; the
Consul Quinctius Flamininus, at thirty, carry off from Philip the victory of
Cynoscephalae? Finally, Scipio Aemilianus, who is to destroy Carthage, will be
elected consul even before the age fixed by the law of Cato.
No
doubt, Cato the Censor, honest and incorruptible, had the laudable design of
arresting the decline of morals. But, instead of attacking the cause, he only
attacked the effect; instead of strengthening authority, he tended to weaken
it; instead of leaving the nations a certain independence, he urged the Senate
to bring them all under its absolute dominion; instead of adopting what came
from Greece with an enlightened discernment, he indiscriminately condemned all
that was of foreign origin. There was in Cato’s austerity more ostentation than
real virtue. Thus, during his censorship, he expelled Manlius from the Senate,
for having kissed his wife before his daughter in open daylight; he took
pleasure in regulating the toilette and extravagance of the Roman ladies; and,
by an exaggerated disinterestedness, he sold his horse when he quitted Spain,
to save the Republic the cost of transport.
But
the Senate contained men less absolute, and wiser appreciated of the needs of
the age; they desired to repress abuses, to carry out a policy of moderation,
to curb the spirit of conquest, and to accept from Greece all that she had of
good. Scipio Nasica and Scipio Aemilianus figured among the most import ant.
One did not reject whatever might soften manners and increase human knowledge;
the other cultivated the new muses; and was even said to have assisted Terence.
The
irresistible inclination of the people towards all that elevates the soul and
ennobles existence, was not to be arrested. Greece had brought to Italy her
literature, her arts, her science, her eloquence; and when, in 597, there came
to Rome three celebrated philosophers—Carneades the Academician, Diogenes the
Stoic, and Critolaus the Peripatetic—as ambassadors from Athens, they produced
an immense sensation. The young men flocked in crowds to see and hear them; the
Senate itself approved this homage paid to men whose talent must polish, by
the culture of letters, minds still rude and unformed. Cato alone, inexorable,
pretended that these arts would soon corrupt the Roman youth, and destroy its
taste for arms; and he caused these philosophers to be dismissed.
Sent
to Africa as arbiter to appease the struggle between Masinissa and Carthage, he
only embittered it. Jealous at seeing this ancient rival still great and
prosperous, he did not cease pronouncing against her that famous decree of
death, Delenda est Carthago. Scipio Nasica, on the contrary, opposed the
destruction of Carthage, which he considered too weak to do injury, yet strong
enough to keep up a salutary fear, which might prevent the people from casting
themselves into all those excesses which are the inevitable consequences of the
unbounded increase of empires. Unhappily, the opinion of Cato triumphed.
As
one of our first writers says, it must be “that truth is a divine thing, since
the errors of good men are as fatal to human ty as vice, which is the error of
the wicked.”
Cato,
by persecuting with his accusations the principal citizens, and, among others,
Scipio Africanus, taught the Romans to doubt virtue. By exaggeration in his
attacks, and by delivering his judgments with passion, he caused his justice to
be suspected. By condemning the vices from which he himself was not exempt, he
deprived his remonstrances of all moral force. When he scourged the people as
accuser and judge, without seeking to raise them by education and laws, he
resembled, says a learned German, that Persian king who whipped the sea with
rods to make the tempest cease. His influence, though powerless to arrest the
movement of one civilization taking the place of another, failed not to produce
a fatal effect on the policy of that period. The Senate, renouncing the moderation
and justice which hitherto had stamped all its deeds, adopted in their stead a
crafty and arrogant line of action, and a system of extermination.
Towards
the beginning of the seventh century, every thing disappears before the Roman
power. The independence of peoples, kingdoms, and republics ceases to exist.
Carthage is destroyed, Greece gives up her arms, Macedonia loses her liberty,
that of Spain perishes at Numantia, and shortly afterwards Pergamus undergoes
the same fate.
THIRD
PUNIC WAR (605-608).
Notwithstanding
her abasement, Carthage still existed, the eternal object of hatred and
distrust. She was accused of connivance with the Macedonians, ever impatient of
their yoke; and to her was imputed the resistance of the Celtiberian hordes. In
603, Masinissa and the Carthaginians engaged in a new struggle. As, according
to their treaties, these last could not make war without authorization, the
Senate deliberated on the course it was to take. Cato desired war immediately.
Scipio Nasica, on the contrary, obtained the appointment of a new embassy,
which succeeded in persuading Masinissa to evacuate the territory in dispute;
on its part, the Senate of Carthage consented to submit to the wisdom of the
ambassadors, when the populace at Carthage, excited by those men who in
troublous times speculate on the passions of the mob, breaks out in insurrection,
insults the Roman envoys, and expels the chief citizens. A fatal insurrection;
for in moments of external crisis all popular movements ruin a nation, as all
political change is fatal in the presence of a foreigner invading the soil of
the fatherland. However, the Roman Senate judged it best to temporize, because
of the war in Spain, where Scipio Aemilianus then served in the capacity of
tribune. Ordered to Africa (603),
to obtain from Masinissa elephants for the war against the Celtiberians, he witnessed
a sanguinary defeat of the Carthaginian army. This event decided the question
of Roman intervention; the Senate, in fact, had no intention of leaving the
entire sovereignty of Africa to the Numidian king, whose possessions already
extended from the ocean to Cyrene.
In
vain did Carthage send ambassadors to Rome to explain her conduct. They
obtained no satisfaction. Utica yielded to the Romans (604), and the two
consuls, L. Marcius Censorinus, and M. Manilius Nepos, arrived there at the
head of 80,000 men in 605. Carthage sues for peace; they impose the condition
that she shall give up her arms; she delivers them up, with 2,000 engines of
war. But soon exactions increase; the inhabitants are commanded to quit their
city and retire ten miles inland. Exasperated by so much severity, the
Carthaginians recover their energy; they forge new weapons, raise the populace,
fling into the campaign Asdrubal, who has soon collected 70,00.0 men in his
camp at Nepheris, and gives the consuls reason to fear the success of their
enterprise
The
Roman army met with a resistance it was far from expecting. Endangered by
Manilius, it was saved by the' tribune, Scipio Aemilianus, on whom all eyes
were turned. On his return to Rome he was, in 607, elected consul at the age
of thirty-six years, and charged with the direction of the war, which
henceforth took a new aspect. Carthage is soon inclosed by works of prodigious
labor; on land, trenches surround the place and protect the besiegers; by sea,
a colossal bar interrupts all communication, and gives up the city to famine; but
the Carthaginians build a second fleet in their inner port, and excavate a new
communication with the sea. During the winter Scipio goes and forces the camp
at Nepheris, and on the return of spring makes himself master of the first
inclosure; finally, after a siege which lasted for three years, with heroic
efforts on both sides, the town and its citadel Byrsa are carried, and
entirely razed to the ground. Asdrubal surrendered, with fifty thousand
inhabitants, the remains of an immense population; but on a fragment of the
wall which had escaped the fire, the wife of the last Carthaginian chief,
dressed in her most gorgeous robes, was seen to curse her husband, who had not
had the courage to die; then, after having slain her two children, she flung
herself into the flames. A mournful image of a nation which achieves her own
ruin, but which does not fall ingloriously.
When
the vessel laden with magnificent spoils, and adorned with laurels, entered the
Tiber, bearer of the grand news, all the citizens rushed out into the streets
embracing and congratulating each other on so joyful a victory. Now only did
Rome feel herself free from all fear, and the mistress of the world. Nevertheless,
the destruction of Carthage was a crime which Caius Gracchus, Julius Caesar,
and Augustus sought to repair.
GREECE,
MACEDONIA, NUMANTIA, AND PERGAMUS REDUCED TO PROVINCES.
The
same year saw the destruction of the Greek autonomy. Since the war with
Persia, the preponderance of Roman influence had maintained order in Achaia;
but on the return of the hostages, in 603, coincident with the troubles of
Macedonia, party enmities were reawakened. Dissensions soon broke out between
the Achaean league and the cities of the Peloponnesus, which it coveted, and
the resistance of which it did not hesitate to punish by destruction and
pillage.
Sparta
soon rebelled, and the Peloponnesus was all in flames. The Romans made vain
efforts to allay this general disturbance. The envoys of the Senate carried a
decree to Corinth, which detached from the league Sparta, Argos, Orchomenus,
and Arcadia. On hearing this, the Achaeans massacred the Lacedaemonians then at
Corinth, and loaded the Roman commissioners with insults. Before using
severity, the Roman Senate resolved to make one appeal to conciliation; but the
words of the new envoys were not listened to.
The
Achaean league, united with Euboea and Boeotia, then dared to declare war
against Rome, which they knew to be occupied in Spain and Africa. The league
was soon vanquished at Scarphia, in Locris, by Metellus, and at Leucopetra,
near Corinth, by Mummius. The towns of the Achaean league were treated
rigorously; Corinth was sacked; and Greece, under the name of Achaia, remained
in subjection to the Romans (608).
However,
Mummius, as Polybius himself avows, showed as much moderation as
disinterestedness after the victory. He preserved in their places the statues
of Philopoemen, kept none of the trophies taken in Greece for himself, and
remained so poor that the Senate conferred a dowry upon his daughter from the
public treasury.
About
the same time the severity of the Senate had not spared Macedonia. During the
last Punic war, a Greek adventurer, Andriscus, pretending to be the son of
Perseus, had stirred up the country to rebellion, with an army of Thracians.
Driven out of Thessaly by Scipio Nasica, he returned there, slew the praetor
Juventius Thalna, and formed an alliance with the Carthaginians. Beaten by
Metellus, he was sent to Rome loaded with chains. Some years later, a second
impostor having also endeavored to seize the succession of Perseus, the Senate
reduced Macedonia to a Roman province (612). It was the same with Illyria after
the submission of the Ardaei (618). Never had so many triumphs been seen.
Scipio Emilianus had triumphed over Africa, Metellus over Macedonia, Mummius
over Achaia, and Fulvius Flaccus over Illyria.
Delivered
henceforth from its troubles in the east and south, the Senate turned its
attention towards Spain. This country had never entirely yielded: its strength
hardly restored, it took up arms again. After the pacification which Scipio
Africanus and Sempronius Gracchus successively induced, new insurrections broke
forth; the Lusitanians, yielding to the instigations of Carthage, had revolted
in 601, and had gained some advantages over Mummius and his successor Galba
(603). But this last, by an act of infamous treachery, massacred thirty
thousand prisoners. Prosecuted for this act at Rome by Cato, he was acquitted.
Subsequently, another consul showed no less perfidy: Licinius Lucullus, having
entered the town of Cauca, which had surrendered, slew twenty thousand of its
inhabitants, and sold the rest.
So
much cruelty excited the indignation of the peoples of Northern Spain, and, as
always happens, the national feeling brought forth a hero. Viriathus, who had
escaped the massacre of the Lusitanians, and from a shepherd had become a
general, began a war of partisans, and, for five years having vanquished the
Roman generals, ended by rousing the Celtiberians. Whilst these occupied
Metellus the Macedonian, Fabius, left alone against Viriathus, was hemmed into
a defile by him, and constrained to accept peace. The murder of Viriathus left
the issue of the war no longer doubtful. This death was too advantageous to the
Romans not to be imputed to Caepio, successor to his brother Fabius. But when
the murderers came to demand the wages of their crime, they were told that the
Romans had never approved of the massacre of a general by his soldiers. The
Lusitanians, however, submitted, and the legions penetrated to the ocean.
The
war, ended in the west, became concentrated round Numantia, where, in the
course of five years, several consuls were defeated. When, in 616, Mancinus,
surrounded by the enemy on all sides, was reduced to save his army by a
shameful capitulation, like that of the Furculae Caudinae, the Senate refused
to ratify the treaty, and gave up the consul loaded with chains. The same fate
was reserved for Tiberius Gracchus, his questor, who had guaranteed the treaty;
but, through the favor of the people, he remained at Rome. The Numantines still
resisted for a long time with rare energy. The conqueror of Carthage himself
had to go to direct the siege, which required immense works; and yet the town
was taken only by famine (621). Spain was overcome, but her spirit of
independence survived for a great number of years.
Although
the fall of the kingdom of Pergamus was posterior to the events we have just
related, we will speak of it here, because it is the continuation of the system
of reducing all peoples to subjection. Attalus HI., a monster of cruelty and
folly, had, when dying, bequeathed his kingdom to the Roman people, who sent
troops to take possession of it; but a natural son of Eumenes, Aristonicus,
raised the inhabitants, and defeated the Consul Licinius Crassus, soon avenged
by one of his successors. Aristonicus, was taken, and the kingdom, pacified,
passed by the name of Asia under the Roman domination (625).
SUMMARY.
The
more the Republic extended its empire, the more the number of the high
functions increased, and the more important they became. The consuls, the
proconsuls, and the praetors, governed not only foreign countries, but Italy
itself. In fact, Appian tells us that the proconsuls exercised their authority
in certain countries in the Peninsula.
The
Roman provinces were nine in number:—1. Cisalpine Gaul. 2. Farther Spain. 3.
Nearer Spain. 4. Sardinia and Corsica. 5. Sicily. 6. Northern Africa. 7.
Illyria. 8. Macedonia and Achaia. 9. Asia. The people appointed yearly two
consuls and seven praetors to go and govern these distant countries; but
generally these high offices were attainable only by those who had been
questors or ediles. Now, the edileship required a large fortune ; for the
ediles were obliged to spend great sums in fetes and public works to please the
people. The rich alone could aspire to this first dignity; consequently, it was
only the members of the aristocracy who had a chance of arriving at the
elevated position, where, for one or two years, they were absolute masters of
the destinies of vast kingdoms. Thus the nobility sought to keep these high
offices closed against new men. From 535 to 621—eighty-six years—nine families
alone obtained eighty-three consulships. Still later, twelve members of the
family Metellus gained various dignities in less than twelve years (630-642).
Nabis, tyrant of Sparta, was right, then, when, addressing the Consul Quinctius
Flamininus, he said, “With you, it is regard for the pay which determines
enlistments into the cavalry and infantry. Power is for a small number;
dependence is the lot of the multitude. Our lawgiver (Lycurgus), on the
contrary, did not wish to put all the power in the hands of certain citizens, whose
assembling together you call the Senate, nor to give a legal pre-eminence to
one or two orders.”
It
is curious to see a tyrant of Greece give lessons of democracy to a Roman. In
reality, notwithstanding the changes introduced into the comitia, the bearing
of which it is difficult to explain, the nobility preserved its preponderance,
and the habit of addressing the people only after having taken the sense of
the Senate, was still persisted in. The Roman government, always aristocratic,
became more oppressive in proportion as the State increased in extent, and it
lost in influence what the people of Italy gained in intelligence and in legitimate
aspirations towards a better future.
Besides,
ever since the beginning of the Republic, it had harbored in its breast two
opposite parties, the one seeking to extend, the other to restrict, the rights
of the people. When the first came into power, all the liberal laws of the past
were restored to force; when the second came in these laws were evaded. Thus we
see now the law of Valeria, which consecrates appeal to the people, thrice
revived; now the law interdicting the re-election of the consuls before an
interval of ten years, promulgated by Genuciusin 412, and immediately
abandoned, renewed in 603, and subsequently restored by Sylla; now the law
which threw the freedmen into the urban tribes, in order to annul their vote,
revived at three different epochs; now the measures against solicitation,
against exactions, against usury, continually put into force; and, finally, the
right of election to the sacerdotal office by turn refused or granted to the
people. By the Portian laws of 557 and 559, it was forbidden to strike with
rods, or put to death a Roman citizen, before the people had pronounced upon
his doom. And yet Scipio Aemilianus, to evade this law, caused his auxiliaries
to be beaten with sticks and his soldiers with vine-stalks. At the beginning of
the seventh century, the principle of secret voting was admitted in all
elections; in 615, in the elections of the magistrates; in 617, for the
decision of the people in judicial condemnations; in 623, in the votes on
proposals for laws. Finally, by the institution of permanent tribunals (quaestiones
perpetuae), established from 605, it was sought to remedy the spoliation of
the provinces; but these institutions, successfully adopted or abandoned,
could not heal the ills of society. The manly virtues of an intelligent aristocracy
had until then maintained the Republic in a state of concord and greatness; its
vices were soon to shake it to its foundations.
We
have just related the principal events of a period of one hundred and
thirty-three years, during which Rome displayed an energy which no nation has
ever equalled. On all sides, and almost at the same time, she has passed her
natural limits. In the north she has subdued the Cisalpine Gauls and crossed
the Alps; in the west and south, she has conquered the great islands of the
Mediterranean and the greater part of Spain. Carthage, her powerful rival, has
ceased to exist. To the east, the coasts of the Adriatic are colonized; the
Illyrians, the Istrians, the Dalmatians, are subjected; the kingdom of
Macedonia has become a tributary province; and the legions have penetrated even
to the Danube. Farther than this exist only unknown lands, the country of
barbarians, too weak yet to cause alarm. Continental Greece, her isles, Asia
Minor up to Mount Taurus, all this country, the cradle of civilization, has
entered into the Roman empire. The rest of Asia receives her laws and obeys her
influence. Egypt, the most powerful of the kingdoms which made part of the
heritage of Alexander, is under her tutelage. The Jews implore her alliance.
The Mediterranean has become a Roman lake. The Republic vainly seeks an
adversary worthy of her arms. But if from without no serious danger seems to
threaten her, within exists great interests not satisfied and peoples
discontented.
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