READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF ROME. THE WAR FOR SUPREMACY IN THE WESTCHAPTER VII.THE SECOND PUNIC OR HANNIBALIAN WAR, 218-201 B.C.First Periodfrom the beginning of the war to the battle of Cannae,218-216 B.C.
The treaty of peace which had
put an end to the first Punic war in 241 B.C. was the inevitable result of the
exhaustion of both the belligerent nations. It was satisfactory to neither.
After the immense efforts and sacrifices which Rome had made in the
twenty-three years of war, she found that the evacuation by the Carthaginians
of a few fortresses in Sicily, and the payment of a sum of money, was a result
not in accordance with the high hopes which seemed justified after the landing
of Regulus in Africa, and after his first brilliant and unexpected victories.
Yet the senate and the Roman people were not able to alter the terms of peace
materially. By refusing to ratify the negotiations of the generals they
succeeded in extorting from the Carthaginians a few thousand talents more, but
nothing else. A further demand might have roused the spirit of the
Carthaginians and have continued the war to an indefinite period. Accordingly,
Rome contented herself with what she could get, and what was after all a great
gain. When the war of the mercenaries broke out in Africa, she availed herself
of the distress of Carthage to extort the cession of Sardinia, and an
additional payment of 1,200 talents.
The disastrous termination of
the Sicilian war could not fail to produce a great effect on the internal
affairs of the Carthaginian republic. Unfortunately we have but a very
imperfect knowledge of the public institutions of Carthage, and we can only
guess what must have taken place on the occasion in question. But thus much
seems certain, that the war with Rome, and still more the mutiny of the
mercenaries, shook the power of the aristocracy. A war is, under all circumstances,
a severe test for the constitution of a state. Whatever is unsound in the
administration and government comes to light, and an unsuccessful war is
frequently the cause of reforms, provided a people has still vital energy
enough left to discover and to apply the remedies which it needs. This was the
case in Carthage. In the war with the mercenaries, when the state could only he
saved by the arms of its own citizens, when the people of Carthage were obliged
to fight their own battles, they were justified in claiming for themselves a
greater share in the government. A democratic movement took place, at the head
of which we find Hamilcar Barcas, the most eminent statesman and soldier that
Carthage possessed at that time. It is perfectly clear, even from the scanty
reports preserved in the extant writers, that at the end of the Sicilian war
Hamilcar found himself in opposition to the party which was then in possession
of the government. He ceased to be commander-in-chief. In the perils of the war
with the mercenaries, he again entered the service of the state. It was he to
whom Carthage owed her deliverance from a ruin that seemed inevitable. His
triumph in the field gave him the ascendancy over the aristocratic party and
its leader, Hanno, surnamed the Great. It appears that from this time forward
Hamilcar practically directed the government of Carthage, somewhat in the way
in which Pericles had governed Athens, without interfering materially with the
forms of the republican constitution. His accession to power was not unlike a
change of ministry in a modern state. The party which had governed the state
before, now formed the Opposition; as a matter of course, it became the party
of peace when Hamilcar and his sons looked upon the renewal of the war with
Rome as an inevitable necessity, and as the only chance for the preservation of
liberty and independence. It is a proof no less of the high political qualities
of the Carthaginians than of the magnanimity of Barcas and his house, that,
under such circumstances, Carthage preserved her republican liberties, and was
not overwhelmed by a military despotism.
The mutiny of the mercenaries
was scarcely suppressed, and the revolted African subjects brought back to
obedience, when Hamilcar directed his attention to a country where he could
hope to find compensation for the loss of Sicily and Sardinia. This country was
Spain, to which, from the remotest antiquity, Phoenician traders and settlers
had been attracted, but which had hitherto not been conquered by the Carthaginian
arms, or made subject, to any considerable extent, to Carthaginian authority.
The island town of Cades,
situated beyond the pillars of Hercules in the outer sea, was older perhaps
than Carthage herself. Its national sanctuary of the Phoenician Melkarth
(Hercules) vied in importance and dignity with the temples of the mother
country. The fertile plain of Andalusia, the old land of Tartessus, was
celebrated for its wealth, and enriched at an early period the merchants of
Tyre and Sidon. The abundance of precious metals in Spain attracted the skilful
Phoenician miners, who knew how to work the mines with profit. No doubt Spain
had been for ages of the greatest importance for the trade of Carthage; but as
long as her possessions in Sicily and Sardinia absorbed her attention and her
energies, it seems that Spain was not so much the object of the public, as of
the private enterprise of the Carthaginian citizens, and that conquests in that
country were not contemplated.
This was changed now after the
war with Rome. Carthage began to extend her power and dominion in Spain, as
England did in India after the loss of the American plantations. With an
astounding rapidity she spread her possessions from a few isolated places on
the coast over the southern half of the peninsula, and she appeared destined to
establish the ascendancy of the Semitic race, and of Semitic culture, in a
country where, nearly a thousand years later, the Arabs, a kindred Semitic
people, succeeded in gaining a footing, and in reaching a high degree of
civilisation. At the time of the Carthaginian conquest it seemed that Spain was
about to be for ever separated politically from Europe, and to be united with
North Africa, with which it has much in common through its geographical
situation and its climate. Yet, owing to the events which we are now about to
relate, the Punic conquest of Spain was of short duration, and left no traces
behind except a few geographical names, like Cadiz and Carthagena; but the
Moorish dominion, which lasted for more than seven hundred years, has left a
stamp on the Spanish people which can even now be recognised, and not least in
the religious fanaticism of which it was the principal cause.
For nine years Hamilcar worked
with great success for the realisation of his plan, and a considerable portion
of Spain was already subjected to the dominion of Carthage when he lost his
life in battle. His son-in-law, Hasdrubal, raised to the command of the army by
the voice of the soldiers and by the approval of the people of Carthage, proved
himself a worthy successor of Hamilcar, though he extended and secured the
dominion of Carthage less by force of arms than by persuasion and peaceful
negotiations with the native races. He founded New Carthage (Carthagena), which
he destined to be the capital of the new empire, as it was more favourably
situated than Gades, and well suited to be a depot of arms and munitions of war
for military undertakings in the central and eastern parts of Spain. The power
and the influence of Carthage extended more and more northwards, and excited at
last the attention and jealousy of Rome, which had for a time been apparently
indifferent to the proceedings of the Carthaginians in the Pyrenaean peninsula.
Hasdrubal was obliged to declare that Carthage would not extend her conquests
beyond the river Ebro. At the same time the Romans entered into friendly
relations with several Spanish tribes, and concluded a formal alliance with the
important town of Saguntum, which, though situated a good way to the south of
the Ebro, was intended to oppose, under Roman protection, a barrier to the
further progress of the Carthaginians.
This was the state of affairs
in Spain when in 221 B.C. Hasdrubal was cut off prematurely by the hand of an
assassin. The universal voice of the Spanish army appointed as his successor
Hannibal, the eldest son of Hamilcar Barcas, then only twenty-eight years old.
The Carthaginian people
confirmed this choice, and by doing so placed their fate in the hands of an
untried young man, of whom they might hope, but could not know, that he had the
spirit of his father. But of one thing the Carthaginians might well be assured,
that the son had inherited his father’s glowing hatred of Rome, and that with
his ardent spirit he held as his sacred duty the task of avenging past wrongs,
and of establishing the security and power of his native country on the ruins
of the rival city. There can be no doubt that the people of Carthage shared the
sentiments of Hamilcar’s family—that the loss of Sicily and Sardinia, whilst
prompting feelings of revenge, convinced them that a lasting peace with Rome
was impossible. They saw that even the twenty-four years of war in Sicily had
not sufficed to fight out their quarrel, and that, sooner or later, the contest
must be renewed. Every danger in which Carthage might possibly be involved,
every war with foreign enemies, and every civil disturbance, might, to the
faithless and ungenerous enemy, offer an opportunity for coming forward with
new demands, and for extorting humiliating concessions. If this was the
conviction of the Carthaginian people (and we have no reason to doubt it), they
could not make a happier choice than in appointing Hannibal to the command in
Spain. Never has a nation found a more fit and worthy representative. Never has
the national will and spirit been embodied so completely and so nobly in one
person, as in Hannibal was embodied the spirit and the will of Carthage. Even
the low passion of hate seemed ennobled in a man who, in a lifelong, almost
superhuman struggle with an overwhelming force, was animated and fired by it to
persevere in a hopeless cause. No Roman ever gathered up and concentrated in
himself so fully the great qualities of his nation as Hannibal did those of
Carthage. We should only insult him if we were to compare him with Scipio, or
any other of his contemporaries. Rome has produced but one man who can compare
with Hannibal. And this Hannibal, so great and powerful, so nearly fatal to the
greatness and the very existence of Rome, is, though a stranger, the first
person we meet with in the history of Rome who inspires us with the feeling of
personal interest, and with whose doings and sufferings we can sympathise.
Before Hannibal appears 011 the historic stage, the shadowy figures of the Valerii,
the Claudii, the Fabii, and hosts of other much-be praised Roman heroes of the
good old time, leave us cold and indifferent. They have too little reality and
too little individuality about them. They are eclipsed by the foreigner
Pyrrhus. But the adventures of Pyrrhus belong only in part to the history of
Rome. Hannibal’s whole life, on the contrary, was absorbed by his contest with
the Roman people. He knew no other aim and aspiration than to lay Rome in the
dust. Hence even the ancients have justly called the war, of which he was the
life and soul, the ‘Hannibalian war’, and almost reluctantly have extolled his
name, and inscribed it in imperishable letters on the tablets of history.
A more dangerous antagonist
than Hannibal the Romans never encountered. A high-minded people, able to
appreciate true greatness, would, at least after his fall, have been generous
or just to such an enemy, and, by acknowledging his greatness, would have
honoured itself. The Romans acted otherwise. Bitterly as they hated, reviled,
and persecuted Carthage, the most deadly poison of their hatred they poured
upon Hannibal; they did not hesitate to blacken his memory by the most
revolting accusations, and they went so far as to hold him alone personally
responsible for the calamities which the long war brought over Italy. This
feeling of hostility to Hannibal suggested or confirmed the account which
Fabius Pictor, the oldest Roman historian, gave of the origin of the war.
Hannibal, it was said, began the war on his own responsibility, without the
consent, nay, even against the wish of the government of Carthage. He began it
for merely selfish purposes, to put an end to impeachments which his political
opponents were at that time bringing forward against the friends of his father and
his brother-in-law. The war was therefore not a war of the Carthaginian people
with Rome, but a war of Hannibal and his party, undertaken in the interest of
this party and of the family of Hamilcar Barcas. Even the expedition to Spain
had, according to this view, been undertaken by Hamilcar, without the
approbation and authority of the government, for the purpose of avoiding and
baffling the impending inquiry into his conduct in Sicily. Hasdrubal showed the
same contempt of the constituted authorities. He founded for himself an empire
in Spain, independent of Carthage, and he entertained the design of
overthrowing the republic, and of making himself king. The government was not
strong enough to curb and control the men of the house of Barcas. It was dragged
into the war with Rome against its will, and in spite of its conviction that
the war would be pernicious to the state; but, though unable to prevent the
war, the government of Carthage punished Hannibal by refusing or stinting the
supplies or reinforcements which he wanted to carry his Italian campaign to a
victorious end.
Polybius has, in a few
words, exposed the utter absurdity of a view like this. ‘If,’ he says,
‘Hannibal had been a mutinous general, and determined, for his own personal
interests, to involve his country in a war which the government was anxious to
avoid, how did it happen that the latter did not seize the opportunity of
getting rid of such a dangerous citizen, when, after the fall of Saguntum, the
Romans demanded that he should he given up to them?’. But the Carthaginian
senate, far from sacrificing or even disowning him, approved his actions as
with one voice, accepted and returned with enthusiasm the Roman declaration of
war, and carried on this war for seventeen years, until the state was exhausted
and compelled to sue for peace.
When, after the war with the
mercenaries, Carthage was enfeebled and crippled, and Rome, in utter
defiance of justice, had availed herself of the distress of her old rival to
deprive her of Sardinia, then it was that Hamilcar Barcas devoted himself and
his house to the service of the avenging goddess, and planned the war with
Rome. He left his native town to lay in Spain the foundation of a new colonial
empire of Carthage, and when he was offering up sacrifice at the altar of the
tutelary god of the Carthaginian people and was praying for his divine
protection, he bade his son Hannibal, then a boy of nine years, lay his hands
on the altar and swear that he would always be the enemy of Rome. He took him
to Spain; he brought him up in his camp, to prepare him for the task for which
he had destined him, and he sacrificed his life to save that of his son. For
eight years Hannibal served under his brother-in-law Hasdrubal. His military
bearing made him the idol of the army. Then, in the full vigour of life, and
still in all the freshness of youth, he was summoned, by the confidence of his
comrades, and by the unanimous voice of the Carthaginian people, to take the
command of the army and to carry out the policy of his father.
Twenty years had elapsed since
the peace of 241 B.C. With wonderful energy and success Carthage had recovered
from her misfortunes. The government was no longer in the hands of the
oligarchy; the popular party was at the head of affairs, and was led by the men
of the house of Barcas. An extensive territory had been conquered in Spain. The
Iberian tribes, subjected by force of arms or conciliated by peaceful
negotiations and readily submitting to Carthaginian authority, furnished for
the army an abundant supply of volunteers or compulsory recruits in place of
the inconstant Gallic mercenaries, of whom the Carthaginian army was mainly
composed in the first war. The Libyan subjects were reduced to obedience, and
furnished excellent foot soldiers. The Numidians, more closely united with
Carthage than ever before, by the military genius and the policy of Hamilcar
and Hasdrubal, supplied a light cavalry that could not be matched by the
Romans. The finances had to some extent recovered, in spite of the heavy
contributions of war exacted by Rome, amounting to 4,400 talents. The time was
come when Carthage might hope to renew the contest with a fair hope of final
victory. The Romans, like the Carthaginians, looked upon the peace of 241 b.c. as only an armistice, but
they very much underrated the strength of their conquered rival. They regarded
Carthage as so thoroughly broken and exhausted that they might at pleasure
resume the war at any time most convenient for them. They were prepared to do
so after the termination of the war with the mercenaries; but the readiness
with which Carthage in that time of depression submitted to the humiliating
conditions imposed as the price of peace averted an open rupture, while the
resignation of the Carthaginians being interpreted as an unmistakable sign of
weakness strengthened the conviction that for the future also Carthage would be
unable to offer a long or determined resistance. The Romans had, probably, but
an imperfect knowledge of the great advance which the Carthaginian power had
made by its conquests in Spain, still less were they informed of the
invigoration of the political system of Carthage by the triumph of the
democracy and the ascendancy of the family of Barcas. Rome was therefore in no
hurry to follow up the policy struck out in the first Punic war. She was the
more inclined to delay as this war had dealt severe blows to Italy, and had
caused losses which time had not yet repaired. Moreover, the acquisition of
Sardinia was followed by almost uninterrupted hostilities with the stubborn
inhabitants of that island, and by similar petty wars in Corsica and
Liguria—wars which, though unimportant in themselves, were yet sufficient to
withdraw the attention of the Romans from other quarters. The Illyrian war
(221) B.C.) was a far more serious affair, especially as it engaged the whole
Roman fleet. But it was more especially the long threatened war with the Gauls
(225 B.C.) which procured for Carthage a temporary respite and a continuance of
the peace with Rome. This war lasted for four years. It came to an end just
before the death of Hasdrubal, and even then it was ended only in appearance.
The resistance of the Gauls in the valley of the Po was broken in 221 B.C., and the Romans set about
securing the possession of the land by establishing the two colonies of
Placentia and Cremona on the Po. Now, at last, the time seemed to have arrived
when Rome could devote herself to the settlement of her old dispute with her
rival for supremacy in the western Mediterranean.
During the last few years the
attention of the Romans had been drawn to the progress of the Carthaginians in
Spain. Spanish tribes and towns which dreaded annexation to the Carthaginian
province applied for assistance to Rome. The result of this application was the
treaty by which Hasdrubal had pledged himself to confine his conquests within
the Ebro. Another result was the alliance between Rome and Saguntum. According
to the conditions of the peace of 241 B.C. the allies of either of the two
contracting states were not to be molested by the other. It is true that
Saguntum was not the ally of Rome at the time when that peace was concluded.
But, nevertheless, it was evident that Rome could not be debarred from
concluding new alliances, and it appeared a matter of course that she must and
would afford her protection no less to her new allies than to the old. If the
Carthaginians questioned or disregarded this claim of Rome, the peace was
broken, and no appeal was left but to arms. No doubt could exist on this
subject either at Rome or at Carthage.
Immediately upon his
appointment to the command of the army, Hannibal was anxious to begin the war
with Rome, and the time have been extremely favourable, as in the year 221 B.C.
Rome was still sufficiently occupied with the Gauls. But he was obliged to make
ample preparations before undertaking so serious an enterprise, and moreover
the Carthaginian possessions in Spain had to be enlarged and secured, so as to
serve as a proper basis for his operations. He also wished, no doubt, to feel
and try the extent of his power over the army and of his authority at home; to
familiarize himself with the troops who were destined to carry out his bold
conceptions—to seat himself firmly in the saddle and to try the mettle of his
steed. He therefore devoted the years 221 and 220 to the task of subduing some
tribes south of the Ebro, training his army, inspiring his men with confidence
in his command, enriching them with booty and thus heightening their zeal, and
finally of providing for the security of Spain and Africa during his absence.
All these preparations were
made by the beginning of the year 210 B.C. The first object of his attack was
Saguntum, the rich, powerful, and well-fortified town to the south of the Ebro,
which had lately sought and obtained the Roman alliance. The Saguntines boasted
of Greek origin, and called themselves descendants of colonists from the island
of Zakynthos—an assertion for which, in all probability, they had no authority
beyond the similarity of the two names. They appear to have been genuine
Iberians, like the other nations in Spain, and to have had no more affinity
with the Greeks than could be claimed by the Romans. At that time, when the
Romans acted as protectors and liberators of the Greeks in the Adriatic and
Ionian Seas, and when they began to pride themselves on their assumed descent
from Homeric heroes, the Grecian name was a welcome pretext and a means for
obtaining political advantages. But even without this pretext the alliance of
Saguntum was of sufficient importance to Rome.
It was admirably situated and
adapted for a base of operations against the Carthaginian possessions in Spain,
and could answer the purpose which Messana had served in Sicily. At any rate it
might be made a barrier against the further advance of the Carthaginians, and
with this view it had been received into Roman protection while Hasdrubal
commanded in Spain.
The Roman senate felt
convinced that a warning would at once he followed by an abandonment of the Carthaginian
designs on Saguntum, which of late had become more manifest, and of which the
Saguntines had repeatedly informed the senate. It accordingly dispatched an
embassy to Hannibal (in 219 B.C.) to point out the consequences if he persisted
in hostilities against the friends and clients of the Roman people. But
Hannibal made no secret of his intentions. He told the ambassadors that the
alliance between Saguntum and Rome was no reason why he should not treat the
former as an independent state; that he had as much right as the Romans to
interfere in the internal affairs of Saguntum, and in case of necessity to
defend that town from the usurped protectorate of Rome. A similar answer was
given to the ambassadors by the senate of Carthage, whither they had proceeded
from Hannibal’s camp.
The Romans knew now that they
had no longer to deal with the peace-loving, yielding Hasdrubal, nor with a
broken-spirited people who recoiled with terror from even the threat of war.
Now was the time, if they meant seriously to stand up for their new allies, to
send forthwith a fleet and an army to Spain, and this was demanded by their own
interest as well as by that of the Saguntines. But they did not stir during the
whole of this year, and left the despairing Saguntines to their fate. Hannibal,
at no loss for a pretext to declare war against Saguntum, laid regular siege to
the town in the spring of the year 219 B.C. But the Saguntines resisted with
the obstinacy and determination which have at all times characterised Spanish towns.
For eight months all the efforts of the besiegers were in vain. Hannibal’s
military genius was of little avail in the slow operations of a regular siege,
where success depends not so much on rapid resolutions and bold combinations as
on stubborn perseverance in a methodical plan. The eight months of tedious,
harassing, and bloody fighting for the possession of Saguntum were calculated
to disgust Hannibal with all siege operations, and we find that during all
his campaigns in Italy he undertook them unwillingly, and persevered only in
one with any degree of firmness. It is probable that the hope of Roman succour
braced the courage of the Saguntines and protracted their defence. But as this
hope in the end proved vain, the resistance of the brave defenders of the
doomed town was borne down. Saguntum was taken by storm, and suffered the fate
of the conquered. The surviving inhabitants were distributed as slaves among
the soldiers of the victorious army, the articles of value were sent to
Carthage, the ready money was applied to the preparations for the impending
campaign.
Now that the war had in fact
begun, the Romans sent another embassy to Carthage, as if they still thought it
possible to preserve peace. But their demands were such that they might safely
have dispatched an army at the same time, for they could not expect that the
Carthaginians would listen to them. The Roman ambassadors required that
Hannibal and the committee of senators which accompanied the army should be
given up to them as a sign that the Carthaginian commonwealth had taken no part
in, and did not approve of the violence done to the allies of Rome. But the
authorities at Carthage were far from ignominiously sacrificing their general,
and submitting themselves to Roman mercy and generosity. They endeavoured to
show that the attack on Saguntum did not involve a rupture of the peace with
Rome, because, when that peace was concluded by Hamilcar and Catulus in 241
B.C., Saguntum was not yet numbered among the allies of Rome, and could not therefore
be included among those whom Carthage had undertaken to leave unmolested. The
Roman ambassadors declined to discuss the question of right or wrong, and
insisted on the simple acceptance of their demands. At last, after a long
altercation, the chief of the embassy, Quintus Fabius Maximus, gathering up the
folds of his toga, exclaimed: ‘Here I carry peace and war; say, ye men of
Carthage, which you choose’. ‘We accept whatever you give us’, was the answer.
‘Then we give you war,’ replied Fabius, spreading out his toga; and without
another word he left the senate-house, amid the boisterous exclamations of the
assembly that they welcomed war, and would wage it with the spirit which
animated them in accepting it.
Thus the war was resolved upon
and declared on both sides—a war which stands forth in the annals of the
ancient world without a parallel. It was not a war about a disputed boundary,
about the possession of a province, or some partial advantage; it was a
struggle for existence, for supremacy or destruction. It was to decide whether
the Graeco-Roman civilisation of the West or the Semitic civilisation of the
East was to be established in Europe, and to determine its history for all
future time. The war was one of those in which Asia struggled with Europe, like
the war of the Greeks and Persians, the conquests of Alexander the Great, the
wars of the Arabs, the Huns, and the Tartars. Whatever may be our admiration of
Hannibal, and our sympathy with heroic and yet defeated Carthage, we shall
nevertheless be obliged to acknowledge that the victory of Rome—the issue of
this trial by battle—was the most essential condition for the healthy
development of the human race.
Since the first war with
Carthage, the strength of Rome had materially increased. At the time when the
war broke out in Sicily, ten years had scarcely passed since the completion of
the conquest of Italy. In Samnium, Lucania, and Apulia the generation still
lived which had measured its strength with Rome in the long struggle for
supremacy and independence. The memory of all the Roman sufferings during the
war, the humiliation of defeat, the old animosity and hatred were yet alive in
their hearts.
Now, however, after the lapse
of sixty years, a new generation had grown up in Italy, which was a living part
of the body of the Roman people, and had given up all idea of carrying on a
separate existence. In a hundred battles the conquered nations of Italy had
fought and bled by the side of the Romans. An Italo-Roman national feeling had
grown up in the wars in which Romans and Italians had confronted Libyans,
Gauls, and Illyrians. Where could the peoples of Italy find the enjoyments,
hopes, and blessings of national life, except in their union with Rome?
In an economical point of
view, the supremacy of Rome was, for the Italians, a compensation for the loss
of their independence. It had put a stop to an intolerable evil—tribes, the
endless disputes and wars, which appear to be inseparable from small
communities of imperfect civilisation. The calamities of a great war, like that
in Sicily between Rome and Carthage, strike the imagination by the great
battles, the sacrifices, and losses on a large scale which characterise
them; but the everlasting paltry feuds of neighbours, accompanied by pillage,
burning, devastation, and murder in every direction, cause a much larger amount
of human suffering, especially where, as in Italy at that time, every man is a
warrior, every stranger an enemy, every enemy a robber, and all look upon war
as a source of profit. This deplorable state of things had ceased in Italy
after the supremacy of Rome was established. Henceforth, it was alone the Roman
people that waged war, and the theatre of war had mostly been beyond the
confines of Italy. When the nations of Italy had furnished their contingents and
contributed their share to the expenses of the war, they could till their
fields in peace, without fearing that a hostile band would suddenly break in
upon them, set fire to the standing corn, cut down the fruit trees, drive away
the cattle, and carry off their wives and children into slavery. Only the
districts near the coast had been alarmed by the Carthaginians during the first
war; but the interior regions had been quite exempt from hostile attacks; and,
even on the coast, the numerous Roman colonies had offered protection from the
worst evils of war.
The public burthens which the
allies of Rome had to bear were moderate. They paid no direct taxes. The
military service was no hardship for a warlike population, especially as there
was always a chance of gaining booty. The Greek cities were principally charged
with furnishing ships. The other allies sent contingents to the Roman army,
which, in the aggregate, seldom amounted to a greater number of men than were
furnished by Rome itself. In the field these troops were victualled by the
Roman state, and were therefore no source of expense to the allies. If we bear
in mind that the different Italian communities enjoyed, for the most part,
perfect freedom and self-government in the management of their own affairs, and
that everywhere the leading men found their authority increased by their
intimate connection with the Roman nobility, we can easily understand that, in
the beginning of the Hannibalian war, the whole of Italy was firmly united, and
formed a striking contrast to the Carthaginian state with its discontented
subjects and inconstant allies.
Of the state of the population
of Italy in the period before the second Punic war, we are tolerably well
informed. Polybius relates that at the time when the Gauls threatened to invade
Etruria (in 225 B.C.) a general census was taken of the military forces of
which Rome might dispose in case of war, and that the number of men capable of
hearing arms amounted to 770,000. If this statement is, on the whole, to be
trusted, not only for the accuracy of the information originally obtained by
the officers employed in the census, but for the faithful preservation of the
official numbers by the historians, we can infer from it that at the time in
question, i.e. shortly before the appearance of Hannibal in Italy, the
population of the peninsula was nearly as great as it is at the present day,
and that it amounted to about 9,000,000 in those parts which then were included
in the name of Italy, i.e. the peninsula south of Liguria and
Transalpine Gaul, and exclusive of the islands.
The Carthaginian statesmen had
a just appreciation of the dangers involved in a war with Rome. The Roman
armies were composed of citizens accustomed to the use of arms, and of faithful
allies equally warlike and equally brave. Forces like these they could not
match, either in quantity or quality. The citizens of Carthage were neither so
numerous as those of Rome, nor available for service beyond Africa. The
subjects and allies were not very trustworthy. The Libyans and Numidians had
only just been reduced again to submission, after a sanguinary war the
Spaniards were hardly broken to the yoke, and served rather the generals than
the commonwealth of Carthage. The ancient undoubted superiority of the Carthaginian
navy was gone. Rome was now mistress of the western Mediterranean, as well by
her fleets as through the possession of all the harbours in Italy, Sicily,
Sardinia, Corsica, and even on the coast of Illyria. In the basin of the
Tyrrhenian Sea, in the Adriatic and Ionian Seas, maritime operations on a large
scale were very hazardous for Carthage, as nowhere was a single port open to
them. They could interrupt the Roman communications, capture transports and
trading vessels, harass and alarm the coasts of Italy; but this kind of
piratical warfare could not lead to great results. In her finances Carthage was
no longer what she had been. Her resources had been drained in the long wars in
Sicily and Africa, and the war indemnities exacted by Rome were felt even by
the wealthy state of the Punic merchants to be a heavy burden. The new
conquests in Spain, it is true, had brought some relief. But the loss of Sicily
and the hostility of Rome had, to a great extent, paralysed trade. Even before
the end of the Sicilian war, it is clear that the financial resources of
Carthage had begun to fail. The equipment of the fleet, which was routed at the
Aegatian Islands, had absorbed all the means left at the disposal of the
state. When this great and supreme effort had failed, peace had become
absolutely necessary. The war with the mercenaries was provoked by the
unseasonable but necessary illiberality with which the claims of the soldiers
for overdue, pay and promised compensations were met. If Spain had not yielded
a rich return beyond paying for the military enterprises of Hamilcar and
Hasdrubal, it would have been hard for Carthage to recover strength for a new
contest. As it was, her financial weakness must have been the principal cause
of the slowness and inefficiency which she displayed in sending reinforcements
to Hannibal.
Thus, with her own strength
alone, Carthage could scarcely hope to meet her hated and dreaded antagonist on
equal terms. It was necessary to secure allies, and the events of the last few
years seemed in the highest degree favourable for organising in different
quarters a combined action against Rome. Above all Hannibal reckoned upon the
cooperation of the Gauls in the north of Italy. In spite of their defeats in
Etruria and on the Po, they were far from being broken, dispirited, or
reconciled. On the contrary, the attempt of the Romans to establish colonies in
their country provoked their renewed hostility. If these Gauls, with their rude
undisciplined, ill-armed hordes alone, were able to jeopardize the Roman
supremacy and to shake the foundations of the Roman empire, what might not
Hannibal expect to accomplish with their aid, if he regulated their impetuous
bravery, and ranged them among his highly disciplined Libyan and Spanish
soldiers? The Gauls had not yet ceased to be the terror of southern Europe.
Even as mercenaries they excelled in many military qualities. Fighting in their
own cause, defending their own homes, they might, in a good military school,
become invincible.
These hopes hastened the
resolution of Carthage to renew the war, and determined the plan of the
campaign. The land of the Gauls in the north of Italy was to be the basis of
Hannibal’s operations, and the Gaulish warriors were to fight under his
standards. The spoliation and plunder of Italy was to pay for the expenses of
the war. It was this consideration which determined Hannibal to march across
the Pyrenees and the Alps into the country of the Insubrians and Boians, on the
Po, where he was expected with impatience. He had for some time past been in
negotiation with these peoples. They had supplied him with information
regarding the Alpine passes, and bad promised guides; and he reckoned on their
strenuous assistance when he undertook that enterprise which filled the whole
world with astonishment and admiration.
The Gauls were not the only
allies that Hannibal hoped to find in Italy. He knew that a hostile army was
sure to be welcomed in Africa by the discontented subjects of Carthage. At the
time of Agathokles, during the invasion of Regulus, and during the mutiny of
the mercenaries, the Libyans and Numidians—nay, on one occasion, even the
kindred citizens of Utica—had made common cause with the enemies of Carthage.
Hannibal hoped in like manner to gain the adhesion of the Marsians, the
Samnites, Campanians, Lucanians, and Bruttians, perhaps even of the Latins, if
he should be able, by brilliant victories, to banish their fear of the power
and vengeance of Rome. He did not know how firmly these peoples were united
with Rome, and perhaps he forgot that his alliance with the Gauls, the common
enemies of all Italy, was calculated to make his friendship suspected.
Not in Italy alone, but also
beyond the confines of Italy, the Carthaginians hoped to find allies for an
attack upon Rome. Antigonus, the king of Macedonia, watched with uneasiness the
aggressive policy of the Romans, and their interference in the affairs of the
Greek states. A Roman party in these states could not but be hostile to
Macedonia. It was natural, therefore, that he should be ready to oppose the
Romans. He had already instigated Demetrius of Pharos to the war with Rome, and
after his expulsion from Illyria he had received him at his court, and refused
to surrender him to the Romans. Messengers went backwards and forwards between
Macedonia and Carthage, and Hannibal was justified in hoping that the first
great victory would secure his active cooperation in a war with Rome.
These plans, negotiations, and
preparations occupied Hannibal during the period from the winter of 219 to 218
B.C. He had, moreover, to provide for the military defence of Spain and Africa
during his absence. He sent a body of 15,000 Spaniards to Carthage, and an
equal force of Libyans from Africa to Spain, making the troops serve at the
same time as hostages to guarantee the fidelity of their countrymen. On the
approach of winter he had allowed his Spanish troops to go home on furlough,
feeling sure that they would be the more ready to join him again for
the following campaign in spring. The plunder of Saguntum had stimulated
their eagerness to serve under the Carthaginian general, and they were ready to
try again the fortune of war under such a victorious and liberal leader.
When in the spring of 218
B.C., Hannibal had again collected his army and made all the necessary
preparations, he set out on his march from New Carthage, rather later, it may
be supposed, than he had originally intended —in the beginning of summer. His
force consisted of ninety thousand foot, twelve thousand horse, and thirty-seven
elephants. Until he reached the Ebro, his road passed through the territory of
tribes that had already submitted to Carthage. But the land between the Ebro
and the Pyrenees was inhabited by independent and hostile peoples, who resisted
the advance of the Carthaginian army. Hannibal, who had no time to lose,
sacrificed a considerable portion of his army for the purpose of quickly
forcing his way through this country, and he succeeded in his plan, at the cost
of losing twenty thousand men. Having reached the Pyrenees, he left his brother
Hasdrubal and ten thousand men to defend the newly conquered territory. An
equal number of Spanish soldiers he dismissed to their homes, finding that they
were reluctant to accompany him, and preferring to take with him a smaller army
of chosen and devoted warriors than a large discontented host. Thus his forces
were reduced to fifty thousand foot and nine thousand horse with the elephants,
when he crossed the Pyrenees by some pass near the Mediterranean, apparently
without encountering any serious difficulty. The Gaulish tribes living between
the Pyrenees and the Rhone did not oppose the march. It was only when Hannibal
arrived at the Rhone that he encountered any resistance. The Gauls in that part
of the country had assembled a force on the left, or eastern, bank of the
river, and endeavoured to prevent the passage. Hannibal was obliged to halt a
few days before he could cross. He sent a detachment under Hanno higher up the
river to an undefended place, where they crossed without difficulty on rapidly
constructed rafts; meanwhile he collected all the vessels that could be
procured, caused trees to be felled and hollowed out for canoes, and when, on
the third day, the fire signals of Hanno announced that he had arrived in the rear
of the Gauls, he forced the passage. The Gauls, attacked in front and rear,
made no long resistance. On the fifth day after his arrival on the Rhone,
Hannibal had gained the left bank, and caused the elephants and heavy baggage to
be ferried over on rafts.
The passage of the Rhone was
not yet quite accomplished when intelligence arrived which showed that the
utmost dispatch was necessary, unless the whole plan for the ensuing campaign
was to be upset at the very beginning. A. Roman army had landed at Massilia,
and was now only four days’ march from the mouths of the Rhone. A collision
with the Romans in Gaul, even if it had led to the most brilliant victory,
would have detained Hannibal so long that the passage of the Alps would have
been impossible before the winter had set in. It was already the beginning of
October, and in a short time the mountains would be impassable; and if the Alps
were not crossed before the winter, the Romans would probably block up the
passes, and Africa, instead of Italy, would become the theatre of war.
The Roman embassy which had
demanded satisfaction in Carthage for the attack on Saguntum, and had formally
declared war, had not been dispatched from Rome, as might have been expected,
immediately after the fall of Saguntum in the course of the year 219, but in
the following spring. The same slowness which the Romans had exhibited in their
diplomatic action they showed in the actual preparations for war. They had
evidently no conception of Hannibal's plan for the ensuing campaign, nor of the
rapidity with which his ardent spirit worked. The Romans flattered themselves
with the idea that they would be able to choose their own time to begin
hostilities, and to select the theatre of war. They waited quietly for the
return of the ambassadors from Spain, whither they had proceeded from Carthage,
for the purpose of making themselves acquainted with the state of affairs and
of encouraging the friends of Rome to persevere in their fidelity. Then the two
customary consular armies were levied in the usual manner; the one destined,
under the command of Tiberius Sempronius Longus, to be sent to Sicily, and from
thence to cross over into Africa to attack the Carthaginians in their own
country; the other, under Publius Cornelius Scipio, to act against Hannibal in
Spain. The Romans hoped to carry on the war with four legions, little thinking
that twenty would not suffice.
Meanwhile they were busily
engaged in completing the conquest of Northern Italy. Two new strongholds, the
colonies of Placentia and Cremona, had been established there for the purpose
of keeping the country in subjection. Each of them had received a garrison of
six thousand colonists. Three commissioners, among them the consular Lutatius,
who had gained the decisive victory at the Aegatian Islands (in 241 B.C.), were
engaged in assigning the land to the colonists, and in making the necessary
arrangements for the administration of the new communities, when they were
suddenly surprised, in the spring of 218 B.C., by a new rising of the Boians.
These people, who saw their land distributed to Roman colonists, felt in the
highest degree alarmed and exasperated, and could not restrain their impatience
nor wait for the arrival of Hannibal. They fell upon the colonists in different
parts of the country, forced them to take refuge in the fortified town of
Mutina, and laid siege to the town. Under the pretext of wishing to negotiate,
they succeeded in inducing the three commissioners to come out of the town for
a conference, seized them treacherously, and held them as a security for the
safety of the hostages which they had been obliged to give to the Romans on the
conclusion of peace.
Upon the news of these events,
the praetor Lucius Manlius, who commanded a legion at Ariminum, marched in all
haste towards Mutina; but he was surprised in the midst of the dense forests
which, at that time, covered those plains, was repulsed with great loss, and
blockaded in a village called Tanetum, on the Po, where he threw up earthworks for
his defence. Thus the whole of Northern Italy was again in a state of
insurrection. The Romans had not succeeded in extinguishing the fire in their
own house before the enemy attacked it from without. The danger within was even
more alarming than the foreign war, which might possibly be delayed. It was
therefore resolved at Rome to send the two recently levied legions, which
Scipio was to have led into Spain, immediately to the Po, and to raise, in
their place, two new legions for the service in Spain against Hannibal. This measure
tended, of course, to delay the departure of Scipio considerably, and it
enabled Hannibal to gain a start, and to carry out his original plan of
avoiding a collision with the Romans until he should have reached Italy.
When at length, probably late
in the summer of 218 B.C., Scipio’s legions were formed, he embarked and sailed
along the coast of Etruria and Liguria to the mouths of the Rhone, on his way
to Spain. But on reaching Massilia he was surprised by the news that Hannibal,
whom he expected to encounter in Spain, had crossed the Ebro and the Pyrenees,
and was on his march towards the Rhone. This was the first intimation which the
Romans had of Hannibal’s plan. But even yet Scipio was in doubt. If Hannibal
intended to attack Italy from the north, the coast road to Genoa, and through
the country of the Ligurians, was the nearest. Scipio knew not for certain that
Hannibal intended to cross the Alps, nor which pass he would choose. To make
sure about this he sent a squadron of horse along the left bank of the Rhone to
look out for Hannibal. If he had arrived in Gaul only a few days earlier, so as
to be able to dispute the passage of the Rhone, he might have baffled
Hannibal’s plan. As it was, his horsemen soon met a party of Numidian cavalry
coming down the river to reconnoitre. A skirmish took place, and the Romans, on
their return, boasted that they had had the better against superior numbers.
The news they brought sufficed to show that Scipio had come too late, and that
Hannibal had already gained the left bank of the river. Nevertheless, Scipio
marched northwards with his whole force, hoping perhaps that Hannibal would
turn southwards to meet him. But when he had reached the spot where Hannibal
had crossed the Rhone, and heard that the Carthaginian army had marched towards
the interior of Gaul, he saw that it was useless to advance further, and was no
longer doubtful about the plan of his opponent to penetrate across the Alps
into Northern Italy. He therefore returned forthwith to Massilia, ordered his
brother Cneius to continue with the legions the voyage to Spain, and returned
himself with a small detachment to Genoa, whence he hastened to the Po to take
the command of the troops assembled there, and to attack Hannibal immediately
after his descent from the mountains.
Nothing proves more the
boldness and grandeur of Hannibal’s enterprise than the fact that the Romans
not suspect it until he had all but reached the foot of the Alps. In spite of
the repeated warnings and the varied information which they had received from
their friends in Spain, from the Massaliots and the neighbouring Gauls, it had
never occurred to them that Hannibal might possibly venture upon such a plan.
It was, indeed, well known to them that the Alps were not absolutely impassable.
The numerous swarms of Gauls that had invaded Italy had found their way across
the mountains. But the Gauls dwelt on both sides of the Alps; they were at home
among the precipitous rocks and the snow mountains; and if irregular troops,
unencumbered with heavy baggage, might find their way through these wild
regions, it by no means followed that an army of Spaniards, Libyans, Numidian
horse, and even elephants would attempt to scale those mountain walls,
where they would have to encounter the terrors of nature and of hostile tribes
at the same time. When Hannibal, nevertheless, undertook the enterprise, and
carried it to a successful end, the impression he produced was deep and
lasting, and the exploit was looked upon as hardly short of miraculous.
Historians delighted in painting and exaggerating the obstacles with which
Hannibal had to contend, the savage character of the mountaineers no less than
the terrors of nature. Polybius censures these descriptions, which, as he remarks,
tend to represent Hannibal, not as a wise and cautious general, but as a
reckless adventurer. Before carrying out his plan, says Polybius, he made
careful inquiries respecting the nature of the country through which he had to
march, the sentiments of the inhabitants, and the length and condition of the
road. His conviction that the enterprise would be difficult and dangerous, but
not impossible, was justified by the event. But it seems certain that if
Hannibal, as no doubt he expected, had been able to commence his march a month
earlier, his loss in crossing the Alps would have been considerably less.
As soon as Hannibal had the
whole of his army, inclusive of the elephants and the baggage, on the left bank
of the Rhone, he marched northwards, and reached in four days the confluence of
the Rhone and the Isere. The country lying between these two rivers was called
the ‘Island,’ and was inhabited by the Allobrogians, one of the largest and
bravest Gallic tribes. On his arrival Hannibal found the natives engaged in a
dispute between two brothers for the chieftainship. He favoured the claims of
the elder brother, and by his interference quickly settled the dispute, gaining
thereby the friendship and support of the new chief. His army was amply
supplied with food, shoes, warm clothing, and new arms, and was accompanied by
the friendly tribe until it reached the foot of the Alps.
It is, even to the present
day, an unsolved question by which road Hannibal marched to and across the
Alps, although Polybius describes it at full length, and was well qualified to
do so, having, only fifty years after Hannibal, travelled over the same ground,
with a view of giving a description of it in his great historical work.
But the descriptions which the
ancient writers give of localities are, for the most part, exceedingly
defective and obscure. Even from Caesar's own narrative we cannot make out with
certainty where he crossed the Rhine and the Thames, and where he landed on the
coast of Britain. The imperfect geographical knowledge possessed by the
ancients, their erroneous notions of the form and extent of countries, of the
direction of rivers and mountain- ranges with regard to the four cardinal
points, in some measure account for these inaccuracies. Not being accustomed,
from their youth upwards, to have accurate maps before their eyes, they grew up
with indistinct conceptions, and were almost accustomed to a loose and
incorrect mode of expression when speaking of such matters. But it seems that,
apart from this imperfect knowledge of geography, they lacked the keen
observation of nature which distinguishes the moderns. As they seem all but
insensible to the beauties of landscapes, they were careless in the examination
and study of nature; and their descriptions of scenery are seldom such that we
can draw an accurate map or picture after them, or identify the localities at
the present time. Moreover, the permanent features of landscapes—the mountains,
rivers, glens, lakes, and plains—had seldom names universally known and
generally current, as is the case at present; nor were there accurate
measurements of distances, heights of mountains, the width of passes, and the
like. Where, in addition to these defects, there were even wanting human
habitations, towns or tillages with well-known and recognisable names, it became
impossible to describe a route like that of Hannibal across the Alps with an
accuracy that excludes all doubts.
Thus it has happened that
every Alpine pass, from that of Mont Genevre to the Simplon, has in turn been
declared to have been the one by which Hannibal crossed into Italy. Nobody can
settle this question satisfactorily who has not travelled over every pass
himself. We must leave this investigation to an Alpine traveller with
sufficient leisure and enthusiasm, and meanwhile confine ourselves, under the
guidance of Polybius, the oldest and most trustworthy witness, to find a road
which has possibility and probability in its favour, though, perhaps, absolute
certainty is unattainable.
The distances given by
Polybius leave, in reality, only a doubt whether Hannibal crossed by the Little
St. Bernard or by the Mont Cenis. It is becoming now more and more the
universal opinion that Hannibal made use of the former of these two routes.
This was the usual road by which the Gallic tribes in the valley of the Po
communicated with their countrymen in Transalpine Gaul. By this pass alone they
could obtain auxiliaries, as they often did from beyond the Alps; for the
territory of the Salassians, their friends and allies, extended to the foot of
this pass on the Italian side, whilst the Mont Cenis pass led into the country
of their enemies, the Ligurian tribe of the Taurini. The guides whom the
Insubrians had sent to Hannibal, and who had promised to conduct him by a safe
road, could not possibly advise him to take the road of Mont Cenis. It seems
therefore highly probable that Hannibal marched over the pass of the Little St.
Bernard. But now another difficulty arises, viz., that of determining by which
road he reached this pass from the ‘Island’ of the Allobrogians. The shortest
and easiest way seems to be that along the river Isere, which leads almost to
the foot of the pass. But the distances given by Polybius are at variance with
this route; and, moreover, when he says that Hannibal marched ‘along the
river,’ he can only have meant the Rhone, and not the Isere. It seems therefore
the most probable view, that Hannibal followed the course of the Rhone,
avoiding, however, the sharp bindings, until he reached the spot where the
mountains of Savoy (the Mont du Chat) approach the river—that he crossed this
chain of mountains, and marched past the present town of Chambery in a southern
direction until he reached the Isere again at Montmelian, and followed its
course to the foot of the Little St. Bernard.
For ten days the army marched
over level ground without encountering any difficulty. The Allobrogian chiefs,
who, as it seems, were not averse to plunder, dreaded the cavalry of Hannibal
and his Gaulish escort. But when the latter had returned home, and Hannibal
entered the defiles of the mountains, he found the road blocked up by the
mountaineers in a place where force could avail nothing. He was informed by his
guides that the enemy were accustomed to keep the heights guarded only by day,
and to retire in the night to their neighbouring town. He therefore caused his
light-armed troops to occupy the pass in the night. The attacks of the
barbarians, who returned on the following day and harassed the slowly advancing
long line of march, were repulsed without much difficulty.
Yet Hannibal lost a number of
beasts of burden and a good deal of his baggage, the latter being no doubt the
principal object of the barbarians. Fortunately many of the animals and some
prisoners were recovered in the town which lay near the pass, and which
contained also provisions for a few days.
Having given his troops one
day of rest, Hannibal continued his march. On the fourth day the natives met
him with branches of trees in their hands as a sign of friendliness, and
requested him to march through their land without doing them any injury. They
brought cattle, and offered hostages as proofs of their sincerity. Hannibal
suspected that all these signs of devotion were insincere, and intended to lull
him into security. Therefore, though he accepted their offers, he provided
against treachery, sent his baggage and cavalry in advance, and covered the
march with his infantry. Thus the cumbersome portion of the army passed through
the most difficult places, and was in tolerable security, when, on the third day,
the faithless barbarians rushed to the attack, rolled and threw stones from
both sides of the narrow pass, and killed a great number of men and animals.
Hannibal was compelled to spend a night away from his baggage and cavalry. But
this was the last time that the mountaineers seriously attempted to obstruct
his march. From this time forward they ventured only on isolated acts of
plunder, and soon after Hannibal reached the summit of the pass, on the ninth
day after he had commenced the ascent.
It was now nearly the end of
October, and the ground was already covered with fresh fallen snow. No wonder
that the men born under the burning sun of Africa, or in the genial climate of
Spain, felt their hearts sink within them in those chill and dreary regions, when
they measured the hardships that still awaited them with those which they had
endured. Hannibal endeavoured to raise their courage by directing their eyes
towards Italy, which lay expanded at their feet like a promised land, the goal
of their hopes and the reward of their perseverance. Then, after a rest of two
days, the downward march began. This was no farther molested by any hostile
attack; but the obstacles which nature presented were greater. The snow covered
dangerous places, and, breaking under the feet of the men, hurled many into
precipices. One portion of the road had been made impassable, and was partly
broken away, by avalanches. In the attempt to pass by a side-way over a
glacier, the tramp of the army soon reduced the recent snow to a slush, and on
the ice which was under the snow the men slipped, whilst the horses broke
through with their hoofs and remained fixed in it. Hannibal was obliged to
halt, and to repair the broken part of the road. The whole army was set to
work, and thus one day sufficed to restore the road sufficiently for horses and
beasts of burden to pass. But three more days passed before the Numidians
succeeded in making the road broad and firm enough for the elephants. When at
length this last obstacle was overcome, the army passed from the region of snow
into the lower and gentler slopes, and in three more days it encamped at the
foot of the Alps.
Thus, at length, Hannibal
accomplished his task, but at a cost which made it doubtful whether it would
not have been wiser never to have undertake it. Of the 59,000 chosen warriors
who had marched from Spain, not less than 33,000 had been carried off by
disease, fatigue, or the sword of the enemy. Only 12,000 Libyan and 8,000
Spanish foot and 6,000 horsemen had reached, the spot where the real struggle
was not to end, but to begin. And these men were in a condition that might have
inspired even enemies with pity. Countless sufferings, miseries, wounds,
hunger, cold, disease had deprived them almost of the appearance of human
beings, and had brutalised them in body and mind. With our admiration of
Hannibal's genius mingles an involuntary astonishment that he thought the
object which he had gained worthy of such a price, and that, in spite of his
losses, he was able to justify the wisdom of his determination by the most
brilliant success. It is not easy to banish the suspicion that Hannibal
anticipated less difficulty in the passage of the Alps than he encountered.
Though the attacks of the mountaineers were probably not so serious as they are
represented, yet they added materially to the losses of the army. No doubt
Hannibal was justified in expecting that these tribes would receive him as the
friend and ally of their countrymen on the Po, and we may suppose that they had
formally promised to assist instead of obstructing the passage. We are at a
loss to account for their hostility. Perhaps their only object was plunder. The
obstructions thus caused were the more serious as Hannibal was too late in the
season for crossing the mountains easily. But it is impossible to determine the
cause of this delay—whether Hannibal’s departure from New Carthage was
postponed unduly; whether the campaign between the Ebro and the Pyrenees, or
the passage of these mountains, or the march through Gaul, or the crossing of
the Rhone and the transactions with the Allobrogians detained him longer than
he had calculated; or whether, in spite of all his inquiries, he had no correct
knowledge of the distances and the difficulties of the road. But there can be
no doubt that the cold, added to the fatigue of mountain-climbing among ice and
snow, was more pernicious to his men than anything else. A march of fifteen
days under the weight of arms and baggage, over the highest and steepest
mountains of Europe, and on such roads as the tramp of men and animals alone,
without any engineering skill, had made, and fifteen nights’ bivouac where even
in October piercing cold winds sweep down from the snow-fields and glaciers,
were alone sufficient to destroy an army. What must have been the fate of those
who fell down from exhaustion, or were left behind wounded or diseased? Nothing
is said in this narrative (and very rarely at any other time in the accounts of
ancient warfare) of the sick and wounded. No doubt every serious wound or
illness caused death, especially on a march where even vigorous men experience
difficulty in keeping pace with their comrades. Recent events have shown that
the care of the sick and wounded in war is a very late and a very imperfect
product of civilisation and philanthropy.
The army required a few days
to recover from their fatigue before Hannibal could venture to begin the
campaign, at a season when, under ordinary circumstances, the time for
winter-quarters had arrived. He then turned against the Taurinians, a Ligurian
tribe which was hostile to the Insubrians, and had rejected his proffered
alliance. In three days their chief town was taken, their fighting men cut
down, and it was made evident to all their neighbours that they had only to
choose between destruction and the Carthaginian alliance. In consequence of
this, all the tribes in the upper valley of the Po, Ligurians as well as Gauls,
joined Hannibal. The tribes living further eastward still hesitated, from fear
of the Roman armies that occupied their country. Hannibal, in order to enable
them to join him, found it necessary to march immediately against the Romans,
and to force them to accept a battle.
We may presume that it was
hardly necessary for Hannibal to urge his soldiers to bravery. Their conduct up
to this time was a sufficient guarantee for the future. Nevertheless, as we are
told, Hannibal placed before their eyes a spectacle to show that death has no
terrors for a man if death or victory is the only chance of deliverance from
unendurable evils. Before the assembled army he asked his Gallic prisoners if
they were prepared to fight with one another unto the death, provided that
liberty and splendid arms were the reward of victory. When with one voice they
all professed themselves ready to stake life for freedom. Hannibal selected by
lot several pairs of combatants. These fought, fell or conquered like
heroes, and were envied by those of their companions who had not been fortunate
enough to be selected. Thus wretched barbarian captives showed what can be
expected of soldiers fighting for the highest prize, and Hannibal’s men were
not disposed to yield to them in military spirit.
It would almost appear that
the issue of the first Punic war had produced among the Romans a feeling of
superiority over the Carthaginians. They had no conception of the change that
had taken place in the Carthaginian army, and that, instead of Gallic
mercenaries, Libyan and Spanish subjects and allies formed now the principal strength
of their old enemies. Of course they were still more ignorant of the military
genius of Hannibal. They were consequently full of courage and confident of
victory; and Scipio, as he had ventured in Gaul to advance against Hannibal
with an inferior force, did not hesitate now to do the same. From Placentia he
marched westward along the left bank of the Po, crossed the Ticinus, and found
himself suddenly face to face with a considerable corps of cavalry, which
Hannibal, advancing on the same bank down the river, had sent before the main
body of his army to reconnoitre. Thus the first encounter on Italian soil took
place between the Po and the Ticinus. It did not assume the dimensions of a
battle. No Roman infantry, except the light-armed troops, were engaged; but the
conflict was severe, and terminated, after a spirited resistance, in a decided
repulse of the Romans. Scipio himself set his men the example of bravery.
Fighting in the foremost ranks, he was wounded, and owed his life to the
heroism of his son, then a youth of seventeen years, but destined to become the
conqueror of Hannibal, and to terminate the terrible war so inauspiciously
opened at the Ticinus. After this check, Scipio could not think of venturing on
a regular battle. The level country round about was too favourable for the superior
cavalry of the Carthaginians. He made therefore a hasty and even precipitate
retreat, sacrificing a detachment of 600 men, who covered the bridge over the
Po until it was destroyed by the retreating army, and, less fortunate than
Horatius Codes in the good old time, were all made prisoners of war.
In order to cross the Po,
Hannibal was obliged to ascend its bank for some distance, until he found a
place where the elephants and the cavalry could swim the stream, and where it
was easy to construct a bridge for the infantry. Then he advanced towards
Placentia, near which city the consul Scipio had constructed a fortified camp.
He crossed, as it appears, the small river Trebia, which, running down from the
Apennines in a northerly direction, joins the Po not far to the west of
Placentia. Thus the two armies again confronted one another, and Hannibal was
anxious to bring on a decisive engagement, whilst Scipio, moderating his ardour
after his recent ill success, and moreover compelled to inactivity by his
wound, kept within his lines. It was most fortunate for the Romans that they
had completed the fortification of Placentia and Cremona. Without these two
strongholds they would, after Hannibal’s appearance, have been unable to keep
their footing in the valley of the Po, and the Gauls would have been throughout
the war much less hampered in their offensive operations as Hannibal’s allies,
if the Roman garrisons in those two fortresses had not kept them in constant
alarm for the safety of their own country.
As yet the Gauls had not
unanimously declared themselves for Hannibal. Most of them were ready to
abandon the cause of Rome, others wavered in their fidelity, a few remained
steadfast and sent auxiliaries. But Scipio could not rely on these men. In one
night more than 2,000 of them mutinied in the Roman camp, overpowered the
sentinels at the gates, and rushed out to join Hannibal. They were received
kindly, praised for their conduct, and dismissed to their homes with great
promises if they would persuade their countrymen to revolt from Rome. Hannibal
was now in hopes that all the Gallic tribes would join his standard, and he
eagerly wished for an opportunity to deal the Roman army a decisive blow, which
might inspire the Gauls with confidence in his strength.
Scipio, on his side, sought to
avoid a conflict. As he did not feel safe enough on the level ground, in the
immediate vicinity of Placentia, he broke up his camp in the night, and, using
the utmost silence, marched higher up the Trebia, in order to gain a more
favourable locality for a camp on the hills which form the last spurs of the
Apennines running northward towards the Po. As Hannibal’s army was not far off,
this movement was no doubt hazardous, especially as Scipio’s march went past
the hostile camp. In spite of the care employed to avoid noise, the movement of
the Romans was perceived. Hannibal’s horsemen were immediately at their heels,
and had they not been delayed by the plunder of the Roman camp, it would have
been difficult for Scipio to reach, without great loss, the left, or western,
bank of the Trebia, and there to fortify a new camp. As it was, he succeeded in
gaining a strong position, where he was in perfect safety, and was able to
await the arrival of his colleague Sempronius, who, with his army, was on his
way from Sicily.
As we have seen above,
Sempronius had, in the early part of the summer, sailed with two legions to
Sicily. In that province he had made preparations for a landing in Africa, but had
been detained by the energy with which the Carthaginians had begun hostilities
in that quarter. Even before his arrival, a Carthaginian squadron of twenty
vessels of war had appeared in the Sicilian waters. Three of them had been
driven by a storm into the Straits of Messana, and had been captured by the
Syracusan fleet with which the old king Hiero was in readiness to join the
Roman consul. From the prisoners, Hiero ascertained that a Carthaginian fleet
was on its way to surprise Lilybaeum and to promote a rising of the Roman
subjects in Sicily, many of whom regretted the change of masters, and would
fain have returned to their old allegiance. This important news was at once
communicated to the praetor, M. Aemilius, who at that time commanded in Sicily;
the garrison of Lilybaeum was warned, and the Roman fleet kept in readiness,
while all round the coast a strict look-out was kept for the Carthaginians, and
messengers were dispatched into the several towns to enjoin vigilance.
Accordingly, when the Punic fleet, consisting of thirty-five sail, approached
Lilybaeum, it found the Roman garrison ready to receive it. There was no chance
of taking the town by surprise. The Carthaginians resolved, therefore, to offer
battle to the Roman fleet, and drew up at the entrance of the port. The number
of the Roman ships is not given. Livy only mentions the circumstance that they
were manned with better and more numerous troops than those of the
Carthaginians. The latter, therefore, tried to avoid being boarded, and relied
on their skill in using the beaks (rostra) for disabling and
sinking the hostile vessels. But they succeeded only in a single instance,
whereas the Romans boarded several of their vessels, and captured them, with
their crews, amounting to 1,700 men. The rest of the Carthaginian ships
escaped. Again it was shown that the sea, their own peculiar element, had
become unfavourable to the Carthaginians; whilst, on the other hand, the genius
of Hannibal had the effect of reversing the relative strength and confidence of
the two nations in their land forces, and of causing the superiority of the
Roman legions over the Carthaginian mercenaries to be forgotten.
Meanwhile, Tiberius Sempronius
had arrived in Sicily with his fleet of one hundred and sixty sail and two
legions, and had been received by King Hiero with the respect due to the
representative of the majesty of Rome. Hiero placed his fleet at the disposal
of the consul, offered him his homage and his vows for the triumph of the Roman
people, and promised to show himself in his old age as faithful and persevering
in the service of the Roman people as he had been in the former war, when he
was in the vigour of manhood. He promised to provide the Roman legions and
crews, at his own expense, with clothing and provisions, and then reported on
the condition of the island and the plans of the Carthaginians. The two fleets
sailed in company to Lilybaeum. They found there that the design of the
Carthaginians on Lilybaeum had failed, and that the town was safe. Hiero therefore
returned with his fleet to Syracuse; Sempronius sailed to Malta, which the
Carthaginian commander Hamilcar, the son of Gisco, surrendered with the
garrison of 2,000 men. These prisoners, as well as the men captured in the
engagement off Lilybaeum, were sold as slaves, with the exception of three
noble Carthaginians. Sempronius then sailed in search of the hostile fleet,
which, meanwhile, committed depredations in the Italian waters, and which he
thought to find among the Liparian Islands. He was mistaken, and on his return
to Sicily received information that it was ravaging the coast of Italy near
Vibo. But his further action in the south was stopped by the news, which
arrived soon after, of Hannibal’s march across the Alps. He prepared
immediately to join his colleague Scipio in Cisalpine Gaul. Placing twenty-five
ships under the command of his legate Sextus Pomponius for the protection of
the Italian coast, and reinforcing the squadron of the praetor M. Aemilius to
fifty sail, he sent the remainder of his fleet with his troops to Ariminum in
the Adriatic. Having regulated affairs in Sicily, he followed the main body
with ten ships. The rest of his army which could not be taken on board the
fleet he ordered to proceed to Ariminum by land, leaving every soldier free to
find his way as best he could, and only binding them by oath to appear at
Ariminum on the appointed day.
From Ariminum Sempronius
marched to the Trebia, where he effected his junction with Scipio, apparently
without difficulty. The Roman army now amounted to more than 40,000 men, and
was consequently more numerous than that of the invaders. But the position of
Hannibal was now very much improved. By the treason of a Latin officer from
Brundusium, he had gained possession of the fortified place of Clastidium (now
called Casteggio, near Montebello), where the Romans had collected their
supplies. Thus he had now abundance of provisions, whilst the Roman army,
swelled by the arrival of Sempronius to double its original number, felt, no
doubt, most keenly the loss of the supplies which had been destined for its
use. Under these circumstances, Sempronius naturally wished to bring on a
battle. He had not come all the way from Sicily to shut himself up in a
fortified camp on the Trebia, and to look on quietly, whilst tribe after tribe
in Cisalpine Gaul joined Hannibal, and swelled the hostile army. He might well
ask for what purpose two consular armies were sent out against the enemy,
except to attack and defeat him. He had been successful in his own province of
Sicily, and had been crossed and thwarted in a direct attack on Carthage by the
order of the senate, which recalled him and transferred him to the north of
Italy. If he should be so fortunate as to destroy Hannibal’s army, he would
have the glory of having quickly brought the war to a triumphant conclusion.
Nor would be share this glory with anybody, as, while his colleague Scipio was
disabled by his wound, he had the undivided command of the two consular armies.
Polybius, refusing to regard the resolution of Sempronius as the result of
rational calculation, or of the necessity of his position, charges him with
recklessness and vanity, contrasting with his conduct the prudent caution of
Scipio, who is said to have dissuaded him from risking a battle. We can hardly
decide whether Polybius is right or wrong. It is possible that Sempronius, just
like Scipio at first, had no just estimation of the enemy with whom he had to
deal, and that, thinking victory certain, he was over anxious to secure the glory
for himself. At the same time it is tolerably evident that Polybius, in his
partiality to Scipio, endeavours as much as possible to throw upon the
shoulders of Sempronius the blame of the defeat on the Trebia. He was the
friend of the Cornelian house, and could not but imbibe in the family circle of
the Scipios all the views most in accordance with the reputation of that
family, views which he has done his best to propagate and to back by his
authority.
The two hostile armies were
encamped at a short distance from one another; the Carthaginians nearer to
Placentia, on the right, or eastern, bank of the Trebia, the Romans higher up
the river, on the left bank. A cavalry engagement took place, and, terminating
apparently to the advantage of the Romans, had increased the confidence of
Sempronius. This Hannibal had expected. He knew that the Romans would not defer
the decision much longer, chose his battlefield with the unerring eye of a
consummate general, and made all the necessary preparations for the impending
struggle.
Not far from the Roman camp,
but on the opposite side of the Trebia, was a dried-up watercourse with high
banks overgrown with bushes, high enough to hide infantry and even cavalry.
Here Hannibal ordered his spirited young brother Mago to proceed before
daybreak with one thousand chosen horsemen and as many foot soldiers, and
to lie in ambush until the signal should be given. Then he sent the Numidian
cavalry across the river right against the Roman camp to draw them out to
battle. What he had expected took place. As soon as the Romans, early in the
morning, caught sight of the Numidians, Sempronius, without even giving his men
time to strengthen themselves by the usual morning meal, ordered the whole of
his cavalry, four thousand strong, to advance against them, and the foot to follow.
The Numidians retired back across the river, closely pursued by the Roman
cavalry and infantry. The day was raw, damp, and cold. It was towards
mid-winter, and sleet and snow filled the air. In the previous night a copious
rain had fallen in the mountains, and the river Trebia had risen so high that
the soldiers in fording it stood breast high in the icy water. Stiff with cold
and taint with hunger they arrived on the right bank, and immediately found
themselves in front of Hannibal’s army, which was drawn up in a long line of
battle, the infantry, 20,000 strong, in the centre, 10,000 horsemen and the
elephants on the wings. Hannibal bad taken care that his men should have a good
night’s rest, and be prepared for the work of the day by an ample breakfast.
The battle had hardly begun
when the Romans lost every chance of victory. The superior Carthaginian cavalry
drove in the Roman cavalry on both wings, and, in combination with the
elephants, attacked the legions on the flanks whilst Hannibal’s Libyan, Spanish,
and Gaulish infantry engaged them in front. Nevertheless, the Romans kept their
ground for a while with the utmost courage, until Mago, with his two thousand
men, broke forth from the ambush and seized them in rear. Terror and disorder
now spread among them. Only ten thousand men in the centre of the Roman line
kept their ranks unbroken, and, cutting their way through the Gauls opposed to
them, made good their retreat to Placentia; the remainder of the Roman infantry,
in helpless confusion, tried to regain their camp on the western side of the
Trebia. But before they could cross the river the greater portion were cut
down by the numerous cavalry of the Carthaginians, or perished under the feet
of the elephants. Many found their death in the river, which with its swollen
and icy flood cut off their retreat. Some reached the camp; others, especially
the horse which had been chased off the field on both flanks, joined the corps
of ten thousand which alone effected an orderly retreat to Placentia. The pursuit
lasted until showers of rain mixed with snow compelled the conquerors to seek
the shelter of their tents. The weather was so bitterly cold and tempestuous
that Hannibal’s army suffered severely, and almost all the elephants perished.
The tempest continued to rage
all night. Under its cover Scipio succeeded in crossing the river Trebia with
the remnants of the defeated army, and in reaching Placentia unmolested by the
victorious but exhausted Carthaginians. In this town and in Cremona, under the
shelter of the recently constructed fortifications, the shattered remains of
the four legions passed the rest of the winter in safety. The supplies from the
surrounding country were cut off, as the Gauls had by this time risen in mass
against Rome, and as Hannibal’s cavalry ranged freely all over the vast plain
about the Po. But the navigation of this river, it seems, was still open. The
fishing boats of the natives could not stop the armed vessels of the Romans,
and thus the Roman colonists and soldiers received the necessary supplies, and
were enabled to hold their ground at this most critical period.
The great battle of the Trebia
was the concluding and crowning operation of Hannibal’s campaign, the reward
for the innumerable labours and dangers which he and his brave army had
encountered. The march from New Carthage to Placentia across the Ebro, the
Pyrenees, the Rhone, the Alps, and the Po, in great part through hostile
nations, and on wretched roads, with an army composed of different races, and
inspired by no feeling of patriotic devotion, is not matched by any military
exploit in ancient or in modern history. But that which raises it above the
sphere of mere adventurous daring, and qualifies it as an achievement worthy of
a great general, is the splendid victory with which it closed.
This victory produced the most
important results. Even the immediate and direct gain was great. The two
consular armies were shattered. The number of the slain and the prisoners is
not stated, but we can hardly suppose it to have been less than half of the
whole army engaged. Still greater was the moral effect. From this time forward
the name of Hannibal was terrible to the Roman soldier, just as the name of the
Gauls had been of old. And these two most terrible enemies of Rome were now
united, flushed with victory and ready to turn their arms against the devoted
city. The dreadful calamity which came upon the republic after the black day of
the Allia might now not only be repeated but surpassed. At that time the
Capitol at least had broken the onset of the barbarians, and had saved the
Roman nation from extinction. But what chance was there now of resisting the
man who, with but small support from the Gallic tribes, had destroyed a
superior Roman army, and was now leading all the hereditary enemies of the
Roman name against the city? To face such dangers, without despairing, the
Romans required all the iron firmness of their character, which never was more
formidable than when veritable terrors appeared on all sides.
Such firmness was the more
necessary as Hannibal, at this early period of the war, showed that it was his
intention to undermine the Roman state within, whilst he was attacking it from
without. After his victory on the Trebia, he divided his prisoners into two
classes. Those who were Roman citizens he kept in rigorous captivity. The Roman
allies he dismissed without ransom, and assured them that he had come into
Italy in order to deliver them from the Roman yoke. If they wished to recover
their independence, their lost lands and towns, they should join him, and with
united strength attack the common enemy of them all.
In spite of the advanced
season, and the severity of the winter, Hannibal showed a restless activity. He
was busied in organising the alliance of the Gaulish tribes against Rome. The
Boians brought him, as a pledge of their fidelity, the three Roman
commissioners whom they had captured. He was joined also by the Ligurians, who
had year after year been hunted and harassed by the Romans like wild beasts,
and who brought as hostages some noble Romans whom they had captured in their
country. Still the Romans held several fortified places on the Po. One of
these, called Victumviae, was stormed by Hannibal, and the defenders were
treated with all the severity of the laws of war; the attempt to take another
fort by surprise failed. The two principal places, Placentia and Cremona, could
not be taken without a formal siege; for besides the remains of the beaten
army, each of them had a garrison of six thousand colonists, i.e. veteran
soldiers. For such an attempt Hannibal had neither time nor means. He was
hastening to carry the war into Southern Italy. The Gauls began to feel the
pressure of the numbers which they had now to support, and they were burning
with impatience for the plunder of Italy. The fundamental feature of their
character was inconstancy. They had no idea of fidelity and perseverance. It
was nothing but their own advantage that united them with Hannibal. Their
attachment could easily be changed into hostility. Hannibal's own life might be
exposed to danger if the treacherous disposition of these barbarians were
stimulated by a prize offered for his head. His brother-in-law, Hasdrubal, had
fallen a victim to assassination. Alexander of Epirus had been killed by a
faithless Lucanian ally. It was not impossible that a similar fate awaited
Hannibal. If we can trust the report of Polybius, such apprehensions induced
Hannibal to avail himself of a ‘Punic deceit’, by assuming different disguises
and wearing false hair, so that his own friends could not recognise him. Yet we
can hardly think such a device worthy of Hannibal, nor does it seem probable
that a general who was worshipped by his soldiers should have been compelled to
hide himself under a disguise in the midst of his army, in order to protect his
life from the dagger of an assassin. We should be rather inclined to think that
Hannibal acted as his own spy, to sound the disposition of his new allies.
In his impatience to leave
Cisalpine Gaul, Hannibal made an attempt to cross the Apennines before the end
of winter. But he was foiled in this undertaking. The army was overtaken in the
mountains by so terrific a hurricane that it was unable to proceed. Men and
horses perished from the cold, and Hannibal was compelled to return to his
winter-quarters near Placentia.
Simultaneously with the
stirring events which accompanied Hannibal’s march, Spain also had been the
theatre of serious conflicts. Publius Scipio, as we have seen, had sent from
Massilia his brother Cneius with two legions to Spain, whilst he himself had
hastened to the Po. In spite of its great distance, Spain was still Hannibal's
only base of operations; and, by its natural wealth and its warlike population,
it was a chief source of strength for Carthage. The Romans therefore could not
leave Spain in the undisturbed possession of their enemies, though they were
attacked in Italy itself. Moreover, their own interest as well as their honour
bound them to send assistance to those Spanish tribes, between the Ebro and the
Pyrenees, who had espoused their cause in the great struggle between the two
rival republics. Hannibal had overthrown them when he passed through their
country on his march to Italy, but he had not had time to reduce them to
perfect submission and peaceful obedience. It was still possible to gain their
alliance for Rome. The dispatch of the two legions to Spain was, therefore,
perfectly justified; and the senate showed its approval of it by continuing the
war in Spain at all costs throughout the greatest distress caused by Hannibal’s
victories in Italy. Spain was for Rome what Cisalpine Gaul was for Hannibal.
Both countries had been recently and imperfectly conquered, and were full of
unwilling subjects, easily roused to rebellion. As the overthrow of Roman
dominion in the north of Italy opened a way for an attack on the vital parts of
her empire, so the conquest of Spain promised to facilitate a transfer of the
war into Africa, where alone it could he brought to a victorious conclusion.
Of the events in Spain during
the year 218 B.C. we have not much to report. Cneius Scipio succeeded, by
persuasion or force, in gaining for the Roman alliance most of the tribes
between the Pyrenees and the Ebro; he defeated Hanno, whom Hannibal had
intrusted with ten thousand men for the defence of that country, and he took up
his winter-quarters in Tarraco.
The first news which reached
Rome of the battle of the Trebia was contained in an official report of the
consul Sempronius, which bears a striking resemblance to other official reports
of very recent times. It stated, for the information of the senate and the
Roman people, that a battle had taken place, and that Sempronius would have
been victorious if he had not been prevented by inclement weather. But soon there
came reports which were not official, and stated the naked truth. The alarm in
Rome was so much the greater, and it rose to positive apprehension for the
safety of the town. Since the great disaster in the Caudine passes, more than a
century before this time, no similar calamity had befallen the united legions
of both consuls; and on that memorable occasion the army had been saved from
destruction by the short-sighted confidence which the Samnite general had
placed in the faith and honour of the Roman people. It was only the battle of
the Allia which could compare in disastrous results with the recent overthrow,
for on that fatal day the army which was destined to cover Rome had been
completely routed and dispersed; and the memory of the terrors of that evil
time was now recalled the more readily as the dreaded Gauls marched in
Hannibal’s army upon the city which they had once already burned and sacked. To
the terror of the foreign enemy were added apprehensions from internal discord.
After a long peace the struggle between the two opposite parties had, a few
years before, broken out again. The comitia of centuries had in 241 B.C. been
remodelled on democratic principles. Whilst the nobility was degenerating more
and more into a narrow oligarchy, a popular party had been formed, bent on
invigorating and renewing the middle class, and on checking the accumulation of
wealth in a few hands. The chief of this party was Caius Flaminius. He had in
his tribuneship encountered the violent opposition of the senate in passing a
law for the division of public land in Picenum amongst Roman citizens; he had
connected that country with Rome by the Flaminian road, a work by which, like
Appius Claudius with his road and aqueduct, he had given employment to a great
number of the poorer citizens, and had gained a considerable following. The
construction of a new racecourse in Rome, the Circus Flaminius, was another
measure designed to conciliate the favour of the people. At the same time these
considerable public works are an evidence of a stricter and growing control
over the public revenue, for the money which they required could not be derived
from any private or extraordinary source. By such attention to the finances of
the state, Flaminius necessarily incurred the hostility of the rich and
influential men of the nobility, who were in the habit of deriving profit from renting
public domains, saltworks, mines, and the like, and from farming the customs.
These men, from the nature of their occupation, considered it their privilege
to rob the public. It had become quite customary for the nobility to violate
the Licinian law, to occupy more land and to keep more cattle on the common
pasture than the law allowed. Occasionally honest and fearless tribunes or
aediles ventured to put down this abuse by prosecuting and fining the
offenders; but no radical cure was effected, nor was it easy to effect one.
Since the passing of the Licinian laws (in 36o B.C.) Rome had conquered Italy,
Sicily, and Sardinia, and had confiscated conquered lands on a large scale. How
was it possible to coerce the rapacity of the great and powerful families by
enforcing a law which was passed when Rome was not even mistress of the whole
of Latium? The great increase in the number of slaves, which was one of the
results of the wars in Southern Italy, Sicily, Corsica, Liguria, and Illyria,
made it possible to farm large estates, and to keep numerous flocks and herds
on the extensive public pastures. The increase of capital which flowed to Rome
from the conquered districts enriched the noble families, which monopolised the
government. When the first province was acquired beyond the confines of Italy,
the besetting sin of the Roman aristocracy, their ungovernable rapacity,
coupled with cruelty and violence, shot up like a flame which has reached a
store of new, rich fuel. The great danger that threatened the Roman
commonwealth became more than ever evident. The lingering fever became more
violent and malignant, and it was high time for a vigorous hand to interfere and
to stop, if possible, the progress of the disorder. Flaminius, it appears, was
the man for it; but unfortunately he was almost isolated among the Roman
aristocracy. His own father, it is said, pulled him down from the public
platform, when he was speaking to the people to recommend his agrarian law; and
when the tribune C. Claudius, who was probably a plebeian client of the great
Claudian family, proposed a law to prevent senators and the sons of senators
from engaging in foreign trade and from possessing any vessels beyond a certain
moderate size, Flaminius was the only man in the senate who spoke in favour of
the proposal. He was therefore opposed by the whole of that powerful party
which monopolised the government for their own benefit. But he had the people
on his side; and as at that time the Assembly of the Tribes was independent and
competent to legislate for the whole republic, he was in a position to carry
his reforms by the votes of the people, and in direct opposition to the senate.
Had he lived longer, it is possible that the economical condition of the Roman
people would not have become so utterly wretched and hopeless as the Gracchi
found it a hundred years later.
Flaminius had been raised to
the consulship as early as 223 B.C.—a time when the war with the Insubrians was
raging with all its force. He had no great military abilities; but as a general
he was probably not inferior to the average of Roman consuls. It was therefore,
in all probability, not from any apprehension of his incapacity, nor from
superstition caused by threatening phenomena, but from political animosity,
that the senate sent a message to recall him to Rome, pretending that his
election was vitiated by some defect in the auspices, and calling upon him to
resign his office. Flaminius had got into difficulties, but he was just on the
point of inflicting a severe blow on the enemy, when the sealed letter of the
senate was delivered to him. Guessing the contents, he left it unopened
until he had gained the victory. Then he answered that, as the gods themselves
had clearly fought for him, they had sufficiently ratified his election; and,
thus setting the authority of the senate at defiance, he continued the war. On
his return to Rome the people voted him a triumph, in spite of the opposition
of the senate, and when Flaminius had celebrated this triumph he laid down his
office. In one of the succeeding years he was made master of the horse by the
dictator Minucius, but was obliged to resign this command because at his
nomination a mouse had been heard to squeak. The nobility, as it appears,
carried on against him a sort of holy war. They marshalled heavenly signs and
auspices on their side; but these weapons were evidently becoming antiquated,
for they produced very little effect, as was shown in the sequel.
When, after the defeat on the
Trebia, the consular elections for the ensuing year were at hand, and the
confidence of the people seemed to be turning in favour of the popular leader
Flaminius, as the first Roman that had signally beaten the Gauls in their own
country beyond the Po, the oligarchical party worked hard to prevent his el
action. Universal fear had seized the minds of men, and made them see in every
direction images of terror, and miraculous phenomena of evil foreboding. Livy
has preserved an interesting list of these ‘prodigies,’ which illustrates the
peculiar mode of superstition dominant at that time among the vulgar :—In the
vegetable market a child of six months called out ‘Triumph’; in the cattle
market a bull ran up into the third story of a house, and leaped into the
street; fiery ships were seen in the sky; the Temple of Hope was struck by
lightning; in Lanuvium the holy spear moved of its own accord; a raven flew
into the temple of Juno, and perched on the pillow of the goddess; near
Amiternum there were seen, in many places, human forms in white robes; in Picenum
it rained stones; in Caere the prophetic tablets shrank; in Gaul a wolf
snatched the sword of a sentinel from its sheath.
To propitiate the anger of the
gods, manifested by these numerous signs, the whole people were for several
days engaged in sacrifices, purifications, and prayers. Dedicatory offerings of
gold and bronze were placed in the temples; lectisternia, or public
feastings of the gods, were ordered, and solemn vows were made on the part of
the Roman people.
If the priests intended, in
the interest of the nobility, to keep the people by religious terrors from
electing Flaminius, who, as a notorious free-thinker, scoffed at the national
superstition, their pains were lost, for Flaminius was elected to the
consulship in spite of all opposition. It was customary that the newly-elected
consul, on the day of entering 011 his office, should dress himself in his
house in his official robe (the praetexta or purple-bordered
toga), ascend the Capitol in solemn procession, perform a sacrifice, convene a
meeting of the senate, in which the time was fixed for the Latin festival
(feriae Latinae) on the Alban Mount by the temple of Jupiter Latiaris, and that
he should not start for his province before the termination of this festival,
which at the period of the Hannibalian war lasted several days. In order to
avoid the chicanery of his opponents, who might have retained him in the city
or compelled him to resign, under some futile pretext of a bad omen or of an
irregularity in the ceremonies, Flaminius disregarded the usual formalities,
and left Rome abruptly, in order to enter on his office in his camp at
Ariminum. The senate, greatly exasperated, resolved to recall him, and sent an
embassy to insist on his immediate return. Flaminius paid no attention to the
order of the senate, which he knew to be of no legal force, and assumed the
command of the army at Ariminum without the observance of the usual religious
formalities. But signs of warning occurred even now. At the sacrifice a calf,
already struck, but not killed by the axe, escaped from the bands of the
attendant, sprinkled many persons with its blood, and disturbed the solemn
proceedings by the terror which such an evident sign of the divine displeasure
produced. The great calamity that was to befall Italy was hastened by the
wickedness of men like Flaminius, who disregarded the warnings of the gods.
The internal disputes did not
prevent the Romans from making their preparations for the ensuing campaign with
circumspection and care. The military strength of Italy was sufficient, not
only once more to encounter the principal enemy with perfect confidence, but
amply to provide for the safety of the distant parts of the Roman dominion.
Troops were sent to Sicily, Sardinia, Tarentum, and other places. Sixty quinqueremes
were added to the fleet. The faithful Hiero of Syracuse, as indefatigable in
the service of Rome as ever, sent 500 Cretans and 1,000 light-armed infantry.
Four new legions were raised, and magazines of provisions were established in
the north of Etruria and in Ariminum, by one of which two routes the advance of
the Carthaginians was expected. In the latter place the remnants of the army
beaten at the Trebia were collected, and hence Flaminius led his men by
cross and by-roads over the Apennines into northern Etruria, to join them to
the two new legions which had been directed there straight from Rome.
The second consul, Cn.
Servilius, proceeded to Ariminum with the two other newly-levied legions. His
army consisted, according to Appian, of 40,000 men in all. If this statement is
to be trusted, Servilius must have had, besides the two new legions and the
usual number of allies, a body of 20,000 auxiliaries, who were perhaps
Cenomanians. The cavalry of his army was very strong if, as Polybius reports,
Servilius dispatched 4,000 of them into Etruria as soon as he was informed of
Hannibal’s march in that direction.
The situation was, upon the
whole, identical with that of 225 B.C., eight years before, when the Romans
expected that the Gauls would advance either by the eastern road through
Picenum, or on the western side of the Apennines from the Upper Arno. They had
then divided their armies between Ariminum and Arretium, in order to cover both
roads to Rome. But as they were then deceived by the Gauls, who crossed the
Apennines, not near the Upper Arno, but far westward near the sea-coast, and
suddenly appeared in Etruria without having encountered any opposition, so they
were now a second time surprised by Hannibal.
On the first appearance of
spring the Carthaginian army broke up from the plain of the Po. It had been
considerably strengthened by Gauls. Crossing the Apennines, probably by the
pass which is now called that of Pontremoli and leads from Parma to Lucca,
Hannibal had reached the Arno, while Servilius was still expecting him at
Ariminum. The march to Faesulae, through the low ground along the Arno, was
beset with great difficulties. The country was flooded by the spring rains and
the melting of the snow on the mountains, and had in several places assumed the
aspect of vast lakes. Men and beasts sank deep into the soft ground; many of
the horses lost their hoofs and perished. A portion of the army was obliged to
wade through the water for three days, and to pass the nights without being
able to find dry spots on which they might rest or sleep, except the bodies of
fallen animals, and heaps of the abandoned baggage. The, damp and variable
weather, together with excessive fatigue, and especially the want of sleep,
caused sickness and terrible havoc among the troops. Hannibal himself lost one
of his eyes by inflammation. The Gauls suffered most. They formed the centre in
the line of march, and if Hannibal had not taken the precaution of causing the
cavalry under his brave brother Mago, to close the rear, they would have
deserted in crowds, for they were near home, and, as Gauls, they had no
perseverance to bear up against continued hardships.
Having reached the Upper Arno,
Hannibal allowed his army to repose. Then he marched southwards, passing by the
camp of Flaminius near Arretium, in the direction of towards Cortona. To attack
the fortified camp of the consul would have been hopeless. Even at the Trebia
Hannibal had left the defeated and wounded Scipio and his discouraged army
unmolested in his camp, and had preferred to engage two united consular armies
in the field rather than attack one within its intrenchments. It was therefore
natural that he should now try to provoke Flaminius to leave his camp and fight
a battle. If he marched further south towards Rome, it was impossible for
Flaminius to remain stationary at Arretium. Between Hannibal and Rome there was
now no Roman army. Who would take the responsibility of letting the enemy march
unopposed upon Rome? Whether Hannibal would attack the city, and whether an
attack would succeed, nobody could tell. At any rate the apprehensions in Rome
were great. It was the duty of the two consuls to beat the enemy in the field.
On no account could they think of remaining in the north of Italy whilst the
capital was threatened.
Flaminius accordingly broke up
from Arretium and followed Hannibal closely. It is not at all probable that he
had any idea of offering or accepting battle before his colleague, whom he had
now every reason to expect in Etruria, should arrive from Ariminum. Perhaps he
contemplated a repetition of the campaign in the late Gallic war, which eight
years before had led to such brilliant results. At that time a Gallic army,
followed by the army of one Roman consul, suddenly encountered the other consul
in front, and was cut to pieces by a combined attack of the two colleagues.
Now, if Servilius marched rapidly by the Flaminian road from Umbria, and
succeeded in placing himself between Hannibal and Rome, the two consuls could,
as on the previous occasion, fall upon the enemy from two sides. It appears
that Servilius acted upon such a plan as this. He dispatched a body of 4,000
horse, under C. Centenius, in advance, and followed with the infantry on the
Flaminian road. It was therefore the duty of Flaminius to keep as close as
possible to the Carthaginians, in order to be near enough, on the expected
approach of the second Roman army, for a combined action. He was strong enough
for this, for he had more than 30,000 men. This force sufficed to hamper the
movements of the invaders, and even to protect the country to some extent from
devastation. In a few hours Roman soldiers could make a fortified camp, in
which they would be safe from a surprise, and even from an attack in due form.
For this reason a Roman general could venture close to an enemy, without
exposing himself to any extraordinary risks. The plan of Flaminius cannot
therefore be called rash. But he had in his calculation overlooked one item, or
rated it at too low a figure. The enemy he had to deal with was not a horde of
barbarian Gauls, but a disciplined army of veteran soldiers, led by Hannibal.
The unfortunate are seldom
treated with justice by their friends, never by their enemies. Flaminius was
the recognised leader of the popular party, and the history of Rome was written
by the adherents and clients of the nobility. Thus Flaminius has experienced,
even at the hands of Polybius, an ungenerous, nay, unjust, treatment. But, in
truth, if he committed faults in his command, if he allowed himself to be
outwitted and surprised in an ambush by a superior antagonist, he is not more
guilty than many other Roman consuls before and after him, whose faults were
forgiven because they belonged to the ruling party. And yet few of these have
an equal claim, to consideration and forgiveness with Flaminius, who atoned for
his fault with his life. Nevertheless, party hatred survived him, and delighted
in making him responsible for the whole misfortune which the genius of Hannibal
inflicted on his ill-fated army.
Polybius disdains repeating
the silly charge brought against Flaminius, that he rushed into misfortune
through his contempt of the gods. Livy, however, is more punctilious in
preserving traits which are characteristic of Roman manners and sentiment. He
relates, therefore, that, on starting from Arretium, he was thrown from his
horse, but disregarded not only this warning of the gods, but another also
which still more plainly bade him stay. An ensign-bearer being unable with all
his strength to pull the ensign out of the ground, Flaminius ordered it to be
dug out. On the other hand, Polybius prefers a graver charge against the
unfortunate general. He says that he was urged by political considerations—by
the fear of losing the popular favour; that he wished to appropriate to himself
the glory of defeating Hannibal without sharing it with his colleague; that he
was puffed up with vanity, and considered himself a great general; and that for
these reasons he was anxious to hurry on an engagement with Hannibal, and rushed
heedlessly into danger. We hold these charges to be unjust, and to be refuted
by the events themselves. If Flaminius had been foolishly eager to bring on an
engagement, he would surely not have waited till Hannibal had advanced as far
as Arretium, still less would he have allowed him to pass by his camp. He would
have gone to meet him, and he would have been able to attack the Punic army
before it had recovered from the fatigues and hardships of a long march across
the Apennines and through the lands inundated by the Arno. He would, then, if
he had been victorious, have prevented the devastation of northern Etruria, and
have secured for himself the glory which he is said to have so much coveted.
Instead of doing this, he remained quietly in his camp; and the fatal battle on
the Thrasymene was not offered by him, but accepted, because he had no chance
of avoiding it. It is no less an invention of his political enemies that, as
Polybius says, Hannibal built his plan on his knowledge of the inconsiderate ardour,
audacity, and vainglorious folly of Flaminius. His faults were too much the
general faults of most Roman consuls to make it necessary for Hannibal to devise
peculiar stratagems against this particular leader.
When, on his march, Hannibal
had passed Cortona, and reached the Lake Thrasymenus (Lago di Perugia), he
resolved to halt and to wait for the Romans, who were closely following him;
and then, having chosen his ground, he made his dispositions for the coming
struggle.
On the northern side of the lake,
where it is skirted by the road from Cortona to Perugia, a steep range of hills
approaches near to the water’s edge, so that the road (from Borglietto to
Magione) passes through a defile, formed by the lake on the right and the
mountains on the left. In one spot only (near the modem village of Tuoro) the
hills recede to some distance, and leave a small expanse of level ground,
bordered on the south by the lake, and everywhere else by steep heights. On
these heights Hannibal drew up his army. With the best portion of his infantry,
the Libyans and Spaniards, he occupied a hill jutting out into the middle of
the plain. On his left or eastern side he placed the slingers and other light
troops; on his right be drew up the Gauls, and beyond them his cavalry, on the
gentler slopes as far as the point where the defile begins and where he
expected the advance of the Romans. Probably the ground near the lake was marshy,
and consequently the road wound along the foot of the hills, where they receded
from the water.
Late in the evening of the day
on which these arrangements were made (it was still April), Flaminius arrived
in the neighbourhood, and encamped for the night not far from the lake. Early
the next morning he continued his march, anxious to keep close up to the enemy,
and not suspecting that the lion whose track he was following was crouching
close by and was prepared to leap upon him with a sudden bound. A thick mist
had risen from the lake and covered the road and the foot of the hills, while
their summits were shining in the morning sun. Nothing betrayed the presence of
the enemy. With the feeling of perfect security, in regular marching order,
laden with their baggage, the soldiers entered the fatal ground, and the long
line of the army wound along slowly between the lake and the hills. The head of
the column had already passed the small plain on their left, and was marching
along that part of the road where the mountains came close to the waiter’s
edge. The rear-guard had just entered the defile, when suddenly the stillness
of the morning was broken by the wild cry of battle, and the Romans, as if they
were attacked by invisible enemies, were struck down without being able to ward
off or return a blow. Before they could throw down their cumbersome baggage and
seize their arms, the enemy was among them. They rushed in masses from all the
hills at the same time. There was no time to form into order of battle. Everyone
had to rely on the strength of his own arm and strike for life as well as he
could. In vain Flaminius tried to rally and form his men. They rushed in all
directions upon the enemy or upon each other, wild with dismay and despair. It
was no battle, but a butchery. The office of the general could no longer be to
lead his men, and to superintend and control the fight, but to set the example
of individual courage, and to discharge the duty of the meanest soldier. This
duty Flaminius performed, and he fell in the midst of the brave men whom he had
led to their death. The Romans were slain by thousands, showing in death that
unwavering spirit which so often led them to victory. A few, pushed into the
lake, tried to save their lives by swimming, but the weight of their armour
pressed them down. Others waded into the water as far as they could, but were
mercilessly cut down by the hostile cavalry, or died by their own hands. Only a
body of 6,000 men, which had formed the head of the line of march, cut their way
through the Carthaginians and reached the top of the hills, from which, after
the mist was dispersed, they beheld the terrible carnage below, and saw at the
same time that they were unable to assist their perishing comrades. They
therefore moved forward, and took up a position in a neighbouring village. But
they were soon overtaken by Hannibal’s indefatigable cavalry, under the command
of Maharbal, and were compelled to lay down their arms and surrender.
In three short hours the work
of destruction was finished. Fifteen thousand Romans covered the bloody field.
The prisoners were equally numerous. It appears, from the account of Polybius,
that none escaped. The Roman army was not only defeated but annihilated. The
loss of the Carthaginians, on the other hand, was small. Fifteen hundred men,
for the most part Gauls, had fallen. Hannibal honoured thirty of the more
distinguished of them by a solemn funeral. He searched also for the body of the
unfortunate Flaminius, to give him a burial worthy of his rank. But among the
heaps of the slain, the Roman consul, stripped, no doubt, and despoiled of his
insignia, could not be identified. A hostile fate, which exposed him to the
reviling tongue of his political opponents and blackened his memory, deprived
him also of the respect which a generous enemy was ready to bestow. The
prisoners were treated by Hannibal as on the previous occasion. Those of them
who were Romans were kept in chains. The Roman allies obtained their freedom
without ransom, and were assured that Hannibal waged war only with Rome, and
had come to free them from the Roman yoke.
The news of the terrible
slaughter at Lake Thrahymenus reached Rome in the course of the following day.
This time no attempt was made to hide or to colour the truth. Already fugitives
had hastened to Rome, and reported what they had seen or what they apprehended.
The Forum was thronged with an anxious crowd that pressed round the
senate-house, impatient to know what had happened. When at length, towards
evening, the praetor Marcus Pomponius ascended the public platform, and
announced, with a loud voice, ‘We are beaten in a great battle, our army is
destroyed, and Flaminius, the consul, is slain' the people gave themselves up
to their grief without reserve, and the scene was more affecting than even the
carnage of the battle. The senate alone preserved its dignity, and calmly consulted
on the measures necessary for the safety of the town.
Three days later fresh tidings
of evil arrived. The 4,000 horse under the proprietor Centenius, whom the
consul Servilius had dispatched from Ariminum to retard the advance of Hannibal
until he could follow with the bulk of his troops, had fallen in with the
victorious army, and were either cut to pieces or captured by Maharbal’s
cavalry and light troops. By this reverse the army of the second consul, being
deprived of its cavalry, was disabled, and could no longer offer any resistance
to Hannibal’s advance. The Punic horsemen now ranged without control through
southern Etruria, and showed themselves actually at Narnia, scarcely two days’
march from
Rome.
The most serious apprehensions
for the safety of the city appeared not unfounded. Between Hannibal and Rome
there now intervened no army in the field. One army was destroyed and the other
was far away in Umbria, crippled and unable to oppose the enemy. The boldest
resolutions could be expected of a general like Hannibal. Nothing seemed to be
able to stop or retard the progress of the man who passed through Italy like a
devastating element, crushing all resistance and setting all obstacles at
nought. Nevertheless the men of Rome did not despair.
The senate remained united for
several days in a permanent consultation from morning until evening, and, by
its gravity and firmness, gradually inspired the terrified people with some
degree of confidence and hope. Measures were taken immediately for the defence
of the city. The bridges over the Tiber and other rivers were destroyed, stones
and projectiles accumulated, and the walls put in a state of defence. The arms
which were hung up in the temples as trophies of war were taken down and distributed
to old soldiers. Above all things, a new head was given to the state. The times
were, remembered when men like Cincinnatus and Camillus, invested with unlimited
authority, had saved the republic from imminent danger. The ancient office of
the dictatorship had almost fallen into oblivion. The living generation of
younger men knew of it only from the tales of their fathers. Thirty-two years
had passed since, in the darkest period of the first Punic war, after the great
defeat at Drepana, a dictator had been chosen. Now, in the overwhelming
violence of the tempest, this often tested sheet anchor was tried again. But it
was not possible to appoint a dictator according to the forms and rules of the
old law. A consul ought to nominate the dictator; but Flaminius was dead, and
between Servilius and Rome stood the hostile army. A mode of appointing a
dictator was therefore adopted which had never been resorted to before, and was
never applied again. A pro-dictator and a master of the horse were elected by
popular suffrage. The man selected was Q. Fabius Maximus, who had served the
state honourably in many public functions, and who belonged to a noble and at
the same time moderate patrician house, which from the earliest ages of the
republic, and especially in the Samnite wars, had proved its warlike abilities.
Q. Fabius was not a bold, enterprising general, but a man of firmness and
intrepidity; and it was precisely such a man that Rome required at a time when
adversity was threatening on all sides.
The first task of the dictator
was to restore the shaken faith in the national gods. There was no hope of
salvation from the present calamity, unless the gods were duly propitiated. It
was clear that, not the sword of the enemy, but the contempt of the gods, which
Flaminius had been guilty of, was the cause of the great reverses. Now the
impious scoffers had been put to shame, and the forfeited favour of the
outraged deity could only be regained by penitence and submission to the sacred
rites of the national religion. The Sibylline books were consulted. On their
advice the dictator vowed a temple to the Erycinian Venus, and the praetor T.
Otacilius promised a temple to the goddess Reason (Mens). For the celebration
of the public games the sum of thirty-three thousand three hundred and
thirty-three and one-third pounds of copper was voted; white oxen were
slaughtered as an atoning sacrifice, and the whole population, men, women, and
children, put up their prayers and offerings to the gods. For three continuous
days the six principal pairs of deities were publicly exhibited on couches and
feasted. A solemn vow was made by the community, if the Roman commonwealth of
the Quirites should remain unimpaired for five years, to sacrifice to Jupiter
all the young of swine, sheep, goats, and cattle that should be born in this
year. It was not necessary to devote also the children of men; they fell in
full hecatombs as victims to the god of war on the field of battle.
Having scrupulously fulfilled
the duties to the gods, Fabius addressed himself to military measures. The
first task was to fill up the gap which the fatal battle of Lake Thrasymenus
had made in the armed force. Two new legions were raised. The consul Servilius
was ordered to come to Rome with his two legions. He met the dictator at
Ocriculum on the Tiber, not far from Narnia. Here the Roman soldiers who had
never been commanded by a dictator saw for the first time that his power in the
state was supreme. When the consul was drawing near the dictator, the latter
commanded him to dismiss his lictors, and to appear alone before his superior,
who was preceded by twenty-four lictors.
Meanwhile more evil news had
arrived. A fleet of transports, destined for the legions in Spain, had been
surprised and taken by the Carthaginians near Cosa on the coast of Etruria.
Upon this news Servilius was sent to Ostia, to arm and equip the Roman ships in
that port. Out of the lower class of people he enrolled seamen for the fleet
and a body of soldiers to serve as a garrison for the city. Already the
pressure of war was felt, and was producing alarming symptoms. In spite of the
apparently inexhaustible population of Italy, in spite of the vast superiority
of Rome over Carthage in men trained to war—the point in which the
preponderance of Rome chiefly lay—the Romans were obliged, in the second year
of the war, to take soldiers from a class of citizens which in the good old
time was looked upon as unworthy of the honourable service of war. From among
the freedmen, the descendants of manumitted slaves, those were enrolled who
were fathers of families, and seemed to have given pledges to the state for
their fidelity in its service. The time was not yet come, but it was
approaching, when the proud city would be compelled to arm the hands of slaves
in her defence.
The apprehension that
Hannibal, after his victory over Flaminius, would march straight upon Rome,
proved unfounded. Hannibal knew perfectly well that, with his reduced army, his
few remaining Spanish and African veterans, and with the unsteady Gauls, he
could not lay siege to such a town as Rome. His plan had been from the very
beginning to induce the Roman allies to revolt, and in union with them to
strike at the head of his foe. He calculated above all on the Sabellian nations
in the heart of Italy. They had offered the longest and stoutest resistance to
the Roman supremacy. If he succeeded in gaining their co-operation, his great
plan was realised, Carthage was avenged, and Rome annihilated or permanently
weakened. Hannibal therefore did not remain long in Etruria, which was entirely
in his power, and where he would have found ample resources and booty for his
army. It seems that he did not expect much help from the Etruscans, who were
too fond of peace and quiet, and looked upon his allies, the Gauls, their old
national enemies and despoilers, with unmitigated distrust. After an
unsuccessful attempt to surprise Spoletium, he marched westwards, through
Umbria and Picenum, to the coast of the Adriatic. These rich and
well-cultivated districts now felt the scourge of war. The Roman settlers, who,
since the agrarian law of Flaminius, were very numerous in Picenum, suffered
most. No doubt Hannibal followed the same rule which since his first victory he
had observed with regard to the Roman citizens and Roman allies that fell into
his hands. The former he had treated, if not cruelly, yet with harshness and
severity, by keeping them as prisoners and loading them with chains. The latter
he had endeavoured to gain over by his generosity, and had dismissed them
without ransom. There is something, therefore, perplexing in the statement of
Polybius, that Hannibal now put to death all the men capable of bearing arms
that fell into his hands. We have no hesitation in declaring this to be a pure
fiction or a gross exaggeration. By such an act of cruelty, Hannibal, even if
he had been capable of it, would have interfered with the success of his own
plan. But we can hardly hold him capable of causing the murder of inoffensive
people, when the utmost severity he showed to soldiers taken in battle was
imprisonment. The Roman reports were therefore either inspired by national
hatred, or caused by isolated acts of barbarity, such as occur even in the best
disciplined armies, not with the sanction, but against the explicit order of
the commander-in-chief.
Yet, though in all probability
the lives of the people of Picenum were spared, their property was forfeited to
the wants and the rapacity of the invading host. Hannibal’s soldiers had not
yet recovered from the hardships of the preceding winter and spring, and from
their wounds received in battle. A malignant skin disease was spread among
them. The horses were overworked and in wretched condition. Now, in the
beautiful mild spring weather, Hannibal gave his army time to repose and to
recover. The country on the Adriatic produced wine, oil, corn, fruit in
abundance. There was more than could be consumed or carried away. Now, at
length, the army was in the possession and enjoyment of the rich land which on
the snow-covered heights of the Alps had been promised to them as the reward
for their fidelity, courage, and endurance.
But the time had not yet
arrived for mere enjoyment and repose, as if the hardships of war were all
over. Hannibal made use of the short interval of rest, the fruit of his
victory, to arm a portion of his army in the Roman style. The quantities of
arms taken in battle sufficed to equip the African infantry with the short
swords and the large shields of the Roman legionary soldiers. We cannot imagine
a more striking proof of the superiority of the Roman equipment, and
consequently of the instinctive aptitude of the Roman people for war, than the
fact that the greatest general of antiquity, in the heart of the hostile
country, exchanged the accustomed native armament of his soldiers for that of
the Romans.
A march of ten days had
brought Hannibal from the lake Thrasymenus across the Apennines to the shore of
the Adriatic. Having reached the sea coast, he renewed the communication with
Carthage which had long been interrupted, and sent home the first direct and
official report of his victorious career. Of course the Carthaginians were not
ignorant of his proceedings. The sudden withdrawal of the Roman legions, which
had been sent to Sicily for an expedition into Africa, was in itself a
sufficient intimation that the Romans were attacked in Italy. Carthaginian
cruisers hovered about the Italian coasts. At Cosa, on the coast of Etruria, a
fleet of Roman transports had been taken. The state of affairs in Italy was
therefore, on the whole, perfectly well known in Carthage. Nevertheless, the
first direct message from Hannibal, and the authentic narrative of his immense
success, produced raptures of joy and enthusiasm, which showed that Hannibal
was supported by the consentient voice of his countrymen. The Carthaginians
resolved to continue with all their strength the war in Italy and Spain, and to
reinforce in every possible manner, not only Hannibal, but his brother
Hasdrubal in Spain.
Having completely restored and
reorganised his army, Hannibal left the sea-board, and marched again into the
midland parts of Italy, where the genuine Italians lived, who vied with the
Romans and Latins for the prize of courage. He passed through the country of
the Marsians, Marrucinians, and Pelignians into the northern part of Apulia,
called Daunia. Everywhere he offered his friendship and alliance for a war with
Rome, but everywhere he met with refusals. Not a single town opened her gates
to him. All were as yet unshaken in their fidelity to Rome. No doubt this
fidelity was due in part to the character of the Roman government, which was
not unjust or oppressive, and allowed to the subjects a full measure of
self-government and partly it was produced by fear of the revenge which Rome
would take if in the end she proved victorious. But it is apparent that another
motive operated at the same time. A feeling of Italian nationality had grown
up. The Italians had been bound together with the Romans by the fear which they
both entertained of the Gauls, the worst enemies of their fertile country. As
the numerous tribes of Greeks learnt to feel and act as one nation in their
common war with the Persians, thus the Italians first became conscious of being
a kindred race in consequence of the repeated invasions of the Gauls, and they
learnt to look for safety in a close union under the leadership of Rome. These
Gauls, the hereditary enemies of all Italy, were now the most numerous
combatants in Hannibal’s army. It was chiefly their cooperation that made the
present war so terrible, and threatened universal devastation, ruin, and
extermination. These feelings of the Italians were the disturbing force which crossed
Hannibal’s expectations. Nevertheless, he did not yet despair of the ultimate
success of his plan. Perhaps his sword could yet break the charm which bound up
the Italians with Rome. If they were acted upon mainly by fear, he had only to
show that he was more to be feared than the Romans, and that they risked more
in remaining faithful to their masters than in joining the invader.
The fidelity of the allies was
justified by the firmness which the Romans displayed. Stunned for a moment by
the terrible blow of the late battle, the senate had speedily recovered its
composure, its confidence, and its genuine Roman determination. There were no
thoughts of yielding, of compromise, or peace; but the spirit of unwavering
resistance animated the senate and every individual Roman. Not a single soldier
was withdrawn from Spain, Sardinia, or Sicily. The spirit with which Rome was
determined to carry on the war was most clearly expressed hi the order issued
to the different Italian districts threatened by the Punic army. It enjoined
the people to take refuge in the nearest fortresses, to set fire to the
farm-houses and villages, to lay waste their fields, and to drive away the
cattle. Italy was to become a desert, rather than support the foreign invaders.
It was in truth not advisable
for a Roman army now to venture on an encounter in the open field with the
irresistible conqueror. The losses of the Trebia and the Thrasymenus could
indeed be quickly replaced by new levies, and Fabius ordered four new legions
to be raised. But the impression produced by the repeated defeats could not be
so easily effaced. The self-confidence of the Roman soldiers was gone. Before
they again crossed swords with the dreaded enemy, they had to learn to look him
in the face. Among the new levies there was, no doubt, a proportion of old
soldiers who had served in former campaigns, but the majority were young
recruits; for the large levies, recently made, could not have been effected
unless the younger men had been enlisted in considerable numbers. The most
difficult task, however, must have been that of replacing the centurions and
higher officers who had fallen in battle; and the want of a sufficient number
of experienced officers must have made the newly-raised legions still more
unfit to encounter Hannibal's formidable veterans.
These circumstances
necessarily imposed on Fabius the utmost caution, even though he had not been
by nature inclined to it. Before he could venture on a battle, he was obliged
to accustom his army to war, and to revive the courage and self-confidence
which generally characterised the Roman soldier. He did this skilfully and
persistently, and thus he rendered the most essential service that any general
could at that time render to the state. He marched (probably with four legions)
through Samnium into northern Apulia, and encamped in the neighbourhood of
Hannibal near Aecae. In vain the latter tried to draw him out of his camp, and
to force on an engagement. Neither the haughty challenges of the Punians, nor
the sight of the devastations which they committed round about, nor the
impatience of Marcus Minucius, his master of the horse, could induce the wary
old Fabius to change his cautious strategy. At length, Hannibal marched past
him into the mountains of Samnium, and thus forced him to follow. But Fabius
followed more cautiously than Flaminius. He was naturally the cunctator,
and moreover he had before his eyes the disaster that had befallen Flaminius.
Hannibal had no chance of coming upon him unawares. He passed through the
country of the Hirpinians and Caudinians without impediment or resistance. For
the third time in this one year he crossed the Apennines, and suddenly appeared
in the Campanian plain. It was to be made clear to all the Italians that the
Punians were masters of Italy, and that no Roman ventured to oppose them.
The plain of Campania was the
garden of Italy. Its fertility is proved by the many flourishing towns which,
in a wide circle, surrounded Capua, the largest and richest of them all.
Hannibal had already found partisans in Capua, and he was in hopes that this
city, which of old was a rival of Rome, would join his cause. Among the
captives whom he bad discharged after the battle on the Thrasymene, there were
three Capuan knights. These had promised their services, and it was no doubt in
order to support and back their plans by the presence of his army that he
appeared now before the town. But the fruit was not yet ripe. Capua, remained
faithful to Rome. Hannibal, therefore, did not remain longer in Campania than
was sufficient to plunder and lay waste the fertile Falernian plain north of
the Volturnus. The dictator Fabius had followed in the track of the enemy
across the Apennines, and was encamped on the summit of the mountain ridge of
Massieus, which, from Casilinum, the modern Capua, on the Volturnus, extends in
a northwesterly direction as far as the sea, and borders the Falernian plain
on the north. From this high and safe position, the Romans could see how the
villages of the plain were consumed by the flames, and how the cultivated fields
were changed into wastes. But nothing could induce Fabius to leave the heights
and to offer battle in the plain. Under these circumstances it appeared that
chance was offering him an opportunity of dealing the enemy a decisive blow.
Hannibal had never had the
intention of winter in in Campania before a strong and large town was in his
possession. He set himself therefore in motion to march back into Apulia, with
immense spoils and with long trains of captured cattle. It seemed feasible to
intercept an army thus encumbered somewhere in the mountainous region which
lay between the plains of Campania and Apulia, a region with which the Romans
had become thoroughly familiar in the Samnite wars, and which was inhabited by
faithful allies. The attempt was actually made. In a spot where the pass over
the mountains was contracted on one side by the river Volturnus, and on the
other by steep declivities, a detachment of 4,000 Romans was posted to block up
the road, whilst Fabius, with the rest of his army, had taken a strong position
on the crest of a hill not far off. But it was not so easy to catch Hannibal in
a trap, nor was the slow and pedantic Fabius the man to do it. No doubt
Hannibal, if he had found it necessary or desirable, might have turned back and
taken another road; but he preferred marching straight on. In order to clear
the pass in front of him, he caused, in the night, a number of oxen, with
bundles of lighted wood fastened to their horns, to be driven against the crest
of the range of hills. The 4,000 men in the pass, deceived by this sight, and
thinking that the Carthaginian army intended to cross the hills in that
direction, left their post in the defile and hastened to the spot on the
heights which they believed to be threatened. But they encountered here only a
few light armed troops, whilst the bulk of the Punic army, with all their
plunder, marched unmolested through the pass, which had been left without
defence. During the disorder and the tumult of the night, Fabius had not
ventured out of his camp; and when day broke, he could just see his soldiers
being driven from the heights with great loss, and the hostile army winding
through the defile and beyond his reach.
Again Hannibal marched through
Samnium and crossed the Apennines for the fourth time in the same year (217 )to
take up his winter-quarters in the sunny plain of Apulia. He occupied the town
of Geronium between the rivers Tifernus and Trento, and established his
magazines in it. For his army he constructed a fortified camp outside the town.
Two-thirds of his troops he dispatched in every direction to collect supplies,
while with the remaining third he kept Fabius in check, who had again followed
him, without however venturing so near as to risk a battle. But during a
temporary absence of the dictator, who had been obliged to go to Rome for the
performance of some religious ceremonies, Minucius, the master of the horse,
being left in command of the Roman forces, made an attempt to check the predatory
excursions of the Carthaginians, and, as he boasted in a report to the senate,
he actually succeeded in gaining some advantages. Upon this news becoming known
to the people, a storm of indignation broke loose against Fabius. Had Rome
fallen so low, the people asked, that they must give up Italy as a helpless
prey to the haughty invader, that they must suffer him to inarch unopposed
wherever he listed through the length and breadth of the peninsula, and to
pillage and waste it with his African, Spanish, and Gaulish hordes? Surely it
was not the duty of a Roman army to follow the enemy, to keep cautiously in a
safe camp, and quietly to look on whilst the whole country was being
devastated. How could it be expected that the allies would remain faithful in their
allegiance if they were left exposed to all the horrors of war? Were not the
Roman soldiers men of the same race that had repeatedly struck down the Gauls,
and in a war of twenty years had wrested Sicily from these Carthaginians? But
there was no doubt of the warlike spirit of the soldiers; the general only
lacked resolution and courage. Minucius had just shown that Hannibal was not
unconquerable, and if only the brave master of the horse had freedom of action,
perhaps the disastrous war might now be ended with one blow.
Such views found favour in
Rome, especially with the multitude, which felt most keenly the pressure of
war, and was already impatient for peace. In the assembly of the tribes,
accordingly, the foolish proposal was made to equalise Minucius and Fabius in
the command of the army; that is to say, to destroy that unity of direction and
the master authority which gave its chief value to the dictatorship in
comparison with the divided command of the consuls. In the old time, when the
office of the dictator was better understood as an embodiment of the majesty
and authority of the whole state, it would have been impossible thus to curtail
the dictatorial power. Now, however, the terrible disasters of the war had
produced the effect which may be observed in the case of sick persons who have
tried several remedies in vain, and are almost given up for lost. The usual and
regular treatment is abandoned, and the chance remedy of some impudent quack is
adopted in sheer despair. The Roman people, generally so sober, composed, and
self-collected, so conservative and so full of confidence in their ancient
institutions, suddenly became reckless innovators and undid their own work.
On his return into Apulia,
Fabius made an arrangement with Minucius to the effect that the legions should
be divided between them, and that each should act independently of the other.
Fabius continued in his old practice, and, fortunately for Rome, kept near
Minucius. The latter was burning with impatience to show what he could do now
that he was no longer hampered by the old pedant’s timidity. Hannibal was
delighted at the prospect of a battle which he had been anxious to bring about
with the whole Roman army, and which was now offered by one-half of it. He
again chose the battlefield with his accustomed skill, and concealed a body of
5,000 men in ambush. The battle was quickly decided, and would have ended in a
rout of the Romans as complete as that of the Trebia, if Fabius ha not come up
just in time to cover the retreat of his rival. Minucius felt so shamed and
humbled that he laid down his independent command, and voluntarily resumed his
position as master of the horse under the dictator, until, after the expiration
of the six months of extraordinary command, both abdicated and handed over the
legions to the consul of the year, Cn. Servilius, and his colleague, M.
Attilius Regulus, who had in the meantime been elected in the place of
Flaminius. The situation of affairs in Apulia remained unaltered. Hannibal, in
his camp before Geronium, awaited the winter with well-filled
magazines. The Romans contented themselves with watching his movements,
and both parties made their preparations for the campaign of the ensuing year
(21(5 B.C.).
The skill, caution, and
firmness of Fabius had given Rome time to recover from the stunning blow of the
battle of the Thrasymenus, and to regain self-possession and confidence. Much
was profited by the mere fact that the war came to a sort of standstill; and
the reputation which the ‘cunctator’ Fabius acquired, even among his
contemporaries, of having saved Rome from ruin is not quite undeserved, though
it is clear that his mode of warfare was imperatively commanded by the
circumstances in which he found himself. After the annihilation of the army of
Flaminius, Rome was not in a position to meet the conqueror again in the field,
even if all the troops had been recalled from Spain, Sicily, and Sardinia. It
was necessary to create a new army, to accustom it to war, and to inspire it
with courage. Only two new legions were raised. These, added to the two legions
of Servilius, formed an army which in numbers may have equalled that of
Hannibal, but could not be compared with it in experience, self-reliance, and
general efficiency. It would have been madness, with such an army as this, to
risk a battle, only a few months after the terrible disaster which had befallen
Flaminius. If, nevertheless, the Roman people began to grow impatient and to
clamour for a battle and a victory, we must remember they were no wiser than
the populace generally is, and that they were already suffering grievously from
the calamities and burdens of war.
But the Roman senate was far
indeed from losing its firmness and its wonted spirit of haughty defiance.
Indeed, the greatest danger that could threaten the safety of the commonwealth
had not yet shown itself. The Roman allies and subjects as yet exhibited no
symptom of rebellion, and as long as these remained faithful, the victories of
Hannibal produced only military advantages which might at any time be
counterbalanced by the fortune of war. It was therefore of the first importance
to keep alive among the allies the old faith in the power of Rome, and not to
yield one inch of that proud position which accepted faith and obedience as a
natural duty, and not as a benefit. In this spirit the senate met an offer of
some Greek cities, which sent golden vessels from their temples to Rome as a
voluntary contribution towards the expenses of the war. The senate accepted the
smallest of the presents, in order to honour the intention of the allies, and
returned the remainder with thanks and with the assurance that the Roman
commonwealth did not require any aid. The aged King Hiero of Syracuse, zealous
as ever in his political attachment, to Rome, sent a golden image of the
Goddess of Victory, 300,000 bushels (modii) of wheat, 200,000 of barley,
and 1,000 archers and slingers. This gift was not refused. The golden Victory
was placed for a good omen in the temple of the Capitoline Jupiter. The
supplies of grain and the auxiliary troops were accepted as a tribute due to
the protecting state. In the course of the year ambassadors were sent to the
king of Macedonia, to demand the surrender of Demetrius of Pharos, who had
taken refuge with him. The king of the Illyrians was reminded to pay the tribute
due to Rome, and the Ligurians were warned to abstain from hostilities against
the Roman republic. At the same time the maritime war and the war in Spain were
carried on with vigour. In the latter country the campaign of 217 B.C. had been
opened successfully. Cn. Scipio sailed from Tarraco southwards with a fleet of
thirty-five vessels, in which number there were a few fast-sailing galleys of
Massilia, and defeated at the mouth of the Ebro a superior Carthaginian fleet
of forty ships of war, causing them a loss of twenty-five ships. After this,
when a Carthaginian fleet of seventy sail cruised off Pisa, in the expectation
of falling in with Hannibal, one hundred and twenty Roman ships were sent from
Ostia against them under the command of the consul Servilius. But the Roman
consul, not being able to find the Carthaginian fleet in the Tyrrhenian Sea,
sailed to Lilybaeum, and thence to the coast of Africa. In the smaller Syrtis
he landed on the island of Meninx, which he plundered, and from the island of
Cereina he exacted a contribution of war amounting to 10,000 silver talents. He
even ventured to land on the coast of Africa, but was repulsed with great loss.
Having, on his return voyage, taken possession of the small island of Cossyra,
he landed at Lilybaeum, and proceeded by the land route through Sicily and
southern Italy to Rome, in order, after the expiration of the dictatorship of
Fabius, to assume the command of the army in Apulia with his colleague Atilius
Regulus.
Meanwhile Publius Scipio, the
consul of the year 218, had been sent to Spain with a reinforcement of thirty
vessels and 8,000 men. The senate considered the war in Spain to be so
important that, even after the annihilation of the Flaminian army, when Hannibal
seemed to be threatening Rome and was laying waste central Italy without
opposition, this considerable force was withdrawn from the protection of Italy
and sent to that distant country. The Romans thought that Hannibal would be
isolated and powerless in Italy, if they could but prevent reinforcements being
sent to him from Spain. The two brothers Scipio carried on the war in that
country not less by the arts of persuasion than by the force of arms. They
endeavoured to gain the friendship of the numerous independent tribes, and they
skilfully availed themselves of the discontent which the recently imposed
dominion of Carthage had called forth. Nor did they disdain to make use of
treason. It is related that a Spanish chief, called Abelux, in order to gain
the favour of the Romans, delivered into their hands a number of Spanish
hostages, which were then detained by the Carthaginians in Saguntum. These
hostages the Scipios sent back to their friends, and thus gained for themselves
the reputation of generosity without any cost or sacrifice. Their military
enterprises were confined to a few expeditions into the country south of the
Ebro, which, however, did not result in any serious collision with the
Carthaginians.
If ever there was a time when
unity was necessary among the citizens of Rome, to avert the threatened
downfall of the republic, it was in the first few years of the Hannibalian war.
Even the unconditional abandonment of party spirit and the most hearty and
devoted patriotism seemed hardly able to save the commonwealth. Nevertheless it
was precisely at this time that dissension showed itself again, and that civil
discord threatened to break out. Flaminius had been raised to the consulship
chiefly as leader of the democratic party. If he had been able to defeat
Hannibal, the popular cause would at the same time have triumphed over the
privileged class. But the liberal politician happened to be an unsuccessful
general. Through his defeat and death the nobility gained the upper hand, and
Fabius was chosen to restore its full supremacy and prestige. This called forth
in Rome a violent opposition. His apparent timidity, his slowness and
indifference to the sufferings of the ravaged country, supplied his opponents
with grounds for leaving to the charge of the nobility the intentional
prolongation of the war, and enabled them at last to limit his dictatorial
power by the decree which raised Minucius to an independent command. This last
imprudent measure had been carried chiefly through the influence of C. Terentius
Varro, a man who, in spite of his low birth, had been raised successively to
several of the high offices of the republic, from the quaestorship upwards, and
was now actually a candidate for the consulship. He evidently enjoyed the full
confidence of the people, and he was consequently elected for the year 216, in
spite of the opposition of the nobility, whilst of three patrician candidates
none obtained a sufficient number of votes. Thus Varro, being alone elected,
held the comitia for the election of a colleague, and used his influence in
favour of Lucius Aemilius Paulus, a man of well-known military capacity. Paulus
had, three years before, commanded in Illyria, and had in a very short time
brought that war to a successful issue; he had afterwards been suspected of
dishonesty in the division of the spoil, but had escaped condemnation, and now
enjoyed the confidence of the nobility in fuller measure, as, in opposition to
the plebeian Varro, he represented the principles of the old families. The
annalists have accordingly shown him especial favour, and have done their best
to throw the blame for the great misfortune that was about to befall Rome on
the shoulders of his colleague Varro, the butcher’s son.
It had become evident that
Hannibal could not be conquered by a Roman army of equal strength. Four legions
opposed to him could do no more than watch and embarrass his movements, and
limit his freedom of foraging and of plundering the country, even though they
might, under favourable circumstances, venture to attack detached portions of
the enemy. This had been the practice of Fabius; it had answered its purpose
for the time, but it was not calculated to bring the war to an end, and, by
exposing the Italians for an indefinite period to the calamities of war, it
tried their fidelity too long. The Romans now resolved to end this state of
things before it was too late, and before either the allies should revolt or
reinforcements reach Hannibal from. Africa or Spain. The senate resolved to add
four new legions to those of the preceding year, and to raise the strength of
each legion from 4,200 foot and 200 horse to 5,000 foot and 300 horse. Thus the
army opposed to Hannibal numbered, with the allies, not less than 80,000 foot
and 6,000 horse. It was a force larger than any that Rome had ever sent against
an enemy. On the Trebia and the Thrasymenus the Roman armies had reached only
half that strength, and in the earlier wars a single consular army of two
legions had generally been sufficient. But now the object was to crush Hannibal
by an overwhelming force, and the new consuls received positive orders from the
senate to offer a battle.
This was, indeed, not only
advisable but absolutely necessary. An army of nearly 90,000 men could only
with the greatest difficulty be fed in a country which, almost for a whole
year, had been made to support both the Roman and the Carthaginian armies, and
which was no doubt thoroughly exhausted. Moreover, Hannibal had, before the
arrival of the new consuls, left his position near Geronium, and had seized the
citadel of Cannae, not far from the sea, on the south of the river Aufidus,
where the Romans had established a magazine for the supply of their army. The
eight legions were therefore obliged to retire to another part of the country,
or to risk a battle.
According to the account of
the Roman annalists, which Polybius adopted, the two consuls could not agree on
the plan of battle to be adopted. Varro, carried away, it was said, with blind
self-confidence, hurried on a decision, as soon as the hostile armies were in
front of each other, whilst the more cautious Aemilius, following in the footsteps
of Fabius, urged that they should avoid a battle in the plains of Apulia, where
Hannibal’s superior cavalry had free scope to act. But the successfulness of a
skirmish among the outposts had the effect, perhaps intended by Hannibal, of
raising the courage of the Romans and inducing them to move forward. They now
established their camp on the right bank of the Aufidus, not far from the camp of
Hannibal.
The two consuls had the chief
command of the army in turn on alternate days. This arrangement, which seemed
purposely devised to exclude uniformity and systematic order from the strategic
movements, may have been good enough in a war with barbarians; but in a contest
with Hannibal it went far towards neutralising all the advantages which the
innate courage of the Romans and their great superiority in numbers gave them.
It is no doubt an exaggeration that Varro alone was responsible for the advancing
movement of the Roman army into the immediate proximity of the enemy, and for
the necessity of accepting the battle which was the inevitable result. It
appears, on the contrary, that both Paulus and Varro, in conformity with the
orders of the senate and by the force of circumstances, made no attempt to
avoid a battle; but if the views of the two consuls did not agree in every
respect, if one of them hurried on the decision whilst the other preferred to
wait for ever so short a time, it is possible that one of them could compel his
colleague to accept the very conditions of battle which he had from the first
disapproved.
The two armies were now so
near each other that a battle was inevitable; and this was clear to Aemilius
Paulus himself. On the day, therefore, on which he had the supreme command he
divided the legions, and passed with about one-third of his forces from the
camp which was on the right bank of the Aufidus, to the left bank, where, a
short distance lower down and nearer to the enemy, he erected a second and
smaller camp. This movement towards the Carthaginian army was evidently a
challenge, and shows very clearly with what degree of security and
self-confidence the Roman armies could manoeuvre in the immediate neighbourhood
of the enemy. Hannibal was highly delighted at the resolution of the Romans. A
whole year had passed since the battle on the lake Thrasymenus, a year in which
all his attempts to bring on a battle had been vain. Now, at length, his wish
was gratified, and, confident of success, he looked forward to the great passage
of arms which was to arbitrate between his own country and her deadly foe.
In Rome the collision between
the two armies was looked for day after day, and the town was in the most
anxious suspense. After the repeated disasters of the last two years, the
confident expectation of victory was gone. Like a desperate gambler, Rome had
now doubled her stake; and if fortune went against her once more, it seemed
that all must be irrecoverably lost. At such times man feels keenly his
dependence on higher powers. The Romans especially were liable to convulsions
of superstitious fear; they were, as Polybius says, powerful in prayers; when
great dangers threatened, they implored gods and men for help, and thought no
practices unbecoming or unworthy of them that are usual under such
circumstances. Accordingly the population was feverish with religious
excitement; the temples were crowded, the gods besieged with prayers and
sacrifices; warnings and prophecies of old seers were in everybody’s mouth, and
every house and every heart was divided between hope and fear.
The Aufidus (now called
Ofanto) is the most considerable of the numerous coast-rivers which flow
eastward from the Apennines into the Adriatic Sea; but its broad bed is filled
only in winter and spring. It was now the early part of summer, about the
middle of June; and the river was so narrow and shallow that it could be
crossed everywhere without any serious difficulty. In the neighbourhood of the
smaller Roman camp the Aufidus made a sudden sharp bend towards the south or
southeast, and after a short distance turned again to the northeast, which is
the general direction of its course. Here, on the left or northern bank, was
the battle-field selected by Varro. In the larger camp on the right bank of the
river, and a little way higher up, he left only a garrison of 10,000 men, with
orders to attack, during the battle, the Carthaginian camp, which was on the
same side of the river, and thus to divide the attention and the forces of the
enemy. With the remainder of his infantry and 6,000 horse he crossed the
Aufidus, and drew up his army in the usual manner, having the legions in the
middle and the cavalry on the wings, with his front looking southward and the
river on his right. As the infantry consisted of eight legions, the front ought
to have had twice the length of two usual consular armies. But instead of
doubling the breadth of front Varro doubled the depth, probably for the purpose
of using the new levies, not for the attack, but for increasing the pressure of
the attacking column. Thus it happened that, in spite of the great numerical
superiority of the Romans, they did not present a broader front than the
Carthaginians. On the right flank of the infantry, leaning on the river, stood
the Roman horse, which contained the sons of the noblest families, and formed
the flower of the army. The much more numerous cavalry of the allies was
stationed on the left wing. Before the front there were, as usual, the light
troops, which always began the engagement, and retired through the intervals of
the heavy infantry behind the line after they had discharged their weapons. The
Roman cavalry on the right was commanded by Paulus, and the cavalry of the
allies on the left wing by Varro, while Cn. Servilius, the consul of the
preceding year, and Minucius, the master of the horse under Fabius, led the
legions in the centre.
As soon as Hannibal saw that
the Romans offered battle, he also led his troops, 40,000 foot and 10,000
horse, across the river, which he had now in his rear. In taking this position
he risked no more than his situation at the time warranted, for he knew that a
defeat would, under any circumstances, end in the total destruction of his
army, he drew up his infantry opposite the Roman legions; but, instead of forming
them in a straight line, he advanced the Spaniards and Gauls in a semicircle in
the centre, placing the Africans on their right and left, but at some distance
behind them. On his left wing, by the bank of the Aulidus, and opposed to the
Roman cavalry, were the heavy Spanish and Gaulish horse, under Hasdrubal; on
the right, under Hanno, the light Numidians. Hannibal, with his brave brother
Mago, took his position in the centre of his infantry, to be able to survey and
to guide the battle in every direction. His African infantry was armed in the
Roman fashion with the spoils of his previous victories; the Spaniards wore
white linen coats with red borders, and carried short straight swords, fit for
cut and thrust; the Gauls, naked down to the waist, brandished their long
sabres, suitable only for cutting. The aspect of these huge barbarians, who had
after the recent battles regained the prestige of bravery and invincibility,
could not fail to make a deep impression upon the Roman soldiers, and to fill
them with anxiety and misgivings for the result of the impending conflict.
The sun had been two hours
risen when the battle began. When the light skirmishers had been scattered, the
heavy horsemen of the Carthaginians dashed, in close ranks and with an irresistible
shock, upon the Roman cavalry. For one moment these stood their ground, man
against man, and horse against horse, as if they were welded into one compact
mass. Then this mass began to waver and to be broken up. The Gauls and
Spaniards forced their way among the disorganised squadrons of their
antagonists, and cut them down almost to a man. Pushing forward, they soon
found themselves in the rear of the Roman infantry, and fell upon the allied
cavalry on the left wing of the Romans, which was at the same time attacked in
front by the Numidians. Their appearance in this quarter soon decided the
contest here; the allied horsemen were driven off the field. Hasdrubal
intrusted their pursuit to the Numidians, and fell with all his forces upon the
rear of the Roman infantry, where the young inexperienced troops were placed,
of whom many had never yet met an enemy in the field.
Meanwhile the Roman infantry
had driven in the Spaniards and Gauls who formed the advanced centre of the
Carthaginian line. Pressing against them from the right and the left, the
Romans contracted their front more and more, and advanced like a wedge against
the retiring centre of the Carthaginian army. When they were on the point of
breaking through it, the African infantry on the right and left fell upon the
Roman flanks. At the same time the heavy Spanish and Gaulish cavalry broke upon
them from behind, and the retiring hostile infantry in front returned to the
charge. Thus the huge unwieldy masses of the Roman infantry were
crowded upon one another in helpless confusion and surrounded on all
sides. Whilst the outer ranks were falling fast, thousands stood idle in the
centre, pressed close against each other, unable to strike a blow, penned in
like sheep, and doomed to wait patiently until it should be their turn to be
slaughtered. Never before had Mars, the god of battle, gorged himself so
greedily with the blood of his children. It seems beyond comprehension that in
a close combat, man to man, the conquerors could strike down with cold steel
more than their own number. The physical exertion alone must have been almost
superhuman. The carnage lasted nearly the whole day. Two hours before the sun
went down, the Roman army was annihilated, and more than one-half of it lay
dead on the field of battle. The consul Aemilius Paulus had been wounded at the
very beginning of the conflict, when his horsemen were routed by the
Carthaginian horse. Then he had endeavoured, in spite of his wound, to rally
the infantry and to lead them to the charge; but he could not keep his seat in
the saddle, and fell, unknown, in the general slaughter. The same fate overtook
the proconsul Cn. Servilius, the late master of the horse Minucius, two
quaestors, twenty-one military tribunes, and not less than eighty senators—an
almost incredible number, which shows that the Roman senate consisted not only
of talking but also of fighting men, and was well qualified to be the head of a
warlike people. The consul Terentius Varro, who had commanded the cavalry of
the allies on the left wing, escaped with about seventy horsemen to Venusia.
It was not Hannibal’s custom
to leave his work half-done. Immediately after the battle he took the larger
Roman camp. The attack which its garrison of 10,000 men had made on the
Carthaginian camp during the battle had failed; and the Romans, driven back
behind their ramparts, and despairing of being able to resist the victorious
army, were compelled to surrender. The same fate befell the garrison and the
fugitives who had sought shelter in the smaller camp. Nevertheless, the number
of prisoners was very small in comparison with that of the slain; it amounted
to about 10,000 men. In Canusium, Venusia, and other neighbouring towns, about
3,000 fugitives were rallied. Many more were dispersed in all directions. This
unparalleled victory, which surpassed his boldest expectations, had cost
Hannibal not quite 6,000 men, and among them only two hundred of the brave
horsemen to whom it was principally due.
Great as was the material loss
of the Romans in this most disastrous battle, it was less serious than the
effect produced by it upon the morals of the Roman people. Throughout the whole
course of the war they never quite recovered from the shock which their courage
and self-confidence had sustained. From this time forward Hannibal was invested
in their eyes with supernatural powers. They could no longer venture to face
him like a common mortal enemy of flesh and blood. Their knees trembled at the
very mention of his name, and the bravest man felt unnerved at the thought of
his presence. This dread stood Hannibal in the place of a whole army, and did
battle for him when the war had carried off his African and Spanish veterans,
and when Italian recruits made up the bulk of his forces. How stupefied and
bewildered the Romans felt by the stunning blow at Cannae may be seen from one
striking instance. Several Romans knights, young men of the first families, had
so completely lost all hope of saving their country from utter ruin, that in
their despair they conceived the wild plan of escaping to the sea-coast, and
seeking shelter in some foreign country. From this dishonourable plan they were
diverted only by the energetic intervention of the youthful P. Cornelius
Scipio, who, forcing his way among them, is said to have drawn his sword, and
threatened to run through any one that refused to take an oath never to abandon
his country.
The patriotic annalists did
all that they could to assign as the cause of the Roman defeat the perfidious
cunning of the Punians. This intention becomes especially evident in Appian’s
description of the battle, and in his concluding remarks. It was related that
Hannibal placed a body of men in an ambush, and that during the battle these
men attacked the Romans in the rear; moreover, that five hundred Numidians or
Celtiberians approached the Roman lines under the pretext of desertion, and
being received without suspicion, and left unguarded in the heat of the battle,
attacked the Romans and threw them into confusion. Nature itself was made to
favour the Carthaginians and to help them to gain the victory, like the cold
weather on the Trebia and the mist at the lake Thrasymenus. A violent south
wind carried clouds of dust into the faces of the Romans, without in the least
incommoding the Carthaginians, whose front looked northward. According to
Zonaras, Hannibal had actually calculated upon this friendly wind, and to
increase its efficacy he had on the previous day caused the land which lay to
the south of the battle-field to be ploughed up. In such silly stories some
writers sought consolation for their wounded feelings; but on the whole it
must he confessed that the Roman people, though writhing and suffering under
the blows of Hannibal, and deeply wounded in their national pride, admitted their
defeat frankly, and instead of falsifying it, or obliterating it from their
memory, were spurred on by it to new courage and to a perseverance which could
not fail to lead in the end to victory.
The overthrow at Cannae was so
complete that every other nation but the Romans would at once have given up the
idea of further resistance. It seemed that the pride of Rome must now at last
be humbled, and that she was as helplessly at the mercy of the invader as after
the fatal battle on the Allia. What chance was there now of resisting this foe,
whose victories became only the more crushing as the ranks of the legions
became more dense? Since he had appeared on the south side of the Alps, no
Roman had been able to resist him, and every successive blow which he had dealt
had been harder. It seemed impossible that Italy could any longer bear within
her own limits such an enemy as the Punic army. If Rome was unable to protect
her allies, they had no alternative but to perish or to join the foreign
invader.
This was from the beginning
Hannibal’s calculation; and now it appeared that his boldest hopes were about
to be realised, and that the moment of revenge for the wrongs of Carthage was
approaching. Nevertheless this truly great man was not swayed by the feeling
that he might now indulge in the pleasure of retaliation. More than this
pleasure he valued the safety and the welfare of his country, and he was ready
to sacrifice his personal feelings to higher considerations. In spite of his
victories, he had learnt to appreciate the superior strength of Rome; and
instead of still further trying the fortune of war, he resolved now, in the
full career of victory, to seize the first opportunity for concluding peace.
His envoy, Carthalo, who went to Rome to negotiate about the ransom of the
Roman prisoners, was commissioned by him to show his readiness for entertaining
any proposals of peace which the Romans might be willing to make. But Hannibal
did not know the spirit of the Roman people, if he thought that it was broken
now; and he, like Pyrrhus, was to discover that he had undertaken to fight with
the Hydra.
The feverish excitement which
prevailed in Rome during the time of the expected conflict did not last very
long. Messengers of evil ride fast. Though no official report was sent by the
surviving consul, the news of the defeat reached Rome, nobody knew how, and the
first rumour went even beyond the extent of the actual calamity. It was said
that the whole army was annihilated, and both consuls dead. On this dreadful
day Rome was saved only by the circumstance that the whole breadth of Italy lay
between it and the conqueror. If, as in the first Gallic war, the battle had
been fought within sight of the Capitol, nothing could have saved town from a
second destruction, and Hannibal would not have been bought off, like Brennus,
with a thousand pounds of gold.
The Roman people gave
themselves up to despair. They thought the last, hour of the republic was come,
and many who had lost their nearest friends or relatives in the slaughter of
battle may have been almost indifferent as to any further calamities which
might be in store for them. The city was almost in a state of actual anarchy.
The consuls, and most of the other magistrates, were absent or dead. A small
remnant only of the senate was left in Rome. In one battle eighty senators had
shed their blood, and many, no doubt, were absent with the armies in Gaul,
Spain, Sicily, or elsewhere oil public service. In this urgency the senators
who happened to be on the spot took the reins of government into their hands,
and strove by their calm and dignified firmness to counteract the effects of
the general consternation. Q. Fabius Maximus was the soul of their
deliberations. On his proposition the measures were determined upon which the urgency
of the danger required. Guards were placed at the gates to prevent a general
rush from the city; for it seemed that, as after the rout of the Allia, 174
years before, the terrified citizens thought of seeking shelter elsewhere, and
were giving up Rome for lost. Horsemen were dispatched on the Appian and Latin
roads to gather whatever tidings they could from messengers or fugitives. All
men who could give information were brought before the authorities. Strict orders
were given to prevent vague alarm, and the women who filled the streets with
their lamentations were made to retire into the interior of the houses. All
assemblies and gatherings of the people were broken up, and silence restored in
the city. At length a messenger arrived with a letter from Varro, which
revealed the extent of the calamity. Though it confirmed, on the whole, the
evil tidings which had anticipated it, yet it contained some consolation. One
consul at least, and a portion of the army, had escaped; and (what was the most
welcome news for the present) Hannibal was not on his march to Rome, but still
far away in Apulia, busy with his captives and his booty.
Thus at least a respite was
gained. The old courage returned by degrees. The time for mourning the dead was
limited to thirty days. Measures were taken for raising a new force. A fleet
was lying ready at Ostia, to sail under the command of M. Claudius Marcellus to
Sicily, whence disquieting news had arrived that the Carthaginians had attacked
the Syracusan territory and were threatening Lilybaeum. Under the present
circumstances the anxiety for the safety of Sicily had to give place to the
care for the defence of the capital. A body of 1,500 troops was transferred
from the fleet at Ostia to garrison Rome, and a whole legion from the same
naval force was ordered to march through Campania to Apulia for the purpose of
collecting the scattered remains of the defeated army. With this legion
Marcellus proceeded to Canusium, only three miles from the fatal field of
Canute, and, relieving Varro from the command in Apulia, requested him to
return to Rome. The Roman historians relate, with national pride, that all
civil discord was at once buried in the present danger of the commonwealth,
that the senators went out to meet the defeated consul, and expressed their
thanks to him for not despairing of the republic. Such sentiments were
honourable and worthy of the best days of Rome; but if it were true that Varro
had caused the disaster of Cannae by his folly and incapacity—if indeed he had
forced on the battle against the instructions of the senate and the advice of
his colleague—in that case the acknowledgment of his merits, and the generous
and conciliatory spirit exhibited by the senate, would have been a virtue all
the more questionable inasmuch as it could not fail to have the effect of
reinstating Varro in the confidence of the people and of again intrusting him
with high office. But we have already been constrained to doubt the report of
Varro’s incapacity, and the conduct of the senate after the battle of Cannae
justifies this doubt. In the course of the war Varro rendered his country many
important services, and he was always esteemed a good soldier. On the present
occasion it is reported that the dictatorship was offered to him, but that he
refused it because he considered his defeat at Cannae as a bad omen. Having
nominated M. Junius Pera dictator, he returned at once to the theatre of war,
leaving to the dictator the management of the government, the levying of new
troops, and the duty of presiding over the election of the consuls for the
ensuing year.
Second Period of the Hannibalian WarFROM THE BATTLE OF CANNAE TO THE REVOLUTION IN SYRACUSE, 216-215 B.C.Unvarying success had
accompanied Hannibal from the first moment of his setting foot in Italy, and
had risen higher and higher until it culminated in the crowning victory at
Cannae. From this time the vigour of Hannibal’s attach relaxes; its force seems
spent. The war continues, but it is changed in character; it is spread over a
greater space; its unity and dramatic interest are gone. For Hannibal those
difficulties begin which are inseparable from a campaign in a foreign country
at a great distance from the native resources. His subsequent career in Italy
is not marked by triumphs on the colossal scale of the victories at the Trebia,
the Thrasymenus, and Cannae. He remains indeed the terror of the Romans, and
scatters or crushes on every occasion the legions that venture to oppose him in
the field, but, in spite of the insurrection of many of the Roman allies and of
the undaunted spirit of the Carthaginian government, it becomes now more and
more apparent that the resources of Rome are superior to those of her enemies.
Gradually she rises from her fall. Slowly she recovers strength and confidence.
Yielding on no point, she keeps up vigorously the defensive against
Hannibal, whilst she passes to the offensive in the other theatres of war, in
Spain, Sicily, and finally in Africa; and, having thoroughly reduced and
weakened the strength of her adversary, she deals a last and decisive blew
against Hannibal himself.
Unfortunately we lose after
the battle of Cannae the most valuable witness, on whom we have chiefly relied
for the earlier events of the war. Of the great historical work of Polybius
only the first five books are preserved entire, while of the remaining
thirty-five we have only detached fragments, valuable indeed, but calculated
wore to make us feel the greatness of the loss than to satisfy our
curiosity. Polybius has almost the authority of a contemporary writer, though
the Hannibalian war was ended when he was still a child. He wrote when the
memory of these events was fresh, and information could easily be obtained—when
exaggerations and lies, such as are found in later writers, had not yet
ventured into publicity or found credence. He was conscientious in sifting
evidence, in consulting documents, and visiting the scenes of the events which
he narrates. As a Greek writing on Roman affairs, he was free from that
national vanity which in Roman annalists is often very offensive. Though he
admires Rome and Roman institutions, he brings to bear upon his judgment the
enlightenment of a man trained in all the knowledge of Greece, and of a
statesman and a soldier experienced in the management of public affairs. He is
indeed not free from errors and faults. His intimate friendship with some of
the houses of the Roman nobility biassed his judgment in favour of the
aristocratic government, and his connexion with Scipio-Aemilianus made him,
willingly or unconsciously, the panegyrist of the members of that family. He is
guilty of occasional oversights, omissions, or errors, some of which we have
noticed; but, taking him for all in all, he is one of our truest guides in the
history of the ancient world, and we cannot sufficiently regret the loss of the
greater part of his work. Fortunately the third decade of Livy, which gives a
connected account of the Hannibalian war, is preserved, and we find in the fragments
of Dion Cassius, Diodorus, and Appian, and in the abridgment of Zonaras, as
well as in some other later extracts, occasional opportunities for completing
our knowledge. But it cannot be denied that, with some exceptions, the history
of the war flags after the battle of Cannae. The figure of Hannibal, the most
interesting of all the actors in that great drama, retires more into the
background. We know for certain that he was as great in the years of
comparative, or apparent, inactivity as in the time which ended with the
triumph at Cannae; but we cannot follow him into the recesses of southern
Italy, nor watch his ceaseless labours in organising the means and laying the
plans for carrying on the war in Italy, Sicily, Spain, Greece, Gaul, and in all
the seas. We know that he was ever at work, ready at all times to pounce upon
any Roman army that ventured too near him, terrible as ever to his enemies,
full of resources, unyielding in the face of multiplied difficulties, and
unconquered in battle, until the command of his country summoned him from Italy
to Africa. But of the details of these exploits we have a very inadequate
knowledge, partly because no history of the war written on the Carthaginian
side has been preserved, and partly because the full narrative of Polybius is
lost.
The disaster of Cannae, it
appears, had long been foretold, but the warnings of the friendly deity had
been cast to the winds. More than that, the Roman people had been guilty of a
great offence. The altar of Vesta had been desecrated. Two of her virgins had
broken the vow of chastity. It is true they had grievously atoned for their sin
: one had died a voluntary death, the other had suffered the severe punishment
which the sacred law imposed. She was entombed in her grave alive, and left
there to perish; the wretch who had seduced her was scourged to death in the
public market by the chief pontiff. But the conscience of the people was not at
ease. A complete purification and an act of atonement seemed required to
relieve the feeling of guilt and to regain the favour of the outraged deity.
Accordingly an embassy was sent to Greece to consult the oracle of Apollo at
Delphi. The chief of this embassy was Fabius Pictor, the first writer who
composed a continuous history of Rome from the foundation of the city to his own
time. But even before the reply of the Greek god could be received, something
had to be done to calm the apprehensions of the public, and to set at rest
their religious terrors. The Romans had national prophecies, preserved like the
Sibylline books, with which they were often confounded. These books of fate
were now consulted, and they revealed the pleasure of a barbarous deity, which
again claimed, as during the last Gallic war nine years before, to be appeased
by human sacrifices. A Greet man and a Greek woman, a Gaul and a Gaulish woman
were again buried alive. By such cruel practices the leading men at Rome showed
that they were not prevented by the influence of Greek civilisation and
enlightenment from working on the abject superstition of the multitude, and
from adding to their material strength and patriotic devotion by religious
fanaticism.
The superiority of Rome over
Carthage lay chiefly in the vast military population of Italy, which in one way
or another was subject to the republic and available for the purposes of war.
At the time of the last enumeration, which took place in 225 B.C. on the
occasion of the threatened Gaulish attack, the number of men capable of bearing
arms is said to have amounted to nearly 800,000, and in all probability that statement
fell short of the actual number. Here was a source of power that seemed
inexhaustible. Nevertheless the war had hardly lasted two years before a
difficulty was felt to fill up the gaps which bloody battles had made in the
Roman ranks. Since the engagement on the Ticinus the Romans must have lost in
Italy alone 120,000 men, actually slain or taken prisoners, without reckoning
those who succumbed to disease and the fatigues and privations of the prolonged
campaigns. This loss was felt most severely by the Roman citizens; for these
were kept by Hannibal in captivity whilst the prisoners of the allies were
discharged. Whether the latter were enrolled again, we are not informed. At any
rate a corresponding number of men was spared for the necessary domestic
labour, for agriculture and the various trades; and consequently the allies who
remained faithful to Rome could more easily replace the dead, although they
also had already reached that point of exhaustion where war begins to
undermine, not only the public welfare, but society itself in the first
conditions of its existence. Men capable of bearing arms are, in other words,
men capable of working; and it is upon work that civil society and every
political community is finally based. If, therefore, only one-tenth of the
labour strength of Italy was consumed in two years, and if another tenth was
needed for carrying on the war, we may form an idea of the fearful
disorganisation which was rapidly spreading over Italy, of the check to every
sort of productive industry at a time when the state, deprived of so many of
its most valuable citizens, was obliged to raise its demands in proportion, and
to exact more and more sacrifices from the survivors. The prevalence of slavery
alone explains how it was possible to take away every fifth man from peaceful
occupations and employ him in military service. The institution of slavery,
though incompatible by its very nature with the moral or even the material
progress of man, and though always a social and political evil of the worst
kind, has at certain times been of great temporary advantage; for, by relieving
the free citizens to a great extent from the labour necessary for existence, it
has set them free to devote themselves either to intellectual pursuits, to the
cultivation of science and of art, or to war. We have no direct testimony of
the extent to which slave-labour was employed in Italy at the time of the
second Punic war; but we have certain indications to show that, if not everywhere
in Italy, at least among the Romans, and in all the larger towns, the number of
slaves was very considerable. (The noble Romans were, even in the field,
accompanied by slaves, who served as grooms, or carriers of baggage).
These remarks are suggested by
the statements of the measures which the dictator M. Junius took after the
battle of Cannae for the defence of the country. In order to raise four new
legions and one thousand horse, he was compelled to enroll young men who had
only just entered on the military age; nay, he went even further, and took,
probably as volunteers, boys below the age of seventeen who had not yet
exchanged their purple-bordered toga (the toga praetexta)
the sign of childhood, for the white toga of manhood (the toga virilis).
Thus the legions were completed. For the present Rome had reached the end of
her resources. But the man-devouring war claimed more victims, and the pride of
the Romans stooped to the arming of slaves. Eight thousands of the most
vigorous slaves, who professed their readiness to serve, were selected. They
were bought by the state from their owners, were armed and formed into a
separate body destined to serve by the side of the legions of Roman citizens
and allies. As a reward for brave conduct in the field, they received the
promise of freedom. With these slaves, six thousand criminals and debtors were
set free, and enrolled for military service.
The full significance of this
measure can be appreciated only if we bear in mind how the Roman government
treated those unhappy citizens whom the fortune of had delivered into
captivity. In the first Punic war it had been the practice of the belligerents
to exchange or ransom the prisoners. It seemed a matter of course that the same
practice should be observed now, provided that Hannibal was ready to waive the
strict right of war which gave him permission to employ the prisoners or to
sell them as slaves. From his point of view the last was evidently the most
profitable, for it was his object to weaken Rome as much as possible, and Rome
possessed nothing more precious than her citizens. But, as we have already
noticed, he was led by higher considerations and by a wise policy to seek a
favourable peace with a nation which, even after Cannae, he despaired of
crushing. He selected, therefore, from among the prisoners ten of the foremost
men, and sent them to Rome, accompanied by an officer named Carthalo, with
instructions not only to treat with the senate for the ransom of the prisoners,
but to open at the same time negotiations for peace. But in Rome the genuine
Roman spirit of stubborn defiance had so completely displaced the former fears
that no man thought of even mentioning the possibility of peace; and Hannibal’s
messenger was warned not to approach the city. Thereupon the question was
discussed in the senate, whether the prisoners of war should be ransomed. The
mere possibility of treating this as an open question causes astonishment. The
men whose liberty and lives were at the mercy of Hannibal were not
purchased mercenaries nor strangers. They were the sons and brothers of those
who had sent them forth to battle; they had obeyed the call of their country
and of their duty, they had staked their lives in the field, had fought
valiantly, and were guilty of no crime except this, that with arms in their hands
they had allowed themselves to be overpowered by the enemy, as Roman soldiers
had often done before. But in this war Rome wanted men who rated their lives as
nothing, and were determined rather to die than to flee or surrender. In order
to impress this necessity upon all Roman soldiers, the unfortunate prisoners of
Canute were sacrificed. The senate refused to ransom them, and abandoned them
to the mercy of the conqueror. At the very time when Rome armed slaves in her defence,
she handed over thousands of free born citizens to be sold in the slave-markets
of Utica and Carthage, and to be kept to field labour under the burning sun of
Africa. We may admire the grandeur of the Roman spirit, and from some points of
view it is worthy of admiration; but we are bound to express our horror and
detestation of the idol of national greatness to which the Romans sacrificed
their own children in cold blood.
As if they could excuse or
palliate the inhuman severity of the Roman senate by painting in a still more
odious light the character of the Punic general, some among the Roman annalists
related that Hannibal, from spite, vexation, and inveterate hatred of the Roman
people, now began to vent his rage on his unfortunate prisoners, and to torment
them with the most exquisite cruelty. Many of them, they said, he killed, and
from the heaped up corpses he made dams for crossing rivers; some, who broke
down under the weight of the baggage which they had to carry on the marches, he
caused to be maimed by having their tendons cut; the noblest of them he
compelled to fight with one another like gladiators, for the amusement of his
soldiers, selecting, with genuine Punic inhumanity, the nearest
relations—fathers, sons, and brothers—to shed each other’s blood. But, as
Diodorus relates, neither blows, nor goads, nor fire could compel the noble
Romans to violate the laws of nature, and impiously to imbrue their hands with
the blood of those who were nearest and dearest to them. According to Pliny, the
only survivor in these horrid combats was made to fight with an elephant, and
when he had killed the brute, he received indeed his freedom, which was the
price that Hannibal had promised for his victory, but shortly after he had left
the Carthaginian camp, he was overtaken by Numidian horsemen and cut down. If
such detestable cruelties were really within the range of possibility, we
should have to accuse, not only those who inflicted them, but those also who,
by refusing to ransom the prisoners, exposed them to such a fate. But the silence
of Polybius, and still more the silence of Livy, who would have found in the
sufferings of the Roman prisoners a most welcome opportunity for rhetorical
declamations on Punic barbarity, are sufficient to prove that the alleged acts
of cruelty are altogether without foundation, and that they were invented for
the purpose of representing Hannibal in an odious light, and of raising the
character of the Romans at the expense of that of the Carthaginians.
When, on the evening of the
bloody day of Cannae, Hannibal rode over the battle-field, he is reported by
Appian to have burst into tears, and to have exclaimed like Pyrrhus, that he
did not hope for another victory like this. It is possible that credulous
Romans may have found in this childish story some consolation for the soreness
of their national feelings. Put an impartial observer cannot but feel convinced
that Hannibal’s heart must have swelled with pride and hope when he surveyed
the whole extent of his unparalleled victory, and that he considered it cheaply
purchased by the loss of only 6,000 of his brave warriors. But he did not allow
himself to be carried away by the natural enthusiasm which caused the impetuous
Maharbal, the commander of his light Numidian cavalry, to urge an immediate
advance upon Rome, and so to put an end to the war in one run. “If”, said
Maharbal, “you will let me lead the horse forthwith, and follow quickly, you
shall dine on the Capitol in five days”. We may be sure that Hannibal, without
waiting for Maharbal’s advice, had maturely considered the question whether the
hostile capital, the final goal of his expedition, were within his reach at
this moment. He decided that it was not, and we can scarcely presume to accuse
the first general of antiquity of an error of judgment, and to maintain that he
missed the favourable moment for crowning all his preceding victories. All that
we can do is to endeavour to discover the motives which may have kept him from
an immediate advance upon Rome.
After the battle of Cannae,
Hannibal’s army numbered still about 44,000 men. It was surely possible with
such a force as this to penetrate straight through the mountains of Samnium,
and through Campania into Latium, without encountering any formidable
resistance. But this march could not be accomplished in less than ten or eleven
days, even if the army were not delayed by any obstacles, and marched ever so
fast. The interval of time which must thus elapse between the arrival of news
from the battlefield and the approach of the hostile army, would enable the
Romans to make preparations for defence, and excluded, accordingly, the
possibility of a surprise. Rome was not an open city, but strongly fortified by
its situation and by art. Every Roman citizen up to the age of sixty was able
to defend the walls, and thus, even if no reserve was at hand (which Hannibal
could not take for granted), Rome was not helplessly at the mercy of an
advancing army.
Failing to take Rome by a
surprise, Hannibal would have been compelled to besiege it in form. This was an
undertaking for which his strength was insufficient. His army was not even
numerous enough to blockade the city and to cut off supplies and reinforcements
from without. What could, therefore, be the result of a mere demonstration
against Rome, even if it was practicable and involved no risk? It was of far
greater importance to gather the certain fruits of victory—to obtain, by the
conquest of some fortified towns, a new basis of operations in the south of
Italy, such as he had not had since his advance from Cisalpine Gaul. Now, at
last, the moment had come when Hannibal might expect to be joined by the Roman
allies. The battle of Cannae had shaken their confidence in the power of Rome
to protect them if faithful, or to punish their revolt; and thus were severed
the strongest bonds which had hitherto secured their obedience. If Hannibal now
succeeded in gaining them over to his side, his deep-laid plan would be
brilliantly realised, and Rome would be more completely and securely overpowered
than if he had stormed the Capitol.
Keeping this end steadily in
view, Hannibal again acted precisely as he had done after his previous
victories. He set the captured allies of the Romans free without ransom, and
dismissed them to their respective homes, with the assurance that he had come
to Italy to wage war, not with them, but with the Romans, the common enemies of
Carthage and Italy. He promised them, if they would join him, his assistance
for the recovery of their independence and their lost possessions, threatening
them at the same time with severe punishment if they should still continue to
show themselves hostile.
It causes just astonishment,
and it is a convincing proof of the political wisdom and the fitness of the
Roman people to rule the world, that even now the great majority of their
Italian subjects remained faithful in their allegiance. Not only the citizens
of the thirty-five tribes, of whom many had received the Roman franchise not as
a boon, but as a, punishment—not only all the colonies, Roman as well as Latin—but
also the whole Etruria, Umbria, Picenum, the genuine Sabellian races of the
Sabines, Marsians, Pelignians, Vestinians, Frentamans, and Marrucinians, the
Pentrian Samnites, and the Campanians, as well as all the Greek cities,
remained faithful to Rome. Only in Apulia, in southern Samnium, where the
Caudinians and Hirpinians lived, in Lucania and Bruttium, and especially in the
city of Capua, more or less readiness was shown to revolt from Rome; but even
in those places, where the greatest hostility against Rome prevailed, there was
not a trace of attachment to Carthage, and everywhere there was found a zealous
Roman party which opposed the Carthaginian alliance. This was, as we have
hinted above, partly the consequence of the national antipathy of Italians and
Punians, between natives and foreigners; partly it was the alliance of Hannibal
with the Gauls, which made the Italians averse to join the invader; partly that
dread of Roman revenge, of which, even after Cannae, they could not rid
themselves. But it was mainly the political unity under the supremacy of Rome,
which, in spite of isolated defections, bound the various races of Italy into
indissoluble union, and in the end prevailed even over the genius of Hannibal.
When the Apulian towns of
Arpi, Salapia, and Herdonea, and the insignificant and all but unknown Uzentum
in the extreme south of Calabria, had embraced the Carthaginian cause, Hannibal
marched along the Aufidus into Samnium, where the town of Compsa opened her gates
to him. A portion of his army he sent under Hanno to Lucania for the purpose of
organising a general insurrection among the restless population of that
district; another portion, under the command of his brother Mago, he dispatched
to Bruttium with the same commission, whilst he himself marched with the bulk
of his army into Campania. The Lucanians and Bruttians were ready to rise
against Rome. Doubtless they chafed impatiently under a government which
obliged them to keep the peace; they regretted their former licence of ravaging
and plundering the land of their Greek neighbours, and they hoped, with
Hannibal’s sanction, to be able to resume on a large scale those practices of
brigandage to which they had been so long addicted. Only two insignificant towns,
Consentia and Petelia, remained faithful to Rome, and were taken by force,
after an obstinate resistance.
From a port on the Bruttian
coast Mago now sailed to Carthage, and conveyed to the government Hannibal's
report of his last and most glorious victory, as also his views and wishes with
regard to the manner of conducting the war for the future. After the battle of
Cannae the character of the war in Italy was changed. Up to that time the
Romans had defended themselves so vigorously that they might almost be said to
have acted on the offensive. They had striven to beat Hannibal in the field,
opposing to him first an equal, then a double force. They resolved now to
confine themselves entirely to the defensive, and indeed from this time to the
end of the war they never ventured on a decisive battle with Hannibal. The
Carthaginians had military possession of a large portion of southern Italy.
Hannibal had no difficulty in maintaining this possession, and needed for this
purpose no great reinforcements from home, especially since he reckoned on the
services of the Italians. But he was not able to aim a decisive blow at Rome.
To do this he needed assistance on a large scale—nothing less, in fact, than
another Carthaginian army, which, considering the naval superiority of the
Romans, could reach Italy only by land. A considerable portion of this army
moreover must necessarily consist of Spaniards, for Africa alone could not
supply sufficient materials. Spain, therefore, was, under present
circumstances, of the greatest importance to Carthage. In that country
Hasdrubal, the brother of Hannibal, carried on the war against the two Scipios.
If in the year 216 he could beat the Romans, penetrate over the Pyrenees and
the Rhone, and then in the following spring cross the Alps, the two brothers could
march upon Rome from north and south, and end the war by the conquest of the
capital.
To carry out this plan, which
Mago as Hannibal’s confidential envoy laid before the Carthaginian government,
it was resolved to send 4,000 Numidian horse and forty elephants to Italy, and
to raise in Spain 20,000 foot and 4,000 horse. We hear much of the opposition
which these measures encountered in the Carthaginian senate. Hanno, the leader
of the party hostile to the house of Barcas, it is said, resisted Hannibal’s
propositions and the prosecution of the war. But as the Barcide party had an
overwhelming majority, the opposition was powerless and unable to thwart
Hannibal’s plans. We can therefore easily believe that the Carthaginian senate
voted all but unanimously the supplies of men and materials of war which
Hannibal required.
As matters stood now,
everything depended on the issue of the war in Spain. While the rapid course of
events in Italy was followed by a comparative rest, while the war was there
resolving itself into a number of smaller conflicts, and turned chiefly on the
taking and maintaining of fortified places, the Romans succeeded in dealing a
decisive blow in Spain, which delayed the Carthaginian plan of reinforcing
Hannibal from that quarter to a time when the Romans had completely recovered
from the effects of their first three defeats on the Trebia, the Thrasymenus,
and the Aufidus.
But this event, which was in
reality the turning-point in the carrier of Carthaginian triumphs, did not take
place till later in the course of the year 216 B.C. Meanwhile the prospects of
Rome in Italy had become still more clouded. The battle of Cannae began to
produce its effects. One after another of the allies in southern Italy joined
the enemy, and Rome in her trouble and distress was obliged to leave to their
fate those who, remaining faithful, only asked for protection and help to
enable them to hold their ground.
The richest and most powerful
city in Italy next to Rome was Capua. She was able to send into the field 30,000
foot and an excellent cavalry of 4,000 men, unsurpassed by any Italian state.
No city not included in the on Roman tribes appeared so intimately connected
with Rome as Capua. The Romans and the Capuans had become one people more
completely than the Romans and the Latins. The Capuan knights possessed the
full Roman franchise, and the rest of the people of Capua enjoyed the civil
rights of Romans exclusive only of the political rights.
The Capuans fought in the
Roman legions side by side with the inhabitants of the thirty-five tribes. A
great number of Romans had settled in Capua, and the prominent families of this
town were connected by marriage with the highest nobility of Rome. These Capuan
nobles had a double motive for remaining faithful to Rome. Through the decision
of the Roman senate they had in the great Latin war (338 B.C.) obtained
political power in Capua and the enjoyment of an annual revenue which the
people of Capua were made to pay to them. A Roman prefect resided in Capua to
decide civil disputes in which Roman citizens were concerned; but in every
other respect the Capuans were free from interference with their local
self-government. They had their own senate and their national chief magistrate,
called Meddix. Under the dominion of Rome the town had probably lost little of
her former importance and prosperity, and she was considered now, as she had
been a century before, a worthy rival of Rome.
But it was precisely this
greatness and prosperity which fostered in the people of Capua the feeling of
jealousy and impatience of Roman superiority. A position which smaller towns
might accept without feeling humbled could not fail to offend the pride of a
people which looked upon itself as not inferior even to the people of Rome. The
plebeians of Capua, in other words the vast majority of the population, had
been grievously wronged and exasperated by the measure of the Roman senate
which had deprived Capua of her domain or public land, and had in consequence
imposed a tax for the support of the Capuan nobility. The natural opposition
between the two classes of citizens, which we find in every Italian community,
had through this measure been embittered by a peculiar feeling of injustice on
the popular side, and by the slavish attachment of the nobles to their foreign
friends and supporters. It was not Hannibal’s appearance in Italy that first
produced this division in Capua. But the discontent which had been growing for
years, had hitherto been kept down by the irresistible power of Rome. Now, as
it seemed, the hour of deliverance was at hand. Soon after the battle of the
lake Thrasymenus in the preceding year, when Hannibal for the first time
appeared in Campania, he had tried to detach Capua from the Roman alliance.
Some Capuan prisoners of war whom he had set free, had promised to bring about
an insurrection in their native city; but the plan had failed. Another decisive
victory over the Romans was wanted to inspire the national and popular party in
Capua with sufficient courage for so bold a step as the throwing off of their
allegiance. Such a victory had been gained at Cannae; and the revolution in
Capua was one of its first and most valuable fruits.
The Capuan nobility was
neither strong enough to suppress the popular movement in favour of Hannibal,
nor honest and firm enough to retire from the government and to leave the town
after the Carthaginian party had gained the ascendency. Only a few men remained
faithful to Rome, foremost among whom was Decius Magius. The majority of the
senate of Capua allowed themselves to be intimidated by Pacuvius Calavius, one
of their number, and hoped by joining the Carthaginians to save their
prerogatives and their position. Soon after the battle of Cannae they
despatched an embassy to Hannibal and concluded a treaty of friendship and
alliance with Carthage, which guaranteed their entire independence, and
especially an immunity from the obligation of military service and other
burthens. As the prize of their joint victory over Rome they hoped that the
dominion over Italy would fall to their share. In order to cut off every chance
of a reconciliation with Rome, and to convince their new ally of their
unconditional attachment, the Capuan populace seized the Roman citizens who
happened to be residing among them, shut them up in one of the public baths,
and killed them with hot vapour. Three hundred Roman prisoners were delivered
into the keeping of the Capuans by Hannibal as a security for the safety of an
equal number of Capuan horsemen who were serving with the Roman army in Sicily.
The example of Capua was followed voluntarily or on compulsion by Atella and
Calatia, two neighbouring Italia cities. All the other numerous towns of
Campania, especially the Creek community of Neapolis and the old city of Cumae
(once, like Neapolis, a Greek settlement, but now entirely Italian), remained
faithful to Rome. This was due to the influence of the nobility, while the
popular party evinced everywhere a strong desire to join the Carthaginian
cause.
Among the great events which
convulsed Italy at this time our attention is arrested by the fate of a
comparatively humble individual, because it permits us to catch a glimpse to of
the civil struggles and vicissitudes which the great war called forth in every
Italian city, and because it throws an interesting and a favourable light on
the character of Hannibal. Decius Magius was the leader of the minority in the
Capuan senate, which, remaining faithful to Rome, rejected all the offers of
Hannibal, and even after the occupation of their town by a Punic garrison
entertained the hope of recalling their countrymen to their allegiance, of
overpowering and murdering the foreign troops, and restoring Capua to the
Romans. He made no secret of his sentiments and hid plans. When Hannibal sent
for him into his camp, he refused to go, because, as a free citizen of Capua,
he was not bound to obey the behests of a stranger. Hannibal might have
employed force; but his object was to gain over as a friend, not to punish, so
influential a man as Decius. When he made his public entry into Capua, the
whole population poured out to meet him, eager to see face to face the man who
had taken the Roman yoke from their shoulders. But Decius Magius kept aloof
from the gaping crowd. He walked up and down on the market-place with his son
and a few clients as if he had no concern in the general excitement. On the
following day, when he was brought before Hannibal, he exhibited the same
spirit of defiance, and tried even to rouse the people against the invaders.
What would have been the fate of such a man, if he had thus defied a Roman
general? Hannibal was satisfied with removing him from the place where his
presence was likely to cause difficulties. He ordered him to be sent to
Carthage to be kept there as a prisoner of war. But Decius Magius was spared
the humiliation of living at the mercy of his hated enemies. The ship that was
to take him to Carthage was driven by adverse winds to Cyrene. Hence he was
brought to Egypt; and King Ptolemy Philopator, who was on friendly terms with
Rome, allowed him to return to Italy. But where was he to go? His native town
was in the hands of a hostile faction and of the national enemies, while Rome
was carrying on a war of extermination against her. He remained an exile in a
foreign land, and thus was spared the misery of witnessing the barbarous
punishment which a few years later the ruthless hand of Rome inflicted on
Capua. No man would have been more justified in deprecating this punishment,
and more likely to mitigate it, if Roman justice could ever be tempered with
mercy, than the man who had dared in the cause of Rome to defy the victorious
Hannibal.
The two hostile parties which
opposed each other in the Campanian towns had caused even members of the same families
to be divided against each other. Pacuvius Calavius, the chief instigator of
the revolt of Capua, had married a daughter of a noble Roman, Appius Claudius,
and his son was a zealous adherent of the Roman cause. The father tried in vain
to convince the youth that the star of Rome had set, and that his native town
of Capua could regain her ancient position and splendour only by a league with
Carthage. Not even the countenance and the kind words of Hannibal himself, who
at the father’s request pardoned the errors of the son, could conciliate the
sturdy young man. Invited with his father to dine in company with Hannibal, he
remained sullen through the merriment of the banquet, and refused even to
pledge Hannibal in a cup of wine, under the pretext of not feeling well.
Towards evening, when Pacuvius left the dining room for a time, his son
followed him, and drawing him aside into a garden at the back of the house,
declared his intention of presently killing Hannibal and thus obtaining for his
countrymen pardon for their great offence. In the utmost dismay, Pacuvius
besought his son to give up this heinous scheme, and vowed to shield with his
own body the man to whom he had sworn to be faithful, who had intrusted himself
to the hospitality of Capua, and whose guests they were at this moment. In the
struggle of conflicting duties filial piety prevailed. The youth cast away the
dagger with which he had armed himself, and returned to the banquet to avert
suspicion.
In Nola as in Capua the people
were divided between a Roman and a Carthaginian party. The plebs was in favour
of joining Hannibal, and it was with difficulty that the nobles delayed the
decision, and thus gained time to inform the praetor Marcellus, who was then
stationed at Casilinum, of the danger of a revolt. Marcellus immediately
hastened to Nola, occupied the town with a strong garrison, and repulsed the
Carthaginians, who, counting on the friendly disposition of the people of Nola,
had come to take possession of the town. This lucky hit of Marcellus was
magnified by the Roman annalists into a complete victory over Hannibal. Livy
found in some of the writers whom he consulted the statement that 2,800
Carthaginians were slain; but he is sensible and honest enough to suspect that
this is a great exaggeration. The extent of the success of Marcellus was no
doubt this, that Hannibal’s attempt to occupy Nola with the assistance of the
Carthaginian party failed; and considering the importance of the place, this
was indeed a great point gained. But it was an empty boast if Roman writers
asserted in consequence that Marcellus had taught the Romans to conquer
Hannibal. Livy hits the truth by saying that not to be conquered by Hannibal
was more difficult at that time than it was afterwards to conquer him. It was
the merit of Marcellus that he saved Nola from being taken. This was effected
not only by anticipating the arrival of the Carthaginians, and by securing the
town with a garrison, but by severely punishing the leaders of the popular
party in Nola, who were guilty or suspected of an understanding with Hannibal.
When seventy of them had been put to death, the fidelity of Nola seemed
sufficiently secured.
The pretended victory of
Marcellus at Nola appears the more doubtful as Hannibal about the same time was
able to take in the immediate neighbourhood the towns of Nucoria
and Acerrae, and made several attempts to gain possession of Neapolis.
Neapolis would have been a most valuable acquisition, as a secure landing-place
and a station for the Carthaginian fleet. But the Neapolitans were on their
guard. All attempts to take the town by surprise failed, and Hannibal had not
the means of laying siege to it in a regular manner. His attempts to take Cumae
were equally futile, and even the petty town of Casilinum, in the immediate
vicinity of Capua, on the river Vulturnus, offered a stout resistance. But
Casilinum was too important on account of its position to be left in the hands
of the Romans. Hannibal therefore resolved to lay regular siege to it.
The siege of Casilinum claims
our special attention, as it shows the spirit and the quality of the troops of
whom the Romans disposed in their struggle with Carthage. When the Roman
legions in the spring of the year 216 B.C. assembled in Apulia, the allied town
of Praeneste was somewhat in arrear in preparing its contingent. This
contingent, consisting of five hundred and seventy men, was therefore still on
its march, and had just reached Campania, when the news of the disaster of
Cannae arrived. Instead of marching further south, the troops took up their
position in the little town of Casilinum, and were there joined by some Latins
and Romans, as well as by a cohort of four hundred and sixty men from the
Etruscan town of Perugia, which, like the Praenestine cohort, had been delayed
in taking the field. Shortly after this Capua revolted, and everywhere in
Campania the popular party showed a disposition to follow the example of Capua.
To prevent the people of Casilinum from betraying their Roman garrison to the
Carthaginians, the soldiers anticipated treason by a treacherous and barbarous
act. They fell upon the inhabitants, put to death all that were suspected,
destroyed that portion of the town which lay on the left bank of the river, and
put the other half in a state of defence. The Carthaginians summoned the town
in vain, and then tried to take it by storm; but several assaults were repulsed
by the garrison with the greatest courage, and with perfect success. Hannibal
with his victorious army was unable to take by force this insignificant place,
with its garrison of scarcely one thousand men—so utterly was he destitute of
the means and apparatus necessary for a regular siege; and perhaps he shrunk
from sacrificing his valuable troops in this kind of warfare. Yet he did not give
up Casilinum. He kept up a blockade, and in the course of the winter hunger
soon began its ravages among the defenders. A Roman force under Gracchus, the
master of the horse of the dictator Junius Pera, was stationed at a short
distance, but made no attempt to throw supplies into the town, or to raise the
siege. Gradually all the horrors of a protracted siege broke out in the town;
the leather of the shields was cooked for food, mice and roots were devoured,
many of the garrison threw themselves from the walls or exposed themselves to
the missiles of the enemies to end the pangs of hunger by a voluntary death.
The Roman troops under Gracchus tried in vain to relieve the distress of the
besieged by floating down the river during the night casks partly filled with
grain. The Carthaginians soon discovered the trick, and fished the casks out of
the river before they reached the town. When all hope of relief was thus gone,
and half of the defenders of Casilinum had perished by hunger, the heroic
Praenestines and Perugians at last consented to surrender the town on condition
of being allowed to ransom themselves for a stipulated sum. They were justly
proud of their performance. Marcus Anicius, the commander of the Praenestine
cohort, who, as Livy remarks, had formerly been a public clerk, caused a statue
of himself to be erected on the market-place of Praeneste, with an inscription
to commemorate the defence of Casilinum. The Roman senate granted the survivors
double pay and exemption from military service for five years. It is added that
the Roman franchise was also offered to them, but declined. Probably the men of
Perugia were honoured like the Praenestines, but we have no information on the
subject.
The obstinate defence of
Casilinum is instructive, as showing the spirit by which the allies of Rome
were animated. If after the battle of Cannae the citizens of two towns which
did not even possess the Roman franchise fought for Rome with such firmness and
heroism, the republic could look with perfect composure and confidence upon all
the vicissitudes of the war; nor could Hannibal with a handful of foreign
mercenaries have much hope of subduing a country defended by several hundred
thousand men as brave and obstinate as the garrison of Casilinum.
The blockade of Casilinum had
lasted the whole winter, and the surrender of the town did not take place
before the following spring. Meanwhile Hannibal had sent a portion of his army
to take up their winter-quarters in Capua. The results of the battle of Cannae
were in truth considerable, but we can hardly think that they answered his
expectations. The acquisition of Capua was the only advantage worth
mentioning; and the value of this acquisition was considerably reduced by the
continued resistance which he had to encounter in all the other important towns
of Campania, especially in those on the sea coast. Thus Capua was in constant
danger, and instead of vigorously supporting the movements of Hannibal it
compelled him to take measures for its protection. It could not be left without
a Carthaginian garrison, for the Roman party in the town would, as the example
of Nola showed, have seized the first opportunity for betraying it into the
hands of the Romans. The conditions on which Capua had joined the Carthaginian
alliance, viz. exemption from military service and war taxes,
show clearly that Hannibal could not dispose freely of the resources of his
Italian allies. He could rely only on their voluntary aid; and it was his
policy to show that their alliance with Carthage was more profitable for them
than their subjection to Rome. It was evident, therefore, that he could not
raise a very considerable army in Italy; and that if he could have found the
men, he would have had the greatest difficulty in providing for their food and
pay, and for the materials of war.
Still, whatever difficulties
Hannibal might encounter by continuing the war in Italy, he might, after the
stupendous success that had hitherto accompanied him, expect to overcome,
provided he obtained from home the reinforcements on which he had all along
calculated. His first expectations were directed to Spain. In this country the
Romans had with a just appreciation of its importance made great efforts during
the first two years of the war to occupy the land between the Ebro and the
Pyrenees, and they had thus blocked up the nearest road by which a Punic army
could march from Spain to Italy. The two Scipios had even advanced beyond the
Ebro to attack the Carthaginian dominions in the southern part of the
peninsula, and, following the example of Hannibal in Italy, they had adopted
the policy of endeavouring to gain over to their side the subjects and allies
of Carthage. In the third year of the war Hasdrubal had to turn his arms
against the Tartessii, a powerful tribe in the valley of the Baetis, which had revolted,
and was reduced only after an obstinate resistance. Then, after he had received
reinforcements for the defence of the Carthaginian possessions in Spain, he
advanced towards the Ebro to carry out the plan which was so essential for
Hannibal’s success in Italy. In the neighbourhood of this river, near the town
of Ibera, the two Scipios awaited his arrival. A great battle was fought; the
Carthaginians were completely beaten; their army was partly destroyed, partly
dispersed. This great victory of the Romans ranks in importance with that on
the Metaurus and that of Zama. It foiled the plan of the Carthaginians of
sending a second army into Italy from Spain, and left Hannibal without the
necessary reinforcements at a time when he was in the full career of victory,
and seemed to need only the cooperation of another army to compel Rome to yield
and to sue for peace. The Romans now had leisure to recover from their great
material and moral overthrow, and after surviving such a crisis as this they
became invincible.
While the Roman arms in Spain
not only opposed a State of barrier to the advance of the Carthaginians, but
laid the foundation for a permanent acquisition of new territory, the two
provinces of Sicily and Sardinia, lately wrested from Carthage, showed alarming
symptoms of dissatisfaction. The dominion of Rome in these two islands had not
been felt to be a blessing. Under its weight the government of Carthage was
looked upon by a considerable portion of the natives as a period of lost
happiness, the evils of the present being naturally felt more keenly than those
of the past. The battle of Cannae produced its effect even in these distant
parts of the Roman empire, and revived the hopes of those who still felt
attachment to their former rulers, or thought to avail themselves of their aid
to cast off their present bondage. Carthaginian fleets cruised off the coasts
of Sicily and kept the island in a continued state of excitement. The Roman
officers who commanded in Sicily sent home reports calculated to cause disquiet
and alarm. The propraetor T. Otalicius complained that his troops were left
without sufficient supplies and pay. From Sardinia the propraetor A. Cornelias
Mammula sent equally urgent demands. The home government had no resources at
its disposal, and the senate replied by bidding the two propraetors do the best
they could for their fleets and troops. In Sardinia consequently the Roman
commander raised a forced loan—a measure ill calculated to improve the loyalty of
the subjects. In Sicily it was again the faithful Hiero who volunteered his
aid, and this was the last time that he exerted himself in the cause of his
allies. Although his own kingdom of Syracuse was at this very time exposed to
the devastations of the Carthaginian fleet, he nevertheless provided the Roman
troops in Sicily with pay and provisions for six months. The old man would have
been happy if before his death he could have seen the war ended, or at least
warded off from the coasts of Sicily. He foresaw the danger to which its continuance
exposed his country and his house, and he conjured the Romans to attack the
Carthaginians in Africa as soon as possible. But the year after the battle of
Cannae was not the time for such an enterprise, and before it came to be
carried out a great calamity had overwhelmed Sicily, had overthrown the dynasty
and exterminated the whole family of Hiero, and had reduced Syracuse to a state
of desolation from which it never rose again.
Although since the battle of
the Trebia the seat of war had been shifted from Cisalpine Gaul to central and
southern Italy, and although Rome itself was now more directly exposed to the
victorious arms of Hannibal, yet the Romans had neither given up Cremona and
Placentia, their fortresses on the Po, nor relaxed their efforts for continuing
the war with the Gauls in their own country. They hoped thereby to draw off the
Gallic auxiliaries from Hannibal’s army, and moreover to prevent any Punic army
which might succeed in crossing the Pyrenees and Alps from advancing further
into Italy. For this reason in the spring of 215 two legions and a strong
contingent of auxiliaries, amounting altogether to 25,000 men, were sent
northward, under the command of the praetor L. Postumius Albinus, at the time when
Terentius Varro and Aemilius Paulus set out on their ill-fated expedition to
Apulia. The disaster of Cannae naturally rendered the task of Postumius very
difficult by increasing the courage of the tribes hostile to Rome, and by
damping that of their friends. Nevertheless the praetor kept his ground in the
country about the Po during the whole of the year 215, and so far gained the
confidence of his fellow-citizens that he was elected for the consulship of the
ensuing year. But before he could enter on his new office he was overtaken by
an overwhelming catastrophe, second only to the great disaster of Cannae. He
fell into an ambush, and was cut to pieces with his whole army. It is related
that the Gauls cut off his head, set the skull in gold, and used it on solemn
occasions as a goblet, according to a barbarous custom which continued long
among the later Gauls and Germans.
Rome was in a state of frantic
excitement. The worst calamities of the disastrous year that had just passed
away seemed about to be repeated at the very time when the brave garrison of
Casilinum had been forced to capitulate, and when by this conquest Hannibal had
opened for himself the road to Latium. A short time before the faithful towns
of Petelia and Consentia in Bruttium had been taken by storm. The others were
in the greatest danger of suffering the same fate. Locri soon after joined the
Carthaginians under favourable conditions : and thus a maritime town of great
importance was gained by the enemy. In Croton the nobility tried in vain to
keep the town for the Romans, and to shut out the Bruttian allies of Hannibal.
The people admitted them within the walls, and the aristocratic party had no
choice but to yield to the storm and to purchase for themselves permission to
leave the town by giving up possession of the citadel. Thus the whole of
Bruttium was lost to the Romans, with the single exception of Rhegium. The
legions were stationed in Campania, and did not venture beyond their fortified
camps. Everywhere the sky was overhung with black clouds. In Spain alone the
victory of the Scipios at Ibera opened a brighter prospect. By it the danger of
another invasion of Italy by Hannibal’s brother was for the present averted.
Had the battle near the Ebro ended like the battles hitherto fought on Italian
soil, it would seem that even the hearts of the bravest Romans must have
despaired of the republic.
Hannibal passed the winter of
216-215 B.C. in Capua. These winter-quarters became among the Roman writers in
Capua a favourite topic of declamation. Capua, they said, became Hannibal’s
Cannae. In the luxurious life of this opulent city, to which Hannibal’s
victorious soldiers gave themselves up for the first time after long hardships
and privations, their military qualities perished, and from this time victory
deserted their standards. This statement, if not altogether false, is at any
rate a vast exaggeration. As we have seen, only a portion of Hannibal’s army
passed the winter in Capua, whilst the rest was in Bruttium, Lucania, and
before Casilinum. But apart from this, it is manifest that the people of Capua
could not at that time have been sunk in luxury and sensual pleasures. If their
wealth had been little affected by the calamities of the war, surely the
necessity of feeding some thousand soldiers would soon have sobered them down
and taught them the need of economy. Hannibal knew how to husband his
resources, and he would not have allowed his men to drain his most valuable
allies. We can scarcely suppose that voluntary extravagance and excessive
hospitality marked the conduct of a people which had, at the very outset,
stipulated for immunity from contributions. Lastly, it is not true that the
Punic army had in Capua the first opportunity of recovering from the hardships
of the war, and of enjoying ease and comfort. The soldiers had had pleasant
quarters in Apulia after the battle on the lake Thrasymenus, and had already
passed one winter comfortable. But whatever may have been the pleasures and
indulgences of Hannibal’s troops in Capua, their military qualities cannot have
suffered by them, as the subsequent history of the war sufficiently
demonstrates.
That Hannibal’s offensive
tactics were relaxed after the battle of Cannae is particularly evident from
the events of 215 B.C. The year passed without any serious encounters between
the two belligerents. The Romans had resolved to avoid a battle, and applied
their whole strength to prevent the spread of revolt among their allies, and to
punish or re-conquer the towns that had revolted. The war was confined almost
entirely to Campania. In this country Hannibal did not succeed, after the
surrender of Casilinum, in making any further conquests. An attempt to surprise
Cumae failed, and on this occasion the Capuan suffered a serious reverse.
Neapolis remained steadfast and faithful to Rome; Nola was guarded by a Roman
garrison, and the Roman partisans among the citizens; and a renewed attempt of
Hannibal to take this town is said to have been thwarted, like the first
attack, the year before, by a sally of the Romans under Marcellus, and to have
resulted in a defeat of the Carthaginian army. On the other hand the Romans
took several towns in Campania and Samnium, punished their revolted subjects
with merciless severity, and so devastated the country of the Hirpinians and
Caudinians that they piteously implored the help of Hannibal. But Hannibal had
not sufficient forces to protect the Italians who had joined his cause and who
now felt the fatal consequences of their step. Hanno, one of Hannibal’s subordinate
officers, being beaten at Grumentum in Lucania by Tiberius Sempronius Longus,
an officer of the praetor M. Valerius Laevinus, who commanded in Apulia, was
obliged to retreat into Bruttium. A reinforcement of 12,000 foot, 1,500 horse,
20 elephants, and 1,000 talents of silver, which Mago was to have brought to
his brother in Italy, had been directed to Spain after the victory of the
Scipios at Ibera; and Hannibal had accordingly, in the year 215 B.C., not only calculated in vain
on being joined by his brother Hasdrubal and the Spanish army, but he was also
deprived of the reinforcements which ought to have been sent to him straight
from Africa. As at the same time the revolt of the Roman allies did not spread
further, and as the Romans gradually recovered from the effects of the defeat
at Cannae, the fact that Hannibal was not able to accomplish much is easily
explained.
As in Italy, so in the other
theatres of war, the Carthaginian arms were not very successful during this
year, 215 B.C. In Spain, the victory of the Scipios at Ibera was followed by a
decided preponderance of Roman influence. The native tribes became more and
more disinclined to submit to Carthaginian dominion, thinking that the Romans
would help them to regain their independence. It seems that the battle of Ibera
was lost chiefly by the defection of the Spanish troops. Hasdrubal had
thereupon tried to reduce some of the revolted tribes, but was prevented by the
Scipios, and driven back with great loss. According to the reports which the Scipios
sent home, they had gained victories which almost counterbalanced the disaster
of Cannae. With only 16,000 men they had totally routed at Illiturgi a
Carthaginian army of 60,000 men, had killed more of the enemy than they
themselves numbered combatants, had taken 3,000 prisoners, nearly 1,000 horses,
and seven elephants, had captured fifty-nine standards, and stormed three
hostile camps. Soon after, when the Carthaginians were besieging Intibili, they
were again defeated and suffered almost as heavily. Most of the Spanish tribes now
joined Rome. These victories threw into the shade all the military events which
took place in Italy this year.
Equal success attended the
Roman arms in Sardinia. In the preceding year the propraetor Aulus Cornelius
Mammula had been left in that island without supplies for his troops, and had
exacted the necessary sums and contributions by a species of forced loans from
the natives. The discontent engendered by this measure, in connexion with the
news of the battle of Cannae had the effect of inflaming the national spirit of
the Sardinians, who, from the time of their subjection to Rome, had hardly
allowed a year to pass without an attempt to shake off the galling yoke. The
Carthaginians had contributed to fan this flame, and now dispatched a force to
Sardinia to support the insurgents. Unfortunately the fleet which had the
troops on board was overtaken by a storm and compelled to take refuge in the
Balearic Islands, where the ships had to be laid up for repair. Meanwhile, the
son of the Sardinian chief Hampsicoras, impatient of delay, had attacked the
Romans in the absence of his father, and had been defeated with great loss.
When the Carthaginians appeared in the island, the force, of the insurrection
was already spent. The praetor Titus Manlius Torquatus had arrived from Rome
with a new legion, which raised the Roman army in the island to 22,000
foot and 1,200 horse. He defeated the united forces of the Carthaginians and
revolted Sardinians in a decisive battle, whereupon Hampsicoras put an end to
his life, and the insurrection in the island was eventually suppressed.
While thus the sky was
clearing in the west, a new storm seemed to be gathering in the east. Since the
Romans had obtained a footing in Illyria, they had ceased to be uninterested
spectators of the disputes which agitated the eastern peninsula, and they had
assumed the character of patrons of Greek liberty and independence. By this
policy, and by their conquests in Illyria, they had become the natural
opponents of Macedonia, whose kings had steadily aimed at the sovereignty over
the whole of Greece. The jealousy between Macedonia and Rome favoured the
ambitious plans of Demetrius of Pharos, the Illyrian adventurer whom the Romans
had at first favoured and then expelled, 219 B.C. Demetrius took refuge at the
court of King Philip of Macedonia, and did all in his power to urge him to a
war with Rome. Hannibal also had hoped for the cooperation of the Macedonian
king. But the so-called Social War which Philip and the Achaian league carried
on since 220 B.C. against the piratical Aetolians occupied him so much that he
had no leisure for another enterprise. Then the news reached him of the
invasion of Italy by Hannibal. The gigantic struggle between the two most
powerful nations of their time attracted specially the attention of the Greeks.
In the year 217 B.C. Philip was in the Peloponnesus. It happened to be the time
of the Nemean games, with which, as with the other great festivals of the Greek
nation, not even war was allowed to interfere. The king, surrounded by his
courtiers and favourites, was looking on at the games, when a messenger arrived
straight from Macedonia and brought the first news of Hannibal’s great victory
at the lake Thrasymenus. Demetrius of Pharos, the king's confidential friend,
was by his side. Philip immediately imparted the news to him and asked his
advice. Demetrius eagerly seized the opportunity to urge the king to a war with
Rome, in which he hoped to regain his lost possessions in Illyria. At his
suggestion Philip resolved to end the war in Greece as soon as possible, and to
prepare for a war with Rome. He hastened to conclude peace at Naupactos with
the Aetolians, and forthwith began hostilities by land and sea against the
allies and dependents of Rome in Illyria. But he displayed neither promptness,
energy, nor courage. He took a few insignificant places from the Illyrian
prince Skerdilaidas, an ally of the Romans, but when he had reached the Ionian
Sea with his fleet of one hundred small undecked galleys of Illyrian construction
(lembi), in the hope of being able to take Apollonia by surprise, he was so
frightened by a false report of the approach of a Roman fleet, that he made a
precipitate and ignominious retreat. Perhaps he was already disheartened, and
beginning to repent the step which he had taken, when in 210 B.C. the news of
the battle of Cannae and of the revolt of Capua and other Roman allies inspired
him with new hope, and induced him to conclude with Hannibal a formal alliance,
by which he promised his active co-operation in the war in Italy, on condition
that Hannibal, after the overthrow of the Roman power, should assist him to
establish the Macedonian supremacy in the eastern peninsula and islands. Thus
the calculations and expectations with which Hannibal had begun the war seemed
on the point of being realised, and the fruits of his great victories to be
gradually maturing.
The Romans had watched the
movements of Philip with increasing anxiety. As long as he was implicated in
the Greek Social War, he was unable to do any mischief. But when he brought
this war to a hasty conclusion to have his hands free against Illyria and Rome,
the senate made an attempt to frighten him by demanding the extradition of
Demetrius of Pharos. When Philip refused this demand and followed up his
refusal by an attack upon Illyricum, Rome was de facto at war with
Macedonia; but the condition of the republic was such that the senate
was compelled to ignore the hostility of the Macedonian king as long as he made
no direct attack upon Italy. But when, in the year 215 B.C., an embassy which
Philip had sent to Hannibal fell into their hands, they learnt with terror
that, in addition to the war which they had to carry on in Italy, Spain, and
Sardinia, they would have to undertake another in the east of the Adriatic.
They did not, however, shrink from the new danger, and, in fact, they had no
choice. They strengthened their fleet at Tarentum and the army which the
praetor M. Valerius Laevinus commanded in Apulia, and made all the necessary preparations
for anticipating an attack of Philip in Italy by an invasion of his own
dominions. But it seems that Philip never earnestly contemplated the idea of
carrying the war into Italy. He was bent only on profiting by the embarrassment
of the Romans to pursue his plans of aggrandizement in Greece. It was,
therefore, easy for the Romans to keep him occupied at home by promising their
support to all who were threatened by Philip’s ambitious projects; and the
military resources of Macedonia, which, if they had been employed in Italy in
conjunction with and under the direction of Hannibal, might have turned the
scale against Rome, were wasted in Greece in a succession of unprofitable petty
encounters.
Third Period of the Hannibalian War.THE WAR IN SICILY, 215-212 B.C
Sicily, the principal theatre
of the first war between Rome and Carthage, had hitherto been almost exempt
from the ravages of the second. While Italy, Spain, and Sardinia were visited
and suffering by it, Sicily had only been threatened now and then by the
Carthaginian fleets, but had never been seriously attacked. But now, in the
fourth year of the war, an event took place destined to bring over the island
all the worst calamities of an internecine struggle, and to give the final blow
to the declining prosperity of the Greek cities. In the year 215 B.C. King
Hiero of Syracuse died, at the advanced age of more than ninety years, and
after a prosperous reign of fifty-four. He was among the last of that class of
men produced by the Greek world with wonderful exuberance, who were called
‘tyrants’ in more ancient times, and who afterwards, when that name lost its
original and inoffensive signification, preferred to call themselves ‘kings’.
The best, and also the worst, of these rulers had sprung up in Syracuse, a city
which had tried in rapid succession all forms of government, and had never long
been able to abide by any. Syracuse had seen the arbitrary, but in their way
honourable, tyrants Gelon and the elder Hiero; then the blood-stained first
Dionysius, and his son, the consummate ideal of a man of terror; afterwards
Agathokles, great and brave as a soldier, but detestable as a man; and, lastly,
the wise and moderate Hiero II, under whose mild sceptre she once more revived,
after a period of anarchy and depression, and enjoyed a long peace, security,
and well-being in the midst of the most devastating wars. Polybius bestows on
Hiero full and well-deserved praise, and his honourable testimony deserves to
be recorded. “Hiero”, he says, “obtained the government of Syracuse by his own
personal merit; fortune had given him neither wealth, nor glory, nor anything
else. And what is of all things the most wonderful, he made himself the king of
Syracuse without killing, driving into exile, or harming a single citizen, and
he exercised his power in the same manner in which he bad acquired it. For
fifty-four years he preserved peace in his native city, and the government for
himself, without danger of conspiracy, escaping that jealousy which generally fastens
itself on greatness. Often he proposed to lay down his power, but was prevented
by the universal wish of his fellow-citizens. He became the benefactor of the
Greeks, and strove to win their approval. Thus he gained great glory for
himself, and won from all people great good-will for the men of Syracuse.
Though he lived surrounded by magnificence and luxury, he reached the great age
of more than ninety years, retaining possession of all his senses with
unimpaired health of body, which seems to me to be a most convincing proof of a
rational life”.
Such a ruler was the best
constitution for Syracuse, where republican freedom never failed to produce
civil war, anarchy, and all imaginable horrors. Hiero renewed the laws which,
about a century and a half before his time, had been enacted in Syracuse by
Diokles, and, what was of far more importance, he took care that they should be
inforced. He seems to have bestowed his especial care on the improvement of
agriculture, industrial pursuits, and commerce, and on healing the wounds which
the long wars had inflicted on his country. Thus it is explained how he was
always able to supply money, corn, and other necessaries of war when his allies
needed his aid. But he was at the same time a patron of art, and animated by
the desire of gaining the approbation of the whole Hellenic race—a desire which
had been strong in his predecessors Gelon and Hiero, and even in the bloodstained
tyrant Dionysius. He embellished the city of Syracuse with splendid and useful
buildings, contested in the great national games of the Greeks the prizes which
were the highest peaceful honours that a Greek could aspire to; he erected
statues at Olympia, and patronized poets like Theokritos, and practical
philosophers like Archimedes. Of his Greek national spirit, and at the same
time of his humane sentiments and of his wealth, he gave a striking proof when,
in 227 B.C., the city of Rhodes was visited by a terrible earthquake, which
destroyed the walls, dockyards, a great part of the town, and also the
far-famed colossus. It was not the universal custom in antiquity, as it is at
present in the civilized world, to relieve extraordinary calamities like this
by charitable contributions from all parts. But Hiero’s proper feelings
supplied the force of custom. He readily and liberally succoured the distressed
Rhodians, giving them more than one hundred talents of silver and fifty
catapults, and exempting their ships from tolls and dues in the port of
Syracuse. For this liberality, which was entirely his own doing, he gracefully
and modestly disclaimed any personal merit, by putting up in Rhodes a group of
statues representing the city of Syracuse in the act of crowning her sister
city.
How Hiero assisted Rome with
never-failing zeal and loyalty we have noticed on several occasions. It was by
this steadfast and honest policy that he succeeded in keeping unscathed the
independence of Syracuse during the contest of his two powerful neighbours.
When peace was concluded after the first Punic war, this independence was
formally recognized, and Hiero had now good reason to persevere in his
attachment to Rome, which had proved her superiority over Carthage, and was now
mistress of the greater part of Sicily, exercising that influence over him
which a patron has over his client. Nevertheless he did not hesitate to render,
in the Mercenary War, that essential service to Carthage which seemed to him
called for. He wished to preserve a balance of power, and the Romans had no
just cause or pretext to interfere with him, though, from their ungenerous
policy with regard to Carthage at this time, they must have been annoyed at any
support being given to their rivals. In the year 237 B.C. Hiero paid a visit to
Rome, was present at the public games, and distributed 200,000 modii of
corn among the people. Perhaps the journey was not undertaken merely for
pleasure. It was not customary at that time for princes to travel for their
amusement. Hiero went to Rome soon after the disgraceful stroke of policy by which
the Romans had acquired possession of Sardinia; and it is not at all unlikely
that, even at that early period, four years after the termination of the first
Punic War, a desire was manifested in Rome to annex the Syracusan dominions to
the Roman province of Sicily, and thus to prevent the possibility of Carthage
finding in some future war friends or allies in Syracuse. If, indeed, such
dangers were then threatening his independence, Hiero succeeded in removing
them, and, by renewed proofs of sincere attachment, was able to maintain
himself in the favour of his too powerful friends. The Gallic war (225 B.C.)
gave him again an opportunity for it; and soon after the breaking out of the
second Punic war, he showed his unaltered zeal and attachment by sending
auxiliaries and supplies, in 217 and 210 B.C. It seemed that, of all parts of
the Roman dominions, Sicily was most exposed to the attacks of the
Carthaginians, and the most serious danger arose from the existence of a strong
Carthaginian party within the island. Sicily had been so long under
Carthaginian dominion or influence that here, as well as in Sardinia, such a
party could not fail to exist. It was of course made up chiefly of the large
number of men who had suffered by the change of masters, and were hoping for
better things from a return of the Carthaginians. The whole of Sicily, as the
succeeding events prove, was in a state of fermentation, and it required but a
slight impulse to rouse a great part of the population to take up arms against
Rome. This impulse was given in 215 B.C. by the death of Hiero, which produced
an effect so much the more fatal as his son Gelon, who seems to have shared his
sentiments and policy, had died shortly before him, leaving only a son, called
Hieronymus, a boy of fifteen years.
Of the condition of Sicily
since its acquisition by Rome in 241 B.C., we can form only an imperfect
notion. We may suppose that, upon the whole, the material prosperity of the
island was gradually increasing, after the ending of the destructive internal
wars; but we should not wonder if the compulsory peace which the different
communities of Sicily were now enjoying had been felt by many to be a mark of
their subjection. The towns which during the war with Carthage had joined the
Roman side—such as Segesta, Panormus, Centuripa, Alaesa, Halicyae—occupied a
privileged position and were free from all taxes and services. The Mamertines
of Messana were regarded as allies of Rome, and supplied their contingent of
ships like the Greek towns in Italy. All the other towns were tributary, and
paid the tenth part of the produce of their land. This liability implied no
oppression, for most of the Sicilians had in former times paid the same tax to
the Carthaginians, or to the government of Syracuse. But the Romans placed on
the free intercourse between the different communities restrictions which must
have been felt as highly injurious and annoying. No Sicilian was allowed to
acquire landed property beyond the limits of his native community, and the
right of intermarriage and inheritance was probably confined within the same
narrow bounds, Roman citizens and the people of the few favoured towns being
alone exempt from this restriction. Thus every town in Sicily was, to a great
extent, isolated, and the limited competition placed the privileged few at a
great advantage both in the acquisition of land and in every kind of trade and
commerce. Under such circumstances the freedom from military service was
probably not felt to be, a great boon, especially as at that time the prospect
of booty and military pay was no doubt attractive to many of the impoverished
population. Since 227 B.C. Sicily was placed under a praetor, who conducted the
whole civil and military administration, including that of justice. This was
the beginning of those annual viceroyalties with unlimited power which, in
course of time, became the terrible scourge of the Roman provinces, and almost
neutralized the advantages which, by the inforcement of internal peace, Rome
was aide to bestow on the countries round the Mediterranean. The Roman nobles
could not resist the temptation of abusing, for their own profit, the public
authority which was intrusted to them for the government of the provinces; and
as long as the Roman republic lasted, it never succeeded, in spite of many
attempts, in putting down this great evil.
The consequences of the
discontent in Sicily, and of the revolution which followed the death of Hiero,
did not assume a threatening aspect till the following year. In the meantime
the attention of the Roman senate was absorbed by other things nearer home.
Since the censorship of C. Flaminius and L. Aemilius in the year 220, the
senate had not been formally reconstituted. The public magistrates, from the
quaestors upwards, enjoyed, it is true, the right, after the termination of
their office, of joining in the deliberations of the senate, and of voting; but
their number was not sufficient, even under ordinary circumstances, to keep the
senate at its normal strength of three hundred members, and the censors were therefore
obliged, every five years, on the revision of the list of senators, to admit
into the senate a number of men from the general body of the citizens, who had
not yet discharged any public office. But now the circumstances were most
extraordinary. Many senators had fallen in battle; eighty were said to have
perished at Cannae alone. Many were absent on the public service in various
parts of Italy, in Spain, Sardinia, and Sicily. The senate therefore was
reduced in numbers as it never had been since the establishment of the
republic. Accordingly, when, in 213 B.C., the government had first taken
measures for raising new armies, for providing the means of defence, and for
prosecuting the war vigorously in every direction, it occupied itself with the
task of filling up the numerous vacancies in the senate. It was found necessary
to make a wholesale addition of new senators, such as had been made, according
to tradition, by Brutus after the expulsion of the kings. For this extraordinary
measure the official authority of a regular censor seemed to be insufficient.
Recourse was had therefore to the dictatorship, an office which in times of
special difficulties had always rendered excellent service to the state. The
disastrous year of the battle of Cannae, 216 B.C., had not yet come to an end,
and the dictator M. Junius Pera was still in office, occupied with organizing
the means of defence. As it seemed unadvisable to divert his attention from his
more immediate duties, a proposal was made and adopted to elect a second
dictator for the special purpose of raising the senate to its normal number—an
innovation which shows that, under extraordinary circumstances, the Romans were
not entirely the slaves of custom, but could adapt their institutions to the
requirements of the time. C. Terentius Varro was called upon to nominate to the
dictatorship the oldest of those who had discharged the office of censors
before. This was M. Fabius Buteo, who had been consul in 245 B.C., five years
before the close of the first Punic war, and censor in 241 at the time when
that war was concluded. In the debate which now took place in the senate with
respect to the nomination of new members, Spurius Carvilius proposed to admit
two men from every Latin town. Never was a wiser proposal made than this, and
no season was more suitable than the present for reinvigorating the Roman
people with new blood, and for spreading the feeling and the right of
citizenship over Italy. The Latins were in every respect worthy to be admitted
to a share in the Roman franchise, and without their fidelity and courage Rome
would undoubtedly have lost her preponderance in Italy and perhaps her
independence. If now the best men from the several Latin towns had been
received as representatives of those towns into the Roman senate, a step would
have been taken leading to a sort of representative constitution, and tending
to diminish the monopoly of legislative power enjoyed by the urban population
of Rome, a monopoly which became more and more injurious and unnatural with the
territorial extension of the republic. As yet no Latin town had exhibited the
least system of discontent or disloyalty, and a generous and conciliatory
policy on the part of Rome could not have been looked upon as a result of fear
or of intimidation. But the Roman pride revolted now, as it had done more than
a century before, and as it did again more than a century later, at the idea of
admitting strangers to an equality with Romans; and Spurius Carvilius was
silenced almost as if he had been a traitor to the majesty of Rome. His
proposal was treated as if it had not been made, and the senators were bound
not to divulge it, lest the Latins should venture to hope that hereafter they
might possibly gain admission into the sanctuary of the Roman senate. A list of
one hundred and seventy-seven new senators was drawn up, consisting of men who
had discharged public offices, or proved themselves to be valiant soldiers. As
soon as Fabius had performed this formal duty, he abdicated the dictatorship.
The most difficult task which
the reorganized senate had to perform was to restore order in the finances, or
rather to provide means for continuing the war. The public treasury was empty,
the demands made upon the state for the maintenance of the fleets and armies
became greater from year to year, and in the same proportion the resources of
the state were diminished. The revenues of Sicily and Sardinia were not even
sufficient for the support of the forces necessary for the defence of these islands,
and could not therefore be applied to other purposes. A large portion of Italy
was in possession of the enemy, and all its produce was lost to Rome. The
tithes and rents of the state domains, the pastures, woods, mines, and
saltworks in Campania, Samnium, Apulia, Lucania, and Bruttium were no longer
paid, or not paid with regularity. Even where the enemy was not in actual
possession, the war had reduced the public income. Many thousand citizens and
tax-payers had fallen in battle or were in captivity; the scarcity of hands
began to tell on the cultivation of the land; the families whose heads or
supporters were serving in the army fell into poverty and debt, and the
republic had already contracted loans in Sicily and Sardinia which it was
unable to repay. The senate now adopted the plan of doubling the taxes, a most
unsafe expedient, by which the extreme limit of the tax-paying power of the
community could not fail soon to be reached or passed, and which accordingly
paralysed this power for the future. But even this measure was not sufficient.
Large sums of ready money were wanted to purchase supplies of provisions,
clothing, and materials of war for the armies. The senate appealed to the
patriotism of the rich, and the consequence was the formation of three
companies of army purveyors, who undertook to supply all that was needed and to
give the public credit till the end of the war. They only stipulated for
freedom from military service for themselves, and required that the state
should undertake the sea and war risks of the cargoes afloat. This offer seemed
noble and generous; but experience showed that the most sordid motives had more
share in it than patriotism or public spirit.
To obtain a supply of rowers
for the fleet, the wealthier class of citizens were called upon to furnish, in
proportion to their property, from one to eight men, and food for a period of
from six to twelve months. In proposing this measure, the senate gave a proof
of its devotion to the common cause; for the senators, as belonging to the
richest class in the state, had to contribute most. But the middle class would
not be surpassed by the senatorial order. Horsemen and officers refused to take
pay, and the owners of the slaves who had been drafted for military service
waived their right to compensation for their loss. The undertakers of public
works and of repairs of temples and public buildings promised to wait till the
conclusion of peace before claiming payment; trust moneys were applied to the
use of the state: a universal enthusiasm had seized the whole nation. Every
individual citizen looked for his own safety only in the safety of the
commonwealth, and to save the commonwealth no sacrifice was held too dear.
One of the financial measures
of this time, dating from the year 216 B.C., was the appointment of a
commission, similar, as we may suppose, to that which in the year 352 B.C.
relieved the debts of a great mass of the people by loans on sufficient
security. But no satisfactory account is given of the proceedings of this commission,
and we may reasonably doubt whether it effected much. It is one of the most
difficult, and as yet unsolved, problems of financial skill to procure money
where there is none. Paper has been a great temporary resource to modern
financiers. But the Romans were innocent of this contrivance, and it is not
likely, therefore, that they effected more than the alchemists of the middle
ages, who vainly sought the secret of changing base metal into gold.
In times of extreme danger,
when the commonwealth is suffering from an insufficiency of means, it seems
unnatural and unjustifiable that private citizens should indulge in an
unnecessary display of riches. On the contrary it seems just that private
wealth should be made to minister to the necessities of the state. This, at any
rate, was the feeling of the Romans when they strained every nerve to make head
against Carthage. They hit upon the idea of limiting private extravagance. On
the motion of the tribune C. Oppius, a law was passed forbidding the women to
apply more than half an ounce of gold for their personal ornaments, to dress in
coloured (i.e. purple) robes, and to drive within the town in
carriages. This law was enforced; but the Roman ladies found it a great
hardship, and submitted to it with a heavy heart as long as the war lasted, but
not longer, as we shall see in the sequel.
The extraordinary measures
adopted for replenishing the public treasury were not superfluous. For the
coming year Rome maintained not less than twenty-one legions and a fleet of one
hundred and fifty vessels. The war assumed larger proportions from year to
year, and baffled all the calculations which had been made at its commencement,
when one consular army in Spain and one in Africa were supposed to be
sufficient to resist the power of Carthage. Eight legions alone were required
to keep Hannibal in check; three were employed m the north of Italy against the
Gauls: one was kept ready near Brundusium to meet the expected attack of the
king of Macedonia; two formed the garrison of Rome; two held Sicily, and two
Sardinia. Including the army engaged in Spain, the Roman land and sea forces
cannot have amounted to less than 200,000 men, that is, one-fourth of the
population of Italy capable of bearing arms
The results accomplished were
not what might have been expected from this prodigious display of strength, and
although Fabius and Marcellus, the two ablest generals that Rome possessed,
were elected consuls for the year 214. The events of this year are of trifling
importance, and can be summed up in a few words. Hannibal was prevented from
gaining more ground in Italy; his attempts to get possession of Neapolis,
Tarentum, and Puteoli were thwarted; his lieutenant Hanno, with an army
consisting chiefly of Bruttians and Lucanians, was defeated near Beneventum by
Gracchus, who commanded the corps of 6.000 slaves raised after the battle of
Cannae, and now rewarded their courage by giving them their freedom. Hannibal,
it is alleged, was repulsed a third time by Marcellus at Nola, and (what was
for him the greatest loss) Casilinum was retaken by the Romans, owing to the
treason and cowardice of 2,000 Campanian soldiers of the garrison, who, by
betraying the town and seven hundred men of Hannibal’s troops, sought to
purchase their own safety. Meanwhile the king of Macedonia did not make the
expected attack on Italy. The Gauls, after their great victory over Postumius
early in the year 215, remained quiet; several Samnite communities that had
revolted were again subdued by the Romans and severely punished. It seemed that
Hannibal must soon be crushed by the overwhelming power of his enemies, whilst
the reinforcements for which he looked were delayed, and his friends and allies
became either lukewarm or wreak. Yet the terror of his name was undiminished.
He was a power in himself, independent of all cooperation from without, and no
Roman general ventured as yet to attack him, even with the greatest superiority
of numbers.
Meanwhile a revolution had
taken place in Sicily which in an unexpected manner revived the hopes of
Carthage. Hiero’s grandson and successor, Hieronymus, a boy of fifteen, was
entirely guided by a few ambitious men and women, who deluded themselves with
the hope of being able to make use of the war between Rome and Carthage for the
aggrandizement of the power of Syracuse and of the royal house. Andranodoros
and Zoippos, the sons-in-law of Hiero, and Themistos, the husband of a daughter
of Gelon, having put aside, soon after Hiero’s death, the council of regency of
fifteen members which had been established by Hiero for the guidance of his
youthful successor, persuaded the boy that he was old enough to be independent
of guardians and councillors, and thus they practically seized the government
themselves. In vain the dying Hiero had conjured his family to continue his
policy of a close alliance with Rome, which had so far proved eminently
successful. They were not satisfied with simply preserving the government of
Syracuse and the small part of Sicily which the Romans had allowed Hiero to
retain. Seeing no chance of enlarging the Syracusan dominion by free
concessions on the part of the Romans, they directed their hopes towards
Carthage, which after the battle of Cannae seemed to them to have gained a
decided superiority.
Hiero had scarcely closed his
eyes when Hieronymus opened communications with Carthage. Hannibal, who in the
midst of his military operations watched and guided the policy of the
Carthaginian government, sent to Syracuse two men who were eminently fitted by
their descent and abilities to act as negotiators between the two states. These
were two brothers, Hippokrates and Epikydes, Carthaginians by birth and
Syracusans by descent, their grandfather having been expelled from his native
country by the tyrant Agathokles and having settled in Carthage and married a
Carthaginian wife. They had long served in Hannibal’s army, and were equally
distinguished as soldiers and as politicians. As soon as they arrived in
Syracuse, they exercised unbounded influence as the advisers of Hieronymus.
They promised him at first the possession of half the island, and when they
found that his wishes went further, they at once agreed that he should be king
of all Sicily after the expulsion of the Romans. It was not worthwhile, the
Carthaginians thought, to haggle about the price to be paid to so valuable an
ally, especially as the payment was to be made at the expense of the common
enemy. These transactions between Hieronymus and Carthage could not be carried
on in secret. They became known to Appius Claudius, who, commanding as praetor
in Sicily in 215, repeatedly sent messengers to Syracuse, warning the king of
any steps which might endanger his friendly relations with Rome. In truth Rome
ought to have at once declared war; but she was little inclined, and not at all
prepared, in the year after Cannae to meet a new enemy, and Claudius probably
entertained hopes of gaining his end without a rupture, either by intimidation
or by an internal revolution in Syracuse.
Such hopes were not unfounded;
for, immediately after the death of Hiero, a republican party had been formed
at Syracuse, headed by the wealthiest and most influential citizens. The
turbulent Syracusans had now quietly submitted for an unusually long time to a
stable and orderly government. As during Hiero’s lifetime all opposition would
have been nipped in the bud by the king’s popularity, not less than by his
prudence and caution, the republicans had not stirred; but Hieronymus inspired
contempt by his folly and arrogance, and he provoked the enemies of despotism
by showing that he possessed the qualities, not of his grandfather, but of the
worst tyrants that had preceded him. Whilst Hiero, in his dress and mode of
living, had made no distinction between himself and the simple citizens, Syracuse
now, as in the days of the tyrant Dionysius, saw her ruler surrounded by royal
pomp, wearing a diadem and purple robes, and followed by armed bodyguards. His
authority was no longer based on the willing submission of the people, but on
foreign mercenaries and on the lowest populace, who had always hailed the
advent of tyrants, and hoped from them a share in the spoils of the rich. The
better class of citizens desired the overthrow of despotic government and an
alliance with the Romans, the natural friends and patrons of the aristocratic
party.
The fermentation continued
during the remainder of the year 215. One of the conspirators was discovered
and cruelly tortured, but died without naming his accomplices. Many innocent
persons were put to death, and Hieronymus, thinking himself safe, was
prosecuting his schemes for the enlargement of his kingdom in 214, when he was
betrayed by one of his own bodyguard into the hands of the conspirators, who
killed him as he was passing through a narrow lane in the city of Leontini.
This deed was the signal for one of those sanguinary civil wars which so often
convulsed the unhappy city of Syracuse. Whilst the body of Hieronymus lay
neglected in the street at Leontini, the conspirators rushed back to Syracuse,
to call the people to arms and to liberty. A rumour of what had happened had
preceded them, and when they arrived in the evening, bearing the blood-stained
cloak and the diadem of the tyrant, the whole town was in a fever of
excitement. When the death of Hieronymus became known for certain, the people
rushed into the temples and tore from the walls the Gallic arms which Hiero had
received from the Romans as his share of the booty after the victory at
Telamon. Sentinels were placed in different parts of the town, and all
important posts were secured. In the course of the night the whole of Syracuse
was in the power of the insurgents, with the exception of the island Ortygia.
This small island was the
place where the first Greek colonists had settled. As the town increased in
population, the inhabitants removed to the adjoining mainland, and the island
Ortygia became the fortress of Syracuse. A narrow strip of land connected it
with the mainland, but the access was defended by strong lines of wall. Behind
these walls the masters of Syracuse had frequently defied their insurgent
subjects, and from this stronghold they had issued to regain their authority.
For a moment this was now attempted by Andranodoros, who after the death of
Hieronymus was the head of the royal family, and was stimulated by his
ambitious wife Damarate, the daughter of Hiero, to resist the insurgents and to
uphold the cause of monarchy. But he found that a part of the garrison of
Ortygia was inclined to side with the conspirators, and there was, consequently,
nothing left to him but to declare his adhesion to the popular cause and to
deliver up to the republicans the keys of the fortress. He even affected zeal
in joining the revolutionary party, and was elected as one of the magistrates
to govern the new republic. The cause of liberty triumphed, and with it the
policy of those sensible and moderate men who wished to remain faithful to the
Roman alliance. Hippokrates and Epikydes, the agents of Hannibal, found that
their mission had failed, and that they could no longer safely remain in
Syracuse. They requested a safe-conduct to return to Italy into Hannibal’s
camp.
But Andranodoros had not given
up the hope of preserving the dominion over Syracuse for himself and the family
of Hiero. He was suspected, justly or unjustly, of a plan for overthrowing the
republican government and for assassinating its chiefs. Impartial inquiry and
fair trial were never thought of in the civil broils of Syracuse. The party
that brought forward an accusation acted at the same time as judge and executioner,
and resorted to violence and treachery without the least scruple. Accordingly,
when Andranodoros one day entered the senate with his kinsman Themistos, the
husband of Gelon’s daughter, they were both seized and put to death. Nor did
their death seem a sufficient guarantee for the safety of the republic against
a restoration of the monarchy. It was resolved to root out the whole family of
Hiero. Murderers were dispatched to the palace, which now became a scene of the
most atrocious carnage. Damarate, the daughter, and Harmonia, the
grand-daughter, of Hiero, were murdered first. Herakleia, another daughter of
Hiero, and wife of Zoippos, who was at that time absent in Egypt, fled with her
two youthful daughters into a domestic sanctuary, and in vain implored mercy
for herself and her innocent children. She was dragged away from the altar and
butchered. Her daughters, besprinkled with their mother’s blood, only prolonged
their sufferings by trying to escape, and fell at last under the blows of their
pursuers. Thus was destroyed the house of a prince who had ruled over Syracuse
for half a century, and had been universally admired and envied as one of the
wisest, happiest, and best of men.
This deed of horror bore evil
fruits to the authors. It could not fail to bring about a reaction in public
opinion, and consequently when, soon after, two new magistrates were elected in
the place of Andranodoros and Themistos, the choice of the people fell on
Hippokrates and Epikydes, who, in the hope of some such chance, had prolonged
their stay in Syracuse, and had, no doubt, in doing so risked their lives.
Their election was evidently to be attributed to the populace and the army,
which began to exercise more and more influence in the civil affairs of
Syracuse, and a considerable part of which consisted of Roman deserters, who
wished at all hazards to bring about a rupture with Rome. From this moment
began the counter-revolution, which was soon followed by the most deplorable
anarchy. When the magistrates showed their desire to renew the Roman alliance,
and for this purpose sent messengers to the praetor and received Roman
messengers in return, the people and the army began to be agitated. The
agitation increased when a Carthaginian fleet showed itself in the neighbourhood
of Pachynus, inspiring the enemies of Rome with confidence and courage. When,
therefore, Appius Claudius, to counteract this movement, appeared with a Roman
fleet at the mouth of the harbour, the Carthaginian party thought themselves
betrayed, and the crowd rushed tumultuously into the port to resist a lauding
of the Romans, if they should attempt it.
Thus the unhappy town was tom
by two hostile parties; nor was the form of government the only object of
contention. The independence and the very existence of Syracuse were involved
in the struggle. For a time it seemed that the government, and with it the
friends of Rome, would prevail. The greatest obstacles in the way of an
arrangement with Home were the two Carthaginian brothers, who, from being the
agents and messengers of Hannibal, had been elected among the Syracusan
magistrates. If these two men could be got rid of the government, it was
thought, was strong enough to carry out its policy of reconciliation with Rome.
Force could not be employed against men who enjoyed the favour of a great mass
of the people and were the idols of the soldiers. But a decent pretext was not
wanting. The town of Leontini asked for military protection. Hippokrates was
sent thither with a body of 4,000 men. But no sooner did he find himself
in possession of an independent command than he began to act in direct
opposition to the government. He incited the people of Leontini to assert their
independence of Syracuse, and, to precipitate matters, he surprised and cut to
pieces a military post of the Romans on the frontier, and thus de facto commenced
the war with Rome. As yet, however, the government of Syracuse was not
compromised by this act of hostility. They disavowed all participation in this
violation of the still existing alliance, and offered to put down the rebellion
of Hippokrates and the Leontinians in conjunction with a Roman force. The Roman
praetor Marcellus, however, did not wait for the cooperation of the Syracusan
force, which, 8,000 strong, left Syracuse under the command of their
‘strategoi’. Before they arrived Marcellus had taken Leontini by force, and had
inflicted severe punishment on the rebels and mutineers. Two thousand Roman
deserters who had been taken in the town were scourged and beheaded.
Hippokrates and his brother escaped with difficulty to the neighbouring fort of
Herbessos. Again the Carthaginian party seemed annihilated, but again the
cruelty shown by their opponents brought about a reaction. When the Syracusan
troops, on their march to Leontini, heard of the storming of the town by the
Romans, and of the terrible punishment inflicted on the citizens, and
especially on the captive soldiers, they feared that their government would
deliver up all the deserters among them to the vengeance of the Romans. They
not only refused, therefore, to attack Hippokrates and Epikydes in Herbessos,
but, fraternising with them, drove away their officers and marched back to
Syracuse under the command of the very men whom they had been sent to capture.
In Syracuse an exaggerated report had been spread of the brutality of the
Romans in Leontini, and had revived the ill-feeling of the populace towards the
Romans. In spite of the resistance of the strategoi the soldiers were admitted
into the town, and this was the signal for all the worst horrors of anarchy.
The slaves were set fee, the prisons broken open and the inmates let loose, the
strategoi murdered or expelled, their houses ransacked. Syracuse was now at the
mercy of the populace, the soldiers, deserters, slaves, and condemned
offenders; the only men enjoying anything like authority and obedience were
Hippokrates and Epikydes. The Carthaginian party was completely triumphant, and
the Romans, in addition to their numerous difficulties, had now a new and most
arduous task imposed on them—the reduction by force of the principal town of
Sicily, which in the hands of the Carthaginians made the whole island an unsafe
possession, and cut off all prospect of ending the war by a descent on the
African coast.
Sosis, one of the expelled
strategoi, and a leader of the j republican movement from the very beginning,
brought to Marcellus the news of what had happened. The Roman general at
once marched upon Syracuse, and took up a position on the south side of the town,
near the temple of the Olympian Zeus and not far from the great harbour, while
Appius Claudius anchored with the fleet in front of the town. The oldest part
of Syracuse was in the small island Ortygia, which separates the large harbour
in the south from a much smaller one on the north. On this island was the
famous fountain of Arethousa, which seemed to gush forth, even from the sea, at
a place where, according to a myth, the nymph—who, as she fled from the
river-god Alpheios, had thrown herself into the sea from the shores of Elis—had
re-appeared above the waters. Such islands, near to the mainland, easy of
defence and containing good anchoring-ground, were on all the coasts of the
Mediterranean the favourite spots where the Phoenicians used to settle in the
primeval period long before the wanderings of the Greeks.
On this island accordingly, as
in many similar places, a Phoenician settlement had preceded the Greeks; but
when here, as on the whole eastern half of Sicily, the Semitic traders retired
before the warlike Greeks, the latter soon became too numerous for the islet of
Ortygia. They extended their settlement to the mainland of Sicily, and built a
new town, called Achradina, along the sea-coast, on the north wide of the
original town on the islet. Achradina became now the principal part of
Syracuse, whilst Ortygia, more and more cleared of private dwellings, became a
fortress, containing the palaces of the successive tyrants, the magazines, the
treasure-houses, and the barracks for the mercenaries. It was strongly fortified
all round, but especially on the northern side, where a narrow artificial neck
of land connected it with the nearer portions of Syracuse. It thus formed a
formidable stronghold, and its possession was indispensable for those who
wished to control the town. During the memorable siege of Syracuse in the
Peloponnesian war by the Athenian armament, the town consisted only of the two
parts—the island of Ortygia and Achradina; but at a subsequent period there
arose on the western side of the latter two suburbs, called Tyche and Neapolis,
each of which was, like Achradina and Ortygia, surrounded with walls and
separately fortified. Dionysius the elder considerably enlarged the
circumference of the town by fortifying the northern and southwestern side of the
whole slope called Epipolae, which, in the form of a triangle, rose with a
gradual incline to a point called Euryalis, in the west of Achradina, Tyche,
and Neapolis. Thus a large space was included in the fortifications of
Syracuse; but this space was never quite covered with buildings, and the
population was not large enough, even in the most flourishing period, to man
effectually the whole extent of wall, amounting to eighteen miles; but the
natural strength of the town made the defence more easy. The walls, which from
the northern and southern extremities of the older town ran westward and
converged at the fort Euryalus, stood on precipitous rocks, and were therefore
easily defended, even by a comparatively small number of troops. Moreover Hiero
had in his long reign accumulated in abundance all possible means of defence.
The ingenious Archimedes, liberally supported by his royal friend, was in
possession of all material and scientific resources for the construction of the
most perfect engines of war that the world had hitherto seen. If we recollect
how often Hiero in the first Punic war supplied the Romans with munitions of
war, and that he gave fifty ballistae to the Rhodians after the earthquake, we
may form an idea of the extensive scale on which machinery of this kind must
have been manufactured in Syracuse, and how large a stock must have been there
ready for use.
The attempts of Marcellus to
take Syracuse by storm failed, accordingly, in the most signal manner. On the
land side the wall-crested rocks defied all the usual modes of attack with
ladders, movable towers, or battering-rams. On the sea-front of Achradina sixty
Roman vessels, venturing to approach the walls, lashed two-and-two together,
and carrying wooden towers and battering-rams, were driven back by an
overwhelming shower of great and small missiles from the bastions and from
behind the loop-holed walls; some ships, caught by iron hooks, were raised
partly out of the water, and then dashed back, to the dismay of the crews, so
that at length they apprehended danger when they only saw a beam or a rope on
the wall, which might turn out to be a new instrument of destruction invented
by the dreaded Archimedes. Marcellus saw that it was of no use to persist in
his attacks. Syracuse, which had repeatedly resisted the power of Carthage and
the Athenian armada, was indeed not likely to be taken by force. He therefore
gave up the siege, but remained in the neighbourhood in a strong position for
the purpose of watching the town and cutting off supplies and reinforcements.
It was impossible to blockade Syracuse by a regular circumvallation, on account
of the vast extent of her walls; and this would have been useless, even if it
had been possible, so long as the harbour was open to the Carthaginian fleet.
From the moment when Syracuse
passed over from the Roman to the Carthaginian alliance, the chief momentum of
the war seemed shifted from Italy to Sicily. The attention of both the
belligerent nations was again turned to the scene of their first great struggle,
and thither both now sent new fleets and armies. It was Hannibal himself who
advised the Carthaginian government to send reinforcements to Sicily instead of
Italy. The Romans had already a considerable force on the island, and now sent
a new legion, which, as Hannibal blocked the land road through Lucania au
Bruttium, was conveyed by sea from Ostia to Panormus. Of the exact strength of
the Roman armies in Sicily we are not informed. The garrisons of the numerous
towns must have absorbed a great number of troops, apart from the force engaged
before Syracuse. A considerable portion of Sicily was inclined to rebellion,
and in several places rebellion had already broken out. The towns of Helorus,
Herbessus, and Megara, which had revolted, were retaken by Marcellus and
destroyed, as a warning to all those that were wavering in their fidelity.
Nevertheless, as at this very time Himilco had landed with
15,000 Carthaginians and twelve elephants at Heraclea in the west of the
island, the insurrection against Rome spread, under the protection and
encouragement of the Carthaginian arms. Agrigentum, though destroyed in the
first Punic war, was still of great importance, from the strength of its
position. Marcellus marched upon it in all haste from Syracuse, to prevent its
being occupied by the Carthaginians; but he came too late. Himilco had already
seized Agrigentum, and made it the base of his operations. At the same time a
fleet of fifty-five Carthaginian vessels entered the harbour of Syracuse, and
thereupon Himilco, advancing with his army, established his camp under the
southern walls of Syracuse, near the river Anapus.
The situation of the Romans,
close before the hostile town, and in the immediate vicinity of a hostile army,
was by no means satisfactory. But it became still worse when the town of
Murgantia (probably in the vicinity of Syracuse) where they had large
magazines, was betrayed to the Punians by the inhabitants. The Romans now felt
that they were nowhere safe; but, although their suspicions justified not only
precaution but even severity, we cannot, even at this distance of time, read
without indignation and disgust the report of the way in which the Roman
garrison of Enna treated a defenceless population on a mere suspicion of treason.
The town of Enna (Castro Giovanni), situated in the central part of the island
on an isolated rock difficult of access, was of great importance on account of
the natural strength of its position. Ancient myths called it the place where
Persephone (Proserpina) the daughter of Demeter, was seized by Hades, the god
of the regions beneath the earth. A temple of the goddess was a national
sanctuary for all the inhabitants of Sicily, and conferred on Enna the
character of a sacred city. In the first Punic war it had suffered much and had
been repeatedly taken by one or the other belligerent. It had now a strong
Roman garrison, commanded by L. Pinarius. The inhabitants, it appears, felt
little attachment to Rome, and probably L. Pinarius had good reason to be on
his guard day and night. But fear urged him to commit an act of atrocity which
rendered his own name infamous and sullied the honour of his country. He called
upon the inhabitants of Enna to lay their requests before him in a general
assembly of the people. Meanwhile he gave secret instructions to his
men, posted sentinels all round the public theatre where the popular
assembly was held, and upon a given signal the Roman soldiers rushed upon the
defenceless people, killed them indiscriminately, and then sacked the town, as
if it had been taken by storm. The consul Marcellus not only approved of this
iniquitous deed but rewarded the perpetrators, and allowed them to keep the
plunder of the unhappy town, hoping, no doubt, thus to terrify the vacillating
Sicilians into obedience to Rome.
The carnage of Enna reminds us
of similar acts of atrocity committed by Italian warriors in Messana, Rhegium,
and more recently in Casilinum. But the crime had never been so openly approved
and rewarded by the first representative of the Roman community. The defenders
of Casilinum had acted not only as murderers, but also as brave soldiers; but
L. Pinarius and his men were rewarded with the spoils of their victims without
showing that they were as brave as they were treacherous, bloodthirsty,
and greedy. It seemed that the war rendered more ferocious the minds of
the men who were destined to receive and to spread the civilization of
antiquity and to defend it from the barbarians of the north and of the south.
The cruel punishment of Enna
failed to produce the effect which the Romans had expected. Hatred and aversion
acted even more powerfully than fear. The towns which had as yet been only
wavering in their allegiance joined the Carthaginian side all over Sicily.
Himilco left his position before Syracuse, and made expeditions in every
direction to organize and support the insurrection against Rome. Thus passed
the year 213 B.C. Towards its close, Marcellus, with a part of his army, took
up his winter-quarters in a fortified camp five miles to the west of Syracuse,
without abandoning, however, the camp previously established near the temple of
the Olympian Zeus in the south of the town. Lacking the means of blockading the
town, he remained in the neighbourhood only in the hope of obtaining possession
of it by some stratagem, or by treason.
The result showed that his
calculations were just. The republican party in Syracuse was indeed vanquished
and broken up by the soldiers and the populace; and its chiefs, the murderers
of Hieronymus and of the family of Hiero, were in exile, mostly in the Roman
camp. All power was in the hands of the foreign mercenaries and deserters, and
Syracuse was de facto a Carthaginian fortress under the command of Hippokrates
and Epikydes. Nevertheless the republican party found the means of keeping up
with the Romans a regular correspondence, the object of which was to deliver up
the town into their hands. In fishing boats, hidden under nets, messengers were
secretly despatched from the harbour of Syracuse into the Roman camp, and found
their way back in the same manner. Thus were discussed and settled the
conditions under which the town was to be betrayed. Marcellus promised that the
Syracusans should be restored to the same position which they had occupied as
Roman allies under King Hiero; they were to retain their liberty and their own
laws. All the preparations were already made for carrying out the proposed
plan, when it became known to Epikydes, and eighty of the conspirators were put
to death. Thus baffled, Marcellus nevertheless persevered in his scheme. By his
partisans he was informed of everything that took place within the town. He
knew that a great festival was about to be celebrated to Artemis, which was to
last for three days. He justly expected that on this occasion great laxity
would be shown in guarding the walls. Marcellus had observed that in one part
of the fortifications, on the northern side, the wall was so low that it could
be easily scaled with ladders. To this place he sent, on one of the festive
nights, a party of soldiers, who succeeded in reaching the top of the wall,
and, under the guidance of the Syracusan Sosis, one of the conspirators,
proceeded to the gate called Hoxapylon. Here the drunken guardsmen were found
sleeping and quickly dispatched, the gate was opened, and the signal given to a
body of Roman troops outside to advance and enter the town. When the morning
dawned, Epipolte, the upper part of the town, was in the hands of the Romans.
The suburbs Tyche and Neapolis, which in former times had been protected by
walls on the side of Epipolae, were now probably open on the west, since
Dionysius had constructed the wall which inclosed the whole space of Epipolae.
They could not, therefore, be held tor any longtime after the Romans were
inside the common wall. But on the extreme west point of Epipolae, the strong
detached fort Euryalus defied all attacks. Marcellus was therefore still very
far from being master of Syracuse. Not only Euryalus and the island of Ortygia,
but Achradina, the largest and most important part of Syracuse, had still to be
taken; and these had lost nothing of their strength by the fact that the
suburbs were now in the power of the Romans. In truth the siege of Syracuse
lasted for some months longer, and the difficulties of the Romans were now
doubled rather than diminished. It is, therefore, a silly anecdote which
relates that when, on the morning after the taking of Epipolao, Marcellus saw
the rich town spread out before his feet and now within his grasp, he shed
tears of joy and emotion. He summoned the garrisons of Euryalus and Achradina.
The deserters who kept guard on the walls of Achradina would not even allow the
Roman heralds to approach or to speak. On the other hand the commander of
Euryalus, a Greek mercenary from Argos called Philodemos, showed himself ready
after a while to listen to the proposals of the Syracusan Sosis, and evacuated
the place. Marcellus was now safe in his rear and had no longer to apprehend a
simultaneous attack from the garrison of the town in front and from an army
approaching by land in his rear. He encamped on the ground between the two
suburbs Tyche and Neapolis, and gave these up to be plundered by his soldiers
as a foretaste of the booty of Syracuse. Soon after, a Carthaginian army, under
Hippokrates and Himilco, marched upon Syracuse, and attacked the Roman camp
near the temple of Zeus Olympios, whilst, simultaneously, Epikydes made a sally
from Achradina upon the other Roman camp between the suburbs. These attacks
failed. On every point the Romans kept their ground; and thus the hostile
forces within and before Syracuse remained for some time in the same relative
position, without being able to make an impression either one way or the other.
Meanwhile summer advanced, and a malignant disease broke out in the
Carthaginian camp, which was pitched on the low ground by the river Anapus. In
times past the deadly climate of Syracuse had more than once delivered the town
from her enemies. Under the very walls of the town a Carthaginian army had
perished in the reign of the elder Dionysius. Now the climate proved as
disastrous to the defenders as it had formerly done to the besiegers of
Syracuse. The Carthaginians were struck down by the disease in masses. When a
great part of the men and of the officers, and among them Hippokrates and
Himilco themselves, had been carried off, the remainder of the troops,
consisting for the most part of Sicilians, dispersed in different directions.
The Romans also suffered from the disease; but the higher parts of Syracuse,
where they were stationed, were more cool and airy than the low ground on the
banks of the Anapus; and moreover the houses of the suburbs Tyche and Neapolis
afforded shelter from the deadly rays of the sun, so that the Roman loss was
comparatively small. Nevertheless Marcellus had, as yet, no prospect of taking
by storm a town so vigorously defended, nor could he reduce it by famine, as
the port was open to the Carthaginian vessels. At this very time Carthage made
renewed efforts to supply Syracuse with provisions. Seven hundred transports,
laden with supplies, were dispatched to Sicily under the convoy of one hundred
and thirty ships of war. This fleet had already reached Agrigentum when it was
detained by contrary winds. Epikydes, impatient of delay, left Syracuse and
proceeded to Agrigentum, for the purpose of urging Bomilcar, the Carthaginian
admiral, to make an attack upon the Roman fleet which lay at anchor near the
promontory of Pachynus. Bomilcar advanced with his ships of war; but, when the
Romans sailed to meet him, he avoided them, and steered to Tarentum, after
having dispatched an order to the transports to return to Africa. The cause of
this extraordinary proceeding does not appear in the account handed down to us.
If it he true, as Livy reports, that Bomilcar’s fleet was stronger than that of
the Romans, it cannot have been fear which prevented him from accepting battle.
Perhaps he thought that his presence at Tarentum was more necessary than at
Syracuse; perhaps he quarrelled with Epikydes. At any rate he left to its own
resources the town which he was sent to relieve, and thus spread discouragement
among its defenders and hastened its fall.
From this moment the fate of
Syracuse was sealed. Epikydes himself probably lost all hope, as he did not
return, but remained in Agrigentum. Again the republican party took courage.
The leaders of this party renewed negotiations with the Romans, and again
Marcellus guaranteed the liberty and independence of Syracuse as the price for
surrendering the town. But the friends of Rome were not able to fulfill the
promises they had made. The unhappy town was torn by a desperate struggle
between the citizens and the soldiers. At first the citizens had the advantage.
They succeeded in killing the chief officers appointed by Epikydes, and in
electing republican magistrates in their place, who were ready to hand the town
over to the Romans. The lawless soldiery seemed overpowered for a moment. But,
after a short time, that faction among the troops got the upper hand again who
had a just apprehension that their lives were in jeopardy if they fell into the
hands of the Romans. The foreign mercenaries were persuaded to resist to the
last. Another revolution followed. The republican magistrates were murdered,
and a general massacre and pillage signalized the final triumph of the enemies
of Rome and of Syracuse. The unhappy town resembled a helpless wreck, drifting
fast toward a reef whilst the crew, instead of battling with the elements,
spends its last strength in bloody internecine strife.
Even now Marcellus did not
make a direct attempt to take Syracuse by force until he had secured the
cooperation of a party in the town. The troops had chosen six captains, each of
whom was to defend a certain part of the walls. Among these captains was a
Spanish officer of the name of Mericus, who commanded on the southern side of
Ortygia. Seeing that the town could not possibly be held much longer, and that
therefore it was high time to make his peace if he wished to obtain favourable
terms, at least for those soldiers who were not deserters, he entered secretly
into negotiations with Marcellus. An agreement was soon made. A barge
approached at night the southern extremity of Ortygia, and landed a party of Roman
soldiers, who were admitted through a postern-gate into the fortification. On
the following day Marcellus ordered a general attack upon the walls of
Achradina, and whilst the garrison rushed from all parts, and also from Ortygia
to the threatened spot, Roman soldiers landed in several ships unopposed on
Ortygia and occupied the place with a sufficient force. Having made sure of the
fact that Ortygia was in his power, Marcellus at once desisted from any further
attack on Achradina, well knowing that, after the fall of Ortygia, the defence
of Achradina would not be continued. His calculation proved correct. During the
following night the deserters found means of escaping, and in the morning the
gates were opened to admit the victorious army.
Thus, at length, after a siege
that had lasted more than two years, the Romans reaped the fruit of their
dogged perseverance. If any town that had ever succumbed to the Roman arms was
justified in expecting a lenient, or even a generous treatment, this town
assuredly was Syracuse. The invaluable services which Hiero had rendered in the
course of more than half a century, could not in justice be considered as
balanced by the follies of a child, and by the hostility of a political party
with which the better class of Syracusan citizens had never sympathized. From
the very beginning of the sad complications and revolutions at Syracuse, the
true republican party, which was attached to order and freedom, inclined to
Rome and wished to continue the foreign policy of Hiero. It was they who
conspired to put down the tyrant Hieronymus and his anti-Roman relations and
councillors. They had attempted to rid themselves of the emissaries of Hannibal
and of their adherents in the army; they were overpowered without renouncing
their plans; they had made every effort, in conjunction with their exiled
friends who had taken refuge in the camp of Marcellus, to deliver Syracuse into
the hands of the Romans; they had resisted the reign of terror exercised by the
foreign mercenaries and the Roman deserters, and many of them lost their lives
in the attempt to deliver their native town from the tyranny of an armed mob of
mutineers and traitors, and to renew the old alliance with Rome. Syracuse had
not rebelled against Rome, but had implored assistance from Rome against its
worst oppressors. Not only clemency and magnanimity, but even justice, should
have prompted the conquerors to look upon the sufferings of Syracuse in this
light; and it would have been the undying glory of Marcellus—brighter than the
most splendid triumph—if, on obtaining possession, he had shielded the wretched
town from further miseries. He would indeed have acted right in punishing with
Roman severity the soldiers who had violated the military oath and deserted
their colours, and who were the chief cause of the pertinacity of the struggle.
But he ought to have spared the citizens of the town, the deplorable victims of
hostile factions. He did the very opposite. He allowed the deserters to escape,
perhaps with the object of being able to plunder so much the more leisurely,
and he treated the town as it had been taken by storm, handing it over to the
rapacity of soldiers maddened to fury by the long resistance and by the
prospect of plunder and revenge. The noble Syracuse, which had ranked in the
foremost line of the fairest cities that bore the Hellenic name, fell never to
rise again from that time to the present. Marcellus had indeed promised that
the lives of the people should be spared; but how such a promise was kept we
may infer from the savage murder of the best man in Syracuse, whose grey hair
and venerable, thought-furrowed forehead ought to have shielded him from the
steel even of a barbarian. Where Archimedes was slain, because, absorbed in his
studies, he did not readily understand the demand of a plundering soldier,
there, we may be sure, ignoble blood was shed without stint. Marcellus was
intent only on obtaining possession of the royal treasures, which he hoped to
find in the island of Ortygia; but it is hardly likely that much of them had
been left by the successive masters of Syracuse during the time of anarchy. On
the other hand, the works of art which had been accumulated in Syracuse during
the periods of prosperity were still extant. These were all, without exception,
taken, to be sent to Rome. Syracuse was not the first town where the Romans
learnt and practised this kind of public spoliation. Tarentum and Volsinii had
already experienced the rapacity rather than the taste of the Romans for works
of art. But the art treasures of Syracuse were so numerous and
so splendid that they threw into the shade everything of the sort
that had been transported to Rome before. It came therefore to be a
received tradition that Marcellus was the first who set the example of
enriching Rome, at the expanse of her conquered enemies, with the triumphs of
Greek art.
Fourth Period of the Hannibalian War.FROM THE TAKING OF SYRACUSE TO THE CAPTURE OF CAPUA, 212-211 B.C.
By the taking of Syracuse the
war in Sicily was decided aurrender in favour of the Romans, but not by any
means finished. Agrigentum was still held by the Carthaginians, and a great
number of Sicilian towns were on their side. A Libyan cavalry general, named
Mutines, sent to Sicily by Hannibal, and operating in conjunction with Hanno
and Epikydes, gave the Romans a great deal of trouble. But when Mutines had
quarrelled with the other Carthaginian generals, and had gone over to the
Romans in consequence, the fortune of war inclined more and more to the side of
the latter. At length, two years after the fall of Syracuse, Mutines betrayed
Agrigentum to the Romans. The consul, M. Valerius Laevinus, who then commanded
in Sicily, ordered the leading inhabitants of Agrigentum to be scourged and
beheaded, the rest to be sold as slaves, and the town to be sacked. This severe
punishment had the effect of terrifying the other towns. Forty of them
submitted voluntarily, twenty were betrayed, and only six had to be taken by
force. All resistance to the Roman arms in Sicily was now broken, and the
island returned to the peace and slavery of a Roman province. Its principal
task was henceforth to grow corn for feeding the sovereign populace of the
capital, and to allow itself to be plundered systematically by farmers of the
revenue, traders, usurers, and, above all, by the annual governors.
It was most fortunate for Rome
that, by the fall of Syracuse in 212, the Sicilian war had taken a favourable
turn. For the same year was so disastrous to them in other parts, that the
prospect for the future became more and more gloomy. In Spain the two brothers
Scipio had, after the successful campaign of 215, continued the war in the
following year with the same happy results. Several battles are reported for
this year, in which they are said invariably to have beaten the Carthaginians.
We may safely pass over the detailed accounts of these events, which are of no
historical value, from their evident air of exaggeration, and on account of our
ignorance of the ancient geography of Spain. Yet, through all misrepresentations,
it appears certain that the war was continued in Spain, and that the
Carthaginians were not able to carry out Hannibal’s plan of sending an army
across the Pyrenees and Alps to cooperate with the army already in Italy. How
much of this result is due to the genius of the Roman generals and to the
bravery of the Roman legions it is impossible to ascertain from the partial
accounts of the annalists, who probably derived their information chiefly from
the traditions of the Scipionic family. One cause of the failure of the
Carthaginians lay no doubt in the frequent rebellions among the Spanish tribes,
which the Romans instigated and turned to their own advantage. But the
principal cause was a war in Africa with Syphax, a Numidian chief or king, which
seems to have been very serious, and which compelled them to withdraw Hasdrubal
and a part of their army from Spain for the defence of their home territory.
This circumstance operated most powerfully in favour of the Roman arms in
Spain, leaving the Scipios almost unopposed, and enabling them to overrun the
Carthaginian possessions, and to obtain a footing south of the river Ebro. In
the year 214, the Romans took Saguntum, and restored it as an independent
allied town five years after its capture by Hannibal. They also entered into
relations with King Syphax. Every enemy of Carthage was of course an ally of
Rome, and valuable in proportion as he was troublesome or dangerous to
Carthage. Roman officers were dispatched into Africa to train the undisciplined
soldiers of the Numidian prince, and especially to form an infantry, after the
Roman model, which might be capable of resisting the Carthaginians in the
field. Such a task as this, however, would have required more time than the
Roman officers could devote to it. It seems that Syphax derived no benefit from
the attempt to turn his irregular horsemen into legionary soldiers. He was soon
after in great difficulties. The Carthaginians secured the alliance of another
Numidian chief, called Gula, whose son Masinissa, a youth seventeen years old,
gave now the first evidence of a military ability and an ambition destined in
the sequel to become most fatal to the Carthaginians. Syphax was completely
defeated and expelled from his dominions. He came to the Romans as a fugitive
about the same time that Hasdrubal, after the victorious termination of the
African war, returned to Spain with considerable reinforcements.
The fortune of war now changed
rapidly and decidedly. The Scipios, having long been left without a supply of
new troops from home, had been obliged to enroll a great number of Spanish
mercenaries. Rome now learnt to know the difference between mercenaries and an
army of citizens. It was not indeed the first time that such troops had been
employed. In the first Punic war a body of Gallic deserters had been taken into
Homan pay. The Cenomanians and other tribes of Cisalpine Gaul, mentioned as
serving on the Roman side in the beginning of the Hannibalian war, were no
doubt regularly paid, and were, in fact, mercenaries. So were of course the
Cretans and other Greek troops whom Hiero had sent as auxiliary contingents on
several occasions. But it appears that the first employment of mercenaries on a
large scale, after the model of the Carthaginians, took place in Spain on the
present occasion. Where the Scipios obtained the means for paying these troops
we cannot tell. Perhaps they were not able to pay them punctually, and this
fact would alone suffice to explain their faithlessness and desertion.
It was in 212 B.C. that
Hasdrubal, the son of Barcas, after the defeat of Syphax, returned to Spain. He
found that the Roman generals had divided their forces, and were operating
separately in different parts of the country. Their Celtiberian mercenaries had
deserted and gone home, tempted, it is said, by their countrymen who served in
the Carthaginian army. Thus, weakened by desertion and by the division of their
strength, the two Scipios were one after another attacked by Hasdrubal, and so
thoroughly routed that hardly a remnant of their army escaped. Publius
Cornelius Scipio and his brother Cneius both fell at the head of their troops.
A poor remnant was saved, and made good its retreat under the command of a
brave officer of equestrian rank, called L. Marcius. But almost the whole of
Spain was lost to the Romans at one blow. The war which they had vigorously and
successfully carried on for so many years, for the purpose of preventing a
second invasion of Italy from Spain, had ended now with the annihilation of
almost all their forces, and nothing seemed henceforth able to check the
Carthaginian general, if he intended to carry out the plan of his brother.
The disastrous issue of the
war in Spain was the more alarming as in the year 212 Hannibal again displayed
in Italy an energy which was calculated to remind the Romans of his first three
campaigns after he had crossed the Alps in 218. The year 213 had passed almost
as quietly as if a truce had been concluded. Hannibal had spent the summer in
the country of the Sallentinians, not far from Tarentum, in the hope of taking
by surprise or by treason that city, which was of the greatest importance to
him from the facilities which it afforded for direct communication with
Macedonia. He obtained possession of several small towns in the neighbourhood;
but, on the other hand, he lost again Consentia and Taurianum in Bruttium,
while a few insignificant places in Lucania were taken by the consul Tiberius
Sempronius Gracchus. On this occasion we learn incidentally that Rome allowed
at that time, or rather encouraged, a kind of guerilla warfare of volunteers,
not unlike privateering in naval wars, which must have contributed largely to
brutalize the population. A certain Roman knight and contractor, called T.
Pomponius Veientanus, commanded a body of irregulars in Bruttium, pillaging and
devastating those communities which had joined the Carthaginian side. He was
joined by a large number of runaway slaves, herdsmen, and peasants, and he had
formed something like an army, which, without costing the republic anything,
did good service in damaging and harassing her enemies. But this mob was not
fit to encounter a Carthaginian army, and it was accordingly an easy task for
Hanno, who commanded in these parts, to capture or cut to pieces the whole band.
Pomponius was taken prisoner, and it was perhaps fortunate for him that he thus
escaped the vengeance of his countrymen, whose curses he had richly deserved,
not only by his incompetence as an officer, but much more by the rascality with
which he, in conjunction with other contractors, had robbed the public and
jeopardized the safety of the state.
It now became evident that the
apparently self-denying patriotism of which, two years before, several large
capitalists had made an ostentatious display, was nothing but a cover for the
meanest rapacity, selfishness, and dishonesty. The ungovernable craving for
wealth which at all times possessed the great men of Rome, joined with their
utter contempt of right—the two great evils which the Gracchi in vain endeavoured
to check—show themselves for the first time with great distinctness in the
trial of the contractor M. Postumius Pyrgensis and his fellow-conspirators in
the beginning of the year 212 B.C.
This Postumius, like the
just-mentioned Pomponius, was a member of a joint-stock company, which in 215
had offered to furnish, on credit, the materials of war necessary for the army
in Spain, on condition that the government should insure them against sea
risks. Since then the pretended patriots had been discovered to be common
rogues and villains. They had laden old vessels with worthless articles, had
scuttled and abandoned them at sea, and then claimed compensation for the
alleged full value. This act was not merely an ordinary fraud on the public
purse, but a crime of the gravest nature, inasmuch as it endangered the safety
of the army in Spain. Information of it had been given as early as the year
213; but, as Livy assures us, the senate did not venture at once to proceed
against the men whose wealth gave them an overpowering influence in the state.
Pomponius accordingly remained not only unpunished, but was even appointed to a
sort of military command, and allowed to carry on a predatory war on his own
account and for his own profit. We can easily understand that men of such
reckless audacity and so unprincipled as Pomponius, who commanded bands of
armed ruffians, could not easily be punished like common offenders. Yet after
Pomponius had fallen into captivity, and his band was annihilated, the
government plucked up courage to call his accomplices to account for their
misdeeds. Two tribunes of the people, Spurius Carvilius and Lucius Carvilius,
impeached Postumius before the assembly of tribes. The people were highly
incensed. Nobody ventured to plead in favour of the accused; even the tribune
C. Servilius Casca, a relative of Postumius, was kept by fear and shame from
interceding. The accused now ventured upon an act which seems almost
incredible, and which shows to what an extent, even at the best time of the
republic, the internal order and the public peace were at the mercy of any band
of desperate villains who ventured to set the law at defiance. The Capitol,
where the tribes were just about to give their votes, was invaded by a mob,
which created such an uproar that acts of violence would have been committed if
the tribunes, yielding to the storm, had not broken up the assembly.
This triumph of lawlessness
over the established order of the state was a temporary success which carried
the anarchical party beyond their real strength. Rome was not yet so degenerate
that a permanent terrorism could be established by the audacity of some rich
and influential malefactors. It was rather an outbreak of madness than a
deliberate act which prompted Postumius and his accomplices to resist the
authority of the Roman people and its lawful magistrates. They were far from
forming a political party, or from finding men in the senate or in the popular
assembly who would venture to defend or even to excuse them. Their vile frauds
were now a small offence compared with their attempt to outrage the majesty of
the Roman people. The tribunes dropped the minor charge, and, instead of asking
the people to inflict a fine, insisted upon a capital punishment. Postumius
forfeited his bail, and escaped from Rome. The punishment of exile was formally
pronounced against him, and all his property was confiscated. All participators
in the outrage were punished with the same severity, and thus the offended
majesty of the Roman people was fully and promptly vindicated.
The villany of the Roman
publicani, who abused the necessities of the state to enrich themselves, and
whose criminal rapacity endangered the safety of the troops in Spain, is not
without parallels in history, and has been equalled or surpassed in modern
Europe, as well as in America during the late civil war. We must not,
therefore, be too harsh in our judgment, or too sweeping in our condemnation of
the Roman people among whom such swindlers could prosper. But we shall do well
to remember infamous acts like these, when we hear the fulsome praise often
lavished on the civic virtue, the self-denial, and the devotion of the Roman
people in the service of the state. The moral and religious elements of the
community must have been deeply tainted if, in the very midst of the
Hannibalian war, in the agonizing struggle for existence, a great number of men
could be found among the influential classes so utterly void of patriotic
feeling and conscientiousness, so hardened against public indignation, so
careless of just retribution.
Not only public morality, but
also the religion of the Romans, felt the injurious effect of the protracted
war. It seemed that men gradually lost confidence in their native gods. All the
prayers, vows, processions, sacrifices, and offerings, all the festivals and
sacred games which bad been celebrated on the direct injunction of the priests,
had proved to be of no avail. Either the ancestral gods had forsaken the town,
or they were powerless against the decrees of fate. In their despair the people
turned towards strange gods. The number of the superstitious was swelled by a
mass of impoverished peasants, who had left their wasted fields and burnt
homesteads to find support and protection in the capital. The streets swarmed
with foreign priests, soothsayers, and religious impostors, who no longer
secretly, but openly, carried on their trade, and profited by the fear and
ignorance of the multitude. Such a neglect of the national religion was, in the
eyes of every community in the ancient world, a kind of treason, which, if
tolerated, would have brought about the most fatal consequences. No nation of
antiquity rose to the conception of a God common to the human race. Every
people, every political society, had its own special protecting deity, distinct
from the deity of the next neighbour and hostile to the gods of the national
enemy. It was of the utmost importance that all citizens should combine in duly
worshipping those powers who, in consideration of uninterrupted worship, vouchsafed
to grant their protection, and who were jealous of the admission of foreign
rivals. It was therefore a sure sign of national decay if a people began to
lose confidence in their own paternal religion, and turned hopefully to the
gods of their neighbours. The Roman government began to be alarmed. The senate
commissioned the magistrates to interfere. Not the priests or pontifices,
who might be expected to be more directly concerned in upholding the purity of
religion, but a civil magistrate—the praetor—caused the town to be cleared of
all the foreign rituals, prayers, and oracles; and it appears that the people
submitted to this interference as to a legitimate exercise of civil authority,
just as they submitted to the burdens of the war.
The condemnation of Postumius
took place in the beginning of the year 212, about the time of the consular
elections, which placed Quintus Fulvius Flaccus and Appius Claudius Pulcher at
the head of the government. Great difficulties had now been regularly
experienced for some time past in the conscription of recruits for the army.
The number of twenty-three legions was, however, completed for the impending
campaign, and even this enormous force proved by no means too large. In spite
of the taking of Syracuse, the year 212 was destined to be one of the most
disastrous for the Romans in the whole course of the war.
The first calamity was the
loss of Tarentum, which took S place even before the opening of the campaign.
The Romans had been themselves the cause of it through their short-sighted
cruelty. A number of hostages of Tarentum and Thurii, detained at Rome, had
made an attempt to escape, but were seized at Terracina, brought back to Rome,
and tortured to death as traitors. By this act the Romans had themselves cut the
bonds which had thus far held the Tarentines in their allegiance. It was a
proceeding intended to inspire terror, like the massacre of Enna; but, like
this, it produced the opposite effect, by engendering only a feeling of revenge
and implacable hatred. A conspiracy was immediately formed at Tarentum for
betraying the town to Hannibal. Nikon and Philodemos, the chiefs of the
conspirators, under the pretence of going out on hunting expeditions, found
means of seeing Hannibal, who still tarried in the neighbourhood of Tarentum;
they concluded a formal treaty with him, stipulated that their town should be
free and independent, and that the house of no Tarentine citizen should be
plundered by the Carthaginian troops. The situation of Tarentum is known from
the history of the first war with Rome. On the eastern side of the town, where
the narrow peninsula on which it lay was joined to the mainland, a large open,
space within the walls formed the public burial-ground. In this lonely place
Nikon and some of his fellow-conspirators hid themselves on a night previously
fixed upon, and waited for a fire signal, which Hannibal had promised to give
as soon as he had reached the neighbourhood. When they saw the signal they fell
upon the guards at a gate, cut down the Roman soldiers, and admitted a troop of
Gauls and Numidians into the town. At the same moment Philodemos, pretending to
return from hunting, presented himself before the postern of another gate,
whose guards had been accustomed, for some time past, to open when they heard
his whistle. Two men who were with him carried a huge boar. The guard, whilst
admiring and feeling the animal, was instantly pierced by the spear of
Philodemos. About thirty men were ready outside. They entered by the
postern-gate, killed the other guards, opened the main gates, and admitted a
whole column of Libyans, who advanced in regular order, under the guidance of
the conspirators, towards the market-place. On both points the enterprise had
succeeded, and the empty space between the walls and the town was soon filled
with Hannibal’s soldiers. The Roman garrison had not received the slightest
warning. The commanding officer, M. Livius Macatus, an indolent, self-indulgent
man, had been spending the evening in revelry, and was in his bed, overpowered
with wine and sleep, when the stillness of the night was broken by the noise of
arms and by a strange sound of Roman trumpets. The conspirators had procured
some of these trumpets, and, although they blew them very unskillfully, they
yet succeeded in drawing the Roman soldiers, who were quartered in all parts of
the town, into the streets just as Hannibal was advancing in three columns.
Thus a great number of Romans were cut down in the first confusion and
disorder, without being able to make any resistance, and almost without knowing
what the tumult was all about. A few reached the citadel, and among them was
the commander Livius, who at the first alarm had rushed to the harbour and
succeeded in jumping into a boat.
When the morning dawned, the
whole of Tarentum, with the exception of the citadel, was in Hannibal’s hands.
He caused the Tarentines to be called to an assembly, and made known to them
that they had nothing to fear for themselves and their families; on the
contrary, that he had come to deliver them front the Roman yoke. Only the
houses and the property of the Romans were given up to plunder. Every house
marked as the property of a citizen of Tarentum was to be spared; but those who
made a false statement were threatened with capital punishment. Probably the
Romans were quartered in houses of their own, or in houses of men who were
partisans of Rome. The latter were now made to suffer for their attachment to
Rome, which was a crime in 1he eyes of their political opponents.
The citadel of Tarentum being
situated on a hill of small elevation at the western extremity of the tongue of
land occupied by the town, could only be taken by a regular siege, and such a
siege was hopeless without the cooperation of the fleet. In order, therefore,
to secure the town in the meantime from any attacks of the Roman garrison,
Hannibal caused a line of defences, consisting of a ditch, mound, and wall, to
be made between the citadel and the town. The Romans attempted to interrupt the
work. Hannibal encouraged them by a simulated flight of his men, and when he
had drawn them far enough into the town, attacked them from all sides, and
drove them back into the citadel with great slaughter.
The Roman garrison was now so
much reduced that Hannibal hoped to be able to take the citadel by force, and
he prepared a regular assault by erecting the necessary machines. But the
Romans, reinforced by the garrison of Metapontum, sallied forth in the night,
and destroying Hannibal’s siege-works, compelled him to desist from his enterprise.
Thus the citadel of Tarentum remained in the possession of the Romans; and as
it commanded the entrance to the harbour, the ships of the Tarentines would
have been locked up, if Hannibal had not contrived to drag them across the
tongue of land on which the town lay, right through the streets running from
the inner harbour to the open sea. The Tarentine fleet was now able to blockade
the citadel, whilst a wall and ditch closed up the land side. The possession of
the citadel was of the greatest importance to both belligerents. The Romans
therefore made strenuous efforts to defend it. They dispatched the praetor P.
Cornelius with a few ships laden with corn for the supply of the garrison, and
Cornelius, evading the vigilance of the blockading squadron, succeeded in
reaching his destination. Thus Hannibal’s hope of reducing the fortress by
famine was deferred, and the Tarentines could do no more than watch the Roman
garrison and keep it in check.
The example of Tarentum was
soon followed by Metapontum—from which the Roman garrison had been withdrawn—by
Thurii—out of revenge for the murdered hostages—and by Heraclea. Thus the
Romans lost by their own fault these Greek towns, which had remained faithful
to them for so many years after the battle of Cannae. The only towns that stood
out against Carthage were Rhegium and Elea (Telia), with Posidonia or
Peestum—which in 263 had become a Roman colony—and Neapolis in Campania.
Hannibal had reason to be satisfied with the first results of the campaign of
212. Leaving a small garrison in Tarentum, he now turned northwards.
Three years had passed since
Capua had revolted to the Carthaginians. Rome had succeeded in preventing the
other larger towns of Campania from following her example. Nola, Neapolis,
Cumae, Puteoli had remained faithful and were safe; Casilinum had been retaken;
and Capua was hemmed in on all sides, partly by these towns, partly by
fortified Roman camps. The time was approaching when the attempt could be made
to retake Capua. This was now the principal aim of the Romans in Italy, and the
defection of the Greek towns, so far from inducing them to give up this plan,
contributed rather to confirm them in it. If Capua could be reconquered and
severely punished, they might hope to put an end to all further attempts at
revolt on the part of their allies, and they would have destroyed the
prestige of Hannibal and the confidence which the Italians might be tempted to
place in the power and protection of Carthage.
Since their defection the
Capuans had had little cause to approve the bold step which they had taken and
to rejoice over the results. If at any time they had really entertained the
hope of obtaining the dominion over Italy in the place of Rome, they were soon
disabused of so vain a notion. They had not been able even to subject the towns
of Campania, or to induce them to enter into the alliance of Carthage, and as,
in consequence of their own defection, Campania had become the principal
theatre of war, they saw themselves exposed to the unremitting attacks of the
Romans. Whenever Hannibal left Campania, the Roman armies approached the town
from all sides, returning immediately into their strong positions as soon as
Hannibal drew near. Such a war as this, while it drained the resources of the
country, and interfered with the regular tillage of the land and the commercial
intercourse with her neighbours, could not fail soon to reduce to distress a
town whose wealth consisted chiefly in the produce of her fruitful soil. People
began to repent the step which they had taken. There had always been a Roman
party at Capua. With the continued pressure of the war, which this party had
endeavoured to prevent, the split among the Capuan citizens became wider every
day. As early as the year 213 we hear of a body of one hundred and twelve
Capuan horsemen deserting to the Romans with all their arms and accoutrements.
Moreover the three hundred horsemen who had been serving in Sicily at the time
of the revolt of their native town, and who were looked upon in the light of
hostages, abjured their allegiance to the revolutionary government of Capua,
and were admitted as Roman citizens to the full franchise. Even if the
Carthaginian garrison was not found irksome and onerous to the people of Capua,
it was natural that a revulsion of feeling should take place among them.
In the beginning of the year
212 the Capuans perceived that the Romans were about to draw the net round
them. As the populous town was not supplied with provisions to resist a long
siege, they sent in all haste to Hannibal, who was at that time in the
neighbourhood of Tarentum, and conjured him to come to their aid. In truth
Hannibal’s task was not easy. Being stationed at one extremity of the hostile
country, and fully occupied in the enterprise against a strong and important
city; having to bestow his constant attention to the feeding and recruiting of
his army; called upon to defend a number of allies, mere troublesome than
useful to him; obliged, moreover, to survey and conduct the whole war in Italy;
Spain, and Sicily, to advise the home government, to urge on the tardy
resolutions of his ally the king of Macedonia—be was now required to provide
for the victualling of Capua. The supplies with which this could be effected be
was not able to send for from Africa, and to direct by a safe and easy road to
the threatened town. They had to be collected in Italy by violence, or by the
good services of exhausted allies; and, being collected, they had to be
conveyed by land, on bad and difficult roads, past hostile armies and
fortresses.
In spite of all these
difficulties, if Hannibal had been able personally to undertake this task, it
would have succeeded without any doubt, fur wherever he appeared the Romans
slunk back into their hiding-places. But he was not able to leave Tarentum, and
therefore intrusted the victualling of Capua to Hanno, who commanded in
Bruttium. Hanno too was an able general. He collected the supplies in the
neighbourhood of Beneventum, and if the Capuans had equalled him in energy and
dispatch, and had furnished means of transport in sufficient quantity and in
proper time, the hard problem would have been solved before any Roman force
would have had time to interfere. But, owing to the remissness of the Capuans,
a delay took place. The Roman colonists of Beneventum informed the consul Q.
Fulvius Flaccus, at Bovianum, that large supplies were being brought together
near their town. Fulvius hastened to the spot, and, during the temporary
absence of Hanno, attacked the camp, filled and encumbered with 2,000 waggons,
an immense train of cattle and a great number of drivers and other
non-combatants. The whole convoy was taken. We are not informed if Hannibal
succeeded afterwards in repairing this loss and in sending the necessary
supplies to Capua. But this seems highly probable, as otherwise we could hardly
explain the long duration of the siege. Moreover Hannibal himself appeared soon
after in Campania, and entered Capua; so that if he brought a new supply of
provisions, the Romans at any rate were not able to intercept it a second time.
He had sent a body of 2,000 horse in advance, who fell upon and routed the
Romans with great loss as they were engaged in ravaging, according to their
custom, the neighbourhood of Capua. When Hannibal appeared himself and offered
battle, the two consuls, Fulvius Flaccus and Appius Claudius, instead of
proceeding with the siege of Capua, retired hastily, the one to Cumae, the
other into Lucania. Capua this time was delivered, and Hannibal was at leisure
to turn southwards once more.
Since the campaign of 215
B.C., Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus had, with his army of liberated slaves,
commanded in Lucania, and Had been on the whole successful. A portion of the
Lucanians had remained faithful to Rome. These and the slave legions carried on
a kind of civil war against the revolted Lucanians. The Roman general was now
doomed to experience the faithlessness of the Lucanian national character, to
which King Alexander of Epirus had fallen a victim. He was drawn into an ambush
by a Lucanian of the Roman party, and cut down. His army was dissolved at his
death. The slaves, liberated by him, did not consider themselves bound to obey
any other leader, and dispersed immediately. The cavalry alone remained, under
the quaestor Cn. Cornelius. It seems, however, that some slaves were collected
again by the centurion M. Centenius, whom the senate had sent into Lucania with
8,000 men, in order to carry on a war of rapine against the revolted Lucanians,
as Pomponius had done in Bruttium. This Centenius had almost doubled his army
by collecting volunteers, when unfortunately for him—he encountered Hannibal,
and was so utterly defeated in this unequal contest that hardly one thousand of
his men escaped.
After this easy victory,
Hannibal hastened into Apulia, where the praetor Cneius Fulvius, the consul’s
brother, commanded two legions. At Herdonea Fulvius ventured, or was compelled,
to offer battle to the dreaded Punian, and paid for his rashness by the loss of
his army and camp. Livy reports that no more than 2,000 men escaped out of
18,000. It was a victory which resembled the days of the Trebia, the
Thrasymenus, and the Aufidus, and Rome witnessed again such scenes of
consternation and terror as had followed those great national disasters.
Thus had Hannibal in the
course of the year 212 made himself again terrible to the Romans, in a manner
which could hardly be expected after his comparative inactivity during the last
three years. He had taken Tarentum, destroyed two Roman armies, and dispersed a
third. Apulia and Lucania were cleared of Roman troops; the Greek cities south
of Naples, with the exception of Rhegium and Velia, were held by the
Carthaginians. The weight of these disasters was increased by the defeat and death
of the two Scipios in Spain, and the loss of all the territory and the
advantages which had been gained in five campaigns. In Sicily the war
continued, even after the fall of Syracuse; and the Carthaginians, or their
allies, were in possession of a great portion of the island. Rome was nearly
exhausted, and yet the demands made upon the people went on increasing year
after year. The government found it more and more difficult to raise money for
the public treasury and men for the legions. Nor was it the material resources
alone that began to fail. Already many thousands of citizens of the military
age had evaded the service, and it had become necessary to proceed against them
with the utmost severity and to press them into the legions. The villany of the
army purveyors exposed the troops to want and privations. One hope after
another seemed to vanish; every resource appeared to fail at last; and not a
single great man had as yet appeared, whom the struggling republic might oppose
as a worthy antagonist to Hannibal. The Roman generals rose nowhere above
mediocrity and not one of them had been inspired by genius to venture beyond
the beaten paths of routine.
Nevertheless the Roman people
did not despair. They continued the struggle without a thought of yielding, of
reconciliation, or of peace. Every sentiment was repressed people, which was
not a spar to perseverance and which did not intensify the power of resistance.
All the pleasures of life, and all possessions, to which Roman hearts clung so
tenaciously, were cheerfully sacrificed for the public weal. The bonds of
family, of friendship, of social circles were severed at the call of duty. All
thoughts, wishes, and actions of the nation tended to one common end—the
overthrow of the national enemy; and it was this unanimity, this perseverance,
which secured a final triumph.
No sooner had Hannibal left
Campania, and marched southwards, than the Roman armies returned to their
former position before Capua. The two consuls, Appius Claudius Pulcher and Q.
Fulvius Flaccus, each with two legions, and the praetor C. Claudius Nero, with
an equal force, advanced from three different points towards the doomed town,
and began to surround it with a double line of circumvallation, consisting each
of a continuous ditch and mound. The inner and smaller circle was intended to
keep the besieged within their walls; the outer line was a defence against any
army that might come to the relief of the town. In the space between the
two concentric circles, camps were erected for an army of 60,000 men. It
was not the intention of the Romans to take the town by storm. They relied on
the slow but sure effects of hunger, which, in spite of any amount of collected
provisions, could not fail to make itself soon felt in a populous town completely
cut off from without. The wants of the besieging army were amply provided for.
The chief magazine was established in the important town of Casilinum on the
Volturnus. At the mouth of this river a fort bad been erected, and to this
place, as well as to the neighbouring town of Puteoli, provisions were sent by
sea from Etruria and Sardinia, to be forwarded on the Volturnus to Casilinum.
The several towns of Campania in the possession of the Romans served as
outposts and defences to the besieging army, while the communication with Rome
was open by the Appian as well as by the Latin road.
For a time the Capuans
endeavoured to interrupt the work of circumvallation by desperate sallies. The
narrow space of a few thousand paces between the walls of the town and the
Roman lines became the theatre of numerous engagements, in which, above all,
the excellent Capuan cavalry maintained its reputation. But the girdle around
the town became from day to day firmer, and the besieged began anxiously to
look out upon the heights of the hill of Tifata, where Hannibal had repeatedly
pitched his camp, and whence he had but recently pounced upon the Romans, to
scatter them in all directions. But Hannibal did not come. After the
destruction of the army of M. Centenius in Lucania, and of Cn. Fulvius in
Apulia, he had quickly marched upon Tarentum in the hope of surprising the
citadel, and, baffled in this enterprise, he had turned, in the same hope, to
Brundusium. Here also be found the Roman garrison warned and prepared, and he
now led his overworked troops into winter-quarters. To the Capuans he sent word
not to lose courage, promising that he would come to their rescue in the right
season, and put an end to the siege as he had done once before.
But this time the danger was
more serious, and the Romans felt sure of final success. The lines of
circumvallation were drawn nearly all round Capua. Before they were quite
complete the Roman senate made a last offer to the besieged, promising personal
freedom and the preservation of all their property to those who should leave
the town before the Ides of March (at that period about mid-winter). The
Capuans rejected this offer contemptuously. They were confident of the help
that Hannibal had promised; their strength was sufficient to withstand any
attack, and the town was apparently well supplied with provisions. There were
of course friends of peace and friends of the Romans in Capua, but we can
easily understand that they could hardly venture, under the present
circumstances, to make their wishes known, and thus to incur the suspicion of
cowardice or treason. The government was in the hands of the democratic party,
hostile to Rome, and it was supported in its policy of unwavering resistance by
the Carthaginian garrison. A man of low birth, called Seppius Loesius,
discharged the chief office of Meddix Tuticus, and it is probable that the
condition of Capua was much like that of Syracuse during the Roman siege. The
men in possession of the government were too much compromised to hope for
safety from any reconciliation with Rome; they had staked their lives on the
great game, and were determined to persevere to the last.
Meanwhile the consuls of the
year 211, Cn. Fulvius Centumalus and P. Sulpicius Galba, had entered on their
office. They were apparently men of no great consideration, and the consuls of
the previous year were left as proconsuls in command of the army before Capua,
with instructions not to withdraw from the siege until they had taken the
place. After the fall of Syracuse, the Romans justly looked upon the reduction of
Capua as the most important object to be attained in Italy. The period when
Capua would fall could be calculated with tolerable accuracy. It was determined
by the quantity of provisions which the besieged had had time to accumulate
before they were entirely cut off from external supplies. Yet there was one
hope left. An agile Numidian succeeded in making his way through both Roman
lines, and in informing Hannibal of the serious danger in which the town was
now placed. Hannibal immediately broke up from the extreme south, with a body
of light troops and thirty-three elephants, and advanced by forced marches into
Campania. Having stormed at Galatia one of the outer posts which the Romans had
erected all round Capua, he encamped behind the ridge of Mount Tifata, and
immediately directed a brisk attack against the outer Roman lines, whilst
simultaneously the Capuans made a sally and tried to force the inner
circumvallation. A Spanish cohort had already scaled the mound, some elephants
had been killed, their bodies filled up the ditch and formed a bridge over it,
others had penetrated into one of the Roman camps, and had spread terror
and confusion. But the Roman forces were so numerous that they were able
to keep their ground, and to repel the enemy on both sides. Hannibal was
obliged to give up the plan of raising the blockade of Capua by a direct attack
on the Roman lines. He at once changed his plan. Whilst the Romans were
preparing to meet a second attack, he left his camp at nightfall, gave
information to the Capuans of his intention, encouraged them to persevere, and
set himself in motion towards Rome.
No event in all the wars since
the Gallic conflagration produced a deeper impression on the excitable masses
of the capital than the appearance of the dreaded Carthaginian before its
walls. The most disastrous defeats and the most glorious victories at a
distance from Rome could not work upon fear and hope in a manner so direct and
powerful as the sight of a hostile camp before their eyes. The terrible words “Hannibal
at the gates!” never vanished from the memory of the Romans; and the fear and
anguish with which these words were first beard enhanced the satisfaction which
was felt when, by the firmness of the senate and the Roman people, the danger
was overcome. For this reason the imagination of narrators was particularly
fertile in adorning the story of Hannibal’s march to Rome in a manner
flattering to the national pride. There arose a number of stories, some
altogether fictitious, others suggested by mistakes : and it is consequently
impossible for us to harmonise into a consistent narrative the statements of
the two principal witnesses, Polybius and Livy, which differ in some essential
points. We are compelled to make a selection; and as it appears that the report
of Livy, though not free from errors, is, on the whole, more in harmony with
the general course of events than that of Polybius, we give the preference to
it on this occasion.
For five days Hannibal had
lingered before Capua, trying in vain to raise the siege. In the night
following the fifth day he crossed the Volturnus in boats, and marched past the
Roman colony of Cales by Teanum on the Latin road to the valley of the Liris,
in the direction of Interamna and Fregellae. All these towns were held by Roman
garrisons, and Hannibal could not think of laying siege to them. Nevertheless
he felt so safe in the midst of the hostile fortresses, with an army of 60,000
men in his rear and Rome itself before him, that he leisurely plundered the
districts through which he inarched, tarried a whole day near Teanum, remained
two days at Casilinum and then at Fregellae, and thus gave time to the Roman
army before Capua either to overtake him or to precede him to Rome by the
direct road. The former alternative he would probably have preferred, for he
sought above all things to bring on a battle, and it was for this reason that
he devastated the country without mercy. But the Romans steadily adhered to
their plan of avoiding a battle, and allowed him to advance unmolested. From
Fregellae Hannibal marched further north, through the country of the Hernicans,
by Frusino, Ferentinum, and Anagnia, and between Tibur and Tusculum reached the
river Anio, which he crossed in order to pitch his camp in sight of Rome, and
to announce his arrival by the conflagration of the surrounding farms and
villages.
Terror and dismay had preceded
him. The fugitives, who had with difficulty escaped the fast Numidian horsemen,
and had poured into Rome in vast crowds to find shelter for themselves, their
property, and their cattle, spread heart-rending reports of the cruelties
committed by the savage Punians. The rich, well-tilled country about Rome,
which since the days of King Pyrrhus had seen no enemy, was now the prey of
war. He had arrived at last, this dreaded Hannibal, before whose sword the sons
of Rome had fallen fast and thick as the ears of corn before the mower’s
scythe. The irresistible conqueror, whom no Roman general ventured to
encounter, who but a very short time before had annihilated two Roman armies,
had now arrived to accomplish his work, to raze the city of Rome to the ground,
to murder the men, and to carry away the women and children into slavery far
beyond the sea. The city was tilled with a tumult and a confusion that were
uncontrollable. Seeing a troop of Numidian deserters pass down from the
Aventine, the people, demented with fright, thought the enemy was already in
the city. Maddened with despair, they thought of nothing but flight, and would
have rushed out of the gates if the dread of encountering the hostile cavalry
had not kept them back. The women filled all the sanctuaries, poured out their
prayers and lamentations, and on their knees swept the ground with their
dishevelled hair.
Yet Rome was not unprepared.
Hannibal’s intention of marching upon Rome had been made known by deserters
even before he broke up from Capua, and even without such indirect or casual
information his march could not long remain a secret. When the news arrived,
the first thought of the senate was, as Hannibal had anticipated, to withdraw
the whole army forthwith from Capua for the protection of the capital. But
on the advice of the cautious T. Valerius Flaccus, it was resolved to order
only a portion of the legions under Fulvius to come to Rome, and to continue
the blockade of Capua, with the rest. Fulvius therefore broke up with only
16,000 men, and hastened to Rome by the Appian road, arming either
simultaneously with Hannibal or a very short time after him. As proconsul he
could not have a military command in the city of Rome. A decree of the senate,
therefore, conferred upon him a command equal to that of the consuls of the
year, and provided for the defence of the city. The senate remained assembled
on the Forum; all those who bad in former years discharged the office of
dictator, consul, or censor were invested with the imperium for the duration of
the present crisis. A garrison, under the command of the praetor C. Calpurnius,
occupied the Capitol, and the consuls encamped outside the town towards the
northeast, between the Colline and the Esquiline gates. The two newly raised
legions, which happened to be in Borne, joined to the army of the proconsul,
were strong enough to baffle any attempt of Hannibal to take the town by storm.
Accordingly Hannibal never ventured to make an attack. He approached the city
with a few thousand Numidians, and leisurely rode along the walls, eagerly
watched, but undisturbed by the awe-struck garrison. It was a triumphal procession,
and Hannibal may have felt legitimate pride in the thought that he had so far
humbled his enemies. But when he reflected that Rome, though humbled, was still
unconquered, all premature exultation must have been suppressed, while his eye
was fixed anxiously on the dark future. So far he had realized his own and his
country’s ardent wishes. With the devastation of Italy and the blood of her
sons, Rome bad atoned for the wrong which she had done to Carthage; but the
spirit of the Roman people was unsubdued, and it stood even this severe test
without despairing or even doubting of ultimate success.
No battle was fought before
Rome, as the Romans did not accept Hannibal’s challenge. It could not be
unknown to Hannibal that a part at least of the blockading army of Capua had
been withdrawn, and was now opposed to him. Perhaps he hoped that his plan had
succeeded. It he could draw the Romans from their fortified position under the
walls of Rome, and beat them, and then return to Capua, it was possible that the
Capuans, if they had not yet broken through the Roman lines, would now, in
conjunction with his army, repeat a combined attack upon the Roman forces left
to continue the blockade, and it was not likely that this time such an attack
would fail. In a few days, therefore, he left the immediate neighbourhood of
Rome, marching in a north-easterly direction into the country of the Sabines,
then to the south-east through the land of the Marsians and Pelignians, to
return to Campania by a circuitous route. He marked his road with flames and
devastation. The Roman consuls, as he had expected, followed him, trying in
vain to protect the land of their most faithful allies. After a march of five
days, Hannibal was informed that the Romans had not relinquished the blockade
of Capua, and that only a portion of their army had left Campania. Suddenly he
turned round upon the pursuing Romans, attacked them in the night, stormed
their camp, and routed them completely. But his plan was nevertheless thwarted.
He found out, like Pyrrhus, that he was fighting with the Hydra; the Roman
lines round Capua were sufficiently defended; and seeing that there was no
prospect of success if he attempted to storm them, he turned aside and left
Capua to her fate. By forced marches he hastened through southern Italy, and
appeared unexpectedly before Rhegium. But he was foiled in the attempt to
surprise this town, and the only result gained was an abundance of booty and
prisoners, which rewarded his soldiers for the unusual fatigues they had undergone.
The fate of Capua was now sealed.
The besieged made one more attempt to call Hannibal to their rescue; but the
Numidian who had undertaken to deliver the dangerous message was discovered in
the Roman camp, and driven back into the town with his hands cut off. The
leaders of the revolt now foresaw what they would have to expect. After the
Capuan senate had formally resolved to surrender the town, about thirty of the
noblest senators assembled in the house of Vibius Virrius for a last solemn
banquet, and took farewell of one another, resolved not to survive the ruin of
their country. They all swallowed poison and lay down to die. When the gates
were thrown open to admit the victorious army, they were beyond the reach of
Roman revenge. The other senators of Capua relied on the generosity of Rome. It
is probable that all who were conscious of guilt had sought death, and that the
survivors were not directly implicated in causing the defection of Capua. In
all such revolutions there is a wide difference between leaders and followers.
No doubt many of the latter had no choice but to swim with the stream, and
among them there must have been many parents or relatives of the young Capuan
knights who had either taken no part at all in the revolt, or had gone over to
the Romans in the course of the war. Such men were justified in hoping for
mercy. But Q. Fulvius thirsted for blood, and Roman policy demanded a terrific
example. The Capuan senators were therefore sent in chains partly to Cales,
partly to Teanum. In the course of the night, Fulvius broke up with a
detachment of cavalry and reached Teanum before dawn. He caused twenty-eight
prisoners to be scourged and beheaded before his eyes. Without delay he
hastened to Cales, and ordered twenty-five more to be put to death. The awful
rapidity with which he went through the work of the executioner, without even
the shadow of discrimination or trial, shows that his heart was in it. It is
said that, before he had done, he received a sealed letter from Rome, which
contained an order from the senate to postpone the punishment of the guilty,
and to allow the senate to pronounce their sentence. Guessing the contents of
the letter, Fulvius left it unopened until all his victims were dead. If this
report is true, and if the Roman senate really intended to act with clemency,
they still had ample opportunity, even after the hot haste with which Fulvius
had slaked his thirst for revenge. But as the Roman senate, far from exhibiting
a spirit of clemency, continued to treat prostrate Capua with exquisite
harshness and cruelty, we feel it difficult to credit the report.
That Flaccus had carried out
the intention of the Roman government is clear from the treatment of the two
small Campanian towns, Atella and Calatia, which had revolted, and were now
reduced at the same time as Capua. The leading men of these two places were put
to death. Three hundred of the chief citizens of Capua, Galatia, and Atella
were dragged to Rome, cast into prison, and left to die of starvation; others
were distributed as prisoners over the Latin towns, where they all perished in
a similar manner. The rest of the guilty, i.e. those who had
themselves borne arms against Rome, or whose relations had so done, or who had
discharged any public office since the breaking out of the revolt, were sold as
slaves, with their wives and children. Those who were not guilty, i.e. those
who at the time of the revolt had not been in Campania, or who had gone over to
the Romans, or who had taken no active part in the insurrection, lost only
their land and part of their movable property, but were left in the enjoyment
of personal freedom, and received permission to settle within certain limits
away from Campania. The towns of Capua, Atella, and Calatia, and the whole
district belonging to them, became the property of the Roman people. The right
of municipal self-government was withdrawn, and a prefect, annually sent from
Rome, was intrusted with the administration of the district, which, instead of
a free community, contained henceforth only a motley population of workmen,
farmers of the public land and of the revenue, tradesmen, and other
adventurers—a population destitute of all those hallowed associations and
feelings of attachment to the soil which to the people of antiquity were the
basis of patriotism and all civic virtues. The flourishing city of Capua, once
the rival of Rome, was blotted out from among the list of Italian towns, and
was henceforth let out by the Roman people ‘like to a tenement or pelting
farm’. We cannot, of course, expect to find among the men that fought against
Hannibal that chivalrous spirit and generosity which in general characterize
modern warfare. To what extent they acted in the spirit of their contemporaries
we can judge most clearly from the manner in which the tender-hearted, humane
Livy, two centuries later, spoke of their proceedings. He calls them in every
respect laudable. “Severely and quickly”, he says, “the most guilty were
punished; the lower classes of the people were dispersed without the hope of
return; the innocent buildings and walls were preserved from fire and
destruction; and, by the preservation of the most beautiful town of Campania,
the feelings of the neighbouring peoples were spared, whilst at the same time
the interests of the Roman people were consulted”.
The final decision of the fate
of Capua, which we have here related, did not follow immediately after the
burned punishment of those who were principally guilty. It was postponed to the
year following, and by a decision of the popular assembly intrusted to the senate.
Meanwhile Capua was occupied by a Roman garrison and strictly guarded. No one
was allowed to leave the town without permission. Yet there were some
Campanians at Rome; perhaps the three hundred who at the time of the revolt
were serving as horsemen with the Roman legions in Sicily, and who, as a reward
for their fidelity, had been received as Roman citizens. These unfortunate men
also were now doomed to experience the adverse fate which seemed inexorably
bent on destroying the people of Capua. It happened that a conflagration broke
out in Rome, which raged for a whole night and day, destroyed a number of shops
and other buildings—among them the ancient palace of Numa, the official
residence of the chief pontiff--and which even threatened the adjoining temple
of Vesta. The style of building then prevalent at Rome, the narrow streets, and
the absence of fire-police and engines, rendered such a calamity no matter for
surprise. But the imminent danger which had threatened one of the principal
sanctuaries of Rome—a sanctuary on whose preservation the safety of the
city depended—spread general consternation, and suggested the idea that the
fire was not accidental, but caused by some bitter enemy of the commonwealth.
By order of the senate, the consul accordingly issued a proclamation, promising
a public reward to anyone who would point out the men guilty of the supposed
crime. By this proclamation a premium was offered to any villain who might
succeed in concocting the story of a plot plausible enough to be credited by
the excited populace. An informer was soon found. A slave of some young
Campanians, the sons of Pacuvius Calavius, declared that his masters and five
other young Capuans, whose fathers had been put to death by Q. Fulvius, had
conspired, out of revenge, to set Rome on fire. The unfortunate young men were
seized. Their slaves were tortured to confess that they had caused the fire by
order of their masters. This confession under torture, the eternal disgrace of
the Roman law procedure, established the guilt of the Capuans to the
satisfaction of their judges, and the men were all executed, whilst the
informer received his freedom as a reward.
It is not absolutely necessary
to assume that this revolting sentence of death was inspired by hatred of the conquered
Capuans. The Romans, in their savage ignorance, raged not less fiercely against
themselves, and had given a proof of this as late as 331 B.C., by the execution
of one hundred and seventy innocent matrons. But the prevailing hatred of Capua
caused the story of the wretched informer to be received with ready credulity,
just as the English nation, besotted with terror at the time of the Popish
plot, greedily swallowed any lies which villains like Oates and Dangerfield
were pleased to concoct. The cruel sentence pronounced on the young Capuans in
Rome was a worthy introduction to the decrees of the senate, which blotted out
the old rival for ever. It was a consequence of the municipal constitution of
the republic that Rome could not brook another great town besides herself. This
was the reason why, even in the legendary period, Alba Longa was crushed, and
at a subsequent period Veii was doomed to destruction. It was now the turn of
Capua to sink into the dust; and no long period elapsed before that other rival
city followed which was now struggling desperately with Rome, under the
thorough conviction that she must either conquer or perish. Wherever the
republican armies planted their iron foot, they stamped out the life of all
towns which might enter into competition with Rome. It was not before Rome
itself had bowed her proud head under an imperial master that municipal
prosperity returned to the great centres of art, learning, and commerce in the
subjected countries.
Fifth Period of the Hannibalian War.FROM THE FALL OF CAPUA TO THE BATTLE ON THE METAURUS, 211-207 B.C.
The reconquest of Capua marks
the turning-point in the second Punic war. From the time when Hannibal had
crossed the Alps to the battle of Cannae the destructive waves which had
inundated Italy had risen higher and higher, had borne down one obstacle after
another, and had threatened to engulf the whole fabric of Roman dominion. After
the day of Cannae the waters spread far and wide over Italy; but they rose no
higher. Most of the Roman allies, and these the most valuable, resisted the
impulse to revolt, which carried along the Capuans to their own destruction.
The colonies and Rome herself remained firm; and now at length, after a seven
years’ struggle, a decided turn of the tide took place. Rome had passed through
the worst; her safety was secured, and even her dominion over Italy seemed no
longer exposed to any serious danger. Henceforth she could continue the war
with full confidence in a final triumph.
The first fruit of the victory
in Campania was the restoration of Roman superiority in Spain, which had been
lost by the reverses and the death of the two Scipios. Spain was justly looked
upon as an outlying fortress of Carthage, whence a second attack on Italy might
at any time be expected. To prevent such an attack had hitherto been the
principal object of the Roman generals in Spain. In the gloomy period after the
battle of Cannae the two Scipios had succeeded in accomplishing this task by the
victory over Hasdrubal at Ibera; and it is perhaps no exaggeration to say
that by it they had saved Rome from destruction. When the Carthaginians had
recovered from their defeat at Ibera, and had victoriously ended the war with
the Numidians in Africa, they had resumed the war in Spain with new vigour, and
the consequence was the almost total destruction of the Roman armies in Spain.
It was, for Rome, a most lucky coincidence that at this critical season a part
of the forces that had besieged Capua became disposable for other purposes. C.
Claudius Nero was accordingly summoned from Campania, and in the course of the
same summer (211 B.C.) sent, with about two legions, to Spain, to rally the
remnants of the Scipionic army, and to incorporate them with his own. Nero
succeeded not only in effectually defending the country between the Pyrenees
and the Ebro, but he is said even to have undertaken an expedition far into the
Carthaginian possessions, and to have so far outmanoeuvred Hasdrubal that he
might have made him prisoner with his whole army if he had not been duped by
the wily Carthaginian. This statement appears to deserve no more credit than
the pretended exploits of Marcius. The situation of the Romans in Spain, even
in the following year (210 B.C.), was very critical, and it was resolved in
Rome to send thither an additional force of 11,000 men. The command of this
reinforcement was intrusted to Publius Cornelius Scipio, a young man only
twenty-seven years of age, who had as yet discharged but one public
office, viz. that of aedile, and had never before had any
independent military command, but who was destined to rise suddenly into
distinction, and finally to triumph over Hannibal himself.
Publius Cornelius Scipio was
the son of Lucius Cornelius Scipio, and nephew of Publius Cornelius Scipio, the
two brothers who had fought and fallen in Spain. His appearance on the stage of
history is marked by a series of events which are startling and somewhat
mysterious in their character, and calculated to challenge serious doubts. It
does not at all appear that, as regards external attestation, the history of
Scipio's exploits stands on a higher level than that of the preceding events.
And yet we know that Polybius—the most intelligent, sober, and conscientious
investigator of facts in the history of Rome—had close and intimate relations
with the house of the Scipios, and that he drew his information directly from
C. Laelius, the friend and associate of Scipio himself. But we find, both in
Polybius and Livy, statements regarding Scipio which remind us of the time when
the Roman annals were full of random assertions, errors, exaggerations, and
impudent fictions. We are therefore obliged to sift with particular care all
those accounts which refer to Scipio’s character, to his military exploits, and
the political transactions in which he took a part.
For some generations the
family of the Scipios had belonged to the most prominent of the republic. Since
the time of the Samnite wars they were almost regularly in possession of one or
other of the great offices of state. Their family pride was intense, and has
left lasting monuments in the epitaphs which have come down to us. It is
evident that their influence among the noble families of Rome was very
considerable. Cneius Scipio Asina, who, in the fifth year of the Sicilian war,
had, by his want of judgment, caused the loss of a Roman squadron, and had
himself been made prisoner of war, was, in the course of the same war, again
appointed to high office. In the Hannibalian war, the influence of this family
had risen so greatly that the conduct of the war in Spain was, year after year,
confided to the two brothers Publius and Cneius Scipio, in a manner altogether
at variance with the regular practice of the republic. The Scipios disposed, in
Spain, of the armies and the resources of the Roman people as if they were the
uncontrolled masters, and not the servants, of the state; and they conducted
the administration of the province, and the diplomatic relations with the
Spanish tribes, as they thought proper. It seemed that the senate had intrusted
the management of the Spanish war entirely to the family of the Scipios, as in
the legendary period the war with the Veientines was made over as a family war
to the Fabii. Their command was cut short only by their death, and it was now
transferred to the son of one of them, as if it was hereditary in the family.
The manner, too, in which this was done was strange in itself, and had on no
occasion been known before. Such men as Pomponius and Centenius, it is true,
had in the course of the war been intrusted with the command of detachments of
troops, without having ever previously discharged any of the offices to which
the ‘Imperium’ was attached. But the troops of these officers were wholly, or
for the most part, volunteers and irregulars, and they were bent more on
plundering and harassing the revolted allies of Rome than on fighting the
Carthaginians. On the other hand, the supreme command of the Roman legions in
Spain was a matter of the greatest importance. The senate had not allowed the
brave L. Marcius to retain the command of the remnants of the Spanish army,
though it was due to him that any portion of it was saved. Nor was it the want
of able generals, such as the Romans could boast of, that made it absolutely
necessary to place at the post of danger an inexperienced young man, who had
not yet given proofs of his ability. C. Claudius Nero, who had rendered good
service during the siege of Capua, and who afterwards proved himself a master
of strategy in the campaign against Hasdrubal, had already been sent to Spain.
There was no reason why he should not be left there, and if there had been an
objection to him, there were other tried officers in abundance, fit to take the
command. The eulogists of Scipio related a silly story, viz., that nobody came
forward to volunteer his services for the dangerous post in Spain, and that
Scipio, by boldly declaring his readiness to undertake the command, inspired
the people with admiration and confidence, and in a manner compelled them to
give the appointment to him. The Roman republic would indeed have been in a
deplorable condition, if cowardice had restrained even one man capable of
command from dedicating his services to the state in a post of danger. It was
not so. The appointment of Scipio was due to the position and influence of his
family. It was one of the irregularities caused by the war, and a long time
elapsed before proconsular command was again conferred on a man who had not
previously been consul.
Scipio was, however, a man far
above the average of his contemporaries, and there was in him greatness of
mind, which could not fail to rivet general attention. His character was not
altogether of the ancient Roman type. There was in it an element which
displeased men of the old school, and which, on the other hand, gained for him
the admiration and esteem of the people. His bearing was proud, his manners
reserved. From his youth his mind was open to poetical and religious
impressions. He believed, or pretended, that he was inspired; but his keen
understanding kept this germ of fanaticism within the bounds of practical
usefulness to his political purposes. Whether the piety that he displayed
ostentatiously, his visions and communions with the deity, were the results of
honest conviction, as his contemporaries believed, or whether they were merely
political manoeuvres, as Polybius thought, intended to deceive the populace and
to serve his political ends, we can hardly decide with any degree of certainty,
as no genuine speeches or writings of his are preserved, which might have
revealed the true nature of his mind. But whatever we may think of the
genuineness of his enthusiasm, it appears un-Roman in any light. His
imaginative mind was powerfully affected by the creations of Greek poetry. It
is not incredible that he may himself have believed stories like that of his
descent from a god. If he did, he will stand higher in our esteem than if we
look upon him as a clever impostor.
In the autumn of the year 210,
Scipio sailed from the Tiber under a convoy of thirty ships of war, with 10,000
foot and 1,000 horse. The second in command under him was the propraetor, M.
Junius Silanus; the fleet was under the orders of C. Laelius, Scipio’s intimate
friend and admirer. As usual the fleet sailed along the coast of Etruria,
Liguria, and Gaul, instead of striking straight across the Tyrrhenian Sea. In
Emporiae, a trading settlement of the Massilians, the troops were disembarked.
Thence Scipio marched by land to Tarraco, the chief town of the Roman province,
where he spent the winter in preparation for the coming campaign.
The plan of this campaign was
made by Scipio with the utmost secrecy, and was communicated to his friend
Laelius alone. He had received information that the three Carthaginian armies,
commanded by Mago and the two Hasdrubals, were stationed at great distances
from one another and from New Carthage. This important place was intrusted to
the insufficient protection of a garrison of only one thousand men. Thus an
opportunity was offered of seizing by a bold stroke the military capital of the
Punians in Spain, whose excellent harbour was indispensable to their fleet, and
where they had their magazines, arsenal, storehouses, dockyards, their military
chest, and the hostages of many Spanish tribes. The preparations for this
expedition were made with the greatest secrecy. The very unlikelihood of an
attack had lulled the Carthaginian generals into a criminal security, and
compromised the safety of the town. If New Carthage were able to hold out only
a few days, or if Hasdrubal, who was at a distance of ten days’ march, had the
least suspicion of Scipio’s plan, it had no chance of success. It was bold and
ingenious, and is so much more creditable to its author as the sad fate of his
father and uncle might have been expected to make him lean rather to the side
of caution and timidity than of daring enterprise.
In the first days of spring
(209 B.C.) Scipio broke up with his land army of 25,000 infantry and 2,500
horse, and marched from Tarraco along the coast southward, whilst Laelius, with
a fleet of thirty-five vessels, kept constantly in sight. Arriving unexpectedly
before New Carthage, the united force immediately laid siege to the town by
land and sea. New Carthage lay at the northern extremity of a spacious bay,
which opened southwards, and whose mouth was protected by an island as by a
natural breakwater, so that inside of it ships could ride in perfect safety.
Under the walls of the town on its western side, a narrow strip of land was
covered by shallow water, a continuation of the bay; and this sheet of water
extended some way northwards, leaving only a sort of isthmus, of inconsiderable
width, which connected the town with the mainland and was fortified by high
walls and towers. New Carthage had therefore almost an insular position, and
was very well fortified by nature and art. But it had a weak side, and this had
been betrayed by fishermen to the Roman general. During ebb tide the water of
the shallow pool west of the town fell so much that it was fordable, and the
bottom was firm. On this information Scipio laid his plan, and, in the
expectation that he would be able to reach from the water an undefended part of
the wall, he promised to his soldiers the cooperation of Neptune. But first he
drew off the attention of the garrison to the northern side of the town. He
began by making a double ditch and mound from the sea to the bay, in order to
be covered in the rear against attacks from the Punic army in case the siege
should be postponed and Hasdrubal should advance to relieve the town. Then
having easily beaten off the garrison, which had made a foolhardy attempt to
dislodge him, he immediately attacked the walls. Having an immense superiority
of numbers, the Romans might hope by relieving one another to tire out the
garrison. They tried to scale the walls with ladders, but met with so stout a
resistance that after a few hours Scipio gave the signal to desist. The
Carthaginians thought the assault was given up, and hoped to be able to repose
from their exertions. But towards evening, when the ebb tide had set in, the
attack was renewed with double violence. Again the Romans assailed the walls
and applied their ladders on all parts. Whilst the attention of the besieged
was thus turned to the northern side, which they thought was exclusively
endangered by the second attack, as by the first, a detachment of five hundred
Romans forded the shallow water on the west, and reached the wall without being
perceived. They quickly scaled it, and opened the nearest gate from the inside.
Neptune had led the Romans through his own element to victory. New Carthage,
the key of Spain, the basis of the operations against Italy, was taken, and the
issue of the Spanish war was determined.
On the occasion of the taking
of New Carthage, Polybius relates the Roman custom observed in the plundering
of a town taken by storm. He tells us that for a time the soldiers used to cut
down every living creature they met, not men only, but even brute animals. When
this butchery had lasted as long as the commander thought proper, a signal was
given to call the soldiers back from it, and then the plundering began. Only a
portion of the army, never more than one-half, was allowed to plunder, lest
during the inevitable disorder the safety of the whole might be compromised.
But the men selected for plundering a town were not allowed to keep anything
for themselves. They were obliged to give up what they had taken, and the booty
was equally distributed among all the troops, including even the sick and wounded.
The commanding general had a
right of disposing of the whole of the booty as he deemed proper. He could, if
he liked, reserve the whole, or a part of it, for the public treasury. If he
did so, he made himself of course obnoxious, like Camillus in the old legend,
to the soldiers; and it seems that, in the time of the Punic wars, it was the
general practice to leave the booty to the troops. Only a portion of it—more
especially the military chest, magazines, materials of war, works of art, and
captives—was taken possession of by the quaestor for the benefit of the state.
The rest was given to the soldiers, and served as a compensation and reward for
the dangers and hardships of the service, which were very inadequately rewarded
by the military pay.
The booty made at New Carthage
was very considerable. This town had been the principal military storehouse of
the Carthaginians in Spain, and contained hundreds of ballista, catapults, and
other engines of war with projectiles, large sums of money, and quantities of
gold and silver, eighteen ships, besides materials for building and equipping
ships. The prisoners were of especial value. The garrison, it is true, was not
numerous, and had no doubt been reduced by the fight; but among the prisoners
was Hanno, the commander, two members of the smaller Carthaginian council or
executive board, and fifteen of the senate, who represented the Carthaginian
government in the field. All these were sent to Rome. The inhabitants of the
town who had escaped the massacre, 10,000 in number, as it is stated, might
have been sold as slaves, according to the ancient right of war, but were
allowed by Scipio to retain their liberty; several thousand skilled workmen,
who had been employed in the dockyards and arsenals, as ship-carpenters,
armourers, or otherwise, were kept in the same capacity, and were promised
their freedom if they served the republic faithfully and effectually. The
strongest of the prisoners Scipio mixed up with the crews of his fleet, and was
thus enabled to man the eighteen captured vessels. These men also received the
promise that, if they conducted themselves well, they should receive their
freedom at the end of the war. But the most precious part of the booty
consisted of the hostages of several Spanish tribes, who had been kept in
custody in New Carthage. Scipio hoped by their means to gain the friendship of
those subjects or allies of Carthage for whose fidelity they were to be a
pledge. He treated them therefore with the greatest kindness, and told them
that their fate depended entirely on the conduct of their countrymen, and that
he would send them all home if he could be assured of the good disposition of
the Spanish peoples.
The narrative of the conquest
of New Carthage is adorned with some anecdotes, the object of which is to extol
the generosity, the delicacy of feeling, and the self-control of the great
Scipio. According to one of these stories, there was among the hostages a
venerable matron, the wife of the Spanish chief Mandonius, the brother of
Indibilis, king of the Ilergetes, and several of the youthful daughters of the
latter. These ladies had been treated with indignity by the Carthaginians, but
the sense of female modesty at first kept the noble matron from expressing in
distinct words her wish that the Romans would treat them more as became their
rank, age, and sex. Scipio, with fine discrimination, guessed what she hardly
ventured to pray for, and granted the request.
Again, when his soldiers,
bringing to him a Spanish lady, remarkable for her dazzling beauty, desired him
to take her as a prize worthy of himself alone, he caused the damsel to be
restored to her father, subduing a passion which had often triumphed over the
greatest heroes, and from which he himself was by no means exempt. This story, related
in its credible simplicity by Polybius, was further enlarged and adorned by
Livy, who speaks of the lady as the betrothed of a powerful Spanish prince, to
whom Scipio, like the hero in a play, restores her unharmed, with all the
pathos of conscious virtue and youthful enthusiasm. The rich presents which her
parents had brought for her ransom Scipio gives to the happy bridegroom, as an
addition to her dowry. The Spaniard reveres Scipio like a god, and finally
joins the Roman army as a faithful ally, at the head of a picked body of 1,400
horse. If we compare the simple story of Polybius with the little novel into
which it is worked up by Livy, we may in some measure understand how many
stories were expanded by a natural process of gradual growth and development.
The characteristics of fiction are often unmistakable, but it is not often
possible to lay them bare by documentary evidence. If our sources could be
traced even beyond Polybius, we should perhaps find that the whole story of
Scipio's generosity towards captured ladies emanates from the desire of
comparing him with Alexander the Great, who in a similar manner treated the
family of Darius after the battle of Issos.
In the narrative of the great
Hannibalian war, which was carried on simultaneously in so many different
parts, we cannot sometimes avoid shifting the scenes suddenly, and turning our
attention away from events before they have reached a sort of natural
conclusion. The taking of New Carthage determined the fate of the Carthaginian
dominion in Spain, which now rested on the distant town of Gades alone; but
before we can trace the sequel of events which led to the total expulsion of
the Carthaginians, we must watch the progress of the war in Italy, where, as
long as Hannibal commanded an unconquered Punic army, the Romans had still most
to fear and the Carthaginians to hope.
The re-conquest of Capua in
211 B.C. was by far the most decisive success which the Roman arms had gained
in the whole course of the war. With Capua Hannibal lost the most beautiful
fruit of his greatest victory. He had now no longer any stronghold in Campania,
and was in consequence obliged to retire into the southern parts of the
peninsula. It became more and more difficult for him to maintain the Italian
towns that had joined him. The Italians had lost confidence in his star.
Everywhere the adherents of Rome gained ground, and the temptation became
greater to purchase her forgiveness by a timely return to obedience, coupled, if
possible, with a betrayal of the Punic garrisons.
Thus Hannibal’s ingenious plan
of overpowering Rome with the aid of her allies had failed. How could he now
hope, after the fall and dreadful punishment of Capua, to win over the smaller
Italian towns which had hitherto remained faithful to Rome? Those who had
previously rebelled he could protect only by strong detachments of his army
from internal treason and from the attacks of enemies without. But he
could not spare the men necessary for such a service, and he did not like to
expose his best troops to the danger of being betrayed and cut off in detail.
It seemed, therefore, advisable rather to give up untenable towns voluntarily
than to risk the safety of valuable troops in their defence.
The necessity of such measures
became apparent by the treason which in the year 210 delivered Salapia into the
hands of the Romans. Salapia, one of the larger towns of Apulia, had joined the
cause of Hannibal soon after the battle of Cannae. It contained a garrison of five
hundred picked Numidians. After the fall of Capua,, the Roman party in Salapia
regained confidence and strength, and succeeded in betraying the town to the
consul Marcellus, on which occasion the brave Numidians were cut down to the
last man. Marcellus, who was consul for the fourth time, had the conduct of the
war in Italy, whilst his colleague, M. Valerius Laevinus, brought the war in
Sicily to a close by the conquest of Agrigentum. After gaining possession of
Salapia, he marched to Samnium, where he took a few insignificant places, and
the Carthaginian magazines which they contained.
Whilst he was here occupied
with operations of little moment, and apparently paid little attention to
Hannibal’s movements, and to acting in concert with the praetor Cn. Fulvius
Centumalus, who commanded two legions in Apulia, the latter officer and his
army paid dearly for the negligence and unskillful strategy which again marked
the divided command of the Roman generals. He lay encamped near Herdonea, a
town of Apulia, which, like Salapia, had joined the Punians after the battle of
Cannae. By the co-operation of the Roman party in the place, he hoped to gain
possession of it. But Hannibal, far away in Bruttium, had been informed of the
peril in which the town was placed. After a rapid march he appeared
unexpectedly before the Roman camp. By what stratagem he succeeded in drawing
Fulvius from his safe position, or in forcing him from it, we are not informed.
It is not at all likely that, as Livy relates, the Roman praetor voluntarily
accepted battle, confident in his own strength. By a most extraordinary
coincidence, it happened that, in the same place where, two years before,
Hannibal had defeated the propraetor Fulvius Flaccus, he was now again opposed
to a Fulvius. The happy omen which lay in this casual identity of name and
place was improved by Hannibal’s genius to lead to a second equally brilliant
victory. The Roman army was utterly routed, the camp taken, 7,000 men, or,
according to another report, 13,000 men, were slain, among them eleven military
tribunes and the praetor Cu. Fulvius Centumalus himself. It was a victory
worthy to be compared with the great triumphs of the first three glorious years
of the war. Again it was shown that Hannibal was irresistible in the field, and
again Rome was plunged into mourning, and people looked anxiously into the
future when they reflected that not even the loss of Capua had broken
Hannibal's courage or strength, and that he was more terrible now and in the
possession of a larger part of Italy than after the day of Cannae.
Yet Hannibal was far from
overrating his success. He saw that, in spite of his victory, he was unable to
hold Herdonea for any long time. Accordingly he punished with death the leaders
of the Roman faction in the town, who had carried on negotiations with Fulvius.
He then set the town. on fire, and removed the inhabitants to Thurii and
Metapontum. This done, he went in search of the second Roman army in Samnium,
under the command of the consul M. Claudius Marcellus.
Whether Marcellus might have
prevented the defeat of Fulvius is a question which we do not venture to
decide. But it is quite evident, even from the scanty and falsified reports of
his alleged heroic exploits, that, after the disaster, he did not venture, with
his consular army of two legions, to oppose Hannibal. The boastful language
with which Livy introduces these reports seems to indicate that they were taken
from the laudatory speeches preserved in the family archives. Marcellus, it is
said, sent a letter to Rome, requesting the senate to dismiss all fear, for
that he was still the same who after the battle of Cannae had so roughly
handled Hannibal; he would at once march against him, and take care that his
joy should be short-lived. The hostile armies met indeed at Numistro, an
utterly unknown place—perhaps in Lucania—and a fierce battle ensued, which,
according to Livy, lasted without a decision into the night. On the following
day, it is further reported, Hannibal did not venture to renew the struggle, so
that the Romans remained in possession of the field and were able to burn their
dead, whilst Hannibal, under cover of the subsequent night, withdrew to Apulia,
pursued by the Romans. He was overtaken near Venusia, and here several
engagements took place, which were of no great importance, but on the whole
ended favourably for the Romans.
It is much to be regretted
that the account of these events by Polybius is lost. Yet we are not altogether
deprived of the means of rectifying the palpable boastings of the annalists
whom Livy followed. Frontinus, a military writer of the first century after
Christ, has by chance preserved an account of the battle of Numistro, from
which we learn that it ended, not with a victory, but with a defeat of
Marcellus. So barefaced were the lies of the family panegyrists even at this
time, and so greedily and blindly did the majority of historians, in their
national vanity, adopt every report which tended to glorify the Roman arms! The
whole success of which, in truth, Marcellus could boast was, in all likelihood,
this—that his army was spared such a calamity as had befallen Flaccus and
Centumalus. The year passed without further military events in Italy. But at
sea the Romans sustained a reverse. A fleet with provisions, destined for the
garrison of the citadel of Tarentum, and convoyed by thirty ships of war, was
attacked by a Tarentine squadron under Demokrates, and completely defeated. Yet
this event had no essential influence on the state of things in Tarentum. The
Roman garrison of the citadel, though pressed very hard, held out manfully, and
by occasional sallies inflicted considerable loss on the besiegers. We must
presume that provisions were from time to time thrown into the place. Under
these circumstances the Romans could calmly maintain their position, whilst the
populous town of Tarentum, whose trade, industry, and agriculture were
paralysed, felt the garrison of the citadel like a thorn in the flesh.
The year 210, as we have seen,
had produced no material change in the situation of affairs in Italy. The
reconquest of Salapia and a few insignificant places in Samnium was amply
compensated by the defeats which the Romans sustained by land and sea.
Hannibal, though driven out of Campania, was still master of southern Italy.
The Romans had indeed put two legions less into the field—twenty-one instead of
twenty-three—but a permanent reduction of the burdens of war was out of the
question as long as Hannibal held his ground in Italy unconquered and
threatening as before. The war had now lasted for eight years. The exhaustion
of Italy became visibly greater. All available measures had already been taken
to procure money and men. The foremost senators now set the example of
contributing their gold and silver as a voluntary loan for the purpose of
equipping and manning a new fleet. At length the government appropriated a
reserve fund of 4,000 pounds of gold, which had in better times been laid by
for the last necessities of the state.
As long as the undaunted
spirit of Roman pride and determination animated the state, there was hope that
all the great sacrifices had not been made in vain. Up to the present moment
this spirit had stood all tests. The defection of several of the allies seemed
only to have the effect of uniting the others more firmly to Rome, especially
the Roman citizens themselves and the Latins, who on all occasions had shown
themselves as brave and patriotic as the genuine Romans. But now, in the year
209, when the consuls called upon the Latins to furnish more troops and money,
the delegates of twelve Latin colonies formally declared that their resources
were completely exhausted, and that they were unable to comply with the
request. This declaration was no less unexpected than alarming. When the
consuls made their report to the senate of the refusal of the twelve colonies,
and added that no arguments and exhortations had the least effect upon the
delegates, then the boldest men in that stubborn assembly began to tremble, and
those who had not despaired after the battle of Cannae almost resigned
themselves to the inevitable downfall of the commonwealth. How was it possible
that Rome should be saved if the remaining colonies and allies should follow
the example of the twelve, and if all Italy should conspire to abandon Rome in
this hour of need?
The fate of Rome was trembling
in the balance. Hannibal’s calculations had so far proved correct that now even
the Roman senate feared that his plan must be realised. The fabric of Roman
power had not, it is true, yielded to one blow, nor even to repeated blows; but
the miseries of a war protracted through so many years had gradually undermined
the foundations on which it rested, and the moment seemed approaching when it
would collapse with a sudden crash.
Everything depended on the
attitude which the remaining eighteen Latin colonies would assume. If they
followed the example of the twelve, it was clear that no further reliance could
he placed on the other allies, and Rome would be compelled to sue for peace.
But fortunately this humiliation was not in store for her. Marcus
Sextilius of Fregellae declared, in the name of the other colonies, that they
were ready to furnish not only their customary and legal contingent of
soldiers, but even a greater number, if necessary; and that at the same time
they were not wanting in means, and still less in the will, to execute any
other order of the Roman people. The deputies of the eighteen colonies were
introduced into the senate by the consuls, and received the thanks of that
venerable assembly. The Roman people formally ratified the decree of the senate
and added its own thanks; and indeed never had any people more cause for
gratitude, and never was the expression of public thanks more amply deserved
than by the eighteen faithful colonies. Their firmness saved Rome, if not from
utter destruction (for no doubt Hannibal would now, as after the battle of
Cannae, have been ready to grant peace on equitable terms), at any rate from
the loss of her commanding position in Italy and in the world. The names of the
eighteen colonies deserved to be engraved in golden letters on the Capitol.
They were Signia, Norba, and Saticula, three of the original cities of old
Latium; Fregellae, on the river Liris, the apple of discord in the second
Samnite war; Luceria and Venusia, in Apulia; Brundusium, Hadria, Firmum, and
Ariminum, on the east coast; Pontiae, Paestum, and Cosa, on the western sea;
Beneventum, Aesernia, and Spolotium, in the mountainous district of the
interior; and, lastly, Placentia and Cremona on the Po, the most recent
colonial foundations, which since Hannibal's appearance in Italy had been in
constant danger, and had bravely and successfully resisted all attacks. What
caused the division among the thirty Latin colonics is not reported by our
informants, nor are we able to guess. We find that, on the whole, it was the
older colonies, lying nearer to Rome, which refused further service. These were
Ardea, Nepete, Sutrium, Alba, Carseoli, Sora, Suessa, Circeii, Setia, Cales, Narnia,
and Interamna. Is it possible that, because they were nearer to the capital,
more services had been required of them during the war? or did they feel more
keenly than the more distant colonies their exclusion from the full Roman
franchise? We remember that, in the third year of the war, Spurius Carvilius
proposed in the senate to admit members to that body from the Latin colonies.
This wise proposal had been rejected with Roman haughtiness and even
indignation. It is not improbable that Spurius Carvilius, before he recommended
the admission of Latins into the Roman senate, had convinced himself that the
colonists also felt themselves entitled to a privilege which they regarded as
their right. Perhaps if his counsel had been taken, the Romans would never have
heard of a refusal of their allies to bear their share of the burdens of the
war. But, in the total absence of direct evidence, we cannot be sure that any
such discontent caused the disobedience of the twelve colonies. The reason
which Livy assigns seems inadequate. He relates that the remnants of the routed
legions of Cannae and Herdonea were punished for their bad behaviour by being
sent to Sicily and condemned to serve to the end of the war without pay, under
conditions that were onerous and degrading. The majority of these troops, says
Livy, consisted of Latins; and as Rome called for new efforts and sacrifices
year after year, for more soldiers and more money, whilst she kept the veterans
in Sicily, the discontent of the colonists swelled to positive resistance. The
severity, or rather the cruelty, of Rome towards the unfortunate survivors of
the defeated armies may have called forth bitter feelings; yet, as Rome treated
her own citizens with the same severity as the Latins, and, as far as we know,
made no difference among the various Latin contingents, we fail to discover why
twelve colonies out of thirty considered themselves more especially ill-treated
and called upon to remonstrate.
The thanks of the senate and
the Roman people awarded to the staunch and faithful eighteen colonies was the
only reproof which at present was addressed to the remonstrances of the
others. With wise moderation Rome refrained from punishing them. The
negotiations with them were broken off. Their delegates received no answer of
any kind, and left Rome with the painful feeling that they had indeed carried
their point, but that they had done so at the risk of a severe retaliation at
some future time, which could be averted only by speedy repentance and
redoubled zeal in the service of Rome.
The great object of the
campaign in Italy was now the reconquest of Tarentum. Not less than six legions
were deemed necessary to accomplish this end, viz., the armies of
the two consuls of Fabius Maximus and Q. Fulvius Flaccus—and a third army of
equal strength under Marcellus. Besides these forces there was in Bruttium a
body of 8,000 men, mostly irregular troops, a motley band of Bruttian
deserters, discharged soldiers, and marauders, who, after the ending of the war
in Sicily, had been collected there by the consul Valerius Laevinus and sent
into Italy to be let loose upon the allies of Hannibal. There were, therefore,
altogether not less than 70,000 men in the south of Italy, a force sufficient
to crush by its mere weight any other enemy of the numerical strength of the
Carthaginian army. But, even with this vast superiority of strength, the Roman
generals were far from trying to bring on a decisive battle. The events of the
past year had too much revived the memory of Cannae, and no Roman as yet
ventured to run the risk of a like disaster. The plan of the consuls
accordingly was to avoid pitched battles, and to retake one by one the
fortified places which had been lost—a process by which Hannibal would be
combined more and more within a contracted territory. This was the plan which
had been successfully adopted after Cannae. Every deviation from it had proved
dangerous. It was a slow process; nut, owing to the preponderance of
the Romans in material resources and to their
dogged perseverance, it was sure in the end to lead to victory.
Whilst the consul Q. Fabius
Maximus was watching Tarentum, his colleague Fulvius and the proconsul
Marcellus had orders to occupy Hannibal elsewhere. Fulvius marched through the
country of the Hirpinians, and took a number of fortified places, the
inhabitants of which made their peace with Rome by delivering up the Punic
garrisons. Marcellus, exhibiting more courage than discretion, ventured to
advance against Hannibal from Venusia; but he was so badly handled in a series
of small engagements that he was obliged to take refuge in Venusia, and so
crippled that he was unable to undertake anything for the remainder of the
year.
Whilst Hannibal was
confronting Marcellus in Apulia, a Roman force of 8,000 men had issued from
Rhegium to attack the city of Caulonia in Bruttium. As Frederick the Great, in
the eventful year 1756, turned with the rapidity of lightning from one defeated
enemy to defeat another, so Hannibal suddenly appeared before Caulonia, and,
after a short resistance, captured the whole of the besieging army. This done,
he immediately hastened towards Tarentum, which he hoped would hold out against
Fabius Maximus until he had repulsed the other hostile forces.
Marching night and day, he
reached Metapontum, where he received the mournful intelligence that Tarentum had
been betrayed into the hands of the Romans. Fabius had attacked Tarentum on the
land side with great vehemence, but without success. The Tarentines, knowing
full well what they had to expect from Rome if their town should be retaken,
defended it with desperate courage. A Punic garrison under Carthalo,
strengthened by a detachment of Bruttians, shared the defence with the
citizens. There was no prospect of taking the town by force, and any day a
Punic fleet or Hannibal’s army might be expected before the town to raise the
siege. Under these circumstances the cautious old Fabius tried the same alts by
which two years before Hannibal had gained Tarentum. The officer in command of
the Bruttians was bribed to let the Romans secretly into the town. Fabius ordered
a general night-attack on Tarentum from the citadel, the inner harbour, and the
open sea, whilst on the land side, in the east of the town, where the Bruttians
were stationed, he waited for the signal agreed upon. While the attention of
the besieged was directed to the three parts of the town which were apparently
most in danger, the Bruttians opened a gate; the Romans rushed in, and now,
after a short and ineffectual resistance of the Tarentines, followed
promiscuous massacre which usually accompanied the taking of a hostile town by
Roman troops. The victors put to the sword not only those who
still resisted, like Niko, the leader of the treason by which Tarentum had
fallen into the hands of Hannibal two years before, and Demokrates, the brave
commander of the Tarentine fleet, so recently victorious over that of the
Romans, but also Carthalo, the commander of the Punic garrison, who had laid
down his arms and asked for quarter. In fact they slew all whom they met, even
the Bruttians who had let them into the town, either, as Livy observes, by
mistake, or from old national hatred, or in order to make it appear that
Tarentum was taken by force, and not by treason. The captured town was then given
up to be plundered. Thirty thousand Tarentines were sold as slaves for the
benefit of the Roman treasury. The quantity of statues, pictures, and other
works of art almost equalled the booty of Syracuse. All was sent to Rome; only
a colossal statue of Jupiter, the removal and transport of which proved too
difficult, was left by the generous Fabius. He would not, he said, deprive the
Tarentines of their patron deities, whose wrath they had experienced.
Thus Tarentum, which was,
after Capua, the most important of the Italian cities that had joined Carthage,
was again reduced to subjection. The limits were contracting more and more
within which Hannibal could range freely. The whole of Campania, Samnium, and
Lucania, almost all Apulia, were lost. Even the Bruttians, the only one of the
Italian races that had not yet made their peace with Rome, began to waver in
their fidelity to him. Tarentum had been betrayed to the Romans by the Bruttian
corps of the garrison; and the tempting offers of Fulvius, who promised
pardon for the revolt, were readily listened to by several chiefs of this
half-barbarous people. Rhegium, the important maritime town which kept open the
communication with Sicily, and, in conjunction with Messana, closed the straits
to the Carthaginian ships, had always remained in the possession of the Romans.
The impoverished Greek towns and the narrow strip of land from Lucania to
Sicily were all that was left to Hannibal of the promising acquisitions made
after the first few brilliant campaigns. Pushed back into this corner, like the
Duke of Wellington behind the lines of Torres Vedras, the unconquered and
undaunted Hannibal waited for the moment when, in conjunction with his brother,
whom he expected from Spain, he could with renewed vigour assail Rome and force
her to make peace.
The taking of Tarentum at the
same time with the fall of New Carthage was a compensation for the efforts and
losses of the year 209. The remainder of this year passed without any further
military events, and for the succeeding year, as has been already stated,
Marcellus was for the fifth time raised to the consulship. His colleague was T.
Quinctius Crispinus, one of the many Roman nobles whose names call forth no
distinct pictures in our imagination, because they mark nothing but the average
mediocrity of their class. The campaign of this year had for its object, as it
appears, the reconquest of Locri, the most important of the towns still in
Hannibal’s possession. The Romans steadily adhered to their plan of avoiding
battles as much as possible, and of depriving the enemy of his means for continuing
the war in Italy by taking from him the support of fortified places. Seven
legions and a fleet were destined to operate for this end in the south of
Italy. Whilst the two consuls, with two consular armies, covered in the rear by
a legion in Campania, occupied Hannibal, Q. Claudius, who commanded two legions
in Tarentum, was ordered to advance on Locri by land, and L. Cincius was to
sail from Sicily with a fleet and attack Locri from the sea side. Hannibal, who
was opposing the combined armies of the consuls, was informed of the march of
the Roman army along the coast from Tarentum to Locri. He surprised it in
the neighbourhood of Petelia and inflicted a severe defeat, killing several
thousands and driving the remainder in a disorderly flight back to Tarentum.
Thus, for the present, Locri
was out of danger, and Hannibal was at leisure to turn against the two consuls,
whom he hoped to force to accept a decisive battle. But Marcellus and Crispinus
were resolved to be cautious. They were not going to allow Hannibal to try one
of his stratagems and to catch them in a trap, as he had so often done with
less experienced or less careful opponents. The sexagenarian Marcellus himself
headed a reconnaissance, accompanied by his colleague, his son, a number of officers,
and a few hundred horsemen, to explore the country between the Roman and the
Carthaginian camps. On this expedition the brave old soldier met his death.
From the wooded recesses of the hills in front and in the flank, Numidian
horsemen rushed suddenly forward. In a moment the consuls’ escort were cut down
or scattered; Crispinus and the young Marcellus escaped, severely wounded, and
Marcellus fell fighting like a brave trooper, closing his long life in a manner
which, though it might befit a common soldier, was hardly worthy of a statesman
and a general. His magnanimous enemy honoured his body with a decent funeral,
and sent the ashes to his son.
If we calmly examine what is
reported of the virtues of Marcellus, we shall come to the conclusion that he
is one of those men who are praised far beyond their merits. This is caused
partly by the circumstance that, owing to the scarcity of men of eminent
abilities, the Roman historians were almost driven to speak in high praise of
men scarcely raised above mediocrity, because otherwise they would have had
nobody to compare with the great heroes and statesmen of Greece, by whose
greatness they loved to measure their own. If it happened that a Roman
possessed a little more than the average amount of national virtues—if by
family connexions, noble birth, and wealth he was marked out for the high
offices of state, and if he was fortunate enough to find on the occasion of his
funeral a sufficiently skilful and not too bashful panegyrist, his fame was
secured for ever. All these favourable circumstances were combined in the case
of Marcellus. He was a brave soldier, a firm intrepid patriot, and an
unflinching enemy of the enemies of Rome. But to extol him as an eminent
general, or even as a worthy opponent of Hannibal, argues want of judgment and
personal or national partiality. He was not much better than most of the other
Roman generals of his time. The reports of his victories over Hannibal are one and
all fictitious. Thus much is evident from what has been said before, for the
tissue of falsehood is after all so thin that it covers the truth but
imperfectly; but it can also be proved from the statement of Polybius. This
historian says, evidently for the purpose of refuting assertions current in his
own time, that Marcellus never once conquered Hannibal. After such emphatic
evidence as this, we are allowing a great deal if we admit that, perhaps once,
or even on several occasions, Marcellus succeeded in thwarting the plans of
Hannibal, by beating off attacks or withdrawing from a conflict without the
total rout of his army. Something of this sort must have supplied the materials
for exaggerations for which there may have been some pretext or excuse. Accordingly,
if Cicero calls Marcellus fiery and clashing, he no doubt speaks the truth; but
if he extols his clemency towards the conquered Syracusans, it is clear that he
only employs him as a foil for the purpose of placing in a more glaring light
the horrible “villany of Verres”. How Marcellus treated the Sicilians we learn
from the events which followed the capture of Syracuse. He was, in truth, a
merciless destroyer and insatiably greedy. When the Sicilians heard that, in
the year 210, he was again to take the command in their island, they were
distracted with terror and despair, and declared, in Rome, that it would be
better for them if the sea were to swallow them up, or if the fiery lava of
Mount Aetna were to cover the land; they assured the senate that they would
much rather leave their native country than dwell in it for anytime under the
tyranny of Marcellus. So vigorous and so just was the protest of the Sicilians
that Marcellus was obliged to exchange provinces with his colleague Valerius
Laevinus, and to take the command in Italy instead of Sicily, which had been
awarded to him by lot. That he exceeded the limits of Roman severity is evident
from the decree of the senate, which, though it does not exactly censure his
proceedings in Syracuse, or annul the arrangements which he had made, yet
enjoined his successor Laevinus to provide for the welfare of Syracuse, as far
as the interest of the republic allowed. The old Fabius Maximus was surely a
genuine Roman, but he acted very differently from Marcellus. He
warmly pleaded in the senate in favour of the Tarentines whom he had reduced,
and he shielded them from the rapacity and revenge of men who, like Marcellus,
delighted in venting their evil passions on helpless foes. We can see clearly
that public opinion no longer declared it to be a Roman virtue to treat conquered
enemies with excessive severity, that feelings of humanity began to influence
the more refined minds, and that the panegyrists (those, for example, of the
Scipios) found it necessary to throw over their heroes the colour of kindliness
and clemency.
It would be interesting to
know from what source the vast exaggerations and fictions are derived which
have the praises of Marcellus for their object. Perhaps we shall not go wrong
in supposing that their fountain-head was the funeral speech delivered, according
to Livy, by the son of Marcellus. This document seems, however, not to have met
with unconditional credence at first, as may be inferred from the quoted
declaration of Polybius, and from Livy himself. But when the Emperor Augustus
had selected M. Claudius Marcellus, the descendant of the conqueror of
Syracuse, for the husband of his daughter Julia, a new period of glorification
began for the family of the Marcelli. A careful search was now made for
everything that redounded to the praise of the ancestors of the young man in
the glorious times of the older republic. Augustus himself composed an
historical work on this subject, and we cannot fail to perceive that Livy wrote
under the influence of the Augustan court. He treats Marcellus as a favourite
hero, and even in Plutarch we can trace this preference accorded to Marcellus.
If we deduct all that family conceit and national pride have invented about
Marcellus, there remains, indeed, the image of a genuine Roman of the old type,
of an intrepid soldier, and an energetic officer: but the parallel between
Marcellus and Pelopidas seems inappropriate, and all comparison between him and
Hannibal is absurd.
The death of Marcellus and
that of his colleague Crispinus, who very soon after died of his wounds, appears
to have paralysed the action of the two consular armies for the whole of the
campaign, though they had remained intact when their leaders were cut off. It
is very strange that the Roman people, which year after year found new
commanders-in-chief, now allowed four legions to remain inactive for at least
half a year because both consuls had by chance fallen in the field. If it be
indeed true, as is related, that the armies suffered no further losses—in other
words, that after the death of Marcellus they were not attacked and beaten by
Hannibal—the strategy of the Romans appears in a sorry light. One of the two
armies retired to Venusia, the other even as far as Campania, paid they left
the Carthaginian general at liberty to put an end to the siege of Locri, which
had been again undertaken. The praetor Lucius Cincius had obtained from Sicily
a great quantity of engines necessary for a siege, raid had attacked Locri
vigorously, both by land and sea. Already the Punic garrison was much reduced,
and despaired of being able to hold the town much longer, when Hannibal’s
Numidians showed themselves in the neighbourhood and encouraged the garrison to
make a sally. Attacked in front and rear, the Romans soon gave way, left all
their siege engines behind, and took refuge on board their ships. Locri was
saved by the mere arrival of Hannibal.
Through the failure of the
attack on Locri, the campaign of 208 proved entirely fruitless to the Romans,
and all further military proceedings were suspended. For the first time since the
establishment of the republic both consuls had fallen in battle. The
commonwealth was bereaved, and religious fears and scruples no doubt
contributed to paralyse military action for the time. It was most fortunate for
Rome that, in consequence of her indefatigable perseverance and gigantic
efforts, Hannibal had been pushed into the defensive, and was no longer able to
carry on the war on a large scale. For at this very time the signs of discontent
and disobedience multiplied among the subjects of Rome in Italy, whilst the
news that arrived from Spain, Massilia, Africa, and Sicily left little doubt
that the time had come at last when the long prepared expedition of Hasdrubal
from Spain into Italy might be looked for as imminent. It seemed as if the war,
which had now lasted ten years, instead of gradually flagging and drawing to a
close was to begin afresh with renewed vigour.
The refusal of the twelve
Latin colonies to bear any longer the burdens of the war could not fail to
produce an effect on the other allies of Rome. Soon after there appeared most
alarming signs of growing discontent in Etruria. This country had hitherto been
almost exempt from the immediate calamities of war. Hannibal, it is true, had
in his first campaign touched a part of Etruria, and had on Etruscan soil
fought the battle of Thrasymenus. But, as he wished to conciliate the allies of
Rome and to appear as their friend, he had probably spared the country as much
as possible. In the succeeding years the theatre of war had been shifted to the
south of Italy, and whilst Apulia, Lucania, Campania, and, above all, Bruttium
were exposed to all the horrors of war, and whilst the African, Spanish, and
Gaulish barbarians in Hannibal’s army penetrated with fire and sword into the
interior of Samnium and Latium, nay even to the very gates of Rome, Etruria had
heard the storm rage at a distance, and had, almost without interruption,
enjoyed practically the blessings of peace. The countryman had securely tilled
his field, the shepherd had tended his flock, the artisan and the tradesman had
each plied his craft. In its fidelity to Rome, Etruria had hitherto remained
unshaken. It was an Etruscan cohort from Perugia, which, side by side with one
from Praeneste, had heroically resisted the Carthaginians in the
protracted siege of Casilinum. Without any doubt the Etruscans had
supplied their full contingents to all the armies and fleets of the Romans, and
nothing but the customary injustice of the Roman annalists has ignored this
co-operation of their allies. Financially, too, the rich towns of Etruria had
helped to bear the burdens of the war. Of especial importance were the supplies
of grain that came from this country. We cannot suppose that the Roman treasury
was in a condition to pay for this grain in cash, and probably the price was
fixed very low, in the interest of the state. Thus it was that Etruria also
began to feel the pressure of the war; and the desire for peace showed itself
naturally in an unwillingness to comply with further demands on the part of
Rome. As early as 212 B.C. the first symptoms of discontent had become
apparent. On that occasion a Roman army was sent to Etruria to keep the country
in check. Three years later the agitation became much more critical. It showed
itself especially in Arretium, a town which at one time was reputed as one of
the foremost of the Etruscan people, and which, as an old friend and ally of
Rome, might consider itself entitled to be treated with some degree of
preference and indulgence. Marcellus, who, immediately after his election to
the consulship of 208 B.C., was sent to Arretium, succeeded for the moment in
quieting the people; but when he had set out on his campaign in the south of
the peninsula, where he was soon afterwards killed in ambush, the Etruscans
again became troublesome, and the senate now dispatched C. Terentius Varro, the
consul of 216, with military authority, to Arretium. Varro occupied the town
with a Roman legion, and required hostages from the Arretine senate. Finding
that the senators hesitated to comply with his order, he placed sentinels at
the gates and along the walls, to prevent anybody leaving the place.
Nevertheless seven of the most eminent men escaped with their families.
The property of the fugitives was forthwith confiscated, and one hundred and
twenty hostages, taken from the families of the remaining senators, were sent
to Rome. The unsatisfactory state of Etruria seemed, however, to require a
better guarantee than a few hostages from a single town. The senate therefore
dispatched a legion to back the measures which were everywhere taken for
keeping the country in subjection and for crushing in the bud every attempt at
revolution.
This growing discontent among
a considerable portion of the most faithful and valuable allies caused the more
anxiety in Rome as about the same time disquieting news arrived of the
movements of Hasdrubal. As early as two years before (in 210 B.C.) the admiral
M. Valerius Messala had sailed from. Sicily with fifty vessels to Africa, to
obtain accurate information about the plans and preparations of the
Carthaginians. He returned after an absence of thirteen days to Lilybaeum, and
reported that the Carthaginians were making armaments on a large scale to
increase Hasdrubal’s army in Spain and to carry out at last the plan of sending
him with a strong force across the Alps to Italy. This news was confirmed by
the Carthaginian senators taken prisoners by Scipio at New Carthage, who, as
commissioners of the Carthaginian government, were necessarily well informed of
the plan of war and of the progress of the armaments in Carthage. It was now of
the utmost importance, just as in the beginning of the war, to detain Hasdrubal
in Spain; and after the decided progress which the Roman arms had made in Spain
during the last year, after the conquest of New Carthage and the revolt of
numerous Spanish peoples from the Carthaginians, this appeared a comparatively
easy task for so enterprising a general as Scipio. He had been enabled, by
means of the hostages found in New Carthage, to gain the friendship of many
Spanish chiefs, among whom Indibilis and Mandonius are especially mentioned as
the most powerful and hitherto most faithful allies of Carthage. After such
results it seems strange that Scipio remained inactive for almost a whole year
before he thought of moving southwards from Tarraco. Where the three
Carthaginian generals were during all this time, and what they did, we do not
know. All the events that took place in Spain during the whole war are hidden
in such obscurity that, by comparison with them, the campaigns in Italy and
Sicily appear as in the clear light of historical truth. The Romans were so
ignorant of the geography of Spain, the distance of that country from Rome was
so great, and the intercourse so limited, that fancy ranged freely in all the
narratives of Spanish affairs.
We have already seen, on a
former occasion, how the annalists made use of this circumstance, and we have
now again an opportunity for noticing the same thing. They reported that Scipio
encountered Hasdrubal at Baecula, a place situated probably between the Baetis
(Guadalquivir) and the Anas (Guadiana), and defeated him with a loss of 20,000
men. One might suppose that such a decisive victory as this would have led to
the most important results, and would at any rate have paralysed all further
enterprises of Hasdrubal; but we find that Hasdrubal was able immediately after
this battle to carry into execution the plan which had been delayed by adverse
circumstances for eight years. From the battlefield he marched unpursued, with
his defeated and crippled army (if Roman accounts are to be trusted), through
the centre of the peninsula, crossed the Pyrenees by one of the western passes,
and had actually reached Gaul, while Scipio, in total ignorance of his
movements, was in hopes that he could stop his march somewhere between the Ebro
and the Pyrenees, on the road which Hannibal had taken ten years before. It is
hard to understand how, under such circumstances, the battle at Baecula can
have resulted in a Roman victory. Perhaps it was only an insignificant
encounter of the Carthaginian rear-guard with the Roman legions, which, after
their usual fashion, the Roman annalists magnified into a great battle and
glorious victory. Anyhow the strategic success was entirely on the side of the
Carthaginians, and Scipio had to confess that he was not equal to the task
which he had undertaken; it was his fault that Italy was exposed to a new invasion,
and that on Italian soil a struggle was renewed on whose doubtful issue
depended not only the supremacy but the very existence of Rome.
In Italy the approaching
danger called forth the most serious apprehensions. The combined assault of the
two sons of Hamilcar on Italian soil, which the senate had been so anxious to
elude, was now imminent. The military history of the preceding year was not
calculated to inspire much confidence. The siege of Locri had failed. The
consuls with their combined armies had not been able to keep Hannibal in check,
and both had actually fallen. Their legions had retired to the shelter of
fortified places, and Hannibal was undisputed master of Bruttium and Apulia.
The twelve remonstrating colonies still refused to furnish troops. Etruria was
discontented, almost in open rebellion; the Gauls and Ligurians were ready to
make another inroad into Italy. The news from Spain, even if it was coloured as
favourably as it appears in Livy’s narrative (a circumstance much to be
doubted), could not deceive the senate on the subject of Scipio’s real success.
There was not the slightest doubt that Italy would again have to bear the brunt
of war, and that now, after ten years of exhausting warfare, she would scarcely
be able to resist a double assault. The Romans might well ask, what gods would
watch over their town in such perilous times, when, in spite of all their
prayers and all their vows and sacrifices, the paternal deities had shown
themselves inexorable or else powerless to ward off the devastation of Italy
and disasters like those of Thrasymenus and Cannae. Again—as always happens in
days of extreme danger—the popular mind, tortured by religious terrors, saw
everywhere signs of the divine anger; and, in the effort to avert this anger, it
gave itself up to horrid delusions, and to the cruelty of superstition. Again
it rained stones, rivers ran with blood, temples, walls, and gates of towns
were struck by lightning. But more than usual terror was caused by the birth of
a child of uncertain sex, and so large that it seemed to be four years old.
Soothsayers were specially sent for from Etruria, and at their suggestion the
wretched creature was placed in a box and cast into the sea far from the coast.
Then the pontifices ordained the celebration of a grand
national festival of atonement. From the temple of Apollo before the town, a
procession marched through the Porta Carmentalis, along the Vicus Jugarius to
the Forum. At the head of the procession walked two white cows, led by
sacrificial servants; behind them were carried two statues of the royal Juno,
made of cypress wood; then followed three times nine virgins in long flowing
garments, walking in a single line and holding on to a rope, singing to the
measured time of their footsteps, in honour of the goddess, a hymn, which
Livius Andronicus, the oldest Roman poet, had composed for this special
occasion, and which later generations—justly, no doubt—considered a specimen of
ancestral rudeness. At the end of the procession came the ten officers who
presided over sacrificial rites (decemviri sacris faciundis), crowned
with laurel and clothed in purple-bordered togas. From the Forum the procession
went, after a short pause, through the Vicus Tuscus, the Velabrum, and the
Forum Boarium, up the Clivus Publicius, to the temple of Juno on the Aventine.
Here the two cows were sacrificed by the ten sacrificial priests, and the
statues were put up in the temple of the goddess. This simple and dignified
solemnity is interesting, not only because, being taken from the priestly
archives, the narrative is no doubt authentic and trustworthy, but because it
shows, in a very clear and unmistakable manner, to what extent the Roman mind
was at that period already penetrated by Greek ideas. The Roman pontifices arrange
a festival in honour of a Roman deity, Juno the Queen. The religious
procession, with rhythmical walking and singing, is likewise Roman, but the
procession starts from the temple of the Greek Apollo; the ten officers, the
keepers of the Sibylline oracles of the same god, perform the sacrifice, while
a poet of Greek extraction, Andronikos, who sixty-four years before had been
dragged into slavery from conquered Tarentum, composed the solemn hymn, which,
in spite of its hard and uncultivated language, marked, no doubt, an immense
progress when compared with the old and scarcely intelligible litanies of the
Romulean “fratres arvales”. In the very midst of a war which threatened Rome
and Italian culture with ruin, we can watch the signs of the increasing ascendancy
of the Hellenic mind.
Amidst their prayers for
divine protection, the Romans did not forget to take measures for confronting
the impending danger. The number of the legions was increased from twenty-one
to twenty-three. The conscription was enforced with the greatest severity; even
the maritime colonies, which had hitherto been exempt from service, were
compelled to furnish troops. Ostia and Antium alone remained exempt, but were
ordered to keep their contingents in constant readiness. From the Spanish
legions 2,000 foot and 1,000 horse were detached and sent to Italy, besides
8,000 Spanish and Gaulish mercenaries; from Sicily came 2,000 slingers and
archers. The two legions of liberated slaves, which, since the death of
Gracchus, had been neglected, were re-organised and completed, and thus a
military force was set on foot large enough to take the field as well against
Hannibal as Hasdrubal.
The consuls selected for the
momentous year 207 were Caius Claudius Nero and Marcus Livius Salinator. The
former—the great grandson of the celebrated censor Appius Claudius the
Blind—had, immediately after the taking of Capua in 211 B.C., been sent as
propraetor with an army to Spain, to retrieve the fortunes of war in that
country after the destruction of the Roman armies under the two Scipios. His
alleged successes over Hasdrubal are either entirely fictitious or greatly
exaggerated. It was said that he had outmanoeuvred the Punic general, and might
have made him prisoner with his army, but allowed himself to be delayed by
negotiations about an armistice until the whole hostile force had had time
gradually to escape from its critical position. In his command in Spain he was
superseded, in 210, by the younger Scipio. In what manner he so gained the
confidence of the people as to be intrusted with the consulship in 207, we are
not told. His colleague, Livius Salinator, was a tried old soldier, who twelve
years before had conducted the Illyrian war successfully, and ended it with the
last triumph that Rome had witnessed. But from that time he had been lost to
his country. He had been accused and condemned for an unjust distribution of
the Illyrian booty, and had felt so hurt at this indignity that he had retired
into the country, had allowed his beard and hair to grow, and had refused for
eight years to take part in the affairs of state, until in the year 210 the
consuls Marcellus and Valerius induced him to return into the town. The censors
of the same year Veturius and Licinius re-introduced him into the senate, from which
he had probably been expelled in consequence of his public condemnation; still
his wrath was not appeased. He never took part in the discussions, but sat
moodily listening in silence, until at last the accusation of one of his
relations, M. Livius Macatus, who by his negligence had caused the loss of
Tarentum, induced him to speak. Now, when the people needed a good general,
they bethought themselves of the tried old soldier, and, in spite of his
remonstrances, elected him as the colleague of Claudius Nero. But a difficulty
had still to be overcome before the intention of the people could be realised.
Nero and Livius were personal enemies. How was it possible to intrust the
welfare of the state in such a critical period to men who hated one another? It
was not enough to separate the consuls in their command, by sending one
southward against Hannibal, and the other against Hasdrubal into the north of
the peninsula. The division of the supreme command among two men, which had so
often been the source of weakness in the wars of the Roman republic, was surely
ruinous if such an enemy as Hannibal were opposed by men who hated one another.
It was absolutely necessary not only to reconcile the two consuls, but to unite
them by cordial friendship. This arduous task was accomplished by the senate.
Both Nero and Livius overcame their personal feelings of resentment, and this
triumph of patriotism over personal passion was a happy augury and almost a
guarantee of the final triumph over the foreign enemy.
The Romans were far from
having finished their preparations for the ensuing campaign when the allied
Massilians brought the news of Hasdrubal’s march through Gaul, and made it
evident that he would cross the Alps in the early part of the spring. He had
marched from the western Pyrenees right across southern Gaul to the Rhone, had been
hospitably received by the Averni and other tribes, had enlarged his army by
newly enlisted mercenaries, and, after passing the winter in Gaul, was
preparing to cross the Alps by the same road which his brother had taken eleven
years before. It was evident that neither the difficulties of the Alpine passes
nor the hostilities of the mountaineers would deter him. The passes offered no
insurmountable difficulties in the good season, and the inhabitants of the Alps
had learnt by experience that the Carthaginian armies had not come to make war
on them, but only to march through their country. If the Romans wished to avoid
the mistake of 218, and to meet the Carthaginians at the foot of the Alps, the
utmost dispatch in the movement of their armies was imperatively demanded.
Every step that Hasdrubal made in a southerly direction, after crossing the
Alps, brought him nearer to his brother and increased the danger which the
union of the two brothers threatened to bring upon Rome.
Hannibal had probably wintered
in Apulia, and at the beginning of spring marched into Bruttium to collect and
organise the troops in that country. Thereupon he started northwards, and
encountered the consul, Claudius Nero, who, with an army of 40,000 foot and
2,500 horse, was posted near Grumentum, in Lucania, to stop his advance. An
engagement took place, in which Nero claimed the victory, and Hannibal is
reported to have lost 8,000 dead and 700 prisoners. But this seems not to agree
with the statement that Hannibal continued his march and soon after halted near
Venusia. Here he paused, hardly, as it would appear, because he was afraid of
the Roman army which followed him, and which, at the worst, was able only to
annoy, but not to harm, him; he was probably waiting for news from his brother,
in order to be sure on which road and at what time he should march northwards
to meet him. On receiving no news of any sort, he turned back again to
Metapontum, to join another reinforcement which his lieutenant Hanno had in the
meantime collected in Bruttium. Whether it was his intention to induce the
Roman consul to follow him southwards, or to draw him into an ambush, we cannot
tell. Nero followed him closely, and when Hannibal soon after turned again
northwards and encamped at Canusium, in the neighbourhood of the glorious
battlefield of Cannae, Nero had again taken up his position close to him, and
from the mounds of their respective camps the Roman and the Carthaginian
sentinels were idly watching each other whilst, at a distance of a few days' march
further northwards, the fate of Rome and Carthage was decided.
Having crossed the Alps,
Hasdrubal had met with no Roman army in Cisalpine Gaul. The praetor L. Porcius
Licinus, who commanded two legions, either came too late or did not venture to
penetrate far beyond the Po. Reinforced by Gauls and Ligurians, Hasdrubal tried
to take Placentia by storm, but was soon compelled to give up this enterprise,
for which he had neither means nor time; and he now advanced southwards on the
Flaminian road by Ariminum. It was his intention to meet Hannibal in Umbria,
and then to march with the combined armies upon Narnia and Rome. He
communicated this plan to Hannibal in a letter, which he dispatched by the
hands of four Gaulish and two Numidian horsemen through the whole length of
Italy, across a thickly-peopled hostile country, where at every step they ran
the risk of being discovered and hunted down. The undaunted horsemen made their
way as far as Apulia, but could not find Hannibal, and, roaming about in search
of him in the neighbourhood of Tarentum, were at last discovered and made
prisoners. Thus Nero was apprised of Hasdrubal's march and of his plans, whilst
Hannibal was waiting in vain for news from his brother. Now was the time for
forming a quick and bold resolution—such a resolution as, under ordinary
circumstances, was quite beyond the conception of a Roman general. It was
necessary to deviate from the ordinary routine and from the prescribed order.
Apulia and Bruttium had been assigned as the provinces of Nero; it was his task
to keep Hannibal in check, whilst his colleague, Livius Salinator, confronted
Hasdrubal in the north. Should he take upon himself to leave the province
assigned to him, to encroach upon the province of his colleague, and to offer
an uncalled-for aid? If the haughty Livius, who had only just subdued his old
animosity at the call of his country, should reject the proffered aid—if he
should come too late—if Hannibal should discover his march, pursue and overtake
him—if from any other cause the enterprise should fail, Claudius Nero was
doomed to be for ever branded as the author of the greatest calamity that could
befall his country, and Rome would be given up to the mercy of the conquerors.
By silencing all scruples and taking upon himself the weighty responsibility,
Nero showed a moral firmness and strategic ability which far surpassed the
average qualifications of which Roman generals could boast. Even the failure of
his plan would not have sufficed to condemn him before the impartial tribunal
of history; but, fortunately for Rome, his just calculations and his bold
resolve were destined to be crowned with complete and overwhelming success.
Nero informed the senate of
Hasdrubal’s plans, and of what he himself was resolved to do. He recommended
the government to send two legions which were stationed at Rome up the Tiber to
Narnia, for the purpose of blocking up that road in case of necessity, and at
the same time to replace them in the capital by one legion, which was stationed
in Campania under the command of Fulvius. He then selected out of his army
7,000 of the best foot soldiers and 1,000 horse, and left his camp so quietly
that Hannibal did not perceive his march. The inhabitants of the country
through which he passed, the Larinatians, Frentanians, Marrucinians, and
Praetutians—had been informed of his approach, and called upon to furnish
provisions for his troops as well as horses, draft cattle, and vehicles for the
transport of the baggage and of the men that might break down on the road. The
sentiments of the population of Italy now became unmistakably apparent in a
genuine outburst of enthusiasm and of devotion for the cause of Rome, which was
the cause of all Italy. Every man was eager to help, to contribute something
towards putting down the common enemy. Old and young, rich and poor, hurried to
the places where Nero’s soldiers were expected to pass, supplied them with food
and drink, warmed them by their sympathies, followed them with the most ardent
wishes for victory, while thousands of young men and veteran soldiers joined
the army as volunteers.
The march was pressed on
without delay. The soldiers would scarcely indulge in so much rest as nature
imperatively required; they were inspired by their enthusiasm with superhuman
strength. In the neighbourhood of the colony of Sena, to the south of the river
Metaurus, Nero found his colleague Livius, and not far from him the praetor L.
Porcius Licinus, each encamped with two legions opposite Hasdrubal. In the
stillness of the night Nero and his troops were received into the consular
camp, and distributed into the tents of their comrades, so that the area of the
camp was not enlarged. It was the intention of the Roman consuls to withhold
from Hasdrubal the knowledge of the arrival of reinforcements, in order to
induce him the more readily to accept battle. At any rate a battle must be
fought before Hannibal should become aware of Nero’s march and hasten to
support his brother. On this depended the success of the whole campaign. In
case of need the consuls would have been compelled to attack the Carthaginian
camp. Hasdrubal, however, was not long ignorant that both consuls were
confronting him. The double signals which he heard from the Roman camp
since Nero’s arrival left no doubt of the fact, and the troops which had just
arrived exhibited manifest signs of a long and fatiguing march. Hasdrubal could
explain the arrival of the second consul only by supposing that Hannibal’s army
was defeated and annihilated, and he resolved accordingly to return into the
country of the Gauls, and there to wait for accurate information. In the same
night he gave orders to retire beyond the Metaurus. But, by the faithlessness
of his guides, he missed the way, wandered long up and down the river without
finding a ford, and when morning dawned, saw his disordered and exhausted
troops pursued and attacked by the Romans. He had no longer time to cover
himself by throwing up fortifications for a camp. In the most disadvantageous
position, with a deep river in his rear, he was obliged to accept battle, and,
from the very first, he felt the necessity of either conquering or dying. The
battle lasted from morning till noon. The Spaniards on Hasdrubal’s right wing
fought with the inborn bravery of their race against the legions of Livius. The
Gauls on the left wing occupied an unassailable position. Nero, on the right
wing of the Roman line, saw that he had no chance of producing an impression on
them; he therefore shifted his position, marched with his men behind the rear of
the Roman line to the left, and attacked the Spaniards in flank and rear. This
manoeuvre decided the battle. The Gauls on Hasdrubal’s left wing appear to
have behaved very badly. They did not avail themselves of Nero’s retreat for
the purpose of pushing forward, but gave themselves up to sloth and rioting,
and were afterwards found lying for the most part drunk and helpless on the
ground, so that they could be slaughtered without offering resistance. When
Hasdrubal saw his best troops falling under the overwhelming attack of the
Romans and that all was lost, he rushed into the thickest throng of battle and
was slain. Nothing was wanting to make the Roman victory complete. Ten thousand
of the enemy, for the most part Spaniards, fell in the battle. The Gauls and
Ligurians fled in the utmost disorder, and tried to gain their respective
homes. Of ten elephants six were killed, four taken. The Carthaginian army was
destroyed; and, for the first time in the course of the war, the Romans could
boast that they had on Italian soil revenged the fatal day of Cannae.
Nero’s plan of marching
northward had become known in Rome; the town had not ceased to be agitated with
feverish excitement. Everybody felt that a decisive moment was
approaching, and there were many who were far from approving Nero’s bold
resolution. The senate remained assembled, day after day, from early morn
until evening, supporting and counselling the civic magistrates; the people
thronged the streets and especially the Forum; all the temples resounded with
the prayers of the women. Suddenly an uncertain rumour ran through the crowd
that a battle had been fought and a victory gained. But the hopes of the people
had been deceived so often that they refused to believe what they wished for
with agonising eagerness. Even a written despatch of Lucius Manlius, sent from
Narnia, met with but partial credit. At last the news spread that three men of
senatorial rant, delegated by the consuls, were approaching the city. The
excitement of impatience now reached its highest point, and masses of the
population rushed out of the gates to meet the messengers. Every man was
anxious to be the first to hear certain news, and as the crowd picked up scraps
of information from the messengers or their attendants, the joyful tidings
travelled fast from lip to lip. Still no formal announcement was made, and
slowly the messengers rode onwards through the swelling throng to the Forum. It
was with difficulty that they could penetrate to the senate-house. The crowd
pressed after them into the building, and could scarcely be kept from invading
the sacred precincts where the senate was assembled. The official report of the
consuls was at length read in the senate, and then Lucius Veturius stepped out
into the Forum and communicated to the people the full tidings of victory—that
the two consuls and the Roman legions were safe, the Punic army destroyed, and
Hasdrubal, its leader, slain. Now all doubts were removed, and the people gave
themselves up to boundless joy. The first feeling was that of gratitude to the
gods. At last they had heard the prayers of their people, had overthrown the
national enemy and saved Italy. The senate decreed the celebration of a public
thanksgiving, which was to last three days. The Roman people, tired and sick of
war, fondly nourished the fairest hopes of peace, and seemed almost to forget
that Hannibal still occupied Italian soil, unconquered and terrible as ever.
From the field of battle on
the Metaurus Nero marched, with the same rapidity with which he had come, back
into his camp near Canusium, where Hannibal was still waiting for news from his
brother. This news was now brought in an unlooked-for manner. Hasdrubal’s head
was cast by the Romans before the feet of his outposts, and two Carthaginian
captives, set free for this purpose by Nero, gave him an account of the
disastrous battle which had wrecked all his hopes. When Hannibal
recognised the bloody head of his brother he foresaw the fate of Carthage. He
immediately broke up with his army, and marched southward into Bruttium,
whither his victorious opponent did not venture to follow him. The war in Italy
was now to all appearances decided. It was in the highest degree unlikely that
Carthage would repeat the enterprise of another invasion of Italy, which had
just signally failed. After the loss of Sardinia and Sicily, soon to be
followed by that of Spain, it seemed to be of little use, in a military point
of view, to retain any longer a corner of Italy, especially as an attack upon
the Carthaginian possessions in Africa might now be expected. Nevertheless
Hannibal could not make up his mind to leave of his own accord a country which
had been the theatre of his great deeds, and where alone, as he was convinced,
a mortal blow could be dealt at Rome. For four years longer he clung with
astounding tenacity to the hostile soil, and for all this time his name and his
unconquered arms continued to strike terror throughout Italy.
At the close of the year which
determined the successful issue of the war, Rome had, for the first time after
a long interval, days of national rejoicing, and the consuls celebrated a
well-deserved triumph. After the fall of Syracuse the senate had refused to
accord to Marcellus the triumph which he eagerly coveted, and an ovation on the
Alban mount was but a poor substitute for the usual display of triumphal pomp
within the walls of Rome. Fabius indeed had triumphed when he had been
fortunate enough to get possession of Tarentum by the treachery of the Bruttian
garrison. But, in spite of the great show of treasures and works of art which
he displayed before the gazing multitude, nobody was deceived as to his real
merits in a military point of view. Now at length Roman generals had fought a
pitched battle and had overcome an enemy second in reputation only to Hannibal.
The senate decreed that both consuls, as they had fought side by side, should
be united in their triumph. They met at Praeneste, Livius at the head of his
army, Nero alone, as his legions had been ordered to remain in the field to keep
Hannibal in check. Livius entered the city on the triumphal car, drawn by four
horses, as the real conqueror, because on the day of battle he had had the
auspices, and the victory had been gained in his province. Nero accompanied him
on horseback; but, though the formal honours accorded to him were inferior, the
eyes of the crowd were chiefly directed on him, and he was greeted by the
loudest applause, as the man to whose bold resolution the victory was
principally due.
Sixth Period of the Hannihalian War.FROM THE BATTLE ON THE METAURUS TO THE TAKING OF LOCRI, 207-205 B.C.
From the beginning of the war
to the great victory at Cannae the star of Carthage had been in the ascendant.
The defection of Capua, Syracuse, Tarentum, and numerous other allies of the
Romans was the fruit of this rapid succession of victories. But the fortunes of
Carthage did not rise higher, and soon the reconquest of Syracuse, of Capua,
and of Tarentum marked the steps by which Rome gradually rose to her ancient
superiority over her rival. The annihilation of Hasdrubal’s army was the
severest blow which she had yet inflicted, and it proved the more disastrous to
the cause of Carthage as Hasdrubal’s expedition into Italy had been effected
only at the price of the virtual abandonment of Spain. Whatever may have been
the tactical result of the battle of Baecula, in which Scipio claimed the
victory, its results were, as far as he alone and the campaign in the Spanish
peninsula were concerned, those of a great military success; for the best and
largest portion of the Carthaginian forces in Spain withdrew immediately after
and left him almost undisputed master of all the land from the Pyrenees to the
Straits of Calpe (Gibraltar). An additional advantage for Scipio was, that on
the withdrawal of the Punic army more and more of the Spanish tribes embraced
the cause of the Romans, whose dominion had not yet had time to press heavily
on them, and through whose help they hoped, in their simple-mindedness, to
recover their independence. This vacillation of the Spanish character explains
to some extent the sudden and wholesale vicissitudes of the war in that
country. Nothing appeared easier than to conquer Spain; but nothing was, in
reality, more difficult than to keep permanent possession of it. Thus the first
Carthaginian conquests in Spain, under Hamilcar Barcas and his
son-in-law Hasdrubal, had been effected with wonderful rapidity, owing to
internal divisions among the Spanish tribes. Hannibal had, on his march to
Italy, subdued, as he thought permanently, all the country between the Iberus
and the Pyrenees; but the mere appearance of the Roman legions under the
Scipios had swept away this acquisition, and in their very first campaigns the
two Roman generals penetrated far to the south, into the heart of the
Carthaginian possessions. When the Carthaginians were entirely expelled from
Spain, it took the Romans two hundred years of hard fighting before they could
say that the whole of Spain was in their possession and pacified. In the first
ten years of the Hannibalian war they persistently reinforced their armies in
Spain at the greatest cost, and their perseverance was not without its effect;
for the hold that the Carthaginians had on Spain was materially weakened, and
they could no longer draw from it the large supplies of soldiers and treasure
which they had received from that country in the beginning of the war. It lost
accordingly much of the importance which it had had in their eyes. Yet it was
not entirely given up by them, even after Hasdrubal had evacuated it with the
best part of the Carthaginian forces. Another Hasdrubal, the son of Gisco, a
very able general, and Hannibal’s youngest brother Mago remained still at the
head of respectable armies in Spain, and were receiving reinforcements from
Africa. Nevertheless, it is not difficult to perceive that the power of
Carthage was now on the wane. Not a single vigorous effort was made to regain
what had been lost. The theatre of war was transferred more and more southward,
into the neighbourhood of Gades, the last town of any importance which had
remained of the whole of the Punic possessions in the peninsula. It seemed that
the Carthaginians placed all their hopes of final success on the issue of the
war in Italy, and that from the victory of the two sons of Barcas in Italy they
expected the recovery of Spain as a natural consequence.
Under such circumstances the
task of Scipio was comparatively easy; and however much his panegyrists
endeavoured to extol his exploits in Spain and to represent him as a
consummate hero, they have not succeeded in convincing us that, in a military
point of view, he had an opportunity of accomplishing great things. We see
clearly that the glory of Scipio is the engrossing topic of the writers who
record the progress of affairs in Spain. His individual action is everywhere
conspicuous. We can almost fancy that we are reading an epic poem in his
honour, and some of the scenes described unmistakably betray their origin in
the poetical imagination of the original narrator or in an actual poem. It is
not difficult to discover these traces of poetry. But as we possess no strictly
sober and authentic report of events by the side of the poetically coloured
narrative, we are unable to separate fiction from truth by any but internal
criteria, and in many instances this separation must be left to the tact and
individual judgment of the critical reader.
On his first appearance in
Spain, Scipio had won the hearts of the people. When, after the capture of New
Carthage, they had seen his magnanimity and wisdom, their admiration for the
youthful hero rose to such a height that they began to call him their king. At
first Scipio took no notice of this. But when, after the battle of Baecula, he
liberated the prisoners without ransom, and the Spanish nobles, seized with
enthusiasm, solemnly proclaimed him their king, Scipio met them with the
declaration that he claimed indeed to possess a royal spirit, but that, as a
Roman citizen, he could not assume the royal title, but was satisfied with that
of Imperator. Polybius makes this the opportunity for extolling Scipio’s
moderation and republican sentiments, and he expresses surprise that he
stretched out his hand to seize a crown neither on this occasion nor at a later
period when, after the overthrow of Carthage and Syria, he had reached the
height of glory, and ‘had free scope to obtain royal power in
whatever part of the earth he wished’. This opinion, so unhesitatingly
expressed by Polybius, is in the highest degree strange and startling. It
proves beyond dispute that in his time, i.e. in the first half of
the second century before our era, the establishment of monarchical government
was a contingency which the imagination of the Romans did not place beyond the
reach of possibility; that at any rate distinguished members of the nobility
were reputed capable of aspiring to a position above the republican equality
which befitted the majority of citizens. It is true we find this idea expressed
by a Greek, who perhaps had no conception of the deep-seated horror with which
a genuine Roman looked upon the power and the very name of a king, and whom the
history of his own nation since the time of Alexander the Great had made
familiar with the assumption of royal dignity by successful generals. Moreover,
Polybius intimates that, in his opinion, Scipio might have made use of his
influence and of circumstances to obtain royal authority, not in Rome, but in
Spain, Asia, or elsewhere. Perhaps he thought such a regal or vice-regal
position not incompatible with the duties of a Roman citizen and general, much,
perhaps, as the men of the house of Barcas had been de facto kings
in Spain, and had yet continued to serve the Carthaginian state as dutiful
subjects; but, in spite of all these considerations, the judgment of Polybius,
with regard to Scipio’s refusal of the royal title, must be looked upon as a
sign of the times. It is the first faint shadow which coming events cast before
them. The dominion of Rome over the provinces made it necessary to confer upon individuals
from time to time monarchical powers; and these temporary powers were the steps
to the throne of the Roman emperors. Spain was the first country that witnessed
the autocratic power of Roman nobles; and it was in the family of the Scipios
that this became first apparent. It grew from generation to generation, and
under its weight the republic was crushed. There had been a time in Rome, and
it was not far back, when not even the thought of the possibility of
monarchical power could have been entertained by any one. In the Samnite wars,
in the war with Pyrrhus, and in the first war with Carthage, the soul of every
Roman was filled by the republican spirit alone.
Another form of government
than that of the free republic was inconceivable in Rome, just as it is
inconceivable at the present day in Switzerland and in the United States of
America. All the accusations brought by the Roman annalists against Spurns
Cassius, Spurius Maelius, and Marcus Manlius, for alleged attempts to seize
monarchical power, are nothing but inventions of a later period. But this
period begins, as we now see, after the Hannibalian war, when a writer like
Polybius could find reason to praise Scipio for refusing the royal title and
for abstaining from the assumption of royal authority.
In spite of the republican
sentiments and the moderation which Scipio displayed with regard to the offer
of the royal title, his conduct and demeanour showed a kind of royal bearing
and of conscious superiority over his fellow-citizens. He was surrounded by
something like a court on a small scale. His first confidential adviser and
most trusty servant was Caius Laelius, who was employed especially to execute
delicate commissions and deliver messages in Rome, to sound Scipio’s praise and
to keep together his friends in the senate. Besides this diplomatic agency he
was also intrusted with military duties, like Scipio’s elder brother Lucius,
and like Caius Marcius, the brave tribune who in the year 212 had saved the
remnants of the Roman army from utter destruction. Even the propraetor Marcus
Junius Silanus received orders from him as if he were an imperial legate,
whilst the commander-in-chief directed the movements of his inferiors from his
head-quarters at Tarraco.
The year 207 B.C., which was
so decisive for the war in Italy, seems not to have been marked by any
noteworthy events in Spain. After Hasdrubal had marched with his army across
the Pyrenees and Alps, it appears that the Carthaginians did not feel strong
enough for any offensive operations, and Scipio too was weakened, as he had
sent a part of his forces for the protection of Italy. He remained stationary
in Tarraco, where he had wintered, and we hear only of a march of Laelius to
Baetica in the extreme south of the peninsula, where he encountered and worsted
Hannibal's brother Mago, and captured a Punic general named Hanno. The only
other event assigned to this year is the taking of a place called Oringis, by
Scipio’s brother Lucius, on which occasion 2,000 enemies and not more than
ninety Romans are said to have fallen.
The succeeding year, 206 B.C.,
witnessed the total extinction of Punic dominion in Spain. Scipio had probably
again reinforced his army after the battle on the Metaurus. The news of that
victory produced a great effect in Spain, and gained new allies fur the Romans.
Scipio marched again southwards, and met a second time at Baecula a large
Carthaginian army under Hasdrubal, the son of Gisco, which, after a severe
struggle, he compelled to retreat into its camp, and drove further and further
south shortly after. Hereupon he returned by slow marches to Tarraco, leaving
Silanus behind to pursue the broken hostile army. This army, it appears,
dwindled away fast. The Spanish troops deserted and went to their respective
homes, while the Punians retreated to the island town of Gades. Thus the war
was brought to an end on the continent of Spain. Here, as well as in Sicily and
Sardinia, the superior strength and perseverance of Rome had prevailed over the
Carthaginian armies, which were apparently better led, but composed of worse
materials.
The contagion of defection,
which in great part had caused the loss of Spain, now began to attack the
native African troops, which, more than any other portion of the Carthaginian
armies, had hitherto been the terror of the legions. Masinissa, the brave
Numidian prince, who a few years before had fought against the rebellious
Syphax, and had since then rendered the most important services in Spain
with his excellent cavalry, was beginning to find out, with the native
shrewdness of a barbarian, that the cause of his friends and patrons was lost,
and he was anxious, before it should be too late, to secure for himself a safe
retreat into the camp of the conquerors. He was shut up in Gades with the
remnant of the Carthaginian army, but found an opportunity of treating with
Silanus, and is even related to have had a secret interview with Scipio
himself, in which the terms of an alliance between him and Rome were discussed,
and his co-operation was promised in case the war should be carried into
Africa. Thus the first preparations were made for the execution of the plan
which Scipio was already maturing in his mind, viz., of bringing the war to a
conclusion in that country, where the most deadly blows could be inflicted on
Carthage.
But before Masinissa’s help
was quite secured, Scipio endeavoured to restore and to strengthen the amicable
relations which for several years had existed between Rome and Syphax, the most
powerful prince of the western Numidians or Massaesylians. In the year 215
Syphax had, in the hope of aid from Rome, taken up arms against Carthage. But
he seems to have been left to his own resources, and the few Roman officers
whom the two Scipios had sent to him from Spain had proved unable to convert
his unruly Numidians into anything like a regular and steady infantry. He was
accordingly worsted and expelled from his kingdom by the Carthaginians and
their allies, the Numidians, under King Gula and his son Masinissa. Under what
conditions the Carthaginians afterwards made peace with him and allowed
him to return into his country, we are not informed. We hear only that, with
the subtle treachery of a barbarian, he sent an embassy to Rome in 210, to
assure the senate of his friendship, whilst he was in amicable relations with
Carthage. The secret intrigues carried on with him and with Masinissa are not
known to us. It may be that Scipio wished to gain the friendship and alliance
of both. But it was in the nature of things that neither Rome nor Carthage could
be on good terms with one of the two rivals without making an enemy of the
other. The two Numidian chiefs could not be on the same side, for each of them
aimed at obtaining exclusive possession of the whole of Numidia. As long as
Masinissa was faithful in the service of the Carthaginians, Syphax tried to
keep on good terms with Rome; but as soon as he heard that Masinissa had
betrayed his friends and gone over to the Romans, it was no longer possible for
him to remain in a neutral or even hostile position to Carthage. If one of the
two Numidian chiefs turned to the right, it was necessary for the other to turn
to the left. It was therefore a vain attempt on the part of Scipio to secure
the co-operation of Syphax in the war with the Carthaginians after he had
detached Masinissa from their aide.
Livy gives a long and graphic
description of a dangerous voyage of Scipio to a Numidian port; of his meeting,
by an extraordinary coincidence, with Hasdrubal, the son of Gisco, in the very
house and at the table of Syphax; of negotiations there conducted, on which
occasion Scipio's personal qualities again drew forth the admiration of his
enemies, and lastly of an alliance concluded with Syphax. The whole of this
narrative belongs, in all probability, to the domain of fiction. It looks like
a rhapsody in the epic poem of the great Scipio. The facts related are nothing
but the personal adventures of a few heroes; they have not the slightest
influence on the course of events, and cannot even be made to harmonise with it.
The alleged treaty with Syphax turns out to be a fable, and the Quixotic voyage
to Africa cannot be fitted chronologically into the year 206. If therefore
negotiations really took place between Scipio and Syphax, it is probable that
Laelius, or some other
confidential agent, was the negotiator, and not the commander-in-chief
himself.
Not a whit more authentic, and
not a whit more interesting as bearing on the course of events, is the detailed
narrative given by Livy of the magnificent funeral games which Scipio
celebrated in New Carthage in honour of his father and his uncle. The
gladiatorial combats on this occasion were not of the kind usually exhibited in
Rome at the funerals of great men. Instead of hired gladiators, free and noble
Spaniards, who had offered themselves voluntarily and with a chivalrous zeal,
fought with one another to do honour to the great Scipio. Nay, the mortal
Combat was turned into an ordeal. Two kinsmen, rival claimants of a disputed
crown, resolved to decide their quarrel by an appeal to arms, and at the same
time to enhance the brilliancy of Scipio’s funeral games by their personal
encounter. Scipio's refined humanity was of course revolted at this singular
and atrocious suggestion; he sought to persuade the rivals to desist from their
intention, but, being unable to do so, he consented at last to this singular
trial by battle, which was at the same time a show for his troops, and in which
one of the two princes was killed after a severe, and no doubt interesting,
fight. What are we to think of historians who gravely accept such wild flights
of imagination as actual facts, to be recorded in sober historical prose, and
who dwell upon them with visible satisfaction? A single chapter of such history
as this is sufficient to cast doubt on other stories connected with Scipio’s
doings, even though they should not in themselves be fantastic or ridiculous.
When the Carthaginians had
evacuated all Spain with the single exception of Gades, there remained nothing
for Scipio to do but to make war upon those of the former Carthaginian
allies who might not be found willing to exchange the dominion of one foreign
and alien power for that of another, or upon those tribes which had
distinguished themselves by their hostility to Rome. To the latter belonged the
town of Illiturgi on the river Baetis. The inhabitants of this place, formerly
subject to Carthage, had joined the Romans in the beginning of the war, but
after the defeat of the two Scipios they had made their peace with Carthage, by
killing the Roman fugitives who had fled into their town from the battlefield.
This cruel treachery now called for vengeance. Illiturgi was taken by storm.
All the men, women, and children were killed indiscriminately, and the town was
levelled with the ground.
The neighbouring town of
Castulo was treated less severely, because, terrified by the fate of Illiturgi,
it had surrendered to Marcius and delivered up a Punic garrison. Marcius then
marched upon Astapa (the modern Estepa, south of Astigi). This unfortunate town
became the scene of one of those horrible outbreaks of frenzied patriotism and
despair of which the natives of Spain in ancient and modern times have given
several examples. The men of Astapa raised in their town a huge funeral pile,
cast all their treasures on it, killed their wives and children, and let the
flames consume all, whilst they themselves rushed against the enemy and fell in
battle to the last man. They had had no choice left between this terrible end
and the still more terrible one of Illiturgi, and they thought that the
bitterness of death would be less at the hands of sacrificers than of butchers.
Hitherto Scipio had met with
uninterrupted success. The Carthaginians were driven out of Spain; all the
native peoples were subdued or had voluntarily joined the Roman cause;
negotiations had been entered into with the two most powerful Numidian chiefs,
who promised their assistance in the further prosecution of the war in Africa,
when suddenly the promising result was jeopardised—for Scipio, the man on whom
everything depended, was suddenly taken ill. Even the bare rumour of this
calamity, exaggerating his illness the further it spread, caused disquietude in
the whole province; and not only the fickle Spanish allies, but even the Roman
legionary soldiers, unexpectedly evinced a spirit of insubordination and even
mutiny. A body of eight thousand Roman soldiers, stationed near Sucro, had even
before this time been animated by a bad spirit; they had complained that their
pay was withheld, that they had been forbidden to despoil the Spaniards, and
that they were kept too long on foreign service. Now, when the news of Scipio’s
illness had reached them, their discontent broke out into open resistance to
the orders of the legionary tribunes; they elected two private soldiers as
their leaders, plundered the surrounding country, and seemed to be about to
imitate the example of the Campanian legion in the war with Pyrrhus, in
renouncing the authority of Rome, and in establishing somewhere an independent
dominion of their own.
As yet, however, they had not
been guilty of any open act of violence and bloodshed, and had ventured on no
outrage against the majesty of Rome beyond the violation of military discipline
and subordination, when the news arrived that Scipio was not dead, nor
hopelessly ill, but that he had recovered, and that he ordered them to march to
New Carthage, for the purpose of receiving the pay that was due to them. They
obeyed, and were soon brought to their senses. Scipio caused them to be surrounded
and disarmed by faithful troops, the ringleaders to be seized and executed, and
order and discipline to be restored without further difficulty. The danger
disappeared as if by magic, and it was shown again what a power Scipio
possessed over the minds of his soldiers.
The mutiny of the army being
suppressed, the rebellious Spaniards were soon punished. Scipio crossed the
Ebro, penetrated into the land of the Ilergetes and Laretan, on the north side
of this river, defeated the brothers Mardonius and Indibilis, and forced them
to submission and to the payment of a sum of money.
Before the year closed, Gades
fell into the hands of the Romans. For a regular siege of this strong island
town, Scipio would have needed not only a considerable army but also a large
fleet. But he could not avail himself of his ships, as he had taken the
rowers from them to employ on land service. He sought, therefore, to gain the
town by treason, a plan which had succeeded in so many instances, and which
promised an easier and speedier result. Negotiations were begun. In Gades, as
well as in all places occupied by the Carthaginians, it was easy to find
traitors who declared their readiness to deliver the town, as well as the Punic
garrison, into the hands of the Romans. But the plot was discovered, and the
ringleaders were seized and sent to Carthage, to await their punishment.
Nevertheless, the Carthaginians seem to have despaired of holding Gades
permanently. The inhabitants were Punians, but not Carthaginians. They were in
the condition of subject allies, a condition which was, no doubt, felt to be
burthensome and unsatisfactory. They took very little interest in the struggle
for supremacy between Rome and Carthage, for neither the one state nor the
other allowed them an independent position. Perhaps the commercial rivalry of
Carthage was considered to interfere with the prosperity of Gades, whilst
nothing was to be apprehended from Rome on this score; and the whole trade in
the western seas was, after the humiliation of Carthage, sure to fall into the
hands of Gades, under the protection of the Romans. Such dispositions as these,
on the part of the population of Gades, would explain the severity with which
Mago was ordered by the home government to treat the town—a severity which
could aim not at maintaining possession of Gades, but at exacting from it
mercilessly the means for continuing the war with Rome, and then giving it up.
Mago plundered not only the public treasury and the temples, but even private
citizens, and then left the port of Gades with the whole fleet and all the
forces. In this undignified way the Carthaginians abandoned the last hold they
still had on Spanish soil. Gades, of course, opened its gates to the Romans,
and obtained favourable conditions of peace, under which it continued for a
long time to flourish, as an allied city, subject indeed to Rome, but enjoying
perfect freedom in the management of its own local affairs.
Thus Spain was lost, not in
consequence of a great decisive battle, but by the gradual retreat and
exhaustion the of the Carthaginians. The last effort for the defence of Spain
had been made when Hasdrubal Barcas appeared with the Spanish army on Italian
soil. It was on the Metaurus that the Romans conquered Spain, and Scipio had
nothing to do but to follow the traces of the wounded lion to the last recesses,
and to scare him away. Before the year closed, he could look upon this task as
done. He intrusted the chief command to his legate, M. Junius Silanus, and
returned to Rome, accompanied by Laelius, to secure his election for the
consulship of the ensuing year, and to mature his plans for carrying the war
into Africa.
The hopes which Hannibal had
entertained from the alliance and co-operation of King Philip of Macedon had
not been realised. Instead of taking an active part in the operations in Italy,
where his excellent Macedonian troops would infallibly have decided the war in
favour of the allied powers soon after the battle of Cannae, Philip attacked
those countries on the east of the Adriatic for which he had stipulated as his
share of the booty after the defeat of Rome, taking it apparently for granted
that, even without his help, Hannibal would be able to accomplish the conquest
of Italy. He succeeded in gaining considerable advantages in Illyria, and,
regarding himself as already undisputed master of the countries north of the
Ambracian Gulf, he seemed to be bent on changing the influence which he
enjoyed, as the protector of some of the Greek states, into a real dominion
over all. He laid aside more and more the qualities of a leader of the Greeks,
and assumed those of an Asiatic despot. The amiable character which he had
exhibited in his youth gave way to low voluptuousness, falsity, and cruelty
when he had become a man. He forfeited the confidence and attachment of his
best friends, the Achaeans, when he endeavoured, by cunning and cruelty, to
keep possession of Messenia. The royal debauchee was not ashamed, whilst he was
a guest in the house of his old friend Aratos, to dishonour the wife of his
son, and, when Aratos reproached him, to cause his death by poison. The old
jealousy and all the passions and internal disputes of the Greeks, which were
to have been buried for ever by the peace of Naupaktos, in 217, revived at
once, and it was not difficult for the Romans to kindle again the flames of war,
and then to leave the king of Macedonia so much to do in his own country that
he was obliged to give up the attempt of a landing in Italy.
There is little use in
attempting to determine who was guilty of having caused the interference of
Rome in the internal affairs of Greece. Owing to the prevalence of small
independent states, the spirit of nationality could not embrace all the Greek
peoples, and bind them durably together for common action against any enemies
whatever. No abstract considerations of public morality or national duty
ever prevented any Greek community from seeking the alliance of a foreign
power; they accepted it without the least scruple, if it promised immediate
material advantages. Few Greeks ever felt patriotic scruples in availing themselves
of Persian money or Macedonian troops to strike down their own immediate
neighbours and Hellenic compatriots. Even the great national struggle against
Asiatic barbarism, under Miltiades and Themistokles, had not united all the
Greeks in their common cause, and since that time no equally grand national
enthusiasm had raised them above the petty jealousies of local interests. A
short time before the interference of the Romans, the Achaean league had
appealed to the Macedonians, and made them the arbitrators in the internal
affairs of Hellas. If, therefore, on the present occasion, the Aetolians called
in the Romans, we can only condemn them of having committed a sin against their
own nation which none of the other Greeks would have scrupled to commit, a sin
which is the inevitable curse of internal division in every nation of ancient
or modern times.
Nevertheless we must
acknowledge that the league which the Aetolians now concluded with the Romans
was distinguished by peculiar turpitude. It was an engagement by which the
whole Aetolian people became Roman mercenaries, and stipulated that their hire
should be the plunder of the neighbouring Greek cities. They agreed to make
common cause with the Romans, like a band of robbers. The Romans were to
furnish ships, the Aetolians troops; the conquered countries and towns were to
become the spoil of the Aetolians, the movable booty that of the Romans. If we
recollect that this ‘movable booty’ included the inhabitants who might fall
into the hands of the conquerors, and who would consequently be sold into
slavery, we shall duly appreciate the sense of national dignity that could
animate the Aetolians and induce them to conclude so disgraceful an alliance with
foreign barbarians for the enslaving of their countrymen. And even this conduct
might perhaps have been excused or palliated to some extent if extreme danger,
or the necessity of self-defense, had urged the Aetolians, as a last resource,
to secure foreign help on these terms. But it was, in truth, nothing but their
native robber instinct that induced them, instead of honestly cultivating their
fields, to plough with the spear and to reap with the sword. They succeeded by
their league with the Romans once more in setting Greece in a blaze of war, in
filling the whole length and breadth of the land with untold misery, and in
preparing for subjection to a foreign yoke the nation which, would not submit
to the discipline of a national state. Our indignation at their conduct is
mingled with a feeling of satisfaction when we remember that they were the
first, to feel the weight of this yoke, and that they were almost driven to
despair and madness when they felt how galling it was.
After the fall of Syracuse and
Capua, M. Valerius Laevinus crossed over to Greece with a fleet of fifty ships
and one legion, and made his appearance in the popular assembly of the
Aetolians, the leading men of which had been previously persuaded to favour the
Roman proposals. He found no difficulty in prevailing upon them to renew the war
with Philip, as he held out the prospect of conquering the Acarnanian country,
which they had coveted for a long time, and of regaining the numerous towns
taken from them by the Macedonians. It was supposed that all would join the
alliance who, from their own interest, or from old hostility, were the natural
enemies of Macedonia, such as the Thracian barbarians in the north, the chiefs
Pleuratus and Skerdilaidas in Illyria, the Messenians, Eleans, and Lacedaemonians
in Peloponnesus; lastly, in Asia, King Attalus of Pergamum, who, feeling unsafe
in his precarious position between the two great monarchies of Macedonia and
Syria, welcomed the Romans as his patrons, and thus made an opening for their
diplomacy to interfere in the political affairs of the distant East. Valerius
promised to assist the Aetolians with a fleet of at least twenty-five ships,
and both parties engaged not to conclude a separate peace with Macedonia. Thus
the Romans had let loose upon Philip a pack of hounds, numerous enough to keep
him at bay in his own country and to prevent him from thinking of an invasion
of Italy. They were relieved from all anxiety on this score, and were not even
obliged to make great efforts for the defence of their eastern coast.
It is not necessary for us to follow
in detail the course of the war in Greece. It was marked, not by great decisive
actions, but by a number of petty conflicts and barbarous atrocities, by which
the strength of the nation was sapped and wasted. The source of the greatest
calamities was this, that the hostile territories were not compact masses,
separated from one another by a single line of frontier, but detached pieces,
scattered about irregularly, and intermingled in the Peloponnesus, in central
Greece, and on the islands. Thus the war was not confined to one locality,
but raged simultaneously in every quarter. In the Peloponnesus the Achaeans
were harassed continuously by the Aetolians and the Lacedaemonians, who, in
this last period of their independence, had exchanged their venerable
hereditary monarchy and their aristocratic constitution for the government of a
tyrant. The proud Spartans, formerly the sworn enemies and opponents of tyranny
in all parts of Greece, had at last succumbed to a tyrant themselves.
Machanidas, a brave soldier, had made himself their master, and exercised a
military despotism in a state which at one time appeared to the wisest of the
Greeks the model of political institutions. The coasts of the Corinthian Gulf
and the Aegaean Sea were visited by Roman, Aetolian, and Pergamenian fleets,
that plundered and devastated the towns and carried away the inhabitants into
slavery. From the north, hordes of barbarians broke in upon Macedonia. Philip
was compelled to hasten from one place to another. When he was confronting the
Thracians, he was called away by messengers to protect his Peloponnesian
allies; and scarcely had he marched southwards, when his hereditary dominions
were invaded by Illyrians and Dardanians. He conducted this difficult war not
without vigour and ability, and succeeded, by his restless activity and
quickness, in showing himself superior to his enemies in every part, in driving
back Pleuratus and Skerdilaidas in Illyria, in beating the Aetolians (210 B.C.)
near Lamia, and chasing them into their own country. Attalus of Pergamum was
surprised by Philip, near the town of Opus, which he had taken and was just in
the act of plundering. Barely managing to escape captivity, he returned into
Asia, and, being occupied in disputes with his neighbour, King Prusias of
Bithynia, paid no more attention to the affairs of Greece. The Romans took very
little part in the war. Under these circumstances, some of the neutral powers,
the Rhodians and the king of Egypt, almost succeeded, as early as 208 B.C., in
bringing about the restoration of peace between King Philip and the Aetolians.
But the Romans made the negotiations abortive by now resuming the war with
increased vigour on their part. After a short armistice, hostilities were
continued; and if Philip had possessed a respectable fleet, he would have had
no difficulty in reducing the exhausted Aetolians to submission. In 200 B.C. he
penetrated a second time to Thermon, the capital of their country. His allies,
the Achaeans, under the command of the able general Philopoemen, gained a
decisive victory over the Spartans, in which the tyrant Machanidas was killed;
and as the Romans neglected more and more to render the services to which they
had bound themselves in the treaty, the Aetolians were compelled at last, in
205 B.C., to conclude a separate peace with Macedonia, in formal violation of
their engagements with Rome.
On his return from Spain in
the year 206, Scipio entertained not unfounded hopes that, at an age when other
men began to prepare themselves for the higher military commands and offices of
state, he would be rewarded with a triumph, the greatest distinction to which a
Roman citizen could aspire, as the crowning honour of a life devoted to the
public service. He had not indeed been invested with a regular magistracy.
Without having been praetor he had been sent to Spain, with an extraordinary
command as propraetor; nor had any but the regular magistrates ever celebrated
a triumph. But the Hannibalian war had made people familiar with many
innovations, and among these innovations, Scipio’s extraordinary command was so
prominent that the concession of a triumph, as a natural consequence of it,
seemed hardly likely to meet with any serious opposition. In the temple of
Bellona accordingly, before the walls of the city, Scipio enumerated before the
assembled senate all his exploits in Spain; he told them how many battles he
had fought, how many towns he had taken, what nations he had brought under the
dominion of the Roman people, and, though he did not distinctly ask for a
triumph, he expected that the senate would of its own accord decree the honour
he so much coveted. But he was disappointed. His opponents insisted that there
was no valid reason for departing from the old custom, and Scipio had to
content himself with displaying as much pomp and show as he could when he made
his entry into Rome as a private citizen, without the solemn formalities of a
triumph. Hereupon the consular elections for the next year took place amidst
unusual activity on the part of the people. From all parts the Roman citizens
came in great numbers, not only to vote, but simply to see the great Scipio.
They thronged round his house, followed him to the Capitol, where, in
fulfilment of a vow made in Spain, he offered a sacrifice of a hundred oxen. He
was unanimously elected consul by all the centuries, and in their imagination
the people saw him already carrying the war into Africa and ending it with the
destruction of Carthage.
But the senate was far from
exhibiting the enthusiasm and unanimity of the people. The friends and
adherents of Scipio found themselves opposed by independent men who did not
possess unbounded confidence in him, and who thought there was too much risk in
an attack upon Africa so long as Hannibal had not evacuated Italy. At the head
of these men was the aged Q. Fabius Maximus. His system of a pertinacious
defensive warfare and of a slow and cautious advance to the offensive had so
far proved eminently successful. By it Hannibal had gradually been compelled to
give up central Italy and to full back upon the narrow peninsula of Bruttium.
Fabius could see no cause why this system should now be abandoned. It was to be
expected that, if it was persisted in for some time longer, Hannibal would lose
Thurii, Locri, and Croton, the last strongholds in his power, and would thus be
compelled to retire from Italy. But if, in order to carry the war into Africa,
Italy were drained of troops, it might be apprehended that Hannibal would again
sally forth from Bruttium and threaten Samnium, Campania, or Latium.
The plan of Scipio and his
party was, without any doubt, grander and more worthy of the Roman people. It
was reasonable to expect that a vigorous attack on the Carthaginians in Africa
would at once lead to the recall of Hannibal from Italy. Moreover it had ever
been the custom of the Romans to attack their enemies in their own country. It
was thus that they had warred in ancient times with the Etruscans, the Latins,
and the Samnites. They had gone as far as Heraclea and Beneventum to meet
Pyrrhus. In the first Punic war they had made Sicily the battlefield, and in
the second they had sent out their armies and fleets to Spain and across the
Adriatic. It is true they had not forgotten the Caudine passes, nor the rout of
Regulus in Africa; but, after all, the greatest calamities had broken upon Rome
when her enemies had been allowed to approach her too near, on the Allia, near
the Thrasymenus, and at Cannae. The time had come at last when they could
attempt that expedition to Africa which had been part of the original plan of
the Romans, and which the consul Sempronius had actually been commissioned to
undertake in the first year of the war. At that time Hannibal’s invasion of
Italy had thwarted this well-considered plan. But now Hannibal was so enfeebled
that two consular armies were sufficient to keep him in check; he barely
maintained himself in Bruttium; the remainder of Italy was free from danger; in
Sicily, Sardinia, and Spain the war was practically at an end; in Macedonia,
where it had never been serious, it could at any time be ended by the
conclusion of peace. It was therefore most assuredly the time now to abandon
the Fabian principle of cautious defence, which was calculated to prolong
indefinitely the excitement, the disquiet, and the sufferings of the war, and
to gather up the whole energy of the nation for a bold decisive blow, as the
previous generation had done with glorious success in the Sicilian war.
It cannot be doubted that the
most weighty arguments brought forward against this plan were based on the
presence of Hannibal in Italy, who, though terribly exhausted and left almost
without resources, still shielded his country by the mere terror of his name.
If personal satisfaction and his own glory, so distinctly acknowledged by his
enemies, could have been a compensation to him for the wreck of his hopes, he
must surely have been consoled and even gratified in watching this involuntary
tribute to his greatness. But it was his ambition to establish the greatness of
his country, and he knew no personal glory apart from the prosperity and
independence of Carthage.
The majority in the senate
were not favourable to Scipio’s plans. He had foreseen this, and he was
prepared to carry out his project without the consent, and, if necessary,
against the will, of the senate. It was rumoured that he intended to avail
himself of the favourable disposition of the masses, and to obtain, without the
authority of the senate, a decision of the popular assembly by which he would
be commissioned to carry the war into Africa and to raise the necessary forces.
Such a procedure would not have been unconstitutional, but it would have been
contrary to the usual practice, which had almost the power of law, and by which
the chief direction of the war, and especially the distribution of the
provinces, was left entirely to the discretion of the senate. This body was
therefore thrown into great consternation when Scipio showed himself resolved,
as a last resource, to set their authority at naught, and to appeal to the
decision of the people. Violent debates took place, and at last the plebeian
tribunes effected a compromise by which Scipio abandoned the idea of provoking
a decision of the people, and promised to be guided by a decree of the senate,
on the understanding, however, that the senate would not oppose his plan in
principle. Hereupon the senate resolved to give permission to Scipio for
crossing over from Sicily into Africa; but they voted means so inadequate for
carrying out this plan that Scipio was obliged first to create for himself an
army and a fleet before he could hope to carry out his design with any chance
of success. By this decision, the obstructive party in the senate had, at any
rate, postponed his expedition, and they might hope that in the meanwhile
events would happen to make a landing in Africa unnecessary.
Scipio’s colleague in the
consulship was Publius Licinius Crassus, who, being at the same time pontifex
maximus, was not permitted to leave Italy. He was therefore commissioned,
in conjunction with a praetor, and at the head of four legions, to operate in
Bruttium, where he had to watch and keep Hannibal in check, but where, during
the whole course of the year, nothing of importance took place. Scipio had
assigned to him only thirty ships of war and the two legions composed of the
fugitive troops of Cannae and Herdonea. No conscription was ordered for new
troops to serve under Scipio; but he was allowed to enlist volunteers, and to call
upon the towns of Etruria to contribute materials for the fitting out of a
fleet. Thus a force of about 7,000 men was collected, especially in Umbria, the
country of the Sabines, Marsians, and Pelignians. The town of Camerinum, in
Umbria, alone sent a cohort of 600 men. Other towns contributed arms, provisions,
and various articles for the fleet; Caere gave corn, Populonia iron, Tarquinii
sail-cloth, Volaterae timber and corn. Arretium, with a liberality and zeal
prompted perhaps by the desire of proving its doubted fidelity, supplied
thousands of helmets, shields, lances, various utensils, and provisions;
Perusia, Clusium, and Rusellae gave corn and timber. It is an agreeable
surprise for us to find these towns, some of which appeared to have fallen into
decay or oblivion, taking an active part in the war; and the inference is
justified that Etruria had, in comparative obscurity, enjoyed some of the
blessings of peace.
By their contributions Scipio
was enabled to order the building of thirty new ships, and he went to Sicily,
there to complete his preparations. Besides the two legions from Cannae and
Herdonea, he found in Sicily a great number of the old soldiers of Marcellus,
who after their discharge had apparently remained in Sicily of their own
accord, had squandered the booty made in war, and, disdaining to return to a
life of honest toil and civil order, were ready to try again the fortune of
battle. The long war could not fail to create a kind of professional soldiery,
consisting of men who had become unfit for agriculture and other peaceful
pursuits and who began to look upon war as their trade. The licentiousness and
savagery into which some portions of the Roman armies had by that time fallen
had been shown by the mutiny of Scipio’s soldiers in Spain; but the doings of
these mutineers were soon, thrown into the shade by atrocities of a far more
hideous and alarming character, which betrayed the existence of the most
dangerous elements in the ranks. The incidents in Locri formed only, as it
were, an intermezzo in the grand drama of the war, and did not essentially
influence the course of events and the final issue; but they are too highly
characteristic of the public morals of the time to be passed over in silence,
especially as it is of far more importance for us to form a picture of the
moral and intellectual status of the Roman people than to follow the details of
battles, to which, for the most part, little credit is to be given.
In spite of the attempts to
take Locri which the Romans had made since 208, it was still in Hannibal’s
possession, and was now his principal base of operations in Bruttium. The Roman
partisans among the Locrians had fled from the town when it revolted to the
Carthaginians, and had betaken themselves chiefly to the neighbouring town of
Rhegium. From that place they opened communications with some of their
countrymen at home, and the latter promised to admit Roman troops by means of
ladders into the citadel. The treason was carried into effect in the usual way.
As soon as the citadel was in the power of the Romans, the town joined their
cause; the Punic garrison retired into a second citadel in another part of the
town, where it was at last compelled to surrender. This successful surprise was
planned and executed not by the consul Licinius, who commanded in Bruttium, but
by Scipio, who was at that time commanding in Sicily, because Hannibal and his
army, standing between Locri and the four legions in Bruttium, prevented
Licinius from penetrating into the neighbourhood, whilst the nearness of
Rhegium and Messana favoured the plan of making an attack upon Locri from
Sicily.
Thus it happened that Scipio
had the good fortune and the merit of gaining an important advantage beyond the
limits of his own province. With this step, however, he also took upon himself
the responsibility of the further proceedings at Locri, and these were of such
a nature that they offered an occasion to his enemies for questioning his
ability as a general in one essential point. He caused the chiefs of the
Carthaginian party in Locri to be put to death, and their property to be
distributed among their political opponents. If he had stopped here, nobody
would have blamed him, for, according to the prevailing principle of justice,
he had not been guilty of undue severity. But such a measure of punishment did
not satisfy the rapacity of his troops. These troops, treating Locri like
a town taken by assault, not only plundered it, but indulged against the
wretched inhabitants of both sexes their beastly lusts and their sanguinary
ferocity. At last they broke open the temples and ransacked even the sanctuary
of Proserpina, which, though lying unprotected before the town, had hitherto
been respected by enemies and even by vulgar robbers. The legate Pleminius, who
had been intrusted by Scipio with the command in Locri, not only permitted all
these atrocities, but took his share in the plunder and protected the
plunderers. Two legionary tribunes, called Sergius and Matienus, who were under
his orders, strove to check the violence of the soldiers. A fight took place
between the soldiers of the two tribunes and the rest. Pleminius openly took
the part of the licentious plunderers, ordered Sergius and Matienus to be
seized, and was on the point of causing them to be executed by his lictors when
their soldiers arrived in larger numbers, rescued the tribunes, ill-treated the
lictors, seized Pleminius, slit up his lips, and cut off his nose and ears. All
bonds of military discipline were cast aside, and the Roman soldiers had become
a riotous rabble.
Upon the news of these
disgraceful and alarming proceedings, Scipio hastened from Messana to Locri,
re-established order, and, acquitting Pleminius of all guilt, left him in
command at Locri, whilst he ordered the tribunes Sergius and Matienus to be
seized as ringleaders of the mutiny and to be sent to Rome for trial. This done
he immediately returned to Sicily. He was scarcely gone when Pleminius gave
full vent to his revenge, and, instead of sending the two tribunes to Rome,
caused them to be scourged and put to death, after exquisite tortures. Then he
turned with the same barbarous fury against the most distinguished citizens of
Locri, who, as he was informed, had accused him before Scipio. Some of these
unfortunate men escaped to Rome. They threw themselves in the dust before the
tribunal of the consuls in the Forum, imploring protection for their lives and
property, and mercy for their native town. The senate was greatly moved by
proceedings so dishonourable to the Roman name. It seemed that Scipio himself
could not be free from guilt. He was certainly responsible for the discipline
of his soldiers, and he seemed tacitly to approve of the atrocities of
Pleminius, which he had not punished. It was not the first time that such
disorders had broken out among troops under his command, though the
insubordination of his soldiers in Spain was trifling compared with what had
happened now. His political enemies, numerous and influential in the senate,
charged him with corrupting the spirit of the army, and insisted that he should
be recalled from his command. The lamentations of the wretched Locrians called
forth general sympathy, and their undeserved sufferings demanded
redress and satisfaction. After a long and angry discussion, Scipio's
friends at last were so far successful that he was not condemned without a
previous investigation. The praetor Marcus Pomponius was dispatched to Locri
with a commission of ten senators to send Pleminius and the associates of his
guilt for trial to Rome, to restore to the people of Locri the plunder which
the soldiers had taken, more especially to set free the women and children, who
had been treated as slaves, to replace doubly the treasures taken from the
temples, and to appease the anger of Proserpina by sacrifices; moreover to
inquire if the lawless actions of the troops in Locri had been committed with
the knowledge and consent of Scipio, and if this should be proved, to bring
back Scipio from Sicily, and even from Africa, to Rome. For this purpose two
tribunes of the people and an aedile were added to the commission, who, by
virtue of their sacred office, should, in case of necessity, seize the general,
even in the midst of his troops, and convey him away. When the commission had
reached Locri, and, after discharging the first part of their duty, had
expressed to the Locrians the regret and sympathy of the Roman senate and
people, as well as the assurance of their friendship, the Locrians did not
further insist on their charges against Scipio, and thus saved the commission a
delicate and perhaps difficult task. It is not stated, but we may perhaps be
justified in supposing, that this generous resignation on the part of the
Locrians was the result of an expressed or implied wish on the part of the
commissioners, and could be obtained by a very gentle pressure, even if the
Locrians did not see how desirable it was to avoid the hostility of a powerful
Roman noble like Scipio, and of his party. The commission therefore came to the
conclusion that Scipio had no share in the crimes committed at Locri, and
Pleminius only was brought to Rome, with about thirty of his accomplices. The
trial was conducted with great laxity, and Scipio’s friends hoped that the
excitement of the public would gradually cool down, and that by delaying the
decision as much as possible they would in the end secure impunity for the
accused. But this intention was foiled by Pleminius himself, who, in his
audacious recklessness, went so far as to cause some ruffians to set fire to
Rome in several places during a public festivity, in the hope of escaping in
the general confusion. The conspiracy miscarried, and Pleminius was thrown into
the dismal Tullianum, the prison vault under the Capitol, from which he never
came forth again. He was dead before his trial in the popular assembly came on.
Whether he died of hunger, or by the hands of the executioner, and what became
of his accomplices, is not known.
The senatorial commission
proceeded from Locri to Sicily, to be convinced by their own eyes of the
condition of Scipio’ s army. Here they found everything in good order, and they
were able to report to Rome that nothing was omitted to secure the success of
the African expedition. Scipio had done all in his power to organise and to
increase his army, and to furnish it with all the materials of war. For this
purpose he disposed of the resources of Sicily without the least limitation,
but, owing to the obstructive economy of the Roman senate, and its evident
disapproval of the African expedition, he was prevented from making his
preparations as fast as he wished. The whole of the year 205 passed away before
he was ready. In the course of it Laelius had sailed with thirty ships to the
African coast, probably for the purpose of concerting measures with Syphax and
Masinissa for the impending combined attack on Carthage. But the two Numidian
chiefs, as was to be expected, had ranged themselves on two opposite sides. As
soon as Masinissa had openly declared himself in favour of Rome, Syphax was not
only reconciled with Carthage, but closely allied with it; and the first use he
made of this accession of strength was to make war upon his troublesome rival
Masinissa, and to expel him from his country. Accordingly, when Laelius landed
at Hippo, he found Masinissa, not as he had hoped, in the position of a powerful
ally, but of a helpless exile, wandering about at the head of a few horsemen,
and so far from being able to render active help, that he implored the Romans
to hasten their expedition into Africa, in order to rescue him from his
position. We do not know what impression this alteration in the state of things
produced on Laelius and Scipio. By it the hope of Numidian support was
considerably reduced; especially when Syphax soon afterwards formally announced
his alliance with Carthage, and warned Scipio against an undertaking in which
he would have to encounter not only the Carthaginians, but also the whole power
of Numidia.
These incidents were in
themselves calculated to show the difficulties and dangers of an African
expedition, and to justify the hesitation of those cautious men of the Fabian
school who shrunk from the bold plan of Scipio. At the same time the
Carthaginians made another desperate effort to keep the Roman forces at home
for the defence of Italy. It does not indeed appear from our sources that they
sent direct reinforcements to Hannibal, but they would attain the same object
if they repeated the attempt of penetrating with an army into the north of
Italy, and thus threatening Rome from two sides. For this purpose Mago,
Hannibal’s youngest brother, after the evacuation of Spain, spent the winter
from 206 to 205 in the island of Minorca, occupied in raising a new army; and
in the summer of 205, whilst Scipio was busy in Sicily with the preparations
for his African expedition, he sailed with 14,000 men to the coast of Liguria,
took Genoa, called upon the Ligurians and Gauls to renew the war with Rome,
swelled his army with volunteers from their ranks, and marched into Cisalpine
Gaul, in order to advance from thence southwards as from his base of
operations. In Rome nothing less was apprehended than a repetition of the
danger from which the unexpected victory on the Metaurus had saved the
republic. Again were two sons of Hamilcar Barcas in Italy, determined, with
united strength, to accomplish the object which they had set before themselves
as the chief task of their lives. Carthage, far from pursuing the suicidal
policy, as has since been asserted, of leaving Hannibal without support,
strained every nerve to carry out his plans, and even at this moment, when
Africa was threatened with invasion, despatched to Mago a reinforcement of
6,000 foot and eight hundred horse. From the Roman point of view it was
therefore not an unreasonable wish to keep together as much, as possible the
military strength of exhausted Italy, so that at all risks Rome might be
covered before a decisive attack should be directed against Carthage.
The decision and firmness of
character which Scipio exhibited in his opposition to all hindrances and
difficulties mark him as a man of unusual power. He was capable of bold
conceptions, and without heeding secondary considerations, he went on straight
to the object he had proposed to himself. By this concentration of his will he
accomplished great things, though in other respects he did not rise far above
the average level of the military capacity displayed by Roman generals. The
African expedition was due to him and to him alone. He had planned it when he
was in Spain, and he carried it out in spite of the determined resistance of a
powerful opposition in the senate. Half a year had been taken up with
preparations. Now, in the spring of 204 B.C., the army and the fleet were
collected at Lilybaeum. Four hundred transports and forty ships of war crowded
the port. The statements of the strength of the army vary from 12,500 to 35,000
men. According to the annalist Coelius, quoted by Livy, the number of men who went
on board the transports was so great that it seemed that Sicily and Italy must
be drained of their population, and that, from the cheering of so many
thousands, the birds dropped from the air on the ground. It can hardly be
doubted that such bombastic phrases were taken from some poetical narrative of
the embarkation. The same poetical colouring can be traced in other features of
Livy’s account. When all the ships were ready to sail, Scipio caused a herald
to command silence, and pronounced a solemn prayer to all the gods and
goddesses, wherein he implored them to grant him protection, victory, spoils,
and a happy and triumphant return, after inflicting on the Carthaginian people
all those evils with which they had threatened the commonwealth of Rome. Then
he cast the crude entrails of the sacrificial animal into the sea, and ordered
the trumpets to give the signal for departure. The walls of Lilybaeum and the
whole coast on the right and on the left were lined with spectators, who had
assembled from all parts of Sicily, and followed the fleet with their hopes and
forebodings until it vanished on the horizon. Many squadrons had left Lilybaeum
in the course of the war, but never such an armada, which carried with it the
vows of all Italy for the speedy termination of the struggle. Yet, compared
with the colossal fleets of the first Punic war, the fleet of Scipio was almost
insignificant. When the two consuls Marcus Regulus and Lucius Manlius sailed
with their combined armies to Africa in 256 B.C., the ships of war alone
equalled in number the total of Scipio’s fleet, and the army was then twice or
three times as large as now. But in the year 256 Italy had not been wasted, as
in 204, by a war of fourteen years, and no Roman army had then perished in
Africa. Now it was known what dangers the legions might have to encounter, and
their fears were consequently intensified for the much smaller force which had
undertaken to revenge Regulus and Rome.
In spite of the long
preparations for the African expedition, which were well known in Carthage, in
spite of the certainty that it would sail from Lilybaeum, and in spite of the
apparent ease with which from the port of Carthage a fleet might have sailed to
intercept the passage of the numerous transports and to overpower the forty
ships of war, Scipio met no resistance on the part of the Carthaginians, and
landed undisturbed, on the third day, near the Fair Promontory, close to Utica.
Seventh Period of the Hannibalian War.THE WAR IN AFRICA TO THE CONCLUSION OF PEACE, 204-201 B.C.
The details of the short war
in Africa would, if faithfully recorded, be amongst the most attractive and the
most interesting of the whole struggle. We should learn from them more of the
conduct of the Carthaginian people than from all the campaigns in Italy,
Sicily, Sardinia, and Spain. A veil would be lifted, so that we could look into
the interior of that great city, where the nerves of the widely extended state
met as in a central point. We should see how nobles and people, senate, officials,
and citizens thought, felt, and acted at the near approach of the final decision
of the war. We should become acquainted with the spirit which moved the
Carthaginian people, and should be able in some measure to judge what the fate
of the old world would have been if Carthage, instead of Rome, had been
victorious. But in place of a history of the African war, we have only reports
and descriptions of the victorious career of Scipio, drawn up by one-sided
Roman patriotism. Only the great and leading events are ascertainable with
any degree of certainty. The details, which might have enabled us to judge of
the manner in which the war was conducted, of the plans, exertions, sacrifices,
and losses of both belligerents, are either entirely lost, or are disguised by
party spirit. At no period of the war do we more keenly feel the want of a
Carthaginian historian.
Scipio’s object, in the first
instance, was the gaining a strong position on the coast, where, by means of a
secure communication with Sicily, he could establish a firm basis for his
operations in Africa. For this purpose he selected Utica, the ancient
Phoenician colony allied with Carthage, and situated on the western side of the
wide Carthaginian gulf. During the war with the mercenaries Utica had fallen
into the hands of the enemies of Carthage, but after the suppression of the
rebellion she was again most intimately connected with Carthage. In spite of
the burdens which the campaigns of Hannibal imposed on the Carthaginians, as
also upon their allies and subjects, we hear of no revolt or discontent on
their part, such as broke out in Italy among the Capuans and among many others.
Up to the time of the landing of Scipio, it is true, the Romans had only
appeared on the African coast now and then, to ravage and plunder rather than
to make war. No Roman Hannibal had established himself in the interior of the
country, or challenged the allies to revolt from Carthage. For this reason
Scipio might entertain the hope that, after the great exhaustion and the innumerable
troubles of the war, the subjects of Carthage would be ready to revolt now, as
they had been during the invasions of Agathokles and Regulus. Perhaps he
thought thus to obtain easy possession of Utica.
But it appears that the state
of things in Africa was this time different. The reason is unknown to us; but
the fact is certain that Scipio found among the Carthaginian subjects no
readiness for revolt or treachery. Utica had to he besieged in due form, and it
offered such determined resistance that the siege—which lasted, with occasional
pauses, almost to the conclusion of peace, that is, nearly two years—remained
without result. If Scipio had been so fortunate as to take Utica, many
particulars of this remarkable siege would no doubt have been preserved. But
the Roman chroniclers passed briefly over an undertaking which contributed in
no way to swell their national renown, and the Carthaginian writings, which
would have exhibited in a proper light the bravery of the Uticans, are
unfortunately lost. We know therefore but little of an event which was of the
very greatest importance to the war in Africa, and what has been preserved
cannot be considered authentic in detail, because it comes from Roman sources.
After Scipio had landed his
army, he took up a strong position on a hill near the sea, and repulsed the
attack of a troop of cavalry, which had been sent out from Carthage to
reconnoitre, on the news of a hostile landing. He then sent his transport
ships, laden with the spoils of the surrounding open country, back to Sicily,
and advanced to Utica, where, at the distance of about a mile from the town, he
established his camp. After a short time the transport ships returned from
Sicily, bringing the remainder of the siege train, which Scipio, from want, of
room, had not been able to take with him before. The siege was now begun, and
it appears to have lasted the whole summer without any considerable
interruption. Scipio took up his position on a hill close to the walls of the
town, and attacked them with all the appliances of the ancient art of siege.
The trenches were filled up by mounds of earth; battering-rams were pushed
forward under protecting roofs to open breaches, and at the same time ships
were coupled together and towers for attacking the sea walls were erected on
them. But the defence was still more vigorous than the attack. The Uticans
undermined the mounds, so that the wooden structures on them were thrown down;
by letting down beams from the walls they weakened the blows of the
battering-rams, and made sallies to set the works of the besiegers on fire. The
whole of the citizens were inspired by the spirit which, half a century before,
had rendered Lilybaeum impregnable. When towards the end of the summer, as it
appears, the Carthaginian army under Hasdrubal advanced, united with a Numidian
army under Syphax, Scipio found himself obliged to raise the siege. He confined
himself now, as Marcellus had done before Syracuse, to occupying a fortified
camp in the neighbourhood, from whence he could observe Utica, and at any time
begin a fresh attack. This camp, known even in Caesar’s time as the ‘Cornelian
camp’, was on the peninsula which runs eastward from Utica towards the sea.
Scipio here drew his ships ashore to protect them, and so he passed the winter
uncomfortably enough, enjoying only this advantage, that, being in communication
with Sicily and Italy, he was preserved from want by the continual conveyance
of supplies, arms, and clothing, and was enabled to collect together means for
the next campaign. Hasdrubal and Syphax encamped in the neighbourhood, and it
appears that during the winter (204 to 203) nothing of importance was
undertaken on either side.
On Scipio’s landing in Africa,
Masinissa immediately joined him, at the head of only two hundred horsemen. He
was, as has been already mentioned, expelled from his kingdom by Syphax and the
Carthaginians. His adventures, which Livy relates in detail, correspond exactly
to the circumstances under which the Berber races lived for centuries, and live
still. Some chief holds hereditary authority over a tribe. A dispute with a
neighbour drives him, after a short struggle, to take flight into the desert.
He returns with a few horsemen, collects a troop of followers around him, and
lives for a time on plunder. His band grows, and with it grows
his courage. The men of his tribe, and the old subjects of his family,
flock around him. The struggle with his rival begins anew. Cunning,
dissimulation, treachery, courage, fortune decide who shall keep the mastery,
and who shall suffer imprisonment, flight, or death. Such a struggle is never
decided until one of the two combatants is killed; for no dominion is
established on a firm basis, and the personal superiority of the one who is
today vanquished may, without any material cause, become tomorrow dangerous to
the conqueror. Thus Masinissa, although a dethroned prince, was nevertheless a
welcome ally to the Romans. In addition to this, he was not a mere barbarian.
To the cunning and cruelty, to the perseverance and the wild audacity of the
barbarian, he added a knowledge and experience of the arts of war which gave
him an immeasurable superiority over others of his class. He had been brought
up in Carthage, had served for several years under the best generals in Spain;
he knew the military organisation and politics of the Carthaginians, their
strength and their weakness, and he had long foreboded their inevitable
downfall. For this reason, and not, as has been said, out of chagrin at the
loss of a Carthaginian lady-love, he espoused the cause of the Romans. He knew
that only from them he could obtain the secure possession of his paternal
heritage, and an extension of his power over the Numidians; and he never
doubted the realisation of his plan, even when, as related, he lay defeated and
wounded in a cavern of the desert, and when his life was saved only by the
devoted attentions of a few faithful followers.
The value of the advice and
assistance of Masinissa was made evident to the Romans. He alone could have
originated the scheme of setting fire in the night to the enemy’s camp.
Masinissa knew the style of building adopted in the Numidian and Carthaginian
camps, which consisted of wooden huts covered with rushes and branches, and he,
as a Numidian, knew best how to surprise and attack the Numidians. Hasdrubal
and Syphax were encamped, during the winter, at a short distance from each
other and from Utica, and awaited, as it appears, the opening of the campaign
by Scipio, whose fortified camp they dared not attack. The strength of the
Carthaginian army is reported to have been 33,000 men, that of the Numidians
g0,000, among whom were 10,000 horsemen. Scipio pretended that he wished to
enter into negotiations for peace, and sent during the truce his most skilful
officers as messengers to the camp of Syphax, who had undertaken to act as
mediator between the Romans and Carthaginians. But the negotiations were a mere
pretence. Scipio wished to get accurate information as to the position and
arrangements of the enemy’s camp. He now gave notice of a renewal of
hostilities, and acted as if he were going to renew the attack upon Utica.
Seeing the enemy in perfect security, he made a night attack, first on the
Numidian and then on the Carthaginian camp. He succeeded in setting fire to
both, in penetrating to the interior, and causing a terrible slaughter, killing,
according to Livy’s report, 40,000 men, and capturing 5,000. Polybius
represents the success of the Romans as still greater, saying that of the
93,000 Carthaginians and Numidians only 2,500 escaped, and calling this the
grandest and boldest exploit that Scipio ever carried out.
If the losses of the
Carthaginians had been anything like the numbers reported by the Scipionic
accounts, we should expect that Utica must have surrendered immediately. But
Utica remained firm, and in the course of thirty days, a new Carthaginian army
of 30,000 men, under Hasdrubal and Syphax, stood in the field. Among these
there were 4,000 Spanish mercenaries, who had only just arrived in Africa.
Scipio was obliged once more to interrupt the siege of Utica and to march against
this army. He gained a complete victory on the so-called ‘Large Plains', after
which Syphax, with his Numidians, separated himself from the Carthaginians, and
returned to his own dominions.
The time had now come when
Masinissa could prove his value as an ally. Strengthened by a Roman detachment
under Laelius he followed Syphax to Numidia. The eastern part of this country,
the land of the Massylians, which was contiguous to the Carthaginian frontier,
was Masinissa’s paternal kingdom. Here he was welcomed with enthusiasm by his
former subjects and companions-in-arms. From an exile he became, all at once,
again a powerful sovereign. His power grew daily. He had the good fortune not
only to conquer Syphax, but (what was of much more importance) to take him prisoner,
and thus with one blow to put an end to the war in Numidia. The importance of
this event can hardly be rated too high. Up to this time Scipio’s success, in
spite of the two victories, had been far from decisive. Now, however, the power
of Numidia was no longer arrayed against him, but ranged on his side, and
Carthage was obliged to carry on the war against two allies, each of which
alone was a match for her.
Notwithstanding this
unfortunate turn of affairs, the war continued with unabated vigour, and only a
few voices in Carthage were heard wishing for peace. Hannibal, the invincible,
was still in Italy with his army, and his brave brother Mago was in Gaul, ready
to co-operate with him. During the long time since his landing Scipio had not
even been able to conquer Utica. How could he think of attacking the mighty
Carthage? It is true, a detachment of the Roman army had advanced into the
neighbourhood of Carthage and had taken possession of Tunes, which the
Carthaginians had voluntarily evacuated; but this march upon the capital of the
empire made no more impression on it than Hannibal’s appearance before Rome had
made upon the Romans. While Scipio lay in Tunes, a fleet of a hundred ships
left the harbour of Carthage, to attack the Roman fleet before Utica, and
Scipio was obliged to return thither with all baste. As he had applied his
ships of war to carry the machines employed in the siege, and had thus made
them useless for a naval battle, he could not go to meet the Carthaginian
fleet, but had to keep on the defensive. He lashed his ships of burden together
in a line four deep, and manned them, like a sort of camp rampart, with his
land troops. Of the result of the battle that ensued we have but a garbled
report, made for the purpose of representing the losses of the Romans as slight
as possible. Livy says that about six Roman ships of burden were detached and
carried away; according to Appian one ship of war and six ships of burden were
lost. The losses of the Romans must, however, have been much more considerable,
as Scipio found it advisable to relinquish entirely the siege of Utica. Having
made an attempt to take Hippo, and meeting with no better success, he set fire
to all his siege-works and engines, and occupied himself for the remainder of
the year in marching through the Carthaginian territory, and enriching his
soldiers with the spoils.
In spite of the late success
against the Roman fleet, the conviction, since the defeat and capture of
Syphax, became more and more general in Carthage, that the resistance against
Roman invasion could no longer be continued with the existing forces. The
democratic war party was obliged to retire from the government, and to leave to
the opposition the task of negotiating with Rome for peace. The successes of
Scipio had not up to this time been such as to enable him to oppose the
conclusion of a peace on fair terms. He possessed the natural and just ambition
not to leave to his successor the glory of bringing the long war to a close,
and he therefore agreed with the Carthaginian ambassadors on preliminaries of
peace, which were to be presented for approval to the senate and people of Rome
as well as of Carthage. It was agreed that the Carthaginians should give up all
prisoners of war and deserters, should recall their armies from Italy and Gaul,
resign Spain and all the islands between Africa and Italy, deliver all their
ships of war but twenty, and pay 5,000 talents as a contribution of war, and
moreover a sum equal to double the annual pay of the Roman army in Africa.
It is plain that, in this
preliminary treaty, the conditions of a peace and those of an armistice have
been mixed up together. The demand of pay for the Roman troops for the duration
of a truce had long been customary. This money was paid immediately by the
Carthaginians. In the same manner the evacuation of Italy by the Carthaginian
army was certainly a condition preliminary to the negotiations for peace, i.e.
a condition of the armistice. It could not possibly be the intention of the
Romans that, while the armies were at rest in Africa, the war should still be
carried on in Italy. We know very well that the greatest desire of the Roman
people was the withdrawal of Hannibal from Italy. We also know that the senate,
on principle, negotiated with no enemy for peace so long as hostile troops were
in Italy. It is therefore certain that the recall of Hannibal and Mago, which
in a treaty of peace was a matter of course, belonged not to the conditions of
peace but to those of an armistice, and this supposition is absolutely
necessary if we wish to understand the conduct of the Carthaginians on the
renewal of hostilities, which took place soon after.
When the Carthaginian
ambassadors reached Rome, Laelius had just been there with the captive Syphax
and an embassy from Masinissa, and both senate and people had convinced
themselves, by personal observation, that Carthage, deprived of her most powerful
ally, would not be in a position to carry on the war much longer. This accounts
for the contemptuous treatment which the Carthaginians met with in the senate.
Although the Roman prisoners had been already released, in the expectation that
the conditions of peace would be accepted, the ambassadors were not admitted
before the senate till after the departure of Hannibal and Mago from Italy.
Then new difficulties were raised. According to the report of Livy the peace
was not ratified, and the Carthaginian ambassadors returned home almost without
an answer. Polybius says that the senate and people in Rome approved the conditions
of peace. If this last report be true, some alterations in the treaty must have
been proposed in Rome, on the acceptance of which by Carthage the peace
depended. On this supposition only can we understand how in Rome and in the
Scipionic camp the peace could be considered to be concluded, while in point of
fact the war continued up to the time when Carthage would have consented to the
proposed alterations.
In Carthage there had been for
some time past a growing opinion that Hannibal ought to be recalled from Italy,
but before entering into negotiations for peace with Scipio the senate had
adhered strictly to its old plan of keeping the enemy occupied in his own
country. When the Roman expedition to Africa was in contemplation, Mago had
received a considerable reinforcement, had marched from Genoa over the
Apennines, and had again roused the Gauls to renew the war against Rome. He met
in the country of the Insubrians a Roman army of four legions, under the
praetor P. Quintilius Varus and the proconsul M. Cornelius Cethegus; and in the
battle which ensued the Romans could hardly have been victorious, as they own
to heavy losses and do not boast of having taken any prisoners. Mago, however,
was severely wounded, and this mishap was sufficient to cripple his movements.
Under these circumstances the order reached him from Carthage to leave Italy.
He returned to Genoa and embarked his army, but died, in consequence of his
wounds, before he reached Africa. His army, however, arrived, without hindrance
or loss, clearly under the protection of the armistice.
The time had now come when
Hannibal wan at last obliged to renounce his long-cherished hopes of
overthrowing the Roman power on Italian soil. The last three years brought him
one bitter disappointment after another. After the defeat and death of
Hasdrubal and the loss of Spain, one faint hope still remained—a vigorous
participation in the war on the part of Macedonia. But this hope also
disappeared. King Philip did nothing to carry the war into Italy, and confined
himself to keeping the chief power in Greece and conquering a part of Illyria.
The Romans had since 207 devoted but little attention to affairs on the east of
the Adriatic Sea, and when, in the year 205, they could not prevent the
hard-pressed Aetolians from concluding a peace with Philip, they did the same,
and in order to satisfy the Macedonian king, they resigned to him a part of
their possessions in Illyria. After this, a new prospect opened for Hannibal.
The march of Mago to the north of Gaul was the last attempt which Carthage made
to carry out Hannibal’s original plan. It was undertaken with great energy, and
seemed to promise success, when the negotiations for peace put an end to it. As
for Hannibal’s strategy in the last years of the war, it was confined to
defending that corner of Italy which he still occupied, and the area of which
was growing less from year to year. How Locri was lost has already been
related. Hannibal’s last stronghold was Croton. From that place he still defied
the Roman legions, and succeeded, when hard pressed, in inflicting serious
losses. At no period does the generalship of Hannibal appear in a more
brilliant light. How he succeeded, with the scanty remnants of his victorious
army, with the pressed Italian recruits, emancipated slaves and fugitives,
without any other resources than those which the small exhausted land of the
Bruttians afforded, in keeping together an armed force, animated with warlike
spirit, severely trained to discipline and obedience, supplied with arms and
other necessaries of war—an army which was capable not only of steady
resistance, but which repeatedly inflicted on the enemy bloody repulses—this
the Roman annalists have not related. If they had been honest enough to
represent in true colours the greatness of their most formidable enemy in his
adversity, they would have been obliged also to paint the incompetence of their
own consuls and praetors, and to confess with shame that they had not one
single man able to cope with the great Punian.
Hannibal, as if he had had a
foreboding of his enemies’ love of detraction, made use of the leisure which
their fear granted him to record his exploits in Italy. Like all great men, he
was not indifferent to the judgment of posterity, and he foresaw that this
judgment must be unfavourable to him if it rested on Roman reports alone. He
therefore caused to be engraved on bronze tablets in the temple of Juno on the
Lacinian promontory, near Croton, an account of the principal events of the
war, in the Greek and Punic languages. These bronze tablets Polybius saw and
made use of, and we may be sure that the most trustworthy accounts of the second
Punic war were taken from this source. Unfortunately the history of Polybius is
completely preserved only for the period ending with the battle at Cannae. Of
the latter books of Polybius we have mere fragments, the only complete and
connected account of the Hannibalian war being that of Livy,
who unhesitatingly made use of the most mendacious Roman annalists, such,
for instance, as the impudent Valerius of Antium. Thus the memoirs of Hannibal
are for the most part lost to us, owing to the same cruel fate which persecuted
him to his death and even after his death; and Rome not only prevailed over her
most formidable enemy in the field, but her historians were enabled to obtain
for themselves alone the ear of posterity, and thus to perpetuate to their
liking the national triumph.
Thus alone can it be explained
that historians, even up to the present day, have recorded, as Hannibal’s last
act in Italy, a crime, which, if it deserved credit, would place him among the
most execrable monsters of all times. It is affirmed that he ordered those
Italian soldiers who declined to follow him into Africa to be murdered in the
sanctuary of the Lacinian Juno, and that he thus violated with equal scorn all
human feelings and the sanctity of the temple. We have had already an
opportunity of refuting charges such as these, and we do not hesitate to call
this accusation a gross calumny. The act cannot be reconciled with Hannibal’s
character. He was not capable of gratuitous cruelty, and it would have been
nothing but gratuitous cruelty to massacre the poor Italians, who could have
been of no use to him in Africa, and could do him no harm if left in Italy. We
cannot believe that Hannibal, who before his march over the Pyrenees dismissed
many thousand Spaniards to their homes because they showed unwillingness to
accompany him, would now have acted so differently in Italy. If Italian
soldiers met their death in the sanctuary of Juno, it was much more likely that
they were men who, like the noble Capuans before the taking of the town,
preferred to die a voluntary death rather than allow themselves to be tortured
by the Romans in punishment of their rebellion.
Hamilcar Barcas, obeying the
call of his country, had, forty years before, left the theatre of his heroic
deeds, unconquered. If, with heavy heart, he discharged a mournful duty, he had
at least hopes of a better future for his people. He devoted his life to bring
this better future about. Now his son, greater and mightier than he, had
sought, in a fifteen years’ struggle, to solve the father’s problem, and the
end of his efforts and of his glorious victories was that he also had to bow
his head before an inexorable fate. The anguish of his soul can be imagined
only by those unhappy men who have seen before them the downfall of their
fatherland, and who loved it and lived for it like Hannibal. He obeyed the
order which recalled him, and was ready now, as ever, again to try the fortune
of battle; but when he surveyed the progress of the war, and contemplated the
continually increasing preponderance of power on the side of Rome, he could
scarcely entertain any other hope than that of mitigating to some extent the
fate which was
inevitable.
With the best men of his army
Hannibal sailed from Croton in the autumn of the year 203. He held his course,
not direct to Carthage, but, probably in consequence of a formal stipulation in
the armistice, to Leptia, almost on the extreme southern boundary of the
Carthaginian territory, where he was as far as possible removed from the Roman
and Numidian armies and from the capital. To the same place, as it seems, came
the army of Mago from Genoa, and Hannibal spent the winter there in completing
his army and providing it with horses, elephants, arms, and all necessaries, so
that, in case of a failure of the peace negotiation, he could renew the war in
the following year.
The peace was not concluded.
We have already seen that the Roman senate delayed the Carthaginian embassy
until the hostile armies had left Italy, and then ratified the treaty of peace
only after introducing certain alterations. This intelligence reached Carthage
before the embassy itself had returned. All hopes of peace at once vanished,
and instead of complete reconciliation the greatest animosity was felt. The
democratic party had been in favour of war from the beginning, had conducted it
vigorously in spite of the opposition of an aristocratic minority, and had
reluctantly submitted to the necessity of accepting conditions of peace. Now
this party again had the upper hand, after the more moderate men and the
friends of peace had been foiled in their attempt to make peace with Rome on
equitable terms. It has often happened that in a supreme crisis, when foreign
enemies have threatened the existence of a state, an internal revolution has
suddenly broken out, and that a nation, believing itself betrayed, has fallen a
victim to ungovernable fury and blind passion. It was thus in Carthage. The
advocates of peace were now persecuted as traitors and foes of their country,
and the government fell again entirely into the hands of the fanatical enemies
of Rome. Hasdrubal, the son of Gisco, according to all appearance a moderate
man and by no means on principle an opponent of the family of Barcas, had till
now conducted the war. After Hannibal he was the most distinguished general
that Carthage possessed, and it was necessary that the negotiations for peace
with Scipio should be conducted by him. The people, disappointed in their hope
of peace, now turned their rage against this man. He was recalled from the
command and condemned to death, on the charge of having mismanaged the war and
of having had treacherous dealings with the enemy. The high-minded patriot
suffered the iniquitous sentence to be passed, and continued, although
condemned and outlawed, to serve his country. He collected an array of
volunteers, and carried on the war on his own account. But after all he fell a
victim to the unreasonable hatred of the populace. He ventured to show himself
in the town, was recognised, pursued, and fled to the mausoleum of his own
family, where he eluded his pursuers by taking poison. His body was dragged out
into the street by the populace, and his head carried about in triumph on the
top of a pole.
After such an outbreak of fury
against supposed internal enemies, it may easily be imagined that the populace
of Carthage were not very conscientious in the observance of the law of nations
towards the Romans. The truce, as the Roman historians report, had not yet
expired when a large Roman fleet, with provisions for Scipio’s army, was driven
against the coast in the Carthaginian bay, and wrecked before the eyes of the
people. The town was in the a state of the greatest excitement. The senate
consulted as to what was to be done. The people pressed in among the senators
and insisted on plundering the wrecked vessels. The government determined,
either voluntarily or under compulsion, to send out ships to tow the stranded
vessels to Carthage. Whether and how this resolution was carried out may be
doubtful; but this much is certain, that the Roman ships were plundered,
perhaps by the licentious populace, without the authority or approval of the
government. Scipio sent three ambassadors to Carthage, demanding satisfaction
and compensation. The embassy received a negative answer, and the attempt was
even made on the part of Carthage to detain them as hostages for the safety of
the Carthaginian ambassadors who were still in Rome. This attempt failed. The
three Romans escaped, with much difficulty. Scipio, instead of retaliating,
allowed the Carthaginian ambassadors, who shortly afterwards fell into his
hands on their return from Italy, to leave his camp unmolested. After all hopes
of an immediate peace had vanished, he prepared for a renewal of the war, which
now, since Hannibal was opposed to him, had assumed a far more serious
character.
What has been said already
with regard to our imperfect knowledge of the war in Africa applies especially
to the period between the landing of Hannibal and the battle of Zama. Livy and
Polybius say nothing at all about it, so that we cannot understand how the
hostile armies, at the distance of a five days’ march, encounter each other to
the west of Carthage. Fortunately we find some indications in Appian and
Zonaras, derived from an independent source, which enable us to form a
proximate notion of the course of the campaign. It appears from these
indications that the war was brought to a close through the Numidians and in
Numidia. From Leptis Hannibal had marched to Hadrumetum, where he spent the
winter. But instead of marching from this place to Carthage, and against
Scipio, he turned in a southerly direction, towards Numidia. He considered it
his first duty to restore Carthaginian influence in this territory, to weaken
Masinissa, and to draw off its forces to the Carthaginian side. Hannibal
secured the support of some Numidian chiefs, especially of Vermina, the son of
Syphax; he succeeded in defeating Masinissa, in taking several towns, and in
laying waste the country. Hereupon Scipio marched from Tunes, where he had
taken up his position for the second time, and came to relieve his ally,
threatening Hannibal on the east, whilst the Numidians were advancing against
him from the west. Hannibal was worsted in a cavalry engagement near Zama, one
of his commissariat trains was cut off by the Romans under the legate Thermus,
and, after fruitless negotiations for peace, the decisive battle at last was
fought.
The uncertainty of the history
of this last year’s campaign is strikingly characterised by the fact that
neither the time nor the place of this battle is exactly known. One thing is
certain, that the battle of Zama, as it is called in history, was fought, not
at Zama, but several days’ march to the west of it, on the river Bagradas, at a
place the name of which is given differently by different authors, and which
was perhaps called Naraggara. The date of the battle is also
uncertain. Not one of the extant historians names even the season of the year.
On the authority of a statement in Zonaras that the Carthaginians were
terrified by an eclipse of the sun, the 19th of October has been fixed upon as
the day of the battle, as, according to astronomical calculations, an eclipse
of the sun, visible in North Africa, took place on that day in the year 202
B.C. This calculation agrees perfectly with the course of events as it appears
probable from the narratives of Appian and Zonaras; for the campaign in the
wide deserts of Numidia may very well have lasted through the whole summer of
that year.
The battle of Naraggara,
which, in order to avoid a misunderstanding, we must call the battle of Zama,
is described in detail by Polybius and by Livy. After what we have said above,
of the inaccuracy of these authors as to the war in Africa, it would hardly be
worth while to copy their battle-pieces here, however much we may desire to
have a true picture of this battle, which, though it did not decide the issue
of the seventeen years’ war—for this had been long decided—yet brought the long
struggle to a close. But the battles of the ancients, compared with those of
modern times, were so easy to survey; their battle-fields, even when the
greatest forces fought, were so small, and the battle array and tactics of
their troops so uniform and simple, that it was not impossible to obtain a
clear conception of the course of a battle; and where there was no intention to
deceive, the accounts of eye-witnesses maybe received as, on the whole,
trustworthy.
According to Appian Hannibal
brought into the field 50,000 men and eighty elephants, Scipio 34,500, without
counting the Numidians whom Masinissa and Dacamas, another Numidian chief, had
brought to his aid. According to the account of Polybius both armies were
equally strong in infantry. Hannibal’s army consisted of three different corps,
drawn up one behind the other in a treble line of battle. In the first rank
were placed the mercenaries, the Moors, the Gauls, the Ligurians, the Balearic
contingent, and the Spaniards; then, in the second line, the Libyans and the Carthaginian
militia, and in the third line the Italian veterans, mostly Bruttians. The
eighty elephants, drawn up before the front, opened the attack on the Romans.
In cavalry the Romans were superior to Hannibal, by the aid of their Numidian
auxiliaries. It appears that Hannibal’s Numidian ally Vermina had not arrived
with his troops on the day of the battle. He did not attempt an attack on the
Romans until after the battle, and was then defeated with a loss of 16,000
men.
The Roman legions were
generally drawn up in three lines, in manipuli or companies of 120 men each, in
such a manner that the manipuli of the second line, the principes, came to
stand behind the intervals left by the manipuli of the first line, the hastati,
and that on advancing they could form one unbroken line with them. The manipuli
of the third line, the triarii, were half as strong as those of the two
first—sixty men each; but they were formed of veterans, the most trusty
soldiers in the legion. They were again disposed so that in advancing they
filled up the intervals in the second line. The different manipuli were
therefore drawn up like the black squares of a chessboard. The light troops,
armed with spears and intended to open the battle, skirmished before the first
line and retired into the intervals between the manipuli, as soon as more
serious fighting began. The cavalry stood on both wings. This battle array was
almost as invariable as the order of the camp, and the Roman generals had but
little opportunity for the development of individual tactics. Still Scipio is
said to have deviated from the usual rules at Zama. Instead of drawing up his
manipuli like the black squares of a chess-board, he placed them one behind the
other, like the rounds of ladders. This was intended to leave straight
openings, through which the elephants might pass without trampling down or
tearing asunder the infantry battalions. The elephants seem to have been of
little use to the Carthaginians; but we do not know whether on account of this
manoeuvre, or for some other reason, a number of them, driven aside by the
Roman skirmishers, threw the Carthaginian cavalry into such disorder that they
were unable to resist the attack of the Roman and Numidian horse. After a long
and obstinate conflict, the first Roman line, the hastati, threw the
Carthaginian mercenaries back upon their reserves, the Libyan and Punic troops.
It is even said that the latter came to blows with the fugitives, either in
consequence of mutual distrust, or treason, or because by Hannibal’s orders the
national troops tried to drive the venal and cowardly mercenaries back into the
fight. At any rate the confusion which thus ensued was most fortunate for the
Romans. Scipio advanced with his second and third lines, and attacked Hannibal’s
veterans, who alone preserved good order and were able to offer further
resistance. The combat raged long and fiercely and without approaching a
decision, until the Roman and Numidian cavalry, returning from the pursuit of
the Carthaginians, fell upon the enemy’s rear and thus decided the battle.
The defeat of the
Carthaginians was complete. Their army was not only routed but destroyed. Those
who escaped from the horrible slaughter were for the most part surrounded and
taken prisoners by the victorious cavalry. The battle was in many respects a
parallel to that of Cannae, and it was especially by the bravery of the
legions of Cannae that this victory was gained, and that the military honour of
the Roman soldiers was retrieved. For Scipio the battle of Zama was a double
success. It put an end to the war, and it secured for him the glory and the
triumph. If the decision had come only a short time later, Scipio would have
been obliged to share the command-in-chief in Africa with, his successor.
Tiberius Claudius Nero, one of the consuls for the year 202, was already on his
way with a consular army, and only bad weather had delayed his passage. Hence
it appears certain that, even if the battle of Zama had ended differently, the
war might indeed have been prolonged, but the final result would have been the
same. The Carthaginians had indeed long been overcome, and in all their battles
and exertions of the last few years, especially since the battle at the
Metaurus, they were prompted more by the recklessness of despair than by
well-founded hope of victory.
Hannibal had not seen his
native town since he had gone to Spain with his father as a boy nine years old.
He was not destined, after an absence of six-and-thirty years, when he had
filled the world with his glory, to come back as a triumphant victor. He
returned, after the destruction of the last Carthaginian army, to tell his
fellow-citizens that not only the battle but the war was lost. His task was now
to secure the most favourable conditions in the unavoidable peace. His return,
and the continuance of his authority and influence in Carthage, sufficiently
prove that he had always acted by the orders and had entered into the views of
the Carthaginian government. If it had been true that he had begun and carried
on the war out of personal motives, or even against the wish of his
fellow-citizens, he would hardly have dared now to appear in a city where
unsuccessful generals, even when not guilty of criminal contumacy, were in
danger of crucifixion.
From Zama, Scipio had marched
directly upon Carthage, whilst, a fleet of fifty ships which had just arrived
under Lentulus threatened the town from the sea. But the siege of so
well-fortified a town as Carthage could not be extemporised, and Scipio’s
attacks on Utica and Hippo could hardly have given him hopes of rapidly ending
the war by the capture of Carthage.
The importance of a fortified
capital was much greater in ancient than in modern times. How often, for
instance, had the wave of an invading army been broken by the walls of
Syracuse, after the Syracusan armies had been routed, and the whole of their
territory overrun. Thus even Carthage, trusting in the strength of her
position, could now enter into negotiations with Rome as a power not yet
subdued. Scipio was prepared, more than any other Roman could be, to grant
favourable conditions; for he knew that a hostile party in the Roman aristocracy
was endeavouring to bring about his recall before the conclusion of the treaty,
in order to deprive him of the honour of ending the long war by a glorious
peace. This party was supported, not by the people of Rome, but by the senate,
and could easily now, as on a former occasion, retard the negotiations and
finally make them abortive. In the beginning of the year a vote of the people
had intrusted Scipio with the command-in-chief in Africa, but nevertheless the
senate had, on its own authority, dispatched the consul Tiberius Claudius Nero
with a fleet, and had coordinated him with Scipio in the command. Nero had been
detained by contrary winds, and had not reached Africa. The same opposition
against peace and against Scipio was again exhibited after the battle of Zama.
The newly elected consul Cn. Lentulus was impatient to undertake the command in
Africa, and whilst Scipio was conducting the peace negotiations, violent
discussions and dissensions took place in Rome, which at last led to the
decision that Lentulus should be intrusted with the command of the fleet, and
that, if peace was not concluded with Carthage, he should sail to Africa and
there undertake the command-in-chief of the fleet, whilst Scipio should retain
the command of the land forces.
In Carthage also there were,
even after the battle of Zama, some fanatics who would still have continued the
war with Rome. We are told that Hannibal with his own hands pulled down from
the platform one of these demagogues that was attempting to inflame the populate,
and that the people forgave its deified hero this military contempt of civil
order. It is equally creditable to Hannibal and the democratic party in office
during the whole of the war and to their political opponents, the aristocratic
peace party, which had now to conduct the negotiations with Rome, that they
arrived at a friendly understanding, and joined in common measures for the
public weal.
We hear of no revolution in
Carthage, not even of outbreaks of rage and despair directed against the supposed
authors of the national calamity. The senate sent a deputation to
Scipio, and it seems that the negotiations were resumed without any
difficulty on the basis of the conditions which had once already been accepted.
In some points, certainly, they were made more severe. Scipio required of
Carthage the surrender of all elephants, of all ships of war but ten, the
payment of 10,000 talents in ten years, a hundred hostages between fourteen and
thirty years of age, and (what was most serious of all) the engagement that she
would wage no war either in Africa or elsewhere without the permission of the
Roman people. By the acceptance of this condition Carthage evidently renounced
her claim to be an independent state, and admitted that her safety and her very
existence were at the pleasure of Rome.
Still the chance of battles
had decided, and after the preliminaries of peace had been accepted, Scipio
granted a truce for three months, which Carthage had to purchase with a sum of
25,000 pounds of silver, ostensibly as a compensation for the Roman ships that
had been plundered during a former truce. In addition to this the Carthaginians
had to pay and provision the Roman troops during the truce, while, the latter
in return refrained from plundering the Carthaginian territory. Hereupon a
Carthaginian embassy was sent to Rome for the purpose of obtaining for this
peace the sanction of the senate and of the Roman people.
The news of Scipio’s victory
at Zama had been received in Rome with boundless enthusiasm. When the legate L.
Veturius Philo had delivered his message to the senate, he was obliged to
repeat it on the Forum before the assembled people, as on a former occasion the
messengers had twice to proclaim the news of the victory on the Metaurus. All
the temples of the town were opened for a festive rejoicing of three days. The
crowd had long desired peace in vain, and now came peace accompanied by
victory. The new consul Cn. Lentulus and his party in the senate vainly
attempted once more to delay the conclusion of peace. The pressure exerted by
the popular party and by Scipio’s adherents was too great. The people did not
wish to be cheated out of their hopes of peace, nor would they allow their
favourite Scipio to be deprived of the credit of victory. They resolved, on the
motion of two tribunes of the people, that the senate should conclude the peace
with Carthage through P. Scipio, and that none other than he should bring back
the victorious army to Rome. A commission of ten senators was at once sent to
Africa to communicate this decision, and to give to Scipio their counsel and
assistance. As a proof that with the conclusion of peace all hatred and
dissension were to be put aside, the Carthaginian ambassadors were allowed to
choose two hundred of their countrymen who were in Rome as prisoners and to
take them home without any ransom.
In Carthage the news of peace
was not received with equal joy, however desirable it might appear to the
people. The surrender of the Roman prisoners to the number of 4,000 was no act
of free generosity, but a confession of defeat that had been extorted from
them. The pecuniary sacrifices which they had to make were felt still more
painfully. But when the Carthaginian fleet was towed out of the harbour and
fired within sight of the town, such a lamentation arose as if, with these
wooden walls of the mistress of the seas, the town itself were delivered to the
flames.
For Scipio nothing remained to
be done in Africa but to dispense reward and punishment. Directly after the
victory over Syphax he had, before the assembled army, decorated Masinissa with
the crown, sceptre, and throne, with the embroidered toga and tunic, as ally
and friend of the Roman people. The senate approved of this distinction by a
regular resolution. Scipio now added the most valuable gift to these splendid
and glittering decorations, by bestowing on Masinissa a part of the kingdom of
Syphax, which they had conquered together, and its capital, Cirta. But the
cautious Roman politicians could not place full confidence in the barbarian.
They found it advisable to leave a rival by his side, and therefore they
restored to Vermina, the son of Syphax, a part of his father’s kingdom, in
spite of his hostility during the late war. The punishment of the deserters
delivered up by Carthage formed the bloody epilogue to this war. The Latins
amongst them were beheaded, and the Roman citizens, deemed deserving of a
severer penalty, were crucified.
Scipio’s journey to Rome was
an uninterrupted triumphal procession. From Lilybaeum he sent a considerable
part of his army by sea to Ostia; he himself travelled by land through Sicily
and southern Italy. Everywhere the people of the towns and villages came out to
meet him, and welcomed him as victor and deliverer. His entry into Rome was
celebrated by thousands of Roman soldiers whom he had delivered from
Carthaginian captivity, and who loudly extolled him as their saviour. It must
remain doubtful whether the Numidian king Syphax walked before
his triumphal car; for, though Polybius affirms this, Livy states
distinctly that he had previously died at Tibur. On the other hand we may take
for granted, even without any particular testimony, that the legions of Cannae,
which had been so undeservedly punished, more for their misfortune than their
fault, now brilliantly established themselves in the esteem of their
fellow-citizens, as they marched as conquerors behind the triumphal chariot of
the general who by their arms had obliterated the disgrace of Cannae.
CHAPTER VIIIGENERAL REMARKS ON THE HANNIBALIAN WARAND THE CORRESPONDING PERIOD.
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