READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF ROMETHE WAR FOR SUPREMACY IN THE EASTCHAPTER I.THE SECOND MACEDONIAN WAR, 200-196 B.C.
The peace of the year 201 BC between Rome and Carthage
had not put an end to hostilities in all the countries which had been the
theatre of the Hannibalic war. The Gauls were not included in its provisions,
and were now carrying on the war on their own account with a degree of determination
and energy which they had failed to display for a long time. Nor could Spain be
transferred without much difficulty from the dominion of Carthage to that of
Rome. The Spaniards had hoped to find in the Romans their deliverers from a
hateful oppression, not new and more exacting masters. The proud and warlike
nation, impatient of control, struggled hard, before it would submit. At the
same time the periodical insurrections in Corsica and Sardinia continued as
before, and in Italy the long war had brought about a state of things which
imperatively demanded permanent peace, if order and national wealth were to be
restored. In spite of all these considerations, the peace with Carthage was
scarcely concluded, when the Roman senate decided on commencing a new war, a
war not like those of Cisalpine Gaul, Liguria, and Spain, which were only
continuations of the Punic war, but one coolly planned for a political purpose
and forced upon an enemy who wished nothing more than to live in peace with
Rome.
Four years before the end of the Hannibalic war, in
the year 205 BC, Rome had come to terms with king Philip of Macedonia. This
step had become necessary, because Rome’s allies, the Aetolians, had already
given up the unequal struggle with Philip, in which they had not been
strenuously supported by Rome. The exhaustion of Italy in the latter part of
the Hannibalic war, which had been the cause of this neglect of the Aetolians,
made it imperative for the senate to purchase the peace with Philip even at the
sacrifice of some Roman possessions in Illyria. That a peace concluded under
such circumstances and such conditions could not be a sincere and lasting one
is very clear. The Romans looked upon it only as a suspension of hostilities,
and resolved to use the first opportunity to make Philip suffer for the
troubles which he had caused them by interfering in the Hannibalic war. Yet it
was not solely a feeling of revenge by which the cool and far-seeing statesmen
in the Roman senate were determined in their policy. It was the well-founded
apprehension which the alliance between Philip and Hannibal in the course of
the second Punic war had called forth. It seemed at that dark period that the
power of Rome would soon be at an end, if Philip acted as boldly as his ally,
and carried the war into Italy. After the humiliation of Carthage, a similar
danger, it is true, was not to be feared, at least for some time to come; but
who would undertake to answer for the future? Once already Carthage had
recovered with wonderful rapidity after a great fall, and had become more
formidable to Rome in the second war than she had been in the first. Though
Masinissa, the king of Numidia, was now a troublesome neighbour and relentless
foe of the Carthaginians, yet he afforded the Romans no absolute security. No
reliance could be placed on the permanence of a Numidian kingdom. The condition
of the unsteady barbarian communities in the north of Africa changed as easily
as the sand of their native desert. The very existence of these states depended
mostly on the life and prosperity of a chief, and their policy was equally
shifting and uncontrollable. Syphax had once been the great enemy of Carthage.
He became afterwards her useful ally. Who could vouch for Masinissa’s fidelity,
if the crafty Punians should offer a sufficient temptation to gain him over to
their side? Above all, Hannibal was yet living, and was actually guiding the
policy of the Carthaginian states. His name, even after the defeat at Zama, had
hardly lost anything of the terror with which during a seventeen years’ war it
had fascinated all Italy. It was, therefore, a natural and well-considered plan
of the men who ruled the Roman state, to make use of the first leisure which
the peace with Carthage afforded for the purpose of humbling Macedonia. The
actual conquest of the lands on the east side of the Adriatic was not yet aimed
at; at most, a moderate extension of the possessions in Illyria was
contemplated as the prize of victory.
Macedonia alone, as things then stood, was not
dangerous to the Roman republic. It was no longer the Macedonia of the second
Philip and of the great Alexander. The endless wars and the inroads of the
Northern barbarians had depopulated and impoverished the country. But it was
still the first power on the eastern peninsula, and king Philip, who had ruled
it since the year 221 BC had displayed unusual military abilities which had
procured for him an undisputed pre-eminence in Greece. He had humbled the Aetolian
confederation, the most powerful of his enemies, notwithstanding its alliance
with the Romans. The Achaean League, which was second in importance among the
Greek states, had ever since the time of Aratus been entirely subject to
Macedonian influence. The Acarnanians, Boeotians, Locrians, Dorians, Phocians,
Euboeans were intimately connected with Macedonia as friends and allies.
Besides these states, which were more or less independent, the kings of
Macedonia possessed, as direct dependencies, the whole of Thessaly, and several
places in different parts of Greece, the most valuable of which were the three
great fortresses, Demetrias on the Pagasaean Gulf, Chalcis on the Euripus, and
Corinth. Holding these towns with strong garrisons, they commanded the most
important military positions in Greece.
After the reverses sustained by the Aetolians, no
single state on the whole of the Greek continent was in a position to
counterbalance the preponderance of Macedonia. The Athenians were
anti-Macedonian in their politics, and did their utmost to counteract the
supremacy of the leading state; but their power was small, and it was only the
memory of the days of past greatness that secured for this degenerate people
any consideration or respect. In the Peloponnesus the anti-Macedonian party was
headed by Sparta, more from old enmity to the Achaeans than for any other
reason; and the insignificant states of Messenia and Elis were united with
Sparta in like opposition to Achaia. It was only on the islands and in
different commercial towns on the coasts of Asia Minor and of Thrace that the
old Greek spirit of restless activity survived together with the pride of local
independence. Before all others, it was the island of Rhodes which, as champion
for the ancient republican and city freedom, stoutly opposed the encroachments
of the military monarchies.
Philip was a thorough soldier-king, like the first
successors of Alexander the Great. He knew nothing of any duties of a king but
the extension of his territory. Always on the watch for the chance of new
conquests, he led a restless life, full of excitement and vicissitudes. Personally
courageous, active, and skilful in war, he had made himself the terror of all
those states which seemed to offer a tempting spoil. He delighted in destroying
works of art, in devastating towns and lands, in torturing and murdering
conquered enemies. From year to year he became more reckless, more grasping,
and more savage. At last he ceased to be a Greek king, and assumed the
character of an Eastern despot, self-willed and tyrannical, jealous, and cruel.
His most intimate friends and counsellors were no longer safe from a sudden
outbreak of suspicion, which was equivalent to a sentence of death. Thus he
gradually alienated most of his friends, and created for himself throughout
Greece well-founded distrust and bitter enmity. Not content with the success
which he had had in his war with the Aetoliaus and the Romans, he contemplated extending
his territory on the east after the conclusion of the treaty of peace with Rome,
and he flattered himself with the deceitful hope that, even after the overthrow
of Carthage, the Romans would stand by as quiet spectators of his
aggrandisement. By this shortsightedness and love of conquest he brought about
complications and difficulties which enabled and even invited the Romans to
turn their arms against him.
The king of Egypt, Ptolemaeus Philopator, had died in
205 BC leaving a son only five years old. Under the first three Ptolemies, from
321 to 220 BC. Egypt had enjoyed a century of great prosperity, and had grown
to power and opulence. The kingdom comprehended not only the valley of the Nile
properly so called, but had been extended under these warlike and victorious
rulers far into Asia, Africa, and Europe, thus relinquishing the secure and
defensive position of Egypt proper, and offering tempting objects of attack to
the ambition and cupidity of its neighbours. It had acquired in Africa the important
Greek city of Cyrene, in Asia the provinces of Palestine and Phoenicia together
with Coelesyria; besides the island of Cyprus and many towns on the coast of
Asia Minor, a number of islands in the Aegean Sea, and even in Europe some
districts on the Thracian coast. By these conquests Egypt was completely
brought out of its former isolation; and by her possessions on the opposite
coasts, and by the importance of her commercial towns, she had risen to be a
great maritime power. Such a kingdom could be protected and kept together only
by able and vigorous rulers; the distant possessions especially were not easily
defended. The kings of Macedonia and Syria saw their advantage, and without any
other pretext or excuse than the desire to make use of so good an opportunity,
they formed an alliance in 205 BC for the purpose of robbing the youthful
Ptolemaeus Epiphanes.
The ally of Philip in this project for robbing or
eventually dismembering Egypt was Antiochus III of Syria, the fourth successor
of Seleucus, the founder of the Syrian monarchy and of the royal house of the
Seleucidae. Of the three great states into which the vast Macedonian empire was
broken up, the kingdom of Syria was in size the largest, and her rulers
arrogated to themselves the first rank among the so-called Successors of
Alexander the Great. It extended from the coasts of the Mediterranean, beyond
the two great rivers Euphrates and Tigris, over the high lands of Persia, as
far as the Indus and the Jaxartes (the modern Sir Daria), thus including the
empire of Persia proper with the renowned old capitals of Babylon, Susa,
Persepolis, and Ecbatana. But, notwithstanding its enormous size, and the claim
derived therefrom, the empire of Syria was in point of fact weaker than either
Egypt or Macedonia. It was a helpless Colossus, the members of which were no
longer moved and governed by one spirit; it was in a state of progressing
decomposition, and new life was already springing up in the elements which
composed it. Even before the conquest of Alexander the Great, when the vast
territories between India and Europe were yet parts of the Persian empire, many
indigenous races had opposed a stubborn resistance to the invading Persians,
and had succeeded in maintaining a more or less complete independence. The
rapid march of Alexander’s victorious army left but few traces among these
tribes. That which could be accomplished neither by the Persian kings in the
prolonged period of their mighty sway nor by the genius of Alexander, was still
more beyond the power of the degenerate successors of the brave Seleucus. Upper
Asia, the old empire of Persia, on the eastern side of the Tigris, cast off the
Macedonian yoke soon after Alexander’s death, and notwithstanding some
expeditions undertaken by the third Antiochus, fell under the dominion of the
Parthians, who, under their native kings of the house of Arsaces, successfully
maintained their independence against Syria as afterwards against Rome. The
rule of the Seleucidae and the influence of Greek culture extended only as far
as the Tigris. But on the western side of that boundary independent states had
also been formed in the east and north of Asia Minor, whilst in the south of
this peninsula many different nations, for instance, the wild Isaurians, lived
in a state of independence, which was never seriously interfered with. The
Greek commercial towns on the sea coast were more or less autonomous. The
Galatians had established themselves in the centre of Asia Minor and had formed
a free Gallic community. Even in the immediate vicinity of Syria itself and of
the chief town of Antiochia the provinces of Coelesyria, Phoenicia, and
Palestine had been annexed by Egypt, which had moreover seized Cyprus and many
other islands, as well as a strip of land on the coast of Caria and Cilicia in
Asia Minor.
Thus the king of Asia was in truth nothing but the
shadow of a great name, and the Seleucidae did not supply by personal
qualifications the want of material power. In no part of the old Persian empire
had the spirit of Greek self-respect, moderation, and the love of liberty so
completely died out after the Macedonian conquest as in Syria. Nowhere else had
the brave leaders of the Macedonian army so quickly degenerated into Asiatic
despots. Nowhere had Eastern voluptuousness, immorality, servility, and an
effeminate spirit become so general as at the court of Antioch, where in the
family of the royal house poison and the dagger became more familiar
instruments of policy than they ever had been in the house of the Persian Achaemenidae.
Antiochus III had been on the throne since the year 224 BC. After an unhappy
war, which he carried on with Egypt for the possession of Phoenicia and
Coelesyria, and which terminated in his complete overthrow in the decisive
battle of Raphia (217 BC), he succeeded in vanquishing his rebellious uncle,
Achaeus, whom he put to a cruel and ignominious death. Elated by this success,
Antiochus aspired to greater things. He endeavoured to reunite with his empire
that great extent of territory in which the kings of Parthia and Bactria had
asserted their independence. But the result of a war of several years did not
answer his expectations. He was finally compelled to recognise the independence
of these states; and though he actually penetrated into India and returned home
with a large number of elephants and other trophies, he had really gained
nothing except the barren title of ‘the Great,’ which he allowed his flatterers
to bestow upon him.
When in 205 BC Ptolemaeus Philopator, the king of
Egypt had died, Antiochus formed an alliance with Philip of Macedonia for the
purpose of despoiling Ptolemy’s successor, a child of five years, of his
kingdom. He overran and conquered Coelesyria, Phoenicia, and Palestine, the
long-disputed territory between Syria and Egypt—a conquest, which in the sequel
led to the heroic opposition of the Maccabees against Syrian oppression, and to
the independence of the Jewish nation.
While Antiochus was taking that portion of the
Egyptian spoil which he had bargained for in his contract with Philip, his ally
was anxious on his side to secure the advantages which he had hoped to gain
from the plunder of Egypt. Instead of attacking with combined forces the seat
and centre of the Egyptian power, each of the allies tried to obtain those
countries which were most conveniently situated for him, just as in his
alliance with Hannibal against Rome the shortsighted Philip only thought of
extending his territory on the side of Illyria, instead of supporting Hannibal
in Italy with all his strength. Philip had in his service, as commander of the
fleet, the Aetolian Dicaearchus, a pattern of a reckless, insolent mercenary,
who, in his contempt of the old Greek veneration for the gods, went so far as
to put up altars for ‘Godlessness’ (Asebeia) and ‘Lawlessness’ (Paranomia).
This worthy servant of Philip sailed about in the Aegean Sea with a fleet of
twenty Macedonian ships, practised piracy, laid the smaller islands under
contribution, and subjected without difficulty those of the Cyclades which were
under Egyptian rule, and which were for the most part utterly defenceless.
Every independent Greek state seemed now exposed to be plundered and violated
by the two great allied powers of Syria and Macedonia.
No Greek community felt this danger more than the island
and republic of Rhodes, which had for a long time been closely connected with
Egypt by commerce and mutually profitable intercourse. A great contrast to the
industrious and thrifty Rhodians was presented by the rude and half-barbarised
communities of Crete. No Greek island was so completely estranged from peaceful
pursuits and the habits of order. In Crete every man grew up a soldier and
pursued war as his profession. Whoever was not engaged in the eternal fends
within the island, enlisted as mercenary in some foreign service, or practised
piracy on his own account. Rich trading towns like Rhodes had to suffer the
greatest annoyances from these lawless robbers, and the encouragement and
support of Philip and his admiral Dicaearchus were hardly necessary to excite
the Cretans against Rhodes.
Philip, like the captain of a band of robbers,
revelled in the delights of pouncing upon innocent towns, burning them to the
ground, and murdering the inhabitants or selling them as slaves. He troubled
himself with no scruples and asked for no pretext, for he thought himself
secure and far above all such consideration of the weak. The towns of
Lysimachia on the Thracian Chersonesus, Perinthus on the European, Cios on the
Asiatic coast of the Propontis, Chalcedon opposite Byzantium, and the island of
Thasos on the Thracian coast, experienced one after another his treachery,
violence, and savage cruelty. Those which did not submit voluntarily, or, like
Thasos, were entrapped into submission by false promises, were conquered by
force, and had to suffer the dreadful consequences of such a fate. The unhappy
city of Cios suffered all the terrors of a siege; and, notwithstanding the
intercession of the Rhodians, was utterly destroyed, the inhabitants being sold
into slavery. This ruthless abuse of power roused the discontent even of
Prusias, king of Bithynia, Philip’s ally, who had hoped to acquire the town of
Cios uninjured. The Aetolians, Philip’s old enemies, resented his proceedings
as an act of hostility against themselves, for some of the towns thus
shamefully treated (like Lysimachia, Chalcedon and Cios) were old members of
the Aetolian league. For the same reason the important city of Byzantium, the
close ally of Perinthus, was forced into opposition to Philip as the common
enemy of independent city communities. Indeed, Philip earned in the whole of
Greece nothing but hatred and distrust. For, notwithstanding’ many internal
wars and outrages committed by Greeks against Greeks, a generous Hellenic
feeling had not yet died out entirely, and the cruel treatment of a Greek town
by a foreign conqueror deeply wounded the whole people. Those states especially
which were more directly exposed to similar attacks saw the necessity of
strenuously opposing the rapacity of Philip for the sake of their own security.
Thus a league was formed against him, at the head of
which were the enterprising Rhodians, united with Attalus, the king of
Pergamum, in Asia Minor, who even in the first Macedonian war had fought on the
side of Philip’s foes. Byzantium, Chios, and other Greek towns joined this
league, and had the courage to undertake a contest with the powerful and
defiant king of Macedonia, even before they had the prospect that Rome would
join in the struggle for the independence of the smaller Greek states. Yet the
hopes of all the enemies of Philip were fixed on the great Western power, and
embassies were being continually sent to Rome to warn the senate of the danger
with which the increasing strength of Macedonia threatened not only her weaker
neighbours and Egypt, which had stood so long in friendly relations with Rome,
but also the security of Rome herself.
In the meantime, before Rome was able to interfere in
Eastern affairs—that is, before the peace with Carthage had been concluded, the
war between Philip and the allied cities broke out with great fury. Philip
advanced quickly to the attack. He sailed with his fleet and army against the
Egyptian island of Samos, and took possession of it. Whilst he was proceeding
to lay siege to Chios, he encountered, between the island and the continent, a
fleet of Pergamenian and Byzantian ships, under the command of old king Attalus,
of Pergamum, and of the enterprising Rhodian admiral Theophiliscus, the man who
had decided his countrymen to enter on the war, and had even induced king Attalus
to take part in it.
It was the object of the allies not only to prevent
the conquest of Chios, but also to cut off Philip’s retreat to Samos. They had
sixty-five decked vessels at their disposal against fifty-three of the
Macedonians; but Philip had a larger number of smaller craft, and thus the two
fleets may have been about equally matched. Philip had the advantage of not
being obliged to consult an ally. He was consequently enabled to act quickly,
and he surprised the hostile fleets before they had quite effected a junction.
The battle is one of the most interesting of the ancient sea fights, for
Polybius has handed down to us a full and detailed account, which enables us to
form a tolerably clear notion of the naval tactics of that period, of which,
comparatively speaking, we know so little. Philip had several large vessels
with from six to ten rows of oars, which must have been very unwieldy, and
probably served more for royal pomp than for real war, or, like the elephants
on land, caused more consternation than harm in the hostile ranks. Some of
these ships were pierced by the enemy’s beaks below the water-line and sunk;
others, being entangled in collisions with hostile vessels, were too slow of
movement to clear off, and were boarded. Others, again, had whole rows of oars
brushed off by fastsailing small craft. Thus were destroyed a Macedonian ship
of ten rows of oars, one of nine, one of seven and one of six, besides twenty
other decked vessels and sixty-eight smaller ones, while only nine were
captured. It is reported that the allies lost in all only seven ships.
The reports of the losses on both sides represent the
issue of the battle as so favourable to the Rhodians and Attalus, and so
pernicious to Philip, that we are at a loss to understand how, under such
circumstances, Philip could claim the victory at all, and how his enemies did
not reap the benefit of the battle. For it is stated that, besides the great
number of ships mentioned in the text, Philip lost nine thousand dead, whereas the
allies lost only one hundred and twenty. It seems almost certain that the
materials for the description of the sea fight at Chios wore furnished by Zenon
and Antisthenes, the Rhodian historians, whom Polybius charges with the
perversion of the truth in the interest of their native city, and who did not
scruple to represent tin; defeat of their countrymen at Lado soon after as a
victory. It is always a great temptation for a beaten general to palliate his discomfiture
by representing the loss of his opponents as enormous, and as larger, if
possible, than his own. In such false statements patriotic historians can
easily find arguments to show that a battle in which the enemy lost so much was
a victory; at least, they will easily persuade themselves and their own
countrymen of it. The only things which cannot well be concealed or perverted
are the results and consequences of a battle; and though a victory is not
always followed by an advance of the victors, yet it is not difficult, on the
whole, to infer the issue of a battle from the subsequent movements of the
belligerents. With regard to the sea fight at Chios, we are inclined to think
that the advantage was on the side of Philip, as Attalus returned home with his
fleet, and the Rhodians could not effectually stop Philip’s advance.
Notwithstanding this, however, the result of the
battle was, by no means favourable to them. Attalus had narrowly escaped being
captured in the fight by running his flagship aground, and sacrificing it to
the enemies who plundered it. And, moreover, whilst the Rhodians suffered an
irreparable loss through the mortal wound of their brave admiral Theophiliscus,
Philip actually kept possession of the ground, collected the wrecks of the
vessels, buried the slain, and openly boasted of a triumph, though the allies
offered battle again on the following day. Yet the continuance of the siege of
Chios was not possible on account of the great losses which Philip had
sustained, and he had to be content with being able to return unmolested to
Samos. The Pergamenian fleet sailed home. The Rhodians, perhaps reinforced by
other Greek ships, ventured soon after to encounter the Macedonians again; but
they were defeated at Lade, and thus prevented from opposing the further
operations of Philip, who soon afterwards conquered Chios, landed with his army
in Asia Minor, entered Miletus in triumph, and ravaged the territories of king
Attalus, of the Rhodians, and of Egypt.
It appears that he no longer encountered any opposition
on the part of his enemies, and he took a number of fortified places. An
attempt to take Pergamum failed. But he so effectually laid waste Caria, in the
south of Asia Minor, that at last he began to suffer want in the hostile and
desolated country, and was in danger of losing his whole army by famine. When
the summer and autumn of 201 BC were past and the inclement season had set in,
it became absolutely necessary for him to return to Macedonia. The return was
now rendered dangerous, partly by the tempestuous state of the weather and
partly by the hostile fleets which had been gathering in the interval. Still
Philip, against all expectation, did succeed in avoiding both these dangers,
and in bringing his army back to Macedonia after a campaign which proved
utterly fruitless in results.
It might have been expected that Philip would soon
give up the task of making conquests in Asia, and prepare to meet the danger
which he could not fail to see approaching from the West. In the course of the
year just expired, 201 BC, the peace between Rome and Carthage had been
concluded; nor did it need a keen vision to foresee that Rome would soon call
Philip to account for his support of Hannibal, and join the alliance against
him which had been called forth by his aggressive policy in Greece. But whether
Philip, after the manner of despots, obstinately closed his eyes to an
unpleasant fact, or whether he allowed himself to be deceived by his wretched
counsellors, a band of adventurers from all nations, who encouraged his worst
vices and passions (for no one ventured to tell him the truth), certain it is
that in the beginning of the year 200 BC he engaged with blind recklessness in
new enterprises, which, even in case of complete success, must have weakened
him for a contest with Rome. It is plain that he and his captains of
mercenaries had begun to take great pleasure in the capturing and plundering of
Greek towns, without carefully discriminating between such as were independent
and those that were Egyptian dependencies. But his campaign in Caria had almost
terminated fatally, because during the winter season he had been very nearly
prevented by the enemy’s fleet from returning home. He marched now towards the
Hellespont, where the towns of Sestos and Abydos commanded the narrow arm of
the sea between Europe and Asia, the spot where Xerxes had constructed his
celebrated bridge of boats. If he possessed these towns, his communication with
Asia could not be interrupted. Therefore, after taking some of the Thracian
coast towns and castles in the neighbourhood, which belonged to the kingdom of
the Ptolemies, he marched to the Hellespont, and laid siege to Abydos. This
undertaking occupied a considerable time, for Abydos offered a determined
resistance. During the progress of the siege, his enemies, especially the
Rhodians and Athenians, had full leisure, with the assistance of their fleet,
not only to expel the Macedonian garrisons from most of the islands which he
had conquered, but to form an alliance against him, to which he was soon doomed
to succumb.
Whilst Philip was pursuing his ambitious policy beyond
the Aegean, serious disagreements had broken out between Athens and Macedonia,
which, in the end, furnished the ostensible grounds for the Roman declaration of
war. At a festive celebration of the Eleusinian mysteries two Acarnanian
youths, who happened to be on a visit in Attica, mingled with a crowd of
mystics, and thus found their way into the sacred precincts of the temple of
Demeter. They intended no harm, and were unconscious of the enormity of the
offence which they had committed. Betrayed by their incautious questions, they
were discovered as intruders, brought up before the high priest of the temple
to answer for their conduct, condemned to death and executed.
This fanatical outrage produced a violent outburst of
rage among the Acarnanians. They addressed their complaints to their ally and
protector, the king of Macedonia, and were encouraged and supported by him to
invade Attica, to lay waste the level country with fire and sword, and to
gratify not only their revenge but their love of spoil.
All this happened in the autumn of the year 201 BC, when
Philip had not yet returned from his campaign against the possessions of the
Rhodians, of Egypt, and of Attalus in Asia Minor. The Athenians in their
distress immediately sent an embassy to Rome, asking for help against the
Acarnanians and Philip, and thus affording the Romans the best excuse they
could desire for interfering in the internal affairs of Greece, and for a
formal declaration of war. The senate had already foreseen the necessity of
such a war so clearly that they had ordered a part of the fleet on its return
from Africa to set sail from Vibo in southern Italy for Macedonia, and to hold
itself in readiness for any emergency. The Athenian ambassadors found therefore
an attentive hearing in Rome. The senate, notwithstanding the remonstrances of
two tribunes of the people, and in spite of the unpopularity of a new war,
obtained the consent of the people to their proposed warlike policy, and
immediately despatched an embassy commissioned to visit the several Greek
states, for the purpose of enlisting allies, and of eventually delivering to
the king of Macedonia the final demands of the Roman republic. This embassy
arrived at Athens at the time when the fleet of the allied Greek states, which
had endeavoured to cut off the retreat of the Macedonian king from Curia, had
returned from its fruitless expedition, and had just cast anchor at the island
of Aegina. Attalus was received by the Athenians as their deliverer, and was
overwhelmed with extravagant honours, in conformity with a practice which
unfortunately had, by this time, ceased to be novel at Athens. The whole people
came out from Athens to meet him in the Piraeus; the priests awaited him in
their festive robes; the temples were opened, and solemn offerings prepared;
even the gods themselves were to receive the honoured guest of the republic.
Amidst universal acclamations, Attalus was enrolled among the national heroes,
and a phyle, or tribe, of the Attic land was named after him.
Similar honours sealed the fraternal bond between the
Athenians and the Rhodians, and a formal declaration of war against Macedonia
followed immediately. The first fruit of the alliance with Rome was the retreat
of the Macedonian general, Nicanor, who, in the meantime, had marched into
Attica, but did not like the risk of provoking the anger of the Roman
ambassadors by harassing the new allies of the great republic.
Meanwhile Philip, as we have seen, had opened the
Siege of campaign of the year 200 BC on the Hellespont, and was by now
besieging Abydos, leaving the Rhodians in undisturbed possession of the Aegean
sea. These accordingly retook all the Cyclades, with the exception of Andros,
Paros, and Cythnos, but they accomplished nothing more, neither attacking
Macedonia, which was destitute of troops, nor coming to the assistance of
Abydos, perhaps, because they expected everything from the Romans.
But the latter had not yet completed the preliminary
diplomatic arrangements which they deemed indispensable before the commencement
of hostilities. Their object was to unite, if possible, all the Greek states in
one great offensive and defensive alliance, in order to carry on the war
against Philip (just as they had done in the first Macedonian war), chiefly
with the arms of their allies, and with the smallest possible addition of
Italian troops. The Roman embassy had already visited Epirus, Acarnania, Aetolia,
Achaia, and lastly Attica. They had not everywhere found a hearty readiness to
join the alliance. But, on the other hand, they discovered no decided sympathy
for Philip.
From Greece the ambassadors proceeded to Egypt, where
they had a most delicate commission to execute.
The Egyptian government had asked the Roman people to
act as guardians of the infant king, Ptolemaeus Epiphanes, in other words, to
protect him from the spoliation which his two powerful enemies, Philip of
Macedonia and Antiochus of Syria, had planned. The Romans had not the slightest
wish to commit themselves to a contest with these two powers at once. But how
could they proceed against Philip without giving such offence to his ally as
would make him take an active part in the war? This object was nevertheless
attained. Rome made her client, the king of Egypt, pay the cost of securing the
neutrality of Antiochus. No obstacle was placed in the way of the conquest of
the whole of Phoenicia by that monarch. Whether his claims to it were formally
recognised by Rome we do not know; at any rate, they were recognised de facto,
and Antiochus, who wisely gave up all thoughts of conquering Egypt proper,
found in the unchallenged acquisition of Phoenicia a sufficient inducement to
leave his ally, the king of Macedonia, to his fate, and to avoid the hostility
of Rome. The government of Egypt were not in a position to compel their Roman
friends and protectors to render direct assistance for the defence of Phoenicia.
Perhaps they hoped for or received assurances that after the overthrow of
Philip the Egyptian possessions in Asia Minor, Thrace, and in the Aegean sea
would be restored to Egypt.
Before the termination of their mission in Egypt and
Syria, the Roman ambassadors despatched Marcus Aemilius, the youngest of their
number, from Rhodes to Philip, who was still occupied with the siege of the
dauntless town of Abydos. The task of Aemilius was only to comply with an empty
formality. He had to declare war on the part of Rome; for it was easy to
foresee that Philip would a reject the terms on which peace might yet be
preserved. These terms contained a demand that the king of Macedonia should
make war upon no Greek city, that he should give up the possessions of Ptolemy
which he had seized, and submit to a court of arbitration, which would settle
the damages to be paid by him to king Attalus and the Rhodians. There is no
mention made of a demand in the interest of the Athenians; probably because the
Macedonian general Nicanor had, at the request of the Roman ambassadors during
their stay in Athens, evacuated Attica. The ostensible pretext under which the
senate had obtained the sanction of the Roman people for a declaration of war,
viz., Philip’s attack upon a Roman ally, had under these circumstances become
untenable. The Romans were constrained to speak for Attalus and the Rhodians,
although, as Philip justly observed, the Rhodians were the aggressors and not
the attacked. Moreover, in assuming the attitude of a protecting power with
regard to Egypt and Greek towns in general, and in requiring of Philip that he
should refrain from all attacks upon them, the Romans claimed a right which was
founded neither on special treaties nor on international law, but merely on the
consciousness of their superior power and on the calculation of what their own
interest demanded. Philip’s answer, therefore, contained a sharp and deserved
rebuke. The Romans, he said, should strictly observe the sworn treaty and not
break the peace. But if they were bent on war, the Macedonians would call upon
the gods as witnesses, and resist force by force. With these words, which
breathe a truly royal pride, and with the feeling that he was resisting an
unjustifiable interference, Philip broke off the negotiations. But, with some
approach to the courteous diplomacy of our own days, he seized the opportunity
of assuring the representative of the Roman people personally of his
distinguished respect and regard. He told him he would pardon the frankness of his
speech for three reasons, first, because he was young and inexperienced;
secondly, because he was a handsome man; and, thirdly, because he was a Roman.
Soon after the failure of the Roman negotiations, the
fate of the unhappy town of Abydos was decided. Up to the present time it had
been defended with the courage of despair. The town wall had already been
thrown down by a mine in one place, and a second wall, which had been built
behind the first, had been undermined, when at length, despairing of all assistance
from without, the besieged offered to surrender the town to Philip on condition
of being permitted to leave it unmolested. But Philip required unconditional
submission; and the inhabitants of Abydos, knowing full well that this meant
death, slavery, and dishonour, prepared to die as free men on their native
soil. They collected the women in the temple of Artemis, the children in the
gymnasium, and commissioned a number of older men to kill them all, and then to
cast into the sea or to burn all the gold and silver and other treasures as
soon as they should see the enemy penetrate into the town over the corpses of
the defenders. Thereupon they took up their post in the breach of the inner
wall, and fought as men determined to conquer or die. In the evening, after
most of them had fallen, the Macedonians desisted from the attack. The courage
of some of the survivors then gave way, and they resolved to send the priests
to supplicate Philip for mercy. This weakness the patriotic fanatics abominated
as treason to the cause of the fatherland and as a crime against the gods whom
they had called upon to witness their voluntary death. On the following day,
therefore, while the Macedonian troops were taking possession of the treasures
heaped up in the market-place, the remnant of the people of Abydos carried out
their terrible resolution. Philip gave them three days’ time to murder the
women and children, and finally themselves, and then he took possession of the
depopulated town.
The terrible end of Abydos reminds us of the similar
catastrophe of Saguntum in 218 BC. But it is not subject to historical doubts,
like the narrative of the fall of the Spanish town. It is authenticated by the
testimony of Polybius. There are other points of likeness in the fate of the
two towns. The siege and conquest of each of them mark the commencement of a great
war of the Romans; and both towns were left to their fate by their allies,
while greater decision and promptness might have been the means of saving them.
And as during the siege of Saguntum Roman ambassadors appeared before Hannibal
in the camp, begging him to desist, so Aemilius came to Philip while he was
blockading Abydos, without being able to stop the impending war by a mere
diplomatic interference.
Attalus meanwhile had sailed with his fleet from Aegina,
where he had passed the winter, and proceeded as as the coast of the Troad,
near Tenedos; but he had not courage enough to avert the fall of Abydos. In
spite of the threats of Rome and the hostile demonstrations of his Greek
enemies, Philip had attained his object. He had won bloody laurels, and
returned to Macedonia towards the autumn of the year 200 BC to prepare for the
attack of the Romans, which now he could expect with positive certainty.
We have seen with what decision the Roman senate determined
upon the struggle with Macedonia immediately after the conclusion of peace with
Carthage, and how skilfully they made use of the complications in the east for
carrying on that war, more with the arts of diplomacy and the military strength
of allied towns than with Roman legions. Yet the Roman negotiators had not
succeeded in uniting all the Greeks in an alliance against Philip. The
Acarnanians, the Boeotians, Phocians, Locrians, Dorians, and Euboeans were too
dependent on Macedonia, because Macedonian power protected them from their
nearest enemies, especially the Aetolians. But the Aetolians were slow to
declare themselves. During the preceding winter Attalus had in vain urged them
to a war against Philip. Between them and Rome a marked coolness, almost
amounting to enmity, had been apparent from the time when, in the first
Macedonian war, they had been insufficiently supported by Rome, and had in
consequence concluded a separate peace with Philip. Since then the former
allies accused one another mutually of a breach of contract. But the Romans
were quite right in thinking that the force of circumstances would after all
draw the Aetolians into the war with Macedonia, especially as the domineering
spirit of Philip had during the last few years become very troublesome to the Aetolians,
and as they had not been able to repel or to punish his attacks on their
allies, the towns of the Propontis.
If it was not quite easy for the Romans to gain
the hearty alliance of the Aetolians in a war with Macedonia, it seemed
utterly hopeless to determine the Achaeans to the same line of policy. Ever
since the time of Aratus the Achaeans had been closely allied with Macedonia,
because they had found in the Macedonian kings their natural allies in their
continual struggles with their neighbours the Aetolians and Sparta. Yet when the
Achaean league, under the able direction of Philopoemen, had become a great
military power, a party of the Achaean people was no longer opposed to a line
of policy which seemed likely to make them independent of Macedonian
protection. Moreover, Philip had alienated his best friends, and given just
cause of apprehension, by attempting the assassination of Philopoemen, because
he could not look upon him on all occasions as a ready tool.
Under such circumstances the Roman envoys could hope
to organize a party hostile to Philip. Their watchword was ‘the liberation of
Greece’, a phrase which had always exercised a magic influence on the easily
deluded Greeks. Nevertheless, the Achaeans could not be brought at once to act
a decided part. Whether from fear of Philip or from distrust of the Romans,
most of the Greek states could not summon resolution enough to side with one or
the other party. When the war actually broke out, Rome had for acknowledged
allies only those who were already at war with the Macedonians, namely, Egypt,
Rhodes, Pergamum, Byzantium, and lastly, Athens.
Immediately after the consuls for the year 200 BC, Publius
Sulpicius Galba and Caius Aurelius Cotta, had entered on their office, the war
against Macedonia was formally determined on. Nevertheless, the greater part of
the year passed away in the negotiations just related and in military
preparations. The chief cause, however, for the delay in the operations was an
alarming rebellion among the Gauls, who, under the command of an able Punic
general named Hamilcar, in the year of the conclusion of peace with Carthage,
attacked and utterly destroyed a Roman army of seven thousand men. Thus it
happened that the autumn of the year 200 BC was almost past before the consul
P. Sulpicius Galba set out with his army for Macedonia. Two legions only were
destined for this campaign, and with a view of taxing Italy with no more new
levies of troops than was absolutely necessary, the senate ordered that
Sulpicius should collect as many volunteers as possible from Scipio’s army just
then returned from Africa. He received, moreover, a reinforcement of one
thousand Numidian horse, and a number of elephants. Having landed in Apollonia,
the Roman consul was prevented from commencing operations by the advanced
season of the year; for between the western coast of the Graeco-Macedonian
peninsula and the kingdom of Philip lay a broad, wild, impracticable mountain
tract, which, extending from north to south, formed an almost impassable
barrier. The navigation, however, was not yet closed. The fleet, therefore, had
time to inflict a quick and unexpected blow.
Attica, as we have seen, was freed by the protest of
the Roman ambassadors from the Acarnanian and Macedonian bands, which under the
command of Nicanor had advanced so far in order to take revenge for the two
murdered Acarnanians. But Philip in his hatred of Athens had disapproved of
Nicanor’s retreat, and had commissioned another general Philocles, who then
commanded the Macedonian troops in Euboea, to attack Attica with renewed
vigour. In their trouble the Athenians had received but little help from
Attalus, and now turned to the Romans. Sulpicius had crossed the Ionian sea,
and by this time had selected Corcyra as the winter station for the Roman
fleet. From this island he sent a number of ships and one thousand men to the
Piraeus under the command of Caius Claudius.
On reaching Athens, Claudius was informed by exiles
from Chalcis in Euboea that this chief fortress of the Macedonians was left
with an insufficient garrison and was badly guarded; that it might, therefore,
be easily surprised and taken. He seized the opportunity without delay, sailed
to Sunium the southern cape of Attica, and from thence in the night to Chalcis,
which he reached before break of day. The walls were scaled, all men capable of
bearing arms cut down, the magazines and arsenals, which were full of
provisions and stores, were set on fire, the statues of the king thrown down
and mutilated, and a quantity of rich spoil carried away to the ships. Unfortunately,
the Roman force, too weak to hold the important town, was compelled, after
inflicting as much damage as they could, to return in all haste to the Piraeus.
The report of this disaster reached Philip at
Demetrias on the northern extremity of the Pagasaean gulf, not far from the
venerable old town of Iolkos, from whence, according to the legend, the Argonauts
had sailed to the land of Colchis in quest of the Golden Fleece. Beside himself
with rage, he determined to take summary vengeance, hoping to be able by great
expedition still to overtake the Romans in Chalcis. In a run rather than a
march, he proceeded to Chalcis with five thousand light armed troops and three
hundred horse. When he found, instead of the Romans, only the smoking ruins of
the destroyed houses and the unburied bodies of the slain, he hurried across
the Euripus, and through Boeotia straight to Athens, in the hope of taking it
by surprise. His plan almost succeeded, for the Athenians were far from
expecting an attack of the Macedonians. But a spy, on the look-out, had
observed the advance of the enemy, had traversed the space from the Euripus to
Athens in one day, and arriving in the middle of the night alarmed the town.
When Philip appeared before the walls a few hours later, he found his plan
frustrated, and the Athenians not only prepared to receive him, but bold enough
actually to sally out and attack him. Philip having driven them into the town
without difficulty, applied himself deliberately and systematically to lay
waste the immediate neighbourhood. In
true barbaric fashion he desecrated, destroyed, or defaced all the temples,
sacred groves, and even the burial places of the dead. After an attempt to
carry by assault the fortified temple of Demeter in Eleusis, he marched off to
Megara, and from thence to Corinth, the Macedonian fortress of the
Peloponnesus.
It so happened, that at that very time the federal
council of the Achaean league was assembled at Argos, for the purpose of
devising ways and means for a war against Nabis, the tyrant of Sparta. Sparta,
of old the enemy of the Achaeans, and the chief obstacle to the extension of
the Achaean league over the whole of the Peloponnesus, had been humbled seven
years before, in the year 207 BC at Mantinea by Philopoemen, the re-organizer
of the Achaean army, and had since then been obliged to submit and keep the
peace. But when Philopoemen in 200 BC, annoyed at not being re-elected to the
place of federal chief magistrate (strategos), left the Peloponnesus to take
part in the domestic quarrels of Crete, Nabis watched his time, and harassed
the Achaeans again.
The Achaeans found themselves now in a very difficult
position. Having already been called upon by the Romans to join the alliance
against Philip, a demand which they had not without some misgivings declined,
on the plea that they wished conscientiously to preserve their neutrality, they
were now importuned by Philip in person, who pressed them, in conformity with
their ancient connexion with Macedonia, to place their military force at his
disposal against the Romans. He promised on his part to protect them against
Sparta, desiring only that the Achaean troops should be used for garrisoning
Corinth, Chalcis, and Oreus. But the Achaeans neither trusted Philip’s words
nor did they place confidence in his power. They were afraid that he would use
their troops as hostages to compel the league to engage in the war against the
overwhelming power of Rome, and that after all he would give them no security
from the attacks of Nabis. Hence, although Philip had some sincere friends and
partisans in the Achaean towns, and though the chief magistrate of the year was
personally devoted to him, the assembly refused to depart from their
neutrality, and declined even to submit Philip’s proposal to a formal vote,
under the pretext that it was irregular to pass a resolution on any but those
subjects for which the assembly had been called together.
Full of resentment, Philip, on his return from the
Peloponnesus, attempted another attack upon Athens, the Piraeus, and Eleusis,
and avenged himself for his failure by a second and more systematic devastation
of the open country. In the course of these ravages he caused the pillars and
sculptured stones of the temples and public buildings, not only to be thrown
down, but to be defaced and broken, in order to render the injury irreparable.
He then left Attica, and retreated with his troops through Boeotia to
Macedonia, where he passed the winter, and where he planned the campaign for
the following year.
The Roman consul, Publius Sulpicius Galba, had landed
in Apollonia in the autumn of the year 200 BC, after the season for advancing
into the mountains on the frontier of Macedonia had long passed; he was
moreover incapacitated for a time from military action by illness. He therefore
sent for his legate, Lucius Apustius, who was with the fleet then wintering
near Corcyra, and commissioned him to make a series of short expeditions into
the country near the Apsus, a large river on the coast, flowing from the
watershed in the middle of the peninsula through the territory of Dassaretia,
and falling into the Adriatic between Apollonia and Dyrrhachium. Here were some
inconsiderable towns and fortresses, protecting the extreme frontier of
Macedonia on the west, of which the most important seems to have been the town
of Antipatrea. Apustius passed through the district, took Antipatrea and other
places, and returned to Apollonia almost unmolested and laden with spoil.
If, in a military point of view, but little had been
accomplished by this march, still the neighbouring tribes were now convinced
that the Romans meant to carry on the war in earnest, and it induced the petty
chiefs of the Dardanians, Illyrians, and Athamanians to make common cause with
the Romans, and to agree with them on a combined attack upon Macedonia in the
following year. The Dardanians, a powerful tribe of mountaineers in the north
of Macedonia, on the other side of the Scardus chain, were bitter enemies to
the Macedonian kingdom, and nothing could be more welcome to their king or
chief, Bato, than to unite with the Romans for an invasion of Macedonia. Not
less ready in his friendship was Pleuratus, the prince of Illyria, who
threatened Macedonia on the west. Amynander, the chief of the Athamanians, one
of the tribes of Epirus, had some time previously been visited by the Roman
ambassadors, but had hesitated to relinquish his neutral position. His scruples
were now overcome; he not only joined the Roman alliance, but undertook at the
same time to secure the co-operation of the Aetolians, who had always been on
friendly terms with him, for the purpose of securing a road from the south
through Thessaly into Macedonia. It was also arranged with Attains and the
Rhodians that the allied fleet should meet at Aegina, to open the attack on
Macedonia from the sea.
It was not, however, quite certain that the Aetolians
would enter into the Roman alliance. Considering their adhesion to be of the
greatest importance, the consul, Sulpicius Galba, resolved formally to solicit
their alliance, though such a step could not fail to be somewhat humiliating to
Roman pride; for it showed that Rome could not dispense with the aid of these
unruly and wayward allies. The consul’s legate, Lucius Furius Purpureo,
accordingly appeared at a congress of the Aetolian league, which was held at
Naupactus in the course of the winter. His request was vigorously supported by
the loud declamations of the Athenians, who, with just and pardonable
bitterness, declared that Philip’s treatment of them was that of a savage
barbarian, while the representatives of the Macedonian king did all they could
to justify their master’s proceedings. The Aetolian congress, before which the
most powerful states of the time thus presented themselves as petitioners for aid,
must have felt not a little flattered; and the arrogance with which this small
mountain tribe behaved is as easy to comprehend as the cool contempt with which
Rome treated it after the overthrow of the Macedonian power. The Romans were
already sufficiently disgusted with the Aetolians. But their anger was greatly
increased, when, even after their urgent entreaties, the Aetolians, like the
Achaeans, declined to give a final decision, but persisted in remaining
neutral, evidently from distrust of the Romans, who had once already left them
without support in a quarrel with Macedonia, which they had undertaken in the
Roman interest.
In the meantime the season for opening the campaign of
the year 199 BC had become favourable. For the purpose of protecting the
Thessalian coast from an attack on the sea side, Philip had already destroyed
the towns of Sciathos and Peparethos on the islands of the same name, and had
thus rendered these places useless as a basis for the operations of the enemy’s
vessels. He then ordered his fleet, under the command of the Tarentine
Heraclides, to take shelter in Demetrias, as it was decidedly too weak to keep
the open sea against the combined squadrons of the Romans, the Rhodians, and
king Attalus. Against a threatened invasion of the Dardanians and Illyrians he
sent his son Perseus to occupy the mountain passes of Pelagonia, on the
north-west boundary of Macedonia, while with the principal part of his troops
he marched westward to the neighbourhood of Lyncestis, where he expected the
approach of the Romans.
About the same time Sulpicius also had started from
Apollonia, and the two hostile armies, after marching about apparently lost in
the wild uncultivated mountain districts, formed by the watershed between the Aegean
and Adriatic seas, at length encountered each other. A few cavalry engagements
took place without any decisive result. Philip seems to have intended to draw
the Roman army into the barren mountain regions, where it was difficult for the
troops to obtain the necessary supplies. In vain Sulpicius tried to bring about
a decisive battle. While he had been marching forwards and backwards, through
the border countries of Dassaretia, Lyncestis, Eordaea, and Elimia without
accomplishing anything, and finally had commenced his retreat to Apollonia,
Philip was able to send a body of troops under Athenagoras against the united
forces of the Dardanians and the Illyrians, who endeavoured to penetrate
through Pelagonia into Macedonia, intending to effect a junction with the Roman
army. They were easily repulsed; and now there remained only a third enemy, but
one who for the moment was more dangerous than the northern barbarians. For
when Sulpicius had begun the campaign in good earnest, the Aetolians had at
last resolved to take the side of Rome, and early in the summer of 199 BC had
invaded Thessaly in conjunction with Amynander, the chief of the Athamanians.
Without meeting with any opposition, they marched through that fertile land,
ravaging everywhere without mercy, till at last Philip, after the retreat of the
Roman army, was at liberty to turn towards Thessaly. He surprised the
undisciplined bands of plunderers, and drove them back to their own country
with great loss.
In this manner the three attacks which the Romans and
their allies had made on Macedonia by land on the north, west, and south,
utterly failed. Not much more satisfactory was the result of the attacks of the
allied fleet, although the Macedonian ships did not venture to issue from their
safe refuge in the port of Demetrias to thwart the operations of the enemy. The
Roman fleet, from its winter station at Corcyra, had sailed round the
Peloponnesus in the beginning of the summer, and had in the Saronic gulf joined
the Pergamenian fleet, which came from Aegina. Later on in the season this
squadron was reinforced by twenty large ships of the Rhodians, and the same
number of smaller undecked vessels from the Illyrian island of Issa. The chief
object of this naval force seemed to be plunder, as may be seen by the
readiness with which the Illyrians of Issa took part in the expedition. They
evidently hoped to carry on their favourite occupation of piracy, under the
plea that for belligerents it was legitimate. First of all, the island of
Andros, close to the southern extremity of Euboea, was taken. The Romans
carried off all the moveable spoil, especially the works of art, and handed
over the island to Attalus as a permanent possession, although by right it
should have been restored to the king of Egypt, from whom it had been taken by
Philip. The southern port of Euboea was plundered next. Sciathus would have
suffered a similar fate, if Philip had not devastated it before the campaign,
and thus deprived his enemies of this pleasure. The fleet sailed afterwards
further northwards, and visited the Chalcidian peninsula. Here it suffered from
storms, and being repulsed from Cassandrea, found a compensation in the capture
of Acanthus. Having returned to Euboea, the expedition finished the year’s
operations by achieving a great success in the capture of the fortress of Oreus
on the north of the island, after a long and obstinate resistance. Here, also,
the Romans and their allies divided the spoil, according to their custom. The
town was given over to Attalus, the Romans took the prisoners with the rest of
the booty.
With this final stroke the naval operations terminated
for the year. Philip had not suffered any material loss. The Rhodians and the
Pergamenians returned home; the Romans sailed to Corcyra, leaving thirty ships
in the Piraeus for the protection of the Athenians. The Athenians alone, who
had carried on the war with brave slashing words and patriotic demonstrations,
could boast of complete success. They destroyed all the monuments erected in
honour of Philip and his ancestors, whether male or female, desecrated the
altars which had been erected to him, and commanded the priests of the state to
add to the prayer for the prosperity of Athens a curse on Philip, on his
children, his empire, his army, his fleet, nay, on the whole Macedonian people
and name. It was further resolved that, if any one in future should make a
proposal for putting some fresh insult or dishonour on Philip, the Athenian
people should be bound to sanction such a proposal; on the other hand, whoever
should be found guilty, either in words or in deed, of honouring or respecting
the memory of Philip, should be declared an outlaw. Finally, all the old
decrees against the tyrannical house of Pisistratus should be applied to
Philip. In order to give these resolutions the proper relief, king Attalus and
the Romans were loaded with extravagant and boundless honours.
The result of the campaign of 199 BC was, that Philip
had repulsed the attacks of his opponents on all sides, and was now the master
of the theatre of war. He employed the remainder of the favourable season of
the year to make an attack on the fortified town of Thaumaci, which was held by
an Aetolian garrison, and commanded the road from Macedonia into Thessaly. But
a body of Aetolians succeeded in passing into the town through the midst of the
besieging army of Macedonians, and thus frustrated all Philip’s attacks, so
that at last, as the winter was approaching, he desisted from the undertaking.
Publius Villius Tappulus, the consul of the year 199 BC,
had waited until the autumn, before he proceeded to Greece to relieve his
predecessor, Publius Sulpicius Galba. He arrived at Apollonia just when
Sulpicius Galba returned from his fruitless campaign in the mountainous border
country of western Macedonia. Military operations were out of the question at
that late season of the year, particularly as discontent, amounting to mutiny,
had broken out in the Roman army. The volunteers, who in the beginning of the
war had been selected from Scipio’s African legions, now declared that they
were sent to Macedonia against their will, and insisted on being discharged.
The men had probably hoped to amass rich and easy spoil in Greece, and were
tired of inarching to and fro in the barren and thinly populated mountains of
Macedonia, where they found no reward for endless toils. Perhaps we may even
infer that the discontent of the soldiers had something to do with the failure
of the consul’s campaign, and contributed to determine him to an early retreat.
How the mutiny of the soldiers was put down, we are not informed. It may have
been that the Roman government yielded, and allowed the malcontents to go home,
for we hear that in the following year, 198 BC, Flamininus brought eight
thousand eight hundred fresh troops with him to Macedonia, who served to
replace those who had been discharged.
In the course of the winter Philip displayed great
activity. Indefatigable in his military preparations, he was at the same time
intent on strengthening his political position. The commander of the fleet,
Heraclides of Tarentum, had by his injudicious conduct and his cruelty made the
king’s government generally detested. To gain popularity Philip now sacrificed
this man to the vengeance of his subjects by dismissing him and throwing him
into prison. Above all things, it was his great desire to gain allies. The king
of Syria had been detached from his alliance. In truth, Antiochus could offer
him no help. Though he made common cause with Philip for the purpose of
attacking Egypt, he had so far been influenced by Roman diplomacy as to
preserve friendly relations with Rome. Probably, as we have surmised, the
Romans had promised him to acquiesce in his obtaining permanently the province
of Coelesyria, which he had conquered from Egypt. He was therefore prevented
from supporting Philip in his war with Rome, even if he had been willing to do
so, which is very doubtful. He could not hope to gain anything by such a
policy. But as he had succeeded, with the consent of Rome, in despoiling their
client Ptolemaeus, he thought he might possibly meet with equal success on the
northern frontier of his kingdom. He calculated that the Romans were too busy
in Macedonia to trouble themselves much about the affairs of Asia. But here he
found himself mistaken. Upon the complaint of Attalus, the Romans gave
Antiochus to understand that he had better desist from hostilities against
their friend. Thus Attalus was free to continue in conjunction with Rome his
operations against Macedonia.
Philip had now only one faint hope left, that, namely,
of persuading the Achaeans to take part with him in the war with Rome. He
delivered over to them several towns in Peloponnesus, which he had seized at a
former time, and had kept in his possession. But he failed to conciliate the
Achaeans by this tardy restitution. When the election of a new chief magistrate
of the league came on, Cycliades, who favoured the Macedonian party, succumbed
to Aristaenus, the Roman candidate.
Significant as this decision was, it was by no means
final, and the Achaeans persevered for the present in their neutrality, which
did them but little honour, and prejudiced their vital interests.
After the expiration of the winter (199-198 BC), when
the mountain passes became practicable, Philip, without waiting for the attack
of the Romans, went to meet them in the direction of Corcyra, more to the
southward than in the previous year. He crossed the watershed, and took up a
position in the narrow valley of the Aous, near Antigonea, which he strongly
fortified by intrenchments. Thus the consul Publius Villius, who, on the
arrival of spring, had set himself likewise in motion, and was advancing up the
same valley, was forced to remain stationary for some time in front of the
Macedonian position, unable to commence an attack. During this inaction the
summer approached, and the newly elected consul for the year 198 BC, Titus
Quinctius Flamininus, who had started for the scene of action earlier in the
year than his predecessor, landed in Corcyra with reinforcements of fight
thousand foot and eight hundred horse, crossed from thence to the continent,
and assumed the command of the Roman army and the allied contingents.
The family of the Quinctii belonged to the noblest and
most prominent of the Roman people. Though they did not boast, like the Julii,
that they were descended directly from the Trojans, yet they pretended to trace
their family traditions back to the time
of the earlier kings, and derived their descent from one of those families,
which, after the destruction of Alba Longa under Tullus Hostilius, the third
king, were transplanted to Rome, and received among the patrician houses. One
branch, of the gens was the family of the Cincinnati, highly respected in the
time of the older republic. The family of the Flaminini was a younger branch of
the Quinctian gens. At any rate, they first appear in the ranks of the
high official nobility after the war with Hannibal. Immediately after this
period, however, they seem to have been distinguished by great wealth; for in
the year 200 BC the dramatic games of the Aediles, of whom Lucius Quinctius
Flamininus was one, were represented with unusual splendour. This liberality
may have had some influence on the Comitia Centuriata, by which Titus Quinctius
Flamininus, the brother of the aedile, was chosen as consul for the year 198 BC,
though he was scarcely thirty years old, and had never filled the office either
of aedile or of praetor. It is true he had served in the war with Hannibal as
legionary tribune, but he had had no opportunity of distinguishing himself in
an independent command, and he belonged, therefore, to that large number of
Roman generals who owed their election to party influence among the citizens,
and not to any proved personal merit. Nothing justified the expectation of great
military success from the young man, nor did he at the head of the legions show
himself superior to the common run of Roman citizen-generals. It appears,
however, that he was a skilful diplomatist, and particularly qualified to sift
and settle the affairs of Greece; for he understood the Greek character, and
was not inaccessible, like so many other Romans, to Greek views and opinions.
But it is a great error to attribute to him, as is often done, a predilection
or partiality for the Greeks; a, partiality which overruled the calculations of
interested statesmanship, and made political considerations to depend on
sentiment. It is a great error to suppose that he was induced by mere
generosity and good will for the Greeks to make concessions which were not entirely
in harmony with the interests of Rome. He proved himself throughout to be a
cool, clear-headed statesman, keeping always in view the solid advantage of his
own country. If he acted the part of friend and liberator of the Greeks, he
adhered closely to his instructions; for the Roman senate desired by means of
the Greeks to keep the king of Macedonia in check, and thus to use the Greeks
for the interests of Rome; while the freedom of Greece itself was as much a
matter of utter indifference to all true Romans as in recent times the
so-called Germanic liberties were to the statesmen of France. Flamininus was
just the man to undertake the part of protector of the Greeks, and if he was to
a certain extent a Philhellene, that sentiment did not interfere with his main
duty. In one point only he showed himself weak. He was most sensitive to praise
and blame, and easily wounded by the sharp tongue of the Greeks. Many actions
which he may have wished to see attributed to his high admiration of the Greeks
may really have been prompted by considerations such as these. He was, however,
never misled into forgetting that he was a Roman, and responsible for all his
acts to an inexorable judge, the Roman senate.
His first operations against Philip promised no better
result than those of his predecessors. During the whole of forty days he lay
before the strongly fortified position of the king in the narrow valley of the
Aous, making plans for the attack. During this period of inactivity an attempt
was made, through the Epirots, who had always been well inclined to Philip, to
settle the quarrel amicably. But as Flamininus insisted on the original demands
of Rome, and required that Philip should set free all the Greek towns which he
held in his possession, and that he should give, moreover, full compensation to
those whom he had injured, Philip indignantly broke off the negotiations.
Flamininus was now in doubt, whether he should force the
pass of the Aous or, retreating to the coast, should try to penetrate into
Macedonia by the road which Sulpicius had followed through the more northerly
passes. The failure of Sulpicius was no recommendation of this plan; and, on
the other hand, an attack on the Macedonians in their very strong position
would have been too great a risk, and would even, in case of success, have
considerably weakened his army. It happened, therefore, very opportunely for
the Roman general that with the help of an Epirote chief named Charops a
shepherd acquainted with the country was found who promised to show the Romans
a path over the mountains by which they could get into the rear of the enemy’s
position. This plan was carried out. After a difficult march of three days, a
few thousand men arrived in the rear of the Macedonian camp, and announced the
success of their march by fire signals, upon which the king, attacked on two
sides at the same time, was forced to abandon his position with a loss of two
thousand men, and to retire into Thessaly. In order to retard the expected
pursuit of the Romans, Philip devastated the whole country which he traversed
on his march to Macedonia. He burnt down towns and villages, and carried the inhabitants
away with him. The province so barbarously treated was not, as one might think,
a hostile country; it was part of the Macedonian kingdom, and the Thessalians
were no rebels, but faithful subjects. No wonder if the inhabitants of Pherae
closed the gates of their town, thinking that if they must perish, it was
preferable to be ruined by the enemies of their country rather than by their
own sovereign.
On the news of Philip’s retreat the Aetolians again
invaded unhappy Thessaly, and their worthy ally, Amynander of Athamania, vied
with them in their work of devastation. The open towns were plundered and
reduced to ashes, the inhabitants cut down or made prisoners, and the land
transformed into a desert.
This dreadful devastation of Thessaly stopped the advance
of the allied armies. Flamininus, instead of marching after the king of
Macedonia, turned back towards Epirus, and secured for himself by mild
treatment the neutrality and even support of a portion of the Epirote
population, who till now had remained true to Philip. He then ordered the fleet
at Corcyra to bring provisions for his troops to the eastern end of the Ambracian
gulf; and having from thence supplied his army, he advanced to attack the
fortified town of Atrax, on the Peneus, westwards from Larissa, in the heart of
the Thessalian plain. The town was defended by the Macedonian garrison with
persevering bravery; and, after an assault had been repelled, Flamininus found
himself obliged to retreat from a land which had been totally devastated by four
armies, and was utterly destitute of means for the maintenance of the troops.
Thus Philip’s desperate method of resisting the advance
of his enemies had answered his purpose, and this campaign also ended in the
evacuation of Thessaly by the combined allied forces. Flamininus returned
southwards before the fine season of the year was quite gone, and took up his
winter quarters in the Phocean town of Anticyra, on the Corinthian gulf. He had
previously taken some small places in the neighbourhood necessary to cover his
position, but had been repulsed from the fortified town of Elatea. In Anticyra
he was able to procure during the winter provisions for his army by sea, and at
the same time he was in close vicinity to the Peloponnesus, so that he had an
opportunity during the cessation of hostilities of treating with the Achaean
league, and of inducing them at last to take part in the war.
The operations of Flamininus by land were to some
extent supported by those of the allied fleet. This was commanded by Lucius
Quinctius Flamininus, the consul’s brother, a man who several years later (184 BC)
was ignominiously expelled from the senate by Marcus Porcius Cato for wantonly
murdering a prisoner of war. When the Roman ships had joined, near the island
of Andros, the ships of the Rhodians and of Attains, the combined naval force
took two Euboean towns, Eretria and Carystus, pillaged them in the usual
manner, and left them. After this feat the allied vessels sailed to Cenchreae,
the eastern harbour of Corinth, in order to be in readiness to support the
consul’s policy in the Peloponnesus. The allies were making preparations to
besiege the town of Corinth, the chief fortress of the Macedonians in all
Greece; but before they commenced their operations, the consul, Titus Flamininus,
commissioned his brother Lucius, the commander of the fleet, to offer to the
Achaeans this important and long desired town as the price for their
participation in the league against Philip. To decide this important question,
Aristrenu, the chief magistrate of the Achaean league, and a partisan of Rome,
called together a federal congress at Sicyon. Here the representative of the
several Achaean towns, and the ambassadors of the Romans, of the Rhodians, of
Attalus, and of the Athenians met together. An embassy of Philip was also
admitted, and demanded nothing more than the continued neutrality of the
Achaeans.
The Achaeans were in a state of deplorable difference
of opinion, fear, and indecision; and the earnest appeals of the various
negotiators contributed still more to confuse them. The Macedonians could plead
the ancient alliance and the essential services rendered by their king to the
league in the war with Sparta. Then there was Philip’s promise to continue to
defend the league against this ever dangerous hereditary enemy. Lastly, he had
quite recently given them possession of several places in the Peloponnesus as a
proof of his goodwill. But all these reasons in his favour were counterbalanced
by his notorious dishonesty, and by his tyrannical and cruel temper, by which
he had long made himself detested. On the other side, the Romans could allege
neither old friendly relations with the Achaean league, nor especial services
rendered. Nay, their amicable relations with Nabis, the detestable tyrant of
Sparta, were calculated to call forth serious apprehensions. Nor had the
success of the Roman arms up to this time been such that it could weigh heavily
in their favour. On the contrary, the eagerness with which they sought the
alliance of the Achaeans showed clearly that they did not feel themselves
strong enough to carry on the war alone.
Thus the opinions wavered from side to side, and none
of the assembled Achaeans ventured to make a clear and distinct proposal. This
indecision, so unworthy of a proud and independent nation, was at length put an
end to by Aristamus, the strategos of the league. He gave his vote in favour of
the Romans, declaring that the neutrality of the Achaean league was no longer
to be maintained, and that an alliance with Rome was their only true policy,
partly on account of the geographical situation of the Achaean towns, partly on
account of the superior power of the Romans. He went so far as to urge that it
was also in the interest of Greece, which, under the protection of such
powerful allies, might at length regain her freedom, and her independence from
Macedonia. Notwithstanding these weighty reasons, the ten representatives of
the Achaean towns were split up into two equal parts; and it was not till one
of the members of the congress was threatened with death by his own father, and
consequently changed his opinion, that a majority in favour of the Romans was
formed on the following day. But even now the men of Argos, Megalopolis, and
Dyme could not make up their minds to renounce the Macedonian alliance, and
they resentfully left the assembly. The remainder agreed upon a formal
resolution to take the Roman side, and a part of the Achaean army was at once
despatched to join the allied forces destined for the siege of Corinth. To calm
the apprehensions of the Achaeans with respect to the designs of Nabis,
Flamininus brought about the conclusion of an armistice between the two.
Thus the anti-Macedonian alliance had grown very
considerably in strength and numbers. It now embraced all Greek towns with but
few exceptions, and gave the war more and more the character of a national
contest against the king of that country, which, under a former Philip, had
destroyed the independence of Greece. There were now on the side of Macedonia only
the Acarnanians, who did not count for much; Boeotia which, except in the days
of Epaminondas, had always systematically opposed the rest of Greece; and a few
isolated towns, such as the three members of the Achaean league, which could
not be induced to make common cause with the rest.
Notwithstanding all this, the cause of Philip was by
no means lost. The Romans, indeed, succeeded in taking Elatea in Phocis by
storm ; but the attacks of the allies on Corinth were all beaten off by the
citizens and the brave Macedonian garrison, which had been reinforced in good
time by a detachment of one thousand five hundred men, under the command of
Philocles, sent from Chalcis, the Macedonian stronghold in Euboea. After the
allied fleets had separated and returned to their winter stations in the Piraeus
and Corcyra, the enterprising Philocles, not satisfied with the successful
defence of Corinth, made an attempt to gain the important city of Argos for
Philip. He appeared suddenly before this town, into which the Achaeans,
immediately after embracing the Roman alliance, had thrown a garrison of five
hundred chosen warriors. The sympathy of the citizens was entirely on the
Macedonian side, and they had not by any means accommodated themselves to the
resolution of the Achaean league. When, therefore, Philocles advanced to the
town, and the five hundred Achaeans of the garrison made preparations to repel
him, they were attacked in the rear by the armed citizens. The valiant Achaean
captain, Aenesidemus, saw the fruitlessness of resistance, and instead of
uselessly sacrificing the troops which had been entrusted to him, he
surrendered the town on condition that he might send away his men unmolested.
But, resolved to save his military honour, he himself remained with a few faithful
men at his post, threw away his shield, and allowed himself to be pierced to
death by Thracian archers.
The two principal towns of the Peloponnesus, Corinth
and Argos, were, therefore, at the end of the year 198 BC, in the hands of
Philip, and he hoped by this means to keep the Achaeans in check, the more so,
as he finally reckoned on securing the alliance of their irreconcilable enemy,
the tyrant Nabis of Sparta, although Nabis had concluded an armistice with the
Achaeans under Roman mediation.
Although winter had now put an end to the operations
in the field, hostilities did not altogether cease. The Romans occupied Phocis
and Locris, and the town of Opus opened her gates voluntarily to them, after
the Macedonian garrison had retired into the fortress. Flamininus had not had
time in his year of office to bring the war to a close, and he much feared that
he would be called upon to resign the command to his successor in the
consulship. He did all he could, and exercised all his influence in Rome, to be
allowed to remain in Greece with the power of proconsul; but as he could not
calculate with certainty upon a prolongation of his command, he was not
disinclined to meet the wishes of Philip, who now for the second time offered
to enter into negotiations for the settlement of disputes. An interview was,
therefore, agreed upon on the coast of the Malian gulf, not far from the town
of Nicaea. Flamininus appeared accompanied by prince Amynander of Athamania, by
Dionysodorus the Pergamenian ambassador, by Agesimbrotus the commander of the
Rhodian fleet, by Phaeneas the strategos of the league of the Aetolians, and by
the two Achaeans Aristaenus and Xenophon. The king of Macedonia, standing on
the prow of a ship, approached the shore, where the Roman consul and the allied
chiefs were waiting for him. Flamininus and his suit advanced to the margin of
the water to meet the king. The ship cast anchor but the king remained standing on the deck,
hesitating to go on land at the invitation of the consul. Being asked of whom
he was afraid, he said he feared none but the gods, but he could not place
confidence in all those who accompanied the consul, and least of all in the Aetolians.
With such distrust on both sides the negotiations were commenced, and as was io
be expected they led to no satisfactory result.
Philip, more and more conscious of the difficulty of
his situation, was resolved to make great concessions. He declared himself
prepared to restore the districts on the Illyrian coast which he had taken from
the Romans, to give up the deserters and prisoners, to send back to Attalus the
ships taken in the battle near Chios with the captured sailors, to resign the
possessions of the Rhodians called Peraia on the continent of Asia Minor, to
give to the Aetolians Pharsalus and Larissa, and to the Achaeans Argos, and
even Corinth, the most important town of all. But these concessions satisfied
neither the Romans nor their allies. The Romans insisted on the evacuation of
all Greek towns, and the restoration of the Egyptian possessions which Philip
had conquered after the death of Ptolemaeus Philopator. Attalus wanted
compensation for the ravages committed in his kingdom; the Rhodians demanded
that all the towns conquered by Philip in Asia and on the Hellespont should be
declared free. But the highest demands were made by the Aetolians, who wished
to make use of this opportunity thoroughly to weaken Macedonia, and to recover
all the places which at one time or another had been members of the Aetolian
confederation. The animosity and personal rancour between Philip and the
representatives of the Aetolians were so great that they threatened to break
off the negotiations. Flamininus felt obliged on the second day of the
conference to agree to Philip’s wish and to negotiate with him alone, without
admitting the allies, although their exclusion could not fail to offend them. Finally,
contrary to the advice of the Greeks, he granted an armistice of two months to
the king of Macedonia, the price of which was the evacuation of all the places
in Locris and Phocis which were still occupied by Macedonian troops. Thus time
was gained to send an embassy to Rome, and to ascertain the final decision of
the senate respecting the conditions of peace. It was not difficult to foresee
that in the present state of things a peaceful settlement of the dispute was
impossible. The demands of the Romans went a great way beyond the concessions
which Philip was prepared to make, and yet up to this time no single military
event had taken place during the war of decided importance. Philip’s power was
as yet untouched. Neither his army nor his fleet had suffered a defeat. The
devastations which the Romans, and still more their allies, had committed in
Thessaly had no other result than that of hindering the military operations
against Macedonia, for they made it difficult to feed an army in that country,
which was the only direct road for an army bent on invading Macedonia. If the
Romans and their allies had conquered a number of fortified places, they, were on
the other hand, baffled in their attacks on others, or they had been compelled
to give up again places which they had taken. The alliance between Achaia and
the Romans was almost outweighed by the acquisition of Argos by Philip, who
moreover retained in his hands the chief fortresses of Greece. It was
therefore, as we have already remarked, not to be expected that he should
comply with the demands of the Romans before he should have suffered a decided
defeat. When his ambassadors were roundly asked in Rome whether they were
authorised to promise the evacuation of Corinth, Chalcis, and Demetrias, they
had to reply by a negative, and were requested to leave Rome immediately.
The war accordingly continued. The chief command was
prorogued to Flamininus, as proconsul for the year 197 BC, through the
intercession of his friends in Rome, and a reinforcement of six thousand
infantry, three hundred horse, and three thousand sailors was sent out to him.
Flamininus, more intent, as Livy remarks, on victory than on peace, declined
all further negotiations with Philip, which should not have for their basis the
acceptance of all the demands of the senate, and prepared himself to strike a
decisive blow.
From that moment when the Achaeans had joined the
Roman alliance, the prospect was opened to Philip of securing the co-operation
of Nabis in their place. It seemed natural that, of the two hostile neighbours in
the Peloponnesus, the one should make common cause with that party with which
the other was at war. Up to this time Macedonia had been always allied with Achaia
against Sparta. Now, after this alliance had been broken, Philip hoped to be
able to draw Nabis over to his side, and he determined to do this in a manner
which was calculated to brand him throughout all Greece as an infamous traitor
to his best friends, and to deprive him of the small remnant of confidence and
attachment still felt for him.
The citizens of Argos had given proofs of their
loyalty to Macedonia by seceding from the Achaean league, and by surrendering
their town to the Macedonian general Philocles. As a reward for this service,
Philip now gave over the town of Argos to the detestable Nabis, who had most
deservedly drawn upon himself the loathing of all the Greeks. Some of the most
respectable citizens, knowing well what fate awaited them, made a timely escape
out of the betrayed town, and thus sacrificed only the property which they had
to leave behind. The others found themselves exposed not only to plunder, but
also to ill-treatment, and even the women were robbed by Apega, the worthy
spouse of Nabis, of their costly garments and their jewels. A general
cancelling of debts, and an assignation of land to the poor, secured for the
tyrant a numerous party of warm adherents and admirers, and thus he obtained
secure possession of Argos, just as similar measures had established his
dominion over Sparta.
When we read of these revolting proceedings we feel a
kind of satisfaction in learning that one villain cheated the other. Nabis
accepted the town of Argos from Philip. But instead of joining his party, he
entered into negotiations with the Romans, by whose mediation an armistice was
concluded between him and the Achaeans for the duration of the war. He even
sent them an auxiliary force of six hundred Cretan mercenaries for the war
against Philip; and thus the tyrant loaded with the curses of half Greece, the
man who had made a robber’s den of the proud commonwealth of Sparta, could
boast of taking part under the chief leadership of Rome in the great war of liberation
of the Greek people.
The whole of the Peloponnesus had now joined the
league against Philip. In central Greece the Boeotians alone still held aloof.
These, too, Flamininus managed now to gain for his side. Their good will was of
the greatest importance to him, as they might have interrupted his line of
operations, which extended from the south of Greece through Thessaly.
Determined to secure it, he entered Boeotia in the spring of 197 BC, gained
possession of Thebes by a stratagem, and by displaying the overwhelming force
at his command, frightened the Boeotians,
though most reluctant to abandon the Macedonian side, to declare for the Roman
alliance. There was nothing now to threaten the rear of the advancing army,
except the two Macedonian fortresses of Chalcis and Corinth, the latter of
which alone contained a garrison of no less than six thousand men. However, as
all the Greek states had now declared themselves in favour of Rome, and were
united in a common war against Macedonia, these two strongholds could easily be
kept in check, and they could benefit Philip only so far as they detained
before them a portion of the auxiliary forces which otherwise would have joined
the invading army in its advance northwards. Flamininus, therefore, as soon as
he had secured the co-operation of Boeotia, advanced at once towards Thessaly,
determined, if possible, to bring the war to a close in this the fourth
campaign. He commanded, in addition to his two legions, a heterogeneous mass of
Greek and African soldiers, an army such as no Roman general had ever before
led into the field. Besides the Roman legions, he had Numidian and Aetolian
horsemen, African elephants, Cretan archers, Epirots, Illyrians, and Greek
Hoplites and Peltasts. The whole force seems to have amounted to no more than twenty-four
thousand men, if we can rely on the accuracy of Livy’s statements. But the
numbers appear very small, and, as usual with Roman annalists, the contingents
of the allies seem to have been unduly understated.
Philip in the preceding autumn could hardly have
entertained any hope of successful negotiations for peace. He, therefore, made
use of the winter to replenish his army and to train his new soldiers.
Macedonia was so exhausted that Philip had to press boys and old men into his
service to raise in all about twenty-three thousand five hundred men. Sixteen
thousand of these were Phalangites or heavy-armed men. The rest were
lightarmed, and among them were Thracians, Illyrians, mercenaries from
different countries, Thessalian horse, and some Greek auxiliaries, notably the
Boeotians, who had remained faithful to him, when the rest of their countrymen
had joined the Romans. The strength of this army consisted in the dreaded
Phalanx, which was still regarded as invincible, but the charm of which was soon
to be broken. Notwithstanding the efficient Thessalian cavalry in Philip’s
army, the allies were superior to Philip in this respect, thanks to the
excellent Aetolian horse.
It was the summer of the year 198 BC, and the yellow
corn was waving in the fields of Thessaly, when Philip, marching southwards
from Larissa, on the Peneus, looked out for the Roman army, which was moving
northwards, near the coast of the Pagasaean Gulf. The intention of Flamininus
may have been to attack the fortress of Demetrias, and perhaps Philip came to
protect it. But our informants are silent on the cause which brought the two
armies into this corner of Thessaly. The light-armed advanced guards of both
encountered each other in the neighbourhood of Pherae. As, on account of numerous
fences and garden walls, this locality was very unfavourable for the evolutions
of large bodies of troops, Philip retired in the direction of Scotussa. A low
chain of hills called Cynoscephalae (the hound’s heads) stretched in the
direction from Pherae towards Scotussa. Separated by these hills from one
another, the Macedonians and the Romans marched for two whole days side by side
in the same direction, without seeing one another or having the remotest idea
that a collision was all but unavoidable. If there had been a Hannibal opposed
to the Romans, it would have been difficult for them to escape the fate of the
unhappy Flaminius at the Thrasymenian lake. But Philip knew neither how to make
use of the ground nor to avail himself of the negligence of the Roman general,
who, although he had a numerous and excellent cavalry, familiar with the
country, had entirely lost sight of the enemy, and was groping about like a
blind man. On the third day, while mist and heavy showers of rain almost
enveloped the country in darkness, Philip halted, pitched a camp, and sent out
a detachment to take possession of the ridge of the hills. By chance a troop of
Roman horse and light-armed foot met the Macedonians, who were coming from the
other side. Thus a skirmish took place, without object or plan, in which
alternately one and the other side had the advantage, according as each received
reinforcements. Philip did not wish to bring on a battle, especially as one
half of his phalanx had been sent out to forage. But when the fight of the
advanced guard seemed to grow more and more favourable for the Macedonians, and
the Romans were repulsed, in spite of the devoted bravery of the Aetolian
horse, Flamininus found himself obliged, for the protection of his fleeing
troops, to draw up his whole army in order of battle. Philip now complied with
the solicitations of his chief officers, and gave orders for a general advance.
He marched himself at the head of the right wing of the phalanx towards the
hills, and having reached the top saw his advanced troops engaged with the
whole left wing of the Romans. The light-armed Macedonians, unable to withstand
the onslaught of the legions, sought protection behind and near the approaching
phalanx, which now commenced the attack, and by the weight of its closed ranks,
increased by the sloping ground, drove back the Romans, and compelled them to
retire fighting towards their camp.
The chances of the battle seemed to turn in favour of
the Macedonians. But as yet only one wing had been engaged as well on the Roman
as on the Macedonian side. The right wing of the Romans was yet unbroken, and
now moved, with the elephants at its head, towards the heights where the
remainder of the Macedonian phalanx, which had only just returned from their
foraging expedition, were in the act of forming into line, an operation which
the broken and irregular ground rendered peculiarly difficult. Nicanor, who
commanded here, did not wait until the phalanx had completed its order of
battle. He rushed, without order, with the foremost ranks against the advancing
Romans; but the feeble line was in a moment broken and routed by the elephants.
Disorder soon spread over the whole wing, and the phalanx turned to flight
without even waiting for the arrival of the Roman infantry.
At this momentous juncture a legionary tribune, whose
name is unfortunately not recorded, seized the favourable opportunity to shape
the battle which had been begun without plan into a brilliant victory for Rome.
He desisted from pursuing the routed wing of the Macedonians, and wheeling
round to the left with a small detachment against the victorious wing of the
enemy’s right, which was advancing upon the Roman camp, fell upon their rear.
The phalanx, firm as a wall against an attack in front, was too unwieldy to
turn quickly and meet an attack coming from behind. It was at once broken. The
Macedonians threw away their long spears, which were only impediments in a
hand-to-hand combat. At the same moment the Romans on the left wing, which was
in full retreat towards the camp, had no sooner perceived what was going on in
the rear of the phalanx, than they turned round and resumed the attack. The
Macedonians, thus assaulted in front and rear, were utterly routed and turned
to flight.
The battle was soon decided. Five thousand Macedonians
were made prisoners, eight thousand were killed, partly in consequence of a
mistake, because the Roman soldiers, not knowing that the Macedonians placed
their lances upright as a token of surrender, cut down many who asked for quarter.
The Romans lost altogether only seven hundred men. That was the price paid for
a victory which laid the monarchy of Alexander the Great in the dust.
The detailed account of Polybius, which we have followed
in our narrative, leaves no room for a doubt as to the character of the battle.
It was won, not by the superior generalship of Flamininus, but by the superiority
of the Roman manipular tactics over the cumbrous and unwieldy Macedonian
phalanx. In a narrow breach, or wherever the flanks and rear were covered, the
phalanx, it is true, formed an impenetrable living wall; but where it could be
attacked in flank or rear it was helpless. It was scarcely possible to move
round quickly or to change the front of a solid body of men of sixteen ranks,
drawn up behind one another and armed with spears twenty feet long,1 which
projecting from the second, third, fourth and fifth rank to a distance of
eight, six, four and two cubits beyond the front, bound them all together into
a compact mass. Every inequality in the ground, every ditch, bush, or stone
that hindered the closing of ranks, every quick and sudden movement, necessarily
broke up this solid mass, in which the single soldier counted for nothing
unless he remained closely united to the whole. One gap in the forest of lances
was sufficient to split up the whole phalanx, and once broken it could not
easily form again.
Thus it happened that in the first serious encounter
after the commencement of the war the rapidly moving maniples of the Roman
legions, without any direction from an able leader, found out almost by
instinct the weak part of the phalanx and broke into it, as water finds its way
into the chinks of an old ship. This result was perhaps materially facilitated
by the circumstance that a portion of Philip’s soldiers consisted of newly
levied and almost useless recruits. At least it is probable that the discreditable
conduct of the left wing may be attributed to the inferior quality of the
troops composing it.
What share the Greek auxiliaries had in the victory at
Cynoscephalae is not reported by our authorities. We hear only that in the
beginning of the combat the Aetolian horse conducted themselves well and
delayed the Macedonian advance. But after the victory an outcry was raised
among the legions against the Aetolians for having immediately broken into the
enemy’s camp to plunder it, while the Romans were still occupied with the
pursuit. The jealousy and envy among the allies therefore broke out immediately
after the first great success which they had gained by their united efforts, and this
feeling could not fail to lead more and more to mutual estrangement.
At about the same time when Philip’s principal army
succumbed in Thessaly to the Roman legions and to the allied Greeks, he
experienced in three different places unexpected and heavy blows which, in
connexion with his own defeat, impressed upon him the absolute necessity of a
speedy reconciliation with Rome.
After the successive defection of the Epirots, the
Achaeans and Boeotians, and after the loss of Phocis, Locris and Thessaly, the
only allies which Philip had yet in Greece were the Acarnanians. Their chief
town, Leucas, on the island of the same name, was at that time besieged by a
Roman fleet under the proconsul’s brother, Lucius Quinctius Flamininus, and
after an heroic resistance was taken. When after this loss the news arrived of
the battle of Cynoscephalae the brave and faithful Acarnanians resigned
themselves to their fate, and submitted to the Romans.
The second mishap was announced from Peraea, an
ancient possession of the Rhodians, on that part of Caria which was opposite
the island of Rhodes. It had lately been conquered by Philip on his expedition
into Asia Minor in 201 BC, of which we have spoken above. The Rhodians had
formed an army of Greek, Gallic, Asiatic, and African mercenaries, and defeated
so completely the Macedonian general Dinocrates, who commanded a no less
heterogeneous army, that he had to give up all the fortified towns in the land,
except Stratonicea.
The third and heaviest reverse of the Macedonian arms
was reported from the Peloponnesus. Though the strong Macedonian garrison of
Corinth, of six thousand men, had not been able to stop the advance of the
Romans towards Thessaly, nor to threaten them in the rear, they had occupied
the forces of the Achaeans, and the Macedonian commander, Androsthenes,
considered himself strong enough to lay the surrounding lands under
contribution, while Nicostratus, the strategos of the Achaean league, for a
long time did not venture to leave the shelter of the walls of Sicyon. But at
last Nicostratus made a well-planned attack on the plundering bands, routed
them completely, and drove them back to Corinth, with the loss of eighteen
hundred men.
Even before Philip could have heard of these
disasters, he had lost the courage to continue the contest any longer. Straight
from the field of battle, he hurried into his own country, where he collected
the flying remnants of his army. He sent heralds to ask for the permission to
bury the dead, and at the same time to ascertain whether Flamininus was
inclined or not to receive ambassadors. The Roman general showed so much
readiness to enter into negotiations, and such a generous disposition towards
the king of Macedonia, that his allies, the Aetolians, were baffled in their
eagerness for revenge, and at once accused him of neglecting their wishes and
interests, inasmuch as he was about to negotiate with the enemy without
consulting those “who had contributed most towards the victory.”
Such presumption had only the effect of confirming the
Roman statesman in his determination to grant the king of Macedonia at once
favourable terms of peace. He was, moreover, anxious to bring the Macedonian
war to a close before the king of Syria should be tempted to make common cause
with his old ally. It was enough for the present, if Macedonia was humbled and
weakened. By a show of moderation it might be expected that king Philip would
be reconciled to the position of a Roman ally. It was desirable to establish a
kind of political equilibrium in the East, so that no single state might grow
powerful enough to pursue an independent policy, to withdraw itself from Roman
influence, and possibly become dangerous in the end. Flamininus had, moreover,
a personal interest in his conciliatory policy, as was so often the case with
Roman statesmen. He wished to put an end to the war before the arrival of a
successor in the command could deprive him of the glory of triumphing in Rome
as the conqueror of Macedonia. He explained, therefore, to his allies that Rome
had determined to let Macedonia remain intact within her old boundaries. She would
thus, he said, serve to protect Greece from the Northern barbarians without
being able further to threaten the liberty of the Greek states. He then
arranged a conference with Philip at the opening of the pass of Tempe, which
leads from Thessaly to Macedonia along the foot of Mount Olympus. Here Philip
declared himself ready to comply with all the demands formerly made by Rome,
and to let the Roman senate draw out the final and detailed conditions of
peace. When the Aetolians saw that in these negotiations between Macedonia and
Rome they were being disregarded, Phaeneas, the strategos of their league,
tried to establish the claim of the Aetolians to those towns in Thessaly which
Philip had taken from them. He thought himself at liberty to base his claim on
the treaty which was concluded in the year 211 BC between the Aatolians and the
Romans, and according to which the spoil gained in the war was to be divided,
so that Rome should have all that was movable, and Aetolia all the conquered
countries and towns. But he was severely rebuked by Flamininus, and reminded
that that treaty could no longer be considered as binding, since the Aetolians
had violated it by their separate peace with Philip. This act the Romans could
never forget or forgive, and it made it impossible for them to entertain
perfect confidence and hearty goodwill towards the Aetolians in the second
alliance against Macedonia, an alliance which nothing but the necessities of
the war had compelled them to seek.
In order to give time to the Roman senate to settle
the questions of peace and war, a truce of four months was concluded. As a
security for its rigid observance, Philip gave up his son Demetrius and several
men of high rank as hostages, besides the sum of two hundred talents, on
condition that the money and the hostages should be returned if the peace were
not concluded. During this time of truce Philip was at liberty to drive back
the Dardanians, who in the meantime had invaded Macedonia. Why the Romans
abandoned those barbarians, who till now had been their allies, we cannot tell.
Perhaps the Dardanians had neglected to make the diversion in favour of the
Romans at the right time, according to the agreement. At all events, the
proceeding of both allies shows that they did not consider themselves much
bound by their mutual obligations. The Dardanians, being left to themselves,
could not resist the Macedonian army, and were driven back to their own country
with great loss.
As hostilities were now at an end, the troops out of
the different Greek towns, which fill now had served in the Macedonian army,
returned to their homes at the suggestion of Flamininus. This measure was
indispensable, because the connexion was dissolved which up to this time had
united so many Greek towns to Macedonia. The Macedonian army—the strength of
which was to be reduced to a lower standard—could for the future no longer
contain any Greek contingents; and, on the other hand, the Greeks, if they
wished to preserve their independence, were obliged to keep their fighting men
at home.
The return, however, of so many men from the
Macedonian service could not fail to give a new impulse to party hatred, and to
impart new strength to the adherents of Macedonia, who had temporarily given
way to the superiority of Rome. In Boeotia they felt themselves so encouraged,
that they chose for the coming year as head of the Boeotian league one
Brachyllas, the late commander of the contingents just returned from Macedonia,
the most zealous friend of Philip, and, of course, leader of the opposition to
Rome.
That the beaten party could summon up courage to take
such a bold step before the eyes and under the pressure of the Roman army was a
warning to their opponents, and caused them to fear the worst after the Romans
should have left the country. In order to secure the power for themselves
betimes, they determined to get rid of the head of the Macedonian party.
Flamininus knew of the plan, and neither disapproved nor prevented its
execution. He confined himself to allowing the Boeotians to do as they pleased,
and this alone was encouragement enough for the hot-headed faction. Two of the
Roman sympathisers, Zeuxippus and Pisistratus, hired assassins to kill
Brachyllas in the street by night, as he was returning, full of wine, with some
boon companions from a public banquet. This criminal as well as foolish deed,
for which the authors immediately suffered death, produced in the whole of
Boeotia such a violent rage against the Romans, that no isolated Roman soldier
was safe anywhere, and some hundreds of them were surprised and murdered. Flamininus
saw himself compelled to adopt most rigorous measures of repression. He imposed
a heavy fine on the Boeotians; and when they were unable to pay it, and
endeavoured to excuse or even to justify themselves, he sent troops to lay
waste the neighbourhood of Coronea and Acraephia, in the vicinity of the lake
Copais, where most of the murders had taken place. At length, through the
mediation of the Athenians and Achaeans, a compromise was agreed upon. The Boeotians
consented to give up the chief malefactors, and to pay a penalty of thirty
talents. This whole episode shows how little prospect there was that, if the
Greeks gained their independence and freedom with Roman help, they would ever
put off their old sins, and establish order and peace under any form of
national self-government.
Towards the end of the year 197 BC Philip’s ambassadors
appeared in Rome, and tried to obtain the consent of the Roman people to the
treaty of peace. At the same time the allies of the Romans made use of the
opportunity to lay their especial wishes, demands, and complaints before the
senate. No doubt the worthy senators must have felt confused and worried when
they were called upon by the glib-tongued Greeks to decide whether Triphylia
belonged in justice to the Eleans or to the Achaeans, whether the Messenians
had a well-grounded claim upon Asine and Pylos, or the Aetolians on Hersea, and
to determine other like questions of detail. The difficulty was increased by
the circumstance that Marcus Claudius Marcellus, one of the consuls elected for
the ensuing year, did all he could to frustrate the peace, in hopes that the
glory of bringing the Macedonian war to a close might devolve upon him.
Fortunately these machinations utterly failed. The senate and the people
approved the proceedings of Flamininus, and it was determined to send a
commission of ten senators to Greece for the final settlement of the conditions
of peace, and for the regulation of all matters of detail. The ten deputies
arrived a few days after the disturbances in Boeotia had been put down, and now
the conditions under which the Roman people were inclined to conclude peace
were communicated to the king of Macedonia.
These conditions were so hard that only the consciousness
of thorough exhaustion could make them appear acceptable. Macedonia was,
indeed, allowed to continue as an independent state, but like Carthage a few
years before, she was to lose all foreign possessions; even the old dependency
of Orestis was to be detached and declared free. This district of Orestis was
of special importance, because it was an easily defended mountain region, and
lay on the line of communication with Illyria, the line by which the Romans, in
a future war, were likely to advance, provided the kings of Macedonia were no
longer able, as hitherto, to close the road against a hostile army. Moreover,
the so-called independence of Macedonia was very materially modified by
restrictions, whereby it was placed under the suzerainty of Rome, and in fact
sunk to the level of a vassal state. Philip was obliged to reduce his army to
five thousand men, his fleet to five ships, to keep no war elephants, and to
pledge himself to carry on no foreign war without the consent of the senate.
The last of these conditions alone sufficed to take away the semblance of
independence, and to range Macedonia among those states which, though honoured
by the name of allies and friends, were really subject to Rome. A last
condition which followed, as a matter of course, was the delivering up of all
the prisoners of war, of the deserters, and of those ships which were over and
above the stipulated number of five. Finally, a war indemnity was imposed of a
thousand talents, or about two hundred and fifty thousand pounds sterling.
The conclusion of a treaty of peace with Philip
offered no very great difficulty to the ingenuity of the Roman negotiators, as
Philip was bent upon peace at any price. But a task much more complicated and
delicate was the new order to be established in all those towns which had been
delivered from the Macedonian dominion, and the settlement of their mutual
relations to one another. It was in no way sufficient to leave each separate
community to itself. All were not in a position to maintain such independent
existence. Many of them were, of old, either subject to a more powerful
neighbouring state, or they were members of confederacies more or less
extensive.
Some were claimed by jealous neighbours on all sorts
of pleas. It was impossible to fulfil all hopes. The general declaration that
the war had been undertaken for the liberation of Greece, could not, except
under many limitations and reserves, be carried out without giving mortal
offence to deserving allies. The Aetolians hoped to rule in Thessaly in
Philip’s place; the Rhodians insisted on recovering their possessions on the
continent of Asia Minor; nor could it be expected of the king of Pergamum that
he should lose the Greek towns lying within the boundaries of his kingdom,
which had always been subject to him, or that he should resign Aegina which
Attalus had purchased from the Aetolians in the first Macedonian war for the
sum of thirty talents.
But the most difficult question of all seemed to be
what should be done with the three great Macedonian fortresses of Corinth, Chalcis,
and Demetrias. Whatever might be thought of Corinth, which had always been a
great autonomous state, and was safe as a member of the Achaean league, the
condition of Chalcis and Demetrias was very different. It was not to be
expected that, if left to themselves, they would be able to remain neutral or
independent, because they bad not sufficient resources to resist a vigorous
attack from one of the greater powers. The king of Syria assumed from day to
day a more hostile position. If he, or any other power, were to get possession
of them, they would again become what they had been in the hands of
Macedonia—the means for enslaving Greece.
Across all these difficulties Flamininus, with the
senatorial committee deputed to assist him, at length found a way which
promised to satisfy, if not all, at least the great majority of the Greeks, and
he resolved to declare his resolutions with such solemnity that their new
liberty might appear to the Greeks in the light of a free gift of Roman
magnanimity. The grand festival of the Isthmian games was about to be
celebrated. A rumour had already prepared the Greeks for the important message
which was to be delivered to them by their powerful protectors at this national
meeting of the whole race. Full of expectation and delight, like children who
are promised an unusual pleasure, they assembled in large numbers on the
isthmus of Corinth, and filled the race-course with an impatient crowd,
expressing their wishes, doubts, and hopes with the liveliness and excitement
characteristic of the Greek race. At length a herald stepped forth into their
midst. A blast of the trumpet commanded silence, and with a loud voice the
herald read the following decree: “The Roman senate and Titus Quinctius the
consul, having conquered king Philip and the Macedonians, accord their liberty
to the Corinthians, Phocians, Locrians, Euboeans, Phthiotians, Magnesians,
Thessalians, Perrhaebeans, that they may live according to their own laws
without foreign garrisons, and without paying tribute.” The herald was obliged
to read the resolution a second time, for many thought they were dreaming, or
could not trust their own ears, so overjoyed were they when the news reached
them. There were no bounds to the rejoicings, and Flamininus was overwhelmed
with the demonstrations of thanks from the intoxicated crowd.
The sanguine people gave themselves up without reserve
to the hope that now at last, purchased almost without a sacrifice of their
own, the long-desired day of freedom and independence was breaking, and that
all the long trials and calamities of evil days would be forgotten in the new prosperity
of the people. They believed with child-like simplicity that the Romans really
cared for their freedom, and that they had crossed the sea with no other object
than to deliver Greece from a foreign yoke. They seriously considered it a gain
that they had exchanged the dominion of a neighbour, arrogant indeed, but of
kindred blood, for that of a foreign people, because this people, conscious of
superior strength, left them for the present undisturbed to the play of their
national passions, their everlasting jealousies, their mutual encroachments,
waiting patiently for the time when it might be opportune to make them feel
that they had only placed a heavier yoke about their necks. A close observer
might indeed, even now, have had a foretaste of the Roman mode of treating
their friends. For in the solemn proclamation of independence the co-operation
of the Greeks in the war against Macedonia was passed over with significant
silence, and Greece was treated as if she were the private property of the Roman
people. Was it possible not to feel the humiliation which lay in the whole
proceeding, or to hope that Greece would be able to guard a possession which
she had received as a free gift of generosity?
Though such considerations were swallowed up in the
first gush of excitement and in the general rejoicings, it was unavoidable that
here and there, where private interests had been injured, discontent should
show itself. Perhaps after the first frenzy of delight had abated, few were
perfectly satisfied, when they compared what had been granted by Flamininus
with that to which, by their own services, they thought they could lay just
claim. Above all others, the Aetolians were deeply hurt. They had reckoned on
new acquisitions in Thessaly and Acarnania. But Thessaly, according to the
intentions of Rome, was to form a neutral ground between Macedonia and Aetolia
to keep the ambition of both states within bounds. It was, therefore, divided
into four free and autonomous cantons, called Phthiotis, Magnesia, Thessaly, and
Perrhaebia, and every kind of dependence on Macedonia as well as on Aetolia
which had formerly existed was removed. Moreover, the Aetolians received
neither Acarnania, nor the towns in the Peloponnesus which formerly belonged to
them ; they were allowed to extend their confederacy only in the direction of
Locris and Phocis, and besides this they received Ambracia and Oeniadoe in
Epirus.
The year 196 BC was spent in adjusting the internal
affairs of Greece. The most difficult task, however, of all yet remained to be
done, the final establishment of peace in the Peloponnesus. The Romans found
themselves here in a very awkward position, in so far as they had for their
allies both Sparta and Achaia, two states at war with one another. Each of
these had rendered important services in the last campaign, and each expected
now to be rewarded by Rome at the expense of the other. The Achaeans had joined
the Roman alliance not readily, but with great reluctance, while Sparta could
boast of her old friendly relation to Rome. Still Rome could hardly side with a
tyrant like Nabis, while ostensibly fighting for the liberty of the Greeks.
Nabis had not only laid his neighbours in the Peloponnesus under contributions
in a shameless manner, but had also practised piracy on a large scale in
connexion with notorious pirates from the island of Crete where he had
possessions. He had not even spared Italian vessels. He paid not the slightest
respect to sworn obligations, or to international rights and duties; and as
till now he had acted with impunity, his presumption passed all bounds. All
principles of political honour would, therefore, justify the Romans in delivering
Greece and the world from such a monster, if only they could release themselves
from the obligation which they had incurred towards the tyrant by the
acceptance of Spartan aid.
A cause of war with Nabis was easily found in his
refusal to give up Argos, which he had acquired by treachery, and oppressed
with heartless cruelty. He thus compelled the Romans to take part openly
against him. Flamininus was authorised, or rather commissioned, by the Roman
senate to compel the tyrant by force to submit to the Roman demands, and he
summoned at Corinth an assembly of the great states, in which the war with
Sparta was determined upon. The most eager of all the enemies of Nabis were of
course the Achaeans, who, having suffered most from his hostility, now hoped to
have their long-cherished desire fulfilled, and to receive Sparta as a member
into their confederation. Their strategos, Aristaenus, with no less than ten
thousand foot and a thousand horse, joined the Roman army, which Flamininus at
the commencement of the mild season of 195 BC led from Elatea into the
Peloponnesus. The Aetolians took no part in this expedition. They were
dissatisfied with the whole turn which affairs had taken, and looked with great
displeasure and jealousy on the possible increase of power which their old
rivals, the Achaeans, might derive from the subjection of Sparta. But king
Philip of Macedonia, the most recent ally of Rome, sent a detachment of one
thousand five hundred men. In addition to these military contingents, the
allied forces were joined by a number of Spartan citizens, who had been robbed
and exiled by the tyrant, with Agesipolis the legitimate heir to the throne of
Sparta at their head.
The first point of attack was the important town of
Argos, which was besides the foremost object of contention. But Pythagoras, the
son-in-law of Nabis, a determined and able soldier, who had the command in the
town, frustrated a conspiracy among the citizens, and foiled an attempt of the
besiegers to carry the place by a sudden onset. Flamininus, on the advice of
the Achaeans, now determined not to allow himself to be detained by the siege
of Argos, but to march straight against Sparta, in the hope that Nabis would
submit, as soon as he saw himself seriously threatened in the very centre of
his dominions. But the petty tyrant’s power was by no means contemptible. Being
determined to resist to the utmost, he had collected a force of no less than
fifteen thousand men. To guard against internal treason, he had caused eighty
of the chief men in Sparta, and a number of Helots whom he looked upon as
suspicious, to be seized and murdered in prison. The town of Sparta, which in
the old time was not fortified, had been protected since the Macedonian period
in many places by walls and trenches wherever the approach was open and easy.
Nabis had strengthened these defences, and so had made the town secure against
a surprise. The Romans, however, attempted no serious attack. After some slight
skirmishes they marched round the town to Amyclae, in order to reach the
important town of Gythium, on the coast, by which Nabis had access to the sea,
and which was his starting point and place of refuge on his piratical
excursions. Before this port appeared now the Capture of united fleets of the
Romans, the Rhodians, and Eumenes, who two years before had succeeded his
deceased father, Attalus, in the kingdom of Pergamum. The surrender of the town
of Gythium, after a valiant defence, enabled the allies, whose numbers had
grown to fifty thousand, to march leisurely against Sparta.
Nabis had, in the meantime, been reinforced by the
brave Pythagoras and a portion of the garrison of Argos; but in spite of this
he had not the least chance of being able to resist such an overwhelming force
as was now brought against him. He would, perhaps, at once have submitted, if
he had not felt convinced that it was not the intention of the Romans to put an
end to the independence of Sparta. He knew that they were jealous of the
Achaeans; that they desired to see the influence of the league in the
Peloponnesus checked by another power; and that, therefore, the existence of
Sparta was indispensable to Rome. Thus he was encouraged to resist, as long as
possible, the feeble attack, and even to propose a peaceful arrangement.
Flamininus seemed indeed disposed to negotiate. He offered conditions which
must have appeared most favourable to Nabis in his desperate situation. Nabis,
however, was aware of the dilemma in which the Romans found themselves, and
knowing how unwilling they were to take extreme steps against him, he hoped to
satisfy them by promising to restore Argos. At the same time he stimulated his
soldiers to the most desperate resistance by spreading reports of the fearful
treatment to be expected from Flamininus. The wild beast was fairly at bay, and
it was absolutely necessary to use force against him. The allies made an
assault, forced the weak defences of the town, and drove the enemy into the
interior. Sparta was taken, and it might have been thought that the conquerors
had only to follow up their advantage in order to crush the tyrant completely
with their immensely superior forces, when, at the command of Pythagoras, the
streets, already crowded by the assailants, were set on fire. Flamininus
immediately gave the signal for retreat. But it soon became evident that the
retreat had not been caused only by a sudden alarm. There was nothing to
prevent the repetition of the attack. Nevertheless, when, after a few days, the
tyrant declared himself ready to accept the conditions offered before, to give
hostages, and to pay an indemnity, Flamininus granted him an armistice, and at
length concluded peace under conditions similar to those which he had imposed
on the king of Macedonia. The first condition was of course the restoration of
Argos. But this had in the meantime become superfluous, for the citizens of
Argos had themselves recovered their freedom, after the withdrawal of
Pythagoras and the Spartan garrison. The second demand of Flamininus was the
surrender of all the country along the sea coast of Laconia, and of the Spartan
possessions in Crete. Nabis was thus completely cut off from the sea, was
obliged to sacrifice his fleet, and to discontinue the practice of piracy,
which had been such a source of profit to him. As a matter of course, he was
called upon to give up the deserters and prisoners of war, and to restore all
the plunder that was not yet destroyed or consumed, and which could be
identified. He was, moreover, compelled to discharge those mercenaries who had
left his service, or in other words, had deserted to the allies, and to give up
to them their private property. As a mark of his lasting dependence on Rome,
Nabis had to resign the right of carrying on war or making alliances with
foreign powers, and he was forbidden to establish anywhere fortified castles or
towns. As a war indemnity one hundred talents were to be paid at once, and four
hundred talents in eight years.
The one condition which Nabis personally must have
dreaded most he was spared. He was not compelled to allow the Spartan exiles to
return, and to restore to them their right of citizenship and the property which
had been divided among the mercenaries and the freed slaves. Such a measure
would naturally have called forth without delay a political and social revolution
in Sparta, the consequence of which, in case of success, would have been the
downfall of the tyrant. The exiles who, with Agesipolis, the legitimate
claimant of the Spartan throne, at their head, had joined the Roman army, could
not obtain the full acknowledgment of their rights. The only condition made in
their favour was, that Nabis was compelled to deliver up to them their wives
and children, if these should wish to leave Sparta. The fate of these women
seems not to have been enviable. Nabis had given them in marriage to his new
citizens, who were either the emancipated slaves of the exiles, or adventurers
and criminals from abroad. These conditions of peace exhibit a mournful picture
of the terrible disruption of family ties, of property, and of all domestic
life, which the infamous reign of terror had caused in Sparta. The exiles,
instead of returning to their old possessions, were settled in the coast
district which had been detached from the Spartan territory, and entered into
the Achaean confederation under the name of free Laconians.
Thus were the affairs of the Peloponnesus settled at
last, but settled in a way which fulfilled neither the promises of the Romans
nor the wishes of the best men in of the new Greece. The root of the most
destructive dissensions was left in the ground in the person of the tyrant
Nabis, and the Roman politicians could not justify themselves by saying that their
power was insufficient for the liberation of Sparta. Evidently they had not
desired the downfall of Nabis and the reception of Sparta in the Achaean
league. As in the north of Greece they had only humiliated and weakened Philip,
and had prevented the Aetolians from extending their power, so they tried to
establish a political equilibrium in the Peloponnesus, and they allowed Sparta
to continue within moderate bounds as an independent state, in order to teach the
Achaeans that the protection of Rome was indispensable to them. This was deeply
felt as a great disappointment, and no real joy was possible in Greece,
especially as Roman garrisons continued to hold the strongest fortresses, the
most important of which were Acrocorinthus, Chalcis, and Demetrias. Flamininus,
who personally coveted the fame of being known as the deliverer of Greece, was
very sensitive to the censure directed against him as the most prominent
expounder of the Roman policy; but he had no choice in his actions, and he
could not help seeing that in view of the threatening attitude of Antiochus the
withdrawal of all Roman troops from Greece might be attended with danger. At
last, however, the Roman senate yielded to the entreaties of the Greeks and
their friends. Perhaps they hoped that the moral conquest of Greece might
outweigh the material possession of it, and that in a war with Antiochus, who
threatened the freedom of Greek towns in Asia and Thrace, the Greeks,
completely freed from foreign rule, would, from gratitude and self-interest,
support the Roman cause as their own. In the spring of the year 194 BC
Flamininus was able, in a large assembly of deputies from all the Greek states
at Corinth, and amid the joyful acclamations of the crowd, to communicate the
resolution of the senate that all the towns still occupied by the Roman troops
should now be evacuated. The promise was no sooner made than fulfilled. Under
the eyes of the assembly the Roman garrison marched off from Acrocorinthus. The
same scene was witnessed soon afterwards in Chalcis and in other Euboean towns,
Oreus, and Eretria, as also in the Thessalian town of Demetrias.
Flamininus was occupied for some months longer with
settling the internal affairs of many towns, being especially anxious to set
limits to the extravagance of democracy, and to secure to the owners of
property the influence which was their right. The deliverer of Greece had at
the conclusion of his successful work the satisfaction of setting free from
slavery some thousands of his own countrymen. At his desire the different
states purchased the freedom of all the Italians who in the war with Hannibal
had been sold as slaves in great numbers throughout Greece. The Roman legions
then marched to Oricum in Epirus, and embarked for Italy, where celebrations of
victory and a brilliant triumph awaited them.
On reviewing the course of the second Macedonian war
from a military point of view, we are struck by a fact which we have already
remarked on former occasions, and of which we can easily explain from the Roman
military organization and the frequent change of commanders. The first
operations were not favourable to the Roman arms. More than two years passed in
fruitless marches and counter-marches in the frontier lands of Macedonia, and
when at length a more skilful general than the first two consuls was sent to
the theatre of war, it was not by calculation, but by accident, that the
decisive encounter took place; and the victory was attributable, not to the
genius of the leader, but to the greater ease and rapidity with which the Roman
legions could outmanoeuvre the unwieldy Macedonian phalanx, and to the skill
and promptitude of a nameless inferior officer. If the manner in which the war
against Nabis was conducted had to be judged from military grounds alone, the
Roman commander would appear in a still more unfavourable light. It cannot,
however, be doubted that Flamininus had orders to spare Nabis, and that for
this reason he displayed no more military force than was necessary to bring him
to subjection.
More than in former wars we observe that the Romans
availed themselves of auxiliary troops. By the side of the legions we find
Numidians with elephants, Illyrians, Epirots, and Greeks from all parts,
towards the end even Macedonians. For wars beyond the sea it was evidently
difficult to make use of the Italian militia. At the beginning of the war,
therefore, volunteers were enlisted; but soon these also began to create
difficulties, and clamoured to be discharged and sent home as soon as they had
experienced the fatigues and dangers of the campaign. The senate sent no more
than one consular army to the East, and yet it was with much trouble that its
numbers were kept up, and that supplies were provided. We discover here the traces
of the exhaustion of Italy by the war with Hannibal, which was more keenly felt
when the unnatural strain on the national strength was relaxed by the treaty of
peace in 201 BC.
If the war by land was not carried out with vigour,
nor on a grand scale, the naval war showed even less enterprise and
consequently contributed, but in a small degree to secure the final result. The
Roman fleet, in conjunction with the Rhodian and the Pergamenian, dealt some
successful blows against hostile ports; but they had no chance of a conflict
with the Macedonian fleet, which, during the whole war, did not venture out of
Demetrias, nor did they make an attack on Macedonia itself. It seems never to
have occurred to either of the belligerents that under the protection of their
fleets the allied army could effect a landing in Macedonia, instead of
advancing with difficulty through inhospitable or impoverished frontier lands.
Lastly, it must have been humiliating to Roman pride that, while the allied
fleets were scouring the sea without encountering an antagonist, they could not
suppress the outrageous proceedings of the Lacedaemonian and Cretan
pirates.
The political object of the war was completely gained
at a small expense. It was undertaken to restore the political liberty of
Greece, or rather to destroy the predominance of Macedonia, and to establish a
sort of balance of power among the second-rate states, which would compel them
to keep one another in check, and to remain dependent on the protecting power
of Rome. It is certain that the Romans in general were perfectly innocent of
anything like enthusiasm for the Greeks as a race. They saw no reason for
dealing with them in a way different from that pursued towards other states.
Even Flamininus was not guilty of such weakness; at any rate, he would never
have dreamt of carrying his admiration of Greek art and literature so far as to
sacrifice Roman interests. The influence of the Greek mind, it is true, had
been growing in Rome for some time, and was still on the increase. But there
was a great deal of mere fashion in all this, and even the admiration which the
great Grecian works of art called forth suffered by the low estimation in which
the Romans were taught to hold the character of the Greeks, the more they came
in contact with them politically and socially. The Romans were disgusted by the
servility, the dishonesty and cunning, the mean and estimation revengeful spirit,
which characterised the degenerate Greeks, as well as by the impotence and
rottenness of their political life. They considered themselves superior men,
though they admitted that in painting, carving and writing verses they
possessed less skill. That a Roman like Flamininus, though holding such
opinions, should feel gratified by the eulogiums of Greek orators and poets,
that he should be pleased when the crowd applauded him, when statues and
chaplets were dedicated to him, can scarcely seem strange to those who know
that such human weakness is by no means unusual or unnatural.
But if a Frederick, with all his partiality for the
French language and literature, remained yet in heart and action a German, and
as a politician never made the smallest sacrifice to his literary
predilections, we are justified in thinking that the statesmen of antiquity
were still less influenced by sentiments of this sort, as all human virtues and
duties were in those times confined to the narrow circle of fellowship in civil
rights and national worship.
THE SYRO-AETOLIAN WAR, 192-189 BC
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