READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF ROME.THE WAR FOR SUPREMACY IN THE EASTCHAPTER III.THE THIRD MACEDONIAN WAR, 171-168 B.C.
The war with Antiochus of Syria was decided in the two
campaigns of 191 and 190 BC. The final peace was concluded in the year 188,
after the Asiatic affairs had been kept in suspense and uncertainty for more
than a whole year on the plea of settling details. The Syrian kingdom was so
weakened by the unhappy issue of the war that whole provinces separated
themselves from it, and maintained their independence as free states. The
payment of the war indemnity caused embarrassment even in a country reputed to
possess enormous wealth. Antiochus used desperate means to procure money, and
when he attempted to plunder a temple of Baal, in the land of the Elymaeans, he
was slain by the fanatical natives.
The further history of the Syrian kingdom concerns us
only in so far as it bears on the history of Rome. We are still less concerned
in the personal adventures of Antiochus, and can therefore pass them over with
a word. But our full and genuine sympathy is excited by the fate of another
man, a man who, for many years, had so commanded the foreground of the
historical stage that we beheld everywhere his mighty form. Even after Hannibal
had left Italy, and when he was banished from his country, we could not
entirely lose sight of him. We saw how faithfully he endeavoured to discharge
the duty of his life, even with almost exhausted strength, and when no longer
borne up by the enthusiasm of his countrymen. We saw that the Romans had not
forgotten him, and demanded his extradition of Antiochus as a condition of peace.
He avoided the fate which then awaited him by escaping to Crete, where,
however, the treasures which he carried with him proved as dangerous to him as
the enmity of the Romans. He deceived the cupidity of the Cretans, and escaped
to Asia Minor, where he at length found a refuge with Prusias, king of Bithynia.
This king happened just then to be involved in a war with his neighbour,
Eumenes of Pergamum, and being hard pressed, was anxious to avail himself of
the genius of the great general. Once more, but in a very limited field,
Hannibal fought against the hereditary enemy of his native town. This time he
was not even in the service of a great power like Syria; and his enemies were
but the satellites of the Romans. He succeeded in gaining some advantages for
Prusias; but the progress of the war in which Philip of Macedonia, as an old enemy
of Eumenes, had also taken a part, was arrested through the interference of the
Romans. And now the great Carthaginian approached the end of his career. Titus
Quinctius Flamininus, the victor of Cynoscephalae, the ‘liberator’ of Greece,
the leading man in Greek polities at Rome, appeared as ambassador in Asia
Minor, to settle the quarrel of Eumenes and Prusias. Openly, or under cover of
diplomatic forms, whether of his own free will or commissioned by the senate,
he demanded from Prusias the surrender of Hannibal. The dubious light which surrounds
this affair seems to indicate that Rome was ashamed to continue the war against
a single man, and thereby to express an undignified fear of the old exile.
Whatever may have been the detail of these disgraceful transactions, so much is
undoubtedly true, that Prusias by betraying Hannibal obeyed the orders of the Roman
ambassador, and that the latter, if not strictly commissioned, carried out, at
least, the most eager wishes of his countrymen. He had the satisfaction of
being able to report to the senate that Hannibal had killed himself by poison,
in order to escape extradition; and this news at length (183 BC) delivered the
ruling nation from the terrifying phantom which had pursued and haunted it for
twenty years, ever since the day of Zama.
The anxiety with which Rome looked upon Hannibal, even
after the great victory of Magnesia, was to some extent justified by the
unsettled and unsatisfactory state of things which followed the last treaties,
and which gave no security for the duration of peace. The Romans, it is true,
were principally to blame, as they never ceased to offend not only their former
enemies but also their most faithful allies, and to torment them with
chicaneries, prompted by mere jealousy and ill-will. If even the Achaeans, as
we have seen, had occasion to complain of unjust treatment, the policy which
the senate observed towards the king of Macedonia bore the stamp of
premeditated, systematic enmity, calculated to drive to despair a rival who was
but partially humbled, and to ruin him completely. This policy, which we shall
find practised against the Carthaginians with still greater indignity and
heartlessness, could not fail to produce the desired effect, and led in a few
years to the overthrow of the kingdom of Macedonia.
We have seen with what zeal and energy Philip
cooperated in the war against the Aetolians and Antiochus. His motives for
taking such an active share might have been a matter of indifference to the
Romans his services in the cause of Rome
were not less valuable because he was principally bent upon his own profit, and
upon increasing his own power. But this was precisely what Rome disapproved of
on principle, and she could consent to it only with a perfidious reserve under
the pressure of war. Philip had been encouraged by Acilius Glabrio to act
against the Aetolians, by the prospect of being able to annex to his kingdom
the Aetolian towns taken in Thessaly and elsewhere. When, after the war, he was
going to make good his claims, complaints against him, directly encouraged by
the Romans, were sent in from all sides to Rome, and he saw himself forced to
defend himself like a culprit before the senate against a whole crowd of
accusers. A Roman commission was sent to Thessaly in the year 186 BC, to
examine into this dispute. They held a court of enquiry in Tempe, and having
examined the various claims, formally delivered their sentence to this effect:
that Philip had no right to those towns which had, against their will, come
into the power of the Aetolians, from whom he had taken them. They declared
that he must withdraw his garrisons from the places unjustly occupied, and be
satisfied with the ancient boundaries of Macedonia. At a second meeting in
Thessalonica this harsh decree was extended to the towns on the Thracian coast,
which had been taken from Antiochus, especially to Aenos and Maronea, and this
unjust decision was rendered still more unpalatable by an order making over
these towns to king Eumenes of Pergamum, who was thus installed as a nextdoor
neighbour, to watch and control king Philip in the Roman interest. Philip was
stung with anger when he learnt the unfavourable decision, and unable to
contain his feelings he unwisely gave vent to them by saying, “The evening of
all days has not yet come”. The Romans could see that the king was goaded into
rage, and they were anxious that his blood should remain hot. They insisted
that Philip should obey the command of the senate, and withdraw his garrisons
from the Thracian and Thessalian towns. He had now to decide whether he would
quietly submit or defy the senate, and run the risk of an open breach. He chose
the former course; but being unable to vent his passion on the Romans, he
cooled it, in a manner as cowardly as it was treacherous and cruel, by
revenging himself on one of these towns, which had not occasioned the quarrel
and was innocent of his humiliation. He caused a troop of Thracian mercenaries
to enter the town of Maronea, and to massacre the inhabitants. He then declared
to the Romans that the butchery had taken place in consequence of an internal
quarrel of the inhabitants, and that he was perfectly innocent. When Cassander,
his officer, who had carried out this bloody order, was, on that account,
summoned to Rome for examination, he caused him to be poisoned on the
way. A man who was capable of such deeds can hardly excite our compassion,
when we see him ill-treated in his turn.
Yet with the Romans it was not the feeling of injured
justice, but their cool, consistent policy, which induced them to pursue a system
of annoyance and torture. Philip, feeling uneasy, and being unprepared to risk
a breach, sent his son Demetrius, who was a favourite at Rome, to justify his
proceedings before the senate. At the same time deputations, and even private
persons without any public commission, flocked from all parts to the same high
tribunal, with the most petty complaints, which were all listened to by the
senate with great patience for three days running. Not only were questions of
disputed boundaries discussed, but Philip was also accused of having carried
off cattle, and even men, of having refused justice, and of having decided
unfairly in private disputes. Whoever felt himself injured by him calculated on
finding in Rome an ear open to his complaints. But the deepest impression was
apparently made by the ambassadors of king Eumenes, for they reported not only
that Philip had given assistance to
Prusias of Bithynia in his recent war with Pergamum, but also that he had not
yet withdrawn his garrisons from the Thracian towns. The decision of the senate
was, as might have been expected from the beginning, extremely harsh and
provoking. Philip’s son Demetrius was, it is true, treated with ostentatious
kindness, and was given to understand that for his sake the strict demands of
justice would not be enforced. Nevertheless, no material modification was made
in the final decision, and an embassy was sent to Macedonia, and commissioned
to declare that the patience of the senate would be exhausted unless its orders
were immediately executed.
Philip submitted to what could not be helped, though
with inward resentment, and with the firm resolution to prepare for the day of
revenge. He was now more and more bent upon strengthening the Macedonian
monarchy and forming a powerful army. He had already raised the taxes and
import duties in order to improve his finances; had worked his gold mines
profitably, and had endeavoured to increase the population by laws regarding
the rearing of children, and by drawing colonists from Thrace. Into this
country he now made several expeditions, by which he gained the double object
of training his army and of securing the frontier from the barbarians. In such
proceedings he had not to apprehend any interference on the part of the Romans.
For the protection of Greece from her northern neighbours was the special duty
of the king of Macedonia; and the Romans themselves, on a former occasion, when
the Aetolians demanded the destruction of the Macedonian monarchy, had insisted
that its preservation was necessary for the security of Greece. Nevertheless,
when Philip’s extraordinary activity came to be noticed in Rome, it roused
suspicion. It was asserted that he wished to excite the Thracian barbarians to
an invasion of Italy, to repeat in the eastern Alps the famous exploit of
Hannibal. It is hard to decide whether these suspicions arose from the
imperfect knowledge which the Romans had of Thrace and Illyria, and thus from
unintentional exaggeration, or from malevolent fiction. Perhaps even Philip had
no correct idea of the difficulties which made such a plan impracticable. He is
reported to have undertaken an expedition to Mount Haemus, which was supposed
to lie so near to the Adriatic, and at the same time to the Euxine and the
Danube, that one could see these three waters at the same time from the summit.
As the Romans, just about this time (181 BC), were founding the colony of
Aquileia in the north-east of Italy, it is, indeed, possible that they regarded
an invasion on this side as by no means improbable; for they remembered that
Hannibal had been withheld neither by the Pyrenees nor by the Alps, nor by the
many warlike tribes that lived between and on these mountains. But Philip was
no Hannibal. The expedition to Italy was, at the utmost, one of his idle schemes,
and, as on a former occasion, he shrank back when the first difficulties
presented themselves. He accomplished little in Thrace, and returned home
without having gained his object. The only profit which he had from his
expedition was, that he was enabled to transplant a Thracian tribe from the
interior to the coast, and in exchange to settle in the interior all those
Greeks of the coast who had excited his suspicion. According to his wont he
carried out this cruel measure unscrupulously. With curses, imprecations, and
tears, the exiled inhabitants quitted the homes that had become dear to them,
to wander into the wilds of Thrace. Philip remained unmoved, and made use of
the opportunity to get rid of the innocent children whose fathers he had
previously murdered.
The curses which untold victims heaped upon the head
of the heartless tyrant seemed directed not to a deaf fate, but to an avenging
deity. He was destined to feel this in his own house and family. Perseus, his
eldest son, born in unequal marriage, suspected the younger son, Demetrius, of
claiming, on account of his birth, a nearer right to the throne, and of intending
to assert this right with the help of the Romans. It is difficult to decide how
far this suspicion was well founded; at any rate the Romans encouraged it by
ostentatiously favouring Demetrius, and by pretending that for his sake they
treated Macedonia more leniently. Besides the official favours which the senate
conferred on Demetrius during his stay in Rome, several nobles received him
into their special intimacy. It was principally Flamininus who, if we may trust
Polybius, encouraged Demetrius in his opposition, and who thus chiefly caused
his tragic death.
As soon as it became known that the Romans openly
preferred Demetrius, a Roman party was formed, or at least strengthened, in
Macedonia, and the opposition between the two princes of the royal house spread
over the whole country. The national party inclined more and more to Perseus,
who had been inspired by his father with hatred of the Romans just as Hannibal
had been by Hamilcar Barkas. In the eyes of Philip, he seemed alone qualified
to maintain the independence of Macedonia, and, if it should become necessary,
to defend it by a war with Rome. The result of these conflicts was that Philip
also began to suspect Demetrius, and that in the end he sacrificed his son to his
politics. A forged letter, supposed to have been written by Flamininus to
Philip, and referring to the alleged plans of Demetrius, is said to have
brought about the crisis. The prince was poisoned at a banquet by order of his
own father, and, to avoid public attention, and especially to take from the
deed the appearance of hostility to Rome, it was done half secretly in a
retired spot (182 BC). Thus Roman policy played a fatal part, not only in the
relations of State to State, and in the disputes of political factions, but
even in the family circle, and sought out its victims with a stern resolve at
the hospitable hearth where a befriended stranger was sacrificed, and in the
paternal home where it ensnared an inexperienced youth. It is no proof of the boasted generosity of
the Romans in their political dealings that such a leading man as Flamininus,
the ‘friend of the Greeks’, should have been the agent whose footsteps we can
trace by the body of the aged Hannibal, and by that of the youthful Demetrius.
At any rate, a dark shadow is cast upon the Roman politicians, although the
responsibility for the disgraceful deed must be borne by the perpetrators
themselves. It is chiefly King Philip of Macedonia who was guilty of the crime,
and at the same time he is the man who contributed more than any one of his
contemporaries to the downfall of Macedonia. Not his incapacity, but his evil
passions were the cause that the last chance of the regeneration of Greece came
to nothing. Now all his schemes collapsed: all the innumerable murders and crimes
which he had committed, without remorse, had only borne this bitter fruit—that
he saw himself openly confronted by external war and internal division, and
that in his despair he was tempted to dip his hands in the blood of his own
son. With a broken heart and a darkened spirit he sank into his grave three
years later, leaving to his son Perseus a task hopeless even for a man of far
greater powers.
Yet Perseus was a prince endowed with no mean
qualifications for his difficult position. He was tall, strong, and dignified
in his personal appearance, and free from those coarse vices which had caused
the ruin of his father. He restrained his passions and was moderate in the
enjoyment of life and in the exercise of his royal power. Having grown up to
manhood in a period of gloom and danger, he had gone through a school of bitter
experience, and had been fully impressed with the military and political
supremacy of the Romans. He could, hardly hope to free himself completely from
the unequal alliance which bound him to Rome, still less to regain for
Macedonia its old ascendency. Nevertheless he did not intend to act the part of
a humble dependent, and to fawn upon the Roman senate like a Masinissa or a
Eumenes. He felt that only by her own independent strength could Macedonia
resist the encroachments of Rome; and he was, therefore, like his father,
intent on increasing her national wealth and on renewing the ties which bound
her to the kindred States of Greece. He proclaimed an amnesty for all political
offences committed during his father’s reign, remitted the debts of those who
had fled on account of insolvency, and endeavoured to obtain favour with the
Greeks, especially with the Achaeans, who, under the influence of the Roman
party, had broken off all intercourse with Macedonia. By his marriage with
Laodice, daughter of King Seleucus IV, the son and successor of Antiochus, and
by the union of his sister with Prusias, king of Bithynia, he tried to gain
friends, if not allies, with whose help he might, to a certain extent, keep in
check his most troublesome neighbour, Eumenes of Pergamum. Nor did he shrink
from boldness in action. He reduced the insurgent Dolopians by force of arms in
a very short time, and then, before returning home through Thessaly, he went at
the head of an imposing army to Delphi on the pretext of consulting the oracle,
but in truth to show the Greeks that Macedonia was still an independent and a
powerful State1 With the help of his friend Kotys, king of the Odrysians, he
conquered the Thracian chief Abrupolis, who, relying on the patronage of the
Romans, had ventured to extend his invasions and devastations as far as
Amphipolis. According to their usual policy, the Romans had kept up a
friendship with this so-called ally in the immediate vicinity of the rival
State, in order to have, at any time, a pretext for settling disputes among the
neighbours. They watched with a jealous eye every step of the young king, in
order, if occasion offered, to overwhelm him with complaints which might
furnish the cause for a “just and pious” war. Thus they took umbrage, and
regarded it as an intentional act of hostility towards Italy, when the Bastarnians,
a people on the northern bank of the Danube, attacked the Thracian Dardunians
on the borders of Macedonia. They charged Perseus with having been in league
with the Bastarnians, and having intended, like his father, to persuade them to invade Italy when the Dardanians should be conquered.
Such pretended fears were clearly and confessedly
imaginary. Yet the Romans were justified in treating the matter as serious,
since, in the public opinion of Greece, a complete revolution had gradually
taken place, and Perseus was becoming more popular from day to day; while, on
the other hand, Eumenes, the friend of Rome and the Romans themselves, were
regarded more and more as the enemies of the country. The frivolous Greeks had
been completely sobered down since, twenty years before, after the defeat of
Philip, they had hailed the Roman ‘liberators’ with unbounded enthusiasm. They
cast wistful looks towards that same Macedonia from which they had then been
liberated, and they hoped to regain, with the help of Perseus, their national
independence, which had now, indeed, become an empty name. According to their
custom, they showed their impatience by a childish and useless defiance of Rome
and the friends of Rome. Eumenes especially incurred their displeasure. At the
time of the prevailing enthusiasm for Rome and her allies innumerable monuments
and altars had been erected to him, and festivals instituted in his honour. It
was on these that the universal hatred now vented itself. Everywhere the former
resolutions were repealed, the monuments destroyed, the festivals abolished. In
vain had Eumenes attempted, in a somewhat clumsy manner, to form a party for
himself among the Achaeans. His offer to hand over to them a large sum of money
in order to pay from the interest the chief magistrates of the league had been
scornfully rejected, although the Roman party at that time preponderated in the
Peloponnesus, and had succeeded in preventing a friendly understanding with
Perseus. For the Greek States had become so disordered and helpless, and
wavered so much between the , proud feeling of nationality and contemptible
fear, that they showed the pride of outraged honour and insulted the allies of
Rome, they remained nevertheless in piteous subjection to Rome herself, while
the cankerworm of political dissolution was eating into their vitals.
The condition of various parts of Greece at this time
was perfectly frightful. The accumulation of private debts gave rise to
constant civil wars, for it had long been the custom to expect a remedy for
social disorders from political revolutions, and especially from a spoliation
of the wealthier classes, just as in our own days those who call themselves the
working classes endeavour, by the war against capital, to bring about general
well-being. The primeval habit of the Greeks of living by robbery rather than
by labour had cropped up again through the ruins of national wealth. The Aetolians,
it is said, had always shown a disposition for this kind of life; but as long
as they could levy contributions on their neighbours, they could pass for
belligerents, and enjoyed a certain amount of respectability; now, however,
they were restrained within their own boundaries, and, as they could not make
up their minds to get their living by agriculture, they had no choice but to
attack and prey upon each other. Even among the frequent horrors of party
strife in Greece, the bloody massacre of Hypata is noticeable for its
hideousness. Eighty exiles from this town had been induced to return by the
promise of pardon and reconciliation. They were solemnly received and conducted
into the town; but they had no sooner entered the gates than they were
treacherously attacked and murdered. Such a deed as this was, of course,
followed by a counter-blow from the opposite party, and thus the nation drifted
helplessly to destruction; for similar disorders prevailed everywhere
throughout the unhappy country.
Under these circumstances it was no less an historical
necessity than a boon for the Greek nation that Rome considered the time come
to put an end to the untenable state of partial independence in which it was
then placed. Several events occurred which showed that Rome was preparing to
act very soon. King Eumenes of Pergamum had undertaken to bring formal charges
against Perseus, and to call upon the Romans to interfere. In the year 172 BC
he made his appearance in Rome, bringing with him a detailed list of all the
violations of peace of which he accused Perseus. In this list all the public acts
of Perseus, without exception, were enumerated, and interpreted as preparations
for a war with Rome. All that Perseus had done or left undone in order to
increase the national wealth and power of his country, to chastise the
insurgent Dolopians, to repel the invasions of the Thracians from his own
borders or from friendly cities like Byzantium, all his endeavours to make
himself popular in Greece, even his moral conduct, his moderation and
self-control, were represented as schemes against the suzerainty of Rome. There
was, indeed, no real breach of peace or violation of contract that Eumenes
could prove against Perseus. The transgressions which he named in no way
affected the Romans, who were already aware of them, and who, far from
censuring Perseus, had even approved them by remaining on friendly terms with
Perseus, and by renewing the treaties. It appears, therefore, that in their
negotiations, which were carried on with strict secrecy, Eumenes and the senate
occupied themselves, not so much with seeking a motive or a pretext for a war
with Perseus, as with planning the measures which in case of a war they should
respectively adopt. At any rate, the war was now decided upon, and nothing but
the consideration that the time was inopportune kept the senate from declaring
it at once. Harpalus, the Macedonian ambassador, who had in vain asked for
permission to defend his master in the presence of Eumenes, was perfectly
convinced of this, and summoned courage to say that, if Rome was resolved upon
war, it was useless for him to refute unfounded accusations, and that in this
case his master would boldly wield the sword forced into his hand, trusting to
the god of war and to the uncertain issue of battles. Some few members of the
senate, feeling the undignified position of Rome, accused Eumenes of conjuring
up a great war from fear and jealousy; but they remained in the minority, and
the answer which was given to Harpalus compelled him to tell his master that
the rupture with Rome was inevitable. The ambassadors of Rhodes, who were at
that time in Rome to complain of Eumenes, and were therefore looked upon as
friends of Perseus, received an ungracious reply. Apart from this the Rhodians
were in ill favour with the Romans, because they had with great ostentation lent
their fleet to escort the bride of Perseus from Syria to Macedonia. The period
of friendship was over for them, as well as for Achaia and Macedonia. They had
soon to feel that Rome would not suffer even so harmless a state as Rhodes to
exist beside her in complete independence, or even in commercial prosperity.
Eumenes gained his object in Rome. The war with
Macedonia was decided upon. Loaded with honours and marks of favour, he quitted
Rome to return to his own kingdom. On his way through the Corinthian gulf he
landed in Cirrha, in order to go from that port to Delphi, to offer a sacrifice
at the shrine of Apollo. On the road to this place an attempt, so it was said,
was made to murder him. At a spot where an old wall lined the road, four
assassins, who, being hired by Perseus, were watching for the King of Pergamum,
threw stones at him, and hit him so dangerously that he fell down and was
nearly killed. While the king’s companions were busied in attending to him, the
miscreants escaped. Eumenes, badly wounded, was conveyed back to Cirrha, and
thence to Aegina, where he remained until he recovered.
How much truth there may be in this strange tale. it
is difficult for us to determine, as we have only onesided reports from Roman
sources. But, even without any evidence from the party of the accused, we
cannot help suspecting that the whole affair was a prearranged farce, planned
for the purpose of finding some plausible complaint of an odious character
against Perseus. It is by no means likely that, if Perseus had really wished to
get rid of his enemy, he would have caused him to be attacked by four men with
stones, even supposing that he were so silly as to think that the death of
Eumenes would make the slightest difference in the state of his affairs. With
fair assurance we may put down the charge of intended murder as an invention,
resembling the charges of the wolf against the lamb. Of the same nature is the
far more impudent charge against Perseus, which was founded upon the
information of Rammius, a native of Brundusium. This man reported that Perseus
had offered him bribes to poison the Roman ambassadors on their passage through
Brundusium. It is not easy to determine whether the Roman senate really thought
Perseus capable of such silliness, or whether they only pretended to do so. To
the unprejudiced inquirer accusations of this kind are a proof that real and
well-founded grievances were wanting, and that the Roman government, having
decided upon war, was obliged to have recourse to the most frivolous pretexts.
War being determined upon after the visit of Eumenes
to Rome, it remained to fix the time for commencing hostilities, and to take
the preliminary steps. But it was not thought necessary to be in any hurry in
the matter. The Romans had no need to apprehend a sudden attack on the part of
the King of Macedonia, even if they credited him with the bold resolution of
undertaking an aggressive war. It was inconvenient to begin the war in the year
172 BC, because this year was almost completely taken up with a dispute between
the senate and the consuls, which, to a certain extent, paralysed the foreign
policy of the republic.
Marcus Popillius Laenas, one of the consuls of 173 BC,
had attacked the Statellates, a friendly tribe of Ligurians, without orders,
cause, or justification; he had slain several thousands of them, had destroyed
their town, and sold the remainder of the tribe into slavery. This wanton act,
which was as cruel as it was injudicious, was strongly disapproved by the
senate. A resolution was passed that the consul Popillius should redeem from
slavery the Ligurians whom he had sold, that he should restore their property
and their arms, and not leave the province till this order should be executed.
In this resolution the senate had exceeded its powers, for the administrative
authority which it practically exercised was in strict law unconstitutional.
The senate was only entitled to advise and not to command, and it exercised the
functions of government only in so far as the magistrates voluntarily submitted
to its authority, or were inclined to moderation by the prospect of having
to answer for their acts after their year of office. The senate had no means of
enforcing the submission of a consul except by the appointment of a dictator,
and this could not be done unless the other consul was ready to lend his aid.
If this means tailed, the senate might call upon a tribune of the people, who
by virtue of his inviolability could resist the execution of any magisterial
order. But it was very doubtful whether the tribune’s inviolability, or any
tribunicial order, was entitled to respect beyond the limits of the city, as
the military imperium of the consul was unrestrained in the field. M. Popillius
knew the extent of his power, and not only refused to carry into execution the
decision of the senate, but actually went to Rome in person, assembled the
senate in the temple of Bellona outside the town, and censured the senators in
an angry and violent tone, because, instead of honouring a victorious general
by solemn thanksgivings, they had in a certain manner accused and dishonoured
him before the enemies of the republic. He imposed a fine on the praetor Aulus
Atilius, who had moved the resolution of the senate, and demanded that the
resolution should be rescinded, and that thanks should be offered to the gods
for his exploits. But in spite of the defiant attitude of the consul, the
senate was immovable, and as neither yielded, the quarrel remained unsettled.
The consuls for the following year (172 BC) were Publius Aelius Ligur and Caius
Popillius Laenas, the brother of Marcus. Owing to this relationship, the
dispute of the preceding year was carried on with almost equal violence in that
which followed. C. Popillius gave the senate to understand that he would oppose
any resolution condemnatory of his brother’s proceedings similar to that which
had been passed in the previous year. The senate refused to yield, and when the
question arose whether the command in the impending war with Perseus should be
given to one of the consuls, a resolution was passed that both consuls should
be sent to Liguria, and that nothing should be decided about Macedonia until
the resolution of the preceding year should be executed.
From this postponement of the Macedonian war, which
resulted exclusively from internal conflicts, we see that the war did not in
the least depend upon the designs and preparations of Perseus, and that it is
unjust to cast the responsibility of it on him. The Roman senate, in the
feeling of utter security from an attack on the part of Perseus, could even
venture to prevent the consuls raising new legions, or bringing the old legions
to their full complement. The consuls in their turn refused to co-operate in
any measure of internal administration. The Roman republic, on the eve of a
great war, was suddenly paralysed. Its condition may be compared to that of a
constitutional state of our own time, in which the supplies for a war already
determined upon are suddenly refused by the representatives of the people. To
make matters worse, the senate was now informed by the obstinate M. Popillius
that upon his return to his province he had defeated the Statellates a second
time, killing sixteen thousand of them, and that thereupon the other Ligurian
tribes had taken up arms. Two of the tribunes of the people now placed
themselves at the disposal of the senate. They threatened to impose a fine upon
the consuls unless they forthwith started for Liguria, to take the command from
M. Popillius, who could not be punished until he should be divested of the imperium.
They moreover brought a motion before the people for the nomination of a
special judge by the senate, to punish the ex-consul if, before a fixed date,
he should not have restored the enslaved Statellates to liberty. This measure
at last succeeded. The consuls started for their province. M. Popillius gave up
his command, but did not venture to make his appearance in Rome until, by a new
motion of the tribunes, a term was fixed after the expiration of which the trial
should take place in his absence. Now at last he submitted; but, probably
through the influence of his family and his friends, his trial was suspended
till the praetor C. Licinius, who was to conduct it, had quitted office. The
accusation was finally dropped; but the enslaved Ligurians were set free again,
and land was assigned to them on the north side of the Padus. Measures were
moreover taken to pacify the warlike mountaineers, and to prevent the outbreak
of new hostilities.
In the year 172 BC the incident just stated did not
allow of a vigorous foreign, policy. If the political instinct and moderation
of the Romans had not generally prevailed over the obstinacy and perversity of
individual statesmen, the republic would long have been distracted by such
internal conflicts between the senate and the ill-organised executive. But we
may see in the history of Rome, as elsewhere, that the spirit of a nation can
accomplish great things, in spite of an imperfect constitution, whereas the
best-drawn form of government not animated by such a spirit is only a source of
misery.
The clemency, or rather the justice, which caused the
senate to condemn the insane cruelty of M. Popillius in Liguria was, no doubt,
prompted, at least in part, by the political calculation that, with the
prospect of a serious war in the east of the Adriatic, it would be desirable to
preserve peace in the Italian peninsula. The same considerations determined the
Roman policy when (172 BC) the Carthaginians sent ambassadors to complain of
the encroachments of Masinissa. It did not appear advisable just at this time,
when every ally acquired additional value, and every new quarrel was to be
avoided, to exasperate the Carthaginians, who, though weakened and deeply humbled,
were still a power not to be despised. Masinissa was therefore advised to
restrain his greed, and keep within the boundaries marked out to him. Rome was
not only counting upon neutrality, but upon the active aid of both Carthage and
Numidia, in the impending war.
The beginning of the war was now fixed for the year 171
BC. Some preparations had been made for it in the course of the year 172. A
fleet of fifty vessels had been collected at Brundusium, and an army of about
eighteen thousand men kept in readiness at that place. At the same time Roman
diplomacy had been at work. It was of the greatest importance to isolate
Perseus as much as possible, and this task was rendered difficult by the great
popularity which he enjoyed in Greece. But when the gravity of their situation
became apparent to the Greeks, they lost courage and submitted to the hateful
necessity. The same submission was shown also by the larger Asiatic states. At
least they kept aloof from all connexion with Perseus, who could boast only of
one true and valuable ally, the Thracian chief Kotys, whilst Gentius, the king
of Illyria, could not make up his mind to encounter the hostility of Rome till
after the war had begun. The situation of Macedonia was far less favourable now
than it was at the beginning of the second war. At that time a considerable
part of Greece was subject to king Philip directly or indirectly. The chief
fortresses of the country were in his hands, and he had friends and allies in
Boeotia, Locris, and even in the Peloponnesus. The Romans, on the other side,
had at that time hardly any allies in Greece, except the Aetolians and Athamanians.
The Achaean league was neutral. Above all, Macedonia had not yet been
conquered, and the spell of the Macedonian phalanx was yet unbroken. Since then
the Roman legions had overthrown this phalanx in Europe and Asia, had confined
the king of Syria within the Taurus chain, had shut up Macedonia within its old
boundaries, had crushed the brave Aetolians, and had reduced the whole of
Greece to actual dependence in everything but form and name. How could Perseus
hope to stop the triumphal progress of the Roman armies? Surely he must have
been not deluded but mad, if he had voluntarily engaged in a conflict with a
power so formidable.
The consular elections of the year 171 BC were fixed
for an earlier period than usual, that no time might be lost for the projected
campaign. The consuls of the year, Publius Licinius Crassus and Caius Cassius
Longinus, entered upon their office with more than the customary solemnities
and celebrations of sacrifices and lectisternia. The haruspices announced happy
omens and prophesied victory, triumph, and the extension of the Roman dominion.
To the ‘highest and best Jupiter’ games to last ten days had already been
promised, if the republic should remain unshaken for ten years. Now at length
the time had come for the senate to ask the people for the formal vote
sanctioning the undertaking of the war. This vote was given by the centuries
without the slightest delay or hesitation, and nobody seems to have anticipated
the possibility of a refusal. The senate controlled the foreign policy so
completely that, so long as the nobility were agreed among themselves, no such
opposition on the part of the people as that which had shown itself at the
beginning of the second Macedonian wav was possible. The almost uninterrupted
wars in Spain, Corsica, Liguria, and Gallia naturally had the effect of causing
war to be looked upon with much indifference. It was impossible for the people
to judge whether it was prudent or necessary to commence hostilities with one
or another of the tribes dwelling on the Iberus or in the valleys of the
Apennines. They had to leave the decision to the senate, and the senate
frequently had to leave it to the generals. It was due only to the great
importance which the Macedonian kingdom still occupied in the imagination of
the Romans, that the present war was solemnly introduced with religious
ceremonies and the strict observance of constitutional forms. For this reason
also a formal cause had to be assigned for the war. As such, it was alleged
that Perseus had made war upon the allies of Rome, and was preparing for a war
with Rome herself.
As soon as this resolution was passed, preparations
were vigorously made. Veteran volunteers were selected in preference to new
conscripts. Military service in the East, the home of Graeco-Asiatic
civilisation, was much preferred to fighting with the poor and rude inhabitants
of Northern Italy, Spain, and Corsica, where the Roman soldiers had to expect privations,
difficulties, and dangers without end, but could hope for little booty. The
same preference for Oriental warfare was shared in a still higher degree by the
generals. Each of the consuls aspired to the command, and their dispute was
settled only by the decision of the senate that they should draw lots. Thus the
command was obtained by Publius Licinius Crassus, an avaricious, domineering
man, unfit for so important a post. Five years before (in 176), when he was
praetor, he had been ordered out to Spain, which for very good reasons was an
unpopular province at that time. He had on that occasion pleaded that he could
not leave Rome on account of some religious duties which absolutely required
his services, and on taking a solemn oath in the public assembly—that he had
stated the truth, he was excused. On no account would he now give up the chance
of commanding in Macedonia. For, like every Roman, he reckoned upon an easy and
rapid victory as the inevitable result, and he hoped to win valuable spoils. So
thorough indeed were the preparations that failure seemed to be impossible. Of
the eighteen thousand men who had been despatched to Macedonia, some had
already landed in Apollonia, others yet lingered in Brundusium. Apart from
these forces, two newly levied legions of veterans and a corresponding number
of allies were destined for the campaign, besides two thousand Ligurians, and a
reinforcement of Cretan archers and Numidian cavalry and elephants, altogether
an army of more than fifty thousand men. In addition to these must be reckoned
the crews of the fleet, and the expected auxiliaries of the Greek and Asiatic
allies, especially the Achaeans and Pergamenians.
Such a force as this must have appeared to Perseus
quite overwhelming. In spite of all his efforts he had succeeded in collecting
more than thirty thousand foot and five thousand horse; and a great part of
this force consisted of mercenaries who were not to be depended upon. He could
hope for no help from Greece, for the sympathy felt for him in many places by
the national and democratic party was counteracted by the pressure brought upon
his friends by Rome, or neutralised by the machinations of local magistrates,
who favoured the Roman interests. He, therefore, still clung to the hope that
by yielding and by humbling himself he might preserve peace. He actually sent
one more embassy to Rome, when war had already been formally resolved upon by
the people, and when the Roman force was partly in process of formation, and
partly on the march to Macedonia. He offered to comply with the demands of the
senate, and to redress all the grievances of which any Roman allies might
complain, provided only the Romans would withdraw their troops. Instead of a
reply the Romans commanded the ambassadors to leave Italy within eleven days,
and to announce to their master that the consul Licinius would soon be in
Macedonia at the head of an army. If Perseus was ready to give satisfaction, he
should apply to him.
In spite of this arrogant language, which seemed
inspired by the consciousness of superior power, the Romans were by no means so
far advanced in their preparations as at once to begin the war on a large
scale. Only a few thousand men were actually in Greece; the great bulk of the
army was not yet fully organized or hardly on its march to Brundusium. A few
agents had arrived in Greece for the purpose of securing the co-operation of
the Greek states in the impending struggle. Their object was everywhere to
strengthen the Roman partisans, to place them in power, and to obtain
auxiliaries from them. This was no difficult task. The Achaean league had long
been under the direction of the Roman party, at the head of which was
Callicrates. They immediately placed at the disposal of the Romans one thousand
men, with which force, before the Roman troops could arrive, Chalcis was
occupied and secured. The Epirots, although secretly inclined to favour
Macedonia, submitted to the Romans, and sent four hundred men as an auxiliary
force. In Aetolia, Lyciscus, a zealous adherent of Rome, was appointed
commander of the troops of the league. Acarnania and Thessaly also joined Rome.
Whilst Roman diplomacy, in anticipation of the Roman arms, was thus isolating
Perseus, this prince was induced, by a masterstroke of cunning, to remain inactive,
although he was fully armed and prepared to commence hostilities, and the
Romans had not yet appeared on the scene of action. Seeing the storm approach,
in fear and trembling, and still hoping, in his unaccountable delusion, to be
able to arrest it, Perseus had written to the Roman ambassadors before their
departure from Corcyra, and had asked them to state to him their reasons for occupying
Greek towns with Roman troops. This letter had remained unanswered. When, a
short time after, Quintus Marcius Philippus, one of the Roman ambassadors, came
to northern Thessaly, Perseus sent to him to inquire whether he would not
consent to negotiations. Nothing could have been more welcome to Marcius, as he
desired to gain time on some pretext or other. Availing himself, therefore, of
the friendly relations between his family and the royal house of Macedonia, he
came forward in the guise of a kind and ready mediator, listened to the excuses
of Perseus with feigned interest, and advised him to make another attempt in
Rome for the peaceable settlement of the dispute, although he knew quite well
that there was not the least chance of success. Perseus was caught in the
snare; he agreed to conclude a truce, and he sent one more embassy to Rome. In
Rome, it is true, the perfidious cunning of which Marcius boasted, as if he had
achieved a great success, met with some disapproval in the senate on the part
of men who considered it contrary to Roman dignity and honour, but the majority
approved the proceeding, and, according an audience to the Macedonian
ambassadors only for the sake of form, ordered them to leave Italy immediately.
The same order was extended to all Macedonians residing in Italy, and all
therefore were expelled from the territory of the republic with their families
within thirty days.
During this time the Romans continued the movement of
their troops, while their envoys in Greece, in the islands, and in Asia,
actively promoted the scheme of a combined attack upon Perseus, though the
latter, honourably observing the conditions of the truce, had not availed
himself of his present superiority to obtain any military advantage. The
Boeotians, irresolute and wavering between the two parties, were urged to an
unconditional union with Rome, and all but the two insignificant places of
Haliartus and Coronea were induced to join. The chiefs of the opposite faction
were expelled; Achaean troops were raised to garrison Chalcis; Larissa was
occupied, and the important republic of Rhodes, which was strongly suspected of
inclining to Perseus, was prevailed upon to arm a fleet of forty ships to be
placed at the disposal of Rome.
The Romans did not think it necessary to issue a
formal declaration of war, such as had been hitherto usual. It seemed much
simpler to assume that Rome was attacked, and compelled to defend herself. The
consul, Licinius Crassus, left Rome with the usual pomp, after a solemn
sacrifice, to join the army in Brundusium, whence he crossed with it to
Apollonia in order to commence the campaign.
After what has been related, it seems hardly necessary
to add that the war with Perseus was, in the full sense the word, an iniquitous
war of aggression. All that the Romans alleged of the warlike intentions and
preparations of Perseus is either distorted truth or deliberate falsehood.
The more carefully we trace in detail the
dishonourable course of Roman policy, the more we are filled with indignation
and disgust. It is true we discover nothing of novelty in their present
proceedings. We only recognise in more distinct outlines the motives which had
actuated the policy of Rome from the very beginning. Throughout the confused
and vague traditions which rather conceal than exhibit the wars with the
Latins, Etruscans, and Samnites, we can trace the same greed and the same grasping
ambition, joined with the same contempt of justice and equity. It is absurd to
talk of ancient Roman moderation and honesty. The men of the old time, as far
as we can judge, differed from their successors only as being ruder and more
violent. It is of great importance in the history of Rome to recognise the
unity of the Roman character, which has remained unchanged from the oldest
periods downwards, and, such as it appears in the legends of prehistoric ages,
passed over from the republic to the empire, and from imperial Rome to the
despotism of the popes over the minds of men. It is not wonderful that the
Roman character should have remained unchanged for centuries; for the character
of a nation is almost as durable and unalterable as the climate and the nature
of the country which a nation inhabits; but in the fact that the single town of
Rome stamped upon the entire population of Italy her own hard type, that even
after the admixture of Latins, Sabellians, Etruscans, and Greeks, that which
was specifically Roman alone retained predominance over the rest, we have a
proof of vigour and tenacity which helps much to show us how Rome achieved the
sovereignty over the whole world.
While the race of Roman statesmen and warriors in the
second century before our era retained the doctrines, traditions, and qualities
of the men who fought in the Samnite wars, and now, in the consciousness of
exuberant vigour, advanced from conquest to conquest with reckless vehemence
and greed, the kingdom of Philip and Alexander, on the other hand, had lost the
spirit which had raised it from a state of semi-barbarism, and made the
Macedonian chief lord of all Greece and of a great portion of Asia. The ancient
race of Macedonian heroes was extinct. The decrepid nation could not boast a
single man comparable even to the inferior captains of Alexander’s armies. The
Macedonian phalanx was no longer what it had been. It had lost the belief in
its own invincibility since it had ingloriously broken down on the fields of Cynoscephalae
and Magnesia. Perseus himself, though a brave and experienced soldier, had in
him no vestige of a warlike spirit, neither boldness of invention nor
self-confidence. From the very beginning he gave himself up for lost, and did
not venture, even after some unexpected success, to follow up the road to
victory. With a faint heart he drew the sword, not daring, to throw away the
scabbard. Even in the last moment, when the Romans were already approaching,
the question was debated in his council of war, whether unconditional
submission or a desperate resistance was to be preferred, and only when no
other course was left open to him did Perseus determine to make that choice
which was demanded no less by his honour than by necessity.
The army which, after untiring efforts, he had at last
collected was such as no Macedonian king had ever led into the field since the
great Alexander had set out for the conquest of Asia. It numbered forty-three
thousand men, among whom were twenty-one thousand heavyarmed soldiers, forming
the phalanx, and four thousand excellent horsemen; the rest were light-armed
troops, some of them Thracians, the others mercenaries from all the Greek
states, especially Crete, the home of warlike adventurers. His supply of arms,
provisions, and money was amply sufficient for several years. He had been
collecting and amassing these appliances in the hope of never being compelled
to make use of them. When the pressure came, he could not make up his mind to
take boldly the offensive, but awaited the attack. Perhaps he was frightened by
the recollection of his father’s defeat at Cynoscephalae, or he thought he
would have a better chance if he drew the enemy into his own country. If he had
invaded Greece as soon as his preparations were made, he would have gained a
considerable start over his opponents. He could have obtained possession of
many fortified towns, and probably have secured some which were still wavering
between the two belligerents. But he allowed the consul, Roman Licinius
Crassus, to march unmolested through the difficult mountain region of Epirus
and Athamania to Gom-phi, in western Thessaly, and thence to Larissa, which, as
we have seen, had been occupied by the Romans during the armistice. At the same
time, the Roman fleet of forty ships and ten thousand naval troops, commanded
by Marcus Lucretius, appeared at Chalcis, and was joined there by five thousand
Pergamenians under Eumenes, fifteen hundred Achaeans, besides Aetolians,
Thessalians, and other Greek allies. If we suppose, therefore, that the consul,
Licinius, had left a part of his troops on his line of march, the Roman force
was still much greater than that which Perseus could oppose to it.
The road from Thessaly to Macedonia passes through the
narrow gorge of Tempe, where the river Peneus has made for itself a deep bed
between the overhanging rocks of Olympus and the woody slopes of Mount Ossa.
The chain of the Cambunian mountains, extending westward from Olympus, forms a
natural boundary between the two countries, which can only be crossed by
difficult mountain roads. Thus it happened that the pass of Tempe was, from
time immemorial, the only practicable road from north to south, just as further
southwards was the pass of Thermopylae. Perseus, being on the defensive, was
obliged to hold this pass. He therefore marched into Thessaly, across the
mountains to the west of Olympus, and took by surprise several small places,
among which was Gonnos, at the southern extremity of the vale of Tempe. He now
fortified the pass by a triple wall and ditch, and took up his position in the
neighbourhood at Sycurium, on the slope of Mount Ossa, to await the Roman army.
The consul, having been joined in Thessaly by Eumenes
and the auxiliary troops from Greece, lay encamped near Larissa, to the east of
the river Peneus. His inactivity encouraged the enemy. The Macedonians
plundered the surrounding country with impunity, and approached nearer and
nearer to the Roman camp. At length Perseus ventured to take the offensive. It
was his intention to draw the Romans out of their camp, and to defeat them in the
plain with his superior cavalry. After some unimportant skirmishes, the
Macedonian horsemen and light-armed troops came so near to the Roman camp, that
the consul could no longer avoid marching out to meet them. The battle was
fought at the foot of the hill Callicinus, east of the Peneus, between Larissa
and Lycurion, immediately outside the Roman camp. The Roman cavalry forming the
right wing was attacked with great vehemence by the Thracians, and beaten back
with great loss. In like manner the left wing was repulsed, consisting of the
cavalry of the Greek allies. Only the four hundred Thessalian horsemen, who had
been kept in reserve on the extreme left, stood their ground, and covered the
retreat of the defeated army. Fortunately, the fortified camp was near to
receive the fugitives; and this is probably the reason why the Macedonian phalanx,
which now appeared on the scene of action, did not take part in the battle. It
was little suited, on account of its unwieldiness, to storm a Roman camp.
Perseus therefore forbade the continuance of the contest. He was satisfied with
having inflicted on the Romans a loss of from two to three thousand men killed
or taken prisoners, and with having, by this first success, produced a
favourable impression upon his own army, and more especially upon the Greek
states. He even ventured to hope that the Romans would already despair of
success, and be ready to end the war. So little did he know the Romans, or so
thoroughly had his love of peace blinded him, that immediately after the
victory he proposed to the consul to settle the dispute by the renewal of the old
treaties. He declared himself ready to confirm the alliance which his father
Philip had concluded with Rome, and he was even prepared to pay a war
indemnity, such as had been imposed upon Philip, if only the Romans would
conclude peace. But the consul, who had acknowledged his defeat by crossing in
the same night to the left bank of the Peneus, replied with truly Roman
firmness, that he would listen to proposals of peace only if Perseus submitted
unconditionally. He gave the same reply when the pusillanimous victor offered
to pay a larger tribute. Thus ended these premature negotiations, and the war
was accordingly resumed.
Licinius soon afterwards received a reinforcement of
two thousand Numidians and twenty-two elephants, under Misagenes, a son of
Masinissa. Both armies marched about in unhappy Thessaly, apparently without a
fixed plan, engaged principally in collecting the ripe corn for their own
support. At Phalanna they met once more, and here again fortune was
unpropitious to the Romans. They lost six hundred prisoners and one thousand
waggons laden with corn. A body of eight hundred men, who had retired upon a
hill, were in great danger of being cut to pieces, but were at length rescued
from their precarious position by the advance of the legions.
Perseus, continuing his defensive operations, soon
afterwards crossed the mountains into Macedonia before the summer was past,
apparently apprehending no further attack on the part of the Romans. The consul
Licinius made another attempt to take the fortified town of Gonnos, and thus to
open the pass of Tempe. Failing in this, he continued his plundering
expeditions in several parts of Thessaly without achieving either glory or
military success, and finally took up his winter quarters in Thessaly and Boeotia.
Whilst the main armies were confronting each other in
Thessaly, and were in vain attempting to bring matters to a decisive issue, the
war was raging most fearfully in Boeotia. The towns of Haliartus and Coronea
had, as we have seen, remained true to their alliance with Macedonia, when the
other Boeotian towns had, after more or less reluctance, submitted to the
demands of Rome. It was now resolved to punish Haliartus for its presumption.
Before the arrival of the Roman fleet at Chalcis, the Roman legate Publius
Lentulus besieged Haliartus with a troop of Boeotians favourable to Rome. We
can easily imagine how eager the contending factions were to attack and
mutilate one another under the protectorate of their foreign allies, and that
the zeal of the victors was stimulated by the prospect of material gain. But
the Romans were not inclined to concede to their allies the profit which
resulted from the plundering of a conquered town. When, therefore, Marcus
Lucretius had arrived at Chalcis, he ordered the over-hasty Lentulus to retire
from Haliartus; in other words, to leave the spoil untouched. He then marched
to the town with ten thousand men from the fleet, and two thousand
Pergamenians, and was met there by his brother Caius Lucretius, who, in the
capacity of praetor, commanded the fleet. A number of ships sent by faithful
allies from Carthage, Heraclea, Chalcedon, Samos, and Rhodes, were graciously
dismissed because ‘their services were not required.’ The vultures, gathered
around the carcase, were scared away in order that the eagles alone might gorge
upon it. Haliartus was now surrounded by the Roman forces, and was taken, after
a brave resistance. The entire population was either slain or sold into
slavery, the town plundered and razed to the ground.
The treatment of Haliartus was harsh, yet, according
to the laws of war then prevailing, it could not be condemned; for Haliartus
had been taken by storm. But a similar justification did not apply in the case
of Thebes, Coronea, and Chalcis. Thebes was handed over to the vengeance of the
Roman party, who sold their enemies into slavery. Coronea, after surrendering,
shared the same fate. Chalcis, however, an allied and friendly town, was
treated unmercifully, as if it had committed some unpardonable offence. It was
not only plundered by the savage naval troops who were quartered in the houses
of the citizens, but the very temples were despoiled of their treasures of art,
free citizens were ill-treated and sold as slaves, women and children were
disgraced. Everywhere the lowest passions were allowed to riot, and the vilest
appetites were gratified without stint. With some of his plundered pictures the
praetor Caius Lucretius, on his return home, adorned a temple of Aesculapius at
Antium, and with the proceeds obtained by selling the rest he built an aqueduct
at the same place, regardless of the complaints of some honourable tribunes,
who accused him before the Roman people of cruelty and rapacity. Such were the
means by which the Roman nobles acquired princely wealth. Was it to be wondered
at that the aristocracy sought for one war after another, and that republican
simplicity became more and more a dream? Only forty years after the time which
we have reached the Gracchi sought in vain to stem the current of corruption which
swept on irresistibly.
In order to clear himself from the charge of
incompetence, the consul Licinius was mean enough to attribute the loss of the
combat of Callicinus to his Greek allies, and especially to the Aetolian
cavalry. Though of all human vices cowardice was the one from which, the Aetolians
were farthest removed, the Romans did not hesitate to charge them with it. They
felt, no doubt, some satisfaction in punishing them now for boasting so long
and so persistently of having contributed most to the victory of Cynoscephalae.
At the same time, the reproach of cowardice and treachery served as a
convenient instrument for removing from Aetolia all who were still opposed to
Rome. Several eminent men, who were troublesome to the Roman partisan Lyciscus,
were sent to Rome to clear themselves from the charge of having caused the bad
conduct of the Aetolian cavalry. This proceeding was as violent and arbitrary
as it was impolitic, for the Macedonian victory had brought about a sudden
change in the minds of the Greeks. The spirit of patriotism, which had been
kept down only by the fear of Roman invincibility, burst forth everywhere. The
outrages, extortions, and robberies committed by the Roman officials and
soldiers, heaped fuel upon these flames. In Epirus an open insurrection broke
out, excited chiefly by the wretched Charops, who had been brought up in Rome,
and now sought by means of Roman protection to obtain influence and power. By
calumniating the leaders of the national party he succeeded in driving them
into open revolt. Almost all the tribes of Epirus now rebelled, with the single
exception of the Thesprotians. The country between Italy and Macedonia, which was
of the greatest importance to the Romans for the conduct of their operations,
they were now compelled to regard as hostile, and Ambracia had to be occupied
by a garrison of two thousand men.
Such were the results obtained in the first year of
the war by the contemptible strategy of incompetent commanders, and by the
cupidity and cruelty of all the Roman officers and soldiers. Many Romans,
indeed, enriched themselves; but the reputation of the republic was deeply shaken; and had the Greeks had a
national leader such as fortune had so often given them in time of need, had
Perseus possessed the warlike virtues even of his father or his great-uncle
Antigonus, it is probable that the independence of Greece might have been
prolonged, for the benefit even of the Romans, whom the vices of prosperity
were already hurrying towards national ruin.
The year 170 BC brought new, but not better,
commanders for the Roman army and fleet. The consul Aulus Hostilius Mancinus,
proved as incapable as his predecessor, and Lucius Hortensius, who succeeded to
the command of the fleet, was perhaps a few shades more greedy and more violent
than Lucretius, but not in the least more able as a soldier. The latter, before
returning with his plunder to his villa near Antium, had allowed himself to be
surprised at Oreos by the hostile fleet, and had lost four quinqueremes and a
whole transport fleet with provisions. To supply the troops with food was a
very difficult task, as the exhausted land was unable to furnish what was
wanted. It was therefore necessary in the wars with Philip, Antiochus, and the Aetolians,
and now in the war with Perseus, to send out large quantities of corn from
Sicily, Sardinia, and Africa. If such a convoy was delayed or destroyed the
operations in the field could easily be paralysed, and it is therefore not
unlikely that the inactivity of the army up to this time was owing to some
stoppage in the supply of provisions. On the other hand, the soldiers were
compelled, by the scantiness of supplies, to get what they wanted wherever they
could find it, and thus many an act of cruelty may be explained or excused.
Hortensius, probably for the purpose of replenishing his stores, which were
reduced by the fault of his predecessor, sailed along the coast to levy
contributions from the different maritime cities, and among others from Abdera
in Thrace, from which he demanded one hundred thousand denarii and fifty
thousand modii of wheat. The Abderites, instead of sending forthwith what had
been demanded, asked for a short delay, during which they sent to the consul,
and even to Rome, to ask for some reduction. Before an answer came back,
Hortensius caused the town to be occupied, the chief men to be executed, and
the remainder to be sold as slaves. Perhaps by such a process he succeeded in
obtaining the necessary supplies from other towns, which would rather be
plundered than utterly destroyed. But some towns, like Emathia, Amphipolis,
Maronea, and Aenus, were courageous enough, and strong enough, to shut their
gates, and to resist the outrageous rapacity of the Romans.
About the operations of the consul Hostilius Mancinus
during the year 170 hardly anything is known. It appears that he made two
fruitless attempts to penetrate into Macedonia, but that, repulsed by Perseus,
he spent the remainder of the year in Thessaly without venturing on any further
enterprise, occupied only with establishing in the army a certain degree of
order and discipline. Perseus had nothing more to apprehend on this side, and was
for some time engaged in Thrace and Illyria. The Romans also seemed to have
been induced by the revolt of the Epirots to devote their attention chiefly to
Illyria. Gentius, king of Scodra, the successor of Pleuratus, who had long been
on good terms with Rome, was the friend and ally of the Roman people. This
friendship had its drawbacks. It prevented Gentius from enjoying full freedom
of action, and restrained him in his practice of piracy, without which the
Illyrians fancied that they could not exist. Hence arose complaints and disputes,
and there seemed to be good foundation for the news which the Issaeans (the
Greek colonists on the island of Issa) carried to Rome in the year 172, that
Gentius was in secret correspondence with Perseus. Yet Gentius did not dare to
oppose Rome openly, and could for the time still be counted as a Roman ally.
When, therefore, in the beginning of the war, Lucius Decimius had been sent to
him to ask for his aid against Macedonia, he placed at the disposal of the
Romans a fleet of fifty-four Illyrian galleys.
A Roman army of about twenty thousand men, commanded
by Cneus Licinius, was destined for Illyria, and a part of it marched through
Dassaretia towards the Macedonian frontier. From thence they expected to be
able to penetrate into Macedonia with less difficulty than by way of the
strongly defended Thessalian passes. The same road had been attempted in the
war with Philip; but the difficulties of supplying the armies with provisions
were so great that the consul Sulpicius Galba found himself compelled to retire
to the coast. An enterprising general might, nevertheless, think that the
mistakes of the first expedition could be avoided. Accordingly, the consul Caius
Cassius, the colleague of Licinius, formed an adventurous plan, founded upon
the calculation that Macedonia could be invaded from the north-west.
Disappointed in his hope of receiving the command in Macedonia, and having
obtained by lot Cisalpine Gaul for his province, he, in total ignorance of the
natural features of the country and of the distances, had formed the idea of
gaining his object by marching round the Adriatic, and reaching Macedonia
through Illyria. The fact that the designation ‘Illyria’ extended, very
indefinitely, to the northern extremity of the Adriatic, may have caused him to
fancy that when in the land of the Gauls, or in Istria, he would not be very
far from the possessions of the Illyrian king Gentius. He had set out on this
expedition without the authority or even the knowledge of the senate. It was by
mere chance that the senate received the news of this wild undertaking, and in
the greatest haste they sent messengers to Cassius to order him to return
immediately.
If it was the intention of the Romans to invade
Macedonia by way of Illyria in the year 170, their efforts must either have
been very feeble, or else they must have been hindered by the insurrection of
the Epirots, or by the doubtful attitude of Gentius of Scodra. Anyhow, what
they did undertake had no good result. Appius Claudius Cento, a legate who
commanded an army of four thousand Romans and eight thousand Illyrians,
attempted to take by surprise Uscana, a mountain fortress on the Macedonian
frontier, but was repulsed, and lost on his retreat the greater part of his
troops. This news caused great dissatisfaction in Rome, and induced the senate
to send a special commission to Greece to investigate the matter. By this means
they ascertained what, it appears, the generals purposely kept secret, namely,
that matters were not proceeding favourably at all, that Perseus had
successfully maintained his position during the summer, and had even reduced
several towns, that the Roman allies had lost courage, and, above all, that the
army of the consul was diminished by the absence of a large number of soldiers
on leave without any justifiable cause.
It was probably about this time that the senate was
assailed by embassies from the ill-used Greek towns, among which that of Chalcis
especially produced a great impression. They saw that matters could no longer
be carried, on in this way, and that the insatiable greed, cruelty, and tyranny
of the Roman magistrates not only disgraced the honour of the republic, but
also endangered the success of the campaign. If the senate could not, by a
formal resolution, bestow military ability on the leaders of the army, they
could, at any rate, restrain the abuse of official power; or, at least, they
could express their displeasure if they were not entitled to act as a superior
administrative authority, and to issue direct orders. It was therefore resolved
that in future no commander should levy contributions, or require any services
to be rendered to him by the allies of the Roman people, without special
authorisation from the senate. The Greeks, who had been ill-treated, were
promised redress, the commanders were requested to act with moderation. For the
losses which had been suffered compensation was made, or at least promised. One
of the guilty, the ex-praetor Caius Lucretius, was accused by two tribunes, and
condemned by the popular assembly to pay a considerable fine.
Thus, when the second year of the war had passed, the
Romans had rather lost than gained ground. Not one Roman soldier had as yet
entered Macedonia; but many had fallen, or had been taken prisoners. Some of the
Greek allies were exasperated by ill-treatment, others had become estranged and
discouraged, a few were in open rebellion. But the plainest proof of the
unfavourable state of affairs was that the cautious, and even timid, Perseus
advanced from the defensive to the offensive. Even during the summer of 170 he
had held the wretched consul Hostilius Mancinus in such contempt that he left him
stationed in Thessaly, and marched northwards to attack the Thracians and
Dardanians, who had probably been instigated by the Romans to invade Macedonia
whilst the Macedonian army was engaged in the south of the kingdom. In
conjunction with his brave ally, Kotys, king of the Odrysians, Perseus defeated
the Thracians, and then turned westward, where, in the meantime, the Epirots
had declared against Rome, while Gentius of Scodra still remained neutral, in
expectation of events. It appears that in the winter of 170-169 the Romans had
taken possession of the town of Uscana in Illyria, from which Appius Claudius
had been at first repulsed with great loss in the course of the year. Perseus
now forced the town to surrender, and took the Roman garrison of four thousand
men prisoners; but he refrained, perhaps out of pity, perhaps out of policy,
from selling them into slavery, as the laws of warfare permitted. Then he
marched about Illyria, regardless of the severity of the weather, conquering
towns, and carrying away with him the Roman garrisons.
After such successes, Perseus commenced negotiations
with Gentius, who now mustered courage to declare himself the enemy of Rome.
Then he marched southwards into Aetolia, where he expected that a faction in
Stratus, now the most important town of the Aetolians, was prepared to make
common cause with him. With a part of his army he undertook a most difficult
march over snow-covered mountains and swollen rivers, to within a short
distance of Stratus, hoping that the town would be betrayed into his hands. But
he discovered that a detachment of Romans, warned by the opposite party, had
come in haste from Ambracia, and had anticipated him in occupying the town.
This spirited expedition therefore failed. Artolia was too well garrisoned by
the enemy for Perseus to remain there; he was forced to return into his own
kingdom, after an expedition on the whole successful and creditable to him.
The Roman commanders, Appius Claudius and Lucius
Coelius, tried in vain, after his departure, to regain the lost towns. They marched
to and fro, without a definite plan, in the wild mountain regions; but the only
result was that they lost a great number of men in killed and prisoners. After
the complete failure of his military operations, Appius Claudius dismissed his
Greek auxiliaries to their respective homes, sent his Italian soldiers into
winter quarters in the neighbourhood of Dyrrhachium, and returned himself to
Rome, in order, as Livy reports, to perform some sacrifice. Thus ended the
Roman campaign of the year 170 in Illyria, not only without the slightest
military advantage, but even with confessed losses, incurred in a manner at
once deplorable and dishonourable to the Roman arms.
The chief command in the East for the year 169, the
third year of the war, was allotted to the consul Quintus Marcius Philippus,
the same who, two years previously as ambassador, had outwitted Perseus, and
persuaded him to remain inactive. If he had on that occasion proved a keen and
crafty diplomatist, he had, on the other hand, played hitherto but a sorry part
as a general. During his first consulship, in the year 186, he had allowed
himself to be surprised by the Ligurians in a narrow valley, and to be so
completely beaten, that his army fled disgracefully, leaving behind several
thousands dead, and many standards. This defeat did not prevent his re-election
to the consulship for the year 169, and when he, with Cneus Servilius Caepio,
had obtained the votes of the centuries for the year 169, he also received by
lot the command in Macedonia, although after the unsatisfactory result of two
campaigns, the progress of the war was beginning to be regarded with a certain
amount of impatience if not anxiety.
The unexpected audacity of Perseus during the winter
had given rise to the opinion that he would now continue the offensive, and
penetrate into Thessaly. The Romans, therefore, made extensive preparations,
and, besides sending supplementary troops to Macedonia, formed four legions of
reserve. Even in the previous year the consul Hostilius Mancinus had
endeavoured to limit the practice of giving leave of absence too liberally to
the troops in the field. The Greek allies, especially the Achaeans, offered to
exert themselves to the utmost, and to muster an auxiliary force of five
thousand men, while king Eumenes, and even Prusias of Bithynia, who had, until
now, looked on inactively, sent ships for the reinforcement of the Roman fleet.
Marcius was in a position to make a vigorous attack, and perhaps he hoped thus
to anticipate the designs of Perseus. He conceived the bold design of crossing
the mountains by an extremely difficult pass parallel with that of Tempe, and
of penetrating into Macedonia along the coast with the co-operation of the
Roman fleet. The fact that this plan succeeded in the main, in spite of the
evident incapacity both of Marcius Philippus and of Marcius Figulus, the commander
of the fleet, who was absent at the decisive moment, is one of the many proofs
that courage is, after all, the first and foremost virtue of a soldier.
Perseus, with his main force, was now at the
south-eastern extremity of Macedonia, between the pass of Tempe and the fortress
of Dion, which lay ten miles further north, in a part where the mountains again
run down eastward to the sea, and thus form another line of defence. The pass
of Tempe was strongly occupied in four successive places, from Gonnos in the
south as far as the narrowest part of the valley. Besides this Perseus had
taken the precaution of placing in two localities, where the mountains could be
crossed, strong detachments under Hippias and Asclepiodotus. It was upon the
possible negligence of these troops that Marcius founded his plan. After a
difficult march an advanced guard of light-armed troops reached the heights,
where Hippias and his men, feeling perfectly secure, were easily surprised. The
main force followed, and had, it appears, to contend more with the difficult
nature of the ground than with the enemy. The elephants, especially, caused
great trouble. Circumstances had so changed, that the Romans, who had formerly
encountered these animals in the armies of their enemies, were now the only
nation that employed them in war. It almost seems as if a kind of superstition
attached itself to them; for, according to all reports, they must more often
have been the cause of inconvenience, and even of accidents, than of military
success; and yet the Romans, after their victories over the Carthaginians,
Macedonians, and Syrians, always tried to prevent their enemies from using
elephants of war, and had themselves learnt to use them. After unspeakable
exertions, which Polybius describes as an eye-witness, Marcius reached the
plain, which is bounded on the east by the sea, and on the west by the
semicircular range of Olympus. He had avoided, by a flank march, the pass of
Tempe; but it seemed as if he had got into a trap set on purpose, from which it
was impossible to escape. A retreat by the same route by which he had come was
out of the question, on account of the physical obstacles, and, if attempted,
it might have been prevented by a handful of men. In the vale of Tempe the
fourfold Macedonian posts were still stationed, while, in the pass of Dion, in
front of him, was the Macedonian main force; to the east was the sea, but not a
trace of the Roman fleet, which was to bring supplies and to co-operate, was
visible. If Perseus had but possessed the military instinct of a mere
barbarian, shown seventeen years before by the Ligurians in their war with
Marcius, the Roman army would have been lost. But Perseus was so disconcerted
by the audacity of Marcius, that he at once gave up everything for lost. He
issued orders that the troops left behind should evacuate the pass of Tempe,
and he even retreated from the strong position near Dion, removing, with the
greatest haste, the most valuable treasures in the town, and taking even the
inhabitants away with him. His fear was so great that he ordered his crown
treasures at Pella to be thrown into the sea, and the naval establishments at
Thessalonica to be set on fire.
Such abject cowardice cannot be reconciled with the
previous conduct of Perseus, which, if not heroic, had at any rate not been
contemptible, and we are inclined to believe that the facts were not precisely
what our informants tell us. Perhaps Perseus doubted the fidelity of the troops
who were charged with the defence of the passes. We know that there were
traitors among the servants of the king, for Livy relates that one Onesimus,
formerly one of his friends and councillors, went over to the Romans, and was
rewarded by them for his services. Hippias, however, who ought to have defended
the pass by which the Romans passed, seems to have been guilty only of
negligence and not of treason. On the other hand, we are almost inclined to
doubt that the garrison in the pass of Tempe really retreated in compliance
with the orders of Perseus; for in this case they would surely have destroyed
the magazines of provisions, and not have allowed them to fall into the hands
of the Romans ; and the garrison of Heracleum, a small town, north of the pass,
would have received the same orders to withdraw, whereas we are informed that
it offered a stout resistance. Moreover, the retreat of the Macedonian troops
northwards, through the narrow plain occupied by the Romans, would have been
extremely difficult. We venture, therefore, to surmise that the despair of
Perseus was not mere pusillanimity, but the result, at least in part, of
treason, and that he did not voluntarily give up his position in the pass of
Tempe. But we cannot decide this point with any certainty, as all our reports
are derived from Roman sources, and as unfortunately even Polybius, the most
trustworthy witness, regarded Perseus with evident disfavour and partiality.
The consul Marcius Philippus was at first far from
congratulating himself on his successful march across the mountains. He saw
with terror the danger of his situation, and only the retreat of the Macedonian
troops assured him that his bold plan had succeeded. He now took up the
position at Dium which had been abandoned by Perseus, and thence he penetrated
further to the northward unmolested. But he was compelled to retreat by lack of
provisions. He anxiously watched the sea, where he expected the Roman fleet to
arrive. At length it came in sight and anchored; but the commander, Marcius
Figulus, had left behind on the coast of Magnesia the ships laden with stores.
The Romans would now have perished from hunger, even without any attack on the
part of the enemy, had not the tidings happily arrived that the pass of Tempe
was occupied by Spurius Lucretius. On receiving this news Marcius again marched
back in that direction, in order to feed his soldiers with the provisions there
captured in the Macedonian magazines.
Meanwhile Perseus had recovered from his fright. His
premature order to burn the naval establishments at Thessalonica had not been
executed by his more prudent servant; the crown treasures which had been thrown
into the sea he now caused to be fished up by divers. In order to regain what
lie had lost by his mistake in giving up his position at Dium, he followed the
retreating consul and took up the same ground once more. He naturally found the
place plundered and much damaged; but he restored the fortifications, and
proceeded further south to the banks of the Elpeus. This river, though almost
dry in the summer, had a wide, irregular bed, with high banks, and might be
used as a natural line of defence. Perseus erected a fortified camp, on the
northern bank of the river, and remained in it the rest of the summer; whilst
Marcius contented himself with reducing the small fortress of Heracleum, north
of the pass of Tempe, the only one which still held out, and sent a detachment
to Thessaly, which made vain attempts to take the little town of Meliboea.
Marcius seemed to have given up the plan of storming the Macedonian position at
Dium, or of marching round it. The result of the third year of the war remained
limited, therefore, to the taking of the pass of Tempe, which, it is true, as
the gate of Macedonia, was of the greatest importance.
The Roman fleet accomplished far less than the army.
On the whole, it is again clearly perceptible that naval operations were not
carried on with the same spirit and on the same scale as in the first war with
Carthage, and that even since the Syrian war they had become more and more
feeble. At the time of his rupture with Rome, Perseus had no fleet at all. The
Romans, therefore, had to apprehend no interference in their movements, and the
fleet might easily and effectually have supported the endeavours of the army to
penetrate into Macedonia. The mountain ranges protected Macedonia only from an
enemy advancing by land, and it was of no avail to defend mountain passes, if
armies could be conveyed beyond them on board a fleet. But instead of acting in
common with the army, the commanders of the fleet seem to have confined
themselves to the far more lucrative task of plundering, and they refused the
reinforcements which were offered them by their Greek allies, because for this
purpose they did not need them. We have already spoken of the infamous and
systematic plundering of Lucretius and Hortensius. At length, in the third year
of the war, it was decided that army and fleet should co-operate according to a
fixed plan. But the praetor Marcius Figulus, who was to have supported his
kinsman, the consul Marcius Philippus, in his invasion of Macedonia, was
foolish enough to leave behind, on the coast of Magnesia, the ships laden with
provisions, and appeared north of the pass of Tempe with his armed vessels
alone. This blunder forced the consul to retire, and to give up the strong
position already occupied at Dium. It would even have placed the Roman army in
the greatest danger of perishing from hunger, had not the surrender of the
fortresses and stores in the pass of Tempe suddenly changed the aspect of
affairs, and relieved the consul for the present.
The praetor now undertook an expedition to the coast
of Macedonia for the purpose of plundering ; but was repulsed at Thessalonica, Aenea,
and Antigonea, and, being reinforced by Eumenes with twenty ships, and by
Prusias with five Bithynian vessels, he laid regular siege to Cassandrea, a
town built by Cassander on the site of ancient Potidea. This attack, undertaken
with considerable vigour, failed, nevertheless, when Perseus succeeded in
throwing into the town a reinforcement from Thessalonica. The siege had to be
raised with great loss. After an equally fruitless attack upon Torone, Marcius
and Eumenes sailed back to the Pagassean gulf, where the Macedonians still had
possession of the strong town of Demetrias. The Romans hoped to carry the place
by assault; but they found the garrison prepared, and when Perseus succeeded in
sending a reinforcement of two thousand men into the town, they were obliged to
retire from the place without having accomplished their object.
The allies now parted. Eumenes returned to Asia, and
the praetor sent his ships to winter at Sciathus and Euboea. Thus the fleet had
in this year accomplished not more than in the two previous campaigns. Not one
of its plans had succeeded; everywhere it had been repulsed with loss; and the
expedition could only have one result, namely, that of raising the courage and
self-confidence of Perseus, and, on the other hand, of arousing among the
allies of Rome a doubt of her invincibility, and a general discontent with the
rapacious barbarians.
After three years of unsuccessful warfare the
authority of Rome had indeed greatly suffered, and here and there, among the
eastern states, the desire was awakened to make use of the opportunity for
gaining a more independent position with respect to Rome. If Macedonia unaided
was strong enough to carry on the war for three years, not only without loss
but even with credit and varied success, it was surely possible that by a
tolerably vigorous policy on the part of the eastern states the advance of the
Roman power might be checked at last, and that a kind of balance of power might
be established between the Greek and the Italian world. On the strength of this
calculation Perseus founded his plan; but, in spite of alibis successes and
favourable prospects, he indulged no hopes of destroying or even of conquering
the Roman power, an object in which even Hannibal had failed. He would have
been satisfied if he could have put an end to the war, and placed his relations
to Rome on a footing more favourable and dignified. He therefore commenced
negotiations with the kings of Pergamum, Syria, and Bithynia, and with the
Rhodians—negotiations which were to be kept strictly secret, for fear of the
Roman power, until they should have been completed. Unhappily, by the preceding
events, he had been so much estranged from Eumenes, that an agreement for the
interests of both parties could hardly be made. Above all, there was wanting on
the one side all confidence in the honesty of the other. Moreover, with
Eumenes, not satisfied with a reconciliation with Perseus, in which he was so
much interested, tried to make it the occasion for a profitable bargain. He
demanded from Perseus five hundred talents for simple neutrality, and fifteen
thousand for his mediation in the conclusion of peace. Perseus rejected the
first offer, explaining that it was dishonourable to him, and far more so to
Eumenes. For the mediation of peace, however, he was willing to pay the sum
required, and proposed placing it in the great national sanctuary at Samothrace,
until the results should be secured to him; meanwhile, both kings were to send
hostages to Cnossus, in Crete, as a security for the execution of the treaty.
Eumenes was not satisfied with this suggestion, because Samothrace lay within
the dominions of Perseus, whom he believed capable of deceiving him, and of
pocketing the price after having gained his object. So paltry was the distrust,
and so mean the spirit of overreaching which marked the negotiations of two
princes who ought to have made every effort and every sacrifice in order to
oppose haughty Romo with combined forces. The apportionment of the degree of
blame due to each is a matter with which we need not concern ourselves; but one
thing is evident, that it is unjust to make Perseus alone responsible for the
failure of the plan, and especially to name his avarice as the cause of it. It
is quite natural that Perseus should require security from Eumenes for carrying
out his part of the engagement; nor could he be expected to run the risk of
losing unnecessarily the money which he so much needed for carrying on the war.
The negotiations between Perseus and Eumenes are said
to have been begun during the maritime expedition of the summer (169 BC), in
which Eumenes took part with twenty ships, and which ended so in gloriously.
They were continued in the following winter after the return of Eumenes to
Asia, secretly, of course, and under cover of discussions for the exchange of
prisoners. The Romans, it appears, conceived suspicions, but they had no evidence
in hand, and it is probable that they purposely avoided forcing the king of
Pergamum openly to join the enemy, especially as it was not unknown to them
that some other states were inclined to desert them.
The most powerful of these states was Syria. King
Seleucus (187-176) had conscientiously kept the peace concluded with Rome by
his father, Antiochus; but his disputes with Egypt, occasioned by the
possession of Coele-Syria, might easily give rise to a new rupture with Rome,
which had always assumed the character of patron of Egypt. Perseus, hoping to
profit by this coolness between Syria and Rome, sent a message to
Antiochia, to call the attention of Antiochus Epiphanes, the successor of
Seleucus, to the common interests which ought to unite the eastern states in
resisting the aggressive policy of Rome. But Antiochus was either too indolent
to rouse himself to so decided a course of action, or else he hoped more easily
to carry out his Egyptian policy, to which he attached greater importance,
while the Romans were engaged in a war with Perseus, just as his father,
Antiochus the Great, had done during the second Macedonian war. In short, he
remained neutral, an act of weakness for which he was made to suffer only too
soon.
The proposals of Perseus were more readily received by
the small republic of Rhodes. The Rhodians, at the end of the Syrian war, had
not met with that attention and those rewards to which they considered
themselves entitled. Their interests had, in many respects, been sacrificed to
those of the king of Pergamum. The aristocratic party in Rhodes, which was
favourable to Rome, was thus discredited, and their opponents, the democrats,
who upheld the national cause, gained ground. A feeling hostile to Rome sprang
up, and was fostered by all that was left of the old Hellenic spirit of
independence. Perseus became more and more popular in Rhodes. Upon his marriage
with Laodice, the daughter of king Seleucus Philopator of Syria, they had
escorted his bride to Macedonia with the whole of their fleet, and had by that
act caused great displeasure in Rome. Now, after the war with Macedonia had
broken out, their commerce had suffered frequent interruptions. They justly
feared that it would suffer more and more under the vexatious and illiberal
mercantile policy of Rome. Yet they had been careful not to take a part hostile
to Rome, or even to give cause of suspicion, and at the beginning of the war
they had placed a well-appointed fleet of forty ships at her disposal. Nevertheless,
the Romans did not trust the Rhodians. Eumenes, their neighbour and rival, had
his spies among them, and took care that every unguarded word which might drop
from a public orator in the market-place should at once be reported to the
senate. Perhaps this was the reason why the Rhodian fleet was not called upon
by the Romans to cooperate. It may have been mistrusted, perhaps also it was
not absolutely wanted. The Rhodians, made uncomfortable by the apparent
alienation of the Romans, resolved to send ambassadors in the spring of the
year to assure the senate of their fidelity. The embassy was graciously
received, as far as appearances went, and obtained, among other marks of
favour, the permission to export corn from Sicily. At the same time Rhodian ambassadors
were sent to Greece to the consul Marcius Philippus. The latter, who was fond
of crooked ways, took aside one of the ambassadors, and succeeded in convincing
him that Rome would welcome a mediation on the part of Rhodes for the purpose
of restoring peace. Polybius does not venture to decide whether Marcius,
discouraged by the slow progress of the war, was really inclined for an
amicable arrangement, or whether he was endeavouring, with perfidious cunning,
to entice the Rhodians to a step which he knew would cause the greatest exasperation
in Rome. Yet Polybius is disposed to accept the latter alternative; and as he
knew Marcius personally, and was at that time present with him in the camp, he
surely was able to judge correctly.
Thus the Rhodians were misled, and the Roman consul
himself contributed not a little to make the anti-Roman policy prevail in
Rhodes; for his desire to put an end to the war by the mediation of the
Rhodians was naturally looked upon as a proof of timidity and weakness. In the conflict
of factions which at Rhodes, as in every other Greek democracy, determined the
policy of the state more by sentiment than by judgment, those men now
predominated who had always been zealous for the cause of Hellenic
independence, and in their enthusiasm they took no heed of the signs of the
times. There were men all over Greece, whose thoughts were full of the heroic
deeds of their forefathers, who were inspired with patriotism by the names of
Marathon and Salamis, and who failed to see the vast gulf which separated those
times from their own. If any Greek community could do so, the Rhodians had a
right to think themselves worthy of their ancestors; and indeed against the
Persians the Greek sword would still have proved as sharp as ever. But an enemy
was now to be encountered of a different temper; and it would have been wiser,
though perhaps less dignified, to take into account the altered circumstances
than to be guided by patriotic feelings alone.
The treacherous overtures of the consul Marcius
Philippus were followed in the course of the year 169 by reports of the warlike
operations, which, especially so far as they regarded the fleet, were far from
realising the expectations of the Romans, but which raised once more the
wildest hopes of the patriotic party in Greece. Then, in the following winter,
ambassadors came to Rhodes from Perseus, and from king Gentius. They brought
the news of an alliance formed by the two kings, and invited the Rhodians to
join. This seemed the right moment to the hot-headed leaders of the national party.
On their advice it was now resolved to send embassies to Rome and Macedonia, to
ask the belligerents to put an end to the war, and at the same time to declare
that Rhodes would range itself against those who refused to make peace.1 We
shall soon see what lamentable consequences this rash step entailed upon
Rhodes.
While Perseus was hoping for the support of the
Hellenic states in Asia, offers of immediate military assistance came to him
from a very different quarter. A horde of twenty thousand Gauls, who had
crossed the Danube, and were approaching the frontier of Macedonia, offered to
serve as mercenaries. If Perseus had at that time been hard pressed, or in want
of troops, he would probably have accepted the offer without hesitation; but
his army was strong enough, and twenty thousand Gauls were a force hard to
manage, should they take into their heads to mutiny under some pretext or
other, as was by no means unusual with Gallic mercenaries. Perseus was willing
to take into his pay five thousand of them. These he fancied he could employ
and keep in order. But, as the chief of the Gauls would not agree to a division
of his forces, the negotiations came to an end, and the Gauls marched back to
their own country.
Perseus thought that he could the more easily dispense
with these untrustworthy hordes, because, about this time, the treaty with the
Illyrian king, Gentius, had at length been concluded. Gentius had demanded
three hundred talents as the price of his participation in the war with Rome,
and had received a small amount in advance. Perseus promised to send the
remainder, but he was in no hurry to do so, until Gentius should have openly
declared war against Rome. When Gentius had done this by seizing two Roman
ambassadors, Perseus felt convinced that his aid was secured to him in any
case. He therefore kept back the rest of the stipulated sum, as if, to use
Livy’s expression, he were intent upon keeping undiminished the spoil which the
Romans would find after his defeat. If this report be true, Perseus acted not
only dishonourably but also unwisely, for, in withholding the reward from a man
who only worked for the sake of it, he could not but expect to find in him an
unwilling, and therefore a useless servant. It is, however, not impossible that
this story, too, belongs to the list of slanders of which the Romans were so
liberal towards their enemies.
The prospects of Perseus had never been brighter than
during the winter of 169-168. Everywhere negotiations were being carried on
satisfactorily, even where they had not yet, as in Illyria, arrived at the
desired conclusion. The Roman army, and still more the fleet, were in a
condition which obliged them to remain inactive. The consul Marcius Philippus,
in his winter quarters, was intent chiefly upon providing for the efficiency of
his army, by procuring corn, clothes, and horses. The force in Illyria,
commanded by Appius Claudius, was in a deplorable condition. After his abortive
operations in the year 170 he had been obliged to remain inactive. An attempt
to summon to his aid five thousand Achaeans had failed, because the consul
Marcius Philippus, probably out of jealousy and envy, had advised the Achaeans
to pay no attention to the requests of Appius. It was indeed a delicate question
which now presented itself to the Achaeans, for the wily Marcius had given them
no written order, and matters had already come to such a pass, that no allied
state ventured to refuse compliance with the demands of any Roman commander
without trembling for its safety. But, on the other hand, Appius Claudius could
show no senatorial authorisation for his request, and only a short time
previously the senate had formally told the Greeks to attend to no demands of
any general issued without a written order from the senate. The five thousand
men had therefore not been sent, and Appius Claudius found himself in so
wretched a state that if he did not now receive other reinforcements he would
be obliged to evacuate the country with the rest of his troops.
The fleet was in a worse plight still. The crews had
dwindled away, partly by disastrous battles, partly by disease, partly by
desertion, while those who remained were suffering from insufficiency of
clothing, and complaining of arrears of pay. While the Roman fleet was thus
paralysed, the small Macedonian galleys issuing from Thessalonica made the
whole sea unsafe, attacked the transports intended for the army, and
interrupted the communication. A total change had taken place. In the beginning
of the war Perseus had had no ships, and the Romans, feeling their superiority,
had declined the assistance offered them by their allies. Now the new fleet of
the Macedonians commanded the sea, and the Roman vessels lay useless on the
shore. No wonder if the Greeks, especially the Rhodians, began to lose faith in
the Romans, and to believe that in the end the Macedonian arms would prevail.
However, if they really thought so, they had a very mistaken notion of the
Roman power. The ill success which the Roman arms had hitherto met with, was
due only to the incapacity of the generals and to the false economy of the
senate. A happy choice at the next consular election, and the earnest desire on
the part of the government to furnish the necessary means, sufficed to make
good the mistakes hitherto committed, and to bear down all resistance. The
senate and the people had at length roused themselves, and resolved to complete
the work which they had begun.
The consuls of the year 168 were Caius Licinius
Crassus and Lucius Aemilius Paullus, the son of the consul of the same name,
who had been killed at Cannae. The command in Macedonia was conferred upon the
latter in the usual way by casting lots. Aemilius had acquired some reputation
as a general. When proconsul in Spain (190 BC), he had suffered a considerable
reverse, and, after losing six thousand men, had been repulsed by the
Lusitanians. But in the following year he had redeemed his loss by defeating
the Lusitanians in a great battle. After his first consulship, in the year 182,
he had as proconsul compelled the Ligurians to renounce their habits, of
piracy, and had been rewarded by a triumph for his military exploits. But he
had not succeeded in being reelected until, in the third year of the war with
Perseus, the poor results attained by the previous commanders caused public
attention to be directed towards him as a more able soldier. His honesty
perhaps was still more in his favour; for it was known that he had not enriched
himself in his public offices, as was then the custom with most men. He was,
however, anything but a democrat, and was closely connected with the ruling
families. His eldest son had passed by adoption into the family of the Fabii,
and his second son, who afterwards destroyed Carthage and Numantia, was adopted
under the name of Scipio Aemilianus by a son of the victor of Zama. After
having divorced his first wife, a lady of the ancient and noble family of the
Papirii, Aemilius Paullus married a second time, and had four children, two
daughters and two sons, who were still very young when their father, a
sexagenarian, but hale and strong, entered upon his second consulship (168 BC).
Love of his children seems to have been a prominent feature in the character of
this man, of whom, unfortunately, in spite of Plutarch’s long biography, in
reality we know so little. He employed all his leisure time in superintending
their education, and conducted it in the spirit of the age, causing his sons to
be instructed by Greek masters in the language and literature of Greece, and in
mental as well as bodily accomplishments. We shall see how the day of his
triumph over Perseus and the last years of his life were clouded by the death
of his two youngest and most beloved children, and how he bore this misfortune
with Roman fortitude.
The wars with the barbarous tribes in Spain and
Liguria were not a good school for the Roman generals, as is plainly shown by
the incapacity of those who commanded in Macedonia. If, therefore, as is
reported, something extraordinary was expected of Aemilius Paullus, it must
have been his character, apart from his former exploits, that inspired the
Romans with confidence. At the same time, care was taken that he should have
the means of accomplishing the task entrusted to him. Armaments were made which
recall to our minds the time of the Hannibalic war. About eighty thousand
infantry and more than four thousand cavalry were levied. The remainder of the
troops in Illyria and Macedonia could not amount to less than twenty-five
thousand. Thus the republic had far above one hundred thousand men in arms,
without counting the forces scattered over Spain, Sardinia, Corsica, and
Sicily. Of this overpowering force, fourteen thousand infantry, twelve hundred
horse, five thousand marines, besides the remainder of the old troops still fit
for use, forming together with, the auxiliaries an army which at the very least
must have amounted to fifty thousand infantry and two thousand horse, were
destined for Macedonia. Twenty thousand four hundred infantry and fourteen
hundred horse were sent to Illyria, where the Roman troops had suffered even
more than in Macedonia, and where the alliance of Gentius with Perseus had
created new enemies. The array in that country must thus have been raised at
the very least to thirty thousand infantry and two thousand horse. With such
forces the Romans might begin the fourth campaign with a fair prospect of a
speedy victory.
The first blow was dealt against king Gentius. The
Illyrian pirate vessels were quickly swept off the sea by the Roman fleet, and
the praetor Anicius who now relieved Appius Claudius in the command, marched
straight upon Scodra, the capital of the country. Gentius had actually courage
enough to march out and meet the Romans in the field, but he was immediately
driven back into the town. Although he had suffered but a slight loss, and
might have stood his ground for a long time in the fortified town, yet he at
once lost courage and asked for a truce, and afterwards, when the expected
reinforcements did not arrive, for peace. He was obliged to surrender unconditionally,
and was carried off as a prisoner to adorn the triumphal entry of the victor.
In Rome the news of this first victory of the new campaign arrived before it
was known that operations had begun in earnest.
The sudden collapse of Gentius was, from a military
point of view, no great loss to Perseus, for up to this time the Illyrian chief
had been of no service to him. But it was a bad omen, and could not but lessen
the confidence of all those who wished success to the Macedonian arms, or who
were more or less inclined to join Perseus. Events, which had hitherto marched
so slowly, now followed each other in rapid succession. The aspect of affairs
changed so suddenly, that the plans and calculations which the Rhodians had
only just made for an armed intervention proved very soon to be most
unseasonable.
We have seen that the consul Marcius Philippus had in
the preceding year invited the Rhodians to try to bring about a peace between
Rome and Macedonia, and that thereby the Macedonian party in Rhodes had become
more influential, especially as at the same time the alliance between Perseus
and Gentius became known there. The Rhodians had, in pursuance of this plan,
resolved to send an embassy to Rome, to declare that they wished to see peace
restored, and that they would eventually declare against the side that insisted
on continuing the strife. At the same time they had sent messengers to the
theatre of war to demand the cessation of hostilities. The former embassy was
not received by the senate until after the battle of Pydna; and the Rhodians,
finding themselves forestalled by events, tried to represent the original
object of their mission as dictated by friendship for the Romans, and now
congratulated them on their victory. The ambassadors who had been sent to
Macedonia reached the camp of the consul Aemilius Paullus just as the latter,
having arrived with reinforcements, had newly organised the army and introduced
a stricter discipline. They received the answer that they should wait a
fortnight. By that time Aemilius hoped to be no longer obliged to consult their
wishes; nor had he made a mistake in his calculations.
Perseus still held his strongly fortified position on
the Elpeus, south of Dium. Aemilius was posted immediately in front of it.
Octavius, the commander of the fleet, was prepared to co-operate, and to
support the front attack by a diversion in the rear of the Macedonian line.
But, after due consideration, Aemilius preferred to engross the attention of
Perseus by making a feigned attack in front, while at the same time he
attempted a flank march—a plan which had so often been adopted, and had always
succeeded. He sent a strong detachment, in which his eldest son, Fabius
Maximus, was serving, under the command of Scipio Nasica, across the pass of
Pythium, which was indeed occupied by the enemy, but was taken at once without
difficulty. Thus Perseus was a second time by a simple flank march driven out
of an impregnable position, and he had no alternative but to retreat further
north. He took up a new position at Pydna. Aemilius at once followed him, and
was joined by the detachment under Scipio Nasica. When he had come up with the
Macedonian army south of Pydna, in the immediate vicinity of the sea, his
subordinate officers, and especially Scipio Nasica, urged him to commence the
attack at once. But he first ordered his troops to encamp, and to rest from
their fatiguing march. In the night of the 21st of June, 168 BC, an eclipse of
the moon took place, which the military tribune Sulpicius Gallus is reported to
have calculated beforehand, and to have announced to the soldiers as impending,
so that this natural phenomenon produced no consternation in the Roman camp,
whereas in that of the Macedonians it was unexpected, and consequently filled
the soldiers with superstitious fear. Even on the next day Aemilius did not
wish to give battle, when, towards evening, the advanced troops on both sides,
who were watering their horses, came into collision, and a general engagement
was presently the result. Thus, as at Cynoscephalae, the decisive battle was
brought about without the intention of the two commanders, and, as at
Cynoscephalae, the victory was decided partly by the courage of the Roman
soldiers, partly by the Roman order of battle, which, owing to the manipular
tactics, was more easily moved than the unwieldy phalanx. Wherever in the
Macedonian line of battle a gap was formed, which was inevitable in marching
over uneven ground, the Romans forced their way in and broke the ranks asunder.
Incapable of offering resistance in a hand-to-hand struggle, the phalangites
fell by thousands, helpless as sheep, under the thrusts of the short Roman swords. It is
reported that twenty thousand were killed and eleven thousand taken prisoners.
The Macedonian cavalry exhibited the utmost cowardice. It appears to have taken
no serious part in the battle, but rode off from the field, first to Pydna, and
thence immediately further north. On the other hand, all parts of the Roman
army co-operated to produce the most brilliant result. The elephants advanced
steadily, and helped to bring about the decision, and even the naval troops
came in boats from their ships, and cut down all the fugitives they could
overtake. The Macedonian phalanx had fought its last great battle. On Macedonian
ground it succumbed in a bloody struggle to the Roman legion, and in its fall
it brought down with it the Macedonian monarchy. It was the excellent tactics
of the legions, and not the strategic talent of the worthy Aemilius Paullus,
that decided the victory—a victory which, like the other great decisive battles
in the East, was gained with a surprisingly small sacrifice of blood, for on
the Roman side hardly more than one hundred men were killed. Whilst in the
struggles with the barbarous tribes of Spain, Gaul, and Liguria, thousands of
Roman soldiers were butchered in nameless battles without profit and without
glory for the Roman state, the great civilised countries of the successors of
Alexander succumbed to the first powerful blow, almost without being able to
give a blow in return. But in the East the war was carried on, not by the
nations, but by the rulers; besides, civilisation, usually stronger than
barbarism, had here become paralysed and enervated during the long period which
had estranged the Greek people from their ideals, and had caused them to
degenerate in misery and suffering, in unceasing wars of truculent warrior
kings, and the desperate struggles of the rich with the poor.
We have contradictory reports of the conduct of King
Perseus during the fatal battle. Whilst Polybius unhesitatingly accuses him of
cowardice, relating that he rode off in the beginning of the battle, under the
pretext of offering up a sacrifice to Hercules at Pella, a certain Posidonius,
the author of a biography of Perseus, tells us that on the previous day he was
injured in the thigh by a kick from a horse, that, nevertheless, in spite of
the pain, and against the entreaties of his friends, he mounted a baggage horse
unarmed, and remained on the battle-field until he was grazed by a spear. As
Perseus had, as yet, never exhibited a want of personal courage, the Roman
report sounds strange. We are involuntarily reminded of the systematic
slandering of Hannibal, and of the meanness which always prompted the Romans to
speak ill of their enemies. The authority of Posidonius may be slight, but yet
he was in a better position than a Roman writer to know how Perseus behaved in
the battle. At any rate, it is not improbable that the chance kick of a horse
may have paralysed the spirit and energy of Perseus on the very day which decided
his fate.
We cannot, without compassion, watch the fugitive king
of Macedonia stealing along byways to the woods, accompanied by a few faithful
followers, trying to escape unrecognised, for he already began to fear that he
might fall by the dagger of a traitor. Since the memorable flight of the last
Persian king from the battlefield of Arbela, the world had witnessed no such
event, nor such a fall from so great a height. If we recollect that, in spite
of the partiality of hostile historians, all our sources agree in praising not
only the manly, handsome, and noble appearance of the king, but also his
clemency, humanity, and moderation, and that in reality they can reproach him
with nothing but disinclination to part with his treasures if we are, moreover,
convinced that the war was entirely provoked by the Romans, this compassion is
heightened to sympathy such as only great and noble men suffering from,
undeserved adversity can inspire. Hunted by his pursuers, forsaken by his best
friends, the fugitive hastened on without pausing. His magnificent cavalry was
scattered in all directions: only about five hundred Cretan mercenaries
remained with him, and these remained not from selfsacrificing fidelity, but
because they counted upon grasping some of the treasures which he might
possibly take with him. Not one of his higher officers remained in his company.
Hippias, Midon, and Pantauchus hastened to submit to the approaching consul.
All the large towns in the country, among them Pella, the ancient capital, with
its impregnable castle, Beroea, and Thessalonica, surrendered within two days.
Nowhere was there a pause in the flight, or a shadow of resistance. The
Macedonian nation bowed its neck under the Roman yoke. The suffering caused by
so many wars, and the oppression of foreign mercenaries, had made the people
indifferent to the dignity and pride of independence, and had left them only a
longing for peace.
One example will show the total collapse of the
Macedonian monarchy. In the strongly fortified and important town of Amphipolis
there was still a garrison of two thousand Thracians, under a captain called
Diodorus. Upon the news of the defeat at Pydna the peaceable inhabitants began
to fear not so much the Romans as their own protectors, the Thracian mercenaries.
Diodorus, by a stratagem, induced the Thracians to leave the town, pretending
that there was a rich booty to be made outside, whereupon the inhabitants
immediately shut the gates. Perseus reached Amphipolis on the third day after
the battle. He had now crossed the Strymon, and hoped that the Romans would
leave him time to negotiate. But his own subjects entreated him to leave them.
They feared that his presence might force them to offer resistance to the
Romans, whereas their only thought was submission. Perseus yielded to their
entreaties. He left fifty talents to the faithful Cretans to loot, and embarked
with the rest of his treasures, amounting, as reported, to two thousand
talents, for the island of Samothrace.
Aemilius Paullus had at once comprehended the full
importance of his victory at Pydna, and resolved to turn it to account, not for
the purpose of enriching himself and his friends, but for the advantage of the
Roman republic. He protected the inhabitants from being plundered and ill-used
by his soldiers, a proceeding by which, he doubtless hastened the rapid
subjection of the country, but at the same time made himself unpopular in his
own army. Towards the conquered king he assumed all the dignity and pride of
victorious Rome. The resolution had been formed at Rome from the beginning to
put an end to the Macedonian monarchy. When, therefore, Perseus sent a letter,
in which he, as ‘king of Macedonia’, sent his greeting to the Roman consul, Aemilius
returned it unanswered. This humiliation made it clear to Perseus that he was
not only conquered but also dethroned. A second letter to the consul was signed
only with his name, without the title which he had forfeited. But the
negotiations led to no result, because Aemilius insisted on unconditional
surrender, and Perseus desperately clung to vain hopes. The uncertainty was not
of long duration. The praetor Cneus Octavius approached with the Roman fleet,
and took up his position oft the island. Perseus seems to have hoped for some
little time that the sanctity of the temple of Samothrace, so highly revered
throughout Greece, would protect him from violence. At length, however, he
resolved to make his escape to Thrace. A ship was held in readiness by the
Cretan Oroandes in a solitary part of the coast, and was laden towards evening
with necessaries, and as much money as could be secretly conveyed into it. In
the dead of night the king, with his wife and his children, stole away through
a back door of the house at which he lodged, crossed the garden, climbed over a
wall, and reached the sea. There the fugitives wandered to and fro on the
shore, seeking the ship in vain. The faithless Cretan had sailed away at
nightfall with the treasures, leaving the king to his fate, and to despair.
Perseus, with his eldest son, remained for some time in hiding; but when all
his pages had given themselves up to the Roman consul, to whom also his younger
children had been handed over by their tutor, he at length surrendered at
discretion to the praetor Octavius. He was immediately taken on board a ship,
conducted to Amphipolis, and thence to the camp of Aemilius.
Never before had a Roman consul had in his power so
noble a prisoner. There was a great temptation to be haughty and overbearing.
But it appears that Aemilius was too noble-minded to ill-use his unfortunate
enemy after his fall, and too wise to exult in his victory. It is true, he
spoke harshly to him, and reproached him with his hostile disposition towards Rome,
as not only wrong but foolish; but he extended his hand to him, raised him up
when he was about to fall on his knees, and offered him a seat before the
council of war assembled in the tent; he also ceased questioning him when he
saw that Perseus remained silent to all inquiries. Then he turned to his friends,
reminded them of the uncertainty of all human greatness, and admonished them to
be moderate and humble in good fortune.
The capture of Perseus brought the war to a final
close. It was not to be expected that the Macedonians, who even before this
event had surrendered rapidly and completely to the conquerors, would, when
they were left to themselves, resume hostilities. After a short campaign, Aemilius
could safely dismiss his troops into winter quarters at Amphipolis and the
neighbouring towns, and await the instructions which the senate would issue
with regard to affairs in Macedonia.
This important question now occupied the minds of the
leading Roman politicians. Two roads were open to them. Macedonia, now
completely conquered, might be converted into a Roman province like Sicily,
Sardinia with Corsica, and the two divisions of Spain, or it might be kept
politically dependent upon Rome, and free only in name. The senate resolved to
pursue the latter course, not from moderation or satisfied ambition, but in the
well-founded conviction that the large extent of territory already acquired was
too heavy a superstructure for the foundation on which the republican
government was established. It was clearly perceptible that the development in
the form of government had not kept pace with the extension of the boundaries.
The Roman magistrates, who were to represent the authority of the republic in foreign
parts, had already begun to disregard this authority to an alarming extent. The
Roman nobles showed more and more an inclination to act independently, and this
inclination was justified and supported by the fact that it was impossible for
commanders far from the centre of the Roman power, the seat of the actual
sovereignty, to be implicitly guided by orders and instructions. A Manlius, who
carried on a war with the Galatians on his own responsibility, a Cassius, who,
contrary to distinct orders, left his province to march into Illyria and to
take part in a war which had been entrusted to his colleague; a Lucretius and a
Hortensius, who forgot their duties in eagerness for plunder and rapine—men
who, like the brother of the great Scipio, did not return from the field with
pure hands, might well serve as a warning to Cato and other honest patriots who
were anxious to preserve the spirit of the old republican institutions. As
these men, however, could not conceive a plan of reform which would have burst
the narrow circle of the ancient town institutions, which would have widened
the limits of the old citizenship, and restrained the abuses of office, they
attempted to check, at least for a while, the downward course with which the
state was hurrying to its fall. Perhaps they felt that their attempt was vain.
The momentum of the enormous force set in motion was too great to be stopped or
turned into another direction by any man or any party. The attempt which was
made ended in a temporary arrangement, altogether unavailing and unsatisfactory
to Rome, and ruinous to Macedonia, the country more directly concerned.
The senate resolved that Macedonia should be free. How
this freedom was to be understood and realised was left to the decision of a
committee of ten men selected from the senate, who were despatched to Greece in
order to arrange matters on the spot, under the direction of Aemilius Paullus.
In Amphipolis a great congress was held. Deputies from all the Macedonian towns
appeared before the Roman proconsul and his ten coadjutors to hear what had
been decided with regard to their destiny. It is hardly probable that the word
liberty, so often misapplied, now produced an effect similar to that which had
been called forth at the Isthmian games when Flamininus first pronounced it.
The Greeks in the meantime had learnt what was meant by freedom granted by the
Romans. The abolition of royalty, which, according to tradition, had been the
foundation of liberty in Rome, could not be regarded as a beneficial change by
a nation which from time immemorial had been accustomed to a monarchical
constitution, and had never wished for any other. But if liberty was to mean
independence from other states, especially Rome, the Macedonians knew only too
well that it was a mere illusion and a sham.
This was soon made clear to everyone by the demand
that Macedonia was from this time forward to pay an annual tribute to the Roman
state, only half, it is true, of what had formerly been paid to the native
kings, but still a tribute to a foreign state, which alone was to have the
disposal of it. In return for this tribute paid to her as the protecting power,
Rome undertook to guarantee Macedonia from all foreign enemies, and thus, by
relieving the Macedonians from the duty of military service, or rather by
taking away from them the right of carrying arms, degraded them in their own
estimation. Only in the districts bordering upon the northern barbarians armed
posts were to guard the frontier. The brave and warlike Macedonians, who by
their habits, customs, and past history, had come to regard the profession of
arms as their chief occupation, a people who had brought the Greek tactics to
the highest perfection, and had conquered the whole Eastern world with their
phalanx, were condemned, like the Lydians after the fall of Croesus, to devote
themselves only to the arts of peace.
But in the very practice of these arts, and in the
enjoyment of tranquil life, the strength of the Macedonian people was paralysed
by the insidious policy of their conquerors. The country was divided into four
parts, each of which was to govern itself as an independent republic, entirely
distinct and separate from the other three. The four divisions were deprived of
the connubium and commercium among one another, i.e. no one was allowed to own
landed property in more than one division, or to conclude a legitimate marriage
with anyone belonging to another division. In addition to this, the commerce of
the country was restricted by laws affecting the export and import of
merchandise. One of the restrictions which the Romans found it necessary to
impose shows plainly the difficulty involved in their new conquest, although
they had abstained as yet from converting the land into a regular province.
They resolved that the gold and silver mines of Macedonia should not be worked
any more, and that the royal domains should not be let. This regulation, which
was tantamount to the destruction of national wealth, was dictated by
administrative impotence. The military and civil officers in the Roman
provinces, and the taxcollectors had by this time attained such power that
they inspired more and more alarm to the home authorities, and threatened
entirely to escape from their control. The Romans, therefore, chose rather to
part with a copious source of revenue than to give the tax-collectors a new
sphere for their operations, which had long been abused, to the injury of the
public interests and for the oppression of the subjects. On the other hand,
they could not make up their minds to allow the Macedonians the profit of the
working of these valuable domains, because they looked upon their poverty as a
security for their obedience.
In order to insure the permanence of these new
regulations in Macedonia, the Romans conceived a plan which in excessive
harshness surpassed everything that Roman policy had as yet invented. All the
men who had ever served the king of Macedonia in any important public capacity,
as military and naval officers, as civil servants, or as his councillors and
friends, in short, all who by their position and capacities had to be regarded
as the natural leaders of the people, were transported to Italy, together with
their grown-up sons. Nothing remained but the inert mass of the meaner classes,
and these were thrown back into the condition of mere peasants, from which,
since the time of their great kings, they had risen almost to equality in
education and culture with the Hellenes.
Such was the liberty which Rome granted to the
Macedonians, in order, as Livy pompously explains, that it might be clear to
all nations that the Romans did not enslave the free, but liberated the
enslaved. As time showed, the new liberty was so unbearable, that after twenty
years of vexation and oppression the Macedonians were driven to despair, and
ventured to take up arms once more in a hopeless contest.
Illyria was treated like Macedonia. This country also received
its ‘liberty’ as a gift. It was divided into three cantons, which, like the
four divisions in Macedonia, were allowed a certain amount of independence in
the management of their internal affairs. Some few towns, which during the war
had taken the part of the Romans, were rewarded with immunity from taxation.
The others were obliged to pay as a tribute to Rome one-half of the sum
hitherto paid in taxes.
Kotys, the Thracian ally of Perseus, escaped
unscathed, because it seemed not worth while to carry the war into Thrace; the
Romans even sent him back his son, who had been taken prisoner with the
children of Perseus, and thus he was laid under a special obligation to keep
the peace.
The fall of the Macedonian monarchy was not less fatal
to the Greek states than to the Macedonians themselves. Everywhere, as we know,
there were Roman parties which, under the protection of the great foreign
power, had seized the direction of affairs, and endeavoured to oppress their
opponents who inclined more or less to Perseus. Every trace of political
principle and of patriotism had long disappeared from the minds of these
people. They were not even honest fanatics, but common ruffians who sought to
obtain wealth and power for themselves, and for this object stopped short
neither of violence nor cunning, treason nor murder.
In Achaea it was Callicrates who undertook to perform
the dirty work for the Romans, in Epirus the infamous Charops, in Acarnania
Chremes, in Aetolia Lyciscus, in Boeotia Mnasippus, and every one of these men
had a host of supporters and partisans ready to commit the most atrocious
crimes. The signal for these was given by the Aetolian Lyciscus. He called
together to a meeting five hundred and fifty of the richest and most eminent of
his countrymen, and caused them all to be massacred by Roman soldiers,
commanded by one Aulus Baebius, under the pretext that they had favoured the
party of Perseus. Lyciscus and his companions then seized the property of their
murdered victims, and of a great number of others who had escaped from the same
fate by flight. This atrocity was actually countenanced by Aemilius Paullus,
who was himself anything but cruel, because he thought it served the interests
of Rome. In Amphipolis, where, on the occasion of settling the affairs of
Macedonia, the Roman partisans assembled from all parts of Greece, further
measures were concerted for the extermination of the Hellenic party. All those
men who had had any transactions with Perseus, or who were only suspected were
sentenced to transportation to Italy. The whole of Greece was in this manner to
be cleared of all the opponents of the Roman partisans, and these partisans
were left unchecked in the possession of political power. They were at the same
time rewarded for their fidelity, and encouraged to future services by being
allowed to divide among themselves the property of their proscribed opponents.
In most of the Greek states these cruel measures were
not without an appearance of justification; for in Boeotia, Aetolia. and
Acarnania, there had been numerous enemies of the Romans, some of whom were
convicted of their guilt by their open acts, others by letters which were found
among the papers of Perseus. But with the Achaeans the case was different. They
had wisely avoided having any dealings with Perseus. After their disputes with
Sparta and Messenia, which had almost involved the Achaean league in a war with
Rome, a period of comparative quiet had succeeded, and the national party had given
way to that of the friends of Rome headed by Callicrates. This man proved in
every respect a ready tool of the Roman policy. As matters stood, it is true,
the Achaeans had no choice but to submit to the dictates of Rome, and to waive
those rights which formerly belonged them as independent allies. As soon,
therefore, as it became evident that there would be a rupture between Rome and
Macedonia, the Achaean league unequivocally took the Roman side, and rejected
all advances, and the most tempting offers which Perseus made to gain their
friendship. Thus far the Roman partisans at the head of the federal government
succeeded in their policy, and they were of course backed by direct pressure
put upon the league by Rome. But after all it was not possible entirely to
suppress among the mass of the people, especially the democratic party, the
sympathies which were entertained for Perseus in all parts of Greece. The
national patriots were not bold enough to act upon these sympathies resolutely
and openly; but they could not be restrained from making at least a
demonstration which, though hostile to Rome, was of no practical effect. They
carried a decree to deprive Eumenes, the Roman partisan, of the honours and
distinctions with which he had been loaded in the form of statues,
inscriptions, and festal celebrations. Having in this paltry and somewhat
childish manner made an indirect demonstration against Rome, the league
nevertheless took the Roman side when the war with Perseus broke out, and were
even eager to send forthwith one thousand men to garrison Chalcis, and fifteen
hundred men to join the army of the consul Licinius. It is not quite clear from
the evidence, whether after the despatch of these auxiliaries some disagreement
took place between the Roman generals and the Achaeans, or whether, in consequence
of the wretched strategy of the Romans, and the first victories of Perseus, the
ardour of the Achaeans cooled down. At any rate, it seems certain that their
auxiliary corps was sent back by the Romans or withdrawn, and that from this
time the Achaeans occupied a reserved and neutral position. This, however, did
not last long. When in the third year of the war the consul Marcius Philippus
had taken the command, the Achaeans found it in their interest to prove their
continued loyalty to Rome by a formal resolution that the whole of their
military force, consisting of five thousand men, should be placed at the
disposal of the Romans. At the same time the decree was repealed which deprived
Eumenes of his honours. The historian Polybius, who, like his father, Lycortas,
was among the leaders of the national party, distinctly recognised the
necessity of changing the policy hitherto pursued. He had been elected hipparchus,
or second officer of the league, for the year 169, and undertook himself an
embassy to the consul Marcius for the purpose of offering him the contingent of
the Achaeans. It happened just to be the time when Marcius had undertaken his
bold expedition into Macedonia, across the range of Mount Olympus, an
expedition which, contrary to all expectations, succeeded. Polybius delivered
himself of his commission when Marcius, after having crossed the mountains, had
already entered Macedonia. The offer was declined, and at the same time, as we
have seen, Marcius authorised the Achaeans to refuse the auxiliaries which
Claudius, the Roman praetor commanding in Illyria, had asked of them. We have
seen how dangerous it was for Roman allies to refuse such a request of a Roman
general. It seemed almost as if the directions given by Marcius to the Achaeans
were as insidious as the advice which about the same time he gave to the
Rhodians, and which caused them such distress. Yet the Achaeans, as we have
seen, knew how to extricate themselves out of the difficulty. They declined the
request of Claudius, taking their stand on the instructions of the senate, that
without a written order from that body no Roman officer should call upon the
allies for any assistance. Nevertheless, they did not feel quite comfortable in
this matter. They knew that they were suspected of secret sympathies with
Perseus, and they wished to clear themselves of this suspicion. They resolved
to do this in an indirect way by sending a portion of their army as an
auxiliary force to the king of Egypt, who just then happened to be at war with
Syria. By thus supporting a friend of the Roman republic, they showed clearly
that they did not wish to reserve their troops with a view hostile to Rome, in case
the Macedonian war should present an opportunity. But at the instigation of
Callicrates, the resolution of sending the troops to Egypt was postponed, and
as shortly afterwards Marcius disapproved of it, it was not carried into
execution at all.
Shortly afterwards the decisive blow was struck at
Pydna. This put an end to the uncertainty of the position in which the Achaeans
were placed. Equality of rights with Rome was now out of the question. It was a
settled resolve in Rome to establish Roman supremacy beyond dispute in Achaia,
as well as in the whole of Greece. But as in the papers of King Perseus nothing
was found which could incriminate the league or individual Achaeans, a pretext
was wanting to chastise them. Nevertheless, Callicrates was sent with two Roman
plenipotentiaries, Caius Claudius and Cneus Domitius, from Amphipolis to the
Peloponnesus, in order to institute an inquiry against the adherents of the
king of Macedonia. Accusations were not wanting, and a pretext was soon found
for a measure which had been from the first intended, namely, that of removing
all suspicious personages to Italy. When one of these men indignantly refuted
the accusation, and declared that he was ready to prove his innocence before
any Roman tribunal, he and all who thought like him were taken at their word,
and the resolution was passed that all the accused Achaeans should plead their
case in Italy. The Roman partisans had ample scope now to clear the field of
all their opponents. They knew well the men who were in their way, and they
eagerly and skilfully drew up the lists of proscription. More than one thousand
of the noblest and best Achaeans were selected for punishment. Every man who
was conspicuous by his authority, patriotism, wealth, or birth, was taken away
from his home and his occupation, in order to justify his political acts before
foreign judges. Thus the unhappy country was deprived of its best citizens, and
treated as Macedonia had been treated before. The Achaeans were punished,
because, as allies of the Roman republic, they had presumed to claim a certain
degree of independence, and because there were men among them who could submit
only with disgust and reluctance to the brutal word of command of the Roman
magistrates and the perfidious policy of the senate. Among the exiled leaders
of the national party was the historian Polybius, who afterwards undertook the
sad task of relating the downfall of his country, which he himself had
witnessed, and who was able, through his personal influence with the victors,
to soften in some measure the deplorable fate of his countrymen. We shall see,
in the course of this history, how the personal adventures of the thousand
transported Achaeans were connected with the final catastrophe which befell
Greece.
The same violent measures which the Romans adopted to
secure the dominion of their adherents in Macedonia and Achaia was also applied
in other parts of Greece. The most notable opponents of the Roman supremacy in Aetolia,
Acarnania, Epirus, and Boeotia were sent to Italy, and detained there for an
indefinite time. Some few, who were more especially obnoxious, even suffered
death, as, for instance, the Boeotian Neon, one of the few faithful friends who
had not forsaken Perseus in his flight. Thus the Romans thought that they had
cleared the whole country of every hostile clement, and that they had
permanently established obedience to their commands.
It was not Greece proper alone that felt the
disastrous effects of the battle which had raised Rome to uncontested supremacy
over the whole Grecian world. The commotuon caused by it extended to Asia, and
threatened to overthrow more particularly the republic of Rhodes. We have seen
that, in consequence of the first miscarriages of the Roman generals, that
party gained strength in Rhodes which endeavoured to rescue the island from
Roman tutelage, and that Perseus and Gentius addressed themselves to Rhodes for
military aid. We have seen, moreover, that the Rhodians were induced by the
crafty consul Marcius to act as mediators between the belligerents. This step
was looked upon as an unpardonable crime after the victory at Pydna. The
Rhodian ambassadors, who had been delayed in Rome for some time, and were
admitted to an audience by the senate only when the news of the victory had
arrived, received now a harsh, threatening, and yet indistinct answer. They
were charged with having offered their mediation not, as they said,
in a spirit of benevolence for Rome and the Grecian states, but in the interest
of Perseus. Much would the Rhodians have given to undo what they had been tempted
to do. They trembled at the mere thought of having incurred the displeasure of
the powerful republic, and not only asked forgiveness in a humble and
undignified manner, but also attempted to throw the guilt upon a few individual
citizens, by punishing, without delay, the chiefs of the anti-Roman party. They
eagerly anticipated the measures which the Romans had taken in Macedonia, Achaia,
and the rest of Greece, by banishing all the leading men of the national party.
We are presented with a fearful picture of the omnipotence of the Roman state,
already established in the whole of the ancient world, when we read how a man
proscribed by Rome could find no place of refuge in all the countries round the
Mediterranean, and had only the alternative of choosing a voluntary death or of
being delivered up to his executioners. On the news of the battle of Pydna,
Polyaratus, the head of the national party at Rhodes, had fled to Egypt, and
had sought the protection of King Ptolemy. When the Romans demanded his extradition,
Ptolemy was so far afraid of violating the law of hospitality, that he did not
deliver up the fugitive directly to them; but not daring to keep and protect
him, he extricated himself from the difficulty by ordering him to be sent back
to Rhodes. Polyaratus, knowing full well what fate awaited him at Rome, escaped
on the way, and sought a refuge at the public hearth of the town of Phaselis.
The people of this town, perplexed and fearing the revenge of Rome, endeavoured
to rid themselves of the fugitive, and begged the Rhodians to fetch him. The
latter called upon the Egyptian captain, who was commissioned to deliver him
up, to perform his duty. Polyaratus, shunned and cast out like a leper, escaped
a second time, and sought protection in the Rhodian town of Caunus. But here
also he could not remain. The Caunians pressed him to deliver them from his
presence, which threatened them with danger, and the unhappy man fled further
to the independent Phrygian town of Cibyra, the ruler of which, Pancrates, had
long been his friend, and lay under obligations to him. But even here, in the
heart of Asia Minor, the strong and dreaded arm of the Roman republic made
itself felt. Pancrates applied to Rhodes, and at the same time to Aemilius Paullus,
to ask what he should do. An order from the proconsul, directed both to
Pancrates and to the Rhodian republic, left them no alternative. The wretched
man was transported first to Rhodes and then to Rome. Under such circumstances,
it would have been better for Polycratus to act as Polybius advised all those
to act who were placed in a similar position, he tells them not to expose their
weakness before the world, but to follow the example of the high-spirited
Molossians, Antinous, Theodotus, and Cephalus, and voluntarily to put an end to
their lives. The world had, indeed, become a huge prison, from which an outlaw could
escape only through the gate of death.
Whilst the Rhodians, by expelling the leaders of the
national party, endeavoured to regain the favour of Rome; while they assured
the Romans by a new embassy of their undiminished loyalty, and perhaps indulged
in the vain hope that their fault had been expiated and forgiven, the dreadful
news arrived in the island that a formal proposal had been made in Rome to
declare war against Rhodes. There were men in Rome who were not ashamed, under
some paltry pretext, to treat an old, deserving ally as an enemy, or to
overthrow an almost defenceless state from motives of the meanest rapacity and
cupidity. The praetor Manius Juventius Thalna acted as spokesman for these men,
who, however, to the honour of Rome, did not as yet command a majority in the
senate. Without, therefore, asking for the approval of the senate, the praetor
made known his intention to bring in a motion before the popular assembly to
declare war against Rhodes, and to give the command in it to one of the
magistrates of the current year (167). He probably hoped to obtain this command
himself, and after an easy victory to enrich himself and a Roman army with the spoils
which that small but wealthy island promised. But he had overrated his power.
The Rhodian ambassadors in Rome, who, on meeting with an ungracious reception,
had put on mourning, and entreated the most influential men with prayers and
tears for protection, found in old Cato a powerful advocate of their cause.
Cato, who was a narrow-minded but an honest man, protested against a scheme
which would dishonour the Roman name. He opposed it still more, perhaps,
because he feared that a mere war of plunder with Rhodes would give the Roman
nobles an opportunity to increase their individual and family power, which was
already menacing the foundations of the Roman republic. A fragment from the
speech which Cato delivered on this occasion is the first really genuine sample
of ancient Roman eloquence and honesty which has been preserved to us. It is
highly creditable to the speaker, both on account of its style and on account
of the policy it recommends; but it would produce a more agreeable impression
upon us if we could forget that the same man who spoke so warmly for the
oppressed Rhodians, lost no opportunity of inflaming to a war of extermination
the hatred and jealousy which was felt in Rome for the humbled and ill-used
Carthaginians. As the motion of Juventius had not found favour with the
majority of the senate, and was supported only by a few men, it fell to the
ground, two of the tribunes of the people having moreover declared their
intention to stop it by their formal intercession. The Rhodian ambassadors felt
relieved. The storm which threatened their town had passed over it without
breaking. Whatever might come now, the Rhodians had reason to congratulate
themselves, and to render thanks to the Romans as their deliverers.
The ambassadors who brought this good news to Rhodes
returned to Rome with a golden wreath, as an emblem of homage to the protecting
power, and continued their endeavours to ward off the anger of the powerful
men. Up to this time Rhodes had been on terms of intimate friendship with Rome,
but had not formally entered into an alliance. It had preserved full freedom of
action, as became an independent people. But recent events showed how dangerous
such a position was under the present circumstances. The Rhodians were
convinced that it would be better for them to give up their full independence,
and that in the character of Roman allies they would be protected from the
danger of complete annihilation. They therefore commissioned one of their
ambassadors, Theaetetus, their admiral (nauarchus), to ask as a favour to be
received into the Roman alliance. The free state voluntarily surrendered its
independence, in order to insure its continued existence. Rome, after a delay
of a couple of years, accepted the offer with apparent reluctance, but not without
first placing the Rhodians in a position of such weakness that their submission
and their permanent obedience seemed guaranteed. By a decree of the senate,
those territories in Lycia and Curia, which the Rhodians had received as a
reward for their services in the war with Antiochus, were declared to be free.
They were only allowed to retain their ancient possessions on the continent of
Asia Minor (the district called Peraea), with the exception of Caunus and
Stratonicea, which two towns, on hearing of the distress of Rhodes, had
rebelled, and placed themselves under Roman protection. Thus the island of
Rhodes lost its most valuable dependencies. But decree of the senate that the
island of Delos should be a free port was probably a more serious blow to the prosperity
of Rhodes. By this decree Delos was made the chief centre of commerce in the
Eastern seas, and the harbour dues of Rhodes were reduced to a sixth of their
former amount. Even indirectly Roman policy tried to injure the Rhodians by
supporting the Cretan pirates who annoyed the Rhodian commerce. Nevertheless,
the thrifty people of Rhodes, though in more humble circumstances, continued
for the time to enjoy a fair amount of prosperity.
If the Romans, in order to reap the fruits of their
victory over Perseus, thought it necessary to crush in the various Greek states
the party hostile to them, and in so doing to weaken and paralyse these states,
their proceeding was indeed harsh; but from their point of view it was
intelligible and justifiable. For in Achaia, Aetolia, and Rhodes, the state of
parties was so unsettled before and during the war, that a sudden reaction in
favour of the Macedonians, which had actually taken place in Epirus, might be
expected anywhere. But it was not so in the kingdom of Pergamum. Here there
were no republican parties with divided sympathies. The ruling house of Attalus
alone determined the policy of the state, and this house was faithful to Rome.
King Eumenes himself had urged the Romans to make war upon Perseus. He had not
ceased to set spies, to denounce his enemies, and to excite the Romans against
him, until war was declared. His personal appearance in Rome (172 BC) had
brought about the decision of the senate. During the war, Pergamenian
auxiliaries, under Attalus and Athenaeus, the brothers of the king, accompanied
the Roman armies, and Pergamenian ships took part in the operations of the
Roman fleet, which turned out so inglorious and unsuccessful. It is therefore
surprising that the news was spread, in the third year of the war, that Eumenes
had entered upon negotiations with Perseus, the object of which was nothing
less than to give up the alliance with Rome, or eventually to mediate between
the belligerents for the restoration of peace. As these negotiations were carried
on secretly, and came to no result, it is hard to decide how far the statements
regarding them are trustworthy, and whether, indeed, Eumenes entertained any
treacherous intentions. The latter supposition is in the highest degree
improbable, and, considering the relation in which Eumenes stood to Perseus and
to the Romans, it seems almost impossible. We can only surmise that for some
time he entertained the idea of attempting by his mediation to put an end to
the war, which, by its unexpectedly long duration, must have been very
burdensome to him as well as to all other Eastern states. Even king Prusias of
Bithynia made an attempt in the same direction, little thinking that the Romans
would be displeased. Prusias was of so little importance that his fault might
be overlooked. Not so the king of Pergamum, who, since the overthrow of
Macedonia, was the only prince able to claim the right of carrying out an
independent policy. He was therefore made to suffer for having entertained the
mere hope of being able to deal with Rome as an equal. One breath of suspicion
blighted the recollection of all the devoted services which he had rendered in
the war with Antiochus, and then in that with Perseus. In the exaggerated or
altogether fictitious charges which Livy has borrowed from the Roman annalists,
we hear only the echo of the complaints which were at that time loudly brought against
Eumenes in the Roman camp or in Rome itself. It was said that he had suddenly
and without cause called away his auxiliaries and his ships. A pretext was
evidently wanted for lowering the petted and somewhat spoiled ally to his
former level of unconditional dependence.
The method adopted to reach this end is one of the
worst specimens of the craftiness of Roman policy. After the victory of Rome
and her allies over Macedonia, when Attalus, the brother of Eumenes, and
commander of the Pergamenian auxiliaries, arrived in Rome in the crowd of
congratulating and petitioning ambassadors from all states, several eminent men
among the Roman nobility took him into their confidence, trying to set him
against his brother, and thus to sow the seeds of discord in the royal family
of Pergamum. They gave him to understand that he was personally in great favour
at Rome, and might obtain anything for himself, but that his brother Eumenes
had forfeited the Roman friendship. A partition of the kingdom would have been
desirable for the Romans. It was not difficult to find a pretext for rewarding
Attalus and for resenting the intrigues of Eumenes. But the family of the Attalidae
presented a rare example of mutual affection and fidelity. Instead of
conspiring against and betraying each other, as was so common in the Graeco-Macedonian
dynasties, the members of this family had always aided and supported one another,
and this was one of the most efficacious means by which they, in a short time,
established and extended their dominion. It was not so easy to excite enmity
between Attalus and Eumenes as it had been on a former occasion between Perseus
and Demetrius. Attalus, it is related, was almost tempted by the delusive
proposals made to him, and was, for a moment, doubtful what to do; but he
listened to the advice of his true friend, the physician Stratius, whom his
brother had sent after him to Rome. Besides, it was not hard to see that, apart
from all natural feelings, policy commanded him to remain faithful to his
brother; for as the latter was old and still childless, Attalus had the surest
prospect of succeeding him on the throne, and he had actually begun to take an
active part in the government.—Attalus showed much sense in escaping from his
critical position. For the moment he gave no direct refusal to the insidious
offers. He only asked for himself the two Thracian towns of Aenos and Maronea,
as an earnest of what he was to have afterwards. Having obtained an encouraging
reply, he left Rome without letting the Romans suspect that their perfidious
design had failed. When they afterwards discovered this, their feigned
partiality for him turned to anger, and they unceremoniously deprived him of
the promised towns by declaring them free.
Besides his chief commission of congratulation to the
Romans, Attalus had been charged with another, which was to complain of an
inroad of the Galatians into Pergamenian territory, and to ask for Roman help
against them. In consequence of this request Roman ambassadors were sent to
Asia Minor to remonstrate with the Galatians. We should fancy that these
barbarians, who had already felt the heavy arm of the Romans, would without
hesitation comply with the demands of the ambassadors; but, as the Romans gave
out, they were only the more exasperated, and continued their devastating
inroads. It is no injustice to these ambassadors to infer, and it is even
hinted by Polybius, that they did in reality instigate the Galatians whilst
they pretended to pacify them.
Eumenes began to perceive that his relations to Rome
were no longer what they had been. Feeling that he must make an effort to
regain the position which he had occupied before the war, he resolved,
notwithstanding the bad state of his health, to undertake, in the winter of 167-166,
the long journey to Italy, in order to try what effect he could produce in Rome
by his personal appearance. But he met with a mortification which he could not
have expected. When he had landed in Brundusium, a quaestor appeared before
him, and informed him that a resolution had been passed in the senate
forbidding foreign princes to come to Rome. He was therefore asked to state if
he had any request to make to the senate, otherwise he must leave Italy without
delay. Eumenes saw that the old times were gone, that he was no longer wanted
as an ally, and that he was contemptuously pushed aside. Declaring that he had
no request to make of the senate, he left Italy to return to his own kingdom.
He had but a short time to live; but it was long enough for him to see that he
had now arrived at the stage which Philip of Macedonia had occupied after the
defeat of Antiochus. Roman ambassadors went backwards and forwards, undermining
the ground upon which he stood. It became known to everybody that he had fallen
into disgrace. His subjects and his neighbours were formally called upon to
prefer complaints against him. The arrogant Caius Sulpicius Gallus, sent by the
Roman senate, invited the malcontents to Sardes, and here, in the second city
of the Pergamenian kingdom, he established his tribunal in the public gymnasium
for the trial of the king, and listened for ten days with apparent satisfaction
to the abuse and the complaints which were brought forward from all sides
against Eumenes. Though the Romans did not allow these proceedings to have any
further result, but remained satisfied for the present with having humiliated
an old friend, they nevertheless gained their object. Only by submitting
unreservedly to Rome could Eumenes escape the fate of his former rivals, to
whose ruin he had unwisely contributed. He died (159 BC) leaving behind him a
son of tender age, for whom his brother Attalus, deservedly called
Philadelplius, conducted the regency for twenty-one years. The kingdom of Pergamum
preserved its seeming independence a little longer, until, in the time of the
Gracchi, it suddenly, and without any painful deathstruggle, passed over into
the condition of a Roman province.
The ungenerous treatment of Eumenes by the Romans is
the more striking if we compare it with that of the contemptible Prusias. This
potentate was among those who, immediately after the Roman victory over
Perseus, hastened to offer their congratulations to the senate, and on this
occasion he exceeded the most servile flattery that had ever been witnessed in
Rome. Appearing in the costume of a freedman, his shorn head covered with a
hat, he humbly asked leave to bring an offering of thanks to the gods of the
Roman people, his deliverers. When he was introduced into the senate, he bowed
down to the ground according to the custom of Asiatic courtiers, and greeted
the senators as ‘the gods of his salvation’. So undignified was the manner in
which he implored them to bestow their favour on him and on his son Nicomedes whom
he had brought with him, and to grant him a slight increase of territory, that
Polybius felt too much disgust fully to report the scene. This writer gathers
up the full significance of what passed in a single sentence. “Because Prusias
appeared so utterly contemptible he received a favourable reply.” So much had the Roman nation by this time degenerated
that they adopted the despotic principles of eastern rulers, and in their
dealings with other states measured their benevolence according to the
servility of their submission. It is easy to comprehend that the spectacle of
such abject behaviour as that of Prusias must have had a demoralising effect
upon the nation destined for universal dominion. If Roman magistrates became
despots, and the spirit of republican equality vanished more and more, no
inconsiderable part of the result was due to these wretched princes, who vied
with one another in self-abasement and slavish flattery.
The effects of the Roman victory were felt not only by
those Hellenic states which had been directly involved in the war with Perseus.
Antiochus Epiphanes, the king of the distant Syria, had hoped meanwhile to
carry out quietly his designs upon Egypt; but he was now reached by the hand of
Rome. Coelesyria was once more the bone of contention between Syria and Egypt.
Antiochus defended it so successfully against an attack on the part of his
rival, that after a victory at Pelusium he could penetrate into Egypt. Having
here taken prisoner the young king Ptolemaeus Philometor, his nephew, he
entertained the idea of conquering the whole country; but the national pride of
the Egyptians was now at length roused. In Alexandria, Euergetes, the younger
brother of Polemaeus Philometor, afterwards ironically called Phiyscon (pot-bellied),
was proclaimed king, and Antiochus, alter an ineffectual siege, was obliged to
return to Syria, He left Ptolemaeus, whom he had now taken under his protection,
in Egypt to fight against the pretender. The two brothers, however,
understanding what their interest demanded, came to an agreement, and opposed
their combined forces to the claims of Antiochus, who kept possession of Pelusium
and conquered Cyprus. At the same time they applied to Rome for protection.
Antiochus now invaded Egypt a second time, and had
advanced as far as Alexandria, when he was met by a Roman embassy sent by the
senate to arrange a peace between the two rival states. The chief of the
embassy was C. Popillius Laenas, a man eminently qualified by his harsh,
imperious temper to enforce obedience to a Roman word of command. In this
mission the Romans did not think it necessary to act as cautiously and tenderly
as their Greek allies, whose attempts at mediation they had so cruelly
resented. They had indeed tried already to settle the quarrel; but as long as
the war with Macedonia lasted, Antiochus had not listened to their
remonstrances. Popillius Laenas was determined that this time the voice of Rome
should not be slighted. Meeting the king of Syria a few miles from Alexandria,
he handed him the letter of the senate without any previous greeting, and asked
him to read it. It contained a request that he should leave Egypt at once and
make peace. The king replied evasively that he would consider the matter.
Popillius then drew with his staff a circle in the sand round the king, saying,
“Before you step out of this circle tell me what answer I shall bear to the
senate”. “I shall do what the senate requires of me”, replied Antiochus, after
some hesitation, and not until then did Popillius offer his hand to the king as
a friend and ally of the Roman people. Having thus performed his task, he
sailed to Cyprus, and ordered the Syrian fleet to withdraw. Antiochus evacuated
Pelusium, and returned to his own states. It was evident that the battle of
Pydna had had its effect even upon the far east. The Roman republic had,
without a formal recognition, acquired sovereign rights over Syria and Egypt.
The great importance of this battle has now been
noticed in its effect upon Macedonia, Illyria, Greece, Rhodes, the Pergamenian
kingdom, Syria, and Egypt. It was so decisive that we can date from this time
the establishment of the Roman dominion over the world. As a mere battle, it
cannot be reckoned among the great military achievements of the Romans or any
other nation; but the more remote causes which led to it are, as it were,
manifested in its results. It was gained not by the military genius of the
Roman general, nor in consequence of an exceptional effort with an excessive
sacrifice. On the contrary, it was fought by a single consular army and a
general of average capacity; and the victory was gained not by any display of
genius, but by common military routine. The result was due to the Roman
institutions, not to extraordinary events or extraordinary men. What chances
had the world in those days in struggling against a nation which, even when it
sent out men as incompetent as Licinius, Hostilius, Lucretius, or Hortensius,
found itself at the worst only interrupted for a short time in its victorious
course, and could look on calmly until a more able general or some fortunate
accident brought the hostile armies under the sword of the legions? The
barbarous tribes in the north and west, who were too ignorant to appreciate the
relative proportion of strength, and too poor to have much to forfeit besides
heir bare lives, could alone venture to defy the Roman legions for some years
longer; and in thus acting these tribes relied partly oil their courage, and
still more perhaps on the difficulties which their countries presented for the
inarch of armies. The wars that still continued in civilised countries were
nothing but the final deathstruggle of despairing nations.
Aemilius Paullus would not have been a member of the Roman
nobility if he had not taken to himself the greater part of the credit of this
glorious victory, and if he had not conducted himself from this time forward as
a general justly entitled to triumph. There was very little left to do after
the battle of Pydna that could be called military work. A few towns in Thessaly
had still to be conquered, or rather to be plundered; for serious resistance
was out of the question. There were also a few penal sentences to be executed,
for instance, on the town of Antissa, in the island of Lesbos, which was
charged with having harboured and supported the Macedonian fleet during the
war. This place was destroyed, and the inhabitants were removed to Methymna.
The dreadful punishment which was inflicted on Epirus before the return of the
Roman army to Italy was perhaps not yet resolved upon. The consul had leisure
to enjoy a journey through Greece until the ten plenipotentiaries of the senate
should arrive to settle with him the affairs of Macedonia. Aemilius showed an
unfeigned admiration for Greek antiquity by visiting with his son Scipio, and
with Athennaeus, a brother of king Eumenes, all those places which were sacred
in the mythology and religion of the Greeks or memorable in their history, such
as Delphi, Aulis, Athens, Corinth, Sicyon, Argos, Epidaurus, Lacedaemon,
Megalopolis, and Olympia. Everywhere he offered up sacrifices in that spirit of
toleration which marked the religion of the Greek and Roman world, and which,
recognising under numerous names and shapes embodiments of the same deity,
allowed every nation, and even every man, the right of worshipping this deity
in his own fashion. At Olympia he was struck by the masterpiece of Phidias,
which brought the great Zeus visibly before him. The Olympian Jupiter was honoured
by him with such sacrifices as if he had been the high and mighty protector of
the Roman Capitol itself. At Delphi Aemilius found the pedestal on which
statues of Perseus were to have been placed. We regret to hear that he was mean
enough to order that his own should be erected in the place of those of his
conquered enemy.
On his return to Amphipolis he conducted the long and
important discussions of the senatorial delegates regarding the new settlement
of Macedonia and of the whole of Greece. Ambassadors had arrived from all parts
of the Grecian world in Europe and Asia, from Africa and all the innumerable
islands in the eastern seas. The smallest community had some request to make of
the powerful Roman imperator, or to implore pardon and mercy; the most powerful
states were eager to make professions of loyalty. Before this large assemblage Aemilius
celebrated at great expense magnificent games, such as it was customary to
exhibit at the regular national festivals in Olympia or on the isthmus of
Corinth. The Roman general was proud of being able to arrange a festival as
skilfully as the Greeks in accordance with approved rules. But it did not occur
to him to exhibit any contest, game, or sport of national Italian growth. He
showed the Greeks no fighting gladiators, but collected athletes and racehorses
from all parts of the Hellenic world, and issued invitations in all directions.
There was a certain significance in the fact that while the first liberator of
Greece, Flamininus, proclaimed the success of his mission at the regular
Isthmian festival, the present conqueror of Macedonia did not bind himself to
ancient times or places, but assembled the Greeks in the country recently
subjected, and thus made it clear that they had left their old orbits, and would
henceforth have to move as satellites round a new sun. A huge pile of captured
arms was erected, and lighted by Aemilius himself, as if it were intended to
show that the funeral games of GraecoMacedonian independence should be
finished by an act emblematic of the burning of the body.
In the autumn of the year 167 the Roman army began its
homeward march. Aemilius was anxious to preserve undiminished the valuable
booty, consisting of money and works of art, in order to show it to his
countrymen on the day of his triumph, and then deliver it into the state
treasury. The Roman soldiers, exasperated at being deprived of it, received a
promise of compensation. Epirus lay on their way. A portion, at least, of
Epirus had joined Perseus, and was now to undergo its deserved punishment. It
was in vain that after the Roman victory the leaders of the hostile party had
been deserted by their followers, and had died by a voluntary death. It was in
vain that all the towns had surrendered to Lucius Anicius, who entered the
country from Illyria. Paramount considerations required that Epirus should be
visited by a punishment justified by the terrible usages of the ancient world.
Every Roman soldier was here to receive the extra pay to which he considered
himself entitled, and which had been withheld in Macedonia. The senate sent an
order to Aemilius that he was to deliver up the whole country to plunder, an
order which was executed in cold blood. As the leaders of the Macedonian party
had been sent from Epirus to Italy, and Charops, the Roman partisan, was de
facto the ruler of the country, the Epirots hoped to be spared further
sufferings. They were soon undeceived. Aemilius marched into the country with
his legions, summoned the heads of the towns and villages to his presence,
ordered them to set apart from their property all the gold and silver, and sent
troops with them, as if the intention had been merely to receive the treasures.
Then, on one and the same day, the Roman soldiers fell upon all the towns
throughout Epirus, and plundered them completely. About one hundred and fifty
thousand people were then made slaves, and seventy towns sacked and destroyed.
Never yet had Rome annihilated a whole nation so systematically and so cruelly;
and this was done not to execute a penal sentence, but to satisfy the rapacity
and greed of Roman soldiers, which, after all, as was shown by later
experience, was insatiable.
Four days after the battle of Pydna the news of a
great victory was spread in Rome. The joy was great. But on investigating the
matter it was found to be merely an empty rumour. So much the greater was the
delight when nine days later Quintus Fabius, Lucius Lentulus, and Quintus Metellus,
the messengers despatched by Aemilius with the news of the victory, sent a man
in advance before them with the authentic report and details of the battle, and
when soon after they themselves made their solemn entry. The people were in
almost as boundless an excitement as they had been when, in their great
distress at the time of the Hannibalic war, the long succession of evil tidings
was at last interrupted by the news of a glorious victory over Hasdrubal on the
river Metaurus. Again, as at that time, the crowd poured forth to meet the
messengers of victory, and almost blocked their way to the forum and to the
senate-house. There was indeed no comparison between the present state of the
republic and its circumstances in the second Punic war. Actual danger,
distress, and trouble were never felt during the struggle with the Macedonian
king. But yet the people impatiently looked forward to peace, and one of the
first measures which the senate took was to stop all further preparations for
war, and to dismiss the reserves. A festival of public thanksgiving, lasting
for five days, showed the satisfaction which the senate felt in the successful
end of the war.
These feelings had time to cool before the final
return of Aemilius Paulins, which was delayed for a whole year by the
settlement of affairs in Macedonia. But even then the reception of Aemilius in
Rome was brilliant. He arrived with all the pomp of a general celebrating his
triumph. Sailing on a monster ship, with sixteen tiers of oars, the state barge
of Perseus, richly decorated with arms, purple sails and streamers, he ascended
the Tiber as far as the town, watched by the dense crowds of spectators that
lined both banks. Soon afterwards Octavius, the commander of the fleet, and
Anicius, the conqueror of Gentius, also arrived in Rome. The senate decreed the
honours of a triumph to each of the three. In the whole town, and in the
surrounding country, were already accumulated the booty and the prisoners
destined to adorn these triumphal processions.
But, after all, the man who had personally the first
claim to be rewarded by his country, the man who had served Rome most honestly,
faithfully, and successfully in a great and decisive war, was almost deprived
of an honour which had been repeatedly accorded to men of mean capacity on the
strength of very doubtful victories over contemptible barbarians. This danger Aemilius
Paullus incurred because he was distinguished by a virtue rare among Roman
politicians of his day. If he had allowed his soldiers and subaltern officers
to steal and plunder to their hearts’ content, no one would have opposed his claims
to a triumph. But he had saved as much as possible of the Macedonian booty for
the state treasury. The proceeds of the plundering of Epirus, which the
soldiers were to receive as their only compensation, amounted to four hundred
denarii for every horseman and two hundred for every foot soldier. The troops
were dissatisfied. They considered themselves curtailed of their rewards, and
resolved to make their general suffer for it. Servius Sulpicius Gallus, who had
served as military tribune in Macedonia, urged in the comitia tributa that the
proposal, which the senate had approved, of granting Aemilius Paullus the
‘imperium’ within the town during the days of his triumph should be rejected.
With the help of the soldiers, who crowded to the voting-place in the Capitol,
he almost succeeded in preventing the triumph of Aemilius by a resolution of
the people. The friends of the general, with great difficulty, secured a
decision in favour of the triumph. Thus Rome was almost deprived of a day of
national rejoicing and of a triumphal show more brilliant than any that had, up
to this time, been exhibited. The contemptible opposition made to the
well-earned honours of one of the best men in Rome revealed a weakness in the
military organization which would have had a most pernicious effect, had not
the enemies of Rome suffered from greater evils. This weakness was caused by
the fact that political dissensions were not confined to the senate or the
market-place, but extended to the camp. As the same men were on one day leaders
of political parties at Rome, and on another officers of different rank and
station in the army, the bonds of discipline were naturally loosened. The
divisions among the leaders spread to the mass of common soldiers, who inclined
to one side or to the other from such considerations as can be expected to
influence the rank and file of an army. Every Roman general had therefore to
expect to find among his troops a certain amount of ill-will and opposition;
but if, in addition to this, he ventured, like Aemilius Paullus, to set his
face, on principle, against their disorderly habits and insatiable greed, if he
kept strict discipline, and if, especially in money matters, he had an eye to
the public interests, his popularity in the army was in a precarious state. It
is a proof of unusual honesty in Aemilius Paullus that he did not stoop to act
as a military demagogue, although, like every noble Roman, he eagerly aspired
to distinction, and especially to his triumph, the highest of all honours.
Fortunately he obtained it in full measure, in spite of the undignified
jealousy of base and envious detractors.—But he could not escape the jealousy
of the gods, which, according to the notions of antiquity, he had drawn upon
himself by an excess of good fortune. He was visited by a harder fate than the
vanquished and imprisoned king. Perseus had at least the consolation that, in
his deep fall, his children were spared to him. But the house of Aemilius was a
house of mourning while all Rome cheered and applauded him. Five days before it
he lost the third of his four sons, a lad of fourteen, and three days after the
festival the youngest, a boy of twelve, was carried off. Thus his home was
desolate, for his two remaining sons had already been adopted by the families
of the Scipios and Fabii.
We must pause for one moment to contemplate the
spectacle of the triumph which ended this memorable war. Rome had long been
accustomed to magnificent sights of this kind. The conquerors of Tarentum and
Carthage, of Philip and Antiochus, had exhibited before the Roman people the
greatness of their exploits in brilliant shows. But the past was entirely
eclipsed by the magnificence of the procession which brought home to the Romans
the fact that the empire of Alexander the Great was completely overthrown. The
festival lasted three days. On the first day two hundred and fifty wagons,
containing the paintings and statues taken in the war, were driven through the
streets and exhibited to the people. On the second day were seen wagons with trophies
consisting of piles of the finest and most precious arms. Then followed a
procession of three thousand men carrying the captured silver (two thousand two
hundred and fifty talents); after these the silver vessels, drinking horns,
bowls, and goblets. The third day was the most magnificent of the whole
festival. A string of animals decorated for sacrifice was followed by the
bearers of the captured gold and golden vessels, the heirlooms of the dynasty
of Macedonia. Then came the royal chariot of Perseus, with his arms and his
diadem; behind it walked his children, led by their attendants and tutors. They
were too young to comprehend the full extent of their misfortunes, yet it was a
sight that melted even the hard hearts of the Romans to pity. Next came Perseus
himself in unkingly garb, bowed down and completely broken in spirit. He had
begged and entreated to be spared this humiliation; but even the gentle Aemilius
gave him, as is reported, the reproachful answer, “It lay, and it still lies,
in your power to deliver yourself”. But the king of Macedonia had not the
courage for self-murder, and paid dearly for the last few years of a miserable
life which far surpassed death in bitterness. His friends and higher servants,
who had been taken prisoners in the war, and now walked behind their master,
had tears and prayers only for him, and almost forgot their own fate in
contemplation of his overwhelming misfortune. Four hundred golden crowns, the
offerings of Greek communities, were carried behind the prisoners; then came
the general himself on his chariot, dressed in the garb and decked with the
insignia of Jupiter Capitolinus, with a laurel branch in his hand. The whole
army also was adorned with laurels, and marched in warlike order behind their
chief, singing songs of victory, mingled with occasional sallies of satire directed
against him. A solemn sacrifice in the Capitol concluded the festival.
The triumph of Aemilius was followed at short
intervals by the triumphs of the pro-praetor Cn. Octavius and the pro-praetor
L. Anicius, who had conquered Gentius. Octavius, who, with his fleet, had in
reality accomplished nothing, could produce neither prisoners nor booty, and
his triumph only served as a foil for that of Aemilius Paullus. Anicius, it is
true, also brought home a captured king. But Gentius was of too little
importance to bear comparison with Perseus. The fame of Aemilius Paullus could
only be increased by the fact that the men who had conducted the secondary
operations under him also enjoyed the honours of a triumph.
Aemilius Paullus was indeed not only the first citizen
of the state, but the model of a Roman of the best time. Without possessing
eminent qualities as a statesman or as a soldier, he was nevertheless capable
of doing his duty creditably in every capacity. He was a man of average
abilities, and free from the vices of excessive party spirit, cupidity, and
ambition. He was not, like his contemporary Cato, a one-sided worshipper of
everything old; but he was conservative in the best sense of the word, anxious
to preserve old institutions, but at the same time to improve them. Although
adhering to the true Roman virtues, unselfish fidelity to his country, rigorous
discipline in the field, temperance and moderation, he did not exclude from his
mind the Hellenic culture which at that time had begun to exert its powerful
influence. On the contrary, he strove to make his own countrymen more and more
familiar with it. It would have been fortunate for Rome if succeeding statesmen
had taken him for a model. But with the fall of the Macedonian kingdom the
Roman republic had obtained undisputed dominion over the civilised world, and
this dominion could not be exercised by simple citizens, who, as the laws of
republican government demanded, alternately ruled and obeyed. In the conquered
countries Rome educated the men for whom the modest home of republican liberty
became too small, who were anxious to be masters also in Rome, and who finally
were obliged to submit to one who proved stronger than the rest.
THE FALL OF MACEDONIA AND GREECE, 148-145 B.C.
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