READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE EMPIRE OF ROME |
ROME AND THE MEDITERRANEAN. 218-133 BCCHAPTER VIII
THE FALL OF THE MACEDONIAN MONARCHY
I
THE SETTLEMENT AFTER MAGNESIA
THE Romans hoped that the settlement of 188 BC would procure
them some respite from distant wars on a large scale. They had plenty of
troubles nearer home, and, whatever advantage individual generals may have
expected to gain from their conduct of campaigns, any wise Roman statesman must
have aimed at reducing the drain on Roman resources which great wars involved.
The Senate felt bound to fight against Philip immediately after the long
struggle with Hannibal. The war against Philip had been succeeded by a period
of anxiety culminating in the war against Antiochus; and now at last it seemed
possible that an arrangement might be made which, while securing sufficiently
the prestige and influence of Rome over all that part of the civilized world in
which she was interested, would at the same time set her free for the solution
of her own special problems.
So far as Asia is concerned the Romans may well have regarded
the settlement as satisfactory. The kingdom of Antiochus had been regarded as
the source of danger, and it was now reduced to a less important position. Both
Armenia and Sophene, which had been provinces of Antiochus, became independent.
Bithynia, Pontus and Cappadocia grew in importance. Antiochus himself, who had
contributed much by his personality to the successes gained by his kingdom
during the earlier part of his reign, did not long survive his defeat. In 187
he met his death at the hands of the people
of Elymais as he sought to seize the treasures of one of their temples.
Something had been done to reward Rhodes: from the Roman point of view this reward could
be justified both on the ground of valuable services rendered by Rhodes and of
general agreement between the policies which commended themselves to Rhodes and
to Rome. Though the Romans had not set free all the Greek cities in Asia, they
might claim to have shown preference for this treatment, and they might hope
for some moral advantage from the fact that nothing in Asia was to be subject
to Rome. Of the newer kingdoms, Pergamum had gained a very large extension of
territory; the consciousness that this was due to the support of Rome should
suffice to cause its king to maintain a pro-Roman attitude. The attitude of the
other kings might be more doubtful, but the Roman campaign against the
Galatians had been useful to all of them, and fear of his neighbours ought to
prove enough to prevent any one of them from becoming pronouncedly anti-Roman.
Egypt could be expected to remain friendly, if only on the ground that Syria
would not be too friendly; circumstances might arise in which the quarrels
between them or the differences within Egypt itself would make Roman
intervention necessary; but nothing could be done to prevent those
contingencies, and the reduced strength of the Syrian kingdom would at any rate
postpone one of these dangers for a time. Indeed, it was twenty years before
the traditional struggle between Syria and Egypt became a serious source of
anxiety to Rome.
It is possible to criticize certain points in this settlement,
and to say, in the light of later events, that causes of friction should have
been foreseen and prevented. But it is not at all likely that the Romans wished
to promote friction or to provide themselves with frequent opportunities for
interference: they had quite enough to occupy their attention without having to
fight in the East. Diplomatic missions had to be sent frequently: the object
was generally to prevent the incipient quarrels from growing so serious as to
make it necessary for Rome to intervene by force, and, in so far as such means
produced the end for which they were designed, the Romans could be satisfied
with the results of their policy.
In Europe the problems were harder and the attempts to solve
them were less successful. The Aetolians probably expected to be treated more
severely than they actually were: the treaty made their foreign policy
dependent on that of Rome, but any soreness which the war left was not
increased by an unnecessarily harsh settlement. The Peloponnese presented
greater difficulties. The Achaean League claimed now to include the whole
Peloponnese, but in view of the circumstances under which Elis and Sparta had
become members, either or both of these might cause trouble in the future.
Further, the rival tendencies to strengthen the central authority and to
maintain the independence of each several part, and the lack of sympathy
between Flamininus, who was over-ready with advice, and Philopoemen, who was
reluctant to take it, made any decision far from easy.
It was only to be expected that the guarantee of the freedom
of Greek cities would be followed by a number of appeals to Rome on the part of
those who felt, whether justly or not, that their cause could be supported by
reference to that principle. What were the Romans to do? They could not refuse
to take any further interest in Greek questions: it did not require
philhellenic enthusiasm to convince Rome that, as matters were, she could not
regard these things as entirely outside the sphere of her interests. Still less
could she be expected to undertake direct responsibility for the affairs of
Greece. Even if she had the power, such a course would have satisfied neither
those Romans who preferred to be free from the entanglements of Greek quarrels,
nor those who believed in the Greeks and whose creed accordingly included the article
that it must be for the Greeks themselves to solve their own difficulties. The
Romans may have shown hesitation in dealing with the questions raised by the
Achaean League, even hesitation to act upon Roman decisions; but, in so far as
they encouraged the Greeks to settle their own difficulties, discouraged
violence, and endeavoured to show that they wished to be the friends of all
parties, their behaviour was as correct as circumstances allowed it to be.
Their character inclined them to settle things on what seemed likely to be a
permanent basis; if this could not be done without undue interference with the
concerns of their friends, the process of time and the influence of
conciliatory advice might effect a gradual improvement. They had already discovered
that it was difficult to find out the truth from the involved or contradictory
explanations of Greek spokesmen, and they may have anticipated that there would
be more trouble of the same kind in the future: but those who were interested
in Greek questions as such and those whose outlook was more definitely Roman
could agree in holding that careful consideration of each question as it
presented itself, conducted with patience and an endeavour to understand the
principles involved, was the only available course.
The attitude both of the Achaean and of the Aetolian League
towards Rome was bound to be affected by the possibility that Philip of Macedon
might one day re-assert his claims in Greece. The king’s earlier lite had shown
strange changes of fortune; he had recovered from difficult positions by that
energy which his enemies never denied to him. What attitude should Rome have
adopted towards him? The treaty at the close of the Second Macedonian War had
not professed to alter his position as a free monarch: its provisions had dealt
only with the withdrawal of his claims outside his own dominions and with
details arising out of the war. He was encouraged at the same time to apply to
the Roman Senate for recognition as a friend and ally of Rome: probably some
form of this favour was granted him. He was suspected of doubting at one time
whether it would be better for him to support Rome or Antiochus, but it would
be unsafe to build anything on the existence of such suspicions. At any rate,
the Romans had no cause to complain of the facilities provided for their army
on its march to the Hellespont: their envoy was duly impressed with the
admirable nature of the arrangements, and this sense of Philip’s power in that
neighbourhood may have had something to do with the further suspicion that he
was in part responsible for the severe losses of Manlius Vulso on his return
through Thrace. Philip had not been asked to contribute troops for the campaign
in Asia; in Greece he had helped considerably, and the only fear seems to have
been whether he was not doing too much. He may have hoped to be left in
possession of some of those districts which he had overrun in the course of
aiding Rome against the Aetolians. But he had certainly sent messengers to
Rome, whose congratulations were accepted as sufficient, not only to justify a
polite answer, but to allow of the return of the king’s son Demetrius who had
been a hostage.
It is sometimes contended that the services of Philip deserved
more generous recognition, and that such recognition by Rome would have
maintained the integrity of the Macedonian kingdom, or, if its end was bound to
come, would have caused that end to come in a peaceful way. Generosity to a
former opponent is often good policy, but generosity should not be shown at the
expense of others. The return of the hostage and the remission of part of the
remaining instalments of tribute are eminently proper actions on the part of
Rome. But the rewarding of Philip’s co-operation by the reduction of certain
districts to a lower status than that to which Roman principles entitled them,
would not have been easy to defend.
It is probable that Philip, who presumably attached little importance
to the principle of liberty, was dissatisfied with the return for his
assistance. Though the grievances which Livy mentions can hardly be more than
guesses, since the king is not likely to have announced them publicly in this
form, they may well reflect his real feelings. He hoped that the Romans would
not trouble to prevent him from punishing any Macedonians who may have deserted
him during his war against Rome; he was justly annoyed at the lack of tact
which ordered him to desist from the siege of Lamia under circumstances that
showed too obviously how little he was trusted; and, if he was to be consoled
for losing the honour of receiving the surrender of Lamia by receiving
permission to attack certain Thessalian towns, he probably expected that his
kingdom would be increased as the result of his efforts. The consul Acilius
Glabrio promised that, when any towns or districts had sided with the Aetolians
of their own accord and were subsequently reduced by Philip, the king might
retain them, but stipulated that those which had taken the anti-Roman side
under compulsion should become free. This distinction is in accordance with
what the Romans had decided in Asia about Eumenes, and the Senate, if we may
judge from the attitude of the Roman commissioners at a later date, were
prepared to agree with it: but, unless the particulars of each case were
investigated carefully at once, it would be difficult to act upon it fairly,
and, even if such an investigation were made, there would be room for
difference of opinion.
The Romans may have been mistaken in insisting too strongly on
the principle of liberty. This principle had caused trouble enough to the
Greeks, and perhaps the Greeks themselves were trying to find their way to
something which, while preserving all the advantages of full local autonomy,
should allow for more permanent unions than had been possible in the past. But
here again it is hard to criticize the Roman attitude; it is evident that
Polybius thought it generous, though his Greek political experience
would have been quite sufficient to show him any disadvantages to which the
rigid application of the principle might lead. If the Greeks were looking for
some more practicable formula, we have no reason for supposing that they had
found it; and the Romans can hardly be blamed for not taking that step in Greek
political philosophy which the Greeks had been powerless to take. The Romans
believed themselves to be asserting what the best Greeks believed: at any rate a Greek city was better off in independence or isolation than under the
unsatisfactory control of most of the kings of the time. From Philip’s point of
view the Romans were a distant people who had accepted a rather unpractical
principle of action: their practical nature might cause them not to apply it
too strictly. From the Roman point of view Philip, even if he were not actuated
by any definitely-conceived purpose of revenge for the humiliation of his
defeat, was a powerful king whose past history showed that he was not to be
trusted blindly; yet his power was a safeguard against the anarchy which might
easily follow on its destruction. The relations between the two in 188 were
probably as satisfactory as it was possible to make them: tact on both sides
would be necessary to maintain them in that condition, and, as tact was not the
most conspicuous virtue of the Romans, there might well be trouble between
them: but it is easier to see this than to say what should have been done to
improve the position.
II
THE CLOSING YEARS OF PHILIP’S REIGN
Polybius formed the opinion that Philip had decided on a fresh
war against Rome so soon as circumstances were favourable, that his
preparations were ready by the time of his death, and that his successor
Perseus only carried into execution the plans which his father had formed. It
may seem rash to question the authority of Polybius on such a matter. But,
though the actions of Philip during the last years of his life, so far as we
know them, are not inconsistent with this view, they do not necessarily amount
to more than attempts to strengthen the position of his kingdom, and, in the
absence of direct evidence, it is not certain what use he intended to make of
his increased strength. Philip may have wondered whether Rome would stand the
strain to which she had been subjected, or may have speculated on the chance
that she might ultimately decide to concentrate on the west of Europe. It could
do no harm to consolidate his kingdom, provided he could do this without
arousing Roman suspicions. No doubt he had jealous neighbours ready to
represent each of his actions as directed against Rome, but their representations
were not necessarily any more disinterested than the actions of Philip himself.
We cannot be sure that a ruler, who had lived through such surprising changes
of fortune and whose character had been marked by such inconsistencies even in
his best days, had formed definite intentions for the future; we can only
consider what he did, so far as the fragmentary accounts allow us to do so, and
leave Perseus to bear his own share of praise or blame for the results which he
attained from the materials provided by his father.
Philip certainly strengthened his economic resources. He
increased the taxes on agricultural products and import duties, resumed the
working of disused mines and started many new ones. He took measures to add to
the population, and imported a large number of Thracians into Macedonia. All
these steps may have been intended to provide in peace time for a future war:
but improved resources can be devoted to other purposes than war, and, though
it is only too probable that the interchange of inhabitants between Thrace and
Macedonia was attended by that suffering which often accompanied such
proceedings in antiquity, its object need not have been entirely military. The
signs of increasing strength in Macedonia led to envoys being sent to Rome in
the winter of 186—5 to point out that Philip was not observing the conditions
of the peace. Thessalians, Perrhaebians and Athamanians came with complaints:
the points which they raised were detailed and puzzling, and the Senate felt
that, though these might be unimportant, the questions asked by the envoys from
Eumenes, about Thrace and especially about Aenus and Maronea which Philip had
occupied, could not be disregarded. They adopted the only possible course, of sending
three Commissioners to investigate matters on the spot.
The Commissioners went toTempe and gave audience to a large
number of representatives. Those who spoke first were polite in their
references to Philip, but, as matters proceeded, an increasingly bitter tone
showed itself. Even if these questions could have been discussed without heat,
a decision would not have been easy. Acilius Glabrio had promised Philip that
he might retain any places which had joined the Aetolians voluntarily. The
Aetolians had confused the issue by extending their influence widely during the
war, thus making it hard to determine whether this condition had been
fulfilled. Questions accordingly arose in regard to Philippopolis, Tricca,
Phaloria and Eurymenae in Thessaly, and Gonnocondylum (Olympias), Malloea and
Ericinium in Perrhaebia; the Athamanians said that the liberty of their country
was in process of being lost and they also claimed the border forts of
Athenaeum and Poetneum. It was complained that Philip had despoiled some of
these places or removed prominent citizens in the expectation of having to
restore the cities, that he had unfairly pressed the commercial interests of
Demetrias against those of Phthiotic Thebes and that he had prevented free
access to the Romans by waylaying envoys.
Philip was able to give a confident reply to these last
charges: he could not prevent sailors from choosing whither they would sail;
vague allegations of interference with one set only of the many envoys who had
been sent to injure his cause, were valueless. As regards the places whose
status was called in question he made a counterclaim to the Menelais and the
Parachelois in Dolopia, and to Petra in Pieria, all of which he asserted should
really be his. Probably he hoped for a decision which would leave the existing
position unchanged by showing that there were claims on both sides which could
be left to balance each other. Perhaps that was why he adduced Xyniae, a town
which had been taken by the Aetolians after its inhabitants had deserted it,
and had been allowed to remain in Philip’s possession, though on the strict
application of the Roman principle it was entitled to be free. But his
impatience at the charges caused him to make injudicious remarks: he spoke
lightly of the value of freedom as used by those with no experience of it, and
compared some of his accusers with recently emancipated slaves who did not know
that liberty involved responsibility. He added the menacing phrase ‘that his
sun had not altogether set’. Such an attitude was unfortunate in the
presence of the Roman Commissioners, who would be only too likely to think of
it as directed not only against the Thessalians but also against Rome. He did
not make matters better by adding that he was well aware that he would have to
yield what had been given to him, whether his cause were just or not.
The Commissioners decided that the Macedonian garrisons should
be withdrawn from all the places about which doubts had been raised and that
legal machinery was to be devised for settling any further questions that might
arise between the Macedonians and their neighbours. They added an opinion that
the boundaries of the Macedonian kingdom should be the ancient ones. Probably
they meant no more by this than that Rome would not countenance any aggression;
but the boundaries had varied so much at different times that it is difficult
to see whither this principle might lead, and the grave offence which Livy
tells us that the king took at the result may be connected as much with doubts
on this point as with any disappointment which he felt about particular places.
He may have thought that, in what they said about his hereditary dominions, as
in the value which they set upon liberty, the Romans were enunciating a
principle which sounded well but admitted of diverse applications, and that,
having stated the principle without due consideration, they would be obliged to
defend any deductions that might be drawn from it. In so far as the
Commissioners did not secure general agreement with their decisions, they
failed; but it is easier to see reasons why Philip should have been
dissatisfied with them than to find much positive ground for criticizing their
procedure. They desired that, so far as his relation with other Greek states was
concerned, he should neither be better nor worse off for having helped Rome. We
need not attribute sentimental views, either to Romans in general or to these
particular Commissioners, of whose opinions we know little, to feel that this
was the reasonable attitude for Rome to adopt.
The Commissioners then moved to Thessalonica, to consider the
questions about Aenus and Maronea, which were regarded at Rome as more serious.
The representatives of Eumenes said that they had no comment to offer on the
Roman wish (if it were the Roman wish) that these cities should be free, except
to express a hope that their freedom would be a reality, if, however, the
cities were to be regarded as a prize of war captured from Antiochus, Eumenes
claimed to be a more proper recipient than Philip. The ten Commissioners had
assigned the Chersonese and Lysimacheia to Eumenes; did not the possession of
Aenus and Maronea follow as a matter of course ? Philip pointed out that this
was a doubtful argument: if the Commissioners expressly named the Chersonese
and Lysimacheia, and made no mention of these cities, it was as legitimate to
argue that they were meant to be excluded. But the contention that Eumenes had
rendered greater assistance to the Romans than Philip drove him to say, truly
or not, that favourable offers of alliance had been made to him by Antiochus
and that, in spite of them, he had rendered to Rome the services for which he
was asked, while Eumenes could not have retained his kingdom at all if
Antiochus had been victorious. The fact that claims could be made now which had
not been put forward before the ten Commissioners showed in itself that he must
not expect equitable treatment from the Romans. He repeated his old grievances:
he had been forbidden the favour, unimportant in itself but of some value to
his prestige, of reasserting his authority over the subjects who had deserted
him during a period of truce; the recent decision had taken from him the
advantage which was to compensate him for his rebuff about Lamia. After all, he
was a friend and an ally to Rome; why should he be treated as an enemy?
The Commissioners, impressed by the substance of this complaint,
were reluctant to pronounce further decisions against Philip. But the
inhabitants of Maronea were not satisfied with the existing state of things.
They complained that they had to endure several garrisons, not one only, that
the place was full of Macedonians, that there was no freedom of speech, and
that opponents of the Macedonians had to suffer loss of rights or exile. They
contended that a recent construction of a new road had enabled Philip to
pretend that the city and the portion of the sea-coast had been recognized as
part of his sphere of influence, whereas it had definitely been intended to
exclude him from them. It appeared therefore that matters had reached a state
which went outside the competence of the three Commissioners: their function
was one of interpretation, and, if new questions of policy were to be raised,
it was for the Senate to decide them. If the ten Commissioners had given the
cities to Eumenes, they were his, and the three Commissioners introduced no
alteration; but it seemed very doubtful whether they could be assigned to
Eumenes on this ground. If Philip had been able to assert that he had captured
the cities in war, they might be his on that ground; but this, too, was
doubtful. If the question could not be decided on either of these grounds, the
Senate must investigate the matter further. Meanwhile, however, the garrisons
must be removed pending the decision : and, as the garrisons were Macedonian,
Philip would feel that it was he again who lost by the arrangement; for, if
garrisons were once removed from a place where they were evidently unpopular,
it was not likely that they would ever return.
It was plain to the Senate, as soon as the Commissioners delivered
their report, that a further commission must be sent to Greece. The three had
not been received at a meeting of the Achaean League: at this they had taken
offence, and, in regard to that part of their duties, they were said—not
unfairly—to have left matters more uncertain than they had been before. More investigation
was therefore necessary, and a fresh mission under Appius Claudius was sent. In
regard to the points left open by the three Commissioners, the Senate decided
that Aenus and Maronea should be free: apparently they took the view that
Philip’s boundary was fixed by the old royal road, which went inland and did
not touch that part of the coast, and there would have been even less
justification for assigning these cities to Eumenes. So Claudius and his
colleagues were to see whether Philip had withdrawn his garrisons and whether
he had done what he had been told to do in relation to Thessaly and Perrhaebia.
The intimation that he was not to retain Aenus or Maronea
seems to have inspired Philip to one of those acts of miscalculated cruelty of
which he was always capable. He was determined that in any event his opponents
in Maronea should not gain. He ordered Onomastus, his officer commanding the
coast district, to arrange through Casander, an agent who had lived long in
Maronea, for the introduction at night of a band of Thracians who perpetrated a
massacre. Philip, who believed in the effect of terrorism, thought that the truth
would not be discovered; it proved otherwise, and Appius Claudius demanded that
Onomastus and Casander should be sent to Rome to be examined there. No doubt he
took the ground that, if these men were innocent, they had nothing to fear; but
the attitude of Philip increased the suspicion against him. He declared that he
had duly removed his garrison and that the massacre was due to the dissensions
of the citizens and not to Macedonian soldiers: but that plea would
be vain if the facts were truly stated. He tried to excuse Onomastus on the
ground that he was not in the neighbourhood at the time. He was very reluctant
to allow Casander to go: and, when he at last consented, Casander died on the
journey. Philip may have been maligned in being accused of poisoning Casander,
but the story told us is not so inconsistent with Philip’s character as to
justify us in saying that it is impossible.
It must have been plain to Philip that the Romans distrusted
him: he was not ready for war with Rome, even if he looked forward to it, and,
unless he took some action, there might be a risk of his being asked to comply
with fresh conditions which he would regard as humiliating. He accordingly sent
Demetrius, his son, to Rome, in the hope that the young man, who had created a
favourable impression as a hostage, would be able to serve his father’s
interests. The task was not an easy one. Rumours had arisen that the Romans
were ready to receive and credit accusations against Philip, and it was
certainly the duty of the Romans to see that the judicial methods which they
had prescribed for boundary disputes should be acted upon. Accordingly in 184 bc a
bewildering number of representatives came to Rome, from individuals, cities,
or tribes, alleging grievances of all kinds, connected with land, slaves or
cattle, with Philip’s refusal to act upon arbitral decisions or with his
corrupt methods for securing decisions in his favour. Philip was never popular
with his neighbours and Polybius describes these representatives as including all
who lived near the frontier of Macedonia. Athenaeus, brother of Eumenes, was
there also, complaining of aid given by Philip to Prusias of Bithynia in his
quarrel with Pergamum and raising again the old question of the Thracian
cities.
After statements which had occupied three days, the Senate did
not know what to do, and Demetrius was asked whether he was the bearer of
written instructions from his father. He had a paper with him, and produced it,
though probably Philip never contemplated that it should be read aloud as it
stood. It stated that Philip had done all that was required of him, or that, if
in any case he had not done so, it was the fault of others; it also made it
plain, as would be natural enough in notes prepared solely for his son’s use, that
Philip did not admit the justice of all the decisions. The Senate returned a
general answer which indicated that they were willing to put the most
favourable construction on all that Philip had done or would do, in view of his
having sent so acceptable a messenger as Demetrius. Further envoys would
satisfy themselves as to the position of the several controverted matters and
would explain personally to the king how much the Romans appreciated the
friendly feelings of his son.
Polybius tells us that this visit by Demetrius, though it
served to check for a time a growing feeling of misunderstanding between Rome
and Macedonia, tended in the long run to accentuate the difficulties. The
Romans may have intended no more than to show kindness towards Demetrius: they
can hardly be supposed to have known intimately his exact personal relation to
his father, or, if they had reason for guessing that those relations were not
all that they should have been, to have wished to make them worse. The reports
of confidential conversations with Flamininus, in which Roman support was
promised to Demetrius as his father’s successor, cannot be accepted without
question even on the authority of Polybius: popularity in Rome might easily be
misinterpreted in Macedonia, and stories of what a man may have said in an
interview are often retailed without inquiry, on the basis of reports from
those who are or claim to be his friends. Probably things were not made better
by the fact that Philocles, who had been sent by the king to represent him
specially on the subject of Prusias, received scant attention, and that the
answer to this part of the enquiry was, if we may trust the report, rudely
curt. Philocles was one of those with whom the king had discussed the mission
of Demetrius, and he presumably belonged to the king’s intimate advisers; he
would not have been likely to carry back a favourable account of the visit; for
its results, so far as Philip could regard them as satisfactory, were
attributed exclusively to the favourable impression produced by Demetrius.
Perhaps the Romans indulged in language of excessive courtliness, without
enough experience to enable them to make it innocuous; and it is safer to
attribute to them dangerous experiments of that kind than to suppose that they wished
to produce dissensions in the royal house of Macedonia which were at least as
likely to cause trouble to the friends of Rome as to her enemies.
On his return, Demetrius found himself regarded in Macedonia
as having saved the situation. His relation to Rome suggested that he might in
time become king through Roman influence, and Macedonian time-servers would
naturally try to gain favour with him. He may not have been careful enough in a
difficult situation, and his elder brother, about whose parentage there was
some doubt, might well feel jealous. Their father obeyed the commands of Rome;
but his reluctance was obvious to the Roman envoy Q. Marcius Philippus, who
reported on his return that Philip would continue to be obedient no longer than
he was obliged. It is not surprising that the next message from Rome, while
giving the king some praise for his conformity to Roman wishes, added a warning
for the future.
Philip’s active nature demanded that he should do something
further to strengthen his position. Henceforward he neglected places on the
coast, where Rome had curbed Macedonian expansion, and undertook expeditions
in the opposite direction. An attack on the centre of Thrace reached
Philippopolis and established a garrison, which could not however maintain
itself there for very long: a new town in the Paeonian north of Macedonia, not
far from Stobi, was called Perse'is in honour of his elder son; large shiftings
of population were effected, under circumstances that caused much suffering,
with the object of providing reliable supporters of the king in the most
important districts. His suspicions continually increased, and he issued orders
for the arrest of the children of those whom he had previously executed.
In 181 bc he undertook an expedition into the
Balkans: the object is said to have been the investigation of a rumour that the
Black Sea, the Adriatic, the Danube and the Alps could all be seen from one
place, and those who interpreted every action of the king as directed against
Rome added that a plan for the invasion of Italy was to be devised from this
point. Whatever its object, the expedition was a failure, and it
was accompanied by such privations that a friendly tribe were nearly ruined by
the hungry soldiers in their retreat. A further ambitious scheme was to destroy
the Dardani, who were always regarded as dangerous to the Macedonians, by
means of Bastarnae brought across the Danube; this plan also is represented as
directed ultimately against Rome.
But Philip’s life
was drawing near its end. The elder son, Perseus, nervous as to the succession,
and afraid lest Demetrius should succeed his father through Roman influence,
managed to lead Philip to believe that Demetrius was too dangerous to be
allowed to live. The story, which ends with the poisoning and suffocation of
Demetrius , has reached us in a form that suggests, as do also certain other
features of the later life of Philip and of the reign of Perseus, that some
author or authors wrote tragedies or historical novels dealing with the ruin of
the Macedonian royal house. But the general outline of the incidents is so like
other family quarrels that we have no sufficient ground for doubting its
substantial truth. The death of Demetrius was followed by a period of acute
remorse in the mind of Philip, when he found that the evidence on which he had
acted was largely unreliable, and that a letter from Flamininus, in which the
writer made charges against Demetrius while pretending to excuse him, was a
forgery. The king endeavoured to secure that Perseus should not gain by the
deceit; but most of those in attendance on Philip were so completely won over
to Perseus’ interest as to enable him to succeed without opposition on his
father’s death (179 BC).
If the substance of these stories is true, it is easy to
believe that the death of Philip in his fifty-ninth year was due to agony of
mind rather than of body: for, though there is much in his career which cannot
be commended or excused, he was capable of generous instincts. One may well
believe that he only gave the fatal orders reluctantly, that he was convinced
at the time of the truth of the accusation against his son, and that he
afterwards came to see that it was, at least in part, contrary to the facts.
Demetrius was popular at Rome; but Philip is not likely to have regarded such
popularity as an offence in itself, apart from evidence as to the use to be
made of it, and the discovery that the friends of Perseus were relying on
forged evidence would be enough to show him that disloyalty to the Macedonian
cause could not be proved against Demetrius without false witness.
III.
THE
EARLY REIGN OF PERSEUS
We shall probably never know what degree of blame should
attach to Perseus for his brother’s death. But, after all doubtful details of
the story have been removed, there remains the fact that ugly rumours to the
discredit of Perseus were bound to arise and to be believed by many in Rome.
The attitude of Perseus on succeeding to his father’s throne was quite correct:
he asked at once for a renewal of the alliance on the existing terms. But,
though this was granted, little would be known about him except that he was not
on good terms with the young Macedonian who had been popular in Rome, that this
very popularity had come to be regarded as the ground of the dissension between
them, and that Perseus rather than Demetrius had been associated with his
father in those schemes for strengthening his kingdom which nervous Romans
persisted in considering as directed against the Republic. If Perseus intended
to maintain peaceful relations with Rome while at the same time safeguarding
the dignity and independence of Macedonia, if, in fact, he wished to attempt
what could under no circumstances have been an easy task, he began under a
severe handicap.
It is plain that he possessed certain good qualities. His
appearance and manner were kingly, he avoided some of his father’s faults and
the measures with which his reign commenced showed generosity and
broad-mindedness. He released state prisoners, recalled exiles, restored them
their property, and adopted a more conciliatory attitude than his father to the
Greeks outside Macedonia. He showed vigour in repelling the attack made by
Abrupolis, the ruler of the Thracian Sapaei, on the mines of Pangaeus, and he
can hardly be criticized for going on to expel Abrupolis from his kingdom,
though this action was treated some years later as an offence against an ally
of Rome, and made into the primary cause of the Third Macedonian War. Perseus,
as was natural, sought to magnify the importance and dignity of his rule. He
married Laodice, daughter of Seleucus IV of Syria, who was escorted by the
Rhodians with a great parade of naval strength, and gave his sister to Prusias
king of Bithynia; subjugated Dolopia, and paid a somewhat ostentatious visit to
Delphi (174 bc).
All these acts might have been accepted as harmless efforts at
consolidating his position in relation to his own subjects and his neighbours,
had he not begun with the reputation of being an enemy to Rome, and had not his
enemies, Eumenes in particular, seen to it that this reputation was not
forgotten. At last the conviction grew strong on both sides that a third war
between Rome and Macedonia was inevitable, and wars that seem bound to come
sooner or later are not easily averted or even delayed. That Perseus wished to
make war at once is improbable, whatever confidence he may have had in the
military establishment bequeathed him by his father. The Romans sent embassies
in bewildering succession, and these missions show at least that Rome had no
wish to proceed to extremes so long as an explanation was possible. But each
group of envoys were more convinced than their predecessors that Perseus was
not prepared for a satisfactory agreement: they complained that he avoided
seeing them, and they gained increasing evidence of the strength of the king’s
resources.
Finally in 172 bc came the visit of Eumenes to Rome
which did most to drive Rome into war. We are not obliged to suppose that the
Romans took seriously all the charges brought by Eumenes. He dwelt on Perseus’
long experience in distant wars; but, even if his presence in Pelagonia as
early as 199 b.c. and in Dolopia
in 189 are only specimens of the duties with which his father had entrusted
him, the Romans could hardly have been offended at the successor to the throne
being trained in this way. Strength of body and suppleness of mind were made
into accusations against him. It must have been clear to the Roman senators, in
spite of the disclaimer of Eumenes, that this and much else was inspired by
personal dislike and jealousy.
But no doubt many of his points were based upon fact. It was
true that Perseus had expelled Abrupolis, though the Romans had not at the time
complained of this treatment of one whom it now suited them to call a friend
and ally. The Illyrian chieftain Artetaurus had been murdered and the murderers
had taken refuge in the kingdom of Perseus: the king denied all knowledge of
the crime and added that he had expelled the murderers from his country when he
learned that their presence was unacceptable to the Romans, but it would be
easy to suggest that the murderers of one who had also now come to be described
as a friend and ally had good reasons for going to Perseus rather than elsewhere.
The quarrels between the Dardani and the Bastarnae had ended unfavourably for
the Bastarnae. Perseus had denied any complicity in their invasion, but the
fact that the destruction of the Dardani would have freed his hands had caused
anxiety in Rome, which this failure had probably not entirely removed. There
were mysterious rumours about an intrigue with Carthage, where messengers were
alleged to have been received at night and answers returned to Macedonia:
Romans, who had been in Africa recently, reported that Masinissa was ready to
tell them all about it, though of the Carthaginians themselves it could only be
said that they were not sufficiently emphatic in denying it. Perseus assisted
the people of Byzantium against their Thracian enemies, and this action may
have been, as Eumenes said it was, contrary to the terms of his treaty, even
though the Romans had accepted the excuses made for it. He had attained greater
success than his father in securing influence in Greece. He had come near
securing from the Achaean League the withdrawal of their refusal to allow any
Macedonian in their territory, and it had been openly argued on that occasion
by a supporter of Rome that war was certain to come before long. Some Thebans
of Roman sympathies had perished on their way to Rome, and, though it was
asserted that this was due to shipwreck, suspicion could be cast on Perseus of
being concerned in their fate, just as easily as though they had died suddenly
and he had been accused of poisoning them. Troubles in Aetolia, Thessaly and
Perrhaebia could be represented as stirred up by him so as to give him excuse
for meddling: inscriptions at Delphi and Delos could be cited as evidence of
his far-reaching designs.
Probably it was as difficult for Perseus as for the Romans to
avoid interference in Greece. The Roman influence was thrown on the side of
order, and that frequently meant the predominance of the aristocratic party. It
was not to be expected that all the citizens of Greek states would be content
with this: the democrats, always active in a time of social difficulty and
unrest, looked for help where they might hope to get it, and the first actions
of Perseus, involving the relief of debtors, must have marked him at once as
the friend of the poor, though he may have been inspired only by the wish to
secure popularity in his own kingdom. The proceedings of Perseus, taken all
together, amounted, even after all allowance had been made for exaggeration,
to a formidable list: many may have been capable of explanation, but some,
even though not harmful in themselves, may have been against the letter of his
agreement: he had attained a position in which he might easily have been
represented as the head of an anti-Roman faction, and Rome apparently decided
henceforth that she must regard him in that light.
The Romans had discovered for themselves that Eumenes was not
popular in Greece; and, as they professed to be convinced of his excellent
qualities, they could hardly fail to draw the inference that his notorious
friendship for them had made for his unpopularity. It was not thought proper
to give the other representatives the opportunity of being confronted with
Eumenes, but the speeches which they afterwards delivered in the Senate were
calculated, by their hostility to Eumenes, to add to the effect which he had
produced. The Rhodians, in particular, accused him of stirring up trouble for
them by inciting the Lycians against Rhodes and of being a greater danger in
Asia than Antiochus had been. The Romans took this as further evidence of the
designs of Perseus and conferred additional honours on Eumenes.
But, if the visit of Eumenes to Rome had done much to harden
the Roman temper towards Perseus, an incident near Delphi, which occurred on
his return home, did more. As he was on his way to perform a sacrifice to
Apollo, he was struck down by a rock, rolled down the hillside and for some
time lay between life and death. Indeed he was long believed, even in Asia, to
be dead, and his brother Attalus took measures to secure himself in the
succession, including the project of a marriage with the queen Stratonice,
which would have been inconceivable if he had had any idea that his brother
might still be alive. However, Eumenes recovered and the responsibility for the
attack was inevitably thrown upon Perseus. Of his guilt Polybius expresses no
doubt. The evidence consisted, partly of the testimony of a woman with whom
Eumenes’ assailants are said to have lodged, partly of the allegation that a
Cretan named Evander was subsequently put to death by Perseus for fear of what
he might reveal. Though Polybius is no friend to Perseus, that does not prove
the accusation false. If Perseus was guilty, his behaviour was not only
criminal but foolish. He must have known that Eumenes had brothers well able to
maintain the power of Pergamum, and that there were moderate men, including
statesmen responsible for the guidance of their communities, who would be
reluctant to condone political assassination or to be associated with the
authors of such crimes. It is clear that Perseus was trying to gain the
advantages of bring considered moderate and popular, and it is not clear why he
should have wished to sacrifice any of those advantages by a useless murder.
Perhaps the crime was engineered by enthusiasts with a private grudge against
the king of Pergamum, who was not universally beloved. But certainly Perseus
was believed to have arranged it, and the incident is deemed by Polybius,
though he refuses to call it a cause, to be a real ‘beginning’ of the war
between Perseus and Rome.
IV.
THE
OUTBREAK OF WAR: THE FIRST CAMPAIGNS
By this time the Romans were prepared to believe anything
against Perseus. Their envoy C. Valerius, who reported that he had found
abundant confirmation in Greece of all that Eumenes had said, brought with him
one Rammius of Brundisium. His residence at the port, through which most of the
envoys passed, had brought him into relations with Perseus; he seems to have
become involved in Macedonian secrets further than was quite comfortable, and
finally reported to the Romans that the king had endeavoured to persuade him to
poison various senators and that he had been obliged to promise to do so for
fear of being poisoned himself. The story may not be impossible, but it sounds
wildly improbable, and perhaps Rammius thought that his best way out of a
dangerous situation was to give information which the Romans would be ready to
accept at a moment when their minds were made up against the king.
The actual declaration of war did not come immediately. In 172 bc the praetor Cn. Sicinius was instructed to cross to Apollonia
and secure the coast for the future transport of troops. But much diplomatic
work had to be done first, to counteract the popularity of Perseus in Greece.
Of the kings, Ariarathes of Cappadocia selected this moment to send his son to
be educated in Rome; Antiochus of Syria and Ptolemy of Egypt, though engaged in
struggles with each other, professed to be equally loyal to the Republic;
Prusias of Bithynia, though as a brother-in-law of Perseus he expressed a wish
to be neutral, was evidently not likely to oppose Rome actively. The attitude
of Genthius, the Illyrian chief who reigned in Scodra, was the most doubtful.
In the republics the lower classes tended to dislike Rome: the well-to-do were
more favourable, but there was a strong feeling, even among those who, if the
choice were forced upon them, preferred Rome to Macedonia, that the exclusive
predominance of any one power was dangerous for them. This feeling had made
Perseus popular in certain quarters, but it did not follow that it would gain
him active support against Rome.
The Roman mission met with considerable success. The Achaeans
showed signs of discontent that a body which had supported Rome against Philip
and Antiochus should be treated in the same way as those who had formerly taken
the other side and were now unwilling members of the League, and perhaps they
hoped that their ready adhesion would be met by some recognition of the
permanence of their League as such; but there was no doubt on which side they
stood. The Boeotian League could not arrive at any general policy owing to
internal differences; while Coronea, Haliartus and Thisbe took the Macedonian side, the majority of the cities, some with hesitation,
agreed to support Rome, and the Boeotian League broke up. The Rhodians adopted
a correct attitude which satisfied the Roman envoys, Claudius and Postumius.
While there was no doubt that Cotys, king of the Odrysae, was a firm ally of
Perseus, some of the Thracian rulers promised support to Rome which might be
useful.
After the return of the envoys, who reported that Perseus had
repudiated his renewal of the treaty made with Philip and had proposed to
substitute another after due consideration of the terms, Q. Marcius Philippus,
who had been a friend of Philip and, with other envoys, had been sent to
Greece, accepted an invitation to a final interview with Perseus, that took
place on the Peneus. Marcius expressed himself as anxious that no chance of
peace should be omitted, and advised the king to send a further embassy to
Rome, though his last envoys had received no answer. No change was effected in
the attitude of Rome, and Marcius is said to have boasted on his return that he
had secured six months’ delay by inducing the king not to begin hostilities at
once, to the great advantage of the Romans, whose preparations were far behind
those of the Macedonians. We are told that some of the senators denounced as
un-Roman this method of outwitting an opponent but that the majority agreed to
profit by it, and Marcius was sent back to Greece. Polybius, who had a private
quarrel with Marcius, may have accepted too readily an ill-natured story of his
boasting. But, if Perseus was not deceived, he had helped his enemies by deceiving
himself.
Rome had at last decided to declare war, and it is evident
that the war was regarded at Rome as serious. There was no difficulty in
enlisting volunteers from among those who had served in previous wars in
Greece and Asia Minor and found them profitable, while the anxiety of both the
consuls to secure the command shows that it was a duty which would
be gladly undertaken. But special provisions were adopted for allowing soldiers
of experience to serve up to fifty years of age, for choosing the military
tribunes otherwise than by lot, and for investing the departure of the consul
with all due solemnity. Yet the number of troops sent out was smaller than
might have been expected, if one supposes the Romans to be making a real
effort. The consul, P. Licinius, to whom Macedonia was assigned, received the
usual consular force of two legions; and, though Livy tells us that these
legions had 6000 men each, the testimony of Polybius as to
the largest size of the legions known to him renders this doubtful.
The Macedonians had 43,000 men available (39,000 infantry,
4000 cavalry) and their opponents (with a total of 37,600) were in a position
of considerable inferiority. The Italian part of the Roman forces consisted
largely of recruits, and it would require time before the miscellaneous allies
would act effectively with them. Perseus, who could move earlier, began by a
rapid march which, besides securing his position in northern Thessaly, had the
moral advantage of a surprise, and he was able to secure control of the pass of
Tempe without difficulty. After showing by a series of movements over a wide
area that it was open to him to take the offensive, he approached the Roman
force, which had rested for a time at Gomphi after a tiring advance over the
mountains from Apollonia and was now about three miles from Larissa. The first attempts
to draw out the Romans failed to do more than induce a small number of cavalry
and light-armed troops to take part in an indecisive skirmish; but finally
Perseus drew nearer and brought on an engagement near the hill Callicinus in
which the whole of the cavalry and light-armed on both sides took part. The
battle, with some 12,000 men engaged on each side, is described for us in the
account which Livy drew from Polybius, and it has been noted that, though the
heavy-armed troops were not in action, each side used the manceuvres which they
adopted when the heavy-armed troops were also taking part. The shock tactics of
the massed Macedonian cavalry produced an instant effect which might have been
overwhelming had it not been for the reserves on the Roman side. The neglect of
the king to make use of his phalanx, which had advanced of its own accord so as
not to miss a chance of joining in, may have robbed him of a decisive victory.
Perhaps he felt satisfied with the moral effect produced by a
very considerable success: for the Romans withdrew at once across the river
Peneus into a place of greater safety, and it was now clear that the king, by
using his proved superiority in cavalry and lightarmed troops, could compel
his enemy to fight. Alternatively he could try to use his advantage as an
opportunity for gaining a favourable peace. He sent messengers offering to pay
an indemnity and withdraw from such places as his father had agreed to
abandon. The object of this strictly moderate proposal was no doubt to show
that one who was in a position to do damage to the Romans was ready to
sacrifice much for the chance of being their friend and ally. But the Romans
could not accept such suggestions immediately after a defeat: they declined to
consider any terms except unconditional surrender.
. Perseus, in spite of the indignation which this answer
produced among his followers, made renewed attempts at negotiation and
suggested a still ampler indemnity. The failure of all his efforts may have affected
his nerve, at least for the time. He remained generally at a considerable
distance from the Romans, and no further engagement took place this year on a
large scale except one near Phalanna, which arose accidentally and was probably
not of great importance, though some Roman annalists, whose testimony Livy
evidently doubts, claimed a great Roman victory. At the end of the year the
king withdrew from Thessaly, leaving only such garrisons as might help to make
possible an easy re-entry. Evidently he had done little to satisfy those of his
advisers who wished for a total overthrow of the Roman forces; we must suppose
him to have been anxious, with whatever justification, to try the effect of a
protracted series of campaigns, which might possibly induce the Romans to think
at last that it was not worth while to continue them.
The Roman consul, who ended by marching into Boeotia and
taking Coronea, cannot fairly be blamed for not achieving more: the forces at
his command did not enable him to compel the enemy to accept battle except
under conditions of their own choosing. It is harder to understand why the
Roman fleet did so little. The Romans themselves had provided at least 45 quinqueremes,
the Rhodians 5 triremes, Eumenes enough ships to convey 6000 infantry and 1000
cavalry, and the states in the west of Greece 76 smaller vessels. The Roman
admiral, the praetor C. Lucretius Gallus, found no one opposing him at sea, and
sent home from Chaicis some of the allied naval contingents. If the Macedonian
fleet was negligible, as at this time it seems to have been, why was nothing
done to make it more difficult for the king to maintain his connection with
Thessaly, otherwise than by the mountainous western routes? Instead, Lucretius
operated by land in Boeotia, capturing Haliartus after a stout resistance and
receiving the surrender of Thisbe. He has none too good a reputation: he is
declared to have treated his allies as though they were enemies, and there must
have been some substance in these charges, as he was subsequently condemned and
fined. It is therefore not unnatural that he has been accused of sacrificing
Roman interests by preferring to win booty in Boeotia rather than to cruise
along the shore of Thessaly.
It is possible, however, that the Senate were not averse from
a plan of action in which the fleet played a secondary part. The strength of
Rome was in her army, and, although a fleet was required for a campaign against
Macedonia, Roman interests demanded that the decision should be reached on
land. A strategy which depended largely on naval operations might suggest that
the co-operation of Pergamum or Rhodes was of primary value to Rome. It is not
necessary to suppose that the Romans had at this time any definite grievance
against Pergamum or Rhodes, in order to understand why Roman plans were
constructed in such a way as not to make the allies too prominent.
The Romans, judged on what may be supposed to have been their
own principles, deserve more criticism for not supplying in this first year of
war a sufficiently large force on land, than for conniving at the inaction of
the fleet. That, in spite of previous experience, ignorance of geography
contributed something to their underestimate of the problem may perhaps be
inferred from the action of the other consul of 171 bc, C. Cassius,
who, being disappointed at receiving Cisalpine Gaul for his charge, proposed to
leave his province and march his army through Illyria into Macedonia, without
consulting the Senate and with no further preparations than the collection of
guides and of corn for thirty days at Aquileia.
The campaign of the following year was uneventful, so far as
we are able to judge from the few details about it which are known. The consul,
A. Hostilius Mancinus, tried once and perhaps twice to invade Macedonia from
Thessaly by passing to the west of the great belt of mountains which separated
the two. Probably it was legitimate to make such an attempt, but he was
severely repulsed, and Perseus once more occupied northern Thessaly, the Romans
retiring from Larissa to Pharsalus. The consul did not claim any military
success, but it is reported of him that he restored discipline to the army and
protected the allies from injuries, a commendation which reflects little credit
on his predecessor. The praetor, L. Hortensius, who commanded the fleet, does
not receive similar commendation: in conjunction with Eumenes and a Pergamene
squadron, he captured Abdera, and this may have had more military value than
anything done by Lucretius in the preceding year, but he is accused of cruelty
and avarice by allies as well as by enemies. Perseus availed himself of the
inaction of the Romans to undertake expeditions to the west. One was against
the Dardani, in another he captured and held Uscana in the Drin valley with a
garrison which a Roman commander vainly tried to dislodge. He supported the
Molossians who had declared for him, leaving in their territory a commander
with troops that might be useful for interfering with the usual Roman route
from Apollonia; and finally he went as far south as Stratus. His last march did
not attain its full object, the winning over of the Aetolian League, but this
series of movements served to show that the difficulties of the Romans were not
getting less, and might add to his hopes that his offers of peace would
ultimately be accepted.
The consul of 169 bc, Q. Marcius Philippus, who arrived
with a fresh supply of men and began by summoning the commander of the fleet
to discuss concerted measures of attack, was a man of vigour who started to
move his forces within ten days of his arrival. He may have turned his previous
knowledge of the country to good use: he certainly succeeded in reaching the
Macedonian coast after a difficult march in the course of which he is said to
have admitted that his army might have been destroyed by a small opposing
force. The details of this march can only be reconstructed conjecturally:
perhaps he deceived the commander of the hill garrison, whom he had vainly
tried to force from his position, by feigning retreat, leaving a covering force
to fight a defensive action, and then moving towards the coast by a difficult
route through thick woods, which caused the enemy commander to have no idea
that he was not still retreating along the way by which he had come. The king,
when news arrived that the coast had been reached, supposed that his mountain
force had been overpowered and that the situation was desperate. He withdrew
his garrisons, not only from Dium but also from Tempe, and thereby relieved the
Roman general from what would have been a very critical situation owing to the
absence of provisions and the non-arrival of his transports.
The commanders on both sides have been severely blamed by
critics from Polybius downwards, and with the greater confidence that Polybius
was himself present with the Roman force on a mission from the Achaean League,
and must therefore have known the military situation. But, great as were the
difficulties of the Roman march, it is not easy to see how they were to be
avoided if Macedonia was ever to be entered at all, and, if supplies failed to
arrive, that can hardly have been the consul’s fault. Nor can the king be
blamed for more than having failed to make a brilliant guess as to what had
actually happened, and, had the facts been such as he may legitimately have
supposed them to be, the withdrawal of his garrisons and the concentration of
his troops was his proper course.
So far as the Roman consul is concerned, his successor was
able to start from a very different position from that which had hitherto faced
the Romans. It is true that, if Perseus had been really willing, as Polybius
tells us was at this time expected, to come down again into Thessaly, and
decide the war by a general engagement, the Romans would have been saved the
necessity of crossing the mountains: but, though Perseus had begun the campaign
of 171 by a march into Thessaly and had offered battle in the early part of the
year, his later actions had shown that he was not to be hurried and that he was
not likely to offer battle except on his own terms. If the Romans wished to
force an engagement, they had much more chance of doing this successfully near
the coast than in northern Thessaly. The scheme formed by Philippus only partly
succeeded: the co-operation with the fleet on which it depended was very
imperfectly carried out, and the absence of the provision ships forced him to
retire and to allow the king to return to a position on the Elpeus which could
be so strongly defended that the consul thought it hopeless to attack during
this year. He had enough to do to secure his own position, and in particular to
capture the fortress of Heracleum which threatened his communications. In this
operation also he recognized the value of the fleet’s help.
Another charge has been brought against Philippus, that of not
remembering the importance of the western theatre of war where Roman influence
was endangered by Perseus’ operations in the previous year. The commander in
that district, Appius Claudius Cento, asked the Achaeans to send him 5000 men:
Philippus advised Polybius that this demand was unreasonable and sent him home
with the recommendation that it should not be granted. Polybius made use of the
Senate’s order that no requisitions from Roman commanders should be carried out
unless they were accompanied by decrees from the Senate; the assistance was not
sent, and, if it had been sent, it might have been useful. But it is not
necessary to suppose that Philippus was actuated either by an underestimate of
what had to be done on the west side of Greece or by jealousy of the success
which another commander might possibly win. He may well have thought that the
charges against Rome of showing lack of consideration for her allies were
having serious effects, that scrupulous accuracy ought to be observed in
carrying out the orders of the Senate in this matter, and that it was better to
let military operations be deferred than to run a risk of imposing an
unnecessary burden on the Achaeans. At a time when the lack of progress made by
Rome in the main campaign was causing the anti-Roman party in Rhodes to become
prominent, Prusias to hint apologetically at the possibility of peace, Eumenes
to be spoken of as engaged in mysterious negotiations with Perseus, it was
worth while to sacrifice something for the sake of showing that the allies of
Rome were to be spared as much as possible. Even if the lack of help sent by
the Achaeans might cause Genthius definitely to ally himself with Perseus, it
was better for Rome to make an additional effort, as she did next year, than to
alienate her friends.
The consul was well aware that much remained to be done. He
asked for clothing to be sent from Rome for his troops and for horses to be
supplied: he also asked that payment should be made for the wheat and barley
which he had drawn from Epirus.
It could easily be seen that he regarded the war as likely to
continue, and the consul of 168 bc, L. Aemilius Paullus, as soon as it
was decided that Macedonia was to be his province, caused three commissioners
to be sent to investigate on the spot the actual position of affairs, and
declined to have any discussion of the campaign in the Senate until their
report had been received. Many amateur strategists in Rome were ready with
suggestions how to conduct the war, and the consuls of the last three years may
have been bewildered by ill-considered suggestions, and handicapped by not
knowing for what they ought to ask, until they had themselves arrived at the
front and found that the available resources were not adequate.
When the report arrived, it was not encouraging. The king,
whose army, estimated at 30,000, was only separated from the Romans by the
river Elpeus, occupied an unassailable position and would not give battle. It
was even represented as doubtful whether any advantage had been gained by the
dangerous march of Philippus. Appius Claudius to the west, so far from doing
anything to relieve the pressure, would require to be heavily reinforced
himself if he was to hold his ground. Genthius had thrown in his lot with
Macedon in the autumn of 169, and the next spring was certain to see a new
Illyrian War. The fleet was suffering from disease, from deficiency of clothing
and irregularity of pay. The attitude of Eumenes was uncertain, though no
doubts were thrown on the loyalty of his brother Attalus.
This report produced the requisite effect. It was decided to
bring the legions up to strength by replacing men who were unfit, to select as
military tribunes for the year only soldiers of experience, and to put a
considerable force at the disposal of L. Anicius, the praetor who was to
succeed Claudius in Illyria. The consul, having caused the Latin festival to be
fixed for an early date to avoid unnecessary delay, did not hesitate to start
as soon as his preparations were made. On the fifth day after leaving
Brundisium he sacrificed at Delphi: four days later he was with the army and at
work.
V.
THE
CAMPAIGN OF PYDNA
Perseus had not been idle in trying to win allies. Envoys were
sent to Rhodes, to Antiochus IV, and to Eumenes. The Macedonian fleet, of
which little has been heard hitherto, began to display signs of activity and
raided the coast of Asia Minor; this may have been due, not only to a suspicion
that the Roman ships and crews were not in a good state, but also to a hope of
cooperation from those powers that had navies and to a desire of showing them
that the Macedonians were worth supporting. But we are told that Perseus
forfeited through avarice the assistance of large forces of Celtic horse and foot
from beyond the Danube, and deceived his Illyrian ally Genthius by paying him
enough to make him commit himself irrevocably in the sight of the Romans and
then withholding the rest of what had been promised.
This habit of avarice, with which Perseus is so often charged,
is also said to have lost him a real chance of gaining over Eumenes. Polybius
refers to the intrigue between Perseus and Eumenes as a contest between the
most avaricious and the most unscrupulous of kings. The story is hard to accept
as he tells it; for, though it is true that Roman progress in the war had been
slow, Eumenes can hardly have meant to endanger his whole position by giving
active assistance to Perseus. There could not be reliable evidence of these
uncompleted negotiations, either at the time or later. If they were believed to
have occurred, something in the characters of both kings must have made them
seem plausible, but beyond that it is unsafe to go.
Paullus was not content to rely on the report brought to him
in Rome by the commissioners: it was clearly necessary for him to test it on
the spot. He examined the Macedonian position carefully, and found it so strong
as to be impregnable to a frontal attack. Accordingly he rejected this method
which commended itself to some of his council of war, particularly to the
younger men, and he rejected also the suggestion that a movement of the fleet
northward would be enough to induce the king to retire. But it might be
possible to induce the Macedonians to believe that the Romans were trusting to
this manoeuvre. Accordingly the fleet was called to Heracleum and provisioned,
while a force of 8200 selected infantry and 120 horsemen, commanded by Scipio
Nasica, was ordered to the same place, giving the impression that it was to be
embarked. Instructions were, however, given to this force to proceed farther
south, and then, by a series of night marches, to make a circuit of the
mountains to the west and arrive at a point well to the north of the Roman
position. The plan succeeded: the one force encountered on the way was
surprised, and failed to interrupt the march by its resistance; the king, whose
attention had been divided by a series of attacks and who may have been alarmed
by threatening movements of the fleet, being anxious to retain the right of
giving battle under his own conditions, even at the cost of sacrificing a
stronger for a weaker position, withdrew northwards. A letter in which Scipio Nasica
gave an account of his march was quoted by one of Plutarch’s authorities for
his life of Aemilius Paullus. It gives useful information, but, as it is only
concerned with what seems to have been a part of a combined operation, we are
left in some doubt as to what actually happened. The plan may have been a rash one
which might have resulted in disaster: but, as it was successful and we are not
fully informed about it, criticism of it would be unsafe.
Paullus was able to effect a junction with Scipio without
difficulty, but the king’s new position, protected by the two rivers, Aeson and
Leucus (Pelicas and Mavroneri), was strong. The consul resisted the wishes of
his army that an attack should be made at once, and even on the next day he was
evidently reluctant to take the offensive, assigning as the official reason
that his camp must first be fully secured. The king was equally unwilling to
attack unless he could do so in a position which seemed to give him an
advantage. Neither he nor his advisers could have forgotten Cynoscephalae, and
they were well aware that the phalanx could only be successful against an
efficient Roman force under certain conditions. Livy tells us that neither
commander wished for an engagement that day and that the encounter took place
as the result of an accident, which only concerned a very small number of men
in the first instance. This may be in some sense true, but it is disappointing
that so much doubt should remain. Polybius, who was not himself present, must
have made careful enquiries about this important event; we possess small fragments
in his own words, we have clear evidence of the use of his work by later
writers, and we know that Plutarch consulted other sources, including a
biography of Perseus by a certain Posidonius who described the fight from the
Macedonian side. Unfortunately the text of Livy contains a great lacuna, and it
is only possible to guess in part what may have stood there. Modern critics
have endeavoured to reconstruct in detail what happened, but no one seems to
have succeeded yet in providing a reconstruction which escapes all the
difficulties.
We learn that an eclipse of the moon took place on the night
before the battle: if this evidence is accepted—and there is no sufficient
reason for rejecting it—the eclipse must be identified with that of the night
21—22 June 168, and the battle of Pydna thus occurred on 22 June. If we may
judge from a monument erected in honour of Paullus, it appears that an incident
connected with the escape of a horse across the river which separated the armies
was considered to have a good deal to do with the actual beginning of the
fight. Later tradition made this into a ruse on the part of the Roman
commander, and, even if that may seem absurd, it is not likely that the
incident should be mentioned prominently unless it had really serious
consequences. Another feature of the story is the heroism shown by some Roman
allied cohorts who met the first shock of the Macedonian advance and, by their
self-sacrifice, gave to the Romans the time they needed.
But the course of the battle, in which a decision was reached
in about an hour, is very hard to understand. It is stated that the Macedonians
lost 20,000 killed, while the killed on the Roman side did not exceed 100, of
whom the greater part were the Paelignians who had had to face the first
attack. The accounts do not suggest that the Roman general succeeded in
effecting a surprise: he was ready, no doubt, and on the watch, as a general in
such close contact with the enemy ought to be, and his measures were taken
calmly and without hesitation. But he had to send Scipio Nasica to report to
him on the order in which the enemy were advancing, he admitted himself that he
had never seen anything more terrifying than the Macedonian phalanx as it came
on, and the first of the enemy did actually advance so far that some of the
dead were within a quarter of a mile of the Roman camp.
It would seem, then, that it was the Macedonians who brought
on the battle; for, whatever allowance be made for an accidental encounter by
the river, a general engagement could not have resulted from an incident that
could easily have been localized, if neither side had desired to fight. It must
remain difficult to understand why a leader, who had shown so plainly that he
wished to avoid an engagement on a large scale so long as it could be avoided,
should have decided to risk everything, otherwise than under conditions
exceptionally favourable, and how it can have been possible to make such a
miscalculation as to lose so heavily in such a short time under conditions of
his own choosing. It is not surprising that the suggestion should have been
made that Perseus lost his head, that his men, who had previously shown a wish
to fight when they were not permitted to do so, forced his hand and that he
allowed events to take their course. Paullus earned justly the reputation of
being a great general, and posterity has not reversed the judgment of his
contemporaries; the recovery of the full story of Polybius might perhaps reveal
to us some exceptionally brilliant piece of generalship on his part. As the
narrative stands, the question how the Macedonians should have come to repeat
the error of Cynoscephalae in a far worse form remains unsolved. The Macedonian
cavalry were roughly handled by their countrymen for not having taken part in
the battle and having escaped from it; whether this charge is justified or not,
no similar accusation was brought against the Macedonian infantry, most of whom
fought bravely to the last.
The personal conduct of the king is variously reported: the
story of Polybius, that he made the need of sacrificing to Heracles an excuse
for being among the first to flee, sounds like an ill-natured jest, and the
story of Posidonius, that he insisted on fighting in spite of an accident on
the previous day and suffered wounds in the battle itself, is suspiciously like
an official apology. But he must have seen at once that the battle was
decisive. He fled to Pella, thence to Amphipolis, and finally to Samothrace. He
found everywhere a desire to be rid of him, his attempts to secure from the
Romans a recognition of some part of his position were met by demands for
unconditional surrender, and it may have been a relief to him when his attempts
to escape failed through treachery and he had to give himself up to Paullus,
who in the first instance treated him with personal courtesy. Subsequently he
was obliged to figure in the consul’s triumph and was confined at Alba under
degrading conditions; though Paullus is said to have tried to secure him better
treatment, ugly stories are told of what happened to him during the remainder
of his life, which apparently lasted for some two years. His elder son is said
to have died two years later, and the younger to have followed the profession
of a magistrate’s clerk in Italy.
The battle of Pydna ended the war. The Macedonian fleet
decided without hesitation that it would be unable to maintain itself. So long
as the position on land had appeared to remain stationary and the attitude of
Rhodes, perhaps of Pergamum too,
could be looked on as doubtful, Macedonian ships might perform useful service,
but the complete defeat of the Macedonian army would have the immediate result
of bringing the supporters of Rome to the front at Rhodes and of removing any
doubt about Pergamum; the Roman fleet was also taking itself more seriously than
before, and the Macedonian admiral, Antenor, recognized the situation at once.
The Macedonian towns, despairing of a king who himself despaired, surrendered
in rapid succession, and Paullus was able to refer to his campaign as one of
fifteen days. Some places had to be punished for having gone back on their
earlier professions of supporting Rome or for conspicuous actions on the
Macedonian side, but these punishments appear to have been few.
The fighting in Illyria had come to an end before the decisive
action at Pydna. Genthius had probably relied on not being taken too seriously,
and the proceedings of the Romans in the preceding years may have done
something to justify this expectation. When an effective army was brought into
operation against him, he appears to have made things easy for the Romans by
his rashness. In the spring of 168 he had concentrated near Lissus a fleet of
80 lembi and an army of 15,000 men. Appius had already called up the
levies of the Roman allies in Illyria, Apollonia and Dyrrhachium, and his
successor the praetor Anicius, who arrived with a full consular army of two
legions, had some 30,000 men under his command. The Romans took the offensive,
and in less than 30 days Scodra had fallen, the king was captured with his
family and his leading chieftains, and the first reports of this campaign which
reached Rome announced its ending. Anicius had time to march through Epirus and
back again before he was called upon to deal with Illyria. He met with little
serious opposition in Epirus; but it is evident that strong sympathy had been
shown there with Perseus, and perhaps the Romans thought it wise to use the
presence of a Roman army to impress places like those in the Molossian
territory, which would regard themselves as sufficiently inaccessible at
ordinary times to be able to do what they pleased.
This expedition by Anicius is easy to understand, but it is
not easy to justify or even to explain the treatment of Epirus by Paullus in
the following year. Polybius tells us the bare fact that Paullus took 70 cities
in Epirus and enslaved 150,000 men. The account in Livy explains how this was
done without loss, the plan being that all the places should be attacked on one
day. Both Livy and Plutarch describe Paullus as carrying out the orders of the
Senate. It is unfortunate that our information only gives the general purport
of the senatorial decree and does not tell us on what ground it was officially
justified; for even the version which describes it as a punishment for deserting
to Perseus is unintelligible, unless we suppose that the Romans regarded these
Epirotes as guilty of some treachery which the extant accounts do not record.
The soldiers of Paullus are said to have been dissatisfied with the amount of
the booty, large as it was, while the soldiers of Anicius may well have been
annoyed for not being allowed any part of it, since they had done the fighting.
It is, however, possible that the expedition of Anicius to Epirus, though
useful from a military point of view, was not carried out in accordance with
definite instructions either from the Senate or from the consul, and did not
therefore fall, strictly speaking, within his sphere of duty.
The affairs of Macedonia and Illyria had to be settled, in accordance
with the usual Roman custom, by Senatorial Commissioners acting in concert
with the officer on the spot, and subject to any definite instructions which
might be given by the Senate. The Commissioners were instructed that all
Macedonians and Illyrians were to be free, that Macedonia was to be divided
into four and Illyria into three divisions, that the tribute payable to Rome
was to be half the amount payable to the kings, that special precautions were
to be taken in dealing with the Macedonian mines which had produced such a
large revenue, and that measures must be devised to prevent the newly-found
liberty from degenerating into licence.
Paullus was continued in office on the spot until the Commissioners
came, and he spent part of the interval in undertaking an extensive journey
through Greece, during which he went to the Peloponnese as well as to Athens,
Delphi, and the other famous cities. No doubt he was inspired by a natural wish
to see the places which were well known for their importance in Greek history,
as he and his sons had a genuine love of art and culture. It is, however,
possible that the journey was not without political significance and that it
was meant to present a contrast to the visit of Perseus to Delphi some years
back about which much had been said. Perseus was able to pride himself on the
orderly conduct of his troops; but their good behaviour did not rob his journey
of the air of a military demonstration. The conqueror of Perseus went with only
a few attendants, abstaining from asking any questions about the attitude of
particular cities during the late war, and showing himself as an example of
that orderly and peaceful liberty which the Romans professed themselves anxious
to encourage.
On his return Paullus met the Commissioners, and at Amphipolis
the settlement was announced. The gift of liberty had apparently not been
anticipated and, as in 196 bc, it was well received at first.
Liberty meant that the Romans had no intention of annexing the country
themselves, and this was so far well.
The divisions, though we may not be able to trace their boundaries
in detail, corresponded to the natural physical features of the country. The
first, mainly between the Nessus and the Strymon, included also Heraclea
Sintica and Bisaltica: it possessed valuable estates and mines. The second
stretched from the Strymon to the Axius: eastern Paeonia, and the whole of
Chalcidice, with its agricultural and mercantile advantages, were in it. The
third, from the Axius to the Peneus, contained Edessa, Beroea and western
Paeonia: the large number of Gauls and Illyrians who were among its inhabitants
gave it a good supply of workers. Finally, there was the fourth division, west
of Mount Bora and bordering on Illyria and Epirus, comprising the wilder parts
of the country. The capitals were Amphipolis, Thessalonica, Pella, and
Pelagonia. Only one of the four divisions, the third, had no barbarians on its
boundaries: the remaining three were accordingly allowed to retain armed forces
near their frontiers, the rest of the country being disarmed.
Many of the other arrangements were also reasonable. The
tribute was reduced, the gold and silver mines were closed as being likely to
prove a source of oppression to the natives, the iron and copper mines were
allowed to be worked on payment of half the previous rent, and the enactment
that no timber was to be cut for naval purposes was probably a relief from a
burden. Whatever the exact object of a mysterious provision forbidding the use
of imported salt, there does not seem to be any reason to suppose that it was
meant to help Roman traders; and the refusal to allow the Dardani, who had
suffered from their friendship for Rome, to regain the part of Paeonia which
they asserted had formerly been theirs, showed that the Romans meant to adhere
to their gift of liberty. The proposed constitutional arrangements were
theoretically good and each of the divisions could have maintained successfully
its economic independence.
If in spite of all this the division did not work
successfully, the reason seems to be that the Macedonians, for all their
differences of tribe and occupation, felt themselves as one people and resented
the destruction of that unity on which the importance of Macedonia had
depended since the days of Philip, son of Amyntas.
However true it may have been that they had made good their
claim to be considered Greeks rather than barbarians, it is unlikely that a
people whose only experience of government was to be ruled by kings, can have
felt strongly, as most Greeks did, the essential superiority of republicanism.
They had very little enthusiasm for liberty but a very strong feeling for their
country. The Roman system of division was intended to meet the fact that
Macedonia, so long as it remained a single state, was too large to make one
among a number of Greek states; while smaller sections, kept rigidly apart by
the rule that no intermarriage was to be allowed and that no citizen of one
section might own real property in another, were less likely to create trouble.
The Romans no doubt thought that the Macedonians ought to be grateful for the
consideration which gave each division its own character and, as compared with
the territorial extent of most Greek states, a very substantial size. They may
have been disappointed, and rather surprised, that the Macedonians did not
value the gift of liberty at the price of division: probably if the Macedonians
wished to be considered as Greeks, they should have thought liberty the more
important. But it is hard to alter national sentiment artificially, even if
that sentiment be regarded as unreasonable: considering the past history of
Macedonia, it is perhaps strange that Rome should have thought the experiment
worth a trial.
VI.
MACEDONIA
AND ILLYRIA AFTER PYDNA
The introduction of the new institutions was probably accompanied
by the removal of most of those who had been prominent in political life, owing
to the fear that they would prove to be a centre of intrigues in favour of
restoring the monarchy; but to remove politicians of monarchical views was not
the same thing as to supply statesmen who were anxious to make republicanism
into a success. At any rate, it was not long before the Romans heard that the
Macedonians, unused to democracy, were splitting up into factions whose
quarrels might prove dangerous; and the three Commissioners who were sent to
Syria after the death of Antiochus Epiphanes in 164 bc received
instructions to inspect the state of things in Macedonia. Two years later we
hear incidentally of one Damasippus, as having murdered the members of the
council at Phacus near Pella and then having fled with his family from
Macedonia. Whether the re-opening of the mines in 158 bc was
intended to provide employment as an antidote to discontent it is impossible to say. But it is significant
that Scipio Aemilianus, when he volunteered to go to Spain in 152 bc, had to relinquish for that purpose an invitation which
he had received to go to Macedonia and settle disputes that had arisen there.
Perhaps this request, which had been addressed to him personally, was due to
favourable memories of his father Aemilius Paullus, and, as Scipio referred to
this expedition as less hazardous than the journey to Spain, it may be assumed
that there was at any rate a hope that his advice might be received
respectfully; but the Macedonians would not have asked for a Roman arbitrator
unless their troubles had been too serious to be settled without such help.
This proposed mission by Scipio may have been connected with
the first appearance of Andriscus, a man who claimed to be a son of King
Perseus, possibly also of his wife Laodice, but is said to have been actually
born in Adramyttium of low origin. His first attempts in Macedonia met with
little success, and he is next found in Syria, where he was seized by
Demetrius, and sent to Rome. Perhaps the imposture was regarded as too obvious
to be serious; at any rate he was allowed to escape, and, when he was again
taken in Miletus, he was released. One of Perseus’ wives, who had married an
inhabitant of Pergamum, claimed to recognize him; so also did a Thracian
chieftain Teres, a son-in-law of the Philip whom Andriscus personated, though
it was well known that Philip had died in Italy some two years after his
father. He now gained a considerable following; he won a victory to the east of
the Strymon and three or four months later in 149 bc another on
the west of that river. These successes made him master of all Macedonia and
alarmed the Thessalians, who sent urgent messages to the Achaeans asking for
assistance. Apparently the reports from Macedonia were received with
incredulity both in Greece and in Rome: the Romans do not seem to have realized
how rapidly enthusiasm may gather round a popular claimant to monarchical authority
in a country with a strong monarchical tradition. They thought that the matter
might be settled by a peaceful mission under Scipio Nasica; but things had gone
too far, and Juventius Thalna had to be sent with a legion, which was defeated
and its commander killed. Rumours were now heard of attempts at an alliance
between Macedonia and Carthage; success may have turned the head of Andriscus,
and it is said to have led him into various acts of tyranny. But he could
hardly in any case have maintained himself against Q. Caecilius Metellus, who
was sent with a considerable army in 148 b.c. Andriscus lost a large number of men in a battle, and, after he had fled into
Thrace and tried to re-establish himself from there, he was defeated again and
finally captured to adorn Metellus’ triumph and then be put to death. His power
therefore was short-lived: but two or more other pretenders arose in the course
of the next few years, showing that anyone who could put forward a claim to
belong to the royal house could still count on some support.
The Romans now decided that Macedonia should be made the
province of a Roman magistrate, and, though this method of government was not
intended to supersede the local communities in Macedonia any more than
elsewhere, it would necessarily mean, in a country which had shown itself so
unused to selfgovernment, that the Roman magistrate would have to be
responsible for whatever was done. The four divisions had been a reality, as is
shown by their coinage, but they were given up when the country could once more
be safely treated as a whole; the Roman governor undertook the administration
of all Macedon, and of Illyria and Epirus as well. So far as we can tell,
Macedonia now enjoyed comparative peace, in spite of occasional pretenders to the
throne. There is some evidence of the survival of the local dialects, and local
institutions were left unaltered. A statue was erected at Olympia by a
Macedonian to Metellus for his services to Macedonia: this shows at any rate
that some persons were content with the condition of things which Metellus had
helped to bring about, and perhaps it is more significant at this date than
similar erections half a century later. The construction of the Via Egnatia from
Epidamnus and Apollonia to Cypsela on the Hebrus, passing by Lychnidus, Edessa,
Pella and Thessalonica, may certainly be regarded as a great benefit to the
country. Polybius tells us that it was marked by milestones for its whole
length of 535 miles; it was therefore completed within his lifetime, that is,
not more than some thirty years from the formation of the province.
The defeat of Genthius and the collapse of his power secured
Roman control of the Adriatic coast as far as the Narenta. North of that river
the chief tribe was now the Dalmatae, and they began to molest their southern
neighbours and the Greek colonists at Epetum and Tragyrium. In 157 bc the Romans
decided to intervene, partly actuated according to Polybius by the fear that
the long-continued peace since Pydna might enervate their citizens. The
ostensible casus belli was the uncivil treatment of envoys whom the
Senate had dispatched to command the Dalmatians to offer redress. The
Dalmatians argued that Rome had no concern with their neighbourly quarrels. The
Romans proved the contrary by sending the consul C. Marcius Figulus who, after
suffering a serious reverse, devastated the country and laid siege to the chief
town, Delminium. His successor, P. Scipio Nasica, continued the good work and
took Delminium. This ended the war, and Scipio was rewarded with a triumph
(155). Meanwhile another Roman army under L. Cornelius Lentulus, the colleague
of Marcius, had advanced from Aquileia and may have reached the neighbourhood
of Siscia. But this campaign had
little success and was not followed up by further action. Thus Rome did not
complete her control of the Adriatic coast by linking up Istria with her
newly-extended protectorate north of the Narenta. It was not till a generation
later that this was achieved.
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