READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE EMPIRE OF ROME |
ROME AND THE MEDITERRANEAN. 218-133 BCCHAPTER IX
ROME
AND THE HELLENISTIC STATES (188-146)
I
THE
GENERAL CHARACTER OF ROMAN POLICY
THE preceding
chapter has described the Roman settlement with the Macedonian monarchy; it remains to
consider Roman policy towards the other states of the Hellenistic world during
the period which begins with the Peace of Apamea and ends with the destruction
of the Achaean League. For the second half of this period we are very
ill-informed. Neither the fragments of Polybius nor the epitomes of those who
derived from him give us the means of reconstructing his criticism of the
general course of Roman policy. And even where we possess material from Polybius,
we have to remember that he has the disadvantages as well as the advantage of
being a contemporary. He would have been more than human if he had given us a
wholly impartial account of the downfall of the Achaean League, in whose
affairs he had borne an honourable part, brought about as it was partly by the
agency of leaders of whom he disapproved, partly by a State which had kept him
prisoner for sixteen years.
The whole of the period under review is filled with the
journeys of envoys to Rome from kings or cities or leagues and of Commissioners
sent out by the Republic. The victory of Rome over the two Great Powers,
Macedon and Syria, had deeply impressed the rulers and states of the Eastern
Mediterranean. They could not know enough of Roman doubts and preoccupations to
expect anything but that Rome would be ambitious to spread her influence as
far as possible. In disputes it was plainly an advantage to be the first to
enlist Roman support, and the common answer of the Senate that, if the facts
were as stated, the claimant’s contention seemed to be well-founded,
encouraged envoys to report and believe that they were successful. Even where
Roman intervention was not expected, it was natural that each party in a
dispute should wish the Senate to know its official version. Thus, whether Rome
wished it or not, she was bound to be constantly invited to pronounce on
questions of internal or external policy which concerned the states of the
Hellenistic world.
The Senate could not but be flattered by these constant embassies,
and they might legitimately wish to use their influence and to hold high their
prestige. If Rome was to judge between the stories of rival embassies, she
could find no better way than to send out Commissioners to discover the true
facts, and in order to avoid being drawn into wars not of her making, it was in
her interest to reach agreed settlements by compromise or to maintain, so far
as possible, the existing state of things. The view that Rome constantly sought
to promote rivalries and encourage quarrels can be rejected without supposing
that she was only moved by the unselfish desire that right should triumph.
Besides seeking to avoid exhausting wars, the Senate might well prefer that
their advice and judgment should be regarded as equitable and should enhance
rather than undermine the reputation of Rome. There were changing currents in
the general course of Roman opinion towards foreign powers, due in part to the
influence of individuals or groups in the Senate, and an account of these is reserved
for a later chapter. But each of the Hellenistic powers presented Rome with a
separate problem. Little is to be gained by an annalistic treatment of Rome’s
Greek and Eastern policy as a whole, for we have not the evidence necessary
for knowing the precise interrelation of its various parts, and we are bound to
remain doubtful whether our judgment on each incident does Rome too great or
too little justice.
II.
ROME AND THE EASTERN POWERS
Considering first the kingdoms at the greatest distance from
Rome, we find that Pontus stands outside the Roman sphere during the earlier
part of the period under review. King Pharnaces, it is true, sent ambassadors
to Rome to explain away the allegations of his enemy King Eumenes of Pergamum.
But on at least one occasion the statement is made that he treated a reference
to Rome with contempt; and, when in 180 bc Roman envoys attempted to put an end
to a war in which he was involved, they found that he disputed all their points
at such length that they apparently gave up the problem as insoluble. Evidently
Rome, though prepared to give advice when it was asked, was not ready to take
an active part in quarrels at this distance. But when Mithridates V Euergetes
offered assistance, it was welcome, and he did in fact help Rome against
Carthage and against the pretender Aristonicus.
The king of Cappadocia, Ariarathes IV, who had sided with
Antiochus, was promised peace by Manlius at the price of 300 talents.
Thenceforward his kingdom remained loyal to Rome and is found supporting
Pergamum, for instance, against Pontus. On the death of this Ariarathes in 163 bc there was a
dispute as to the succession; for the king of Syria was induced by a gift of
1000 talents to assist Orophernes to supplant the true prince Ariarathes V. The
Romans advised that the kingdom should be shared between the two. But they
showed a preference for Ariarathes. Thus, when the people of Priene had their
territory pillaged by Ariarathes because they insisted on returning 400
talents, which had been deposited with them by Orophernes, to him and not to
Ariarathes, who claimed it as part of the property of his kingdom, the Romans
do not seem to have taken any steps to check this unjustifiable procedure,
though an appeal had been made to them. Perhaps they were influenced by the encouragement
given to Ariarathes by their friend Attalus of Pergamum, who had a grudge
against Priene. But the Romans interfered as little as possible with
Cappadocia, even in the interest of a king whose merits in civilizing his
country appear to have been great, and who closed a long reign of friendship to
Rome by falling in battle against the Republic’s enemies.
The Roman attitude towards the Galatians seems to be defined
in a fragment of Polybius, which tells us that they might preserve their
autonomy, provided they remained within their own territory and did not
undertake warlike expeditions outside it. It was natural that Manlius, after
subjugating them in the expedition that followed the defeat of Antiochus,
should have conferred with Eumenes about the terms to be granted them, and
should have laid special stress on the need of their keeping peace with
Pergamum. When, at the time of Pydna, Eumenes fell into disfavour with Rome,
the result was felt at once in a Galatian invasion of his kingdom. The
Galatians were certain to act in this way, so soon as any sign appeared that
the Romans would no longer regard Eumenes as a friend whose interests they must
support by force. It is not probable that Rome encouraged the Galatians or
would wish Pergamum to suffer serious injury from them, for such a consequence
would have run contrary to the Roman wish not to be driven into interference.
Instead of this, we find Roman envoys continuing to urge the Galatians to maintain
peaceful relations with their neighbours, though it is likely enough that this
warning was accompanied in later days by less explicit insistence on its
application to Pergamum.
Bithynia was ruled during most of this period by a father and
son named Prusias, of whom the son succeeded the father about 180 bc. Prusias I was the rival and enemy
of Eumenes of Pergamum and, though he had remained neutral during the war with
Antiochus, he was alarmed at the extension of the Pergamene power which Rome
had permitted. In 186 he ventured to challenge the settlement of Apamea,
attacked Eumenes, and, what was even more menacing to Rome, took into his
service Hannibal, the greatest of Rome’s enemies.
The war that ensued went on the whole in favour of Pergamum,
though at sea Hannibal won the last of his victories. The Romans thought it
necessary to intervene, and Prusias made peace. Flamininus himself was sent
to demand the surrender of Hannibal, the king of Bithynia did not dare to
refuse, and Hannibal took his own life. Prusias had learnt his lesson, and his
successor acquiesced in the prosperity of Pergamum, until after Pydna he
sought to turn to his own advantage the declining fortunes of Eumenes. He
visited Rome and, according to Polybius, disgraced himself by assuming the dress
of a freedman to show his subservience to his Roman patrons. Livy, though he
mentions the account of Polybius and does not explicitly contradict it, indicates
that Roman historians gave a less undignified story of his behaviour. Roman
writers would hardly have suppressed a tradition so flattering to their pride,
and perhaps Polybius accepted a picturesque story which caricatured Prusias’
humble attitude.
The death of Eumenes in 160/59 bc put an end to the hopes of Prusias,
for the Romans showed that Attalus II the new king of Pergamum had their
support. Prusias had raised up enemies against Pergamum, especially the
Galatians, but Rome opposed him by diplomatic intervention, and, though Prusias
at first resisted, a short campaign in which Pergamum had support from
Cappadocia, Pontus, Rhodes and Cyzicus, induced him to make peace in the
presence of three Roman Commissioners. He was compelled to hand over twenty
ships, to pay 100 talents on account of damage done to certain towns and a war
indemnity of 500 talents in twenty annual instalments. The territory of
Pergamum was not increased, and some have seen in this an indication that the
Romans were anxious to prevent Attalus from enjoying the results of his
victory. But increase of territory is not a necessary criterion of success in
war.
Peace followed, but not friendly relations. Attalus incited
the prince Nicomedes against his father and supported him in arms. Prusias’
only hope was in Rome, and Rome was slow to move. Nicomedes had resided at Rome
and made powerful friends, but at last three Commissioners were sent to cause
Attalus to hold his hand. If we may trust Polybius one of them, M. Licinius,
was lamed with gout, the second, A. Mancinus, had imperfectly recovered from
the fall of a tile upon his head, and the third, L. Malleolus, was reported the
stupidest man in Rome. The choice of these in a matter which called for speed
moved Cato to tell the Senate that “Before they arrived Prusias would be dead
and Nicomedes grown old in his kingdom. For how could a commission make haste,
or accomplish anything when it had neither feet, head, nor intelligence?” Their
success was what Cato expected. Prusias was killed and Nicomedes reigned in his
stead. Rome recognized what it could not or would not hinder, content perhaps
to see good relations restored between Bithynia and Pergamum.
In Egypt Ptolemy Epiphanes at the beginning of his reign had
received some protection from Rome against Philip, though none against
Antiochus; but he forfeited all claim to Roman goodwill by his negotiations
with Antiochus. Accordingly Egypt had gained nothing at the settlement of
Apamea, and the Ptolemaic monarchy was kept weak by nationalist risings, the
last of which was not crushed till 183. In 184 and 183 attempts were made to
establish an entente with the Achaean League which suggest that the
Egyptian court was reviving its traditional policy of posing as a champion of
Greek liberty. The death of Epiphanes in 181/0 bc ended these projects, and Rome was
spared the necessity of making it plain that she alone was the arbiter of Greek
freedom.
The new king Ptolemy Philometor was a child, and for some time
the true ruler of Egypt was the queen-mother Cleopatra. She was of the house of
Seleucus and kept peace with Syria, while doing nothing to give Rome cause of
complaint. On Cleopatra’s death the proclamation of the king’s majority was
hastened by the new regents Eulaeus and Lenaeus, whose barbarian and perhaps
servile origin could not gain for them respect. Rome, preoccupied with the
Third Macedonian War, was content to recognize the new king and did nothing to
hinder the renewal of Egyptian ambition to recover Coele-Syria. The result of
the war probably disconcerted the Senate, for Antiochus won a great victory and
invaded Egypt (169). Ptolemy was ready to accept a Syrian protectorate which
would have united in one power the Hellenistic East. But the Alexandrians would
have none of it, and proclaimed as king Ptolemy Euergetes, nicknamed Physcon,
the brother of Philometor. The elder Ptolemy chose to share power with his
brother rather than to owe the semblance of it to the king of Syria, and
Antiochus prepared in the spring of 168 to master Egypt by open force. Rome
could hesitate no longer; her envoy, Popillius Laenas, bade Antiochus withdraw
from Egypt and the command was obeyed. The Seleucid fleet which, in violation
of the treaty of Apamea, had advanced to Cyprus, was forced to withdraw, and
the word of Rome had restored the existing balance between the two monarchies.
For the next five years there were two kings in Egypt, but
Ptolemy Physcon who, as the creation of a popular movement, was the stronger,
worked secretly against his brother. Late in 164 Philometor was forced to fly
from Alexandria. The Senate could not evade the responsibility of deciding
whether or not to take up the cause of a king whom Rome had once recognized.
They proposed that Philometor should rule over Egypt and Cyprus, while his
brother received the Cyrenaica. There had been a revulsion of feeling at
Alexandria, and Roman Commissioners carried through this arrangement without
recourse to military action; But Ptolemy Physcon claimed Cyprus, and the Senate
in 162 decided in his favour. The division of Egypt may have been in the best
interests of the kingdom, and if the inheritance of the Ptolemies was to be
halved, the addition of Cyprus to the Cyrenaica made that share more equivalent
to Egypt. But Philometor did not give way, and Rome did not take overt action.
In 154 Physcon accused his brother of an attempt on his life; the Senate
refused to listen to any answer to the charge and instructed their allies in
the East to install him in Cyprus. The allies did little or nothing and
Philometor took his brother prisoner but treated him with generosity, leaving
him in possession of Cyrenaica. This generosity was politic, and Rome ceased to
support Physcon. Philometor had found a powerful advocate in the elder Cato,
and had the skill to maintain a correct attitude towards the Republic. The climax of this was
the moment when after reconquering Coele-Syria for Egypt he refused to accept
the crown of the Seleucids and bring about the union which the Senate had
feared in 168 BC. In general during this period the interests of Rome and of
Egypt coincided, and the action and the inaction of the Senate may both have
been guided by the realization of this fact. Polybius, in one of his most
anti-Roman passages, treats Roman policy in regard to Egypt as typical of the
method by which Rome availed herself of the mistakes of others to strengthen
her own position. But it is not clear that the criticism is justified.
Roman policy in relation to the Syrian monarchy is harder to
defend. The death of Antiochus the Great was doubtless felt as a relief, for he
might take some opportunity of repairing his sudden and complete defeat.
Seleucus, his successor, was too shrewd to provoke the Republic, though the
Achaean League thought it wise to decline a present of ten ships which might
suggest that they were intriguing with Syria. More dangerous was Antiochus Epiphanes, but he had spent years at Rome as a hostage, and his open admiration
for Roman institutions did something to disarm suspicion. The Roman
intervention to protect Egypt marked the limit set to his power; not long
afterwards we find a Roman embassy instructed to discover if he was making any
preparations for war. His death may have been not unwelcome to the Senate, and
Roman Commissioners were instructed to settle matters in Syria in such a way as
to relieve Rome of any future anxiety. The new king was only nine years of age;
his minister Lysias, who had practical control of the kingdom, bore a bad
character, and was expected to acquiesce in anything for a consideration. But
the Syrians were not so complaisant, and the Roman Commissioners were
ill-advised to neglect the warnings of Ariarathes, king of Cappadocia. Without
accepting his assistance, they proceeded to Syria and began to carry out what
Polybius describes as the Senate’s instructions, by burning ships, killing
elephants and generally weakening the resources of the kingdom. The result was
an insurrection in which the leading Commissioner Cn. Octavius lost his life
(162 bc). The Senate neither accepted nor rejected Lysias’ assurances
of his innocence, and remained equally inactive when Demetrius the son of
Seleucus escaped from Rome and recovered his father’s kingdom for himself.
Demetrius had acquired the reputation in Rome of being fond of
enjoyment, and perhaps the Romans underrated his capacity. But they kept a
close watch on his activities, and one of the objects of the treaty which the
Senate made with the Jews in 161 BC. may have been to enable it to stir up
trouble in Syria. More plainly hostile to Demetrius was the moral support given
to the pretender Alexander Balas some ten years later. A decree, which,
according to Polybius, did not represent the view of all the senators, accepted
his claim to be the son of Antiochus Epiphanes and gave him authority to return
to the kingdom of his ancestors. It is not probable, however, that this meant
more than moral support, and the Romans did not interfere when Alexander, who
had made an end of Demetrius in 150, was killed some five years later by a son
of Demetrius with help from Egypt, or when that son was expelled in favour of a
son of Alexander. Despite the loyalty of the Graeco-Macedonian population to
the Seleucid dynasty and the capacity of several of the kings, the
disintegration of the Syrian Empire and with it the weakening of Hellenism went
steadily on. Rome had less and less cause for active interference, but the
paralysing effects of her passive suspicion were more fatal to Greek culture in
the East than any senator can well have anticipated or desired.
III.
ROMAN POLICY TOWARDS PERGAMUM AND
RHODES
The extension of the power of Pergamum after the defeat of
Antiochus has already been described. Of the capacity of King Eumenes
there can be no doubt, and we have already seen how he maintained his extended
kingdom against his Galatian and Bithynian neighbours. The reviving
power of Macedon under Perseus may have seemed to him a menace and he did more
than any other man to bring about the Third Macedonian War. He may well have
shared the general belief that the king of Macedon instigated the attempt to
assassinate him near Delphi. If he entered into negotiations with
Perseus, offering his neutrality or even his active help, it can only be
supposed that he was setting aside his personal feelings and trying to secure
his country’s position against the possible, though unlikely, event of Perseus
proving to be the victor. It is difficult to judge the real meaning of
diplomatic proceedings without the account of either negotiator, and perhaps
Eumenes deliberately set too high a price on his neutrality or his help. This
would prevent the negotiations issuing in action and yet, if Perseus survived
the contest, it would serve to show that Eumenes had not been absolutely
unwilling to do Macedon a service, in spite of the past. But the suspicion that
such negotiations had taken place would be bound to tell heavily against
Eumenes at Rome, when, with startling rapidity, the war ended in the utter
defeat of Macedon.
Once suspicion was aroused, Eumenes saw all his actions interpreted
unfavourably. The visit to Rome of his brother Attalus in 167 bc, to ask for
help against the Galatians as well as to offer his congratulations, might
easily have had serious consequence for Pergamum. The Romans had nothing
against him, and he might have been tempted to try to supplant his brother. But
he used his popularity at Rome, both on this and subsequent occasions, solely
in the interests of his country. Eumenes was allowed no opportunity of clearing
himself and when he proposed to defend himself in the Senate, a resolution was
hastily passed that no king should be received in Rome. As the resolution
followed closely on the favourable reception of Prusias of Bithynia, it was
plain that the Romans regarded Eumenes as one who had received great benefits
from Rome and had repaid them by playing false. Eumenes however concealed any
resentment that he might have felt, and on his death in 160/59 Attalus with the
countenance of Rome was able to maintain his kingdom intact and guard himself
against his neighbours.
The kingdom of Pergamum, accordingly, did not lose its position
during these years, whatever the personal humiliation to which one of its
rulers, Eumenes, was subjected. The republic of Rhodes fared differently. Like
Pergamum, she had done Rome good service in the war against Antiochus: indeed,
without the Rhodian fleet Rome might have found it very difficult to conduct a
campaign in Asia. Her reward was the accession of Caria south of the Maeander
and of Lycia, except that the port of Telmessus and perhaps a corridor leading
to it were reserved for Eumenes. But the Senate had failed to define the new
status of the Lycians, who believed that they were to be allies of
Rhodes, whereas Rhodes treated them as subjects. At the outset the
Lycians showed themselves very ready to be allies, but soon they made it plain
that they would not easily be subjects. Rhodes used force, and in 177 bc, as a result
of appeals, the Senate interpreted their decision as having meant that the
Lycians were to be assigned to Rhodes only as friends and allies. This
interpretation denied to the Lycians complete independence, but it cannot have
satisfied the Rhodians, nor was it likely to settle the question now; for the
Lycians had ceased to be friendly to Rhodes and the Rhodians thought that Rome
was turning against them in annoyance at their having convoyed the bride of
Perseus from Syria and receiving in return a present of Macedonian timber for
their shipyards. Rome may indeed have resented the parade of Rhodian naval
strength, and was probably secretly displeased when the Rhodians invited her to
intervene in favour of Sinope against the king of Pontus (183 BC).
Relations were not improving; but when it came to a question
of choosing between Rome and Perseus, Rhodes was for the moment under the
influence of one Agesilochus, who had been in Rome and was favourable to the
Roman side. While, therefore, the envoys sent by Perseus to Rhodes in 171 bc were
politely received and Rhodes gave a promise to mediate if Perseus were unjustly
attacked, this promise was accompanied by a request that Rhodes should not be
asked to do anything which might bear the appearance of hostility to Rome.
There was, however, a strong party in Rhodes which took the opposite view, and,
even if the motives of its leaders, Deinon and Polyaratus, were as unscrupulous
as Polybius says, it is only in accordance with the usual history of Greek
politics that differences of opinion should be strongly expressed and should be
widely represented among the population. The Roman requests for naval help were
agreed to and even exceeded, but the capture of a Rhodian quadrireme by the
Macedonian admiral Diophanes heightened the annoyance of the anti-Roman party.
Political recriminations increased: each side tried to strengthen its position
by securing concessions or promises from the party it supported, and the Romans
wisely granted a licence to the Rhodians to import 150,000 bushels of corn from
Sicily. Q. Marcius Philippus, when he was in command against Macedonia in 169 bc, flattered
Rhodian envoys by suggesting to them that Rhodes could do good service to Rome
as well as to the general cause of peace by inducing the kings of Syria and
Egypt to cease fighting.
The long continuance of the war against Perseus had its effect
on the prevailing policy of Rhodes, as it may have had also on Eumenes. Till
168 bc nothing had been done that could justly offend Rome; but
early in that year Perseus induced Rhodes to send an embassy to Rome
to urge that the war should cease.The envoys reached Rome at a most unfortunate
moment, when the news of Pydna had already been received. They made an attempt
to substitute a message of congratulation for what they honestly admitted that
they had been sent to say. But they could not hope that this would be well
received, for the Senate complained that Perseus had been allowed to do harm in
Greece for some two years without remonstrance on the part of Rhodes, and
Rhodes had only begun to take action when the position of Perseus was becoming
desperate. The reply may not have been quite fair, but it is what the Rhodians
must have expected under the circumstances. They were, however, much frightened
by it, and sent further embassies, including the orator Astymedes, whose
advocacy exaggerating the services of Rhodes and minimizing those of her
neighbours earned him the contempt of Polybius. A praetor, Juventius Thalna,
even proposed to the people to declare war on Rhodes. This proposal was
rejected through the intervention of a tribune and of Cato, who did not scruple
to hint that the Romans could not complain if they were more feared than loved.
In their relief the Rhodians at once voted a valuable crown to Rome, and
decided to depart from the independent policy which they had pursued hitherto
by asking for an alliance with Rome. They tried to guard against the
humiliation and practical consequences of a refusal by instructing their envoy
Theaetetus, who was also navarch, to make the request on his own initiative,
a course which the constitution allowed him to adopt without any precedent vote
of the people.
The alliance was not conceded at first: the Romans postponed
the question at least once, and once gave a negative answer; it was not till
some two years later, after several embassies, and after Rhodes had gone
through repeated difficulties, that it was granted. The Rhodians had to meet an
attack by Mylasa and Alabanda on their possessions; which, indeed, they
repelled by a victory won in Caria. Moreover, some of their subjects in the
Peraea and in Caunus revolted; the Rhodians put down the revolt without
difficulty, but the Romans ordered them to withdraw their garrisons from Caunus
and Stratoniceia, and a decree of the Senate declared that all the Carians and
Lycians who had been ‘given’ to Rhodes after the war with Antiochus were free.
Even if this decree merely reasserted the principle that these peoples were to
be regarded as friends and allies of Rhodes and not as subjects, it assumed
fresh importance by coming at a time when any sign of Roman dissatisfaction
with Rhodes was watched with keen interest by her friends and enemies. Its
practical effect would be that all the efforts made to reduce these peoples to
order were wasted, while in 165 bc the Rhodians asserted that the loss
of Caunus, which they had purchased from Egypt for 200 talents, and of Stratoniceia,
which had been given them as a special favour by Antiochus III, meant a loss of
revenue amounting to 120 talents a year. A still heavier blow had been inflicted
by the transference of Delos to Athens. That Delos was declared a free port may
have benefited Italian traders in the Levant; any gain which Rhodian merchants may
have shared with others was more than counter-balanced by loss to the Rhodian
State, if it is true, as the Rhodians appear to have asserted, that their
revenue from harbour dues declined from 1,000,000 to 150,000 drachmae.
Rhodes might justly complain of severe treatment if she was
suffering all this in spite of having put to death those who were in any way
responsible for her short-lived anti-Roman policy. The Senate evidently thought
the humiliation enough, for the alliance was concluded in 165 bc, and hopes
may have been held out of further concessions, as we find an embassy some two
years later asking not only that the rights of Rhodian citizens who had had
property in Lycia or Caria should be recognized, but also that Calynda in Lycia
should be assigned to Rhodes. It appears that the Rhodians were now content to
play a subordinate part, and they were probably satisfied if their conduct was
regarded by Rome as correct. They accepted a present from Eumenes towards the
cost of their children’s education: Polybius censures this as undignified, and
the Rhodians may not have liked doing it, but they could not afford to offend
any possible friend. They showed their gratitude and their wisdom by supporting
Attalus in the war which he waged against Prusias with the moral support of
Rome.
The latest reference to the Rhodians which we have from Polybius
describes the discouragement and despair that were causing them to think of
their traditional high position as wholly lost beyond hope of recovery. The
opinion was gaining ground that the Romans were well content to see troubles
persisting so long as the effect of those troubles was to prevent any other
power from attaining importance, and that Rome made little difference in this
respect between those who had been her former friends and others. This may not
have been just to Rome, for the Romans, unless they were alarmed, desired to
interfere as little as possible, and the skill with which a Greek advocate
could present a case made it hard to be sure on which side right stood, if
indeed either party to a quarrel was wholly right. Nor could Rome readily trust
a state which a group of political leaders had caused to change sides during a
struggle in which Rome was concerned. Yet sympathy with the past history of
Rhodes makes us regret that Rome did not find it possible to show whole-hearted
friendship to another republic whose ideals were in some respects so similar to
her own.
Whatever may have been the justification for Rome’s attitude
from her own point of view, it was disastrous for the Aegean world. The
greatest among the many services which Rhodes had rendered to the cause of
civilization was the policing of the seas. For two generations the chief
scourge to Aegean commerce had been the free-booting of the Cretans. Since the
middle of the third century at least, there had existed in Crete a form of
federation which had brought neither true unity nor peace to the island. First
the influence of Egypt and then that of Macedon had prevailed, but never
without opposition, except for the moment of hope for the Greek world in 216,
when the Cretan League put itself under the leading of Philip V. But the power
of Macedon waned, the cities resumed their feuds and settled down to wars and
litigation in which they invoked the help or the judgment of Pergamum and Rome.
In 189 the praetor Q. Fabius Labeo tried in vain to end a war waged by Cydonia
against Cnossus and Gortyn. Four or five years later a settlement was laid down
by Roman Commissioners. In 183 bc thirty Cretan cities allied
themselves with Eumenes II, but this group did not compose the whole
island: Itanus was still a Ptolemaic protectorate, while Cydonia stood aloof
and made a separate alliance with Pergamum. In 174 Rome intervened, but failed
to make the intervention effective. During the war with Perseus Cretans are
found fighting on both sides, and the sending of troops to help Ptolemy
Philometor is a sign that the influence of Egypt was not extinct. Crete, in
fact, could not find unity in a foreign policy of dependence on a single
external power, and within the island federal justice was not allowed to impose
peace and order or to end the disputes which, at the best, issued in shortlived
arbitration awards rather than open war.
But whereas their internal differences taxed the patience of
their neighbours, all Cretans agreed in a form of activity which made them
unbearable. That activity was piracy, which, with mercenary service, provided a
livelihood for the surplus population of the island. One way of checking this
was by agreements with the Cretan towns which were the bases of the
free-booters, and that way Rhodes took. But where that failed, it was to the
fleet of Rhodes and her island allies to whom the Aegean had to look for peace.
Rome was well content to patrol her own waters and to leave all else to others.
In the moment of self-confidence in which she had offered to mediate between
Rome and Perseus, Rhodes had invited the Cretans to unite in an alliance with
her which might perhaps have proscribed piracy, but the news of Pydna ended all
that, and the weakening of Rhodes made her less able to impose order by force.
In 155 b.c. she found herself
faced by Crete united in defence of piracy, and a war followed in which, even
with help from Attalus, the Rhodian squadrons could not crush their nimble
enemies. Rome neither supported Rhodes by force at sea nor by diplomatic
intervention in Crete itself, and the doubt of the Senate’s good will towards
the Rhodians prevented the Achaean League from helping against the common
enemy. Siphnos, the treasure-house of the Aegean, was sacked, and the war dragged
on, with what final result we do not know. One thing seems certain, that with
it ended the capacity of Rhodes to police the seas. Meanwhile the decline of
the Seleucids and the enforced limitation of their naval strength permitted
the rise of Cilician piracy. In the end the Senate was to pay a heavy penalty
for failure to extend the pax Romana to the Eastern Mediterranean.
IV.
CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN GREECE: ATHENS
AND BOEOTIA
In considering the relations between Rome and the political
associations in Central and Southern Greece we have to remember that we only
know of a few of the disputes which the Romans were so often called upon to
settle, and that the numerous journeys by Roman Commissioners about which we
are told represent only a portion of the whole number. Roman envoys were always
moving backwards and forwards, endeavouring to restore peace between
conflicting parties whose one idea of political liberty was to fight each
other. Even though it may be true that there were parts of Greece where politics
were conducted without violence, and even if the Greek cities of which we
happen to hear nothing all presented exceptions to the general rule, it can be
imagined that the feeling must gradually have grown up in Rome that nothing but
force would really quiet the Greeks. Further, the wish to do justice between
appellants, which the Romans felt during their earlier experiences of such
dealings with the Greeks, was seriously prejudiced by the rise of those Greek
politicians whose advice at home was to do what the Romans would be likely to
approve and who, when in Rome, urged the Senate to assert its will strongly.
They represented that the Roman approval would be enough in itself to secure
what was desired and to render unnecessary that military effort which seemed to
be the only effective alternative. Such men as Lyciscus in Aetolia, Mnasippus
at Coronea, Chremes in Acarnania, may not all have been of the same type as
Charops of Epirus or Callicrates, but the context in which they are mentioned
suggests that they had some of the same characteristics. While
there is no reason to suppose that this was the support which the Romans would
have wished to have in Greece if they had been able to choose, the mere
existence of such unscrupulous supporters, who could not easily be repudiated,
was bound to intensify the bitterness of their anti-Roman opponents and to make
partisanship for or against Rome into the test question of Greek politics,
however little the Romans desired it. The envoys of Perseus found it easy to
win sympathy in many cities. Sometimes this movement subsided so soon as it
appeared that to favour Perseus would mean fighting against Rome; but elsewhere
support was actually given to Macedonia, and the revulsion of feeling which
followed on the capture of a town or on the conclusion of the war generally
gave the proRomans an opportunity to injure their personal enemies and to make
the Roman cause highly unpopular.
With Athens the Romans did not find it hard to maintain
friendly relations. If she had wavered for a moment in the days of Antiochus,
she showed no hesitation in siding with Rome throughout the struggle with
Perseus. Complaints are indeed made that Athens, in common with other allies,
was harshly treated by P. Licinius the consul of 171 bc and by the praetor C. Lucretius Gallus, inasmuch as her
offers of men and ships were declined and 150,000 bushels of corn were asked
for in their place. This was a grievous burden to lay upon a
country which could not grow enough corn to feed herself, but the enactment of
the Senate which declined to authorize for the future any demands made by Roman
officers without a senatorial decree to back them, may have produced an
improvement at least so far as Athens was concerned. L. Hortensius, the praetor
in charge of the fleet during the next year, received an Attic decree in his
honour, and the fact that Lucretius was condemned at Rome shows that some at
least of his proceedings were recognized as being incapable of defence.
The unquestioned loyalty of Athens, which allowed her to enter
into friendly relations with Ariarathes, Pharnaces, Antiochus Epiphanes and
other kings, also put her in a position to adopt in 167 bc the same
role as in 190 and 189, and to plead for mercy to a beaten enemy of Rome. But
whereas Rome had accepted the request that she should not go to extremities
against the Aetolians, she was not inclined to restore Haliartus after it had
been destroyed by Lucretius in 171. The Athenians accordingly changed their
tone and asked that the territory of Haliartus should be given to them, as well
as Delos and Lemnos, possibly Imbros and Scyros also. As we should expect, this
action is censured by Polybius, who records with evident satisfaction that the
territory of Haliartus brought disgrace and little profit to Athens, while
Delos and Lemnos involved her in many troubles. An Athenian cleruchy was sent
to Delos, and the former inhabitants, who were ordered to leave but allowed to
remove their property, complained that they were not treated fairly, and
attempted to retaliate on Athens by becoming citizens of the Achaean League
and then laying claims under the commercial treaty between the two countries.
The inevitable appeal to Rome produced an answer in which Rome seems not to
have entered into the facts of the dispute. As it was a decision on the facts
for which both sides must have hoped, if they treated the appeal seriously,
this could not settle the quarrel.
The consequences of a dispute between Athens and Oropus were
more serious, as it appears to have been somehow responsible for the outbreak
of war between Rome and the Achaean League. The Athenians, in the course of
collecting tolls and tribute from this city which they claimed as theirs, were
asserted by the Oropians to have been guilty of violence and illegality. The
Roman Senate appointed the Sicyonians as arbitrators, and the Sicyonians,
before whom the Athenians did not appear, condemned them to pay the enormous
sum of 500 talents in damages. The Athenians then (in 155 bc) sent to Rome
the heads of three of the chief philosophical schools, Carneades, Diogenes, and
Critolaus, to make a protest. This visit, which had an important effect on the
view taken by many Romans of Greek morals and philosophy, was so far successful
that the damages were reduced to 100 talents. It looks as though the Romans
took substantially the anti-Athenian view, but, as the question to be settled
was on this occasion not so much one of principle as of the proper amount of
the penalty, substituted a severe but reasonable sum for one which was plainly
unreasonable. The Athenians declined to pay the smaller amount, and the quarrel
continued until a temporary arrangement was arrived at, by which the Athenians
apparently established cleruchs in Oropus on an understanding that they were
not to molest the natives, while the Oropians sent hostages to Athens as
security that they would not molest the Athenians, This plan, if such is the
correct interpretation of it, could not succeed for long. A further appeal was
made by Oropus to the Achaean League against alleged oppression by the
Athenian garrison; the League decided against Athens and employed force to
carry out their decision. At this point the dispute becomes merged in the
obscure quarrels which brought the Achaean League to an end: the leaders of the
League were not popular in Rome, and this may be the reason why Athenian
charges of bribery and corruption, brought against those leaders in connection
with their decision, came to be accepted as true, though the story as told does
not sound convincing. It is natural that Athens should have suffered less than
most other parts of Greece from the changes which now followed, for her past
reputation was quite sufficient to secure her permanently a position of
dignity, and her claim to intellectual primacy was one which Rome could
recognize without difficulty.
The Leagues naturally fared worse. In any Greek League there
was bound to be a contest between those who were zealous for the independence
of the individual cities and those who desired to strengthen the central
authority. Even where attempts had been made to prevent the central authority
from being vested permanently in one city, this was an important difference of
principle; but sometimes, as in Boeotia, the superiority of one city was so
marked that the question became one between that city and the other members of
the League. The Romans may have begun with a prejudice in favour of a strong
central authority which tended on the whole to support orderly government;
but, in so far as a League, thus made stronger, became a larger and more
powerful unit than its neighbours, jealousies, nervousness and quarrels might
easily arise, while the endeavours of one city to force other members to
associate themselves with the central authority would be repugnant to the
Romans, both as being contrary to the principle of liberty, and as never being
likely to achieve permanent results. It is not surprising that the opinion of
Rome should come to be in favour of the individual cities and against the
Leagues, even where the Leagues had few internal troubles.
In Boeotia the Romans were hampered by the zeal of their
friends. During the war with Perseus the Theban politician Ismenias offered the
support of Boeotia as a whole to the Romans; but it was clear to the Roman
Commissioners that he was not in a position to carry out his promise, as
feelings were divided, and the only practicable alternative was to deal with
the cities individually. Ismenias was apparently trying to secure the unity of
Boeotia by helping Rome: but, as there were some who did not wish to help Rome,
and others whose main concern was with, the independence of the single cities,
he could hardly hope to succeed in this policy, though it may have been
patriotic in intention. Coronea, Thisbe and Haliartus joined Perseus and
suffered for it. Thebes did not lose anything then, as the party dominant in
that city was proRoman. But a period of confusion followed in Boeotia, for
Mnasippus of Coronea is one of those named by Polybius among the promoters of
disorder whose death some ten years later caused relief and improvement. In the
final war against Rome Thebes was less fortunate: for her most influential man
at that time, Pytheas, who is described as bold, ambitious, and of bad
character, brought Boeotia into the struggle, and the destruction of Thebes
followed the defeat of the Achaean League. So far as our knowledge goes, the
loss of Boeotian independence gives little cause for regret: Polybius indeed
tells us that the severe punishment which befell Boeotia might almost be
regarded as retribution for the exceptional good fortune which had enabled her
to escape the consequences of political disorder and misgovernment at an
earlier date. The study of Boeotian history at any other period than the first
half of the fourth century bc leaves us with renewed admiration for the leaders who succeeded in raising
Thebes to so great a height at that time.
V.
CENTRAL
AND SOUTHERN GREECE: THE ACHAEAN LEAGUE
If there is little reason to regret the disappearance of the
Boeotian League, and if in regard to Leagues such as those in Phocis, Locris
or Euboea, too little is known for us to be able to judge fairly whether their
cessation was a loss or not, it is otherwise with the Achaean League. With it
were associated some of the greatest names in the history of Greece, it had
contributed a considerable part of what is best in Greek politics since the
days of Aratus, and there must have been grave faults (not necessarily confined
to one side) in the conduct of affairs which brought this valuable association
to its end.
The Achaeans had preferred Rome to Macedon in the war with
Philip and had declared war on Antiochus. With the crushing of the Aetolian
League, which ceased to have any political importance, they became the chief
power in Greece. The reward which they expected for their wisdom in taking the
side of Rome was that they should be allowed to complete their domination of
the Peloponnese by keeping Sparta and the whole of Messenia. The leader in this
policy was Philopoemen, who believed that it could be carried through by the
assertion of the legal rights of the League, which the Senate would not contest
if they were laid before it firmly but unprovocatively. In this policy he had
the support of Archon and of Lycortas, the father of Polybius, who is careful
to point out that Philopoemen was not opposed to Rome except in the
sense that he did not wish to acquiesce in Roman decisions which seemed to him
unjustified. The military strength of the League was largely his creation, his
personal position was secured by the dominant Arcadian representation on the
League, and he knew himself to be the most famous Hellene of the day. He was
too experienced a soldier to wish to provoke a conflict with Rome, but he
believed that the rights of the Achaeans could be pressed by arms in Greece and
defended by words at Rome, and he resented the attitude of Flamininus, who did
not reserve his phil-hellenism for Achaeans and had more than once been in
conflict with him. Also he had a rival in Aristaenus who, though reluctant to
sacrifice laws or decrees of the League, was willing to do so if it should
prove necessary in order to carry out or even to anticipate the wishes of the
Romans. Naturally he seemed to Rome better-affected than Philopoemen, and this
fact helped to make the Senate unsympathetic to those ambitions of the League
which Philopoemen embodied.
In their policy towards outside powers the Achaeans showed
themselves prudently unenterprising. Aristaenus prevented the Assembly from a
hasty renewal of alliance with Egypt, and though friendship with Syria was
renewed at the accession of Seleucus, the League declined a present of ships of
war, and also an offer of Eumenes to present them with 120 talents to form a
fund for the payment of members of the League’s Council. The acceptance of
this gift would have made possible a more democratic representation in the
Council of the League; and that may have been one reason why it was unwelcome
to those in power. In order to secure its rejection an Aeginetan pointed out
that a more acceptable gift would be the restoration of the island of Aegina,
which Attalus I had bought from the Aetolians. Behind these considerations of
sentiment there may have been the politic calculation that it would be wise not
to seem to have important allies or patrons except Rome. On the other hand, the
Senate was displeased by the stiffness with which the League stood on its rights
towards Q. Caecilius Metellus who, as he returned from Macedonia in 185,
lectured the League magistrates on their harshness to Sparta. He was met by
long arguments from Philopoemen, Lycortas and Archon, and thereupon demanded
that the League assembly should be summoned. This was refused as illegal in the
absence of a written demand by the Senate for a meeting to consider a specific
point. No doubt law was on the side of the Achaeans, but their action brought a
sharp admonition from the Senate to treat envoys with more respect.
The Spartan question continued to be troublesome, and the
Senate made an attempt to reach an agreed settlement by the deliberations of a
committee of three, including Flamininus and Caecilius. The definite and
recognized inclusion of Sparta in the League was at issue, but also the
question of the return of several groups of Spartan exiles, and the restoration
of their property. It was ruled that Sparta should remain a member of the
League but that the exiles should be restored. The Achaean envoys who were at
Rome decided to accept this decision; but the return of exiles was always
unwelcome to the fierce partisans in Greek cities, the acceptance of this
condition meant setting aside a decree of the League, and they may have thought
that Rome was giving them nothing that was not already theirs. The settlement
was not carried through with goodwill, and the Senate was even less sympathetic
with the League when in 183 the Messenians sought to secede. Q. Marcius
Philippus, who had just returned from Greece, advised that, if the Senate
showed itself unfriendly, the movement for secession might spread and drive the
League to welcome Roman protection. The Senate accordingly refused to take
steps to prevent arms and food reaching Messenia from Italy and warned the
League that persistence in conducting a policy opposed to the views of Rome
might cause, not only Sparta, but Corinth and Argos, to secede.
The Achaeans, led by Philopoemen, were not intimidated and the
Messenians were quickly defeated, though during the war Philopoemen himself was
taken prisoner in a skirmish and put to death.
Plutarch says that a certain Roman called Philopoemen the last
of the Greeks. It is true that with him ended the line of Hellenic generals
who added a touch of genius to their virtuosity in the art of war. In the forty
years that followed his first exploit at Sellasia he had not lost a battle by
land, and he had made an army out of the Achaean levies. He had matched his
cunning against the Cretans, his courage against the Spartans, and he had withstood
Flamininus in the day of his success. Yet herein lay the great disservice that
he did to Greece. His fame held high the imperialism of the Achaeans, and his
spirit forbade him to make it easy for Rome to leave the Greeks really free. He
was more of a soldier than a statesman, at a time when Achaea needed a statesman
rather than a soldier. The most Roman of the Greeks, yet he had in him the
almost unreasoning rancour of a Greek partisan, and his moments of violence robbed
of their effect his insistence on treaty rights which the Romans were generally
ready to respect. Furthermore, the successes which had given to the League
greater power than it had ever before enjoyed had been achieved in a way which
outraged panhellenic feeling so far as that existed, and by a reaction against
economic movements which were born of deeply-felt economic stress. If the
Achaeans were not to be the servants of Rome, neither could they be the leaders
of the Greeks. Had we the whole of Polybius’ history or still more his life of
Philopoemen, we should be better able to discover, beneath the qualities which
Polybius admired, the defects of judgment and the narrowness of vision to which
Polybius could not have been blind. It may well be doubted if any statesman,
whether a Cavour, or a Mazzini, or a Bismarck, could have saved Greece from the
power of Rome, and made her a nation, but the high qualities of Philopoemen
were spent in rendering the task impossible. He died felix opportunitate
mortis, and his friend and successor Lycortas was the heir to his policy
but not to the influence and capacity which it demanded.
Though compelled to re-enter the League, the Messenians were
treated with statesmanlike forbearance. The Senate declared that, after all,
they had hindered supplies from reaching Messenia, and the Achaeans were
allowed to interpret the return of exiles to Sparta as excluding those who had
been definitely hostile to the League. An independent policy had so far proved
successful, and only the death of Ptolemy Epiphanes saved the League from the
dangerous temptation of an Egyptian alliance. In Sparta the Achaeans had to
intervene to put down a demagogue Chaeron who might have become a second Nabis.
The Romans were concerned that the restoration of the exiles had not been
complete, and the Achaean leaders were divided about the wisdom of giving way
on the point. Three envoys were sent to Rome, one of whom, Callicrates of
Leontium, gave to the Senate the advice which, in the judgment of Polybius,
produced a disastrous change of Roman policy towards Greece. Callicrates
pointed out that politicians would always be under a temptation to advocate
the strict observance of laws and decrees, since a reputation for patriotism
and independence was most easily won in this way, and he urged that the Romans,
if they really wished to exert effective influence in Greece, should take
strong measures to make their wishes known. The speaker described some of the
recent actions of the League, in regard both to Messene and to Sparta, as done
without Roman consent or in defiance of Rome’s expressed wishes; and, though
the Senate may have suspected that his argument was inspired by political
partisanship, it agreed that there was much to be said for the policy which he
recommended. Hitherto, though the Romans might have shown occasional
impatience, and used language of serious warning, coming near to threats, they
had not gone outside the limits permissible to candid friends whose advice had
been asked. Henceforward they showed a tendency to regard a desire to carry out
the wishes of Rome as the test of patriotism. They included in their official
answer a wish that all men in the various states should be like Callicrates;
and, in order that now at any rate there should be no ambiguity as to their
opinion, they insisted on the restoration of all the Spartan exiles, and,
though the question concerned the Achaean League only, they addressed their
rescript not only to the Achaeans but also to the Aetolians, Epirotes,
Athenians, Boeotians and Acarnanians.
On his return Callicrates played upon the fear of hostility to
Rome, and thus secured his election as General, in which capacity he carried
out the restoration of the Spartan and Messenian exiles. Sparta was refortified
and the constitution of Lycurgus was restored. This seemed to be the end of
this thorny question, and for nearly a decade there was an uneasy peace in
Achaean politics. But once Roman distrust of the Achaean statesmen had been
aroused, there was small prospect of the League being able to pursue a policy
which would preserve both its own self-respect and the goodwill of Rome. There
was no power to whom the Achaeans could turn, except possibly Macedon, and not
only Callicrates but also his political opponents, Archon and Lycortas, had no
wish to be friends to that power. Perseus wished to be on good terms with the
League but his overtures were rejected, and when at last it came to war between
Rome and Macedon, Archon, no less than Callicrates, favoured active assistance
against Perseus, though he may have seen the danger to Achaea of the final and
complete victory of either side. Lycortas was for neutrality, and in 169 bc there was a
rumour that the Roman Commissioners in Greece were thinking of accusing him and
his son Polybius and even Archon himself before the League. It is true that
none of the three reached Callicrates’ high standard of pro-Romanism, but Rome
had no just grounds of complaint. Polybius, indeed, who was Hipparch of the
League in this year, was sent to arrange for the co-operation of the full
strength of the League in what appeared likely to be the decisive campaign in
Thessaly.
During this and the next year the Achaean leaders gave to Rome
no reasonable ground for complaint. When Appius Claudius applied to the League
for 5000 men to help him in Epirus, Polybius was sent by Marcius Philippus to
urge the League to refuse, in the absence of written orders from the Senate.
The only other question of policy which arose in the League at this time was of
its attitude towards the war between Syria and Egypt. Lycortas and Polybius
were in favour of giving help to Egypt, while Callicrates argued that the
Achaeans should reserve their strength to assist Rome and should content themselves
with offering mediation. This was no doubt what the Senate preferred, but it
could not well object if the Achaeans wished to help Egypt, with which they had
some kind of treaty engagement and which had so often served the League, if
only for its own purposes. Callicrates succeeded in contriving that ambassadors
and not troops were sent to Egypt, but their good offices were not needed, for
Rome herself intervened.
One thing is certain, that the Romans were not only
exasperated by their long-continued ill-success against Perseus, but suspected
that Achaean statesmen availed themselves of the complicated machinery of the
League constitution to place obstacles in the way of decisions which they did
not like. It was doubtless more convenient to have in authority persons like
Callicrates who only asked what Rome’s wishes were. But this does not make
clear why the Roman Commissioners sent to Achaea behaved as they did. First
they asked that a vote be passed condemning to death certain persons unnamed
who had supported Perseus; next they said that all the Generals since the
beginning of the war were suspect, and finally, when Xenon, one of these
Generals, expressed his readiness to be tried before any court that the Romans
might appoint, they used this opportunity to command a body of 1000 men, from a
list supplied by Callicrates, to proceed to Italy as prisoners. Still less
intelligible or defensible is the fact that these accused persons, who were
quartered in various parts of Italy, were never brought to trial, and that requests
that this should be done, or that they should be allowed to return home,
received only curt answers. We hear of such requests being received in or about
the years 165, 160, 155 and 153 bc. On one of the occasions the request
might have been granted but for the way in which the presiding Roman magistrate
put the question; with this exception there is no indication of any division of
opinion among the Romans on the subject. It was not till 151 bc that those
who still survived (rather less than 300) were allowed to go back, on the
contemptuous advice of Cato who suggested that they were too old to do much
harm.
The Roman policy of removing from Achaean affairs all experienced
statesmen except those who would support Rome blindly was for a time successful
in preventing complications. In 165 Rome allowed an Achaean court to settle a
boundary dispute between Sparta and Megalopolis: the Achaeans decided in
favour of Megalopolis, probably with justice or at least in accordance with
previous decisions, but the decision was bound to irritate the Lacedaemonians.
In 151/0 the Achaean General Menalcidas, perhaps for a bribe, used force to
eject the Athenians from Oropus. Then came the return of the detenus from Rome, with inevitable disputes about their property. That they played any
important part in the crisis which soon followed is not recorded, and some of
them, like Polybius, may have seen that Rome was too strong for it to be wise
to resent her injustices. The poorer in the Achaean cities found leaders in Diaeus
and Critolaus, the former of whom became General in 150 bc. He sought to
suppress the separatist movement in Sparta, and after his term of office
expired he set out with Callicrates for Rome to represent the League before the
Senate. Callicrates died on the journey, and his death was of some importance,
for, whatever his defects, he was not likely to have encouraged a reckless
challenge of Rome. Diaeus, on the other hand, took up so aggressive an attitude
as to alienate the Senate. For the moment no answer was given but the Romans
decided to weaken the League by encouraging a movement of secession in other
states beside Sparta.
The Senate had good reason to proceed slowly. Roman armies
were engaged in Spain and in Africa, and the rising in Macedonia was still not
crushed. But Diaeus used the delay to press on operations against Sparta, which
had formally seceded. A warning from Metellus the praetor in Macedonia went
unheeded. Then came news that he had defeated Andriscus; a second message led
to an armistice, and, after a further interval of hostilities, Sparta and the
Achaeans came nearer to a settlement (summer, 147 bc). But the
faint hope of peace was dispelled by the arrival of the Roman commission under
L. Aurelius Orestes, who announced to a League assembly at Corinth that the
Senate had decided to detach from the League not only Sparta but also Corinth,
Argos, Orchomenus in Arcadia and a new accession Heraclea. There was an
outburst of anger, in which the Romans could not protect anyone who was suspected
of being a Spartan from rough handling and came near to being treated with
violence themselves. Rome had no desire for war if she could compel obedience
otherwise, but her calmness was misinterpreted; Critolaus was elected General,
the punishment of those responsible for the disorder was refused, and the
Senate pushed on its preparations. Metellus was to advance from Macedonia, and
Attalus was called upon for contingents.
Early in 146 bc it became clear that the Achaeans had
behind them wide-spread sympathy. The Boeotians and Euboeans took up arms, the
masses in the Greek cities were encouraged by promises of a social revolution,
and the new Achaean General Critolaus did not dare to disappoint them. When
Metellus once more sent envoys to the League Assembly, his well-meant admonitions
were in vain: Critolaus declared that the Achaeans sought in the Romans friends
not masters. The Romans wished to be both; the alternative was war. L. Mummius
the consul was placed in command of an army of nearly 30,000 men and orders
were given to equip a fleet. The task of the Romans was made easier by the
faulty strategy of Critolaus who, instead of concentrating on defence, pressed
forward to besiege Heraclea with part of the Achaean forces. Metellus saw his
opportunity and struck hard, Critolaus was defeated and killed at Scarpheia in
Locris as he tried to disengage his army, and the advancing Achaean reinforcements
were cut to pieces. The Boeotians, whose accession had perhaps helped to lure
the Achaeans north of the Isthmus of Corinth, were at the mercy of Rome.
The courage of the Achaeans rose to face the danger. Diaeus
was made General and a promising attempt to negotiate was checked. Metellus
reached the Isthmus where the Achaean forces based on Corinth barred his way.
The Roman fleet was still in the dockyard and, till it came to turn their
position, the Achaeans might hope to hold their own. Meanwhile Mummius arrived
and took over the command, and his army followed. Diaeus was encouraged by a
slight success to offer battle to the superior Roman forces and was utterly
defeated. Corinth opened its gates, most of its inhabitants had fled, the
remainder suffered the rigour of a Roman sack. The city itself awaited the
decision of the Senate.
Thus one short campaign had broken the last military power in
Greece. Diaeus killed himself; the Achaean cities did not venture to resist.
Individuals who had opposed Rome were visited with death and confiscation, democracies
which had encouraged the masses against Rome were overthrown, leagues—Achaean,
Boeotian, Euboean, Phocian and Locrian—were dissolved. Thebes and Chalcis were
partly destroyed. But for Corinth was reserved a harder fate. The city was
burnt and its contents, above all its art treasures, were sold or carried off
to Rome. However much truth there is in the anecdotes about Mummius and about
his soldiers dicing on masterpieces, the Greeks may have lost less than the
Romans gained. Other trading communities, including Italian, doubtless profited
by the destruction of a competitor, but there is no direct evidence that
commercial ambitions or jealousy influenced the decision of the Senate. To
Livy it is a reprisal for disrespect to the Roman Commissioners: it is more
intelligible as a lesson to the Greeks that the patience of Rome was exhausted.
It was a crime, but like other crimes in history, in part salutary, and Greece
did not forget the lesson.
Such is the story, so far as it can be reconstructed from the
scanty and not always trustworthy tradition that has come down to us. The
ultimate authority is Polybius, who disapproved of the Achaean policy and
despised the Achaean leaders; his account has only reached us, apart from a
short fragment elsewhere, in a very unsatisfactory narrative given by
Pausanias. That Critolaus, Diaeus and their colleagues could not reasonably
hope for victory is clear; whether they were so wholly senseless and
irresponsible as the account represents them may be doubted, but we have no
materials to paint a more favourable picture. It is equally easy to see that
the Romans’ patience gave out with disastrous suddenness. For them to guide
Greece without ruling it demanded infinite patience, and they deserve perhaps
more praise than blame, even if their policy was rarely idealistic or
unselfish. But at last they tried to take a short cut and to solve political
problems by removing the men who alone were capable of endeavouring to solve
them intelligently. Whatever excuse may have been given for the unjust removal
and detention of the Achaean leaders, it carried with it consequences which it
became impossible to undo, and the end of the Achaean League is an incident for
which admirers of Rome can find nothing but regret.
It was not until much later that the Romans regarded Southern
Greece as a district in which they were to be separately represented : for the
present, the Roman representative in Macedonia, in addition to his other
duties, received a general responsibility for Achaea, as that part came to be
called. Measures were adopted to divide cities by abolishing common councils
and by preventing individuals from holding property in the territory of more
than one community. Part at least of Greece was made subj ect to tribute.
Polybius earned the gratitude of his countrymen by counselling moderation to
the Roman Commissioners who effected the settlement, by refusing to accept any
reward for the help which he or his friends had given to the Romans, and by
assisting the cities to accustom themselves to altered conditions and to solve
any difficulties which the new position raised. It may be due to his influence
that some amelioration was effected very soon: perhaps about 140 BC, which
Pausanias gives as the date of the end of the Achaean War.
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