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THE SELEUCID EMPIRE. 358-251 BC. HOUSE OF SELEUCUS
CHAPTER 10.
SELEUCUS II (KALLINIKOS)
AND SELEUCUS III (SOTER) 1
The War of Laodicea The Seleucid power
had ceased to be a unity. It was represented by two rival Queens, both
masculine, resolute women, after the fashion of these Macedonian princesses,
Laodice across the Taurus, Berenice in Syria. The son of Berenice, who was
probably proclaimed King in Antioch, was of course an infant in arms; the
eldest son of Laodicea, Seleucus, was a youth nearing manhood.
Seleucus was
proclaimed King in Ephesus and Asia Minor. To support his right, as against the
child of Berenice, Laodice resorted, according to one story, to the device of
dressing up a certain Artemon, who bore a close resemblance to King Antiochus,
and causing him to be laid in the royal bed before the King’s death was known,
in order that in the presence of the magnates of the court he might solemnly
declare his son Seleucus the true heir. Laodicea proclaimed her son King, but
she kept the reins of government in her own hands.
It must come of
course to an internecine straggle between the two Queen-mothers. In the kingdom
itself Laodicea, the old Queen, was the stronger; Berenice had at her back the
might of Egypt. It all depended on whether Laodicea could strike quickly
enough. Even in Antioch she had partisans, among them Genneus or Caeneus, one of
the chief magistrates of the city. She hit on the bold thought of kidnapping
the child of her rival. Her emissaries, flying perhaps to Antioch almost with
the post that brought the news of the King’s death, arranged the plot. It succeeded.
The young prince vanished.
In this extremity
Berenice showed the spirit of a lioness. The child was believed to have been
carried to a certain house. Berenice instantly mounted a chariot, took in her
own hand a spear, and galloped to the spot. On the way Caeneus met her. The
Queen aimed her spear at him. It missed. Nothing daunted, Berenice followed it
with a stone, which brought her enemy down. A crowd, partly hostile, surged
about the closed doors, behind which the prince was understood to be. But they
fell back before the fierce approach of the Queen. And here the story is broken
off. Another author takes it up at a later point. The fate of the young prince
is still mysterious; it is not known whether he is alive or dead. Obviously the
popular feeling in Antioch is so strongly on the side of Berenice that the
murderers dare not avow what they have done. To this body of sentiment Berenice
appeals. She shows herself to the people in the guise of a suppliant, and the
storm of public indignation is so strong that the guilty magistrates are
obliged to dissemble. A child is exhibited to the people as the infant King and
surrounded with all the due pomp; they have still authority enough to keep this
child in their own hands. But they are obliged to come to some agreement with the
Queen and allow her to establish herself in a defensible part of the royal
palace at Daphne with a body of Galatian guards.
This was an awkward
turn for the plans of Laodicea. Everything depended on crushing Berenice before
the Egyptian force could be brought to bear in her favour. And shut up in the
palace at Daphne, Berenice could gain time. The Ptolemaic power was at this
moment in a position to strike strongly. The Cyrenaean difficulty had been at
last settled to its satisfaction. The young Queen, Berenice the daughter of
Magas, had discovered the relations of her husband Demetrius with her mother,
and displaying the characteristic spirit of her race, caused him to be
assassinated in Apama’s bed under her own eyes. She had then renewed her
interrupted betrothal with the heir of the Ptolemaic throne. About the time
that the other Berenice, her cousin, was defying siege at Daphne, the old King
of Egypt died; the government passed into young and vigorous hands. Ptolemy III
ascended the throne, married Berenice of Cyrene, and prepared to intervene with
the whole force of his kingdom in his sister's defence. At the same time the
struggle between the two Queens was being watched breathlessly throughout the
Seleucid realm. A number of the Greek cities of Asia declared for Berenice, and
put on foot the civic forces. Contingents began to glide out of their harbors
or to move along the road to Antioch. Berenice had only to sit still in her
fortress and wait.
The hope of
Laodicea to reach her seemed desperate. But even so she succeeded. It seems an
incredible folly on the part of Berenice that she exposed herself—to be
instantly cut down. But she was led to trust to the oath of her enemies, and
her physician Aristarchus, by whom she was guided, was really Laodice’s tool.
And here we are told another of those strange impersonations which give the
whole story of these events such a mythical complexion. Berenice’s women, it is
said, after they had done their best to shield her with their own bodies and
several of them had fallen, concealed her corpse, and put one of their number
who was wounded, but not mortally, in her place, keeping up, till the advent of
the King of Egypt, the delusion that the Queen and her son were still alive.
Meantime Laodicea
was strengthening herself in Asia Minor. Miletus is found hastening to declare
its adherence to Seleucus II; its embassy conveys to the young King a wreath of
bay leaves, plucked in the sacred enclosure of the Didymaean temple. Many of
the other Greek states must have acted likewise.
But the attack of
Ptolemy III came with terrific effect upon the divided kingdom. He appeared at
the head of his army in Syria, before the death of Berenice and her son was
certainly known, and in many quarters was regarded rather as an ally than a
conqueror. The states which had flown to arms in Berenice’s defence, finding
themselves too late, had no option, now that they had compromised themselves,
but to join him.
The great events of
the following years are obscured by the character of our sources. In their
loose description we seem to see a conquest of Asia which goes beyond the old
invasions of Tothmes, and even resembles the triumphant march of Alexander. If
we look more closely, however, we shall form, I think, a more moderate estimate
of the exploits of Ptolemy Euergetes. The war called by contemporaries the
“Laodicean War”, falls into two divisions—the maritime war and the land war. Of
these the maritime is really the more important, and here the successes of
Ptolemy are more solid. It was on the sea that the Ptolemaic power really lay;
it had already, as we have seen, secured a number of points d'appui over
the coasts and islands of the Levant, and what Ptolemy Euergetes did was to
carry to its farthest extent the traditional policy of his house. On the coasts
of Phoenicia, Lycia, and Caria, Ptolemy was already predominant; he possessed
Cyprus and the federated Cyclades. The maritime war of Ptolemy III rounds off
the work of his father and grandfather. What had been lost in recent years, the
Cilician coast, for instance, and Ephesus, are recovered. The line of Ptolemaic
power is carried still farther along the coasts. Even the acquisitions of the
house of Seleucus in Thrace, from which it was necessarily cut off by a power
dominating the sea, pass to Egypt.
A moment of this
war is lit up for us in a curious way. The commander of a Seleucid squadron on
the coasts of Asia sent home a sheet of papyrus giving a narrative of his
operations. This paper, or pieces of it, worn but still partly decipherable,
came the other day into the hands of modern archaeologists.
Where the dispatch
begins to be decipherable the capture of some town by a detachment of the
Ptolemaic forces is described, apparently one of the towns of Cilicia. A party
among the inhabitants seem to have had an understanding with the attacking
force, and the town was taken by a night surprise. A garrison was put in to
hold it under an officer called Epigenes. Then, after a gap, the document seems
to speak of a squadron of five ships in the Seleucid service, who, acting on
the orders of “the Sister”, i.e. Laodicea, had collected all the money
they could along the coast and deposited it in (the Cilician) Seleucia—1500
talents in all. In Seleucia the Seleucid governor of Cilicia, Aribazus, was
commanding, and his purpose was to forward the moneys now collected to Laodicea
at Ephesus. Before, however, he could do so, the town of Soli and the
subordinate strategoi of Cilicia, the district officers, went over to
the Ptolemaic side, and in concert with them a Ptolemaic force, under
Pythagoras and Aristocles, attacked Seleucia. The town, even the citadel, was
stormed. Aribazus essayed to escape across the Taurus, but fell into the hands
of the native tribes who lived about the passes; they cut off his head and
brought it presently to Antioch.
The rest of the
document narrates operations on the Syrian, not the Cilician, coast, in which
the writer would seem to have taken part in person. A Ptolemaic squadron of as
many sail as the harbour of (the Syrian) Seleucia was understood to be capable
of holding, puts to sea in the first watch of the night. Its place of starting
is conjectured by Kohler to be Salamis in Cyprus. About three o'clock the
following afternoon it strikes the Syrian coast at Posidium, a fort some twenty
miles south of Seleucia. There it remains for the night, and at the next
daybreak moves to Seleucia. Here it is received with open arms. The priests,
the magistrates, the populace, the troops of the garrison flock down the road
to the harbour to meet it in festival array. From Seleucia the Ptolemaic force
moves upon Antioch itself, which was in those days accessible by water. In
Antioch there is a considerable military force, and the district officers, the
“satraps” of the neighboring country, seem to have gathered within its walls.
And it looks as if Antioch had thought at first of offering some defence. But
the sight of the Ptolemaic force convinces it that to do so is hopeless.
Antioch, like Seleucia, receives the invader. A procession of the chief men,
satraps, captains, priests, and magistrates, accompanied by the “youths from
the gymnasium” and the populace, all wearing crowns, comes to meet the
Ptolemaic force. “They brought all the animals for sacrifice into the road
without the gate; some shook our hands, and some greeted us with clapping and
shouting”. There the document leaves off, having shown us the chief city of
Seleucid Syria in the hands of King Ptolemy.
For the land war
our chief authority is the Monumentum Adulitanum, an inscribed stone
seen at Aduli in Abyssinia in the seventh century AD by Cosmas
Indicopleustes, who has left us a copy of it. It was a monument put up by some
Ptolemaic official at that remote station on the Red Sea giving an account of the
King's conquests. It describes how he advanced upon Asia with foot and horse
and ships, “and elephants”, the official is careful to note, whose chief
business in Aduli was no doubt to replenish the supply, “from the Troglodyte
country (i.e. the Red Sea coast) and Ethiopia, which his father and he
himself were the first to cause to be captured in these parts and brought down
to Egypt, and to train for service in war, how he made himself master of all
the country this side of the Euphrates (i.e. Northern Syria), Cilicia,
Pamphylia, Ionia, the Hellespont and Thrace, and of all the forces in these
countries and the Indian elephants, and made all the petty despots in these
regions subject to him, and then how he crossed the Euphrates and plunged into
the distant world of Iran,
It will be observed
that till the passage of the Euphrates no country is mentioned as conquered
which is not open to attack by sea. The Ptolemaic land forces never crossed
the Taurus. Having once secured the road through Northern Syria (Antioch
itself succumbed, as we saw, to an attack from the sea) they passed
east. In Asia Minor, which hitherto rather than Syria had been the Seleucid
base, the court of Laodicea and Seleucus was safe from molestation, except on
the coast. And even the coast was only partially conquered by the Ptolemaic
fleet. Ephesus indeed, where Laodice was still established when the Ptolemaic
captain penned his dispatch, passed before long to Ptolemy, the Seleucid court
returning, no doubt, to the safer distance of Sardis. But Miletus and Smyrna
remained in the Seleucid alliance.
The loss of Ephesus
can perhaps be traced in the story taken from Phylarchus. The court is residing
at some place other than Ephesus, which is not mentioned, but which must surely
be Sardis. Ephesus, however, is still held, as Sophron, the governor of the
city, has been called to the royal presence. He has somehow incurred the
displeasure of Laodice, and she has determined to make away with him. Among
Laodicea’s women, however, is Danae, the daughter of that famous courtesan
Leontion who had shone among the companions of Epicurus : Danae is always at
the Queen’s side; all the Queen’s purposes are open to her. In past days
Sophron was her lover. When Sophron stands before the Queen, Danae is sitting
by the Queen’s side. As Laodicea and Sophron talk, the truth breaks upon Danaii
that Laodicea is inviting him to his destruction. She makes him a quick
imperceptible sign. It is understood. He feigns to agree generally with the
Queen's proposals but asks for two days further to consider. Laodicea assents.
The next night Sophron flies for his life to Ephesus. Then Laodicea understood
what Danae had done. Instantly old friendship was swallowed up in vindictive
fury. Danae was haled as a criminal before her, but the questions which
Laodicea put to her she met with disdainful silence. She was led away to be
hurled from a high place. As she went she made an utterance which those about
her thought worthy of record. “The common run of men make small account of religion,
and they are quite right. I saved the man that was my lover, and this is the
recognition I get from the Powers which dispose of us. Laodice killed hers, and
she is thought to deserve all that honor”.
Sophron fled to
Ephesus. That was no safe place, if it was still to be in Laodicea’s
possession. It was probably Sophron who now called in the Ptolemaic forces. It
is found at any rate a few years later occupied by a Ptolemaic garrison, and a
Sophron appears in command of a Ptolemaic fleet.
The young king
Seleucus seems early to have gone at the head of an army across the Taurus to
defend or to regain the Syrian and eastern provinces. It went hard in his
absence, and the absence of the troops which followed him, with the adherents
of his house along the coast. Smyrna, for instance, was exposed to attack, not
only from the Ptolemaic fleets, but from its neighbor, Magnesia-on-Sipylus,
where there was a great military settlement which declared against Laodice and
Seleucus and harried its fields. Smyrna, at any rate, stood fast, and in this
region the Seleucid cause held its own. The Magnesian colony was compelled to
return to the old alliance, and at some subsequent date was incorporated by the
Smyrnaeans in their own state.
On Smyrna in return
for its fidelity the King was concerned to shower favors. He gave the usual
promise that the city should continue autonomous and be free of tribute. He
also guaranteed it in the possession of all the territory it already stood
possessed of, and promised to restore any it had formerly owned. More than
this, he interested himself warmly in what was the chief interest of the city,
its great temple of Aphrodite-Stratonicis. Smyrna would secure a great
advantage if it could shield itself by the sanctity of its shrine, if it could
be treated as “holy and inviolable”. It could only obtain this advantage in so
far as the independent powers of the world, any who had the material force to
molest it, would consent to recognize its sanctity. To obtain this recognition
was the object it had in view. It began by procuring a pronouncement of the
Delphic oracle in favor of its claims. Armed with this, it approached the
Seleucid king. Seleucus threw himself heartily into the cause of the faithful
city. He addressed letters to all the states of the Greek world, “to kings and
rulers and cities and nations”, asking them to recognize the temple of
Aphrodite-Stratonicis as a sanctuary and Smyrna as a city holy and inviolable.
One of the answers has been preserved, that of the city of Delphi, which, as
the original oracle had proceeded from them, is naturally favorable. It charges
the theoroi, who were sent round the Greek states to invite them to the
Pythian games, to bestow special commendation on King Seleucus both for his
piety in obeying the oracle and his honourable treatment of a Greek city.
Ptolemy did not
continue to direct the Asiatic campaigns in person. After his raid into the
eastern provinces he returned to Egypt, where troubles had broken out which
called for his presence. But the war did not thereby come to an end. Ptolemy
left officers to govern in his name both in the West and in the East, in
Cilicia his “friend” Antiochus, in the provinces beyond the Euphrates “another
general, Xanthippus”. One would like to know on what principle Ptolemy at this
juncture framed his policy. He has been commended for wise moderation in
withdrawing after his triumphal march. And indeed the traditional policy of his
house was to set a prudent limit to ambition. But the texts hardly show the
action of Ptolemy III in this light. His personal return is no evacuation of
the conquered countries. In that moment of intoxicating glory, in the
prostration of the rival house, Ptolemy III seems really to have contemplated
making himself king of Asia as well as of Egypt. He actually intends to govern
Iran from Alexandria as a dependency. It is not his prudence, but the force of
circumstances, which makes him abandon the idea.
But although the
return of Ptolemy to Egypt did not mean a suspension of hostilities, the
absence of the King relaxed the pressure upon his enemies. Seleucus now took
strenuously in hand the reconquest of Northern Syria and the revolted cities of
the coast. A great armada was fitted out in one of the harbours of Asia Minor,
and presently took the sea. It met, however, with a storm which completely
shattered it—as the fleet of Seleucus’ son was later on shattered in the same
dangerous waters—and few, according to Justin, beside the King himself escaped
to land. After this, Justin goes on, the cities were so sorry for him that they
joined him of their own accord—a passage over which modern writers make very
merry, perhaps undervaluing the part which sentiment plays even now in human
politics. As a matter of fact, it seems probable that the cities of Northern
Syria were really attached to the house which had planted and fostered them,
and that they had conceived themselves, not so much to be revolting against
that house, as standing by its wronged representatives, Berenice and her son,
in whose name the King of Egypt had summoned them. It would therefore be
natural that as soon as it became apparent that the house of Seleucus was to be
crushed altogether, and that they were to be annexed to Egypt, a great wave of
compunction should sweep over them.
Of this phase in
the war, that which is marked by the Seleucid house recovering Northern Syria,
no detail is preserved except the bare statement of Eusebius that in the year
142-141 Orthosia on the Phoenician coast, which was being besieged by a
Ptolemaic force, was relieved by Seleucus, who brought up reinforcements.
In the next phase
of the war Seleucus passes from recovering his father’s share of Syria to
attacking the Ptolemaic. The war of defence became a war of reprisals. An
encounter, somewhere in Palestine, took place between the two hosts. Seleucus
was completely beaten. He withdrew the shattered remnant of his army of
invasion to Antioch. His position was once more critical, for he had no force
left wherewith to meet the counterstroke of his enemy.
The operations in
Syria had drawn the Seleucid King for the most part to the regions south of the
Taurus; they had made Antioch on the Orontes rather than Sardis or Ephesus the
pivot of his kingdom. But meantime the Queen-Mother, Laodicea, was still reigning
in Asia Minor, and had her younger son, Antiochus, joined with her, a boy at
that time of some fourteen years. In his extremity Seleucus now addressed an
entreaty to his brother to cross the Taurus to his assistance. This request
seems to show that a certain independent authority was exercised by Antiochus
in Asia Minor, or rather by those who governed in the boy's name, his mother
Laodice and her friends. And this inference finds a separate confirmation in an
inscription from the temple at Branchidae, which contains a list of offerings
made to the shrine by “the kings Seleucus and Antiochus”. The Antiochus here is
therefore one who shares the royal authority; that he does so as a subordinate
is shown by the fact that the letter accompanying the gifts runs in the name of
King Seleucus alone.
To secure the
co-operation of his brother’s court, Seleucus offered to make a partition of
the Empire, to cede the trans-Tauric country to Antiochus. Whether the cession
was to be absolute or whether he reserved to himself any right of suzerainty we
are not told. If his mother and her friends were already the real rulers of
that region, the offer of Seleucus amounted simply to a recognition of existing
facts. The events which followed this proposition are touched on so summarily
by Justin that it is scarcely possible to follow the connexions between them.
At first the court of Sardis closed, or feigned to close, with it. The forces
of Asia Minor were set in motion to join those in Syria. This co-operation
between the two Seleucid courts seems not to have entered into Ptolemy’s
calculations, although why it should not have done so, when it seems the most
natural thing to expect, we cannot say. Perhaps there were already signs of
rivalry and dissension between them. At any rate, on getting word of the
advance of the trans-Tauric army, Ptolemy, instead of following up his recent
victory, concluded a peace for ten years with Seleucus.
2
The Fraternal War Antiochus, however,
did not join his forces with those of Seleucus. The concession made by the
elder king seems to have been used to bring all power in Asia Minor more
absolutely into the hands of the court of Sardis. As soon as that had been
done, the mask was thrown off and a claim was advanced to the whole Seleucid Empire.
The people, who were acting behind the boy Antiochus, were of course the
Queen-Mother Laodice and her friends. Amongst these the chief place was held by
the Queen’s brother, Alexander, who probably performed the functions of viceroy
of the trans-Tauric country.
With this breach
between the brother kings there began for Asia Minor a period of civil war
which must have dealt the country far deeper wounds than the war between
Seleucid and Ptolemy, which affected only its seaward fringes. Seleucus, crippled
as he had been by his recent defeat in Palestine, had still enough authority in
the Empire to gather a force about him with which he crossed the Taurus to
crush this new rebellion. Nowhere along the great high-road did the partisans
of Antiochus arrest his march onwards. He was already in Lydia before his army
met that of his brother. The first battle went in his favor. He fought another,
and again successfully. But his victory was stayed by the strong city of
Sardis, where the party of Antiochus found a sure retreat.
It was now,
however, seen what danger to the central government lay in all those
independent elements in Asia Minor. A disturbance such as the rebellion of
Antiochus Hierax communicated unrest to all the peninsula. The task of Seleucus
was indefinitely complicated. Antiochus had only to hold up his hand to bring
up hordes of Galatians. In some quarters the cause of Antiochus and the
Queen-Mother was more favorably regarded than that of the elder king, who
indeed had been for much of the time since his accession absent from the
country.
We last saw the
dynast of Pontic Cappadocia employing Galatian bands against the Ptolemaic
forces, apparently in alliance with the Seleucid King . Since then Mithridates
the Founder had died in a good old age of eighty-four years, and had been
succeeded by his son Ariobarzanes (in 266). Of the reign of Ariobarzanes we
know nothing except that he got into difficulties with his Galatian mercenaries
and has left no coins. He died about 250, and was followed by another
Mithridates, who at his father’s death was still a boy. Under such
circumstances the Galatian troubles grew worse, and the Pontic territory was so
harried that famine stared the population in the face. Heraclea, whose friendly
connection with the Mithridatic house continued, sent what help it could, and
had in consequence to bear a Galatian attack in its turn. And now, some ten
years later, the breach in the Seleucid house brings the Pontic king once more
upon the stage. With this Iranian dynasty also, as with that in Southern
Cappadocia, the great Macedonian house had mingled its blood. One sister of
Seleucus II was the wife of Ariarathes; the other sister he gave in marriage to
Mithridates II, with Greater Phrygia (or so the Pontic house afterwards asserted)
for dowry. At this juncture Mithridates declares in favor of his younger
brother-in-law, Antiochus, and enters the field at the head of a great army of
Galatians.
The intervention of
the Pontic king and his fierce mercenaries gave a new turn to the struggle. A
great battle, one of the landmarks of that confused epoch, took place near
Ancyra. The forces of Seleucus were swept down by the Galatian onset. Twenty
thousand are said to have perished. At the end of that day of blood Seleucus
himself was nowhere to be found. The news ran through the host of the victors
that he was dead. The youth who by such an event became the sole and unrivalled
possessor of the Seleucid throne displayed or affected great sorrow. Antiochus
put on the garb of mourning and shut himself up to bewail his brother. Then the
tidings came that he had lamented, or rejoiced, too soon. Seleucus was still
alive. He had disguised himself as the armour-bearer of Hamactyon, who
commanded the Royal Squadron, and had escaped so from the fatal field. He was
now beyond the Taurus, safe in Cilicia, rallying once more about him what
remained of his power. Antiochus came out of his retirement, offered a
sacrifice of thanksgiving for his brother's welfare, decreed public festivities
in the cities subject to him, and sent an army to cross the Taurus and crush
Seleucus before he had time to recover.
One story which the
Greeks remembered in connection with this battle was that of Mysta, Seleucus’
concubine. Like the old Persian kings, the Seleucids took women with them in
their camps. As soon as she saw the day was lost, Mysta also disguised herself.
She had been dressed as a queen; she now put on the habit of a common
serving-maid and sat among the huddled women, who fell after the battle into
the victor’s hands. She was put up for sale with others, bought by some
slave-merchant, and carried to the great market of Rhodes. Rhodes was soil
friendly to Seleucus, and once there she made herself known. The Rhodian state
instantly paid her price to the merchant and sent her back with every due
observance to the King.
3.
Antiochus Hierax
and Attalus of Pergamos
The battle of
Ancyra shattered the cause of Seleucus II in Asia Minor. It would be out of the
question for some time to come for him to attack his brother. But the disappearance
of Seleucus meant less the reign of Antiochus than anarchy. The Galatians knew
their power; it was easy by their help to overthrow any existing authority, but
it was not possible to base upon it any secure throne. Antiochus himself found
his life full of vicissitude enough; at one moment marching over the Phrygian
uplands at the head of his Galatian bands, levying a blackmail which can only
by courtesy be described as the tribute due to the royal treasury; at another
moment bargaining for his life with the same bands, or by hairbreadth escapes
breaking away from them and throwing himself into friendly cities, like
Magnesia; then meeting and beating them in open battle; then again raiding, as
before in their company.
The unhappy Greeks
of Asia looked round for a deliverer from the deluge of anarchy and barbarism.
This then was what the Macedonian rule, which had ousted the Persian with such
fair promises, had come to. There were two powers which seemed to offer
resistance to the barbarian storm in the land of the Asiatic Greeks, the
Ptolemaic and the Pergamene. Ptolemy saved at least the cities he held, like
Ephesus and the Carian harbors, from barbarian dictation. We even hear, on an
occasion when Antiochus had broken with his mercenaries, of help being sent him
from a neighboring Ptolemaic garrison. But it was Attalus of Pergamos who now
came forward as the main champion of Hellenism and order.
The figure of this
man, who had succeeded his cousin Eumenes in 241-240, embodying so much of that
age, is obscured for us by the defects of our tradition. And yet even so he is
significant for us, connecting in his person an epoch that was passing away
with one that began a new state of things. Now when he first appears in the eye
of the world, the great Macedonian houses, the heirs of Alexander, are the
cardinal powers of the Eastern Mediterranean; his last breath is spent in
exhorting the peoples of Greece to accept the hegemony of Rome. It was his wars
on behalf of civilization in Asia Minor against the barbarian tribes which
first made him a name. These wars are a glorious, but almost forgotten, episode
of Greek history. We may indeed believe that they were somewhat artificially
magnified by the Pergamene court, which loved to put them in the same order as
the classical struggles between light and darkness, order and chaos, Hellenism
and barbarism, to set them beside the battles of Gods and giants, of Athenians
and Amazons, of Greeks and Persians. It was these scenes, together with those of
the Galatian wars, which the sculptors commissioned by the rulers of Pergamos
had to set before the eyes of the Greek cities. But that the glory claimed by
Attalus he did to a large extent deserve, there is no reason to deny. A genuine
sentiment seems to have thrilled the Greek world as the contest was
victoriously carried on. A current oracle, cited by Pausanias, represents
Attains as a deliverer divinely raised up for the Asiatic Greeks, almost a
demi-god himself —
Then having crossed the narrow strait of the Hellespont
The destructive
army of the Gauls shall pipe; they shall lawlessly
Ravage Asia; and
God shall make it yet worse
For all who dwell
by the shores of the sea
For a little while.
But soon the son of Kronos shall stir up a helper for them,
A dear son of a
Zeus-reared bull,
Who shall bring a
day of doom on all the Gauls.
In days when art
had begun to languish because the old enthusiasms were dying away, the struggle
with the barbarism of Asia Minor called a new and original school into being,
not indeed reaching the serene heights which the children of those who had
fought at Marathon and Salamis attained, but displaying a vigorous realism, a
technical mastery and a lively feeling for dramatic effect.
No narrative of
these wars remains. Historians mention them summarily. When even the Seleucid
house had come to pay blackmail to the Gauls, “Attalus”, says Livy, “first
among all the inhabitants of Asia refused. His bold resolution was, contrary to
the expectation of all, backed by fortune. He met them in fair field and came
off victor”. “His greatest achievement”, Pausanias says, “was compelling the
Gauls to retreat from the coast into the territory which they still occupy”.
Sometimes a particular battle is spoken of, “a great battle”, Strabo calls it;
a battle at Pergamos is mentioned in a Prologue of Trogus. According to
the text of Justin the battle took place immediately after the battle of
Ancyra, before the victors had had time to recover from the effects of that
great day, Antiochus himself being still with the Galatians—if indeed it be the
same battle which is meant in the narrative of Justin and in the Prologue,
or the phrase “saucios adhuc ex superiore congressione integer ipse” be
not an antithesis thrown in for mere rhetorical effect. It is difficult to see
how the victorious army of Ancyra should have engaged Attalus at Pergamos, more
than 250 miles away, before they had recovered from the wounds of their former
battle.
When, however, we
turn from the historians to what remains of the stones of Pergamos, the wars of
Attalus appear no affair of one battle and instant victory. They show Attalus
making dedication to the gods of trophies from a great number of battles.
Sometimes the state of the stone allows us to read the denotation of the enemy
and the site of the battle, sometimes both are conjectural. It is at any rate
impossible to arrange the battles in any connected narrative or even to fix
their order in time. In one Antiochus and two of the Galatian tribes, the
Tolistoagii and the Tectosages, are coupled together; it is the battle fought
“near the Aphrodisium”; unfortunately it is impossible to identify the
Aphrodisium in question. In another the Tolistoagii are mentioned alone, the
battle “by the sources of the Caicus”. In another Antiochus is mentioned alone,
the battle in Hellespontine Phrygia. One inscription speaks of a battle in
which Attalus defeated the Tolistoagii and Antiochus a second time, whether
identical or not with any of those just mentioned we do not know. From all this
we can gather little except that the struggle of Attalus with the forces of
anarchy was prolonged and swept over the country between the valley of the
Caicus and Bithynia.
This contest lifted
the Pergamene dynast to an altogether new position in Asia Minor. As he had
taken over from the house of Seleucus the work which they professed to perform
in that country, the protection of Hellenism and civilization, so he stepped
into their dignities. After the battle of Ancyra indeed, with the elder Seleucid
king driven across the Taurus, and the younger turned into a captain of
freebooters, Seleucid authority ceased in Asia Minor. In that part of the
country which had once obeyed mandates from Sardis or Antioch it was now the
armies of Attalus who marched along the roads, and his officers who began to
claim the tribute of Lydian and Phrygian villages. From this time the dynast of
Pergamos assumed the title of King.
To the Greek cities
the substitution of the Pergamene for the Seleucid house was probably welcome.
The Aeolian cities at any rate, as well as Alexandria, Ilion and Lampsacus,
became his cordial allies. Even Smyrna, which had been so eminent for its
loyalty to the Seleucid house, now changed about, swore fidelity to Attains,
and was henceforward altogether alienated at heart from the Seleucid cause.
Attalus presented himself to the Greeks in the most attractive light. Not only
was he their champion against barbarism, as indeed the house of Seleucus in its
better days had been, but he did everything to show himself an ardent Hellenist
and to exhibit at his court a wholesome family life which would form a contrast
in the eyes of the Greek bourgoisie to the barbaric vice and cruelty
which were rife in the Seleucid and Ptolemaic courts. His mother Antiochis was
a kinswoman of the Seleucid house, and his maternal aunt Laodice was the wife
of Seleucus II, but Attalus himself elected for his queen Apollonis, the
daughter of a plain citizen of Cyzicus, “a woman”, says Polybius, “deserving
for many reasons remark and admiration, who rose from a private station to
royalty, and kept her high place to the last by means of no meretricious
seductions, but by a plain and sober dignity and goodness”. Instead of the
fraternal feuds and family murders which seemed to be elsewhere the rule in
royal houses, the children of Attalus and Apollonis showed the world a
delightful picture of simplicity and natural affection. And whilst the house of
Attalus recommended itself to the moral sentiments of the Greek republics, it did
so equally to their literary and artistic susceptibilities. “Pergamos”, says
the historian of Alexandrine literature, “was in all probability the source of
that renewal of Atticism to which we owe in great part the preservation of the
masterpieces of Attic prose”. Attalus maintained close relations with a number
of the great literary men of his time, especially with the philosophers of
Athens. An Athenian poet, Ctesiphon, was given a high place in his civil
service. Research into the peculiarities of his own dominion was encouraged.
Polemon of Ilion cast his essay on the local cults and deities into the form of
a “Letter to Attalus”. Attalus himself wrote; from one work of his a fragment
is still preserved, describing a certain pine-tree in the Troad. The school of
artists, which developed under his patronage, has been already mentioned. And
not only did Pergamos itself become a city gloriously beautified to the eyes of
the Greeks with the monuments and altars which commemorated the Galatian wars,
but works of art in other cities testified to the munificence of the Pergamene
king. Athens especially he delighted to honour. If the ideal of the
phil-Hellenic king, which had been more or less pretended to by all the
successors of Alexander, was capable of realization at all, it seemed to be
realized in Attalus.
On some points we
are imperfectly informed. What were the relations between this new-grown power
in Asia and the house of Ptolemy, which had so many footholds on the coast? We
do not even know what the relations were between Attalus and Seleucus. Was the
king who reigned on the Orontes content to see a new king arising in Asia Minor
to counterbalance Antiochus Hierax, and the territory which he himself could
not wrest from his brother passing at any rate out of his brother’s hands?
All this time
Sardis continued to maintain the semblance of a Seleucid capital. How long
Laodice reigned there we do not know. According to Appian her end was to be
killed by Ptolemy Euergetes. The court over which she had presided continued to
subsist as that of King Antiochus. If Attalus was supported by the Hellenic
element in Asia Minor, Antiochus was in close association with the barbarian
powers. He married a daughter of Ziaëlas, the Bithynian king. He was also, as
we have seen, in alliance with Mithridates, and seems to have contemplated at
some time before his death marrying a daughter of the Pontic king, whether in
succession to, or side by side with, the Bithynian queen we do not know.
A daughter of
Mithridates, at any rate, whom we may by her name, Laodice, conjecture to be
the issue of Antiochus’ sister, is found to be at one time in his hands. Among
the Pisidians Antiochus had his friends; Logbasis, a prominent citizen of
Selge, was among his familiars, and it was at Selge, among the Pisidian hills,
that Laodice, the Pontic princess, whom he probably intended to marry, grew to
womanhood. Even with an Armenian petty king, Arsames, he had relations of close
friendship. Pushed on the west by the victorious arms of Attalus, Antiochus
began to think of restoring his fortunes at his brother’s expense in the east.
He attempted to turn the position of Seleucus in Syria by crossing the
Euphrates high up and then descending upon Mesopotamia by way of the friendly
kingdom of Arsames. But in the plain the armies of his brother were waiting to
receive him. They were led by Achaeus and his son Andromachus, two persons of
the highest rank in the kingdom, for Achaeus was the father-in-law of King
Seleucus. Antiochus fared badly at their hands. After his defeat a
discreditable abuse of those courtesies which in ancient warfare were connected
with the burial of the dead enabled him to cut down four thousand of his
brother’s troops unarmed; but his cause was none the less lost. He took refuge
at the court of Ariamnes in Cappadocia, where his sister Stratonice was queen.
But he had not been there long before he discovered that though all was smiles
about him, his host had an understanding with Seleucus, and was preparing to
deliver him up. He once more fled. It seems that he made one last desperate
attack upon Attalus (229-228). We hear of four battles, two “in Lydia”, one by
Lake Coloë, and one in Caria. They only served to complete his ruin. Nowhere in
Asia did he now seem safe from capture by either Attalus or his brother. He
crossed into Europe, to Thrace, which had been held since the Laodicean War by
Ptolemaic forces, and threw himself upon the generosity of the King of Egypt
(228-227). On the orders of the Alexandrian court he was held under close
guard. By the help, however, of some girl, whose heart had been won by the
captive prince, he eluded his keepers. But the wild mountains of Thrace were no
safe place for fugitives. His little company encountered a marauding band of
Gauls, and by the hand of the Gauls, with whom he had had all his life long so
much to do, Antiochus Hierax came to his end. A story was told by the
contemporary historian Phylarchus that the horse of Antiochus, when the Gallic
chief Centaretus mounted it, leaped over a precipice and avenged its master.
The disappearance
of Antiochus Hierax from the scene extinguished the separate Seleucid court in
Asia Minor. Attalus was left in possession of what had once been the Seleucid
domain north of the Taurus. It remained for Seleucus Kallinikos to decide
whether he would acquiesce in the severance of that country from his house or
demand its restitution by force of arms from the Pergamene king. What he
actually did we do not know with certainty. He was given but little time to do
anything. A year after the death of his brother, Seleucus II perished by a fall
from his horse (227-226). He had never come to his own again in the land where
his reign had begun.
4
SELEUCUS III SOTER
The task of
restoration, which devolved upon his successor, was a hard one. The
geographical centre of the Empire, Syria, Babylonia, and the nearer Iranian
provinces, were still held, but in the west and east great members had been
broken away. The Ptolemaic power ruled the coasts of southern Asia Minor, even
to some extent of Syria, possessing Seleucia and the mouth of the Orontes; the
Pergamene power ruled the Ionian and Aeolian coasts, and as much of the
interior as was not in the hands of barbarian princes. For this task the youth
who succeeded Seleucus Kallinikos was little fitted. He was the elder of the
two sons of Seleucus II by Laodice, the daughter of Achaeus. He had hitherto
been known as Alexander, but on ascending the throne assumed the dynastic name
of Seleucus. Seleucus Soter was his official style. He was of weak bodily
constitution, liable, if one may judge by the nickname of Keraunos, which the
soldiers gave him, to fits of uncontrolled passion. He seems, however, to have
addressed himself without delay to the work of recovering his kingdom in the
west. His younger brother Antiochus was apparently sent to represent the royal
authority in the eastern provinces.
Of the two enemies
in the west, the Pergamene king is the only one whom Seleucus III is said to
have directly attacked. He seems to have prepared to strike a blow from the
instant of his accession. The inscriptions of Attains record victories over the
generals of Seleucus.
Presently the young
King himself crossed the Taurus with a large army. From this time to the day of
his death he was warring in Asia Minor. Was anything done meantime against the
Egyptian power? In the Book of Daniel (11, 10) both the sons of Seleucus
II are said to be “stirred up”, i.e. against the King of Egypt, and to
“assemble a multitude of great forces”. If we had any ground for supposing an
alliance between Pergamos and Egypt, the attack on Attalus might be considered
an indirect attack on Ptolemy. But we have no ground. Niese supposes that
hostilities between the Seleucid court and Egypt had again broken out before
the death of Seleucus Kallinikos, and that they were closed by a definitive
peace under Seleucus Soter. It is at any rate likely that preparations were
made by Seleucus III for a renewal of the war with Egypt, especially as his
chief minister, Hermias the Carian, was the main advocate of an aggressive
policy against Egypt a few years later under Antiochus III. If Seleucus III
made the war with Pergamos take precedence of the war with Egypt, it may have
been that the attack on the Ptolemaic power was left by an understanding to the
allied court of Macedonia. About the same time that Seleucus engaged Attalus in
the interior of Asia Minor, Antigonus Doson, reigning as Regent in Macedonia
for the infant Philip, whom the death of Demetrius about 230-229 had made King,
descended upon the coasts of Caria and expelled the Ptolemaic garrisons.
How the war between
Seleucus III and Attalus went we do not know. Seleucus was at any rate unable
to maintain order in his own camp. The result was a conspiracy against the
King's life, of which the leading spirits were Nicanor, no doubt a Macedonian
officer of the King’s entourage, and Apaturius, a chieftain of the mercenary
Gauls. Seleucus was in Phrygia in the summer of 223, when the design against
him was brought to pass. His life was suddenly cut short, by poison according
to one account. One disaster after another had come upon the house of Seleucus,
and its extinction must have seemed at that moment a possibility of the near
future.
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