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THE SELEUCID EMPIRE. 358-251 BC. HOUSE OF SELEUCUSCHAPTER 27. DEMETRIUS THE
SAVIOUR
All this while the
boy who had been growing up in Italy had not lost the hope of coming to his
own. When the news of his uncle's death arrived in Rome (164) he had approached
the Senate with fair words, begging to be possessed of his inheritance. The
Senate need have no doubt that a friendly king would sit upon the Seleucid
throne; Demetrius assured them that he actually felt one of themselves, that he
looked upon the Senators as his fathers and the young Roman nobles as his
brothers. The Senate, Polybius says, was made uncomfortable by this appeal;
they had a bad conscience, but they thought they understood Roman interests
better than Demetrius, and preferred a powerless child and a palace camarilla
to an active prince, however friendly. So the mission was sent to destroy the ships
and the elephants.
Demetrius at that
time was twenty-three years old. He bore his captivity impatiently. But it had
been a magnificent school. As in the case of Antiochus Epiphanes, to have been
educated in Rome, not in a Syrian palace, meant a great deal to the ruler of a
kingdom. It was not only that he had grown up in contact with the finest
aristocracy and the most vigorous political system of the world, but there met
in Rome—as captives, ambassadors, teachers—the greatest of the contemporary
Greeks. The circle of Scipio Aemilianus comprised the philosopher Panaetius and
the historian Polybius. For the friendship of Demetrius with Polybius we have
the authority of Polybius himself. The Achaean statesman and the Seleucid
prince were both enthusiastic sportsmen, and this in the first instance had
drawn them together. How much Demetrius owed to his intercourse with this man,
the widest observer of contemporary politics, the most original historian since
Thucydides, we can only speculate. Something the younger man, spirited and
sanguine, must have gained from the manifold experience, the matured reflection
of the elder—from long conversations as they rode or drove home together
through the declining afternoons from hunting the pig in the woods of Anagnia.
Another
acquaintance whom Demetrius made in Rome was his cousin, the best of the
Ptolemies, Philometor. In 163 Philometor came to Italy as a suppliant. For the
double kingship established in Egypt since the invasions of Antiochus Epiphanes
had not worked well, and Philometor had now been driven out by his brother
Euergetes. He landed with three slaves and a eunuch only. People arrived in
Rome with the news that they had seen the King of Egypt tramping along the road
on foot with this poor attendance. Impulsively Demetrius hurried to meet him,
with royal apparel and a magnificent horse, richly caparisoned. He was received
with a smile. He must not spoil a calculated stage effect. Ptolemy begged his
cousin to wait with his horse and royal robes in one of the towns on the road;
he himself proceeded as he had begun, entered Rome, a pathetic figure, and took
up his lodging with a penurious Greek painter in an attic. He was restored
after this by Roman authority to Egypt, although he was obliged to surrender
Cyrene to Euergetes.
It was only a short
time after the visit of Ptolemy Philometor that the startling news of the
murder of Octavius came to Rome, and was immediately followed by the
ambassadors sent from the court at Antioch (162). How would this affect the disposition
of the Senate to the existing government and to Demetrius? Polybius tells us
that Demetrius came to him in high excitement. Would not Polybius advise him to
approach the Senate once more? “Polybius told him”, the historian writes of
himself, “not to stumble twice at the same stone”. Demetrius would never induce
the Senate to move in his favor, but if he took the matter into his own hands
and acted boldly, the hour was favorable. Demetrius understood, but he said
nothing. Presently he consulted a friend of his own age, Apollonius, who had,
Polybius explains, an innocent and childlike belief in the part played by logic
in practical politics, and, since it was unreasonable for Demetrius to be a
hostage for the son of Antiochus Epiphanes, advised him to try the Senate
again. Demetrius did. The Senate showed a disconcerting impassivity to
argument—as Polybius had foreseen.
The resolution of
the young prince, who had plenty of high courage and determination, now began
to rise to the pitch of independent action. The man who had nurtured him in
boyhood, Diodorus, had recently returned from Syria, whither he had gone to spy
out the situation. Demetrius took him into confidence, and the report of
Diodorus confirmed his purpose. The incidents of the Roman mission and the
murder of Octavius had led to a profound breach between the people and the
palace gang. The people mistrusted Lysias, and Lysias the people. Let Demetrius
appear there, were it but with one attendant, and the kingdom would be his!
This clinched his resolve. Polybius received a summons to come and see him, and
was then asked to deliberate on ways of escape.
It occurred to
Polybius that the man who must help them was Menyllus of Alabanda. Menyllus was
now in Rome as the ambassador of Ptolemy Philometor; Polybius knew him well and
trusted him absolutely. He introduced him to Demetrius, and Menyllus was let
into the plot. The ambassador soon had a plan ready. He went down to Ostia and
found a state-vessel of Carthage, carrying the customary offering to the gods
of the mother-city, Tyre, in the harbor. Menyllus saw the captain, told him he
was shortly returning to Alexandria, and made arrangements for himself and his
party to be taken on board.
Before the ship
sailed, Diodorus was sent on ahead to Syria to watch the drift of public
feeling in the great cities. Demetrius made his final preparations. The only
persons in the plot beside Polybius and Menyllus were Apollonius and two sons
of that older Apollonius who had been of influence in the court of Seleucus IV,
called Meleager and Menestheus.
The night came, in
which the escape was to be made. Demetrius dined that afternoon with one of his
friends, not at his own house, where he always kept a large table, and the
presence of numbers would be inconvenient. It was given out that the prince
would hunt next day at Anagnia, and a tent was pitched for him that night without
the city; those in the plot had already sent on their slaves to make
preparations. Only one slave was to accompany each of them in the voyage. The
arrangement was that on leaving the banquet they should proceed with all
secrecy and speed to the ship.
At this critical
moment Polybius was confined to his bed by an illness. It was a great annoyance
to him to be cut off from participation in the action, but Menyllus came
regularly to his bedside to report every fresh development. On the final
evening he knew that Demetrius was making merry with his friends; he knew also
that Demetrius had all the buoyant carelessness of youth and drank freely in
his convivial hours. The thought of possible indiscretions which might wreck
the enterprise tormented him. He lay fretting on his bed, lest Demetrius should
drink too deep into the night. At last he took a tablet, wrote upon it a few
words, sealed it, and gave it to a slave to carry to the house where the feast
was going on. It was now growing dark. The slave had orders to ask at the door
for the prince’s cup-bearer, and deliver him the tablet to give Demetrius, but
he was on no account to say who he was or from whom he came. In the tablet were
no compromising names; nothing but certain proverbial verses from the poets :
“He that acts
carries away the prize from him that tarries.
Night bringeth the
same to all, but they that adventure get more profit of it.
Make a venture,
hazard, act, fail
Or succeed —
anything rather than let thyself be carried by chance.
Be sober and
remember to mistrust : these are the hinges of the soul”.
The tablet was soon
in the hands of Demetrius, and he recognized the sententious tone of his old
friend. Presently he rose, said that he felt sick and left the house. His
friends escorted him to the tent. There he chose the slaves to take the nets
and the dogs to Anagnia for tomorrow’s sport. The rendez-vous was appointed
them and they were sent off. Some others of his friends, including Nicanor,
were now admitted to the plot They were all instructed to go to their several
places of abode, send off their slaves to join the others at Anagnia, and
change their dining garb for such clothes as men wore hunting—or on a journey.
Having done this they were to return each one to the tent.
At last all were
assembled, and in the dead of night the party hurried down to Ostia. Menyllus
had been before them with a story to satisfy the people of the ship. A
communication, he said, had just come from King Ptolemy which would cause him
to prolong his stay in Rome, but he wished to dispatch some trusty young men
who would take secret intelligence to Alexandria concerning the movements of
Euergetes. The young men would present themselves about midnight. All that the
people of the ship cared about was the passage money, and when Menyllus assured
them that the original sum stipulated for would still be given, they asked no
more questions. Everything on board was in readiness for departure. Towards the
end of the third watch Demetrius and his company appeared, eight men, five
grown slaves and three boys. There was some talk with Menyllus apart; then he
showed them the provisions got ready for the voyage, and introduced them with
earnest words to the captain and the crew. In the grey of the dawn the vessel
loosed her moorings and glided out to sea. The steersman had no inkling whom he
carried; he never doubted but they were soldiers in the Egyptian service going
to King Ptolemy.
For some time
Demetrius was not missed. His friends in Rome thought him at Anagnia; his servants
at Anagnia thought him on the way from Rome. But on the fourth day his
disappearance became patent. On the fifth day a meeting of the Senate was
called to consider the matter. But by that time Demetrius must have passed the
Straits of Messina. To try to arrest him and fail would, they thought, be
undignified. In a few days they had fallen upon the inevitable expedient of a
mission—an expedient which always deferred the trouble of a decision. Tiberius
Gracchus and two colleagues were chosen to go and watch events in the East.
In this first-hand
narrative, which stands out in ancient literature for its vividness and
authenticity, we are brought close to the actors and know them for persons of
flesh and blood. It is a moment of life long ago handed down still living to
our own day. But the illumination ends. Once more we perceive through bad or
fragmentary records only the outline of events; the person of Demetrius
recedes, becomes doubtful; the warm-blooded youth who hunted at Anagnia and
drank carelessly with his friends we feel we know, but the King is far removed;
we can see the general figure of his public action, but what heart he now bears
beneath it we are too far off to discern.
The Carthaginian
vessel touched at Tripolis on its way, and here Demetrius and his friends left
it. In this Phoenician city Demetrius published his advent and assumed the
diadem. The news travelled rapidly over Syria, and it soon appeared that
Diodorus had not exaggerated the unpopularity of the present government.
Everywhere the people rose for Demetrius. Almost automatically, and without, it
would seen, a blow struck, he found himself master of the country. In Antioch
the troops declared for him. They seized the sons of Antiochus Epiphanes and
Lysias, and set off to deliver them up to Demetrius. Fresh from the
open-hearted convivialities of his life in Rome, the young man had to begin the
life of kingship with a deed of blood. There could be no question, from the
point of view of the worldly politician, that the boy who had usurped the name
of King Antiochus and the minister who had supported him must be put out of the
way. Demetrius wished at any rate to have the thing done before he had any
personal contact with his cousins. He sent a message to the troops who were
bringing their prisoners, “Show me not their faces”. And the army slew them.
And Demetrius sat upon the throne of his kingdom, 162.
In Syria the old
régime collapsed instantly on the appearance of Demetrius, but in the eastern
provinces Timarchus the Milesian, although unpopular, was not so easily
displaced. When the system to which he belonged broke up, he followed the
precedent of Molon and took the diadem.
Whatever success
Demetrius had won, he was dogged by the displeasure of Rome, an impalpable
disability, but one which counted for a great deal in the East. Timarchus, on
the other hand, reckoned upon Rome’s friendship, not only because he was a counterpoise
to Demetrius, but because he had often gone with his brother as ambassador to
Rome in the days of Antiochus Epiphanes, and not a few of the Senators had
swallowed his golden baits. Demetrius was hardly established in Syria when
Timarchus appeared in Rome. He had come now to ask for a kingdom, to be
recognized by Rome as King of the Medes. The Senate graciously handed him a
piece of paper which announced that “as far as Rome was concerned Timarchus was
King”. That was enough; Timarchus went back happy with his piece of paper to
display it to the other Eastern powers. Artaxias of Armenia, whom Antiochus
Epiphanes had compelled a few years before to do homage to the Seleucid throne,
gave Timarchus his alliance. The new King multiplied his forces. He subjugated
many of the surrounding peoples.
Demetrius, who had
set out in defiance of Rome, was not frightened by Timarchus’ piece of paper,
nor even by his military establishment. It would seem that Timarchus was
advancing to the invasion of Syria, making for the Zeugma upon the Euphrates,
when Demetrius encountered him. And once more at the advent of the Seleucid the
ground gave way under the feet of the rebel. Timarchus, who had followed the
example of Molon, shared his fate. In Babylonia, Demetrius was received with
transports of joy. After the tyranny of the base man, Seleucia hailed the true
King with the shout of Saviour. It is the surname by which he is known (about
160)
While Demetrius was
fighting Timarchus, he also labored to rid himself of the ban fastened upon him
by Rome. Its practical inconvenience was seen when he attempted to renew the
alliance with the Cappadocian court. Ariarathes V had been alienated by Lysias,
and it might be thought that he would be ready to welcome the overthrower of that
criminal administration. He was a man of whom our authorities speak highly, as
having inherited from his mother Antiochis a love of Hellenic culture without
her unscrupulous ambition. The Cappadocian court now for the first time
attracted Greek men of letters. Ariarathes himself seems to have studied
philosophy, and even applied its precepts to his practice. When discord broke
out in the family which ruled Sophene—the house of Zariadris—the rival
claimants betook themselves to the two neighbouring kings—Mithrobuzanes to
Ariarathes, and the other to Artaxias of Armenia. Ariarathes brought back
Mithrobuzanes into the principality with a Cappadocian army. Artaxias now
proposed to him that they should each make away with his protégé and divide
Sophene between them. Ariarathes rejected the suggestion with loathing. Nay,
more, his representations were so powerful with Artaxias, that the young man
whom Artaxias had proposed to murder found himself treated with more courtesy
than before.
Demetrius, soon
after coming to Syria, made overtures to his cousin, the king of Cappadocia. He
offered him the hand of his sister. But Ariarathes thought to win the favor of
Rome by repelling these advances. He refused the Seleucid princess. Naturally,
any possibility of friendship between the two courts instantly vanished.
Demetrius left
nothing undone to conciliate Roman opinion. The embassy, headed by Tiberius
Gracchus, dispatched in 162 after his flight, arrived, perhaps not till the
following year, in Cappadocia. It was here met by Menochares, the ambassador of
Demetrius. Menochares was probably instructed to ascertain its intentions, and
he returned to Antioch to report the result of his interview. Could Demetrius
win the commission to his cause? Fortunately Gracchus himself was well disposed
to him, and Demetrius plied the envoys with fresh deputations before they
reached Syria. They were met in Pamphylia, and again in Rhodes, with assurances
that Demetrius would do everything to meet the wishes of Rome. Let only Rome
utter the word “King Demetrius!”. The friendship of Gracchus stood Demetrius in
good stead. His report was favorable, and the momentous word was uttered. But
Demetrius, although recognized as King, had not yet won confidence. In fact the
Senate could not have confidence in any possessor of the Seleucid throne unless
he were a nonentity.
Envoys of Demetrius
could now be received in Rome, and immediately on his recognition (160)
Demetrius sent Menochares to convey a “crown” of 10,000 gold pieces —a
“thank-offering” for his nurture—and the slayer of Octavius. Beside Leptines,
who had done the deed, there was sent the unhappy rhetorician, Isocrates, who
had glorified it Leptines maintained the calm confidence of the fanatic to the
end. He had presented himself to Demetrius soon after his accession, begged him
to hold the city of Laodicea in no wise responsible for what had occurred, and
stated that he was perfectly ready to go and convince the Senate that he had
been inspired. His enthusiasm was so evidently genuine that it was deemed
superfluous to fetter or guard him. Isocrates on the other hand was put into a
wooden collar and chains, and abandoned himself to despair. Polybius, who
describes the arrival of the pair in Rome, writes no doubt of what he saw.
Isocrates had hardly eaten for months. He made a marvellous figure. For
more than a year he had not washed or cut his hair or his nails. Through the
matted growth which covered his head his eyes glared and rolled strangely. “A
man who has lost his humanity”, the sententious historian observes in this
connection, “is more frightful than a beast”. Leptines was still quite happy;
he felt quite sure that the Senate had only to hear him to set him free.
The Senate was
thrown into some embarrassment by the embassy, as they did not want to make up
their quarrel with the Seleucid King. They decided, however, to receive the
gold, but they refused the murderer. They did not at all want to seem, by
executing justice, to have settled their score. They returned Demetrius a frigid
answer: “he would meet with consideration if his conduct were satisfactory to
the Senate”.
This was high
language; it might be thought to argue that the days of independent states in
the eastern Mediterranean were already numbered, that Syria was practically a
province of Rome. But, as a matter of fact, we see in the period of nearly a
hundred years, which opens with the return of Demetrius, a great waning of
Roman influence. In 162 Rome by its commissions dictated to Cappadocia,
destroyed the material of war in the Seleucid kingdom, apportioned the
dominions of the Ptolemies. It seemed on the point of assuming the formal
sovereignty in these regions. But from the return of Demetrius its overt
domination ceases. The eastern powers are once more left for the most part to
their own devices. The family quarrels of the houses of Seleucus and Ptolemy
are fought out with no interference from Rome, no repetition of the diplomacy
of Popillius.
The cause of this
retrogression is the change which passed over the ruling aristocracy. In the
day of adversity, when Hannibal was at the door, the Roman aristocracy had
showed inflexible resolution; it was rapidly becoming corrupt and indolent in
the day of prosperity. No settled policy could coexist with the corruption which
became every day more flagrant. Decrees of the Senate could be procured by the
highest bidder; an offender against the majesty of Rome could buy himself off.
The prestige of Rome was impaired when it was found to issue declarations which
it did not enforce. It had given its countenance, if not its friendship, to
Timarchus; he had perished unsupported and unavenged. It had refused its
countenance to Demetrius, and he had established himself without it. When Rome
once more imposed its will upon the nations, the power was wielded by the
aristocracy no longer. It was then in the hands of this or that great general,
who used his legions for his own ends. It was the state of things which became
regularized in the monarchy of the Caesars.
But even during the
period of oligarchic misrule Rome maintained a certain influence in the East,
and that in two ways. In the first place, much of the prestige it had acquired
by the overthrow of Antiochus III and of the Macedonian kingdom kept its hold
upon the minds of men. The world is always ruled half by imagination. In the
second place, the functions it had come to exercise as universal arbitrator and
regulator gave it a commanding position for diplomatic intrigue, and without
any overt intervention it could play off one potentate against another, promote
all elements of intestine discord, and in fine make it very unpleasant for
anyone who had incurred its ill-will. Naturally this subterranean influence of
Rome may often be suspected rather than proved.
The Senate continued
therefore to trade upon the terror of the Roman name, to issue decrees and send
out interminable commissions to arbitrate the affairs of the nations. Its
countenance and favor continued to be worth seeking, and the ambassadors of
eastern princes did not cease to bring their crowns of gold and elaborate
flatteries. But at home the same princes took their own way with little
restraint.
Demetrius, with the
friends of Rome looking askance upon him, was thrown upon his own resources.
But his resolution was only stiffened by his isolation. Was it impossible for a
strong ruler to restore even now the Seleucid kingdom to strength, independence
and glory?
The internal
government of Demetrius Soter we can gauge by what took place in Judaea. An
unstable compromise was what we saw result in that quarter from the feeble
administration of Lysias; the Hasmonaean party had been left in power. But it
was quite obvious that the Hasmonaean house, stimulated by the glory it had won
in the war for religion, would rest short of nothing but its own absolute
supremacy within the Jewish state, and the emancipation of that state from any
outside control. From the point of view of a statesman whose object was to hold
together the Seleucid kingdom, the Hasmonaean house must certainly be deposed.
A statesman would, of course, spare in every possible way the religious
sensibilities of the Jews, but to leave the Hasmonaean house in power would be
blind folly. His task would be the easier in that the object for which the
Hasmonaeans now contended—their own supremacy—did not command the same
passionate adherence on the part of the more earliest spirits of the nation
that the cause of religion had done. The Hasidim were satisfied if the Law was
safe.
These
considerations perhaps hardly needed to be pressed upon Demetrius by the man
who soon after his accession presented himself in Antioch. He called himself
Alcimus, after the sound of his Hebrew name Jakim. He belonged to the priestly
tribe, the house of Aaron, and he was come to claim the high-priesthood from
King Demetrius. According to one account he had already at some period in those
days of confusion officiated as High-priest. But he had associated himself with
the Hellenists, and since the Hasmonaeans had got the upper hand had been driven
out of the country together with every other prominent person of that party.
Alcimus had a long story of all that the friends of the Seleucid government had
suffered at the hands of their countrymen; it was easy for him to convince the
King that a government which abandoned its adherents was not likely to serve
its own cause. Bacchides was charged to instate Alcimus as High-priest in
Jerusalem by military force.
Alcimus came to
Jerusalem as the legitimate High-priest of the family of Aaron. Possibly the
functions had been usurped of late by the Hasmonaean brethren. If so, it would
account for the fact that their old associates, the Hasidim, had been stumbled
by this violation of the Mosaic order, and were prepared to receive the Aaronic
High-priest with good-will.
Their only
stipulation was that the blood-feud between the two parties should not now be
continued by reprisals upon those faithful to the Law. This condition Alcimus
thought it politic to agree to, and equally politic to violate soon after. He
thought the opposition would be broken by a fresh proscription. Bacchides also
did some killing on his own account before leaving. The anti-Hasmonaean party,
who had been scattered abroad, flocked home again.
Judas and the
nationalists had been driven out of Jerusalem, but they had not been crushed.
They were still at large, and their flying raids made them a terror in the open
country. It became unsafe for the partisans of the High-priest to venture
outside the walled towns. Alcimus felt the scale turning against him, and
within twelve months of his instatement carried a fresh appeal to Antioch.
The task of
crushing the Hasmonaeans was entrusted by Demetrius to Nicanor, whom one seems
to see through the more or less distorting medium of our Jewish records as a
bluff, outspoken, simple-hearted man. He began by inviting Judas to a personal
interview; and when the Jewish patriot and the Macedonian captain came face to
face, the result was that the two men became friends. In Jerusalem, Nicanor
gave the nationalists his favor. His idea seems to have been that if they were
not worried, the Hasmonaean brethren would follow his advice to settle down in
quiet domestic life, and everything would go happily. He dismissed the levies
from the neighboring countries whom he had gathered about him. Judas showed
himself openly in Jerusalem by Nicanor’s side, and indeed, we are told, took a
wife, as Nicanor wished, and began family life.
The turn things
were taking could not but be very disquieting to Alcimus. It can hardly be
doubted that he was justified in questioning the possibility of “killing home
rule by kindness”. On his representations to the court an order came to Nicanor
to apprehend Judas and send him a prisoner to Antioch. This was hard on
Nicanor, but he was a soldier and knew his duty. He was, however, too
transparent for Judas not to divine at once by his manner what had happened.
Judas instantly vanished, and Nicanor found himself placed in an ugly position
with regard to the court. He had no idea of how to attain his object except by
direct vehemence, and he felt sure that the priests were secretly in league
with Judas. He knew at any rate that it was through the Temple and the sacred
ritual that the Jews' most sensitive point could be reached. To the Temple he
went, and ordered the priests, whom he found officiating, to deliver Judas into
his hands. Naturally he was only answered by blank looks and protestations of
ignorance. He believed that this was all cunning, and then took place that
scene which stamped itself upon the recollection of the Jews—Nicanor standing
in the Temple court, his arm stretched out toward the House of the Lord, and
protesting that if the man were not given up he would lay it even with the
ground and erect in its place a temple to Dionysus.
Meanwhile Judas was
gathering his forces in the country, and Nicanor presently learnt that the man
he was ordered to seize was surrounded by his armed bands. There was nothing
for it but to go out and engage him in battle. But Nicanor had dismissed a
great part of his troops; he was obliged to rely to a certain extent upon the
Jewish levies who followed him by constraint. And these were an obstacle rather
than a help. They refused to attack when ordered to do so on the Sabbath, and
talked to him about the Sovereign in heaven. “And I”, cried the plain man in
extremity, “am a sovereign on earth, who command you to take up your arms and
do the King’s business”.
With such forces as
these Nicanor closed with the bands on Judas at Adasa (about 3,5 miles north-east
of Beth-horon) on the 13th of Adar (March) 161. The victory of Judas was signal
and complete. Nicanor was found on the field “lying dead in full armor”. His
head and the arm which he had stretched out against the Temple were cut off and
carried by Judas in triumph to Jerusalem to be hung up over against the
sanctuary. It was the last victory of Judas, and, in respect of the high
standing of Nicanor, his greatest. The anniversary of the battle was kept as a
day of rejoicing. It is only within the last few centuries that the Jews have
forgotten “Nicanor’s day”.
It was significant
of the transference of the nationalist struggle from the plane of religious
enthusiasm to that of worldly policy that Judas now looked about for a foreign
alliance. And, like Timarchus, he looked to Rome. Rome had not yet in 161
recognized Demetrius as King. Eupolemus and Jason, two members of the
nationalist party who had nevertheless learnt to speak Greek, were sent to
declare to the Senate the desire of the Jewish people for separation from the
Seleucid kingdom, and to invoke the influence of Rome on their behalf. The
Senate, welcoming at this moment any opportunity of furthering the
disintegration of the kingdom of Demetrius, concluded an alliance with “the
nation of the Jews”, which yet was so framed as to leave Rome a loophole of
escape from its obligations should they prove inconvenient.
Before, however,
the effect of the Jewish embassy could be known in Syria, Demetrius had
disconcerted all the designs of the nationalists by his promptitude of action.
There was now a government which was not put off its purpose by a single check.
No sooner was the news of Nicanor’s disaster come to Antioch than an adequate
army under Bacchides was sent to deal with the situation. About a month after
the battle of Adasa, Bacchides was in Jerusalem (April 161). The nationalists
were perfectly aware of the different character of this expedition, and their
self-confidence deserted them. When Bacchides established his camp in Berea
(Bi'r-az-Zait, north-west of Gophna?) the bands of Judas began to melt away.
The tactics of the King's general reduced him to the alternative of flight or
the risking of an immediate battle. Judas, in spite of the entreaties of his
friends, disdained the former, and with forlorn heroism his little band charged
the royal army. At the end of the day Judas himself lay dead upon the field of
Eleasa. His last followers were scattered in flight. Demetrius had taken speedy
recompense for Nicanor.
Alcimus, who since
the battle of Adasa had fled to Antioch, was now once more restored to power in
Jerusalem. The anti-Hasmonaean party came again into the ascendant. But the
vital problem—that of subjugating the country districts, where the Hasmonaean
power had its roots—required more drastic measures than had hitherto been used.
The organization of the country in the government interest must succeed the
dispersion of the rebels, and the wandering remnants of the bands of Judas be
cleared out of it. Bacchides chose members of the party of the High-priest to
rule in the country with the King’s authority, and to track down on the spot
the adherents of the Hasmonaeans. Jonathan, Simon and John, the brothers of
Judas, were still alive to take the place of the fallen leader. They drew off with
their followers into the wilderness of Tekoah, the bare pastoral country by the
Dead Sea, and mingled in the petty warfare of Arab or Ammonite tribes, which
went on without interference from the government in these regions. The Jewish
bands raided, and were themselves raided, by turns; they lost one of their
leaders, the Hasmonaean John, in some obscure affray. Bacchides attempted to
follow them up and exterminate them, but they escaped across the marshes where
the Jordan falls into the Dead Sea. The wilderness has in all ages limited the
success of the royal governments in Asia.
But Judaea at any
rate Bacchides cleared of rebels, and he adopted the only measure likely to
ensure permanent tranquillity—planting strong posts around all its approaches.
The akra in Jerusalem, Gezer and Beth-sur, where garrisons already sat, were
furnished with fresh supplies and strengthened. New posts were fixed at Bethel,
on the northern entrance into Judaea from Samaria, at Emmaus and Beth-horon to
guard the western defiles, at Jericho to command the ascent from the Jordan
valley, and in certain other places whose sites cannot be identified. As an
additional security the sons of the principal men were lodged in the akra.
Bacchides then returned home. The aspect of Judaea with its chain of military
posts itself declared the difference between the government of Demetrius and
that of Lysias.
As for Alcimus, he
did not enjoy his elevation long. He died, just before Bacchides left Judaea,
of a paralytic stroke. His countrymen saw in this a judgment for his impiety in
beginning some alterations in the Temple buildings which involved a disturbance
of the “works of the prophets”.
In 160, as we saw,
Demetrius obtained the recognition, though not the favor, of Rome. The
principle once given him by Polybius, “Do boldly, and Rome will acquiesce in
the accomplished fact”, seemed to have been justified by its success. And if he
had got his kingdom in spite of Rome's veto, it was possible that the veto
might be as safely disregarded in an attempt to restore the Seleucid influence
in lands whence it had been excluded since Antiochus the Great King. On the
north the Cappadocian kingdom adjoined the Seleucid across the barrier of the
Taurus. To make Cappadocia once more a vassal state would be a great step
towards the recovery of Asia Minor. Beside this, Demetrius had to show
Ariarathes that a Seleucid princess could not be slighted with impunity even by
a friend of Rome. The situation in Cappadocia soon of itself invited
interference.
If there is one
characteristic feature of this final period of decline in the kingdoms of the
Nearer East which were formed out of the break-up of Alexander’s Empire it is
the universal domestic quarrels. We have just seen how the quarrel of
Philometor and Euergetes in Egypt gave an opening for Roman interference. The
domestic wars of a kingdom are invariably used at this time by its neighbors
for their own advantage. A principal weapon one power employs against another
is a rival claimant.
A quarrel broke out
in the royal house of Cappadocia. Ariarathes V had, as we saw, two elder
brothers, or putative brothers, one of whom, Orophernes, had been educated in
Ionia. Demetrius entered into an agreement with Orophernes to set him instead
of Ariarathes upon the Cappadocian throne for the sum of 1000 talents. Once
more, therefore, a Seleucid army appeared north of the Taurus and drove the
king of Cappadocia from his throne. Orophernes was successfully instated in his
place.
Ariarathes carried
his cry to Rome, but there also came ambassadors from Orophernes and
ambassadors from Demetrius to tell a very different story from that told by
Ariarathes to the Senate. The Senate, of course, had no means of judging what
was true, but the multitude of voices told more forcibly than the one, and the
fugitive King made but a poor figure to the gorgeous ambassadors (157 BC). The
Senate decided haphazard that Ariarathes and Orophernes should divide the
kingdom between them. And even so it does not appear to have done more than
issue a paper decree.
Demetrius had
reached the zenith of his fortunes. The eyes of the eastern kings began to be
fixed with alarm upon the resuscitated power. There was once more a man on the
throne of Seleucus who did as he would in the East, who helped more effectually
than Rome, and against whom the protection of Rome availed nothing. There were
many men living who remembered the days of Antiochus the Great King before Rome
had intervened in the East, and now that the vigor of Rome seemed to be waning,
was it impossible that the grandson of Antiochus might yet again restore the
Seleucid Empire?
But no personal
ability and vigor in Demetrius could compensate for some of the essential
weaknesses in his position. Philip of Macedon could make a strong state because
he had the hardy Macedonian stock to build upon as a foundation; but what
empire could be based upon the hybrid population of Syria, pleasure-loving and
fickle, in whom Greek lightness and Oriental indolence were combined? Demetrius
had none of the unfastidious bonhomie of his uncle Antiochus. He was not, as we
saw in Rome, averse to conviviality, but he made distinctions as to his
company. He despised the race which was found in Antioch and the Syrian cities,
and did not take pains to conceal what he felt. Naturally this did not make him
popular. Antiochus Epiphanes had been a typical representative in his character
and manners of Syrian Hellenism; the Antiochenes had felt him one of
themselves, but Demetrius withdrew from contact with them; he built himself a
square tower outside Antioch, wherein he sat inaccessible to brood over schemes
of conquest. His eagle face, rarely shown, his hauteur, his demand upon
them for serious national effort, vexed the Syrians and made them ripe for
revolt.
There was also
another circumstance against him, that the neighboring kings, however much they
may have disliked their position as vassals of Rome, much preferred it to being
vassals of the Seleucid King. Rome was farther off and apparently growing
indolent. In proportion as Demetrius grew strong there was added to
disaffection at home hostility abroad. Orophernes only might be counted his
ally, and had Fate given him in Orophernes an ally of any worth, things might
have taken a very different course. But Orophernes proved a ruler of the worst
kind. He wrung all the money he could from the country by the most violent
extortion, and lavished what he got upon favourites and strangers. His manners,
acquired in Ionia, outraged the feelings of the Cappadocian barons. He trampled
upon their religious and moral traditions, and they were shocked to see him
following wild and dissolute cults unknown to their fathers. It was impossible
that the protégé of Demetrius should hold his throne long.
In Pergamos the
interference of Demetrius in Cappadocia had been very ill received. Eumenes '
at once struck a blow on his own account. We have seen that one of the chief
weapons with which a king was attacked was a rival claimant. The world soon
learnt that the second son of Antiochus Epiphanes, Alexander, had been secretly
conveyed away when Eupator was put to death, had been discovered by Eumenes in
Smyrna, brought to Pergamos, and there crowned with the diadem as the genuine
Seleucid King. On the other hand the court of Antioch asserted, and many
well-informed persons believed, that it was a trick of Eumenes, who had
bethought him of supplying the required claimant artificially, and had picked
out some good-looking boy of fourteen who bore an accidental resemblance to the
late King of Syria. Eumenes sent the boy on to Cilicia, placing him under the
protection of Zenophanes, a chieftain friendly to himself who maintained in the
hills his independence against the Seleucid government. Here Alexander was like
the sword of Damocles over the head of Demetriua Zenophanes industriously
circulated the report that the son of Antiochus was about to cross the Amanus
to claim his own. The expectation served to keep alive the unrest in Syria. At
the same time, should any outbreak occur, Alexander was at hand.
Almost immediately
after his elevation of Alexander, Eumenes died (159). But his brother, Attalus
II Philadelphus, who succeeded him, prosecuted his plans against Demetrius with
vigor. When it appeared two years later that Rome was not prepared to give Ariarathes
anything but platonic benevolence, Attalus invited him to return to Asia and
avail himself of a more effectual champion. Ariarathes was glad enough to do
so. But his journey home was not unattended with danger. The ambassadors of
Orophernes dogged him from Rome, and in Corcyra formed a design to kill him;
but Ariarathes was beforehand with them, and they were dead men before their
plot had come to a head. Again at Corinth agents of Orophemes were about him,
and he had a hair’s-breadth escape.
Attalus escorted
him with Pergamene troops to Cappadocia, the Senate perhaps blessing the
enterprise from afar. The power of Orophernes was already tottering. Not only
had he alienated his subjects, but he had no money left, after his lavish
expenditure, to pay his mercenaries. They were on the brink of mutiny. In this
extremity he pillaged the great temple of the Cappadocian Zeus on Mount
Ariadne, which had been inviolate from time immemorial. On the attack of
Attalus his defence collapsed. He fled to Antioch and Ariarathes was reinstated
in the kingdom.
Demetrius had
encountered an ominous check in Asia Minor. Two fragments of Polybius throw a
momentary light upon his schemes in another direction. The island of Cyprus,
long coveted by the Seleucid kings, was about this time the battle-ground of
the two brother Ptolemies. Demetrius sent a secret offer to Archias, who commanded
there for Philometor, of 500 talents and high honors at the Seleucid court if
he would put the island into his hands (154). Archias consented, but before the
arrangement could be carried out, the plot was discovered by Philometor, and
Archias was arrested. He hanged himself with the rope of a curtain. Demetrius
had turned another cousin into an enemy.
The smouldering
discontent in Syria was receiving fresh fuel. We have a record of one of the
incidents which served to increase it. Among the condottieri in the King's
service at Antioch was a certain Andriscus of Adramyttium, who professed to be
the son of Perseus, called himself Philip, and expressed his hope of being
restored by Demetrius, "his kinsman", to the throne of his fathers.
He roused a strong sensational interest in the populace of Antioch, and calls
began to come to Demetrius from the "Macedonians" of the street that
he should set King Philip in the ancestral kingdom. It was not the defect of
Demetrius to lack enterprise, but he treated this demand with the contempt it
deserved. Then the clamour grew; crowds surged about the palace doors. A cry
arose that Demetrius must restore his cousin or give up the pretence of being a
king. Demetrius saw he must take drastic steps. He caused Andriscus to be
seized at night and sent to Rome (about 151-150)
The isolation of
Demetrius became daily more patent. Even Orophernes, residing at Antioch under
his protection, conceived the idea of turning the general sedition to his own
profit and supplanting his patron. He entered into secret negotiations with the
leaders of the Antiochene mob. Demetrius penetrated his designs, and put him
under close guard at Seleucia, upon the loyalty of which town he could perhaps
better depend. As the rival claimant to Cappadocia he might again be useful
some day, and was therefore not put to death.
But already the
danger from Alexander, the would-be son of Antiochus, had taken a far more
menacing form. He was no longer threatening from the Cilician hills. In the
summer of 153 he had appeared in Rome with Laodice, the daughter of Antiochus.
They were conducted by the old intriguer, Heraclides of Miletus, who had now the
grateful task of damaging his brother's destroyer. For a long time the party
resided in Rome, making such a figure as was best calculated to impress public
opinion before Heraclides thought the psychological moment come to approach the
Senate. Nor did he during that time forget the old art by which he had made his
way in Rome. At last the two children of Antiochus were brought before the
Senate. Alexander spoke first—a formal speech about the cordial relations which
had subsisted between his father and Rome, and so on. Then Heraclides made a
moving oration. He began with an encomium of Antiochus Epiphanes, went on to denounce
Demetrius, and finally delivered an appeal in the lofty name of Justice for the
restoration of the true-born issue of the late King. It was all beautifully
staged, and the Senate was immensely impressed. Only a few of the shrewder
heads, Polybius says, saw through the business. A decree was made to the
effect: “Whereas Alexander and Laodice, the children of a king who was sometime
our friend and ally, have approached the Senate and represented their cause,
the Senate has given them authority to return to the kingdom of their father,
and has decreed that they shall receive assistance, as they have required”. It
was a triumph for Heraclides. He returned to Asia with his charges, and fixed
his headquarters at Ephesus, to prepare for the invasion of Syria. The condottieri of most renown in the Hellenic world received a summons to take service
under a king approved by Rome.
The children of
Antiochus would not want for allies. The policy of Demetrius had brought about
a coalition against him of his three neighbour kings. Attalus, Ariarathes and
Ptolemy Philometor. Alexander was “girt with the might of all the (Nearer)
East”. And Demetrius had no security at home. Antioch was almost in open
rebellion. That he knew how desperate the struggle was which lay before him is
shown by his sending two of his sons, Demetrius and Antiochus, out of the
country.
The first move in
the attack was for Alexander to make a descent upon the coast town of
Ptolemais. It was held by the garrison of Demetrius, but they had been infected
by the prevailing sedition and opened to Alexander. Alexander had thus got a
footing in his “paternal realm”, and in Ptolemais he set up his rival court
till his cause should have made further progress. There were now two kings in
the country, each bidding for the support of its various communities and races.
Our scanty
authorities do not permit a connected narrative of the war. The Book of
Maccabees and Josephus, who follows it, make no mention of the allied kings at
all. But the expressions of Justin, Appian and Eusebius imply that the allied
kings took a principal part. In the first battle, Justin says, Demetrius was
victorious. Possibly Alexander risked a battle with his mercenaries before his
allies arrived upon the scene. In the final battle Demetrius had, no doubt, the
whole forces of the coalition against him. Undaunted to the end, he was still
able to make a good fight. His left wing routed the enemy's right, and pursued
it for a long way, inflicting heavy loss. Even the camp of the enemy was
sacked. But the right, where Demetrius himself was, gave way. He found himself
almost alone among the enemy. In those days of close fighting, a single expert
horseman could do some damage. But, charging hither and thither, Demetrius rode
his horse into some boggy ground, where it plunged and threw him. Then the
enemy made a ring about him, and he became the mark for missiles from all sides.
Showing no sign of surrender, he sank at last full of wounds, dying worthily of
the race of fighters from which he sprang (150).
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