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THE SELEUCID EMPIRE. 358-251 BC. HOUSE OF SELEUCUS
CHAPTER 30.
ANTIOCHUS SIDETES
The tedious circle
in which the later history of the Seleucid kingdom runs—the rival claimant
ousting the King in possession by the favor of the army and people, then making
himself unpopular, and being in turn ousted by the oscillation of the people’s
favor to another claimant—was about to fulfill itself in the case of Tryphon.
But the new
claimant was not a man like the other ineffectual personalities who flit across
the stage in that time of ruin and confusion. One more man capable of rule and
of great action, one more luminous figure, the house which had borne the empire
of Asia had to show the world before it went out into darkness.
Antiochus, the
younger surviving son of Demetrius I, had grown up in the Pamphylian city of
Side. Its people were among the boldest seafarers of that coast; their naval
contingent had formed a principal element in the fleet of Antiochus the Great
King. And that the seafaring tradition was maintained is shown by the fact that
in the last century BC the people of Side were prominent among the
pirates, and Side was a great pirate stronghold and mart. It was in close touch
with the hill-peoples behind, who, as we have seen, were ready to join any
adventure which promised fighting and loot. Such an environment might not be an
ideal one for the education of a prince, but it was incomparably better than a
Syrian palace, and wild seafaring men were better comrades than eunuchs and
panders.
The young prince,
now about twenty, was in Rhodes when the news that his brother was a captive in
Iran reached him. He at once made ready to step into the breach and rescue the
heritage of his house from strangers. The mercenaries were got together and a
fleet, prepared no doubt in the docks of Side! He sent letters to the various
communities of Syria announcing his purpose, and summoning them to give him
their allegiance. If the document in the Book of the Maccabees can be trusted,
he already assumed in these letters the title of king. But the coast cities of
Coele-Syria, overawed by the garrisons of Tryphon, refused to open to him. Nor
does he seem to have anticipated a favorable reception in those which
acknowledged Demetrius.
But it was
impossible for the party of the legitimate house to continue the struggle
against Tryphon without a head. Even at Seleucia there was a movement to
deliver up the city to Tryphon. The councillors of Queen Cleopatra at last told
her that there was no course left but to call in Antiochus to take the place of
Demetrius, both as king and as her (third) husband. Thus was entrance into the
kingdom opened for Antiochus. He arrived at Seleucia in 138, married Cleopatra
and assumed the diadem as King Antiochus Euergetes.
Antiochus was in
Seleucia! At the tidings the star of Tryphon finally declined. Another king of
the old house, whose record was as yet unstained, of whom men might hope
anything—the news awoke all the old loyalty, and the soldiery upon whom Tryphon
relied were soon flocking to Seleucia. Tryphon was left with only a remnant. He
was rapidly driven from northern Syria, and Antiochus entered the capital.
Tryphon fell back
upon the southern coast, the region with which his relations, like those of
Alexander Balas, had been close, and shut himself in the strong town of Dora.
Antiochus pressed his flight and invested the place both by sea and land. At
last, reduced to extremities, Tryphon slipped out of the harbor in a boat and
reached Ptolemais. But it was not safe apparently for him to stay there, for he
went on to Orthosia, and thence crossing the hills into the Orontes valley,
made his last stand in the place where he had been bred and had first built up
his power, Apamea. In some fortress of that region he was again besieged and
finally captured. Antiochus would not, of course, allow him to live, but he
permitted him to be his own executioner. With the disappearance of Tryphon
there were none left to claim the Syrian throne but the children of Demetrius
Soter.
The vigorous spirit
and the ability of his father had been inherited by Antiochus “of Side”. He
addressed himself with success to remedy the frightful disorganization which
the double kingship had produced in Syria. Communities which had broken away
from all superior authority were taught that they were once more members of a
kingdom. Among such communities was the Jewish state.
Already while
Antiochus was sitting before Dora there were ominous signs of his intention to
regulate this quarter of the kingdom. The immunity and internal freedom
conceded to the Jews he did not revoke, but he could not pass over the
complaints brought him by those who had been driven from their homes or subjected
to forced contributions by the Jewish bands in the regions round Judaea, nor
the seizure of places beyond the Jewish border, such as Gazara and Joppa. For
the injury done to his subjects he demanded from Simon an indemnity of 500
talents, and for the places he had seized 500 talents more—a perfectly rational
and, as far as we can judge, moderate demand.
Athenobius, one of
the Friends, was sent to convey the King's requisition to the High-priest
Simon, according to the custom of the East, tried to bargain, and started low
down with the offer of 100 talents. But the King's officer had had an
opportunity to observe the great wealth already accumulated by the ruling
family of the Jews, and he met Simon's attempt to bargain with stony silence.
Antiochus, on
receiving his report, instructed Cendebaeus, the governor of the Philistine coast,
to apply force. He himself was occupied for the time with the pursuit of
Tryphon. But the attempts of Cendebaeus to enter Judaea were unfortunate. Simon
was now too old to take the field in person, but his sons, Judas and John,
commanded the Jewish forces and drove Cendebaeus back into the plain.
As soon as
Antiochus had settled more pressing concerns he himself undertook the reduction
of the Jews to order. This was not till the fourth year of his reign (in the
spring or summer of 134). By then the last of the brethren of Judas was no
more. Simon had ended his life a year before (February 135) by a family
tragedy. His son-in-law, Ptolemy the son of Abub, designing to secure the first
place in the Jewish state for himself, had invited Simon to a carousal in the
fortress of Dok, and then fallen upon the old warrior while he was in his cups.
But Ptolemy's design failed owing to the promptitude of John, the son of Simon,
who at the time of the murder was in Gazara. Before Ptolemy could seize
Jerusalem, John was already there installed in the room of his father as
High-priest and head of the state. It was in the first year of John, surnamed
Hyrcanus, that Antiochus took the subjugation of Judaea in hand.
The King came with
a strength sufficient for the task before him. He had a just appreciation of
the mixture of force and conciliation required to meet the case. To put down
the religion of Israel, to trample upon Jewish prejudice were ideas that he was
too good a statesman to entertain. But till the supremacy of the Seleucid
government had been asserted there could be no talk of compromise, and
Antiochus, when he struck, struck home. The Jewish forces were driven from the
field into Jerusalem and a business-like siege of the city begun. Seven camps
hemmed it in. The pinch of famine was soon felt, and Hyrcanus was embarrassed
by the great population of non-combatants. He tried to expel them, but they
were not allowed to pass the besiegers' lines, so that they wandered starving
under the walls of the city. The feeling which the spectacle awoke in the city
overbore the plans of Hyrcanus, and when the Feast of Tabernacles (October 132
?) came round, he was compelled to receive the miserable people back. Antiochus
showed his conciliatory spirit by granting a truce during the sacred season. He
even sent in on his own account a splendid offering of victims and incense to
the Temple. This wise consideration on the point where the Jews were most
sensitive effected as much as his victorious arms. Hyrcanus sent to ask for terms.
The short-sighted councillors of the King now urged him to follow the policy of
his great-uncle Antiochus and break down Jewish exclusiveness by the forcible
violation of its sanctities. Now that the Jewish state was at his feet, let him
take the opportunity to make away with it once and for ever. The character of
Antiochus VII emerged above the influences which surrounded him. He would not
even attempt to re-impose the financial burdens, whose remittance he had
promised, before coming into the kingdom, to confirm, or interfere with the
internal affairs of the Jews. But he insisted that the besieged should
surrender their arms, that a rent or tribute should be paid for the places
occupied by the Jews outside Judaea, like Joppa and Gazara, and that the city
should admit a garrison. To this last condition, however, the Jews showed such
repugnance that Antiochus accepted their alternative proposal that they should
pay 500 talents of silver and give hostages, amongst whom was to be the brother
of Hyrcanus himself. Antiochus also, before he retired, saw the strong ring-
wall built by the Hasmonaeans around Jerusalem pulled down (132).
Antiochus had
attained a satisfactory result with the minimum of irritation. Respect had been
won for the Seleucid power and the Jewish state rendered inoffensive, whilst
its religious and internal liberty was left unimpaired. It is a remarkable
testimony to the greatness of Antiochus as a statesman that he, the very prince
who broke the Jewish power and took Jerusalem, should have got from the Jews
the surname of Eusebes, the Pious.
It is regrettable
that we cannot trace the reorganizing and adjusting work of Antiochus in the
other provinces of the kingdom besides Judaea. Now those who had been true to
the house of Seleucus in the day of adversity received their reward. Seleucia,
the faithful city, appears as “sacrosanct and inviolable” from the accession of
Antiochus VII.
About 134 the
ambassadors of Antiochus were in Rome. It is recorded that they were charged
with splendid presents for Scipio Aemilianus, who was then besieging Numantia
in Spain, presents which, instead of receiving in secret, as other Senators did
in like cases, he publicly made over to the state.
In 130 Antiochus
considered that the reorganization of Seleucid rule in Syria was sufficiently
complete for him to take in hand the recovery of the Eastern provinces.
Demetrius was still
a captive at the Parthian court in Hyrcania. He had become more or less
transformed into a Parthian prince. His beard had been allowed to grow, as the
fashion was among barbarian kings. Mithridates had even, before he died in 138,
caused him to establish a new household, and had given him his own daughter
Rhodogune for wife; he used to talk to his captive about one day driving out Tryphon
by the Parthian arms and restoring Demetrius to his throne. We are already
familiar with such promises given to an exiled king, and know in what sense
they were intended to be carried out. Mithridates was succeeded by his son
Phraates II. After this Demetrius made attempts to escape. He was helped by the
most faithful of his friends, a certain Callimander, whom, when he went to the
East, he had left behind in Syria. When later on the news came of his capture,
Callimander resolved, however difficult it might be, to join him. He had found
some Arabs willing to conduct him for a sum of money to Babylon by the desert
tracks, and when the party arrived in Babylon, Callimander was disguised as a
Parthian. Thence he had made his way to Hyrcania and revealed himself to
Demetrius. His experience on this adventurous journey he thought to turn to
account by making it, together with Demetrius, in the reverse sense. The two
set out, but before reaching the frontier they were headed off by the horsemen
sent in pursuit and brought back to the Parthian kingh’s presence. For
Callimander, Phraates had nothing but praise, and he rewarded so signal an
instance of fidelity substantially; but Demetrius be reprimanded severely, and
sent him back to his Parthian wife. His confinement was made stricter. When,
however, Rhodogune had borne him children he was thought to be rooted, and the
guard was relaxed. But again Demetrius made the attempt with Callimander, and
again they were dragged back from the frontier. Phraates sent Demetrius in
mockery the present of some golden dice, to give interest to a life which he
apparently felt irksome. But Demetrius’ possible usefulness as a tool in Syria
preserved him from worse treatment.
Whatever the
intentions of Antiochus with regard to his brother may have been, it was of
prime necessity to get him out of the Parthians’ hands. He set out with an army
of 80,000, drawn in great part from Syria itself—a visible sign and outcome of
its restored unity. Even the Jews furnished their contingent, commanded by the
High-priest Hyrcanus himself. The army, according to the bad custom of the
East, was accompanied by women and children of the royal house: Antiochus had
at any rate his young son Seleucus with him in 129, and a daughter of
Demetrius. The appearance of Antiochus proved, as that of Demetrius had done, a
signal for all the discontented elements under Parthian supremacy to rally.
Petty kings and chieftains with their various followers continually arrived in
his camp, eager to range themselves against the house of Arsaces. Antiochus
seems to have encountered opposition at an earlier stage than Demetrius. Three
battles had to be fought before he was master of Babylonia. In one of them he
defeated the Parthian general Indates on the river Lycus (mod. Greater Zab)—the
region where Alexander had won his crowning victory at Gaugamela over the
Persians. The Parthians evacuated Babylonia, and their general Enius—the
Parthian satrap presumably of Babylonia—found a frightful end at the hands of
the people of Seleucia. Antiochus pressed the enemy’s retreat into Iran.
Instantly the rebellion against their rule became universal. When the winter of
130 closed in, Nearer Iran had once more been joined to the Seleucid kingdom.
The Arsacid dominion, which was in fact mere military occupation, had ceased,
except in the northern valleys which constituted Parthia. A greater result
could not possibly have been desired for the first campaign. Antiochus, as
conqueror of the East, began to be styled, like his ancestor, Great King.
But what the
campaign had achieved the winter rest was fated to undo. The problem of housing
and feeding the great army and its still greater following during the winter
months was no doubt a difficult one. Antiochus adopted the expedient of quartering
his troops in dispersed bodies on the several cities. It was to put too great a
strain upon their loyalty. One of his generals, Athenaeus, aggravated the
burden by wanton annoyances. The adherence of the Greek cities had given
Antiochus his advantage; their alienation turned the scale against him.
The spring of
129—the Median spring with its transitory burst of greenness and beauty—opened
under clouded circumstances for Antiochus. Phraates understood that the
position of the conqueror had changed for the worse, and tried negotiations.
But Antiochus had come to restore the Empire, and he would entertain no terms
which did not make Arsaces tributary. His authority in Parthia Antiochus would
allow Phraates to retain, but he was immovable on the three conditions—(1) that
the Arsacid king must abandon everything outside Parthia; (2) that he must pay
a regular tribute; and (3) deliver up Demetrius. Phraates threw up the negotiations
and prepared to renew the fight. That, in spite of the change of mood in the
cities, he felt the conflict a redoubtable one, is shown by the fact that in
order to raise complications for Antiochus in the rear, he let so valuable a
tool as Demetrius go. Demetrius was sent westward with a Parthian escort to
re-establish himself in Syria.
Before the army of
Antiochus was concentrated for the new campaign, Phraates dealt his blow. The
scattered detachments were suddenly and simultaneously attacked by the
population of the various Median cities. It was a plan arranged by the secret agents
of Phraates. When the intelligence was carried to Antiochus—living too
jovially, one fears, in the palace of Ecbatana—he hastened out with the troops
he had by him to support the nearest of the bodies attacked. The confused
fighting which followed we cannot trace, but the last scene can be
reconstructed. It was in some place near the hills that Antiochus, marching
along with his own column, became aware that the main Parthian army, commanded
by Phraates himself, was coming down upon him. His staff besought him not to
risk an engagement; the Parthians had only to withdraw into the steep places
behind them to baffle the Syrian cavalry. But Antiochus would not hear of
retiring. Were the Macedonians to show weakness in the face of barbarians whom
they had beaten again and again? He ordered a stand. The Parthians came on and
closed, and Antiochus fought where the fight was hottest. Presently the
barbarians gave back into the hills. Antiochus and the Syrians imprudently
followed. They found themselves caught in a narrow gully. Athenaeus, the
general who had vexed the Greek cities, was the first to flee, and the panic
was infectious. Antiochus was left almost alone, and he saw that the end of all
his ambitions was come. But it was only the dead body of the Great King of
which the Arsacid was allowed to become master.
The great army
which Antiochus had brought to the East was made captive. How much of it
survived to become the slaves of the Parthian we do not know. We are only told
of the fate of the traitor Athenaeus. He came as a starving fugitive to those
villages which he had afflicted in the day of his authority. No one would now
receive him or give him a morsel to eat, and he died outcast by the wayside.
Phraates also got possession of those members of the royal house who had come
in Antiochus’ company. But to offer indignity to the imperial house of the East
would not have been according to the Parthian king’s view of what was fitting.
The body of Antiochus he had treated with all possible honor. The son of Antiochus,
the boy Seleucus, was brought up at the Parthian court as a son of kings. The
daughter of Demetrius was taken into the royal harem.
But the generosity
of Phraates, shown as that of a king to kings, did not extend to those whom he
held rebellious subjects. He remembered against the city of Seleucia what it
had done to his officer. When it sent envoys to implore forgiveness, they were
taken to a place where an eyeless man was sitting upon the ground. He was a
Greek, perhaps a Seleucian, on whom the Parthian government had set the mark of
its displeasure. The envoys were ordered to go and tell the Seleucians what
happened to rebels. We hear of the city soon after suffering days of horror
under the rod of Himeros or Euemerus, a vile favourite of Phraates, to whom he
delivered the kingdom during his expedition against the Scythians. The Greek
cities had cause to regret their desertion of Antiochus.
In Antiochus
Sidetes it was not only an individual who perished. It was the death-blow of
the Seleucid dynasty. The last great king of that house was gone; for the last
time it had stood before the world as the imperial house of the East. It had no
more revivals. And the last real king whom it produced embodied in a striking
way the typical qualities of his race—impulsive energy, a high and generous
courage, the old Macedonian delight in wassailing and war. Like his
predecessors, Antiochus VII drank freely in his convivial hours. “Boldness and
wine”, Phraates is recorded to have said, “these, Antiochus, were thy
destruction! Thou didst think to drink up the kingdom of Arsaces in thy large
cups”. But his success in dealing with the Jews—the only case where we can
observe his political action—seems to argue a degree of adroit statesmanship
more than belonged to the majority, if to any, of his predecessors. On the
other hand, it is perhaps characteristic of the history of his house that its
ultimate fall was due to neglect of the dull work of organizing the winter
quarters and commissariat of troops which on the field of battle the king would
lead with such splendid élan. Here we perhaps touch the weakness which
rendered so much of the brilliant ability of Antiochus VII, so much of the shining
qualities of the Seleucid dynasty as a whole, ultimately frustrate.
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