READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
CAH.VOL.XIITHE IMPERIAL CRISIS AND RECOVERY. A.D. 193-324CHAPTER VI.THE CRISIS OF THE EMPIRE (A.D. 249-270)I.
INTRODUCTION: THE AGE OF DECIUS, GALLUS AND
AEMILIANUS
BRIEF survey of the
period is necessary at the outset, in order to indicate who were the chief
actors in the moving drama that was played in this brief span of time, what
were its essential features and on what lines the action proceeded. Even this
preliminary view enables one to recognize the special character of these two
decades by one of its essential traits—by the amazing acceleration of the
rhythm of events. Under Antoninus Pius the solidarity and inner strength of
the Empire had been so great that its stability seemed to reduce every movement
to insignificance and the whole period took its character from conditions, not
from events. Then ensued blows of unexpected violence, but still quite isolated
blows, like the Marcomannic War, or sudden revolutions like the coup d'état of Septimius Severus. Such decisive events then follow more and more closely on
one another; in each and every department of life the pulse accelerates till
about the middle of the century, and then, gradually and with many a relapse,
it resumes its regularity. Not till Diocletian has life become calm enough for
us to be able to recognize its essential conditions.
In the opening sections
no appraisement of values will be given. It is first necessary to fix the
course of events- We observe these at first from a great distance, so that the
main contours may stand out more clearly while the details disappear, and the
great movements show themselves plainly, but the din of battle and the voices
of individuals are no longer heard. Only when the external order of events has
been determined as precisely as possible, we may approach the tumult of wars
and the life of every day, the headquarters, armies and masses, so as to
determine the forces that were at work, and appreciate the historical evolution
which kept these forces in play and the effect of individuals.
How do matters stand
when this period begins? The two Philips are dead; the victorious pretender, C.
Messius Quintus Decius, approaches Rome. The Senate welcomes him on his arrival
with extravagant honours and bestows on him the name of Traianus, the ideal
model of the. emperor ‘by grace of the Senate’. Decius, however, at once
emphasizes his absolute dependence on the army of Illyricum, which had clothed
him with the purple. Decius had overcome Philip near Verona in September 249.
In Rome, soon after the customary celebration of his arrival and the solemn
vows for the long continuance and happiness of his rule, he initiated that
campaign against Christianity that threw large sections of the population into
panic and misery. He had still a short time left him for buildings in
the capital and for other occupations of peace. From Syria was brought,
according to the fashion of the times, the head of the usurper, Jotapianus, and
as late as the end of December it was still possible to discharge time-expired
soldiers. But signs of disturbance soon appeared. In Gaul a civil war broke
out, only to be suppressed—whether the Emperor himself visited the province
cannot be decided. Thereupon followed the tidings of the inroad of the Goths
into the Balkans. About April or June 250 Decius made his elder son, Herennius
Etruscus, Caesar, a youth who, to judge by his portraits, had hardly reached
man’s estate—and sent him with an armed force to Moesia. Soon afterwards he
himself set out. Probably to ensure the loyalty of the capital by a
representative of his house he appointed his second son, Hostilianus, Caesar.
P. Licinius Valerianus, a respected member of the Senate, was, it appears, set
at the boy’s side, to direct the civil administration for him during the Gothic
war. The wife of Decius, Herennia Cupressenia Etruscilla, now raised to the
rank of Augusta, may well have lent her help and counsel to the young prince.
Simultaneously with the war the persecution of the Christians proceeded on a
grand scale. Towards the middle of June the required sacrifices began, and the
authorities, during some weeks, gave certificates of compliance to the loyal
who sacrificed and began to persecute the recalcitrant. But the effects of the
long drawn-out war soon began to be acutely felt. The mob of Rome, in its
desire for a new régime, went to the length of proclaiming a rival emperor: the
name of Decius was erased from many inscriptions. But the pretender, Julius
Valens Licinianus, a man, it would appear, of senatorial rank, was soon crushed.
In May 251, the two sons of the Emperor were proclaimed Augusti. But, very soon
after the joyful celebration of that event, the whole Empire was shaken by the
news of the destruction of the Roman expeditionary force (about the beginning
of June), and the heroic deaths of Decius and his elder son at Abrittus in the
Dobrudja.
It was some slight
consolation that Julius Priscus, the governor of Thrace, who had surrendered
with his mutinous troops to the Goths at Philippopolis and had been proclaimed
emperor, had in the meantime vanished from the scene. The wrecks of the defeated
army in the Dobrudja proclaimed the legate of Lower Moesia, C. Vibius Afinius
Trebonianus Gallus, second emperor, as the surviving son of Decius was still a
child. Gallus, in the disastrous position in which he stood, had lost the power
to dictate to the enemy the terms of peace. The flower of the population of
Thrace—so far as it still survived—was carried off by the Goths, and with it
went the wealth of the provinces; besides all this, the raiders received annual
subsidies, to induce them not to return.
Gallus treated his
fallen predecessors with all respect and had them consecrated by the Senate;
Hostilianus he adopted as his son. Only Etruscilla was forced into retirement,
but the wife of the new emperor, Afinia Gemina Baebiana, did not become
Augusta, so as not to encroach on her prerogative. Gallus, however, at the same
time made his own son, Volusianus, Caesar and, not long afterwards, Augustus;
had not the son of Decius died of the plague, complications must soon have
arisen. Although enough remained to be done in the devastated lands on the
frontier, Gallus hastened to Rome to ensure his position by showing his respect
to the Senate. Gallus seems, in fact, to have concentrated his entire attention
on Rome, and it appears that it was at Rome that Gallus and his son provided
decent burial for the poor who had been carried off by the plague. It was just
at this moment that a fearful plague broke out, which for fifteen long years
was to rage over the whole Empire. Apart from this, the two rulers were
incapable of any kind of energetic action; the inroads of the East Germans not
only continued, but rose to the pitch of an appalling disaster—to say nothing
of the complete neglect of the East. The persecution of the Christians, which
began again in 253, did not reach any serious dimensions, for the reign of
Gallus and his son lasted only two years.
The successor of Gallus
as governor of Lower Moesia, M. Aemilius Aemilianus, had succeeded early in 253
in putting an end to the devastation of his province by the Goths and had even
carried to a victorious conclusion a punitive expedition north of the Danube.
He was now proclaimed emperor. Though Goths were still running wild in Thrace,
Aemilianus turned in haste to Italy to catch Gallus unprepared. The surprise
succeeded, and he had reached Umbria before Gallus and Volusianus encountered
him. Their army was so inferior in numbers to that of their adversary, that
their own troops chose to make away with them rather than hazard a hopeless
battle—at Interamna, or, according to another tradition, a little farther north
at Forum Flaminii.
After Gallus had thus
been disposed of, Aemilianus was recognized in Egypt and throughout
the East, and plentiful issues from the Imperial mint attested his confirmation
by that same Senate that had so recently condemned him as hostis publicus. His
wife, Cornelia Supera, was made Augusta. But all these glories lasted no more
than three or four summer months. For, when Gallus gave orders to P. Licinius
Valerianus to bring up the Rhine legions to his aid, Valerian, instead of doing
so, had himself proclaimed emperor. He had a strong army, which had been
collected in Raetia, no doubt to fight the Alemanni; he, too, now turned with
it towards Italy. Aemilianus met the fate of Gallus, for, as he marched north,
he was murdered, not far from the place where his predecessors had met their
death (near Spoletium or perhaps between Ocriculum and Narnia). The army of
Valerian was felt to be the stronger, and Valerian himself was an imposing
figure, in virtue of his birth and his career, and so the troops of Aemilianus
chose to kill their own lord rather than face a new civil war. It must have
been out of respect to the authority of the Senate that the new ruler did not
leave it to the army to proclaim his son, P. Licinius Egnatius Gallienus, as
his colleague, but requested the patres to appoint his son a second
Augustus about September 253.
While the best corps of
the Roman army were tied down to Italy by the civil wars, the frontier-guard
was everywhere being shattered by the encircling pressure of the neighbouring
peoples. Valerian now resolved to entrust the conduct of the wars in the West
to his son, while he himself very soon afterwards went to the East, which,
since Philip, had not set eyes on any emperor.
II.
THE ROMAN EAST
FROM VALERIAN TO THE ACCESSION OF AURELIAN
The harsh rule of
Philip’s brother Priscus had at once produced a violent reaction. Jotapianus,
who was perhaps descended from a branch of the family of Severus Alexander, was
raised to the throne in Syria (or, perhaps, in Cappadocia) but he was quickly
crushed. As neither Decius nor Gallus was in a position to appear in person in
the East, the danger abroad and the demoralization at home continued alike to
increase. The peoples of South Russia, who had by this time sucked the Danube
provinces dry, began to organize great sea-raids to plunder Asia Minor. In 253
came the first sea-raid by the Goths of the Black Sea which reached Pessinus
and Ephesus. Armenia was too weak to defend herself without vigorous assistance
from Rome against the New Persian Empire and the friends of Persia succeeded in
murdering the excellent king, Chosroes. Soon afterwards (under Gallus) his son
Tiridates was compelled to flee from his country, and now began that new
Persian offensive against the Roman provinces of the East that was to last
nearly a decade. Early in 253 the Persian bands swarmed over Mesopotamia and
Syria, captured Antioch and made good their retirement with an immense booty
and a countless host of captives. When Valerian hastened to the spot in the
winter of 253-4, he was already too late. But the priest-king of Emesa,
Sulpicius Uranius Antoninus, who, owing to the impotence of the central
government, had been set up as a pretender and had successfully organized the
defence of his own small homeland, now vanished from the scene at the
Emperor’s approach. The gallant commander of Pityus, the Successianus who had
conducted an admirable defence of that city against an assault of the Borani
early in 2 54, was appointed Praetorian Prefect and joined the Emperor in rebuilding
Antioch from its ruins.
Egypt, too, gained a
moment of relief. How loosely the government had been holding the reins can
still be seen from the decay of the coinage of Alexandria under Decius. In the
second Egyptian year of Gallus (August 30, 251-August 29, 252) no coins were
issued—an omission without parallel between 216 and the end of the autonomous
issues in 296. But even the presence of Valerian failed to bring any real
stabilization. In 255 Pityus and Trapezus fell victims to an unexpected renewal
of the attack of the Borani by sea, and in 256 the Goths launched their second
great naval expedition, which, having sailed along the west coast of the Black
Sea, scared the demoralized garrison out of Chalcedon. The conquest of this
key-position placed the great cities of Bithynia at the mercy of the Goths.
In this crisis Valerian
proved utterly incompetent. Out of dread of usurpations he could not bring
himself to entrust any of his generals with an expeditionary force against the
Goths; all he did was to send a certain Felix to Byzantium to direct the
defence of that important strategic centre, preparatory to undertaking the campaign
himself. Setting out from Antioch, however, he got no farther than Cappadocia,
while the passage of his army proved a sore burden to the cities. As his
general headquarters he chose Samosata, a fortress in a commanding position on
the Upper Euphrates, covered against Persian attack by the strong advanced
bastion of Edessa. But even from this favourable position he was unable to
prevent the renewal of the Persian invasions. Hormizd, son of Shapur, first led
an army against the frontier of the Euphrates. The recent excavations at
Doura-Europos, the point at which he broke through, have given us an amazingly
vivid picture of the siege and of the mine-warfare that shattered the nerve of
the garrison of the fort. The latest coins found in the purses of the soldiers
who fell in this underground war can be dated to the year 255', and appear to
show that the fortress fell in that year.
Under these catastrophic
conditions the spirit of hostility to Rome in the East found violent
expression. Mariades, a Syrian noble of Antioch, led Shapur in 258 or 259
against his native city. The local knowledge of the traitor led to a complete
surprise. The well-to-do were able, it is true, to escape; the officials saved
the mint and the State treasure, but the masses, who shared the sympathies of
Mariades, stayed on the spot. It must have been through treachery that the
range of hills near the city fell without a blow into the hands of the Persians.
Shapur made good his retirement a second time unscathed with his booty, after
burning the city and laying waste the surrounding country.
In this fearful crisis
Valerian found a vent for the general embitterment. Since August 257 he had
been engaged in persecuting the Christians with a success denied him against
his foreign enemies, and he now proceeded to intensify the harshness of his
measures against them. Hatred was again allowed to run riot against a
background of general disaster and danger, exactly as under Decius.
The surprise attack on Antioch was followed by an even more terrifying and devastating invasion by Shapur in 260. He had pushed past Commagenian Antioch as far as Cappadocia, before the fatal clash with the ageing Emperor took place. The Roman army was decimated by the plague; it was even more seriously depressed by the complete inertia and feebleness of its commander-in-chief. In his lack of all resolution he seems to have postponed the actual decision; it looks as if he shut himself up behind the walls of Samosata. Finally he risked an engagement in Mesopotamia, only to suffer defeat. The Persians then beset Edessa, where the starving garrison, mutinous though it might be, still gallantly repelled the enemy. Then, of a sudden, came the terrible tidings that the Emperor had fallen into the hands of Shapur. A whole series of picturesque and even fantastic stories was spun about Valerian’s capture and the humiliations to which he was subjected. When the Emperor died is not recorded. The jubilation among the Persians was immense . The disaster itself
occurred in the second half of June, 260. The Persians followed hard on the
Roman army as it fled in utter confusion, laying waste the cities as they went.
For the third time Antioch was visited by the tide of plunderers. Many other
flourishing centres of civilization in Syria, Cappadocia and Cilicia were
destroyed. Lycaonia, too, had been drawn into the vortex, when at last a
counterstroke came from the side of Rome.
Mesopotamia itself had
been occupied by the Persians, but, while Nisibis and, as it seems, Carrhae
also were taken, Edessa defied their attack. Its valiant defenders were
actually able to give sufficient trouble to Shapur on his return to induce him
as he passed the fort to surrender the treasure captured in Syria, rather than
expose to their attacks an army that had lost its formation and had ceased to
care for anything beyond securing its booty. Behind the cover of this bulwark
Macrianus, who had been praepositus annonae expeditionalis and, at the
same time, procurator arcae expeditionis, or, in other words,
Quartermaster General, was able in Samosata to take in hand the whole task of
re-organization. The enemy had scattered over the east of Asia Minor to plunder
and thus facilitated the Roman counter-stroke. A certain general Callistus
(nicknamed Ballista) had put on shipboard the troops that he had collected in
concert with Macrianus, and had surprised and defeated the Persians at more
than one point on the Cilician coast; he even succeeded in intercepting the
baggage-train and concubines of the Great King. This loss impelled Shapur to
retire, driving before him his hordes of captives. But he was thankful enough
to regain the Euphrates, for, as he passed Carrhae on his way to Ctesiphon, he
was again attacked, this time by Odenathus, prince of Palmyra, and suffered
such fresh losses that his victorious homecoming still left him crippled for a
long time to come.
Macrianus had renounced
his allegiance to the captive Emperor when Shapur tried to negotiate with him
in his name. That is the reason why the obverse types of Valerian disappear at
this moment from the issues of the imperial mint at Samosata and the coinage is
continued solely in the name of Gallienus. But in September, when the successes
above chronicled had brought a first, interval of peace, Callistus and
Macrianus broke with Gallienus. Callistus and Macrianus were both barred from
the throne—the former, perhaps, by his low birth, the latter by his lameness.
They therefore proclaimed as Augusti the two sons of the latter, T. Fulvius
Junius Macrianus and T. Fulvius Junius Quietus. Callistus was named Praetorian
Prefect.
Conditions were not
unfavourable for this rebellion. The much suffering East greeted the young
pretenders with enthusiasm; Gallienus had his hands fast tied in the West,
while Shapur was completely crippled. But Macrianus would not confine himself
to one section of the Empire and soon set out with his elder son, of the same
name, to conquer the West. In the spring of 261 the Eastern army reached the
Danube provinces, where Aureolus, the gifted but unscrupulous general of
Gallienus, awaited it. The regiments of Pannonia, which cherished a bitter
spite against Gallienus for putting the defence of the Rhine frontier before
the protection of Illyricum and had already twice risen against him, joined the
Eastern army. But these Oriental troops had little stomach for civil war. When
the battle began and a standard chanced to fall with its bearer to the ground
the other signiferi hastened to lower their standards, in token of
submission. Both of the Macriani met their death. Callistus, who had stayed
behind in the East with the younger pretender, Quietus, was unable now to
sustain his position. On the news of the fall of the Macriani many cities
revolted against him and Gallienus adroitly directed Odenathus, prince of the
desert-city of Palmyra, to attack him. Odenathus assailed Callistus in Emesa
and slew him, while the inhabitants of the city, in their hard plight, executed
Quietus, about November 261.
The complications and
abuses that these revolutions occasioned can to some extent be realized from
the one example of Egypt. The mint of Alexandria, as late as August 260, was
preparing coins of Valerian for the Egyptian New Year (August 30); the capture
of the Emperor was not yet taken to involve the loss of his imperial rights;
the contrary view taken by Gallienus was obviously not yet known. But as early
as September Macrianus and Quietus were recognized in Alexandria as in most
other parts of Egypt. After the defeat of Macrianus in Illyricum the mint of
Alexandria resumed its allegiance to Gallienus, whereas other parts of the
country, as the papyri show, remained true to Quietus up to the moment of his
death. In Alexandria itself these changes were attended by bloody fighting. The
city split into two hostile camps; the testimony of the Bishop Dionysius shows
that the feud was still alive about the Easter of 262. The head of the opposition
party was L. Mussius Aemilianus, who since 257 had been prefect of Egypt. As he
was still there in 262, there can be no doubt that he had first taken the side
of the Macriani and only raised his own flag of revolt after their fall. As the
mint of Alexandria lay in the quarter that resumed its allegiance to Gallienus,
it was not at his disposal, but it is quite possible that he took the purple.
It may be that he was encouraged to do so by a successful blow at the Blemmyes
on the southern frontier of Egypt; Odenathus was unable to attack him, as he
was at that very moment advancing into Persia.
The detachment of
Alexandria was highly dangerous to Italy: it seems as if Rome looked in vain
for the Egyptian corn-fleet. It was probably by a naval expedition that
Gallienus succeeded in ridding himself of the rebel: Aurelius Theodotus, the
general of Gallienus, successfully carried out the coup, while the
Emperor himself, it seems, advanced by land to Byzantium, ready to intervene,
if need arose. Theodotus, who now became prefect of Egypt, succeeded a little
later in crushing a fresh rebellion, led by a Moorish officer, Memor.
In the years that
followed, Septimius Odenathus, prince of Palmyra, came to be the most important
political factor in the Roman East. It will be seen later how important a part
the Palmyrene archers played in this period in the military history of Rome.
But, besides archers, Odenathus had excellent heavy mailed cavalry on the
Persian model. Nor did he fail to profit by the luck of the moment. He had
little difficulty in surprising Shapur’s rabble army; the defeat of Quietus was
made easy by the withdrawal of the main army under Macrianus, while Gallienus,
until his hands were free, was only too glad to find so effective an ally.
Odenathus had originally
sought closer touch with Shapur, whom he had esteemed far more highly than he
had the Romans, but he was rudely rebuffed. This left him no choice but to draw
closer to Valerian. As early as 258 he enjoyed the high distinction of becoming vir consularis. His successful attack on Shapur on his march homewards
reveals the relentlessness of his opposition to that prince—an opposition
perhaps intensified by the Sassanid conquest of Characene and the closing of
the caravan route to the Persian Gulf. Gallienus bound him to himself in the
service of the Empire by high titles of honour, and, after the removal of
Quietus in 261, entrusted him with the counter-offensive against the Persian
Empire. Odenathus was able to supplement the remains of the Roman army of the
East with a strong native levy from Syria and in 262 opened his first
counter-attack, which he began by regaining the great Mesopotamian fortresses,
such as Carrhae and Nisibis, and then defeated the Persians in battle. Shapur
was besieged in his own capital, and Gallienus could receive the title of
Persicus Maximus. Some years later, early in 267, in a campaign in which his
son and co-ruler, Septimius Herodes, shared, Odenathus again marched to the
gates of Ctesiphon. He then turned back to meet the invasion of the Goths in
Cappadocia, and advanced as far as Heraclea Pontica; but he came too late, and,
not long afterwards, was murdered together with his son.
These victories produced
a decisive change in Rome’s relation to Persia. Chance has preserved the record
of the execution of great works of fortification in Adraha by the governor of
Roman Arabia in the years 261—2 and 262—3, and this is doubtless only a
reflection of a more general activity. In Doura, one of the most important
points at which Shapur had broken through, a Roman- Palmyrene garrison was
again stationed as early as 262. Armenia, too, must have returned to its
allegiance to Rome, even if our sources only suggest it indirectly.
The relation of
Odenathus to Gallienus is precisely defined by the titles which the Palmyrene
prince received from his overlord. On his first expedition against Persia he
had already at his disposal the remains of the Roman army; he must then have
held the title of dux Romanorum. This is an exceptional position, in
which the exact powers are deliberately left undefined, as is likewise the
case with the civil titles of this prince. The competence of the Roman
governors was not meant to be undermined by this new dignity, which was
intended to have a purely personal significance. After his victory over Persia
Odenathus received the title of imperator. Besides the diadem of the
king, Odenathus now wore, as did his son after him, the laurel-wreath of the
imperial Imperator. Such an honour was barely reconcilable with the subordinate
position of a vassal-prince, and already foreshadowed the struggles for the
prestige of Empire that were to ensue. Nor did the civil distinctions bestowed
on Odenathus represent any steps in the normal official career. As early as the
second century the special commissioners to restore order in the cities of the
Roman East had been designated legati Augusti ad corrigendum statum civitatium
liberarum Now, when exceptional
conditions were the rule, this function was further developed. Thus arose the
position of a corrector totius Italiae, held by the distinguished
Pomponius Bassus; Odenathus similarly became corrector totius Orientis. This did not imply that the civil and financial administration was allotted to
him, only that he enjoyed a certain right of supervision. Apart from the Roman
titles of honour the dignity of the Palmyrene ruler is now described by the
new title ‘King of Kings.’ This was not incompatible with his subordination to
his Roman suzerain, for the same title had long been allowed, together with the
absolute grant of independent sovereignty, involved in a separate coinage in
gold, to the kings of Bosporus. But what the name did emphasize the more
strongly was a rivalry with the Great Kings of Persia.
The boundaries of the
realm of Odenathus in his new position were to the north the Taurus mountains,
to the south the Arabian Gulf; it extended also to Cilicia, Syria, Mesopotamia
and Arabia. Asia Minor and Egypt were not included and had to be seized by
force later, as will soon appear.
More particularly after
the conferment of the title of imperator the position of the mighty
sheik fell little short of imperial autocracy. From the Roman point of view,
therefore, it could only be regarded as a temporary concession, demanded by the
necessities of the moment. Friction with the governors must have been an
everyday occurrence. Two significant cases are known. A Roman official,
Quirinus by name, could not stomach the fact of Odenathus’ conducting the war
of Rome (against Shapur); Odenathus, in revenge, sought to put him to death. It
is not impossible that this ‘Quirinus’ is the same as Aurelius Quirinius, who
is recorded as head of the financial administration of Egypt in 262. The
second instance was far more serious in its effects. A Rufinus is mentioned,
who had had the ‘elder Odenathus’ put to death and was called to account for it
before Gallienus by ‘the younger Odenathus.’ In the ‘elder Odenathus’ we must,
with Mommsen, recognize the prince of Palmyra; in the younger Odenathus, his son
falsely so-called, Vaballathus Athenodorus— the more so as another tradition
makes the Emperor get rid of our Odenathus. In that case, the instigator of the
murder would be the Cocceius Rufinus, who is known as governor of Roman Arabia
at this time, and the political character of the deed is further to be seen in
the fact that the eldest son of the king, Hairanes-Herodes, was killed along
with him. It is known from other sources that the murderer himself was a
kinsman of the prince, who, of course, may have been prompted by personal
rancour; but behind him stood the plotter, who imagined himself to be acting in
the interests of Rome.
With Odenathus vanished
from the scene yet a third leading personality of Palmyra—and this, too, can be
no mere coincidence. It was Septimius Vorodes, who had received from Gallienus
the dignity of a iuridicus and a procurator ducenarius and who
had. stood at the side of his king as military governor (argapetes) of
Palmyra. The latest inscription that mentions him was set up in April 267; it
was just about that time that Odenathus was stabbed. In one way or another he
seems to have been involved in the plot.
Odenathus, indeed, was
originally no convinced adherent of Rome. But, grievously insulted by Shapur
and at bitter war with him, and loaded by Gallienus with unprecedented
distinctions, he maintained a firm loyalty to Rome. Yet, after all, it appears
as if the second victory over Persia widened the horizon of his ambition and as
if he were meditating a breach with Rome. For this he had to pay with his life,
as had many another barbarian king in the course of the Empire.
There are many other
indications which suggest that Gallienus intended to make a thorough settlement
with Palmyra immediately after the death of Odenathus. In the year 267 a new
mint was established in the west of Asia Minor, the die-engravers of which were
in part detailed from Siscia, and so attest the initiative of the Emperor. As
in this period the foundation of mints was without exception designed to provide
pay for the troops, this new mint points to the establishment of a base of
operations in Asia Minor. Further, the new issue of 268 at Siscia has the
reverse type Orient Augusti, which sounds like an advertisement of the
claim to the East. The Vita Gallieni also reports that Gallienus
sent Heraclianus with an army to the East, but that the Palmyrenes defeated
him. Even if this goes too far and an open clash cannot yet have occurred, it
is clear that Gallienus was only prevented by the terrible raid of the Goths on
Asia Minor in 267 and the great Herulian invasion of 268 from making a final
reckoning with Zenobia, the wife of the dead prince, who carried on the
government in the name of her son, Herodianus, a minor, and, after him, of her third
son, Vaballathus.
The complete failure of
Valerian, the inability of Gallienus to transfer his activities to the East,
the terrible German invasions of 267 and 268, must all have fostered the
conviction in Palmyra that Rome was no longer capable of holding the reins of
the East. The important part that the soldiers of Palmyra had for decades
maintained in the Roman army must have heightened their consciousness of their
native worth. The achievements of Odenathus followed, to confirm the conviction
that it was the mission of Palmyra to rule the East, a mission that Zenobia set
to work to realize with all the ambition and capacity of a Julia Domna.
It was most fortunate
for Rome that Palmyra could find no support against her in Persia. It was not
only the senseless folly of Shapur or the adroit diplomacy of Gallienus, not
even the entanglements of the last years that compelled the Queen to fight out
the battle for the East in a Roman setting and under Roman forms. Not that the
strength of Iranian influence in this environment need be denied. Odenathus,
it is clear, was regarded as a pure barbarian, not only by the Roman commanders
who were active in the East, but by the Syrians of Emesa themselves. More than
this, it is obvious that the rise of the Palmyrene power was favourable to the
elements that hated Rome. But, on the other side, it must not be forgotten that
Palmyra had not only been illumined by the setting sun of Roman civilization,
but had already experienced the warmth and brilliance of Rome’s noonday prime.
The long service of her young men in the Roman armies in Africa and Europe must
have done much to promote assimilation to Roman ways. Even the Palmyra that, as
a new Great Power, refused to serve Rome any longer, could not get clear of the
Roman track, on which she had so long been running.
It was not the title of
Great King, but that of Augustus, with the rest of the full imperial title,
which was the final goal of the ambition of Vaballathus; Zenobia too, after the
break with Rome, adopted the style of Pia and Augusta. Instead of the Persian
tiara Vaballathus wears on his coins the laurel-wreath of the Imperator, as
does his mother likewise. Moreover, these new aims of Palmyrene ambition were
fixed by men who represented the highest classical culture of the age, above
all, by the philosopher Longinus. At the court of Palmyra assembled the
Neoplatonists, who, fleeing from Italy after the murder of Gallienus, continued
to dream of the rule of philosophy in the State.
It has been supposed that
the Palmyrenes, in the years 267—9, quietly and gradually absorbed the whole
East, without disowning the Roman government. But so well disguised an
acquisition of sovereign rights is hard to imagine. There is no evidence for a
separation of Syria from Rome in these years, nor is there any support for the
supposition that Zenobia then attached herself to Persia in place of Rome. It
could hardly be reconciled with such. a direction of policy towards Persia,
that Vaballathus should still have borne the title of ‘ King of Kings’ in 270
and that, even after his ensuing revolt, he should have been called Persicus
Maximus. That Mesopotamia was abandoned to Persia at the time is a mere
baseless hypothesis: when Aurelian appears in Asia, Mesopotamian troops join
him—a clear proof to the contrary.
On the other hand it can
be shown that Zenobia only resolved to refuse obedience to Rome at a later
date, on receiving the news of the death of Claudius. To take Asia Minor first,
it is known that the power of Zenobia there till the death of
Claudius extended no farther than Ancyra. West of this point, the cities of
Pisidia did in fact continue their issues of coin in the names of Gallienus and
Claudius, and one is inclined to place somewhere in this region the new
imperial mint, mentioned above; it continued to function without change under
Claudius. The statement that Claudius was planning to transplant the Isaurians
to Cilicia may also be historical. All the more surprising is the fact that
both the new imperial mint and the autonomous issues of Pisidia no longer
mention Quintillus. In point of fact it was just at this time (beginning of
270) that the Palmyrene troops began to conquer the west of Asia Minor; when
the news of the elevation of Aurelian arrived, they were just trying to occupy
Bithynia, though they did not succeed. That is why the mint of Cyzicus, founded
at the beginning of the reign of Claudius with dieengravers from the mint in
the west of Asia Minor4, continued to strike for Quintillus and,
after him, without delay, for Aurelian.
As regards the spread of
Palmyrene power in Syria, the position is cleared up by the activity of the
mint of Antioch. It works without a break to the end of the reign of Gallienus
and even dispatches workers to the new mint in the west of Asia Minor. It then
continues its striking for Claudius; the numerous types of its two issues are
certainly quite enough to fill the eighteen months of this ruler.
But the coinage of Quintillus of this mint is to seek. Just as the accession of
Aurelian brought a change in Asia Minor, so too in Syria. Zenobia re-opens the
mint of Antioch and strikes coins at once for Vaballathus, with the titles
which Gallienus had given his father, but with the bust of Aurelian on the
reverse. She was therefore aiming at an understanding with the famous general,
but she had already gone too far to obtain it.
Palmyrene activity
following on the death of Claudius probably extended to the province of Arabia,
and also to Egypt. In the latter country the bitter feeling against Rome had
been steadily rising since the suppression of the revolts described above. Yet
another revolution in Alexandria followed, in which many members of the Council
joined in the breach of loyalty; for several years the rebels were besieged in
the suburb of Bruchium, until at last they were starved out and forced to
surrender, apparently in the autumn of 268. It was no long time, however, after
the awful havoc of this war, that the anti-Roman party shouted in triumph as
the Palmyrene troops marched in.
Many writers, it must be
admitted, have set this conquest under Claudius. But, as the mint of Alexandria
belonged to that emperor till the end of his reign and was even able to inaugurate
an issue for Quintillus, it is clear that it was only just at that moment,
about February 270, that the troops of Zenobia arrived. The prefect, Tenagino
Probus, was actually on the seas, engaged in the subjection of the Gothic
pirates and, in his absence, the Palmyrene army under Zabdas, 70,000 strong,
defeated the weak Roman levies; Probus returned in haste and threw back the
foe, but soon lost his life by the treachery of the leader of the Palmyrene
party in Egypt.
Tenagino Probus served
under Claudius first as praeses Numidiae (end of 268), then as prefect
of Egypt, and in that capacity—doubtless in 269—he chastised the Marmaridae,
situated between Egypt and Cyrene. From thence he was called to Carthage to
quell a revolt. The year must have been nearing its close when he returned
with his army to Egypt and then took to the sea, the Gothic pirates having got
as far as Cyprus. Then, early in 270, followed his return and his death
fighting against Palmyra. As at Antioch, so at Alexandria, the coins reflect
the new turn taken by events on the proclamation of Aurelian. Here again
appears the portrait of Vaballathus as imperator dux Romanorum with the
bust of Aurelian on the other side. Here again a compromise was proposed and
supported by the despatch of the cornfleet in this year to Rome. But at the
same time Aurelian was proclaiming his
resolve to be Restitutor Orientis.
III.
THE WEST FROM THE
JOINT REIGN OF VALERIAN AND GALLIENUS TO THE PROCLAMATION OF AURELIAN
While his father betook
himself to the East, Gallienus was left with the task of ordering the affairs
of the West. It was perhaps at this moment that his mother, Egnatia Mariniana,
died and was consecrated; in her place his wife, Cornelia Salonina, received
the rank of an Augusta.
Now that the invasion of
the Empire by its neighbours, Dacian, Sarmatian and, above all, German, had
become endemic, wars threatened on every hand. It is not possible to determine
precisely where and in what order the five German wars of Gallienus between 254
and 259 ran their course. What is certain is that he was constantly and
completely engaged in war, preparations for war and measures of defence
against the invasions, and must have done much more work at fortification than
is directly recorded.
It is clear, however,
that he regarded the position in Gaul and on the Rhine as the most critical and
therefore undertook the conduct of war on that front in person, while
entrusting to his generals the defence of the Danube lands. There, too, there
was mischief enough. In 254 the Goths were already threatening Greece and the
Marcomanni drove through Pannonia into North Italy; Pannonia had also to suffer
in these years from her neighbours, the Quadi and Iazyges, and could only be
defended effectively by the settlement within it of a Marcomannic king and his
tribe. Dacia was sorely harassed by the Carpi, but the title of Gallienus,
Dacicus Maximus, in 257 points to their defeat. The despair of the population
of Illyricum at an emperor who would not come to their help, broke out during
the ensuing years in a succession of rebellions.
In order to have yet
another representative of the reigning house, whose presence might check
usurpations if it did nothing else, the Emperors early in 256 raised to be
Caesar the elder son of Gallienus, P. Licinius Cornelius Valerianus. He was
still a boy, unable to direct wars in person; it is probable, then, that he
remained chiefly in Rome. He soon died, early in 258, apparently from natural
causes, whereupon his younger brother, P. Licinius Cornelius Saloninus, was at
once proclaimed his successor. But the difficulties produced by the incessant
wars fanned such a flame of hatred and desperation, that the government,
towards the autumn of 257, no doubt on the initiative of the elder
Emperor, resumed the persecution of the Christians and intensifiedan it in the
following year.
The
same year (257) brought with it an important change in the government. Gallienus numbered the victories
he had won under his own auspices and not those of his father, beginning
with the war against the Alemanni; on issues of Cologne he now appears cim
exercitu suo, clearly emphasizing is independent command-in-chief. A
definite separation of Eastern and Western armies must have occurred, probably
not unconnected with an estrangement between the two rulers that had
consequences beyond the military sphere. Gallienus now had his hands free to
carry out the reforms that he desired. It is cert that he now- called into
being his new central cavalry corps, henceforth stationed at Milan It had soon
to be tested in battle against Ingenuus.
The
imperial mint of Viminacium was in this year transferred to Cologne, where
Gallienus mainly resided and directed the repulse of the German invasions from
the Rhine. Nor did he fail to show his energy in the building of
fortifications. In fact he did his utmost to earn the title of restitutor Galliarum that his issues of Cologne give him. Either in 258 or the following
year he had to leave the Rhine to combat a serious invasion of Italy by the
Alemanni. With a small army he succeeded in defeating and ejecting a greatly
superior force, and returned forthwith to Germany.
The next year was one of
catastrophes unexampled in Roman history. Early in 260 the governor of Numidia
successfully repulsed a number of attacks by the Bavares and Quinquegentanei,
in one of which the historian Q. Gargilius Martians, after greatly
distinguishing himself, met his death on the held of honour. This campaign
seems to mark the end or a series of disturbances of longer standing.
Then, towards the end of
July, came the news of the tragedy in the East; the whole Empire was in
confusion, and conditions moved rapidly towards anarchy. But Gallienus kept his
head. Father and son had from the first been set in opposition by fundamental
differences of temperament and this had led on, no doubt owing to Valerian’s
failure, to an effective separation of East and West in 258. In this moment of
peril the benefits of the change were realized. Gallienus was able to break the
last ties that bound him to the policy of his father. The captivity of the
elder Augustus was naturally felt as an unprecedented disgrace to the Roman
name; even the late historians with senatorial sympathies record their verdict
that it was an ignobilis servitus. This was the view that Gallienus
himself adopted. Far from considering any steps for the recovery of his unhappy
father, he even went so far as to deny, by a kind of damnatio memoriae, any connection with his fatal régime. Hitherto the imperial coins of Egypt had
invariably given Gallienus himself the added name of Valerianus; now all of a
sudden this stops. Saloninus, too, in the short span of life yet allotted to
him, ceased to be called Valerianus and was named Gallienus—at least in such
places as Asia Minor, where the Emperor’s orders could still reach the
officials. Gallienus would not even tolerate further mention of the great
victories that he had himself won under his father’s auspices and insisted on
the numbering of his military successes from the separation of 258. More than
this, he prescribed the beginning of a new count of his regnal years. This
order reached Egypt in early summer 261 and the new regnal year one was placed
besides the old year eight. Here the new count was afterwards abandoned, but in
the West it continued in use. But the reaction against the old régime went
still further. Gallienus broke with the policy of Valerian, who had steadily
leaned on the Senate, and, by a polite but definite exclusion of the senators
from all high commands in the army, dealt a sore blow to the dignity and status
of the senatorial career. It is part of the same policy that his colleague as consul
ordinarius in 261 was no senator, but a distinguished eques, L.
Petronius Taurus Volusianus, a man high in his confidence, who had already
been praefectus vigilum and Praetorian Prefect. The opposition of this
man to the nobiles is also reflected in the fact that he was not
co-opted into the high priestly offices; but, in 267—85 he was praefectus
urbi, and protected the interests of the Emperor during his absence. A
further evidence of the break with the policy of friendship to the Senate is to
be seen in the suspension, soon after the beginning of the sole rule of
Gallienus, of the bronze coinage with the signature senatus consulto, a
formal but tenderly cherished symbol of the authority of the patres. This
bronze coinage had, it is true, lost its meaning through the complete
devaluation of the double denarius; but none the less its disappearance was
tantamount to a grave infringement of the sovereign rights of the Senate From
the middle of 261 the revolution in policy was felt in every department of
life. Its full import is further seen in the complete reversal of the imperial
policy towards the Christians.
This change of direction
and organization was carried out under the most unfavourable conditions
imaginable. Before the autumn of 260 was past, two dangerous revolts broke out
in quick succession in the Danube lands. If the conjecture, that the election
of Pope Julius followed on the news of the capture of Valerian, is correct, the
rebellion of Ingenuus also broke out in the second half of July, for it was
‘comperta Valeriani clade’ that he raised the standard of revolt. He was
governor of Pannonia, and, despite the misgivings of the Empress, enjoyed the
confidence of Gallienus. Moesia also joined him. He chose as his residence
Sirmium in the south of Pannonia, a city that was often to serve as imperial
headquarters. Not far from it, at Mursa, his troops encountered Gallienus as
he hastened to the spot. The new cavalry corps and its commander, Aureolus,
came out of the test with flying colours; the Moorish javelin-men, too, had
their share in the victory that Gallienus gained. Ingenuus was captured as he
fled and was put to death.
The Emperor had no wish
to punish the rebels severely; but none the less the rebellion was renewed by
the same troops. They proclaimed emperor Regalianus, the governor of Upper
Pannonia, who had a number of old billon coins overstruck with his own portrait
at his improvised mint of Carnuntum. Parallel issues reveal the fact that he
was married to a daughter of an influential family of the Senate, Sulpicia
Dryantilla. Regalianus probably had his adherents also in the Senate. It can be
shown that, besides the two legions of Upper Pannonia (X Gemina and XIV Gemina),
the XIII Gemina (which can hardly have been still at its old post in Apulum)
and the garrison of Durostorum in Lower Moesia were implicated in the revolt.
But the reign of Regalianus cannot have lasted more than a few weeks. Gallienus
returned in haste and made an end of him.
Meanwhile (in
September), Macrianus had broken with Gallienus, had proclaimed his sons
emperors and drawn the East to his side. This was yet another immediate result
of the catastrophe of Valerian. But the general consternation thus produced had
further, indirect consequences. Just before the end of 260 followed a fourth
usurpation. M. Cassianius Latinius Postumus, who was possibly governor of one
or other Germania, had quarrelled with another high officer, Silvanus. Silvanus
was in Cologne directing the government in the name of the Caesar Saloninus
(who, capable and attractive, was still quite a boy), and even issuing commands
to Postumus himself. The quarrel was about the booty taken from German
invaders, which Postumus wished to distribute among his soldiers, but which
Silvanus sought to have delivered to the court of the Caesar,—probably to
secure the return of the stolen property to its owners. It is a pretty picture
of demoralization. Postumus marched on Cologne and invested the city. While the
siege was still in progress, the mint went on striking large gold pieces in the
name of Gallienus for the New Year of 261 and, in defiance, the young Caesar
was proclaimed Augustus. But not long afterwards the garrison surrendered both
the prince and his tutor, and Postumus had them put to death. The usurper then
succeeded in occupying the passes of the Alps and any thought of crushing him
was frustrated by a new threat. Macrianus was advancing with an army, 30,000
strong. Aureolus defeated this force in Pannonia, where Gallienus, the
persistent absentee, was held responsible for the desperate misery of the times
and where the garrisons again joined this new rival; but the Oriental troops
soon abandoned the contest and the two Macriani both fell (summer, 261).
Meanwhile yet another rebellion, the fifth in a few months, had been disposed
of. A certain Valens, probably proconsul of Achaea, who had assumed the purple,
met his death at the approach of Macrianus—if any conclusion can fairly be
drawn from the confused account in the Augustan History. In 262 the
former prefect of Egypt, Aemilianus, spread consternation in Italy by detaining
the cornfleet, and had to be removed, is possible that Gallienus pushed
forward to Byzantium, to restore order in those regions. It seems that on this
occasion Pannonia, too, was reorganized; the establishment and undisturbed
activity of the mint of Siscia from a.d. 262 onwards may count as evidence of the fact. Early in autumn at
the end of the ninth year of his reign, Gallienus was certainly in Rome to
celebrate his decennalia, with a magnificence still attested by an
exceptionally rich issue of coins. The panic of 260 and the usurpations
attendant on it were for the moment overcome.
It was now possible to
attempt a reckoning with Postumus. In all probability Gallienus took the field
against him early in 263. The passes of the Alps were either already in his
hands or, if not, were now captured. The first encounter brought defeat, but it
was followed by a decisive victory. The pursuit of the beaten enemy was
entrusted to Aureolus, the commander of the new corps of cavalry; but Aureolus
was meditating treason and allowed Postumus to slip through his fingers. There
was a general conviction of his guilt; the Emperor alone gave credence to his
excuses—it was one day to cost him his life. Postumus, escaping, succeeded in
re-assembling his army—he could call upon large bands of free Germans—but
suffered a second severe defeat. He threw himself into a fortified city in Gaul
and was besieged there by the Emperor. Luck again came to his aid. Gallienus
was seriously wounded by an arrow and was incapacitated from directing the
operations. He was presumably carried back to Rome; the foothills of the Alps
in the South of Gaul seem to have remained in his hands, or at least the most
important passes.
The attempt to re-unite
the whole of the West in one hand had failed, and the failure involved a
terrible weakening of the armed forces of the Empire. The continuance of the
conflict meant that a large part of the troops on both sides was directed
inwards, whilst the frontier-defence suffered enormously; the district along
the limes of Raetia and Germany was doomed to perish between the rival
powers. The lasting sense of insecurity in Gaul itself is attested by countless
coin-hoards buried in those years. Postumus, who, after his exploits as general
in 260, had again in 261 to parry a German invasion, must undoubtedly have been
often compelled to defend himself against such attacks. Even his boasted
victory of 264 was certainly the outcome of a defensive campaign. On the
other side, the forces of Gallienus were insufficient to provide Dacia, that
great advanced bridgehead of the Danube front, with a full complement of
garrisons; even the Danube front itself had to be strengthened by settlements
of barbarians. Finally, this inner cleavage robbed Gallienus of his last chance
of ordering the affairs of the East in person; to guard against the Persian
danger, he was compelled to feed the rank growth of Palmyra.
Postumus did not content
himself so exclusively with the mastery of his Gallic realm as has been
supposed. That he was mainly restricted to it was more due to Gallienus than to
himself. It is true that at his proclamation he protested before his former
master that his only intention was to protect and prosper Gaul, the task
assigned him by Gallienus, and that he would shed no drop of Roman blood. His
coins, too, at the outset speak only of the salvation of the Rhine provinces
and represent him as Restitutor Galliarum and as Hercules of Roman
Germany. But after the consolidation of his rule in the West his
ambitions increased out of all measure. He succeeded in forcing Britain to his
side and visited the island in person. It has long been known from inscriptions
that Spain went over to him. After all this, he came to feel himself the
protector of Roma Aeterna, a new Hercules Romanus—as coins
attest—and, indeed, fears of his advance were entertained in Italy while
Gallienus was fighting against the Goths in 268. In fact, he even
succeeded, if only for a short time, in bringing North Italy on to his side, as
will shortly appear. That Postumus even dreamed of ruling the East is shown by
his coin-types (continued by his successors) with Oriens Augusti. His
aspirations to world-rule are further illustrated by the legend on the reverse, Restitutor Orbis.
To
this general attitude the organization of his new State corresponds. He
certainly set up a new Senate, because he also appointed consuls independently
of Rome. He himself held the consulship five times,—the fourth time as
colleague of his future successor Victorinus, the fifth time just before his
death in 269. His bronze issues often bear the formula Senatus Consulto, one of his senators, as is well known, was
Tetricus, whom he entrusted with the governorship of Aquitania and who
afterwards sat on his throne. He had his own Praetorian Guard, stationed in
Traves, for he had chosen that city as his residence and adorned it with
buildings. Here, too, under his care, a new imperial mint was established. Both
at this mint and at Cologne a precisely regulated coinage in gold was
produced, clear evidence of an efficient economic administration, while his
small change was just as bad an inflation-coinage as that of his antagonist.
What Gallienus was doing
in the years from 263—267 is unknown. There seems to have been no serious
warfare, and the effects of that inner consolidation that has been observed in
the empire of Postumus were not unfelt on the other side. The epidemic of
usurpations of 260 had been mastered, and, until the new flood of German
invasions (in 267), there was a respite that made progress possible. These
short years, indeed, permitted the ripening of that reaction of the ancient
spirit, whose very soul Gallienus was, a reaction that even found expression in
the art both of his court and that of Postumus. Under the patronage of
Gallienus the circle of Neoplatonists that gathered about Plotinus succeeded in
framing a philosophy suited to an educated man and in finding an expression for
the political and patriotic necessity of polytheism which remained valid to the
end of paganism. In art, again, the reaction of the classical antique against
the modern primitivism breaks for a brief moment of high intensity and significance
into flower; the observations on aesthetics found in Plotinus show how close
must have been the connection between the Neoplatonists and this new bloom of
art. The whole movement had a pronounced hellenic character; was not the court
of Gallienus crowded with Greek men of letters?
It was in definite
harmony with these cultural endeavours that Gallienus strove to lead the masses
away from the mysteryreligions to the cult of Demeter of Eleusis. It was
perhaps while engaged in measures of defence against the new German peril in
the Aegean that he journeyed to Athens, allowed himself, like Hadrian, to be
elected as eponymous archon and received initiation at Eleusis. On the aurei of
Rome appears at this time the solemn religious type that represents Gallienus
in the guise of Demeter—a combination that strikes the modern mind as
ridiculous, but that is not so alien from ancient sentiment or unfamiliar in
the speculation of the mystics and gnostics; it bears the name Galliena
Augusta. The return of Gallienus to his capital was celebrated with
extravagant honours—Genius Populi Roma) intravit urbem).
Apart from this,
Gallienus is known to have been occupied with the putting of the fleet on to a
war basis and with the fortification of the coast cities of Asia Minor. At the
new year of 268 he experienced the joy of seeing his third son Marinianus
solemnly inaugurate his public career as consul, but in the spring he was
compelled to hasten to the Balkans to counter an exceptionally serious
invasion of the Heruli and Goths. He had already won a decisive victory at
Naissus, when a veritable Job’s message called him suddenly back to Italy.
Aureolus, who had from
the first commanded the equites, the new ‘flying army’ of Gallienus and
was now entrusted with the troops of Raetia and other subalpine districts, in
order to prevent the invasion of Italy by Postumus, now changed sides. He had
already once, in the previous offensive, frustrated the complete success of
Gallienus by his ambiguous conduct. The coins, which he struck in Milan in the
name of Postumus, all glorify the virtues of the cavalry under his command, who
were the mainstay of his rebellion. Gallienus handed over to Marcianus the
prosecution of the Gothic war and soon appeared in the plain of the Po.
Aureolus was defeated in a pitched battle near Milan. He withdrew into the city
and was besieged by Gallienus. While the siege was in progress he was
proclaimed emperor—an advancement that was to cost him his life. Meanwhile a
conspiracy had been formed by the leading personalities in the entourage of
Gallienus. The Praetorian Prefect Heraclianus, the Emperor’s deputy in the
chief-command, M. Aurelius Claudius and L. Domitius Aurelianus, the new
commander of the cavalry, were the ringleaders of the plot. On a false report
of the approach of Aureolus with his army the unsuspecting Emperor rushed out
without helmet and cuirass, to meet him and received the fatal thrust. The fact
that the siege proceeded without interruption after the murder of the Emperor argues
strongly for the complicity of the whole staff. Great, however, was the
indignation of the army over the loss of its brilliant commander; it was only
the secret understanding between the chief officers that made it possible to
still the storm. To facilitate the prearranged proclamation of Claudius, the
story was put abroad that Gallienus, as he lay dying, had solemnly appointed
him his successor; at the same time, the State-chest, which in those evil days
was always carted round with the Emperor, so as to be available at need, paid
out twenty aurei to each man, the time-honoured method of winning over the army.
But the demand of the army that the kindred of the dead should be spared came
too late. The Senate, bitterly offended by its exclusion from the high
commands, and the mob of Rome, that made Gallienus the scapegoat for all the
sorrows of his time, murdered his relations and confidants, above all, his
brother Valerian (consul in 265) and his little son, Marinianus. Claudius could
do no more than hinder further bloodshed. The Senate, however, had to consent
to consecrate Gallienus; the temper of the army was such as to commend the step
to Claudius, and the patres naturally, followed his lead.
It was in vain that
Aureolus now surrendered to Claudius: he was at once put to death. All these
tragic happenings fell in the August of 268. It was a piece of good fortune
that the new emperor was in Northern Italy, for he was thus enabled quickly to
bring to action and repel the Alemanni, who had already reached Lake Garda. It
is probable that he then went to Rome to pay his respects to the Senate and
People. Certainly at this stage—if not an even earlier one—an alliance was concluded
between emperor and Senate. After the measures taken by Gallienus, there must
be some real significance in the reappearance of the type of Genius Senatus on issues of Rome with the Emperor’s titles at the New Year of 269. The
extravagant honours paid to Claudius after his death and the choice of his
insignificant brother by the Senate to succeed him are clear witnesses to a
strong bond between emperor and Senate. The lost biographical history of the
emperors, of the middle of the fourth century, sought to explain the enthusiasm
of the patres by the legendary account of the solemn devotion by
Claudius of his own life to the service of the State, on the model of the
heroic sacrifice of the Decii. But, in point of fact, that
enthusiasm had a far more prosaic foundation.
Claudius had now a
splendid opportunity to attack Postumus. A little time back, Italy had been
exposed to the usurper by the adhesion of Aureolus; now Postumus, in his turn,
found his rear exposed to Claudius. The fact that he did not come to the
assistance of Aureolus is indeed remarkable. He was beyond doubt prevented
from so doing. For, although it was not till some four or five months later
that he was able finally to dispose of his rival, Ulpius Cornelius Laelianus,
the revolt of the latter may well have begun earlier. Some idea of this clash
of forces is given by the fact that the mint of Cologne was still striking a
plentiful issue for Postumus for the New Year of 269, while the legion XXX
Ulpia of Vetera (Xanten) went over to Laelianus and both Mainz and the capital
Treves, where his coins were struck, also joined him. Laelianus was shut up in
Mainz and died when the city was taken; but Postumus himself, when he denied
his barbaric troops the satisfaction of sacking the city, had to pay for his
refusal with his life. It is remarkable that at so appropriate a moment the
legions of the Rhine did not return to their allegiance to Claudius, but
preferred to set up M. Aurelius Marius and, after his death in a few months, M.
Piavonius Victorinus.
In Rome, the plan of
recalling Gaul to its obedience was for a moment debated, but Claudius decided,
rightly, that the extermination of the East Germans in Illyricum was a more
serious duty. So to Illyricum he went. But he thrust into the south
of Gaul an expeditionary force, commanded by Julius Placidianus, who soon
afterwards was made Praetorian Prefect. The vexillationes and cavalry
serving under him maintained their position near Grenoble, doubtless in order
to facilitate the hoped-for advance of Claudius with the main army. They
actually succeeded in restoring communications with Spain, which, on the
evidence of inscriptions, acknowledged Claudius. But when Augustodunum (Autun),
not far to the north, closed its gates and called on Claudius for aid,
Placidianus could not save the city, after a siege of seven months it was
forced to surrender at discretion to Victorinus. By that time Claudius was
probably already dead.
Claudius gained one more
decisive victory over the Goths, who after the victory of Gallienus had
continued to be hard pressed by Marcianus, and then directed the ‘mopping-up’
process from the imperial palace in Sirmium, until early in 270 the plague took
him from the Empire’s service.
The Senate, reawakened
to energetic action by the policy of Gallienus, anticipated the army in its
decision. The authorities deserve full belief when they tell us that the
brother of the dead Emperor, M. Aurelius Quintillus, was chosen emperor by the
Senate. He seems to have been in command of the flying column which had to
protect North Italy against the German invasions. It might be supposed that he
went direct to Rome, to present himself before the Senate; but he never reached
the point of distributing the promised largesse to the people of the capital,
and the actual news of the proclamation of Aurelian found him in Aquileia.
The
armies had at first accepted the election of Quintillus, as the issues of the
mints of Milan, Siscia and Cyzicus show; only Palmyra broke away. But he was a
very insignificant person, entirely unversed in State affairs, and his collapse
at the first shock proves that he would never have had the energy on his own
initiative to grasp at the purple. The common soldiers hardly knew him and
abandoned him the moment that a popular general became a candidate for the
throne; it was soon revealed, too, that the generals could not have backed his
proclamation. All the more remarkable in its contrast is the praise of the
pro-senatorial historians of a later age: ‘Unicae moderationis vir et
civilitatis, aequandus fratri vel praeponendus’; but even they had to admit
that owing to the shortness of his reign he did not amount to anything. He was
in fact intended to be a tool of the Senate.
Quintillus was, of
course, anxious to win the favour of the Danubian troops and, as an Illyrian
himself, he had the personifications of the warlike Pannoniae placed on
his issues of Milan; the types of Genius Illyrici and Dacia Felix likewise seem to have been prepared for him at the same mint, but never
actually issued by him. His dependence on the memory of his elder brother is
shown by his assumption of the name of Claudius; the issues in honour of Divus
Claudius Gothicus at Milan and Rome began in his reign and served the same
purpose.
When Aurelian rose
against him in Illyricum in April 270, his armies at once abandoned him and he
was driven to commit suicide. Aurelian spread the report that Claudius had
designated himself and not his brother as successor and, soon after his
proclamation, had coins of Divus Claudius struck in Siscia and Cyzicus
for purposes of propaganda, a clear evidence of the same intention. In actual
fact Aurelian, and not Quintillus, stood in the succession of Claudius as
representative of that Virtue Illyrici that was destined to save the
Empire.
IV.
THE CHIEF POLITICAL FACTORS
The general development
of the imperial autocracy has been described elsewhere, but it is here in place
to note how the consummation of a long process, which was bound to be reached
in the third century, was hastened by successful or unsuccessful usurpations
and the violent deaths of emperors. It became clear that the Senate could no
longer secure stability for the throne, and that it must have another
foundation than legalistic traditions, highly as these continued to be
regarded. What was first needed was a religious basis, and as Juppiter Optimus
Maximus became dim, men turned to this or that Eastern God temporarily in the
ascendant, until at last, under Aurelian, ‘Sol dominus imperii Romani’ embodied
the idea of a unifying deity to correspond to the sole earthly ruler of the
world. A dangerous rival to this claim was the equally monarchical and Universal
idea of the God of the Christians. Decius and his successors had striven to
place in the foreground, not the divinity of the emperor but the divine power
that shielded him, and with this came the possibility that the idea of the
divine favour might remain, but that the pagan gods might give place to the one
true God.
It is, however,
important to realize that the extraordinary emphasis given in these disastrous
times to the fabled bliss of the Golden Age which the emperor brings with him
is closely connected with the struggle of the State against Christianity. This
becomes at once clear when one considers the overstressing in the official
propaganda of the blessings conferred by the restitutor orbis and by the
emperor, as salus generis humani, and to the emphatic protests raised in
the other camp. The saeculum novum with all its glories, advertised by
the issues of Decius and Gallus from Antioch, was, in fact, a pitiful age of
disasters; yet, if these issues are to be believed, each ephemeral emperor was
destined to bring in a Golden Age, in which peace eternal reigns; the hapless
sons of Gallienus must each be the leaders of the new age, as ‘novum Iovis
in'crementum’, and, during the terrible invasions of the end of the reign of
Gallienus, ‘ubique pax’ the coins say: The Christians, however, needed to be
recalled to the enjoyment of this marvellous age of bliss. This doctrinaire
creed was, of course, a blank contradiction of the hard reality, but there was
no other redeemer who could be matched against the Christian. When, under Gallienus,
Augustus is called ‘deus’, instead of ‘divus’, as before, the meaning is that
Augustus really is a god, not a dead man, as the Christians say. This
theological transfiguration of the person of the emperor and, even more so,
his direct deification, had originally been in sharp conflict with the old
humanistic conceptions and, above all, with the mentality of the Senate. Now,
however, the opposition of Christianity made the worship of the emperor a part
of the policy of the patriotic conservatives, and so it remained until paganism
had drawn its last breath.
The absolutist Empire
never allowed its subjects to share in real political or constitutional
decisions. At best, complaints might be brought before the All-Highest by the
Senate in the Curia or by the masses at the games, in the gentle disguise of a
formal litany; decisions were taken in the ‘silentium’ of the palace by a court
clique. But, as the autocracy still rested, however much by anachronism, on
the fiction of a conferment of official competence by the Senate and as this
conferment could obviously only happen after the pretender to the throne had
proved his claim by success, the real choice must first of all be left to the
free play of forces. Thus the retention of the old political forms, with their
Republican colour, at the changes of emperor left considerable room for the
conflict of political forces in the Empire,—especially as, in the twenty-four
years between the deterioration of the situation at the end of the reign of
Philip and the beginnings of Aurelian, there were some thirty proclamations of
emperors.
No
separation of these risings into legitimate and illegitimate can be made. For
from the very first the act by which the supreme offices of State were
conferred was of minor importance when dealing with the candidates backed by
the armed forces. And, as often as continuity had not been secured by the advancement
of the emperor’s real or adoptive son, difficulties inevitably arose. Dynastic
sentiment, developed by transference of this kind, had been strong enough to
guarantee the succession by fictions of a pious or even of a repellent
character (as in the cases of Hadrian, Elagabalus and Severus Alexander)—and
could guarantee it even to children like Gordian III; in our period, too, there
was still recourse to it. But the storms of the age would not permit of the
introduction of a sure, dynastic succession. The decisions lay with those who
carried the sword. Thus the patres had been forced to. declare Decius a hostis
publicus, for only so could Philip protect his rear when he marched out
against him; but the tables were soon turned, and Decius was welcomed with an
extravagance of delight as ‘optimus princeps’—a Trajan come again. The same
thing happened once more with Gallus and Aemilianus. Nor had the Senate even to
pay for its change of tone; its recognition was regarded as a mere formality.
Never once did the Senate protest when the man whom it had legitimized was
killed, but prudently consulted the wishes of his successor. The strict
adherence to principle shown by a Senate uncompromisingly true to Republican
tradition in the third century, is no more than a fond illusion of the
partisans of the Roman aristocracy of the late Empire, as mirrored with
peculiar clarity in the Historia Augusta.
But it would certainly
be a grave mistake to deny to the Senate of the period under review any kind of
political importance. It not only reacted with notable energy against the
attempts to thrust it aside and appointed emperors of genuine senatorial
sympathies on other occasions than in 238, but it was able, in 270 and 275, to
command even greater authority and consent than before, because the anarchy and
bloodshed caused by the violent changes on the throne had taught the army the
useful lesson that the maintenance of continuity in the constitution must be
shielded and respected. Not only did the solemn election of Tacitus fall to the
lot of the Senate but Quintillus, before him, was the Senate’s tool. One may
even go further and say that the close sympathy between the patres and
Claudius seems to have had a history behind it; not without reason does Orosius
say of him: ‘voluntate senatus sumpsit imperium.’
Nor must it be
forgotten, that the candidates whom the soldiers raised to the throne, who,
after all, were almost without exception senators down to 260, were quite
capable of maintaining a completely senatorial programme and temper, as, for
example, did Decius and Valerian. Most of the other creatures of the army, too,
were full of expressions of respect and reverence for the Senate. Philip in a
moment of discouragement wished to return his authority to the Senate, though
he had not received it from them. The example of the disaster of Maximinus
Thrax likewise played its part in putting the fear of the Senate into the
soldier-emperors. They made all haste after their proclamation to make
pilgrimage to Rome and to pay their respects to the patres. Aemilianus,
for example, represented himself as executor of the Senate’s will. When in this
age the stamp of senatorial authority appears on gold and silver coins where
the right of issue had from the first been reserved to the emperor, as for example,
under Gallus, Tacitus and the Tetrarchy or when under Gallienus and Claudius in
the issues of small change in Cyzicus and the still unnamed mint in western
Asia Minor the four proud letters s.p.q.r. are advertised with full official approval, the facts tell their own story.
The
contrast between the enhancement of honour and the decline of actual power is
highly significant of an age in which symbolical and abstract values prevailed
over reality. In this case, for example, the more than ornamental part played
by the Senate as a supreme authority at the election of Emperors was questioned
by no one, least of all by the soldiers of Illyricum, who felt themselves to be
carrying on the traditions of old Rome; but all its other political functions
had been completely lost. As a constitutional instrument it had been treated
with tact and tenderness by the emperors from Augustus onwards, but its
participation in State affairs had been continually whittled down and its
functions transformed into formalities. Unimpaired, however, stood the
reputation and influence of its members as governors and generals, until
Commodus began to have them represented by knights in the provinces and a
practice, begun as an exception, became the rule. Gallienus excluded senators
from the high commands by his permanent agentes vices and
restricted their employment as civil governors: he thus appears in this field,
as elsewhere, as completing a long process of evolution. It was not the
soldier-emperors, it was the incapacity of the senators that accelerated the
process: militiae labor a nobilissimo quoque pro sordido et inliberali
reiciebatur. The permanent state of war called for hard professional soldiers
at the head of the troops, not spoilt gentlemen of the capital.
If in spite of this
exclusion the Senate still remained something more than a relic of ancient
glories, the fact must be credited to the great landed possessions of the
senatorial families, which were not so completely ruined by the bankruptcy of
the State and by the inflation as were the money fortunes of the middle
classes. The album senatorium of the late Empire shows an uninterrupted
high position of many of the great families of the third century. It was
obviously this economic strength that nerved the Senate to a new political
effort in defence of Italy and its heritage of culture in the fifth and sixth
centuries. Even in the crisis of the third century it was due to these wealthy
lords, that in Rome itself the continuity of the traditions of classical art
was not broken and that important treasures of literary and philosophic
humanism were handed on to the next age. Again, it is to the reaction of the
Senate against revolutionary Christianity that the visible quickening of the
old Roman religious sentiment in Rome itself in that dark time was due. It was the emperors of genuinely senatorial temper, like Decius and Valerian,
who were the natural enemies of the Church.
But it was not to the
Senate alone that the emperor was bound by the ties of an honoured tradition:
the idle mob of the capital must receive the customary tokens of respect and
favour. With what care the precise scope of imperial generosity in Rome was
recorded in our period is still shown by the exact list of congiaria in
the Chronographer of a.d. 354.
But, under the sole rule of Gallienus (and, simultaneously, under Postumus),
the systematic count of the benefactions of the Augusti on the coins ceases,
and the representation of ‘liberalitas’ only continues for a time as an empty form,
to disappear almost completely after Aurelian. The attempt to win the favour of
the citizens now recedes behind the bid for the support of the soldiers by largitio. It was the abrupt changes on the throne rather than the old importance of the
capital that still enabled Rome to witness brilliant festivities, such as the
processions that glorified the advent of the god-emperor or the dazzling shows
at the periodic imperial festivals. The accounts in the Historia Augusta of the pomp and glory displayed at the decennalia of Gallienus may not
all be true, but they certainly preserve many genuine characteristics.
Decius in his day
beautified the capital by his completion and dedication of the Thermae of
Commodus; he may also have built a portico and restored the Colosseum But even
then the fortification of the City demanded first attention. There is no reason
to question the statement, that he was busy on plans for the fortification of
Rome. Any considerable building activity was then interrupted by the plague
that began under Gallus, by the constant absence of the emperors and by
financial distress and war. The Arch of Gallienus of 262, erected after the
custom of the age to celebrate the decennalia of the emperor, was a
private dedication of a simpler character.
Despite all this, the
wars of these decades hastened a change in the function of Rome in the State,
that had long been preparing. Now that the emperor must be near the field of
war, permanent imperial residences grew up at or behind the front so that Rome
ceased to be the centre of political life. The free development of the
conception of the emperor had as its corollary: ‘where the ruler is, there is
Rome.’ Hand in hand with this final loss of political privilege went the
crystallization of the abstract idea of the eternal supremacy of Rome. It is no
accident that at this very moment the idea of the primacy of the Roman Church
received its final shape from Cyprian who voiced the idea of the Cathedra
Petri:, the guard at this shrine of human culture was already being
relieved.
Beside this decline in
power of the old vital centre of the world-state stood the rise of the army as
a factor in politics. Its right to share in the election of the emperor had
long been established by custom, and it now found vigorous expression in. the
ceremonial of inauguration. But from the time that Septimius Severus and
Caracalla shortsightedly abandoned the traditional reliance on the Senate and
proclaimed their dependence on the soldiers, it was the temper and will of the
army that must prove decisive in filling the throne. But as the Italians had
long since disappeared from the army and the educated classes in the inner
provinces had likewise ceased to take any serious part in its recruitment, the
word now rested with the sons of the borderprovinces. What, in the end,
determined their attitude was not really the military point of view, but the
atmosphere of their native lands, their nationality and the degree in which
they were permeated by Roman influences.
A notable role was
played by the Osrhoenian archers, who from the time of Caracalla formed a
regular part of the Imperial forces. The proclamation of the first Uranius
under Severus Alexander rested on their support; but, on the other hand, they
with the other Syrian archers formed a strong backing for the Syrian emperors
and for Philip the Arabian, and, after the death of Severus Alexander, tried to
displace the candidate of the Pannonians by an emperor of their own. When a
special issue of coinage under Gallus celebrates the chief god of the
Osrhoenians Aziz, who was identified with Apollo Pythius, it was in honour of
this important arm of the service. The valour of the Osrhoenians in 260 in
battle with Shapur enables us to realize clearly their military, and
consequently their political, value. The whole career of Odenathus and his
family is but one reflection the more of the might of these Oriental archers.
Another important corps
d'élite consisted of the Moorish javelin-men, who had given open support to
the elevation of their countryman, Macrinus; and the proclamation of
Aemilianus, too, a Moor of Girba, must have stood in some relation to the
rising reputation of his fellow Moors. The usurpation of the Moorish officer,
Memor, under Gallienus and of the Mauretanian Saturninus under Probus are
further practical examples of the same thing.
But the armies of the
Western provinces took a much more serious part in the making of emperors in
this period. The notion of the Historia Augusta, that it was the
civilian Gauls (Gallicani, Galli) who were the originators of the separate
empire of Western Europe, though still deeply rooted in the historical
literature of today, finds no support in the genuine tradition. The civil
population of that age was not at all inclined to risk its life for a separate
Gallic Empire; and it was a Roman and not a Gallic programme that Postumus and
his successors announced. But the army, to which they owed their rule, was not
disposed to leave unguarded the Rhine frontier, which was its home, and to
fight in distant lands; it was for that reason that it repeatedly elected emperors
of its own. The bitter results of this separatism have already been seen.
The real decision in the
election of emperors lay, from Severus onwards, with the Danube army, of
Illyro-Celtic stock. From the time of Decius the sons of Illyricum themselves
often reach the throne, until with Claudius it became the rule for more than a
century that the emperors shall hail from the Danube countries. It was the
supreme good fortune of the Empire that this folk was completely romanized and,
despite the fearful devastation of its own lands, was resolute to fight for the
majesty of Rome in all quarters of the Empire. Beginning with Decius and
continuing down the line of his Pannonian successors, the Genius Illyrici is
displayed as a new revelation of Roman patriotism, Roman virtue and Roman
self-sacrifice,—as was only just, for it was Illyricum that restored the unity
of the Empire. This Illyrican supremacy represents at the same time a last
advance of the West against the preponderance of the East. If the Latin
language could make itself at home in the East, if the Roman conception of the
State could take firm root, and if a new Rome could be founded there, it was
the efforts of the new rulercaste of Illyricum that deserve the credit. This
role fell, above all, to the Pannonians as can still be recognized, though the
Dacian regiments played a distinguished part, while Moesians and Thracians had
their share in the great task of restoration.
On the other hand it
must not be forgotten that the encroachment of army influence on political
life involved pernicious consequences. Apart from the fact that the movements
of the army in themselves produced severe pressure and serious disturbance in
the life of the civil population involved, apart, too, from the heavy-
financial burden of the chronic state of war, an original error of the
Principate had bad results. From the Julian house onwards, at every change of
emperor gifts of money were made to the troops to secure their loyalty and,
after 193, these developed into a systematic purchase of military fidelity,
which contributed largely towards a revolution of economic life. The large
gold pieces of Gallienus, with the legend ‘ob fidem reservatam’, express only
too clearly the purpose for which they were issued.
Such were the forces
that determined who should be made emperor. But it would be a grave mistake to
see their effects in isolation. They crossed one another in a hundred different
ways. Decius, the Pannonian, was the pride of the senatorial party; other
Illyrians, like Claudius and Quintillus, though plain soldiers and not senators
themselves, were nevertheless helped on their way to the purple by the
complicity, or, it may be, by the direct will of the Senate. Valerian,
Regalianus2 and other men of consular rank owed their elevation to
the army, and that same army remained unswervingly loyal to the high-born
Gallienus in his later years. Nor did the high birth of Gallienus prevent him
from cutting down the privileges of his senatorial peers.
The Praetorian Prefects
still played their ominous part in the rise and fall of emperors, as, for example,
Heraclianus in 268. But this position was now only exceptionally a step to the
throne, as earlier with Macrinus, and later with Florian and Julianus. Until
the year 260 it was an apple of discord between the senatorial governors;
after that date one commander of the new cavalry corps after another—Aureolus,
Aurelian and Probus— grasped at the succession. It is easy to understand why
Diocletian abolished a position of such dangerous strength.
Yet another force that
raised up pretenders by the score or brought about their overthrow lay in the
psychological malaise of despairing mankind, seeking its redeemers and
hurling its scapegoats to destruction. The aspirants to the throne showed
neither scruples nor any sense of responsibility. Decius, the conservative
senator, cannot be cleared of this reproach by all the tendencious stories of
heathen literature (cf. p. 222 below), any more than can the other
‘constitutional’ rulers, like Valerian. They were as guilty when they clutched
at the purple as were the rough soldiers who rose from the ranks, or the men of
the Eastern border-lands. In revolt against Gallienus rose his own creatures
and familiars, like Ingenuus, Postumus, Aureolus, Claudius and Aurelian—all
highly-skilled soldiers, or, finally, his father’s confidant, Macrianus. The
loyal spirit of an Agrippa was for ever lost. Only very slowly was the balance
against this wild orgy of personal ambition and adventure restored by the sound
political sense and earnest Roman sentiment of the Illyrian peasants. When
after the exclusion of the senators, in 260, the officers from the Danube
countries following the equestrian career came more and more to monopolize the
highest commands, the election of an emperor was gradually restricted to them.
V.
THE STATE AND THE
CHURCH
Soon after his accession
Decius took in hand a persecution of the Christians. In this there were several
stages. First came measures against the leaders of the Church, beginning with
the imprisonment of the Bishop of Rome, who was put to death on January 20,
250. There is evidence to show that the persecution was pressed more severely
in March, but the third stage of more decisive action must be placed in June,
since the many certificates of having made sacrifice to the pagan gods that
have been found in Egypt were all issued between June 12 and July 15. This
reflects the carrying through of a new measure providing that all subjects of
the Empire, from small children to the priests of the pagan cults, must be
registered as making an offering, and the enforcement of this order was
controlled by the whole machinery of the Roman administration. The penalty for
recalcitrancy was death, though the magistrates only imposed it where they
failed by persuasion or threats to secure obedience. The acta of the
martyrs compiled for the purpose of edification and in a set literary convention
do not afford, in general, trustworthy evidence, but there is no reason to
doubt that the number of those who suffered for their faith was large.
Porphyry, a pitiless enemy of Christianity and a well-informed contemporary,
declares that in the persecutions of the middle of the third century thousands
were put to death. That a still larger number of confessores were left
alive is to be explained, not only by the leniency of the magistrates but by
the dying down of the persecution due to the Gothic war about the end of the
year 250. The firm stand of these confessores greatly impressed the
Christians who had yielded, and the organizing skill, political tact, and
determination of the clergy in the restoration of the Church was a potent
factor in recovery. But it cannot be doubted that the general result might
have been far different had Decius not met his death in battle and had he been
able, with iron hand, to persecute not for a year but a decade, and leave no
breathing-space to the Church.
It is in place here to
consider what motives impelled the Emperor to turn executioner. It is true that
the Christians were exposed to penalties before Decius, if they were denounced,
and that before his time there had been sporadic persecutions. The
hatred of the mob against Christianity was of old standing, and if the
Christians saw in the worship of the heathen gods the cause of the troubles and
evils that beset the world, it cannot be doubted that the pagans repaid them in
their own coin. At the end of Philip’s reign Origen could declare that wars,
famines and plagues were attributed to the increasing number of the Christians,
and even that the cessation of persecution was made responsible for the
disorders that followed. The feeling of the mob was whipped up by agitators
from the lettered classes as in Alexandria and elsewhere. Thus there was a
widespread popular hostility to the Church which might well induce Decius to
act. It is also not impossible that the Emperor bore in mind that the strongest
supporters of his predecessor had been the Eastern archers, among whom the
partly Christian Osrhoenians played a leading role. His own power rested on the
soldiery from Illyricum where Christianity had made hardly any progress.
Finally, his good relations with the Senate urged him along the path of
persecution. Thus to other motives may be added the general direction of policy
that followed his accession.
It may further be
pointed out that the Christian community was ever more strongly claiming to be
an imperium in imperio. Despite the humanity and tolerance of the Roman
State, the Church was resolute to yield no whit of its ideals in order to obey
the Roman laws. Thus was removed the possibility of an understanding, and the
claims of the Church to dominion, illustrated by the illusion that certain
recent emperors had even been Christians, were too high to admit of
reconciliation. Immediately before the Decian persecution Origen had declared
that Christ (and therefore also His followers) was stronger than the emperor
and all his officers, stronger than the Senate and the Roman People2.
He looked for a day when the heathen cults should disappear and loyalty to the
sovereign be no longer attested by pagan cult-acts. This does not, he argues,
mean anarchy as even the barbarians will lose their savagery through the
teaching of the Church. It is thus true of Decius that his opponents prescribed
for him in full measure the principle of his action.
Finally, the change that
had converted the Principate based on Republican and juristic concepts into an
absolutism which rested on a theological basis made the claim of the emperor to
worship wholly irreconcilable with the claim of the Christians. In the view of
the present writer, the offering demanded of the Christians by Decius was
something other than an expiatory supplication of the gods, and its purpose was
not to restore the pax deorum but to attest loyalty to the Emperor,
whose reign was assumed to bring divinely-ordained happiness in which an
attempt to deprecate disaster had no place. Indeed, to declare the need for
worldwide offerings to appease the gods would refute the courtly insistence on
the Golden Age which the ruling emperor was supposed to restore to earth. For
in this period the sane logic of mankind had yielded to such idealizing
theories. The primary purpose of the offering was the welfare of the emperor
and it was a matter of subsidiary importance what god received it; this was no
innovation but was in the tradition of the Empire. Only the precise
registration of those who make offerings and the certificates were new.
Furthermore, the anniversary of Decius’ proclamation as emperor fell about the
middle of June, and the offering ordered about that time may be regarded as the
traditional expression of loyalty on this occasion. In the early Empire,
needless to say, such offerings to the Emperor-Saviour were spontaneous, and
compulsion was employed only in the absence of goodwill or in times of great
danger. But what was once offered in gratitude from below was later on
commanded from above. This test of loyalty, as the sources show, was eagerly
welcomed by the pagans, who might well regard refusal as a denial of the general
goodwill to the sovereign inspired by the occasion. The idea of the renewal of
felicity on earth by the Saviour-ruler clashed with the Christian
doctrine—‘tempora Christianis semper, et nunc vel maxime, non auro sed ferro
transi- guntur’. It seems, therefore, that by such action Decius was determined
to demand religious ways of expression of loyalty towards the emperor, and this
is further emphasized by the appearance on coins of Decius of the busts of all
the consecrated emperors.
Under Decius’ successor,
Trebonianus Gallus, there were signs of an approaching persecution, but hardly
had the new emperor decided upon it than he died. Gallus, too, began with
proceedings against the Bishop of Rome, Cornelius, who was arrested and
banished, as was, soon after, his successor Lucius. He too next proceeded with
measures against the clergy, but did not reach any general persecution. It can
be asserted with confidence that Gallus did not renew Decius’ order for a universal
act of sacrifice, and what traces of such an act there are must be attributed
to the local initiative of a governor. It has been pointed out that such an
order need not be regarded as exceptional, and may, as that of Decius, have
been connected with some imperial anniversary. It is, thus, at least hazardous
to regard Gallus as having simply continued the policy of his predecessor and
his death left unrevealed how far he intended to carry his attack upon the
Church.
It was not until 257
that a new persecution was launched, this time by Valerian. The bishop
Dionysius of Alexandria in laudation of Gallienus set himself to find a foil to
that emperor as the author of the later toleration, and chose for this purpose
the rebel Macrianus rather than Valerian, who after all was Gallienus’ father.
Yet Valerian had been Decius’ chief lieutenant, and it is hardly probable that
he did not share his hostility to the Church, so that it may be conjectured
that it was only his preoccupation with the dangers of the Empire that delayed
his action. Macrianus’ part in the persecution may be reduced to his activity
as chief finance minister, whose administrative machinery was involved
particularly in the confiscation of Church property. If then the decision
really lay with Valerian, the reason for it is not far to seek. August 257
found him with a whole series of defeats to his discredit, and he sought to
turn popular indignation against the ’Christians and avert it from himself.
The acta of Cyprian and works of Dionysius of Alexandria afford
excellent evidence for the character of Valerian’s actions. The State demands
no more than the minimum of obedience, not that the Christians should abandon
their faith but that they should add to it a willingness to respect
old-established religious formalities. In the words of the governor of
Africa—‘qui Romanam religionem non colunt, debere Romanas caerimonias recognoscere.’ And it was made clear that this recognition is
imperative because it attests loyalty to the sovereign. The defence of the
Christians takes up this point—the Christians do not cease to pray for the
welfare of the emperors, but can only do so to the one true God. In the words
of Cyprian—‘nullos alios deos novi, nisi unum et verum Deum—huic Deo nos
Christiani deservimus, hunc deprecamur diebus et noctibus—et pro incolumitate
ipsorum imperatorum’
The persecution began,
as under Decius, with the arrest of the leading churchmen, but then followed a
different course. The main body of believers was not called to book, but
meetings for religious purposes and entry to the cemeteries were forbidden
under pain of death. Around these cemeteries, particularly in the Catacombs,
workshops and rooms had been formed for the social life and administration of
the Church, and it was here that in Rome the bishop Xystus and his deacons
together with many clergy and laity were arrested and then put to death. It is
surprising that Dionysius of Alexandria and Cyprian, despite their manful
recalcitrancy, were at ‘first visited only with exile or at worst, deportatio, but their reprieve was short. In a year came a new rescript ordering the
immediate execution of the clergy; highly-placed Christians who clung to their
faith suffered confiscation as well as death, while the Christians of the
imperial household and domains were punished with deportatio. The
humbler folk, so long as they did not disobey the former edict or provoke the
magistrates to action, were left untouched. The persecution cost many lives and
continued till the death of Valerian. But, though it lasted three years, it did
not overthrow the Church. The disciplina Romana, which for centuries had
held in its grasp the civilized world, could not prevail over the divinities
tradita disciplined of Christianity. Herein was to be the secret of
victory—in the iron calm and Roman pride with which a Cyprian faced death, in
the resolution with which the Roman see claimed to lead the whole Church amid
the terrors of persecution, in the unswerving discharge of spiritual duties and
the care for the oppressed and the poor in days of constant peril.
When Valerian was taken
prisoner by the Persians, Gallienus, in this as in all else, broke with his
father’s policy first decree has not come down to us, but only the Greek
translation of a rescript to the bishops of Egypt in which he extended his
concessions to that country after the fall of Macrianus (a.d. 261) and of Aemilianus (262). The imperial decree which
gave freedom and security to the Faith and its adherents and restored to the
communities their places of worship and cemeteries was of fundamental
importance. Christianity was now pronounced neither outside the law nor against
the law. When the Emperor acted on a petition from the bishops, he admitted
that they possessed a legal status, and in giving back the property of the
Church he confirmed the legality of its possession. It is true that his murder
was followed by a violent reaction, but his action pointed the way to the final
solution. The organization of the Church was able to advance, and in a
favourable moment an emperor like Aurelian was prepared to admit the competence
of the bishops of Rome and Italy in an ecclesiastical question.
When Gallienus decided
to end the policy of persecution and the tradition it implied, it was not that
he failed to recognize the danger to the Empire of the Christian movement or
that he lacked the will and ability to carry through a Roman policy of
restoration planned by Decius and Valerian. Such a judgment of his capacity is
the fiction of late historians. The explanation of his action is rather that he
realized that Christianity could only be cured by treatment, not by the knife,
and it was his hope that in the anti- Christian polemic of Neoplatonism, the
outcome of the intellectual circles in which he moved, might be found the
antidote that was needed to bring about the cure2.
In the short reign of Claudius
II there are recorded a host of martyrdoms. The acta that tell of these
are late and not above suspicion. But they are not to be wholly set aside, for
they are concerned with executions in Italy and it was here that the reaction
against Gallienus was most violent, so that a change of policy towards the
Christians was to be expected. Claudius, who enjoyed the confidence of the
Senate, was for that very reason inclined to persecution, even though the
Gothic war and his own death hindered him from taking part in it. Although he
and his immediate successors did not resume the policy of persecution on a
large scale, they preferred to ignore Christianity in a hostile spirit, father
than to continue Gallienus’ real toleration of the Church. Yet it was not in
their power to undo what he had done or to counter its consequences.
VI.
THE ARMY AND ITS TRANSFORMATION
Until the middle of the
third century and even for a time thereafter, the legions remained the backbone
of the Roman army, and their number was increased by Septimius Severus and,
though less notably, by some of his successors1. More than half the
army, to the number of 200,000 men, consisted of legionaries, and throughout
the century the best of these were drafted into the cohortes praetoriae. The most valiant and warlike soldiers of that time were the Illyrians, and
these supplied the majority of the legionaries, and, after Septimius Severus,
of the Guard. Their political predominance reflects that of the legions, which,
as the use of vexillationes became the rule instead of the exception,
provided the best infantry and a part of the cavalry for a new mobile army, so
that in the wars of Aurelian and even somewhat later the great military
creation of Rome still brilliantly proved its worth, though indeed it no longer
was the sole decisive factor.
Although Septimius
Severus confirmed the right of the soldiers to a family life and allowed them
to lease the prata legionis it would be a mistake to suppose that thus
early the legionaries became settlers by compulsion like the barbarians who
were then planted behind the limites. The Illyrians were, indeed, a
peasant stock, yet they left their farms to become soldiers and fought the
battles of the Empire from end to end of it, especially in the many campaigns
of the middle of the century. But before the reforms of Constantine the legionaries,
like the frontier cavalry, had come to be regarded as peasants tied to their
farms2, and this implies that in the preceding decades the legions
had been transformed into a settled and hereditary frontier guard. The great
wars of the middle of the century, the pestilences that visited the Empire and
the loss of men carried off in the widespread barbarian invasions had
exhausted in the Illyrians the last source of romanized man-power, so that
Constantine no longer relied upon them. Further, with the constant withdrawal
of the best troops to serve in the mobile army, the garrisoning of the frontier
sank to a secondary role that was entrusted to barbarians and semi-barbarians.
In the period of the
great military crisis Rome had to meet enemies who had shown superiority in the
field, and the need to match their methods undermined the tactical supremacy of
the legion. This was not due to any failure of the Illyrians, who were no less
suited to maintain the Roman art of war than the Italians had been. They
were simple peasants, but the fact alone that they supplied most of the
centurions of the army at this time shows that they were well able through
years of service to train themselves in Roman discipline and skill of
manoeuvre, and they were inspired by the spirit of Rome. But the countless
forced marches of great range were merely hindered by the old Roman practice of
fortifying camps at the end of each day. Caesar had long before realized how
hampering the heavy legionary armament could be in the face of a nimble arid
mounted enemy, and now, in the third century, the infantry tactics and weapons of
the legions were clearly shown to be out of date. A hint of this may be found
in the fact that Macrinus had sought to increase the mobility of his troops by
taking away their breastplates and heavy shields2. Further, now
that the enemy, both in East and West, trusted to long-distance missiles or
sudden cavalryattacks, the pilum, which was designed for use against
close and comparatively immobile masses, lost its effectiveness and disappeared
in the third century, and with it the short sword, which was replaced by the
long spatha of the auxiliaries and the German enemy, together with the
lance3. But new equipment, suited to the fighting of the time, had
already been supplied to other formations, as was indeed inevitable now that
cavalry was becoming more important than infantry.
As the old tactics lost
their hold, discipline naturally declined. But more grave was the effect of the
disappearance of suitable personnel. The level of education began to sink
during the third century, especially among the officers, where it is more
dangerous. The exclusion of senators from a military career did more harm to
the civil service than to the army, but the disappearance of the Italian
officers of equestrian rank in this period meant an irreparable loss, and
inevitably lowered the cultural standard of the whole hierarchy. Whereas
earlier the principalis marked out to be centurion had already in the
bureaux of his superiors acquired a thorough knowledge of all sides of the
service and had also proved himself in military administration, the army
officer in this epoch was a mere man of his hands4, and in the
fourth century often an illiterate.
Next come the regular auxilia. In order to understand the later development it is important to stress the fact
that in the second century these had not so wholly lost their national
character as might be thought. Though Trajan’s Column shows many auxiliaries in
uniform Roman equipment, advantageous as that could be, their organization and
way of fighting were less assimilated to those of the legions than has been
supposed. Such an assimilation was hardly possible for the cavalry, which in
the legion played a subordinate role, and it is not an archaism when Vegetius
declares that there was a marked difference between auxilia and
legions—‘alia instituta, alius inter eos est usus armorum.’ The motley groups
of fighters with their special kinds of dress and arms that also appear in
these reliefs are not all to be regarded as ‘irregular’ formations.
In the second century
national peculiarities in the practice of war were highly appreciated, and
barbarian formations had even been made out of romanized personnel. To take one
instance, the ala Ulpia contariorum civium Romanorum used the long
thrusting spear of the Iranians to meet the Quadi who fought in the Sarmatian
way, and the tactics of the Sarmatians and Alani, together with their use of
the wedge-formation in attack, were practised in the army, and there was even
made an ala I Gallorum et Pannoniorum catafraetata for use against these
enemies. Hadrian, in particular, who had studied the barbarian ways of
fighting, will not have contented himself with allowing the use of national warcries
by the auxilia. This is obvious so far as the numerous cavalry regiments
and infantry of the Oriental bowmen are concerned; nor can Rome have dispensed
with the admired dexterity of the Batavians, the much-copied cavalry manoeuvres
of the Spaniards or the skill of the Moorish javelin-men. National methods of
fighting became even more important in the third century. There are new archer
formations and an ala nova firma milliaria catafractaria in competition
with the Parthians and Persians. To the variously equipped troops that have
been mentioned may be added, for instance, the ala of camelry, the cohortes
scutatae Hispanorum and other formations, even cavalry armed
with the scutum. It is even possible that the half-naked Germans on
Trajan’s Column were regular troops like those cohorts which were disbanded
after the rebellion of a.d. 69—
Germanorum... nudis corporibus super umeros scuta quatientium’
The practice of filling
up the auxilia with recruits from the region in which they were
stationed militated against the maintenance of their national character, but
the practice was far from uniform. It has been shown that in the third century
the Oriental bowmen received recruits from their home countries as also the ala
nova of cataphracts. At the beginning of that century the cohort III
Batavorum milliaria., which had been stationed in Pannonia for a long
while, still made dedications to its tribal goddess Vagdavercustis, and so must
have retained its national character. Soldiers’ sons joined their fathers’
formations and thus assisted a continuity of race that must not be underrated.
However much the auxilia might be romanized, there were openings for
national characteristics, especially when, as early as Hadrian, arose the fixed
institution of the numeric which were separated off, not because of
their alien character but because of their special functions in the strategy of
that emperor.
Hadrian’s strategic
conception, that is, the police supervision and fixing of the frontiers in the
unyielding line .of a single cordon instead of a defensive battle-zone in
depth, was inspired by high civilizing ideals; but it failed to meet the
military needs of the Empire and led directly to the collapse of the defence in
the stern times of the third century. The Roman army was far too small to guard
the whole line that encircled the world-empire. To fill up the gaps Hadrian
created the numeri as a kind of militia which cost less than the troops
of the line, were worse equipped and not trained to equal efficiency.
For a while these served
their purpose and their presence was attested on almost all the frontiers,
sometimes supported by first- line troops. But the peoples within the Empire
soon failed to supply men to hold the gaps in the defences, the more as invasions,
especially those of the Germans, ever more often broke into it. At the same
time, the constant elaboration of the defensive lines called for more garrison
troops. The result was that the late second century already saw the first
settling of barbarians from without the Empire, who were no longer organized
as numeri. It was still possible to follow the old pattern and place
these new settlers under officers such as praefecti gentium, as for
example the gens Onsorum who have been newly posted under a praepositus in Lower Pannonia at the end of the second century, and the dediticii
Alexandrian settled at Walldurn on the Rhine under Severus Alexander. The
like control was exercised over the Chatti who at the end of the second century
were transplanted to the castellum at Zugmantel in the Taunus with their
families and goods. In the third century, too, the frontier troops were often
reinforced by prisoners of war and fugitives from enemy countries, but at times
it became necessary simply to admit a client State within the frontier line, as
is shown by the settlement under Gallienus of a king of the Marcomanni on the limes of Upper Pannonia.
The numeri gained
little from this barbarization of the frontier garrisons. Despite their entire
or partial lack of romanization they were put under Roman commanders and
officers, yet the soldiers who served in them were not only dediticii and gentiles, but, unlike the other Imperial troops, they did not
receive citizenship after the completion of their years of service. None the
less, they became romanized to a considerable extent, and this process was assisted
by their later recruitment from the inhabitants of the part of the front
allotted to them. The rise in their status (from the Roman point of view) is
reflected in the fact that as late as the third century several numeri were advanced to be cohorts and alae. On the other hand the value of the
citizenship had so fallen that men from Emesa and Palmyra who had become ernes
Romani could be used to form numeri; even among the gaesati of Tongres
citizens are found.
As early as the end of
the second century bounties were provided for those auxiliaries whose sons
carried on their trade of arms, and in the third this duty was imposed on them.
Even earlier than the auxilia the soldiers of the numeri were
tied to the soil. It has already been noted how this military peasantry became
barbarized both in and after the ravages of the years of crisis. Under the
Tetrarchy it was a matter for congratulation if by any means men could be found
to continue this service1. Their fixed settlement and the principle
of local defence, to which they owed their existence, used up the numeric They disappear from the military system after Diocletian, having either
perished or else been changed into other formations. The new strategy demanded
instead of the Hadrianic numeri the revival under another name of
Trajan’s irregulars.
The system of the inelastic
frontier cordon and the ranging along it of the whole military strength of the
Empire broke down as often as serious attacks were launched upon it. But this
second-century idea was too deeply rooted in the whole conception of the State
for it to be abandoned. That would have meant the sacrifice of the Roman
element in the frontier provinces, which at that time did most to uphold the
Empire and so could not be reduced to a mere glacis or field of operations. As
early as the second century there were efforts to make good the exhaustion of
manpower by the strengthening of the frontier fortifications, and after the
German and Persian invasions there was fresh activity in improving the castella and building new defences. In this Gallienus was as active as Postumus and,
later, Diocletian and his successors. But though they clung to the traditional
method of defence the emperors could not evade the demands of a new situation.
If the Empire was to be kept secure, it was necessary to return to a grouping of
the armies in depth, and the constant wars of movement made indispensable an
army that was ever ready to take the field and was independent of the frontier
line. These two needs led to the creation of a new mobile army which was
normally posted at important points behind the frontiers. As the new conception
of defence prevailed, it conferred increased importance on the significant
strategic points of Italy, especially on Aquileia, Milan and Verona, the two
latter receiving under the sole rule of Gallienus the name of colonia
Gallieniana on the score of the building of new fortifications. The minting
of money and manufacture of arms were removed to these or other great military
centres, as also troops including newly organized corps.
About the middle of the
century vexillationes from Danube legions are found in Aquileia, where
they formed a standing camp. This appears to have been a defensive measure
taken by Philip, who in other respects also strove to protect North Italy,
Mobile detachments of the Upper Pannonia legions stationed at Aquileia later
became regiments of the field-army and were transferred to the East. The
commanders of these mobile units were called fraepositus or dux. thus the ducenarius Aurelius Marcellinus, who directed as dux the
work on the fortifications of Verona in 265, was also the commander of such
detachments. Vexillationes of the Eastern legions came to North Italy in
consequence of the victory over Macrianus and when Aureolus went over to
Postumus in 268, they seem to have been detached by the latter to Gaul
(possibly against Laelianus), as their names appear on the gold struck at
Treves by Victorinus.
Gallienus posted mobile
troops not only south but north of the Alps. Vexillationes from Germany
and Britain are found at Sirmium in Pannonia in the period of his sole rule. At
the same time, the two legions withdrawn from Dacia were established in Poetovio at the crossing
of the Drave, thus barring the road that led to Italy. In like manner a
detachment from the legions at Albano and Lambaesis was posted at Lychnidus on
one of the chief roads that lead to Greece. Thus there can be no doubt that Gallienus
went beyond what had hitherto been attempted and devised a far-reaching
strategic scheme to break the waves of the barbarian invasions. It may be that
the vexillationes from Lower Moesia and Pannonia that are found in
Dalmatia in the third century belong to the same setting. The troops on this
mobile footing were of course used also in offensive operations, as for
instance the advance to Southern Gaul under Claudius II.
Some emperors after
Gallienus may have regarded this separating off of mobile troops as a
transitory innovation, but he can hardly have done so. At all events, the
continuous state of war often prevented the vexillationes from returning
to their parent legions on the frontier, and what began as exceptional
continued till it was confirmed in the definitive new organization of Diocletian
and Constantine when the detachments became legiones comitatenses or palatinae in the mobile army. The general rule of having two legions in each province, to
which Severus and Caracalla gave effect, brought it about that these legionary vexillationes appear in pairs as a combined unit; this practice, also applied tactically,
remained an essential part of the late Roman army organization.
Whereas this system was
defensive in motive and was still half based on the infantry of the old order,
the frequent wars of movement caused cavalry to come more into favour. It is
true that at the beginning of the century it was firmly and widely held that
the strength of the Roman army lay in its infantry and close fighting with
spears, whereas the Parthians were distinguished by their cavalry and
long-range archery. As late as 238 Maximinus drew up his army for battle with
the square of legions and auxilia as its main strength. But even the
cavalry had come to play a more decisive role than his ordre de bataille would suggest.
The Moorish javelin-men
with their small shields, riding barebacked, had already become famous in
Trajan’s wars, and in the third century from Caracalla onwards they once more
came to the front. Under Macrinus or Elagabalus they are commanded by a tribune
of the Praetorian Guard; being thus regarded as élite troops, they can
hardly have been reduced to the grade of numeri but remained irregular
formations. Under Macrinus they were effective against the Parthians and in
combination with the Oriental archers they contributed greatly to the successes
of Severus Alexander and Maximinus against the Germans of the Rhine. The former
brought large forces of them to the West.
Philip’s defeat of the Carpi was due to their
impetuous attack, and then they appear with Valerian against the Persians,
though at the same time Gallienus used a Moorish corps against Ingenuus.
Finally, they fought with success against Palmyra under Aurelian.
The other important
specialist troops of this period, the Oriental archers, seem to have been
mainly cavalry, armed with the most dreaded weapon of antiquity, the composite
bow of the Iranian and Turkish nomads. The best archer regiments after
Caracalla’s annexation of their country were the Osrhoenians. Caracalla used
them against the Germans, probably as irregulars, and so too Severus Alexander
and Maximinus: they distinguished themselves in the war against Shapur.
Finally, the heavy cavalry of the Iranians, with their long spears and armour
both for man and horse, were used in the Roman army especially after the
increasing conflicts with Persia, in which, indeed, the enemy, too, were driven
to adopt Roman tactics. Orientals were used as catafractarii because of
their long familiarity with this kind of fighting.
Such were the new kinds
of troops which were at Gallienus’ disposal when he decided to break with
tradition and bring cavalry into the foreground instead of infantry. But it is
significant that he did not rely primarily on these when he organized mounted
regiments on a new model. Doubtless he realized the danger to the State if he
placed this new instrument of war in the hands of the Moors and Orientals, and
so he had recourse to the unexhausted man-power of Dalmatia and created the equites
Dalmatae. Since, after this army had been disbanded, the Notitia
Dignitatum always mentions the equites Mauri, the equites promoti and equites scutarii with the Dalmatian regiments, it is fairly certain
that Gallienus grouped them together, converting into new corps d'élite the Moorish javelin-men, and also the concentrated legionary cavalry and the scutarii, who must have used a distinctive way of fighting. This far-reaching reorganization
was made in a.d. 258. The
coin-issues show that the official designation of this whole cavalry force was
simply equites. and that it was posted at Milan under Gallienus, as also
under Aurelian. At the decennalia of Gallienus it is put on a par with
the Praetorian Guard, and this shows that it was a real household corps under
the direct command of the emperor. From this time onwards its commander was the
most powerful subject of the Empire, though only of equestrian rank. Claudius
seems to have held this post after the rebellion of Aureolus2, and
this agrees with the fact that he is described as second only to the emperor.
After him Aurelian and then Probus (who was called Equitius) used this position
as a jumping-off place to the throne.
It is important to
observe that this cavalry army acted as a unit wholly independent of the
infantry: thus it won the victories over Ingenuus and Macrianus. But even later
this separation continued, as in 269 against the Goths, where friction between
the two arms almost led to a serious disaster. Here, too, the Dalmatians did
much to secure victory, as later in the Eastern wars of Aurelian. In the
battles before Antioch and near Emesa the equites played their
independent role. Once the cavalry army had so brilliantly proved its worth,
and while so much remained for it to do, Aurelian can hardly have broken it up
and distributed its units over the East. It is more probable that this was done
by Diocletian, to destroy the central political importance of their commander.
At some time before a.d. 293 the
name vexillationes, which had been used of legions of the mobile army,
was transferred to mounted detachments, which may be regarded as being parts
of the cavalry army. Diocletian also restored the connection of the promoti with the legion, but this only lasted for a time.
After Gallienus Aurelian
doubtless did much for the reorganization of the army. It seems, he
strengthened the catafractarii, who are also called clibanarii. For on the Arch of Galerius at Salonica the emperor’s bodyguards wear the
scale-armour of the cataphracts and the conical helmet (Spangenhelm) typical of the Iranians, which was then inherited by the Germans of the middle
ages. Their standards are the Iranian dracones—serpents flying and
hissing with the gaping jaws of a wild animal. These may have been used before
by the Thracian auxiliaries and were employed in manoeuvres to mark enemy
positions, but they had earlier been regarded as foreign and barbarian. It may
be taken as certain that this Persian equipment had established itself before
Galerius’ victories and no emperor had had so much to do with enemy cataphracts
as Aurelian. He had, indeed, discovered the right tactics and weapons to use
against them, but he doubtless learned to respect the clibanarii of
Zenobia and introduced such regiments into his army on a large scale.
Another innovation with
far-reaching consequences has been attributed to Aurelian. He apparently formed auxilia of Vandals, Juthungi and Alemanni, and this meant a quite new
access of Germans to the army. There are now found wholly non-Roman formations,
as even earlier a cuneus Frisiorum in Britain. But the new German auxilia also kept their ancient national standards, shield-devices and dress, which, as
ever more Germans were enrolled, spread so quickly that by the early period of
Constantine they became regular in the whole army. As early as the Tetrarchy
the emperor himself wore even in peace time the long trousers, the once
despised bracae of the Celts and Germans. It is probable that before the
century ended the customs of the German warriors, as the raising on a shield
and the crowning with a torque, appeared at the proclamation of the emperors.
All this did not happen suddenly and without precedent. Caracalla created a
privileged elite force of Germans, the leones^ which lasted on,
it may be as a special kind of bodyguard. Germans had done this service to the
first emperors and the third-century rulers from Caracalla certainly had German
bodyguards. The reliefs of the Arch of Galerius show these as typical.
But the emperors of the
third century, though they could not do without this excellent fighting
material, strove as far as possible to keep the Germans in a subordinate
position, as half-free coloni or third-line soldiers in the numeri or at least attached to other troops under Roman supervision. It may be that it
was Philip, in whose reign recruits were already notably scarce, who first
admitted them to the regular auxilia. Claudius certainly did so. But the
wearing down of the Empire’s own resources is shown by the handing over of part
of the Upper Pannonian limes to a German prince under Gallienus or the
alliance in the same period with German kings on the Rhine outside the
frontier. The contingents bought from the Germans under the cloak of a foedus gradually became indispensable. No hesitation was felt about enlisting great
numbers of irregulars from free Germany. This had been the practice of Trajan
and Marcus Aurelius, as of Caracalla, Maximinus and Pupienus. It was followed
by Gallienus on the Rhine and after him by Postumus. By keeping these
irregulars it was possible to isolate these alien elements and in fact the
Germans did not come to the front politically in this period because their
isolation was effective. But this procedure meant that the Empire’s gold was
constantly drained away. And as the troops of the line were used up, the
irregulars became ever more predominant and finally became regulars. The world
was upside-down. Yet the guiding of the increasing flood of Germans in the
army into Roman channels marks an achievement of the third-century emperors.
The great changes in the
army were reflected in its hierarchy and it was Gallienus who made the decisive
alterations in its organization. There is one institution which seems to date
from the beginning of his reign, which was to lead to important developments,
that of the protectores divini lateris. The model for these may have
been the somatophylakes of the Hellenistic Kings. The Hellenistic ideas
that underlay the autocracy were salient in this period, and Gallienus, though
he showered distinctions on the Germans, still excluded them from the regular
service of the State. This suggests that the first institution of the protectores is to be distinguished from its later development in which the direct personal
relation of the protectores domestici to the monarch became tinged with
the idea of loyal retainership familiar to the germanized officers of the
court. Another sign of the change in the position of the protectores is
to be seen in the fact that at
first the name marked a distinction reserved for the tribunes of the Praetorian
Guard, the prefects of the legions and the commanders of the mobile units,
whereas later it was applied to the whole body of centurions. The essential
feature of the institution was residence at the Imperial camp as a kind of
training as staff-officers.
Gallienus’ exclusion of senators
from military service had important consequences. The creation of so eminent a
position as that of the general of the new cavalry army foreshadowed the office
of magister militum under Constantine. This general, and no less the
army-commanders in the provinces, the praefecti legionis,and the praepositi or duces of the vexillationes were equites. But the
equestrian order was no longer the old social class of Rome and the Italians.
Even under the early Empire centurions had been promoted to this rank and
Septimius Severus granted all under-officers the privilege of wearing the gold
ring which was the badge of the equestrian order. This process continued, and
Gallienus bestowed this rank on the sons of principales and centurions
at their birth.
As this development
broke down the old class-distinctions, so the new strategy deprived Rome of its
central importance in favour of the Imperial headquarters. To these were also
removed the arms-factories and the decentralization of coining worked in the
same direction. In this, too, Gallienus broke with tradition. But the army not
only lost its connection with the capital but was wholly divorced from old
ideas of the State. It no longer stood for the Roman citizen body, and had no
feeling for ancient prerogatives, but depended simply on the will of the
monarch. This personal attachment to the Imperator had also much to do with the
change that came over the economic life of the Empire.
The Roman denarius had
for centuries possessed a value based not on State regulation but on its
intrinsic worth, and though since Nero its silver content imperceptibly
decreased, it was the foundation of the prosperity of the Antonine period. But
in the reign of Septimius Severus the debasement of the currency was already so
advanced that either it must be checked or account must be taken of its
consequences. Severus adopted the second alternative. He allowed the process to continue, but was able
to compensate the soldiers, apart from an increase in their pay, by granting
them the benefits of a new taxation in kind, the annona. This new levy
bore hardly on the provincials and induced a far-reaching system of
requisitions. From Septimius Severus onwards the silver content of the currency
fell though gradually, until in the lamentable conditions of a.d. 253 Valerian and Gallienus found
themselves forced to resort to a more drastic debasement of the currency to get
money for the State, and after the catastrophe of 260 the denarius was rapidly
replaced by a silver-washed copper coinage. At the same time the imperial
authority attached an arbitrary value to this inflation-currency, and compelled
its acceptance at this rate; now that the value of money was fixed by
authority, not by the free play of economic forces, the foundations of the old
individual form of life were destroyed. But while no effort was made to do more
for the silver currency than regulate the inflation-money, gold was issued and
put into currency by a new method. By substituting increases of pay2 for military distinctions and developing the abuse of presents in gold Severus
had inaugurated a process that was to have far-reaching effects. Apart from the
facts that from his reign onwards the normal issues of gold were ever more
often made to coincide with the periodic Imperial celebrations and that the
gold reserve more regularly moved about with the imperial court and camp, there
now further developed a peculiar system for the distribution of the gold coins
(which never lost their full metal content). This change is best seen in the
money struck for presents. These gifts became especially common since the
reign of Hadrian and usually consisted in the second century of bronze pieces
of no intrinsic value but well fitted by their high artistic execution to be
presented to highly placed personages on great occasions. After Severus the
‘medallions’ suited to the taste of a cultivated upper class were gradually
replaced by large gold pieces, which, in striking contrast to the poverty of
the time, had become by the period of the Tetrarchy heavy lumps of gold. Their
types displayed with growing emphasis their connection with the Imperial
festivals.
These largesses, which
were no longer designed for the citizens but for the soldiers, served not only
to secure their loyalty but called forth the traditional religious and
emotional expression of it. It was not undisguised bribery, but was allied with
offerings and solemnities as was demanded by the spirit of the age. Liberalitas
praestantissimorum imperatorum expungebatur in castris, milites laureati
adibant,’ writes Tertullian. This development of the system of presents gained
a new impetus as the old conception of money died out in the second half of the
third century. While the compulsory acceptance of the inflation-money and the
growing contribution in kind deprived the civil population of money of
intrinsic value, the soldiers were provided for not only by payments in kind
but by the presents that accompanied the Imperial festivals, a process whereby
the minister of finance became a comes sacrarum largitionum.
Despite all this,
whoever would make the soldiers alone responsible for this development, should
not forget how these men served the Empire with their lives. The millions of
Italian and other citizens of the towns merely looked on at the wars, and had
no desire to put themselves in peril for their country. They preferred to
endure the crushing burden of taxation and the oppression of the autocracy.
VII.
THE EMPERORS
First
the picture, or rather caricature, presented by the ancient authorities must be
considered. Of Decius there is no contemporary tradition apart from the Church
Fathers, like Cyprian, who knew him only as tyrannus ferociens. For
Lactantius, this persecutor of the Faith is an exaecrabile animal. The
Byzantine tradition presents a view that looks like a direct answer to such
slanders. That convinced heathen, Zosimus, maintains that he ruled most admirably
and won all his battles. Again, in the story told by the late Greek sources of
his accession, the same tendency is revealed: the intention is to clear him of
the charge of usurpation. Actually, he had already been months in Illyricum,
and had certainly got rid of the partisans of Pacatianus, when his revolt
began; he could not therefore have been forced to assume the purple by those
same soldiers, in dread of punishment. Nor does it appear to the present writer
to be true that he intended to lay aside the purple, but that the evil,
distrustful Philip would not credit his intention2. That would be to
attribute to this man of iron a course of conduct actually followed a century
later by the soft and servile Vetranio, or, before him, by the feeble Tetricus.
Decius knew that the purple on his shoulders meant empire or death—in that
knowledge he acted. The same tendency is even more crudely exaggerated in that
pamphlet against Christianity, the Historia Augusta. For it Decius is
the ideal champion of the old Roman position, an embodiment of true Roman
virtues. But what is beyond all doubt is that the Senate always regarded him as
flesh of its flesh and that his heroic death finally silenced all criticism in
these circles and so prepared the way for his later transfiguration. To excuse
the terrible disaster that befell this defender of the old national religion
and morality the sources on which our Byzantine authorities depend sought a
scapegoat to bear the guilt. They found one in the successor of Decius, the
witness of his fall— Trebonianus Gallus. The treachery of Gallus, as alleged by
our authorities, is an absurd invention. What was left for him to do, when all
was lost, but to bow to the inevitable and let the Goths go their way?
Of the unhappy Valerian
the heathen sources, truthfully enough, have almost nothing good to report; the
Christians load him with abuse. But the Historia Augusta, in its hatred
for the Christians, excels itself and makes this wretched figure a national
hero. The whole vita Valeriani is a reply to Lactantius, who says of
this persecutor—‘deus novo ac singular! poenae genere adfecit.. . . Etiam hoc
accessitad poenam, quod cum filium haberet imperatorem, captivitatis suae tamen
ac servitutis extremae non invenit ultorem, nec omnino repetitus est.’ Forged
letters are quoted to prove the contrary, and the biographies that follow
Valerian’s in this pitiful production swarm with praises of the persecutor. All
this has no relation to reality.
Never were the
historical features of an emperor so distorted as were those of Gallienus. Even
in his lifetime, when despairing humanity demanded the causes of the fearful
blows of fate, the short-sighted naturally sought to lay the blame on the man
who held the rudder of State. Embitterment of this kind helped many an
adventurer to rise against him. Then, when this malaise of the mind had
been mastered, the resentment of the Senate against him grew ever fiercer. It
was in vain that the army tried to repress the Senate’s fury after his murder:
‘ patres. . . stimulabat proprii ordinis contumelia.’ The fact that so few
edicts from the sole reign of Gallienus are preserved in the law books of
Justinian compared with the rather ample material from his joint reign with his
father shows that the patres might tolerate the shame brought on the
State by the father, but could never forgive their own humiliation by the son.
A generation later, it is true, a panegyrist could still debate whether the
instability of the Roman State under him came from ‘incuria rerum’ or ‘quadam
inclinatione fatorum,’ but the attitude of the Latin writers was So completely
determined by the views of the senatorial circles that the unjust verdict
became ever more exaggerated as time went on. This state of mind is represented
by the author of the lost biographical history of the emperors on which our
later chronicles and compendia depend. He found in the sound tradition much
that was favourable to Gallienus, and so he endeavoured to integrate and
harmonize its self-contradictory verdict in a manner very natural to ancient
thought. From the poems of Solon onwards we find recurring in ancient
literature the ethical dogma that good fortune and prosperity bring men to
destruction— ‘mutant secundae res animos.’ The Greeks themselves established
the formal type of the tyrant, who, after good beginnings, ‘secundis solutior,’
is progressively corrupted: even an Alexander could not escape such reproaches
from moralists. The theme was in due course inherited by the Romans, and the
anonymous historian naturally followed this scheme in calumniating Gallienus.
But the arbitrariness of his method is soon betrayed by the actual sequence of
the events, which he forces into this artificial progression from good to evil.
There is a second
literary motif that plays a part with our anonymous writer in his blackening of
the character of Gallienus —that of the growing effeminacy of the luxurious
tyrant; it passed into the Caesares of Julian and rises in the Historia
Augusta to a veritable medley of ancient commonplaces: Gallienus has here
become sordidissimus feminarum omnium. There is yet a third tendency
that starts with our anonymous historian: in contrast to Gallienus he eulogizes
his opponents, in particular Odenathus and Postumus, who brought salvation
where the profligate failed. That is why the chapter on the thirty tyrants is
spun out in so romantic a style in the Historia Augusta.
In the Greek writers, on
the contrary, we find only the favourable portrait of a humane and illustrious
prince. Even if this may represent no more than the devotion of cultured
Hellenists, such as Dexippus, Porphyry, Callinicus and Longinus, the popularity
of Gallienus among the lower social circles of the East is still echoed in the
fantastic stories told by Malalas. In the Christian literature of his own age
Gallienus was greeted with high praises, or even with formal panegyrics. But
this note grew fainter when emperors followed who had become Christians
themselves and thus could easily overtrump the good will shown by Gallienus. St
Ambrose, for example, already takes his full share in condemning him. The great
historian of later Rome, Ammianus Marcellinus, found on the one hand the
verdict: ‘neque Gallieni flagitia, dum urbes erunt, occultari queant, et,
quisque pessimus erit, par similisque semper ipsi habebitur’1; on
the other, the praise of the Greeks. He took over the reproaches, but also
admitted, albeit with some embarrassment, the favourable judgments—in one case,
indeed, where the Greek authority is still preserved3. Now that the
research of recent years has cleared the memory of Gallienus of this coating of
calumny, it can be seen that, this apart, the really weak sides of the man had
been completely forgotten, even his natural failings can hardly be discerned.
The same senatorial
reaction that created this dark picture tried to acquit Gallienus’ successor,
Claudius, of participation in his murder and to surround him with an atmosphere
of glory and light. Even his insignificant and shortlived brother received the
meed of unstinted appreciation.
Let us now see what the
facts in their turn have to say. The tradition that survives from late
antiquity would suggest that the emperors in these decades had the power to do
good or evil, as their own natures dictated, to act of their own free will.
But, in reality, the path they trod depended on a long and varied series of
premisses. In all departments of life it may be observed how a secular
evolution set the seal on that great crisis of the Empire, and how the new
shape that things now took had had a long preparation behind it. A few examples
must here suffice.
The development of art
is particularly revealing for the history of civilized States. Here it is
possible to trace very clearly the long lines of connection between the early
and late Imperial period. For instance one can determine the road by which the
chief characteristic of late Roman-medieval painting, the gold background, was
unobtrusively led up to through centuries4. The change of style in
relief-sculpture has revealed how, as early as the second century, the
inability to create new compositions resulted in the old scenes becoming
over-crowded by the addition of new figures. This process means the
disappearance of the background, and perspective loses its raison d'être. This ‘anarchy of forms’ reaches its climax in this period, while at the same
time economic stress crushes the great sarcophagus workshops in Rome. The
approaching new order of things can do no more than bring in a primitively
schematic form of composition, and the exhaustion of the power of composition
is followed, about a. d. 300, by
the disappearance of technical virtuosity. But the art of portraiture shows,
with peculiar clearness, that during the regression of the organically
conceived portrait to a lifeless schematic generalizing likeness, there
suddenly, about 260, appears a violent recoil to the classical. Since this
reaction is found not only in Italy but simultaneously in the realm of
Postumus, it is clear that it is widely based, and that, though the rulers
might favour it and guide it to maturity, they did not initiate it.
Much light is thrown on
these progressive changes of orientation by the unbroken sequence of the
history of the monetary devaluation. This shows clearly that about 260 the
manipulation of the silver content of the double denarius that had been going
on for two centuries, accelerated and led to its complete destruction. Here
again it is instructive to draw the parallels between the course of this
process in the regions governed by Postumus and by Gallienus, as it
demonstrates an essential similarity that did not depend on those two
personalities. The career of this debased money is precisely similar in both
areas; at about the same time it sank, on one side and the other, to be a mere
copper piece, coated with silver. The only difference is that the inflation in
Gaul brought with it a great outburst of private coinage (of a rude and
barbarous character), intended to exploit for itself, instead of for the State,
the difference between nominal and metal value. In the lands governed by Gallienus
this mischief was successfully averted, except in Rome, where from 268 to 270
similar abuses flourished though on a more modest scale. On the other hand,
Postumus continued to turn out his aurei at the normal weight, whereas the
procurator of the mint of Rome let the weight of the gold coins fall so low,
that in many issues they were disks as thin as paper. In other mints, on the
contrary, order reigned in this field even under Gallienus. But the corruption
now established was terrible: despite the iron hand of Aurelian each issue of
small change can be seen, for a century and a half, to be diminished in size in
a few months, and there is no pause in the reforms that simply establish, under
old or new titles and denominations, some normal weight for these coins.
It is possible, again,
by following the changes in the representation of the monarch, to discern the
earlier foundations on which the autocratic constitution was based. Step by
step we can trace the process by which the old emphasis on organic function
gives way to the new stress on outward form. Here again it becomes evident that
the transition was actually made in this epoch of crisis, and that Diocletian
and Constantine only gave clear definition to what was already accomplished.
The displacement of the civil princeps by the military dominus is
unmasked and seen as the production of a very long process of evolution.
The centrifugal
tendencies that found expression in the rise of usurpers and undoubtedly slowly
prepared the way for the later separation of East and West, had likewise a
course of development proper to them. Not only does the need of a second ruler
grow more acute and his competence come more and more to be associated with a
division of territory. Under Philip and Aurelian appear administrators of the
East as rector Orientis, praefectus Orientis-, Valerian had already his
own Praetorian Prefect in the East and, as early as 258, the armies of East and
West were separated—if only for a time. The new capitals of the Tetrarchy
(Nicomedia and Antioch, on the one hand, Milan, Treves and Sirmium, on the
other) justified themselves in practice as early as our period. In contrast to
all this, the process of the complete unification of religion, of politics,
administration, political economy, etc. is at least as old: it begins to
mature about the middle of the third century.
Military developments
tell the same story, and it has been made clear that the invasions of the
Germans were only a secondary result of this weakening. Like a human body that
is ageing, the mighty organism of the Empire sank into a feverish condition,
marked by that acceleration of the course of events that has been observed, and
followed by heavy blows from every side. The movements of the army, famine and
devastation brought on that fearful plague that raged from Gallus to the death
of Claudius and contributed largely, with the wars, towards the destruction of
such romanized elements as might have had in them the power to survive.
There was often no scope
for any really free initiative on the part of the rulers. To take, for example,
the laws of the period, one finds nothing but regulations to alleviate the
time’s distress or the enforcement of compulsory rules, no independent
legislation. The administration likewise was turned from its normal functioning
by wars, requisitioning, or persecutions of the Christians. New milestones often
reflect no lively activity in road-making, but simply advertise loyalty in the
face of the constant pronuncia- mentos2. But it is no accident that
Gallienus after 260 found himself obliged wholly to abandon road-making. Money
and labour alike were monopolized by the wars.
But, despite limits set
by the trend of things, the life and prosperity of millions still depended on
whether the Emperor won or lost his battles, whether he adopted the necessary
measures or not at a crisis: the part played by the individual must not be
underestimated. The activity of the ruler was, indeed, at this time confined
to the few main problems of existence. Apart from Gallienus the emperors were
no more than military adventurers, the rebels of yesterday. Yet, finding themselves
faced by tasks that transcended normal human capacity, they lived at the
highest tension and speed only to die, for the most part, by the sword.
In judging the
achievements of the emperors, must be considered only those chief actors who
had a real historical role and mission.
Decius was a native of
Southern Pannonia. But he is not to be confused with his successors, who sprang
from that province and were simple soldiers. His family had certainly owned
great possessions; his wife came of a distinguished Italian family. Not only
did he pass through the normal senatorial career, but he rose to its highest
dignities, he was consul and City Prefect. His administration was not
successful: rivals rose against him in Gaul, Rome and the East. As a general he
was a failure—a failure that made possible and provoked the terrible invasions
by the Germans. His attacks on the Church were not such as to break its power,
but only to shed blood and create mischief. And yet his whole activity shows
his iron hardness, still seen in his portraits. In his campaign against the
Christians, in his persistence after his failures against Kniva, in his heroic
death, the same abundant energy is revealed. It was not without good reason
that he was named ‘reparator disciplinae militaris.’ His extraordinary force of
will, his sincere loyalty to the Senate and his death on the field of honour
have transfigured his person and ensured the vigorous survival of his
conception of Roman conservatism and of his political methods. His reliance on
the Illyrians, as representatives of a constructive patriotism, was justified
by the future.
Trebonianus Gallus came
of an old Etruscan family of Perusia and, as governor of Lower Moesia, was
assisted by accident to the throne. His slackness must have been in part
responsible for the ill-success of the campaigns of Decius after whose death he
seems (to judge by what Dexippus tells us) to have taken no serious steps to
check the German invasions. His listless reign contributed largely to mature
the ill results of the disaster of Abrittus. Nor did the revolt of Aemilianus
have any other result.
It was a further
misfortune for the Empire that Valerian was now able to seize the throne. He
had already (in 253) had a brilliant career; in 238 he had been a notable
defender of the Senate and, later, as confidant of Decius, had taken a share in
administration at Rome during his absence. His rule was generally acclaimed
with high hopes. At the beginning he did indeed strive to restore order and it
seems that he really was a good administrator; the whole management of the
persecution of the Christians suggests the skilful politician. It is probable
enough that history would have had much good to say of him, had his feeble
hands held the reins of power in a time blessed with peace. But the ageing
Emperor was quite unequal to those military tasks that faced him. For eight
years in the East he had no triumphs to chronicle save over the
Christians,—against Germans and Persians he was too irresolute and weak; in the
end, his own hesitancy and impotence betrayed him into the hands of Shapur.
His antithesis—and the
contrast grew more and more pronounced—is to be seen in his son Gallienus. At
the age of about 35 Gallienus was raised by the Senate to the rank of Augustus
at his father’s request. But his greatness was first seen when he succeeded in
mastering the chaos that followed on his father’s captivity. Nor did he stop
there: with sure hand he gripped the mechanism of State and society, to carry
through those essential reforms that secured their continuance. Though himself
of high birth he had the courage to make a clearance of the desidia of
the senators. It was no accident that the Pannonians, who till 261 had been
obstinately disloyal to him, thenceforward served him faithfully to the grave
and after; he opened up to them the road to the highest positions. Even earlier
than this began his far- reaching re-organization of the army, in which like a
pioneer he showed the way for the future. With unerring insight he chose out
and promoted the great generals of the next age. At the same time he
deliberately furthered the reaction that was setting in to defend the ancient
culture. As for the Christians, his intention was to fight them with the
weapons of enlightenment; in Rome, Athens and Syria philosophers and men of
letters are encouraged by him to work to this end. Art turns back, if only for
a moment, from its modern primitivism to the classical tradition of the
Antonine period.
He had certainly enjoyed
a good education. His amazing energy and readiness, which was acclaimed as
‘alacritas Augusti,’ carried him again and again over a succession of terrible
blows and alarms to a swift and right decision. It was the same elasticity and
energy that made him leap up and rush out, when his murderers lured him out on
the pretext that the enemy were at hand. His achievements as general were above
the ordinary. For seven years he beat back the attacks of the Germans of the
Rhine; he repelled the hordes of Alemanni from Italy and checked the Heruli and
Goths in 268. He overcame his own talented but disloyal generals, such as
Postumus and Aureolus, and also Ingenuus and Regalianus.
In chivalrous fashion he
challenged Postumus to a duel, so that, instead of thousands, only one of the
two should fall. ‘I am no gladiator’ is the answer of Postumus. But Gallienus
could not be as merciless as his successors, the soldiers, who ruled ‘manu ad
ferrum’. He called a halt to the massacre of the Christians. Ever benevolent
and ready to help, he never repulsed a petitioner; he even forgave those who
little deserved it. Yet this leniency had its evil consequences; such as the
abuses of the monetarii in Rome, His dearly loved wife, Salonina, the
patroness of Plotinus, accompanied him wherever he went. Even up to the death
of her husband she was with him in his camp.
Augustus was his model.
But, just as the artistic reaction of his age failed to achieve the imitation
of Augustan art and could get no farther back than the baroque of the
Antonines, so did the spirit of the Rome of Augustus at which he aimed end in
the Hellenic patriotism of those Greek men of letters who based themselves on
ideas current in the second century. Amidst bloodshed and dissolution he sighed
for the glories of the older days: Athens was his Mecca. His contemporaries did
not understand him. His kindred and friends were butchered when he fell. Even
before his death misfortune had ever attended him. But through a crisis of supreme
terror he ensured the continuity of the development of the Empire. He is no
type, like the rest, no mere representative of a kind, but an individual.
Between Hadrian and Julian he stands as a pillar of Greek culture, which thanks
to him still exerts its influence on us. Like Caesar and Augustus, like Trajan
and Hadrian, like Diocletian and Constantine, Decius and he form a pair of
opposites, who together point the way to the future. As Diocletian returned to
the principles of Decius, so did Constantine realize the ideas of Gallienus,
even if unconsciously drawing the same consequences from a more advanced stage
of the historical development.
Claudius, whose heroic
qualities were highly esteemed by Gallienus and whose career was advanced under
him up to the supreme command of the equites, already belongs with his
successors to those great soldiers of Illyricum, who with unprecedented energy
won back the peace and unity of the Empire. His supreme achievement was the
final repulse of the Gothic onslaught in 268, after chequered fighting. This
simple, but intelligent and experienced, man had no time in his short period
of rule to display any ideas of his own. His co-operation with the Senate alone
indicates to us a general direction in his policy.
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