Book 38: Arraignment of Scipio Africanus
[38.1]Whilst the war was going on in Asia,
even Aetolia did not remain free from disturbance. The Athamanians were
the cause of the trouble. After the expulsion of Amynander, the country
was held down by the governors whom Philip had established and provided
with troops, and their arbitrary and lawless rule made the people feel
keenly the disappearance of their king. He was spending his time of exile
in Aetolia, and the letters of his friends and their description of the
condition of Athamania led him to hope that he might recover his crown.
He sent messengers to Argithea, their capital, to inform their leaders
that if he were fully assured of the sympathies of his compatriots, he
would obtain assistance from the Aetolians and enter the country with the
members of the Aetolian council and their captain-general, Nicander. When
he saw that they were prepared for all eventualities, he told them at very
short notice the day on which he intended to enter Athamania with an army.
The movement against the Macedonians was begun by four men; they each selected
six comrades, then feeling no confidence in so small a number, which was
more adapted to conceal than to execute their project, they doubled the
number of their fellow-conspirators. Having thus grown to fifty-two, they
formed themselves into four parties; one was to make for Heraclea, a second
for Tetraphylia where the royal treasure used to be kept, the third was
to go to Theudoria, and the fourth to Argithea. They had all agreed to
show themselves in the forums without making any disturbance, as though
they had come on private business, and on a fixed day they were to raise
the populations in the different cities and expel the Macedonian garrisons
from their citadels. When the day came and Amynander was on the frontier
with 1000 Aetolians, the Macedonian garrisons were simultaneously driven
out of the four cities, and letters were sent to all the other cities urging
them to shake themselves free from the tyranny of Philip and win back their
ancestral and legitimate monarchy. The Macedonians were expelled from all
parts of the country. Xeno, the commandant of the garrison in Theium, intercepted
the message sent to that city, and by seizing the citadel was able to stand
a siege for a few days. At last that place, too, surrendered to Amynander,
and the whole of Athamania, with the exception of the fort of Athenaeum,
which lay close to the frontier of Macedonia, was now in his power.
[38.2]On hearing of the revolution in Athamania,
Philip started off with a force of 6000 men, and after an extraordinarily
rapid march arrived at Gomphi. Here he left the greater part of his army,
who were unable to keep up such long marches, and went on with 2000 men
to Athenaeum, the one place that had been retained by his troops. From
here he tried to secure some of the places nearest to him, but he soon
found that they were all hostile, and accordingly he returned to Gomphi.
Re-entering Athamania with the whole of his force, he sent Xeno forward
with 1000 infantry to seize Ethopia, a good position for commanding Argithea.
When Philip saw that his men were in occupation of the place, he encamped
near the temple of Jupiter Acraeus. Here he was detained a whole day by
a terrible storm; the next day he decided to advance against Argithea.
Whilst his men were on the march they suddenly caught sight of the Athamanians
running up to some high ground which commanded their line of march. At
this sight the leading ranks halted and there was confusion throughout
the column, as the men all asked themselves what would happen if the column
went down into the valley where it was commanded by those heights. Philip
wanted to push rapidly through the pass, but the confusion that had been
caused compelled him to recall the head of the column and order them to
counter-march along the way they had come. At first the Athamanians followed
them quietly at some distance, but when the Aetolians had joined them,
they left it to them to harass the enemy's rear while they themselves closed
in on their flank, and some making a short cut through country they were
familiar with, seized the head of the pass. The confusion amongst the Macedonians
was such that their recrossing of the river resembled a precipitate flight
rather than an orderly march, and they left many men and arms behind. Here
the pursuit stopped and the Macedonians got back safely to Gomphi and from
there withdrew into Macedonia. The Athamanians and Aetolians mustered from
all sides round Ethopia with the object of expelling Xeno and his 1000
Macedonians. Feeling their position to be insecure they left Ethopia and
took up a position on higher and more precipitous ground. The Athamanians,
however, found out the approaches, attacked them from several different
points and drove them from the heights. Scattered in flight and unable
to find their way through pathless thickets and over rocky ground with
which they were unfamiliar, they were killed or made prisoners, many in
their panic fell down the cliffs, and only a very few succeeded in making
their escape with Xeno to the king. Subsequently a truce was arranged for
the burial of those who had fallen.
[38.3]His crown recovered, Amynander sent
a delegation to the senate and another to the Scipios, who were staying
at Ephesus after the battle with Antiochus. He asked to be allowed to remain
on a peaceful footing with Rome, and in excusing himself for having sought
the aid of the Aetolians in winning back his ancestral throne, threw the
whole responsibility for the war on Philip. From Athamania the Aetolians
marched into Amphilochia, and the voluntary surrender of the majority of
the population made them masters of the whole country. After recovering
Amphilochia which had formerly belonged to them, they invaded Aperantia,
hoping for equal success, and this State also to a large extent surrendered
without offering any resistance. The Dolopians had never been under Aetolia;
they had formed part of Philip's dominions. At first they flew to arms,
but when they learnt that the Amphilochians had joined the Aetolians, that
Philip had fled from Athamania and his force had been cut up, they too
revolted from him and joined the Aetolians. With these States all round
them, the Aetolians considered themselves secure on every side from the
Macedonians. But in the midst of their security they received intelligence
of the defeat of Antiochus at the hands of the Romans in Asia, and not
long after, their envoys returned from Rome bringing no hope of peace and
announcing that the consul Fulvius had already landed in Greece with an
army. Appalled at these tidings they begged Rhodes and Athens to send delegates
to Rome so that with the support of these friendly nations their own petitions
which had been lately rejected might find readier access to the ear of
the senate. They then sent their leaders to Rome as their last hope, having
taken no precautions to avoid war until the enemy was almost in sight.
M. Fulvius had now brought his army up to Apollonia and was consulting
the Epirot leaders as to where he should open the campaign. They thought
the best course would be to begin with an attack on Ambracia, which had
by that time joined the Aetolian League. They pointed out that if the Aetolians
came to its relief, the open and level country afforded a favourable field
of battle; if they avoided an engagement, the siege would be by no means
a difficult one as there was abundance of timber in the neighbourhood for
constructing the raised galleries and all the other siege works; the Aretho,
a navigable river and well adapted for transporting all necessary materials,
flowed past the very walls; and in the last place, summer, the season for
active operations, was approaching.
[38.4]Induced by these considerations the
consul advanced through Epirus, but when he came to Ambracia he saw that
its siege would be a serious undertaking. Ambracia lies at the foot of
a rugged eminence which the natives call Perranthes. The city on the side
where the wall skirts the river and the plain looks to the west; the citadel
built on the hill lies to the east. The Aretho, which rises in Athamania,
falls into the gulf named after the city - the Ambracian Gulf. In addition
to the protection afforded by the river on the one side and the hill on
the other, the city was enclosed by a strong wall more than four miles
in circumference. Fulvius constructed two entrenched camps at a short distance
from each other in the direction of the plain and one fort on a height
over against the citadel, and made preparations for connecting the whole
by a rampart and fosse, so that those shut up in the city would not be
able to leave it, nor would it be possible to introduce succours from outside.
When the news of the siege of Ambracia reached them, the Aetolian national
council assembled at Stratus, on the summons of Nicander, their captain-general.
Their first intention was to march thither with all their forces and raise
the siege, but when they found that a great part of the city was already
invested and that the Epirot camp was fixed on the level ground the other
side the river, they divided their forces. Eupolemus with 1000 light infantry
succeeded in entering the city at a point where the lines were not yet
closed. Nicander intended to make a night attack with the rest of the troops
upon the Epirot camp, as the Romans would find it difficult to come to
their assistance with the river between them. On second thoughts, however,
the risk seemed too great in case the Romans took the alarm and endangered
his retreat, so he marched away and ravaged Acarnania.
[38.5]The lines of investment were at length
closed and the siege works which the consul was preparing to bring up against
the walls completed. He now commenced an assault from five different points.
On the side of the city overlooking the plain where the approach was easiest
he brought up three siege-engines, at equal distances from each other,
at a place called the Pyrrheum, another near the Aesculapium, and the fifth
against the citadel. As he shook the walls with the battering-rams and
sheared off the parapet by scythe blades fixed on long poles the defenders
were dismayed at the sight and at the terrific noise of the blows delivered
by the rams, but when they saw that the walls were still standing, their
courage revived and they hammered the rams by means of swing beams with
heavy masses of lead, large stones and stout beams of wood; they dragged
with iron grapples the poles with the scythe blades inside the walls and
broke off the blades. Their night attacks on the parties guarding the engines,
and sorties by day against the outposts, spread alarm on the other side.
While this was the state of things in Ambracia the Aetolians had returned
from their plundering raid to Stratus. Here Nicander hit upon a bold stroke
by which he hoped to raise the siege. His intention was to introduce a
certain Nicodamus into the city with 500 Aetolians, and he fixed the night
and the hour at which an attack was to be made from the city on the hostile
works directed against the Pyrrheum whilst he himself threatened the Roman
camp. By this double attack, all the more alarming because made in the
night, he hoped to secure a brilliant success. Nicander moved forward in
the dead of the night and after passing some of the advanced posts unobserved
and forcing his way through others by a determined onslaught, climbed over
the lines connecting the different works and penetrated into the city.
His arrival raised the hopes of the besieged and emboldened them to attempt
any adventure however hazardous. When the appointed night arrived he made
a sudden attack on the works. His attempt did not meet with a corresponding
success, for no attack was made from outside, either because the Aetolian
commander was afraid to move or because he deemed it more important to
carry assistance to the Amphilochians, who had been lately won over and
whom Philip's son Perseus, who had been sent to recover Dolopia and Amphilochia,
was attacking with his utmost strength.
[38.6]As stated above, the Roman engines
were directed against the Pyrrheum at three separate points, and against
each of these the Aetolians were making simultaneous attacks, though not
with the same weapons or the same force. Some went up with lighted torches,
others carried tow and pitch and fire-darts; the whole of their line was
lit up by the flames. At the first onset they overwhelmed many of the guards;
then when the noise of the tumult and clamour reached the camp, the consul
gave the signal and the Romans, seizing their weapons, poured out of all
the gates to help their comrades. Only at one point was there a real fight
between sword and fire; at the two others the Aetolians after attempting,
rather than sustaining, a conflict retreated without effecting anything.
A desperate struggle raged in one quarter; here the two generals, Eupolemus
and Nicodamus, at the head of their respective divisions urged on the combatants
and encouraged them with the almost certain hope of Nicander's coming up
as he had promised and taking the enemy in the rear. This hope for some
time kept up their spirits, but when they failed to receive the agreed
signal from their comrades and found that the numbers of the enemy were
increasing, their courage waned and at last they gave up the attempt, and
finding their retreat almost cut off, fled in disorder back to the city.
They succeeded, however, in setting some of the siege-works on fire after
losing considerably more than they had themselves killed of the enemy.
If the preconcerted plan of operations had been successful, there is no
doubt that at least one section of the siege-works would have been carried
with a great slaughter of the Romans. The Ambracians and Aetolians in the
city not only abandoned all further attempts that night, but during the
remainder of the siege showed themselves much less enterprising, as they
felt they had been betrayed. No more sorties were made against the enemy's
posts; they confined themselves to fighting in comparative safety from
the walls and towers.
[38.7]When Perseus heard that the Aetolians
were approaching, he raised the siege of the city which he was attacking
and, after devastating their fields, left Amphilochia and returned to Macedonia.
The Aetolians, too, were called away by the ravages which were being committed
on their sea-board. Pleuratus, king of the Illyrians, had sailed into the
Gulf of Corinth with sixty ships, reinforced by the Aetolian vessels from
Patrae, and was devastating the maritime districts of Aetolia. A force
of 1000 Aetolians was despatched against him and by taking direct roads
they were able to meet him at whatever point his fleet had, in its cruising
in and out of the indented coast, tried to effect a landing. At Ambracia
the Romans had battered down the walls in several places and partially
laid bare the city, but they could not force their way into it. As fast
as the wall was destroyed a new one was raised in its place and the citizens
stood in arms on the fallen masonry to bar all approach. Finding that he
was making very little progress by direct assault, the consul decided to
construct a secret passage underground after first covering the place whence
it started with vineae. Working day and night they succeeded for a considerable
time in escaping the observation of the enemy, not only whilst they were
digging but also whilst carrying away the earth. Suddenly the sight of
a conspicuous mound of soil gave the townsmen an indication of what was
going on. To avert the danger of the wall being undermined and a way into
the city being thrown open, they began to run a trench inside the wall
in the direction of the place covered with vineae. When they had excavated
as low as the bottom of the secret passage would probably be, they remained
perfectly silent, and by placing their ears against different places in
the side of the trench they caught the sound of the enemy diggers. As soon
as they heard this they broke through straight into the tunnel. There was
no difficulty in doing this, for they quickly found themselves in an open
space where the wall had been underpinned with timber props by the enemy.1
As the trench and tunnel now opened into one another the two parties of
diggers commenced a fight with their digging tools. Very soon armed bodies
came up on both sides and an underground battle began in the dark. The
besieged closed up the tunnel in one place by stretching a screen of goats'
hair across and improvising barricades, and they adopted a novel device
against the enemy which was small but effective. A hole was bored through
the bottom of a cask in which an iron pipe was inserted. and an iron cover
perforated with several holes was prepared to fit the other end. The cask
was then filled with light feathers, the cover fastened on, and through
the holes some long spears - the so-called "sarissae" - were
inserted to keep off the enemy. The cask was now placed with its head towards
the tunnel and a light was placed amongst the feathers which were blown
into a blaze by a pair of smith's bellows inserted in the pipe. The tunnel
was soon filled with a dense smoke, rendered all the more pungent from
the horrid smell of the burning feathers, and hardly a man could endure
it.
[38.8]Whilst this was the state of things
in Ambracia, the Aetolians decided to open negotiations with the consul.
In view of the fact that on one side Ambracia was undergoing a siege, on
another the coast was being threatened by a hostile fleet, whilst on the
third side Amphilochia and Dolopia were being harried by the Macedonians,
and that the Aetolians were not strong enough to confront their various
enemies collectively, the captain-general convened a meeting of the Aetolian
League and consulted the national leaders as to what was to be done. They
were unanimously of opinion that they must sue for peace, on equal terms,
if possible; failing that, on any terms, if they were not intolerable.
It was in reliance upon Antiochus, they said, that they had undertaken
the war; now that Antiochus had been worsted both on land and sea and driven
beyond the Taurus almost to the ends of the world, what hope was there
of sustaining the war? Phaeneas and Damoteles must take such steps as they
thought best in the interests of Aetolia, and consistent with their own
honour, for what counsel, what choice had their fortunes left them? Furnished
with these instructions, the envoys implored the consul to spare the city
and to take pity on a nation which had once been an ally and had been driven
to madness - they would not say by their wrongs, but at all events, by
the wretched conditions under which they lived. The punishment they deserved
for their share in the war with Antiochus ought not to outweigh the services
they had rendered in the war against Philip. At that time no great gratitude
had been shown them; they ought not now to pay an excessive penalty. The
consul told them in reply that the Aetolians had frequently asked for peace,
but seldom with the honest intention of keeping it. They must follow the
example of Antiochus whom they had dragged into the war. He had ceded not
only those few cities whose liberty had been the cause of quarrel, but
the whole of Asia on this side the Taurus - a rich and fertile realm. He,
the consul, would not listen to any proposals unless the Aetolians laid
down their arms. They must first give up their arms and all their horses;
then they must pay 1000 talents; half the sum to be paid down at once,
if they wished to have peace. And in addition to these terms it must be
stipulated in the treaty that they would have the same friends and the
same enemies as Rome.
[38.9]The envoys felt these to be onerous
terms, and as they knew the fierce and fickle temper of their countrymen
they left without giving any decided answer. They wished to discuss the
whole position thoroughly with the captain-general and the national leaders
and come to some decision as to what ought to be done. They were received
with clamorous protests and reproaches. "How long," they were
asked, "were they going to let matters drag on after receiving definite
orders to bring back peace at any price?" Their return journey to
Ambracia was a disastrous one. The Acarnanians with whom they were at war
had posted an ambush close to the road on which they were travelling; they
were made prisoners and conducted to Tyrrhenum for safe keeping. This interrupted
the peace negotiations. The delegates who had been sent from Athens and
Rhodes to support the Aetolians were already with the consul, when Amynander,
who had obtained a safe-conduct, arrived in the Roman camp. He was more
concerned for the city of Ambracia, where he had passed most of his years
of exile, than for the Aetolians. When the consul learnt from them what
had happened to the Aetolian envoys, he sent orders for them to be brought
from Tyrrhenum, and on their arrival the negotiations commenced. Amynander,
whose main interest was in Ambracia, did his utmost to induce the place
to surrender. He approached the walls and held conversations with the leaders,
but finding that he was making no progress, he at last obtained the consul's
permission to enter the city and succeeded by argument and entreaty in
persuading them to place themselves in the hands of the Romans. The Aetolians
found a strong advocate also in C. Valerius, the son of the Valerius Laevinus
who was the first to establish friendly relations with them. He was also
half-brother of the consul.
After stipulating for the safe departure of their auxiliary troops,
the Ambracians opened their gates. Then the Aetolians accepted the following
conditions: They were to pay 500 Euboean talents; 200 at once, the remaining
300 to be spread over six years; the prisoners and refugees were to be
restored to the Romans; they were not to retain within their League any
city which from the day when T. Quinctius landed in Greece had either been
taken by or entered into friendly relations with the Romans. Although these
conditions were much less onerous than they had expected, they asked to
be allowed to lay them before their council. Here there was a brief debate
on the question of the cities which had been confederated with them. They
felt their loss keenly; it was as though they were being torn from their
living body; nevertheless they were unanimous in deciding that the terms
must be accepted. The Ambracians gave the consul a gold crown 150 lbs.
in weight. The statues in bronze and marble and the paintings with which
Ambracia, as the royal residence of Pyrrhus, had been more richly adorned
than any other city in that part of the world were all carried away, but
beyond these nothing was injured or interfered with.
[38.10]The consul left Ambracia for the
interior of Aetolia and fixed his camp at Amphilochian Argos, twenty-two
miles distant from Ambracia. Here the Aetolian delegates at last arrived,
the consul meantime wondering what had delayed them. On their informing
him that the Aetolian Council accepted the conditions of peace, he told
them to go to Rome to appear before the senate; the Rhodians and Athenians
were also allowed to go to plead for them; and the consul also allowed
his brother, C. Valerius, to accompany them. After their departure be crossed
over to Cephallania. In Rome the delegates found the ears and minds of
the leading men preoccupied by the accusations which Philip had brought
against them. Through his representatives, in his despatches he had asserted
that Dolopia, Amphilochia and Athamania had been wrested from him, and
his garrisons and even his son Perseus had been expelled from Amphilochia.
The senate consequently refused to listen to them. The Rhodians and Athenians,
however, obtained a hearing. The Athenian spokesman, Leon the son of Hicesias,
is said to have moved them by his eloquence. Making use of a common simile
he compared the people of Aetolia to a calm sea which has become agitated
by the winds. "As long as they were faithful to Rome," he said,
"their peace-loving temperament kept them quiet, but when Thoas and
Dicaearchus sent a blast from Asia and Menestas and Damocritas from Europe,
then that storm arose which dashed them against Antiochus as against a
rock."
[38.11]After a good deal of rough-handling
the Aetolians at last succeeded in getting the terms of peace settled.
They were as follows: "The nation of the Aetolians shall uphold sincerely
and honestly the majesty and dominion of the Roman people; they shall not
suffer to pass through their territories or in any way assist any army
which may be led against the friends and allies of Rome; they shall count
the enemies of Rome as their enemies and bear arms against them and wage
war against them equally with Rome; they shall restore to the Romans and
their allies the deserters, the refugees and the prisoners, save and except
any who have escaped from captivity and returned to their homes and then
been taken captive a second time, and any prisoners from amongst those
who were fighting against Rome at the time when the Aetolians formed a
part of the Roman forces. Of the others, all who are known shall be handed
over without reserve or subterfuge to the magistrates at Corcyra within
100 days; those who have not then been discovered shall be delivered up
as soon as they are found. The Aetolians shall surrender forty hostages,
such as the consul in his discretion shall choose, not less than twelve
or more than forty years of age. No magistrate or commander of cavalry
or public secretary shall be taken as a hostage, nor any one who has been
previously held as a hostage by the Romans. Cephallania shall be excluded
from the terms of peace." As to the indemnity which they were to pay
and the method of payment, the understanding with the consul held good.
If they preferred to pay it in silver rather than in gold, they might do
so provided that ten silver pieces were taken as the equivalent of one
gold piece. "Concerning the cities, the territories, the populations,
which have at any time been incorporated in the Aetolian League - those
of them which have either been subjugated or voluntarily surrendered to
Rome during the consulships of T. Quinctius, Cneius Domitius, or the consuls
which followed them, none of these must the Aetolians seek to recover.
The Oeniadae with the city and the soil shall belong to the Acarnanians."
Such were the terms upon which peace was concluded with the Aetolians.
[38.12]Almost at the very time when M.
Fulvius was thus engaged in Aetolia, the other consul, Cneius Manlius,
was warring in Gallograecia. I will now proceed to narrate the events of
this war. The consul went to Ephesus at the beginning of spring and took
over the troops from L. Scipio. After holding a review of the army he addressed
the soldiers. He began by eulogising their valour in bringing the war with
Antiochus to a close in a single battle, and went on to encourage them
to begin a fresh war against the Gauls. This nation, he reminded them,
had gone to the assistance of Antiochus, and so intractable was their temper
that the removal of Antiochus beyond the Taurus would be useless unless
the power of the Gauls was broken. He concluded his address with a few
sincere and unaffected words about himself. The soldiers were delighted
and frequently applauded him; they looked upon the Gauls as simply a division
of Antiochus' army, and now that the king was overcome they did not think
that there would be much aggressive energy in the Gauls when left to themselves.
Eumenes was in Rome at the time and the consul regarded his absence as
ill-timed, since he was familiar with the country and the population and
was personally interested in the destruction of the power of the Gauls.
The consul sent, therefore, for his brother Attalus, who was at Pergamum,
and pressed him to take his part in the war. Attalus promised on his own
behalf and on that of his subjects to assist him, and was sent back to
muster troops. A few days later the consul advanced from Ephesus and was
met at Magnesia by Attalus with 1000 infantry and 500 cavalry. His brother
Athenaeus was under orders to follow with the rest of the forces, and the
defence of Pergamum was entrusted to men whom he believed to be loyal subjects
of their king. The consul warmly approved of the young man's action and
advanced with the whole of his forces to the Maeander. Here he entrenched
himself, and as the river was unfordable, vessels had to be collected to
carry the army over.
[38.13]After crossing the Maeander they
marched to Hiera Come. Here there was a noble temple to Apollo and an oracular
shrine; it is said that the priests delivered the responses in smooth and
graceful verses. From this place, after a two days' march, they reached
the river Harpasus. Here they were met by a deputation from Alabandi, who
came with a request to the consul to compel, either by his personal authority
or his arms, a revolted stronghold to return to its former allegiance.
Here, too, came Eumenes' brother Athenaeus with the Cretan Leusus and Corragus
of Macedonia. They brought with them 1000 infantry drawn from various nationalities
and 300 cavalry. The consul despatched a military tribune with a small
force to reduce the stronghold and it was restored to the people of Alabandi;
he himself continuing his march encamped at Antiochia on the Maeander.
This river rises at Celaenae; the city was once the capital of Phrygia.
The population migrated a short distance from the old city and built a
new one, which received the name of Apamea after Apama, the sister of King
Seleucus. The river Marsyas which rises not far from the sources of the
Maeander flows into that river, and the story goes that it was at Celaenae
that Marsyas contested the palm of song with Apollo. The Maeander rises
at the highest part of Celaenae and runs through the middle of the city.
Its course then lies through Caria and Ionia and it finally empties itself
into the bay between Priene and Miletus.
Whilst the consul was in camp at Antiochia, Seleucus the son of Antiochus
came to furnish corn for the army, in pursuance of the treaty obligation
with Scipio. There was a slight difficulty raised in the case of the auxiliaries
under Attalus because Seleucus maintained that Antiochus had only agreed
to supply corn to the Roman soldiers. The dispute was settled by the firmness
of the consul, who sent a tribune from the headquarters tent to give notice
that the Roman soldiers were not to take the corn before the troops of
Attalus had received their share. From Antiochia they marched to a place
called Gordiutichi, and a further three days' march brought them to Tabae.
This place lies within the frontiers of Pisidia, in that part which looks
towards the Pamphylian sea. As this country was unwasted by war, its population
were in a bellicose mood. On this occasion they made a vigorous attack
on the Roman column and at first created some confusion, but when it became
evident that they were outmatched in numbers and in courage and were driven
back to their city, they craved for mercy and offered to surrender the
city. A fine of 25 talents of silver and 10,000 medimni of wheat was imposed
upon them. On these terms they were allowed to surrender.
[38.14]Three days after this they reached
the river Casus and advanced to attack the city of Eriza, which they captured
at the first assault. Continuing their march they came to Thabusion, a
fortified place commanding the Indus. This river got its name from a mahout
who was thrown from his elephant. They were now not far from the city of
Cibyra, but no deputation came from Moagetes, the faithless and cruel tyrant
of that city. In order to ascertain his attitude the consul sent an advance-party
of 4000 infantry and 500 cavalry under C. Helvius. This force was already
entering his territory when envoys met them with the announcement that
the tyrant was ready to comply with the consul's orders. They begged Helvius
to enter their territory peaceably and to restrain his soldiery from plundering
their fields; they also brought 15 lbs. of gold made into a crown. Helvius
promised to protect their fields from pillage and told them to go to the
consul. When they had spoken in a similar strain to him, he replied: "We
Romans have received no proofs of goodwill on the part of the tyrant towards
us, and it is a matter of common knowledge that he is the sort of man whom
we ought to think of punishing rather than treating as a friend."
The envoys were greatly perturbed at these words and simply requested him
to accept the golden crown and to allow the tyrant to visit him in person
with liberty to speak and clear himself of suspicions. The consul gave
permission and the next day the tyrant arrived. His dress and his retinue
were hardly equal to those of a private citizen of moderate means; his
language was abject and broken, and he sought to excuse himself by pleading
the poverty of his cities and his dominions. Besides Cibyra he had the
city of Sylleum and a place called Alimne, and out of these cities he promised,
though somewhat doubtfully, to raise 25 talents, but only by robbing himself
and his subjects. "Really," replied the consul, "this trifling
is intolerable! After trying, unblushingly, to fool us through your envoys,
you actually keep up the same effrontery now you are here. You say 25 talents
will exhaust your government. Very well, then, unless you pay down 500
talents in three days, look out for the plunder of your fields and the
investment of your city." Though appalled by the threat, the tyrant
still persisted in his presence of poverty. Shuffling, whimpering and shedding
crocodile tears, he was at last brought to a fine of 100 talents, and in
addition 10,000 medimni of corn. All this was carried through in six days.
[38.15]From Cibyra the army was led through
the district of Sinda, and after crossing the Caularis formed camp. The
following day they marched past the Caralite marshes and made a halt at
Madamprum. On their further advance towards Lacos the inhabitants fled
from the city, and finding it devoid of men but filled with abundance of
every kind, the Romans sacked it. Then they went on to the sources of the
Lysis and the following day reached the Cobulatus. The Termessians had
captured the city of Isionde and were now attacking the citadel. Shut up
within their walls the only hope left to them was help from the Romans.
They sent to the consul to implore his assistance; shut up in their citadel
with their wives and children, they were daily looking forward to death
either by sword or famine. The consul gladly seized the pretext for a march
into Pamphylia, and raised the siege, granting peace to Termessus on the
payment of 50 talents of silver. Aspendus and the other cities in Pamphylia
were treated in the same way. Leaving Pamphylia and resuming his march
he encamped at the river Taurus, and the next day at a place called Xyline
Come. From there he marched continuously till he reached the city of Cormasa.
The next city to this was Dursa, which they found deserted by the panic-stricken
inhabitants, but abundantly supplied with all manner of stores. On his
advance past the marshes a deputation came to him from Lysinoe to surrender
their city. From this point he entered the territory of Sagalassus, a fertile
district rich in all kinds of fruits. Its Pisidian inhabitants are by far
the best soldiers in that part of the world. Their military superiority,
the fruitfulness of their soil, their large population, and the situation
of their exceptionally strong city make them a brave people. As no envoys
appeared when the consul reached their frontiers, he sent out plundering
parties into their fields. At last, as they saw their crops carried off
and their cattle driven away, their stubbornness yielded. The envoys whom
they sent agreed to pay a fine of 50 talents, 20,000 medimni of wheat and
an equal amount of barley, and on these terms they obtained peace. Making
a further advance to the source of the Rhotris he encamped at a village
called Acoridos Come. The next day Seleucus arrived from Apamea. The consul
sent the sick and all the baggage which was not needed to Apamea, and after
being supplied with guides by Seleucus, he marched into the plain of Metropolis,
and the next day to Dyniae in Phrygia. A further advance brought him to
Synnada. All the cities round had been deserted by their inhabitants, and
the army was so heavily laden with the booty from these places that they
took a whole day to traverse the five miles to Old Beudi, as it is called.
His next halt was at Anabura; the day following he encamped at the source
of the Alander, and on the third day at Abassium. As he had now reached
the frontiers of the Tolostobogii he remained encamped for several days.
[38.16]A large body of Gauls, induced
either by want of room or desire for plunder and convinced that none of
the nations through whom they intended to pass was a match for them in
arms, marched under the leadership of Brennus into the country of the Dardani.
Here a quarrel arose, and as many as 20,000 of them left Brennus and went
off under two of their chiefs, Lonorius and Lutarius, into Thrace. Fighting
with those who opposed their progress and exacting tribute from those who
asked for peace, they reached Byzantium. Here they remained for some time
in occupation of the coast of the Propontis, all the cities in that region
being tributary to them. When reports from those acquainted with Asia of
the fertility of its soil reached their ears, they were seized with the
desire of crossing over to it, and after capturing Lysimachia by treachery
and making themselves masters of the whole of the Chersonese, they moved
down to the Hellespont. They were all the more eager to make the passage
when they saw that there was only a narrow strait which separated them,
and they sent to Antipater, the governor of the coastal district, asking
him to arrange for their transport. The matter took longer than they expected,
and a fresh quarrel broke out between the chiefs. Lonorius, with the greater
part of the host, returned to Byzantium; Lutarius took two decked ships
and three light barques from some Macedonians who had been sent by Antipater,
ostensibly as negotiators, but really as spies, and in these vessels he
transported one detachment after another, night and day, until he had carried
his whole force across. Not long afterwards, Lonorius, with the assistance
of Nicomedes king of Bithynia, sailed across from Byzantium. The re-united
Gauls assisted Nicomedes in his war against Ziboetas, who was holding a
part of Bithynia, and it was mainly owing to them that Ziboetas was defeated
and the whole of Bithynia brought under the rule of Nicomedes.
From Bithynia they went further into Asia. Out of the 20,000 men not
more than 10,000 were carrying arms, yet so great was the terror they inspired
in all the nations west of the Taurus, that those who had no experience
of them, as well as those who had come into contact with them, the most
remote as well as their next neighbours, all alike submitted to them. They
were made up of three tribes, the Tolostobogii, the Trocmi and the Tectosagi,
and in the end they divided the conquered territory of Asia into three
parts, each tribe retaining its own tributary cities. The coast of the
Hellespont was given to the Trocmi, the Tolostobogii took Aeolis and Ionia,
and the Tectosagi received the inland districts. They levied tribute on
the whole of Asia west of the Taurus, but fixed their own settlement on
both sides of the Halys. Such was the terror of their name and the growth
of their numbers that at last even the kings of Syria did not dare to refuse
the payment of tribute. The first man in Asia to refuse was Attalus the
father of Eumenes, and contrary to universal expectation, fortune favoured
his courageous action; he proved himself superior in a pitched battle.
The Gauls, however, were not so far disheartened as to renounce their supremacy
in Asia; their power remained unimpaired down to the war between Antiochus
and Rome. Even then, after the defeat of Antiochus, they quite expected
that owing to their distance from the sea the Romans would not advance
so far.
[38.17]As it was this enemy, so much dreaded
by all the people in that part of the world, that was to be met in war,
the consul paraded his soldiers and delivered the following speech to them:
"I am quite aware, soldiers, that of all the nations of Asia the Gauls
have the highest military reputation. This fierce people, after wandering
and warring over almost the entire world, have taken up their abode amongst
the gentlest and most peaceable race of men. Their tall stature, their
long red hair, their huge shields, their extraordinarily long swords; still
more, their songs as they enter into battle, their war-whoops and dances,
and the horrible clash of arms as they shake their shields in the way their
fathers did before them - all these things are intended to terrify and
appal. But let those fear them to whom they are strange and startling,
such as the Greeks and Phrygians and Carians. We Romans are familiar with
Gaulish tumults and know how they come to nothing. Once in the old days
when our ancestors met them for the first time, they fled from them at
the Alia; from that time for the last 200 years they have routed and slain
them like so many herds of cattle, and almost more triumphs have been won
over the Gauls than over the rest of the world put together. Our experience
has taught us this - if you withstand their first rush with its wild excitement
and blind fury, their limbs become powerless with sweat and fatigue, their
weapons hang idly; their flabby bodies and, when their fury has spent itself,
their flabby spirits, too, are prostrated by sun and dust and thirst, even
though you did not lift a sword against them. We have made trial of them,
not only legions against legions, but man against man. T. Manlius and M.
Valerius have shown how steady Roman courage can get the better of Gaulish
frenzy. M. Manlius flung down single-handed the Gauls who were climbing
the Capitol. And, besides, those ancestors of ours had to deal with genuine
Gauls bred in their own land; these are degenerates, a mongrel race, truly
what they are called - Gallograeci. Just as in the case of fruits and cattle,
the seed is not so effective in keeping up the strain as the nature of
the soil and climate in which they are reared are in changing it.
"The Macedonians who occupy Alexandria, Seleucia, Babylonia and
their other colonies throughout the world, have degenerated into Syrians
and Parthians and Egyptians. Massilia, situated amongst Gauls, has contracted
something of the temperament of its neighbours. How much of the rough and
stern discipline of Sparta has survived amongst the Tarentines? Everything
grows most vigorously in its own home; when planted in an alien soil its
nature changes and it deteriorates into that from which it gets its subsistence.
As in the battle with Antiochus you slew the Phrygians in spite of their
heavy Gaulish arms, so you will slay them now, you the victors, they the
vanquished. I am more afraid of our gaining too little glory in this war
than of gaining too much. Antiochus has often routed and scattered them.
Do not imagine that it is only wild beasts which preserve their ferocity
when newly-captured but after being fed for some time at the hands of men
grow tame. Nature works in the same way in softening the savagery of men.
Do you suppose that these men are the same as their fathers and grandfathers
were? Driven from their home by want of room they wandered across the rugged
coast of Illyria, and after traversing the whole length of Paeonia and
Thrace and fighting their way through warlike nations took possession of
these countries. After becoming hardened and savage by all they had to
go through, they have found a home in a land which makes them fat with
bountiful supplies of every kind. All the ferocity which they brought with
them has been tamed by a most fertile soil, a most genial climate and the
gentle character of the people amongst whom they have settled. You, sons
of Mars, believe me, will have to be on your guard against the attractions
of Asia and shun them from the very first; such power have the pleasures
of other lands to weaken and destroy your energies, so easily can the habits
and practices of the people round you affect you. It is, however, fortunate
for us that though they cannot oppose you with anything like the strength
they once could, they still enjoy their former reputation amongst the Greeks.
You will therefore gain as much credit with our allies in conquering as
if the Gauls you defeat had retained all the courage of old days."
[38.18]After dismissing his men he sent
messengers to Eposognatus, who was the only Gaulish chief who had remained
friendly to Eumenes and refused assistance to Antiochus against the Romans.
The consul then resumed his advance; on the first day he reached the Alander
and the day after, a village called Tyscon. Here a deputation arrived from
Oroanda begging for peace. They were ordered to pay 200 talents, and the
consul allowed them to return home and report his demand to their government.
From there he marched to Plitendum, his next halting-place being Alyatti.
Here the messengers sent to Eposognatus returned in company with envoys
from the chief, who begged the consul not to commence hostilities against
the Tectosagi, as he would go to them himself and persuade them to submit.
His request was granted. Then the army entered a tract of country called
Axylon. It derives its name from the character of the soil; not only does
it bear nothing in the shape of timber, but not even brambles or thorn
bushes grow here, or anything which can serve for fuel. The inhabitants
use cow-dung instead of wood. Whilst the Romans were encamped at Cuballum,
a fortified place in Gallograecia, a body of enemy cavalry appeared making
a great tumult. Their sudden attack not only threw the Roman outposts into
confusion but caused some losses amongst them. As the tumult reached the
camp, the Roman cavalry hurrying out from all the gates routed the Gauls
and put them to flight, and a considerable number of the fugitives were
slain.
The consul, aware that he was now in the enemy's country, advanced with
caution, keeping his force well together and throwing out scouting parties.
Marching continuously, he came to the river Sangarius, and as there was
no possibility of fording it, he decided to construct a bridge. The Sangarius
rises in the Adoreos range and flowing through Phrygia mingles its waters
with the Tymbris on the frontier of Bithynia, and with its volume thus
increased flows through Bithynia and empties itself into the Propontis.
It is not, however, so remarkable for its size as for the vast quantity
of fish with which it supplies the inhabitants. When the bridge was completed
the army crossed the river and as they were marching along the bank they
were met by the "Galli" or priests of the Mater Magna from Pessinus
with their insignia, who prophesied in mystic and oracular verses that
the goddess was granting the Romans safety and victory in the war and the
sovereignty of the country in which they were. The consul welcomed the
omen and fixed his camp for the night on that very spot. The next day he
arrived at Gordium. This is not a large place but it possesses a widely-known
and much-frequented market; a larger one, in fact, than most inland towns.
It is almost equally distant from three seas, the Hellespont, the Euxine
at Sinope, and the sea which washes the shores of Cilicia, and also adjoins
the territories of several large populations, who for the sake of mutual
commercial advantages have made this their business centre. The Romans
found it deserted, the inhabitants having fled, and stored with goods of
every description. Whilst they were encamped here, envoys from Eposognatus
arrived with the intelligence that he had interviewed the Gaulish chiefs
but could not make them listen to reason. They were abandoning their villages
and farms in the open country, and together with their wives and children
were carrying their portable property and driving their flocks and herds
before them towards Olympus. Here they intended to defend themselves by
arms and their strong position.
[38.19]Subsequently, more definite information
was received from Oroanda to the effect that the Tolostobogii had actually
occupied Olympus; that the Tectosagi going in a different direction had
established themselves on another mountain called Magaba, and that the
Trocmi had left their wives and children in the care of the Tectosagi and
gone to the assistance of the Tolostobogii. The chiefs of these three tribes
were Ortiagon, Comboiomarus and Gaulotus. Their main reason for adopting
this mode of warfare was that by holding the principal heights in the country,
provided with everything they might require for an indefinite period, they
hoped to wear out the enemy. They never imagined he would venture to approach
them over such steep and difficult ground; if he did make the attempt they
believed that even a small force would be sufficient to dislodge him or
throw him back in confusion; whilst if he remained inactive at the foot
of the mountain he would be unable to endure the cold and hunger. Though
the height of their position was itself a protection, they drew a trench
and constructed other defences round the peaks on which they were established.
Missile weapons they troubled themselves very little about as they thought
the rocky ground would supply them with plenty of stones.
[38.20]As the consul had anticipated that
the fighting would not be at close quarters but would involve an attack
upon positions from a distance, he accumulated a large quantity of javelins,
light infantry spears, arrows and leaden balls and small stones suitable
for hurling from slings. Provided with these missile weapons, he marched
towards Olympus and encamped about four miles' distance from the mountain.
On the morrow he sent Attalus with 500 cavalry to reconnoitre the ground
and the situation of the Gaulish camp. While thus engaged a body of hostile
cavalry, twice as large as his own force, sallied from their camp and put
him to flight; some of his men were killed and several wounded. The next
day the consul went out with the whole of his cavalry to explore, and as
none of the enemy appeared outside their lines he made the circuit of the
mountain in safety. He noticed that towards the south the ground rose in
gentle slopes and was covered with soil; on the north the cliffs were precipitous
and almost vertical. There were only three possible roads - everywhere
else it was inaccessible - the one up the middle of the mountain free from
rocks, and two which were difficult, one on the south-east and the other
on the north-west. After making these observations he encamped for the
day close to the foot of the mountain. The following day, after he had
offered the sacrifices and the first victims had given favourable omens,
he advanced against the enemy. The army was formed into three divisions;
the largest he commanded in person and began the ascent where it afforded
the easiest approach; his brother, L. Manlius, was ordered to advance from
the southeastern side as far as the ground allowed of his doing so safely,
but if he came to a dangerous or precipitous part he was not to struggle
against the difficulties of the path nor try to force his way over insuperable
obstacles. In that case he was to turn and march across the face of the
mountain and unite his division with the one which the consul was leading.
C. Helvius was to work gradually round the lower slopes of the mountain
and then take his division up the north-eastern side. Attalus' auxiliaries
were also formed into three divisions, Attalus himself accompanying the
consul. The cavalry and elephants were left on the level ground at the
bottom, and their commanders were under orders to watch carefully the progress
of the action and render prompt assistance wherever it was required.
[38.21]The Gauls feeling confident that
on two sides they were unassailable directed their attention to the southern
slope. To close all access on this side they sent 4000 men to seize a height
which commanded the road, distant rather less than a mile from their camp,
where, as in a fort, they might prevent the enemy's advance. When they
saw this, the Romans made ready for battle. Somewhat in front of the legions
went the velites, the Cretan archers and slingers and the Tralli and Thracians
under Attalus. The heavy infantry advanced slowly as the ground was steep
and they held their shields in front of them, not because they expected
a hand-to-hand contest, but simply to avoid the missiles. With the discharge
of missiles the battle began, and at first it was fought on even terms
as the Gauls had the advantage of their position, the Romans that of the
variety and abundance of their missile weapons. As the struggle went on,
however, it became anything but equal; the shields of the Gauls though
long were not broad enough to cover their bodies, and being flat also afforded
poor protection. Moreover, they had no weapons but their swords, and as
they could not come to close quarters these were useless. They tried to
make use of stones, but as they had not got any ready, they had to use
what each man in his hurry and confusion could lay hands on, and unaccustomed
as they were to these weapons, they could not make them more effective
by either skill or strength. On all sides they were being hit by the arrows
and leaden bullets and javelins which they were powerless to ward off;
blinded by rage and fear they did not see what they were to do, and they
found themselves engaged in the kind of fighting for which they were least
fitted. In close fighting where they can receive and inflict wounds in
turn, their fury stimulates their courage; so when they are being wounded
by missiles flung from a distance by an unseen foe and there is no one
against whom they can make a blind rush, they dash recklessly against their
own comrades like wild beasts that have been speared. Their practice of
always fighting naked makes their wounds more visible, and their bodies
are white and fleshy as they never strip except in battle. Consequently
more blood flowed from them, the open gashes appeared more horrible, and
the whiteness of their bodies showed up the stain of the dark blood. Open
wounds, however, do not trouble them much. Sometimes, where it is a surface
bruise rather than a deep wound, they cut the skin, and even think that
in this way they win greater glory in battle. But when the head of an arrow
has gone in or a leaden bullet buried itself and it tortures them with
what looks like a slight wound and defies all their efforts to get rid
of it, they fling themselves on the ground in shame and fury at so small
an injury threatening to prove fatal. So they were lying about everywhere,
and some who rushed down on their enemy were being pierced with missiles
from all sides; those who got to close quarters the velites slew with their
swords. These soldiers carry a shield three feet long, javelins in their
right hand for use at a distance and a Spanish sword in their belts. When
they have to fight at close quarters they transfer the javelins to their
left hands and draw their swords. Few of the Gauls now survived, and when
they found themselves worsted by the light infantry and the legions coming
on, they fled in disorder back to their camp, which was full of tumult
and panic, as the women and children and other noncombatants were all crowded
there together. The Romans took possession of the heights from which the
enemy had fled.
[38.22]L. Manlius and C. Helvius in the
meanwhile had marched up as far as the mountain-side afforded a path, and
when they came to a place where it was impossible to advance they each
turned towards the only part which was accessible, and as though by mutual
understanding, they followed the consul at some distance from each other.
Necessity compelled them to adopt now what would have been the best course
at the outset, for over such difficult ground supports have often proved
of the greatest use; when the first line has been thrown into disorder
the second line can shelter them and go into action fresh and unshaken.
When the foremost ranks of the legions had gained the heights which the
light infantry had captured, the consul ordered his men to rest and recover
their breath. He pointed to the bodies of the Gauls scattered over the
ground and said: "If the light infantry could fight as they have done,
what may I not expect from the legions, from those who are fully armed,
from the valour of my bravest soldiers? Surely after the light infantry
have driven the enemy in confusion into their camp, you legionaries must
storm and capture it." During this halt the light infantry had been
busy collecting the missiles which were lying everywhere, in order that
they might have a sufficient supply, and the consul now ordered them to
advance. As they approached the camp, the Gauls, fearing lest their entrenchments
should afford them insufficient protection, were standing in arms in front
of the rampart. They were at once overwhelmed by a general discharge of
missiles, for the greater their numbers and the closer their formation
so much more surely did every weapon find its mark. In a few minutes they
were driven inside their lines, leaving only strong bodies to guard the
camp gates. A heavy shower of missiles was now directed upon the masses
in the camp, and the mingled shrieks of women and children showed that
many of them were hit. Against those who were holding the gates the legionaries
hurled their javelins. They were not wounded by them, but their shields
were pierced, and thus hopelessly entangled together they were not able
long to resist the Roman attack.
[38.23]As the gates were now open, the
Gauls fled in every direction from the camp before the victors burst in.
Blindly they dashed along the paths and over places where there was no
path; no precipices, no cliffs stopped them; they feared nothing but the
enemy. Most of them fell headlong from the heights; they died, maimed and
crushed. The consul kept his men from plundering the captured camp and
ordered them to do their best to pursue and harass the enemy and increase
his panic. When the second division under L. Manlius came up, he forbade
them also to enter the camp, and sent them off at once in pursuit. After
placing the prisoners in charge of the military tribunes he joined in the
pursuit, for he believed that the war would be at an end if as many as
possible were killed or made prisoners whilst they were in such a state
of panic. After the consul had gone, C. Helvius came up with his division,
and was unable to restrain his men from plundering the camp, and so by
a most unfair chance the booty went to those who had no share of the fighting.
The cavalry stood for a long time knowing nothing of the battle or the
victory which their comrades had won. Then they rode, wherever their horses
could travel, after the Gauls dispersed round the mountain, and either
killed or took them prisoners.
It was not easy to get at the number of those killed, for the flight
and the carnage extended over all the spurs and ravines of the mountain,
and a great many losing their way had fallen into the deep recesses below;
many, too, were killed in the woods and thickets. Claudius, who states
that there were two battles on Olympus, puts the number of killed at 40,000;
Valerius Antias, who is usually more given to exaggeration, says that there
were not more than 10,000. The prisoners, no doubt, amounted to 40,000,
because they had carried with them a multitude of both sexes and all ages,
more like emigrants than men going to war. The enemy's weapons were gathered
into a heap and burnt, and the consul ordered the troops to collect the
rest of the booty. That portion which was to go to the State he sold; the
rest he distributed with most scrupulous fairness amongst the soldiers.
He then paraded them, and after warmly commending the services which the
whole army had rendered, he conferred rewards on each according to their
merit, especially on Attalus, who was unanimously applauded, for the exemplary
courage and untiring energy which the young prince had shown in facing
toils and dangers was only equalled by his modesty.
[38.24]Now came the campaign against the
Tectosagi, and the consul commenced his advance against them. In a three
days' march he reached Ancyra, a city of importance in that district, and
the enemy were only ten miles distant from it. Whilst he was here in camp
a remarkable incident occurred in connection with a female prisoner. The
wife of a chief named Orgiagon, a woman of exceptional beauty, was with
other captives in the custody of a centurion who was notorious even amongst
soldiers for his licentiousness and greed. At first he made improper proposals
to her, but finding that she treated them with abhorrence, he took advantage
of her servile condition and violated her. Then, to assuage her anger and
shame at the outrage, he held out hopes to her of returning to her friends,
but not as a lover would have done without ransom. He stipulated for a
certain weight of gold, and to prevent his men from knowing anything about
it, he allowed her to choose one of the prisoners and send a message by
him to her friends. A spot by the river was fixed upon where not more than
two of her friends were to come with the gold on the following night and
receive her. There happened to be amongst the prisoners one of her own
slaves, and this man was conducted by the centurion beyond the ramparts
as soon as it was dark. The following night two of her friends and the
centurion with his captive met at the place. Whilst they were showing him
the gold, which amounted to an Attic talent - the sum agreed upon - the
woman speaking in her own language ordered them to draw their swords and
cut off the centurion's head while he was counting out the gold. Wrapping
up the murdered man's head in her robe, she took it to her husband, who
had fled home from Olympus. Before embracing him she flung down the head
at his feet, and whilst he was wondering whose head it could possibly be,
or what such an unwomanly act could mean, she told him about the outrage
she had endured and the revenge she had taken for her violated chastity.
It is recorded that by the purity and strictness of her life she maintained
to the very last the honour of a deed so worthy of a matron.
[38.25]Whilst the consul was in camp at
Ancyra he was visited by envoys from the Tectosagi, who begged him not
to advance any further until he had had a conference with their kings,
and assured him that there were no terms of peace which they would not
prefer to war. The next day was fixed for the interview; the spot selected
was one that seemed to be halfway between Ancyra and the Gaulish camp.
The consul went there at the appointed time with an escort of 500 cavalry,
but as not a single Gaul was in sight he returned to camp. The envoys reappeared
and excused the absence of the chiefs on religious grounds; they promised
that some of their principal men would come, as matters could be equally
well transacted with them. The consul said that he would send Attalus to
represent him. Both parties came; Attalus with an escort of 300 cavalry.
The terms of peace were discussed, but no final result could be reached
in the absence of the leaders; so it was arranged that the consul should
meet the chiefs on the following day. The Gauls had a double object in
delaying negotiations; first, to gain time, so that they might transport
their property, which might, they feared, expose them to danger, across
the Halys, together with their wives and children; secondly, because they
were hatching a plot against the consul, who was not taking any precautions
against treachery at the conference. For this purpose they had selected
out of their entire force 1000 men of proved daring, and the design would
have succeeded if fortune had not defended the law of nations which they
intended to violate. The Roman troops were sent to collect forage and wood
near the place of the conference, as this appeared to the military tribunes
to be the safest course, since they would have the consul and his escort
between them and the enemy. Another detachment of 600 mounted men was stationed
nearer their camp.
On receiving Attalus' assurance that the kings would come and that the
negotiations could be completed, the consul started from the camp with
the same escort as before. He had ridden nearly five miles and was not
far from the appointed place when he suddenly saw the Gauls coming on at
full gallop with hostile intent. Halting his force and bidding them prepare
themselves and their arms for battle, he met the first charge firmly without
giving ground. Then when the weight of numbers began to tell he slowly
retired, keeping his ranks unbroken, but at last when there was more danger
in remaining on the field than safety in keeping their ranks, they all
broke and fled. Thus scattered they were hard pressed by the Gauls, as
they cut them down, and a large proportion of them would have been destroyed
had not the 600 who were posted to protect the foragers met them in their
flight. They had heard the shouts of alarm amongst their comrades, and
hurriedly getting their weapons and horses ready they came fresh into the
fight when it was almost over. This turned the fortunes of the day. and
the panic recoiled from the defeated on to the conquerors. The Gauls were
routed in the first charge, and as the foragers came running up from the
fields, the enemy found themselves met on every side, with hardly any way
of escape open. The Romans on fresh horses were pursuing those which were
tired and exhausted, and few escaped. No prisoners were taken. By far the
greater number paid the death penalty for their breach of good faith. Furious
at this treachery the Romans advanced in full strength against the enemy
the following day.
[38.26]The consul spent two days in making
a close inspection of the natural features of the mountain that he might
be familiar with every detail. The next day, after taking the auspices
and offering the sacrifices, he led out his army. It was formed into four
divisions; two of these he intended to take up the middle of the mountain,
the two others were to ascend the sides and take the Gauls in both flanks.
The dispositions of the enemy were as follows: the Tectosagi and the Trocmi,
who formed his main strength, numbering 50,000 men, held the centre; the
cavalry, 10,000 strong, were dismounted as horses were useless on that
broken ground, and formed the right wing; the Cappadocians under Ariarathes
and the Morzian auxiliaries, in all about 4000, were posted on the left.
The consul placed his light infantry in the first line as he had done in
the battle on Olympus, and took care that they should have an equally ample
supply of weapons at hand. When they approached the enemy all the features
of the former battle were reproduced except that the courage of the one
side was raised by their recent victory and that of the other side depressed,
for the enemy though not yet themselves defeated, looked upon the defeat
of their fellow-countrymen as tantamount to their own. As the battle began,
so it ended in the same way. A perfect cloud of missiles overwhelmed the
Gauls. None durst run forward from his entrenchments lest he should expose
his naked body to the certainty of being hit from all sides, and whilst
they remained standing within their lines in close formation, they received
more wounds the more densely they were packed, as though each man was specially
aimed at. The consul thought that the sight of the standards of the legions
would put the already demoralised Gauls to instant flight, and accordingly
he retired the light infantry and other skirmishers within the ranks of
the legions and ordered an advance.
[38.27]The Gauls, unnerved by the memory
of the defeat of the Tolostobogii, exhausted by their long standing and
their wounds, with the javelins sticking in their bodies, did not wait
for the first charge and battle-shout of the Romans. They fled towards
their camp, but few gained the shelter of their entrenchments; the greater
number rushed past them right or left, where-ever their eagerness to escape
carried them. The victors pursued them up to their camp, slaying them from
behind, but once at the camp they stopped in their eagerness for plunder;
no one continued the pursuit. The Gauls held their ground somewhat longer
on the wings, as it took longer to reach them; they did not, however, wait
for the first discharge of missiles. As the consul could not keep his men
from looting the camp, he sent the other two divisions in instant pursuit.
They followed them up for a considerable distance and killed in all some
8000 men in the flight; there was no attempt at fighting. The survivors
crossed the Halys. A large part of the Roman army passed the night in the
enemy's camp; the rest the consul led back to their own camp. The day following,
the consul counted up the prisoners and the booty; the amount of the latter
was as great as even a nation that was always bent on rapine, and had for
many years held by force of arms all the country west of the Taurus, could
possibly have amassed. After the Gauls had collected from their scattered
flight, most of them wounded, without arms, and stripped of all their belongings,
they sent to the consul to sue for peace. Manlius ordered them to go to
Ephesus. He himself, anxious to get out of the cold district near the Taurus
- it was now the middle of autumn - led his victorious army back to the
coast for their winter quarters.
[38.28]During these operations in Asia
things were quiet in the other provinces. In Rome the censors T. Quinctius
Flamininus and M. Claudius Marcellus revised the roll of senators. P. Scipio
Africanus was for the third time selected to lead the Senate, and only
four members were struck off the roll, none of whom had held any curule
office. The censors showed great forbearance also in revising the list
of equites. They contracted for the building of the substructure on the
Capitol over the Aequimelium and also the laying down of a paved road from
the Porta Capena to the temple of Mars. The Campanians asked the Senate
to decide where their census should be taken, and it was decreed that it
should be taken in Rome. There were very heavy floods this year; on twelve
several occasions the Tiber inundated the Campus Martius and the low-lying
parts of the City. After Cn. Manlius had brought the war against the Gauls
in Asia to a close, the other consul, M. Fulvius, now that the Aetolians
were subjugated, sailed across to Cephallania, and sent round to the various
cities in the island to ask them which they preferred - surrender to the
Romans or the chances of war. Fear prevented them all from refusing to
surrender, and they gave the hostages, which the consul demanded in proportion
to their scanty resources. Peace beyond their hopes had now dawned upon
the Cephallanians, when suddenly, for some unknown reason, one city that
of Same, revolted. They said that, as their city occupied an advantageous
position, they were afraid that the Romans might compel them to live elsewhere.
Whether this was an invention on their part, and their breach of the peace
was due to imaginary fears, or whether the matter had been talked about
amongst the Romans and so come to their ears, is quite uncertain. What
is certain is that after giving hostages they closed their gates, and though
the consul sent these hostages to the walls to appeal to the sympathies
of their fellow-citizens and kinsmen, they refused to abandon their opposition.
As no peaceable reply was given, the siege of the city was begun. The consul
had all the siege-engines brought from Ambracia, and the soldiers rapidly
completed what works had to be made. The rams began to batter the walls
in two directions.
[38.29]Nothing was left undone by the
Samaeans in the way of defence against siege-works or assaults. Their method
of resistance was mainly two-fold. On the one hand, where the wall was
destroyed they always built a strong one inside close to it, and on the
other they made sudden sorties, at one time against the siege-works, at
another against the outposts. In these actions they generally proved superior.
One method was discovered of keeping them back; a simple one, but worth
mentioning. A hundred slingers were sent for from Aegium, Patrae and Dymae.
These men had been in the habit, as their fathers had before them, of practicing
with their slings, with which they used to hurl into the sea the round
stones lying on the beach. In this way they gained a more accurate and
longer range than the Baliaric slingers. Their slings, too, were not made
of a single strap, like those of the Baliarics and other nations, but they
consisted of three thongs, stiffened by beings sewn together. This prevented
the bullet from flying off at random when the thong was let go; when fixed
in the sling it could be so whirled round as to fly out as though from
the string of a bow. They used to send their stones through rings at a
great distance, as targets, and were thus able to hit not only the head
but whatever part of the face they aimed at. These slings kept the Samaeans
from making such frequent or such daring sorties; so much so in fact that
they called to the Achaeans from their walls and begged them to retire
for a time and remain quiet spectators while they fought with the Roman
outposts. Same sustained a siege of four months. Day by day some of their
scanty numbers fell or were wounded, and the survivors became exhausted
in mind and body. At last the Romans surmounted the wall and forced their
way through the citadel which they call the Cyatis - the city extends on
the west down to the sea - and appeared in the forum. When the Samaeans
found that the city was partly captured by the enemy they took refuge in
the larger citadel with their wives and children. The next day they surrendered;
the city was sacked, and the whole of its population sold into slavery.
[38.30]After settling matters in Cephallania
and placing at garrison in Same, the consul sailed to the Peloponnesus,
whither the people of Aegium and the Lacedaemonians had for some time urged
him to go. Either as a concession to its importance or owing to its convenient
situation, Aegium had been the meeting-place of the Council of the League
ever since it had been formed. This year for the first time Philopoemen
tried to do away with this custom, and was preparing to bring in a law
enacting that the Assembly should be held in each city of the League in
turn. Just before the consul's visit the Damiourgi (the supreme magistrates)
of the various States had convened a meeting of the League at Aegium, whilst
Philopoemen the captain-general had summoned them to Argos. As they would
evidently almost all meet there, the consul, though he was in favour of
Aegium, went to Argos. Here the question was debated, and when he saw that
the Assembly were inclined towards Argos, he gave way. The Lacedaemonians
then drew his attention to their grievances. The main cause of anxiety
to their city was the threatening attitude of the exiles, many of whom
were living in forts and villages which they had seized on the Laconian
coast. The Lacedaemonians chafed under this state of things; they wanted
to have access to the sea somewhere or other in case they wanted to send
a mission to Rome or elsewhere, and also that they might have a free port
in which to receive merchandise and necessaries from abroad. They made
an attack by night upon a maritime village called Las. The villagers and
exiles were at first terror-struck by the unlooked-for attack, but before
it was day they collected in a body and without much difficulty drove the
Lacedaemonians out. Then the whole of the coast took alarm and all the
forts and villages and the exiles who had made their homes there sent a
joint appeal to the Achaeans for help.
[38.31]From the first, Philopoemen had
championed the cause of the exiles and had always tried to persuade the
Achaeans to abridge the power and influence of the Lacedaemonians. He now
summoned a council to hear the envoys, and on his initiative a decree was
passed in the following terms: "Whereas T. Quinctius and the Romans
have committed to the good faith and protection of the Achaeans the villages
and forts on the coast of Laconia, and whereas the village of Las has been
attacked by the Lacedaemonians who were bound by treaty not to interfere
with them, and blood has been shed there, we decree that unless the authors
and abettors of this outrage are surrendered to the Achaeans, the treaty
shall be held to be broken." A mission was at once despatched to Lacedaemon
to insist on this demand. So arbitrary and arrogant did it appear in the
eyes of the Lacedaemonians that if that city had been in the position it
once held they would undoubtedly have taken up arms. What they feared most
of all was that if they submitted to the yoke so far as to comply with
this initial demand, Philopoemen would carry out the policy he had long
contemplated of handing Lacedaemon to the exiles. In a frenzy of anger
they put to death thirty men who belonged to the party who were in league
with Philopoemen and the exiles, and then passed a decree denouncing the
alliance with the Achaeans and ordering the immediate despatch of a mission
to Cephallania to make a formal surrender of Lacedaemon to the consul and
to Rome, begging him to come to the Peloponnesus and receive their city
into the protection and suzerainty of the people of Rome.
[38.32]When these proceedings were reported
to the Achaeans, all the States of the League with one consent proclaimed
war against the Lacedaemonians. Winter prevented any immediate operations
on a large scale, but their territories were devastated by bodies of raiders
both by land and sea, more in the fashion of brigandage than of regular
warfare. It was this disturbance that brought the consul to the Peloponnesus,
and by his orders a council was summoned to Elis and the Lacedaemonians
were invited to state their case. The discussion soon became a heated quarrel,
which the consul put an end to. He was anxious to befriend both sides and
after giving a reply which committed him to nothing, warned them both to
abstain from hostilities until their representatives had appeared before
the Senate. Both sides sent delegates to Rome; the Lacedaemonian exiles
entrusted their cause to the Achaeans. The leaders of the Achaean embassy
were Diophanes and Lycortas, both natives of Megalopolis. They were opposed
to one another in their political views and the speeches they delivered
showed a similar divergence. Diophanes was for leaving the decision on
every point to the Senate as they would settle the matters in dispute between
the Achaeans and the Lacedaemonians in the best possible way. Lycortas,
acting on instructions from Philopoemen, claimed the right of the Achaeans
to execute their decree in accordance with the treaty and their laws, and
pleaded that as the Senate had been the instrument of their freedom, so
they should preserve that freedom for them undiminished and unimpaired.
At that time the Achaeans stood high in Roman esteem; it was, however,
decided that the position of the Lacedaemonians should be in no way changed.
The reply of the senate was so ambiguous that while the Achaeans assumed
that they had a free hand with regard to Lacedaemon, the Lacedaemonians
interpreted it to mean that the Achaeans had not gained all they asked
for.
[38.33]The Achaeans made a most unscrupulous
use of the permission which they considered to have been granted them.
Philopoemen was still in office and in the first days of spring he called
out the army and fixed his camp on Lacedaemonian territory. Then he sent
to demand the authors of the revolt, and promised that if the city would
surrender them it should remain at peace, and the men themselves should
suffer no injury until their case had been heard. Fear kept the rest silent;
those who had been named declared their willingness to go, as they had
received from Philopoemen's emissaries a guarantee that they would be safe
from violence until they had pleaded their cause. Others, men of high position,
went with them to support their friends and also because they considered
their cause to be the cause of the State. Never before had the Achaeans
brought the exiles with them on to Lacedaemonian soil, because they thought
that nothing would do more to estrange their fellow-countrymen from them,
but now they were almost in the forefront of the whole army. When the Lacedaemonians
came to the gate of the camp the exiles met them in a body. At first they
assailed them with insults; then passions became heated on both sides,
and the more ferocious of the exiles made an attack upon the Lacedaemonians.
Whilst these were appealing to the gods and the pledged word of Philopoemen's
emissaries, and he and his emissaries were keeping back the crowd and protecting
the Lacedaemonians and preventing some from actually manacling them, a
large crowd collected and the disturbance increased. The Achaeans ran up
to see what was going on, and the exiles, protesting loudly about the sufferings
they had endured, implored their help and told them if they let this opportunity
slip they would never again have such a favourable one. "The treaty
which had been solemnly published in the Capitol at Olympia and in the
citadel at Athens had been set at nought by these men, and before we are
bound by another treaty the guilty must be punished." This language
excited the crowd, and one man shouted out "Kill them." On this
they flung stones at them, and seventeen men who had been thrown into chains
during the tumult were killed. On the following day sixty-three were arrested
whom Philopoemen had protected from violence, not that he was concerned
for their safety, but because he did not want them to perish before the
day of trial. Victims to the fury of the mob, they spoke but little and
that to deaf ears. All were found guilty and handed over for punishment.
[38.34]Having thus terrorised the Lacedaemonians,
they sent them peremptory orders: first, that they must destroy their walls;
secondly, that all the foreign mercenaries who had served under the tyrants
must depart from the land of Laconia; thirdly, that all the slaves whom
the tyrants had set free, and of whom there was a large number, must leave
by a certain day; any who remained the Achaeans would have the right to
carry off and sell; lastly, they must abrogate the laws and customs of
Lycurgus and accustom themselves to the laws and institutions of the Achaeans,
as in this way they would form one body and unite more easily in a common
policy. With none of these demands did they comply more readily than with
that demanding the destruction of their walls, and none roused such bitter
feeling as that demanding the restoration of the exiles. A decree for their
restoration was passed in the Council of the Achaeans at Tegea, and it
was stated that the foreign mercenaries had been disbanded, and that the
"naturalised Lacedaemonians," for so they designated the slaves
set free by the tyrants, had left the city and dispersed into the surrounding
country. On receiving this intelligence it was decided that before the
army was demobilised the captain-general should go with a light force and
arrest those people and sell them as lawfully acquired booty. Many were
thus caught and sold. With the money thus raised the colonnade at Megalopolis,
which the Lacedaemonians had destroyed, was at the suggestion of the Achaeans
restored. This city also won back the territory of Belbina, which the tyrants
of Lacedaemon had wrongfully taken possession of; this was in pursuance
of an old decree made by the Achaeans during the reign of Philip the son
of Amyntas. Through these measures the city of Lacedaemon lost the sinews
of her strength, and was for a long time at the mercy of the Achaeans.
No loss, however, affected her more deeply than the loss of the discipline
of Lycurgus, which they had maintained for 800 years.
[38.35]After the meeting of the Council
in which the dispute between the Achaeans and the Lacedaemonians took place
before the consul, M. Fulvius returned to Rome for the purpose of conducting
the elections, as the year was now drawing to a close. M. Aemilius Lepidus,
one of the candidates, was a personal enemy of his, and he refused to allow
any votes to be cast for him. The consuls elected were M. Valerius Messala
and C. Livius Salinator. The praetors elected were Q. Marcius Philippus,
M. Claudius Marcellus, C. Stertinius, C. Atinius, P. Claudius Pulcher and
L. Manlius Acidinus. When the elections were over it was decided that M.
Fulvius should return to his army and command, and an extension of office
was granted to him and to his colleague Cn. Manlius. This year P. Cornelius,
as directed by the Keepers of the Sacred Books, placed a statue of Hercules
and a chariot with six horses, all gilded, in the Capitol. The inscription
stated that it had been given by a consul. Twelve gilt shields were also
hung there by the curule aediles P. Claudius Pulcher and Servius Sulpicius
Gallus out of the fines levied on corn factors who had been holding back
their grain. Another had been convicted at the instance of the plebeian
aedile, on two separate charges, and with this fine he provided two gilt
statues. His colleague A. Caecilius had not prosecuted any one. The Roman
Games were exhibited three times, the Plebeian Games five times. Immediately
on entering into office on the Ides of March the new consuls consulted
the senate on the policy to be pursued in the provinces and the armies.
No change was made with regard to Aetolia or Asia. Pisa and Liguria were
assigned to one consul, Gaul to the other. They were instructed to come
to a mutual arrangement, or failing that to ballot, as to which province
each should take, and each was to raise afresh army of two Roman legions
and 15,000 foot and 1200 cavalry from the Italian allies. Liguria fell
to Messala; Gaul to Salinator. Then the praetors balloted for their commands.
The City jurisdiction fell to M. Claudius; the alien to P. Claudius; Sicily
to Q. Marcius; Sardinia to C. Stertinius; Hither Spain to L. Manlius; and
Further Spain to C. Atinius.
[38.36]In the case of the armies abroad
it was settled that the legions in Gaul which had been under C. Laelius
should be transferred to the propraetor M. Tuccius for service in Bruttium.
The army in Sicily was to be disbanded, and the fleet lying there M. Sempronius
the propraetor was to bring back to Rome. It was decreed that the legion
stationed in each of the two Spanish provinces should remain there, and
the praetors were each to take with them 3000 infantry and 200 cavalry
drawn from the allies as reinforcements. Before the new magistrates left
for their provinces, special intercessions for three days were ordered
on the authority of the Keepers of the Sacred Books to be offered at all
the cross-roads owing to a darkness which came over in broad daylight between
the third and fourth hours. Sacrifices were also enjoined for nine days
in consequence of a shower of stones on the Aventine. The Campanians had
been obliged by a decree of the senate passed the year before to have their
census taken in Rome as it had previously been uncertain where they ought
to be enrolled. They now requested that they might be allowed to marry
women who were Roman citizenesses, and that any who had already done so
might hold themselves to be lawfully married, and that children already
born might be regarded as legitimate and capable of inheriting property.
Both requests were granted. One of the tribunes of the plebs, C. Valerius
Tappo, brought forward a proposal granting the full franchise to the citizens
of the municipal boroughs of Formiae, Fundi and Arpinum. They had hitherto
enjoyed the citizenship without the power of voting. This motion was opposed
by four of the tribunes on the ground that it had not received the sanction
of the senate, but on being informed that it rested with the people and
not the senate to confer the franchise on whom they chose, they abandoned
their opposition. The citizens of Formiae and Fundi were authorised to
vote in the Aemilian tribe, and those of Arpinum in the Cornelian. In these
tribes, therefore, they were for the first time enrolled by virtue of the
plebiscite, passed on the motion of Valerius. The censor M. Claudius Marcellus,
to whom the ballot gave precedence over T. Quinctius, closed the lustrum.
The census gave the number of citizens as 258,318. After these matters
were settled the consuls left for their provinces.
[38.37]During this winter Cn. Manlius,
who was passing the season in Asia first as consul and then as proconsul,
was visited by deputations from all the cities and nationalities west of
the Taurus. Whilst the Romans regarded their victory over Antiochus as
a more notable one than their subsequent victory over the Gauls, their
Asiatic allies rejoiced more over the latter than the former. Subjection
to the king was a much easier thing to bear than the ferocity of the ruthless
barbarians and the terror which haunted them from one day to another, for
they never knew in what direction that ferocity might sweep them like a
storm upon plundering and devastating raids. They had regained their liberty
through the repulse of Antiochus and their peace through the subjugation
of the Gauls, and now they brought to the consul not only their congratulations
and thanks but also golden crowns, each according to their ability. Delegates
came, too, from Antiochus and even from the Gauls themselves to learn the
conditions of peace. Ariarathes also sent envoys from Cappadocia to sue
for forgiveness and offer a pecuniary atonement for his offence in assisting
Antiochus. He was ordered to pay 600 talents of silver and the Gauls were
told that when Eumenes arrived they would have the conditions of peace
given to them. The delegations from the various cities were dismissed with
gracious replies and went away even happier than they had come. Those from
Antiochus received instructions to convey money and corn into Pamphylia,
as agreed with L. Scipio, as the consul was going there with his army.
At the beginning of spring, therefore, after performing the lustrations
on behalf of his army, he commenced his march, and after eight days reached
Apamea. Here he remained encamped for three days, and then advanced into
Pamphylia where he had ordered the king's envoys to deposit the money and
the corn. He received 1500 talents of silver which were taken to Apamea;
the corn was distributed amongst the soldiers. From there he advanced to
Perga, the only city in that country which was held by a garrison of the
king's troops. On his approach he was met by the commandant who asked for
a respite of thirty days that he might consult Antiochus about surrendering
the city. He was allowed the interval and on the thirtieth day the garrison
evacuated the place. Whilst the consul was at Perga he sent his brother
L. Manlius with a force of 4000 men to Oroanda to exact the rest of the
money which, according to the stipulation, was to be paid. On learning
that Eumenes and the ten commissioners from Rome had arrived at Ephesus,
he led his army back to Apamea and ordered the envoys from Antiochus to
follow him.
[38.38]Here the treaty as settled by the
ten commissioners was drawn up. The substance of it was as follows: "There
shall be peace and amity between King Antiochus and the Roman people on
these terms and conditions: The king shall not suffer any army purposing
to levy war on the Roman people or their allies to pass through the borders
of his kingdom or of any subject to him, nor shall he assist it with provisions
or in any other way whatever. The Romans and their allies shall act in
like manner towards Antiochus and those under his sway. Antiochus shall
have no right to levy war upon those who dwell in the islands, or to sail
across to Europe. He shall withdraw from all the cities, lands, villages
and forts west of the Taurus as far as the Halys and extending from the
lowlands of the Taurus up to the range which stretches towards Lycaonia.
He shall not carry any arms from the aforesaid towns and lands and forts
from which he withdraws; if he has carried any away he shall duly restore
them to whatever place they belong. He shall not reclaim any soldier or
any other person whatever from the kingdom of Eumenes. If any citizens
belonging to the cities which are passing from under his rule are with
Antiochus or within the boundaries of his realm, they shall all return
to Apamea by a certain day; if any of Antiochus' subjects are with the
Romans and their allies they shall be at liberty to depart or to remain.
He shall restore to the Romans and their allies the slaves, whether fugitives
or prisoners of war, or any free man who has been taken captive or is a
deserter. He shall give up his elephants and not procure any more. He shall
likewise make over his ships of war and all their tackle, nor shall he
possess more than ten light decked ships, none of which may be propelled
by more than thirty oars, and no smaller ones for use in any war which
he may undertake. He shall not take his ships west of the headlands of
the Calycadnus or the Sorpedon, save only such ships as shall carry money
or tribute or envoys or hostages. Antiochus shall not have the right to
hire mercenary troops from those nations which shall be under the suzerainty
of Rome nor to accept them even as volunteers. Such houses and buildings
as belonged to the Rhodians and their allies within the dominions of Antiochus
shall be held by them on the same right as before the war. If any moneys
are due to them they shall have the same right to exact them, if aught
has been taken from them, they shall have the right of search and recovery.
Whatever cities amongst those that are to be surrendered they hold as a
gift from Antiochus; he shall withdraw the garrisons from them and provide
for their due surrender. He shall pay 12,000 Attic talents of sterling
silver in equal instalments over twelve years - the talent shall weigh
not less than 80 Roman pounds - and 540,000 modii of wheat. To King Eumenes
he shall pay 350 talents within five years, and in place of corn its value
in money, 127 talents. He shall give twenty hostages to the Romans and
exchange them for others in three years, that none may be less than eighteen
or more than forty-five years of age. If any of the allies of Rome shall
wantonly and without provocation make war on Antiochus, he shall have the
right to repel them by force of arms, always providing that he shall not
hold any city by right of war or receive it into friendship and amity.
Disputes shall be determined before a judicial tribunal, or if both parties
shall so will it, by war." There was an additional clause dealing
with the surrender of Hannibal, Thoas and Mnasilochus, as well as Eubulidas
and Philo of Chalcidaea, and also a proviso that if it should afterwards
be decided to add to, or repeal, or alter any of the articles, that should
be done without impairing the validity of the treaty.
[38.39]The consul took the oath to observe
the treaty, and Q. Minucius Thermus and L. Manlius who happened to have
just returned from Oroanda went to demand the oath from the king. The consul
also sent written instructions to Q. Fabius Labeo, who was in command of
the fleet, to proceed forthwith to Patara and break up or burn all the
king's ships which were stationed there. Fifty decked ships were thus either
broken up or burnt. During this voyage he retook Telmessus, where the inhabitants
had been greatly alarmed at the sudden appearance of the fleet. Leaving
Lycia he continued his voyage, and sailing through the Archipelago he landed
in Greece, and stayed a few days at Athens, waiting for the ships which
he had ordered to follow him from Ephesus. As soon as they entered the
Peiraeus he returned with the entire fleet to Italy. Amongst the things
which were to be taken from Antiochus were his elephants, and these Cn.
Manlius presented to Eumenes. He then commenced an investigation into the
circumstances of the different cities, many of which were in a state of
confusion owing to the political changes. Ariarathes had about this time
betrothed his daughter to Eumenes, and owing to the latter's good offices
half the indemnity demanded from him was remitted.
When the investigation into the circumstances and position of the different
cities was completed, the ten commissioners decided each case upon its
merits. Those which had been tributary to Antiochus but whose sympathies
had been with Rome were granted immunity from all tribute. Those who had
sided with Antiochus or paid tribute to Attalus were all ordered to pay
tribute to Eumenes. The natives of Colophon who were living at Notium,
together with the inhabitants of Cymae and Mylasa, were also specially
named as receiving immunity. To Clazomenae was given the island of Drymussa,
as well as immunity. They restored to the Milesians the so-called "sacred
ground," and the inhabitants of Ilium received Rhoeteum and Gergithus
as additions to their territory not so much on account of services recently
rendered as in recognition of its being the original home, and for the
same reason Dardanus was granted its liberty. Chios, Zmyrna and Erythrae
in return for their conspicuous loyalty in the war received a grant of
territory and were treated with especial honour. The territory which the
Phoceans had held before the war was restored to them, and they were allowed
to enjoy their old constitution. The grants made to Rhodes under a former
decree were confirmed; these included Lycia and Caria as far as the Maeander,
with the exception of Telmessus. The dominions of Eumenes were enlarged
by the addition of the European Chersonesus and Lysimachia, the forts,
villages and territory within the limits of Antiochus' rule; in Asia the
two Phrygias, the one on the Hellespont, the other called "Greater
Phrygia"; Mysia which Prusias had taken from him was restored as well
as Lycaonia, Milyas and Lydia, and the cities of Tralles, Ephesus and Telmessus,
which were specially named. With regard to Pamphylia a difficulty arose
between Eumenes and the envoys of Antiochus, as part of it lies on one
side the Taurus and part on the other, and the matter was referred to the
senate.
[38.40]After these articles of peace had
been finally settled and accepted, Manlius proceeded to the Hellespont
with the ten commissioners and the whole of his army. Here he summoned
the Gaulish chiefs to meet him and informed them of the terms upon which
they were to keep the peace with Eumenes, and warned them that they must
put a stop to their custom of making armed forays and confine themselves
to the limits of their own territories. He then collected his ships from
the whole extent of the coast, and with the addition of Eumenes' fleet,
which was brought up by his brother Athenaeus, the consul was able to transport
the whole of his force to Europe. The army was heavily weighted with spoils
of every description and its advance consequently through the Chersonese
was at a moderate pace till they reached Lysimachia. Here they rested for
some time in order that their draught cattle might be as strong and fresh
as possible before they entered Thrace, as they generally dreaded the march
through that country. The same day on which he left Lysimachia the consul
reached Melas, and the next day he arrived at Cypsela. From Cypsela a ten
miles' march over broken ground shut in by forests awaited them. In view
of the difficulties of the route the army was formed into two divisions.
One was ordered to march in advance, the other, at a considerable distance,
to bring up the rear. The baggage was placed between them. This included
the wagons carrying the State money and other valuable booty. Whilst marching
through a pass in this order a body of Thracians drawn from the four tribes
of Astii, Caeni, Maduateni and Coreli, not more than 10,000 in number,
occupied each side of the road at its narrowest part. It was generally
thought that this was due to treachery on Philip's part, that he knew the
Romans would return through Thrace and was also aware of the amount of
money they were carrying.
The general was with the first division and the broken and difficult
ground made him anxious. As long as the armed troops were passing through,
the Thracians did not stir, but when they saw that the vanguard had cleared
the narrowest part of the pass and those behind were nowhere near, they
attacked the baggage and the pack animals, and killing the escort began
to loot the wagons, while others led off the horses with their packs. The
cries and shouts were first heard by those behind who had already entered
the pass; then they reached the leading division. From both directions
a rush was made to the centre, and irregular fighting began at several
points. The booty itself exposed the Thracians to slaughter, hampered as
they were by the loads they were carrying, and most of them without arms
that they might have their hands free for pillage. The unfavourable ground
on the other hand exposed the Romans to the barbarians, who ran up through
paths they were familiar with or concealed themselves in the recesses of
the rocks. Even the packs and wagons obstructed the combatants and interfered
with the movements of one side or the other just as it chanced. Here a
plunderer fell; there, one trying to recover the plunder. The fortunes
of the battle changed as first one side and then the other was on favourable
or unfavourable ground; as the courage of each rose or fell; as the numbers
preponderated on either side, some engaged with larger, others with smaller
bodies than their own. Many fell on both sides and night was already coming
on when the Thracians drew off from the fight, not to escape wounds and
death, but because they had as much plunder as they wanted.
[38.41]When they had got clear of the
pass, the first division of the Roman army encamped on open ground near
the temple of Bendis. The second remained in the pass to protect the baggage
train which they enclosed with a double rampart. The next day after reconnoitring
the pass, they joined the front division. The fighting had practically
extended the whole length of the pass, a portion of the pack animals and
camp servants had fallen and a considerable number of soldiers. But the
most serious loss was that of the gallant and energetic Q. Minucius Thermus.
In the course of the day they reached the Hebrus, and from there they marched
past a temple to the Zerynthian Apollo, as the natives call him, into the
country of the Aenians. Another defile near Tempyra had to be crossed,
not less precipitous than the one already surmounted, but as there was
no wooded country around it, it afforded no concealment for an ambush.
Another Thracian tribe, the Thrausi, had assembled here, quite as greedy
of plunder, but their movements, as they tried to block the pass, were
visible from afar owing to the bareness of the landscape. The Romans were
very little perturbed as though the ground was ill-adapted for maneuvering,
they saw that they could fight on a proper front in a regular action. Charging
in close order and raising their battle-cry they drove the enemy from his
ground and then put him to flight. The narrowness of the pass crowded the
fugitives together, and there was much slaughter.
The victorious Romans encamped at a village belonging to Maronia called
Sale. The following day, marching through open country, they entered the
plain of Priantae. Here they remained, taking in corn partly from the country
people, who brought it in from their fields, and partly from the ships
of the fleet which were loaded with all sorts of stores and were following
their movements. A day's march brought them to Apollonia and from here,
through the district of Abdera, they arrived at Neapolis. The whole of
this march through the Greek colonies was unmolested, but the other part
through the heart of Thrace, though not actually opposed, demanded caution
both by day and night. When this army traversed the same route under Scipio
they found the Thracians less aggressive; the only reason for this being
that there was less chance of plunder, plunder being their one object.
We are, however, told by Claudius that a body of Thracians, amounting to
some 15,000, sought to oppose Muttines the Numidian, who was reconnoitring
in advance of the main army. There were 400 Numidian cavalry and a few
elephants; the son of Muttines, with 150 picked troopers, rode through
the middle of the enemy, and after Muttines with his elephants in the centre
and his cavalry on the flanks had engaged the enemy, his son attacked their
rear and created such disorder amongst them that they never got near the
main body of infantry. Passing through Macedonia, Cn. Manlius led his army
into Thessaly and finally reached Apollonia. Here he remained for the winter,
as the dangers of a winter voyage were not yet so contemptible that he
could venture to cross.
[38.42]It was almost at the close of the
year that the consul M. Valerius came from Liguria to elect new magistrates.
He had done nothing worth mentioning in his province, and this might have
been the reason why he had come at a later date than usual to conduct the
elections. The consular elections were held on February 18; the new consuls
were M. Aemilius Lepidus and C. Flaminius. The praetors elected on the
following day were Ap. Claudius Pulcher, Ser. Sulpicius Galba, Q. Terentius
Culleo, L. Terentius Massiliota, Q. Fulvius Flaccus, and M. Furius Crassipes.
When the elections were over the consuls asked the senate to settle what
provinces were to be assigned to the praetors. They decreed that there
should be two in Rome for the administration of justice; two outside Italy,
namely Sicily and Sardinia; two in Italy itself, namely Tarentum and Gaul;
and the praetors were ordered to ballot at once for these before they took
office. The civic jurisdiction fell to Ser. Sulpicius, the alien to Q.
Terentius, Sicily went to L. Terentius, Sardinia to Q. Fulvius, Tarentum
to Ap. Claudius, and Gaul to M. Furius. During the year L. Minucius Myrtilus
and L. Manlius were charged with having beaten the Carthaginian ambassadors.
They were handed over to them by the fetials and carried off to Carthage.
There were rumours of a warlike movement on a large scale in Liguria,
which was every day growing more serious. In consequence of this the senate
decreed that both the consuls should have Liguria as their province. The
consul Lepidus opposed this resolution and protested against both consuls
being confined to the valleys of Liguria. M. Fulvius, he said, and Cn.
Manlius had now for two years been acting like kings, the one in Europe,
the other in Asia, as though they had replaced Philip and Antiochus on
their thrones. If it was the pleasure of the senate that there should be
armies in those countries it was more fitting that consuls should command
them than unofficial citizens. They were visiting with all the horrors
of war nations against whom no war had been proclaimed, and selling peace
to them at a price. If it was necessary that armies should occupy those
provinces, then C. Livius and M. Valerius as consuls ought to succeed Fulvius
and Manlius, just as L. Scipio, when consul, succeeded Manius Acilias,
and M. Fulvius and Cn. Manlius, when they became consuls, succeeded L.
Scipio. Now, at all events, seeing that the war in Aetolia was at an end,
Asia taken from Antiochus, and the Gauls subjugated, either consuls ought
to be sent to command consular armies, or the legions brought home and
restored to the republic. After listening to this speech the senate adhered
to their decision that Liguria should be the province of both consuls,
and Manlius and Fulvius were to resign their provinces, bring their armies
away and return to Rome.
[38.43]M. Fulvius and M. Aemilius were
on bad terms with one another, the main cause being Aemilius' suspicion
that it was owing to Fulvius that he had been made consul two years later
than he ought to have been. In order to stir up odium against him, he introduced
into the senate some delegates from Ambracia who had been suborned to bring
charges against him. They asserted that while they were at peace and had
done all that the former consuls had required of them and were prepared
to show the same obedience to M. Fulvius, war was declared against them,
their fields were ravaged, the terror created by the bloodshed and pillage
reached their city and compelled them to close their gates. Then they were
besieged, their city carried by storm, and all the horrors of war, fire
and slaughter, wreaked upon them, their homes demolished, their city completely
sacked, their wives and children dragged off into slavery, their goods
carried away, and what they felt most bitterly of all, the temples in the
city stripped of their adornments, the statues of their gods, or rather
the gods themselves, torn from their shrines and carried away. All that
was left to the Ambracians were the naked walls and the columns to receive
their worship or hear their supplications and prayers. Whilst they were
stating these grievances the consul, as previously arranged, questioned
them as to other charges, and elicited answers made with apparent reluctance.
The House was impressed by these statements and the other consul took
up the cause of Fulvius. He pointed out that the Ambracians had taken an
old and outworn course; just in the same way had M. Marcellus been accused
by the Syracusans, and Q. Fulvius by the Campanians. Why might not the
senate allow charges to be brought on similar grounds against T. Quinctius
by Philip, against Manius Acilius and L. Scipio by Antiochus, against Cn.
Manlius by the Gauls, against M. Fulvius himself by the Aetolians and Cephallanians?
"Ambracia," he went on to say, "has been taken by storm,
the statues and temple ornaments have been carried away, and everything
has happened which usually does happen at the capture of cities. Do you
think, senators, that either I, speaking for Fulvius, or M. Fulvius himself,
will deny this? He is going to demand a triumph just because he has done
all this, and will carry in front of his chariot and fasten on the pillars
of his house the captured Ambracia and the statues which he is alleged
to have criminally removed. There is nothing to separate the case of the
Ambracians from that of the Aetolians, the cause of the one is the cause
of the other. My colleague must display his enmity in some other case or
if he prefers the present one, he must keep his Ambracians till Fulvius
returns. I will not allow any decree to be passed in respect of either
the Ambracians or the Aetolians in M. Fulvius' absence."
[38.44]Aemilius continued to attack his
enemy and declared that his cunning and malice were notorious, and that
Fulvius would manage to delay matters so as not to come to Rome while his
adversary was consul. Two days were thus wasted in the quarrel between
the consuls. It was clear that while Faminius was present no decision could
be arrived at. Owing to Flaminius' absence through illness, Aemilius seized
the opportunity to move a resolution which the senate adopted. Its purport
was that the Ambracians should have all their property restored to them;
they should be free to live under their own laws; they should impose such
harbour dues and other imposts by land and sea as they desired, provided
that the Romans and their Italian allies were exempt. With regard to the
statues and ornaments which they said had been taken from their temples,
it was decided that after Fulvius' return their ultimate disposal should
be referred to the pontifical college, and what they deemed right would
be done. The consul was not content with this; subsequently in a thinly
attended House he got a clause added to the effect that there was no evidence
that Ambracia had been taken by storm. In consequence of a serious epidemic
which ravaged City and country alike, the Keepers of the Sacred Books decreed
that special sacrifices and intercessions should be offered for three days.
Then came the Latin Festival. When the consuls were free from these religious
duties and had raised what men they required - they both preferred to employ
fresh troops - they left for their province and disbanded all the old troops.
After their departure Cneius Manlius arrived at Rome, and the praetor S.
Servilius convened a meeting of the senate to grant an audience. After
giving a report of what he had done, he asked that in recognition of these
services, honours should be paid to the immortal gods and permission given
to him to enter the City in triumph. The majority of the ten commissioners
who had been with him opposed this demand, especially L. Furius Purpurio
and L. Aemilius Paulus.
[38.45]They had been appointed, they said,
to act as commissioners with Cn. Manlius for the purpose of concluding
peace with Antiochus and finally settling the terms of the treaty which
had been outlined by L. Scipio. Cn. Manlius did his utmost to upset the
negotiations and, if he got the chance, to inveigle the king into his power.
When the king became aware of the consul's designs, though he was frequently
invited to a personal interview, he avoided not only meeting him but even
the very sight of him. When the consul was bent upon crossing the Taurus
range, it was with the utmost difficulty that he was prevented from doing
so by the commissioners, who warned him against tempting the doom foretold
in the Sibylline Books for every one who overpassed the limits fixed by
Fate. Nevertheless, he marched his army up and encamped almost on the summit
where the mountain streams flow opposite ways. When he found that the king's
subjects remained perfectly quiet and that there was nothing to justify
hostilities, he led his troops round against the Gallograeci, a nation
against whom no declaration of war had been made either by the authority
of the senate or the order of the people. Who else would have ever dared
to do such a thing? The wars with Antiochus, Philip, Hannibal and Carthage
were fresh in all men's memories; in every one of these the senate issued
its decree and the people their mandate; envoys had been sent beforehand
frequently to demand satisfaction, and as a final step to declare war.
"Which of these preliminaries," the speaker continued, "has
been so observed by you, Cn. Manlius, as to make us regard that war as
waged by the people of Rome and not simply as a marauding expedition of
your own? But were you ever content with that? Did you march your army
straight against those whom you had elected to regard as your enemies?
Did you not on the contrary make a roundabout march through winding roads,
halting at all the cross-roads in order that in whatever direction Eumenes'
brother Attalus should direct his march, you might follow him like a mercenary
captain, you, a consul with a Roman army? Did you not visit every hole
and corner of Pisidia, Lycaonia, and Phrygia, collecting money from the
tyrants and their officers scattered through the land? What business had
you, pray, to interfere with Oroanda or with other equally unoffending
communities? But about this war, on the strength of which you are seeking
a triumph, in what way did you conduct it? Did you fight on favourable
ground, at a time of your own choosing? You are certainly right in claiming
that honours should be paid to the immortal gods. For in the first place
they would not let the army pay the penalty of its commander's recklessness
in making an aggressive war in defiance of the law of nations, and in the
second place they brought against us wild animals not men.
[38.46]"Do not suppose, senators,
that it is only in their name that the Gallograeci are a mixed race; it
is much more their bodies and minds that have become mixed and corrupted.
If they had been real Gauls like those with whom we have fought numberless
doubtful battles in Italy, would a single man, so far as our general is
concerned, have returned to tell the story? He fought with them twice.
On both occasions he advanced against them at a disadvantage, and from
his lower ground almost placed his line under the enemy's feet, so that,
without discharging their weapons from above, by simply hurling their naked
bodies upon us, they could have overwhelmed us. What, then, occurred to
prevent this? Great is the Fortune of the Roman people, great and terrible
its name! The recent downfall of Hannibal, of Philip, of Antiochus, had
almost stunned the Gauls. With all their huge bulk they were put to flight
by slings and arrows, not a sword in the army was stained by the blood
of a Gaul, they fled away like flocks of birds at the first whirr of our
missiles. Yes, but Fortune also warned us what would have happened to us
then, if we had had a real enemy. On our return march we fell amongst Thracian
brigands, and were killed, put to flight, and stripped of our baggage.
Q. Minucius Thermus fell, together with many brave men, and his loss was
much more serious than that of Cn. Manlius would have been, through whose
foolhardiness the disaster occurred. The army which was bringing home the
spoil taken from Antiochus was dispersed in three sections, the van in
one place, the rear in another, and the baggage in another, and they lay
down one night amongst thickets and lairs of wild beasts. Is it for these
exploits that a triumph is asked for? Supposing no ignominious defeat had
been sustained in Thrace, over what enemy would you seek triumph? Over
those, I presume, whom the senate or the people of Rome had assigned to
you as your enemy. On these terms a triumph was granted to L. Scipio, to
Manius Acilius over Antiochus, to T. Quinctius, a little earlier, over
Philip, to P. Africanus over Hannibal and Carthage and Syphax. And even
when the senate has voted for war, certain minor questions have had to
be answered - as to whom the declaration of war ought to be made, whether
in any case to the kings themselves, or whether it would be sufficient
to proclaim it at one of his frontier garrisons. Do you then, senators,
want all these formalities to be treated with scorn, the solemn procedure
of the fetials to be abolished, and the fetials themselves to be done away
with? Suppose all religious scruples - the gods forgive me for saying it!
- were cast to the winds and forgetfulness of the gods took possession
of your hearts, should you still think it right that the senate should
not be consulted as to war, or the question referred to the people whether
it was their will and order that war should be waged with the Gauls? Recently,
at all events, when the consuls wanted to have Greece and Asia as their
provinces, you held to your resolution to decree Liguria as their province,
and they submitted to your authority. Deservedly, therefore, will they
ask for a triumph, after their successes, from you under whose authority
they will have achieved them."
[38.47]This was the substance of what
Furius and Aemilius said. I understand that Manlius spoke to the following
effect: "Formerly, senators, it was the tribunes of the plebs who
usually opposed those who claimed a triumph. I am grateful to them for
having conceded this much to me, either personally or in acknowledgment
of the greatness of my services, that they not only showed by their silence
their approval of my being thus honoured, but were even ready, if necessary,
to recommend it to the senate. It is amongst the ten commissioners that
I find my opponents, those whom our ancestors assigned to their commanders
for the purpose of gathering the fruits of their victories and enhancing
their glory. L. Furius and L. Aemilius forbid me to enter the triumphal
chariot; they snatch the victor's wreath from my brow; these very men whom
I was going to call as witnesses to what I have done, had the tribunes
opposed my triumph. I envy no man his honours, senators. Only the other
day when the tribunes of the plebs were trying to prevent the triumph of
Q. Fabius Labeo, strong and determined as they were, you overawed them
by your authority. His enemies laid it to his charge, not that he had fought
an unjust war, but that he had never even seen an enemy. Still he enjoyed
his triumph. I, who have fought so many pitched battles with 100,000 of
our fiercest enemies, who have killed or taken prisoners 40,000, who have
stormed two of their camps, who have left all the country this side the
Taurus more peaceable than the land of Italy - I am not only being defrauded
of my triumph, but actually have to defend myself before you against the
accusations of my commissioners.
"You have noticed, senators, that they bring a double charge against
me; that I ought not to have made war on the Gauls, and that I conducted
it in a rash and imprudent way. 'The Gauls,' they say, 'were not hostile
to us, but you wantonly attacked them while they were quietly carrying
out your orders.' I am not going to ask you, senators, to judge the Gauls
who inhabit those countries from what you know of the savagery common to
the race, and their deadly hatred to the name of Rome. Keep out of sight
the infamous and hateful character of the race as a whole and judge those
men by themselves. I wish Eumenes, I wish all the cities of Asia were here,
and that you were hearing their complaints rather than the charges I am
bringing. Send commissioners to visit all the cities of Asia and find out
which has delivered them from the heavier thraldom, the removal of Antiochus
beyond the Taurus or the subjugation of the Gauls. Let them bring back
word how often the fields of those people have been devastated, how often
they and all their property have been carried off, with hardly a chance
of ransoming the captives, and knowing that human victims were being sacrificed
and their children immolated. Let me tell you that your allies paid tribute
to the Gauls, and would have been paying it now, though freed from the
rule of Antiochus, if it had not been put a stop to by me.
[38.48]"The greater the distance
to which Antiochus was removed, the more tyrannically did the Gauls lord
it over Asia; by his removal you added whatever lands lie on this side
the Taurus to their dominion, not your own. But you say, 'Assuming this
to be true, the Gauls once despoiled Delphi, but though it was the one
oracle common to all mankind, and the central spot in the whole world,
the Romans did not on that account declare or commence war against them.'
I should certainly have thought that there was a considerable difference
between the conditions existing when Greece and Asia had not yet passed
under your suzerainty, as far as regards your interest and concern in their
affairs, and the conditions prevailing now; when you have fixed the Taurus
as the frontier of your dominion; when you are giving to the cities liberty
and immunity from tribute; when you are enlarging the territories of some
and depriving others of their land by way of punishment or imposing tribute:
when you are extending, diminishing, giving, taking away kingdoms, and
making it your one care that they shall keep the peace both on land and
sea. Would you consider that the liberty of Asia would not have been secure
had not Antiochus withdrawn his garrisons, which were remaining quietly
in their quarters, and do you suppose that your gifts to Eumenes would
be safe or the cities retain their freedom as long as the armies of the
Gauls were roaming far and wide?
"But why do I use these arguments, as though I had made the Gauls
into enemies and had not found them such already? I appeal to you, L. Scipio,
whose valour and good fortune alike I prayed to the immortal gods - and
not in vain - to grant me, when I succeeded to your command; I appeal to
you, P. Scipio, who though subordinate to your brother the consul, still
possessed both with him and the army all the authority of a colleague;
and I ask you whether you know that there were legions of Gauls in the
army of Antiochus; whether you saw that they were posted at either end
of his line, for there his main strength seemed to be; whether you fought
with them as regular enemies, and killed them and brought their spoils
home. And yet the war which the senate had decreed and the people ordered
was a war against Antiochus, not against the Gauls. Yes, but I hold that
the decree and order included those who had formed part of his army, and
amongst these - with the exception of Antiochus with whom Scipio had concluded
peace and with whom you ordered a special treaty to be made - all who bore
arms on his behalf were our enemies. The Gauls above all supported his
cause, as did also some petty kings and tyrants. With the others, however,
I made peace and compelled them to make an expiation for their misdoings
proportionate to the dignity of your empire, and I tried to influence the
Gauls, if haply their innate ferocity could be mitigated. When I saw that
they remained untameable and implacable, I thought they ought to be coerced
by force of arms.
"Now that I have cleared myself of the charge of wanton aggression,
I have to account for my conduct of the war. On this topic I should feel
perfect confidence in my case, even if I were pleading not before the Romans
but before the Carthaginian senate, where it is said that their generals
are crucified, even when successful, if their strategy has been faulty.
But this State has recourse to the gods at the commencement and during
the conduct of all its business, because it will not have those matters
which the gods have approved of open to any man's censure, and when it
decrees special thanksgivings or a triumph, employs the solemn formula:
'Whereas he has managed the affairs of the Republic with success and good
fortune.' If, then, renouncing all assertion of my own merits as arrogant
and presumptuous, I were to demand on behalf of my own good fortune and
that of my army, in having crushed so powerful a nation without any loss,
that honours should be paid to the immortal gods, and that I, myself, should
go up in triumph to the Capitol, from whence I started after my vows and
prayers had been duly offered, would you refuse this to me and to the immortal
gods as well?
[38.49]"But, they say, I fought on
unfavourable ground. Then tell me where I could have fought at less disadvantage.
The enemy had occupied the mountain, they kept themselves within their
lines; surely if I was to win the battle it was necessary for me to advance
against them. How would it have been if they had been holding a city there
and keeping within its walls? Of course, they must have been attacked.
Why, did not Manius Acilius engage Antiochus on unfavourable ground at
Thermopylae? Did not T. Quinctius under similar conditions dislodge Philip
when he was holding the heights above the Aous? So far I am unable to make
out what sort of an enemy they are picturing to themselves, or in what
light they wish you to regard him. If they say that he has degenerated
and become enervated by the attractions and luxuries of Asia, what risk
did we run in attacking him even when we were in a bad position? If they
regard him as formidable, owing to ferocity and physical strength, do you
refuse a triumph for so great a victory? Envy, senators, is blind and knows
no other method than that of disparaging merit and soiling its honours
and rewards. I crave your indulgence, senators, if the necessity of defending
myself against accusations, and not a desire to sound my praises, has made
my speech somewhat long. Was it in my power when marching through Thrace
to make the narrow passes into open country, the broken road into level
ground, the forests into open fields? Could I have made such dispositions
as to prevent the Thracian banditti from concealing themselves in lurking-places
with which they were perfectly familiar, or any of our baggage from being
stolen, or any pack animal from being carried off from so long a column,
or a single man from being wounded, or that gallant soldier, Q. Minucius,
from dying of his wounds? They make a great point of that sad misfortune,
involving as it did the loss of so good a citizen. But the fact of our
two divisions at the front and rear of the column having hemmed in the
barbarians when busy in looting our baggage, after attacking in a difficult
pass on ground wholly against us; the fact that those two divisions killed
or took prisoners many thousands of the enemy on that day and many more
a few days later - if they have been silent as to these facts, are they
not aware that you will know them when the whole army can testify to what
I say? If I had never drawn the sword in Asia, or seen an enemy there,
I should still have deserved a triumph for those two battles in Thrace.
But I have said enough and would only ask for and, I hope, receive your
indulgence for having wearied you by speaking at greater length than I
wished."
[38.50]The attack would that day have
prevailed over the defence had they not protracted the debate to a late
hour. When the House rose, the general opinion was that it would in all
likelihood refuse the triumph. The next day the friends and relatives of
Cn. Manlius exerted their utmost efforts, and the authority of the older
senators prevailed. They said that there was no instance on record of a
commander who had brought back his army, after subjugating a dangerous
enemy and reducing his province to order, entering the city in an unofficial
and private capacity without the chariot and laurels of triumph. The sense
of the indignity of such a proceeding was too strong for the aspersions
of his enemies, and a full senate decreed to him a triumph. All discussion
and even recollection of this dispute were lost in the outbreak of a more
serious controversy with a greater and more distinguished man. We are told
on the authority of Valerius Antias that the two Petillii instituted proceedings
against P. Scipio Africanus. Men put different interpretations on this
according to their various dispositions. Some blamed, not the tribunes
only, but the whole body of citizens, for letting such a thing be possible;
the two greatest cities in the world, they said, had proved themselves,
almost at the same time, ungrateful to their foremost men. Rome was the
more ungrateful of the two, for whilst Carthage after her defeat drove
the defeated Hannibal into exile, Rome would banish the victorious Scipio
in the hour of her victory. Others again took the ground that no single
citizen should stand on such an eminence that he could not be required
to answer according to law. Nothing contributed more towards maintaining
liberty for all than the power of putting the most powerful citizen on
his trial. What business, it was asked - not to mention the supreme interests
of the State - could be entrusted to any man, if he had not to render an
account for it? If a man cannot submit to laws which are the same for all,
no force which may be employed against him is unlawful. So the matter was
discussed until the day of trial came. Never before had anyone, even Scipio
himself when he was consul or censor, been surrounded by a greater concourse
of people of all sorts and conditions than on the day when he was conducted
into the Forum to make his defence. When he was called upon to plead, he
made no allusion whatever to the charges brought against him, but spoke
of the services he had rendered in such a lofty tone that it was universally
felt that no man had ever deserved higher or truer praise. He described
his actions in the spirit and temper in which he had performed them, and
he was listened to without any impatience because they were recounted not
in self-glorification but in self-defence.
[38.51]In order to support the charges
they were bringing against him, the tribunes brought up the old story of
his luxurious living in his winter quarters in Syracuse and the disturbance
created by Pleminius at Locri. They then went on to accuse him of having
received bribes, more on grounds of suspicion than by direct proof; they
alleged that his son who was taken prisoner was restored to him without
ransom; that Antiochus had in every way tried to ingratiate himself with
Scipio as though peace and war with Rome were solely in his hands; that
Scipio had behaved towards the consul in his province as dictator rather
than subordinate; that he had gone out with no other object than to make
clear to Greece and Asia and all the kings and nationalities in the East
what had long been the settled conviction of Spain and Gaul and Sicily
and Africa, that he alone was the head and mainstay of Roman sovereignty;
that under Scipio's shadow the mistress city of the world lay sheltered
and that his nod took the place of the decrees of the senate and the orders
of the people. No stigma of disgrace could be fastened upon him, so they
did their utmost to excite popular odium against him. As the speeches went
on till night, the proceedings were adjourned. When the next day for the
hearing came, the tribunes took their seats on the Rostra at daybreak.
The defendant was summoned, and passing through the middle of the Assembly
accompanied by a large body of friends and clients, stood before the Rostra.
Silence having been called he spoke as follows:
"Tribunes of the plebs, and you, Quirites, this is the anniversary
of the day on which I fought with success and good fortune a pitched battle
against Hannibal and the Carthaginians. It is therefore only right and
fitting that on this day all pleas and actions should be suspended. I am
going at once to the Capitol and the Citadel to make my devotions to Jupiter
Optimus Maximus, and Juno and Minerva and all the other tutelar deities
of the Capitol and the Citadel, and to offer up thanksgivings to them for
having given me as on this day the wisdom and the strength to do the Republic
exceptional service. Those of you, Quirites, who are at liberty to do so,
come with me. You have always from my seventeenth year down to this period
of my old age advanced me to honours before I was of the age for them,
and I have always forestalled your honours by my services; then pray now
to the gods that you may always have leaders like me." From the Rostra
he went straight up to the Capitol, and the whole Assembly turning their
backs on the tribunes followed him; even the secretaries and apparitors
left the tribunes; there was no one with them except their attendant slaves
and the usher who used to stand at the Rostra and call the defendants.
Scipio not only went up to the Capitol; he visited all the temples throughout
the City, accompanied by the Roman people. The enthusiasm of the citizens
and their recognition of his real greatness made that day almost a more
glorious one for him than when he entered the City in triumph after his
victories over Syphax and the Carthaginians.
[38.52]This splendid day was the last
day of brightness for Scipio. He saw before him envious attacks and contests
with the tribunes, and so after a somewhat lengthy adjournment had been
agreed upon, he retired to Liternum, firmly resolved not to appear in his
defence. His spirit was too high, his mind too great; he had all through
held a position too lofty to allow him to accept the position of a defendant
or submit to the humiliation of having to plead his cause. When the day
arrived and his name was called, L. Scipio apologised for his absence on
the ground of ill-health. The prosecuting tribunes did not accept the excuse
and gave out that his refusal to appear was dictated by the same spirit
of pride and arrogance in which he had left the seat of judgment and the
tribunes and the Assembly. Surrounded by the very men whom he had deprived
of the right and liberty of passing sentence upon him, and dragging them
after him like prisoners of war, he had celebrated a triumph over the people
of Rome and had made a secession on that day from the tribunes to the Capitol.
"So now," they continued, "you have the due reward of your
folly; the man at whose instigation and under whose leadership you deserted
us, has now deserted you. So low is our courage falling day by day, that
the man whom seventeen years ago we dared to send tribunes to Sicily to
apprehend, whilst he had an army and a fleet at his command, that man we
dare not now, though he is only a private citizen, fetch from his country-house
to stand his trial." L. Scipio appealed to the tribunes of the plebs
as a body, and they passed the following resolution: "If illness be
pleaded as an excuse, it is our pleasure that this excuse be accepted,
and our colleagues must again adjourn the day of trial." Tiberius
Sempronius Gracchus was one of the tribunes. He was a political opponent
of Scipio, and had forbidden his colleagues to add his name to their resolution.
It was generally expected that he would give a more severe sentence, but
he drew up a resolution in the following terms: "Since L. Scipio has
pleaded illness as the reason for his brother's absence, I hold that to
be sufficient excuse, and will not allow P. Scipio to be put on his trial
before his return to Rome; even then, if he appeals to me, I will support
him in any effort to avoid a trial. Scipio has by the common consent of
gods and men attained such a lofty position through his own acts and the
honours which the Roman people have conferred upon him, that for him to
stand beneath the Rostra as a defendant, and have to listen to the insults
of young men, would be a greater ignominy for the people of Rome than for
him."
[38.53]He followed this up by an indignant
speech: Is Scipio, the conqueror of Africa, to stand at your feet, tribunes?
Was it for this that he broke and routed four armies in Spain under the
most famous generals that Carthage possessed? Was it for this that he captured
Syphax and crushed Hannibal, made Carthage tributary to us, removed Antiochus
beyond the Taurus - for his brother Lucius allowed him to share his glory
- was it simply that he might succumb to the two Petillii, and that you
might claim the palm of victory over Publius Africanus. Will you allow
the claim, citizens? Will illustrious men never either through their own
merits or the honours you confer, reach a safe, and if I may say so, a
sacred asylum where their old age may rest, if not venerated, at least
inviolate?" His resolution and the speech which followed it had their
effect upon the other tribunes, even upon the prosecutors, who said that
they would deliberate as to what their right and duty demanded. After the
Assembly broke up, a meeting of the senate was held. Here a most hearty
vote of thanks to Tiberius Gracchus was passed by the whole order, especially
the men of consular rank and the elder senators, for having placed the
interests of the State before his own private feelings, and the Petillii
were taunted with wanting to shine by darkening another's reputation and
enrich themselves by a triumph over Africanus. After this nothing more
was said about proceedings against Scipio. He passed his life at Liternum
without any wish to return to the City, and it is said that on his death-bed
he gave orders that he should be buried and his monument set up there,
so that there might be no funeral rites performed for him by his ungrateful
country. He was an extraordinary man, more distinguished, however in the
arts of war than in those of peace. The earlier part of his life was more
brilliant than the later; as a young man he was constantly engaged in war;
with advancing years the glory of his achievements faded, and there was
nothing to call forth his genius. What additional lustre did his second
consulship confer as compared with his first, or even his censorship? What
further distinction did he gain during his subordinate command in Asia,
rendered useless through bad health and saddened by the misfortune which
overtook his son? Then, again, after his return he was under the necessity
of either standing his trial or of absenting himself from his native city.
Still, he alone won the unique glory of bringing the war with Carthage
to a close, the greatest and most serious war that the Romans have ever
waged.
[38.54]With the death of Africanus the
courage of his enemies rose. The foremost of these was M. Porcius Cato,
who even during Scipio's lifetime was constantly belittling his greatness,
and it was at his instigation, it was thought, that the Petillii attacked
him whilst he was alive. After his death they introduced into the Assembly
the following motion: "Touching the money which was seized, confiscated
and exacted from Antiochus and his subjects, is it your will and pleasure,
Quirites, that in respect of such money as has not been accounted for to
the State, the City praetor Servius Sulpicius shall consult the senate
as to which of the acting praetors it shall appoint to investigate the
matter?" The two Mummii, Quintus and Lucius, interposed their veto
to this proposal; they considered that where money had not been accounted
for to the State, it was only right and proper that the senate should conduct
such investigation as it always had done previously. The Petillii accused
the nobility and the despotic power which the Scipios possessed over the
senate. L. Furius Purpurio, a man of consular rank, one of the ten commissioners,
thought that the inquiry ought to go further. By way of damaging his enemy
Cn. Manlius, he suggested that it ought to include not only the amount
taken from Antiochus, but all that had been taken from other kings and
nations. L. Scipio, who it was evident would speak more in his own defence
than against the proposal, came forward to oppose it. He protested strongly
against this question being raised after the death of his brother P. Africanus,
of all men the bravest and most illustrious. No public eulogium had been
made over him when he died, but that was not enough, now accusations must
be levelled at him. Even the Carthaginians were content with banishing
Hannibal; the Roman people were not satisfied with the death of Africanus,
but his reputation must be torn to pieces over his tomb, and as an aggravation
of malice, his brother also must be sacrificed. M. Cato supported the motion;
his speech, "Concerning the money of King Antiochus," is still
extant. The weight of his authority deterred the Mummii from opposing it,
and as these withdrew their veto, the proposal was earned by the unanimous
vote of the Tribes.
[38.55]Ser. Sulpicius next consulted the
senate as to who was to conduct the inquiry, and they fixed upon Q. Terentius
Culleo. There are some writers who assert that this praetor was so attached
to the family of the Cornelii that at the funeral - they say he died and
was buried in Rome - he preceded the bier wearing a cap of liberty just
as though he were marching in a triumphal procession, and at the Porta
Capena he distributed wine sweetened with honey to those who followed the
body, because amongst the other captives in Africa he had been delivered
by Scipio. Another account is that he was hostile to the family; that,
knowing this, the party opposed to the Scipios selected him as the one
man to conduct the inquiry. However this may be, it was before this praetor,
whether biassed in favour of or against the defendant, that L. Scipio was
at once put on his trial. The names of his divisional commanders, Aulus
and Lucius Hostilius Cato, were also given in to the praetor, and entered
by him, as well as that of the quaestor C. Furius Aculeo; and that his
whole staff might appear to be associated in the embezzlement, his two
secretaries and his marshal were also included. Lucius Hostilius, the secretaries
and the marshal were all acquitted before Scipio's case was heard. He,
together with A. Hostilius and C. Furius, were found guilty - Scipio, of
having received 6000 pounds of gold and 480 of silver over and above what
he had brought into the treasury; and Hostilius was convicted of having
similarly embezzled 80 pounds of gold and 403 of silver; the quaestor was
found guilty of having received 130 pounds of gold and 200 of silver. These
are the amounts I find as stated by Antias. In the case of L. Scipio, I
should prefer to regard these figures as a mistake on the part of the copyist,
rather than a false assertion of the author, for the weight of the silver
was in all probability greater than that of the gold, and the fine was
more likely to be fixed at 400,000 than at 2,400,000 sesterces, especially
as it is stated that this was the sum for which Publius Scipio was asked
to account in the senate. It is also recorded that when he had told his
brother Lucius to fetch his account-book, he tore it up with his own hands
while the senate was looking on, and indignantly protested against an account
for 400,000 sesterces being demanded of him after he had brought into the
treasury 2,000,000. He is further stated to have shown the same self-confidence
in demanding the keys of the treasury, when the quaestors did not venture
to bring the money out as against the law, and declaring that as it was
through him it was shut, so he would open it.
[38.56]There are many other details in
which writers differ, especially as regards his closing years, his impeachment,
his death, his funeral, and his tomb, so that I cannot decide what traditions
or documents to follow. There is no agreement as to the prosecutors. .
Some say that M. Naevius, others that the Petillii, initiated the proceedings;
nor as to the date when they began, nor the year in which he died, nor
where he was buried. Some say that he died and was buried in Rome; others
say in Liternum. In both places his monument and statues are shown. At
Liternum there was a monument surmounted by a statue which we have seen
lately, and which was overthrown by a storm. At Rome there are three statues
above the monument of the Scipios; two are said to be those of Publius
and Lucius; the third that of the poet Q. Ennius. Nor is it only the chroniclers
who differ; even the speeches, if they are really those of the men whose
they are said to be, viz., P. Scipio and Tiberius Gracchus, cannot be brought
into agreement. The title of Scipio's speech gives the prosecutor's name
as M. Naevius; in the speech itself the name does not appear; sometimes
he describes him as a knave, sometimes as a trifler. Even the speech of
Gracchus makes no mention of the Petillii as the prosecutors of Africanus,
nor of the actual proceedings. Quite another story will have to be put
together to fit this speech of Gracchus, and we shall have to follow those
authorities who aver that at the time when Lucius Scipio was tried and
convicted of having taken bribes from the king, Africanus was serving in
a subordinate command in Etruria and, on hearing of the misfortune which
had befallen his brother, hurried back to Rome. On learning that his brother
was being taken to prison, he went straight to the Forum, drove off the
officer who had charge of him and, his affection for his brother getting
the better of his citizenship, even used violence towards the tribunes
who tried to hold him back.
Gracchus himself complains that in this instance the authority of the
tribunes was successfully defied by a private citizen, and at the end of
his speech where he promises to support Scipio, he adds that it would form
a better precedent were it to appear that the tribunitian and State authority
had been overborne by a tribune of the plebs rather than by a private citizen.
But while he reproaches him bitterly for losing his self-control in this
one outbreak of lawlessness, and censures him for having fallen so far
below himself, he makes up for his censures in recalling the high esteem
in which Scipio was held in the old days for his equable and self-disciplined
character. He reminded his hearers how severely Scipio rebuked the people
for wishing to make him perpetual consul and dictator; how he had prevented
them from raising statues to him in the Comitium, the Rostra, the senate
house, and in the shrine of Jupiter on the Capitol, and how he had prevented
a decree from being passed authorising his image decked in triumphal garb
to be borne in procession from the temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus. These
things, even if inserted in a public eulogium, would still be a proof of
his greatness of soul in keeping his honours within the limits of ordinary
civic life; how much more so when they are the admissions of an enemy.
[38.57]It is generally understood that
the younger of his two daughters was married to this same Gracchus, and
the elder one was certainly disposed of by her father to P. Cornelius Nasica,
but whether it was after her father's death is uncertain. It is equally
uncertain whether the current belief in the following story is well founded.
The story goes that when Gracchus saw that L. Scipio was on the point of
being carried off to prison and that none of his fellow-tribunes interfered
on his behalf, he swore that though his enmity towards the Scipios was
as strong as ever, and he would do nothing to win his favour, yet he would
not look on whilst the brother of Africanus was being taken to a dungeon
into which he had seen Africanus himself taking kings and commanders. The
senate happened to be dining that day in the Capitol, and rising in a body
they begged Scipio to betroth his daughter to Gracchus there and then.
The betrothal having been formally completed in the presence of the whole
gathering, Scipio went home. On meeting his wife, he told her that he had
betrothed their youngest daughter. She was naturally hurt and indignant
at not having been consulted in the disposal of their child, and observed
that even if he were giving her to Tiberius Gracchus, her mother ought
to have had a voice in the matter. Scipio was delighted to find that they
were of one accord, and told her that it was to that man that she was betrothed.
It is right that in the case of so great a man the various opinions and
the different historical statements as to these details should be noted.
[38.58]When the praetor Q. Terentius had
brought the proceedings to a close, Hostilius and Furius, who had been
convicted, gave the required sureties to the City quaestors. Scipio, who
stoutly maintained that the whole of the money he had received was in the
treasury, and that he had none which belonged to the State, was ordered
off to prison. P. Scipio Nasica formally appealed to the tribunes in a
speech full of just and true encomiums on the house of the Cornelii and
particularly on his own family. He pointed out that the two distinguished
men, Cn. and P. Scipio, were the fathers respectively of himself, and of
P. and L. Scipio, who was now being led to prison. These two men had for
many years fought in Spain against numerous armies of Carthaginians and
Spaniards, and had not only added to the glory of Rome, but after presenting
to those two nations an example of Roman moderation and good faith, had
at last given their lives for the commonwealth. It would have been enough
had their glory been kept untarnished for posterity, but P. Africanus had
so far surpassed his father's renown that men believed him to be sprung
from no human parents, but to be of divine origin. As to Lucius Scipio,
whose case was before them, he would pass over all that he had done as
his brother's lieutenant in Spain and Africa, and would remind them that
when he was consul the senate thought him worthy of being entrusted with
Asia and the war with Antiochus as his province, without having recourse
to the ballot. His brother, too, though he had been censor and twice consul,
and graced with a triumph, went to him to serve as his lieutenant in Asia.
Whilst he was there, as though to prevent the greatness and splendour of
the lieutenant from eclipsing the fame of the consul, it so happened that
on the day when Lucius Scipio completely defeated Antiochus in the great
battle of Magnesia, Publius Scipio was several days' journey away, lying
ill at Elaea. The army that Lucius engaged was not less than that which
Hannibal commanded at the battle in Africa. Hannibal who had commanded
all through the Punic war was also among the generals with Antiochus. The
conduct of the war was such that no one could charge even Fortune with
caprice. It is in respect of the peace that the charges are made; the peace
is said to have been sold. If so, the ten commissioners are also involved
in the charge; it was on their advice that the peace was granted. And though
out of those ten men some came forward to accuse Cn. Manlius, not only
did they fail to prove their charge, they were not even able to delay his
triumph.
[38.59]But in Scipio's case the very terms
of the peace formed the grounds of suspicion as being too favourable to
Antiochus. "His kingdom," they say, "has been left to him
in its entirety; after his defeat he remained in possession of all that
had belonged to him before the war. Though he had a large amount of gold
and silver, none of it has been brought into the treasury; it has all passed
into private hands." Was not the amount of gold and silver borne before
all men's eyes in Lucius Scipio's triumph greater than in any other ten
triumphs if it were all collected together? What am I to say about the
limits of the king's dominions? Antiochus held all Asia and the adjacent
parts of Europe; how great a part of the world that is, stretching from
the Taurus to the Aegean, you all know. This tract of country, more than
thirty days' march in length and, measured from sea to sea, ten days' march
in breadth, extending right up to the Taurus, has been taken from Antiochus.
He has been banished to the most remote corner of the world. What more,
pray, could have been taken from him, even if peace had been granted without
any conditions? After Philip's defeat, Macedonia was left to him as Lacedaemon
was to Nabis, and yet no criminal inquiry was instituted against Quinctius.
He had not Africanus for his brother, whose great reputation ought to have
helped Lucius instead of injuring him by the jealousy it aroused. It was
stated in the trial that the amount of gold and silver brought into Lucius
Scipio's house was greater than could have been realised by the sale of
the whole of his property. Where, then, is that gold and silver and all
the benefactions he has received? Surely this access of fortune must have
been in evidence in a house which is not wasted with extravagance. Yes,
but what cannot be got out of his property, his enemies will get out of
his person by insult and torture, in order that a man so illustrious may
be shut up with burglars and highwaymen in the inmost dungeon and breathe
out his life in darkness, and his naked body flung out of the prison doors.
That would not bring a deeper disgrace upon the house of the Cornelii than
upon the whole City of Rome.
[38.60]Terentius, in reply, read the resolution
carried by the Petillii, the decision of the senate and the sentence passed
upon L. Scipio. He declared that unless the sum stated in the judgment
were restored to the treasury, there was no other course open to him but
to order him to be arrested and taken to prison. The tribunes retired for
consultation and shortly afterwards C. Fannius, in the name of all his
colleagues except Gracchus, declared that they would not intervene to prevent
the praetor from exercising his authority. T. Gracchus gave his decision
thus: He would not oppose the action of the praetor in recovering the sum
in question from the sale of Lucius Scipio's property, but that as to L.
Scipio himself, a man who had conquered the most prosperous and wealthy
monarch in the world; who had carried the dominion of Rome to the utmost
limits of the world; who had bound King Eumenes, the Rhodians, and so many
other cities in Asia under obligations to Rome; who had led first in triumph,
and then to prison, so many enemy commanders - this man he would not allow
to lie in prison and in chains amongst the enemies of Rome. He then ordered
him to be released. His decision was greeted with such enthusiasm by those
who heard it, and there was such general delight at the news of Scipio's
release, that it seemed hardly possible that these were the same people
before whom the sentence against him had lately been pronounced. The praetor
then sent the quaestors to seize L. Scipio's property in the name of the
government. Not only was there not a vestige of the king's gold to be seen,
but the amount realised was nowhere near the sum named in the judgment.
The relatives and friends and clients of L. Scipio's contributed a sum
sufficient, if he accepted it, to make him even richer than before. He
refused to accept any of it. Everything necessary for him was supplied
by his nearest relations. The ill-will and popular odium against the Scipios
had now turned against the praetor and his assessors and the prosecution.
End of Book 38
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