31.1
I, too, feel as much relief in having reached the end of the Punic War
as if I had taken a personal part in its toils and dangers. It ill befits
one who has had the courage to promise a complete history of Rome to find
the separate sections of such an extensive work fatiguing. But when I consider
that the sixty-three years from the beginning of the First Punic War to
the end of the Second take up as many books as the four hundred and eighty-seven
years from the foundation of the City to the consulship of Appius Claudius
under whom the First Punic War commenced, I see that I am like people who
are tempted by the shallow water along the beach to wade out to sea; the
further I progress, the greater the depth, as though it were a bottomless
sea, into which I am carried. I imagined that as I completed one part after
another the task before me would diminish; as it is, it almost becomes
greater. The peace with Carthage was very soon followed by war with Macedonia.
There is no comparison between them as regards the critical nature of the
contest, or the personality of the commander or the fighting quality of
the troops. But the Macedonian war was, if anything, more noteworthy owing
to the brilliant reputation of the former kings, the ancient fame of the
nation and the vast extent of its dominion when it held sway over a large
part of Europe and a still larger part of Asia. The war with Philip which
had commenced some ten years previously had been suspended for the last
three years, and both the war and its cessation were due to the action
of the Aetolians. The peace with Carthage now left the Romans free. They
were angry with Philip for his attacking the Aetolians and the other friendly
States in Greece while he was nominally at peace with Rome, and also for
his having given assistance in both men and money to Hannibal and Carthage.
He had ravaged the Athenian territory and driven the inhabitants into the
city, and it was their request for help which decided the Romans to recommence
the war.
31.2
Just about the same time envoys arrived from King Attalus and also from
Rhodes with the information that Philip was trying to gain the States of
Asia Minor. The reply made to both deputations was that the situation in
Asia was engaging the attention of the senate. The question of war with
Macedonia was referred to the consuls, who were at the time in their respective
provinces. In the meanwhile, C. Claudius Nero, M. Aemilius Lepidus and
P. Sempronius Tuditanus were sent on a mission to Ptolemy, king of Egypt,
to announce the final defeat of Hannibal and the Carthaginians and to thank
the king for having remained a staunch friend to Rome at a critical time,
when even her nearest allies deserted her. They were further to request
him, in case Philip's aggressions compelled them to declare war against
him, that he would maintain his old friendly attitude towards the Romans.
During this period P. Aelius, the consul who was commanding in Gaul, learnt
that the Boii, prior to his arrival, had been raiding the territories of
friendly tribes. He hastily raised a force of two legions in view of this
disturbance and strengthened it with four cohorts from his own army. This
force, thus hurriedly collected, he entrusted to C. Ampius, a prefect of
allies, and ordered him to march through the canton of Umbria called Sapinia
and invade the country of the Boii. He himself marched over the mountains
by an open road. Ampius crossed the enemy's frontier, and after devastating
his country without meeting any resistance, he selected a position at the
fortified post of Mutilum as a suitable place for cutting the corn which
was now ripe. He commenced the task without previously examining the neighbourhood
or posting armed parties in sufficient strength to protect the foragers,
who had laid aside their weapons and were intent on their work. Suddenly
he and his foragers were surprised by the Gauls who appeared on all sides.
The panic and disorder extended to the men on guard; 7000 men who were
dispersed through the cornfields were killed, amongst them C. Ampius himself,
the rest fled to the camp. The following night the soldiers, as they had
no regular commander, decided to act for themselves, and leaving most of
their possessions behind made their way through almost impassable forests
to the consul. Beyond ravaging the Boian country and making a league with
the Ligurian Ingauni the consul did nothing worth mentioning in his province
before his return to Rome.
31.3
At the first meeting of the senate after his return there was a general
demand that the action of Philip and the grievances of the friendly States
should take precedence of all other business. The question was at once
put in a crowded House and a decree was made that the consul P. Aelius
should send the man whom he thought best, with full command to take over
the fleet which Cn. Octavius was bringing back from Africa and proceed
to Macedonia. He selected M. Valerius Laevinus, who was sent with the rank
of propraetor. Laevinus took thirty-eight of Octavius' ships which were
lying at anchor off Vibo and with these he sailed for Macedonia. He was
met by M. Aurelius, who gave him details about the strength of the land
and sea forces which the king had got together and the extent to which
he was securing armed assistance not only from the cities on the mainland,
but also from the islands in the Aegean, partly by his own personal influence,
partly through his agents. Aurelius pointed out that the Romans would have
to display far greater energy in the prosecution of this war, or else Philip,
encouraged by their slackness, would venture on the same enterprise which
Pyrrhus, whose kingdom was considerably smaller, had ventured on before.
It was decided that Aurelius should send this information in a despatch
to the consuls and the senate.
31.4
Towards the close of the year the question was brought up as to the holdings
which were to be assigned to the veteran soldiers who had served with Scipio
in Africa. The senator decreed that M. Junius, the City praetor, should
at his discretion appoint ten commissioners for the purpose of measuring
and allotting that portion of the Samnite and Apulian territory which had
become State domain. The commissioners were P. Servilius, Q. Caecilius
Marcellus, the two Servilii, Caius and Marcus-who were known as "The Twins"-the
two Hostilii Catones, Lucius and Aulus, P. Villius Tappulus, M. Fulvius
Flaccus, P. Aelius Paetus and T. Quinctius Flamininus. The elections were
conducted by the consul P. Aelius. The consuls-elect were P. Sulpicius
Galba and C. Aurelius Cotta. The new praetors were Q. Minucius Rufus, L.
Furius Purpureo, Q. Fulvius Gillo and C. Sergius Plancus. The Roman Scenic
Games were celebrated this year with unusual splendour by the curule aediles,
L. Valerius Flaccus and T. Quinctius Flamininus, and were repeated for
a second day. They also distributed to the people with strict impartiality
and to the general satisfaction a vast quantity of corn which Scipio had
sent from Africa. It was sold at four ases the modius. The Plebeian Games
were also exhibited on three separate occasions by the aediles L. Apustius
Fullo and Q. Minucius Rufus; the latter after serving his aedileship was
one of the newly-elected praetors. The Festival of Jupiter was also celebrated.
31.5
In the 551st year from the foundation of the City, during the consulship
of P. Sulpicius Galba and C. Aurelius and within a few months of the conclusion
of peace with Carthage, the war with King Philip began. On March 15, the
day on which the consuls entered office, P. Sulpicius made this the first
business before the senate. A decree was made that the consuls should sacrifice
full-grown victims to those deities whom they might decide upon, and should
offer up the following prayer: "May the will and purpose of the senate
and people of Rome as regards the commonwealth and the entrance upon a
new war have a prosperous and happy issue both for the Roman people and
for the Latin allies!" After the sacrifice and prayer the consuls were
to consult the senate as to the policy to be pursued and the allocation
of provinces. Just at this time the war-spirit was stimulated by the receipt
of the despatches from M. Aurelius and M. Valerius Laevinus as well as
by a fresh embassy from Athens which announced that the king was nearing
their frontiers and would soon be master of their territory and of their
city as well if Rome did not come to the rescue. The consuls reported the
due performance of the sacrifices and the declaration of the augurs that
the gods had listened to their prayer, for the victims had given favourable
omens and portended victory, triumph, and an enlargement of the dominion
of Rome. Then the despatches from Valerius and Aurelius were read and an
audience given to the Athenian envoys. A resolution was passed by the senate
that thanks be given to their allies for remaining loyal in spite of continual
attempts to seduce them and even when threatened with a siege. With regard
to giving active assistance the senate deferred a definite answer until
the consuls had balloted for their provinces, and the one to whom the Macedonian
province fell had submitted to the people the question of declaring war
against Philip of Macedon.
31.6
This province fell to P. Sulpicius, and he gave notice that he should propose
to the Assembly that "owing to the lawless actions and armed attacks committed
against the allies of Rome, it is the will and order of the Roman people
that war be proclaimed against Philip, King of Macedonia, and against his
people, the Macedonians." The other consul, Aurelius, received Italy for
his province. Then the praetors balloted for their respective commands.
C. Sergius Plancus drew the City; Q. Fulvius Gillo, Sicily; Q. Minucius
Rufus, Bruttium, and L. Furius, Gaul. The proposed declaration of war against
Macedonia was almost unanimously rejected at the first meeting of the Assembly.
The length and exhausting demands of the late war had made men weary of
fighting and they shrank from incurring further toils and dangers. One
of the tribunes of the plebs, Q. Baebius, too, had adopted the old plan
of abusing the patricians for perpetually sowing the seeds of fresh wars
to prevent the plebeians from ever enjoying any rest. The patricians were
extremely angry and the tribune was bitterly attacked in the senate, each
of the senators in turn urging the consul to call another meeting of the
Assembly to consider the proposal afresh and at the same time to rebuke
the people for their want of spirit and show them what loss and disgrace
would be entailed by the postponement of that war.
31.7
The Assembly was duly convened in the Campus Martius, and before the question
was put to the vote, the consul addressed the centuries in the following
terms: "You seem to be unaware, Quirites, that what you have to decide
is not whether you will have peace or war; Philip will not leave you any
option as to that, he is preparing war on an enormous scale both by land
and sea. The only question is whether you will transport the legions into
Macedonia or wait for the enemy in Italy. You have learnt by experience,
if not before, at all events in the late Punic War, what a difference it
makes which you decide upon. When Saguntum was beseiged and our allies
were imploring us for help, who doubts that if we had sent prompt assistance,
as our fathers did to the Mamertines, we should have confined within the
borders of Spain that war which, most disastrously for ourselves, we allowed
through procrastination to enter Italy. Why, this very Philip had entered
into an agreement with Hannibal through his agents and in his despatches
that he would invade Italy, and there is not the smallest doubt that we
kept him in Macedonia by sending Laevinus with a fleet to take the offensive
against him. Are we hesitating to do now what we did then, when we had
Hannibal for our enemy in Italy-now that Hannibal has been driven out of
Italy and out of Carthage, and Carthage itself is completely vanquished?
If we allow the king to make proof of our slackness by storming Athens
as we allowed Hannibal to do by storming Saguntum, it will not be in five
months-the time Hannibal took from Saguntum-but in five days after he sails
from Corinth that he will set foot in Italy.
"Perhaps you do not put Philip on a par with Hannibal or consider the
Macedonians equal to the Carthaginians. At all events you will consider
him the equal of Pyrrhus. Equal, do I say? How greatly the one man surpasses
the other, how superior is the one nation to the other! Epirus always has
been and is today a very small accession to the kingdom of Macedonia. The
whole of the Peloponnese is under the sway of Philip, not excepting even
Argos, famous for the death of Pyrrhus, quite as much as for its ancient
glory. Now compare our position. Consider the flourishing state of Italy
when all those generals and armies were safe and sound which have been
since swept away by the Punic War. And yet when Pyrrhus attacked it, he
shook it to its foundations and all but reached Rome itself in his victorious
career! Not only did the Tarentines revolt from us and the whole of that
coastal district of Italy called Magna Graecia, which you would naturally
suppose would follow a leader of the same language and nationality as themselves,
but the Lucanians, the Bruttians and the Samnites did the same. Do you
suppose that if Philip landed in Italy, these nations would remain quiet
and true to us? They showed their loyalty, I suppose, in the Punic War.
No, those nations will never fall to revolt from us, unless there is no
longer any one to whom they can revolt. If you had thought it too much
to go to Africa you would have had Hannibal and his Carthaginians in Italy
today. Let Macedonia rather than Italy be the seat of war, let it be the
enemy's cities and fields that are devastated with fire and sword. We have
learnt by this time that our arms are more potent and more successful abroad
than they are at home. Go to the poll with the help of the gods, and confirm
the decision of the senate. It is not your consul only who urges you to
take this course, the immortal gods also bid you do it, for when I was
offering up the sacrifices and praying that this war might end happily
for the senate, for myself, for you, for our allies and Latin confederates,
for our fleets and armies, the gods vouchsafed every cheering and happy
omen."
31.8
After this speech they separated for the voting. The result was in favour
of the consul's proposal, they resolved on war. Thereupon, the consuls,
acting on a resolution of the senate, ordered special prayers and supplications
for three days, and at all the shrines intercessions were offered up that
the war which the Roman people had ordered against Philip might have a
happy and prosperous issue. The fetials were consulted by the consul as
to whether it was necessary for the declaration of war to be conveyed personally
to King Philip, or whether it would be sufficient if it were published
in one of his frontier garrison towns. They declared that either mode of
procedure would be correct. The senate left it to the consul to select
at his discretion one of them, not being a member of the senate, to make
the declaration of war. The next business was the formation of the armies
for the consuls and praetors. The consuls were ordered to disband the old
armies and, each of them, to raise two fresh legions. As the conduct of
the new war, which was felt to be a very serious one, was entrusted to
Sulpicius, he was allowed to reenlist as volunteers as many as he could
out of the army which P. Scipio had brought back from Africa, but on no
account to compel any of the veterans to join against his will. The consuls
were to give to each of the praetors, L. Furius Purpurio and Q. Minucius
Rufus, 5000 men from the Latin contingents as an army of occupation for
their provinces, the one in Gaul, the other in Bruttium. Q. Fulvius Gallo
also was ordered to select men belonging to the Latin and allied contingents
from the army which the consul P. Aelius had commanded, beginning with
those who had seen the shortest service until he had made up a force of
5000 men. This army was for the defence of Sicily. M. Valerius Falto, who
had had Campania for his province during the previous year, was to make
a similar selection from the army in Sardinia, which province he was to
take charge of as propraetor. The consuls received instructions to raise
two legions in the City as a reserve to be sent wherever there was need
for their services, as many of the Italian nationalities had taken the
side of Carthage in the late war, and were seething with anger.
31.9
In the midst of these preparations for war a deputation came from King
Ptolemy to bring information that the Athenians had sought his aid against
Philip. Although both States were allies of Rome, the king would not-so
the deputies stated-send either fleet or army to Greece to protect or attack
any one without the consent of Rome. If the Romans were at liberty to defend
their allies he should remain quietly in his kingdom; if on the other hand
the Romans preferred to remain inactive he would himself send such assistance
as would easily protect the Athenians against Philip. The senate passed
a vote of thanks to the king and assured the deputation that it was the
intention of the Roman people to protect their allies; if the need arose
they would point it out to the king, and they were fully aware that the
resources of his kingdom would prove a steady and loyal support for their
commonwealth. To each of the deputies the senate presented 5000 ases. While
the consuls were raising troops and preparing for war, the citizens were
occupied with religious observances, especially those which were usual
when a fresh war began. The special intercessions and prayers at all the
shrines had been duly offered, but that nothing might be omitted the consul
to whom Macedonia was allotted was authorised to vow Games in honour of
Jupiter and an offering to his temple. This matter was delayed through
the action of the Pontifex Maximus, Licinius, who laid it down that no
vow ought to be made unless the sum required to discharge it was paid,
because the money so appropriated could not be used in connection with
the war, and ought to be at once set apart and not mixed up with other
money. Unless this were done, the vow could not be duly discharged. Although
the pontiff's authority and the reasons he gave had great weight, the consul
was instructed to refer the question to the whole pontifical college as
to whether a vow could be properly undertaken when the expense incurred
was left uncertain. The pontiffs declared that it could, and would be made
with even greater propriety under these conditions. The consul recited
the words of the vow after the Pontifex Maximus in the same form in which
vows to be discharged after an interval of five years were usually recited,
the exception being that the senate was to determine the cost of its fulfilment
at the time when it was discharged. Up to this time when the Games and
offerings were vowed a definite sum had always been named; this was the
first instance where the cost was not fixed at the time.
31.10
Whilst all men's minds were turned to the Macedonian war, rumours suddenly
arose of an outbreak of the Gauls, the last thing that was apprehended.
The Insubres and Cenomani in conjunction with the Boii, who had induced
the Celines and Ilvates and the other Ligurian tribes to join them, had
taken up arms under Hamilcar, a Carthaginian general, who had held a command
in Hasdrubal's army and had remained in the country. They had stormed and
sacked Placentia and in their blind rage had destroyed most of the city
by fire, hardly 2000 men being left amid the smoking ruins. Thence, crossing
the Po, they advanced with the intention of sacking Cremona. Hearing of
the disaster which had overtaken their neighbours the townsmen had time
to close their gates and man their walls so that they might, at all events,
be able to stand a siege and send a message to the Roman praetor before
the final assault. I,. Furius Purpureo was in charge of that province at
the time, and acting under the resolution of the senate had disbanded his
army, retaining only 5000 from the Latin and allied contingents. With this
force he was encamped in the neighbourhood of Ariminum. In a despatch to
the senate he described the serious condition of his province; of the two
military colonies which had weathered the terrible storm of the Punic War
one was taken and destroyed by the enemy and the other was being attacked.
His own army could not render assistance to the colonists in their distress
unless he was willing to expose his 5000 allied troops to be massacred
by the 40,000 of the enemy-that number was under arms-and by incurring
such a fatal disaster himself raise the courage of the enemy who were exulting
over the destruction of a Roman colony.
31.11
After the despatch had been read the senate decreed that the consul C.
Aurelius should order his army to muster at Ariminum on the day which he
had previously fixed for their muster in Etruria. If the state of public
affairs allowed, he was to go in person to suppress the disturbance, otherwise,
he was to send instructions to L. Furius requesting him, as soon as the
legions reached him, to send his 5000 of the allied contingent to replace
them in Etruria, and then raise the siege of Cremona. The senate also decided
to send a mission to Carthage and to Masinissa in Numidia. Their instructions
for Carthage were to inform the government that Hamilcar, one of their
citizens who had come with either Hasdrubal's or Mago's army, had been
left behind and in defiance of the treaty had persuaded the Gauls and Ligurians
to take up arms against Rome. If they wished to remain at peace they must
recall him and surrender him to the Romans. The commissioners were also
to announce that the deserters had not all been given up, a great many
of them were stated to be openly walking about in Carthage; it was the
duty of the authorities to find them out and arrest them in order that
they might be handed over in accordance with the treaty. These were their
instructions for Carthage. To Masinissa they were to convey the senate's
congratulations on his having recovered his ancestral kingdom and still
more upon his having extended it by the annexation of the richest portion
of Syphax's dominions. They were also to inform him that a war had been
undertaken against Philip in consequence of his having lent the Carthaginians
active assistance, and when Italy was wrapped in the flames of war he had
inflicted injuries on the allies of Rome. She was thus compelled to send
ships and armies to Greece, and by thus dividing her forces Philip was
primarily the cause of the delay in sending an expedition to Africa. The
commissioners were further to request Masinissa to assist in that war by
sending a contingent of Numidian horse. Some splendid presents were placed
in their charge for the king-gold and silver vases, a purple robe, a tunica
palmata together with an ivory sceptre, also a toga praetexta together
with a curule chair. They were instructed to assure him that if he required
anything for the security and extension of his kingdom and would intimate
what he wanted, the Roman people would do their utmost to meet his wishes
in return for the services he had rendered.
A deputation from Syphax's son, Vermina, also appeared before the senate.
They made excuses for his mistakes on the ground of his youth and threw
all the blame on the faithlessness of the Carthaginians. Masinissa had
once been the enemy and had now become the friend of Rome; Vermina, too,
they said, would make every effort not to be outdone in friendly offices
to Rome either by Masinissa or by any one else. They ended by petitioning
the senate to confer on him the title of "king, ally and friend." The reply
which the deputation received was to the effect that "Syphax, his father,
had suddenly without any reason become an enemy to the people of Rome after
being their ally and friend, and that Vermina himself had commenced his
military education by an attack on the Romans. He must therefore sue for
peace before he could have any title to be styled 'king, ally and friend.'
The Roman people were accustomed to confer that honourable distinction
in return for great services which kings have rendered to them. The Roman
envoys would shortly be in Africa and the senate would empower them to
grant peace to Vermina on certain conditions, providing that he left the
fixing of those conditions absolutely to the Roman people. If he wanted
anything added or cancelled or altered in the terms he must make a fresh
appeal to the senate." The men who were sent to conduct these negotiations
were C. Terentius Varro, Sp. Lucretius and Cn. Octavius; and they had each
a quinquereme placed at their disposal.
31.12
A despatch was read in the House from Q. Minucius, the praetor commanding
in Bruttium, in which he stated that money had been stolen by night from
the treasury of Proserpine at Locri and there was no clue to the perpetrators
of the crime. The senate were extremely angry at finding that acts of sacrilege
were still going on and that not even the example of Pleminius, notorious
alike for the guilt and the punishment which so swiftly followed, acted
in any way as a deterrent. C. Aurelius was instructed to write to the praetor
and tell him that the senate wished an enquiry to be made into the circumstances
of the robbery on the same lines as the one which the praetor M. Pomponius
had conducted three years previously. Whatever money was discovered was
to be replaced, and the deficit made up; and should it be thought necessary
expiatory sacrifices were to be offered in accordance with the instructions
of the pontiffs on the previous occasions. Their anxiety to atone for the
violation of the temple was made all the keener by the simultaneous announcements
of portents from numerous localities. In Lucania it was alleged that the
heavens had been on fire; at Privernum the sun had been glowing red through
the whole of a cloudless day; at the temple of Juno Sospita in Lanuvium
a terrible noise was heard in the night. Numerous monstrous births were
also reported amongst the Sabines a child was born of doubtful sex; another
similar case was discovered where the child was already sixteen years old;
at Frusino a lamb was yeaned with a head like a pig; at Sinuessa a pig
was littered with a human head, and on the public domain-land in Lucania
a foal appeared with five feet. These were all regarded as horrid and monstrous
products of a nature which had gone astray to produce strange and hybrid
growths; the hermaphrodites were looked upon as of especially evil omen
and were ordered to be at once carried out to sea just as quite recently
in the consulships of C. Claudius and M. Nero similar ill-omened births
had been disposed of. At the same time the senate ordered the decemvirs
to consult the Sacred Books about this portent. Following the instructions
found there, they ordered the same ceremonies to be observed as on the
occasion of its last appearance. A hymn was to be sung through the City
by three choirs, each consisting of nine maidens, and a gift was to be
carried to Queen Juno. The consul C. Aurelius saw that the instructions
of the Keepers of the Sacred Books were carried out. The hymn in our fathers'
days was composed by Livius, on this occasion by P. Licinius Tegula.
31.13
When all the acts of expiation had been duly performed, and the sacrilege
at Locri had been investigated by Q. Minucius, and the money, recovered
from the sale of the goods of the guilty persons, had been replaced in
the treasury, the consuls were now anxious to start for their provinces,
but a delay arose. A number of persons had lent money to the State during
the consulship of M. Valerius and M. Claudius, and the repayment of the
third instalment was due this year. The consuls informed them that the
money in the treasury would hardly meet the cost of the new war, which
would have to be carried on with a large fleet and large armies and that
there was no means of paying them for the present. They appealed to the
senate and pleaded that if the State chose to use the money which was lent
for the Punic War to defray the cost of the Macedonian War also, and one
war arose out of another, it would simply mean that their money would be
confiscated in return for the service they had rendered as though it had
really been an injury. The senate acknowledged that they had a grievance.
The creditors' demands were just, but the State was unable to meet its
liabilities and the senate decided upon a course which was fair to both
sides and of practical utility. Many of the applicants had stated that
there was land everywhere for sale and they wanted to become purchasers;
the senate accordingly made a decree that they should have the option of
taking any part of the public domain-land within fifty miles of the City.
The consuls would value the land and impose a nominal tax of one as per
jugerum as acknowledgment of its being public land, and when the State
could pay its debts any of them who wished to have his money rather than
the land could have it and restore the land to the people. They gladly
accepted these terms, and the land thus occupied was called trientabulus
because it was given in lieu of a third part of their loan.
31.14
After the recital of the customary prayers in the Capitol P. Sulpicius
was invested by his lictors with the paludamentum and left the City for
Brundisium. Here he incorporated into his legions the veterans who had
volunteered out of the African army, and also selected the vessels out
of the fleet under Cn. Cornelius. Then he set sail, and the next day he
landed in, Greece. Here he was met by an embassy from Athens who begged
him to raise the siege which that city was undergoing. C. Claudius Cento
was at once despatched thither with 20 warships and 1000 men. The king
was not personally directing the siege, he was just then attacking Abydos,
after trying his strength in naval encounters with the Rhodians and with
Attalus, and in neither battle had he been successful. But his was not
a nature to accept defeat quietly, and now that he had leagued himself
with Antiochus, king of Syria, he was more determined on war than ever.
They had agreed to divide the rich kingdom of Egypt between them, and on
hearing of the death of Ptolemy they both prepared to attack it. The Athenians,
who retain nothing of their ancient greatness but their pride, had become
involved in hostilities with Philip through a quite unimportant incident.
During the celebration of the Eleusinian Mysteries two young Acarnanians
who had not been initiated entered the temple of Ceres with the rest of
the crowd, quite unaware of the sacrilegious nature of their action. They
were betrayed by the silly questions which they asked, and were brought
before the temple authorities. Though it was quite evident that they had
sinned in ignorance, they were put to death as though guilty of a horrible
crime. The Acarnanians reported this hostile and barbarous act to Philip
and obtained his consent to their making war on Athens supported by a Macedonian
contingent. Their army began by laying the land of Attica waste with fire
and sword, after which they returned to Acarnania with plunder of every
description. So far there was only anger and exasperation on both sides,
subsequently, by a decree of the citizens, Athens made a formal declaration
of war. For when King Attalus and the Rhodians who were following up Philip
in his retreat to Macedonia had reached Aegina, the king sailed across
to the Piraeus for the purpose of renewing and confirming his alliance
with the Athenians. The whole body of the citizens came out to meet him
with their wives and children; the priests in their sacred robes received
him as he entered the city; even the gods themselves were almost summoned
from their shrines to welcome him.
31.15
The people were at once summoned to an assembly, in order that the king
might lay his wishes before them. It was, however, thought to be more in
accordance with his dignity that he should put what he wanted into writing,
rather than let his blushes be called up by having to recount his services
to the city or his modesty be shocked by the fulsome flattery of the applauding
crowd. Accordingly he drew up a written statement which was read in the
assembly, in which he enumerated the benefits he had conferred on their
city and described his contest with Philip, and urged them in conclusion
to take their part in the war while they had him and the Rhodians and,
now especially, the Romans to support them. If they hung back now they
would never have such an opportunity again. Then the envoys from Rhodes
were heard; they had quite lately done a good turn for the Athenians, for
they had recaptured and sent back to Athens four Athenian warships which
the Macedonians had taken. War against Philip was unanimously decided upon.
Extraordinary honours were paid to King Attalus and also to the Rhodians.
A proposal was carried to add to the old ten tribes a new one to be called
the Attalis tribe. The people of Rhodes were presented with a golden crown
in recognition of their bravery, and the full citizenship was granted to
them just they had previously granted it to the Athenians. After this Attalus
rejoined his fleet at Aegina and the Rhodians sailed to Cia, and from there
made their way home through the Cyclades. All the islands joined them with
the exception of Andros, Paros and Cythnos which were held by Macedonian
garrisons. Attalus had sent messengers to Aetolia and was waiting for the
envoys who were coming from there; their non-arrival kept him inactive
for some time. He could not induce the Aetolians to take up arms, they
were only too glad to remain at peace with Philip on any terms. But had
he in conjunction with the Rhodians vigorously opposed Philip, they might
have won the glorious title of Liberators of Greece. Instead of this, they
allowed him to cross the Hellespont a second time and seize an excellent
position in Thrace where he could concentrate his forces, and thus they
gave fresh life to the war and surrendered the glory of bringing it to
a close the Romans.
31.16
Philip showed a more kingly spirit. Though he had not held his own against
Attalus and the Rhodians he was not alarmed even at the prospect of a war
with Rome. Philocles, one of his generals, was sent with a force of 2000
infantry and 200 cavalry to ravage the lands of the Athenians, and Heraclides
was placed in charge of the fleet with instructions to sail for Maronea.
Philip himself marched thither overland with 2000 men in light marching
order, and took the place at the first assault. Aenos gave him a good deal
of trouble, but he finally effected its capture through the treachery of
Callimedes, who was holding the place for Ptolemy. Cypsela, Doriscos and
Serrheum were taken in rapid succession and he then advanced to the Chersonese
where Elaeus and Alopeconnesus voluntarily surrendered. Callipolis and
Madytos fell through treachery; together with some other unimportant fortified
places. The people of Abydos would not even admit his envoys and closed
their gates against the king. The siege of this place detained Philip for
a considerable time, and if Attalus and the Rhodians had shown the smallest
energy they might have saved the place. Attalus sent only 300 men to assist
in the defence and the Rhodians despatched one quadrireme out of their
fleet which was lying at anchor off Tenedos. Later on, when they could
hardly hold out any longer, Attalus himself sailed to Tenedos, and after
raising their hopes by his approach did not afford his allies any assistance
either by land or sea.
31.17
The Abydenes in the first instance placed engines all along their walls
and in this way not only prevented any approach by land, but also made
the anchorage of the hostile ships unsafe. When, however, a portion of
the wall was battered into ruins and the enemies' mines had been carried
up to an inner wall which the defenders had hastily constructed, they sent
envoys to the king to arrange terms for the surrender of the city. They
proposed that the Rhodian quadrireme with its crew and the contingent which
Attalus had sent should be allowed to depart and that the inhabitants should
be permitted to leave the city with simply the clothes they were wearing.
Philip replied that there was not the slightest hope of peace unless they
surrendered unconditionally. When this reply was brought back it created
such an outburst of indignation and rage that the citizens formed the same
frenzied resolution as the Saguntines had done in former years. They gave
orders for all the matrons to be shut up in the temple of Diana, the freeborn
boys and girls, even infants with their nurses to be collected in the gymnasium,
all gold and silver to be taken to the forum, all costly apparel to be
placed on board the vessels from Rhodes and Cyzicus which were lying in
the harbour, and altars set up in the middle of the city, round which the
priests were to be assembled with victims for sacrifice. Here a body of
men, selected for the purpose, took an oath dictated to them by the priests,
to carry out the desperate measure which had been decided upon. As soon
as they saw that their comrades who were fighting in front of the levelled
wall were all killed, they were to put the wives and children to death,
throw the gold and silver and the apparel on board the ships into the sea
and set fire wherever they possibly could to all the public buildings and
private houses, and the most horrible curses were invoked on them if they
broke their oath. Following them, all the men of military age solemnly
swore that none should leave the battle alive, except as victor. So faithful
were they to their oath and with such desperation did they fight, that
before night could put an end to the battle, Philip withdrew from the conflict
appalled by their frenzied courage. The leading citizens, to whom the more
cruel part had been assigned, finding that there were only a few survivors,
and they wounded and exhausted, sent the priests, wearing supplicatory
fillets, as soon as it was light to Philip to make a surrender of the city.
31.18
Before the surrender actually took place, the Roman envoys who had been
sent to Alexandria heard of the siege of Abydos, and the youngest of the
three, M. Aemilius, went at the suggestion of his colleagues to Philip.
He remonstrated against the war that had been made on Attalus and the Rhodians,
and especially against the attack on Abydos. On the king replying that
Attalus and the Rhodians had been the aggressors he asked, "Were the people
of Abydos also the first to take up arms?" To one who seldom heard the
truth this language seemed too bold to address to a king. "Your youth,
your good looks and, above all, the fact of your being a Roman make you
too venturesome. It is my wish that you should remember treaty obligations
and keep the peace with me, but if you begin the attack, I too am quite
ready to fight, and you will find the kingdom and name of Macedon no less
renowned in war than those of Rome." After dismissing thus the envoy Philip
took possession of the gold and silver which had been collected, but he
lost all chance of making prisoners. For such a madness fell on the people
that they believed that all who had met their death in battle had been
suddenly betrayed, and they accused one another of perjury, especially
the priests, for they were surrendering to the enemy those whom they had
devoted to death. Seized by one sudden impulse they all rushed off to kill
their wives and children, and then they inflicted death upon themselves
in every possible form. The king was utterly astounded at this outburst
of madness and called off his men from the assault, telling them that he
would allow the people of Abydos three days in which to die. During this
interval the vanquished wrought more horrors upon themselves than the victors
would have done, however infuriated they might have been. Not a single
man fell into the hands of the enemy alive, save those for whom chains
or some other cause beyond their control made death impossible. After leaving
a force in occupation of Abydos, Philip returned to his kingdom. As the
destruction of Saguntum strengthened Hannibal's resolve to war against
Rome, so the fall of Abydos encouraged Philip to do the same. On his way
he was met by couriers who announced that the consul was now in Epirus
and was wintering his troops in Apollonia and his naval force at Corcyra.
31.19
The envoys who had been sent to Africa to report the action of Hamilcar
in assuming the leadership of the Gauls were informed by the Carthaginian
government that they could do nothing more than sentence him to banishment
and confiscate his property; all the refugees and deserters whom after
careful search they had been able to discover had been given up, and they
intended to send envoys to Rome to give satisfactory assurances on this
point. They sent 200,000 modii of wheat to Rome and a similar amount to
the army in Macedonia. From Carthage the legates proceeded to Numidia to
visit the two kings. The presents destined for Masinissa were given to
him and the message delivered from the senate. He offered to furnish 2000
horse, but only 1000 were accepted, and he personally superintended their
embarkation. With them he sent to Macedonia 2,000,000 modii of wheat and
the same quantity of barley. The third mission was to Vermina. He came
to meet them at the frontier of his kingdom and left it to them to put
in writing what conditions of peace they wanted, assuring them that any
peace with Rome he should look upon as fair and advantageous. The terms
were handed to him, and he was instructed to send commissioners to Rome
to obtain their ratification.
31.20
About this time L. Cornelius Lentulus returned from Spain where he had
been acting as proconsul. After giving a report of the successful operations
which he had conducted there for several years, he asked to be allowed
to enter the City in triumph. The senate were of opinion that his services
quite deserved a triumph, but they reminded him that there was no precedent
for a general who had not been Dictator or consul or praetor enjoying a
triumph, and he had held his command in Spain as proconsul, not as consul
or praetor. However, they went so far as to allow him to enter the City
in ovation, in spite of the opposition of Tiberius Sempronius Longus, one
of the tribunes of the plebs, who said that there was no precedent or customary
authority for that any more than for the other. In the end he gave way
before the unanimous feeling of the senate, and after they had passed their
resolution, Lentulus enjoyed his ovation. 43,000 pounds of silver and 2450
pounds of gold, captured from the enemy, were carried in the procession.
Out of the spoil he distributed 120 ases to each of his men.
31.21
By this time the consular army in Gaul had been transferred from Arretium
to Ariminum, and the 5000 men of the Latin contingent had moved from Gaul
into Etruria. L. Furius accordingly left Ariminum and hastened by forced
marches to Cremona which the Gauls were at the time besieging. He fixed
his camp a mile and a half distant from the enemy and would have had a
chance of winning a brilliant victory if he had led his men straight from
their march against the Gaulish camp. The Gauls were scattered over the
fields in all directions and the camp had been left insufficiently guarded.
But he was afraid that his men would be too much fatigued after their rapid
march, and the shouts of the Gauls recalled their comrades, who, leaving
the plunder which they had gathered behind, ran back to their camp. The
next day they marched out to battle. The Romans were not slow in accepting
the challenge, but they had hardly time to complete their formation, so
rapidly did the enemy come on. Furius had formed the allied troops into
two divisions, and the right division was stationed in the first line,
the two Roman legions forming the reserve. M. Furius was in command of
this division, M. Caecilius commanded the legions and L. Valerius Flaccus
the cavalry. These were all staff-officers. The praetor kept two of his
staff with him-C. Laetorius and P. Titinius-to assist him in surveying
the field and meeting any sudden attempt of the enemy.
At first the Gauls brought their whole strength to bear in one direction,
hoping to be able to overwhelm the right wing and smash it up. Failing
in this, they endeavoured to work round the flanks and envelop the enemy's
line, which, considering their numbers and the fewness of their opponents,
seemed an easy task. When the praetor saw this maneuver he extended his
front by bringing up the two legions in reserve to the right and left of
the allied troops, and he also vowed a temple to Diovis, in case he routed
the enemy that day. He then ordered L. Valerius to launch the Roman cavalry
against one wing of the Gauls and the allied cavalry against the other
to check the enveloping movement. As soon as he saw that the Gauls had
weakened their centre by diverting troops to the wings, he ordered his
infantry to advance in close order at the charge and break through the
opposing ranks. This was decisive; the wings were repulsed by the cavalry
and the centre by the infantry. As they were being cut down in all parts
of the field, the Gauls turned, and in wild flight sought shelter in their
camp. The cavalry followed in hot pursuit and the infantry soon came up
and attacked the camp. Not 6000 men succeeded in making their escape; more
than 35,000 were killed or made prisoners; 70 standards were taken together
with 200 Gaulish carts loaded with spoil. The Carthaginian general Hamilcar
fell in that battle as well as three Gaulish nobles who were in command.
2000 men whom the Gauls had taken at Placentia were set at liberty and
restored to their homes.
31.22
It was a great victory and caused great joy in Rome. When the despatch
arrived a three days' thanksgiving was decreed. The Romans and allies lost
2000 men, mostly belonging to the right division against which the enormous
mass of the enemy made their first attack. Although the praetor had practically
brought the war to a close, the consul C. Aurelius after finishing the
necessary business in Rome proceeded to Gaul and took over the victorious
army from the praetor. The other consul reached his province quite late
in the autumn and wintered in the neighbourhood of Apollonia. As stated
above, C. Claudius was sent to Athens with twenty triremes out of the fleet
which was laid up at Corcyra. When they entered the Piraeus they brought
great comfort and hope to their allies who were now in a state of great
despondency. The depredations committed on their fields by the troops at
Corinth, who came through Megara, now ceased, and the pirates from Chalcis
who had infested the sea and harried the maritime districts of Athens no
longer ventured beyond Sunium and in fact would not trust themselves outside
the Euripus. In addition to the Roman ships there were three quadriremes
from Rhodes and three Athenian undecked vessels which had been fitted out
to protect their coast. As a chance of an important success offered itself
to C. Claudius he thought that it would be sufficient for the present if
this fleet protected the city and territory of Athens.
31.23
Some refugees from Chalcis who had been expelled by the king's adherents
reported that the place could be seized without any serious resistance,
for as there was no enemy to be feared in the neighbourhood the Macedonians
were strolling about everywhere, and the townsmen, trusting to the Macedonians
for protection, made no attempt to guard the city. On this information
C. Claudius proceeded to Chalcis, and although he reached Sunium early
enough to allow of his entering the strait of Euboea the same day, he kept
his fleet at anchor till nightfall that his approach might not be observed.
As soon as it was dark he sailed on over a calm sea and reached Chalcis
a little before dawn. He selected the least populous part of the city for
his attempt, and finding the guards at some points asleep and other places
without any guard at all, he directed a small body of soldiers to place
their scaling-ladders against the nearest tower, which was taken with the
wall on either side of it. Then they advanced along the wall to where the
buildings were numerous, killing the guards on their way, till they reached
the gate which they broke down and so admitted the main body of troops.
Dispersing in all directions they filled the city with tumult, and, to
add to the confusion, the buildings round the forum were set on fire. They
burnt the king's granaries and the arsenal with an immense number of military
engines and artillery. This was followed by an indiscriminate slaughter
of those who offered resistance and those who tried to escape, and at last
every man capable of bearing arms was either killed or put to flight. Amongst
the former was Sopater, an Acarnanian, the commandant of the garrison.
All the plunder was collected in the forum and then placed on board the
ships. The gaol too was broken open by the Rhodians, and the prisoners
of war whom Philip had immured there as being the safest place of custody
were released. After the statues of the king had been thrown down and mutilated
the signal for embarkation was given, and they sailed back to the Piraeus.
Had there been a sufficient force of Roman soldiery to allow of Chalcis
being occupied without interfering with the protection of Athens, Chalcis
and the Euripus would have been wrested from the king; a most important
success at the very outset of the war. For the Euripus is the key to Greece
by sea as the pass of Thermopylae is by land.
31.24
Philip was in Demetrias at the time. When the disaster that had overtaken
a friendly city was announced to him, he determined, as he was too late
to save it, to do the next best thing and avenge it. With a force of 5000
infantry in light marching order and 300 cavalry he went almost at a run
to Chalcis, not for a moment doubting that he would be able to take the
Romans by surprise. Finding that there was nothing to see but the uninviting
spectacle of a smoking and ruined city in which hardly enough men were
left to bury the victims of the war, he hurried away at the same speed
and crossing the Euripus by the bridge marched through Boeotia to Athens,
thinking that as he had shown as much enterprise as the Romans he would
have the same success. And he would have had, if a scout had not observed
the king's army on the march from a watch-tower. This man was what the
Greeks call a hemerodromos, because these men cover enormous distances
in a single day, and running on in advance he reached Athens at midnight.
Here there was the same somnolence and negligence which had brought about
the loss of Chalcis a few days before. Roused by the breathless messenger,
the Athenian commander-in-chief and Dioxippus the prefect of the cohort
of mercenaries mustered their soldiers in the forum and ordered the trumpets
to sound the alarm from the citadel so that all might know that the enemy
was at hand. There was a general rush to the gates and the walls.
Some hours later, though considerably before daybreak. Philip approached
the city. When he saw the numerous lights and heard the noise of men hurrying
to and fro in the inevitable confusion, he halted his force and ordered
them to lie down and rest. As his attempt at a surprise had failed he prepared
for an open assault and made his advance on the side of the Dipylon. This
gate, placed as a mouth to the city, is considerably larger and wider than
the rest, and the road on both sides of it is broad, so that the townsmen
were able to form their line right up to it from the forum, whilst the
road beyond it stretching for about a mile as far as the Academy allowed
plenty of room for the infantry and cavalry of the enemy. After forming
their line inside the gate, the Athenians, together with the detachment
which Attalus had left and Dioxippus' cohort, sallied forth. As soon as
he saw them Philip thought he had them in his power and would be able to
satisfy his long-cherished desire for their destruction, for there was
not one of the Greek States that he was more furious against than he was
against Athens. After exhorting his men to keep their eyes on him as they
fought and to remember that where the king was, there the standards and
the fighting line ought to be, he put spurs to his horse, animated not
only by raging anger but also by a love of ostentation. He thought it a
splendid thing to be seen fighting by the immense crowd who thronged the
walls to view the spectacle. Galloping forward in front of his lines with
a few horsemen he charged into the middle of the enemy and created as much
alarm amongst them as he inspired his own men with enthusiasm. Many he
wounded at close quarters, others by the missiles he flung, and he drove
them back to their gate where he inflicted greater losses as they crowded
through the confined space. Recklessly as he pursued them, he was still
able to draw off in safety because those who were on the turrets of the
gate forbore to throw their javelins for fear of hitting their own comrades
who were mixed up with the enemy. After this the Athenians kept within
their walls, and Philip after giving the signal for retirement fixed his
camp at Cynosarges where there was a temple of Hercules and a gymnasium
with a grove round it. But Cynosarges and the Lyceum and every sacred and
delightful place round the city was burnt. Not only were buildings destroyed
but even the tombs, nothing belonging to either gods or men was spared
in his uncontrollable fury.
31.25
The following day the closed gates were suddenly thrown open to admit a
body of troops sent by Attalus and the Romans from the Piraeus. The king
now removed his camp to a distance of about three miles from the city.
From there he marched to Eleusis in the hope of securing by a coup-de-main
the temple of the fort which surrounded it and protected it on all sides.
When, however, he found that the defenders were quite on the alert, and
that the fleet was on its way from the Piraeus to render assistance, he
abandoned his project and marched to Megara, and then straight to Corinth.
On learning that the Council of the Achaeans was sitting at Argos he made
his appearance in the assembly quite unexpectedly. They were at the time
discussing the question of war with Nabis, tyrant of the Lacedaemonians.
When the supreme command was transferred from Philopoemen to Cycliades.
who was by no means his equal as a general, Nabis, finding that the Achaeans
had dismissed their mercenaries, resumed hostilities, and after devastating
his neighbours' fields was now threatening their cities. To oppose this
enemy the council were deliberating as to what proportion of troops should
be furnished by each State. Philip promised to relieve them from all anxiety
so far as Nabis and the Lacedaemonians were concerned; he would not only
protect the soil of his allies from their ravages, but he would at once
roll back all the terror of war upon Laconia itself by marching his army
thither. When these words were greeted with loud applause he went on to
say, "If, however, your interests are to be protected by my arms it is
only fair that my own should not be left undefended. Furnish me then, if
you approve, with such a force as shall suffice to garrison Oreus, Chalcis
and Corinth, so that with all safe in my rear I may make war upon Nabis
and the Lacedaemonians free from misgivings." The Achaeans were not slow
to detect his motive in making such a generous promise and offering aid
against the Lacedaemonians. They saw that his real aim was to draw the
fighting strength of the Achaeans out of the Peloponnese as hostages and
so bind the nation to a war with Rome. Cycliades, seeing that further argument
would be irrelevant, simply observed that the laws of the Achaeans did
not allow discussion on any matters other than those which the council
had been convened to consider. After a decree had been passed for raising
an army to act against Nabis, he dismissed the council over which he had
presided with courage and independence. Before that day he had been looked
upon as a strong supporter of the king. Philip, whose high hopes were thus
suddenly dashed, succeeded in enlisting a few volunteers, after which he
returned to Corinth and from there to Attica.
31.26
During the time that Philip was in Achaia, Philocles, one of his generals,
started from Euboea with 2000 Thracians and Macedonians for the purpose
of ravaging the Athenian territory. He crossed the forest of Cithaeron
in the neighbourhood of Eleusis, and there he divided his forces. Half
were sent forward to harry and plunder the fields in all directions, the
other half he concealed in a position suitable for an ambuscade so that
if an attack were made from the fort at Eleusis upon his plunderers he
might take the assailants by surprise. His ruse, however, was detected,
so he recalled the scattered pillagers and made a regular attack upon the
fort. After a fruitless attempt in which many of his men were wounded he
retired and joined forces with Philip who was on his way from Achaea. The
king himself made an attempt on the same fort but the arrival of the Roman
ships from the Piraeus and the presence of a reinforcement which had been
thrown into the place compelled him to abandon the undertaking. He then
sent Philocles with a part of his army to Athens, and with the rest he
proceeded to the Piraeus in order that while Philocles kept the Athenians
within their city by approaching the walls and threatening an assault,
he might seize the opportunity of storming the Piraeus whilst it was left
with a feeble guard. But the assault on the Piraeus proved to be quite
as difficult as the one on Eleusis, as practically the same troops defended
both. Leaving the Piraeus he hurried up to Athens. Here a force of infantry
and cavalry from the city attacked him within the dilapidated Long Walls
which connect the Piraeus with Athens and he was repulsed. Seeing that
any attempt on the city was hopeless he divided his army with Philocles
and set himself to complete the devastation of the country. His former
work of destruction had been confined mainly to the sepulchres round the
city; now he determined to leave nothing free from profanation and gave
orders for the temples which the people had consecrated in every deme to
be destroyed and set on fire. The land of Attica was famous for that class
of building as well as for the abundance of native marble and the genius
of its architects, and therefore it afforded abundant material for this
destructive fury. He was not satisfied with overthrowing the temples with
their statues, he even ordered the blocks of stone to be broken in pieces
lest if they retained their shape they might form imposing ruins. When
there was nothing left on which his rage, still insatiate, could wreak
itself he left the enemy's territories for Boeotia and did nothing more
worth mentioning in Greece.
31.27
The consul Sulpicius was at the time encamped by the river Apsus in a position
lying between Apollonia and Dyrrhachium. He recalled L. Apustius and sent
him with a portion of his force to ravage the enemy's frontiers. After
devastating the borders of Macedon and capturing at the first assault the
fortified posts of Corrhagum, Gerrunium and Orgessus, Apustius came to
Antipatrea, a place situated in a gorge between two mountain ranges. He
first invited the chief men of the city to a conference, and tried to persuade
them to trust themselves to the Romans. Confident in the size of their
city, its fortifications, and its strong position, they treated his overtures
with contempt. He then resorted to force and carried the place by assault.
After putting the adult males to death and allowing the soldiers to appropriate
all the plunder he levelled the walls and burnt the city. Fear of similar
treatment brought about the surrender of Codrion-a fairly strong and fortified
town-without offering any resistance. A detachment was left there to garrison
the place, and Cnidus-a name better known as that of a city in Asia-was
taken by storm. As Apustius was on his way back to the consul with a considerable
amount of plunder he was attacked during his passage of the river by Athenagoras,
one of the king's prefects, and his rear was thrown into confusion. On
hearing the shouting and tumult he galloped back, made his men face about
and throw their kits into the centre of the column, and formed his line.
The king's soldiers did not stand the charge of the Romans, many were killed
and more taken prisoners. Apustius brought back his army safely to the
consul, and was at once sent off to rejoin the fleet.
31.28
As the commencement of the war was marked by this successful expedition,
various princes and leading men from the countries bordering on Macedonia
visited the Roman camp; amongst them Pleuratus, the son of Scerdilaedus,
Amynander, king of the Athamanians, and Bato, the son of Longarus, who
represented the Dardanians. Longarus had been warring on his own account
with Demetrius, Philip's father. In reply to their offers of help the consul
said that he would avail himself of the services of the Dardanians and
of Pleuratus when he led his army into Macedonia. With Amynander he arranged
that he should induce the Aetolians to take part in the war. Envoys from
Attalus had also come, and he instructed them to ask the king to meet the
Roman fleet at Aegina where it was wintering and in conjunction with it
to harass Philip, as he had previously done, by naval operations. Emissaries
were also sent to the Rhodians urging them to take their share in the war.
Philip, who had now arrived in Macedonia, showed no less energy in making
preparations for the war. His son Perseus, a mere boy, to whom he had assigned
some members of his council to direct and advise him, was sent to hold
the pass which leads to Pelagonia. Sciathos and Peparethos, cities of some
importance, were destroyed that they might not enrich the hostile fleet
with plunder. He sent envoys to the Aetolians to prevent that people, excited
at the arrival of the Romans, from breaking faith with him.
31.29
The meeting of the Aetolian League which they call the Pan-Aetolium was
to be held on a certain day. The king's envoys hastened their journey in
order to be in time for it and Lucius Furius Purpurio was also present
as representing the consul, as was also a deputation from Athens. The Macedonians
were allowed to speak first, as the treaty with them was the latest that
had been made. They said that as no new circumstances had arisen they had
nothing new to urge in support of the existing treaty. The Aetolians, having
learnt by experience how little they had to gain by alliance with the Romans,
had made peace with Philip, and they were bound to keep it now that it
was made. "Would you prefer," asked one of the envoys, "to copy the unscrupulousness-or
shall I call it the levity?-of the Romans? When your ambassadors were in
Rome, the reply they received was 'Why do you come to us, Aetolians, after
you have made peace with Philip without our consent?' And now the very
same men insist upon your joining them in war against Philip. Formerly
they pretended that they had taken up arms against him on your account
and for your protection, now they forbid you to be at peace with Philip.
In the first Punic war they went to Sicily, ostensibly to help Messana;
in the second, to deliver Syracuse from Carthaginian tyranny and restore
her freedom. Now Messana and Syracuse and in fact the whole of Sicily are
tributary to them: they have reduced the island to a province in which
they exercise absolute power of life and death. You imagine, I suppose,
that the Sicilians enjoy the same rights as you, and that as you hold your
council at Naupactus under your own laws, presided over by magistrates
of your own choice, and with full power of forming alliances or declaring
war as you please, so it is with the councils which meet in the cities
of Sicily, in Syracuse or Messana or Lilybaeum. No: a Roman governor manages
their meetings; it is at his summons that they have to assemble; they see
him issuing his edicts from his lofty tribunal like a despot, and surrounded
by his lictors; their backs are threatened with the rod, their necks with
the axe, and every year they have a different master allotted them. Nor
ought they, nor can they wonder at this when they see the cities of Italy,
such as Regium, Tarentum and Capua, lying prostrate beneath the same tyranny,
to say nothing of those close to Rome out of whose ruin she has grown to
greatness.
Capua does indeed survive as the sepulchre and memorial of the Campanian
nation, the people themselves are either dead and buried, or else cast
forth as exiles. It is a headless and limbless city without a senate, without
a plebs, without magistrates, an unnatural portent in the land. To leave
it as a habitation for men was an act of greater cruelty than its utter
destruction would have been. If men of an alien race, separated from you
more widely by language, customs and laws than by intervening sea and land,
obtain a hold here, it is folly and madness to hope that anything will
remain as it is now. You think that Philip's sovereignty is a danger to
your liberty. It was your own doing that he took up arms against you, and
his sole aim was to have a settled peace with you. All that he asks today
is that you will keep that peace unbroken. Once make foreign legions familiar
with these shores and bow your necks to the yoke, then you will seek in
vain and too late for Philip's support as your ally; you will have the
Romans for your masters. Aetolians, Acarnanians, Macedonians are united
and disunited by slight and purely temporary causes; with foreigners and
barbarians, all Greeks ever have been and ever will be at war. For they
are our enemies by nature, and nature is unchanging; their hostility is
not due to causes which vary from day to day. But I will end where I began.
Three years ago you decided on this very spot to make peace with Philip.
You are the same men that you were then, he is the same that he was, the
Romans who were opposed to it then are just those who want to upset it
now. Fortune has altered nothing, I do not see why you should alter your
minds."
31.30
The Macedonians were followed, at the instance of the Romans, by the Athenians,
who after the shocking way they had been treated, had every justification
for protesting against Philip's barbarous cruelty. They mourned over the
piteous devastation and pillaging of their fields, but it was not because
they had suffered hostile treatment from an enemy that they complained.
There were certain rights of war which could be justly exercised and therefore
must be justly submitted to; the burning of crops, the destruction of dwellings,
the carrying off of men and cattle as plunder, cause suffering to those
who endure them, but are not felt to be an indignity. What they did complain
of was that the man who called the Romans foreigners and barbarians had
so completely outraged all law, human and divine, that in his first ravages
he made impious war upon the infernal deities, and in his subsequent ones
he defied the powers above. All the sepulchres and monuments within their
borders were destroyed, the dead in all their graves laid bare, their bones
no longer covered by the earth. There were shrines which their ancestors
in the day when they dwelt in separate demes had consecrated in their little
fortified posts and villages, and which even when they had been enrolled
as citizens of one city they did not abandon or neglect. All these temples
Philip had enveloped in sacrilegious flames, the images of their gods,
blackened, burnt, mutilated, were lying among the prostrate pillars of
their temples. What he had made the land of Attica, once so fair in its
beauty and its wealth, such, if he were allowed, would he make Aetolia
and the whole of Greece. Even Athens itself would have been similarly disfigured
if the Romans had not come to the rescue, for the same impious rage was
driving him to attack the gods who dwell in the city, Minerva the protectress
of the citadel, the Ceres of Eleusis and the Jupiter and Minerva of the
Piraeus. But he had been repulsed by force of arms, not only from their
temples, but even from the walls of the city, and had turned his savage
fury against those shrines whose sanctity was their only protection. They
closed with an earnest appeal to the Aetolians that they would out of compassion
to the Athenians take part in the war, under the leadership of the immortal
gods and of the Romans who next to the gods possessed the greatest power
and might.
31.31
Then the Roman legate spoke as follows: "The Macedonians and then the Athenians
have compelled me to alter entirely the address I was going to make. I
came to protest against Philip's wrongful action against all those cities
of our allies, but the Macedonians by the charges they have brought against
Rome have made me a defendant rather than an accuser. The Athenians, again,
by their recital of his impious and inhuman crimes against the gods above
and those below, have left nothing more for me or for any one else to bring
up against him. Consider that the same things have been said by the inhabitants
of Chios and Abydos, by the Aeneans, the Maronites, the Thasians, by the
natives of Paros and Samos, of Larissa and Messene, and by the people over
there in Achaia, and that those upon whom he was able to inflict most injury
have made the gravest and most serious charges. As to those actions which
he has brought up against us as crimes, I frankly admit that if they do
not deserve praise they cannot be defended. He mentioned, as instances,
Regium, Capua and Syracuse. In the case of Regium, the inhabitants themselves
begged us during the war with Pyrrhus to send a legion for their protection,
and the soldiers, forming a criminal conspiracy, took forcible possession
of the town which they were sent to defend. Did we therefore approve their
action? Did we not on the contrary take military measures against the criminals,
and when we had them within our power did we not compel them to make satisfaction
to our allies by scourgings and executions, and then did we not restore
to the Regians their city, their lands and all their possessions, together
with their liberty and their laws? As to Syracuse, when it was oppressed
by foreign tyrants-a still greater indignity-we came to its help and spent
three weary years in making attacks by sea and land upon its almost impregnable
fortifications. And though the Syracusans themselves would rather have
remained under that servile tyranny than let their city be taken by us,
we captured it, and the same arms which effected its capture won and secured
its freedom. At the same time we do not deny that Sicily is one of our
provinces, and the communities which took the side of the Carthaginians
and in full sympathy with them urged war against us are now tributary,
and pay us the tenth of all their produce. We do not deny this; on the
contrary we with you and the whole world know that each has been treated
in accordance with its deserts. It was the same with Capua. Do you suppose
that we regret the punishment meted out to the Capuans, a punishment which
they themselves cannot make a ground of complaint? It was on their behalf
that we remained at war with the Samnites for nearly seventy years, during
which time we suffered severe defeats; we were united with them by treaty,
then by intermarriage, and at last by common citizenship. And yet these
men were the first of all the Italian nationalities to take advantage of
our difficulties and revolt to Hannibal after massacring our garrison,
and then in revenge for our besieging them sent him to attack Rome. If
neither their city nor a single inhabitant had survived, who could feel
any indignation at their fate or charge us with having adopted harsher
measures than they deserved? Those whom a consciousness of guilt drove
to suicide were more numerous than those who were punished by us, and though
we deprived the survivors of their city and territory we gave them land
and a place to dwell in. The city itself had not injured us, and we left
it standing uninjured, so much so that any one who sees it today would
find no trace of its having been stormed and captured.
But why do I speak of Capua when even to conquered Carthage we have
given peace and liberty? The danger is rather that by showing too much
leniency to the conquered we should incite them all the more to try the
fortune of war against us. So much in defence of our conduct. With respect
to the charges against Philip-the bloodshed in his own family, the murders
of his kinsmen and friends, his lust almost more inhuman than his cruelty-you
who live nearest to Macedonia know most about them. As regards you Aetolians,
it was on your behalf that we undertook war against him; you made peace
with him without any reference to us. Perhaps you will say that as we were
fully occupied with the Punic War, you were compelled to accept terms of
peace from the man whose power was at that time in the ascendant, to which
we should reply that it was only after you had laid aside hostilities that
we too abandoned them, as greater matters claimed our attention. Now, however,
that through the favour of the gods the Punic War is over, we have thrown
our whole strength on Macedonia and the opportunity offers itself for you
to regain our friendship and support, unless indeed you prefer to perish
with Philip rather than conquer with the Romans."
31.32
At the conclusion of this speech the unanimous feeling was in favour of
the Romans. Damocritus, the chief magistrate of the Aetolians, who was
currently reported to have been bribed by the king, refused to support
either side. "In a matter of such serious consequence," he said, "nothing
is so fatal to wise counsels as doing things in a hurry. This is followed
by quick repentance which, however, is too late, and quite unavailing;
decisions hastily and precipitately formed cannot be recalled, nor can
the mischief be undone." He thought that an interval ought to be allowed
for mature deliberation, and the time could be fixed there and then. As
they were forbidden by law to discuss questions of peace and war anywhere
but in the Pan-Aetolian Council, they ought at once to pass a decree exempting
the chief magistrate from all penalties, if he summoned a council when
he thought the time had come to submit the question of peace and war, and
the decrees of that council should have the same force and validity as
though they had been passed in a regular Pan-Aetolian Council. After the
matter was adjourned the envoys were dismissed, and Damocritus said that
the decision come to was in the highest degree favourable to the nation,
for whichever side had the better fortune in the war, that side they would
be able to join. Such were the proceedings in the Pan-Aetolian Council.
31.33
Philip was making vigorous preparations both by land and sea. He concentrated
his naval strength at Demetrias in Thessaly, as he expected that Attalus
and the Roman fleet would move from Aegina at the beginning of the spring.
Heraclides was continued in command of the fleet and coast-line. The gathering
of his land forces he conducted in person, encouraged by the belief that
he had deprived the Romans of two important auxiliaries, the Aetolians
on the one side and the Dardanians on the other, as the pass at Pelagonia
was closed by his son Perseus. By this time the consul was not preparing
for war but actually engaged in it. He led his army through the country
of the Dessaretii, and the corn which they had brought from their winter
quarters they were carrying with them untouched, as the fields through
which they marched supplied all that they wanted. Some of the towns and
villages on his route surrendered voluntarily, others through fear, some
were taken by storm, others were found to be abandoned, the inhabitants
having fled to the neighbouring mountains. He formed a standing camp at
Lyncus near the river Bevus, and from there he sent parties to collect
corn from the granaries of the Dessaretii.
Philip saw that there was consternation everywhere and that the population
were in a state of panic, but he did not know what part the consul was
making for, and accordingly he sent a cavalry detachment to reconnoitre
and find out in what direction the enemy were marching. The consul was
equally in the dark, he knew that the king had moved out of his winter
quarters, but was ignorant of his whereabouts, so he too sent out cavalry
to reconnoitre. After each party had wandered for a considerable time along
unknown roads amongst the Dassaretii, they at last took the same road.
When the noise of men and horses was heard in the distance, they both became
aware that an enemy was approaching. So before they came in sight of one
another they put their horses and weapons in readiness, and as soon as
they saw their enemy they charged. They were not unfairly matched in numbers
and courage, for each corps consisted of picked men, and for some hours
they kept up an even fight, until the exhaustion of men and horses put
a stop to the battle without either side gaining the victory. Forty of
the Macedonians fell and thirty-five of the Romans. Neither side gained
any information as to the whereabouts of their opponents' camp, which they
could carry back either to the consul or to the king. This information
was ultimately conveyed by deserters, a class of persons whom want of principle
renders useful in all wars for finding out things about the enemy.
31.34
With the view of doing more to win the affections of his men and make them
more ready to meet danger on his behalf, Philip paid special attention
to the burial of the men who had fallen in the cavalry action and ordered
the bodies to be brought into camp that all might see the honour paid to
the dead. But nothing is so uncertain or so difficult to gauge as the temper
of a mass of people. The very thing which was expected to make them keener
to face any conflict only inspired them with hesitancy and fear. Philip's
men had been accustomed to fighting with Greeks and Illyrians and had only
seen wounds inflicted by javelins and arrows and in rare instances by lances.
But when they saw bodies dismembered with the Spanish sword, arms cut off
from the shoulder, heads struck off from the trunk, bowels exposed and
other horrible wounds, they recognised the style of weapon and the kind
of man against whom they had to fight, and a shudder of horror ran through
the ranks. Even the king himself felt apprehensive, though he had not yet
met the Romans in a pitched battle, and in order to augment his forces
he recalled his son and the troops who were stationed in the Pelagonian
pass, thus leaving the road open to Pleuratus and the Dardanians for the
invasion of Macedonia. He now advanced against the enemy with an army of
20,000 infantry and 4000 cavalry, and came to a hill near Athacus where
he strongly intrenched himself about a mile from the Roman camp. It is
said that as he looked down on it and gazed with admiration on the appearance
of the camp as a whole and its various sections marked off by the rows
of tents and the roads crossing each other, he exclaimed, "No one can possibly
take that for a camp of barbarians." For two whole days the king and the
consul kept their respective armies in camp, each waiting for the other
to attack. On the third day the Roman general led out his whole force to
battle.
31.35
The king, however, was afraid of hazarding a general engagement so soon,
and contented himself with sending forward a detachment of 400 Trallians-an
Illyrian tribe, as we have explained above-and 300 Cretan infantry with
an equal number of cavalry under Athenagoras, one of the nobles of his
court, to challenge the enemies' cavalry. The Romans, whose main line was
about half a mile distant, sent forward their velites and about two squadrons
of cavalry, so that the number of their mounted and unmounted men was equal
to that of the enemy. The king's troops expected the style of fighting
to be that with which they were familiar; the cavalry would make alternate
charges and retirements, at one moment using their missiles, then galloping
to the rear; the swift-footed Illyrians would be employed in sudden onsets
and rushes; the Cretans would discharge their arrows on the enemy as he
dashed forward to attack. But this order of combat was completely upset
by the method of the Roman attack, which was as sustained as it was fierce.
They fought as steadily as though it had been a regular engagement; the
velites after discharging their javelins came to close quarters with their
swords; the cavalry, when once they had reached the enemy, halted their
horses and fought, some on horseback whilst others dismounted and took
their places amongst the infantry. Under these conditions Philip's cavalry,
unaccustomed to a stationary combat, were no match for the Roman horse,
and his infantry, trained to skirmish in loose order and unprotected by
armour, were at the mercy of the velites who with their swords and shields
were equally prepared for defence and attack. Incapable of sustaining the
conflict and trusting solely to their mobility they fled hack to their
camp.
31.36
After one day's interval the king decided to bring the whole of his cavalry
and light-armed troops into action. During the night he concealed a body
of caetrati, whom they call peltasts, in a position between the two camps
well adapted for an ambush, and instructed Athenagoras and his cavalry
in case the main battle went favourably to push their advantage, but if
not, to give ground slowly and draw the enemy to the place where the ambush
was set. The cavalry did retire, but the officers of the corps of caetrati
did not wait long enough for the signal, and by sending their men forward
before the right moment lost their chance of success. The Romans, victorious
in the open battle and safe from the danger of ambuscade, returned to camp.
The next day the consul went out to battle with his whole force. In front
of his line were posted some elephants which the Romans were using for
the first time, having captured some in the Punic war. When he saw that
the enemy were keeping quiet within their lines, he mounted some rising
ground close to their rampart and taunted them with their timidity. Even
then no chance of fighting was offered him, and as foraging was by no means
safe while the camps were in such close proximity since Philip's cavalry
would attack his men when they were dispersed amongst the fields, he shifted
his camp to a place called Ottolobum, about eight miles off, to allow of
his foraging more safely owing to the greater distance. As long as the
Romans were cutting corn in the neighbourhood of their camp the king kept
his men within their lines in order that the enemy might grow more venturesome
and careless. When he saw them scattered far afield he set off with the
whole of his cavalry and the Cretan auxiliaries at such a rapid pace that
only the fleetest of the infantrymen could keep up with the troopers. On
reaching a position between the foragers and their camp he divided his
force. One division was sent in pursuit of the scattered foragers, with
orders not to leave a single man alive; with the other he beset the various
roads by which the enemy would have to return to their camp. Now men were
fleeing and being cut down in all directions, and no one had yet reached
the Roman camp with tidings of the disaster because those who fled thither
fell into the hands of the king's troops who were waiting for them; more
were killed by those who were blocking the roads than by those who had
been sent in pursuit. At last some who had managed to elude the enemy brought,
in their excitement, more confusion into the camp than definite information.
31.37
The consul ordered his cavalry to go wherever they could to the rescue
of their comrades and at the same time led the legions out of the camp
and marched in close order against the enemy. Some of the cavalry lost
their way in the fields owing to the various cries that were raised in
different places, others came face to face with the enemy and fighting
began at many points simultaneously. It was hottest where the king's stationary
troops were posted, for owing to their numbers, both horse and foot, they
almost formed a regular army, and as they held the road most of the Romans
encountered them. The Macedonians, too, had the advantage of the king's
presence to encourage them, whilst the Cretan auxiliaries, in close order
and prepared for fighting, made sudden onsets and wounded many of their
opponents, who were dispersed without any order or formation. If they had
kept their pursuit within bounds they would not only have come off with
flying colours in the actual contest, but they would have gone far to influence
the course of the war. As it was, they were carried away by thirst for
blood and fell in with the advancing Roman cohorts and their military tribunes;
the cavalry, too, as soon as they saw the standards of their comrades,
turned their horses against the foe who was now in disorder, and in a moment
the fortune of the day was reversed, those who had been the pursuers now
turned and fled. Many were killed in hand-to-hand fighting, many whilst
fleeing; they did not all perish by the sword, some were driven into bogs
and were sucked down together with their horses in the bottomless mud.
Even the king was in danger, for he was flung to earth by his wounded and
maddened horse and all but overpowered as he lay. He owed his safety to
a trooper who instantly leaped down and put the king on his own horse,
but as he could not keep up on foot with the cavalry in their flight he
was speared by the enemy, who had ridden up to where the king fell. Philip
galloped round the swamp and made his way in headlong flight through paths
and pathless places until he reached his camp in safety, where most of
the men had given him up for lost. Two hundred Macedonians perished in
that battle, about a hundred prisoners were taken and eighty well-equipped
horses were secured together with the spoils of their fallen riders.
31.38
There have been some who blamed the king's rashness and the consul's want
of energy on that day. They said that Philip ought to have remained quiet,
for he knew that the enemy would in a few days have cleared all the country
round of corn and would have come to the extremity of want. The consul,
on the other hand, after routing the enemy's cavalry and light infantry
and almost capturing the king himself, ought to have marched at once to
the enemy's camp; the enemy were too much demoralised to make any stand
and the war could have been finished in a moment. As in most cases, this
was easier to say than to do. Had the king engaged with the whole of his
infantry it is possible that he might have lost his camp after they had
been completely defeated and fled from the field to their camp, and then
continued their flight as the enemy broke through their intrenchments.
But as the infantry force in camp remained intact and the outposts and
guards were all at their stations, what would the consul have gained beyond
imitating the rashness of the king in his wild pursuit of the routed horses?
Nor could any fault be found with the king in his plan of attacking the
foragers whilst dispersed through the fields, had he been contented with
that success. That he should have tempted fortune as he did is the less
surprising since a report was current that Pleuratus and the Dardanians
had already invaded Macedonia with an immense force. With this force assailing
him in the rear he might well believe that the Romans would finish the
war without striking a blow. After the two unsuccessful cavalry actions
Philip thought that he would be running considerable risk in remaining
any longer in his standing camp. As he wanted to conceal his departure
from the enemy he sent a flag of truce just after sunset to ask for an
armistice for the purpose of burying the dead. Having thus deceived the
enemy he marched out at the second watch in perfect silence, leaving numerous
fires alight all through the camp.
31.39
The consul was resting when the news was brought to him of the arrival
of the herald and the reason of his coming. All his reply was that an interview
would be granted on the following morning. This was just what Philip wanted,
as it gave him the night and a part of the following day in which to get
the start of his opponent. He took the road over the mountains, which he
knew that the Roman general would not attempt with his heavy column. At
daybreak the consul granted the armistice and dismissed the herald and
not long afterwards became aware that the enemy had disappeared. Not knowing
in what direction to follow him he spent some days in camp, collecting
corn. Then he marched to Stuberra and gathered out of Pelagonia the corn
which was in the fields. From there he advanced to Pluinna without, so
far, discovering the route which the enemy had taken. Philip at first fixed
his camp at Bryanium and then advancing by cross-roads created a sudden
alarm amongst the enemy. The Romans in consequence left Pluinna and encamped
by the river Osphagus. The king pitched his camp not far away by a river
which the natives call Erigonus, and carried his intrenchment along the
bank. Then, having definitely ascertained that the Romans intended to march
to Eordaea, he determined to anticipate them and occupied a narrow pass
with the object of making it impossible for the enemy to pass through it.
He barricaded it in various ways, in some parts with rampart, in others
with fosse, in other places with piled-up stones to serve as a wall, and
elsewhere with tree-trunks as the nature of the ground or the materials
allowed, until, as he believed, he had made a road which was naturally
difficult, absolutely impassable by the obstacles which he had placed across
every exit. The country was mostly forest, difficult for troops to work
in, especially for the Macedonian phalanx, for unless they can make a kind
of chevaux de frise with the extraordinarily long spears which they hold
in front of their shields-and this requires a free and open space-they
are of no use whatever. The Thracians with their pikes, which were also
of an enormous length, were hampered and obstructed by the branches on
all sides. The Cretan cohort was the only one that was of any service,
and this only to a very limited extent, for though when attacked by an
unprotected horse and rider they could discharge their arrows with effect,
there was not sufficient force in their missiles to penetrate the Roman
shields nor was there any exposed part of the body at which they could
take aim. Finding therefore that mode of attack useless, they pelted the
enemy with the stones which were lying all over the ravine. This caused
more noise than injury, but the drumming on their shields checked the advance
of the Romans for a few minutes. They soon ceased to pay any attention
to them, and some of them forming a shield-roof over their heads forced
their way through the enemy in front, while others by making a short circuit
gained the crest of the hill and drove the Macedonians from their posts
of observation. Escape was almost impossible on such difficult ground,
and the greater number were slain.
31.40
Thus the pass was surmounted with less trouble than they had anticipated,
and they entered the district of Eordaea. After ravaging the fields in
all directions, the consul moved into Elimia. Here he made an attack on
Orestis and approached the town of Celetrum. This was situated on a peninsula,
the walls were surrounded by a lake and there was only one road to the
adjacent country over a narrow neck of land. At first the townsmen, relying
upon their position, closed their gates and rejected the summons to surrender.
When, however, they saw the standards advancing and the legions marching
under their shield-roof up to the gate and the narrow neck of land covered
by the hostile column, their hearts failed them and they surrendered without
risking a battle. From Celetrum he advanced into Dassaretia and took the
city of Pelion by assault. The slaves and the rest of the booty he carried
off, but the free citizens he set at liberty without ransom, and he restored
their town to them after placing a strong garrison in it. It was well adapted
from its position to serve as a base for his operations against Macedonia.
After thus scouring the enemy's country, the consul returned to friendly
territories and led his force back to Apollonia, which had been his starting-point
for the campaign. Philip had been called away by the Aetolians, the Athamanians,
the Dardanians and the numerous wars which had broken out in various quarters.
The Dardanians were already retiring from Macedonia when he sent Athenagoras
with the light infantry and the greater part of the cavalry to attack them
from the rear as they retreated, and by harassing their rear make them
less eager to send their armies away from home. As to the Aetolians, Damocritus
their supreme magistrate, who had advised them at Naupactus to delay resolving
upon war, had at their next meeting urged them strongly to take up arms
after all that had happened-the cavalry action at Ottolabrum, the invasion
of Macedonia by the Dardanians and Pleuratus in conjunction with the Illyrians,
and especially the arrival of the Roman fleet at Oreum and the certainty
of Macedonia, beset by all those States, being blockaded at sea.
31.41
These considerations brought Damocritus and the Aetolians back to the side
of the Romans, and in conjunction with Amynander king of the Athamanians
they proceeded to invest Cercinium. The townsmen had closed their gates,
whether spontaneously or under compulsion is not clear, as Philip's troops
were holding the place. However, in a few days Cercinium was taken and
burnt, and those who survived the wholesale slaughter, slaves and citizens
alike, were carried off with the rest of the booty. Dread of a similar
fate drove the inhabitants of all the cities round Lake Boebeis to abandon
their homes and take to the mountains. There being no further chance of
plunder, the Aetolians left that part of the country and proceeded to go
into Perrhaebia. Here they took Cyretiae by storm and ruthlessly sacked
it. The population of Maloea surrendered voluntarily and were admitted
into the Aetolian League. Leaving Perrhaebia, Amynander advised them to
attack Gomphi, as it was close to Athamania and there was every probability
of its being carried without much fighting. The Aetolians, however, wanted
plunder and made for the fertile plains of Thessaly. Amynander accompanied
them, though he did not approve of the disorderly way in which they carried
on their depredations nor of their careless method of pitching their camp
on any chance ground without taking the trouble to select a good position
or throw up proper intrenchments. He was afraid that their recklessness
and carelessness might bring disaster to him and his men, and when he saw
them fixing their camp on flat open ground below the hill on which the
city of Phaeca stood, he took possession of some rising ground little more
than a mile away which needed very slight fortifying to make it safe. Except
that they continued their depredations the Aetolians seemed to have almost
forgotten that they were in an enemy's country; some were roaming about
unarmed, others were turning day into night with wine and sleep, leaving
the camp altogether unguarded.
Suddenly, when no one expected him, Philip came on the scene. Some who
rushed back from the fields announced his appearance, and Damocritus and
the other generals were in dire consternation. It happened to be midday,
when most of the soldiers were asleep after their heavy meal. Their officers
roused them, ordered some to arm themselves and sent off others to recall
the plundering parties dispersed over the fields. So great was the hurry
and confusion that some of the cavalry went off without their swords and
most of them had not put on their body-armour. Sent out thus hurriedly,
barely amounting to 600 horse and foot they met the king's cavalry, who
were superior to them in numbers, equipment and moral. They were naturally
routed at the first shock, and after showing hardly any fight, broke into
a cowardly flight and made for their camp. Many whom the cavalry cut off
from the main body of the fugitives were either killed or captured.
31.42
.His men were already coming up to the enemy's rampart when Philip ordered
the retreat to be sounded, for horses and men alike were tired, not so
much by fighting as by the length and extraordinary celerity of their march.
Orders were given to the cavalry to get water and take their dinner a troop
at a time, and the light infantry to do the same, a maniple at a time;
the others he kept in position under arms waiting for the main body of
infantry, who owing to the weight of their armour had marched more slowly.
When these arrived they were ordered to plant their standards and put their
arms down in front of them and then take a hasty meal, while two or three
at the most were sent from each company to fetch water. The cavalry and
light infantry were in the meantime standing ready for instant action in
case of any movement on the part of the enemy. By this time the crowds
of Aetolians who had been dispersed in the fields had regained their camp,
and troops were posted about the gates and rampart as though they were
prepared to defend their lines. As long as they saw that the enemy were
quiet and they felt safe, they were quite courageous, but as soon as the
Macedonians got into motion and began to advance towards their camp fully
prepared for battle, they all promptly deserted their posts and made their
escape through the gate in the rear of the camp to the eminence on which
the Athamanian camp stood. Philip felt quite certain that he could have
deprived the Athamanians also of their camp, had sufficient light remained,
but the day had been consumed, first in the battle and then in plundering
the Aetolian camp. So he took up his position on the level ground near
the hill, prepared to attack at dawn. But the Aetolians, who had not recovered
from the panic in which they had abandoned their camp, fled in various
directions during the night. Amynander proved of the greatest assistance
to them; under his leading the Athamanians who were familiar with the paths
over the mountain summits conducted them into Aetolia by ways unknown to
the enemy who was following in pursuit. A few who had lost their way in
the scattered flight fell into the hands of the cavalry whom Philip on
finding that the camp was abandoned had sent to harass their retreat.
31.43
Athenagoras, Philip's lieutenant, in the meanwhile caught up the Dardanians
as they were retiring within their frontiers and created considerable confusion
in the rear of their column. They faced about and formed in line of battle,
and a regular engagement ensued in which neither side gained the advantage.
When the Dardanians began again to go forward the king's cavalry continued
to harass them, as they had no troops of the same kind to protect them,
and their equipment rendered them immobile. The ground, too, was in favour
of the assailants. Very few were actually killed, but there were many wounded;
no prisoners were taken because they were cautious about leaving their
ranks and kept up the retreating fight in close order. Thus Philip through
his bold initiative as much as by its successful results kept the two nations
in check by his well-timed movements and so made good the losses he had
sustained in the war with Rome. An incident which occurred subsequently
gave him a further advantage by diminishing the number of his Aetolian
enemies. Scopas, one of their principal men, who had been sent by King
Ptolemy from Alexandria with a considerable amount of gold, conveyed to
Egypt a mercenary army consisting of 6000 infantry and 500 cavalry. He
would not have left a single man of military age in Aetolia if Damocritus
had not kept some of them at home by sternly reminding them of the war
which was imminent and the defenceless condition of a country deprived
of its manhood. It is uncertain whether his action was dictated by patriotism
or by personal enmity to Scopas who had not bribed him. Such were the various
undertakings in which the Romans and Philip were engaged during this summer.
31.44
It was in the early part of this summer that the fleet under L. Apustius
left Corcyra and after rounding the Cape of Malea was joined by Attalus
off Scyllaeum, a place situated in the district of Hermione. On this the
Athenians, who had for a long time been afraid to show their hostility
to Philip too openly, now at the prospect of immediate assistance gave
full vent to their rage against him. There is never any lack of tongues
there to stir up the populace. People of this sort thrive on the applause
of the mob, and are found in all free States, particularly in Athens where
oratory had so much influence. A proposal was introduced and at once adopted
by the people that all the statues and busts of Philip and of all his ancestors,
male and female alike, with the inscriptions on them should be removed
and destroyed; the festivals, sacrifices and priests which had been instituted
in honour of him or of his predecessors should be abolished; even the localities
in which anything had been set up, or where there was any inscription to
perpetuate his name, were to be placed under a curse, and nothing which
it was right to erect or consecrate on undesecrated ground could be erected
or consecrated in these places. On every occasion on which the official
priests offered up prayers for the people of Athens and the armies and
fleets of their allies, they were always to invoke solemn curses on Philip,
his children and his realm, al1 his forces, military and naval, and on
the whole nation of the Macedonians. It was further decreed that if any
one should in future introduce any measure calculated to brand Philip with
ignominy the Athenians should at once adopt it, and if any one by word
or deed tried to vindicate him or do him honour the man who slew him would
be justified in doing so. Finally it was enacted that all the decrees which
had been formerly made against Pisistratus should be in force against Philip.
As far as words went the Athenians made war on Philip, but it was only
in these that their strength lay.
31.45
When Attalus and the Romans arrived at the Piraeus they stayed there a
few days and then left for Andros with a heavy cargo of decrees quite as
extravagant in their praises of their friends as in their expressions of
wrath against their enemy. They brought up in the harbour of Gaurelum,
and a party was sent ashore to test the feelings of the citizens and find
out whether they preferred to surrender voluntarily or to await an assault.
They replied that they were not their own masters, as the place was held
by Philip's troops. Thereupon the forces were landed and all the usual
preparations for an assault were made, Attalus approached the city on one
side and the Roman commander on the other. The novel sight of the Roman
arms and standards and the spirit with which the soldiers without the slightest
hesitation mounted the walls utterly appalled the Greeks, who promptly
fled to the citadel, leaving the enemy in possession of the city. There
they held out for two days, trusting more to the strength of the place
than to their own arms; on the third they, together with the garrison,
surrendered the town and citadel on condition of being allowed to retire
with one garment apiece to Delium in Boeotia. The city itself was made
over by the Romans to Attalus; they themselves carried off the plunder
and all that adorned the city. Anxious not to have the island a solitude,
Attalus persuaded nearly all the Macedonians, as well as some of the Andrians,
to remain there. Subsequently those who had, in accordance with the terms
of surrender, migrated to Delium were induced by the king's promises to
return, for the love of country made them more ready to trust his word.
From Andros the fleets sailed to Cythnos. Here they spent some days
in a fruitless attack on the city, and as it seemed hardly worth while
to continue their efforts, they sailed away. At Prasiae, a place on the
mainland of Attica, the Issaeans joined the Roman fleet with twenty fast
sailing-vessels. They were sent off to ravage the Carystian country; pending
their return the rest of the fleet lay at Geraestus, a well-known port
in Euboea. Then they all set sail for the open sea, and leaving Scyros
on their right, reached Icus. Here a violent gale from the north detained
them for a few days, and as soon as the weather moderated they sailed across
to Sciathos, a city which had been devastated and plundered by Philip.
The soldiers dispersed through the fields and brought back to the ships
a supply of corn and whatever other food they could find. There was no
plunder, nor had the Greeks done anything to deserve being plundered. From
there they directed their course to Cassandrea, and touched at Mendae,
a village on the coast. Rounding the cape they were purposing to bring
their ships right up to the walls when they were caught and scattered by
a violent storm in which the vessels almost foundered. It was with difficulty
that they gained the land after losing most of their tackle. This storm
was also a presage of their land operations, for after they had collected
their vessels and landed their troops they were repulsed in their attack
on the city with heavy loss, owing to the strength of the garrison which
held the place for Philip. After this failure they withdrew to Canaestrum
in Pallene, and from there sailing round the promontory of Torone they
headed for Acanthus. After ravaging the territory they took the city by
assault and sacked it. As their ships were by this time heavily laden with
booty they did not go any further, and retracing their course they reached
Sciathus, and from Sciathus they sailed to Euboea.
31.46
.Leaving the rest of the fleet there they entered the Maliac Gulf with
ten swift vessels to discuss the conduct of the war with the Aetolians.
Pyrrhias the Aetolian was the head of the deputation which came to Heraclea
to share their views with Attalus and the Roman commander. Attalus was
requested to furnish a thousand soldiers, as under the terms of the treaty
he was bound to supply that number if they made war on Philip. The demand
was refused on the ground that the Aetolians had declined to march out
and ravage the Macedonian country at the time that Philip was burning everything
round Pergamum, sacred and profane, and so draw him off to look after his
own interests. So the Aetolians were dismissed with expectations rather
than with actual assistance, as the Romans confined themselves to promises.
Apustius returned with Attalus to the fleet. Plans were now discussed for
attacking Oreus. This was a strongly fortified city and, after the former
attempt upon it, had been held by a strong garrison. After the capture
of Andros twenty Rhodian vessels commanded by Agesimbrotus, all decked
ships, joined the Roman fleet. This squadron was sent to take its station
off Zelasium, a promontory in Phthinia beyond Demetrias, where it would
be admirably placed for meeting any movement on the part of the Macedonian
ships. Heraclides, the king's admiral, was anchored at Demetrias, waiting
for any chance which the enemy's negligence might offer him rather than
venturing on open battle.
The Romans and Attalus attacked Oreus on different sides; the former
directed their assault against the citadel which faced the sea, whilst
Attalus directed his towards the hollow between the two citadels where
a wall separates one portion of the city from the other. And as they attacked
at different points, so they employed different methods. The Romans brought
their vineae and battering rams close up to the wall, protecting themselves
with their shield-roof; the king's troops poured in a hail of missiles
from their ballistae and catapults of every description. They hurled huge
pieces of rock, and constructed mines and made use of every expedient which
they had found useful in the former siege. The Macedonians, however, who
were defending city and citadel were not only in greater force but they
not forgotten Philip's censures for their former misconduct nor his threatenings
and promises in the respect of the future, and so they exhibited more courage
and resolution. The Roman general found that more time was being spent
there than he expected and that there was a better prospect of success
in a regular investment than in a sudden assault. Other operations might
be conducted during the siege, so, leaving a sufficient force to complete
the investment, he sailed to the nearest point on the mainland, and suddenly
appearing before Larissa-not the well-known city in Thessaly, but another,
called Cremaste-he captured all the city but the citadel. Attalus, too,
surprised Aegeleon, where the inhabitants were not in the least apprehending
an attack from an enemy who was engaged in the siege of another city. By
this time the siege-works round Oreus had begun to tell upon the place
and the garrison were weakened by their losses and exhausted by the incessant
labour of watches and guards by night and day alike. A part of the wall
had been loosened by the blows of the battering-rams and had fallen down
in several places. The Romans broke through the breach during the night
and forced their way into the citadel commanding the harbour. On receiving
a signal from the Romans in the citadel Attalus entered the city at daybreak
where a large portion of the wall lay in ruins. The garrison and townsmen
fled to the other citadel and in two days' time surrendered. The city fell
to Attalus, the prisoners to the Romans.
31.47
The autumnal equinox was now at hand, and the straits of Euboea, which
are called Coela, are considered dangerous to navigation. As they were
anxious to get away before the winter storms began, the fleets sailed back
to the Piraeus, their starting-point for the war. Leaving thirty ships
there Apustius sailed with the remainder past Malea to Corcyra. Atticus
was detained by the celebration of the Eleusinian Mysteries at which he
wished to be present, and when they were over he withdrew into Asia after
sending Agesimbrotus and the Rhodians home. Such were the operations against
Philip and his allies conducted by the Roman consul and his lieutenant
with the assistance of King Attalus and the Rhodians. When the other consul,
C. Aurelius, came into his province he found the war brought to a close,
and he did not conceal his chagrin at the praetor's activity in his absence.
He sent him into Etruria and then took his legions into the enemy's country
to plunder it: an expedition from which he returned with more booty than
glory. L. Furius, finding no scope for his activity in Etruria, and bent
upon obtaining a triumph for his victories in Gaul, which he thought he
might more easily do while the angry and jealous consul was out of the
way, suddenly returned to Rome and convened a meeting of the senate in
the temple of Bellona. After giving a report of what he had done, he asked
to be allowed to enter the City in triumph.
31.48
A considerable number of the senators supported him in view of the great
services he had rendered, and also on personal grounds. The older members
were for refusing him a triumph, partly because the army which he had employed
had been assigned to another commander, and partly because in his eagerness
to snatch the chance of a triumph he had quitted his province, an act contrary
to all precedent. The consulars, in particular, insisted that he ought
to have waited for the consul, for he could then have fixed his camp near
the city and so have afforded sufficient protection to the colony to hold
the enemy in hand without fighting until the consul came. What he failed
to do, the senate ought to do, namely, wait for the consul; after hearing
what the consul and the praetor had to say, they would form a truer judgment
about the case. Many of those present urged that the senate ought not to
consider anything beyond the praetor's success and the question whether
he had achieved it as a magistrate with full powers and under his own auspices.
"Two colonies," it was argued, "had been planted as barriers to check risings
amongst the Gauls. One had been plundered and burnt, and the conflagration
was threatening the other colony which was so near it, like a fire running
from house to house. What was the praetor to do? If no action ought to
have been taken in the consul's absence, either the senate was at fault
in furnishing the praetor with an army-for as it had decided that the campaign
should be fought by the consul's army and not by the praetor's which was
far away, so it could have passed a special resolution to the effect that
it should be fought under the consul and not under the praetor-or else
the consul was in the wrong in not joining his army at Ariminum, after
he had ordered it to move from Etruria into Gaul, so that he might take
his part in the war, which you say ought not to have been undertaken without
him. The critical moments in war do not wait upon the procrastination and
delays of commanders, and you sometimes have to fight, not because you
wish to do so, but because the enemy compels you. We ought to keep in view
the battle itself and its consequences. The enemy were routed and cut to
pieces; their camp taken and plundered; one colony relieved from siege;
those of the other colony who had been made prisoners recovered and restored
to their homes and friends; the war was finished in a single battle. Not
to men only was that victory a cause of rejoicing; thanksgivings for three
days ought to be offered to the immortal gods because L. Furius had upheld
the cause of the republic well and happily, not because he had acted ill
and rashly. War with the Gauls was the destined prerogative of the house
of the Furii."
31.49
Through speeches of this kind delivered by him and his friends, the personal
influence of the praetor, who was on the spot, outweighed the dignity and
authority of the absent consul, and by an overwhelming majority a triumph
was decreed to L. Furius. So L. Furius as praetor celebrated a triumph
over the Gauls during his magistracy. He brought into the treasury 320,000
ases and 100,500 pounds of silver. No prisoners were led in procession
before his chariot, nor were any spoils exhibited, nor was he followed
by his soldiers. It was obvious that everything except the actual victory
was at the disposal of the consul. The Games which Scipio had vowed when
he was proconsul in Africa were celebrated with great splendour. A decree
was made for the allotment of land to his soldiers; each man was to receive
two jugera for every year he had served in Spain or in Africa, and the
decemviri managed the allotment. Commissioners were also appointed to fill
up the number of colonists at Venusia, as the strength of that colony had
been diminished in the war with Hannibal. C. Terentius Varro, T. Quinctius
Flamininus and P. Cornelius, the son of Cnaeus Scipio, were the commissioners
who undertook the task. During this year C. Cornelius Cethegus who was
holding Spain as propraetor routed a large army of the enemy in the Sedetan
district. 15,000 Spaniards are said to have been killed in that battle
and seventy-eight standards taken. On his return to Rome to conduct the
elections, C. Aurelius did not, as was anticipated, make it a ground of
complaint that the senate had not awaited his return or given him the opportunity
of discussing the matter with the praetor. What he did complain of was
the way in which the senate had passed the decree granting the triumph
without hearing any of those who had taken part in the war or indeed any
one at all except the man who was to enjoy the triumph. "Our ancestors,"
he said, "laid it down that the lieutenants-general, the military tribunes,
the centurions and the soldiers should be present in order that the people
of Rome might have visible proof of the victory won by the man for whom
such an honour was decreed. Was there a single soldier out of the army
which fought with the Gauls, or even a single camp-follower from whom the
senate might have enquired as to the truth or falsehood of the praetor's
report?" After making this protest he fixed the day for the elections.
The new consuls were L. Cornelius Lentulus and P. Villius Tappulus. Then
followed the election of praetors. Those returned were L. Quinctius Flamininus,
L. Valerius Flaccus, L. Villius Tappulus and Cn. Baebius Tamphilus.
Provisions were remarkably cheap that year. A great quantity of corn
had been brought from Africa and the curule aediles, M. Claudius Marcellus
and Sex. Aelius Paetus, distributed it to the people at two ases the modius.
They also celebrated the Roman Games on a splendid scale and repeated them
a second day. Five bronze statues from the proceeds of fines were placed
by them in the treasury. The Plebeian Games were celebrated three times
by the aediles, L. Terentius Massiliota and Cn. Baebius Tamphilus, the
latter being praetor-designate. Funeral Games were also exhibited in the
Forum for four days on the occasion of the death of M. Valerius Laevinus
by his sons, Publius and Marcus; they also gave a gladiatorial spectacle
in which five-and-twenty pairs fought together. One of the Keepers of the
Sacred Books, M. Aurelius Cotta, died and Manlius Acilius Glabrio was appointed
to succeed him. It so happened that the curule aediles who were elected
were both unable to take up their duties at once; Gaius Cornelius Cethegus
was elected while absent in Spain where he held command; C. Valerius Flaccus
was in Rome when he was elected, but as he was a Flamen of Jupiter he could
not take the oaths, and it was not permitted to hold any magistracy for
more than five days without doing so. Flaccus asked that this condition
might be waived in his case and the senate decreed that if an aedile should
provide some one, with the approval of the consuls, to take the oaths for
him, the consuls might if they thought good arrange with the tribunes for
the matter to be referred to the plebs. L. Valerius Flaccus, praetor-designate,
was brought forward to take the oaths for his brother. The tribunes brought
the matter before the plebs, and the plebs decided that it should be just
as though the aedile himself had taken them. In the case of the other aedile,
the tribunes requested the plebs to appoint two men to command the armies
in Spain, and the plebs resolved that the curule aedile C. Cornelius should
come home to take up his duties and that L. Manlius Acidinus should retire
from his province after having held it for many years. They then made an
order that Cn. Cornelius Lentulus and T, Stertinius should have the full
powers of proconsuls in Spain.
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