Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
An Overview of the Roman Empire and its People (Incomplete)
#1
This work is incomplete and has been reformatted from the original version by this site. The essay was originally meant to cover all of Roman history and overviews of their military and culture. I only got to part of Roman history because i underestimated how long this essay would take. I just turned the essay in for my class, now its here for you. Feel free to comment.

by Jared Boles

Preface
For over two millennia the people of ancient Rome have brought about a sense of respect from all who study them. They were a people who came from nothing, and quickly grew to have everything. Through cunning works of politics and their more common method of warfare, and Romans quickly created an empire of massive size and population. Through the great influence they held, the Romans impacted cultures across their empire, creating the world as we know it today.
This essay will seek to inform the reader about various aspects of the Roman Empire, and to convey their importance to us all. First we will examine the history of Rome, and then move to its culture, an overview of its military, and finally end with how The Empire has impacted our world. Because much of the information we know about the Romans comes from written accounts from the time, it must be treated with scrutiny. Much of our ancient sources of knowledge are fused with mythology and are often written to portray the truth in a way either the culture or the writer preferred it. Because of this, the reader is advised not to take the information here as absolute truth. This essay only seeks to inform the reader with the truth as it is known today.




An Overview of the Roman Empire and its People

History
The history of Rome as a nation spans a great deal of time, from its traditional founding date of 753 BC until its official fall in 476 AD (“The History of Ancient Rome”). Throughout this time millions of Romans lived and died, millions were born into wealth and poverty, and millions died in a multitude of ways. This transition from one generation to another was no different from that of any other culture, but somehow the Romans grew beyond all others.
But one may ask, “Why should I care about the Romans? They’ve been gone for over a thousand years.” The answer to this is simple. Roman history is important and must be learned because it is our history, and because they made mankind what it is today. Whether by blood, culture, or association with the rest of the world, we are all descendants of the Roman people. This is because Roman influence was so extensive that every land they inhabited kept something of their culture even after Rome’s fall in 476 AD. The influence of the Romans has lasted to the modern day, and has shaped the lives of everyone in between. Not only were the Romans very important to our modern world, their story is also very interesting and entertaining to learn. In his book “Caesar and Christ”, Will Durant describes the entertaining nature of Roman history well by stating that, “The rise of Rome from a crossroads town to a world mastery, its achievement of two centuries of security and peace from the Crimea to Gibraltar and from the Euphrates to Hadrian’s Wall, its spread of classic civilization over the Mediterranean and western European world, its struggle to preserve its ordered realm from a surrounding sea of barbarism, its long, slow crumbling and final catastrophic collapse into darkness and chaos-this is surely the greatest drama ever played by man;” ( preface vii).
The history of early Rome is greatly shrouded in mystery. The Romans themselves provide us with several versions of their founding, but all are heavily laden with mythology. Because of this, what is fact and what is myth within the stories is debated. One version says that the city of Alba Longa had been founded by Iulius, son of a Trojan man named Aeneas who had escaped the destruction of Troy (“The History of Ancient Rome”). One of Aeneas’s descendants was King Numitor, who’s younger brother Amulius usurped his throne. Amulius had Numitor’s sons killed and his daughter Rhea Silvia forced to join the Vestal Virgins, who are chaste priestesses of the goddess Vesta. By doing this, Amulius was attempting to secure his new throne from any possible blood relatives. However, this attempt was not successful. According to the Romans, Mars (the god of war) became lustful for Rhea Silvia and had his way with her. This resulted in the birth of the twins Romulus and Remus (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
When Amulius learned of the birth of Romulus and Remus, he had Rhea Silvia thrown into the river Tiber, where she is said to have married the river god. The twins however were sent down river in a basket that eventually became snagged in a fig tree. It was here that the twins are said to have been found by either a female wolf or a shepherd whose wife was a former prostitute that nursed them. The confusion over whether it was a wolf or woman that raised the twins arises from the fact that the Latin word lupa means both ‘she-wolf’ and ‘prostitute’ (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
When Romulus and Remus grew older, they raised an army and marched on Alba Longa. In the resulting battle Amulius was killed and Numitor restored to the throne. After aiding their grandfather regain his throne, Romulus and Remus decided to found a city of their own near the area they washed ashore as infants. This process however did not go so smoothly, as the twins quarreled over which of the area’s hills would be home to their new city. Romulus favored the Palatine hill, while Remus favored another. Eventually it was settled that they would build their city on the Palatine as Romulus had wished, but when Romulus began marking the boundary of the city, Remus crossed this boundary. The crossing of this sacred boundary suggested that the defenses of the city could be breached, and Remus was killed for making such an insulting gesture. It is unknown whether Remus was slain by the hand of Romulus or one of his followers. With Remus out of the way, this new city on the Palatine took the name Roma from the name of Romulus. This is the city we know today as Rome (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Beginning with Romulus a line of seven kings ruled Rome for roughly 244 years, from 753 BC to 509 BC (“The History of Ancient Rome”). King Romulus is credited with the creation of the Roman Senate, army, and the patrician class which constituted the senate (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”). One matter of importance to Romulus was expanding his city, which he seems to have done very well. The method he used was to allow criminals and runaway slaves to settle in Rome, which led to an issue of having too few women. To solve this problem, Romulus is said to have used trickery. What he did was invite many neighboring tribes to attend a festival for Consus, the god of the granary and storehouses. At the party, Romulus and many Roman men took the unmarried women of the Sabine tribe forcefully as their wives. Romulus himself gained his wife Hersilia in this way. King Titus Tatius was understandably angered by this and declared war against Rome. However, it seems the war did not go well for the Romans, because it took the intervention of their new Sabine wives to stop Rome from falling. After this episode, the Romans and Sabines from the city of Cures decided to become one people under the joint rule of Romulus and Titus Tatius.
In 715 BC, at the age of 54, legend says that Romulus was offering a sacrifice to the gods when a thunderstorm began. All but the senators and Romulus ran for cover. When the people returned to the scene, Romulus was missing and the senators claimed he had been taken away by his father Mars. It seems that not even in this time was such a story believed. Romulus was not a very popular leader by this time, and it was suspected that the senators had stabbed him to death (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”). Despite being relatively unpopular, Romulus was later worshiped as the god Quirinus, which was the Sabine equivalent of Mars (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”).
The second Roman king was a Sabine named Numa Pompilius, who ruled from 715 to 673 BC (“The History of Ancient Rome”). Pompilius was chosen for a job that he doesn’t seem to have even wanted. He was never a warlike king as Romulus had been, but more concerned with religious and cultural matters. Pompilius is credited with founding the temple of Janus, moving the order of Vestal Virgins from its home in Alba Longa to Rome, and brought the number of days in a year to 360 by adding the months of January and February to the calendar. For 43 years Numa Pompilius ruled Rome in peace and was beloved by his people (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
The third Roman king, Tullus Hostilius, ruled from 672 BC until 641 BC and was the complete opposite of the late King Pompilius (“The History of Ancient Rome”). Hostilius was a warrior king, who sought to end disputes by the sword. When a dispute led to war between Rome and their brethren in the city of Alba Longa, it was decided that three brothers from each side would fight each other instead of armies. This would help prevent the death of blood relatives from each side. The brothers Horatius of Rome defeated the brothers Curiatus of Alba Longa and thus made Rome the victor. Despite this, King Mettius Fufetius of Alba Longa refused to accept Roman supremacy. Fufetius provoked the neighboring Fidenates into war with the alliance of Alba Longa and Rome. When it came time for battle however, Alba Longa did not join in the fight and left Rome to defend itself. Fufetius must have been surprised when he learned that Rome had won the battle without his help. In rage, King Hostilius had Alba Longa destroyed and King Fufetius torn apart by two chariots. Despite this brutality, the people of Alba Longa were given a home on the Caelian Hill in Rome. This sudden increase in Rome’s population led Hostilius to create a larger senate house at the bottom of the Capitoline Hill, the Curia Hostilia. King Hostilius’s reign was filled with many military successes against the neighboring Sabine tribes, until a plague brought him to take part in more religious duties like his predecessor. Yet this seems to have been unsuccessful in pleasing the gods, because King Hostilius was killed by a lighting strike (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
The fourth king of Rome was Ancus Marcius, who ruled from 640 BC until 616 BC, and was the grandson of Numa Pompilius (“The History of Ancient Rome”). The senate chose Marcius as king out of a hope that, like his grandfather, he would bring peace to Rome. The idea that Marcius would have a weakness in war led the prisci latini or ‘Old Latins’ to attack the Romans. It was a surprise to everyone that King Marcius proved to have a talent in warfare. The prisci latini were defeated and their city destroyed, leading Marcius to allow them to settle the Aventine Hill. Ancus Marcius died a successful and popular king (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
The fifth king of Rome was Lucius Tarquinius Priscus, a native Etruscan who ruled from 616 BC until 579 BC (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”). There is a legend that tells how when entering the city of Rome, an eagle swooped down and took Tarquin’s hat but returned to place it back on his head right away. This legend made Tarquinius seem to have fate on his side. When Ancus Marcius was still on the throne, Tarquinius was made guardian of the king’s two sons. This appointment was very fortunate for Tarquinius. When King Marcius died, Tarquinius persuaded the two sons to go hunting while he prepared for the king’s funeral. In the time the sons were absent, Tarquinius worked to gain the votes of the senate to put him on the throne. When the sons of Marcius returned to Rome, they found the city ruled by King Tarquinius. Tarquinius seems to have been a very successful ruler, leading many triumphant campaigns against the Sabines, Latins, and even his native Etruscans. He is also credited with creating Rome’s first sewer, the Cloaca Maxima, which was originally used to drain the swamps that originally lay on the site of the forum. Despite a successful and seemingly poplar reign, Tarquinius was still scorned by the sons of the late King Ancus Marcius, who hired assassins and had him killed (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).

The sixth king of Rome was Servius Tullius, who ruled from 578 to 534 BC (“The History of Ancient Rome”). At a young age Servius had gained favor with the wife of King Tarquinius, and thus became a possible candidate for the throne. When King Tarquinius died, Servius married his daughters to the late king’s sons so that they would support his claim to the throne. Many accomplishments are attributed to King Servius, however physical evidence suggests that many may have been done at a time outside his time of rule. One questionable accomplishment is the construction of the Servian Wall, which was likely made later in the 4th century BC. Despite this, evidence shows that he is likely responsible for the first Roman coinage, moving the Temple of Diana to Rome, finishing the Temple of Jupiter Capitolinus, and the first census. Despite many positive accomplishments, the policies of King Servius were becoming increasingly unpopular with the senate by the time he was an old man. A plot was made by Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, the son (or more likely grandson) of the late King Tarquinius, and Servius’ own daughter Tullia. One day Lucius Tarquinius went before the senate in royal robes, and was acknowledged as king by the senators. When King Servius arrived, he was thrown from the senate building and stabbed to death by assassins in the street. Legend says that his daughter Tullia took a carriage down the street after her father’s death, and rode over his body (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
The seventh and final king of Rome was Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, also known as Tarquin the Proud. Tarquin, who was a prime player in the assassination of King Servius, held a tyrannical rule over Rome from 534 BC until 510 BC (“The History of Ancient Rome”). Tarquin made himself absolute ruler of Rome, giving him complete authority over criminal cases. Any possessions owned by the convicted were confiscated and became property of the government. Though hated by his people, Tarquin was able to bring power and glory to Rome. He convinced the surrounding Latin tribes to acknowledge Rome as their capital. This was known as the Treaty of Ferentia, which through a single action managed to roughly double the strength of the Roman military. Through the spoils gained in his impressive military campaigns, Tarquin began many projects such as improving the system of roads, and strengthening the city’s defenses. These projects however, were built by the forced labor of the plebeians (common people). The people of Rome had endured Tarquin for 24 years when they decided to stop him. The last straw that had sent the people into a rage was the rape of a noblewoman, Lucretia, by Tarquin’s son Sextus. While Tarquin was on campaign, the nobility declared Rome a republic. The army abandoned the king, and he was thus forced into exile for the rest of his life. A king would no longer be allowed to rule the Roman people. By 509 BC the Roman Republic was born (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Though King Tarquinius was exiled from Rome, he still sought to regain his throne. Because Tarquin was of Etruscan blood, he was able to call upon the Etruscan king of Clusium, Lars Porsenna. There are two stories as to what happened next. The first says that Porsenna besieged Rome and that Consul Publius Valerius Publicola attempted to explain how Tarquin was a tyrant and that Rome ought to be ruled by its people. At this, Tarquin said that Porsenna had no right to be his judge, which insulted the Etruscan king. King Porsenna then lifted the siege. The other story is that Porsenna managed to capture Rome, but placed himself in power instead of Tarquinius. Not wanting to be ruled by another tyrant, the Romans called on the other cities of Latium to rise against Porsenna the Etruscans. At the Battle of Aricia in 506 BC the united Latin forces defeated the Etruscans and won their freedom (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Though Rome was free from the rule of kings, the Republic was under almost constantly at war in its early years. Its main enemies were the Etruscans of Veii, the Volscians, Aequians, and even its Latin neighbors. In 510 BC Rome made a treaty with Carthage that stated it owned a large amount of the surrounding land in Latium, which wasn’t true though it did hold considerable influence over the region. This claim greatly angered the very Latin tribes that had fought alongside Rome just years before, and led to war. These united Latin tribes, the Latin League, were led against Rome by Octavius Mamilius, who was the son-in-law of King Tarquinius. In 496 BC at Lake Regillus the two forces met, with Rome declaring victory. Though the battle doesn’t seem to have been a decisive one, it ended with Mamilius dead and King Tarquin wounded. By 493 BC the war was ended with the signing of the foedus Cassianum, which united the Latin League and Rome in alliance. After this, King Tarquin gave up attempts to retake the Roman throne and was not heard from again (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Since its creation Rome had no written law for the citizens to follow. Law was decided by the king and then by those who held the office of consul in the Republic. The people wanted a clear set of laws to follow, and so three patricians (the noble class) were sent to Athens in 454 BC to study the laws created by Athenian law maker Solon (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “Solon The Lawmaker of Athens”). In 451 BC the delegation returned proposing that instead of appointing two consuls that year, they would elect ten men to spend a year creating a set of laws to be written at the end of their term. These ten patricians were known as the decemviri, which means ‘the ten men’. One man who stood out among the decemviri was Appius Claudius Inregellensis Sabinus Crassus, also known simply as Appius Claudius. After a year had passed, the decemviri with a list of laws that pleased the plebeians, but were still felt to be unfinished. Because of this it was decided that another ten men, this time consisting of an equal number of patricians and plebeians, would be elected to finish the laws. Of the previous decemviri, only Appius Claudius ran for re-election. While the first set of decemviri had been honest in their attempt to make laws for the Roman people, the second set had run for election simply as a means to gain power for personal use. When their term was up, the corrupt decemvirs refused to step down, and ruled in tyranny. This would not last for long however. Appius Claudius had become attracted to a girl named Verginia, but she was engaged to another man. So Claudius made up a story claiming that she was another man’s slave, and presided over her trial to make sure things went his way. This invalidated her engagement and made her available for Claudius. When the girl’s father heard of this, he killed his daughter to prevent her from entering slavery. Rome was absolutely enraged; much of the army refused to fight and a large number of plebeians left the city. With war raging on all sides, Rome needed its army and manpower. So finally the decemviri stepped down on the condition that they not be given to the plebs. Though nine of the decemviri escaped justice, Appius Claudius was thrown into prison where he took his own life (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Despite the many problems the decemviri brought to Rome, a set of twelve laws did manage to be written into law. The Twelve Tables governed many different aspects of Roman life, such as the proceedings of a court of law, regulation of general conduct, and also outlined specific punishments for breaking particular laws. Considering the violent times in which the laws were written, it is not surprising that many of the punishments were very harsh. One law stated that if a song was composed about another person, and the song was slanderous in nature, the writer of the song was to be clubbed to death (Adams).
By the time of the Twelve Tables, Rome was quite possibly the strongest city in Latium. The Etruscan city of Veii, twelve miles north of Rome, was one of its only real threats. In the time around 496 BC Celtic peoples known as the Gauls were ravaging Etruria to the north of Rome, weakening the alliance that made the Etruscans strong. This also led to a weakening of Veii, and a perfect opportunity to finally remove one of its oldest enemies. The man who led the attack on Veii was the Roman hero Marcus Furius Camillus. According to the Romans, Camillus besieged Veii for ten years before he drained Alban Lake to allow his army under the city’s walls through now dry streambeds. This victory and gain of power made Rome the undeniable power in Latium (“The History of Ancient Rome”).
With the Veii out of its way, Rome turned its attention to the Falerii tribe. Legend says that when Camillus was sent to capture the city of the Falerians, a teacher kidnapped several noble children and delivered them to the Romans as hostages, so that the Falerii would surrender. Camillus did not like this plan, and so sent the children back home and kept the teacher as his prisoner instead. The Falerians were so shaken by such an honorable act that they surrendered. This turned out to do more bad for Camillus than good however. His army was expecting loot, and would receive none from a people who had willingly surrendered. The Roman people became angered by Camillus when he rode a chariot pulled by four white horses on his celebration day in Rome, which they found to be irreverent at this time. Because of these acts, Camillus was taken to court and charged with taking loot from Veii that should have been given to the state. His punishment was banishment from Rome (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
The Gauls, who had been tearing at the Etrurians for years in the north, were on their way to Rome. In an attempt to stop this advance, the Romans met the Gauls at the Battle of Allia just eleven miles outside of Rome. The Romans were completely crushed, leaving a clear path for the Gauls on their way to Rome. On entering the city, the barbarians entered the senate house, where they slaughtered all the senators that were present. In desperation, Rome called for the return of Camillus as their only hope. On being appointed dictator, Camillus quickly sought out any remaining Roman soldiers, and any other allies he could find to turn into an army (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
The Gauls occupied Rome for months, but were suffering from disease, a shortage of food, and news that their homeland was being overrun by another Gallic tribe. They were ready to go home, and wanted to strike one last blow. A deal was reached that the Gauls would leave Rome for 1000 pounds of gold, though the measurements were very obviously rigged by the Gauls. Gallic chieftain Brennus even added his sword to the counterweight on the scales with the words “Vae Victis”, ‘Woe to the vanquished’. The Gauls never received a pound of gold however; Camillus met them with his army and paid them in steel (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Over the next hundred year, the Romans saw several more waves of Gauls enter Latium, and yet Rome fared better and better each time. Rome also saw another war with the Etruscans, but were successful enough to force Etruria into accepting peace for at least forty years. During this time, the Romans were wise to set up the aerarium sanctius, which was a special reserve fund to be used in times of disaster and invasion (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
From 343 BC until 290 BC Rome found itself in three wars with a new enemy, the Samnites. The Samnites were a barbaric people living to the south of Rome in and around the mountains near Campania, and were allies with Rome for some time before various disputes led to war. In the First Samnite War, the Samnites began attacking the weaker civilized peoples on the plains of Campania. A roman delegation was sent to mediate the situation, but is said to have been treated very rudely. This rudeness brought Rome into the war, which only lasted a short two years due to many military successes for the Romans. The First Samnite War was a great success for Rome that brought her the lands of Campania, with the wealthy city of Capua included (“The History of Ancient Rome”). In 341 BC the Samnites sought peace, and the resulting treaty renewed the old alliance between Samnium and Rome (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”).
Less than twenty years after the first war between Rome and Samnium The Second Samnite War began. The war was a result of Roman advance further into Campania, and the creation of two colonies on this land, Cales and Fregellae. In response to this, the Samnites sent soldiers to garrison the city of Neapolis (modern Naples), which asked Rome for help. A Roman army arrived at Neapolis and forced the Samnite garrison out, starting The Second Samnite War in 327 BC. The early years of this war were clearly in Rome’s favor, so much so that in 321 BC the Samnites sued for peace. The Romans accepted this, but offered terms so outrageous that the Samnites decided to continue the war rather than accept the terms. After this point, the tide of the war began to turn in favor of the Samnites. At the Battle of Claudine Forks, the Samnites surrounded a Roman army led by both of that year’s Consuls in a mountain pass. The Romans were forced to surrender and accept humiliation at the hands of the enemy. To regain hostages taken in the battle, Rome was forced to agree to give up her colonies at Cales and Fregellae and accept a five year respite to the war. During these five years Rome strengthened itself by absorbing and allying with many of the tribes surrounding Samnium. When the war resumed in 316 BC, Rome still found itself losing. In 311 BC the Etruscans entered the war on the side of the Samnites. It was at this time however that the war began to turn once again, this time in favor of the Romans. In 308 BC the Etruscans were forced to accept harsh Roman terms, and in 304 BC the Samnites did the same (“The History of Ancient Rome”).
In 298 BC, just six years after the end of The Second Samnite War, a new conflict began. The Third Samnite War was an attempt to simply stop Rome’s rising power in the region. The Samnites convinced several of Rome’s old enemies, the Etruscans, Gauls, and Umbrians, to join them in their attempt to defeat Rome. From the very beginning of the war, even though they were surrounded on all sides, Rome dominated the war. In 290 BC the war was over, with Rome the victor. Samnium was forced into alliance with Rome, and never fought her again (“The History of Ancient Rome”).
At this time in Roman history, the years are filled with almost constant war. Southern Italy at this time was mostly controlled by Greek city states, which were at war with the Carthaginians in Sicily and the Lucanian and Bruttian tribes in south of the peninsula. In 282 BC the Greek city-state of Thurii asked for aid against the Lucanians and Bruttians. Rome sent a force to city, along with a small fleet. The powerful Greek city of Tarentum felt threatened by this act, and said that a treaty made with Rome in 302 BC stating that no Roman ships would enter the Bay of Tarentum, had been broken. This angered the Tarentines, but peace was kept. When the majority of Roman forces left Thurii, a small garrison was left behind. The extended settling of Roman troops in the area drove Tarentum to attack the garrison and sink the Roman ships in the bay. Rome however did not feel like getting into a war with Tarentum, and asked that the city only provide compensation for their losses. Tarentum declined the offer; they had gained a new and powerful ally, King Pyrrhus of Epirus (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”). Epirus was a powerful nation on the west coast of Greece, only a short trip by sea to Italy (“Pyrrhic War (280-275 BC)”).
Pyrrhus came to Italy with an army of 25,000 men and twenty war elephants. This was the first war in which the Romans confronted such beasts on the battlefield. At this time Greece held some of the strongest and best equipped militaries in the world, and Rome knew this. The Romans quickly raised a large force of soldiers from all classes, even among the poor who were usually excluded from the army because the state did not supply armor and weapons. They had to be purchased by the individual (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
At the Battle of Heraclea Rome had its first taste of the mighty army of Pyrrhus and his war elephants. The battle went surprisingly well for the Romans, who held their own against the phalanx formation of the Greeks. Even king Pyrrhus’s own horse was killed with him in the saddle, which led to him needing rescue. Despite these successes, the battle was a loss for the Romans. The Greek war elephants threw the Roman cavalry into chaos, and drove them away. The Romans are said to have lost 15,000 of their original 20,000 men in the battle. The battle did not go as hoped for Pyrrhus either however. The Greek losses were so great that King Pyrrhus said that another such victory would cost him the war, which resulted in the expression of a ‘Pyrrhic victory’ (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
After the Battle of Heraclea, Roman armies in the area of Etruria headed south to deal with Pyrrhus, and new levies were being raised in Rome. Faced with such a massive force to the north, Pyrrhus spent his winter behind the walls of Tarentum. In the spring, the Greeks laid siege to the city of Asculum, and so Rome arrived with a force of 40,000 men to stop him. The Battle of Asculum in 279 BC was truly a victory for neither side, and ended in a stalemate. The Greeks came out of the battle faring better than the Romans, but gained nothing from it (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
When the Greek city of Syracuse on the island of Sicily asked King Pyrrhus for aid against the Carthaginians, it gave him an excuse to work toward eventually taking the entire island. Carthage did not want to be kept from dominating the land of Sicily, and so offered Rome an alliance with financial backing and the aid of their navy in order to keep Pyrrhus busy in Italy. Though Rome eventually accepted this deal, Carthage’s plans of keeping Pyrrhus in Italy failed; Pyrrhus set out for Sicily in 278 BC. For three years the Greeks campaigned in Sicily with great success, while Rome was destroying their allies in Italy. Unable to take the Carthaginian city of Lilybaeum, Pyrrhus returned to Italy in 276 BC due to calls for aid from his allies on the mainland. At the Battle of Beneventum Pyrrhus planned on surprising the Roman army, but Rome had learned how to deal with the Greek elephants and phalanx formation. When a second Roman army joined the battle, King Pyrrhus was forced into retreat. The Greeks no longer had the manpower to continue a war in Italy, and so were forced to return to Greece defeated. King Pyrrhus’s parting words seem prophetic, “What a battlefield I am leaving for Carthage and Rome!” It is said that King Pyrrhus continued his career as a great general in Greece, but was later killed in an assault on the city of Argos in 272 BC when an old woman threw a roof tile on his head from the top of her home (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
At this time, the Sicilian city of Messana was under the control of a band of ex-mercenaries who called themselves the Mamertini (‘Sons of Mars’). The Mamertines held Messana for over twenty years, and acted as pirates to all who passed between Sicily and Italy. In 264 BC King Hieron of Syracuse (or Hiero as the Romans called him) felt it time to put an end to the Mamertines and their piracy, and thus laid siege to the city. The Mamertines had no means of defeating the armies of Syracuse, and so asked Carthage for aide. Carthage, which was an old enemy of Syracuse, sent their navy to the area. This persuaded Hiero to call off the siege under threat of attack by the strongest navy in the Mediterranean. With a force in the area of Messana, Carthage now sought to take the city for itself. Now the Mamertines asked Rome, master of Italy, against the Carthaginians. After much debate, the Romans concluded that Carthaginian control of Messana would hurt Roman trade in the area. An expeditionary force was sent into the area to attempt to restore Messana to the Mamertines. The small force was enough to make Carthage withdraw from Messana, without any blood spilled or war declared. Though this action was bloodless, Carthage was infuriated. The commander of the force that had retreated from Messana was executed, Carthage became allied with Syracuse, and a force was sent to Messana to take the city. This small dispute over a city of pirates had erupted into one of the most famous wars in history, The Punic Wars (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
From the beginning of The First Punic War, things went well for Rome. It was now Rome’s intent to take all of Sicily. Many Carthaginian towns fell, and Rome was moving into Syracuse. King Hiero was aware of Rome’s strength, and negotiated with Rome. The outcome of these negotiations was that Syracuse would now fight on the side of Rome, Messana would belong to Rome, and that Hiero would pay a tribute to Rome for 15 years to keep Syracuse independent and under his control. As a result of this agreement many small Greek towns in the area also became allied with Rome (“The History of Ancient Rome”).
In its past wars, Rome had been lenient to peoples it had conquered. In this new war however, cities were ravaged and the people sold into slavery. This treatment of conquered people inspired hatred in many Sicilians. Despite the great gains of the Romans, Carthage still held western Sicily, and was still master of the seas. The Roman navy was small, and its ships dwarfed by the large quinquereme ships of the Carthaginians. The Carthaginian navy soon began tearing at the Roman coastal cities, and retook many of the towns it had lost. Despite this, Rome was lucky enough to get its hands on a beached Carthaginian quinquereme and copy it. At this time the Romans also developed a brilliant device called the corvus, which was a swiveling bridge that could attach to enemy ships and allow the Romans to board them. The Romans were weak and inexperienced at sea even with their new ships, but the corvus allowed them to fight as if on land, which was where Rome was at its strongest (“The History of Ancient Rome”;“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
At the Battle of Mylae in 260 BC, Consul Gaius Duilius attacked approximately 130 ships of the Carthaginian navy with his own fleet of roughly 120 ships. The use of the corvus helped the Romans achieve a great victory, with fourteen Carthaginian ships sunk, and 31 captured. After this battle, Consul Duilius was treated as a hero in Rome. The prows of the Carthaginian ships captured in the battle were used to decorate the speaker’s platform in the forum. The Carthaginian commander, Hannibal Gisco, returned home where he was crucified for incompetence (“Battle of Mylae”;”The History of Ancient Rome”).
In 256 BC the war had been raging for years. Rome continued to push Carthage further back into Sicily, but at a slow pace. Operations were also taking place on Carthaginian held Corsica and Sardinia. Fifty years earlier, King Agathocles of Syracuse had broken through a Carthaginian naval blockade and landed troops in Africa itself. Now Rome sought to do the same, and claim a decisive victory. A fleet of around 330 ships, carrying approximately 40,000 men headed for Africa. Off the southern coast of Sicily the Roman fleet met with around 350 Carthaginian ships at The Battle of Ecnomus. It is estimated that there may have been a total of 140,000 men present at the battle. When the battle was over, Rome continued on to Africa as the victor. The Romans are said to have lost 24 ships while the Carthaginians lost 30, with 64 ships captured by the Romans. At the time, The Battle of Ecnomus was the largest naval battle in history (Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The Battle of Ecnomus (256)”).
After the victory at Ecnomus, Rome was able to land its fleet in Africa under the command of Consul Regulus. The Roman fleet returned home carrying most of the army with it, leaving Regulus around 15,000 men to command in Africa. The Romans captured the town of Adys after defeating a Carthaginian force sent to relieve it. Regulus then moved to Tunes, only a day away from Carthage itself. Carthage was filled with people seeking shelter, many of its towns were rebelling in favor of the Romans, and the city was nearing a state of famine. The Carthaginians offered to negotiate terms of surrender with the Romans, but the demands Regulus placed on them were too great to bear, and so the war continued. Though it was suffering at this time, Carthage’s luck was about to change. A group of Greek mercenaries led by a Spartan soldier named Xanthippus arrived to aid Carthage. Xanthippus was given command of the Carthaginian army, and trained them in the way of the famous Spartan warriors. With his newly trained army of 12,000 infantry, 4,000 cavalry, and 100 war elephants, Xanthippus met the Roman army on the open field of Bagradas in 255 BC. The Romans were almost completely massacred. The army that once held 15,000 men was reduced to the 2,000 who managed to escape. Consul Regulus and some of his forces were captured in the battle; Regulus was later executed by the Carthaginians sometime around 250 BC (Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”; “Marcus Atilius Regulus”).
The 2,000 lucky Romans who managed to escape from Bagradas to Aspis were picked up by a Roman fleet to be taken home. Sadly however, many would never see home again. Off the coast of southern Sicily the fleet got caught in a storm that threw the ships against the rocky coastal waters. Roughly 70% of the fleet and 100,000 men were lost in the storm. This tragic even made the failure in Africa feel even worse for the Romans. Despite this, campaigns on land were faring much better. In 254 BC the fortress city of Panormus fell to the Romans. In 253 BC another Roman fleet was lost in a storm, which pushed the senate to limit the use of costly naval warfare, and focus more on battling on land. This was a wise move, which brought more attention to land campaigns and aided in the capture of the Sicilian cities of Lipara and Thermae in 252 BC, and a siege on the great fortress of Lilybaeum. These successes brought confidence back to the Romans, and they were soon fighting at sea again (“The History of Ancient Rome”).
In 247 BC an able Carthaginian named Hamilcar Barca was given command of forces in Sicily. Hamilcar used guerilla style tactics to raid the coast of Italy and take the mountain fortresses of Mount Hercte and Mount Eryx in Sicily. All attacks against Hamilcar failed, and he was able to end the unending successes of the Roman army. Though successful and very talented, Hamilcar did not have the manpower to completely stop Roman dominance of Sicily. In the war at sea, Rome had managed to come up with funds for a new fleet off 200 ships. This fleet was sent to blockade the ports of Lilybaeum and Drepanum, which were under siege by Rome, but still received supplies from Carthage. The Carthaginian navy was in a state of disrepair due to the massive funds needed to keep it, but was called up in desperation to stop the blockade. Consul Gaius Lutatius Catulus, who commanded the Roman fleet, sought to attack the Carthaginian fleet before it could reach land and deliver supplies. Catulus also feared that the fleet could drop off reinforcements to the forces of Hamilcar Barca, who would use them very effectively against Rome. When the two fleets met at the Aegates Islands in 241 BC, Rome had a clear advantage. The Romans had better trained men with superior equipment, and were using ships copied from a Carthaginian model that was quite fast. The Carthaginian fleet was not using this superior model of ship, while all ships in the Roman fleet were of this model. In the battle, 50 Carthaginian ships were sunk and 70 captured; 10,000 Carthaginians were taken prisoner. Roman losses were 30 ships sunk and 50 badly damaged. With this loss, Carthaginian forces in Sicily were cut off from supply, and had no hope of victory. Hamilcar Barca was told by Carthage to seek peace, though he was willing to continue the war. In 241 BC Gaius Catulus and Hamilcar Barca represented their nations in peace negotiations. In 241 BC after 23 years of war, The First Punic War was over (Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”).
The terms settled to end The First Punic War were greatly in Rome’s favor. Carthage would return all Roman prisoners, would not make war with Syracuse or any of its allies. King Hiero’s lands would be expanded and would remain an independent ally of Rome. Messana and several other cities would gain allied status with Rome, while the rest of Sicily would belong directly to Rome. Carthage would also pay Rome 3200 talents over a period of ten years. As a result of the costs exacted on Carthage, the nation was unable to pay many of its mercenary forces, which led to a revolt (Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”).

Hamilcar Barca was sent to the island Sardinia in 238 BC to stop a major mercenary rebellion there. Hamilcar was simply trying to save a territory for Carthage, and meant no harm to Rome, but the Romans were horrified. One of the most able and anti-Roman commanders of the past war was going back into action. A Roman force was sent to occupy Sardinia, and when Carthage protested, Rome declared war. Carthage was in no position to fight another war so soon after their last defeat. The Romans forced Carthage to hand over control of Sardinia and its neighbor Corsica, and pay an additional 1700 talents in compensation. This understandably caused a lot of hate towards Rome in Carthage, who had only attempted to hold onto one of its territories, but as a result had lost it to an old enemy (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Several years after The First Punic War, the nation of Illyria on the eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea had developed a large navy under King Agron. The king used this navy in acts of piracy against his Greek neighbors. When the king died, his wife Teuta took the throne and increased the level of piracy. By 230 BC Roman trade in the area was beginning to suffer, and Greek merchants were begging them to take action against the pirates. Rome sent two diplomats to speak with Queen Teuta about the matter, and were said to have been treated rudely. Teuta only agreed that her official forces would not harm the Romans, but that she could not be held responsible for pirates. Both sides left the argument angry, so much so that Queen Teuta had one of the diplomats assassinated while on his trip back to Rome. In 229 BC a fleet of 200 Roman ships was deployed against Illyria, while several legions traveled there by land. Several towns were taken, and many pirate ships destroyed. In 228 BC Queen Teuta was forced to sue for peace. In the peace agreement, Illyria would give up 120 miles of land along its coast and pay tribute. Restrictions were also place on the movements of the Illyrian navy. As a result of this, many Greek cities along the western coast were incredibly grateful to Rome. Though most of Greece was happy with Rome’s actions, Illyria’s ally Macedonia was very angry. The First Illyrian War may have been a small engagement, but it would have an impact on the future that no one could have foreseen at the time (“The History of Ancient Rome”).
In 225 BC an army of several Gallic tribes crossed into Roman land in Etruria. This would be the last Gallic invasion into Italy. The Gallic army consisted of approximately 50,000 infantry, and 20,000 cavalry; Rome was not afraid however. An army of 130,000 Romans was easily raised. At the Battle of Telamon the Gauls were caught between two Roman armies, and annihilated. The Gallic death toll was around 40,000 men, with 10,000 taken prisoner. After this incident, the Romans felt inclined to punish the Gauls. Over a period of two years, three successful campaigns brought all of northern Italy under Roman control, including the city of Mediolanum (modern Milan) (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
In 238 BC, just three years after its defeat in The First Punic War, Carthage began campaigning in Spain. Hamilcar Barca led the Carthaginian armies with great success. When Hamilcar died, his son-in-law Hasdrubal the Elder took over operations in Spain. One of Hasdrubal’s greatest accomplishments was the founding of the prosperous coastal city of Carthago Nova. When Rome questioned the peaceful intentions of the Carthaginians in 231 BC, Hamilcar (who was alive at the time) explained that in order to pay tribute to Rome, Carthage needed a new source of income. This income was furnished by the campaigns in Spain, and its productive mines. Despite assurances by the Carthaginians, in 226 BC the Romans convinced Hasdrubal to agree to limit expansion to the area south of the river Ebro. In 223 BC Rome made the disasterous move of allying with the town of Saguntum, which was on the Carthaginian side of the river Ebro (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; Durant 48).
In 221 BC Hasdrubal the Elder was assassinated; so Hannibal Barca, the son of Hamilcar Barca, took over Carthaginian operations in Spain. From a young age Hannibal had been taught by his father to hate Rome, and these teachings were very effective. When a war erupted between Saguntum and a Carthaginian ally, the Turboletae tribe, Rome felt obligated to aid her ally. This intervention in the war led to small losses among the Turboletae, which eventually gave Hannibal cause to lay siege to Saguntum in 219 BC. Rome demanded the surrender of Hannibal, but Carthage tried to explain how the Roman alliance with Saguntum had been at conflict with their treaty in 226 BC. The chief envoy of the Romans, Quintus Fabius Maximus, was not willing to negotiate (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”). It’s said that Fabius pulled the folds of his toga into his hands and said, "’we bring you peace and war. Take which you will.' Scarcely had he spoken when the answer no less proudly rang out: 'Whichever you please, we do not care.' Fabius let the gathered folds fall, and cried: 'We give you war'" (“The History of Ancient Rome”).
In 218 BC Hannibal crossed the river Ebro with nearly 60,000 troops, including about 38 war elephants. Hannibal traveled through northern Spain, and into Gaul where he spent fifteen days crossing the cold and rugged Alps. When Hannibal emerged from the Alps into Italy his army had lost over half its size, and most of his war elephants were dead. Despite his losses, the speed at which Hannibal was able to travel by foot from Spain to Italy stands as an amazing achievement. Once Across the Alps, Hannibal met the army of Publius Scipio at the Ticinus River. The Roman army of 40,000 received heavy losses from Hannibal’s Numidian calvary, and Scipio had to be rescued from the field by his son after receiving a severe wound. The Romans were easily swept aside by Hannibal’s more experienced troops. Though the Battle of Ticinus is considered to have been a relatively small battle, news of Hannibal’s victory spread through the neighboring Gallic tribes, bringing many new warriors to Hannibal’s cause (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “Hannibal Barca”).
After the Battle of Ticinus the remnants of Publius Scipio’s army joined with that of consul Sempronius Longus. On the plain west of the River Trebia Hannibal scouted the area as a potential battlefield. Before the battle Hanninbal left 2,000 men commanded by his brother Mago hiding either in a nearby gully or in the bushes around the bend of the river. The next day Hannibal sent some of his Numidian cavalry to goad Longus into an attack. This provocation was successful in drawing the Romans across the freezing river right into Hannibal’s army, which was warm and rested unlike the Romans. First, the Roman skirmishers (velites) advanced and were able to take out the last of Hannibal’s remaining elephants, but were quickly forced back. The Roman cavalry fared poorly as well, only the infantry managed to hold itself together for long. Mago’s hidden 2,000 troops, the Carthaginian cavalry, and skirmishers circled the Romans and eventually crushed them. Only 10,000 legionaries of the original 40,000 managed to escape from the battlefield (Rickard, J; “Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”).
Nomen:Jared AKA "Nihon" AKA "Nihonius" AKA "Hey You"

Now with Anti-Varus protection! If your legion is lost for any reason, we will give it back! Guaranteed!

Carpe Dium
Reply
#2
In the spring of 217 BC Hannibal began moving his army toward southern Italy; ravaging the area as they went. Consul Gaius Flaminius felt that he had to stop the destruction quickly, and so rushed blindly toward Hannibal’s army. At Lake Trasimene Hannibal set his trap; hiding his men in the hills to the north of the lake, while he had camp fires lit miles away. When Flaminius marched his army through the area between Lake Trasimene and the nearby hills, the distant fires blinded him to the fact that the Carthaginians were in an ambush position on his flank. On June 24th of 217 BC the Carthaginian army charged the Romans from the hills above Trasimene, pushed them against the lake, and absolutely annihilated them. Of the original Roman army of 25,000, roughly 15,000 were killed in battle, and many of the rest were taken prisoner and executed. A group of 4,000 cavalry sent to aid Flaminius’s army arrived late and were destroyed as well. It is said that Lake Trasimene was so thick with blood after the battle that a small stream feeding into it was renamed Sanguineto, the Blood River (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”; Gill, N.S.).
After the Battle of Lake Trasimene, Rome appointed Quintus Fabius Maximus dictator, the very man who let the folds of his toga fall and started the Second Punic War. This appointment meant that now Maximus was in charge of saving Rome from Hannibal, and had any power necessary at his disposal. First Maximus made sure that Rome’s walls were repaired and made ready, and that the bridges over the Tiber were destroyed. Two new legions were created, which brought the army at Maximus’s command to around 60,000 men. If the Romans thought Maximus would use this massive army to crush the Carthaginians, they were mistaken. Instead of directly confronting the superior forces of Hannibal, Maximus followed the Carthaginians wherever they marched, but kept at a distance. This brilliant tactic kept Hannibal from laying siege to cities and creating a base for himself; doing so would mean splitting his army in a battle between both the forces of Maximus and those of the city. Though this tactic was very effective in keeping Hannibal from gaining a foothold in Italy, and kept him from successes that would bring in new allies, Maximus was becoming increasingly unpopular with the people. Because of this unpopularity, for the first and last time in Roman history a co-dictator was appointed to command half of Maximus’s army. The man given this job, Marcus Minucius Rufus, was chosen because of his completely opposite opinions to Maximus. Where Maximus sought to defeat Hannibal through exhaustion, Rufus was anxious to meet the Carthaginians in direct battle. At Gerunium Hannibal set a trap for Rufus, and would have utterly annihilated his army had it not been for the intervention of Maximus and his force (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
In 216 BC the terms of Fabius Maximus and Minucius Rufus were at an end, and two new consuls took their place as the defenders of Rome; Lucius Aemilius Paulus and Gaius Terentius Varro. Like Maximus and Rufus before them, Paulus and Varro were complete opposites of opinion. Where Paulus was calm and cautious like Maximus, Varro was brash and blinded with aggression. When Hannibal captured a large army supply depot at Cannae in Apulia, Varro and Paulus led their combined army of 70,000-80,000 men after him. Their armies would meet on August the 2nd of 216 BC at the Battle of Cannae (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”).
On the flat plains of Cannae the Roman army marched against the forces of Hannibal under the command of Consul Varo. An army under the command of two consuls was to alternate that command daily; today was Varro’s day and so it was decided that Rome would attack Hannibal. The Carthaginian force of roughly 40,000 took the Roman attack at its center, which slowly gave way as Hannibal planned it to. On both flanks the Carthaginian cavalry took on the cavalry of the Romans and crushed them. With the Romans funneled into deep into the middle of his army, Hannibal let the flanks of his infantry close around the sides of the Roman force, and then called for his cavalry to strike the rear of the Roman formation. The Romans were encircled, and trapped in a hopeless position in which they were slowly cut down. At the end of the battle an estimated 50,000 to 70,000 Romans died at Cannae, with Carthaginian losses only around 6,000; most of these being Celtic recruits. Hannibal’s tactics at Cannae were military genius, and allowed him to inflict the greatest single military loss Rome would ever endure (“Cannae, Battle of”; “Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “The History of Ancient Rome”).
Though Rome was absolutely shocked by the massive loss of life suffered at Cannae, and some loosely allied Italian tribes became allied with Hannibal, Rome and her remaining allies united in their determination to see victory. Romans willingly paid the high taxes levied on them, all men of proper age were called upon to join the army and defend Rome. Even slaves were called to serve, and offered freedom so long as victory was achieved. The legionaries would not even accept pay for their services. The young Publius Cornelius Scipio ( later the famous Scipio Africanus), is said to have overheard some noblemen contemplating fleeing from Rome, and so drew his sword and threatened to kill them if they did not swear an oath to fight for Rome. Terentius Varo, who managed to escape from Cannae with around 10,000 men, was welcomed back to Rome as a hero for bringing the remnants of his army back and not abandoning his country. Though Rome had been deeply wounded at Cannae, she was still standing and willing to fight on (Durant 51; “Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
In 216 BC and 215 BC Hannibal made two attempts to take the fortress town of Nola. In the siege of 216 BC the Romans rushed from the city gates while the Carthaginians were hampered with ladders, and sent them into retreat. In the 215 BC siege little is known other than that Hannibal was also repulsed. Both of these incidents showed that Hannibal was best suited for war on the open field, and was unable to effectively achieve total victory. At this time the Romans were also seeing success in Spain and on the island of Sardinia, but not all was well. In 215 BC Rome’s long time ally King Hiero of Syracuse died and his pro-Carthage grandson Hieronymus held the throne until his assassination in the same year. Without the firm control of a king Syracuse fell to Carthage after it was encouraged to rebel against Roman authority by agents of Hannibal. All of Sicily was in chaos, but there was worse news; Hannibal had managed an alliance with King Phillip V of Macedon (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “Hieronymus of Syracuse”).
The First Macedonian War began in 215 BC with Rome trembling in fear, and Hannibal full of hope. Macedonia was the nation that bore Alexander the Great, and still maintained a great deal of power in Greece centuries after his death. Despite the early expectations of the war, no battle between Rome and Macedon would take place in this war. With great diplomatic skill, Rome managed to secure an alliance with the majority of Greece not under Macedonian rule; the Aetolian League, Illyria, Elis, Messene, Pergamum, and Sparta. Due to this, most fighting in the First Macedonian War stayed in Greece, Phillip was too busy with his neighbors to bother with Rome. In 205 BC the Greek nation of Epirus negotiated an end to the war out of fear that it would soon be dragged into it (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Back in Italy the war was not going well for Rome. Hannibal had managed to either take or ally with nearly all of southern Italy except the town of Rhegium. When the Romans tried to retake the important city of Capua, Hannibal came to the city’s aid, which sent the Romans into retreat out of fear. Several times however, the Romans did meet with Hannibal on the battlefield in 212 BC, but all engagements were complete disasters. In 211 BC another attempt was made to retake Capua, this time the Romans surrounded the city with two layers of trenches and palisades to keep the defenders in, and any relief force out. When Hannibal came to the city’s aid this time, he was unable to get past the defenses and so retired from the field. Hannibal’s new plan was to march unseen through mountainous Samnium to the north and arrive at Rome itself, which he hoped would force the Romans to end the siege of Capua and come to the aid of their capital. Former dictator Q. Fabius Maximus was still alive and now head of the senate. He advised that the siege of Capua should go on, and that Rome would be safe from capture. When Hannibal realized that his plan to lure the Romans from Capua had failed, he left the area with little damage done to his enemy. In this same year Capua fell to Rome as a result of starvation. The citizens of Capua were deported to other scattered regions, and many of the city’s nobles were executed for aiding Carthage (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
In Spain the tide of the war rose and fell for Rome. The brothers Publius and Gnaeus Scipio began their campaigns with great success; in 213 BC alone the brothers saw victory in battles at Iliturgi, Munda, and Aurinx. After these successes however, the Scipio brothers split their armies and met with disaster in 211 BC. Publius Scipio was defeated at the river Baetis where he lost his life. The Spanish mercenaries in the army commanded by Gnaeus Scipio abandoned him, and so when he was met by three Carthaginian armies at Ilorici his army was annihilated and he lost his life as well (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Publius Cornelius Scipio, whose father and uncle had both been killed commanding the Roman armies in Spain, was now chosen to take command of the Spanish campaign. At only twenty-four or twenty-five, young Scipio had already proven his worth as a true Roman. He had saved his father’s life at the Battle of Ticinus early in the war, survived the battles at Trebia and Cannae, and showed himself to be intelligent, pious, courteous, and just. On arrival Scipio was able to turn his troops into disciplined soldiers and secure the alliance of several Spanish tribes. In 209 BC Scipio learned from a fisherman that that a lagoon leading into the Carthaginian city of Carthago Nova could be crossed at low tide. When Scipio assaulted the city, he made use of this knowledge and personally led 500 men into the city through the lagoon. Because of this double assault and Scipio’s genius as a commander, the greatest city in Spain now belonged to Rome. Inside Carthago Nova the Romans found massive amounts of treasure, and 300 Spanish hostages who assured the allegiance of their tribes once Scipio had them released. In 208 BC Scipio won a completely one-sided victory against Hannibal’s brother Hasdrubal at the Battle of Baecula. After this battle, Hasdrubal marched his army out of Spain to make an attempt to cross the Alps and aid his brother in Italy. Scipio was highly criticized for not attempting to stop Hasdrubal, though he knew where the Carthaginian was marching (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; Durant 52-53; “Scipio Africanus”).
Hasdrubal spent one year in Gaul recruiting troops before he crossed the Alps into Italy in search of his brother’s army. Consul Marcus Livius Salinator was sent north to fight Hasdrubal, and Consul Gaius Claudius Nero was sent south to keep Hannibal in check. If the two Carthaginian armies were to meet, it would be disastrous for Rome. Luckily for the Romans, Punic messengers sent by Hasdrubal to tell his Hannibal where he would be marching to meet him were intercepted. Because Hannibal now had no idea what his brother’s plan were and where they were to meet. Now that the Carthaginians were disorganized, Consul Nero took 7,000 troops out of his army following Hannibal and marched them north to meet with Consul Salinator to help stop Hasdrubal. Now with enough troops to take on Hasdrubal, Consul Salinator pushed Hasdrubal back to the river Metaurus where the Carthaginians were unable to find a crossing, and were forced into battle (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”). The fighting at the Battle of Metaurus in 207 BC was very fierce. Nero was placed on the Roman right flank, but was unable to engage the Gallic warriors that were set opposite of him due to a ravine separating them. Because of this, Nero took 2,000 infantry from his flank and marched them behind the Roman line to the left flank; he then marched his army behind the Carthaginian flank and collapsed it (Jones np). After this the Carthaginian army fell apart and was destroyed. On seeing that defeat was imminent Hasdrubal charged valiantly into the fray and to his death. Roman historians Polybius and Livy have differing numbers on the Carthaginian death toll, one saying 10,000 and the other 56,000. The same sources very in their account of Roman casualties; one saying 2,000 and the other 8,000 men lost. After the battle, Hasdrubal’s head was taken south and thrown into Hannibal’s camp. This was the way in which Hannibal finally saw the victory of Rome as inevitable, his own brother’s head. Hannibal was stranded in Italy without enough troops or power to ever take Rome; his dream of a Carthaginian victory was crushed (“Battle of the Metaurus”).
In 206 BC the fate of Spain was leaning in Rome’s favor due to the departure of Hasdrubal Barca’s army. A new commander, named Hasdrubal Gisco, was chosen to take over command of Carthaginian operations in Spain (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”). In 207 BC, Punic reinforcements had arrived in Spain and joined with Mago Barca, who then began massive recruiting of Spaniards. When Scipio sent a detachment to attack Mago, the Romans were able to surprise the Carthaginians and send their new recruits into desertion. Now only Hasdrubal’s army remained in the way of Roman domination in Spain. In the spring of 206 BC the armies of Hasdrubal Gisco and Mago Barca met at Ilipa, creating a combined force of 54,000 to 70,000 men; this left Scipio’s army of 43,000 men well outnumbered. When the Romans arrived at Ilipa the Carthaginians attempted a cavalry attack on the Roman camp, which failed when a hidden force of Roman cavalry was unleashed against them. After the attack, several days were spent with the Carthaginians taking to the field and Scipio’s men doing the same only in response; but with neither side committing to a battle (“Battle of Ilipa”). Scipio noticed that every time the Carthaginians came to the field, they were arranged in the same formation. Hasdrubal would place his experienced Libyan troops in the center of the line, less trained Spanish troops on the sides to guard the flanks, cavalry placed behind both flanks, and war elephants placed in front of the Spanish on both sides. Technically this was a very wise and effective method of arranging one’s troops, but the fact that Scipio knew beforehand what the enemy arrangement would be on the day of battle was Hasdrubal’s failure (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
When Scipio decided the day of his attack, he woke his troops early in the morning and fed them well. When the Romans took to the field, the Carthaginians were shocked by the change of events, and quickly took to the field without breakfast. Once both armies were on the field of battle, Scipio refused to give battle for several hours to push the Carthaginians deeper into a state of hunger. The Romans were arrayed in a manner that at first looked unwise, weak Spanish recruits in the center of the Roman line, and battle hardened legionaries on the flanks. This was completely opposite of the Carthaginian formation, and looked as if the Romans would send their weak Spanish troops against the stronger Libyans of Carthage. What happened however, was a complete surprise to the Carthaginians. Scipio sent the two wings of his line, consisting of his legionaries, cavalry, and skirmishers swung slightly outward from the center and advanced quickly toward the enemy. Meanwhile the Spanish troops in the center marched straight forward at a slower pace. As the wings came near to the enemy, the legionaries broke away and engaged the war elephants and weak Spanish on the Carthaginian flanks head on. The cavalry and skirmishers continued their advance together and charged the sides and rear of the Carthaginian flanks, taking on their Spanish troops and cavalry. By only attacking the Carthaginian flanks, and placing his Spanish troops as reinforcements, Scipio rendered Hasdrubal’s Libyan troops useless. If the Libyans were to break from the center and engage the Romans on the flanks, Scipio would then be able to send his Spanish troops into the newly formed gap and fight each flank from two sides. Hasdrubal knew this and was forced to keep his Libyans out of the fight. Scipio crushed the Carthaginians at the Battle of Ilipa with complete tactical brilliance (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “Battle of Ilipa”).
The Battle of Ilipa may have been the most important battle of Scipio’s career. The loss of soldiers suffered by the Carthaginians at Ilipa was so great that they no longer had the means to hold power in Spain. The Iberian Peninsula now belonged to Rome. In 205 BC Scipio returned to Rome and was unanimously elected consul with huge support. Scipio was not content to stay in Rome and bask in his past glories, he immediately asked the Senate to send him on campaign in Africa. The Senate however was reluctant to send armies from Italy with Hannibal still in the area. Another fear held by the Senators was of Scipio’s power and popularity, which would increase dramatically if he were to succeed in Africa. Scipio was adamant about his decision to take the fight to the Carthaginian homeland, and threatened to gain support for the mission from the populace. Knowing that Scipio’s popularity would gain him massive support, the Senate gave in. However, Scipio was only allowed to take the 10,000 survivors of Cannae who had been banished to Sicily for the disgrace of their massive defeat, and anyone else volunteering to join him. This was sufficient for Scipio, who was able to secure many supplies and volunteers. The rest of year Scipio spent training his new army (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Also in 205 BC Hannibal’s brother Mago Barca came to Italy by sea and landed at Genua (modern Genoa). Mago hoped to recruit Gauls living in Northern Italy, but found that years of war had weakened their will to fight. For two years he stayed in the Po valley with few achievements. In 204 BC Scipio landed near the city of Utica in Africa with approximately 35,000 troops. He was unable to begin operations however because two armies led by Hasdrubal Gisco and his son-in-law King Syphax of Numidia shadowed his army and held Scipio in check. When Syphax suggested meeting to negotiate peace with Rome, Hasdrubal accepted the terms set for both sides to withdraw their forces from each other’s homelands. Scipio agreed to attend these negotiations, but never actually considered the terms. He used these meetings first to attempt to sway Syphax over to the Roman side, but when it became clear that would never happen he used the time to scout the layout and makeup of the enemy camps. Scipio used the information he had gained on the camps to organize a strike on them. According to both Livy and Polybius, One night Scipio placed 2,000 men on a hill overlooking Utica to deceive the enemy into believing he was preparing to besiege the city. Another small group of men was left to guard the Roman camp while the main body of troops split in half and marched to the camps of Hasdrubal and Syphax. The troops sent to attack the Numidian army set fire to the wooden huts outside the camp’s palisades, which quickly spread inside as well. The Numidians awoke in confusion and tried to flee the flames unarmed, but were cut down by Romans blocking all exits. Those who stayed in the camps were either consumed in the flames or trampled by pack animals. When the Carthaginian camp saw the flames coming from the Numidian camp Hasdrubal and his men rushed to their aid unarmed, thinking the fire was started by accident. The Romans commanded directly by Scipio ambushed the defenseless Carthaginians and absolutely slaughtered them. Both Hasdrubal and Syphax were able to escape with a small body of men, but the Battle of Utica was a complete disaster for Carthage and a massive victory for Scipio and Rome (“Battle of Utica (203 BC)”; “Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
After the Battle of Utica both Hasdrubal Gisco and King Syphax of Numidia were able to assemble a force of up to 30,000 men on the Great Plains (Campi Magni) within a month. At this time Scipio was besieging Utica, and when he heard that the Carthaginians were assembling a new army he marched to meet them with around 15,000 men. At his arrival there began two days of skirmishing before the armies joined in battle. The Roman cavalry swept the Numidian horsemen of Syphax from the field, and the infantry was encircled and destroyed. Some Spanish troops in the Carthaginian center were able to hold out and fight to the death, buying time for some of the Punic troops to flee. Once again Hasdrubal and Syphax managed to escape death; Syphax however was pursued by Roman ally Masinissa of Numidia and Scipio’s friend Laelius, and was eventually defeated and captured at the Battle of Cirta. With Syphax taken off the Numidian throne, Masinissa was now king of Numidia and would be able to provide even more warriors to aid Rome in the war (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
After their defeats at Utica and The Great Plains, Carthage was ready to give in to defeat. Carthaginian diplomats were sent to Rome to negotiate terms for peace, and it was agreed that Carthage would pay Rome 5,000 talents, revoke any claims to Spanish territory, and limit the size of its navy to 20 war ships. Though Carthage had agreed to these terms, it did not stop her from recalling the armies of Hannibal and his brother Mago back to their homeland. Hannibal returned to Carthage after years spent campaigning in Italy with his army of 15,000 experienced veteran troops, but Mago died on the trip due to a wound he had received fighting in Italy. Though Rome and Carthage had agreed to peace, this treaty was revoked when a stranded Roman fleet in the Gulf of Tunes was captured by the Carthaginians and stripped of supplies. At Zama, near Carthage, Hannibal and Scipio finally met face to face. Scipio told Hannibal that due to the actions of Carthage at the Gulf of Tunes, he would not agree to peace without a battle. So on October 19, 202 BC, the heroes of Rome and Carthage met at the Battle of Zama (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “Battle of Zama”).
The Roman army was comprised of approximately 34,000 infantry and 8,500 cavalry, while the larger Carthaginian force held roughly 50,000 infantry, 4,500 cavalry, and 80 war elephants. Hannibal arranged his infantry behind his war elephants in three lines parallel to the Roman forces. The third and last line of the Punic formation was made up of the experienced veterans of Hannibal’s Italian campaigns; these forces were placed at the rear of the formation in order to counter any encirclement by Roman forces. In front of these forces lay two lines of newly raised mercenary units. On the left flank of the army were Numidian cavalry, and on the right were Carthaginian cavalry. The Roman forces were arranged in rows arranged vertically to those of the Carthaginians, which created lanes through the army. These rows were split into blocks of soldiers made up of hastati and principe type melee warriors. Likely to make the first row appear solid, velite skirmishers filled the lanes of the formation at its front. Backing the entire formation was a solid line of triarii spearmen. On the right flank of the Roman army were the Numidian cavalry of Masinissa and Roman cavalry under Laelius on the left. Hannibal first sent his cavalry and war elephants against the Romans. The Punic cavalry fought those of the Romans, but was sent into retreat and pursued well behind Carthaginian lines. This seemingly eliminated both the Carthaginian and Roman cavalry from the battle. When Hannibal sent his war elephants against the Roman lines, he did not realize the amazing plans Scipio had made to counter them. When the elephants charged the Roman line, the Romans concealing the lanes through Scipio’s army stepped aside. Scipio correctly surmised that war elephants had a difficulty turning, and once charging could only continue in a straight line; Hannibal’s great elephants charged the Roman army relatively harmlessly down the lanes through it. Once through the lanes most of the elephants were killed with missiles coming from both sides of the line, and others were thrown into confusion and driven back into the cavalry on the right of the Carthaginian flank. It was at this time in the battle that Laelius took advantage of the confusion caused by the elephants, and sent the Carthaginian horsemen to rout. When the infantry of both sides clashed, it became clear almost immediately that Hannibal’s inexperienced troops on the front line would not be able to hold out against the experienced Roman soldiers (“Battle of Zama”; Livius). Ancient Roman historian Livy describes the effect of the Roman infantry upon those of the Carthaginians:
the Romans made the enemy give ground in their very first charge, then pushing them back with their shields and elbows and moving forward on to the ground from which they had dislodged them, they made a considerable advance as though meeting with no resistance. When those in the rear became aware of the forward movement they too pressed on those in front thereby considerably increasing the weight of the thrust. This retirement on the part of the enemy's auxiliaries was not checked by the Africans and Carthaginians who formed the second line. In fact, so far were they from supporting them that they too fell back, fearing lest the enemy, after overcoming the obstinate resistance of the first line. should reach them. On this the auxiliaries suddenly broke and turned tail; some took refuge within the second line, others, not allowed to do so, began to cut down those who refused to admit them after refusing to support them. There were now two battles going on, the Carthaginians had to fight with the enemy, and at the same time with their own troops. Still, they would not admit these maddened fugitives within their ranks, they closed up and drove them to the wings and out beyond the fighting ground, fearing lest their fresh and unweakened lines should be demoralised [sic] by the intrusion of panic-struck and wounded men (Livius).
While this fighting between the infantry was taking place, the Roman cavalry which had chased those of the Carthaginians from the field returned. Because they were now positioned behind the Punic forces, they were free to charge into the enemy infantry, which broke under the combined Roman forces on both sides. Livy tells us that after this attack most of the fleeing Carthaginians were slaughtered by the roman cavalry, and that Carthaginian losses were at around 20,000 men while Roman losses were a much smaller 1,500 men. Hannibal, one of the greatest generals the world has ever seen, was absolutely crushed (Livius).
After Zama any hope of a Carthaginian victory was impossible, and yet some within their senate called for a continuation of the war. Hannibal saw the futility of this and would not allow it, the great warrior called for peace. After their treachery at Zama Carthage was required to pay Rome double what was agreed to before the battle over a span of fifty years, their navy was to be limited to 10 triremes, and Carthage could no longer train war elephants. Carthage was also to hand over 100 hostages picked by Scipio, and return the ships and supplies seized by Carthage at the Gulf of Tunes. These terms were soon agreed to, ending the Second Punic War in 202 BC. For bringing Rome this success, Publius Cornelius Scipio was now known as Scipio Africanus. As for Hannibal, he was allowed to live freely in Carthage, but in 190 BC he was banished by political rivals and would soon find favor in the court of King Antiochus III of Syria (Livius; “Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Though the war with Carthage was over, peace was very short lived. In northern Italy Gallic tribes were revolting, and several very large battles took place between 200 BC and 193 BC. After many Roman victories however, Northern Italy was once again firmly under Roman control, and would never rebel again. Though the First Macedonian War had ended in 205 BC, Macedon continued to war with Rome’s allies in Greece. King Philip V of Macedon also had secured an alliance with the powerful Seleucid king Antiochus III of Syria in 203 BC to help attack Egypt, which was a valuable provider of grain to Rome. Macedonian ships were pirating trade ships in the Aegaean, which brought and the island nation of Rhodes into the war in 202 BC, and Rome’s ally Pergamum in 201 BC. Rhodes, Pergamum, and Athens were under attack and all called for Roman aid. Macedon was no friend of Rome’s for its alliance with Carthage in the First Punic War, was attacking Roman allies, and had allied itself with another powerful nation in the east; the conflict in Greece was bringing Rome close to another war just years after the end of their war with Carthage. The senate voted overwhelmingly for war in order to stop the Macedonians and Seleucids from becoming too powerful to handle in the future, however the people’s assembly, the Comitia Centuriata voted against the war. The Roman people were tired of the long years of war they had already endured, and saw no need to get involved in the conflicts of distant nations. Despite this decision however, Consul Publius Sulpicius Galba addressed the comitia centuriata and explained that their only choice was to fight Macedon in Greece now, or in Italy later. Galba’s message hit the people hard, and with the memory of Hannibal’s invasion still fresh, they decided that war was indeed the best option. In 200 BC the Second Macedonian War began (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”; “Publius Sulpicius Galba Maximus”).
Rome was hoping for a limited campaign against Macedon, nothing near the scale of the wars with Carthage. Only roughly 30,000 men were raised for battle by the Romans, and the soldiers who had fought in the Second Punic War were exempt from service. The siege of Athens was relieved by the Romans and her allies by forcing the meager Macedonian navy into retreat from the area without a fight. After this Galba landed in Illyria with his new army and attempted to move east into Macedonian territory. King Philip V marched to meet the Roman forces with 20,000 infantry and 2,000 cavalry, and yet nothing more than two skirmishes ever took place between them. Each time the forces met, Philip withdrew from the fight. Galba was soon forced to pull back due to a lack of supplies, and had achieved nearly nothing. The war was going badly for Rome’s allies as well, many of which contributed little to the war. Only the Aetolian League was very helpful at all, and took most of the fighting on itself with heavy losses (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
In 198 BC Titus Quinctius Flamininus, who was only 30 years old, took command of the war. While marching his troops through Epirus in Greece, Flamininus’s army was forced to spend six weeks in a river valley surrounded by a Macedonian army. King Philip offered to negotiate, but Flamininus would not yield. The Roman army was finally able to sneak out of the valley and reach Thessaly when a local shepherd revealed the location of a little known pass out of the valley. Another good turn of events for the Romans was news that the Achaean League had entered the war against Macedon and was now their ally. Despite this, the year of 198 BC saw little achievement on the part of Rome, and Flamininus’s position was almost given to Scipio Africanus as a result (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
By 197 BC the war was becoming difficult for Macedon under the combined might of the Greeks and Rome, and his Seleucid ally was providing no assistance at all. King Philip sought to tip the fate of the war firmly to his side, and so marched an army of 25,000 men into Thessaly. Flamininus marched his army to stop the Macedonians, and met them in the hills known as Cynoscephalae, which were ill suited to the Macedonian phalanx formation. The Battle of Cynoscephalae began with both sides evenly matched, and each on an opposite side of the hills. The morning of the battle saw the hills covered in fog, and the fighting began with hilltop skirmishes which were in favor of the Macedonians. When the Macedonians brought their army to the top of the hill, their left side seemed to be missing. The Romans advanced up the hill to meet the Macedonians, but Flamininus ordered his right flank to remain at the bottom. When the Roman and Macedonian forces met, the Roman infantry was quickly losing ground to the impenetrable phalanx of the Macedonian spearmen. In order to save his left flank, Flamininus brought his right flank into action marched uphill to attack the Macedonian left flank, hoping that his attack would force Philip to divert troops from the main attack. The Macedonian left flank however had not yet gotten into proper formation and was not ready for an attack. With war elephants leading the way, the Roman right flank plowed into the unprepared Macedonian left. With the Macedonian left pushed back, a force Romans was able to break from the main group and attack the main body of the Macedonians from the rear. The Romans had now discovered the one weakness of the phalanx formation; they may have been near invincible from the front, but could not turn around quick enough to defend themselves from behind. Sandwiched by Romans on both sides the Macedonians were thrown into chaos, and were defeated. The Romans are said to have lost only around 700 men while 13,000 Macedonians were either killed or captured (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Macedon’s defeat at Cynoscephalae forced King Philip into suing for peace with Rome, thus ending the Second Macedonian War. Flamininus was put in charge of dictating the peace terms to Macedon. The Macedonians were to leave all territories outside of their homeland, give Rome their naval fleet, and provide hostages. The land held by Macedon were divided up by the Greek forces who had aided Rome; The Achaean League received most of the Peloponnesus area in southern Greece, Athens received the islands of Paros, Scyros, and Imbros. The Aetolian League felt bitter at receiving only a small portion of Thessaly, while the rest was made independent. At the Isthmian Games in Corinth in 196 BC Flamininus declared that Rome had only come to Greece to aid the Greek people against the Macedonians, and would withdraw its forces soon. In 194 BC the last Roman troops left in Greece withdrew, just as Flamininus had promised (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Because of the anger the Aetolian League felt at having Rome decide their meager prize after victory over Macedon, they sought the aid of the Seleucid Empire, Sparta, and even Macedon against the Romans. The Aetolians were able to convince King Antiochus III of Seleucia to give them aid in the event of Roman aggression against Aetolia. The Aetolian League took this as a solid promise for aid against Rome, and thus instigated Roman involvement in the area by attacking the fortresses of Demetrias, Chalcis, and the city of Sparta. The Aetolians were unable to take Chalcis, but did take Demetrias and held Sparta for a short time. Though it was unnecessary since Rome had not acted against the Aetolians, King Antiochus personally led a small force of 10,000 infantry, 500 cavalry, and 6 war elephants across the Aegean. The small size of this army was partly due to the large number of other campaigns he was waging at the time. As soon as Antiochus landed in Thessaly, Rome allied herself with the Achaean League and even Macedon against the Seleucids in 192 BC (Rickard; “Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
The campaigns occurring in 191 BC were decisive, with Macedon overrunning enemy holdings in Thessaly and Rome dealing with the Aetolians in the West. In April of 191 BC a Roman forced marched through Aetolia to meet Antiochus. To defend against the Romans, Antiochus decided to hold the pass of Thermopylae, the very pass that the famous Spartan King Leonidas defended valiantly to the death against the Persians centuries earlier. Knowing that the Spartans under Leonidas had been defeated because their enemy had discovered a hidden path with which to surround the Spartans, Antiochus sent 2,000 Aetolians to defend the path. Despite the well defended position the Seleucids held, the Roman force under Marcus Acilius Glabrio advanced against them. While most of the Romans were confronting the main body of the enemy, 4,000 men were sent up to the hidden path to take on the Aetolians positioned there. These Romans were successful in forcing their way down the path, until they were able to descend from the pass and hit the Seleucids from the rear. Now that they were fighting a battle on both sides the Seleucids were rapt with fear and fled. Most of Antiochus’s army was destroyed, but the king himself managed to escape. Not long after their ally’s defeat at Thermopylae, the Aetolians were forced to accept Roman terms for peace. The war with Antiochus however, was not over yet (Rickard; “Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
After Seleucia’s defeat at Thermopylae came a sea battles for control of the Aegean. In 191 BC at Cape Corycus, admiral Polyxenidas of the Syrian navy attempted to attack a joint fleet ships from both Rome and Pergamum before they could unite with the Rhodian navy. This turned out to be a terrible defeat for the Seleucids, who lost 23 warships while the Romans only lost one. In the spring of 190 BC however, Polyxenidas managed to nearly destroy the entire Rhodian fleet at Panormus. It was around this time that the famous Carthaginian general Hannibal Barca, who had been banished from Carthage by political enemies, found favor with King Antiochus and was put in charge of one of his navies. Hannibal raised his navy in Phoenicia with a mixed variety of ships designed to counter the grappling and boarding tactics of Roman ships. What Hannibal did not take into consideration was the tactics of the Rhodian fleet, which relied on their experienced captains and crew more than warriors. At the Battle of Eurymedon Hannibal was defeated by the more experience Rhodian navy. Soon after the Battle of Eurymedon the Seleucid fleet of 89 ships under Polyxenidas was met by 80 Roman and Rhodian ships at Myonnesus. The swift Rhodian ships prevented the Seleucids from outflanking the Roman navy, which left the Romans free to board the enemy ships. The Seleucids lost 42 ships at Myonnesus, almost half of their fleet. The allied forces of Rome, Pergamum, and Rhodes were now in obvious control of the Aegean and were free to cross into Asia Minor (Rickard; “Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
The consulship for 190 BC was given to Lucius Cornelius Scipio, who was accompanied by his brother Scipio Africanus because of the consul’s lack of military experience. Rome’s unlikely ally Macedon was played an important part in making sure the Roman army was well supplied for the invasion of Asia Minor. King Antiochus was now on the defensive, and pulled together a massive army of 60,000 infantry and 12,000 cavalry to fend off the Roman invasion force of around 30,000 men. Despite the king’s advantage in numbers, he offered to pay for half of Rome’s war expenses and withdraw from some of the land he had recently acquired around the Aegean in order to end the war. Rome would not allow the king to get off so easily, and so demanded that the Seleucids pay the full Roman war costs and withdraw from all of Asia Minor. Antiochus would not consent to such harsh terms, and so in December of 190 BC the two armies met at Magnesia (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
Due to a serious illness, Scipio Africanus was unable to take part in the Battle of Magnesia. Because of this, command of the army fell to Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus and King Eumenes of Pergamum who had brought along 10,000 Pergamene troops to accompany the 20,000 Romans. When the battle began the entire field was covered in a thick fog which made command of the battle particularly difficult. The battle began with a charge by King Eumenes’ cavalry and light infantry from the Roman right driving away the cavalry and chariots on the Seleucid left. These forces then attacked the Seleucid phalanx formation on its left. Seeing that the Seleucid center was in disarray, the Roman center advanced and forced the pikemen back. The Seleucid right however, led by King Antiochus, was very successful in breaking the Roman left with a cavalry charge. The only problem for Antiochus was that he and his cavalry were now separated from the main army, and were unable to find safety in the dense fog. Suddenly Antiochus and his cavalry were assaulted from both sides and forced from the field. Without cavalry to protect either of its flanks, and without a leader to command them, the Seleucid army soon broke and fled. The Seleucid defeat was made obvious by the number of their men left dead on the field, 50,000 infantry and 3,000 cavalry. Amazingly, the Romans only lost around 350 men (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
The Battle of Magnesia brought an end to the war with Seleucia. The Scipio brothers gave Antiochus roughly the same terms as they had before the battle, that were now agreed to. The Seleucids were to leave the lands of Asia Minor, pay a fine of 15,000 talents. The land of Cappadocia and two Armenian regions were made into independent kingdoms. Pergamum received a large amount of land in Asia Minor and the Chersonese Peninsula; Macedon and the Achaean League received some land from the Aetolian League, which was put under Roman control. These punishments however were not seen as harsh enough by the Scipio’s political enemies. When Gnaeus Manlius Vulso took over as consul from Lucius Scipio, he gave even harsher terms to King Antiochus. The Seleucids were to give up all war ships except for ten, and get rid of all of their war elephants. Also, Seleucia was never to wage war in Europe or the Aegean, and could not take Greek allies. Such harsh terms likely played a part in Seleucia’s eventual decline (“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire”).
INCOMPLETE, TO BE CONTINUED?




Works Cited
Adams, John P. “The Twelve Tables.” California State University Northridge.
Dec. 2006. 27 February 2009 <http://www.csun.edu/~hcfll004/12tables.html>
“Battle of Ilipa.” Allexperts.com. 31 March 2009
<http://en.allexperts.com/e/b/ba/battle_of_ilipa.htm>
“Battle of Mylae.” Knowledgerush.com. 2003. 11 March 2009
< http://knowledgerush.com/kr/encyclopedi ... _of_Mylae/ >
“Battle of the Metaurus.” Wikipedia.org. Mar. 2009. 28 March 2009
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Metaurus#cite_note-4>
“Battle of Utica.” The Free Dictionary. Oct. 2007. 4 April 2009
<http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Battle+of+Utica+(203+BC)>
“Battle of Zama.” Wikipedia.org. Mar. 2009. 21 April 2009
< http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Zama >
“Cannae, Battle of.” Encyclopedia.com. 2000. 24 March 2009
< http://www.encyclopedia.com >
Durant, Will. Caesar and Christ. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1944.
Gill, N.S. “On This Day in Ancient History-Battle of Lake Trasimene.” Ancienthistory.about.com. Jun. 2008. 21 March 2009
<http://ancienthistory.about.com/b/2008/06/24/on-this-day-in-history-3.htm>
“Hannibal Barca.” Answers.com. 2009. 16 March 2009
<http://www.answers.com/topic/hannibal-barca>
“Hieronymus of Syracuse.” Wikipedia.org. Mar. 2009. 24 March 2009
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hieronymus_of_Syracuse>
“Illustrated History of the Roman Empire.” Roman-empire.net. 22 January 2009
<http://www.roman-empire.net/index.html>
Jones, Chris. “Battle of Metaurus (207 BC).” Fanaticus.org. Jan. 2000. 28 March 2009
<http://www.fanaticus.org/DBA/battles/metaurus.html>
Livius, Titus. “Livy’s History of Rome: Book 30.” 1996. 13 April 2009. Trans. Rev.
Canon Roberts. London: J.M. Dent & Sons, Ltd., 1905.
< http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/txt/ah/Livy/Livy30.html >
“Marcus Atilius Regulus.” Wikipedia.org. Feb. 2009. 11 March 2009
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcus_Atilius_Regulus>
“Publius Sulpicius Galba Maximus.” Wikipedia.org. Apr. 2009. 25 March 2009
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Publius_Sulpicius_Galba_Maximus>
“Pyrrhic War (280-275 BC).” militarythroughtheages.com. 4 March 2009
<http://www.militarythroughtheages.com>
Rickard, J. “Battle of Trebia, late December 218 BC.” Historyofwar.org. 16 March 2009
<http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/battles_trebia.html>
Rickard, J. “War between Rome and Antiochus III, 192-188 B.C.” Historyofwar.org. Nov. 2008. 29 April 2009 <http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/wars_rome_antiochusIII.html>
“Scipio Africanus.” Wikipedia.org. Mar. 2009. 28 march 2009
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scipio_Africanus_Major>
“Solon The Lawmaker of Athens.” E-classics.com. 25 February 2009
<http://www.e-classics.com/solon.htm>
“The Battle of Ecnomus (256).” Livius.org. 11 March 2009
< http://www.livius.org/sh-si/sicily/sicily_t25.html >
“The History of Ancient Rome.” UNRV History. 5 February 2009
< http://www.unrv.com/empire/roman-history.php >
Nomen:Jared AKA "Nihon" AKA "Nihonius" AKA "Hey You"

Now with Anti-Varus protection! If your legion is lost for any reason, we will give it back! Guaranteed!

Carpe Dium
Reply
#3
That's quite a piece of work! How did your teacher respond? Good grade?

No wonder we haven't heard much from you lately: you've been busy.
M. Demetrius Abicio
(David Wills)

Saepe veritas est dura.
Reply
#4
Lol ya, I've been pretty busy for sure. I just turned in the paper yesterday and havent gotten a grade yet ( It will likely take days for him to read all the essays).
I'm hoping to be on here a bit more this summer. My whole gladius project has been on hold for a while due to time issues and the fact that I dont have a workbench yet. I'm hoping to start lots of swordmaking this summer so long as work doesnt get in the way.

Thanks for the comment

-Jared
Nomen:Jared AKA "Nihon" AKA "Nihonius" AKA "Hey You"

Now with Anti-Varus protection! If your legion is lost for any reason, we will give it back! Guaranteed!

Carpe Dium
Reply
#5
I'm guessing nobody has read any of this.... oh well.
Nomen:Jared AKA "Nihon" AKA "Nihonius" AKA "Hey You"

Now with Anti-Varus protection! If your legion is lost for any reason, we will give it back! Guaranteed!

Carpe Dium
Reply
#6
Well, I have. Let us know how your teacher thought you did. Pretty comprehensive essay, if you ask me. Good job, again.
M. Demetrius Abicio
(David Wills)

Saepe veritas est dura.
Reply
#7
I have to eat supper now...gimme some time and I will, that's a lot of writing to read! Big Grin
____________________________________________________________
Magnus/Matt
Du Courage Viens La Verité

Legion: TBD
Reply
#8
Quote:I'm guessing nobody has read any of this.... oh well.

I've been reading too. I'm through your first post, but I have the bad habit of easily getting sidetracked while reading history. I'll read something and then wonder how so-and-so described the same event and then go check. I do that a lot. I've never met a footnote that I didn't like. :lol:

But anyway, that is just a long way of saying that I am reading your essay but am not done yet. I like it so far.
David J. Cord
www.davidcord.com
Reply
#9
Wow cool! Thank you guys so much! I know it's not really book worthy or anything, but the fact that anyone is reading it still makes me happy. I was originally supposed to write a paper that was somehow arguable, thus in need of my opinions. I kinda forgot to do that very much...hehehe :oops: My teacher is pretty forgiving luckily though, and I already got Valedictorian so I doubt even a bad grade would do more than hurt my pride. I'll be sure to let you all know what grade I get though. Let me know if there are any questionable facts or anything else wrong in the essay as well. I ran into a good deal of information conflicts that I had to dig through to find the most likely truth of. You guys know alot more than I do, so please let me know any issues!

Thanks again,
-Nihonius
Nomen:Jared AKA "Nihon" AKA "Nihonius" AKA "Hey You"

Now with Anti-Varus protection! If your legion is lost for any reason, we will give it back! Guaranteed!

Carpe Dium
Reply
#10
Congratulations on your Valedictorian award. Got your speech ready? No??! Well, better get on it. :wink:
M. Demetrius Abicio
(David Wills)

Saepe veritas est dura.
Reply
#11
Quote:I'm guessing nobody has read any of this.... oh well.

Eh...read what?

Just kidding.
I haven't had too much free time to read it all, but spotted the intersting note about the double meaning of Lupus....I reckon they were definately refering to a she wolf....otherwise how do you explain their total lack of suitering skills..... see 'the rape of the Sabine women' for my thinking:wink: :mrgreen:
Visne partem mei capere? Comminus agamus! * Me semper rogo, Quid faceret Iulius Caesar? * Confidence is a good thing! Overconfidence is too much of a good thing.
[b]Legio XIIII GMV. (Q. Magivs)RMRS Remember Atuatuca! Vengence will be ours!
Titus Flavius Germanus
Batavian Coh I
Byron Angel
Reply
#12
Luckily I dont have to give a speech, lol. I wouldnt know what to say.
My guess is that the Romans meant she-wolf as well, otherwise the famous statue of Romulus and Remus getting a drink from the wolf would be suckling a lady Big Grin

@Gaius: By suitering do you mean finding women? I'm sure other Latin cities did have prostitution before Rome, so a prostitute could be around for sure. Early Rome may not have, due to it's lack of women. Ex slaves and criminals likely were of a male majority, and would settle down with any woman they could find in the area.
Nomen:Jared AKA "Nihon" AKA "Nihonius" AKA "Hey You"

Now with Anti-Varus protection! If your legion is lost for any reason, we will give it back! Guaranteed!

Carpe Dium
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Stefanie Hoss: River finds from the Netherlands – an overview Simplex 4 262 01-17-2023, 06:42 PM
Last Post: Simplex

Forum Jump: