Read Makers of Ancient Strategy: From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome Online
Authors: Victor Davis Hanson
Tags: #Princeton University Press, #0691137900
bridge University Press, 1996); F. H. Thompson,
The Archaeology of Greek and Roman Slav-
ery
(London: Duckworth, 2003); Thomas Grünewald,
Bandits in the Roman Empire: Myth
202 Strauss
and Reality
, trans. John Drinkwater
(London: Routledge, 2004); Nial McKeown,
The In-
vention of Ancient Slavery?
(London: Duckworth, 2007); and the col ection of documents
edited by Thomas Wiedemann,
Greek and Roman Slavery
(London: Routledge, 1981).
Studies of individual subjects include Karl-WilhemWelwei,
Unfreie in antiken Kriegs-
dienst
, 3 vols. (Wiesbaden, Germany: Steiner, 1974–88); Peter Hunt,
Slaves, Warfare, and
Ideology in the Greek Historians
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998); Paul
Cartledge,
The Spartans: The World of the Warrior-Heroes of Ancient Greece, from Utopia to
Crisis to Collapse
(Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press, 2003), and his more detailed
Sparta
and Lakonia: A Regional History 1300–362 bc
, 2nd ed. (London: Routledge, 2002); Nino
Luraghi and Susan E. Alcock, eds.,
Helots and Their Masters in Laconia and Messenia:
Histories, Ideologies, Structures
(Washington, DC: Center for Hellenic Studies and the
Trustees for Harvard University, 2003); Nino Luraghi,
The Ancient Messenians: Construc-
tions of Ethnicity and Memory
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008); Alexan-
der Fuks, “Slave Wars and Slave Troubles in Chios in the Third Century BC,”
Athenaeum
46 (1968): 102–11; Kyung-Hyun Kim, “On the Nature of Aristonicus’s Movement,” in
Forms of Control and Subordination in Antiquity
, ed. Toru Yogi and Masaoki Doi, 159–63
(Leiden: Brill, 1986); Jean Christian Dumont,
Servus: Rome et l’esclavage sous la république,
Collection de l’École Française de Rome 103 (Rome: École Française de Rome, Palais
Farnèse, 1987); J. A. North, “Religious Toleration in Republican Rome,”
Proceedings of
the Cambridge Philological Society
25 (1979): 85–103; P. Green, “The First Sicilian Slave War,”
Past and Present
20
(1961): 10–29, with objections by W.G.G. Forrest and T.C.W.
Stinton, “The First Sicilian Slave War,”
Past and Present
22 (1962): 87–93; G. P. Verbrug-
ghe, “Sicily 210–70 B.C.: Livy, Cicero and Diodorus,”
Transactions and Proceedings of the
American Philological Association
103 (1972): 535–59, and idem, “Slave Rebellion or Sicily in
Revolt?”
Kokalos
20 (1974): 46–60; N. A. Mashkin, “Eschatology and Messianism in the
Final Period of the Roman Republic,”
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
10, no. 2
(1949): 206–28; P. Masiello, “L’ideologica messianica e le Rivolte Servili,”
Annali della
Facolta di lettere e filosofia
11 (1966): 179–96; and Barry Strauss,
The Spartacus War
(New York: Simon & Schuster; London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2009).
notes
1 For these terms, see Yvon Garlan,
Slavery in Ancient Greece
, rev. ed., trans. Janet
Lloyd (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1988), 24, 87.
2 On this subject, see Karl-WilhemWelwei,
Unfreie in antiken Kriegsdienst
, 3 vols.
(Wies baden, Germany: Steiner, 1974–1988); Garlan,
Slavery in Ancient Greece
, 163–76; and
Peter Hunt,
Slaves, Warfare, and Ideology in the Greek Historians
(Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1998).
3 Aristotle
Politics
1269a36–b6.
4 For an introduction, see Paul Cartledge,
The Spartans: The World of the Warrior-
Heroes of Ancient Greece, from Utopia to Crisis to Collapse
(Woodstock, NY: Overlook
Press, 2003), and his more detailed
Sparta and Lakonia: A Regional History 1300–362 bc
, 2nd
ed. (London: Routledge, 2001); Nino Luraghi and Susan E. Alcock, eds.,
Helots and Their
Masters in Laconia and Messenia: Histories, Ideologies, Structures
(Washington, DC: Cen-
ter for Hellenic Studies and the Trustees for Harvard University, 2003); Nino Luraghi,
Slave Wars of Greece and Rome 203
The Ancient Messenians: Constructions of Ethnicity and Memory
(Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2008).
5 Thucydides 7.27.5.
6 Thucydides
Hellenica Oxyrhynchia
17.4.
7 For an overview of the era of slave wars between 140 and 70 BC, see Brent D.
Shaw,
Spartacus and the Slave Wars
(Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2001), 2–14; for a more
detailed account, see K. R. Bradley,
Slavery and Rebellion in the Roman World, 140–70 b.c.
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989).
8 Appian
Civil Wars
1.9.36.
9 See J. Vogt,
Ancient Slavery and the Ideal of Man
, trans. T. Wiedemann (Oxford:
Blackwell, 1975), 40; Bradley,
Slavery and Rebellion
, 1–15; Peter Garnsey,
Ideas of Slavery
from Aristotle to Augustine
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 75–86.
10 Constantine, Porphyrogenitus, Excerpt 4, p. 384 (Diodorus Siculus 34.2.38).
11 Appian
Civil Wars
1.116.539.
12 Strabo 14.1.138, 34–35.2.26. See Kyung-Hyun Kim, “On the Nature of Aristoni-
cus’s Movement,” in
Forms of Control and Subordination in Antiquity
, ed. Toru Yogi and
Masaoki Doi, 159–63 (Leiden: Brill, 1986).
13 Diodorus Siculus 2.55–60.
14 See the recent argument by Theresa Urbainczyk,
Slave Revolts in Antiquity
(Stocks-
field, UK: Acumen Publishing, 2008), 31–34, 75–80.
15 On the messianic aspects of the Roman slave revolts, see N. A. Mashkin, “Escha-
tology and Messianism in the Final Period of the Roman Republic,”
Philosophy and Phe-
nomenological Research
10, no. 2 (1949): 206–28, and P. Masiello, “L’ideologica messianica
e le Rivolte Servili,”
Annali della Facolta di lettere e filosofia
11 (1966): 179–96.
16 Athenaeus
Deipnosophistae
6.266d. The sole ancient source is the gossipy Athe-
naeus,
Deipnosophistae
6.265d–66d. For a modern account, see Alexander Fuks, “Slave
Wars and Slave Troubles in Chios in the Third Century BC,”
Athenaeum
46 (1968): 102–11.
17 Diodorus Siculus 34.2.46, 36.4.4, with Jean Christian Dumont,
Servus: Rome et
l’esclavage sous la république
, Collection de l’École Française de Rome 103 (Rome: École
Française de Rome, Palais Farnèse, 1987), 263–64.
18 “Enormous strength and spirit”: Sallust
Histories
frag. 3.90 (my translation).
19 Wife or girlfriend: Plutarch
Life of Crassus
8.4.
20 Plutarch
Life of Crassus
8.4.
21 Claudian
Gothica
155–56.
22 Aulus Gellius,
Attic Nights,
5.6.20, trans. Shaw,
Spartacus and the Slave Wars
, 164.
23 We depend largely on ninth- and tenth-century Byzantine summaries of the ac-
count of Diodorus of Sicily, who in turn relied heavily on the Stoic philosopher Posido-
nius; see Thomas Wiedemann,
Greek and Roman Slavery
(London: Routledge, 1981),
199–200. For the theory of nationalist rebellion, see G. P. Verbrugghe, “Sicily 210–70
B.C.: Livy, Cicero and Diodorus,”
Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological
Association
103 (1972): 535–59, and idem, “Slave Rebellion or Sicily in Revolt?”
Kokalos
20
(1974): 46–60.
24 Constantine Porphyrogenitus, Excerpt 4, 384f. (Diodorus Siculus 34.2.48) (Loeb
translation).
25 Photius
Bibliotheca
388 (Diodorus Siculus 36.6.1) (Loeb translation).
204 Strauss
26 Appian
Civil Wars
1.116.540 (my translation).
27 Revolt of Selouros in Sicily: Strabo
Geography
6.2.7; nascent slave rebellion in
southern Italy in AD 24: Tacitus
Annals
4.27; possible slave revolt under Bulla Felix in
Italy in AD 206–7: Cassius Dio
Histories
77.10.1–7.
28 Augustus
Res Gestae
25
.
Slave Wars of Greece and Rome 205
9. Julius Caesar and the General as State
Adrian Goldsworthy
In the early hours of January 11, 49 BC, Julius Caesar led the Thir-
teenth Legion across the Rubicon and became a rebel. The river—in
reality little more than a stream, and now impossible to locate—marked
the boundary between his province of Cisalpine Gaul and Italy itself.
North of that line he was legally entitled to command troops. To the
south he was not. Nineteen months later, while surveying the corpses
of his enemies at Pharsalus, Caesar claimed, “They wanted it; even af-
ter all my great deeds I, Caius Caesar, would have been condemned, if
I had not sought support from my army.”1
Caesar was more successful than any other Roman general, fighting
“fifty pitched battles, the only commander to surpass Marcus Marcel-
lus, who fought thirty-nine.”2 Yet there was an ambiguity about his rep-
utation because many of his battles were fought against other Romans.
For more than a year before crossing the Rubicon, Caesar and his op-
ponents in the Senate had engaged in a game of brinkmanship, each in
turn raising the stakes. Probably both sides expected the other to back
down. There was no profound ideology involved. His opponents were
determined to end Caesar’s career, and he was equally resolved to pre-
serve it. The price was a war fought all around the Mediterranean that
cost tens of thousands of lives. However unreasonable his opponents
had been, it was Caesar who crossed the Rubicon and started the civil
war of 49–45 BC. Cicero believed that fighting this war was unnecessary
and foolish, but was still scornful of Caesar’s behavior: “He claims that
he is doing all this to protect his dignity. How can there be any dignity
where there is no honesty?”3
The rebel won the war. Caesar became dictator for life and held su-
preme authority in the republic. He also had effective control of the en-
tire Roman army. His rule was not especial y tyrannical. Enemies were
pardoned and many promoted, while his legislation was general y sen-
sible. However, the republican system was supposed to prevent any one
individual from permanently possessing so much power. For this and
other reasons, a group of senators stabbed Caesar to death on March 15,
44 BC. Just over a decade later, Caesar’s adopted son defeated his last rival
and became Rome’s first emperor. Augustus created a system that would
endure for centuries, and was a monarchy in al but name. “ Caesar” even-
tual y went from being simply a family name to a title synonymous with
supreme power. Caesars would rule Rome for 500 years, and the Eastern
or Byzantine Empire for nearly a thousand more. The name would sur-
vive into the twentieth century in the forms
kaiser
and
tsar
.
Caesar conquered Gaul and raided across the Rhine into Germany
and over the English Channel into Britain. By Roman standards these
wars were all justified and for the general good of the state. Success-
ful commanders were expected to profit from victory, and Caesar did
so on a massive scale, matching the scope of his campaigns. He was a
commander of genius who then turned his army against opponents
within the republic and made himself dictator through force of arms.
His career was that of a talented man who began as a servant of the
state, but then subverted it and became its master.
In a modern democracy, the armed forces are supposed always to
remain fully under the control of civil authorities. This has been es-
pecially important in Britain since the civil wars, which had led to the
rule of Cromwell and the Major Generals. Memories of this same rule
by the army influenced America’s founding fathers, and George Wash-
ington earned almost as much praise for his refusal to stand for a third
term as president as for winning the war with Britain in the first place.
The United States was to be a better version of the ancient republics,
avoiding Rome’s slide into military dictatorship and imperial rule. In
contrast, France’s revolution led to the rise of its own Caesar in the
form of Napoleon. At his coronation as emperor in 1804, Napoleon
himself placed the crown on his head to emphasize that he had taken
power rather than been given it.
The General as State 207
Dictators have seized powers in military coups in many countries,
although since the Second World War the problem has afflicted only
Third World countries and has seemed a distant one in the West. It is
important to remember that Caesar did not spring from nowhere. He
did not single-handedly destroy the republic, nor did he subvert a de-
mocracy that was functioning well and essentially stable. The conflict
from 49 to 45 BC was not the first civil war, and others were as willing as
he to resort to violence. Sulla had already fought his way to the dicta-