Read Makers of Ancient Strategy: From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome Online
Authors: Victor Davis Hanson
Tags: #Princeton University Press, #0691137900
mention in the narrative of the
Commentaries
. Caesar and other sources
claim repeatedly that Roman soldiers fought better when they were
being watched by their commander, who had the power to reward or
punish them.17
Many of Caesar’s senior officers became extremely wealthy during
these campaigns, something lampooned by the poet Catullus. Com-
mand of an army gave a Roman governor considerable patronage,
allowing him to make appointments as legates and tribunes and to a
218 Goldsworthy
whole range of other posts. He could also award contracts to business-
men. The profits of war were also of great value in winning friends at
Rome. Caesar gave a loan to Cicero and a legate’s commission to his
brother Quintus, who is portrayed in a very favorable light in the
Com-
mentaries
. Vast sums were rumored to have been spent to purchase the
support of Aemilius Paullus and Curio, respectively consul and tribune
of the plebs, in 50 BC.18
Caesar’s massive expansion of his army was not officially sanctioned
at first. He carried this out on his own initiative and authority, funding
it through the revenue from his province. He treated the people of Cis-
alpine Gaul as if they were citizens and enrolled them in the legions.
Later he would do the same in the Transalpine province, eventually
forming an entire legion,
Legio V Alaudae
, from this source.19 In 55 BC,
Pompey and Crassus arranged not only the extension of Caesar’s com-
mand but the retrospective approval and funding from the Senate for
the enlargement of the army. It was probably not until the dictatorship
that Caesar himself was able to confirm the grant of Roman citizen-
ship to the Gauls recruited into his army.
Expanding the army gave Caesar not only greater forces but also
much greater patronage. Each new legion raised created sixty com-
missions for centurions, as well as half a dozen or so tribune posts. In
the
Commentaries
, Caesar notes that he promoted centurions to higher
grades for conspicuous service, often transferring men from a veteran
legion into a new formation. By the end of the campaigns in Gaul, it
is likely that every centurion in the army owed his original commis-
sion or one or more steps in promotion to Caesar. By 48 BC, Caesar’s
legions were on average below half strength, and by the time it reached
Alexandria, the veteran Legio VI numbered fewer than 1,000 men, just
20 percent of its full complement. We do not know how often fresh
recruits were drafted into existing legions, but it is possible that the
preference was always to raise new formations, creating more commis-
sions with which to reward loyal followers.20
Ordinary soldiers—
nostril
,
“
our men”—are praised for their cour-
age and prowess in the
Commentaries
but are almost never named. Even
the eagle bearer of the Tenth Legion who famously jumped over the
side of a ship and led the charge up the beach during the landing in
The General as State 219
Britain in 55 BC is anonymous. Centurions are singled out and identified
far more often. When Caesar was rallying the line at the Sambre, he
encouraged the men as groups, but called to the centurions by name.
(There were 480 centurions in the army at that time, a number it is not
impossible for one man to know. Today, battalion commanders could
be expected to recognize each of the soldiers under their command,
in a way that would not be possible for leaders of brigades or larger
formations.)21
Although there is a persistent myth that centurions were promoted
from the ranks, Caesar never once mentions doing this. Many, if not
all, seem to have been directly commissioned, and probably came from
the moderately well-off classes and local aristocracies of Italy. Substan-
tial numbers of centurions were given leave by Caesar to assist in vital
elections at Rome. In part this was through intimidation, but given that
the Roman voting system gave more weight to the better-off, this also
suggests that many centurions were men of consequence. Some were
rewarded by Caesar with enough wealth to become equestrians, such
as Scaeva, who held an outpost at Dyrrachium against massive odds
in 48 BC. The prominence of centurions in the
Commentaries
adds to
the impression that they came from a politically significant class that
Caesar wished to cultivate.22
The Rubicon and Beyond
Crossing the Rubicon was a sign of Caesar’s political failure. It was a
gamble; hence his famous comment, “the die is cast.” It would have
been far better to return peacefully, moving smoothly into a second
consulship and then a new provincial command, both of which would
have secured him against prosecution. Such a victory would also have
been far more satisfying, forcing his rivals to acknowledge his deserved
preeminence. Caesar’s eventual victory should not blind us to the fact
that in most respects, the odds were against him. Pompey and his allies
were not ready to defend Italy. This was in part because no one would
expect a war to begin in January, long before the normal campaigning
season, but also because they always expected Caesar to back down. Yet
they managed to withdraw with considerable troops to Greece. Once
220 Goldsworthy
there, Pompey was able to call on the resources of the eastern prov-
inces to mass and train a great army.
Caesar overran Italy quickly but did not have the ships to pursue
Pompey. Inactivity would only allow his enemies to grow stronger,
and so he led his army to Spain. Pompey had controlled the Spanish
provinces since his second consulship in 55 BC, governing them through
deputies and remaining near Rome himself. Caesar won another quick
victory, outmaneuvering Pompey’s generals. He could not afford to suf-
fer a serious defeat. Since the war was fought to protect his career and
position, a serious reverse would have utterly discredited him. His op-
ponents were far more able to absorb such losses and blows to prestige.
Caesar had to keep attacking and had to keep winning, and even after
these early successes his enemies possessed much greater resources.
Pompey waited for Caesar to attack him in Greece. The same strat-
egy was employed by Brutus and Cassius in 42 BC, and by Mark Antony
in 31 BC. There was much to recommend it, as each of these possessed a
stronger fleet than their opponents. Yet in every case they were beaten
and the risk-taking attacker prevailed. Keeping the initiative was clearly
a major asset in civil as well as foreign wars. The 48 BC campaign was
close and could easily have ended in disaster for Caesar. Despite his
soldiers’ formidable powers of endurance, Caesar failed at Dyrrachium
and was forced to retreat. Pompey then decided that the Caesarean
army was sufficiently weakened to be defeated, and so risked battle at
Pharsalus. This was not unreasonable, since he was under considerable
pressure from the distinguished senators with his army, who accused
him of prolonging the war needlessly. Caesar’s failure to attract promi-
nent supporters ensured that his leadership was never challenged by
subordinates. Waiting to starve the enemy into submission, however,
was a difficult strategy to maintain in a civil war. Caesar accepted the
offer of battle and proved himself the better tactician, winning an over-
whelming victory.
The civil war did not end. Pompey fled to Egypt and was killed.
Caesar pursued him and became embroiled in that kingdom’s own civil
war. He placed Cleopatra on the throne and then stayed for some time,
personal reasons mingling with political ones. The time permitted sur-
viving Pompeians to muster again in North Africa. They were defeated
The General as State 221
in 46 BC. Another force, led by Pompey’s son, had to be confronted
and beaten in Spain in 45 BC. Caesar had not intended to seize supreme
power by force. Once he had done so he had to fight to keep power, and
also had to decide how to use it. It is important to remember just how
short a time Caesar spent in Rome as dictator. After his murder another
spate of civil wars erupted, fought first between his defenders and his
assassins. Both sides produced floods of propaganda concerning what
Caesar was planning to do. The truth is now impossible to recover with
any certainty.
Caesar’s immediate plans involved fighting major wars against the
Dacians and then the Parthians. These offered the “clean” glory of
defeating foreign enemies of the republic rather than fellow Romans.
Caesar nominated magistrates for the next three years, which suggests
that he planned to be away for at least this time. The Parthians were
formidable opponents who had defeated and killed Crassus in 53 BC
and would later severely maul Antony’s invasion force. Whether or not
Caesar would have fared better is hard to say. It is uncertain whether he
planned conquest and occupation or simply a grand punitive expedi-
tion to gain public vengeance for Crassus.
As dictator, Caesar was head of the republic. Since he had come to
power by force, it was important to maintain control of the army. At
some point, probably just before or during the civil war, Caesar had
doubled the basic rate of pay for a legionary soldier. No doubt higher
ranks received proportional increases. Veterans were discharged and
given farms. As far as possible this was done without inflicting serious
hardship on existing communities. Around the time he celebrated his
triumphs, there was a protest by disgruntled soldiers. This was dealt
with extremely severely, and several men were executed. As dictator,
Caesar continued to be generous but firm with his soldiers. Officers of
all ranks received lavish rewards. Caesar enrolled large numbers of new
senators, including equestrian officers, some Gauls, and a few former
centurions.23
Many individuals from the army benefited from Caesar’s dictator-
ship. The army itself was not granted particular privileges, nor was it
placed in direct control of any new aspects of life. Caesar had come
to power through civil war but, as in Gaul, hoped to create a regime
222 Goldsworthy
that survived by consent as much as by force. In the last months of
his life he dismissed his Spanish bodyguard. Presumably he felt that
if his regime was to survive three years of his absence on campaign,
then he needed to show confidence while he was in Rome. Sulla had
resigned the dictatorship he had taken by force, but Caesar described
this as the act of a “political illiterate.”24 Caesar believed he should hold
on to power. He misunderstood the attachment of others to tradition,
and was murdered.
Limits of Force
Caesar was a commander of genius. Like Alexander or Napoleon, he
was not a great military reformer and took over a fighting force already
improved by others. All of these men honed their armies to a fine edge,
inspired them, and led them with a flair and imagination that produced
spectacular success. Also like Napoleon, Caesar exploited his military
success to seize supreme power within the state. Unlike the French em-
peror he did not so profoundly shape the entire state around himself.
Caesar effectively controlled elections and was himself a higher author-
ity above the magistrates chosen. Yet these still served, the Senate and
Popular Assemblies continued to meet and vote, and the courts func-
tioned much as they had before the dictatorship. The conspirators felt
that almost the sole thing needed for the republic to function as normal
was the removal of Caesar himself.
The dictator fel to internal rather than foreign enemies, unlike Na-
poleon. Military success was not enough to al ow Caesar to create a
stable regime; that task would be left to Augustus. He too would seize
supreme power through military force. It took decades to create his new
regime and to turn the brutal triumvir who had clawed his way to the
top so violently into the beloved “father of his country.” Augustus took
care to keep the army loyal to himself alone. For over two centuries,
the republican tradition of the senatorial class holding military and civil
power continued. At any time, only a handful of senators were capable
of supplanting the emperor. There were civil wars in AD 68–69 and 193–
97, but otherwise there was far greater stability than in the last decades
of the republic. Augustus and his successors were military dictators, but
The General as State 223
at the cost of political independence they gave the Roman world in-
ternal stability. Senators enjoyed prestigious careers and could stil win
glory, but simply did so as representatives of the emperor. This and so
much more would change in the third century.