ROME AND THE CONQUEST OF
THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN
How
to host a Roman orgy. Knowing the proper etiquette is everything.
On the Roman legion and warfare, try this site.
Thinking back: review document
§67 on the end of the 2nd Punic War. Note the terms of peace.
- Introduction
- The Problem: Three
decisive victories and wars of short duration characterize the process.
Yet the Hellenistic kingdoms had great advantages: they were far wealthier
in both manpower and material, more urbanized, and had a vastly superior
culture. Why was their resistance so minimal? Many scholars believe that the Hellenistic
monarchs were so passive because they believed that their fortunes would
change (for such had been the pattern in the East between Alexander and
the arrival of the Romans); that Rome would not prove so tenacious a foe.
- Qualities of Warfare:
Romans superior in manpower (to each individual state), tactics and strategy.
Had the Hellenistic kingdoms acted together, they might have succeeded
in defending the status quo.
- The propaganda.
Propaganda also a constraint: Rome did not want to appear as a barbarian
state, but as the savior of the Greeks from the tyranny of a monarch; what she could do
then was limited by her own perception of her mission and of her self-image:
- Rome fought
for the freedom of the Greeks, a specious and overused
pretext by Hellenistic standards and a cover for fear (that another
Hannibal/Alexander/Pyrrhus might arise),
- desire for booty (but no evidence of commercial goals) and glory (to ensure political
advantage) and prestige both at Rome and in East --where history was
written!).
- The process of involvement
- Conscious Roman
policy to keep her potential enemies weak; hence, she always acted
to destabilize her nearer and powerful neighbors.
- The weaker Greek
states, as always anxious to remain independent of powerful immediate
neighbors, constantly sought Roman intervention and protection. Rome actively
courted such appeals and used them to justify her envolvement.
- The social and cultural
situation in the cities of the Mediterranean...
- The classical city-state,
leagues and monarchies.
- The development
of trade and commerce. Despite the uncertain political situation, the
general level of prosperity increased.
- Release of resources
stored by the Persian kings
- There were few
restrictions on trade and it became extensive; tho there was warfare,
it was waged by mercenaries and tended to be quick and undisruptive.
- Increasing
diplomatic ties.
- Increasing
frequency of commercial treaties, representation, monetary pacts,
trading privileges, banking, arbitration, marine insurance, mortgaging.
- Culture and politics
- Physical and
intellectual life of the cities.
- Spread of Culture.
- Wide popularity
of Attic drama especially that of the 5th century and of Euripides
encouraged development of the koiné,
- Increasing
movement of philosophers and of sophists.
- stress
on personal freedom and commercial freedom
- humanitarianism
- cosmopolitanism
- New philosophies:
Stoicism especially important, but is more appropriate for a later
lecture
- Education: A
private yet civic responsibility.
- The formation
of public opinion: historians, rhetoricians, and biographers.
- Greek culture was
respected as being clearly superior to what the Romans had to offer. Moreover,
the Romans were impressed by the historical consciousness of the Greeks;
they wanted to be part of that constellation.
- Early Contacts
- Legend.
- Greek states of
Italy had certainly heard of Alexander's conquests and had sent ambassadors
to him at Babylon (323). Rome must have been aware to events.
- War with Pyrrhus
a turning point
- Pyrrhus represented
a Hellenistic threat to Rome and Italy.
- Victory had
brought Rome into formal alliance with the Greek states of Italy.
Rome henceforth a part of Hellenistic world, with contacts and commitments.
- The domination of
Greek speaking Italy meant that Rome forced to protect trading interests
of her subject allies.
- The
Hellenistic States
- The First Macedonian
War (214-205)
- Roman action against
pirates in the Adriatic following
the war against Pyrrhus.
- In 214, and after
Cannae, Carthage and Macdonia become allies against Rome (§66). Rome
declares war and sends Valerius Laevinus to Apollonia (in NW Greece).
He makes alliances with the smaller Hellenistic states of Aetolia, Rhodes
and Pergamon. But, as Rome was fully occupied elsewhere, the war stagnates.
In 206, Rome's allies make peace with Philip (the Macedonian king) and
Rome follows one year later.
- The Second Macedonian
War (200-196)
- Causes: one of the
great issues of modern historiography. Reasons given by ancient (i.e.,
by pro-Roman) writers are not plausible (Rome's allies had been attacked,
but none are mentioned or known). Some factors:
- Philip's successes
in eastern Mediterranean against smaller states.
- A secret alliance
with Antiochus to divide Ptolemaic/Egyptian possessions.
- Outrage of "respectable"
Greek (i.e., Athenian) opinion at Philip's (alleged?) actions and
plans.
- The unsatisfactory
conclusion of First War in which Rome's reputation had been blemished
by brutality.
- Fear of Philip's
growing power ("Hannibal complex") and concern for own reputation.
She was willing to assume the prestigious patronage of Greece, a cultural
hegemony.
- Desire for glory
and lust for booty.
- Immediate cause was
decision to send an "impertinent" ultimatum to Philip to cease
and desist from attacking an unspecified Roman ally. Clearly a provocation
and understood by Philip as such.
- After three years
of indecisive campaigning and diplomacy, the decisive battle fought at Cynoscephalae
in 197: Another sequence one, two, three. Flamininus the victor. On the
military aspects, visit this site.
- The Settlement
- Consistent with
Roman policy, Philip was confirmed as king and paid a modest indemnity..
- Aetolia, Rome's
foremost ally in war, failed to gain the territorial concessions she
had sought and expected.
- Greece (i.e.,
the Greek city-states) is liberated. §68 all three
documents are critical. Note Roman policy §68, p.188.; and §69
the formula: "...shall uphold in good faith the empire and majesty
of the Roman people..."
- Rome and the Hellenistic
States of Asia Minor
- The War against
Antiochus III (the Macedonian king of Greater Syria) and the Aetolians,
192-189.
- The Aetolians,
angry over the territorial settlement of the First Macedonian War,
invite Antiochus to invade and liberate Greece --an explicit
refutation of Rome's claim.
- Antiochus' invasion
(really only a raiding party) may have been a counter, designed to
gain Roman recognition of Seleucid hegemony in Asia. If so, it failed,
for Rome interpreted the attack as the first step in an invasion of
Italy.
- Battle of Magnesia decides war.
- Settlement (§§
69-70 note esp. p. 189 and 193): Syria reduced to nonentity pays an
enormous indemnity, restricted to Syria proper. The big winner in
this war was Pergamum which now has control over all of Anatolia;
Seleucids too weak to defend eastern frontier, a fact which will bring
the Romans in again.
- The Third Macedonian
War (172-167)
- Perseus
comes to throne on death of father whose policy had been accomodation
with Rome. On the charges against: §71 --note the recurring themes..
- Perseus, in
contrast to earlier policy of Macedonia, now begins to encourage lower
classes of Greek city states; Rome is the champion of order and moderate
aristocracy (previously supported by the Macedonians!). §72,
esp. 198.
- Declaring that
Perseus had attacked unspecified allies of Rome in the Balkans, Rome
demands reparations. Perseus refuses. After three years of indecisive
warfare, Aemilus
Paullus defeats Perseus at Pydna, 168. The line of the victorious
phalanx broke up under own momentum.
- Macedonia divided
into four republics (§74, esp p. 200); too weak for defense of
self or of Greece.
- Rome and Rhodes:
The latter had been responsible for peace at sea, but unfortunately,
had attempted to mediate between Rome and Perseus. This is not something
a client does!
- The end of independence
for the Hellenistic monarchies
- Egypt: the constant
strife between family members increasing led to an appeal to Rome;
but, as Rome decided on the basis of who of the applicants was openly
the most "pro-Roman", there could be no enduring solution.
Note §75. p.201. And §77 on Roman atrocity in Epirus.
- The Fourth Macedonia
War = Achaean War, 150-146 B.C.
- The republican
militias of Macedonia were not effective against the rebel and
alleged son of Perseus, Andriscus. Metellus defeats him in 148
and makes Macedonia a province of the Roman people.
- After the
Third Macedonian War, Greece again reverted to its traditional
pattern of intra- and extramural strife.
- To discourage
trouble, Rome took to Italy one thousand hostages from the best
families of Greece.
- Roman brutality
and insensitivity led to a revolt under the leadership of Critolaus
of Corinth. Metellus crushed the revolt and destroyed the city
of Corinth (one of the two greatest in Greece!).
- Why had Rome succeeded?
Why had the Greco-Macedonian world fail to defend itself?
- On the Greco-Macedonian
side, it is apparent that there were sufficient resources in men and material
to limit the Roman advance. The failure then was at least in part a political
failure to act together in common defense.
- Though Rome was
inferior to the totality of Hellenistic manpower and weapons, she enjoyed
the advantage of a technologically superior "weapons system"
and a more flexible mode of fighting.
- Rome's attitude
also played an important role --to support "freedom of the Greeks";
to defend Greek culture; and to provide for order and moderate oligarchy,
to support the weaker and most openly pro-Roman in any controversy. Implications
for Greek opinion makers?
- It took, then, only
three decisive battles for Rome to gain effective control over the area.
She will not be challenged in the Mediterranean until the 4th century,
A.D.
- Events in the West,
202-146 B.C.
- Problem areas:
- Northern Italy,
especially the Po Valley.
- Liguria (the
area around and to the west of Genoa) is now reduced.
- Spain: the source
of Hannibal's resources in material and manpower; it could not be
ignored or left as a power vacuum. There are continuous wars from
215-15 B.C.
- Methods of control:
based on solutions of an earlier period.
- Colonies
- Roads