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Roman–Seleucid war

The Roman–Seleucid war (192–188 BC), also called the Aetolian war, Antiochene war, Syrian war, and Syrian-Aetolian war was a military conflict between two coalitions, one led by the Roman Republic and the other led by the Seleucid king Antiochus III. The fighting took place in modern-day southern Greece, the Aegean Sea, and Asia Minor.

Roman–Seleucid war

Asia Minor after the war
Date192–188 BC
Location
Result Roman victory, Treaty of Apamea
Territorial
changes
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders

The war was the consequence of a "cold war" between both powers, which had started in 196 BC. In this period, the Romans and the Seleucids attempted to settle spheres of influence by forging alliances with the small Greek city-states. Also important were the Romans and Seleucids' irreconcilable visions for the Aegean: the Romans saw Greece as their sphere of influence and Asia Minor as a buffer area while the Seleucids saw Asia Minor as a core part of their empire with Greece as the buffer zone.

After the Aetolian League triggered a small war which drew in Antiochus, Rome and the Seleucids came to blows. Antiochus' landed in Greece but was forced to retreat across the Aegean after being defeated at the Battle of Thermopylae by the consul of 191 BC, Manius Acilius Glabrio. The Aetolians attempted to reach a settlement with the Romans but were unsuccessful in the face of maximalist Roman demands. Antiochus' naval forces in the Aegean were defeated in two major engagements which saw the Roman coalition gain naval superiority. The consul of 190 BC, Lucius Cornelius Scipio, then pursued Antiochus into Asia Minor with the support of the Pergamene king Eumenes II.

Antiochus started peace negotiations, which he broke off after maximalist Roman demands. But after he was defeated by the Roman-led coalition at the Battle of Magnesia, he sued for peace, accepting those Roman demands. In the resulting peace of Apamea, Antiochus ceded all of his territories beyond the Taurus mountains to Roman allies and paid a large indemnity covering the Roman cost of the war. The Aetolians reached separate terms with the Romans, reducing them to a Roman client state, the next year. The Romans thereby gained uncontested hegemony over the Greek city-states in the Balkans and Asia Minor while also largely excluding the Seleucids from the Mediterranean.

Background and cold war Edit

 
Greece and the Aegean on the eve of the Second Macedonian War (200 BC).
 
Head, possibly a Roman copy of a Hellenistic original, depicting Antiochus III of the Seleucid empire.

From 212 to 205 BC, Antiochus III campaigned to reassert Seleucid authority over Armenia and Iran. After reducing those areas to vassals and signing a treaties with the Parthians and the Bactrians, he returned home.[6] He then concentrated on restoring his empire's control over large portions of Asia Minor. He was, however, interrupted by the death of Ptolemy IV Philopator of Egypt in summer 204 BC, which gave him an opportunity to take Coele Syria, Phoenicia, and Palestine from the Ptolemies in the aftermath of the Fifth Syrian War.[7] Successful in Syria and Palestine, he spent some time there before turning back to Asia Minor some time in 197 BC.[8] For these victories, he took the title "Great King" (Ancient Greek: βασιλεὐς μἑγας).[9]

With the conquests of Antiochus and the Roman victory in the Second Punic War, the Aegean was now flanked by two great powers on its east and west.[10] Roman influence continued expanding as a result of the Second Macedonian War (200–197 BC), fought between the republic and Philip V of Macedon. After Philip invaded the Cycladic islands and declared war on Rhodes and Pergamum, the defenders called on Roman aid in summer of 201 BC after major setbacks in the war.[11] The Roman senate, influenced by a senatorial "circle of 'eastern experts'" led by Publius Sulpicius Galba Maximus, who were veterans of the First Macedonian War, sent an embassy to Philip with an ultimatum.[12] Over the next three years, the Romans fought Philip and by 197 BC were victorious; in the aftermath, the Aegean's interstate politics had shifted considerably. The Roman coalition had defeated Philip, but Antiochus at the same time was consolidating Seleucid influence in Asia Minor and Ionia.[13]

During the war, Antiochus' relations with Rome were cordial:[14] at the start of the war, he had promised no aid to Philip before a Roman embassy; he complied with a Roman embassy demanding he withdraw from Pergamum, a Roman ally in the war; the Romans did nothing to prevent his occupation of areas further east in Asia Minor.[15] After the war, however, Roman opinion soured, largely due to Antiochus' having crossed into Europe after the war's end, threatening Roman buffers in the Balkans, all while expressing a delayed congratulations to Rome.[16] The Romans, in the peace after the Macedonian war, declared four towns – formerly Philip's possessions – to be free even though they were within Antiochus' sphere of influence.[17]

The Romans also – in the aftermath of the war – proclaimed freedom for all Greeks, explicitly including even those in Asia Minor under Antiochus' control.[18] The Romans gave a further warning against intervening in Greek affairs or entering Europe at the Isthmian Games of 196 BC.[19] A later embassy reached the king at Lysimachia and demanded Antiochus' withdrawal from Ptolemaic lands in Asia Minor, his withdrawal from lands formerly Philip's, and that he refrain from attacking any Greek cities (as all Greek cities had been declared free); the Romans had no right to demand the last element and Antiochus deftly brushed off Roman demands by appealing to his historic claims in the region and protesting the lack of any legitimate Roman interest in Asia Minor after his marriage alliance with Ptolemy and his own declaration of freedom for the Greek cities in Asia Minor.[20] His responses largely blunted any possible Roman causes for war: "if Rome had wanted to fight at this point, she would have had to fight for the freedom of cities that Antiochus [declared] free, for the settlement of disputes that he was willing to refer to arbitration, and for the return to Ptolemy of cities that Ptolemy apparently did not want back".[21]

More fundamentally, however, the Romans and Antiochus had incompatible international visions: Rome saw their sphere of influence running directly to the Hellespont with Asia Minor as a buffer region; Antiochus saw Asia Minor as his sphere with Greece acting as a buffer.[22] In the interim, Rome pursued a policy of building goodwill among the Greek states to avoid seeming the aggressor and, if attacked, to draw neutral cities to Rome's cause.[23] Any Seleucid move against Greek cities would paint them as the aggressors.[24]

Outbreak Edit

 
The Aegean world at the outbreak of the war in 192 BC.
  Seleucid Empire and allies
  Roman Republic and allies
  Neutral states
 
This 18th century drawing depicts Flaminius announcing the freedom of the Greeks at the Isthmian Games in 196 BC.

Roman forces in Greece, under Titus Quinctius Flamininus, largely withdrew after proclaiming its freedom from Roman control or taxation in 195 BC. Antiochus, at the same time, operated a large army in Europe against tribes in Thrace through 194, moving into the Roman power vacuum and conceiving of the Roman withdrawal as a retreat.[25] At a meeting between Antiochus' envoys in Rome, ten legates speaking on behalf of the senate made their position clear behind closed doors: if Antiochus wanted peace he would have to stay on his side of the Hellespont and Bosphorus; if he did not do so Rome would maintain its rights to intervene in Asia to protect its allies.[26] Provocatively, Flaminius – one of the legates – then gave an public oration before the senate proclaiming Roman intentions to free the Greeks in Asia Minor while Antiochus' ambassadors, from fear of starting a war and without authorisation to accept the Roman terms or to reject them, could only plead negotiations continue.[25] The senate by spring 192, clarified its position and would accept peace provided that Antiochus remained in Thrace.[27]

In late 193 BC, the Aetolian League – receptive to Antiochus' ambassadors as they returned from the embarrassment at Rome – sought to shake up the Roman settlement and draw both Rome and Antiochus into war for its own advantage.[28] The Aetolians moved to form an alliance between themselves, Philip in Macedon, and Nabis in Sparta. The plans for an alliance failed, but Nabis was sufficiently persuaded to invade coastal cities in Laconia;[28] the nearby Achaean League responded by moving in reinforcements and dispatching an embassy to Rome; Rome responded by sending four ambassadors to remind the Greeks of their continued interests. After Flaminius, one of the ambassadors, spoke to the Aetolian League, it responded by passing a decree to invite Antiochus to liberate Greece and arbitrate the dispute between Rome and Aetolia. This was a declaration of war and the Romans saw Antiochus' representatives in Aetolia as responsible.[29] The Aetolians then moved troops to seize Sparta, Chalcis, and Demetrias. Successful only at Demetrias (the Aetolians assassinated Nabis but were stopped by Achaean intervention; Chalchis responded to the Aetolians with force) and able to convince Antiochus that the Greek cities were waiting enthusiastically to rebel against Rome, he landed at Demetrias and proclaimed he would liberate the Greeks from Roman subjugation.[30]

This was the final provocation for the senate in Rome. The combination of the Aetolians and Antiochus was an unacceptable intrusion into Greece. The Romans responded by dispatching the praetor Aulus Atilius Serranus with a fleet to the Peloponnese and Marcus Baebius Tamphilus with two legions to Epirus. Further troops were levied and, in the new year of 191 BC, placed under the command of Manius Acilius Glabrio to conduct the war "against Antiochus and those in his empire".[31]

The military conflict Edit

 
The course of the war, with locations of key battles.
 
Coin depicting Eumenes II of Pergamum. Eumenes was one of the key Roman allies during the war and aided greatly in the Roman coalition's victory at Magnesia.

Even before Glabrio and his consular army arrived, Antiochus' campaign was not going well. He was received extremely coolly by the Greeks. Roman declarations of liberty had real substance and his claim of Greek liberation compared unfavourably with it; his ostensible liberations of a few cities in Thessaly had required force against their indigenous governments.[31] The Achaean League responded to his occupation of Demetrias by declaring war, justifying it with their Roman alliance.[32]

Thermopylae Edit

The spring of 191 BC saw the Macedonians enter the war against the Aetolian League – they operated independently of the Romans – and occupy a number of towns in Thessaly. Antiochus moved on Acarnania, but was forced to withdraw when he heard of the incursion into Thessaly. By the time the consul Glabrio reached Thessaly, towns simply surrendered without a fight. Antiochus, receiving no reinforcements and heavily outnumbered by the Roman coalition, was forced to choose between retreat or doing battle where the coalition's numerical superiority would be minimised. He chose Thermopylae. The resulting battle was such an overwhelming defeat for Antiochus that he immediately fled Greece for Ephesus. Less than six months had elapsed from his arrival in Demetrias.[33] With the Roman victory there, the Greek cities that sat on the sidelines quickly flocked to join the victors.[34]

Glabrio turned his eye towards the Aetolians and captured Heraclea that year before besieging Naupactus after peace negotiations – the Aetolian ambassadors sought to surrender but the specific rites for surrender were unclear and vitiated by their need for ratification[35] – fell apart.[36] Succeeded by the consul of 190 BC, Lucius Cornelius Scipio and Lucius' able legate Scipio Africanus, Glabrio returned to Rome and celebrated a triumph.[37] That year, the Roman fleet under Gaius Livius won a battle off Corcyra forcing Antiochus' fleet to retreat to Ephesus; Antiochus then dispatched fleet reinforcements from Syria under the command of Hannibal, who had years previously fled to Antiochus' court.[38]

Prevented from crossing the Aegean directly, the Scipios stayed in Europe, where they oversaw a six-month truce with the Aetolians so that they could send envoys to the senate in Rome negotiate a peace. In the meantime, the Scipios marched on the land route for Asia Minor. Fortunately for the Romans, Hannibal's fleet was stopped by the Rhodians at the Battle of the Eurymedon and the remaining fleet at Ephesus was destroyed by Livius' successor, Lucius Aemilius Regillus, in the Battle of Myonessus. Aemilius' victory forced Antiochus to withdraw in haste back across the Hellespont to Asia Minor. When the Romans advanced into Thrace, Antiochus' allies did nothing to stop them; when they crossed the Hellespont, he gave no contest.[39]

Magnesia Edit

By October of 190 BC, Antiochus' naval forces were vastly outmatched by the Romans and the Scipios had arrived into Asia Minor. He attempted to negotiate for peace, offering to indemnify half the Roman cost of the war and abandon his claims to Smyrna, Lampsacus, Alexandria Troas, and other Roman allies. The Scipios, reflecting the Roman view that the Greeks in Asia Minor were part of Rome's sphere of influence, declined the offer and demanded that Antiochus cede the whole of Asia Minor northwest of the Taurus mountains and indemnify all Roman war costs. Seeing these demands as too extreme, Antiochus broke off negotiations.[40]

Late in the year, some time around the middle of December, the decisive battle of the war took place near Magnesia ad Sipylum. The consul Lucius Scipio was anxious for battle, as he needed a victory in December when he would be replaced in command.[41] The resulting Battle of Magnesia saw the Roman coalition victorious over Antiochus' army, driven to rout.[40] Numbers on each side are disputed. Livy reports that Antiochus commanded 60,000 infantry and 12,000 cavalry against the Roman coalition of around 30,000; this is disputed and John Grainger, in The Roman War of Antiochos the Great, argues instead that both sides had around 50,000 men.[42]

The nominal Roman commander there was Lucius Scipio, as his brother Scipio Africanus claimed illness; however, Appian and Plutarch instead relate that Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus, also a legate, was in effective command.[43][44] The battle started with the Roman coalition dispersing Antiochus' scythe-chariots on his left before Eumenes II of Pergamum led a mass cavalry charge which drove Antiochus' cataphracts into his own centre. Antiochus himself was at the head of a separate wing of his cavalry, which had driven back the Roman left close to the Roman camp and therefore was unable to support his infantry.[45] Antiochus' infantry resisted stubbornly but after their order was disrupted by their own elephants, Eumenes exploited the holes in the formation and annihilated Antiochus' phalanx from the flank.[46]

With his armies defeated, Antiochus sent representatives to the Scipios at Sardis, where they had moved after the battle, to seek terms.[47]

Aetolian peace and later stages Edit

In Greece, the war continued. The consul of 189 BC, Marcus Fulvius Nobilior, was assigned to continue the war after negotiations again failed. He besieged Ambracia and later in the year negotiated a final peace with both the Aetolians and the Cephallenians. Aetolia, initially faced with unbudging Roman demands from 191 BC onwards for an indemnity of one thousand talents – far beyond her ability to pay – was eventually given a break; Rhodes mediated between them and was successful in convincing the Romans to accept an indemnity of 200 talents with a further 300 to be paid over the next six years.[48] Aetolia also was reduced to a Roman client state,[49][50] required exceptionally and explicitly to "minister to the power and empire of the Roman people".[51][52]

The other consul for 189, Gnaeus Manlius Vulso, succeeded the Scipios in Asia – Lucius Scipio's request for prorogation, sent in haste after his victory, was ignored[53] – and finding a truce with Antiochus, led a plundering expedition into Anatolia to subdue some Gallic tribes located there who had supported Antiochus.[54][55]

Peace of Apamea Edit

 
Territorial changes resulting from the Peace of Apamea.
  Rhodes

After Magnesia, Antiochus' representatives reported to Sardis where the Romans had encamped after the battle. There, they accepted the Roman peace terms, which had become more specific: Antiochus would cede all territory north and west of the Taurus mountains; he would pay 15,000 Euboeic talents (500 immediately, 2,500 after Roman ratification, and the rest over twelve years); Eumenes of Pergamum would receive 400 talents and grain; the Roman enemies sheltered at Antiochus' court, including Hannibal, would be handed over; and twenty hostages, one of which was Antiochus' youngest son, would be delivered to Rome as a guarantee.[47]

Terms Edit

What is today known about the detailed terms of the treaty largely comes from fragments of Polybius' Histories.[56] The precise terms were hashed out first at Rome, with input for ambassadors hailing from all over Asia Minor (Eumenes visited in person), and later by the Roman consul in Asia, Manlius Vulso, who was assisted by ten senatorial legates. In Rome, it was determined that the republic would not treat the Greeks in Asia Minor the same way it had treated those in Europe. They would instead reward Eumenes of Pergamum and Rhodes with territory for their support in the war. Eumenes and the Rhodians were at odds in their interests. Eumenes asserted that while the Romans were the best to hold direct responsibility for Antiochus' former territories, inasmuch as the Romans were unwilling to stay, he felt he was the second-best option. Rhodes argued that freedom should be granted to the Greeks and Eumenes rewarded with Antiochus' ceded non-Greek territories. The senate, with no desire to maintain a military presence in Asia Minor, gave Rhodes Lycia and Caria south of the river Maeander while Eumenes received the rest.[57]

Manlius Vulso, after defeating some Galatian Gauls in Anatolia and seizing from them (and, of political importance, not from Greeks) substantial plunder, marched to Pamphylia to receive the first large instalment of Antiochus' war indemnity. Hearing of the arrival of the senatorial legation, he then moved to Apamea and there with them precisely defined the Taurus line, which started Cape Sarpedon and ran through the upper portions of the river Tanais. They also decreed restrictions on Antiochus' navy, which limited it to only ten large ships of more than thirty oars.[55] A number of disarmament provisions were also included: among other things, Antiochus would pledge to desist from the use of war elephants and be prohibited from sailing past Cape Sarpedon. The resulting treaty was then sworn by Manlius Vulso – by then prorogued pro consule[58][59] – and by Antiochus.[55] They then divided the cities in Asia Minor, with the exception of those cities which had been defined as Roman allies (they retained their independence), into the respective territories allotted to Pergamum and Rhodes. Antiochus' territories in Europe were also adduced to Pergamum, though the cities of Aenus and Maronea, freed in the peace in 196, were again liberated.[60]

The treaty broadly followed the same goals as those of Flaminius after the Macedonian war: in areas of Roman interest, outside influences would be neutralised and Roman friends would be buttressed. The Asiatic victors of the war, Pergamum, Rhodes, and the allied free cities were bound in gratitude to the Romans. The Romans intended to pacify the region with goodwill rather than legions; so far they had been successful.[60]

Aftermath Edit

 
Antiochus IV Epiphanes was the youngest son of Antiochus III. He was sent to Rome in the first set of twenty hostages. After the death of his brother Seleucus IV Philopator, he succeeded him.
 
Coin depicting Demetrius I Soter, who during the reign of his father, Seleucus IV, he was one of the Seleucid hostages in Rome.

The territories formerly Antiochean were re-parcelled immediately after the treaty; this was to the substantial advantage of Eumenes, who later supported Roman intervention against his enemy Macedon in the Third Macedonian War. This, however, proved to his detriment as by this point, his usefulness to Rome had come to an end.[61] By 168 BC, the Romans had reoriented their alliances against both Pergamum and Rhodes.[62]

Roman enforcement of the terms with Antiochus continued in part. The disarmament provisions which prohibited Antiochus from having war elephants, reducing the size of his navy, prohibiting his navy from sailing past Cape Sarpedon, and prohibiting him from recruiting mercenaries from Roman-dominated territory, however, largely lapsed with his death.[63]

Buffer for the Seleucid empire Edit

Antiochus' immediate acceptance of terms after Magnesia reflected a prudent belief that further war between Rome and the Seleucid empire would be mutually ruinous. Antiochus still had more men and significant space to trade for time, especially given that the Romans would be forced to besiege every city along the Royal Road down to Cilicia. However, giving up the whole of Asia Minor created for Antiochus and his successors a massive buffer zone which allowed for a prolonged peace between the Roman and Seleucid empires.[64]

The Romans did not attempt to engage in another armed conflict with the Seleucids as they had yet to gain a firm foothold in Asia Minor and despite his recent defeat Antiochus retained his reputation as a skilled military commander due to his campaigns in Asia. Instead the Romans sought to undermine their adversary through diplomatic channels, threats and bribery by spurring smaller states to declare war on the Seleucids. Roman interference made it impossible for Antiochus' successors to carry out their desired policies on their western border. In the eastern Seleucid empire, the vassal states of the Parthians and Bactrians declared independence.[65] This war was the only war the Romans fought with the Seleucids; the Seleucid empire collapsed amid internecine conflict a generation later.[66]

Disarmament provisions Edit

After Antiochus' death on 3 July 187 BC, his successor Seleucus IV Philopator immediately started rebuilding his navy as funds became available, but largely did not provoke and remained aloof from the Romans.[67] Antiochus' successors were also quickly able to field armies in similar sizes to those which Antiochus had fielded in his wars. The terms reached at Apamea caused no collapse in Seleucid military power.[68]

Seleucus IV's successor, Antiochus IV Epiphanes, simply ignored the treaty's disarmament provisions: his navy by 168 BC was sufficiently power to support his invasion of Cyprus – itself west of Cape Sarpedon – and included both elephants and various mercenaries recruited from Roman client states.[69] Some sources, such as Appian and Zonaras, indicate that the Romans attempted after the death of Antiochus IV to enforce the provisions of the treaty by burning Seleucid ships and hamstringing elephants.[70] However, that the Seleucids had both ships and elephants had been known by this point for two decades and Polybius' explanation of the matter makes no reference to the treaty, instead explaining Roman action in terms of military opportunism.[71]

Rome through the middle of the second century took a cordial approach toward the Seleucids; a Roman diplomatic embassy arriving shortly after a military parade in Antioch made no mention of the treaty to the senate even though it surely would have seen elephants.[72] The provisions carving out a Roman sphere of influence in Asia Minor, however, were faithfully abided: when Seleucus IV assembled a large army to aid his cousin Pharnaces I of Pontus against Pergamum, the Romans likely sent a message reminding him of his obligations not to wage war on Roman allies.[73] So too were the provisions relating to the indemnity, payments of which were completed very slightly late during Antiochus IV's reign in 173 BC.[74] In general, only the provisions relating to the cession of Seleucid lands north and west of the Taurus mountains and relating to the indemnity were rigorously pursued by the Romans. The other provisions – like similar treaties in the Hellenistic period – attached to the ruler rather than their state; the provisions of such treaties therefore lapsed on a ruler's death unless otherwise indicated.[75]

Hostages and captives Edit

Antiochus III's youngest son, also named Antiochus, was sent as a political hostage into Roman custody. After Antiochus III's death, he was exchanged for Demetrius, who was Antiochus' nephew and the son of Seleucus IV Philopator.[76] He was held in Rome for sixteen years until he was able to escape – apparently the historian Polybius helped in the escape – and take the throne from his uncle's lineage in 162 BC.[77]

Hannibal, who was to be surrendered to Rome under Apamea's terms, fled for Crete and thence to Pergamum's enemy, Bithynia. After Flaminius negotiated with the king of Bithynia to have Hannibal surrendered in 183 or 182 BC, he killed himself.[78] One of the Aetolian leaders who had fled to Antiochus' court, Thoas, was also handed over to the Romans; he was later released and later became Aetolia's strategos twice more in 181 and 173 BC.[79]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Grainger 2002, p. 217.
  2. ^ Sarikakis 1974, p. 80.
  3. ^ a b c d e Grainger 2002, p. 268.
  4. ^ Taylor 2013, p. 139.
  5. ^ Sarikakis 1974, p. 81.
  6. ^ Errington 1989, p. 249.
  7. ^ Errington 1989, pp. 250–51.
  8. ^ Errington 1989, p. 252.
  9. ^ Errington 1989, p. 244.
  10. ^ Badian 1959, p. 81.
  11. ^ Errington 1989, pp. 252–55.
  12. ^ Errington 1989, p. 256. The Romans demanded that Philip cease his war and make restitution to be determined by a fair tribunal. The Romans did not intend for him to accept.
  13. ^ Errington 1989, p. 271.
  14. ^ Badian 1959, p. 82.
  15. ^ Errington 1989, pp. 270–71.
  16. ^ Errington 1989, p. 272; Badian 1959, p. 85.
  17. ^ Errington 1989, p. 272.
  18. ^ Errington 1989, p. 270.
  19. ^ Errington 1989, p. 274.
  20. ^ Badian 1959, pp. 86–87; Errington 1989, p. 275.
  21. ^ Badian 1959, p. 87.
  22. ^ Errington 1989, p. 276.
  23. ^ Badian 1959, p. 89.
  24. ^ Badian 1959, p. 90.
  25. ^ a b Badian 1959, p. 91.
  26. ^ Errington 1989, p. 278.
  27. ^ Errington 1989, p. 280.
  28. ^ a b Badian 1959, p. 92.
  29. ^ Errington 1989, pp. 280–81, citing Livy, 35.32.2–33.11.
  30. ^ Badian 1959, p. 96; Errington 1989, p. 282.
  31. ^ a b Errington 1989, p. 283.
  32. ^ Badian 1959, p. 96; Errington 1989, p. 283.
  33. ^ Errington 1989, p. 284.
  34. ^ Badian 1959, p. 96.
  35. ^ Eckstein, A M (1995). "Glabrio and the Aetolians: a note on deditio". Transactions of the American Philological Association. 125: 271–289. doi:10.2307/284356. ISSN 0360-5949.
  36. ^ Broughton 1951, p. 352.
  37. ^ Broughton 1951, pp. 356–58.
  38. ^ Errington 1989, p. 285.
  39. ^ Errington 1989, pp. 285–86.
  40. ^ a b Errington 1989, p. 286.
  41. ^ Grainger 2002, p. 324.
  42. ^ Grainger 2002, pp. 317 (Antiochus), 321 (Romans).
  43. ^ Grainger 2002, p. 323.
  44. ^ Broughton 1951, p. 359, citing Livy, 37.39.5 and App. Syr., 30–36.
  45. ^ Broughton 1951, p. 358. The prefect of the camp, one Marcus Aemilius Lepdius, halted Antiochus' troops on the Roman left.
  46. ^ Lazenby, John F (2016-03-07). "Magnesia, battle of". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.3880. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5. Retrieved 2023-04-11. See Livy, 37.39–44.2 and App. Syr., 30–35.
  47. ^ a b Errington 1989, pp. 286–87.
  48. ^ Gruen 1986, p. 29, citing Polyb., 21.29.9–21.31.16.
  49. ^ Broughton 1951, p. 360, citing, among others, Livy, 38.3–10.
  50. ^ Derow, Peter Sidney (2015-12-22). "Aetolian Confederacy". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.162. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5. Retrieved 2023-04-12.
  51. ^ Badian, Ernst (1952). "The treaty between Rome and the Achaean league". Journal of Roman Studies. 42: 76–80. doi:10.2307/297516. ISSN 0075-4358. Badian, p. 80 n. 34, cites Polyb., 21.32.2 and Livy, 38.11.2.
  52. ^ Gruen 1986, p. 279, translating imperium as "power" or "supremacy". Gruen also notes that no other treaties in the east ever included such terms, which were added likely to force Aetolia to renounce "her former faithlessness and treachery".
  53. ^ Gruen, Erich (1995). "The "fall" of the Scipios". In Malkin, I; Rubinsohn, Z W (eds.). Leaders and masses in the Roman world. Mnemosyne Supplements. Vol. 139. Brill. p. 69. doi:10.1163/9789004329447_006. ISBN 978-9-0040-9917-3.
  54. ^ Broughton 1951, p. 360, citing, among others, Polyb., 21.33–39 and Livy, 38.12–27.
  55. ^ a b c Errington 1989, p. 288.
  56. ^ See Polyb., 21.42.
  57. ^ Errington 1989, pp. 287–88.
  58. ^ Broughton 1951, p. 366.
  59. ^ Polyb., 21.44.
  60. ^ a b Errington 1989, p. 289.
  61. ^ Habicht 1989, pp. 332–33.
  62. ^ Habicht 1989, p. 334.
  63. ^ Paltiel 1979, pp. 31, 36–41.
  64. ^ Grainger 2002, pp. 356–57.
  65. ^ Tsimpoukidis 1989, pp. 174–75.
  66. ^ Grainger 2002, p. 357.
  67. ^ Habicht 1989, p. 340; Paltiel 1979, p. 31.
  68. ^ Grainger 2002, p. 350.
  69. ^ Paltiel 1979, p. 31.
  70. ^ Paltiel 1979, p. 33, citing App. Syr., 8.46; Zon., 9.25.
  71. ^ Paltiel 1979, p. 33, noting also that Cicero – Cic. Phil., 9.2.4 – makes no mention of the treaty in relating this episode.
  72. ^ Paltiel 1979, p. 34, citing Polyb., 30.25.
  73. ^ Paltiel 1979, p. 33, noting, however, that the section in Diodorus (29.24) that covers this message does not survive.
  74. ^ Paltiel 1979, p. 34, citing Livy, 47.6. Seleucus IV had been assassinated in 175 BC by his chancellor. Habicht 1989, p. 340.
  75. ^ Paltiel 1979, pp. 35–36.
  76. ^ Habicht 1989, p. 340.
  77. ^ Errington, R M (2015-12-22). "Demetrius (10) I, of Syria". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.2097. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5. Retrieved 2023-04-12.
  78. ^ Caven, Brian M (2015-07-30). "Hannibal". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.2930. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5. Retrieved 2023-04-12.
  79. ^ Grainger 2002, p. 352.

Bibliography Edit

Modern literature Edit

  • Astin, AE; et al., eds. (1989). Rome and the Mediterranean to 133 BC. Cambridge Ancient History. Vol. 8 (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23448-4. OCLC 916019669.
    • Errington, R M. "Rome and Philip and Antiochus". In CAH2 8 (1989), pp. 244–89.
    • Habicht, C. "The Seleucids and their rivals". In CAH2 8 (1989), pp. 324–87.
  • Badian, Ernst (1959). "Rome and Antiochus the Great: a study in cold war". Classical Philology. 54 (2): 81–99. ISSN 0009-837X.
  • Bar-Kochva, Bezalel (1976). The Seleucid army: organization and tactics in the great campaigns. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-20667-9.
  • Broughton, Thomas Robert Shannon (1951). The magistrates of the Roman republic. Vol. 1. New York: American Philological Association.
  • Grainger, John D. (2002). The Roman war of Antiochos the Great. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-12840-8.
  • Green, Peter (1990). Alexander to Actium: the historical evolution of the Hellenistic age. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-05611-6. OCLC 13332042.
  • Gruen, Erich S (1986). The Hellenistic world and the coming of Rome. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-05737-6. OCLC 16573469.
  • Paltiel, Eliezer (1979). "The treaty of Apamea and the later Seleucids". Antichthon. 13: 30–41. doi:10.1017/S006647740000263X. ISSN 0066-4774.
  • Sarikakis, Theodoros (1974). "Το Βασίλειο των Σελευκιδών και η Ρώμη" [The Seleucid kingdom and Rome]. In Christopoulos, Georgios A. & Bastias, Ioannis K. (eds.). Ιστορία του Ελληνικού Έθνους, Τόμος Ε΄: Ελληνιστικοί Χρόνοι [History of the Greek Nation, Volume V: Hellenistic Period] (in Greek). Athens: Ekdotiki Athinon. pp. 55–91. ISBN 978-960-213-101-5.
  • Sherwin-White, A N (1984). Roman foreign policy in the East, 168 BC to AD 1. London: Duckworth. ISBN 0-7156-1682-X. OCLC 10664923.
  • Taylor, Michael (2013). Antiochus The Great. Barnsley: Pen and Sword Military. ISBN 9781848844636.
  • Tsimpoukidis, Dimitrios (1989). Ιστορία του ελληνιστικού κόσμου [History of the hellenistic world] (in Greek). Athens: Dimitrios N. Papadimas. ISBN 9789602060766.

Ancient literature Edit

  • Livy (1905) [1st century AD]. From the Founding of the City . Translated by Roberts, Canon – via Wikisource.
  • Polybius (1922–27) [2nd century BC]. Histories. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Paton, W R. Cambridge: Harvard University Press – via LacusCurtius.

Further reading Edit

  • Ma, John (1999). Antiochos III and the cities of western Asia Minor. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198152194.
  • Ma, John (2013). "The Attalids: a military history". In Thonemann, Peter (ed.). Attalid Asia Minor: money, international relations, and the state. Oxford University Press. pp. 49–82. ISBN 9780199656110.
  • Sullivan, Richard D (1990). Near eastern royalty and Rome, 100–30 BC. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-7759-3. OCLC 244766991.
  • Waterfield, Robin (2014). Taken at the flood: the Roman conquest of Greece. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199916894.

roman, seleucid, also, called, aetolian, antiochene, syrian, syrian, aetolian, military, conflict, between, coalitions, roman, republic, other, seleucid, king, antiochus, fighting, took, place, modern, southern, greece, aegean, asia, minor, asia, minor, after,. The Roman Seleucid war 192 188 BC also called the Aetolian war Antiochene war Syrian war and Syrian Aetolian war was a military conflict between two coalitions one led by the Roman Republic and the other led by the Seleucid king Antiochus III The fighting took place in modern day southern Greece the Aegean Sea and Asia Minor Roman Seleucid warAsia Minor after the warDate192 188 BCLocationGreece and Asia MinorResultRoman victory Treaty of ApameaTerritorialchangesPergamum annexes Lydia Phrygia Mysia Pisidia and Pamphylia Rhodes annexes Caria and Lycia BelligerentsSeleucid Empire Aetolian League Galatians Athamania 1 Kingdom of Cappadocia 2 Elis 1 Roman Republic Achaean League Kingdom of Pergamon Rhodes Macedonia Thessalian League 3 Beotian League 3 Acarnanian League 3 Athens 3 Carthage 4 Numidia 3 Commanders and leadersAntiochus III the Great Zeuxis 5 Hannibal PolyxenidasManius Acilius Glabrio Lucius Aemilius Regillus Lucius Cornelius Scipio Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus Eumenes II of Pergamum The war was the consequence of a cold war between both powers which had started in 196 BC In this period the Romans and the Seleucids attempted to settle spheres of influence by forging alliances with the small Greek city states Also important were the Romans and Seleucids irreconcilable visions for the Aegean the Romans saw Greece as their sphere of influence and Asia Minor as a buffer area while the Seleucids saw Asia Minor as a core part of their empire with Greece as the buffer zone After the Aetolian League triggered a small war which drew in Antiochus Rome and the Seleucids came to blows Antiochus landed in Greece but was forced to retreat across the Aegean after being defeated at the Battle of Thermopylae by the consul of 191 BC Manius Acilius Glabrio The Aetolians attempted to reach a settlement with the Romans but were unsuccessful in the face of maximalist Roman demands Antiochus naval forces in the Aegean were defeated in two major engagements which saw the Roman coalition gain naval superiority The consul of 190 BC Lucius Cornelius Scipio then pursued Antiochus into Asia Minor with the support of the Pergamene king Eumenes II Antiochus started peace negotiations which he broke off after maximalist Roman demands But after he was defeated by the Roman led coalition at the Battle of Magnesia he sued for peace accepting those Roman demands In the resulting peace of Apamea Antiochus ceded all of his territories beyond the Taurus mountains to Roman allies and paid a large indemnity covering the Roman cost of the war The Aetolians reached separate terms with the Romans reducing them to a Roman client state the next year The Romans thereby gained uncontested hegemony over the Greek city states in the Balkans and Asia Minor while also largely excluding the Seleucids from the Mediterranean Contents 1 Background and cold war 2 Outbreak 3 The military conflict 3 1 Thermopylae 3 2 Magnesia 3 3 Aetolian peace and later stages 4 Peace of Apamea 4 1 Terms 4 2 Aftermath 4 2 1 Buffer for the Seleucid empire 4 2 2 Disarmament provisions 4 2 3 Hostages and captives 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 7 1 Modern literature 7 2 Ancient literature 8 Further readingBackground and cold war EditFurther information Second Macedonian War nbsp Greece and the Aegean on the eve of the Second Macedonian War 200 BC nbsp Head possibly a Roman copy of a Hellenistic original depicting Antiochus III of the Seleucid empire From 212 to 205 BC Antiochus III campaigned to reassert Seleucid authority over Armenia and Iran After reducing those areas to vassals and signing a treaties with the Parthians and the Bactrians he returned home 6 He then concentrated on restoring his empire s control over large portions of Asia Minor He was however interrupted by the death of Ptolemy IV Philopator of Egypt in summer 204 BC which gave him an opportunity to take Coele Syria Phoenicia and Palestine from the Ptolemies in the aftermath of the Fifth Syrian War 7 Successful in Syria and Palestine he spent some time there before turning back to Asia Minor some time in 197 BC 8 For these victories he took the title Great King Ancient Greek basileὐs mἑgas 9 With the conquests of Antiochus and the Roman victory in the Second Punic War the Aegean was now flanked by two great powers on its east and west 10 Roman influence continued expanding as a result of the Second Macedonian War 200 197 BC fought between the republic and Philip V of Macedon After Philip invaded the Cycladic islands and declared war on Rhodes and Pergamum the defenders called on Roman aid in summer of 201 BC after major setbacks in the war 11 The Roman senate influenced by a senatorial circle of eastern experts led by Publius Sulpicius Galba Maximus who were veterans of the First Macedonian War sent an embassy to Philip with an ultimatum 12 Over the next three years the Romans fought Philip and by 197 BC were victorious in the aftermath the Aegean s interstate politics had shifted considerably The Roman coalition had defeated Philip but Antiochus at the same time was consolidating Seleucid influence in Asia Minor and Ionia 13 During the war Antiochus relations with Rome were cordial 14 at the start of the war he had promised no aid to Philip before a Roman embassy he complied with a Roman embassy demanding he withdraw from Pergamum a Roman ally in the war the Romans did nothing to prevent his occupation of areas further east in Asia Minor 15 After the war however Roman opinion soured largely due to Antiochus having crossed into Europe after the war s end threatening Roman buffers in the Balkans all while expressing a delayed congratulations to Rome 16 The Romans in the peace after the Macedonian war declared four towns formerly Philip s possessions to be free even though they were within Antiochus sphere of influence 17 The Romans also in the aftermath of the war proclaimed freedom for all Greeks explicitly including even those in Asia Minor under Antiochus control 18 The Romans gave a further warning against intervening in Greek affairs or entering Europe at the Isthmian Games of 196 BC 19 A later embassy reached the king at Lysimachia and demanded Antiochus withdrawal from Ptolemaic lands in Asia Minor his withdrawal from lands formerly Philip s and that he refrain from attacking any Greek cities as all Greek cities had been declared free the Romans had no right to demand the last element and Antiochus deftly brushed off Roman demands by appealing to his historic claims in the region and protesting the lack of any legitimate Roman interest in Asia Minor after his marriage alliance with Ptolemy and his own declaration of freedom for the Greek cities in Asia Minor 20 His responses largely blunted any possible Roman causes for war if Rome had wanted to fight at this point she would have had to fight for the freedom of cities that Antiochus declared free for the settlement of disputes that he was willing to refer to arbitration and for the return to Ptolemy of cities that Ptolemy apparently did not want back 21 More fundamentally however the Romans and Antiochus had incompatible international visions Rome saw their sphere of influence running directly to the Hellespont with Asia Minor as a buffer region Antiochus saw Asia Minor as his sphere with Greece acting as a buffer 22 In the interim Rome pursued a policy of building goodwill among the Greek states to avoid seeming the aggressor and if attacked to draw neutral cities to Rome s cause 23 Any Seleucid move against Greek cities would paint them as the aggressors 24 Outbreak Edit nbsp The Aegean world at the outbreak of the war in 192 BC Seleucid Empire and allies Roman Republic and allies Neutral states nbsp This 18th century drawing depicts Flaminius announcing the freedom of the Greeks at the Isthmian Games in 196 BC Roman forces in Greece under Titus Quinctius Flamininus largely withdrew after proclaiming its freedom from Roman control or taxation in 195 BC Antiochus at the same time operated a large army in Europe against tribes in Thrace through 194 moving into the Roman power vacuum and conceiving of the Roman withdrawal as a retreat 25 At a meeting between Antiochus envoys in Rome ten legates speaking on behalf of the senate made their position clear behind closed doors if Antiochus wanted peace he would have to stay on his side of the Hellespont and Bosphorus if he did not do so Rome would maintain its rights to intervene in Asia to protect its allies 26 Provocatively Flaminius one of the legates then gave an public oration before the senate proclaiming Roman intentions to free the Greeks in Asia Minor while Antiochus ambassadors from fear of starting a war and without authorisation to accept the Roman terms or to reject them could only plead negotiations continue 25 The senate by spring 192 clarified its position and would accept peace provided that Antiochus remained in Thrace 27 In late 193 BC the Aetolian League receptive to Antiochus ambassadors as they returned from the embarrassment at Rome sought to shake up the Roman settlement and draw both Rome and Antiochus into war for its own advantage 28 The Aetolians moved to form an alliance between themselves Philip in Macedon and Nabis in Sparta The plans for an alliance failed but Nabis was sufficiently persuaded to invade coastal cities in Laconia 28 the nearby Achaean League responded by moving in reinforcements and dispatching an embassy to Rome Rome responded by sending four ambassadors to remind the Greeks of their continued interests After Flaminius one of the ambassadors spoke to the Aetolian League it responded by passing a decree to invite Antiochus to liberate Greece and arbitrate the dispute between Rome and Aetolia This was a declaration of war and the Romans saw Antiochus representatives in Aetolia as responsible 29 The Aetolians then moved troops to seize Sparta Chalcis and Demetrias Successful only at Demetrias the Aetolians assassinated Nabis but were stopped by Achaean intervention Chalchis responded to the Aetolians with force and able to convince Antiochus that the Greek cities were waiting enthusiastically to rebel against Rome he landed at Demetrias and proclaimed he would liberate the Greeks from Roman subjugation 30 This was the final provocation for the senate in Rome The combination of the Aetolians and Antiochus was an unacceptable intrusion into Greece The Romans responded by dispatching the praetor Aulus Atilius Serranus with a fleet to the Peloponnese and Marcus Baebius Tamphilus with two legions to Epirus Further troops were levied and in the new year of 191 BC placed under the command of Manius Acilius Glabrio to conduct the war against Antiochus and those in his empire 31 The military conflict Edit nbsp The course of the war with locations of key battles nbsp Coin depicting Eumenes II of Pergamum Eumenes was one of the key Roman allies during the war and aided greatly in the Roman coalition s victory at Magnesia Even before Glabrio and his consular army arrived Antiochus campaign was not going well He was received extremely coolly by the Greeks Roman declarations of liberty had real substance and his claim of Greek liberation compared unfavourably with it his ostensible liberations of a few cities in Thessaly had required force against their indigenous governments 31 The Achaean League responded to his occupation of Demetrias by declaring war justifying it with their Roman alliance 32 Thermopylae Edit The spring of 191 BC saw the Macedonians enter the war against the Aetolian League they operated independently of the Romans and occupy a number of towns in Thessaly Antiochus moved on Acarnania but was forced to withdraw when he heard of the incursion into Thessaly By the time the consul Glabrio reached Thessaly towns simply surrendered without a fight Antiochus receiving no reinforcements and heavily outnumbered by the Roman coalition was forced to choose between retreat or doing battle where the coalition s numerical superiority would be minimised He chose Thermopylae The resulting battle was such an overwhelming defeat for Antiochus that he immediately fled Greece for Ephesus Less than six months had elapsed from his arrival in Demetrias 33 With the Roman victory there the Greek cities that sat on the sidelines quickly flocked to join the victors 34 Glabrio turned his eye towards the Aetolians and captured Heraclea that year before besieging Naupactus after peace negotiations the Aetolian ambassadors sought to surrender but the specific rites for surrender were unclear and vitiated by their need for ratification 35 fell apart 36 Succeeded by the consul of 190 BC Lucius Cornelius Scipio and Lucius able legate Scipio Africanus Glabrio returned to Rome and celebrated a triumph 37 That year the Roman fleet under Gaius Livius won a battle off Corcyra forcing Antiochus fleet to retreat to Ephesus Antiochus then dispatched fleet reinforcements from Syria under the command of Hannibal who had years previously fled to Antiochus court 38 Prevented from crossing the Aegean directly the Scipios stayed in Europe where they oversaw a six month truce with the Aetolians so that they could send envoys to the senate in Rome negotiate a peace In the meantime the Scipios marched on the land route for Asia Minor Fortunately for the Romans Hannibal s fleet was stopped by the Rhodians at the Battle of the Eurymedon and the remaining fleet at Ephesus was destroyed by Livius successor Lucius Aemilius Regillus in the Battle of Myonessus Aemilius victory forced Antiochus to withdraw in haste back across the Hellespont to Asia Minor When the Romans advanced into Thrace Antiochus allies did nothing to stop them when they crossed the Hellespont he gave no contest 39 Magnesia Edit Further information Battle of Magnesia By October of 190 BC Antiochus naval forces were vastly outmatched by the Romans and the Scipios had arrived into Asia Minor He attempted to negotiate for peace offering to indemnify half the Roman cost of the war and abandon his claims to Smyrna Lampsacus Alexandria Troas and other Roman allies The Scipios reflecting the Roman view that the Greeks in Asia Minor were part of Rome s sphere of influence declined the offer and demanded that Antiochus cede the whole of Asia Minor northwest of the Taurus mountains and indemnify all Roman war costs Seeing these demands as too extreme Antiochus broke off negotiations 40 Late in the year some time around the middle of December the decisive battle of the war took place near Magnesia ad Sipylum The consul Lucius Scipio was anxious for battle as he needed a victory in December when he would be replaced in command 41 The resulting Battle of Magnesia saw the Roman coalition victorious over Antiochus army driven to rout 40 Numbers on each side are disputed Livy reports that Antiochus commanded 60 000 infantry and 12 000 cavalry against the Roman coalition of around 30 000 this is disputed and John Grainger in The Roman War of Antiochos the Great argues instead that both sides had around 50 000 men 42 The nominal Roman commander there was Lucius Scipio as his brother Scipio Africanus claimed illness however Appian and Plutarch instead relate that Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus also a legate was in effective command 43 44 The battle started with the Roman coalition dispersing Antiochus scythe chariots on his left before Eumenes II of Pergamum led a mass cavalry charge which drove Antiochus cataphracts into his own centre Antiochus himself was at the head of a separate wing of his cavalry which had driven back the Roman left close to the Roman camp and therefore was unable to support his infantry 45 Antiochus infantry resisted stubbornly but after their order was disrupted by their own elephants Eumenes exploited the holes in the formation and annihilated Antiochus phalanx from the flank 46 With his armies defeated Antiochus sent representatives to the Scipios at Sardis where they had moved after the battle to seek terms 47 Aetolian peace and later stages Edit In Greece the war continued The consul of 189 BC Marcus Fulvius Nobilior was assigned to continue the war after negotiations again failed He besieged Ambracia and later in the year negotiated a final peace with both the Aetolians and the Cephallenians Aetolia initially faced with unbudging Roman demands from 191 BC onwards for an indemnity of one thousand talents far beyond her ability to pay was eventually given a break Rhodes mediated between them and was successful in convincing the Romans to accept an indemnity of 200 talents with a further 300 to be paid over the next six years 48 Aetolia also was reduced to a Roman client state 49 50 required exceptionally and explicitly to minister to the power and empire of the Roman people 51 52 The other consul for 189 Gnaeus Manlius Vulso succeeded the Scipios in Asia Lucius Scipio s request for prorogation sent in haste after his victory was ignored 53 and finding a truce with Antiochus led a plundering expedition into Anatolia to subdue some Gallic tribes located there who had supported Antiochus 54 55 Peace of Apamea EditFurther information Treaty of Apamea nbsp Territorial changes resulting from the Peace of Apamea Seleucid Empire Kingdom of Pergamum RhodesAfter Magnesia Antiochus representatives reported to Sardis where the Romans had encamped after the battle There they accepted the Roman peace terms which had become more specific Antiochus would cede all territory north and west of the Taurus mountains he would pay 15 000 Euboeic talents 500 immediately 2 500 after Roman ratification and the rest over twelve years Eumenes of Pergamum would receive 400 talents and grain the Roman enemies sheltered at Antiochus court including Hannibal would be handed over and twenty hostages one of which was Antiochus youngest son would be delivered to Rome as a guarantee 47 Terms Edit What is today known about the detailed terms of the treaty largely comes from fragments of Polybius Histories 56 The precise terms were hashed out first at Rome with input for ambassadors hailing from all over Asia Minor Eumenes visited in person and later by the Roman consul in Asia Manlius Vulso who was assisted by ten senatorial legates In Rome it was determined that the republic would not treat the Greeks in Asia Minor the same way it had treated those in Europe They would instead reward Eumenes of Pergamum and Rhodes with territory for their support in the war Eumenes and the Rhodians were at odds in their interests Eumenes asserted that while the Romans were the best to hold direct responsibility for Antiochus former territories inasmuch as the Romans were unwilling to stay he felt he was the second best option Rhodes argued that freedom should be granted to the Greeks and Eumenes rewarded with Antiochus ceded non Greek territories The senate with no desire to maintain a military presence in Asia Minor gave Rhodes Lycia and Caria south of the river Maeander while Eumenes received the rest 57 Manlius Vulso after defeating some Galatian Gauls in Anatolia and seizing from them and of political importance not from Greeks substantial plunder marched to Pamphylia to receive the first large instalment of Antiochus war indemnity Hearing of the arrival of the senatorial legation he then moved to Apamea and there with them precisely defined the Taurus line which started Cape Sarpedon and ran through the upper portions of the river Tanais They also decreed restrictions on Antiochus navy which limited it to only ten large ships of more than thirty oars 55 A number of disarmament provisions were also included among other things Antiochus would pledge to desist from the use of war elephants and be prohibited from sailing past Cape Sarpedon The resulting treaty was then sworn by Manlius Vulso by then prorogued pro consule 58 59 and by Antiochus 55 They then divided the cities in Asia Minor with the exception of those cities which had been defined as Roman allies they retained their independence into the respective territories allotted to Pergamum and Rhodes Antiochus territories in Europe were also adduced to Pergamum though the cities of Aenus and Maronea freed in the peace in 196 were again liberated 60 The treaty broadly followed the same goals as those of Flaminius after the Macedonian war in areas of Roman interest outside influences would be neutralised and Roman friends would be buttressed The Asiatic victors of the war Pergamum Rhodes and the allied free cities were bound in gratitude to the Romans The Romans intended to pacify the region with goodwill rather than legions so far they had been successful 60 Aftermath Edit nbsp Antiochus IV Epiphanes was the youngest son of Antiochus III He was sent to Rome in the first set of twenty hostages After the death of his brother Seleucus IV Philopator he succeeded him nbsp Coin depicting Demetrius I Soter who during the reign of his father Seleucus IV he was one of the Seleucid hostages in Rome The territories formerly Antiochean were re parcelled immediately after the treaty this was to the substantial advantage of Eumenes who later supported Roman intervention against his enemy Macedon in the Third Macedonian War This however proved to his detriment as by this point his usefulness to Rome had come to an end 61 By 168 BC the Romans had reoriented their alliances against both Pergamum and Rhodes 62 Roman enforcement of the terms with Antiochus continued in part The disarmament provisions which prohibited Antiochus from having war elephants reducing the size of his navy prohibiting his navy from sailing past Cape Sarpedon and prohibiting him from recruiting mercenaries from Roman dominated territory however largely lapsed with his death 63 Buffer for the Seleucid empire Edit Antiochus immediate acceptance of terms after Magnesia reflected a prudent belief that further war between Rome and the Seleucid empire would be mutually ruinous Antiochus still had more men and significant space to trade for time especially given that the Romans would be forced to besiege every city along the Royal Road down to Cilicia However giving up the whole of Asia Minor created for Antiochus and his successors a massive buffer zone which allowed for a prolonged peace between the Roman and Seleucid empires 64 The Romans did not attempt to engage in another armed conflict with the Seleucids as they had yet to gain a firm foothold in Asia Minor and despite his recent defeat Antiochus retained his reputation as a skilled military commander due to his campaigns in Asia Instead the Romans sought to undermine their adversary through diplomatic channels threats and bribery by spurring smaller states to declare war on the Seleucids Roman interference made it impossible for Antiochus successors to carry out their desired policies on their western border In the eastern Seleucid empire the vassal states of the Parthians and Bactrians declared independence 65 This war was the only war the Romans fought with the Seleucids the Seleucid empire collapsed amid internecine conflict a generation later 66 Disarmament provisions Edit After Antiochus death on 3 July 187 BC his successor Seleucus IV Philopator immediately started rebuilding his navy as funds became available but largely did not provoke and remained aloof from the Romans 67 Antiochus successors were also quickly able to field armies in similar sizes to those which Antiochus had fielded in his wars The terms reached at Apamea caused no collapse in Seleucid military power 68 Seleucus IV s successor Antiochus IV Epiphanes simply ignored the treaty s disarmament provisions his navy by 168 BC was sufficiently power to support his invasion of Cyprus itself west of Cape Sarpedon and included both elephants and various mercenaries recruited from Roman client states 69 Some sources such as Appian and Zonaras indicate that the Romans attempted after the death of Antiochus IV to enforce the provisions of the treaty by burning Seleucid ships and hamstringing elephants 70 However that the Seleucids had both ships and elephants had been known by this point for two decades and Polybius explanation of the matter makes no reference to the treaty instead explaining Roman action in terms of military opportunism 71 Rome through the middle of the second century took a cordial approach toward the Seleucids a Roman diplomatic embassy arriving shortly after a military parade in Antioch made no mention of the treaty to the senate even though it surely would have seen elephants 72 The provisions carving out a Roman sphere of influence in Asia Minor however were faithfully abided when Seleucus IV assembled a large army to aid his cousin Pharnaces I of Pontus against Pergamum the Romans likely sent a message reminding him of his obligations not to wage war on Roman allies 73 So too were the provisions relating to the indemnity payments of which were completed very slightly late during Antiochus IV s reign in 173 BC 74 In general only the provisions relating to the cession of Seleucid lands north and west of the Taurus mountains and relating to the indemnity were rigorously pursued by the Romans The other provisions like similar treaties in the Hellenistic period attached to the ruler rather than their state the provisions of such treaties therefore lapsed on a ruler s death unless otherwise indicated 75 Hostages and captives Edit Antiochus III s youngest son also named Antiochus was sent as a political hostage into Roman custody After Antiochus III s death he was exchanged for Demetrius who was Antiochus nephew and the son of Seleucus IV Philopator 76 He was held in Rome for sixteen years until he was able to escape apparently the historian Polybius helped in the escape and take the throne from his uncle s lineage in 162 BC 77 Hannibal who was to be surrendered to Rome under Apamea s terms fled for Crete and thence to Pergamum s enemy Bithynia After Flaminius negotiated with the king of Bithynia to have Hannibal surrendered in 183 or 182 BC he killed himself 78 One of the Aetolian leaders who had fled to Antiochus court Thoas was also handed over to the Romans he was later released and later became Aetolia s strategos twice more in 181 and 173 BC 79 See also EditList of conflicts in the Near EastReferences Edit a b Grainger 2002 p 217 Sarikakis 1974 p 80 a b c d e Grainger 2002 p 268 Taylor 2013 p 139 Sarikakis 1974 p 81 Errington 1989 p 249 Errington 1989 pp 250 51 Errington 1989 p 252 Errington 1989 p 244 Badian 1959 p 81 Errington 1989 pp 252 55 Errington 1989 p 256 The Romans demanded that Philip cease his war and make restitution to be determined by a fair tribunal The Romans did not intend for him to accept Errington 1989 p 271 Badian 1959 p 82 Errington 1989 pp 270 71 Errington 1989 p 272 Badian 1959 p 85 Errington 1989 p 272 Errington 1989 p 270 Errington 1989 p 274 Badian 1959 pp 86 87 Errington 1989 p 275 Badian 1959 p 87 Errington 1989 p 276 Badian 1959 p 89 Badian 1959 p 90 a b Badian 1959 p 91 Errington 1989 p 278 Errington 1989 p 280 a b Badian 1959 p 92 Errington 1989 pp 280 81 citing Livy 35 32 2 33 11 Badian 1959 p 96 Errington 1989 p 282 a b Errington 1989 p 283 Badian 1959 p 96 Errington 1989 p 283 Errington 1989 p 284 Badian 1959 p 96 Eckstein A M 1995 Glabrio and the Aetolians a note on deditio Transactions of the American Philological Association 125 271 289 doi 10 2307 284356 ISSN 0360 5949 Broughton 1951 p 352 Broughton 1951 pp 356 58 Errington 1989 p 285 Errington 1989 pp 285 86 a b Errington 1989 p 286 Grainger 2002 p 324 Grainger 2002 pp 317 Antiochus 321 Romans Grainger 2002 p 323 Broughton 1951 p 359 citing Livy 37 39 5 and App Syr 30 36 Broughton 1951 p 358 The prefect of the camp one Marcus Aemilius Lepdius halted Antiochus troops on the Roman left Lazenby John F 2016 03 07 Magnesia battle of Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 3880 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Retrieved 2023 04 11 See Livy 37 39 44 2 and App Syr 30 35 a b Errington 1989 pp 286 87 Gruen 1986 p 29 citing Polyb 21 29 9 21 31 16 Broughton 1951 p 360 citing among others Livy 38 3 10 Derow Peter Sidney 2015 12 22 Aetolian Confederacy Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 162 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Retrieved 2023 04 12 Badian Ernst 1952 The treaty between Rome and the Achaean league Journal of Roman Studies 42 76 80 doi 10 2307 297516 ISSN 0075 4358 Badian p 80 n 34 cites Polyb 21 32 2 and Livy 38 11 2 Gruen 1986 p 279 translating imperium as power or supremacy Gruen also notes that no other treaties in the east ever included such terms which were added likely to force Aetolia to renounce her former faithlessness and treachery Gruen Erich 1995 The fall of the Scipios In Malkin I Rubinsohn Z W eds Leaders and masses in the Roman world Mnemosyne Supplements Vol 139 Brill p 69 doi 10 1163 9789004329447 006 ISBN 978 9 0040 9917 3 Broughton 1951 p 360 citing among others Polyb 21 33 39 and Livy 38 12 27 a b c Errington 1989 p 288 See Polyb 21 42 Errington 1989 pp 287 88 Broughton 1951 p 366 Polyb 21 44 a b Errington 1989 p 289 Habicht 1989 pp 332 33 Habicht 1989 p 334 Paltiel 1979 pp 31 36 41 Grainger 2002 pp 356 57 Tsimpoukidis 1989 pp 174 75 Grainger 2002 p 357 Habicht 1989 p 340 Paltiel 1979 p 31 Grainger 2002 p 350 Paltiel 1979 p 31 Paltiel 1979 p 33 citing App Syr 8 46 Zon 9 25 Paltiel 1979 p 33 noting also that Cicero Cic Phil 9 2 4 makes no mention of the treaty in relating this episode Paltiel 1979 p 34 citing Polyb 30 25 Paltiel 1979 p 33 noting however that the section in Diodorus 29 24 that covers this message does not survive Paltiel 1979 p 34 citing Livy 47 6 Seleucus IV had been assassinated in 175 BC by his chancellor Habicht 1989 p 340 Paltiel 1979 pp 35 36 Habicht 1989 p 340 Errington R M 2015 12 22 Demetrius 10 I of Syria Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 2097 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Retrieved 2023 04 12 Caven Brian M 2015 07 30 Hannibal Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 2930 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Retrieved 2023 04 12 Grainger 2002 p 352 Bibliography EditModern literature Edit Astin AE et al eds 1989 Rome and the Mediterranean to 133 BC Cambridge Ancient History Vol 8 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 23448 4 OCLC 916019669 Errington R M Rome and Philip and Antiochus In CAH2 8 1989 pp 244 89 Habicht C The Seleucids and their rivals In CAH2 8 1989 pp 324 87 Badian Ernst 1959 Rome and Antiochus the Great a study in cold war Classical Philology 54 2 81 99 ISSN 0009 837X Bar Kochva Bezalel 1976 The Seleucid army organization and tactics in the great campaigns Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 20667 9 Broughton Thomas Robert Shannon 1951 The magistrates of the Roman republic Vol 1 New York American Philological Association Grainger John D 2002 The Roman war of Antiochos the Great Brill ISBN 978 90 04 12840 8 Green Peter 1990 Alexander to Actium the historical evolution of the Hellenistic age Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 05611 6 OCLC 13332042 Gruen Erich S 1986 The Hellenistic world and the coming of Rome Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 05737 6 OCLC 16573469 Paltiel Eliezer 1979 The treaty of Apamea and the later Seleucids Antichthon 13 30 41 doi 10 1017 S006647740000263X ISSN 0066 4774 Sarikakis Theodoros 1974 To Basileio twn Seleykidwn kai h Rwmh The Seleucid kingdom and Rome In Christopoulos Georgios A amp Bastias Ioannis K eds Istoria toy Ellhnikoy E8noys Tomos E Ellhnistikoi Xronoi History of the Greek Nation Volume V Hellenistic Period in Greek Athens Ekdotiki Athinon pp 55 91 ISBN 978 960 213 101 5 Sherwin White A N 1984 Roman foreign policy in the East 168 BC to AD 1 London Duckworth ISBN 0 7156 1682 X OCLC 10664923 Taylor Michael 2013 Antiochus The Great Barnsley Pen and Sword Military ISBN 9781848844636 Tsimpoukidis Dimitrios 1989 Istoria toy ellhnistikoy kosmoy History of the hellenistic world in Greek Athens Dimitrios N Papadimas ISBN 9789602060766 Ancient literature Edit Livy 1905 1st century AD From the Founding of the City Translated by Roberts Canon via Wikisource Polybius 1922 27 2nd century BC Histories Loeb Classical Library Translated by Paton W R Cambridge Harvard University Press via LacusCurtius Further reading EditMa John 1999 Antiochos III and the cities of western Asia Minor Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198152194 Ma John 2013 The Attalids a military history In Thonemann Peter ed Attalid Asia Minor money international relations and the state Oxford University Press pp 49 82 ISBN 9780199656110 Sullivan Richard D 1990 Near eastern royalty and Rome 100 30 BC University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 7759 3 OCLC 244766991 Waterfield Robin 2014 Taken at the flood the Roman conquest of Greece Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199916894 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Seleucid war amp oldid 1162892324, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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