Dio's Rome, Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about Dio's Rome, Volume 3.

Dio's Rome, Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about Dio's Rome, Volume 3.

[-26-] Brutus besides doing this had stamped upon the coins which were being minted his own likeness and a helmet and two daggers, indicating by this and by the inscription that in company with Cassius he had liberated his country.  At that same period Cassius had crossed over to Trebonius in Asia ahead of Dolabella, and after securing money from him and a number of the cavalry whom Dolabella had sent before him into Syria attached to his cause many others of the Asiatics and Cilicians.  As a result he brought Tarcondimotus[30] and the people of Tarsus into the alliance, though they were reluctant.  For the Tarsians were so devoted to the former Caesar (and out of regard for him to the second also) that they had changed the name of their city to Juliopolis after him.  This done, Cassius went to Syria, and without striking a blow assumed entire direction of the nations and the legions.

[B.C. 43 (a. u. 710)]

The situation in Syria at that time was this.  Caecilius Bassus, a knight, who had made the campaign with Pompey and in the retreat had arrived at Tyre, continued to spend his time there, incognito.  On ’Change.  Now Sextus was governing the Syrians, for Caesar, since he was quaestor and also a relative of his, had entrusted to his care all Roman interests in that quarter on the occasion of his own march from Egypt against Pharnaces.  So Bassus at first remained quiet, satisfied to be allowed to live:  when, however, some similar persons had associated themselves with him and he had attracted to his enterprise various soldiers of Sextus who at various times came there to garrison the city, and likewise many alarming reports kept coming in from Africa about Caesar, he was no longer pleased with existing circumstances but raised a rebellion, his aim being either to help the followers of Scipio and Cato and the Pompeians or to clothe himself in some authority.  Sextus discovered him before he had finished his preparations, but he explained that he was collecting this body as an auxiliary force for Mithridates of Pergamum against Bosporus; his story was believed, and he was released.  So after this he forged an epistle, which he pretended had been sent to him by Scipio, in which he announced that Caesar had been defeated and had perished in Africa and stated that the governorship of Syria had been assigned to him.  His next step was to use the forces he had in readiness for occupying Tyre and from there he approached the camp of Sextus.  In the attack on the latter which followed Bassus was defeated and wounded.  Consequently, after this experience, he no longer employed violent tactics, but sent messages to his opponent’s soldiers, and in some way or other so prevailed over some of them that they took upon themselves the murder of Sextus.

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Dio's Rome, Volume 3 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.