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.

[B.C. 40 (a. u. 714)]

He remained quiet, pretending that the necessity was a favor to himself. 
In this way Lepidus took charge of both provinces.

[B.C. 42 (a. u. 712)]

[-24-] About this same period that the above was taking place, and after the battle the scene of which was laid at Philippi, Mark Antony came to the mainland of Asia and there by visiting some points himself and sending deputies elsewhere he levied contributions upon the cities and sold the positions of authority.  Meanwhile he fell in love with Cleopatra, whom he had seen in Cilicia, and no longer gave a thought to honor but was a slave of the fair Egyptian and tarried to enjoy her love.  This caused him to do many absurd things, one of which was to drag her brothers from the temple of Artemis at Ephesus and put them to death.  Finally, leaving Plancus in the province of Asia and Saxa in Syria, he started for Egypt.  Many disturbances resulted from this action of his:  the Aradii, islanders, would not yield any obedience to the messengers sent by him to them after the money and also killed some of them, and the Parthians, who had previously been restless, now assailed the Romans more than ever.  Their leaders were Labienus and Pacorus the latter the son of King Orodes, and the former a child of Titus Labienus.  I will narrate how he came among the Parthians and what he did in conjunction with Pacorus.  He was by chance an ally of Brutus and Cassius and had been sent to Orodes before the battle to secure some help:  he was detained by him a long time (over three lines starting at line beginning “constant ill treatment"):  and his presence ignored, because the king hesitated to conclude the alliance with him yet feared to refuse.

[B.C. 41 (a. u. 713)]

Subsequently, when news of the defeat was brought and it appeared to be the intention of the victors to spare no one who had resisted them, he remained among the barbarians, choosing to live with them rather than perish at home.  This Labienus, accordingly, as soon as he perceived Antony’s relaxation, his passion, and his journeying into Egypt, persuaded the Parthian monarch to make an attempt upon the Romans.  He said that their armies had been partly ruined, partly damaged, and that the remainder of the warriors were in revolt and would again be at war.  Therefore he advised the king to subjugate Syria and the adjoining districts, while Caesar was detained in Italy and with Sextus, and Antony abandoned himself to love in Egypt.  He promised that he would act as leader in the war, and announced that in this way he could detach many of the provinces, inasmuch as they were hostile to the Romans owing to the latter’s constant ill treatment of them.

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