person, could not avoid complying with the suggestion
that he should begin war with Mithradates. The
declaration of war by Bithynia took place; but, even
when the vessels of Nicomedes closed the Bosporus
against those of Pontus, and his troops marched into
the frontier districts of Pontus and laid waste the
region of Amastris, Mithradates remained still unshaken
in his policy of peace; instead of driving the Bithynians
over the frontier, he lodged a complaint with the
Roman envoys and asked them either to mediate or to
allow him the privilege of self-defence. But
he was informed by Aquillius, that he must under all
circumstances refrain from war against Nicomedes.
That indeed was plain. They had employed exactly
the same policy against Carthage; they allowed the
victim to be set upon by the Roman hounds and forbade
its defending itself against them. Mithradates
reckoned himself lost, just as the Carthaginians had
done; but, while the Phoenicians yielded from despair,
the king of Sinope did the very opposite and assembled
his troops and ships. “Does not even he
who must succumb,” he is reported to have said,
“defend himself against the robber?” His
son Ariobarzanes received orders to advance into Cappadocia;
a message was sent once more to the Roman envoys to
inform them of the step to which necessity had driven
the king, and to demand their ultimatum. It
was to the effect which was to be anticipated.
Although neither the Roman senate nor king Mithradates
nor king Nicomedes had desired the rupture, Aquillius
desired it and war ensued (end of 665).
Preparations of Mithradates
Mithradates prosecuted the political and military
preparations for the passage of arms thus forced upon
him with all his characteristic energy. First
of all he drew closer his alliance with Tigranes king
of Armenia, and obtained from him the promise of an
auxiliary army which was to march into western Asia
and to take possession of the soil there for king
Mithradates and of the moveable property for king
Tigranes. The Parthian king, offended by the
haughty carriage of Sulla, though not exactly coming
forward as an antagonist to the Romans, did not act
as their ally. To the Greeks the king endeavoured
to present himself in the character of Philip and
Perseus, as the defender of the Greek nation against
the alien rule of the Romans. Pontic envoys
were sent to the king of Egypt and to the last remnant
of free Greece, the league of the Cretan cities, and
adjured those for whom Rome had already forged her
chains to rise now at the last moment and save Hellenic
nationality; the attempt was in the case of Crete
at least not wholly in vain, and numerous Cretans
took service in the Pontic army. Hopes were entertained
that the lesser and least of the protected states—Numidia,
Syria, the Hellenic republics—would successively
rebel, and that the provinces would revolt, particularly
the west of Asia Minor, the victim of unbounded oppression.