Efforts were made to excite a Thracian rising, and
even to arouse Macedonia to revolt. Piracy,
which even previously was flourishing, was now everywhere
let loose as a most welcome ally, and with alarming
rapidity squadrons of corsairs, calling themselves
Pontic privateers, filled the Mediterranean far and
wide. With eagerness and delight accounts were
received of the commotions among the Roman burgesses,
and of the Italian insurrection subdued yet far from
extinguished. No direct relations, however, were
formed with the discontented and the insurgents in
Italy; except that a foreign corps armed and organized
in the Roman fashion was created in Asia, the flower
of which consisted of Roman and Italian refugees.
Forces like those of Mithradates had not been seen
in Asia since the Persian wars. The statements
that, leaving out of account the Armenian auxiliary
army, he took the field with 250,000 infantry and
40,000 cavalry, and that 300 Pontic decked and 100
open vessels put to sea, seem not too exaggerated
in the case of a warlike sovereign who had at his
disposal the numberless inhabitants of the steppes.
His generals, particularly the brothers Neoptolemus
and Archelaus, were experienced and cautious Greek
captains; among the soldiers of the king there was
no want of brave men who despised death; and the armour
glittering with gold and silver and the rich dresses
of the Scythians and Medes mingled gaily with the
bronze and steel of the Greek troopers. No unity
of military organization, it is true, bound together
these party-coloured masses; the army of Mithradates
was just one of those unwieldy Asiatic war-machines,
which had so often already—on the last
occasion exactly a century before at Magnesia—
succumbed to a superior military organization; but
still the east was in arms against the Romans, while
in the western half of the empire also matters looked
far from peaceful.
Weak Counterpreparatons of the Romans
However much it was in itself a political necessity
for Rome to declare war against Mithradates, yet the
particular moment was as unhappily chosen as possible;
and for this reason it is very probable that Manius
Aquillius brought about the rupture between Rome and
Mithradates at this precise time primarily from regard
to his own interests. For the moment they had
no other troops at their disposal in Asia than the
small Roman division under Lucius Cassius and the
militia of western Asia, and, owing to the military
and financial distress in which they were placed at
home in consequence of the insurrectionary war, a
Roman army could not in the most favourable case land
in Asia before the summer of 666. Hitherto the
Roman magistrates there had a difficult position;
but they hoped to protect the Roman province and to
be able to hold their ground as they stood—the
Bithynian army under king Nicomedes in its position
taken up in the previous year in the Paphlagonian territory
between Amastris and Sinope, and the divisions under
Lucius Cassius, Manius Aquillius, and Quintus Oppius,
farther back in the Bithynian, Galatian, and Cappadocian
territories, while the Bithyno-Roman fleet continued
to blockade the Bosporus.