Still more singular was the circumstance, that with
these movements was combined a renewed attempt to
place a pretender on the Macedonian throne in the person
of one Euphenes. Mithradates, who from the Crimea
maintained connections with the Thracians, was hardly
a stranger to all these events. The praetor
Gaius Sentius defended himself, it is true, against
these intruders with the aid of the Thracian Dentheletae;
but it was not long before mightier opponents came
against him. Mithradates, carried away by his
successes, had formed the bold resolution that he
would, like Antiochus, bring the war for the sovereignty
of Asia to a decision in Greece, and had by land and
sea directed thither the flower of his troops.
His son Ariarathes penetrated from Thrace into the
weakly-defended Macedonia, subduing the country as
he advanced and parcelling it into Pontic satrapies.
Abdera and Philippi became the principal bases for
the operations of the Pontic arms in Europe.
The Pontic fleet, commanded by Mithradates’
best general Archelaus, appeared in the Aegean Sea,
where scarce a Roman sail was to be found. Delos,
the emporium of the Roman commerce in those waters,
was occupied and nearly 20,000 men, mostly Italians,
were massacred there; Euboea suffered a similar fate;
all the islands to the east of the Malean promontory
were soon in the hands of the enemy; they might proceed
to attack the mainland itself. The assault,
no doubt, which the Pontic fleet made from Euboea
on the important Demetrias, was repelled by Bruttius
Sura, the brave lieutenant of the governor of Macedonia,
with his handful of troops and a few vessels hurriedly
collected, and he even occupied the island of Sciathus;
but he could not prevent the enemy from establishing
himself in Greece proper.
The Pontic Proceedings in Greece
There Mithradates carried on his operations not only
by arms, but at the same time by national propagandism.
His chief instrument for Athens was one Aristion,
by birth an Attic slave, by profession formerly a
teacher of the Epicurean philosophy, now a minion of
Mithradates; an excellent master of persuasion, who
by the brilliant career which he pursued at court
knew how to dazzle the mob, and with due gravity to
assure them that help was already on the way to Mithradates
from Carthage, which had been for about sixty years
lying in ruins. These addresses of the new Pericles
were so far effectual that, while the few persons
possessed of judgment escaped from Athens, the mob
and one or two literati whose heads were turned formally
renounced the Roman rule. So the ex-philosopher
became a despot who, supported by his bands of Pontic
mercenaries, commenced an infamous and bloody rule;
and the Piraeeus was converted into a Pontic harbour.
As soon as the troops of Mithradates gained a footing
on the Greek continent, most of the small free states—the
Achaeans, Laconians, Boeotians—as far as
Thessaly joined them. Sura, after having drawn