the struggle between the orders political factions
had without exception been united in opposing the public
foe; but Romans of note fought under the standards
of Mithradates, large districts of Italy desired to
enter into alliance with him, and it was at least
doubtful whether the democratic party would follow
the glorious example that Sulla had set before it,
and keep truce with him so long as he was fighting
against the Asiatic king. But the vigorous general,
who had to contend with all these embarrassments,
was not accustomed to trouble himself about more remote
dangers before finishing the task immediately in hand.
When his proposals of peace addressed to the king,
which substantially amounted to a restoration of the
state of matters before the war, met with no acceptance,
he advanced just as he had landed, from the harbours
of Epirus to Boeotia, defeated the generals of the
enemy Archelaus and Aristion there at Mount Tilphossium,
and after that victory possessed himself almost without
resistance of the whole Grecian mainland with the
exception of the fortresses of Athens and the Piraeeus,
into which Aristion and Archelaus had thrown themselves,
and which he failed to carry by a coup de main.
A Roman division under Lucius Hortensius occupied
Thessaly and made incursions into Macedonia; another
under Munatius stationed itself before Chalcis, to
keep off the enemy’s corps under Neoptolemus
in Euboea; Sulla himself formed a camp at Eleusis
and Megara, from which he commanded Greece and the
Peloponnesus, and prosecuted the siege of the city
and harbour of Athens. The Hellenic cities, governed
as they always were by their immediate fears, submitted
unconditionally to the Romans, and were glad when
they were allowed to ransom themselves from more severe
punishment by supplying provisions and men and paying
fines.
Protracted Siege of Athens and the Piraeus
Athens Falls
The sieges in Attica advanced less rapidly.
Sulla found himself compelled to prepare all sorts
of heavy besieging implements for which the trees
of the Academy and the Lyceum had to supply the timber.
Archelaus conducted the defence with equal vigour
and judgment; he armed the crews of his vessels, and
thus reinforced repelled the attacks of the Romans
with superior strength and made frequent and not seldom
successful sorties. The Pontic army of Dromichaetes
advancing to the relief of the city was defeated under
the walls of Athens by the Romans after a severe struggle,
in which Sulla’s brave legate Lucius Licinius
Murena particularly distinguished himself; but the
siege did not on that account advance more rapidly.
From Macedonia, where the Cappadocians had meanwhile
definitively established themselves, plentiful and
regular supplies arrived by sea, which Sulla was not
in a condition to cut off from the harbour-fortress;
in Athens no doubt provisions were beginning to fail,
but from the proximity of the two fortresses Archelaus
was enabled to make various attempts to throw quantities