In fact a select squadron of fifty sail, which carried
10,000 select troops including Marcus Marius and the
flower of the Roman emigrants, sailed forth even into
the Aegean; the report went that it was destined to
effect a landing in Italy and there rekindle the civil
war. But the ships, which Lucullus after the
disaster off Chalcedon had demanded from the Asiatic
communities, began to appear, and a squadron ran forth
in pursuit of the enemy’s fleet which had gone
into the Aegean. Lucullus himself, experienced
as an admiral,(13) took the command. Thirteen
quinqueremes of the enemy on their voyage to Lemnos,
under Isidorus, were assailed and sunk off the Achaean
harbour in the waters between the Trojan coast and
the island of Tenedos. At the small island of
Neae, between Lemnos and Scyros, at which little-frequented
point the Pontic flotilla of thirty-two sail lay drawn
up on the shore, Lucullus found it, immediately attacked
the ships and the crews scattered over the island,
and possessed himself of the whole squadron.
Here Marcus Marius and the ablest of the Roman emigrants
met their death, either in conflict or subsequently
by the axe of the executioner. The whole Aegean
fleet of the enemy was annihilated by Lucullus.
The war in Bithynia was meanwhile continued by Cotta
and by the legates of Lucullus, Voconius, Gaius Valerius
Triarius, and Barba, with the land army reinforced
by fresh arrivals from Italy, and a squadron collected
in Asia. Barba captured in the interior Prusias
on Olympus and Nicaea while Triarius along the coast
captured Apamea (formerly Myrlea) and Prusias on the
sea (formerly Cius). They then united for a joint
attack on Mithradates himself in Nicomedia; but the
king without even attempting battle escaped to his
ships and sailed homeward, and in this he was successful
only because the Roman admiral Voconius, who was entrusted
with the blockade of the port of Nicomedia, arrived
too late. On the voyage the important Heraclea
was indeed betrayed to the king and occupied by him;
but a storm in these waters sank more than sixty of,
his ships and dispersed the rest; the king arrived
almost alone at Sinope. The offensive on the
part of Mithradates ended in a complete defeat—not
at all honourable, least of all for the supreme leader—of
the Pontic forces by land and sea.
Invasion of Pontus by Lucullus
Lucullus now in turn proceeded to the aggressive. Triarius received the command of the fleet, with orders first of all to blockade the Hellespont and lie in wait for the Pontic ships returning from Crete and Spain; Cotta was charged with the siege of Heraclea; the difficult task of providing supplies was entrusted to the faithful and active princes of the Galatians and to Ariobarzanes king of Cappadocia; Lucullus himself advanced in the autumn of 681 into the favoured land of Pontus, which had long been untrodden by an enemy. Mithradates, now resolved to maintain the strictest defensive, retired without giving battle from Sinope