the lost dominion of Rome over the Mediterranean.
He showed himself in the conduct of Asiatic affairs
no unworthy successor of his instructor and friend
Sulla. A Philhellene above most Romans of his
time, he was not insensible to the obligation which
Rome had come under when taking up the heritage of
Alexander—the obligation to be the shield
and sword of the Greeks in the east. Personal
motives—the wish to earn laurels also beyond
the Euphrates, irritation at the fact that the great-king
in a letter to him had omitted the title of Imperator—may
doubtless have partly influenced Lucullus; but it is
unjust to assume paltry and selfish motives for actions,
which motives of duty quite suffice to explain.
The Roman governing college at any rate—timid,
indolent, ill informed, and above all beset by perpetual
financial embarrassments—could never be
expected, without direct compulsion, to take the initiative
in an expedition so vast and costly. About the
year 682 the legitimate representatives of the Seleucid
dynasty, Antiochus called the Asiatic and his brother,
moved by the favourable turn of the Pontic war, had
gone to Rome to procure a Roman intervention in Syria,
and at the same time a recognition of their hereditary
claims on Egypt. If the latter demand might not
be granted, there could not, at any rate, be found
a more favourable moment or occasion for beginning
the war which had long been necessary against Tigranes.
But the senate, while it recognized the princes doubtless
as the legitimate kings of Syria, could not make up
its mind to decree the armed intervention. If
the favourable opportunity was to be employed, and
Armenia was to be dealt with in earnest, Lucullus had
to begin the war, without any proper orders from the
senate, at his own hand and his own risk; he found
himself, just like Sulla, placed under the necessity
of executing what he did in the most manifest interest
of the existing government, not with its sanction,
but in spite of it. His resolution was facilitated
by the relations of Rome towards Armenia, for long
wavering in uncertainty between peace and war, which
screened in some measure the arbitrariness of his
proceedings, and failed not to suggest formal grounds
for war. The state of matters in Cappadocia and
Syria afforded pretexts enough; and already in the
pursuit of the king of Pontus Roman troops had violated
the territory of the great-king. As, however,
the commission of Lucullus related to the conduct of
the war against Mithradates and he wished to connect
what he did with that commission, he preferred to
send one of his officers, Appius Claudius, to the
great-king at Antioch to demand the surrender of Mithradates,
which in fact could not but lead to war.
Difficulties to Be Encountered