quarter nothing impeded the embarkation. But
the want of ships, through which the pursuit of Pompeius
had failed in March 705, threatened also to frustrate
this expedition. The war-vessels, which Caesar
had given orders to build in the Gallic, Sicilian,
and Italian ports, were not yet ready or at any rate
not on the spot; his squadron in the Adriatic had
been in the previous year destroyed at Curicta;(27)
he found at Brundisium not more than twelve ships of
war and scarcely transports enough to convey over
at once the third part of his army—of twelve
legions and 10,000 cavalry—destined for
Greece. The considerable fleet of the enemy exclusively
commanded the Adriatic and especially all the harbours
of the mainland and islands on its eastern coast.
Under such circumstances the question presents itself,
why Caesar did not instead of the maritime route choose
the land route through Illyria, which relieved him
from all the perils threatened by the fleet and besides
was shorter for his troops, who mostly came from Gaul,
than the route by Brundisium. It is true that
the regions of Illyria were rugged and poor beyond
description; but they were traversed by other armies
not long afterwards, and this obstacle can hardly
have appeared insurmountable to the conqueror of Gaul.
Perhaps he apprehended that during the troublesome
march through Illyria Pompeius might convey his whole
force over the Adriatic, whereby their parts might
come at once to be changed—with Caesar
in Macedonia, and Pompeius in Italy; although such
a rapid change was scarcely to be expected from his
slow-moving antagonist. Perhaps Caesar had decided
for the maritime route on the supposition that his
fleet would meanwhile be brought into a condition
to command respect, and, when after his return from
Spain he became aware of the true state of things
in the Adriatic, it might be too late to change the
plan of campaign. Perhaps— and, in
accordance with Caesar’s quick temperament always
urging him to decision, we may even say in all probability—he
found himself irresistibly tempted by the circumstance
that the Epirot coast was still at the moment unoccupied
but would certainly be covered in a few days by the
enemy, to thwart once more by a bold stroke the whole
plan of his antagonist.
Caesar Lands in Epirus
First Successes
However this may be, on the 4th Jan. 706(28) Caesar
set sail with six legions greatly thinned by toil
and sickness and 600 horsemen from Brundisium for
the coast of Epirus. It was a counterpart to
the foolhardy Britannic expedition; but at least the
first throw was fortunate. The coast was reached
in the middle of the Acroceraunian (Chimara) cliffs,
at the little-frequented roadstead of Paleassa (Paljassa).
The transports were seen both from the harbour of
Oricum (creek of Avlona) where a Pompeian squadron
of eighteen sail was lying, and from the headquarters
of the hostile fleet at Corcyra; but in the one quarter
they deemed themselves too weak, in the other they