History Of Ancient Civilization eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 346 pages of information about History Of Ancient Civilization.

History Of Ancient Civilization eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 346 pages of information about History Of Ancient Civilization.

ROMAN WARFARE

=The Triumph.=—­When a general has won a great victory, the Senate permits him as a signal honor to celebrate the triumph.  This is a religious procession to the temple of Jupiter.  The magistrates and senators march at the head; then come the chariots filled with booty, the captives chained by the feet, and, at last, on a golden car drawn by four horses, the victorious general crowned with laurel.  His soldiers follow him singing songs with the solemn refrain “Io, Triomphe."[125] The procession traverses the city in festal attire and ascends to the Capitol:  there the victor lays down his laurel on the knees of Jupiter and thanks him for giving victory.  After the ceremony the captives are imprisoned, or, as in the case of Vercingetorix, beheaded, or, like Jugurtha, cast into a dungeon to die of hunger.  The triumph of AEmilius Paullus, conqueror of Macedon, lasted for three days.  The first day witnessed a procession of 250 chariots bearing pictures and statues, the second the trophies of weapons and 25 casks of silver, the third the vases of gold and 120 sacrificial bulls.  At the rear walked King Perseus, clad in black, surrounded by his followers in chains and his three young children who extended their hands to the people to implore their pity.

=Booty.=—­In the wars of antiquity the victor took possession of everything that had belonged to the vanquished, not only of the arms and camp-baggage, but of the treasure, the movable property, beasts of the hostile people, the men, women, and children.  At Rome the booty did not belong to the soldiers but to the people.  The prisoners were enslaved, the property was sold and the profits of the sale turned into the public chest.  And so every war was a lucrative enterprise.  The kings of Asia had accumulated enormous treasure and this the Roman generals transported to Rome.  The victor of Carthage deposited in the treasury more than 100,000 pounds of silver; the conqueror of Antiochus 140,000 pounds of silver and 1,000 pounds of gold without counting the coined metals; the victor over Persia remitted 120,000,000 sesterces.

=The Allies of Rome.=—­The ancient world was divided among a great number of kings, little peoples, and cities that hated one another.  They never united for resistance and so Rome absorbed them one by one.

Those whom she did not attack remained neutral and indifferent; often they even united with the Romans.  In the majority of her wars Rome did not fight alone, but had the assistance of allies:  against Carthage, the king of Numidia; against the king of Macedon, the AEtolians; against the king of Syria, the Rhodians.  In the east many kings proudly assumed the title of “Ally of the Roman People.”  In the countries divided into small states, some peoples called in the Romans against their neighbors, receiving the Roman army, furnishing it with provisions, and guiding it to the frontiers of the hostile country.  And so in Gaul it was Marseilles that introduced the Romans into the valley of the Rhone; it was the people of Autun (the AEdui) who permitted them to establish themselves in the heart of the land.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
History Of Ancient Civilization from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.