Ch. Meier 1995 Caesar. A Biography
Ch. Meier 1995 Caesar. A Biography
Ch. Meier 1995 Caesar. A Biography
CHRISTIAN MEIER
Translated from the German
by David McLintock
CONTENTS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
2 Caesar's Fascination
5 Youth in Rome
Education
6 The Second Decade: Experience of the Civil War and First Commitment
7 The First Test: the Experience of Rome in the Decade after the
Restoration (78-70 Bc)
I I Achievement in Gaul
The First Spanish Campaign and the Second Visit to Rome (April-
December 49 Bc)
Caesar in Rome
The Second Spanish Campaign, the Dispute about the Dead Cato, the
Decision to Make War on the Parthians
In Rome for the Last Time: from the Spanish Triumph to the Ides of
March 44 B C)
AFTERWORD
INDEX
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
i. Portrait head of Caesar from Tusculum in Turin.
3. Portrait head in green slate from the early 1st century AD,
Pergamonmuseum, Berlin.
8. Augustan copy of a portrait head of Pompey from the 1st century BC.
18. Egyptian portrait bust in green slate of Mark Antony from the i
stcentury B c, from Kingston Lacey, Dorset.
24. Coin of Lucius Aemilius Buca from the year 44 BC showing Caesar as
Dic[tator] perpetuo.
26. Coin struck in Brutus' army commemorating the Ides of March c. 43-
42 BC.
Due to circumstances beyond their control the Publishers have been unable
to acknowledge all the photographic sources for the illustrations used in
this book. They will be happy to do so in future editions if they are notified.
The Caesarian tribunes of the people thereupon left the city, disguised
as slaves, in one of the carriages that stood ready for hire at the city
gates. (These conveyances, together with horses and litters, were the
normal means of transport for lengthy journeys; the horses could be
changed en route.) By doing so they indicated that the freedom of the
Roman people was in such jeopardy that even its guardians, whom the
people had once sworn to protect, were no longer assured of safety.
For a long time he stood silent. Then he shared his thoughts with his
friends. One of them, Asinius Pollio, recorded the scene in his histories.
These have not survived; but Pollio's account has been preserved in
slightly differing versions by two other ancient authors. According to
Pollio, Caesar was concerned about the misfortune to which he would
expose all men if he now took the step leading to war. He considered
`how much misfortune the crossing would bring to all men'. He tried to
see how posterity would judge him and his decision. One of our sources
shows Caesar's thoughts clearly concentrated on the fateful alternative:
`To refrain from crossing will bring me misfortune; but to cross will
bring misfortune to all men.'
If the misfortune of all men was in the one scale, was only Caesar's in
the other? Was the other side of the alternative as unequivocally clear
and as fateful as it appears from our source? Was the war waged solely
because Caesar did not wish to be stripped of his command and
arraigned before a Roman court? Was he therefore alone against
everyone, with only himself to rely on? And if this was really so, could
he see it like this without deceiving himself in any way, and speak of it
so frankly to his friends at the Rubicon?
At Ariminum he was joined by the tribunes who had fled from Rome.
He led them before his soldiers. According to his own account he
addressed the troops and explained to them that the Senate had
suppressed the legitimate objection of the tribunes by force of arms and
quite unjustifiably passed the senatus consultum ultimum. He rehearsed
`all the infringements of the law that his opponents had persistently
committed against him'. Now they even sought to relieve him of his
command. He called upon the soldiers `to defend the fame and honour of
their general, under whose leadership they had for nine years fought so
successfully for the commonwealth, won many battles and pacified the
whole of Gaul and Germany'. Thus began the civil war, which, with brief
intermissions, was to occupy Caesar for nearly five years, costing much
bloodshed and shaking the entire Roman world to its foundations.
If the soldiers were to defend the fame and honour of their general, as
he put it, did this not mean that Caesar, solely for his personal interests,
was risking a war that, if the worst came to the worst, would affect the
whole of humanity? If we consult the relevant sources, of which there
are not a few, we can be in no doubt of this. He wanted to deflect the
misfortune and danger that threatened his own political existence. By
posing as the champion of the tribunes and the liberty of the Roman
people, he was merely cloaking his true concerns. The cloak was
altogether transparent, and Caesar did not trouble to conceal its
transparency by skilful draping. He did not try to deny that the danger to
the tribunes, which in any case he grossly exaggerated, resulted solely
from their support for him, and he soon abandoned this pretext. From his
own statements, and from speeches in which others sought to win his
favour, it is evident that the war was waged to preserve Caesar's honour
(dignitas). `What else did your armies want,' asked Cicero, `but to
defend you against demeaning injustice?'. On the evening after the battle
of Pharsalos, surveying the field strewn with the dead and wounded,
Caesar himself said, `This is what they wanted; after such great deeds I,
Gaius Caesar, would have been condemned had I not sought the help of
my army.' Such quotations could be multiplied. Caesar had no cause but
himself. Cicero wrote: `This cause lacks nothing but a cause.'
Caesar rebelled against Rome; this is how it must have seemed to the
Senate and to all who acknowledged its authority and its responsibility
for the commonwealth - in other words, to Roman society. Caesar's
armed invasion was universally condemned, even by some of his
prominent friends, relatives and allies.
Modern scholars, on the other hand, have sought to evade the fatal
alternative by crediting Caesar with a superior statesmanly vision and a
genuine cause, in order to be able to assume that he acted from higher
motives: that he was standing up for Rome, Italy, and the peoples of the
empire against a blinkered, self-seeking and superannuated Senate, or
that he wished to create a just and effective system of government and
fundamentally renew the structure of the Roman empire.
If this was so, Caesar said nothing about it, either at the Rubicon or
subsequently, and no other evidence can be cited in support of such a
view. On the contrary, it is clear that no one knew anything of it. None of
the groupings in the civil war was moved by any such objective
considerations. Indeed, there was no split in Roman society
corresponding to the division between Caesar and his opponents. Those
who went over to him did so because he seemed likely to succeed, or
because he was ultimately victorious. On his own side he had only his
immediate supporters, whose loyalty - for all the fascination and
friendship he inspired - derived chiefly from the hope that his victory
would lead to an improvement in their own conditions, and his soldiers,
who were similarly motivated. There was no cause that extended beyond
his immediate circle. Hence, there can be no doubt that Caesar and his
followers were isolated, seemingly alone against Rome.
This was admittedly not how he saw it. His quarrel was not with Rome,
but only with his opponents. He did not wish to fight a civil war, but
merely to settle `civil disputes' (civiles controversiae). He could not
regard the Senate as an independent force. In his view, the resolution it
had passed against him did not express the will of the Roman republic,
but was engineered by his opponents, to whom he could ascribe no
statesmanly motives, but only gross self-interest.
His opponents had only a limited grasp on reality, in that they clearly
did not realize what kind of man they were dealing with. For nine years
the proconsul had commanded a large army, waged a highly successful
war, and made more conquests than any other general in the whole of
Rome's glorious history. Yet now he was not only to be denied a triumph
- the honour to which he was traditionally entitled - but even punished
and robbed of his political existence.
True, ten years earlier he had been guilty of various breaches of the
law - committed, incidentally, while asserting important demands by
Pompey against Senate opposition. True, he had obtained his Gallic
command against the wishes of the Senate, which had no desire for war
or the conquests he went on to win. Yet after it had to acquiesce in all
this, was it still justifiable, advisable or practical to ignore what had
happened, what had been tolerated and was now a fait accompli, and
revert to the events of 59 in order to threaten Caesar's political
existence? Could the victorious leader of nine legions and twenty-two
cohorts really be expected simply to hand himself over? Could Caesar's
dismissal be realistically presented as the cause of the res publica when
the Senate had for so long refused to pass a resolution against him? Was
the res publica in fact conceivable without Caesar?
Yet how were Caesar's opponents to appreciate this? How could they
gain sufficient detachment to realize that the continuance of the
inherited order was in question? Everything we know about Roman
society at this period indicates that the inherited order was regarded as
the only legitimate one. With it Rome had conquered the world. In it the
citizen body had found not only a political form, but a social identity. No
one knew anything different. At most Rome might resign itself to
making a few concessions. Yet Caesar's opponents believed, as the
leading senators had repeatedly believed, that the just order must be
strenuously defended, especially in view of the pusillanimity evinced by
so many of the citizens. Rome stood at a threshold: if Caesar was
allowed to cross it, the worst could be expected.
Caesar's opponents, in short, saw Roman reality from within and did
not doubt it. Caesar, by contrast, saw it from without. This is why he was
able to gauge the power relationships so accurately, though without
knowing how firmly rooted the cause of the Senate still was in the public
mind. His opponents knew, but deceived themselves by underrating their
own weakness.
Yet if a man who had done so much for Rome and led such a great
army could see Roman reality from outside and hence stand outside it to
this extent, then this reality must have somehow acquired a peculiar
character. Its principles, its code of conduct and its fundamental rules no
longer had any hold over Caesar; nor were they clearly observed any
longer. This meant that his position was neither fortuitous nor wholly
alien to Roman conditions - otherwise it is unlikely that any outsider
could have become so powerful.
For this very reason Caesar cannot have been simply a desperado who
relied solely on his own resources. He had obviously been able to create
his own sphere of activity, enjoying so much power and hampered by so
little interference that he may be said to have inhabited a world of his
own, ruling over his provinces, surrounded by his soldiers, and fully
conscious of his immense abilities and achievements. His personal
ambition had developed and consolidated itself in a powerful individual
position, which was grounded in an admirable, if one-sided, ethos that
embodied the old aristocratic ideal of achievement. In this respect only
Pompey came close to him. This position acquired a certain
independence. It became, as it were, so wide and so powerful that he
might feel he had a duty to preserve it. To a certain extent it was a
substitute for suprapersonal legitimacy, in other words for the numerous
opinions and endeavours that coalesce to objectify and justify a cause. It
provided him with a shield against his opponents. This goes some way to
explaining Caesar's readiness to embark upon a war that could affect all
men. He owed it to himself, even after intense soul-searching.
Consciously or unconsciously he may have deceived himself and others
in that he could not see - or could not admit - that Roman society was
opposed to him. He may have found this impossible to believe after all
his services to Rome. And indeed it was true only up to a point.
Caesar and his opponents thus represented two disparate realities: the
old reality, which had once been the whole and was suddenly reduced to
a part, and the new, which had detached itself from the old and could
hardly have been realigned with it even if war had been avoided - so
wide was the gap, so great the mutual alienation. It was this disparity
that characterized the situation - not just conflicting interests, mistrust,
fear, hatred, or the pathological exaggeration of individual pretensions.
It is becoming clear that the Roman republic had now reached a point
at which not only Caesar and his opponents, but the whole of society,
were locked into a situation from which there was no escape. As society
was not internally split - but rather united over the need to preserve the
res publica - its reality was split. An outsider could challenge the whole
from a position of power, because he had been able to construct a world
of his own.
What kind of a society was this? If outsiders were able to build up so
much power within it, against its leading institutions, it can no longer
have been properly integrated, but in a state of crisis. Indeed, the old
institutions, designed for a city state, had long been overstretched, as
Rome now ruled over a world-wide empire. Yet how could the citizen
body remain solid in its adherence to the inherited order? How was it
possible, in view of the crisis, that it did not split around great objective
oppositions? Why did the deprived populace not rise in revolt? How
broad was this society, and what possibilities were there for opposition?
Are we dealing here with a phenomenon peculiar to the ancient world?
Jacob Burckhardt noted that in the ancient world affairs were ordered in
a way that made for rigidity rather than flexibility: the bough was less
likely to bend than to break. This is no doubt connected with the fact that
the citizen body could be said to be a political order rather than to have
one, and that there was no duality of society and state; rather, the body
politic had itself become a political unit. It could therefore have little
detachment from itself.
What kind of a crisis was it in which it was not Roman society that fell
apart, but Roman reality - the sense of shared security in an order that
was essentially unquestioned? It was obviously a crisis that produced
outsiders rather than internal opponents, a crisis that - in view of the
unanimous adherence to the old - clearly resulted rather from the build-
up of the unintended side-effects of action and thus evolved in the form
of a process (which looks like a quite modern phenomenon). What did
this mean for society in general and for the individuals who grew up and
lived in it? How could they feel at home in it - and justifiably feel at
home? What kind of reality was it that was at once still valid and clearly
no longer valid?
Did all this arise because there was special scope for action? If so,
there seems nevertheless to have been no scope for structural change. If
there had been, existing structures would inevitably have been
questioned. It seems then that power to act co-existed with
powerlessness to change anything - power within conditions, but not
over them. However, faith in the traditional afforded a measure of
security, just as the failure of the traditional gave rise to special
achievements. There were powerful necessities, strong expectations,
undreamt-of possibilities. In this largely comprehensible and essentially
controllable world a great deal was seen to depend on the individual.
And often enough he had to resign himself to failure. This may have led
to the emergence of particular types of character.
Be this as it may, how did Caesar come to occupy the position from
which he was able to launch the war at the Rubicon? How did he become
an outsider? Was it a predisposition from his youth? Was he as great as
he is often said to be - and what does that mean? If he was indeed great -
in whatever sense - can his greatness have resulted from the coincidence
of the universal and the particular, which Burckhardt discerned in all
great individuals? When he crossed the Rubicon, was he acting solely to
save himself, his position, his honour and his security, as Hegel thought,
and thereby doing something timely - something that had to be done -
because where great men are concerned `their particular aims embody
the will of the world spirit'? Or is this a historical fairy-tale?
Caesar's Fascination
THE EUROPEAN TRADITION • DOUBTS ABOUT CAESAR'S
GREATNESS AND STATESMANLY ACHIEVEMENT • FASCINATION
AND FAILURE • SOURCES OF POSSIBLE DELUSION •
INDEPENDENCE AND POWER IN A `BASE AGE' • `IT IS OUR
CONCERN'
The Middle Ages revered him as the first emperor, the founder of the
monarchy, from which the supreme secular power in the west takes its
name (Kaiser). Caesar, Rome and the Empire seemed to be one and to
take on mythical dimensions. Then, starting in the Renaissance, came
the discovery of the great personality behind the name, with all its
facets: the general, the conqueror of Gaul and Rome's immense empire,
the important writer, the great organizer, credited with having
reconstituted Rome after a long crisis, the strategist and military leader,
the politician, diplomat and heart-breaker, the victor who showed
clemency to the defeated, steadfast and daringly nonchalant, a man who
was ceaselessly active and seems never to have known failure, for whom
any set-back was merely a prelude to further success, who was swift and
brilliant in action - until Brutus and his fellow conspirators brought his
life to a seemingly tragic end.
Yet against all these doubts a new form of greatness was conceived -
historical greatness. Hegel saw Caesar as the executive arm of the
`world spirit', uniting the universal and the particular, for `what he
gained for himself by attaining his at first negative end - absolute power
over Rome - was . . . at the same time a necessary destiny in the history
of Rome and the world, so that not only his personal advantage, but all
his activity, proceeded from an instinct that brought about what was in
itself timely.'
The man who fulfilled this historical mission was also a perfect human
being. `In both human and historical terms Caesar stands at the point
where the great contrasts of existence meet and combine. Caesar was a
man of immense creativity, yet gifted with a penetrating intellect; . . .
supreme in will and achievement, imbued with republican ideals, yet
born to be king, a Roman to the core, yet with a vocation to reconcile
and unite Roman and Greek traditions within himself and communicate
them to a wider world. In all this Caesar is the whole and complete man.'
In our own day, by contrast, greatness seems to have lost all credibility.
It is no longer a question of whether it is beneficent, but of whether there
can be any such thing. `Spurious greatness', of which Thomas Mann
spoke, with Hitler in mind, seems to have made the very concept of
greatness seem spurious. If fascination were to make itself felt across
the centuries in his case, it would for the time being meet largely with
resistance, if not incomprehension.
Moreover, much that was once ascribed to Caesar has become highly
questionable. The threat of the Germani, for instance, which Mommsen
credited him with removing, did not exist. Above all, Caesar's
statesmanly abilities - or rather potentialities - have been increasingly
called into question. Whatever great feats of organization he performed
as ruler, it is uncertain, if not improbable, that he knew a way out of the
profound crisis that faced the Roman republic.
We may presume that Caesar had power only within these conditions.
Command of an army, victory in a civil war, comprehensive powers, the
love of the masses, a wide circle of friends, wealth, and the ability to
fulfil the wishes of many - all these may enable a politician to
accomplish a great deal and become irresistible. Yet in order to effect
enduring changes in existing conditions he may need quite different
forms of power. His will must be able to mesh with the needs, interests
and opinions of others, not simply in order to bring about what he
desires in this or that case, but to ensure that society as a whole changes
and that the new order acquires a degree of self-regulation. Power and
authority can help in achieving this end, but legitimacy cannot be
engineered or attained by force.
After all, any serious attempt to found a new order - supposing that
Caesar wished to do so - would have called for much patience and
empathy, many concessions, and great forbearance, as well as a great
deal of manoeuvring, calculation, persuasion, and quiet, sedulous
activity. And if he had been capable of all this, would he still have been
the man whose personality fascinated the European mind for so many
centuries?
Can this fascination, whatever its source, still enthrall us? Can we - after
Hitler - continue to speak of great men in accordance with time-
honoured European tradition, above all when their spheres of activity
were war and politics? Can we still be captivated by a man who launched
a civil war - after a war of conquest in Gaul - for his own sake?
Yet we must also ask whether we know so much better than all the
great minds who, since the Renaissance, have acknowledged Caesar's
incomparable greatness, despite every possible criticism of his deeds.
`In the end', wrote Burckhardt, `we begin to sense that the whole of the
personality we find so great still affects us with its magic, across the
nations and across the centuries, far beyond the limits of the mere
historical record.' Can it be that the judgment of modern times was
conditioned by a mysterious magic force that has only recently released
us from its thrall - if it has?
There are periods, says Musil, when one has only one choice - `to
conform with the baseness of the age (and do in Rome as the Romans
do) or to become a neurotic'. In a way the late republic was such a
period. Although there were some highly honourable and responsible
men among the senators, their policy-making was desperate and feeble.
On the whole everything was overlaid with endless selfseeking and
unrestrained exploitation of position. The general picture is one of
corruption and incompetence, of swimming with the tide. The historian
Sallust, a man of high moral standards, blamed society for his own
inability to behave as he would have wished: `Instead of decency, self-
discipline and competence, there was insolence, corruption and rapacity.
Although I despised these things, being quite untainted by baseness, my
insecure youth was nevertheless corrupted, in the presence of such great
vices, by the desire for honours and gain and became their prisoner.'
Relatively few, while not necessarily becoming neurotic, as far as we can
see, felt a compulsion to be negative. And many vacillated between the
two.
Caesar, by contrast, could on the one hand operate all the social levers
with bravura in order to secure his own advantage, and at the same time
develop an inward independence, a serene and rather disdainful
aloofness. As an outsider he built up a power base that ultimately
enabled him to challenge the whole of Rome. Unable to forge any real
links, he stuck tenaciously to his course and continued to rely on his own
resources. This accounts for the extraordinary freedom he enjoyed. He
could find no raison d'etre in the society he belonged to, and to this
extent his position was subject to chance. Freedom requires a bond -
what Sartre called `the choice of a goal in the service of the past' - and
this Caesar found in the old Roman ethic of achievement. It provided
him with a yardstick, admittedly outside contemporary society - which
was no longer the old society he belonged to. He evolved exalted
standards and measured his peers against them, in order to perceive their
shortcomings all the more clearly. He, however, measured up to them,
isolated though he was, beset by the greatest dangers, obliged to meet
the highest demands, and sustained wholly by his own energy. With a
nonchalance that was no doubt aesthetically attractive but ethically
dubious, he disdained to conform with the discipline of his class, which
had once endorsed the old achievement ethic, and set his own
personality above it. For because he was isolated in Roman society,
because there was no cause to which he could commit himself or in
whose name he could act, he had no choice but to build up his own
position. And since the Roman empire was so immense, since Rome's
ruling class was the most powerful the world has ever known, he was
able to create his own world. Here he could give free rein to all the
potentialities that lay within him - but at the price of no longer being
able to take his place in Rome. The dynamism with which he confronted
society became ever more monstrous and demonic.
The way in which Caesar played this game - risking his very existence
and then raising the stakes, seeking out immense opportunities, finding
them and savouring them - affords an absorbing spectacle. The costumes
are historical and belong to Roman history. And the drama is set in an
age that saw a relaxation of the constraints that had once held Rome
together in the tension of force and counterforce. An abundance of
power, which Rome had accustomed itself to producing during centuries
of dull, disciplined solidarity, was now released. At the same time the
city was becoming more and more receptive to the sophistication of
Greek culture. All this suddenly came together in such disparate figures
as Marius and Sulla, Cato and Caesar, Pompey, Crassus and Lucullus,
Cicero and Brutus. Nor should we forget the brilliant escapades of the
generation that grew up in this ambience, aping what they observed in
the others, yet ignoring the scruples that still occasionally assailed the
objects of their emulation. Nor should we forget the ladies of the Roman
aristocracy, who were begining to acquire a taste for freedom, for
culture, even for power, and becoming susceptible to them. Where else
has there been such an imposing array of power and personal - though
not institutional - brilliance?
If this period and its most significant protagonist is still able to fascinate
us, this is because what we see enacted is essentially our concern too.
We see it in all its seriousness. Beside and within the historical
dimension the anthropological is always present.
In his Essays on Caesar Otto Seel remarks that Caesar's greatness - 'if
one dare use this emotively charged word' - lies `neither in the purity of
a radiant genius nor in the licence of the emancipated immoralist . . . but
in his problematic humanity, his possible splendour and unavoidable
misery, the unhappiness he endured and the guilt he incurred, but above
all in his historical activity, which both achieved and destroyed so
much'.
`Not every age', says Burckhardt, `finds its great man, and not every
great talent finds its age. There may be very great men in the present
age, but they have no causes.' When he goes on to say that great men - at
any rate before our own age, which he finds dreary and oppressive -
belong to times of crisis, we are bound to ask what kind of crisis it was
in which Caesar grew up, a crisis in which there was no cause to which
outsiders could attach themselves, in which society did not break down
into political oppositions, but simply - or even - allowed a new reality to
emerge beside the old.
3
Some crises arise through the emergence of a new force that mounts an
assault on the existing order. Others arise simply because they are
apprehended as such. This is not just a question of what may be called
`crisis psychology'. Rather, if the demands made on the system are so
great that those who operate it can no longer cope with them, many are
tempted to infer that the system has failed. The demands may become so
persistent as to exacerbate the crisis. Attention is then focused on
evolving something different, something better; any disappointments are
therefore bound to lead to doubts about the system, not about the
demands.
What characterized the crisis in Rome, however, was the fact that the
demands were limited to ensuring that tradition was properly observed.
And however many citizens suffered hardship, however many attempts
were made to remedy this or that grievance through legislation, no solid
opposition emerged that outlasted the particular situation - no party of
reform, no comprehensive programme in which the grievances came
together and generated a common policy. Occasionally social and
economic problems might be brought into politics, but not permanently.
They did not cause a split in Roman society. Politics could thus relate
only to limited individual questions of greater or lesser moment. The
whole remained all-embracing, and all remained involved in it. Hence,
those who concerned themselves to any great extent with particular
problems were likely - indeed bound - to be outsiders. At first it was the
great tribunes of the people who attempted, with the support of the
popular assembly, to push through reforms against the will of the Senate;
foremost among them were the Gracchi, Tiberius (133) and Gaius
(123/2). For a time they were able to mobilize massive support. Yet it
produced no new political groupings, no opposition, that survived
beyond the immediate situation.
All this is somewhat surprising, for the system seems to have had many
shortcomings. Almost the whole of the Mediterranean world was
governed through institutions that the Romans had evolved for the
limited cantonal conditions of an earlier age. Moreover, the body politic
had greatly increased, and many cities throughout Italy - including, since
the eighties, all those south of the Po - possessed Roman law; yet all
popular assemblies continued to be held in Rome. A prosperous class
numbering tens of thousands had grown up, yet politics were still
controlled by an aristocratic elite. Until the eighties there were three
hundred senators. The structure of the body politic was changing.
Economic, social and political problems arose that in the course of time
weighed heavily on the city.
Originally it was the farmers who had made up the nucleus of the
citizen body. It was they who had waged Rome's wars, since military
service was restricted to landowners or members of landed families, and
a certain minimum income was required. However, the importation of
cheap grain from overseas and the partial switch of Italian agriculture to
new methods of production had made the economic conditions less
favourable to the farmers. When wars had to be waged in increasingly
remote parts and above all lasted longer, many families ran into
difficulties, as the women and children were unable to till the land.
Many farms had to be mortgaged or given up. In the years before 133, a
long and costly war had been fought in Spain. Tiberius Gracchus, a
tribune of the people, had declared, `The wild beasts that live in Italy
have their caves. Each knows where it can take refuge. But the men who
fight and die for Italy have nothing but air and light. They roam the land
with their wives and children, homeless and hounded.' The decline of the
peasantry posed yet another problem: where would Rome find its future
soldiers? Recruitment was already proving difficult.
The consul Gaius Marius created another problem when, in the levies
of 107, he took on anyone who presented himself for military service,
thereby fostering an expectation among the soldiers, most of them
landless country-dwellers, that they would be given plots of land when
they had completed their service, which was usually of brief duration.
The land he had in mind was mainly in the newly won provinces. This
aroused fierce opposition in the Senate, for according to traditional
aristocratic thinking such veterans were bound to feel beholden to
whoever provided them with land. Marius thus gained so much power
that it was feared he would no longer be bound by oligarchic equality.
The Senate therefore opposed these land laws, no matter where it was
proposed to settle the veterans. The soldiers consequently had to rely on
their commander, and this led to serious political conflicts. Above all,
the fact that the soldiers might feel a greater obligation to their
commander than to the Senate provided an essential condition for
possible civil wars. True, a great deal had to come together before the
possibility could be exploited. But this happened as early as the eighties,
long before the civil war of 49. At all events, the unsatisfactory
integration of the Roman armies into the republic was the most serious
problem of the age.
Moreover, during the second century the population of the city had
grown to several hundred thousands. Many immigrants came from the
country and the whole of the Mediterranean world; but above all many
former slaves automatically became Roman citizens on being freed.
Many craftsmen, clerks, tradesmen and moneychangers - often highly-
skilled men - came to Rome as slaves and were often freed after a time
if they were successful, while many others gained their freedom through
the testamentary dispositions of their masters. The lot of slaves in the
ancient world was extremely varied.
Far more prosperous, influential and problematic was the large class of
the knights, so called because they fulfilled the equestrian census and
could therefore take to the field with their own horses. The members of
this class were mainly big landowners and included the nobles of the
Italian cities. Some new senators were recruited from their ranks, for in
every generation a number of knights embarked on political careers.
Many were engaged in business, as wealthy merchants, bankers or
publicani (a publicanus being a person responsible for collecting public
revenues and taking public contracts).
It is true that nearly all the economic and social problems of the late
republic - the period that began in 133 with the tribunate of Tiberius
Gracchus - could be settled within the framework of the existing order,
provided that civil war did not erupt, but in many ways they helped to
erode it. The aristocratic solidarity on which it rested began to loosen.
Fierce quarrels arose, in the course of which important institutions lost
some of their authority. This led to the break-up of the probably unique
combination of variety and cohesion, elasticity and firmness, mobility
and solidity, that had characterized the classical republic. The practice of
government and the formation of public opinion became more rigid. As
a consequence, new problems arose - in the field of foreign policy for
instance - and greatly increased the burden on the aristocracy and the
republic as a whole.
The crisis of the republican order drew sustenance from many roots,
but it was in the political sphere that it developed its dynamism. It was
thus in essence a crisis of the order itself and the aristocracy on which it
rested.
The Roman constitution had not been laid down once and for all, but
was an organic growth. This meant above all that there had never been a
divorce between the social and the political constitution of the republic.
The middle and lower classes, for instance, had never detached
themselves from the whole to the extent of creating a purely political
order and setting it against the social order. It is true that the broad mass
of the population is always potentially more powerful than the
aristocracy, but this potential can be realized only if it is embodied in
political institutions, so that it can be brought to bear permanently and
not just at moments of rebellion. It is therefore necessary to organize
something in the political field that can be set against the social
conditions. This had happened in Greece when democracy was created in
an aristocratic society. It did not happen in Rome. Nor had a monarchy
built up a state apparatus separate from the social order, as happened in
modern times, when the state, as it were, transcended society.
In Rome the political order had evolved out of the social, and despite a
number of changes the two remained essentially congruent. In its
internal structure the Roman republic was no more than the sum of the
organs, conventions, precedents and laws that had shaped society
politically and made it capable of political action, after which it was
partly modified by further precedents and laws and by the development
of new principles, on the basis of a certain shift in power relationships
and a change in political morality. Much was left open, yet the whole
was remarkably cohesive.
For the overall conditions were very stable. There was a broad
consensus as to what was proper and what was not. This consensus made
for a powerful public opinion. The commonwealth was kept on an even
course with a minimum of prohibitions. The guiding principles were
generally supplied by tradition, by the custom of the ancestors (mos
maiorum), but they were not inflexible. Because men had confidence in
the inherited order and their own capacity to deal with any emergencies,
it was not necessary for competences to be strictly circumscribed. In this
way many things that, taken in the abstract, would have been mutually
contradictory, were in fact compatible.
This applied above all to the institutions that Rome had preserved
from the class conflicts. At that time the plebs, the large section of the
population that was at a disadvantage vis-d-vis the patricians as regards
civil liberties, political rights and economic conditions, had created a
few instruments with which to defend its interests: the tribunes of the
people, who were supposed to act as perpetual custodians of popular
interests, and the plebeian assemblies, which asserted their will by
means of resolutions. The tribunes gradually won a number of rights,
above all the right of veto. Finally, in 287, the patricians conceded that
resolutions of the plebs should have the force of law. There was no
restriction on the right of legislation or the right of veto. It clearly
occurred to no one that they could have been grossly abused. And if this
had been conceivable, the solution could in any case have been sought
only in concerted opposition. For the Romans lived to a quite
extraordinary degree in the present.
The magistrates acted for the most part on instructions from the
Senate, though they were repeatedly tempted to enlarge their scope for
action. At least the senior magistrates - the two consuls, together with
the praetors, of whom there were at first six, then eight, in the late
republic - were in principle free to act on their own initiative. In
practice, however, they regularly agreed their policy with the Senate, if
necessary by way of compromise.
Admittedly the Senate could not always reach unanimity. Since the
major disputes - which might affect the traditional rules - arose mainly
from extraordinary claims by single nobles or whole families, many
senators were involved in individual suits by virtue of kinship or
friendship. Moreover, it could easily happen that the nobles in question
represented the people in the form of the electoral or legislative
assembly, or even, in certain circumstances, the special interests of
wider circles. It would then be difficult to resist them. After all, the
popular assembly could decide on any proposal put by a magistrate. And
the magistrates might make generous use of their freedom of action in
order to help their kith and kin.
To deal with such conflicts a highly practical policy was evolved in
Rome. As a rule the Senate first let the various initiatives take shape.
These naturally came up against opposition, sometimes against the
tribunician veto. If necessary the leaders of the Senate seem to have
persuaded the tribunes at least to threaten to use their veto. For from the
third century onwards the tribunes only rarely ranged themselves against
the Senate and the magistrates in support of plebeian interests. On the
whole they acted within the framework of the prevailing aristocratic
groupings.
At all events, the upshot in difficult cases was that the opposing parties
agreed to leave matters to the Senate. It could then arrive at a rough
estimate of the power relationships by observing the interplay of the
opposing forces. In accordance with time-honoured custom it did not
allow matters to come to a head. This would have conflicted with its
strong sense of reality, its commitment to the practical and the possible.
If the promoters of a particular initiative were strong, the Senate
majority would be inclined to compromise and make concessions,
thereby ensuring that it retained the power of decision and that the
dispute did not generate precedents that would increase the power of the
magistrates or the popular assembly. At times the Senate sought not only
a practical compromise, but an agreement that no similar claims would
be raised in future. To this extent the majority was at least able to reach
agreement. Flexibility over the matter in hand and the final achievement
of solidarity in 'constitutional policy' ensured that the Senate's authority
was not overstretched and that it was always preserved and handed
down.
In this context one may thus speak of `state wisdom' or an `instinct for
government' on the part of the senatorial order. At any rate we observe
an extraordinary capacity for reaching agreement when the maintenance
of order was at stake. It is clear that, in the face of conflicts and
irregularities, a series of successful decisions had created clear rules and
powerful positions that enabled the majority to go on acting cohesively.
In particular, the leading senators (the former consuls or consulares)
came to assume a special responsibility for the interests of the whole -
commonwealth and nobility. This was the basis of their authority. And it
is likely that at least a majority of them regularly addressed themselves
to this task. Thus many matters could be left to the free interplay of
forces, whether these were individuals or families, and at the same time
there was the assurance that they would be confined within narrow
limits. In important questions, most of the leading politicians refrained
from acting in a partisan fashion.
The Roman republic has always been admired. The wisdom of its Senate
and its internal order have earned the Romans the reputation of being
politically a specially gifted people. Yet every constitution has a certain
capacity; none is capable of dealing with oppositions of every kind and
magnitude. The Roman constitution relied on the fact that territorial
conquests had for a long time made it possible to satisfy numerous
interests - the farmers' interest in land, for instance - and so distract
attention from politics. Whatever conflicts remained might at times be
fierce, but they concerned only a minority.
However, the great problems that arose in the late republic put the
system under strain. It had been able to function only because
controversy was limited. This first became manifest in 133, when the
plight of the impoverished and dispossessed farmers prompted Tiberius
Gracchus to petition for a land law. It had very strong popular support,
but the Senate majority was implacably opposed to it. Another tribune of
the people entered his veto. This was clearly at variance with the nature
of his office and the right of veto: one might intercede against many
things, but no one had ever done so against a powerful plebeian interest.
And land laws were traditionally among the most important subjects of
tribunician legislation. By treating his right of veto as absolute, the
tribune flouted the principles of the inherited order. Tiberius Gracchus
then went a step further and demanded that the tribune be removed from
office. This violated not only the right of veto, but the vital principle
that magistrates could not be removed from office. After further
irregularities, Gracchus concluded that he could protect himself from the
threats of his opponents only by applying for a second term as tribune,
whereupon the Senate majority judged that the system was in jeopardy.
The tribune of the people was killed in an act of lynch justice. That a
serving magistrate should immediately apply for a fresh term was
deemed illicit. After his year in office it had to be possible to call him to
account. On the other hand, the tribunes of the people had long been
sacrosanct, the plebs having sworn that whoever harmed one of them
was guilty of a capital offence. The Senate had now violated this
tradition. As soon as the solidarity of the nobility no longer sufficed to
bridge all the oppositions - or the oppositions were too strong to be
absorbed within this solidarity - the inherited institutions were open to
any abuse; they began to be dismantled.
Ten years later, Tiberius' brother Gaius had himself elected tribune. He
had a great programme of reform, the most comprehensive ever drawn
up in the Roman republic. In addition to further land legislation, the first
corn law, and a number of measures designed to consolidate civil
liberties and make Senate policy more objective, he attempted to raise
the status of the knights and increase their participation in politics. He
introduced a bill under which they, not the senators, should serve in the
jury courts that tried cases involving pecuniae repetundae, moneys
extorted from the provinces. Gracchus wished to end the blatant
exploitation of provincial cities by their senatorial governors. Yet the
effect of his law was much more farreaching: the equestrian order was to
exercise control over the senatorial. In a sense it was to take over a
function that had once belonged to popular jurisdiction but had long
been removed from it. This put an end to the undisputed leadership and
responsibility of the Senate; the knightly class was politicized and the
ground laid for many future disputes.
After this second attempt at substantial reform had been put down with
enormous bloodshed, much changed in Rome, thanks not only to the
brutality of the consul's actions, but to the Senate's successful stand in
defending him against all attacks. Its opponents prosecuted him in the
popular court for violating the law on the liberty of the citizens,
according to which no magistrate might kill a citizen without the prior
verdict of a court. The court acquitted the consul, upholding the claim
that he was in duty bound to protect the republic from harm and might if
necessary disregard this law. No less significant were the proven
unreliability of the knights and the weakness of the broad mass of the
citizens. There was clearly no force that could be relied upon to check
the power of the Senate or in whose favour the republic could be
effectively reformed. Hence, no one was willing to repeat Gracchus' bold
and imaginative enterprise. There were only two more attempts at
extensive reform, and both were in favour of the Senate. The very
thoroughness and consistency of the Gracchi's insights demonstrated the
futility of pursuing farreaching modifications of the inherited order, and
the fickleness of the knights discouraged any potential successors.
One device was to enter specific and repeated complaints against the
supposedly arbitrary, arrogant and self-serving conduct of the fathers,
who were portrayed as a small clique that resorted to numerous
machinations and treated the commonwealth more as booty than as a
charge, restricting the rights of the people and even threatening to
abolish them. The populares claimed that they wished to restore ancient
Roman liberty. They enjoined the citizens to overcome their lethargy and
embrace the cause of the republic - in other words to do what the
popularis in question wanted. A tradition grew up in which the Gracchi
were extolled as martyrs and other forerunners invoked as models. A
new political trend seems to have developed over the years. The method
also involved various procedures that could be employed to mobilize a
mass of supporters and push through laws against powerful resistance.
Certain groups emerged who were instantly available - for a
consideration - to act as claqueurs and voting cattle in support of
`popular politics'. Apart from this core of supporters there must have
been a wider circle - how wide we cannot tell - that was potentially
susceptible to popular agitation, but could for the most part be mobilized
only with difficulty and on special occasions.
One politician after another played this role. Yet however similar the
lines they spoke, they did not constitute a group with respect to their
political aims. As populaces they had no common cause - except insofar
as they were all obliged to oil the popular apparatus in order to make use
of it.
The truth is that popular politics won few major successes, and even
these were due to the interest and involvement of powerful minorities
outside the urban populace. Scarcely anything was undertaken to benefit
the city-dwellers. At most there were occasional attempts, when
important measures were planned, to win its support through laws
reducing the price of grain. It seems an astonishing situation, and
astonishing arguments have been proposed to account for it - for
instance, that the urban poor were induced by donations of various kinds
to become clients of the senators. Yet clearly this clientele was not very
effective politically on any particular occasion. And what apparatus
would have been available to the senators, had they wished to control the
voting behaviour of their clients among so many thousands or even tens
of thousands? The true reason for the weakness of the urban populace
was, in the first place, that their vote in the popular assembly had little
weight. Most of them were assigned to four out of thirty-five tribes, and
the total result depended not on the individual votes, but on the votes of
the tribes. Moreover, the power relationships within the citizen body
were determined chiefly by the prosperous sections of the population.
Since the right of suffrage was graded according to census, it was on
these sections that the subsequent career of the tribunes of the people
depended. Some of them may have approved this or that popular action,
but they would never have tolerated an upgrading of the urban populace
- that is to say, a policy designed to serve its long-term interests, and in
particular its economic interests.
Since the urban plebs had little influence on elections to the highest
offices, and since large groups - of knights or veterans, for instance -
rarely asserted themselves with the help of the popular assembly, such
help was as a rule just one factor among many. This or that individual
might canvass popular support, but this support was seldom crucial.
Opposition between Senate and people constantly recurred, but tended to
remain on the periphery of politics. Certain politicians might continue to
support popular agitation, but they were not among the most ambitious,
as such activity brought insufficient influence. It was only in Caesar's
day that things changed somewhat.
In a crisis, then, in which much has gone wrong, but the victims of
hardship are too weak to organize themselves politically, when the
discontented have no power and no ideas regarding the political order
and all those who have so much as a prospect of power are contented - in
such a crisis outsiders cannot bank on the security of a consistent
opposition. They may of course present themselves and even win power,
but their scope for achievement is restricted, and only a few can break
through the restrictions.
Tiberius Gracchus, born into one of Rome's most illustrious families,
was alienated from the Senate by a chance event. As a young magistrate
he had served in Rome's Spanish army when it was ambushed and
encircled. The Spaniards were willing to grant life and liberty to the
thirty thousand soldiers in return for independence from Rome. Yet they
refused to deal with the consul, for on a previous occasion they had
released a Roman army after negotiating a similar treaty with a consul,
and the Senate had then refused to ratify it. They trusted Tiberius
Gracchus, however, because his father had once concluded a just treaty
with them and seen that it was honoured. This had led to a client
relationship with the Gracchi. Tiberius then concluded a peace treaty on
which he, the consul and all the senior officers swore an oath. In this
way the army was saved. But once again there was no majority in the
Senate, and the treaty became null and void.
Since the attack on Tiberius Gracchus had originated in the Senate and
been approved, at least subsequently, by many leading senators, his
younger brother Gaius became a bitter opponent of the Senate. A highly
gifted and energetic man of about twenty, he was imbued with a
passionate desire to avenge his brother. He then conceived an even
stronger desire to win power and continue his brother's work. He
addressed his extraordinary and varied talents to the task of reforming
the republic. Not content, as his brother had been, to concentrate on a
single issue, he set his sights on the whole, above all on political reform.
Unlike his brother, he was an innovator, though of course within the
limits that Roman conditions imposed on all change. No one ever
reflected so independently and carefully on the state of the
commonwealth. He wished to build up a counterforce to the Senate,
based on the equestrian order. However, his legislation went far beyond
this; hardly any area of the commonwealth was untouched by it. Yet his
death put an end to any hope of reforming the republic.
The decade between iii and ioo saw the emergence of a political
current opposed to the Senate; this rested primarily on the ambition of
the knights to occupy a position of greater esteem in the republic.
During this period a series of the ablest sons of the nobility became
tribunes of the people and set themselves up in opposition to the Senate,
but only for a time; they all went on to carve out successful careers for
themselves. It seems that the bounds of political propriety had widened.
The fathers did not object to their sons' seizing the new political
opportunities.
Only one man came close to assuming the role of an outsider. This was
Gaius Marius. He did not belong to a senatorial family, but was a homo
novus. He had a good military record and, profiting from the current
political trend, was uniquely successful in serving several terms as
consul.
Marius was a man of simple nature, rough and straightforward; he was
also a brave officer who had never spared himself and liked to show off
his scars. His self-confidence, however, was at odds with a certain
touchiness and irritability in his dealings with overbearing nobles and
their effete - or at least rather precious - sons. Like other successful
parvenus no doubt, he was fond of boasting that he embodied the old
Roman virtues far better than they. He had the added merit of being the
only significant and successful general of his day. The current political
mood allowed him to vent his resentments quite freely. He relished the
weakness of the senators, thought nothing of doing what he deemed
right, and pursued his career with a single-mindedness that was scarcely
affected by the assimilating force of his class. He thus came to occupy a
special position. In any case, he reacted defiantly to insults and
disappointments by seeking refuge, as it were, with his soldiers, sharing
everything with them and devoting himself to their welfare. He
demanded much of them, but differed markedly from the other senior
officers in that he felt particularly close to his men. Hence, having
recruited landless soldiers, he raised a claim, on their behalf, that they
should be granted land.
In too this claim was embodied in a land law by the tribune Lucius
Appuleius Saturninus. The dispute that ensued became so fierce that
Lucius was murdered. The senatorial nobility now regrouped, closed
ranks, and henceforth followed a more decisive and consistent policy; in
the first place, popular actions were no longer tolerated.
The last great attempt at reform before the civil war of the eighties
was undertaken by Marcus Livius Drusus, who had himself elected
tribune for 91. Drusus, like Gaius Gracchus, set out with comprehensive
plans, though his aim was to strengthen senatorial rule. For instance, he
removed the jury courts from the jurisdiction of the knights; this was
amply justified, for in 92 they had acted with blatant partisanship by
condemning a former consul because he had tried to prevent their gross
exploitation of the province of Asia. Drusus also enlarged the Senate. To
please the populace he brought in a corn law and a law on the founding
of colonies. Above all, however, he wished to solve a problem that had
become a burning issue - that of satisfying, wholly or partly, the demand
of Rome's Italian allies for admission to Roman citizenship.
There is no doubt that this process and the events leading up to it were
closely linked with the social and political changes that had taken hold
in Rome roughly since the time of the Gracchi - the reform of
recruitment procedures, the corn laws (which made the city attractive),
the ascendancy of the knights, the enfeeblement of the Senate, and
probably the increasingly arbitrary conduct of some of its members.
Gaius Gracchus too had wanted to introduce a law on the allies. These
problems, which contributed so significantly to the decline of the
republic, were thus not tangential or fortuitous, but essentially resulted
from the crisis.
There were strong objections to Livius Drusus' bill. Had it suc ceeded,
it would have brought him unusually wide support. For, according to
contemporary thinking, the new citizens would have been bound to
support him politically. Although he had undertaken to solve all the
questions at issue in accordance with the Senate's wishes and had many
leading senators on his side, the majority of the house refused to support
his bill. They even went so far as to repeal the laws that had already been
passed, on the ground of a formal error. Behind this lay a combination of
oligarchic jealousy, growing resistance, and the efforts of various
senators opposed to Drusus. However, their distaste and apprehensions
seem to have been aggravated by the way in which he conducted
himself.
The struggle for the law on the allies was extremely fierce. Many
Italians had come to Rome. There were big demonstrations, and much
intimidation and fear. Rumours of murder plots circulated. It was
therefore probably not just specific plans, but the overheated
atmosphere, that cost Drusus his life. In the midst of the throng of
supporters who habitually escorted him home, a dagger was thrust into
his side; he died a few hours later. Rome's allies immediately went to
war.
Once more a great attempt at reform had ended with the death of the
tribune of the people. On each of these occasions, senators and knights
had finally joined forces against the reformers, though the forces were in
each case differently weighted. The lethargy, the dead weight of inertia
that Rome's `good society' - the `good', as they called themselves -
brought to bear in support of the inherited order, was immense. Various
reforming laws might be passed and even survive the death of the
reformer. But it was felt intolerable that one man should accomplish
anything great, even in the Senate's own interest, and thereby display the
kind of independence that went with being to some extent an outsider. It
was seen as a threat to the political order, to which all must be bound by
mutual ties.
Marius was the only significant outsider to survive. But then he was
not a tribune of the people: he was a war-hero who could boast the kind
of achievements that had earned men the highest fame throughout
Roman history.
The deadly nature of the outsider's role did not prevent individuals
from repeatedly addressing themselves to various big problems and
trying to solve them. As early as 88 important plans for reform were
again initiated, both for and against the Senate, by Sulpicius Rufus, a
young tribune of the people, and Sulla, who was consul. The tribune paid
with his life when the consul - for the first time in Roman history - led
an army against Rome. Whatever attempts were made at reform,
however, the political problem facing Rome was neither recognized nor
solved. The essence of this problem was that the Senate could no longer
master the difficulties of governing a world empire and opposed anyone
who tried to do so, because this brought him excessive power, and
because political independence was both a prerequisite and a product of
all such attempts.
On the whole, the late republic produced few new ideas regarding the
political order. If it is correct to say that the purpose of political ideas is
to serve as levers that can be operated in the real world, then there have
to be points of purchase at which their operation can begin. Since the
death of Gains Gracchus there was little hope of this. Hence whatever
was new - if it was of any significance at all - took the form not of ideas,
but of human abilities - a new independence, new political positions,
new ways of accumulating power, and a new isolation. Traditional
Roman society was still strong enough to ensure that these possibilities
were hardly ever realized, but the history of Caesar and his age shows
that they already existed.
4
His father too was called Gaius Julius Caesar, and in ioo he had
probably just completed a term as quaestor, the lowest rank in the
hierarchy of Roman officials. His mother was Aurelia, the daughter of
Lucius Aurelius Cotta, who had been consul in 119 B C.
It was on this basis that the new nobilitas had taken shape. Political
prestige and public support were inherited. So were political ambitions.
Politics and war were the only spheres in which one could establish one's
noble credentials. As a rule, anyone belonging to the senatorial nobility
became a politician. Conversely, few others did, except for a small
number of social climbers, who were usually soon assimilated. Thus
political rank (the holding of a magistracy), distinguished lineage,
influence and wealth were usually concentrated in the same families.
Yet there were exceptions to the rule. Not every family succeeded in
maintaining the high rank it had acquired. And the Julians were among
the unsuccessful. Privileged though they were as patricians, they had
long been in the second or third rank politically. In the two previous
centuries they had produced only two consuls (in 267 and 157 BC).
Otherwise, members of the family had reached at best the second-
highest office, that of praetor. They cannot therefore have had a great
fortune.
Nonetheless, they probably retained a more or less unassuming pride.
What such an ancestry had to offer is best illustrated by a quotation from
the speech that Caesar made at the age of thirty on the death of his
father's sister: `Her mother's family is descended from the kings, her
father's related to the immortals. For the Marcii Reges, whose name her
mother bore, are descended from Ancus Marcius; and the Julii, to whose
race our family belongs, are descended from Venus. Her lineage thus
enjoys both the venerability of the kings, who are supreme among men,
and the divinity of the gods, to whose authority even kings are subject.'
The descent from Venus was traced through a postulated mythical hero
who, among other attributes, was given the name Julus and reputed to
have founded Alba Longa, the old suburb of the Latini, the tribe to which
Rome belonged. Various patrician families, including theJulii, were said
to have come from there in early times and settled in Rome. According
to one myth, Julius was the son of Aeneas, whose mother was Venus.
Having come to the West after the destruction of Troy, he was held to be
an ancestor of the mother of Romulus and Remus, the founders of Rome,
supposedly fathered by Mars. Aeneas supplied the Romans' link with the
culturally superior East; he also afforded a model ofpietas (respect for
gods and ancestors), having carried his father Anchises on his shoulders
from the flames of Troy.
Youth in Rome
Education
A boy would learn riding and swimming from his father or other
teachers, near the city or in the country, where the family repaired during
the Senate recess from early April to mid-May, or in the summer. Great
value was attached to physical training, which often took the form of
competitive sports. These usually took place on the Campus Martius,
which lay outside the city gates, on both sides of the present Via del
Corso. `This is an admirably large field,' writes the geographer Strabo,
`on which an enormous number of chariots and horses can race
unimpeded and a host of people can daily play ball games and practise
discus-throwing and wrestling.' Especially popular exercises were
fencing and leaping on and off horses. Caesar is said to have been a good
rider as a boy. `He had accustomed himself to folding his hands behind
his back and letting the horse run at a fast trot.' For swimming one went
to the Tiber, which lay a short distance away.
All these activities took place under the critical eyes of interested
spectators. Though practised mainly for sport, they were directly related
to the requirements of war. All Roman education had a practical
orientation. The Romans had little time for Greek athletics, which were
regarded as a useless pastime that made the young soft and were
appreciated only as a spectator sport.
After all, there was nothing in the world to compare with the Roman
aristocracy. And the aristocracy ascribed its dominance and its character
chiefly to certain virtues. Ennius had written, Moribus antiquis res stat
Romana virisque: `The Roman commonwealth rests upon ancient
customs and the men [who practise them].' These customs could not be
taught in any school. Teachers might be needed to convey knowledge
and method. But the nature of the Roman nobility, its maxims,
experiences and connections were so ingrained and so infinitely varied
that they could be conveyed only by those who had such a matchless
command of them. They could not be taught, but only demonstrated and
inculcated by example. The sons of the nobility were not so much
obliged to absorb knowledge and methods; first and foremost they had to
take over a world - from their fathers.
Cicero later declared that such schools blunted the mind and bred
insolence. The education and learning that went with Greek rhetoric, he
said, had been set aside. Obviously such schools concentrated on
inculcating the methods by which the pupils could represent certain
interests as effectively as possible, possibly by demagogic means. This
may well have been true. Yet one should not underestimate the other
motives: whole days spent at school turned young noblemen into
schoolboys, alienated them from practical life and forced them into
idleness. Instead of being confronted as individuals with models to be
emulated, they were thrown together with their own kind and with
teachers. The young gentlemen were offered little that could command
their respect. They may even have been encouraged to develop a critical
view of the aristocratic establishment. However, what probably told
most heavily against the schools was that they estranged the young from
their natural environment and fostered common youthful interests, when
traditional values shared with the family and the elders should have been
paramount.
Preparation for adult life did not allow the growing boy much chance
to enjoy a carefree childhood and youth. Many demands were made on
him, but this meant that at an early age he was taken seriously. He was
bound to feel proud, especially as the world of the fathers was
exceedingly impressive. He was courted, respected, esteemed; he
conducted himself in a sober and superior manner, assured and
authoritative, proud yet affable, full of gravitas, a quiet and perhaps
slightly pretentious seriousness; he appeared firm and responsible, yet at
the same time energetic, and occasionally perhaps even urbane.
Rome's dominion over the known world and the leading role of its
aristocracy were in the very air the young man breathed. He saw not only
foreign and at times exotic ambassadors arriving in Rome to present this
or that petition, but governors setting out to rule distant provinces. With
friends and relatives he might escort them for a short distance or go to
meet them on their return. He could watch the departure of the legions or
stand at the roadside as some general rode in triumph to the temple of
Juppiter Optimus Maximus on the Capitol, bringing booty and prisoners
from distant parts and largescale depictions of his battles, designed to
inform and impress the Roman public. All over the city were statues of
great captains and politicians; captured weapons were displayed in
public or in the victors' houses, and large maps showed the conquered
territories or the whole of the known world. Wealth flowed into the city
from all parts. Great spectacles were staged. In 95 or thereabouts Lucius
Cornelius Sulla, the praetor and later dictator, had a hundred lions and a
contingent of well-trained spearmen sent to him by his African host
Bocchus, the king of Mauretania. He staged a great fight in the circus,
which was all the more imposing for being the first in which the lions
were not chained. It is unlikely that the seven-year-old Caesar was taken
to see it, but he might have been, and he must have heard reports of it. It
was all part of the atmosphere of empire, which made the world of the
fathers so impressive. It need not matter if one's own father did not
occupy a grand position in this world. One might resolve to enhance the
reputation of one's family in future.
The Roman father was more powerful than most. He had the right to
chastise and even kill members of his family, and for as long as he lived
his sons, their wives, and their children were subject to his authority, the
patria potestas. True, this right had survived from early times only
because it was rarely abused, and any abuse would have led to
communal intervention. The father could legally be allowed to retain his
power because there were enough extra-legal means of checking it. A
practical compromise had been reached between the community's
insistence on law and order and the families' insistence that there should
be no interference in their affairs. The extent of the father's power was
commensurate with his obligations. This was a patriarchal society. Even
if arbitrary action was severely restricted, the families still enjoyed
considerable autonomy and independence, such as comes from the
exercise of self-restraint. The Roman father and the assembly of the
`fathers' - the Senate - were entitled to obsequium ('obedience') and
pietas ('respect', which was due also to the gods). Behind them was the
almost palpable presence of their ancestors. Polybios gives a striking
account of how the masks of the great ancestors hung in noble houses as
a constant reminder to the living, and were worn by servants in funeral
processions. These servants, accompanied by the appropriate lictors and
attired in the official garb of the highest public office the deceased had
held - perhaps even the triumphal purple - walked in a long, imposing
cortege bearing witness to the family's unity and greatness, its political
achievements and rank. Similarly, the ancestors were represented on the
ivoryadorned seats of the magistrates around the speaker's platform in
the forum, combining with the statues nearby to testify to the continued
presence of countless past generations. The son or a close relative would
then mount the platform and extol the virtues and services of the
deceased, and finally the deeds of his ancestors. In this way, writes
Polybios, their fame was constantly renewed, and it would be hard to
invent a more splendid spectacle as a spur to the young, who would do
anything to win such renown.
Whether all this emphasis on the father and the ancestors was felt only
as a spur and an inspiration and not also - or rather - as a crushing
burden is a question that must be deferred for a moment. First we must
say something more about the special character of a Roman education.
What the young were expected to learn in Rome was hardly the kind of
dry general knowledge that might be thought to have been assembled at
random. Rather, nearly all of it had a practical and individual character.
Since a boy's education was essentially in the hands of his father and his
relatives, its schoolmasterly component was confined to the more
technical aspects. These, however, were clearly indispensable.
The learning process was spread over successive stages of the child's
development, though we do not know precisely how. There was no clear
dividing line between what he learned in the home and what he learned
outside it. A break came at the age of about fifteen, when he donned the
toga virilis (the male toga), having hitherto worn the praetexta, an upper
garment bordered with purple that was otherwise proper to magistrates.
Life now became serious, as it were, and from this point on he wore the
plain toga, unless he preferred something even simpler. There was a
domestic celebration. Then the father took the boy to the forum in order
to present him to the Roman public. He offered a sacrifice to Juppiter
Capitolinus. There followed a year's apprenticeship in politics; he now
applied himself full-time to what had previously been only a marginal
pursuit. His father would introduce him to an important politician, in
whose circle he could learn the art of politics. The young were allowed
to accompany their elders to the Senate and stand by the doors, which
were usually open, in order to listen to debates. At some stage they were
admitted by the censor to a centuria, one of the divisions of the most
important Roman elective assembly. This was divided according to
census. The most important units were the centuriae of the knights; sons
of noble houses were regularly placed in the first six (out of a total of
eighteen), which played a special part in Roman elections and were
consequently much coveted. As the censurae were irregular during the
period of the civil war, we cannot say when Caesar obtained this
privilege.
After this it was customary to serve in the army for a year; one might
then join the staff of a governor. Caesar served in the east from 8o to 78.
When he was sent to Nicomedes, the king of the Bithynians, to take over
a naval squadron, he is said to have shared the king's bed. Throughout
his life this episode furnished his opponents and his soldiers with matter
for ribald jokes. For pederasty enjoyed no esteem in Rome. It was
widespread (though not to the same extent as among the Greeks), but
even more widespread were the reproaches - or at least innuendoes - that
it attracted. During Caesar's triumph after the Gallic War, the public
sang:
Unlike most sons of great families, Caesar not only remained on the
staff, but fought in the front line. At the storming of Mytilene he
distinguished himself by his valour. During the battle he rescued a
comrade and gained the rare distinction of being awarded the `citizen's
crown', a wreath of oak-leaves that he was henceforth entitled to wear on
all solemn occasions. When its wearer appeared at the public games it
was customary for all the spectators, including the senators, to rise to
their feet. After taking part in another campaign against pirates
operating from bases along the south coast of Asia Minor, Caesar
returned to Rome.
After completing his military service at the age of about twenty, it was
customary for a young man to go into politics. Caesar distinguished
himself as a prosecutor. This was a popular way to get oneself known
and win early respect and support. Thanks to the illegal practices that
were common in the provinces and in Rome itself, there was no dearth
of defendants. Yet however guilty they were, they were rarely convicted.
But this did not matter: the prosecution might still be conducted with
bravura. In 75 Caesar returned to Greece to study in Rhodes.
After all, when Caesar was young, Rome had been going through a
crisis for more than a generation, and at least some of its effects were
plain to see: frequent breaches of senatorial class discipline, serious
disputes, defeats for the Senate, failure to address pressing problems,
and then, in the eighties, civil war.
How could the young gain access to this society, find a place in it and
learn to look upon it as theirs? It was ultimately for them to decide who
they wanted to be, where they wanted to stand. One wonders what
opportunities they had to develop their own identity.
Given the city's wealth, size, and population, as well as the many tasks
that had to be performed, it was hardly possible to keep a strict eye on
the `adolescents'. Nor, presumably, did their fathers entirely satisfy the
standards they ascribed to the ancestors. A measure of licence was
inevitable, and this opened the pores through which Greek manners and
refinement could be assimilated into the Roman aristocracy. The young
indulged in escapades, extravagances and festivities, and countless
amorous adventures. Nor were they obliged to content themselves with
common wenches - or even with highclass courtesans, who were of
course by no means lacking in charm - for the ladies of Roman society
too had acquired a taste for freedom and variety. At least this was true
twenty years later, and there is little reason to suppose that things were
very much different in Caesar's youth. The lure of love, especially illicit
love, seems at times to have combined with the cultural atmosphere that
resulted from the recent adoption of Greek manners. We are told that
Sempronia, the wife of one of the consuls of 77, `was favoured by
fortune in respect of ancestry and beauty, marriage and children; she was
versed in Greek and Latin literature, played the cithara, and danced
better than was needful for a respectable woman; and she commanded
much else conducive to untold delight. She found anything preferable to
good repute and chastity.' She was readily credited with anything
disreputable, and she was clearly implicated in the Catilinarian
conspiracy. `But she was not lacking in intellectual talent; she could
compose verses, and she could jest and converse, now with restraint,
now softly, now impudently; in short, she possessed much wit and grace.'
Slightly later, Clodia, another lady from the highest ranks of the
aristocracy and the wife of one of the consuls of 6o, was likewise highly
educated, interesting, generous, pleasure-loving and charming. She was
the beloved of Catullus, his Lesbia. `Let us, Lesbia, live and love and
give not a fig for all the words of sullen elders.' She found nothing good
in any convention, save the pleasure of transgressing it, and did not
recoil from scandal. She reputedly had intimate relations with her
brother Publius, who later became an anarchic tribune of the people. She
was at all events far from strait-laced and loved variety; and for this she
was to incur the bitter rancour of the poet she discarded.
This may have become the more necessary as the republic slid further
into crisis. The more disillusioned one was by the spectacle of
aristocratic society, the more deviously one had to move in order to gain
access to it. And all the while one had to prepare oneself for a political
career. The one did not exclude the other. In any case, although such
devious approaches to adulthood infringed timehonoured convention,
they probably also enriched it. Yet they gave rise to no positive new
possibilities. They were at best evasive manoeuvres, not ways to a
different identity. Their outcome merely ensured that certain members
of the younger generation could allow themselves an easier, more
relaxed, more colourful life-style.
It left little scope for the shaping of individual identity and therefore
raised few problems. In republican Rome, chances and burdens,
opportunities and dangers, freedom and risk, assumed far smaller
proportions than in modern times. Early in life Roman nobles must have
become what they were destined to be. They were not anonymous
individuals surrounded by people they did not know. All their roles lay
close together. In each of these roles they were expected to display
personal commitment. Everywhere they were directed towards practical
responsibility and achievements that in principle were bound to seem
possible. They associated with their own kind in a world that
encompassed - indeed consisted in - their common activity. They took
their places in it, as in a shared property, without being obliged, or even
able, to strive for something different. Because their reality was so
largely constituted and shaped by themselves, because they were this
reality, they could not be confronted by it. They could not see
themselves as parts of an alien whole. The whole to which they belonged
also belonged to them, and they belonged to it as partners. There was no
sense of a higher whole, such as is familiar in modern times,
overarching an enormous variety of isolated and highly specialized
members, who can easily lose their footing if it fails to hold. There was
thus nothing equivalent to the enormous discrepancy between our own
littleness (what Jacob Burckhardt called our `midget existence') and our
affiliation to disproportionately large abstract entities - a discrepancy
that is often a problematic feature of modern identity, especially if one
comes from a relatively restricted life. Young Roman nobles no doubt
had their problems, anxieties and conflicts, but they were obviously not
exercised by the question of who they were and wanted to be.
In this society it was far from easy to become an outsider - even during
the crisis, with its great problems and its fierce and sometimes bloody
conflicts. True, the Roman aristocracy may on occasion have disgusted
some of its younger members - who were usually not the worst - but
never in its entirety, only in some of its features. Of course, if one of
them assumed a critical attitude on matters of importance and decided to
proceed from criticism to reform, he would suddenly find himself
opposed by the Senate majority and many others. He might in certain
circumstances find himself outside the establishment. But this could
only happen if he had become exceptionally estranged from the Senate.
Otherwise he would hardly have reached the stage of forming his own
opinion on such important matters and pursuing it in defiance of the
Senate majority. Only by embarking upon open conflict did he become a
total outsider. This happened in very few cases: most of those who were
tempted along this path drew back because they found the aristocracy
sufficiently embracing, their lives sufficiently agreeable, and ordinary
reality sufficiently strong. For outsiders there was no ordinary reality, no
conformity in nonconformity. Before Sulla scarcely anyone had any
chance of survival as an outsider. If things changed after Sulla, after the
civil wars of the eighties, this was probably due not so much to a new
situation as to the personality of the outsider. The most obvious case is
that of Caesar.
6
It was Sulla who launched the civil war in 88 BC. Its origin lay in the
complications of external and internal politics that had arisen in 92,
especially in connection with the Social War and the internal problems
that resulted from it. Admittedly it lay also, as far as Sulla and his
supporters were concerned, in the new character of the Roman army and
the most recent chapter in the Roman outsider tradition, the failure of
Livius Drusus.
The Social War had posed great difficulties. For the first time for over
a century Rome had faced an enemy whose military might had to be
taken seriously, whose legions had earlier fought beside her own and
closely resembled them in training, structure and discipline. The enemy
armies were strong, and they were fighting on their own ground. Rome
could defend herself only by attempting, in the course of the hostilities,
to weaken the opposing side by offering political terms, first to those of
its confederates who were still loyal, and then to those who had
remained in contact up to a certain point. Yet even if more and more of
the enemy's support was thereby whittled away, this did not prevent a
build-up of anti-Roman sentiment on the opposite side. Among the
Samnites and the Lucani, for instance, there were many who had no
desire for Roman citizenship but wished to shake off Roman rule. Once
in a mood to fight, they were not easily appeased.
Fairly large contingents were still under arms when a fresh catastrophe
intervened. Mithridates Eupator, the king of Pontos, a small kingdom on
the southern shore of the Black Sea, invaded the Roman province of Asia
and was enthusiastically welcomed by the indigenous Greeks. He had the
hated Romans put to death - merchants, publicani, tourists and others.
Eighty thousand are said to have perished; this was certainly a gross
exaggeration, but the reality was bad enough. He then showed signs of
wanting to cross over into Greece, with the clear intention of exploiting
Rome's current difficulties in order to establish a new Hellenistic empire
in the east. He also had relations, not previously activated, with the
rebellious Italians, and perhaps with the pirates who operated from the
south coast of Asia Minor, threatening the lines of communication
across the Mediterranean. The problem of who should be put in charge
of operations against Mithridates was then complicated by internal
politics.
The senators who put forward this policy probably had no need to fear
that the new citizens would vote for candidates who were not favoured
by the old. Indeed, they and their supporters would still have had a good
chance of success even if the new citizens had been distributed equally
among the tribes. However, the elections would have had to be organized
differently. New considerations would have arisen, and it would
probably have been necessary to promote the interests of those who
supported the politically important sections of the newly admitted
communities, in order to assure them of a share in the magistracies. This
would have entailed a number of changes and required a degree of
generosity and farsightedness that the Senate majority was unable or
unwilling to entertain.
Sallust writes, `In Greek and Latin literature he was as well versed as
the finest minds. He had great strength of soul, was avid for pleasure,
but even more for fame. He lived in luxurious idleness, but no pleasure
ever detained him from his duties . . . He was eloquent, subtle, and
indulgent to his friends; and by the incredible inscrutability of his mind
he could deceive others as to his plans.'
Sulla quickly mastered any subject and soon became a match for any
expert. He seems to have had a remarkable capacity for concentration,
combined with intelligence, energy and courage. One of his enemies
remarked that two animals dwelt inside him, a fox and a lion, but of
these the fox was the more dangerous.
This was probably connected with his faith in fortune. He felt himself
to be the darling of Aphrodite. He recalled that the enterprises he had
embarked upon boldly and at the right moment had brought him greater
success than those that were carefully planned. Mommsen speaks of the
`belief in the absurd that inevitably arises in someone who has lost faith
in a coherent order, the superstition of the lucky gambler who feels
privileged by fate to throw the right number every time and everywhere'.
Caesar too believed in fortune and felt he had a special affinity to Venus.
But if fortune seemed to help Caesar on a course he had consciously
chosen, she seems to have preserved Sulla from following such a course,
at any rate for long.
As Sulla lived life to the full, his time was precious. He was therefore
impulsive and impetuous, a man of quick resolve who could not bear to
beat about the bush. He seems to have been impatient with others'
misgivings and with the to and fro of protracted deliberations. He saw
things in relatively clear and simple terms, which naturally meant that
he was out of place in the oligarchy.
Thus in 88, for the first time, a Roman army marched on Rome with
hostile intent. Such were the misgivings of the senior officers that all but
one quaestor refused to take part in the march. The second consul,
however, joined it. The senate sent envoys to persuade Sulla to turn
back; it was obviously not acting solely under pressure from his
opponents. But the envoys achieved nothing.
Sulla's troops occupied the approaches to the city at three points. Two
legions pressed on in close formation from the Esquiline gate to the
centre, colours flying and trumpets blaring. They were pelted and shot at
from the houses. It was only when Sulla ordered his men to set fire to
the buildings and discharge burning arrows that the belligerence
subsided. The soldiers pressed on to the Esquiline market (close to
where the church of Santa Maria Maggiore now stands); here they were
confronted by Marius and Sulpicius, who had quickly assembled a troop
of soldiers. The advance came to a halt. Sulla, however, brought up
reserves and sent other troops across the Subura to bypass Marius. The
defenders dispersed, and many hastily left the city. During the night
Sulla's legions camped in the forum. The two consuls were constantly on
the move to ensure that discipline was maintained. Looting was severely
punished, and casualties were few.
Caesar was now twelve years old. It is not known whether he witnessed
these events, but his family must have told stories about them and
expressed various surmises and apprehensions.
The city was defended by regular armies, which seem to have been
superior in numbers and experienced in war, but incompetently led. One
of the commanders, Quintus Metellus Pius, while loyal to the Senate,
became apprehensive when his men exchanged greetings with friends in
Cinna's camp, and would not commit his forces, preferring inactivity to
the risk of desertions. The other commander was Pompeius Strabo, the
father of the `Great Pompey', the consul of 89. He had confidence in his
army, but wished to avoid fighting. He tried instead to exploit the
situation in order to win a special position as the saviour of the city. As
the Senate clearly did not intend to accommodate him, he decided to sit
it out. He also treated with Cinna. The Senate's armies moved on to the
defensive. An initial defensive battle was successful, but on the whole it
was a phoney war. While the soldiers of Cinna and Marius were sure of
their objectives, their opponents had no clear idea about what they were
to do. Finally, when Pompeius died in an epidemic, his soldiers wanted
to fight, but not under the consul, who was said to lack fortune. This
impression seems to have stemmed from his rigidity. Metellus, however,
whom the legions wanted as their leader, refused on constitutional
grounds.
Upon their return the killing began. Marius' fury against his opponents
knew no bounds. The rough, ambitious and vulnerable homo novus,
having been so shabbily treated and so often disappointed, gave vent to
all his resentments. Whoever had opposed him, recently or in years gone
by, and many of those who had angered the uncouth upstart by treating
him with disdain, were ruthlessly put to death. Among them were one of
the consuls (the other committed suicide), four consulares and several
prominent senators. As Mommsen puts it, Marius avenged every
pinprick with a daggerblow. Sulla was outlawed and declared an enemy,
his house destroyed and his estates laid waste. Marius' bodyguard,
consisting of runaway slaves, spread such terror that Cinna finally had
them taken unawares as they slept and murdered to the last man. The
Cinnans then established their rule, which lasted from 87 to 82. Marius
was elected consul for 86, but died shortly after assuming office.
We are told nothing at all about Cinna's personality. Perhaps it was too
colourless; at all events, after his death this period of Roman history was
almost wholly erased from memory. He must have been able, to judge by
his deeds. Owing to the absence of sources, we cannot tell whether he
was anything more than an opportunist. His political planning tended to
be reactive. Whether he thought beyond his victory is unclear. He wanted
to reinstitute the law on new citizens and put it into effect. To this extent
he was energetic. It is impossible to say whether he knew what to do
next. What he did was roughly what had to be done in such a situation:
he had himself repeatedly elected consul, tried to restore order in the
war-torn economy and sought to establish tolerable relations with the
Senate.
Neither he nor the Senate had anything to gain from a renewal of the
civil war. The Senate sought a reconciliation with Sulla, which Cinna
apparently did not oppose. There was an obvious wish to restore Sulla's
rights and leave him with his command; this was not difficult after the
death of Marius, and it made sense in view of his gifts as a commander.
In return he was to give up all claims to vengeance for the wrongs done
to him and other leading nobles. If Cinna thought he could appease Sulla
in this way he seriously misjudged him. If not, his tactics were shrewd:
he offered reconciliation and a peaceful settlement. Only in 85, when
war seemed inevitable, did he begin to arm against Sulla. The following
year he intended to lead an army across the Adriatic into Macedonia, but
was killed in a mutiny.
During this period Caesar's childhood came to an end. He donned the
male toga and began his apprenticeship in the forum. At the age of
fifteen he lost his father. More important, however, was the fact that a
year later (clearly in 84 Bc) he moved to the very centre of Roman
society. Cinna gave him his daughter Cornelia in marriage, and his
engagement to Cossutia, who came of a prosperous knightly family, was
broken off. The connection with Cinna was an astonishing distinction.
The victor of the civil war could hardly marry off his daughter to just
any young man, however illustrious his family. Cinna's other daughter
was married to Gnaeus Dominus Ahenobarbus, a brave young nobleman
of excellent stock. One wonders whether the marriage was connected
with Caesar's being a nephew of Marius. Or was Burckhardt right when
he remarked of the impression that the young Caesar made on Sulla:
`Something of the extraordinary nature of the person concerned usually
becomes evident at an early age,' so that the great man is exposed to
special `early dangers'? But was Caesar great? Did he already possess
some of the charisma, the brilliance, the many-sided superiority and
assurance of success that he later radiated? Was something of his great
potential already discernible?
About the same time Cinna decided that Caesar should be appointed to
the distinguished office of priest of Juppiter, which had just fallen
vacant. It is not clear whether Caesar was actually inaugurated. The
office carried special privileges and was accessible only to patricians.
On the other hand, it imposed many duties on the holder, requiring him
to perform sacrifices and conduct ceremonies, and above all it was
hedged about by numerous regulations.
The flamen dialis was deemed to possess a magic power that must be
carefully guarded. At all times - at least when he was out of doors - he
had to wear the apex, a fur cap with cheekguards tied under the chin and
a special ornament on the top. He was forbidden to mount a horse, and
he must not set eyes on armed troops; on holidays he must not see
anyone working. His hair could be cut only by a freeman using a bronze
knife, and had to be buried in a special place together with the parings
from his nails. There must be no knot in his house. A table without food
must never be set before him, for he must be spared even the impression
of want. At one time the priest of Juppiter was not allowed to hold a
magistracy, because this required him to swear an oath on the laws and
exposed him to the risk of cursing himself. However, ways had been
found to circumvent this regulation, and the last holder of the office had
even become a consul. Yet this priestly office cannot have been an
unmixed blessing, at least not for an ambitious young nobleman. It was
customary to bestow it on patricians whose poor health precluded a
political career.
Caesar and Cinna may have seen it differently. To a house that had
long been politically insignificant, such an honour might seem highly
desirable, possibly even opening the way to a consulship. And for Cinna
it was clearly important that it should go to someone close to him. For
honours were exceedingly important in Rome's aristocratic
commonwealth, and especially to a usurper. Moreover, the priest of
Juppiter had to be married to a woman of patrician stock, and Cornelia
clearly fulfilled this requirement.
Sulla had at first devoted himself with energy and courage - and
success - to the war against Mithridates. Receiving no supplies from
Rome, he ruthlessly seized all the treasures that Greece had to offer,
including the finest works of art, and converted them into money. When
necessary, he imposed the severest discipline on his troops. But
otherwise he allowed them a seductive degree of licence. They were to
fight and be loyal to him. For the rest they might do as they pleased;
even mutinies could be forgotten. His generosity in this regard matched
his own excesses. Of the life of the troops behind the lines Sallust
writes: `It was at this time that the army of the Roman people first
became accustomed to whoring and drunkenness. It learned to admire
statues, paintings and chased vessels, to steal them privately or
officially, to loot the holy shrines, to defile things sacred and profane.'
As has already been said, Sulla was a superb leader of men. He had the
common touch and sometimes fought in the front line; he was a comrade
whom they could meet as man to man - and who impressed them all the
more by being anything but one of them. He was a dare-devil who seems
to have excelled at obliterating all evidence of planning. And the
soldiers trusted in the fortune of their leader.
He informed the envoys from Rome that he was ready to accept the
allocation of the new citizens to all the tribes, but could not waive his
demand that the guilty among the Cinnans be punished. He was deeply
offended personally and on behalf of the nobles who had been murdered
or driven from their lands. His was an archaic personality. He left
instructions that the epitaph on his gravestone should state that he
excelled all his friends in doing good and all his enemies in doing ill. In
small things he could be generous, but in important matters he was not
to be trifled with. However, he may also have felt that reason of state
forbade him to ignore the excesses of the Cinnans and behave as if
nothing had happened.
The Cinnans were numerically far superior. More than fifteen legions,
some of high quality and ready for action, recruited largely from among
the new citizens, were matched by five, which included auxiliary troops:
well over a hundred thousand men against a mere forty thousand. Before
crossing to Italy, Sulla was not sure that his army would not disperse,
once back on Italian soil. But the soldiers swore to be loyal to him and
submit to extreme discipline, so that the war would not cause
unnecessary damage in Italy. They even collected money to support his
enterprise, feeling that they and Sulla had a common cause. Sulla would
not accept this sacrifice. After landing he was joined by various nobles.
As soon as it became clear that war was unavoidable, their place was at
his side - unless they preferred to perish rather than join him in
marching on Rome. Two of them came with a few thousand men. One,
the twenty-three-year-old Pompey, came with a regular army. On his
own initiative he had raised three legions from among his large clientele
in Picenum, which included veterans who had served under his father.
Pompey had realized what civil war was. And with an audacity inspired
by youth rather than temperament he sought to exploit the situation for
his own ends. Sulla treated him with great respect and, contrary to all
convention, greeted him as imperator, a designation proper to a general
who commands an army in his own right. The other nobles, who, as
Mommsen puts it, `wanted to be rescued for the good of the
commonwealth and could not even be brought to arm their slaves',
treated Sulla with some disdain, which became all the more marked, the
closer he came to victory and the more their self-assurance grew. He
preferred to rely on officers who did not belong to the high nobility.
Caesar was probably outraged by the demand that he should part from
his wife and felt even more bound to her and her family. At all events,
his defiant decision committed him, at least for the time being, to a lost
cause. For the side to which he chose to adhere had little to offer him,
save for certain links with the sons of those who had been proscribed -
which he continued to cultivate - and with a few other families, and a
certain popular attachment to Marius. This need not have been
immediately clear to him. Until recently Cinna's party had been able to
rely on the strong forces it commanded throughout Italy. Sulla was not
popular, and even many of the senators were against him. Why should
events not take a fresh turn? Yet even if Caesar envisaged such a turn,
his action was due less to calculation than to a desire to remain true to
himself. He was disgusted by the way in which others truckled to the
dictator. He would not be thrown off the course on which he had
embarked. He knew - or was starting to learn - what he owed to himself,
and this was a great deal. In this way Caesar, unlike the whole of Rome,
successfully resisted the insolent demands of the powerful dictator.
This was all the more significant as Sulla's power was generally
regarded as absolute. He was the victor - on behalf of the nobility, it is
true, but hardly with its help. The armies had decided the issue, and the
nobles had had none. Sulla could continue to rely not only on the
authority of his office, but on the hundred and twenty thousand veterans
- his old soldiers and those who had defected to him - whom he now
began to settle, probably in close-knit communities, at various key
points in Italy, as well as the ten thousand slaves he had freed from their
proscribed masters.
After all that had happened, Sulla wanted to introduce a thorough and
coherent reform. He placed little trust in the collaboration of the Senate.
He was discouraged by the experiences of 91 and 88, and probably by
what he knew of current senatorial society. The oligarchs could not be
used to restore the oligarchy: it had to be imposed on them. Sulla had
therefore no wish to collaborate with the Senate to more than a limited
extent; he may occasionally have consulted the fathers, but did not allow
them to decide anything. He did, however, submit his proposals to the
popular assembly for ratification.
The knights lost not only the jury courts, but their special seats at the
theatre, which had publicly distinguished them, probably since the days
of Gaius Gracchus, as the second order of the republic, inferior only to
the senators. On the other hand, Sulla doubled the membership of the
Senate to six hundred. This was no doubt prompted mainly by practical
considerations: three hundred senators were no longer equal to the
burdens involved in ruling the empire and acting in the jury courts, the
number of which Sulla had greatly increased. It also served to broaden
the social basis of the Senate. Among the new senators were members of
knightly families, and certainly some of the new citizens who had
remained loyal to Sulla and the nobility and rendered signal services. We
may wonder whether even a body of six hundred was capable of
performing all the tasks of leadership incumbent upon the Senate.
Also for practical reasons, Sulla raised the number of quaestors and
praetors, thus ensuring that the magistrature was better able to meet the
increased requirements of the empire and the penal system. Yet in order
to keep the size of the magistrature within bounds, he ruled that every
consul or praetor, after completing his year's service in the city, should
spend a further year as a provincial governor.
One of his laws was designed to regulate the duties of the magistrates,
especially on becoming governors. It seems to have included a
prohibition against leading an army into Italy, even for a triumph. The
military was no longer to interfere in Rome's internal politics.
Elections to the senior magistracies were moved from the end of the
year to July, to coincide with tribunician elections. This enhanced the
influence, in both sets of elections, of the prosperous classes in the rest
of Italy; it also gave the new magistrates more time to accustom
themselves to their duties and strengthened the continuity of the
magistrature. Sulfa brought in a law laying down the minimum ages at
which candidates might present themselves for various offices and
prohibiting anyone from holding a second consulship until ten years had
elapsed. The penal system was overhauled completely, to such good
effect that most of the relevant laws remained in force until well into the
imperial age.
Using all the legal and illegal means available to him, Sulla did
everything possible to restore a consistent senatorial regime that could
work and govern efficiently. He could not, of course, cancel the effect of
his march on Rome. The new dimensions of politics that he had created
could not be restricted by legislation. The horizon of possibilities had
significantly widened and henceforth far exceeded anything that could
be encompassed within the traditional pattern of expectations, fulfilment
of expectations, and expectation of expectations. The outlines of a new
and potentially monarchic reality were now discernible.
A dispute arose over his funeral. The anti-Sullan consul was against a
public ceremony, but his colleague prevailed. With regal splendour
Pompey brought his body to Rome on a gold-chased litter. Many
trumpeters provided the music, and the cortege was joined by senators
and knights, as well as many of his old soldiers, bearing their weapons.
He had left instructions that he was to be buried. It was recalled,
however, that after Sulla's victory the grave of Marius had been ripped
open and his bones desecrated. Sulla was therefore cremated on the
Campus Martius. The ladies of the nobility went into mourning for a
year.
Meanwhile the aristocracy and the Senate realized that, willy-nilly,
they were identified with Sulla's cause. The `most respected and
influential citizens' had taken part in his triumphal procession and worn
befitting wreaths. This is said to have been the most splendid aspect of
the ceremony. Accompanied by their wives and children, they had hailed
Sulla as their `saviour and father'. This was not without its irony, for the
situation he had saved them from was essentially of his own making.
Soon after his return, the Senate resolved to erect a gilded equestrian
statue of L. Cornelius Sulla Felix Imperator in front of the speaker's
platform in the forum. Never before had anyone been so honoured in his
lifetime, and it was many years before it happened again. Moreover,
Sulla had been the first man, since the age of the kings, to extend the
hallowed boundaries of the city. It was traditionally held that this might
be done only by one who had made great conquests, and Sulla had not.
But he clearly wished to demonstrate that he had re-founded Rome, and
probably also that the newly marked city boundary would in future prove
more effective than the one he had crossed in 88. In this way he was re-
enacting the ritual founding of the city by Romulus.
It was especially ironic that the senatorial regime owed its restoration
to such an ambitious and self-sufficient outsider, the kind of man it had
always strenuously opposed. It was ironic too that this regime, which
was generally considered legitimate, should owe its continuance to one
of the leaders in a civil war. What is more, the honours accorded to Sulla
as the saviour of the republic conferred a status incompatible with
republican equality. Yet after all the anger generated by the power and
pretensions of the nobles had broken out in the upstart Marius and all
those who wished to replace the old ruling class, it was necessary to
rehabilitate the nobility. This was a return to normality, and generally
accepted as such, but it was also an act of partisan violence. This meant
that henceforth the nobles and those senators who supported them -
virtually the entire Senate - were Sullans. They were obliged, as Cicero
says, not only to retain all the dictator's institutions, but to defend them
with public authority, lest greater calamities should ensue.
Hardly anyone was as conscious as Caesar of the partiality of the
senatorial regime. This experience probably accounts for the lack of
understanding he was later to show for the objective nature of
institutions.
Hardly anyone distanced himself so much from the Senate at this time.
From his position as an outsider, into which he had allowed Sulla to
push him, he had experienced everything: civil war and murder, the
power - and, above all, the impotence - of the Senate, arbitrary action
and extreme partisanship. Three times he had seen Roman legions
willingly march on Rome under their leaders. Clearly anything was
possible. Order seemed finally to have returned. But could it last? Could
the nobility, which had been rehabilitated without lifting a finger in its
own cause, continue to lead the republic as if nothing had happened?
And even if so, could it carry conviction with Caesar?
One wonders whether Caesar was casting around for a model and, if
so, where he found it. Given the nature of his commitment, he could
probably find it only in outsiders. Yet could it have been Marius, who
was after all little more than a brave soldier and an able commander -
and perhaps a kind uncle? Or the unsuccessful Cinna? Or the Gracchi,
whom Caesar probably admired, but could hardly emulate in an age of
civil war?
Only one man had acquitted himself brilliantly, and that was Sulla. True,
he filled Caesar with loathing, but one wonders whether this was the
only feeling he aroused. At some level of consciousness Caesar must
also have been deeply impressed by this terrible and fascinating figure.
Sulla's influence was not so much formative as liberating. It opened new
prospects. Caesar may even have been able to sympathize with Sulla's
forceful, high-handed and inconsiderate treatment of the Senate. He had
measured himself against him once, and he could apply the same
measure in future. A terrible, detestable model, and probably all the
more detestable for being secretly admired: a nobleman whose
intentions were conservative, but whose views set him apart from
senatorial society, who became a statesman out of duty, but was by
inclination a bon vivant, intent upon living life to the full; modern in his
acceptance of many practical necessities and in his receptivity to all the
possibilities of the age, yet at the same time archaic - in a novel way - in
his political claims and his insistence on dignitas; a personality in which
the threads that had once composed the fabric of Roman society pulled
in opposite directions. It may be that no one was as susceptible to the
whole of this personal reality as Gains Julius Caesar, Sulla's junior by
thirty-eight years.
7
Yet he can make his absorption into the political world easier or harder
for himself. And if the limits of the allotted field become blurred and he
breaks through them at some point, wide vistas may seem to open.
While going through the required motions, he is not obliged to think the
required thoughts. He may set himself a number of goals and pursue
them with such energy that his actions are directed more to the goals
themselves than to the approbation of others. The world then expands.
He is no longer tightly locked into his environment; the resonance
within him increases, and he concentrates on more distant objectives.
Certainty of the future lifts him beyond the present, creating a greater
detachment from the age, enabling him to see himself differently, in a
longer perspective. Personal independence is probably always a certain
investment in time. This seems to have been true of the young Caesar.
When Sulla died, Caesar was in the east. Since 8o Bc he had served in
the army, first in the province of Asia and later in Cilicia. At that time he
had been with Nicomedes, king of Bithynia, and distinguished himself as
a soldier. On hearing of Sulla's death he returned to Italy - in haste,
Suetonius tells us, and `in the hope of new troubles, set in train by
Marcus Lepidus'. Although Lepidus made him tempting offers, Caesar
did not join him, being distrustful of his ingeniuni - his character,
courage, insight and ability - `and also of the situation, which he found
to be worse than he expected'.
M. Aemilius Lepidus was the consul for 78 who had attacked Sulla's
work and then sought to prevent his public funeral on the Campus
Martius. He appears to have been a particularly ambitious opportunist, a
weak and vain man whom the civil war had detached from the
aristocratic code of conduct; this detachment, however, brought out no
great talent, but merely fostered a narrow cunning, of which he was quite
proud. He had enriched himself through Sulla's proscriptions and
extorted a great deal of money as governor of Sicily. With this he is said
to have built the finest house of the period. We are told that he was the
first to import Numidian marble for the thresholds, a costly material for
a trifling purpose - merely for ostentation - and this is said to have been
much criticized in Rome. Lepidus also lavishly restored the great
Basilica Aemilia, which his grandfather had built in the forum.
He now perceived a chance of rallying the abandoned supporters of the
defeated regime and winning a powerful position in Rome as their
leader.
After Sulla's death he worked for the repeal of his laws - we do not
know how strenuously or how openly. In particular he sought to restore
the authority of the tribunes of the people, the distribution of cheap grain
to the urban populace, and the rights of the sons of those who had been
proscribed; he also wished to see the land that Sulla had confiscated for
the settlement of his veterans returned to its former owners, most of
whom were new citizens and had supported Cinna.
Yet there was no new civil war in the making - only a farcical sequel to
the old one. Both Lepidus and the Senate majority set about enacting it.
It was one of the saddest chapters in Roman history.
In the Senate there had already been various complaints about Lepidus,
in particular because he had levied and armed troops of soldiers on his
own initiative in order to lend force to his policies. A few determined
Sullans called for him to be put in his place. But at first there was some
reluctance to see anything sinister in the consul's private levying of
troops and his public call for the overthrow of the Sullan regime. His
friends, together with all those who were unable to see where all this
would lead to - the Senate majority, in other words - did not argue
politically, but in class terms; they lauded the great deeds of his
patrician family, the Aemilians, and refused to believe that he might be
its black sheep. This was in keeping with the restoration spirit, after
Sulla had re-established the nobility. It was pointed out that Rome's
greatness had always thrived on forgiveness and reconciliation. The
motion to oppose Lepidus gained only minority support. And for a time
he seems to have tempered his demands.
When it came to putting down the rebellion in Tuscany, the Senate was
again not united or strong enough to take the necessary measures against
Lepidus or to outmanoeuvre him. What could they know? Perhaps they
were wrong to suspect him - though no one who had eyes to see could
have been in any doubt. Or at least things were not as bad as they
seemed. The two consuls were therefore ordered to levy troops and
proceed against the rebels. One of them, Quintus Lutatius Catulus, a
firm champion of Sullan policies, soon became the leading personality
in the Senate. The senators were untroubled by the fact that his colleague
was so sympathetic to the rebellion and even suspected of having close
links with the rebels. Perhaps they thought that, having first made the
mistake of putting the fox in charge of the hen-house, they could remedy
it by another - that of yoking the supporter and the opponent of the
Sullan regime in a team. At all events, they made them swear a solemn
oath that they would not take up arms against each other; any breach of
this oath would call down special curses. Now that all suspicion had
been allayed by this ingenuous device, the heirs to Rome's ancient
political wisdom withdrew to the wings, as it were, and waited to see
what happened. They had repressed what they knew - which was a good
deal - in order to do what they could - which was nothing.
Everything was set for the rebellion, but Lepidus was clearly as
reluctant to strike as the Senate was to recognize that it had for a long
time been confronted with open insubordination. The one seems to have
stared at the other as the rabbit stares at, the snake - except that there
was no snake.
Lepidus lacked the support he needed. The power he hoped for had
apparently not materialized. Had he acted more decisively he could
presumably have won many supporters. Yet he could not bring himself
to do so. For the time being he was strong because the Senate was afraid,
but he was unable to exploit its fear because he too was afraid - or at any
rate waited until he had enough support for his rebellion. He therefore
vacillated. As Sallust puts it, `he feared peace, but he also hated war.' He
probably thought that all avenues were still open to him, and so he once
again tried the legal avenue: he asked for his consulate to be renewed, as
though this were the object of all the preparations, as though he would
then be satisfied and act in accordance with the Senate's wishes. This at
last produced strong resistance. The Senate began to recognize his
insubordination.
He had clearly failed to see that most people were tired of civil war;
even the defeated and the victims were sick of the atrocities and wanted
peace. Sulla had deterred them all. Only desperadoes and implacable
opponents of the Senate had joined in the rebellion. Philippus claimed
that such people had agitated against the Senate since ioo. And
presumably Lepidus did not realize that the political force on which
Sulpicius and Cinna were able to rely had grown up in a particular
situation and probably among a particular generation, that it could not
simply be remobilized among the successors of the politically
disaffected knights and the new citizens.
If Caesar immediately saw through Lepidus, this says much for his
knowledge of human nature, perhaps for his instinct, or for the standards
he required in others. At all events, he did not throw himself recklessly
into the struggle against the Sullan regime, despite the hopes and wishes
he may have at first entertained and - not least - despite the patent
weakness of the Senate and the widespread discontent. He may also have
been aware of the mood among the Cinnans. In any case, on his return
from the east he probably travelled widely in southern Italy, staying with
various hosts and meeting many people. He probably appreciated the
general situation and the longing for calm; he may also have seen that
Lepidus was short of soldiers, while his opponents had many. At all
events, the twenty-two-yearold Caesar showed more than a little
judgment.
During these years Cornelia gave birth to Julia, the daughter whose
charm, adroitness and loyalty were later to be of such help to him.
Hearings took place in the forum. Here there were two permanent
tribunals (platforms for praetor and jury), and others could be set up if
necessary. Other hearings took place indoors, in the public rooms of the
great basilicas. Anyone who performed well was assured of an attentive
audience.
Many political battles were fought out in court, and politics might
occupy much of the pleading. Even if the matter itself was not
interesting, the participants often were. The defendant would call upon
all his friends to support him as defenders, as character witnesses, or in
other ways. One of the supreme duties of friendship was to respond to
this call and at times to provide the defendant with a successful
advocate. Hence the most important orators, the most notable
personalities among the Roman nobility, could time and again be seen
doing brilliant forensic battle. Trials were thus notable events and
attracted large crowds of spectators; some were attracted by a particular
cause, while others came to learn, to look around, and to enjoy the
intellectual cut and thrust. Cicero was an interested spectator at
Dolabella's trial. As in Hyde Park, the crowd might fluctuate - `a great
audience that was for ever changing, made up of opponents and friends,
so that nothing that was well or badly said went unnoticed'. Of Brutus,
Caesar's murderer, it was said that he dried up when his inspiration
failed him. What people saw and experienced in the forum was widely
reported. Speeches and performances were an important topic of
conversation in Roman society.
Given the significance of political and other cases, and of the debates
that took place on numerous affairs before the Senate, the popular
assembly or the magistrates, everyone had to know who was a good
advocate, prepared his brief well, and could sway his hearers. One
therefore had to prove oneself and attract attention, and the sooner the
better. And in doing so one immersed oneself in matters that concerned
one as a politician.
All the same he had no success. Roman courts - especially when the
jury was made up of senators - were inclined to acquit persons of rank.
The exploitation of provincials was regarded as a trifling offence, unless
it was carried to extremes. Moreover, Dolabella was defended by the two
most distinguished advocates of the day, Caesar's uncle Gains Aurelius
Cotta and Quintus Hortensius. Caesar's defeat was thus probably
predictable; at any rate he could console himself. He certainly achieved
his main object: he became known as a brilliant speaker.
The following year the Greeks asked him to take on the prosecution of
Gaius Antonius, a Sullan officer who had shamelessly enriched himself
during the war against Mithridates. In this case Caesar almost
succeeded. However, Antonius appealed to the tribunes of the people,
and they intervened in his favour. Then in 70 the censors expelled him
from the Senate, but he returned in 68, and in 63 he even became consul,
together with Cicero.
Soon after this Caesar went to Rhodes to study rhetoric under the
celebrated Apollonios Molon. He is said to have gone there not only to
pursue his studies, but to avoid certain charges arising from his
prosecution of Dolabella. It was not yet common to study in Greece. But
Caesar attached particular importance to rhetoric, culture and style.
Apollonios Molon was highly esteemed. When he had gone from Rhodes
to Rome as ambassador in 81, he was the first person to be allowed to
address the Senate in Greek. Cicero had studied under him in 78/77 and
owed much to his teaching. But it is questionable whether all this would
have been enough to draw Caesar away for any length of time from the
political career to which he was so committed. Moreover, although such
charges were common, was it not inevitable, when the restoration
seemed so precarious, that the leading senators, and public opinion
generally, should construe Caesar's prosecution of prominent Sullans as
an act of anti-Sullan policy? And had he really taken much trouble to
conceal this aspect of his attack on the corrupt grandees? Another reason
why Caesar may have gone into voluntary exile at this time becomes
clear from the later course of his career.
On the voyage to Rhodes Caesar was captured by pirates off the island of
Pharmacussa, six miles south of Miletus. When they demanded a ransom
of twenty talents, he is said to have replied haughtily that they obviously
did not know who their captive was; he would offer them fifty. This may
be an anecdotal embellishment. What is certain, however, is that his
companions and slaves visited the coastal towns nearby in order to
collect the money and clearly held them responsible because of their
inadequate control over local waters; a member of the Roman ruling
class was worth a great deal even to the Greeks of Asia Minor. Caesar is
said to have spent nearly forty days in captivity and to have conducted
himself with aristocratic nonchalance, demanding quiet when he wanted
to sleep, composing poems and reading them to his captors, and
jocularly threatening to string them all up once he was freed. When the
ransom was collected he made the pirates give hostages to the towns in
order to ensure his release. Once free, he chartered a few ships at
Miletus, pursued the pirates, and captured them. He confiscated their
booty; it is not recorded whether he returned it to the towns. When the
governor of Asia hesitated to punish the prisoners - he reckoned on
taking a ransom himself- Caesar had them summarily crucified. But for
old acquaintance' sake, he first had them strangled.
All this was possible, given the conditions prevailing at the time. But
there is no doubt that such self-sufficiency and arrogance were
exceedingly unusual: such decisive action in the name of Roman rule, or
at least in its interest, in the interest of bold efficiency and as a
demonstration of Roman power - and executed with such energy!
Caesar tried to halt the troops that were sent to the southern flank to
accomplish this. He demanded soldiers from the local towns. With these
he moved against the enemy commander and forced him to quit the
province. It is not clear how significant this military achievement was.
Mithridates can hardly have reckoned with much resistance. There can
have been only small Roman detachments stationed there. Hence the
king probably sent only a small force. At all events it was important that
Caesar, by his prompt action, prevented the towns from going over to the
king. The Roman merchants and tax-farmers who were settled there
would have been likely to flee, remembering how many thousands of
Romans had been murdered during the earlier Mithridatic war.
One wonders where Caesar obtained the money for such a retinue and
such journeys, considering that Sulla had confiscated his inheritance.
Perhaps it had been restored when he was pardoned; it is likely too that
his mother and his relatives helped him out when necessary. In the
aristocracy there was always money to be had somewhere; something
could always be engineered. When making a will, for instance, it was
customary to provide not only for one's heirs, but also for friends and
benefactors, as a kind of compensation in a society where there was so
much that could not be paid for but still had to be requited. This did not
yet apply to Caesar, but it was certainly symptomatic of the way money
was treated and the way it circulated. Finally, Caesar had the booty from
the pirates, and he could always borrow. In any case, he could hardly go
around without servants. What would people have thought of him? The
fact that he was attended by servants made it clear who he was. And who
would he have been without any? How could he have achieved anything
in the circumstances of the time?
There was no obvious reason for his hasty departure. There were no
pressing duties awaiting him that brooked no delay. Rather, the real
object of Caesar's absence had clearly been attained; this was to let the
grass grow over the ill feeling caused by the Dolabella case. Caesar was
now fully rehabilitated - and more than that.
The fifteen augurs and the pontifices were the most important priestly
bodies. Neither was there to carry out the ceremonies themselves; this
fell either to certain priests such as the flamines, or to the magistrates,
who represented the community in its dealings with the gods. Rather,
they were the experts, the supervisory authorities. Seats in the two
colleges were greatly coveted, being limited to thirty (out of 6oo
senators). And at the time of their election not all were senators.
The priests often co-opted quite young noblemen - as in Caesar's case.
Care was taken to ensure that the college had a wide age-range. There
was much to be learnt and handed down. It was therefore desirable for at
least some members to serve for a long time. It was probably also
important, unless it was politically inexpedient, to recruit particularly
intelligent young members. However, the choice was not easy. This was
no doubt one of the main reasons why it had become customary, when a
member died, to replace him by a relative. This made the choice easier.
But it was by no means the rule. There was also a wish to confer the
priesthood on respected consulares and thereby strengthen the authority
of the college. And there might of course be objections to the relatives
of a deceased colleague.
The seat to which Caesar was co-opted was that of his mother's cousin,
Gaius Aurelius Cotta, the consul of 75. The family connection was
certainly of benefit to Caesar, as was his membership of the patriciate.
At the same time it was by no means self-evident that Cinna's son-in-
law, who had prosecuted prominent Sullans, should be appointed to the
college, dominated as it was by the ruling aristocracy. Caesar's friends
must have used their good offices on his behalf. One of the pontifices is
mentioned among those who interceded for him with Sulla. Another had
been commander in Cilicia when Caesar served there. A third, Quintus
Catulus, may have been won over by his cousin Servilia, the mother of
Brutus, if she was already Caesar's mistress or at least looked upon him
with favour. Moreover, his exceptional conduct in Asia Minor no doubt
made up for much. Finally, the establishment may have hoped to draw
this promising young nobleman on to its side.
It was certainly useful to him to have been away from Rome for a
while, presumably on the advice of well-wishers. This would explain the
study journey to Rhodes. He may have decided to absent himself so that
he would not have to choose between being the kind of person everyone
was expected to be and falling out with the aristocracy. His individuality
was not to be confined to his sartorial tastes or private extravagances; he
wished to be seen by others as he saw himself, to be wholly himself.
This may be connected with the fact that he went away to study and not
for another tour of military duty. This of course allowed him to distance
himself more from others and deliberately opt for a role that still had to
be developed.
The picture presented by the Senate was anything but imposing. The
immense losses it had suffered in terms of biological and moral
substance had become all too obvious. There were hardly any principes.
In normal times the leadership of the house was in the hands of a group
of twenty consulares. Only two had survived from the pre-Sullan period,
and one of these, Lucius Philippus (the consul of 91) had died shortly
after 75. The other (the consul of 92) lived to be eighty-nine, but we do
not know what help he could still give. The consuls of 81 were Sulla's
creatures and had clearly been elected because they were faithful
followers and political nonentities. Of the consuls of 8o, 79 and 78 only
three were still alive, and one of them was in Spain. The consuls Of 77
were notoriously so incompetent that when it came to sending a good
general to Spain, the aged Philippus proposed that Pompey should be
chosen `in lieu of the consuls' (pro consulibus). A commander who was
not a magistrate could hold his command as `proconsul' (pro consule).
This then became Pompey's title. Philippus meant that he should be sent
in lieu of both consuls, who were patently not equal to the task. One of
the consuls of 76, Gaius Scribonius Curio, was an energetic man who
later became one of the most important principes. But he first had to go
to Macedonia for three to four years in order to wage war on the
Thracian tribes who were threatening the borders of the province. The
other was severely incapacitated by pains in his limbs. One of the
consuls for the following year was Caesar's uncle, the alert and
ambitious Gaius Cotta, but his colleague was described as negligent and
idle.
The truth was that two men, Quintus Lutatius Catulus (consul for 78)
and Publius Servilius Isauricus (consul for 79) had to do what was
formerly done by all the principes: they had to direct the business of the
house and see to it that the Senate's authority was upheld and its code of
conduct observed. And they had to do this after the earlier discipline had
been shattered by civil wars and proscriptions; they were faced for the
most part with new members who had not risen gradually to prominence
under the guidance of the principes, but were in many cases favourites of
Sulla, and with a body whose membership had been increased from three
hundred to six hundred.
Senators held their seats for life and were subject to no control, as they
also sat in the lawcourts. Their power and responsibility were all-
embracing. If the leading senators did not succeed in discouraging
unhealthy developments and setting an example, in gradually educating
the new members to adopt the traditional image of the senator and
setting the right tone, it was hardly possible for the assembly of the
fathers to perform the functions entrusted to it. But how could it do so if
the ruling caste had yet to mature? And, moreover, they were all faced
with the countless tasks resulting from the legacy of the civil wars in
Rome, in the empire, and on the periphery of the empire.
During these years Sertorius had allied himself with the pirates and,
more importantly, with Mithridates. For decades the pirates had profited
from the feebleness of Roman rule. From their bases in Asia Minor and
along the Adriatic coast they ranged over the whole of the
Mediterranean, attacking and robbing not only ships, but towns and
whole regions, and threatening, even blocking, the supply of goods to
Rome. They were so successful that even prominent magnates made
common cause with them. They gained control of whole stretches of the
coast and secured them with observation towers.
The pirate ships were not only very seaworthy, but are said to have
been splendidly equipped with gilded masts, purple flags and silver-
mounted oars. Flutes and stringed instruments, singing and carousing
could be heard on every beach; abductions and forced contributions were
frequent. In the end the pirates are said to have possessed a thousand
ships and attacked four hundred towns.
Yet the tribunes of the people and those concerned with the restoration
of their powers were at first too weak to effect any decisive change. And
the senators procrastinated on the ground that they had to await the
return of Pompey.
From the mid-seventies Rome lived in the shadow of his return. His
intentions were not clear. If he wished, he could certainly lead his
soldiers to Italy, despite the legal prohibition. Probably not in order to
seize control of Rome - that would have been too difficult, given the
enormous area ruled by the city - but to assert his will in this or that
question. Ever since the days of Marius and Sulla, soldiers were more
beholden to their leaders, in case of doubt, than to the Senate, and
Pompey's would certainly have followed him. It was therefore
inadvisable to give him a pretext for marching on Rome, either by
agreeing to restore the rights of the tribunes - which might have
offended his Sullan sensibilities - or by firmly refusing to do so and
thereby enabling him to act in the name of the people's rights and on
behalf of everyone who had ever wanted to prevail over the Senate in
some matter. Perhaps he could be enrolled as an ally against the tribunes.
All this was an open question.
Pompey himself informed the Romans only that if the Senate and
people had not agreed before his return he would try to promote
agreement. Ultimately it was not only a question of the fate of the Sullan
regime, but of how to reach an accommodation with a powerful outsider.
Rome thus entered a power vacuum. The Senate did not know what to
do. To attentive critical observers it must have presented a sorry
spectacle.
There was a feeling that the Roman order was out of control. There
was a discernible lack of leadership, cohesion and certainty; nothing
could be done to alter the prevailing conditions; they simply had to be
accepted. No one knew what was happening. As a result, an essentially
trivial event could assume such proportions as to rock the whole of Italy
once more.
At the games they made a grand entry into the arena. This was
followed by a weapon test - a mock fight with blunt weapons. Then, after
a flourish of trumpets, they fell upon one another in earnest. Precise
details are attested only for the imperial period, but they are unlikely to
have been much different under the republic. Timid fighters were driven
into combat with whips and red-hot iron bars. As at modern games, the
spectators excitedly shouted encouragement, reproaches and insults at
the combatants: `Why is he holding back?' `Why doesn't he want to die?'
`Why doesn't he go for the kill?' The promoter of the games decided on
the fate of the defeated - life or death - with a thumbs-up or a thumbs-
down. During the contests the spectators took sides for or against
particular contenders, but especially against the more timid. Solicitous
promoters provided fine mass graves for their fallen gladiators.
Such men were naturally not easy to deal with; they had to be
subjected to iron discipline. They had their own fierce notions of honour.
The breakout of 73 is unlikely to have been the first, and it was certainly
not the last. It differed from the others only in that it had extraordinarily
wide repercussions.
For the seventy men did not remain alone. Having defeated the Roman
troops sent to quell them, they were joined by many others - slaves and
freemen, agricultural labourers, shepherds, small farmers and - not least
- numerous booty-seekers. For the proceeds of their pillaging
expeditions were always divided equally.
It was not long before the number of rebels ran into thousands and tens
of thousands. At its height the uprising is said to have attracted seventy
thousand supporters; one source even speaks of a hundred and twenty
thousand, but this probably included sympathizers. It was led by three
men, of whom the best known and most important was Spartacus.
For a long time Spartacus performed this task with bravura. He was
fortunate in that his force included some outstanding fighters -
gladiators trained to despise death - and that a large part of his army
consisted of runaway slaves who knew that if they took to pillage they
could expect no pardon from their masters. It was to his advantage too
that the Romans at first underrated the uprising and that their regular
methods of warfare were unavailing against this particular enemy. For a
long time Spartacus had more difficulties within his own ranks than he
had with the Romans. He was a great tactician, but it is not clear whether
he had any strategy.
Meanwhile, at the end of 72, the Romans had placed Marcus Licinius
Crassus, who had recently been praetor, in charge of the war against
Spartacus. Crassus had served under Sulla. He was the richest man in
Rome and exceedingly ambitious - which is probably why the Senate
gave him the command. Rome sent six to eight legions into the field.
Crassus encircled Spartacus with a long trench at the southern tip of the
boot of Italy. Spartacus is then said to have treated with the pirates, in
the hope of breaking out to Sicily. When this came to nothing he filled in
the trench at one point and broke out in the direction of Brundisium
(Brindisi). Faced with this situation, Crassus asked the Senate to send
Marcullus Lucullus and Pompey to his aid; the former was on his way
back from Macedonia, the latter from Spain. Before this had happened,
however, Crassus had defeated the rebels.
When the seventies ended the Senate was obviously in the same parlous
state as when they had begun. At all events it still had the utmost
difficulty in performing its tasks, and the commanders it chose from
among the magistrates or its own ranks were repeatedly found lacking in
fortune. If we are not content with such formulations, we must ask what
it was that the Senate and the senators lacked. Were the senators no
longer men of substance? Were they different from their fathers and
forefathers? Referring to an earlier period, Mommsen wrote: `It was not
so much that different men sat in the Senate, as that it was a different
age.'
The reason for the Senate's many failures at this time was therefore not
that - Pompey apart - it had chosen the wrong men for the more
important tasks. This may admittedly seem to be so when one reads
accounts of the great influence wielded by the intriguer Publius
Cornelius Cethegus. He was an extremely shrewd and skilful senator
from the patrician nobility. He had at one time supported Marius; in 88
he was one of the twelve men who, after being proscribed by Sulla, went
over to his side; in 78 he sided with Lepidus, but his power was not
diminished when Lepidus was defeated.
The real reason for these failures seems to have been that the
aristocracy was guided by the wrong principles - or rather that it
encouraged the wrong kind of behaviour.
They lived in constant fear that ambitious individuals might again defy
the rules of senatorial propriety and violate the fundamental equality
that prevailed among the senators, or at least among the principes, which
called for solidarity within the traditional framework and a willingness
to be bound ultimately by the judgment of the Senate. No one should
again behave like the Gracchi, let alone like Marius and Sulla. This
sentiment had existed for some time. But it was now embraced with
particular fervour, under the pressure of the widely felt need for
restoration. Conformity was at a premium; it was inculcated, demanded,
encouraged and rewarded.
From the earliest times Rome had set great store by preserving and
handing down the customs of the fathers. And as no one knew or could
even imagine that the Roman order as a whole was no longer able to
respond to the exigencies of the age, the only possible explanation for
present crises and emergencies was that the old customs were no longer
properly practised. It was therefore necessary to be all the more
punctilious in observing them.
Hence the Senate, and with it large parts of society, sheltered behind
tradition. They followed the rules and sent the consuls against the slaves
because they were consuls; and the consuls waged war in the
conventional manner, although they had quite different opponents. It
seems to have occurred to no one that pirates could not be dealt with by
standard manoeuvres on sea and land, carried out at fixed points, and
Lucullus took it for granted that his men should simply obey orders, no
matter what was demanded of them, with the result that they finally
mutinied. It was because the problems, or at any rate the demands, were
so great that the Romans adhered to convention. Rigidity thus led to
failure, failure to rigidity. Being clearly reluctant to contemplate reality,
they were reduced to compulsive self-constraint and anxious immobility.
In earlier times, they had been willing, despite their reverence for the
old, to explore new avenues, to devise new measures appropriate to new
situations. Respect for the old, formerly a rule, now became a binding
law. Often it was no longer the rules of the ancestors that were raised to
the status of dogma, but what was written about them, as it were, in the
history books.
Yet because every effort went into ensuring that everyone adhered to
the rules and that no one became too important, there was no longer the
flexibility that was necessary if exceptional tasks were to be adequately
performed. A dichotomy emerged between the defence of conventional
conduct and order - on which everyone concentrated - and the solving of
urgent practical problems, which were consequently neglected. What
had once gone together became an alternative. What was expected was
not achievement, but conformity.
Yet this meant that even conformity had to be more narrowly
construed. For if such a wide gap exists between ability and obligation,
one may decry the new, yet still fail to preserve the old from decadence.
If duty seldom calls, it becomes difficult to perform. The Romans were
thus small-minded, in that they expected no one to take exceptional
political risks or attempt anything on a grand scale. Yet they were also
broad-minded - perforce - in that they tolerated countless minor
deviations from the customs of the fathers, at least in the more private
areas of life. Corruption was rife. Politics were seen chiefly as a struggle
for office and position. Little was demanded of the sons of the great. The
educational rigour of earlier times became a rarity. A life of luxury was
preferred.
Metellus Pius, Sulla's fellow-consul in 80, who was later sent to Spain
to lead the Roman forces against Sertorius, is said to have had his arrival
in Spanish towns celebrated like that of a god, complete with altars and
incense. At his banquets he wore a garment embroidered with palms,
like the triumphal robe of Juppiter Capitolinus, while figures of victory,
lowered from the ceiling by an ingenious system of ropes, set golden
wreaths on his head. And all this in the inhospitable atmosphere of
Spain, with a difficult war in prospect. The noble senators are later said
to have conceived a passion for fish-breeding. Such activities distracted
them from ambitions that could seldom be fulfilled in politics and had to
be satisfied in other ways.
All this was presumably to be expected: the ruling class may have
been overstretched, but it still enjoyed unquestioned authority and found
a variety of outlets for the overwhelming pressure of its normal image of
itself. Some of the leading personalities - and others too - would have
liked things to be different and behaved honourably, shunning luxury.
Yet if they wished to influence affairs they probably had to fall in with
the general tendency of their class. Anyone who wanted to break out of
these narrow confines and think independently had to remain aloof from
the majority or try to distance himself from it. And clearly only a few
could do this: those who tried had many reasons for doing so, but few
points of purchase. Mommsen's sarcastic judgment of the senators was
objectively correct: `Their political wisdom was confined to a sincere
belief in the oligarchy as the only guarantee of salvation, combined with
a fervent detestation and courageous condemnation of demagogy and
any force that emancipated itself.' It is unlikely that the senatorial order
itself could have evolved an alternative wisdom. Only outsiders could do
this. It had nothing to do with their capacity for abstract thought, but
with the place from which their thought proceeded, their viewpoint - in
other words, the position that the thinker occupied. And the senators can
hardly have been in two minds as to whether they could - or should -
capitulate to outsiders.
Senators, knights and others went out of the city and received him with
honour. Negotiations took place. The outcome was that the Senate
granted Pompey not only a triumph, but the right to submit himself
immediately for election as consul, without having previously held
office as quaestor or praetor. He would normally have had to wait
another seven years, but after commanding Rome's armies for thirteen
years with scarcely a break he could not be expected to start his political
career from scratch. And one could hardly make him wait for his
consulship. The leading senators also promised to pass a land law in
favour of his veterans. This was to be the only land law of the late
republic - save for that of Livius Drusus - that had the Senate's approval.
However, lack of funds delayed its implementation for so long that it
became a dead letter.
There are grounds for thinking that the Senate did not even find it hard
to make these concessions. Pompey was an old Sullan. True, he had
vexed a number of the senators, including Sulla himself. Sulla had at
first deeply offended the others during the civil war by greeting the
youthful leader of a private army as imperator. He had then sent him to
Sicily and Africa to defeat his opponents there. Having accomplished
this task speedily and efficiently - and with a degree of clemency -
Pompey was ordered to dismiss the bulk of his army and wait, with just
one legion, for the arrival of the new governor. The soldiers had been
incensed, as they wanted him to lead them back to Rome. With a show
of reluctance he let himself be forced into compliance. Outside Rome,
Sulla greeted him with the title Magnus. It is said that a certain
resemblance to Alexander led people to call him `the Great', at first
ironically, then flatteringly, and finally with conviction - because
everyone did so. Sulla decided to follow suit, no doubt hoping to
forestall Pompey's demand for a triumph, for only magistrates were
allowed a triumph, and Pompey was not a magistrate: from now on the
law was to be strictly observed. Pompey demurred: standing before Sulla
and pointing to the sky, he declared that more respect was due to the
rising than to the setting sun. Seeing that it was futile to argue the point,
Sulla acquiesced in this further advancement of the young man's career.
When the Senate dispatched Pompey against Lepidus and Sertorius, this
was not just because it needed him, but rather because he pushed himself
forward; in any case the senators were glad to have him out of the way.
Since then he had served them well, and they probably hoped that by
accommodating him they could win him over.
However, Pompey was approached by all those who wished to see the
rights of the tribunes of the people restored - the knights, a number of
senators and others. Caesar may have been among them. Soon after
being elected consul, Pompey declared his support for their cause. He
also advocated a reform of the courts, following a number of scandalous
verdicts delivered by juries composed of senators, and the election of
censors. Not even this programme was opposed by the Senate, as the
abuses he complained of were too blatant to be denied. Some senators
even seem to have felt that he was relieving them of a burden by
removing indefensible features of the Sullan regime. The Senate then
seems to have approved the law restoring the rights of the tribunes.
It can hardly have been unaware that this was bound to lead to grave
conflicts in future, not least with Pompey himself, who obviously hoped
for further commands. And he must have known that the Senate was
bound to be apprehensive about enabling him to use the popular
assembly, if he needed to, as a means to gain his ends.
Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus was fundamentally averse to conflict. He was
not a man to assert himself, but preferred to please everyone. Alfred
Heuss compared him with a head boy who goes around showing off his
unquestionable achievements like a school report. He was vain, eager for
applause, and full of respect for the inherited order, even for the Senate.
He sought honour and fame, rather than power and influence. Politically
he liked to stay in the background and was reluctant to become involved.
He did not champion others; he avoided controversy, preferring to be
seen as a kind of figurehead. On his rare appearances in the forum he
was attended by a large retinue, `whereby he lent weight and grandeur to
his presence, believing that he must preserve his dignity by avoiding
contact with the crowd'.
Moreover, Crassus supplied the citizens with corn for three months. In
this way the two most ambitious Romans of the age vied with each other.
It was important that the citizens should take them to their hearts.
In this year Caesar reached the age of thirty. In one essential respect
Pompey was able to serve as a model and a spur: in the way he tackled
practical problems and won power and prestige as a commander - and no
doubt also in the way he distanced himself from the Senate. Caesar
admired the achievements of Pompey, whose fame and splendour were
still undiminished, and above all untarnished. Pompey's high-handed
conduct may have inspired Caesar when he was in Rhodes and decided,
equally high-handedly, to intervene in the Mithridatic war. He may even
have been in contact with the great man when campaigning for the
restoration of tribunician rights. In 73 or 72 he obtained his first elective
office, that of military tribune. Each year the popular assembly
appointed twenty-four military tribunes, who were charged, when
necessary, with levying troops and given minor commands. In this
capacity Caesar may have taken part in the war against the slaves. In 7o
he supported a bill permitting the surviving supporters of Lepidus and
Sertorius to return to Rome. This bill accorded with Pompey's
conciliatory policy. Its sponsor may have been the same man who put
through the land law for his veterans. Caesar's brother-in-law Cinna was
among the beneficiaries. In these years, then, it became clear that he
wished to champion at least the supporters of the Cinnan cause and
attached great importance to popular politics.
We may presume that in his twenties Caesar could hardly fail to
maintain his inward opposition to Rome's ruling circles, and that he was
obliged to seek - and limit - his freedom by refusing to commit himself
to them, even if this went against the grain. For there is much to suggest
that a fairly straight line can be drawn between Caesar's beginnings
under Sulla and the course he subsequently pursued. To draw such lines
may be to read into a person's life a meaning that was not originally
there and to confer significance on what should properly, viewed without
hindsight, be ascribed to a series of contingent events.
If this was so, then in this and the following decade he must have been
somewhat restless, both secure and insecure; the reality that the republic
still represented must have imposed itself on him only gradually. None
of this is now clearly discernible. Yet it seems clear that for all his
vacillations he was constantly inclined to scorn this reality and remain
an outsider.
8
On the other hand, if one approaches practical living not just with
scepticism - or even contempt - but with the intention of making
something of oneself, if one sets out with the pretension of being in
some way special, one must not be too fastidious, but adapt oneself to
what cannot be altered. Experience teaches that the more a person
imagines himself to be above the dubieties, constraints and
entanglements of existing society, the less compunction he has in
conforming; the less respect he has for a flawed morality, the more
assured he is of his own superiority; this gives rise to many
opportunities.
This readiness to swim with the tide, in which blind trust and
indifference combine to afford the pleasure of yielding to one's own
impulses without undue circumspection - this mixture of audacity and
complaisance that we call wilfulness - need not lead to total absorption
in the ordinary, which can sometimes be quite devastating. If a person is
capable of calculating, of respecting certain limits, of drawing back in
extremities, and, above all, if he is a player in a big game and has
something to stake in it, if he is sufficiently disciplined, sufficiently
cool and collected, and at the same time sufficiently rigorous towards
the high expectations he has of himself - then wilfulness may generate
not only a heightened self-awareness, but, if success comes, a particular
trust in his own fortune. Success did not come early to Caesar, but he did
not cease taking risks or renounce his desire to remain outside society
rather than be absorbed in it. His political career was therefore not only
successful, but ultimately became a special chapter in the remarkable
history of Caesar and his fortune. The office of quaestor was the lowest
rung of the Roman career ladder. Caesar probably became quaestor in
70, at the age of thirty. This was the earliest age at which one could
normally apply for the office. It may be, of course, that Caesar, having
won the citizen's crown, was accorded the privilege of applying earlier.
At all events, he subsequently became praetor and then consul two years
before the prescribed age.
At about this time his aunt Julia, the widow of Marius, died. He
delivered the funeral oration in the forum. He was assured of wide
attention, for everyone was eager to hear what the extravagant young
nephew would say about Sulla's old enemy, the victor in the Cimbrian
war. The content of his speech is not recorded. We learn only that he
extolled his family's descent from Venus and the Roman kings before the
assembled crowd and that the image of Marius was carried in the
cortege. This is said to have caused much displeasure. But there was also
much applause, and not just for political reasons: people wished to
honour a distinguished general, whom Cicero too had recently praised.
The Sullans were naturally bound to see it as a political demonstration.
However, Caesar scored a great success: he became known, and it was
important that the Romans should take note of his name.
There are many indications that Caesar now began to attract attention
in a quite different way - certainly not as a future ruler or even as a
promising politician. He became known as an extravagant, bold and
disrespectful young man, certainly not without arrogance, though of a
rather charming kind - at least to those not directly exposed to it. He was
carefree and high-spirited rather than overbearing. He led a fairly easy-
going life. So, of course, did many others. But Gains Julius Caesar
probably outdid them.
Equally unmistakable was the skill and artistry of his rhetoric. Cicero
praises not only the correctness and precision of his Latin, but its
unpretentious purity. Caesar himself later justified this in one of his
writings, saying that one should avoid an unfamiliar word as a ship
avoids a reef. Such simplicity of expression clearly had a special
elegance and charm. A later author writes that there was such force,
sharpness and fire in Caesar that he obviously spoke in the same spirit as
he later waged war. In Cicero's opinion Caesar was unmatched as an
orator. He had a brilliant and far from conventional delivery, to which
his voice, his gestures and his figure lent nobility and grandeur. These
attributes do not properly belong to rhetoric. Rather, they characterize
the whole man. Cicero's description of Caesar as a speaker thus
embraces the whole of his performance.
Caesar had little money and, though living far from frugally, he used
whatever means he had - which were largely borrowed - purposefully
and effectively. At least he lived in cheap accommodation in the Subura,
a populous district on the slopes of the Quirinal, Viminal and Esquiline
hills, just above the forum. There were more taverns here than anywhere
else, and life was especially noisy and bustling. As well as artisans and
shopkeepers, many whores plied their trade here. The main street led to
the Argiletum; from there, passing to the right of the Basilica Aemilia,
one reached the forum.
This was all quite natural and self-evident. There was no place for
larger groups; there were no major interests around which they could
form. As a rule, then, the various interests remained isolated and had to
be represented in differing combinations, depending on who brought his
connections to bear against whom.
The mutual ties entertained by the Romans were above all of a personal,
not an objective nature. The nobles were involved every where - as
advocates, intermediaries and decision-makers. They could thus bring
their influence to bear in all matters. The precondition for this was that
important subjects only occasionally appeared on the agenda. Otherwise
Rome could hardly have retained the old system, whereby elections were
held only for the appointment of magistrates; elections only indirectly
affected the composition of the Senate and the weighting within it, as
only about a thirtieth of its membership changed when the twenty newly
elected quaestors were admitted and the other magistrates moved up in
the hierarchy. An objective `will of the electorate' could not take shape;
what mattered were the interests of the individual citizens in promoting
their particular candidates.
In one's own career one was therefore thrown upon one's own
resources, at least insofar as one did not belong to any solid groupings.
Admittedly one had ties with many friends and supporters, but everyone
had his own combinations of ties and had to cultivate them assiduously.
When a man like Caesar entered this world, relatively new and without
many inherited connections, he had to try to secure the goodwill of a
particularly large number of people by speaking or acting on their behalf
in the courts and the Senate. He had to hold himself in readiness for
many people. And we know that Caesar did so to a considerable extent.
One route to electoral influence lay through the tribes, the thirty-five
subdivisions of the citizen body. It was customary for young noblemen
to show special concern for the interests of the electors within their own
tribes. In such a world anything one had in common with others was
naturally a ground for calling upon their good offices. Hence a certain
solidarity developed among the members of the tribe, and they were
proud when one of their number was elected. And the young nobles who
had to build up their careers would then try to persuade their fellow
members to vote for certain candidates so that these would offer their
services in return when suitable opportunities arose. In this way
electoral influence could be organized on a rather wider scale. The
career of the young Caesar followed this pattern.
`Toiling day and night with unremitting zeal': this was how the poet
and philosopher Lucretius described a man's rise to the highest honours.
The younger nobles had to make great efforts and endure many
hardships. Their endeavours must not, of course, degenerate into vulgar
sedulity or even into the censorious efficiency of a homo novus such as
Cicero. By no means everything could be achieved through industry, as
though it was just a matter of accumulating more and more useful
connections.
For there was another complex of electoral motives: what was known
as existimatio (reputation or prestige). This embraced a number of
factors that might convince others of the candidate's worth - especially
those who were not directly beholden to him. Among these were the age
and standing of his family, the achievements of his father and forebears,
the recollection of splendid games he had sponsored, of public buildings
he had erected, of the grain he had distributed, and perhaps of his
military successes or signal political services. Then there was the way in
which he conducted himself, his style and bearing. His treatment of
clients and the support he gave to those who sought his help likewise
contributed to his existimatio, as did the size of his retinue, the extent to
which he was known, the number of hands he shook. It was carefully
noted who received the support of the leading nobles.
In all this the candidate probably had to discover and maintain a
suitable mean between dignity and eagerness to please; he must not
seem plebeian, but he had to do much that was beneath his dignity if he
wished ultimately to rise to the rank, honour and dignity of a consul and
take his place among the principes. Special conditions applied only to
the homines novi.
It is not clear how Caesar planned his career. Did he really wish to
distinguish himself by diligence and hard work? Or did he prefer not to?
Or did he simply not want it to appear so? Was he quite serious about the
regular canvassing of more and more useful connections, or was he to
some extent a gambler who preferred to risk sudden leaps?
Caesar took the land route through Gaul, stopping for a while in the
northern Italian) province of Gallia Cisalpina. The towns there were
largely romanized, but did not yet enjoy Roman citizenship. This caused
much discontent, which Caesar seems to have encouraged. He is unlikely
to have wished to persuade them to rebel; that would have been highly
irresponsible. It is more likely that he hoped they would exert massive
pressure and he would be able to support them. He wished to gain power
as their champion and so win a large number of clients at a stroke. We
know that the citizens of the province, where all the prominent families
had been admitted to citizenship, exercised substantial electoral
influence in Rome. But if any proposal was actually made in favour of
the Gauls it was thwarted by the Senate.
Pompey's hour had come. He was indeed, as events proved, the only man
who understood war on a grand scale, on both land and sea. Aulus
Gabinius, the tribune of the people, petitioned, at first without naming
his master, that a large proconsular command should be created and
conferred on one of the consulares. He should be given a large fleet and
authority to levy soldiers and sailors at his discretion. A huge amount of
money was voted to him, as well as credit with all the public treasuries.
He was to have command over all the land within fifty miles (75 km) of
the coast - an authority equivalent to that of any local governor. He was
to be able to call upon fifteen legates (senior officers of the Senate),
each with the authority of a praetor, and be given two quaestors. His
command was to last for two years. These were just the powers that
Pompey had hoped for. He liked to fight his battles with superior forces
and so be assured of victory from the beginning. He also knew how to
organize and operate with such forces.
It was in 67 that the opposition between Pompey and the Senate began.
Early that year, after the experience of recent decades, the Senate was
resolved not to let any one man have supreme power. The principle
underlying its resolve was that nothing new should be allowed to happen
that conflicted with the example and the institutions of the fathers. They
were indifferent to the hunger endured by the populace, the miserable
failure of Roman rule, and the spread of anarchy and piracy. Far more
important was the preservation of order and liberty.
The senators prevailed upon two tribunes of the people to enter their
veto against Gabinius' bill. This caused indignation not only among the
broad masses, but among the knights, who suffered particularly from the
insecurity of the seas. Gabinius and his allies were determined that their
good cause should triumph. There were tumultuous disputes, during
which Gabinius had to flee from the Senate and the Senate from the
mob; the consul was arrested and almost killed. Following the example
of Tiberius Gracchus, the petitioner swept aside the tribunician veto; he
threatened to remove the interceding tribune from office and would
probably have done so had the tribune not yielded at the last minute. The
other tribune then dared do no more than propose that Pompey be given
a colleague with equal authority, but the general uproar was so great that
he could not make himself heard and was reduced to making signs with
his fingers. Whereupon the crowd is said to have shouted so loudly that a
raven flying over the forum lost its balance and fell to earth. Cicero
reports that the forum was packed with people and that all the temples
with a view of the speaker's platform were occupied. The law setting up
the command was then passed. A further law conferred it on Pompey;
the number of legates was increased to twenty-four, and further levies
approved. Pompey at once set about arming, and suddenly the price of
grain fell; the market filled with goods. Confidence in the order and
Roman power returned. All speculation on its weakness collapsed. All
this was possible through the determination of one man.
Caesar is said to have been the only senator to support the bill. This
might relate to a particular debate that took place in the absence of
Gabinius and his allies. And it would be evidence of great courage on
Caesar's part, for the atmosphere was highly charged. Later twentyfour
senators, among them two consulares, put themselves at Pompey's
disposal as legates, admittedly after the law had been passed.
As far as the pirates were concerned, Caesar may have had a personal
interest; in any case it was important that he should put himself in good
standing with Pompey. If he ever wished to pit himself against the
Senate majority, Pompey would be a natural ally.
Pompey was at the same time the patron of the populares - those
politicians who at any given time played the popular role - and the
populace to whom they addressed themselves. He had restored the
authority of the tribunes. Now they had raised him on the shield, and his
great and rapid successes had fully justified the popular agitation and
legislation. If it was part of their role to maintain a continuity of ideas,
Pompey was bound to remain at the centre of popular propaganda. All
the more so as leading senators prosecuted the tribunes who had
supported him - except Gabinius, who had become his legate. Violations
of the tribunician veto, on which they had once more been forced to rely
since 70 in order to block proposed legislation, could not be allowed to
go unpunished. The defence invoked Pompey, partly with success,
especially among the judges from the equestrian order. It followed that
Caesar, by supporting Pompey, gained favour with the populares and part
of the urban populace. This too was no doubt very gratifying.
Probably a year later Caesar was elected curator of the Via Appia, the
old highway linking Rome with Brindisi. The curators were responsible
for checking the state of the road and seeing to repairs, and probably
also for carrying out improvements. The Roman roads of the period were
nothing like as impressive as those we admire today. Most of them were
paved with large stones only in the Augustan period. Early road-building
involved acquiring the necessary land, laying out roads leading straight
across country, levelling uneven surfaces as far as possible, reinforcing
them with sand and gravel, building bridges and introducing ferries
where fords were impracticable. There were always many improvements
to be made - the paving of certain stretches, the building of new bridges,
staging posts, overnight quarters or feeder roads.
At this time he began to run up large debts. To some extent this was an
inevitable part of a politician's career. Young nobles increasingly vied
with one another in costly enterprises designed to draw attention to
themselves and please the masses, and their income was often far from
adequate to their needs. Hence they had to take out large loans, which
were easy to obtain if their career prospects were good. For in time their
income was bound to grow; the praetorship was followed by the first
governorship, during which large sums could be saved and, above all,
extorted from the provincials.
Suetonius records too that, having built a villa on Lake Nemi at great
expense, he had it torn down as it was not entirely to his taste, `though at
the time he still lived modestly and was much in debt'. Nor can his
gallant adventures have been inexpensive, especially as he liked to show
himself generous to ladies - even if not all received such costly gifts as
his beloved Servilia, Brutus' mother, for whom, in 59, he bought a pearl
valued at one and a half million denarii. Much of his expenditure,
however, went on his career.
In 66 he was elected aedile for 65. The aediles were responsible for
policing and public order (unless it was severely threatened), market
policy, the supervision of baths and brothels, the provision and
distribution of grain, and the supply of water. For these purposes the
office carried a measure of jurisdiction.
It also involved the organizing of the regular games and was therefore
coveted by ambitious nobles. It enabled them to cut a dash if they were
willing to incur the necessary expense, over and above what was
provided from the public exchequer. Caesar was extremely liberal. He
also staged great animal fights, either in collaboration with his colleague
Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus or on his own account; this earned him more
public gratitude than anyone else.
He organized gladiatorial games in honour of his father, who had died
in 85. They admittedly came somewhat late, but had the advantage of
being fresh in people's minds when Caesar sought election as praetor and
later as consul. The games were exceedingly lavish. It was intended that
three hundred and twenty pairs should meet in combat, but it is not
known whether this actually happened. Either beforehand or just
afterwards the Senate passed a resolution limiting the numbers.
However, it is credibly reported that Caesar was the first to have all the
contestants appear in silver armour. It was a great event that could not
fail to impress: this young man was not one for half-measures, but did
things in style. It has every appearance of ostentation and vainglory, and
the appearance is not entirely deceptive. Here again Caesar wished to be
something patently special. This may reflect the insecurity of the young
outsider, and also a desire to build up his future electoral power on the
grand scale, rather than by slow and laborious degrees. It was not that he
shunned the labour, but he had no wish to be totally absorbed in it.
The following year Caesar was presiding over a jury court when two
men appeared before it, one accused of having committed a murder on
Sulla's instructions, the other of having killed a number of citizens who
had been legally proscribed, and of having collected the price on their
heads from the public treasury. Caesar accepted the accusations; the
court condemned the one and acquitted the other (the later conspirator
Catiline). Marcus Porcius Cato, who was then quaestor and later became
one of the most dedicated advocates of Senate policy, withdrew the
rewards from those involved in the proscriptions.
The Roman plebs had long endured great hardship and, so Sallust tells
us, was inclined to rebellion. He calls its mentality alien (mens aliena) -
implying that its mentality was estranged from itself and the community
to which it belonged, from the civic body and the civic mind. Sallust
speaks of a dire disease that afflicted the citizens like consumption. `In
any commonwealth the indigent look enviously upon the good (the able
and prosperous) and honour the bad; they hate what is old and crave
what is new; displeased with their own conditions, they wish to change
everything. Untroubled, they are nourished by strife and unrest, for
poverty can easily be endured without harm. Yet for many reasons the
Roman populace found itself set on a particularly perilous course.' All
the worthless elements collected there like the bilge in a ship's hold. For
this reason the Roman nobility referred to the urban mass as the bilge of
the city (sentina urbis). `Moreover, the young, who had endured a life of
poverty and hard work in the country, were prompted by private and
public largesse to choose idleness in the city in preference to thankless
toil . . . No wonder that these people could be of no more benefit to the
republic than to themselves.'
So far as we can judge from other sources and recorded opinion, the
picture of poverty that emerges here faithfully reflects the reality. The
income of most Romans was very low and often supplied them with no
more than the bare necessities. Work might become scarce; there were
great fluctuations in the money supply, building activity, harvests and
imports, and the earning capacity of the inhabitants fluctuated
accordingly. Yet as a rule there was probably enough food to go round,
thanks to the public and private distribution of corn and other supplies.
Moreover, one could enjoy all the excitements of metropolitan life - the
frequent games, the latest news, and other happenings. Yet housing had
long posed a serious problem.
The city was grossly overpopulated. Even in the late republic it did not
extend far beyond the `Servian Wall' (built in the period after 387), but
the population had multiplied as large numbers of migrants, especially
slaves and impoverished farmers, moved to the city. In Caesar's day it
may be reckoned at about three quarters of a million. While the well-to-
do citizens needed large complexes for their luxurious houses, foyers
and small gardens - Lepidus' house, the finest in Rome about 78, was
reckoned to be quite modest a generation later - people in other parts of
the city lived in large tightly packed tenements (insulae). Taller and
taller buildings were erected, and new stories were often added to
existing buildings. Augustus later decreed that the maximum height
should be a generous sixty feet (nearly 21 metres). Party walls should
not be thicker than one-and-a-half feet, and other walls must be thin in
order to provide maximum space. The upper stories often projected
outwards, making the streets narrow and dark - but cool in summer.
The result was a vicious circle: the population was growing, and so the
price of land increased and building became dearer. As the builders
economized on materials, the houses might easily collapse or burn
down. And fires were hard to contain. Thousands became homeless, and
there was a demand for new houses. In one of his poems Catullus praises
a beggar who has nothing to fear - not fire, not the collapse of his house,
and naturally not theft. The rich Marcus Crassus made much of his
fortune by speculating in property. He began by hiring about five
hundred slaves with various building skills. If a fire broke out
somewhere, his agents were promptly on the spot, seeking to buy the
burning house and those adjacent to it at the lowest possible prices. In
this way large parts of the city came into his possession; in a very short
time, using his own labour, he built large new tenements that yielded
handsome returns.
It is obvious that politically and spiritually the urban plebs lived from
hand to mouth. Their discontent might serve to foment unrest, but could
not envisage a fundamental change in conditions. Everything we know
argues against this. This social powder-keg was too damp to be ignited
politically. Politics, as we know, are not a function of social conditions,
and poverty was the normal background of much of ancient history.
Hardship becomes explosive only when it is felt to be unbearable. The
Roman populace seems to have regarded its hardship as normal,
preferring the reliefs and palliatives afforded by daily life to the
prospect of supporting or rewarding an attack on any of the central
points of the Roman order. Had this not been so, it would have been
impossible to rule the city with virtually no police, even in the difficult
and tensionridden period of the Catilinarian conspiracy. Sallust thus
exaggerates - for reasons of his own - the propensity of the plebs to
rebel.
We hear of a conspiracy in late 66. The consuls elected for 65 had been
convicted of corrupt electoral practices and were deprived of office even
before assuming it; new consuls had been elected in their place. The
deposed consuls are said to have planned to murder their successors and
several other senators and then to resume office. However they did not
carry out their plans - if they ever seriously intended to. Crassus is said
to have had close contacts with them. Suspicion later fell on Caesar too,
probably wrongly. Clearly the most interesting aspect of the affair,
which remained shrouded in official silence and unofficial rumour, is
that a few prominent citizens appear to have hatched such audacious
plans, that they were credited with them, and that, suspicions having
been aroused, the whole thing petered out and everyone carried on as if
nothing had happened.
To most debtors this was of course far worse than paying interest, for
since the expenditure of the Roman nobles was high and their income
irregular, Crassus increased their dependence on him. More over, he
tried never to give offence and was utterly at home in the prevailing
climate of complaisance. He was fundamentally goodnatured, not to say
well-meaning. In more restricted circumstances he would have passed
for a man of probity, and might even have been one.
All his difficulties arose because he set his sights too high. It was
unfortunate that he was plagued with greed, but on the other hand he was
active, and the other Romans were not poor orphans. More worrying was
the fact that Crassus wanted to be the first man in Rome, and nothing he
did to further this ambition could make up for his essential mediocrity.
For this reason he was constantly devising new plans. The wildness of
his plans was consonant with the indeterminacy of contemporary reality.
The standards he did not possess within him could therefore not be
imposed on him from without. The wisdom he imbibed from outside led
him to believe that the possibilities were endless. And this was as true as
it was false.
Yet although many recognized its merits, the bill had no solid support,
and there was probably no determination to secure its passage. Cicero
was thus able to block it, with the support of a coalition made up of
advocates of Senate policy and followers of Pompey. Caesar probably
began to realize how little he could achieve in collaboration with
Crassus. At all events, from now on he paid more attention to Pompey
and the populares.
Then, with Caesar's help, the tribune Titus Labienus pushed through a
measure under which the priests were no longer to be coopted, but
elected, as they had been in the last decades before Sulla.
For even if the murder was not covered by the letter of the senatus
consultum ultimum, it accorded with its spirit: there was an obvious
interest in eliminating legislators who had forced through important
measures that the Senate opposed. Yet this presupposed that certain
citizens were willing to lend themselves to such actions. Their
willingness was bound to abate if a man like Rabirius was convicted, or
at least exposed to the risk of conviction.
If Labienus and Caesar sought to deal the Senate such a blow and
thereby blunt its ultimate weapon, they presumably acted with the
imminent return of Pompey in mind. For upon his return there was likely
to be a substantial programme of legislation, and this weapon might
become important. Moreover, by supporting the basic liberties of the
people, which were usually violated by the execution of the senatus
consultum ultimum, they stood to win great popularity.
In his favour were his reputation with the plebs and his support for the
law to re-institute elections for all other priestly offices. In 102 the
sponsor of the law introducing the elective principle had immediately
become pontifex, then pontifex maximus, at an early age. Caesar was
certainly supported by many friends and followers, but this would not
have sufficed to outweigh the authority and prestige of his highly
respected fellow contenders. He therefore borrowed money on an
unprecedented scale and bribed the electors. Financially he was so
stretched that Catulus hoped, by offering him a large sum, to persuade
him to withdraw. Caesar, however, raised his stake to the limit of his
credit. On leaving home on the morning of the election he told his
mother that he could only return as pontifex maximus or not at all. He
was elected with an overwhelming majority.
However unusually Caesar's career had begun, he had made his way
satisfactorily through the regular sequence of offices; in the middle of
63 he was elected praetor for the following year. But if he had wished to
achieve something extraordinary, he had little or nothing to show. He had
been able to prosecute and provoke the Sullans, but his attempts to win
power or authority - however seriously or light-heartedly he had
embarked on them - had all failed. In political terms the alliance with
Crassus had scarcely been rewarding; Caesar does not even seem to have
taken much money from him - and it would have been unwise of him to
do so, as he would have been unable to pay it back very soon. Now he
had brought off his first big success.
Now, at the latest, it becomes clear how much Caesar differed from
others of his generation. Among these there was undoubtedly a good
deal of dissatisfaction with existing conditions, and a good deal of
rebelliousness. The Senate regime was anything but convincing, with its
endless deliberations and vacillations, its insistence on complaisance
and consideration, its time-wasting and obsession with trifles, and above
all its utter refusal to countenance anything new. The political order was
full of absurdities, which made sense only because society still believed
in them. Yet what was so maddening was society's increasingly rigid
attachment to the past. Where governmental and administrative
efficiency were concerned, the Romans may seem to us to have been
relatively undemanding, but even they must have found some things
hard to endure.
Marcus Cato, Caesar's later opponent, and his junior by about five
years, who still most closely resembled him in intensity of temperament
and strength of character, seems to have felt much the same. Yet he drew
quite different conclusions: he wanted senatorial rule to be decisive,
consistent and vigorous. Instead of being merely backward-looking, the
senators should actually return to the ways of the fathers. But Cato was
made of quite different stuff and had grown up in the bosom of the
ruling oligarchy.
And if Cicero, Caesar's senior by six years, tried to give firmness and
direction to senatorial policy, this too was an expression of criticism and
dissatisfaction. True, Cicero was a homo novus and so full of admiration
for the old Senate that his first concern was to do things better himself.
In most of the younger nobles, however, rebelliousness and disrespect
for the fathers manifested itself in a general attitude of youthful disdain,
frivolity and cynicism. They had no clear notion of what they wanted to
do, and there was no opposition in society to which they could ally
themselves. They therefore sought an outlet for their ambitions in wild
festivities and private adventures. The `rich old men', as the sassy
Marcus Caelius once called them, did not expect the young to die of
respect for them; the young could be allowed their debts, their luxuries,
their amours. They could even risk a little political side-stepping - so
long as they gave the impression of being prepared, in the end, to don
the old tightly fitting garments that became the guardians of tradition
and consider them the most splendid in the world. And most of the
younger nobles were prepared to do so.
Like Caesar, he came of old patrician stock that had long since ceased
to be important; he was highly gifted and uncommonly strong-willed.
Aristocratic self-assurance combined in him with the robustness of the
self-made man. He had served as one of Sulla's henchmen. He had
always been ruthless and had the `plebeian' habit, not uncommon in
outsiders, of conforming with the ways of society at large, which
appeared corrupt, but ultimately was not. His forcefulness and
ebullience contrasted agreeably with the narrowness and rigidity, the
anxiousness and caution, of his peers. Yet he was unable to turn his
talents to anything positive, being by nature too much of an anarchist.
Now, if not before, his will began to harden. His energy and daring, his
imagination and intellect, were concentrated on the prospect of the
consulship, and probably also on what he hoped to achieve during and
after it - though at this stage he cannot have reckoned on obtaining a
province like Gaul. From now on there is no evidence of actions or plans
that could be construed as pointing to a lack of seriousness. True, he
remained opposed to the leaders of the Sullan aristocracy, and a certain
resentment surfaced now and then. Yet at the same time a distinct
`achievement ethic' came more and more to the fore. The youthful
insouciance of earlier days was gone. He now needed something firm to
hold on to, and this he increasingly found in service to the res publica.
The better he discharged the duties that were properly incumbent upon
all Roman nobles, the more he excelled - as Pompey did too, though in a
different way.
What may initially have been a rather negative disposition could thus
be turned to his own advantage. The change cannot be traced to any
single event. The most that can have happened in 63 was a switch from
quantity to quality; certain motives that were already at work were
consolidated, strengthened and given a fresh momentum; and this
coincided with his decision to pursue a course of his own choosing.
Caesar had immense inner resources, and the strength and skill to
organize them. Hardly any Roman was so unremittingly active as
Caesar, or brought such intelligence to bear on his activity. One striking
detail that is always cited is his ability to dictate four important letters
to his scribes simultaneously, and as many as seven unimportant ones. It
is also reported that he was the first person to correspond with friends
within Rome itself, as the size of the city often made it difficult to keep
appointments punctually.
At the same time his political position became clear: he saw that in
future he must above all side with Pompey, though this did not mean that
he wished to sever his links with Crassus which would have meant
forfeiting some of his independence. Yet if Caesar was to become an
important ally of Pompey, Pompey must rely on the people. Caesar could
do little for Pompey in the Senate. However, he could be useful to him
through his popularity with the urban masses and his good relations with
those who operated the mechanism of popular politics. The important
question, then, was how the various forces in Rome stood in relation to
Pompey and he in relation to them.
Pompey had instructed his envoy Nepos to secure for him the right to
apply for the consulship of 61. This required a dispensation from the
normal rules; under these he could not have become consul until 59, ten
years after his first consulship. He also sought leave to conduct his
candidacy in absentia. As on his return from Spain, he intended to move
straight from his military command to the consulship, in order to ensure
acceptance of the demands arising from his campaigns - provision of
land for his veterans and ratification of the settlements he had made in
the east. His wishes were presumably to be submitted to the Senate in
the form of a petition; if this failed, they would be put to the people.
Nepos accordingly sought to become a tribune of the people for 62.
Pompey must also have considered another eventuality: if there was any
reason - or pretext - for armed entry into Rome, as there had been in 71,
it should be acted on. He probably had to leave all the details to be
decided on the spot. He was still in Asia Minor, attending to local
affairs.
In view of the grave consequences for Rome that flowed from this
complication, it might for once be justifiable to use the word `fateful'.
This of course applies only to the effects. For the element of pure
coincidence should not be overlooked, especially the part played by a
number of protagonists - among them Caesar himself. At this time he
played an extremely significant role.
Catiline, having failed in his second bid for the consulship (for 62), now
joined with others in planning a coup d'etat. They intended to murder
Cicero, seize power in the city, eliminate a number of opponents, and
take over the chief magistracies. The conspirators also planned a
remission of debts, which would benefit not only certain nobles who
were deeply in debt and on the verge of bankruptcy, but many common
folk too.
The idea was probably to march on Rome and conquer it, as Sulla had
done before. How Catiline proposed to defend himself against the
returning Pompey remains unclear. It would probably be unfair to
consider the plans in too much detail. On the whole we are dealing once
more with a product of the `unreality' of the contemporary situation; no
one saw the need for strict rules, and the conspirators were not only
lured by imaginary possibilities, but driven by adversity and pressing
need. Moreover, the extent of the general indebtedness was itself
symptomatic of the fact that in Rome anything was deemed possible.
Crassus is believed, perhaps rightly, to have been linked with the
conspiracy, though when it came to the crunch he distanced himself from
it.
Caesar too came under suspicion. He may indeed have encouraged the
conspirators, if only to disrupt the life of the city and provide Pompey
with an occasion for leading his army against it. Sallust writes: `All who
were not on the side of the Senate preferred to see the commonwealth
lapse into disorder rather than lose some of their own importance.'
Cicero had assembled a large body of knights to guard the forum and
the Capitol. The knights had been alarmed by what they had learnt of
Catiline's plans from Cicero's rich friend Atticus.
These precautions were all the more necessary as clients and former
slaves of the prisoners were already trying to recruit men among the
plebs to free them from captivity. The atmosphere in the city was tense.
Rumour was rife; sensational reports circulated, some true, some false;
messengers ran to and fro. One claimed to know this, another that; much
was surmised, much alleged to have been seen or heard. Crowds of
curious, interested and distrustful citizens - potential trouble-makers -
congregated in the streets, probably at some distance from the well-
guarded temple of Concordia. Such gatherings could easily turn into
angry demonstrations.
When the senators arrived for the meeting they had to force their way
through the crowd and were exposed to shouts and questions. The
consul, having performed the ritual sacrifice and obtained the goodwill
of the gods, opened the session from the rostrum. The senators, having
risen to greet him, resumed their seats on the long benches placed in
rows parallel to the side walls, with a gangway in the middle; the
senators did not usually sit in a fixed order. After delivering his report,
the consul asked the assembled fathers, in order of rank and seniority,
what they proposed regarding the fate of the Catilinarians. The first, a
consul designate, called for the extreme penalty (ultima poena).
Everyone was bound to take this to mean the death penalty. The other
consul designate and the consulares concurred. This was no doubt pre-
arranged. The accused were to be given short shrift and exemplary
punishment; this was customary at times of internal emergency and
always had the desired effect. It was the best way to prevent the
Catilinarians from gathering further support, to halt the spread of
disorder in the city, and to forestall any attempt to free the prisoners. It
also offered a prospect of quelling the rebellion before Pompey returned
from the east. It all seemed cut and dried; however, the senators were
swayed not only by rational arguments, but by the excitement, tension
and outrage caused by the plans that had come to light. All this seems to
have combined to inflame the general sentiment. The senators reassured
one another of their common cause by showing their determination to
attack.
The question was then put to Caesar, the praetor designate. He rose and
made a lengthy speech, which is said to have been delivered with
consummate skill and extreme concentration, in his high voice, with his
characteristically lively gestures, and no doubt with all the elegance for
which his speeches were famous. He must have radiated calm, perhaps
even coolness.
In the main Caesar concurred with the earlier speakers. He roundly
condemned Catiline and his followers. He spoke of the need to punish
them severely; he even declared that no penalty was severe enough to
match their crime. He also held that the Senate was entitled to inflict any
punishment it thought fit. He did not question its claim to decide, if need
be, upon anything that would save the res publica.
The effect was immense. Those who were questioned after Caesar
voted almost without exception for his proposal, against the solid
authority of the consulares. This had probably never happened before.
They were glad not to have to reach a definitive decision or display
resolution in such a difficult matter.
The consul now intervened in order to reply to Caesar's concerns and
reservations - and probably also to the anxious, furtive glances of many
of the senators. He told them that they should not be concerned for him,
but let themselves be guided solely by the public interest. For he
naturally related everything to himself and the dangerous position he
occupied. Yet he too was seized with fear and uncertainty; even his
brother was unsure whether he really meant what he said. There were
interjections; doubts spread as to whether he would be able to implement
a resolution that day, and whether it was prudent to reach any decision
when everything was so uncertain. In these circumstances Cicero then
began to question the senators again. The first announced that in
speaking of the ultima poena he too had of course meant life
imprisonment. And although some of the principes disagreed, most of
them, and most of the praetorians, including Cicero's brother, voted for
Caesar's proposal. Support for the death penalty proved so weak that one
of the praetorians, Tiberius Claudius Nero, ventured to go a step further.
He proposed that any decision should be deferred until Catiline was
killed. The consul should then make a fresh report, under armed guard.
This would have been to carry the impression of senatorial irresolution,
feebleness and lack of leadership to the extreme and done everything to
sustain and encourage the conspiracy. Nero had recently served as a
legate under Pompey and obviously represented Pompey's interests. This
proposal too met with approval; the consul was powerless. The
advocates of the death penalty seemed to have been decisively defeated.
This was the first time, as far as we know, that the two strongest
characters of the late republic confronted each other; one of them, after
this speech, became the most dedicated champion of Senate policy; the
other was soon its most dangerous opponent. It was the only occasion
before the end of the civil war - with one exception, in 59 - that Caesar
came close to winning over the Senate, and in a matter of vital public
interest. Yet we should not overlook the significance of the fact that
things were on a knife-edge: there was a choice not just between Caesar
and Cato, but probably between two different possibilities for senatorial
policy. This becomes clear when one considers how pregnant with
consequences Cato's victory was - though no more so than Caesar's
intervention, which made this victory possible. The course of events, the
starting positions for Pompey's return and for the future of the republic -
in the decade still left to it - were far from predestined, but determined
by the great performance of this extraordinary man. The outcome was
very soon to become clear.
As soon as the Senate had reached its decision, the prisoners were
brought from the houses where they had been held. The five groups
made their way through the silent crowd in the forum to the prison. Here
Cicero had the prisoners strangled. Outside the prison he announced to
the people: `They have lived.' As the hero of the hour, he was solemnly
escorted home; lamps and torches were set up everywhere; the tension
was released. Any sympathy there had been for Catiline and his plans
had evaporated when it became clear that the conspirators had intended
to set fire to the city. The awesome demonstration of senatorial power
had a liberating effect. It was now possible to take in what had
happened.
Nepos, however, immediately petitioned that the general and his army
should be recalled to Italy to restore order. In preparation for Pompey's
return, he vehemently attacked Cicero for violating the laws of
provocation. He apparently announced that Pompey would see to it that
the guilty were punished. He probably thought that this would shake the
newly established power of the Senate. But Cicero arranged for a
military detachment to be stationed outside Rome, and the Senate
resolved that anyone who accused those involved in the execution of the
Catilinarians should be considered an enemy. The knights supported this
policy. Cato persuaded the Senate to agree to a substantial increase in the
provision of corn for the plebs. Nepos therefore resorted to force in
order to put through his petition. His supporters occupied the forum and
drove out his opponents. The voting was to take place in the temple of
Castor, where he presided over the assembly, supported by Caesar; the
steps of the temple were occupied by gladiators. Cato had difficulty in
forcing his way through. When he interceded to prevent the herald's
reading out the petition, Nepos read it out himself. Cato tore the
document from his hand, and when Nepos continued from memory,
another tribune clapped a hand over his mouth. Armed men then began
to storm the podium. But Cato remained steadfast. His supporters were
at first put to flight, but then returned, encouraged by his example.
Nepos finally gave up after further altercations and after the Senate
passed the senatus consultum ultimum. In a threatening speech he
inveighed against the tyranny in Rome, then fled to Pompey. We do not
know whether all this was staged in order to provide Pompey with a
pretext for making himself the champion of the tribunes of the people
and marching on Rome.
The mission of Nepos had failed, and Cato had won his second big
victory, which virtually guaranteed that in future there would be
opposition between Pompey and the Senate. Perhaps the Senate would in
any case have refused to accommodate Pompey after he had won his two
great commands in defiance of it. However, weakness and fear of
Pompey might have inclined it to agree to a measure of conciliation.
However, after being challenged so strongly by Nepos and gaining such
power and confidence through the authority of the young Cato, it was no
longer willing to compromise. It was above all for this reason that
Catiline's conspiracy and Caesar's various powerful interventions
affected the politics of the following months and years.
All the more splendid was his triumph in late September 61. It was his
third triumph, in celebration of his victories over the pirates and the
kingdoms of the east. After Africa and Spain, he had now conquered
Asia. There was so much to show that the procession was spread over
two days. Yet even so it was not possible to display all the spoils. Large
tablets caried lists of the lands and peoples he had conquered: Pontos,
Armenia, Paphlagonia, Cappadocia, Media, Colchis, the Iberians, the
Albanians, Syria, Cilicia, Mesopotamia, Phoenicia and Palestine, Judea,
Arabia, as well as the pirates he had defeated on sea and land. Other
tablets stated that through his conquests the public revenues had risen
from fifty to eighty-five million denarii a year, and that Pompey would
deliver twenty talents in gold and silver to the treasury, not including the
soldiers' shares in the booty. Huge pictures illustrated his victories, and
also the death of Mithridates. Several conquered kings and members of
their families processed in front of Pompey's triumphal chariot. He
himself wore a cloak that had belonged to Alexander the Great and been
part of the treasure of Mithridates. This documented the fact that world-
wide dominion had passed from the Macedonians to the Romans. Next
came the senior senators who had served as legates under Pompey.
He had vowed to build a temple of Minerva from the proceeds of the
spoils. There he later declared proudly in an inscription: `Cn. Pompeius
Imperator, having ended thirty years of war, defeated, killed or subjected
12,183,000 men, sunk or captured 846 ships, brought under Roman
protection 1,538 towns and fortified settlements and subjected the lands
from the Sea of Asov to the Red Sea, fulfilled his vow to Minerva in
accordance with his merit.' As early as 63 Cicero had declared that the
limits of Roman rule could no longer be found on earth, but were
determined by heaven.
While crossing the Alps, Caesar and his companions found themselves
in a wretched little village and fell to discussing whether there too men
contended for office. He is said to have declared in all seriousness: `I for
my part would rather be the first man here than the second man in
Rome.'
Soon after arriving in the province he moved against a number of
tribes in what is now Portugal and northwest Spain, partly with newly
levied troops. Acting with great energy and skill, he took much booty
and made many conquests. After one battle the soldiers, in accordance
with established custom, acclaimed him as `imperator'. This was the title
of every Roman general, but to acclaim him as such was to honour him
as victor in a particular battle. On receiving Caesar's report, the Senate
decided to accord him a triumph.
It is in any case difficult to see how anyone could imagine that this
kind of petty chicanery would deter Caesar from pursuing such
promising prospects. What beckoned was the chance of a lifetime.
'Pompey needed him and could surely be induced, after so many defeats,
to mobilize all the support he commanded in order to win success in the
popular assembly with Caesar's help. And he had to offer something in
return. It became clear, however, that Caesar wanted a province from
which he could make great conquests. There was no other way to gain
great power, fame, riches and a large following of veterans, no other way
to prove his worth, far from all the irksome restrictions of the oligarchy,
all the pettifogging of city politics. If Pompey's demands were pushed
through, it must also be possible to push through an appropriate
provincial law.
Had Cato and his allies no inkling of Caesar's plans? It would
admittedly have been something quite novel to set up an important
special command when there was no war. Hitherto special commands
had always been preceded by wars. Yet it surely cannot have been
beyond the wit of Caesar's opponents to conceive such a possibility.
Yet whatever thoughts Cato may have had about Caesar's intentions, he
relied on the various means of obstruction and the superiority of the
Senate, which in the past had nearly always proved effective in the end.
True to his programme, he was determined to defend every inch of the
old order. And he did not want to be overtaken by events, but to forestall
them. He could expect nothing good of Caesar. He therefore opposed
him systematically. For his own part, and on behalf of the Senate, he
forced him to remain an outsider. Rome's aristocrats had always tried to
outdo one another. But as a rule they had kept within certain bounds.
There was competition for every position. But in principle everyone had
an equal chance of attaining it. It was not the business of the aristocracy
to devalue the positions themselves for the sake of an individual. Yet
now, in defence of the Senate regime, one of the prerequisites of this
basic class solidarity had been violated. Perhaps it was the attempt to
defend the regime that provoked the attack on it.
As Cicero wrote at the time, Caesar had a good following wind. He made
an electoral pact with Pompey's wealthy friend Lucceius, who promised
to distribute money to the centuries on behalf of them both. Crassus and
Pompey came out in support of Caesar. It was not uncommon for men
who were on bad terms, or even at enmity, with one another to support
the same candidates at elections. The number of candidates was
consequently limited, more or less in accordance with their year of birth.
Only someone who commanded substantial electoral influence in his
own right had any real prospects. Support from such rivals was then
determined by their obligations; moreover, they might compete with one
another for the candidate's favour. Crassus probably mobilized large
numbers of knights for Caesar. Caesar, moreover, could rely not only on
his clients and friends, but on his reputation. At least he was well known,
had given splendid games - with gladiators in silver armour - and used
his good offices on behalf of many people. He was the pontifex maximus
and had been granted a triumph. To the bulk of good Roman society he
seems to have been an extravagant, restless aristocrat, impressive and
intelligent, but in no way dangerous. An enfant terrible. If he went his
own way now and then, leaving the beaten track and exasperating his
elders and betters, this simply made him interesting. No doubt his
aloofness from the others was noted. He was not easy to fathom and did
not fit into any obvious mould. But whatever objections this might have
occasioned were obviously mitigated by his social bravura and
versatility. He was no simple popularis, but played the `popular' role in a
superior fashion - persuasively, with brilliant arguments and therefore, it
must have seemed, responsibly. He was presumably all the more friendly
to the younger generation, the less he saw eye to eye with their elders.
Because he offended the most powerful citizens, he may have felt it
prudent to treat the others with consideration. And by doing so he
probably succeeded in making them feel honoured. Most were bound to
be impressed and captivated by his superb skill as a speaker, his
insouciance and charm, his aristocratic bearing and assurance, and
perhaps by even his arrogance. And the masses were already on his side
- however little that signified.
Before the voting began, one century from the first class was chosen
by lot to be the centuria praerogativa; it voted before the others, and the
result was publicly announced by the herald. It was meant to act as a
suggestion to the assembly. According to Cicero, the candidate whom
the praerogativa placed first was always successful. He therefore picked
up many of the uncommitted second votes (each elector had as many
votes as there were offices to fill). The practice of calling on one century
to open the voting tended to ensure uniformity. After this the remaining
sixty-nine centuries of the first class, together with twelve equestrian
centuries and a few special divisions, were called to vote. When their
ballots had been counted, the result was read out. There then followed a
separate ballot for the six senior equestrian centuries, in which senators'
sons voted. It had obviously been instituted so that these centuries,
having heard the results of the first class, could vote solidly for the most
successful candidates; this would again give later voters the impression
of a uniform vote carrying special authority. It was a striking
manifestation of senatorial solidarity. We do not know whether the
institution still functioned in Caesar's day as it had in the past. At all
events, the intention was that the various forces should show their
relative strength in the first ballot and then demonstrate their solidarity
in succeeding ballots. It was now the turn of the other classes, from the
second to the fifth. As soon as the required number of candidates had
absolute majorities, the voting was terminated. As there were a hundred
and ninety-three centuries, this stage could be reached in the second
class. It was considered important that the result should not be decided
by the lowest classes and that they should not be able to give any one
candidate a specially large majority. A candidate could distinguish
himself only by winning the support of all or most of the centuries by
the time he had gained a majority. The first candidate to be declared
elected had certain privileges over the other.
The assembly lasted many hours, and by the time the second class
came to vote it must have been very hot. We do not know whether the
enclosures had awnings to protect them against the sun. One can imagine
that candidates felt tempted to provide them. Anyone who had cast his
vote could canvass among the others or repair to the shade of one of the
buildings nearby.
In the next few weeks Caesar had long negotiations with Pompey and
Crassus and forged an alliance with them. The aim of this `triumvirate'
was to realize jointly certain objectives that they had failed to achieve
alone. Pompey was to have his two demands met, Crassus to obtain a
long-sought remission for the tax farmers of Asia, and Caesar to be
given a province. As for the longer term, there was only the vague
formula that nothing should be done in the commonwealth that was
displeasing to any one of them. As each wanted to be the first man in
Rome, it was hardly possible for them to agree on anything beyond the
present moment.
At this time the country was visited by a great storm. Many trees were
uprooted and many houses destroyed; ships sank in the Tiber and its
estuary; the wooden bridge over the river was destroyed, and a wooden
theatre built for a celebration collapsed. Many lives were lost. Roman
historiography tells us that great events were widely believed to be
reflected in nature. Here was confirmation of this belief.
For a time Cicero had deluded himself into thinking that he could draw
Pompey on to the side of the Senate. In 6o he wrote to his sceptical
friend Atticus that he was thinking of making Caesar see reason
(literally `making him better'). He spoke also of a `medicine that heals
the sick parts of the commonwealth instead of excising them'. As always
when viewing great decisions with hindsight, one wonders whether
things could have been ordered differently; one considers the
possibilities and probabilities immanent in the situation. This is merely
another way of asking how it was that things happened as they did.
`Happy is the man who can say "when", "before" and "after"! He may
have suffered misfortune, he may have writhed in pain, but as soon as he
is able to recount events in the order in which they occurred he feels as
well as if the sun were shining on his stomach.' This, says Musil, is `the
law or narrative order', the `proven way of shortening the perspective of
understanding'.
What was it that made for power or impotence? What was decisive in
creating oppositions? Since the oppositions governed the scope of
possible positions and possible points of contact, this also raises the
question of the opportunities open to Caesar in the Roman society of his
day.
9
This practice continued into the late republic - though the tensions had
by now become so much fiercer that it could no longer operate as
impartially, convincingly and definitively as before.
It had of course been clear for some time that there was always one
highly authoritative personality who espoused the cause of the Senate.
To do so required perpetual diligence and painstaking effort, the
expenditure of much time, energy and responsibility, as well as
confidence and endurance. Since the seventies Catulus had displayed
these qualities and for this reason been universally respected as the first
of the senators. On his death in 61, Crassus is said to have tried to take
over his role. None of the principes would have offered any competition.
But young Cato did. Cato then became the most committed, resolute and
tireless advocate of senatorial policy.
His only problem was that he did not receive enough support from the
principes or that they were too weak to dragoon the bulk of the senators
into consistently pursuing a common line. Rather, there arose within the
ruling class a movement of mutual repulsion and rigidification, between
the indolence and resignation of the old and the orthodox, defiant rigour
of the young. Various elements may have come together: relative
impotence led to resignation, and resignation to relative impotence.
There was a tendency to withdraw into private life. Cicero characterized
the grandees of the time as `fishponders': nothing was dearer to their
hearts than their fish, nothing gave them more pleasure than the red
mullet that lived in their ponds and ate out of their hands.
The Senate was hard to govern: its members, of whom there had been
twice as many since Sulla's reforms, were now confronted for the first
time with the problem of supporting a strong, resolute policy in the
interests of the house. At the same time a mood of complaisance had
taken root. After all, Pompey's demand that land should be provided for
his veterans was not altogether unjustified. And why should Caesar's
triumph founder on the prohibition against conducting his candidacy in
absentia? There were many impediments to a decisive senatorial policy.
But a new realization that they must unite with Pompey rather than
oppose him was not one of them.
Cato was all the stronger, his authority all the greater. For he was able to
advocate forcefully and with utter conviction what the principes and the
Senate represented only feebly and half-heartedly: first, that the Senate
was responsible for the commonwealth, and secondly that everyone must
conform with class discipline and no one become too powerful. Cato's
cause corresponded to the old tradition of constitutional policy, to which
the senators generally subscribed. So what objections could there be to
him?
One might think of two: Pompey's goodwill and the present situation
of the republic. Yet however well-disposed Pompey might be to the
traditional order and however genuine his desire to serve the Senate
regime, he was an outsider and could, if necessary, bring great power to
bear; if his demands were met he would become significantly stronger,
and this would inevitably result in repeated conflicts between him and
the Senate majority. Even though Pompey had represented the interests
of countless clients, his reputation as a patron was bound to suffer if he
could not assert himself. Whatever his plans, he could not evade the
demands that went with a position of privilege.
It could be said that the more powerful Pompey became, the more
necessary it was to oppose him. And the more indolent the Senate
majority showed itself to be, the less it could be relied upon in an
emergency and the more necessary it was to fight for every inch of the
order. This was probably why it seemed desirable to take preventive
action against Caesar, which would incidentally have been justified only
by his plans for a great command that would not result from a war, but
precede it. These plans had to do with power relationships in which a
man like Caesar might take the view that he was not dependent on the
Senate. And they were the same power relationships in which the Senate
majority was unreliable and which determined Cato's policy. Cato's
authority was thus unusually great, but by no means unquestioned. The
harder he had to work, the greater it became. Had he not worked hard he
would not have been able to assert himself. The pettiness and rigidity of
his policy is therefore symptomatic not only of the power that this
solitary figure wielded as the champion of the Senate, but also of his
weakness, which was essentially that of the Senate.
Yet just because the Senate was weak, we should not overlook the
strength of its cause. This strength went into the role that Cato was able
to play so incomparably well, thanks to his philosophical convictions
and his tenacity. It derived from the continued attachment of Roman
society in general to the inherited order. The Senate was at the heart of
this order; it was the centre of power, the place where all the forces were
held in balance. This disposes of the second objection that modern
commentators repeatedly raise against Cato's policy: that he failed to
recognize that Rome's aristocratic regime was superannuated, that the
republic was in a profound crisis, that Pompey's power resulted simply
from the Senate's inability to deal properly with the practical problems
of the commonwealth and from the inadequacy of Rome's old
institutions when faced with the new realities of empire.
The nobility, after ruling Rome for centuries, could not assume the
innocence of mere functionaries. Rather, it had existential ties with the
republic. And it could not evolve a sense of state weakness, because
there was as yet no divorce between state and society. The
commonwealth was constituted by its citizens, though there were
admittedly substantial gradations among them.
Finally no one, even outside the ruling class, seems to have been in
any doubt that this class had responsibility for the commonwealth. It had
no competitor. Nor did anyone envisage an alternative order.
This sounds odd when one considers all the ills that afflicted the
republic. Yet the oddity was hardly noticed, or at least hardly pondered
or emphasized. Nowadays we are inclined to postulate a crisis of
legitimacy, which we deduce from the misery and discontent of the
broad masses not only in Rome, but in other towns and in the country. It
was here that Rome's soldiers were recruited. Attention is drawn to their
willingness, after Sulla's march on Rome, to follow their generals even
against the Senate.
There was therefore none of the pressure for legitimation that goes
with the development of the state. In modern times the individual
citizens have given up basic rights, including the right to self-help, paid
much in taxes and become subservient to the state, in exchange for the
promise - indeed the guarantee - of protection, care, welfare, and
ultimately total provision for existence. And they needed these things.
Max Weber speaks of the `growing need for order and protection
("police") felt by a society accustomed to absolute security' in all areas
of life. To this were added all the organizational requirements of an
increasingly specialized economic society.
When the state detaches itself from the whole and becomes so
powerful, it may appear, from the perspective of the church and later of
society, as an opposing force. This creates quite new perspectives,
attitudes and demands. And where society can be shaped and changed by
the state, it begins to seem as though the order one belongs to is largely
at the disposition of others. Add to this the modern belief in progress,
and it becomes clear that today, given the huge expectations we have
developed, the legitimacy of political systems can easily become a
problem. This is unique in world history. There seem to have been
certain remote parallels in the monarchic high cultures of non-European
history.
This was crucial for the existing power relationships, and for politics
as a whole. Social discontent did not produce a separate force that could
press politicians into its service. The outcome was that from time to
time, when some politician found it advantageous or feasible, the urban
populace or the soldiers and veterans would be mobilized politically and
at best granted a share in any gain that accrued to the republic; all were
concerned simply to improve their lot within the existing system.
Cato and the Senate majority could thus see the crisis as essentially
confined within the nobility. If Cicero arrived at a different judgement,
this was because he was rather more sensitive and had personal reasons
for feeling that the republic was in constant danger. As a homo novus he
had a livelier conscience as regards the tasks facing the republic than
other members of his class, who merely wished to represent it. There
was a more important reason, however: as the one who had had the
Catilinarians executed, he was in danger of being attacked by the
populares. When the senatus consultum ultimum, and hence the
republic, were attacked or defended, he was in the crossfire. He therefore
wanted everyone, in his daily actions, to be as concerned for the republic
as he was for himself. He felt that the whole of the order was
permanently on the agenda; accordingly, all who cared for the Senate
regime and the republic should form a united front. From his point of
view Pompey belonged on the side of the Senate majority. Cicero thus
drew the dividing lines differently; but he gave no more thought than
anyone else to the social ills and the problems of empire, and it certainly
never occurred to him that social conditions had made the Senate regime
superannuated. As a good intellectual he merely related things primarily
to himself and judged Pompey on the basis of his opinions, not of his
interests.
Nor could the outsiders, Pompey and Caesar, change Cato's mind.
Their difficulty, their great weakness, lay in the fact that while they
might change their conduct, they could not redesign the commonwealth.
Whenever Pompey was needed, he had many allies, such as the knights
who supported him in 67 and 66. On the other hand it was not in their
interest that he should become too powerful. They too were attached to
the Senate regime, unless they happened to be in dispute with it over
particular issues. True, they did not think it desirable that the Senate
should as a rule be strong. Indeed, it was its weakness that endeared it to
them. Yet in extreme cases they always sided with the Senate -
especially as it never failed to accommodate them. And there was no
other cause to which Pompey could have attached himself.
He could therefore never free himself from his inner ties to the old
republic. He wanted to serve the Senate regime, but if he wished to
assert himself he was bound to oppose it. This contradiction was too
much for him. What he was - and could not help being - was
unacceptable.
The opposition between the two men was doubtless inevitable. And it
was equally inevitable that both sides should make such a disagreeable
impression: Cato petty, intense and dogmatic, Pompey half-hearted,
anxious and hypocritical. By setting his face against anything new, Cato
elevated the old sceptical attitude to innovation to a principle - as always
happens in critical situations when one takes one's measure from the
past or an imagined future. He put on the armour of ideology, as it were,
to protect his thinking. When Pompey honestly declared that he
disapproved of the attacks that his helpers mounted against the Senate,
he became a traitor to his friends. And his `honest face' was still not
wholly convincing. Yet by conducting such a vacillating, shady,
unreliable and cowardly policy he could at least retain a minimal degree
of trust, which might later provide a point of contact. He did not destroy
his bridges. He remained reliant on the approval of the `good'. This was
the best way to retain the prospect of one day establishing a power like
his in Rome: when the city needed him, when the situation had become
sufficiently difficult - with a little help from him, though this should if
possible not become obvious.
In any case the Roman republic had reached a point where it could
have coped with its problems only at the cost of a substantial loss of
freedom and scope for personal development. For things were ultimately
moving towards monarchy, though no one could have known it. Yet when
in fact does a society regard such a political price as unavoidable - at
least if it is politically and existentially as attached to its order and as
unconcerned with efficiency as Roman society was? This was possible
only after it had been worn down by the protracted civil wars of the
forties and thirties.
Both had been strongly influenced by Sulla. Yet while Pompey had
been accepted by him, Caesar had felt repelled by him. Pompey wished
to emulate him by performing extraordinary services for the Senate and
the republic. Caesar was fascinated mainly by Sulla's extraordinary
personality, his audacity, and his determination to take matters into his
own hands when they were set on the wrong course. And apart from the
fact that he hardly had an opportunity to commit himself to the Senate,
personal fascination was to him of overriding importance - because he
did not want to be like the others, and because he had such high
standards.
If Pompey was vain, Caesar was proud. From his youth onwards. This
accounted for his early opposition to the ruling circles. And for the spirit
of contradiction within him. And because he had demonstrated this spirit
so clearly at an early age, the merits he brought to his `popular' career
were enough to dispense him from the need to woo the urban populace.
The trouble he had with the leading senators was thus more valuable
than any advantages he could have gained by compliance.
It meant a great deal to Pompey that he had won fame in his early
years. Caesar, however, still had to make good his claim. He felt certain
of accomplishing great things in the future, and this made him to some
extent independent of his surroundings. Yet he thereby incurred an
obligation to himself. And in time this may have made his need for
ultimate recognition - to which he had at first been indifferent - all the
stronger.
Much in his early career seems to indicate that Caesar felt sure of
rising step by step. But he probably took little thought for the future. He
may often have been in danger of coming to grief like Catiline. Yet he
knew how to calculate; above all he could count on his amazing
superiority and his genius for captivating others - and not just women.
Even if the leading senators sized him up fairly accurately and opposed
him, even if they recognized that he was really far more dangerous than
Catiline, he was able to present himself in all innocence as a victim of
gross injustice. He could provoke his opponents to the utmost and
simultaneously put them in the wrong. This no doubt predisposed most
people in his favour. Justice required it of them, and in any case they
were inclined to complaisance. Caesar's generosity, courage and
enterprise contrasted pleasingly with Cato's rigidity, reservations and
inflexibility. Cato was enervating, Caesar refreshing - if at times
excessively so.
He had so far won every round in his great game and been elected
consul. The question was now what would happen if he espoused
Pompey's demands. Would he succeed in persuading the majority of the
senators to act against the Senate's cause? The case was far from open
and shut.
For the present, however, the only certainty was that Caesar had found
his own path, the path he had always sought. Since the contemporary
oppositions afforded the outsider nothing that would have induced him
to take up a firm, objective position, he had to find his point of
reference, his criteria, within himself. With no cause to take up, he had
to develop his personality freely and without ties. He wanted to
demonstrate his virtus - the manliness so admired by the Romans -
through deeds. His pride, his awareness of his own superiority and the
self-confidence that grew with every new success made him certain of
achieving the goals he had set himself.
The fateful year of the consuls Gaius Julius Caesar and Marcus
Calpurnius Bibulus thus began, as far as the latter was concerned, like
any other - and probably more correctly than any other. But the auspices
were deceptive.
Then the questioning began. It was eagerly awaited. For the consuls
customarily questioned a few consulares before the rest, paying no heed
to seniority. They usually adhered to this order throughout the year. In
this way they indicated their wish to collaborate especially closely with
the senators in question, who were chosen on grounds of reputation and
personal friendship. Caesar called first upon Crassus, not Pompey. He
had after all long-standing contacts with Crassus and may have been
moved by the consideration that Crassus came off worst in his intended
programme of legislation.
On the same day, or soon afterwards, the consul usually made his first
speech to the people, in which he thanked them for his election and
spoke of himself, his achievements, and his ancestors, so that it should
become clear who he was. Caesar probably made a programmatic
statement about the way in which he intended to conduct affairs and
about his plans - undoubtedly with a very statesmanlike air, in keeping
with convention, but in such a way as to give expression, here as
elsewhere, to his personal style and distinction. He can hardly have
denied the fact that he was a true popularis, concerned with the welfare
of the whole commonwealth.
It was probably in the early days of the year that Caesar introduced his
land bill. It had long been known that he was planning it. It provided for
two forms of land acquisition. On the one hand, all lands still in
communal ownership, except those in the Campania, were to be divided
up; on the other hand, part of the proceeds of Pompey's booty was to be
used to purchase land. The sale of land was to be voluntary, at a price
equivalent to the value entered in the census assessment lists. In settling
these lands, priority was to be given to Pompey's veterans. Any residue
would go to others. Caesar seems to have pointed out that there were far
too many people living in the city who would benefit from acquiring
land of their own. This would strike at the root of much unrest. The land
commission was to be fairly large, with a membership of twenty. Caesar
himself declared that he did not wish to be favoured in any way by his
own law; one provision precluded the sponsor from membership of the
commission.
Caesar submitted the text to the Senate and declared himself ready to
consider any proposed changes. On a number of occasions soldiers had
been given land after serving in campaigns. Most of them were
impoverished country-dwellers. Sulla himself could serve as a model for
the proposed policy. Yet how much milder Caesar's law was: it robbed no
one! There was only one fundamental objection, and this related not to
individual provisions of the expertly drafted bill, but to its effect: it
would substantially increase the power of Pompey. Hardly anyone liked
to say this openly. There was certainly strong opposition, not least from
Caesar's colleague Bibulus. On the whole, the fathers seem to have made
heavy weather of the debate; most were probably opposed to the law, but
unable to raise any substantive objections. Some spoke in its favour; the
rest refrained from negative comments. They tried to prolong the debate.
The outcome could not be foreseen. There may have been a real prospect
that Caesar's eloquence and cogent arguments - in the absence of
compelling counter-arguments - would win the majority over. Then once
again, as in the Catilinarian debate, Cato spoke out in opposition.
Without beating about the bush or going into detail, he baldly insisted on
the principle that in all things one must adhere to convention and not
transgress it in any way. He launched into a long speech on the subject.
The day was short - the session had to be adjourned before sundown -
and there was no end in sight. Cato clearly intended to monopolize all
the remaining time. For a while Caesar seems to have listened patiently.
Then his patience snapped. He ordered an official to arrest Cato and take
him to the prison. Did he hope for a favourable decision in Cato's
absence? Or had he suddenly realized that he would get nowhere with his
policy of superiority and consideration? Or had he merely been looking
for a pretext to put an end to what had meanwhile become a charade?
Was he dropping his mask?
Whether Caesar really hoped that the house would agree is not clear. If
so, he would presumably have had to be satisfied with a more modest
province and a more or less normal continuation of his career. For only
if it became necessary to assert himself against the Senate by violent and
illegal means would he have any prospect of winning the extraordinary
command for which he saw himself destined. There is no way of
knowing which of the two possibilities he preferred. We do not even
know whether he saw the question in this light; he may have decided to
see how things went. Reason may have counselled him to try for the
conciliatory but more modest solution. If so, he was not wearing a mask,
but would admittedly have had to be prepared to expend much effort in
long and fairly fruitless discussions. For quick, resolute action was much
more to his taste, and his whole consulship was directed towards action.
Thus, whatever his preference, he cannot have been unhappy when Cato
frustrated his diplomacy. His determination and anger erupted, and he
gave full vent to them.
Many senators rose and left the hall with Cato. When the consul
pointed out to one of them that the session was not over, he replied that
he would rather be in the prison with Cato than in the Senate with
Caesar. Whereupon Caesar had Cato released, probably by asking a
tribune to object to his arrest. As he adjourned the session he remarked
that if they did not wish to consider the bill with him he would put it to
the vote as it stood. He was no longer disposed to sue for a majority.
An alternative scenario had long been planned and was now quickly
staged. Pompey had summoned his veterans to Rome for the vote on the
land law. They and others were organized into teams that were able to
terrorize the public life of the city. Their leader was Vatinius. They soon
controlled the streets.
In the night before the voting Caesar's supporters occupied the forum.
When his opponents, Bibulus and three tribunes, arrived with their
retinue, they had difficulty fighting their way through. The sources are
not altogether clear. However, it seems that they reached the temple of
Castor, where Caesar was to conduct the voting from the platform. But
they were unable to present their intercession, as they were thrown down
the steps. The lictors' fasces, symbols of consular authority, were broken.
A basketful of dung had been kept in readiness for Bibulus and was
tipped over his head. He was to be made a laughing stock. Two tribunes
of the people and several others were wounded. During the scuffles the
group was forced to the east along the Via Sacra. Bibulus is said to have
bared his neck. He wanted to die and call down the curse of murder on
Caesar. But his friends dragged him to safety in the shrine ofJuppiter
Stator (near where the Titus Arch now stands).
Caesar did not let himself be disturbed by all this. He was apparently
in the middle of a speech when his fellow consul was forced from the
steps to the temple. He may have paused briefly or raised his voice. In
any case the session took its expected course; everything was perfectly
organized, and the law was ratified.
Next day Bibulus called the Senate together. He complained about the
disgraceful violence. But when he questioned the senators, none had any
proposal to make. What were they to decide? A senatus consultum
ultimum was unthinkable. Only if there was a prospect of superiority
could the citizens be mobilized for a police action. The senators were
outraged, but they were also paralysed by fear. And there was no legal
basis for repealing the law. The fact that Caesar had foiled the
intercession might be a ground for a prosecution. Yet because no
intercession had been possible the law was valid. This meeting of the
Senate clearly served only to write the illegal defeat of the res publica
on the wall and initiate a new phase in the opposition to Caesar.
Another new tactic was tried. Whenever a vote was due to be taken on
a bill, Bibulus observed the sky and sent word to the official conducting
the ballot that he had seen lightning. Unlike intercession, religious
objections of this sort remained effective, even if they were ignored.
They involved dealings with the gods. There were precedents in which
the Senate had repealed laws because they had been passed in disregard
of the auspices. The aim was thus to have all the legislation annulled. In
earlier times there had been perhaps one intercession against major
legislative programmes, but if it was unsuccessful no further action was
taken, lest the instrument of the veto should be blunted. The opposite
procedure was now adopted, obviously under Cato's influence. An
attempt at obstruction was made, even though they knew that Caesar and
Vatinius would ignore it. Being so sure of their cause, they deliberately
incurred a high risk. In earlier times they had normally used the
procedure of intercession, not `obnuntiation' (which relied on signs
observed in the sky). Intercession required one to appear in person, but
one could `obnun- tiate' through officials. This was another advantage,
but there was a concomitant disadvantage: the exclusive use of
obnuntiation as a means to block legislation meant that no open
confrontation occurred between the legislator and the sky-gazer - which
made the whole business somewhat ludicrous.
For a time Caesar was unmoved by all this. He would have preferred to
get his way by legal means, but this was not possible, and he probably
did not grieve too much over the hallowed institutions. If his opponents
wished the constitution to be violated, then they should have their wish.
In future he would do everything alone. As jokers observed, they were
living under the consuls Julius and Caesar.
Publius Clodius Pulcher had admittedly scant respect for the ideals of
the republic and the proud but often ineffectual old gentlemen who
represented it. He was no more averse to scandal than his egregiously
generous and much-loved sisters. Yet at the same time he was extremely
touchy. He might do whatever he liked to others, but he was put out if he
met with unfriendliness.
Translation to the plebs required a special act of adoption that took the
form of a law. The application had to be scrutinized by the college of the
pontifices and then posted publicly. Three weeks later an archaic and by
now purely formal meeting of the people could be held at which the
applicant submitted himself to a plebeian as his son; the assembly then
gave its approval. In Clodius' case the pontifices were probably not
consulted, and there was certainly no three-week delay. The pontifex
maximus, acting on his own authority, staged the whole proceedings as a
demonstration of his contempt for tradition. The only `father' that could
be found for this son of well over thirty, a scion of the highest patrician
nobility, was a nondescript man of twenty; he of course at once
emancipated his `son'. In this farce Pompey had to play the role of augur.
The haste with which the proceedings were conducted suggests that the
adoption was not originally intended. Perhaps all three rulers - or at least
Pompey and Caesar - had been against it. Or perhaps the resistance came
only from Pompey, who, in his worthy way, did not like this
unpredictable, ill-mannered young man and also did not want him to act
against Cicero. If so, the event is easily explained. Caesar exploited
Cicero's complaints as a means to take Pompey off guard. It was after all
quite clear that they needed a strong man in the tribunate who would
defend Caesar's laws when his consulship came to an end. Otherwise one
would have to assume that Cicero's open criticism was in itself too much
for Caesar. In this case he was seized by a fierce resolve not only to put
down his opponents, but to keep them down, displaying the inordinate
fury of someone who was determined to use every means to achieve the
impossible. It may be that Caesar's action was partly prompted by both
these motives, especially as he may have been infuriated by Pompey's
continued caution. Moreover, Pompey extracted a promise from Clodius
that he would do nothing against Cicero.
The two had obviously made new agreements. Caesar seems to have
convinced Pompey that there was no turning back. At all events, Pompey
executed a sharp turn. Everything he had done in the first few months
had been dictated by necessity: he had to get his laws through, and
Caesar had him in the palm of his hand. All the same, he had maintained
a certain distance between himself and his unruly ally. And this
aloofness seems to have worked to his advantage. Now he acted on his
own initiative and set out much more openly to augment his power. The
chief beneficiaries of the land distribution were his veterans. He himself
took a leading role, but above all he was now wholly on Caesar's side.
Caesar had his new province conferred on him by the Senate - or the
rump that still met. The senators believed that at least the power of
decision lay with them and not again with the people. Pompey himself
was the proposer. He was supported by Gaius Calpurnius Piso, whose
daughter Caesar had recently married. Cato inveighed against the horse-
trading in daughters and provinces and warned that the Senate was itself
installing the tyrant in the castle. A few days later Caesar boasted that he
had achieved what he desired, against the will of his opponents and to
the accompaniment of their groans; now he could dance on their heads.
At this point one of the senators, in a veiled allusion to Caesar's alleged
relations with Nicomedes, is said to have interjected that this was not
easy for a woman. Caesar riposted that Semiramis had once ruled Syria
and the Amazons had possessed a large part of Asia. This was in June or
thereabouts.
At about this time there were more and more demonstrations against
the new rulers, whose laws benefited few of the citizens. The withdrawal
and silent opposition of many leading senators created an increasingly
powerful impression. People thronged round Bibulus' public notices. The
terror, intimidation and arbitrary action employed by the rulers had
induced a change of mood, even among the masses. `Nothing is so
popular as hatred of populares,' wrote Cicero. Indeed, the ability to take
pleasure in the ascendancy or even the tyranny of an oligarchy in the
name of the people had scarcely evolved in ancient times. Not only lies,
but ideologies too, were quickly seen through. In the day-to-day life of
Rome it soon became evident who wielded the power and used it to do
whatever he pleased. And there was nothing to be hoped for from
impalpable advantages. Caesar had done nothing to benefit the urban
populace; there was no new corn law, no games. Only talk - and the
pressure exerted by the veterans, the gangs organized by Vatinius.
Cicero goes on to say, `No one approves of what has taken place;
everyone complains and is indignant; people all agree, speak their mind
openly and do not hesitate to inveigh; but no one knows what to do. If
we resist there will probably be bloodshed; but everyone sees that
constant acquiescence can only lead to ruin.' Whistles greeted the rulers
wherever they appeared in public. In July many citizens came to Rome
for the games. When Caesar entered the theatre, everyone remained
silent. But the entrance of young Curio, his one passionate and open
opponent, met with the tumultuous applause that Pompey had enjoyed in
his better days. Caesar felt grossly insulted; he complained and
threatened the knights who had risen from their special seats to join in
the clapping; in his impotent rage he even threatened to abolish the
people's corn rations. In spite of all this, an actor won such applause
with a verse directed at Pompey the Great - 'Through our misery you are
great' - that he repeated it several times. When Pompey wished to reply
openly to the reproaches of Bibulus he was so helpless that people
almost felt sorry for him. Slowly the wheel seemed to be turning again.
Yet power still lay entirely with Pompey and Caesar.
On the one hand, their opponents hoped that the next elections would
bring in suitable men who could energetically support the Senate's cause
in the following year. To gain time, Bibulus postponed the elections from
July to October. On the other hand, they seem to have realized that it was
no longer possible to cancel all the results of Caesar's consulate - on the
basis, for instance, of a senatus consultum ultimum. They therefore hit
upon the idea of putting a compromise solution to him: he should
reintroduce all his laws, but this time in the proper manner, paying due
respect to the auspices. They were obviously ready to refrain from
obstruction. They would accept all Caesar's laws if only he would
reintroduce them and thereby admit that he had acted illegally, that laws
introduced in this manner were invalid, and that the traditional
institutions must be unconditionally respected. In return for repairing
the breaches of the law they offered to guarantee Caesar's legislation and
naturally to grant him indemnity.
True, he would have had to eat humble pie and acknowledge that he
had acted unlawfully. He would also have had to concede that Bibulus'
ludicrous sky-gazing had been justified. Not that anyone in Rome is
likely to have believed the daily reports of lightnings. The efficacy of
this means of obstruction depended not on religious conviction, but on
the senatorial sanction behind it, the existence of a power that could
punish any infraction. Caesar was invited to recognize and strengthen
this power, to help ensure that in future the means to obstruct legislation
would function more effectively. From now on it was not to be so easy to
override the Senate.
These two reasons alone doubtless sufficed to make Caesar reject the
offer, which was put to him several times. He probably did not trust his
opponents. What would happen if he was prepared to reintroduce all his
legislation and they failed to keep their side of the bargain? It would be
interesting to know what weighed more heavily with Caesar - his
distrust, his pride, or his aversion to any strengthening of the Senate's
authority. On this occasion in particular one wonders about his attitude
to the Roman order. First as a matter of principle: did he believe that his
scorn and disregard for hallowed institutions had opened a serious
breach in their walls? Then in pragmatic terms: how did he assess it in
relation to his own future? How did he envisage his future within the
Roman republic?
To this extent, any going back must have been far from his mind.
Having trounced his opponents, was he now to make it all up to them?
Probably others would have done so. Pompey would have been happy to
have such golden bridges built for him; he may have urged Caesar to
cross them. One should of course beware of interpreting this period of
his career by extrapolation from its later phases; this was the period
when the points were being set. However, the way in which he chose his
course - unwaveringly, without yielding to temptation, purposefully and
with the utmost commitment, wilfully embracing the role that had been
forced on him - strongly suggests that he was determined to go his own
way, at first alone, in his province; then he would have to take stock. He
was ready to render great services to Rome, and he must have hoped to
benefit from them. Just as he had little understanding for institutions, so
he had little for the power that his opponents could still summon up
within the framework of the republic, in defence of its laws. After all, he
had at first soundly beaten them.
It may be presumed that Caesar had again pulled all the levers of
political pressure. This is suggested by the reluctance of the praetors to
charge Gabinius with electoral corruption. When the accuser in a
popular assembly called Pompey an `unappointed dictator' he was
almost lynched.
During his consulate, Plutarch tells us, Caesar behaved like the most
insolent tribune of the people. Perhaps things were even worse than in
the days of the Gracchi and Saturninus. In any case Caesar, unlike any
tribune of the people, was assured of a provincial command. And he
could be almost certain of obtaining it with impunity.
Caesar had been able to bring about this change because he proceeded
with unexpected ruthlessness and, unlike all the others, had no particular
respect for the Roman order. Another precondition for his effectiveness,
however, was the fact that the leading circles in the Senate did their
utmost to oppose him and were not prepared `to wait for the storm to
pass', as Cicero formulated the old precept.
The situation was new, and so were Caesar's methods. Not that he was
an innovator in any modern sense. Yet everything he did - and above all
the manner in which he did it - ran counter to previous custom. So did
the actions of his opponents. The crisis of the republic had produced the
possibilities that Caesar now exploited. The fact that Pompey was
needed to attend to foreign problems, that he was powerful - and that the
more powerful he became, the more he was opposed -justified Caesar's
actions and gave meaning to his victory. The way in which he had
emerged from the crisis determined the way in which he now went to
work. The crisis thus perpetuated itself and became ever more intense.
Yet what society sees and what it does are two different things,
especially when it has suffered a severe blow. How Caesar would in the
long run be perceived by the Romans, how he would present himself to
them, how he would find his way back among them, may still have been
a matter of future politics.
At all events, from now on he had to work towards being once more
accepted in Rome; to do so he had to strain every nerve, but not
necessarily to make concessions that would have cost his pride too dear.
He can hardly have thought it hopeless, and perhaps it was not
impossible. It was not yet time for the question `Caesar or the republic?'
- though his opponents already knew that the one precluded the other.
Yet Rome did not consist solely of Caesar and his adversaries.
We do not know how anxious Caesar was about his future. But he must
have been aware of the problems he faced, even though a certain
nonchalance and his contempt for his opponents armed him against an
immediate perception of their full gravity.
11
Achievement in Gaul
Yet Caesar could not let internal politics out of his sight for a single
moment. His future depended on helping to shape events in Rome,
securing his rear, doing everything to restore his political credit, making
sure that his opponents did not recoup their strength and above all that
they did not reach an accommodation with Pompey.
Caesar was ever present in Rome through his ideas, his orders and
advice, his gifts and his requests. There was no comparison between him
and other governors, who also were keenly interested in what went on in
Rome, but for the most part remained spectators. He wished to have a
hand in affairs - and indeed he had to. It was vital to him that he should
be consulted on all important matters and be able to make known his
opinions and wishes; his allies were not to take any action without first
clearing it with him. They were to have no advantage for which he was
not compensated. Accordingly they often sent agents to treat with him,
and he is unlikely to have left them in any doubt as to his precise wishes
and demands. Given his ability to calculate so many things in advance
and take up a stance on them, as well as his rapid access to information
about current events, he could demand to be heard. No one could pretend
that he had been unable to obtain Caesar's opinion. He had the advantage
of being able to spend much of his time in Gallia Cisalpina, relatively
close to Rome. Nor was he at first in a great hurry to set out for his
province.
The laws went through unopposed, though one tribune of the people had
offered to oppose them. Clearly no one wished to provoke Clodius.
Cicero, for instance, convinced himself that it was to his advantage that
the law on the associations should go through. Was it hoped that Clodius
would be against Caesar's laws rather than for them? It is by no means
inconceivable. But there may also have been a fear that the means of
obstruction would once again be blunted.
These four laws look like the beginning of a big legislative programme,
as though the weapons were being forged for passing more important
measures. There had never been any other reason for passing such a
generous corn law.
Also in January, probably towards the end of the month, a bill was
published under which anyone who killed a Roman citizen without due
process of law or had done so in the past was to be outlawed. The
principle of nulla poena sine lege is not Roman. There had in fact been a
law to this effect since the time of Gaius Gracchus. Clodius may have
done no more than reformulate it. His aim may have been to assure
himself of a compliant court. On the same day another bill was posted,
under which the two consuls were to be provided with particularly
desirable provinces. They were also given moneys that had been
earmarked for land settlement under Caesar's laws; at least one of them is
reported not to have taken it with him, but to have invested it at a
favourable rate of interest. Clodius was thus hoping to forestall consular
opposition. For on i January the consul Piso had honoured Cicero by
calling on him to speak third, after Pompey and Crassus, and Gabinius
was a supporter of Pompey.
Gabinius now came forward and declared that the time had come to
punish those responsible for the execution of the Catilinarians, adding
that there was no reason to believe that the Senate still had anything to
say. Piso confined himself to saying that he was not a brave man. Cicero
should withdraw; he would soon be allowed back.
The law in itself did not pose a new threat to Cicero. Only a court could
condemn him. Yet he at once put on mourning and persuaded senators
and knights to support his cause. Clodius' gangs pursued him, shouting
vulgar abuse and pelting him with dung and stones, and the consul
Gabinius threatened the knights who spoke up for him. Clodius invoked
the understanding with Caesar, Pompey and Crassus.
At the beginning of March, Cicero voluntarily left the city and went
into exile. Shortly afterwards Caesar set off in haste for his province. He
had received reports that the Helvetians were planning to march through
it. This Celtic tribe wanted to leave its settlements in what is now
Switzerland and seek a new home in western Gaul. Caesar's presence was
urgently required. He ordered the legion stationed in Gallia Transalpina
to march to Lake Geneva and hurriedly levied confederate troops. At
first, however, he made no use of his main force of three legions
stationed in Gallia Cisalpina, near Aquileia. They were to remain in Italy,
ante portas as it were, in order to exert pressure on Rome. Only at the end
of April were they given their marching orders, so that they could quickly
be thrown against the Helvetians.
Probably by now another dangerous man had been removed from Rome
- Marcus Cato. The occasion for this was a matter of foreign policy.
Clodius had decided to annex the kingdom of Cyprus. The island actually
belonged to Egypt and was ruled - on the basis of a disputed will - by a
member of the Ptolemaic dynasty. The tribune bore him an old grudge,
because when he had fallen into the hands of pirates the king had been
miserly with the ransom, sending a large, but not sufficiently large sum.
The pirates, feeling they were being mocked, rejected the money and
generously freed Clodius. He, however, could not get over the challenge
that he thought Ptolemy had issued. Moreover, the republic's coffers
needed replenishing after Clodius had made over so much money to the
consuls. He had a law passed by which Cyprus was to be summarily
annexed and another entrusting Cato with its execution. Cato, being a
law-abiding man, obeyed. Clodius informed the assembly that Caesar had
sent a letter congratulating him on ridding his tribunate of Cato and at the
same time gagging him, for now that Cato had accepted an extraordinary
commission he was in no position to polemicize against extraordinary,
commands.
Marcus Tullius Cicero posed some danger to Caesar. Though not really
powerful, he was an important, rousing and persuasive speaker. True, he
was rather on the periphery of the leading senatorial circles, but highly
esteemed by the majority; and his services against Catiline were not
forgotten. He was not a brave man but in the heat of battle he could be
impelled by a sense of duty or indignation into making passionate
protests. He was unpredictable. And he was an exceedingly loyal
supporter of the Senate. Being a homo novus, a countryman of knightly
extraction, he had a rather old-fashioned attachment to republican ideals;
he was also extremely diligent, efficient and skilful. He had been
fortunate in managing to rise to the rank of consul, to top the poll and be
elected by all the centuries - what is more, at the earliest possible
moment. The consulate had been exactly the right place for him. Seldom
had there been such a perfect match between what a man was and what
was required of him. A supporter of the Senate who was also bound - with
due moderation - to the urban plebs, the son of a knight, and a consul:
this was the very combination that was called for at the time. Whether in
opposing popular legislation or in the struggle against Catiline, he was
able to commit himself to broad coalitions. He regarded this as
important, for he was averse to acting in a partisan fashion, except
against men whom he regarded as enemies of the republic. He was all for
harmony, between the classes - the Senate, the knights and all the `good' -
and between the Senate and Pompey. This attitude resulted from his
situation and from political theory. As a parvenu he thought it essential to
be able to rely on other forces against the Roman grandees, who were
unwilling to treat him as an equal. Being an outsider, he felt a special
affinity to Pompey. And since he had not only studied philosophy, and
rhetoric, but needed them to legitimate and balance his identity, he
preferred to adhere to the teachings of political theorists. While the other
principes represented the republic, he was chiefly concerned to find
solutions to its problems. Whereas they perceived an internal threat to the
traditional exercise of power, he saw the whole of the republic threatened
more from without. All the more necessary, then, was a philosophy that
embraced the whole of the commonwealth. And this attitude became
stronger, the more he identified himself with the republic after the
execution of the Catilinarians.
Moreover, Cicero's ties with Pompey had never been wholly severed.
He could encourage him, when the opportunity presented itself, to resume
negotiations with the Senate. Moreover, the fact that Cicero was being
sent into exile caused Pompey considerable embarrassment. His
unreliability and weakness were becoming all too apparent.
Finally, and most importantly, it was now clear that the Senate could
not protect the man who had executed the senatus consultum ultimum in
accordance with its wishes. Another grave defeat was added to those it
had already suffered in 59•
Publicly Caesar held back. He did not use his influence, but he treated
Cicero kindly and offered him a post as a legate in his province; and he
pretended to be in despair over Clodius, who admittedly could not be
restrained. It is curious that Clodius did not bring in the bill until the end
of January. Perhaps he needed another occasion to show Pompey how
vital it was to remove Cicero and Cato. Perhaps he himself was uncertain
whom to attack. Then Caesar, whom his opponents saw as his 'alder and
abetter', had to force him to act. In any case, Caesar no doubt represented
himself to Pompey as the clever one who would have so much liked to
spare Cicero. What he engaged in during these weeks was a shameless
piece of politicking.
He could now safely leave Rome to its own devices. Clodius and his
gangs controlled the streets. He was the hero of the mob, perhaps even of
the citizenry at large. They enjoyed their free rations of corn, as well as
the way in which Clodius took it out on the wielders of power. He
developed novel ways of articulating the `popular will'. Violence had
previously been used as a means to get laws through the popular
assembly, but now it served a kind of `popular justice'. First against
Cicero, in the name of civil liberties, and then against others. Repeated
assaults and demonstrations were staged; the forum was frequently
occupied and the actions of the magistrates frustrated. Popular `liberty'
took the form of violence. And the ways in which this happened suggest
that it was not due entirely to Clodius' zeal for tough action, but partly to
the people's desire to satisfy certain needs. Whereas Clodius needed
scandal, the populace wished to see its dissatisfaction with its living
conditions translated into deeds - not into resolutions.
When engaged in agitation, the tribunes of the people had always invoked
the power of the Roman people, which supposedly ruled the whole of the
Mediterranean world. And parts of the urban populace had always been
involved in political demonstrations: politics took place before their very
eyes, they were interested in them and took part in them. Yet at the same
time it was clear that many lived in poverty and that the real rulers of the
Roman world were the Senate and the magistrates. The citizens could
accept this, having long been inured to it; it was after all traditional and
therefore natural; only occasionally did they rebel. Yet this pattern of rule
and exception presupposed that the Senate and the magistrates could
regularly make their authority and superiority felt.
The new element in the present situation was the fact that protest and
`popular anger', superbly stage-managed by Clodius, could be indulged in
with impunity. The forces that might have opposed them were too weak
or held one another in check. In many ways the effects of Caesar's
consulship were still felt. The Senate was beaten, the magistrates' hands
were tied, and there was no police. There were admittedly some forces of
order, but they were employed merely to keep the streets safe from
thieves and vagabonds. Anything else was a matter for the magistrates,
who sought help from friends and clients, and in extreme cases formed a
kind of special constabulary. This system, however, presupposed a degree
of energy and security that could nip disorder in the bud.
As such energy and security no longer existed, Clodius had a free hand.
He could indulge his passion to the full. And the urban populace enjoyed
the power it seemed to possess, some by exercising it, others by
identifying themselves with it. The disintegration of Roman society was
proceeding apace. For the time being the gangs could be opposed only by
setting up other gangs; this happened in 57. And until 52, when Clodius
was murdered, his chief adversary banished, and the Senate's authority
restored with Pompey's help, street battles flared up in Rome again and
again.
Not long after Caesar's departure, Clodius and Pompey came up against
each other. When Clodius was setting up an assassination attempt or
something that looked like one, Pompey withdrew from public life, as
Bibulus had done a year earlier. On i June the Senate, no doubt with
Pompey's approval, accepted a proposal to recall Cicero from exile. A
tribune of the people interceded. A little later Clodius took the bold step
of attacking Caesar's laws. He led Bibulus before the people and had him
testify that he had in every case observed the sky. Hortensius and other
principes made common cause with him in the hope of achieving by
popular means what the Senate was unwilling to risk. It was a curious
reversal of the fronts, a strange alliance that suddenly brought together
the leading senators and the popular terrorist. But two important tasks
confronted them - recalling Cicero and reversing the defeat inflicted by
Caesar. The former had to be shelved for the time being because Clodius
was opposed to it, but the latter could be carried out with his help. It was
presumably intended that Clodius should first annul Caesar's laws and
then have their content legally ratified. This would have greatly increased
his power. He even declared that if the Senate repealed Caesar's laws he
would carry Cicero back to Rome on his shoulders. This would have been
a fresh scandal, but this time to the Senate's liking. But the Senate
majority was not prepared to countenance it. To conduct constitutional
policy with a gangster against Caesar's breaches of the law was probably
too bold and its consequences too unpredictable to tempt the senators out
of their reserve. Perhaps they were also too strongly opposed to Clodius
because of the exile of Cicero.
Pompey then turned the knife. Speaking in the Senate on i January 57,
he openly supported the recall of Cicero. Scarcely anyone but Clodius
could speak against him. For the first time he had the majority of the
Senate on his side and could perhaps hope to win it over permanently.
This would have brought about a fundamental change in the internal
politics of Rome. After some initial reluctance Caesar agreed to Cicero's
recall - though on condition that Cicero promised to behave loyally
towards him.
How then did Caesar come to do so? How was it possible for him to
embark upon a conquest far greater than had been undertaken by any
Roman general before him, without instruction or permission, and indeed
quite needlessly, in contravention of the principles of Roman foreign
policy and in spite of the fact that Rome had long suffered from the size
of her empire? The conquest of Gaul greatly extended the borders of the
empire, pushing them as far as the Atlantic, the North Sea and the Rhine,
bringing Rome into conflict with many brave tribes, making her a
neighbour of the Germani, and opening up to ancient culture a gigantic
land mass that no longer faced the Mediterranean, much as Alexander's
conquests had opened up parts of Asia to Greek culture. How did a
Roman proconsul come to engage four legions, then six, then eight and
finally ten, along with auxiliary troops, in a war undertaken on his own
initiative? Four of these legions had been provided by the
commonwealth, but the rest were high-handedly levied by Caesar
himself.
Cicero made no mention of Caesar's reason for going to war. Yet two
years later, in his De re publica, he stated Rome's principles in the
matter: `Unjust wars are those that are undertaken for no reason. For a
war can be deemed just only when it is a question of taking vengeance on
enemies and repulsing them, not otherwise.' Here, on the other hand, he
presupposes a long-lasting `Gallic War' that did not exist and pretends
that it was simply a question of how to continue a war against hostile
tribes.
Caesar's own version starts with single events, by which he was drawn
step by step into a great war, in the conscientious performance of his
duties as a Roman governor. He gives a very detailed account of how the
hostilities first arose. He derives their external causation and legitimation
from certain shifts of power and movements of population that had
alarmed Rome in 61 and 60 B c. Admittedly everything had meanwhile
settled down.
Since the end of the second century Rome had had an `official district' to
the west of the Alps, known as the province of `Gallia Transalpina' or
`Narbonensis'. It was ruled directly by Rome and used as a base from
which to observe the immediate and more distant approaches. The Gauls
were organized in tribes that seem to have had a loose sense of affinity
based on a common language and a shared religion. A close connection
obviously existed among the priests, the druids, who met once a year at a
sacred place in the middle of Gaul. Here numerous disputes were settled.
The political and social order was aristocratic, the power structure
apparently unstable. Wars between tribes, and alliances between nobles
from different tribes, often caused unrest, but most of these seem to have
had only local significance. The system was occasionally disturbed from
the outside as a result of tribal movements beyond the Rhine. Pressure
from the north and east, for instance, caused the Helvetians to move from
southwestern Germany to what is now Switzerland. Larger or smaller
groups of Germans often entered the country, invited or uninvited, to
make conquests or merely to take booty. Yet such incursions seldom
affected large areas of Gaul. Hence, what went on in this part of the world
need not as a rule concern the Romans, even if the Gauls occasionally
tried to involve them in their affairs.
True, Rome had friendly relations with many Gallic tribes and
prominent nobles within them. A specially close friendship - what the
Gauls called blood-brotherhood - bound Rome to the Haedui, who
enjoyed a certain hegemony among the tribes who inhabited the regions
bordering the Roman province and beyond; this hegemony was disputed
by their neighbours the Sequani.
The Sequani, wishing to displace the Haedui, had sought the help of a
German prince from the tribe of the Suebi; he had assembled a large
following and come to their aid, to be rewarded with land in Alsace. This
prince was called Ariovistus. He had defeated the Haedui; and in 61 the
Romans considered whether they should intervene in favour of their
friends. The Senate could not make up its mind and decided on a delaying
measure. It instructed the governor ofTransalpina to `protect the Haedui
and the other friends of the Roman people as far as is possible without
disadvantage to the republic'. This meant that he could do anything or
nothing. Moreover, during Caesar's consulate, the victorious Ariovistus
had been acknowledged as `king and friend'. If, as we must assume,
Caesar had a decisive say in this, he may have wished to prepare the way
for a conflict between the Haedui and Ariovistus that could later be
exploited. In any case such acknowledgments were regularly linked with
gifts.
When Caesar arrived there after long forced marches, the Helvetii
asked his permission to pass through Roman territory. He asked for time
to consider the matter and told them to return in mid-April.
He had already destroyed the bridge over the Rhone. Now the soldiers
he had summoned in haste had to build a wall between the lake and the
mountains, some thirty kilometres in length and nearly five metres in
height, with trenches and watchtowers. When the envoys returned, Caesar
declared that according to the custom and precedent of the Roman people
he could not allow anyone passage through the province. Any attempt
would be frustrated by force.
The Helvetii then sought to reach their destination through the
territories of the Sequani and the Haedui. Caesar concluded that this
posed an extraordinary danger to Rome and hurriedly augmented his
forces. He sent for the three legions stationed at Aquileia. He also raised
two more in Gallia Cisalpina; these presumably did not consist solely of
Roman citizens, as they should have done. However, as early as 65 he had
sought Roman citizenship for the inhabitants of this province. It is true
that the raising of legions really required a Senate resolution, but things
were now pressing. The Helvetii had already laid waste the land of the
Haedui. Caesar felt obliged to come to the aid of Rome's friends. He was
determined to act on the Senate's resolution requiring the governor of
Transalpina to do so.
In a forced march he led his army across the Alps and surprised the
Helvetii as they were crossing the Saone. He wiped out the last quarter of
the tribe, which was still on the left bank. He then had a bridge built. In
one day his army crossed the river. The Helvetii, having spent twenty
days in the same endeavour, were greatly alarmed and sought an
accommodation with him. They sent an envoy to say that if Rome would
make peace with them they would settle wherever Caesar told them. If
not, they would defend themselves. The envoy proudly reminded him that
they had beaten the Romans before: Caesar's surprise victory by the river
should not mislead him into underrating them, lest the name of the place
where they now stood should come to be known as the site of a fresh
Roman defeat.
The Helvetian envoy replied that his people had a tradition of taking,
but not giving, hostages. The Roman people could bear witness to this.
He then departed, and on the next day the tribe began to move westwards.
For about two weeks Caesar and his soldiers followed close behind. He
was not prepared to do battle until he had a good chance of defeating the
Helvetii. One well-devised battle plan failed as a result of false
intelligence, but battle was finally joined near the town of Bibracte.
`Caesar first had his own horse and then all the others led out of sight, so
that the danger would be equal for all and no one could think of fleeing.
After encouraging his soldiers he joined battle.' The Helvetii put up stiff
resistance. When they withdrew on to an eminence and the Romans
followed, other parts of the tribe intervened and tried to encircle the
Romans. Caesar states that not one Helvetian fled during the battle,
which raged for half a day; even the camp-followers defended themselves
courageously. When the battle was over the Helvetii moved off. For three
days and nights, without pausing, they marched northwards to the
territory of the Lingones. The Romans could not follow because they
needed just as much time to tend the wounded and bury the dead. When
Caesar threatened to attack the Lingones if they provided the Helvetii
with corn or anything else, the latter finally capitulated. They were
obliged to hand over the hostages they had taken from other Gallic tribes,
their weapons and any deserters; they were ordered to return to their
territory and rebuild their settlements. Caesar instructed the neighbouring
tribe, the Allobroges, to supply them with corn. For they had destroyed
all their stocks. He added that he did not want the Germans to be attracted
by the fertile areas that the Helvetii had vacated and so become
neighbours of the Roman province. The Helvetii were thus to remain
outside the area of direct Roman rule.
In their camp precise lists are said to have been found, showing that in
all 368,000 people had taken part in the migration. According to another
count ordered by Caesar, iio,ooo returned to their old territory. We may
presume that these figures were grossly exaggerated, as was usual in
reports by Roman military commanders. Yet it is quite possible that the
Roman army, consisting of six legions and auxiliaries - 35,000 men at
most - was inferior in numbers. Caesar gives no details of his own losses,
but makes it clear enough that they were substantial.
At the same time he gives the reader to understand that this victory
cancelled out the defeat that the Helvetii had inflicted on the Romans in
107. The background to this is that Rome always saw the Celts and the
Germans as particularly dangerous opponents. Only the Gauls, in 387,
had succeeded in conquering Rome and burning the city. The Romans
still recalled the vae victis with which the Gallic commanders had
rejected the Romans' laments. Then, in the last decade of the second
century, the Cimbri and Teutones had inflicted heavy defeats on them and
struck terror into the city, until it was finally saved by Marius. Now
Caesar had defeated one of the bravest peoples, parts of which had been
involved in the Cimbrian campaign, for all its superiority in numbers.
This spoke in favour of his campaign. The question of the casus belli
could take second place.
The defeat of the Helvetii forced the rest of the Gauls to reach an
accommodation with the proconsul. The leading men of most of the
tribes came to congratulate him. They explained that they knew his chief
purpose had been to punish the Helvetians for their earlier transgressions.
But they considered him to have acted in their interest too. For the
Helvetii had intended to bring the whole of Gaul under their dominion.
They then asked him to convene a meeting of representatives from the
whole of Gaul. By paying Caesar a kind of homage they probably sought
to convince him that he could leave the Gauls to their own devices. The
meeting took place, but Caesar tells us nothing about it. It may be
presumed that it did not produce the desired result. He writes simply that
afterwards the same men met him secretly in order to ask for his
protection against Ariovistus.
For Ariovistus was bringing more and more Germans across the Rhine
and demanding more and more land. There was a danger of a large
invasion. Moreover, the king was an unpredictable barbarian, quick to
anger, whose rule was intolerable. He had also taken many Gallic
hostages, especially from among the Haedui. If Caesar did not help them
they would have no recourse but to emigrate, like the Helvetii, and find
themselves a new home far away from the Germans. Caesar promised to
take up their cause, declaring himself confident that Ariovistus would be
discouraged from further incursions. While the Gauls feared the worst, he
trusted that the king would be reasonable, that he would respect his
authority and the friendship that Rome had shown him.
Caesar then reports what had prompted him to warn Ariovistus to keep
within bounds. Because of the long-standing friendship between Rome
and the Haedui it seemed to him intolerable that the latter had come
under the control of the Germans. In view of the size of the Roman
empire, it was a disgrace both to himself and the republic. This reflection
implies a criticism of the Senate, which, having so often set its seal on
this friendship, had now let matters come to the present pass. Moreover,
it seemed as though the stream of Germans crossing the Rhine would
never end. Were these savage barbarians ever to occupy Gaul, they would
invade his province and enter Italy, as the Cimbri and Teutones had done.
It was therefore vital to oppose them as quickly as possible. Finally,
Ariovistus had shown himself insufferably arrogant.
This local affair, involving a few Gallic tribes and a German prince
thus assumed the proportions of a major threat to Rome. It is not clear
whether Caesar really believed this. And it is quite unclear how he knew
about Ariovistus' arrogance. For his only contact with him had been in
the preceding year, when he had had him recognized as a friend and a
king.
i. Caesar. Portrait from Tusculum in Turin, the only one likely to have been
made during his lifetime.
2. Caesar. Colossal portrait head from the and century Al). Archaeological
Museum, Naples.
3. Caesar. Portrait head in green slate. Egypt, early 1st century AD.
Pergamonmuseum, Berlin.
4. Caesar. Portrait in Pisa. The head corresponds to a type dating from the
Augustan period and preserved in several copies; it differs clearly from the
earlier portrait (ill. i) in that Caesar's baldness is concealed by a fuller
growth of hair and the high, furrowed brow and the resolute jaw are more
strongly emphasized.
5. The secret ballot was one of the Romans' most important liberties. The
descendant of one of the legislators who introduced it proudly cites this
deed on a coin. The obverse is Rome, and behind her the voting urn; on the
reverse Libertas is drawn by a team of four galloping horses; the
personification of liberty is recognizable by the pileus (ct: below ill. 26.)
that she wields with her outstretched right hand. Coin of Gaius Cassius
Longinus, c. 126.
6. Coin of Lucius Cassius Longinus (63 Bc). The abbreviation III V[ir]
identifies Longinus as one of the three annually appointed mintmasters
(officially called tres viri aere argento auro flando fieriundo). A citizen is
seen casting his ballot into the urn. On the ballot is the letter U, short for
uti rows, a conventional formula indicating assent to a motion. The picture
alludes to the law, requested by an ancestor of the mintmaster, which
introduced the secret ballot in most proceedings of the popular court.
7. Portrait of Sulla: 'he possessed immense power of soul, was avid for
pleasure, but still more avid for fame; he led a luxurious life of leisure; yet
no pleasure ever detained him from his duties' (Sallust). Coin of Quintus
Pompeius Rufus, c. 54 Bc.
8. `Honest in face, shameless at heart': this is how Sallust described
Pompey. With his honest face he hoped to evince his loyalty to the
senatorial regime, but his heart was dedicated to his ambition. Portrait head
of Pompey. Augustan copy after a public portrait from the Sos of the 1st
century BC.
22. The curia still stands on the forum. Though rebuilt at the beginning of
the fourth century, it presumably corresponds to the original design, except
that it was originally surrounded by a colonnade. Representation of the
Curia Julia on a coin struck c. 30 Be. The building of the new Senate House
was inaugurated by Caesar and completed by Augustus. On the roof-ridge
is the winged Victoria; under the gable, in large letters, is the inscription
`lmp[erator] Caesar'.
23. Coin of Caius Cossutius Maridianus, struck in 44 tic, showing Caesar as
parens patriae. The toga drawn up over his head, indicating that he is
performing a sacrifice, relates to his religious office as pontifex maximus.
There are symbols of other priestly offices: on the left the cap of the (amen,
on the right the curved staff of the augur.
24. Coin of Lucius Aemilius Buca front the year 44 BC showing Caesar as
Dic[tatorl pcrpetuo.
25. Marcus Junius Brutus: `it depends very much on what he wants; but
what he wants, he wants utterly' (Caesar). Coin struck by Lucius Plaetorius
Cestius from the army of Caesar's assassins, commanded by Brutus:
Brut[us] Impleratorl. (43-42 BC: for the reverse of this coin see ill. 26.)
26. To Caesar's assassins the Ides of March meant the day on which Rome
was freed from the tyrant. On a coin struck in 43 or 42 in Brutus' army, the
date (Eidlus] Mart[iae]) acquires the character of a symbolic watchword: in
the middle of the image is the pileus, symbolizing liberty regained, and to
left and right are the daggers used in the murder.
Caesar now sent envoys to request a meeting with him. Ariovistus was
to choose the place - somewhere between the two of them. Ariovistus
replied that if he wanted anything from Caesar he would visit him, and
Caesar should do the same; he wondered, moreover, what business
Caesar, or indeed the Roman people, had in `his Gaul', which he had
conquered by military force. He thus confronted the proconsul proudly,
on terms of equality. Herein lay his monstrous arrogance. Caesar at once
sent further envoys to say that if Ariovistus was so ungrateful for the title
of friend and king as to reject his invitation to a meeting, he was obliged
to convey certain demands: he should bring no more Germans into the
country, hand over the hostages he was holding, and not challenge the
Haedui and their allies again. Invoking the Senate's decision to protect
the Haedui, he concluded that it was for Ariovistus to decide whether he
wished to be a friend or an enemy of Rome.
With regard to the Haedui, the king invoked the right of the victor,
adding menacingly that if Caesar attacked him he would discover `what
the undefeated, battle-tested Germans, who had for fourteen years had no
roof over their heads, could achieve through their valour'.
Here a panic arose in the Roman army. Caesar writes that it started
among the junior officers. Having heard from travellers about the huge
stature, valour and training of the Germans - it was said that no one could
endure their looks or the piercing gaze of their eyes - they were seized
with abject fear. Some had deserted, and the rest despaired. Throughout
the camp wills were being written. The young officers ran to tell Caesar
that the extensive woods were unsafe, that it was difficult to obtain corn
supplies, and that a mutiny was to be feared. And indeed the confusion
seems to have communicated itself to the men.
Caesar at once called a council of war, to which all the officers were
summoned, including the centurions, the long-serving non-commissioned
officers from the ranks. He upbraided them for imagining that it was for
them to consider where they should be led and what strategy should be
adopted. There were no grounds for fear. Even the Helvetii had beaten the
Germans. However, anyone who hid his fear under the pretext of being
concerned about the supply of corn or poor road conditions was acting
insolently, either distrusting his general's ability to perform his duties or
presuming to give him instructions. Caesar was unmoved by suggestions
of a threatened mutiny. Such things happened only to commanders who
lacked fortune or were motivated by greed. In his case, his whole life
testified to his selflessness, and his victory over the Helvetii testified to
his fortune. Contrary to his original intention he would begin the march
that very night in order to see whether they were moved more by duty or
more by fear. If necessary he would set out with only the tenth legion,
which should be his personal bodyguard. For he could rely on it. After
this address his officers were as if transformed: the whole army was at
once imbued with eagerness for battle.
As we have known since Elias, the matter has a historical dimension. The
particular emotional control that we have inherited from early modern
times, which sets up official channels, as it were, between emotions -
good and bad - and their expression, arose only with the modern state and
the particular civilization it engendered. Fear then came to be regarded as
a base emotion. In the Roman soldiers, however, courage and fear
probably manifested themselves more directly; they did not need to
conceal them and therefore reacted more naturally. It was thus possible to
address them more openly. This probably has to do with the fact that
ancient communities lived in the present, a fact that is also obvious in the
sphere of public order and the performance of countless public functions.
After all, a large number of soldiers who had to fight man against man in
a confined space felt differently from a modern army.
The Roman proconsul and the German king met. The mounted troops
took up position two hundred paces behind each. Regarding the
reproaches that Caesar made to the German it is interesting that he again
spoke of the generous honours that had been conferred on him. According
to Roman thinking the fact that he had sought and been granted the title
of king and friend made him dependent. Ariovistus failed to understand
this. He thought his friendship with Rome must bring him honour and
protection; if it worked to his disadvantage he would rather forgo it.
Moreover, the Gauls had called him to their country and he needed
German reinforcements in order to defend it. He had arrived before
Caesar: hence, this part of Gaul was his province, as Gallia Transalpina
was the Romans'. After all, in the recent wars the Haedui had had no help
from Rome; nor had they, for their part, helped the city. Hence Caesar
was using Rome's friendship with them only as a pretext for destroying
him, Ariovistus. The king concluded by saying that if Caesar did not quit
his lands he would regard him as an enemy. He added that he knew from
leading Romans that it would suit them very well if he were to eliminate
him. However, if Caesar left Gaul to him, he would find him to be a loyal
confederate.
Caesar replied that Rome had previously refrained from the subjection
of Gaul and thus had older claims on the country. It was the will of the
Senate that the Gauls should be free. At this point Ariovistus' horsemen
began to discharge stones and darts at Caesar's retinue, and the parley
was broken off.
The two armies clashed so fiercely and rapidly that they could not cast
their javelins. Hand-to-hand fighting started at once. Under Caesar's
leadership the left flank of the Germans was beaten, while their right
flank pressed the Romans. The engagement of the Roman reserves proved
decisive. The Germans fled and did not halt until they reached the Rhine,
about seven-and-a-half kilometres from the site of the battle. Few
escaped across the river, but the king was among those who did. `Our
cavalry,' Caesar reports laconically, `caught up with the rest and killed
them.'
Especially puzzling at first sight is the fact that on the one hand Caesar
rehearses all the arguments over the legitimacy of the demands he made
of Ariovistus and the war waged against him, whereas according to his
chosen criteria it seems clear that he is in the right. However, the manner
in which he propounds his view of the Gallic war and presents himself to
the reader deserves to be treated as a whole.
This is the first mention of the pacification (which implies also the
subjection) of the whole of Gaul (Gallia omnis pacata). True, Caesar is
not reporting his own opinion, but that of others, and it is not clear
whether the pacification in question had already been achieved or was
still to come.
With war threatening, he raised two more legions, doubling the number
provided by Senate and people. In Gaul he then ordered the tribes
occupying the territories next to the Belgae to spy out what was afoot.
Having made sure that adequate rations were available, he set off with his
army against the Belgae. The first tribe he encountered, the Remi,
submitted without a fight. As the Belgic tribes were very strong and
courageous - and also reinforced by Germans - he persuaded the Haedui
to mount a relief attack and so divert part of the huge enemy forces. Soon
after this he seems to have come into contact with the enemy. At first he
appears to have avoided a full scale battle, preferring to test the bravery
of the enemy and the courage of his own soldiers in minor skirmishes.
Then he ordered his army to move against the enemy. He secured his
flanks with large catapult machines - weapons whose power relied on the
elasticity of twisted animal tendons. But no battle ensued. The Romans
retired to camp, and after the Belgae had tried unsuccessfully to cut off
their supplies, their army broke up, being short of grain. Each of the
tribes retired to its own territory to obtain fresh supplies, having agreed
to join forces again if any of them was attacked by Caesar.
The Nervian levy, with reinforcements from other tribes, was encamped
in vast woods beyond the Sabis (Sambre). They had heard from the
Belgae among Caesar's followers that the Roman legions marched
separately, each followed by a long baggage train with supplies and
equipment (amounting perhaps to a thousand pack animals and some
waggons). The Nervii intended to fall upon the first legion and plunder
the baggage train. They hoped that the rest would then offer no further
resistance.
Even in Caesar's later account it is clear what confusion must have been
caused by the unexpected onslaught. The soldiers did not even have time
to put on their helmets or remove the leather covers from their shields,
let alone to attach plumes to their helmets. Caesar was able to give only
the most urgent instructions before rushing to the front to encourage his
men, to halt those who were giving ground, and to bring some order into
their ranks.
The terrain was broken and the legions widely separated. The fortunes
of battle varied. A few units had managed to push the enemy troops down
to the river and pursue some of them across it; others were hard put to
hold their positions. The camp was unprotected on two sides, and it was
here that the Nervii now concentrated their attack. Some pressed straight
towards the camp; others tried to circumvent it from the flank. Panic
broke out among the Roman cavalry and waggoners.
The soldiers of the twelfth legion had crowded so closely round their
standards as to hamper one another in the fighting. Many officers had
fallen or been wounded. Resistance began to crumble as the Nervii
relentlessly stormed forwards, threatening the soldiers from two sides.
Caesar saw that the situation there was extremely dangerous, yet he had
no reserves to send to their aid. He then took a shield from a soldier in
the rear ranks - he himself had come without one - and forced his way
through to the front line, calling to the centurions by name, encouraging
the rest of the soldiers and ordering them to go on to the attack and draw
the units apart. The soldiers then found fresh courage; the enemy attack
lost some of its impetus.
Caesar was able to rush over to the seventh legion, which was fighting
beside the twelfth and likewise being attacked from both sides. He
gradually brought the two legions together and then ordered them to
wheel round in order to fight back to back. When the two legions that had
been covering the baggage train finally came into view and one of the
successful legions brought help to the points that were threatened, the
course of the battle at last changed. Many who had given up resumed the
fight. The Nervii had no way of escape. Caesar praises them for having,
even when there was hardly any hope of rescue, `shown such bravery that,
when the first line had fallen, the second took up position on the bodies
of the fallen and went on fighting. When these soldiers fell and the bodies
piled up, the survivors cast their darts at our soldiers as from a burial
mound and hurled back our pikes.'
In this battle, says Caesar, almost the whole tribe of the Nervii was
wiped out; only the old survived, and they surrendered. `In order to make
it clear that he had mercy on the hapless and the humble' Caesar not only
gave orders that they should be spared, but instructed the neighbouring
tribes to respect their territory. A few years later, however, we find the
Nervii once more mounting a rebellion against him. Their losses cannot
therefore have been anything like as great as Caesar claimed.
He clearly could not refrain from the old Roman custom of grossly
exaggerating enemy losses. It was a strange ambition, but probably in
tune with the age, in which martial fame counted for so much and human
life for comparatively little.
After this Caesar vanquished the Atuatuci, the remnants of the Cimbri
and Teutones, who had made preparations to come to the aid of the
Nervii. They lived by the Eifel. Here there was no open battle. The tribe
had taken shelter in a well fortified town. Having surrounded it, Caesar
built corridors protected from above (so-called mantlets) and had a ramp
thrown up against the wall. He also had a siege tower built, a tall wooden
structure several storeys high, that could be moved on rollers. Below was
a heavy battering ram, and at the top artillery pieces were set up; bridges
were probably prepared for surmounting the wall. The besieged enemy
followed these preparations with undisguised scorn, unable to imagine
how the Romans, inferior to them in stature, would be able to bring such
a huge construction up to their wall.
About the same time he received news from Publius Crassus, the son of
his friend, that all the tribes of Brittany and northern Normandy had
submitted to the Romans.
The whole of Gaul was pacified, Caesar declares. The formula sounds
strange. There were still vast tracts of the country in which no Roman
soldier had set foot. Nor do we hear that they had not been at peace, and
even if they were not, we still have to ask what business it was of
Caesar's. Only those tribes that had opposed Caesar were `pacified'. In his
formula they appear as disturbers of a universal peace. And Caesar
appears as the man to whom the peace of the whole of Gaul was
entrusted. This was a monstrous pretension, a claim to the whole, in
relation to which any stirring of traditional independence was bound to be
seen as rebellion, as a breach of the peace. The conqueror subsequently
presents himself as having waged war merely for the sake of peace! He
anticipates in his claim something that did not exist: a pax Romana - or
pax Caesariana - in the whole of Gaul.
Of course Caesar may well have believed that the military subjection of
Gaul was accomplished. If so he was deceived by the success of his bold
incursions, which owed much to the element of surprise. And in any case
his success was so impressive that even some German tribes beyond the
Rhine wished to submit to Roman rule. In the autumn of 57, however,
Caesar had no time to deal with them. He told their envoys to wait until
the following summer.
In the second century he was granted at most five days, as in the case of
Marius. In 63 Pompey had been accorded ten. Now Caesar was honoured
with fifteen. Cicero later called this a tribute to his dignitas - his honour
and renown.
The Senate was paying him respect for the conquest of the whole of
Gaul. At the same time it was indirectly confirming his command and the
legitimacy of his wars. It was honouring him in such a way that the
transgressions of 59 were bound to pale. Its decision thus represented a
quite extraordinary success for Caesar, however little it meant in material
terms. Very quickly, perhaps more quickly than he expected, his hope
seemed to be realized - the hope that he could repair all the damage to his
reputation and, through great military successes, counter all the
criticisms that had been made of him.
This book, together with another dealing with large parts of the civil
war, is of the greatest interest as Caesar's portrayal of himself.
He shaped not only himself and his deeds, but also his account of them,
in a manner at once so personal and so masterful that this account
contains a special truth. To put it briefly: in the Bellum Gallicum Caesar
presents himself in all innocence as a Roman governor who performs his
multifarious tasks in a traditional fashion, conscientiously and
circumspectly, as duty requires. He does not appear to be defending
himself. Quite the contrary.
For he makes no secret of it. Whatever the truth with regard to the
Helvetii and Ariovistus, his intentions became clear by the first winter at
the latest, when the legions took up quarters in conquered territory.
According to his own account, the Belgae recognized this too. Moreover,
there was no reason whatever for the conquest of Brittany and Normandy.
In 56 his intention becomes quite obvious. In one of his typical sentences,
in which the verb is delayed to the end, he writes: `At about the same
time, although summer was almost spent, Caesar, seeing that after the
whole of Gaul had been pacified the Morini and Menapii were still under
arms and had sent no envoy to talk peace, and believing that he could
quickly end this war, dispatched his army there.' It is typical of Caesar's
presentation that circumstances are introduced as motives and
incorporated into the dynamic of the action, that the syntactic build-up
draws the reader into the movement and that the tension is released only
when the action begins. Yet this is a stylistic observation. Neither the
Morini nor the Menapii had been involved in the fighting. The fact that
they were `still under arms' meant no more than that they were still free
and had not yet surrendered to him.
Caesar's account makes it clear that he expected all the Gauls to submit.
He gave them orders that they were expected to obey. Every tribe he
encountered, with the exception of Rome's long-standing friends, had to
submit. They all had to give hostages. If they did, Caesar usually treated
them leniently. This was evidence of his clemency. Any prince or tribe
who refused to submit was in the wrong and so gave Caesar a pretext for
war.
All this was at odds with the Roman principle that only just wars might
be waged. And a war was just only if its purpose was to right a wrong. Yet
it could hardly be wrong for a foreign power to fail to do what Caesar
demanded. And there was a good reason for Rome's defensive policy.
After all, the Senate had instructed the governor to help the Haedui `if
this is not detrimental to the interest of Rome'.
Yet it is not only this demand that Caesar makes clear. More than once
he reports that the Gauls wished to be free. On one occasion he states that
`human nature is universally imbued with the desire for liberty and
detests servitude.' He understands the pride that caused brave tribes,
accustomed to victory, to resist defeat. His description is generally fair
and arouses the reader's sympathy for the Gauls - or at least the modern
reader's. Yet it is clear that their pride and their desire for liberty were
just one more reason for treating them with severity. Caesar proceeded
from the premise that they must be subjugated, even if the Senate wished
the Gauls to remain free.
As he makes his intention clear without declaring it, he cannot advance
any reasons for it. At most he can hint at a few. Occasionally he gives the
reader to understand that there was much disorder in Gaul before he
intervened. He also speaks of the danger posed by the Helvetii and the
Germans, which he dutifully forestalled or contained. Yet he does not go
beyond hints.
Naturally one must beware of viewing Caesar's desire for conquest with
modern eyes. Thoroughly Roman and unused to being challenged, he was
not plagued by doubts or the need to justify Roman expansion. To this
extent he did not differ from his contemporaries. Yet he was not bound by
the attitudes that had constantly inhibited such expansion or made it
dependent on special circumstances. Above all, even if there was no need
to justify oneself for the sake of the peoples involved, it was not self-
evident that one might flout the rules enjoined upon a Roman governor.
Yet what was he to do? Was he to admit that all this was the outcome of
his own arbitrary decision and give his reasons for deeming it right?
Would that not have meant severing all his links with the Senate and
people? He probably thought it best neither to acknowledge nor to deny
his intention, but to imply that it was self evident - at least after his
battles against the Helvetii and Ariovistus, when he found himself more
deeply involved in the affairs of Gaul. Anyone who demanded further
justification could be indirectly likened to the officers at Vesontio: they
had no reason to question the prudence and circumspection of their
commander, so why should anyone else doubt his devotion to duty or the
propriety of his conduct?
Against any questions and objections Caesar sets himself and his
actions. It is through these that he hopes to convince. It is these that are at
issue, and ultimately the subject of his book. And by speaking of them in
his own way he imposes his own perspective. He never thought to
convince his opponents. He addressed himself to those senators and
knights who were still undecided, relatively openminded and
impressionable.
The political isolation that forced him into his career of conquest
corresponded to his dissatisfaction with the normal Roman tempo.
Underlying both was Caesar's exceptional will to assert himself. His
dissatisfaction gave an objective content to his determination to conquer.
His weakness became his strength.
Moreover, the regime that Caesar builds up is no more than the sum of
interpersonal relations. How persons relate to one another is what counts.
There is no talk of institutions, of attempts at persuasion or
reconciliation, of administrative problems, of establishing a system of
government. The state of affairs that his conquests were aimed at is
described broadly as imperium in Gallia ('command in Gaul'). General
tendencies - processes at work under the surface, as it were - find no
mention. The soldiers march, camps are built, demands are issued, battles
fought and conquests made. Caesar gives orders; even security and food
supplies are ensured by giving orders to those who are to provide them.
Only at one point does he break out of the narrow narrative confines.
This is in the sixth book, where he gives a comparative ethnology of the
Gauls and the Germans. At first sight these chapters seem to have no
function. By implication, however, they explain why Caesar broke off his
campaign against the Germans without subjugating them: for here one
reads that Germany, contrary to current opinion, is quite unlike Gaul. To
conquer it would be both difficult and unrewarding. Again Caesar
refrains from going beyond implication. Yet should he have said in so
many words that he really wanted to conquer Germany too? He neither
admits it nor denies it.
A special feature of Caesar's account is the almost total exclusion of
emotion. Only the soldiers are allowed to feel fear. Caesar is seemingly
immune to it. It has been said that Caesar's commentaries owe their
formal assurance to the same strength that produced his actions. There is
certainly much truth in this, even if this strength is unlikely to have been
as effective in reality as it appears in his account. He cannot have
possessed the superhuman superiority that his writings suggest.
There was one question that he could hardly suppress entirely: What
was the point of his unremitting activity, his subjugation of Gaul, and
perhaps of the sacrifices his soldiers had to make in order to achieve it?
Pompey clearly believed that after his success over the recall of Cicero
the way was open to him to pursue a more expansive policy. He had
triumphed, the Senate was on his side, and his opponents had been
weakened. And he presumably felt an even greater urge to exploit the
situation, as Caesar, through his unexpectedly great successes, had made
substantial headway in terms of achievement, power and popularity. In
Pompey's eyes Caesar had been essentially the `young man' -
extraordinarily able, it is true - and this was what he should remain for a
long time. But if he seemed to be gaining ground, Pompey should at least
improve his own position. He was the first man. This should be clear and
made increasingly clearer.
A great legal war ensued, against Clodius' helpers on the one hand and
against Pompey's supporters on the other. The Pompeians were generally
successful in defending themselves and to some extent in prosecuting
their opponents. This had much to do with the important role of the
knights in the jury courts and the fact that memories of the struggle for
Cicero's return were still fresh. Nevertheless, Clodius' most important
helper was acquitted, supposedly because of displeasure with Pompey.
For all his suc cesses, Pompey's situation generally worsened in the early
months of 56.
Early in 56 he had again sought a command, the purpose of which was
to restore the king of Egypt to his throne after he had been driven out by
his subjects. Pompey wished to take on this task, thereby extending his
eastern clientele and increasing his revenues. A broad opposition
emerged. The matter dragged on. The opposition prevailed in the Senate.
Once again the majority sided with Pompey's opponents.
Earlier, in December 57, he had tried to advance his cause in the Senate
by having one of Caesar's laws brought up for debate by a tribune of the
people. This was the Lex Campana, under which the Campanian lands
were to be broken up. So far only part of them had been settled. This was
not to be reversed. But the rest were clearly to be exempt. The Senate had
always been anxious to keep these lands in public ownership. Pompey
therefore decided to play along. He would not have turned directly
against Caesar or disputed the legitimacy of his laws, but he would have
removed certain sources of grievance and cautiously distanced himself
from his ally. The tribune's speech contained certain barbs directed
against Caesar. Possibly the lands still unsettled had been earmarked for
his soldiers.
Pompey was not present when the matter came before the Senate. The
senators silently took note of this. They were unwilling to consider such a
vague offer. In a highly charged session at the beginning of April, Cicero
proposed that the Campanian lands should be debated on 15 May. In view
of the importance of the matter he urged that as many senators as
possible should attend. Everything points to Cicero's being able to count
on Pompey's approval. Naturally he was acting in his own interest, as he
was keen to effect a reconciliation between Pompey and the Senate
majority. But for this it was either too late or too early.
It was about this time that Pompey lost the support of the majority.
There were various reasons for this, the main one being the inconsistency
of his policy: he not only sought to distance himself from Caesar and
reach an accommodation with the Senate, but at the same time he wished
to consolidate his special position, which meant making himself
increasingly independent of the Senate's authority. He might have
achieved something by the former means, only to undo it by the latter.
This was the problem that bedevilled his whole career. The aim of
winning a special position was incompatible with that of gaining respect
and influence in the Senate and the good society of Rome. He may have
believed that they were no longer so far apart because the senators
recognized that they needed him. But their distrust, fear and disapproval
were too strong. Nor was it at all evident that Pompey could help in
solving the major internal problems. Against the anarchy on the streets,
for instance, he was not only incapable of doing anything, but actually
made matters worse. He had lost most of his former popularity with the
masses. And against Clodius he could only use Milo, meeting violence
with violence. This situation was bound to continue unless regular troops
were brought in to restore order. There was no police. No political force
was strong enough to prevent the violence. It was thus left to the
contending parties, the opposing political forces, and these were now so
fierce that no authority could effectively represent the whole. Yet this
could scarcely be appreciated at the time. Indeed, in the spring of 56 it
was still not understood why the violence should be tolerated at all. It
was opposed in abstract terms, as it were, because it conflicted with
orderly government. If any hope was placed in Pompey, it was that he
would use his authority, in concert with the consul and the Senate, to
suppress the violence. The senators were disappointed by his inability to
do so. Why, then, did they need him?
These questions must have exercised the Senate. Crassus and Clodius
collaborated closely with those who advocated a decisive Senate policy.
One of the consuls of 56, Gnaeus Lentulus Marcel linus, pursued a clear
and energetic line, less extreme than that of the former leading circles,
but clearly designed to bring the Senate back to the centre of politics.
Given the rivalries between the men who held power, it was possible to
hope for a restoration of senatorial leadership. It was a well-tried axiom
that the authority of the Senate depended on its decisiveness and unity.
And this was not wrong, at least so long as the power of others did not
call the supremacy of the house into question; and this no longer seemed
to be the case.
Even before the elections the two Gallic provinces would be available
for allocation to the consuls for 55. No intercession was possible against
the Senate's decision regarding the provinces. It was thus in the Senate's
power to relieve Caesar of his command in 54. This was precisely what
the senators wanted. If Pompey brought up the Lex Campana for debate
they could agree to discuss it and so widen the gap between him and his
father-in-law. He may even have welcomed the prospect of putting an end
to Caesar's successful campaigns.
During these months, however, Caesar had not only observed Rome's
internal politics, but taken a hand in them. The news from Rome must
have alarmed him: he could see his achievements threatened and his
plans put in jeopardy, while he was several days' journey away, able to act
only at a distance. Yet he knew how to make himself felt: he kept abreast
of affairs, writing letters, receiving messengers and important guests
(Clodius' brother Appius, for instance), planning, issuing instructions,
commenting, advising, bribing and demanding. He insinuated and
intrigued. It may be presumed that he secretly incited Clodius and
Crassus to make life difficult for Pompey, perhaps also to reassure the
senators regarding their future collaboration. He may even have had the
proposals in his favour introduced in order that they would fail. At all
events he wanted to make Pompey susceptible to a new agreement.
The triumvirate was thus renewed. It cut deep into Roman politics. A
new tier of rule was established: the three were superior to all the others
because they had long-term commands and large armies, and two of them
were bent on waging wars that could only enhance their power and
prestige. The break-up of the homogeneity of the Roman nobility had
gone a step further. And for Pompey the old distinction between a
provincial command and a position of power in Rome was removed. The
provinces were encroaching upon Rome - and becoming more important.
They agreed that each must involve his friends and allies in their joint
policy. Clodius must make up his quarrel with Pompey. Cicero must keep
his hands off the Lex Campana and openly commit himself to the
triumvirate.
Immediately after these negotiations Caesar set off for Gaul, where an
uprising had taken place. It had started among the Veneti, a prosperous
tribe in southern Brittany that conducted trade between Britain and the
continent and maintained a large fleet. The Veneti, who lived in relatively
well protected towns, had captured some Roman officers sent to
requisition grain and wished to exchange them for the hostages they had
been forced to give the Romans. They were joined by many other tribes
in northern Gaul (up to the Rhine delta) and by auxiliary troops from
Britain.
Caesar sent orders from Italy that ships were to be built on the Loire
and rowers and steersmen hired. `As soon as the season allowed,' writes
the dutiful proconsul, he went to take charge of operations. One should
remember that the meeting at Luca, according to our calendar, took place
not in mid-April, but in the middle or towards the end of March.
The battle took place under the eyes of Caesar and his army. From the
cliffs they were able to observe precisely what went on. Caesar attaches
importance to the fact that this spurred on the soldiers in the ships to
display the highest courage.
When the Veneti surrendered, Caesar determined `to punish them with
the utmost severity, in order to make sure that in future the barbarians
would be more scrupulous about respecting the rights of deputies. He
therefore had the whole of their senate executed and sold the rest of the
men as slaves.'
In the same year Caesar's legate Crassus forced most of the Aquitanian
tribes to submit to Rome. Owing to the onset of winter Caesar had to
postpone a campaign against the Morini and the Menapii on the North
Sea coast.
The elections were due to be held in July, but were postponed because
of objections. Pompey and Crassus dared not declare their candidacy in
the regular way. This is hard to understand, given their large clienteles
and the respect they probably still commanded in spite of everything. A
powerful current of opinion must have arisen against them throughout the
citizenry. For once it seemed likely that the elections would be highly
politicized. The question was whether Rome was prepared to yield to the
claims to power made by Caesar and his two allies, claims that were
gradually coming to be felt intolerable. Cato missed no opportunity of
declaring that the liberty of the commonwealth was at stake, and many
believed him. When the elections had once more been deferred because
of objections, the consul Marcellinus asked Pompey and Crassus whether
they wished to become consuls. Pompey answered: Perhaps yes, perhaps
no. When pressed he was prepared to say that for the sake of the honest
citizens he certainly did not wish to be consul, but for the sake of those
who disturbed the public order he very much wanted to be. Crassus
declared, equivocally yet unequivocally, that he would do what was best
for the commonwealth. Both probably wanted to be called upon as
saviours of the republic. As the deadline for the announcement of
candidacies had passed, the consul refused to consider them. This meant
that the elections were further deferred.
Soon after the election, work went ahead to put through the agreed
programme. The consuls were entitled to levy as many troops as they
deemed necessary in their provinces. When the law came up for debate,
its opponents were given only a limited time to speak; when Cato went
beyond the limit an official pulled him down from the platform; when he
went on speaking from the floor he was removed from the forum. He
returned, however, and began speaking again; he went on speaking even
as he was being arrested. The vote was deferred. The following day the
forum was occupied. Cato and his friends found their path blocked. Some
pushed their way forwards; Cato and a tribune were lifted on to the
shoulders of friends and protested loudly, whereupon fresh fighting broke
out, in which four men were killed and many injured. One tribune of the
people, to avoid being barred from the forum, had spent the night in the
Senate, where he was locked in and later violently handled. After the
voting a friend brought him out covered with blood and showed him to
the bystanders. Crassus personally punched one of the senators in the
face.
Not only was Caesar's command extended, but it was agreed that the
Senate should not discuss his provinces until i March So. This meant that
the first consuls on whom they could be conferred were those elected for
49. Before this was resolved, Cato had gone to Pompey and begged him
to consider that he was saddling himself with Caesar. He might not
realize this yet, but when Caesar really began to exert pressure they
would both fall upon the city, since he would be unable either to throw
him off or to bear his weight. It was an impressive image: two men of
gigantic stature towering over the city. But it was to no avail: Pompey
was too convinced of his superiority.
Caesar thus gained time and could set about his plans for expansion and
conquest in earnest. First, however, he had to repel a surprise attack. Two
Germanic tribes, the Usipetes and the Tencteri, had crossed the Rhine
near the sea. Caesar tells how they had been exposed to pressure from the
powerful Suebi and reached the Rhine only after aimless wanderings. In
view of the `fickleness' of the Gauls, he feared that this incursion might
lead to a major war. Some tribes, he writes, had summoned the Germans
to help them. He therefore set out with his army earlier than usual,
summoned the Gallic leaders to a meeting, informed them of his decision
to make war and ordered them to provide horsemen.
When the Germans sent deputies to treat with Caesar, he demanded that
they should settle beyond the Rhine in the territory of the Ubii. He also
granted them a truce. Meanwhile, if Caesar is to be believed, the German
cavalry attacked the Roman. Although the Romans - or rather their Gallic
allies who supplied the cavalry - were far superior to the Germans, they
were defeated. Believing that a trap had been set for him, Caesar no
longer felt bound by his earlier promises. He wanted to defeat the
Germans as quickly as possible, as the bulk of their cavalry was absent,
searching for corn supplies. Next day a much larger deputation appeared,
including all the leaders and elders of the Germans. They wished to
justify themselves for the cavalry attack. And it is unlikely that they
would all have come together had they not been serious about this.
Caesar, however, asserts that this `proved their already notorious
treachery and duplicity'. He `was glad to have them in his power and
ordered that they should be detained'. This was a blatant breach of the
rights of deputies, to which Caesar had attached such importance in the
case of the Veneti. He quickly ordered an attack on the leaderless
Germans. They could scarcely defend themselves and took flight with
their women and children. Having reached the confluence of the Meuse
and the Rhine they could go no further. Some were massacred on the
riverbank; the rest threw themselves in the river and perished. Two whole
tribes were wiped out. Only the cavalry survived, together with the
deputies, whom Caesar now contemptuously released without maltreating
them.
This attack on the Germans may be explained by his anger at the fresh
German invasion of territory he had recently conquered, by his
annoyance at discovering that his rule was still insecure in the area, or by
his determination to put his new plans for conquest into action with all
speed. Yet it also indicates that Caesar was waging war with increasing
impatience, severity and cruelty. His uncompromising will caused him to
act resolutely, but clearly did not bring him the speedy victory he desired.
It enabled him to conquer, but not to secure his conquests, at least not
politically. He might thus on occasion resort to brutality. It was not to
become the rule, but it might have been indicative of Caesar's situation.
May he not have been impelled by the impatience that from time to
time assails someone who has put immense effort into attaining a certain
goal, thinks he has succeeded, and then presses on with increasing haste,
refusing to be held back for fear of losing direction, becoming less and
less able to wait and let things take their course, and seeking to force
events? If so, such impatience would explain the enormity of Caesar's
conduct. Although it would not make it less heinous, it would make it
possible to construe it differently - as deriving less from an urge to
destroy than from a quickening of Caesar's inner tempo, which broke
through the inhibitions that should have restrained him.
Having defeated the two tribes, Caesar decided to cross the Rhine. He
states that he wanted to demonstrate Rome's power to the Germans on
their own territory, so that they would no longer be tempted to cross into
Gaul. Moreover he could as usual claim to have been called upon for aid:
the Ubii, who had become friends of Rome, needed help against the
Suebi. Finally, he felt obliged to punish the Sugambri for having given
refuge to the horsemen of the Usipetes and Tencteri and refused to hand
them over. He may have found it insolent that they should turn his
arguments against him. He had maintained that the Rhine was the
boundary of Roman rule; if he, they said, thought it wrong for the
Germans to cross into Gaul, why did he claim any imperial power beyond
the Rhine?
The Ubii offered to ferry the Roman army across the Rhine. Caesar,
however, thought this unsafe; above all, he considered it beneath the
dignity of the Roman people. What would it look like if divisions of the
Roman army were to cross the Rhine in German fishing boats? He was
well aware that the breadth and depth of the river, to say nothing of its
powerful currents, posed the greatest difficulties. Either they would
succeed in building a bridge or it would be better not to cross at all.
After ten days' work the bridge was completed; Caesar does not say
how long the planning and the preparation of the tools had taken. Nor do
we know the precise location.
Since the Sugambri had withdrawn into the depths of their forests, the
Romans could only set fire to their villages and cut down the corn-crop.
Caesar granted peace and friendship to some German tribes, at their
request, in exchange for hostages. Learning that the Suebi were also
hiding in the woods, `he judged that he had accomplished all the objects
for which he had determined to lead the army across the Rhine - to strike
terror into the Germans, to take vengeance on the Sugambri, to deliver
the Ubii from a state of blockade.' Enough had been done to satisfy both
honour and expediency. After eighteen days he returned and destroyed the
bridge behind him.
From the Rhine he led his troops straight to the channel coast. For
despite the lateness of the season he planned an expedition to Britain, for
which preparations had obviously already been made. Again he states that
he was concerned about the security of Gaul, because during recent years
the Gauls had repeatedly used British auxiliaries against him in the field.
Other reports, however, reveal that he suspected great riches on the
unknown island. It was a source of tin, and it was reported that gold,
silver and iron occurred there too. There were also said to be unusually
large pearls. The island might also supply slaves and other goods. In the
first place he wanted to investigate the situation, for no one could
properly inform him about the land and its people. Obviously his
expedition was intended as a prelude to a later and more extensive
campaign. For he can hardly have been content simply to penetrate into
unknown regions, although that too was important; for in this he was
emulating Pompey.
The Britons sued for peace. Caesar reproached them, though it is hard
to see for what. True, he had reported that some British tribes had
submitted to him, but not that all had done so or that those who had were
among the men who had just fought against him. All the same he
pardoned them. They were to bring hostages, but this took some time.
Then the Roman fleet was partly destroyed and partly damaged by a
storm tide. The soldiers were afraid of being cut off from their supplies.
It was probably then that the unrest in the Roman army, reported in
another source, took place. The Britons decided to resume the fight,
calculating that if they now defeated the Romans they would have no
more trouble from them for a long time.
Caesar had already guessed what was afoot. He was prepared for
everything and took the necessary measures to meet the enemy. He had
the fleet restored, taking whatever material he needed from the damaged
ships; the rest was quickly brought across the channel. After he had won
two victories and set fire to all the farms far and wide, the Britons again
sued for peace. Caesar was glad to be able to break off the campaign. He
doubled the number of hostages, ordered them to be sent to the continent,
and then withdrew to Gaul with his army.
Apart from the fame of having landed with armed force on an island of
which little was known and whose very existence had been disputed, he
had nothing to show. Only two British tribes sent the promised hostages;
the others sent none.
When the Senate discussed Caesar's report in autumn 55, there was for
the first time, as far as we know, severe criticism of his way of waging
war. Cato declared that sacrifices must be offered to the gods, lest they
should punish the soldiers for the crimes perpetrated by their leader
against good faith and honesty and so that the citizens might be spared.
He proposed handing Caesar over to the Germans whom he had so
disgracefully ill-used. This was an old remedy - handing over a general
so that Rome would not be visited by divine punishment for breaking a
treaty. It had last been applied in 135, when a consul had concluded a
treaty with Spanish tribes and the Senate refused to ratify it; he was
handed over to the victims of the deceit as the one who had broken the
treaty.
At about this time, in the late autumn of SS, Crassus set out for his
province. It was no secret that he wished to take the field against the
Parthians. Caesar had written and encouraged him to do so. A tribune of
the people, however, observed unpropitious omens and forbade him to
leave for his province. No war might be started without cause. When
Crassus ignored the intercession, the tribune tried to have him arrested;
this was prevented only by the intervention of some of his colleagues.
The tribune ran out to the city gate and set up a basin of glowing coals; as
Crassus passed by he burnt incense, offered a libation, and called down
fearful curses on the consul. Yet another demonstration - very impressive
but apparently ineffectual. But, in this case the gods were not invoked in
vain.
Apart from a few minor reforms to the legal system and moves to
restrict electoral malpractice, the consulate of Pompey and Crassus was
distinguished only by a great festival. Pompey opened the theatre that he
had built on the Campus Martius with the proceeds of the spoils from his
eastern war. The complex was not quite finished, but he wanted to
inaugurate his consulate with the most magnificent games in living
memory.
`The Roman people hates private luxury, but loves public liberality,'
Cicero tells us. Roman grandees therefore built no palaces - though they
did build themselves fine country villas. On the other hand they set up
temples or halls, unless they were content to be remembered by their
countrymen for great displays or games. But none had conceived
anything so grand and splendid as Pompey's theatre. After all, he had to
demonstrate his outstanding stature. He had to surpass everything that
had gone before, and this was not easy.
It was not easy to compete with Sulla's stepson, one of those who had
inherited the profits of the civil war. When the young Gains Scribonius
Curio later staged great funeral games in honour of his father, he devised
something even more startling, though less costly: two wide theatres, also
of wood, that could be made to revolve. They were pivoted on a strong
post and must have been mounted on rollers. The whole structure was
probably hauled round by mules or horses.
For performances the stages faced away from each other in the
morning; the theatres were then turned through a hundred and eighty
degrees, probably pushed. They then formed an amphitheatre for
gladiatorial games. The elder Pliny, to whom we owe this information,
wondered which was the more to be marvelled at - the inventor or the
invention, the engineer or his client; that someone was so bold as to think
up such a thing, so bold as to undertake it, or so bold as to commission it.
But what was most terrifying, he said, was the idea that the spectators
dared to take their seats in such a precarious structure. Here, in fact, the
people themselves were risking their lives - as the gladiators usually did.
The people who had conquered the world hovered on an artificial
structure and applauded its own peril. Did people at the time perceive its
deeper significance? Everyone gathered there. It must have caused great
excitement in Rome and dominated the talk of the town, the curiosity of
the citizens, and popular memory for a long time. When the pivots were
turned on the last day there was a fresh diversion: it was left as an
amphitheatre. The two stages were separated and athletic contests took
place, then suddenly the walls were drawn up and the victors of the
gladiatorial games met in combat.
The building was about three hundred and forty metres long and up to a
hundred and seventy metres wide, the inner courtyard measuring more
than seventeen thousand square metres. The theatre could hold over ten
thousand persons. At that time there were hardly any buildings on the
Campus Martius. Pompey's great building thus towered up out of the
plain, almost as though competing with the Capitol: he was leaving an
unmistakable mark on the city. (Today only the foundations survive, but
the buildings in the Via di Grotta Pinta partly follow the former outline of
the auditorium.)
The masses marvelled, but in this case they were not amused, for the
great beasts aroused their compassion. The trumpeting of some of the
wounded elephants was so heart-rending that the horrified spectators
pleaded for them not to be killed. This, we are told, displeased Pompey.
Cicero remarks that there was something human about the elephants. He
asks, `How can a civilized person take delight in seeing a frail human
being torn to pieces by a powerful beast or a magnificent animal run
through with a spear?' This was probably an uncommon reaction. For
most of the spectators it must have been a horrifyingly splendid
spectacle, well suited to a people that ruled the world, and all the more to
be relished, the less this people could actually achieve. Here it might
fancy itself powerful. What Goethe said about the amphitheatre is
precisely apposite: it was `properly designed to impress the people with
the image they had of themselves, to hoodwink them'. Pompey also
displayed one of nature's wonders - the first rhinoceros ever seen in
Rome.
For all this Gaul had to bleed. That the rivalry between the great men of
Rome required such sacrifices was probably of little concern to Caesar.
He simply had to win in the building stakes. Suetonius reports that he
often destroyed towns more for the booty they could yield than for any
offence they were guilty of. All the offerings that had accumulated over
the centuries in the shrines of Gaul he turned into money, to be thrown
into the Roman power struggle. This was in addition to the normal booty,
including the sale of slaves. In this way alone so much gold flowed into
Rome that its price fell by twenty-five per cent.
Public building in Rome had long been bound up with politics, though
normally it involved political contention between nobles, who were
concerned more to outdo their rivals than to win popular support. Interest
now concentrated on the rivalry between Pompey and Caesar and on the
fact that both of them flaunted their superiority to the Senate. They set
out to demonstrate it to all and thereby give permanence to the new
power relations.
To distinguish in this way between the `no longer' and the `not yet' is of
course a matter of historical judgement - in both senses of the word
`historical': in the first place, we can see things more clearly than those
who lived at the time because we know what happened subsequently; in
the second, we operate with different categories because we have learnt
to think historically. Within a historical perspective every state of affairs
is transitional, and doubly so in the critical phases of a system. Even if
one is mistaken in the individual case, there is today a great readiness to
distinguish between the `no longer' and the `not yet'. This was hardly
possible in ancient times, and certainly not in the Roman republic. The
traditional was regarded as enduringly normal and right, even though at
the moment it appeared, for some incomprehensible reason, to be weak
and ineffectual. When Cicero complains that res publica amissa est, this
does not mean that the republic is lost in the sense that it has perished,
but in the sense that something that was present is momentarily absent.
The republic could be rediscovered, so to speak, and restored to its
former strength. In periods of despair - about 55 - he feared that nothing
could be done in his lifetime about the superiority of Pompey and his
allies. And he was then fifty-one. It never occurred to him that the old
republic could never arise again.
Yet this was exactly what Cato and his allies were anxious to prevent.
On their side were many others who were more or less resigned, ready to
make concessions, but unwilling to acknowledge Pompey's superior
power as legitimate. Even Cicero, who had allied himself with Pompey,
found nothing to say in his favour except that he was powerful and that
any resistance to him would prevent the return of peace. And however
much large sections of `good society' were troubled by the growing
anarchy, corruption and violence, this was an argument against Pompey
and his allies, not in their favour.
The power that this man enjoyed - despite his inability to achieve
anything in positive terms - is one of the strangest phenomena in the
whole of history. He exercised his power much as Pompey and Caesar
exercised theirs, chiefly as an individual, though he had a few notable
allies. Yet he lacked the means of coercion that Pompey and Caesar
possessed. His only strength was the general conviction that legitimacy
lay only with what he deemed legitimate. Traditional authority, the
responsibility of the Senate, still had such a strong hold on men's minds
that no one could effectively contradict the one person who represented it
so courageously, resolutely and censoriously. Whatever the senators
resolved in defiance of Cato, it did not alter the general feeling - or even
the feeling of the senators themselves - that he was right. Yet this was due
not so much to his personality as to the fact that in a curious way he stood
for the republic. And where legitimacy was at issue, no one could be
against the republic.
In other words, the real problem of the Roman republic was not a
matter for political contention. There could be no question of
legitimating Pompey's special position; what was judged right and proper
in Rome was at no one's disposal. One could only demonstrate for or
against it, and perhaps hope - and try to ensure - that the unsatisfactory
conditions one lived in would soon be at an end.
Pompey had much to do with this. He made sure that political life was
largely blocked by tribunes of the people. The consular elections for 53,
for instance, were obstructed for a whole year until finally, in the middle
of 53, the Senate instructed Pompey to see that they were held. Everyone
did as he pleased, in competition with everyone else. Electoral bribery
was so rife that there was a shortage of money; the interest rate rose from
four to eight per cent. Two of the candidates promised to give the century
that voted first ten millions for their votes. They assured themselves of
the consuls' support by promising them four millions if they failed to
produce prominent witnesses to testify that non-existent resolutions had
been framed for them to be provided with provinces. The courts still
functioned, but acquitted most of the accused. Yet they did send one of
Pompey's most important friends into exile.
June 54 saw the first calls for a dictator to be appointed, and the
`rumour of dictatorship' would not die down. There must have been some
thought of giving Pompey a special commission, such as had once been
given to Sulla, to restore public order.
Cicero too felt that some such authority was needed. In De re publica he
wrote of the responsible statesman who in times of emergency comes to
the aid of the endangered commonwealth as a dictator, or at any rate in an
unconventional manner. He lacked Cato's conviction that the main
priority was to defend the republic against any superior power, to counter
any attack, so to speak, so that it could once more function legitimately.
It may be that Cicero, not having taken up a firm position between Cato
and Pompey, tried to consider the whole of the republic from a detached,
theoretical standpoint. And in his soft, sensitive, nervous way he believed
that intervention was urgently needed in order to put things to rights. But
Cicero could offer only theoretical concepts. And in speaking of the
responsible statesman he was thinking not of Pompey, but of himself. For
to him there was nothing more important than philosophical education,
and his model was Plato.
The crucial difficulty was that the traditional Roman dictatorship, with
its comprehensive powers, had always presupposed that the institutions
of the republic were strong enough and society confident enough to
preclude the abuse of such powers. This was no longer certain. The very
reason that would formerly have made it possible to think of one man as
a saviour of the republic was now a reason for ruling out any one man. If
he had no power he could achieve nothing. If he was powerful he was
distrusted. And Rome was not faced, as it had been in Sulla's day, with
the problem of providing a victor in the civil war with the office he
sought.
Hence the call for a dictatorship only made for bad blood. Pompey
himself - whose `honest face', according to Sallust, concealed his
`shameless intentions' - publicly denied any suggestion that he sought
such a position. But no one believed him. And no one wanted him. He
only lost more credit. The rumor dictatoris was anathema to good society.
With a great armada of more than eight hundred ships, some of them
owned by Roman merchants, Caesar crossed the channel. Throughout the
winter the soldiers in Gaul had collaborated with engineers and workmen
in building a new fleet. Rome's soldiers had to possess such skills. Caesar
had decided on the shape and dimensions of the ships: they were to be
lower, wider and more manoeuvrable. To prevent unrest on the continent,
he took the leading Gauls with him, except for the few on whose loyalty
he thought he could rely. The expeditionary force comprised five legions
and two thousand horse. Three legions and an equal number of horse had
to be left behind to guard the ports, to provide logistic support and to
monitor events in Gaul.
This time the landing went off without difficulty. The sight of eight
hundred ships appearing on the horizon almost simultaneously struck
such terror into the Britons that they withdrew from the shore. When the
armies met, however, the Britons caused the Romans great hardship
through the extreme mobility of their tactics. Their chief weapons were
the battle chariots, which at the beginning thundered across the
battlefield and from which they first shot at the Romans and then
attacked them at various points. The fighters would jump from the
moving chariots, then be taken aboard again when necessary and driven
to another part of the field. The ponderous Roman cohorts were no match
for them. Even the cavalry was confused by the enemy's mobility. In the
following night Caesar seems to have hastily devised a different tactic
and instructed his officers accordingly. At any rate he succeeded in
beating the British by means of greater flexibility and a fierce attack.
From now on the British evaded the Romans; they vanished from the
scene, only to reappear somewhere by surprise and fall upon the Romans
when a favourable opportunity presented itself. Caesar's army reached the
Thames and crossed it. But victory eluded them. There was no booty; a
few tribes surrendered because they were at enmity with Cassivellaunus,
the leader chosen by the majority, but naturally they had to be treated
with special leniency. Much time was lost when a storm seriously
depleted the fleet and Caesar had to reinforce it. Unfavourable winds had
in any case delayed the Romans' departure for Britain. The army lived in
constant fear of being taken unawares and cut off from the continent. It
had been able to fend off one attack on the harbour, but feared a second.
And in the rear was a restless Gaul, which had just suffered a bad harvest.
The commander himself was alarmed by Pompey's plans for a
dictatorship. He therefore took advantage of a recent military success and
a request for peace from Cassivellaunus in order to break off the
campaign. He imposed a tax on the British, as if they were already
inhabitants of a Roman province. They certainly never paid it. On about
20 September the Roman expeditionary force returned to Gaul.
Not only had Caesar lost a campaign and a year of valuable time, but a
heavy blow had been dealt to his certainty of victory and continued
expansion. He may have hoped to reach his goal in the following year,
but he may also have decided to turn his attention first to Germany or
Illyria. He may have been driven on by impatience, a craving for
spectacular successes, and the hope of booty. In fact he had overreached
himself. It is not clear whether he already knew this. If he did not, the
situation in Gaul soon made it clear.
He now received word that Julia, his only daughter, had died in
childbirth. It is clear that he had been very close to her and was deeply
affected by her death. We know hardly anything about her. She was
probably one of the few people in whom he could confide - perhaps the
most important, or indeed the only one. For we hear nothing of Caesar's
having a close friend. True, he had political allies, and above all faithful
followers and supporters. But whatever details we have about these
suggest that they were hardly privy to his concerns and intentions, but
were merely given political instructions. Inwardly Caesar was probably
always isolated, and even more so after the death of his daughter. Who,
after all, was in a position to understand him?
It is reported that Caesar hardly showed his grief. He may have been
inwardly shattered, but this must not appear on the surface. After three
days he resumed his duties as commander. A later author reports that he
conquered his pain as quickly as he was accustomed to doing everything.
Caesar's contemporary Cicero did not share this view. And insofar as it
implies anything more than outward discipline, it is probably just a
cliche.
Pompey wished to bury Julia on one of his estates. But `the people' -
whoever that was - removed her body from the funeral ceremonies and
cremated it on the Campus Martius, where her remains were interred as
befitted a highly deserving citizen. Caesar responded, contrary to
convention, by promising gladiatorial games and a feast for his daughter.
Shortage of grain forced Caesar to find winter quarters for the legions
in different parts of Gaul. He himself intended to repair to northern Italy
as usual. Then the Carnutes murdered the king he had appointed. The
Eburones, under their leader Ambiorix, lured the one-and-a-half legions
stationed on their territory into a trap and wiped out all but a few men.
This was an unprecedented loss for Caesar. On hearing the news, he
resolved not to have his hair or his beard cut until he had taken
vengeance. Then the Eburones, together with the Nervii and the Atuatuci,
stormed the Roman camp in the territory of the Nervii, employing to
perfection the siege technique they had learnt from the Romans. Their
towers, their sheds to protect attacking soldiers, and their siege-works
later earned Caesar's admiration. On launching an assault they sent
burning javelins into the huts in the Roman camp; these then went up in
flames. Meanwhile they attacked. In heat and thick smoke, and under a
hail of missiles, the Romans had to defend themselves against a superior
force. Yet they continued to resist tenaciously until Caesar came to their
aid; he found not even one in ten unwounded.
As a prelude to his campaign Caesar had outwitted the Gauls, who had
observed his approach and advanced with greatly superior forces. He had
restricted the proportions of his camp in order to appear even weaker than
he was. He had ordered the cavalry to yield in the face of the enemy
attack. While fortifying the camp the soldiers had to dash to and fro as
though driven by fear. The Gauls believed they had already won and
ventured forwards into un favourable terrain. Caesar then defeated them
by ordering his men to rush out of all the gates. In this way the enemy
was beaten. For the time being the rebellion collapsed.
But Caesar could not risk leaving Gaul. He wintered near Samarobriva
(now Amiens) with three legions. Here the Romans had large arsenals
with all the heavy military equipment, as well as the hostages, the
archive, and a great store of grain. Throughout the winter he received
disturbing reports. He summoned the leading men of all the tribes and
managed to persuade many to remain loyal to Rome. But some did not
come, and almost all who did were suspicious of Caesar.
Before the winter was over the Treveri rebelled. Their prince,
Indutiomarus, convened an `armed diet'. This meant the opening of
hostilities. Every able-bodied man immediately had to appear armed; the
last to arrive was tortured to death by the others. The Roman commander,
however, whose camp Indutiomarus intended to storm, used the same
tactic as Caesar: he lured the enemy on by simulating fear and was able
to beat them. The prince was captured and killed, and his head brought
proudly into the Roman camp. `Then Caesar had somewhat more peace in
Gaul.'
Because the Germans had sent auxiliary troops to the rebels, Caesar
crossed the Rhine a second time. However, as the Suebi, whom he
intended to attack, had withdrawn to a great distance, he quickly turned
back; this time, however, he destroyed only the first two hundred feet of
his bridge, on the right bank, leaving the rest standing as a permanent
threat. At the end of it he erected a turret four storeys high; he left twelve
cohorts (about six thousand men) behind strong fortifications.
Thus were the fallen avenged. One campaign followed another; the
Gauls were obviously still not sufficiently acquainted with Caesar. Also,
they probably could not gather their forces properly, could not supply
them as well, and were too naive to understand the full subtlety of
Caesar's lightning strikes.
In the autumn Caesar held a diet at which an inquiry was carried out
against the Senones and Carnutes. He condemned the leader of their
rebellion; he was beaten to death and then beheaded. Having sent the
legions to their winter quarters and provided them with supplies, Caesar
returned to Italy. It is not clear whether he was really sure that Gaul
would remain at peace. But at any rate he had to turn his attention to
Rome.
The period of the great successes was over. All that was left to do in Gaul
was to secure what had been won, and this was hard enough. He could
scarcely hope for further conquests. He had only three more years at his
disposal. Meanwhile Crassus had perished after a heavy defeat at Carrhae
in northern Mesopotamia (now Haran, on the Turkish-Syrian border). The
Parthians had responded to his attack by inflicting an annihilating defeat
on his army. The solemn curses uttered as he set out from Rome had been
fulfilled.
Caesar had lost his greatest ally. He had always needed Crassus as a
counterpoise to Pompey. Because relations between the two were tense,
Caesar had power over them both. Had Crassus remained in Rome,
Caesar would have been much better able to frustrate Pompey's plan to
become dictator; even from the east, however, Crassus could have helped
maintain the precarious balance among the three. Now Pompey could
exploit any weakness of Caesar's for his own benefit. And the opportunity
soon presented itself.
At the beginning of 52 the internal political struggles reached a new
pitch. Again no magistrates had been elected. There was not even an
interrex, because friends of Pompey had prevented an appointment. The
election campaigns were this time especially fierce, indeed violent,
because Clodius and Milo were candidates, one for the praetorship, the
other for the consulship; both made use of their gangs of thugs. Milo's
opponents had also taken on mercenary troops.
It was a beacon fire. The Senate served as a funeral pyre for the popular
leader. The populace indulged in a symbolic orgy of destruction,
demonstrating at once its power and its impotence. In this long moment
of intoxication, made all the more overwhelming as the fire spread to the
adjacent Basilica Porcia, it savoured its dominion, which could only be
negative.
Because the Senate had been unable to quell the previous disorder, it
went up in flames when the violence culminated in the murder of the
popular gang-leader. The house from which Rome and the whole world
had been ruled was on fire. Rome had been living amid the tension of
force and counterforce. Now that the tensions were largely relaxed, the
violence was unleashed, and it was virtually inevitable that it should
concentrate on the old centre and destroy it.
At the same time the murder of Clodius and the burning of the Senate
brought about an abrupt change in Roman politics. There could no longer
be any doubt but that the Senate must have recourse to the power and
ability of Pompey in order to restore order. This, however, led to a
marked strengthening of the Senate regime.
The form in which this was to be effected was agreed chiefly with Cato
and his friends. In view of the clash of interests it was decided that
Pompey should be elected sole consul. He was thus accorded exceptional
scope for action - and a great honour - but it fell short of dictatorial
authority. Cato could not bring himself to propose this, but Bibulus did,
whereupon Cato declared that as it had been proposed he would assent to
it. At last, almost exactly two months after the murder of Clodius, the
way was clear for Pompey's election.
He had attained his goal. His special status was at last acknowledged by
the Senate majority. He was resolved to do all in his power to restore
order and the rule of law, and to act wherever possible with the
concurrence of the Senate. He thanked Cato and decided to make him his
adviser. At the same time the senators naturally hoped that they could
eventually draw Pompey so far over to their side as to be able to count on
him to oppose Caesar. They would then have to see whether they still
needed him.
The Senate had already decided to entrust the rebuilding of the Curia to
Sulla's son Faustus. It was to be called the Curia Cornelia, after Cornelius
Sulla. This symbolized the hopes and pretensions of the house: in
opposition to Clodius' supporters, the senators wished to renew its link
with the victor in the civil war who had reestablished a solid senatorial
regime. Faustus happened to be married to Pompey's daughter. The
session at which the decision was made took place in Pompey's theatre.
Beforehand, however, the room in which it was to be held had to be
consecrated in a religious ceremony, for the validity of the Senate's
decisions depended on the proper venue. The Senate thus yielded to
Pompey by meeting in his curia. And he was glad to join it in renewing
the link with Sulla. This was a new start.
Caesar's position was extremely difficult, if not desperate. For six years
he had devoted immense effort to the waging of war. All the time he had
had to keep his eye on Rome's internal politics and try to influence them.
He had long since conquered Gaul and initiated further conquests. In
Rome he had won significant influence in the face of great difficulties.
Now everything he had built up seemed to be collapsing. While he
endeavoured to salvage what he could in Rome, a new rebellion had
broken out in the whole of Gaul, this time on a large scale.
Since the end of 54 his army had incessantly trekked back and forth. It
is true that wherever Caesar went he was still able to beat his opponents.
But this was often due solely to the extraordinary speed with which he
could mount a surprise attack or to the extreme concentration he brought
to the task of outwitting an opponent far superior in numbers, a task in
which he relied on his intelligence and the bravery and discipline of his
soldiers. He now had the initiative only to a limited extent.
Above all there was no knowing how the struggle would end. Although
Caesar was able to set some warning examples, he had to keep within
bounds, lest he provoked a general revolt. Time and again he was obliged
to show clemency to rebels who surrendered to him, though it was often
quite patent that this amounted to no more than a pause in the fighting.
Cicero called him `terribly active, swift and prudent'. The Greek
historian Cassius Dio found him ingenious in discerning what was
necessary, interpreting it convincingly, and addressing it with the utmost
skill. In his own writings Caesar perhaps somewhat exaggerated this
faculty, but to a large extent he must have been able to foresee the host of
possibilities inherent in any situation and to arm himself against them.
He was well acquainted with the power of chance and sufficiently
imaginative to envisage whatever might happen at any time. He planned
everything very precisely. It was one of his maxims that not the slightest
scope should be allowed to chance. It was a common human failing, he
observed, that the surprising inspires in us greater trust - or greater alarm
- than the known. He tried to avoid this failing in himself and to exploit it
in others. The intelligence that he brought to the waging of war made him
far superior to the Gauls, who had great courage, but lacked cunning and
were not sufficiently detached from events to appreciate the multitude of
possibilities and so avoid being taken in by the first impression that
Caesar conveyed to them.
At the same time he must have possessed the courage, fine judgement,
resolution, and coolness that Clausewitz identified as the distinctive
qualities of the `martial genius' - the ability to `hit at once upon a truth
that is invisible to the normal mind or becomes visible only after long
consideration and reflection'; the resolution that can become `a habit of
mind'; courage not only `in the face of physical danger, . . . but in the face
of responsibility, thus, to some extent, in the face of spiritual danger';
presence of mind, fortitude, force of temperament and, not least,
precision in the use of subordinates. In Caesar these qualities were
compounded by his inventiveness in devising and exploring new
techniques. Finally, he was so observant, so versatile, so quick to learn,
that he constantly reviewed the course of events and made fundamental
changes in his strategy and tactics. This is attested more than once. He
seems to have raised Roman military technique, tactics and strategy to a
new plane. And he was obviously able to translate knowledge into
practice. For `the mental reaction, the ever-changing shape of things
causes . . . the active man to carry the whole mental apparatus of his
knowledge within himself, so that everywhere, at every pulse-beat, he can
produce the necessary decision from within himself. Knowledge must
therefore be translated into true ability by being perfectly assimilated
into his own mind and life' (Clausewitz).
The course of the war suggests that even when Caesar was dealing with
single tribes he had to secure his operations on all sides and keep an eye
on large parts of Gaul. There is no doubt that in his military planning he
showed himself an outstanding general, able to make extensive military
dispositions and deploy vast resources. This is confirmed in every case
for which we have fairly precise information - in his large-scale
operations against Ambiorix in 53 or the comprehensive strategy he later
employed during the rebellion of Vercingetorix. A vital role was played
by his famous `celerity', the surprise attack, the blitzkrieg, which enabled
him to attain his objectives throughout a wide theatre of operations.
Warfare of this kind must in the long run have posed unusual
difficulties. Owing to the Gauls' love of liberty, Caesar had to reckon with
facing brave and dangerous enemies in many places at once. It was often
impossible to beat them - if they broke off the fighting early and sued for
peace - for Caesar was usually in no position to refuse them peace terms.
Yet there was no guarantee that they would not strike again at the first
opportunity. True, he always took hostages. It is curious that he never
says what he did with them. Often enough he would have had reason to
execute them. On occasion he may even have done so, but if he did it
brought him little benefit.
Such difficulties made Caesar's war different from those of, say,
Alexander or Pompey, in which a king was usually the focus of
resistance; when he had been roundly beaten, his kingdom could be
subjugated. It differed also from many other wars fought by the Romans,
in which one power was pitted against another. Caesar had to contend
with numerous powers, a turbulent country and, it must be repeated,
valiant opponents. Given such circumstances, the way in which Caesar
conquered Gaul - with superiority, boldness, swiftness, energy and
perseverance - makes him one of the great commanders of all time. It
was not for nothing that he earned the boundless admiration of Frederick
the Great, Napoleon and many others.
Since Caesar lived with his army, at least throughout the summer, he
knew not only the senior officers, but the subalterns and
noncommissioned officers too. He was continually on the move
inspecting his troops. Despite his far from robust constitution, he shared
in all their dangers, exertions and privations. He is even said to have tried
to overcome his indifferent health by long marches, frugal rations, and
exposure to the elements, and by making harsh demands on his physique.
He marched at the head of his army in the blistering heat, and during the
fighting he would, if necessary, take up a position in the front ranks; if his
soldiers fell back he would bring them to a halt by stopping them
individually and turning them back to face the enemy. For himself he
claimed no privileges, but only higher obligations, and of course superior
insight. Yet the soldiers were allowed to share this insight. He did not
simply give them orders; he also knew how to convince them. He
informed himself about the situation and, if he deemed it important, told
the men of his reflections. For all the assurance with which he conducted
himself and issued his commands, he treated them as comrades. They felt
that he knew them and that they could rely on him.
Caesar's leadership radiated strength and confidence. The men knew that
he would expect nothing unnecessary of them. By his own example, by
the compelling and convincing manner in which he demanded the highest
achievements, he seems to have inspired them to do everything to prove
their worth to him. Caesar reports how one of his legates encouraged his
men: `Show the same bravery under our leadership as you have so often
shown your commander. Imagine that he is here, watching us all.' And in
an emergency, when things became difficult, Caesar's confidence was
sufficiently strong to restore morale. His `vigour and wonderful
cheerfulness' communicated themselves to the soldiers. They too must
have believed in Caesar's fortune.
`These legions', he is reported to have said, `can tear down the sky.' At
the time he was in southern Spain, `where the pillars of Hercules marked
the end of the world and where the way to the sky, which rested on the
shoulders of Atlas, was not far off' (Sattler).
In this extraordinarily active life, the demonic force that supposedly lay
behind Caesar's serenity could be directed outwards. It has been surmised
that while campaigning he became so used to giving orders that he could
no longer carry conviction in Rome. However, it was not as simple as
that: he became accustomed to a world that allowed him - indeed obliged
him - to develop his potential without constraint. Apart from giving
orders, he had to plan, acquaint himself with foreign conditions, make
dispositions, provide for his soldiers, cultivate alliances, react to new
situations, and attend to much else besides.
In all these activities Caesar could operate on a grand scale and was
free to determine and dictate what happened - without being inhibited,
without having to immerse himself in dreary, time-consuming
negotiations or seek others' approval for his actions.
Yet this was all part of his task, and it must have fascinated him.
Relations with the soldiers were uncomplicated, and those with his
subordinates must on the whole have gone according to his wishes.
Negotiating with the Gauls gave him the chance to exercise his
diplomatic skills. Even if these and other activities were means to an end
- the conquest and securing of Gaul and, indirectly, the advancement of
Caesar's inordinately ambitious career - they also accorded with the ideal
of the highly active life he had chosen: he controlled everything that
happened, at least on the Roman side. He set the rhythm and tempo, in
spite of many extraneous demands and periodic initiatives launched by
the enemy. On the whole the relation between means and ends must have
been such that, while the means might sometimes impose heavy burdens,
these were not so heavy as to jeopardize the ends. Caesar was not
invariably successful, but his plans were seldom totally frustrated; and
when they were he quickly saw the need for a fresh approach. He
probably never tired of the effort. He was after all confronted with all the
gravity of a major war and intent upon subjugating a country far larger
than had been conquered by any previous Roman general. He had ample
scope to prove himself - or to fail. It all depended on him. It was an
immense challenge.
The strength to meet it may have derived partly from the pleasure and
pride he took in his many achievements, but it was also a function of the
challenge itself. Caesar's activity during these years was at any rate
motivated not solely from within, but also by external circumstances, to
which his inner energies responded and with which they interlocked.
A man who could achieve so much stood head and shoulders above all
the others. Only Pompey approached him in stature. We may presume
that his endeavours really were inspired, as he would have us believe, by
a consciousness of serving his native city. He saw himself as Rome's
representative, always jealous of her honour. Rome had to appreciate this.
In view of his notable conquests and his involvement in internal
politics, the magnitude of Caesar's accomplishments far exceeded
anything expected of even the most outstanding and responsible Roman
generals and governors. He led his life at an exceptional level of intensity
because he had to accomplish much more than anyone else if he was to
win recognition in Rome, and because he was fighting a war that he had
started deliberately. After all, he saw his strenuous expansionist activity
as proof his own worth. The exceptionally high standards of achievement
that he had set himself not only contrasted with the general ineffectuality
prevalent in Rome, but were the basis of the claim to distinction with
which he confronted his peers.
It was thus not only his role as commander, but the challenge to his
whole personality, that Caesar enjoyed in the fresh air of Gaul. Here he
could breathe freely and develop his potential to the full; here his life
took on a higher meaning. He now had the chance for achievement that he
had craved.
At this time he is reported to have said more than once that it would be
harder to demote him, the first citizen, from first to second place than
from the second to the last: in other words, he was now so intent upon
occupying the first place that, were he to lose it, everything would at once
cease to be important to him.
The aura of habitual success that formed around Caesar shielded him
from the questions, doubts and presumptions of his peers, from their
claims and expectations. He could no longer orient himself to anything
but the bald ethic of achievement to which he was dedicated. This was the
source of his greatness and his limitations.
Caesar had never been properly understood in Rome. Things now became
worse. At the beginning of the civil war Cicero called him a teras, a
wonderful, frightening, monstrous and inscrutable phenomenon of a
higher order - so alien had he become to his peers. Yet it was in such
alienation that he had found his freedom.
Keen observers now feared - not for the first time - that Caesar's aim
was tyranny. `Of course,' Cicero is said to have commented, `when I see
the meticulous care with which he tends his hair and the way he uses only
one finger to scratch himself, it again seems to me impossible that this
man could contemplate such a crime as the destruction of the Roman
republic.' It is not known when Cicero said this, but it may have been
about this time; Cicero had just seen Caesar at Ravenna.
However, quite apart from the public image he presented, we must have
serious reservations about the suspicions entertained by his opponents.
The fact that he acted highhandedly and with extreme effectiveness in
Gaul did not necessarily mean that he sought autocracy in Rome.
In Rome tyranny was a frequent reproach, but never a role. Whether the
leading senators, the chief men in the republic, ever understood Caesar's
situation is no clearer than whether Caesar knew - or cared - why they
found him so alien. Presumably what they thought they knew of him and
what he thought he knew of them was enough to account for their mutual
animosity. His gaiety, charm and urbanity seemed to betoken a
superiority that made them all the more distrustful. It may be that their
apprehensions were no less to blame for pushing him to the margin of the
republic than his behaviour was for arousing such apprehensions. Here
one could cite Thomas Mann's remark about Frederick the Great: `In any
case, perhaps his intentions were honest - and he merely deluded himself
about how dangerous he was? The man who was a mystery to all -
perhaps he was also a mystery to himself?'
The revolt in Gaul, in which the tribes for the first time acted in
concert, had soon taken hold of half the country. It began among the
Carnutes, who had killed all the Roman citizens in the town of Cenabum.
The news spread like wildfire and reached the Arverni that very evening.
They acted on it by electing a young nobleman, Vercingetorix, as king.
This was the stage things had reached before Caesar, having obtained
what he wanted in his negotiations with Pompey, could leave Italy and
cross the Alps. Reports from Gaul must have reached him, but he
received them with iron calm. Meanwhile even the roads by which he
could have joined his legions had been blocked. Hardly any news got
through. The fate of the army was unknown.
Caesar's governorship had two more years to run. Would this suffice for
the final pacification of Gaul? Was it too long to hold up the imminent
alliance between Pompey and the Senate? What now followed was the
real test of Caesar's strength and confidence.
The Gallic leader now changed his tactics. He began setting fire to
farms, villages and even towns that could not be defended within a wide
radius of the Roman army. This was the same procedure that had brought
Cassivellaunus success in Britain. The Haedui, who were supposed to
provide the Romans with supplies, delivered virtually none. The Romans
ran out of corn and had to fetch cattle from more distant villages. (Meat
was not a normal part of military rations; the soldiers lived mainly on
grain, which was eaten in the form of bread, or as a stew, with the
addition of oil, vegetables and herbs.) Caesar now gave his soldiers the
option of raising the siege of Avaricum if they were too tormented with
hunger. They proudly rejected the offer, saying that they had never
departed from any place without completing a task. `Never a word was
heard,' their general records, `that was unworthy of the dignity of the
Roman people and of their previous victories.' The siege-work was
extremely arduous, especially as the Gauls had by now learnt to parry the
practice of the Romans. Twenty-five days were spent building a ramp, a
hundred and ten metres wide and twenty-seven metres high. It was
banked up over wooden gangways and supported by beams. The Gauls
undermined it and set the wood on fire. The Romans, however, managed
to prevent the enemy from escaping. Finally, when a violent storm came
up and the Gauls withdrew from the wall, the Romans were able to
conquer the town. As usual in extreme cases, they were not sufficiently
disciplined. The Romans indulged in a terrible massacre. All the
inhabitants they could seize were killed, including old men, women and
children. Caesar states that eight hundred survived, out of a population of
forty thousand. Perhaps, after their immense hardships, he had to give his
men free rein. It may be presumed that by now Caesar and his men were
desperately weak and that their weakness was transformed into atrocious
violence. The violence was probably also meant to have a deterrent
effect.
He tried to save what could be saved. He called the army together and
severely reprimanded the soldiers for their indiscipline and presumption
in believing they knew better than their commander, but finally praised
them for their valour and spoke words of encouragement. For two days he
had the army ranged in battle order. Vercingetorix dared not leave the
town. At last Caesar could withdraw without too much disgrace and move
to the territory of the Haedui.
There too the whole country was by now in disarray; even Rome's
friends had joined the seemingly victorious cause. Above all, the Romans
had lost Noviodunum (now Nevers); this was a severe blow, as Caesar
had deposited all the Gallic hostages there, together with his stocks of
grain, the state chest, most of the baggage, and the fresh horses purchased
in Spain and Italy. With the help of the hostages, the Haedui now put
pressure on the tribes that still remained loyal to Caesar. They took them
to the fortress of Bibracte (now Autun). They destroyed whatever grain
they could not take away with them. Everywhere Caesar's army was cut
off from its supplies. About the same time the Bellovaci defected, and
Labienus was forced to withdraw southwards to Agedincum (now Sens).
Here he presents himself to the reader with his usual superiority, stating
only the reasons that finally weighed with him. Yet he cannot have seen
the matter so clearly from the start. In view of the recent defeat, the rapid
disintegration of his rule in Gaul, the imminent collapse of all he had
worked for, and the acute danger to his army and his province, Caesar
would have had to be made of stone had he not at first been devastated
and plunged into a mood of hopelessness and despair, alternating with
wild resolution, before he knew what he had to do. He forced a crossing
of the Loire and marched northwards, so that he was soon able to join up
with Labienus.
When the Gauls called a council in Bibracte, it was attended by all the
tribes except the Remi and the Lingones, who were still loyal to Caesar,
and the Treveri, who were fighting the Germans. Vercingetorix was
confirmed in his supreme command. He ordered new levies. A scorched
earth policy was to be pursued everywhere. Finally he ordered various
tribes to invade Gallia Transalpina at three points.
This was to be the site of the decisive encounter. Not only was it the
most difficult battle the Romans had faced: it was preceded by the
heaviest labour. For it was here that the biggest earth-moving operations
of the whole war took place. Alesia stood on the summit of a hill, almost
impregnable and impossible to take by storm. Caesar therefore set about
building a siegewall. At the same time he had to anticipate the possible
arrival of a relieving army and was therefore obliged to secure his rear
with forces far inferior to those of the Gauls.
Soon after being surrounded, Vercingetorix had sent the cavalry out of
the town at night with orders to urge the tribes to call all their able-
bodied men to arms. The town's supply of corn would last for thirty days,
or rather longer if it was strictly rationed. He dared not risk an open
battle with the Romans.
The wall built by the Romans extended for fourteen kilometres, with
twenty-three forts as strongpoints. Since Caesar's army was too small to
occupy these fortifications in the proper strength, he sought to secure the
approaches by additional devices. Towards the town he first had a deep
trench dug, almost seven metres wide and with perpendicular sides.
Barely four hundred metres away from it two other trenches were dug,
each five metres wide and five deep. The first of these was filled with
water diverted from a river nearby. Behind them he had a ramp and
palisade built, four metres in height, with breastwork and battlements; all
round the works he placed turrets at intervals of twenty-seven metres.
During these works the Gauls made repeated sorties, and the Romans,
being occupied with obtaining grain and timber, had difficulty in
resisting them. Caesar therefore devised further obstacles. He had tree-
trunks and large branches sunk into the ground; the tops of the branches
were sharpened and partly interwoven. In front of them pits were dug; in
these sharpened stakes, burnt at the tips, were sunk, so that they
protruded only four fingers' breadth out of the earth. They were firmly
stamped in and covered with twigs and brushwood to conceal the trap. In
front of them were logs with iron hooks attached. Similar devices were
placed on the other side. All the men had to go out and collect thirty days'
supply of corn and fodder.
Meanwhile the Gauls had called a council and decided what contin gents
each tribe must supply. They all agreed that they must make every effort
to relieve Alesia. There was no opposition, even from the friends of
Rome. According to Caesar, two hundred and fifty thousand foot and
eight thousand horse were assembled. Full of confidence, they marched
on the town. There the might of the whole of Gaul was to show itself and
be victorious.
It had taken them more than thirty days to arm, and in the town the food
was running out. The inhabitants considered what was to be done.
Critognatus, an Arvernan noble, proposed that they should revert to an
ancient practice and `keep themselves alive with the bodies of those who,
because of age, seemed no longer suitable for war'. He failed to persuade
the others, but they nevertheless resolved to send away everyone who
could not fight - the old, the sick, the women and the children. The
preservation of the eighty thousand men who were to fight in the final
battle for the freedom of Gaul took precedence over all other
considerations. Those who were expelled approached the Roman lines in
a long procession and begged to be taken in, if only as slaves. Caesar,
however, decided that they should return to Alesia, so that the enemy's
food would run out all the sooner. He hoped to end the siege before the
relieving army arrived. He showed no more humanity and no less
determination to win than the Gauls in Alesia. It is true that he was
fighting to preserve his rule, while they wished to regain their liberty. But
this did not alter the fact that military considerations were paramount,
and foremost among these was the safety of his men. His decision was
harsh, but we know too little to judge whether it was contemptible. As
they were not allowed back in the town, the men, women and children
camped miserably under the walls, where most of them probably died.
Shortly afterwards the huge Gallic levy arrived and halted about one
and a half kilometres from the Roman entrenchments. On the very next
day they advanced to do battle. At the same time Vercingetorix led his
men out of the town and began to fill up the first Roman trench with
hurdles and earth in preparation for the sally.
Caesar describes the battle in detail, with his usual objectivity, but
underneath his account one senses all the tension of an extremely varied
series of encounters in which the issue was decided only at the last
moment. He `had disposed the whole army on both sides of the
entrenchments in such a way that when the time came each man would
know and keep his proper station'. The first cavalry engage ment took
place before everyone's eyes. Caesar describes how the Gauls `sought to
inspire their countrymen with shouts and yells from every side' and how
both Romans and Gauls fought with extreme bravery `because no deed, of
honour or dishonour, could escape notice'. The Gauls used their well-tried
tactics, grouping lightly armed men and horsemen in such a way that in
each group the former could protect their own horsemen and fend off
attacks by the Roman. At first the Gauls gained the upper hand. After
long and bitter fighting Caesar's Germans attacked again, just before
sunset, concentrating on one point; they succeeded in breaking through
and the battle turned in the Romans' favour.
Next day there was calm, but at midnight the Gauls attacked again on
both sides. From outside came loud battle cries, while inside
Vercingetorix had the trumpet sounded as a signal to attack. The Romans
defended themselves with heavy stones, sharpened stakes, burnt at the
tips, and bullets cast from slings. At daybreak, having fallen into the
traps set by the Romans, the Gauls broke off the attack.
Only now did they study the situation more closely. They realized that
the Roman fortifications had a weak point in the north, where a hill
extended so far that it had not been included in the Roman works. The
Roman camp was half-way up the hill. At night the Gauls sent a
contingent of picked men, said to number sixty thousand, to this point. At
midday, having rested, they began to attack the Romans from above,
while Vercingetorix attacked from the other side. Battle cries rang out on
both sides, causing alarm among the Roman soldiers, who had to defend
themselves in front and heard danger approaching from the rear. At the
same time new attacks began at other points.
Both sides fought with the utmost ferocity, knowing that the battle must
now be decided. The Gauls must break through the Roman fortifications,
for another failure would mean defeat. The Romans must hold them back
in order to win the first round. Being superior in numbers, the Gauls
could send in fresh reserves to relieve their exhausted soldiers. Large
numbers of them were employed in filling in the trenches and making all
the complicated Roman devices unusable. Others moved up in close
formation under their shields towards the Roman wall. The Romans'
strength began to flag, and they were running out of weapons.
Caesar had sent six cohorts to the aid of the most hard-pressed
detachment on the hill, ordering them to break out down the hill if the
worst came to the worst. He then raced through the fortifications,
shouting encouragement to his men everywhere and telling them that the
fruit of all previous engagements depended upon that day and hour. He
was seized by a desperate resolve to make the last supreme effort and
assert himself against superior forces.
But the enemy was too strong. From higher up the hill they attacked the
Romans with a hail of missiles. The Romans abandoned their turrets, and
the Gauls began to tear down the rampart and breastwork with grappling-
hooks. Whereupon Caesar withdrew men from other points in order to
throw them against the enemy. It was not enough. He quickly formed new
cohorts and sent them into the fray. Finally he himself hurriedly led the
last reserve to the centre of the fighting. The battle began afresh. The
Gauls launched a new attack. Caesar writes that they recognized him 'by
the colour of his cloak, which he usually wore in battle as a
distinguishing mark'. The formulation is striking: if he had been wearing
the usual commander's cloak, the paludamentum, he would have had to
say so. Obviously he wore a special garment even in the field. And its
colour must have indicated to the Gauls - and the troops he was leading
against them - how serious things were becoming when the battle was
renewed with such ferocity.
Few battles, says Plutarch, have been fought with such outstanding
bravery and such a wealth of technical invention or `martial genius'.
Caesar had indeed won a great victory. The war was not over. But much of
central Gaul was once again in Roman hands, and the links with the old
province and Rome were secured.
At the end of 52, as had happened more than once before, the Senate
granted Caesar a twenty-day supplicatio. Apparently many wished to
document that the Gallic war was finally at an end: a successor to Caesar
could now be appointed.
While Caesar was cut off in Gaul, certain events in Rome had greatly
weakened his position. Although the law allowing him to conduct his
candidacy in absentia had gone through, Pompey had brought in several
bills intended to curb various abuses. Though useful reforms, they were
detrimental to Caesar's rights. It was decreed, for instance, that in future
no candidacy might be pursued in absentia. We do not know why Caesar's
friends raised no objection. Perhaps they were unaccustomed to acting on
their own initiative, as they normally received instructions from Gaul.
They noticed the omission, if at all, somewhat late in the day. When the
couriers finally reached Caesar, the law was already cast in bronze and
deposited in the archive. Pompey went and made a correction, but it was
doubtful whether this would have furnished grounds for a legal claim.
Even worse, another law, designed to restrict electoral bribery, laid down
that in future five years must elapse between a consulship and a
governorship; meanwhile, magistrates from earlier years were to be sent
to the provinces. This meant that Caesar could be replaced immediately
after i March 50. His command would then have run its term.
Yet still the country was not pacified. The unrest continued and the
Gauls went on re-arming. Caesar's legates had to move against various
tribes, though they met with little opposition. The Gauls calculated that
since this would be Caesar's last summer as governor they had only to
bide their time, in the expectation that they would have less trouble from
his successor. Here and there Caesar struck all the harder, taking more
and more hostages and executing the leaders of the rebellious tribes.
After the fall of Uxellodunum, a town belonging to the Cadurci, into
which a large number of rebels had withdrawn, Caesar ordered that all
who had borne arms should have both hands cut off. He spared their lives,
`so that the penalty for their wickedness should be all the more obvious'.
Aulus Hirtius, who wrote the eighth book of the Gallic War, which
describes its last two years, observes that Caesar knew that he was
famous for his clemency and had no need to fear that such actions would
be ascribed to natural cruelty. He did not see how he could prevent further
rebellion without recourse to such deterrent measures. A fine
explanation!
It seems that Caesar already attached great importance to his reputation
for clemency. We hear of defeated enemies appealing to his dementia and
humanitas. On the whole he probably showed consideration to his
defeated enemies whenever possible. He was too controlled to give vent
to anger and too attentive to be indifferent to abuses. He may even have
been motivated by an awareness that the war stemmed from his ambition
for conquest and wished to act as mercifully as the exigencies of war
allowed. In any case Caesar took pleasure in showing generosity, not only
to his soldiers, but to everyone under his authority. It was a mark of his
superiority; it did not preclude punctiliousness and severity, but
embraced them. He was certainly not naturally cruel. Occasional cruelties
were the outcome of his high pretensions, his growing impatience, and
his boundless determination to assert himself.
He was also well aware that if he was to hold Gaul he had to secure the
allegiance of many of its leaders. If he wished to win over important
figures and tribes, he must not treat their supporters badly. Having dealt a
severe blow on one occasion, he had to make up for it on another.
The reckoning of the war was terrible, even if the figures are greatly
exaggerated. Caesar is said to have captured eight hundred towns,
subjugated three hundred peoples and defeated three million armed men,
a third of whom were killed and another third imprisoned or taken into
slavery. The country had lost countless lives and untold wealth. Gaul
could still defend itself, but if peace returned it might be persuaded, for
the time being, to accept the new situation. This was what Caesar had
brought it to. The battles of 5 r remained as echoes of the great uprising
of Vercingetorix.
In the autumn of 5 i he had visited Aquitaine for the first time. Having
inspected it and finally subjugated it, he left for Gallia Transalpina in
order to hold court, to reward those who had kept faith with him and
Rome throughout the long war and to cement the bonds between them.
Finally he returned to the Belgic area and wintered at Nemetocenna (now
Arras).
During this time, according to Hirtius, `his sole aim was to maintain
friendly relations between the tribes and Rome, to forestall any hopes of
armed conflict and to give no occasion for it.' In So Gaul remained quiet.
The country was so well secured that its tribes did not even exploit the
civil war by falling upon Caesar's rear or rising up against Rome, which
was now exposed to attack from outside. Caesar really had conquered the
country.
Yet even if Caesar had solved one of his great problems - by dint of
immense effort and sacrifice, and at the cost of great losses, not least
among his own men - the other loomed all the larger, the more pressing it
became: how was he to return to internal politics? A powerful group in
Rome was intent upon stripping him of his governorship and then, as
Cato repeatedly declared and even swore, to bring a prosecution against
him. It was obviously intended that his trial, like Milo's, should take
place under military guard.
The prime mover behind this policy was Cato, and its chief advocates
three members of the family of the Claudii Marcelli - two brothers and a
cousin, each of whom succeeded in becoming consul in 5i, 5o, and 49.
They and their allies were convinced that Caesar's return to internal
politics must be prevented at all costs.
This could of course mean civil war. Cicero records that the second
consul of Si, a lawyer named Servius Sulpicius Rufus, repeatedly recalled
the civil war of the eighties and predicted that a new one would be even
worse. He maintained that anything for which there was a precedent
could easily be regarded as legitimate; and one always added a little of
one's own. He insisted that nothing must be allowed to happen that could
lead to a civil war. The possibility of a war recurs elsewhere in the
reflections of good observers of the contemporary political scene.
They had been able to deal with Pompey, however long and strenuously
they had opposed him. They knew that he fundamentally respected the
old order. This was after all why his policy had been so vacillating and
hypocritical. His power and pretensions were so great that Cato and his
friends thought him dangerous. But by nature he was a conformist who
ultimately fitted into the framework of the aristocracy. Hence, when there
was nothing else for it, they could do a deal with him. Presumably they
already knew that once they had recognized his power it could no longer
harm them; there was no longer anything to prevent his respecting the
Senate.
Caesar, however, was disrespectful and alien; he did not fit into the
republic. His cold, unconcealed ruthlessness, his scorn of the traditional
institutions and their representatives, his self-centredness, his total lack
of scruple in starting the war in Gaul, his attacks on other nations and, not
least, the insufferable superiority he displayed in his dealings with
everyone - all this was enough to put him beyond the pale of the
aristocracy and make him seem a sinister figure, quite apart from the
demonic element in his nature. He could not be expected to comply and,
if necessary, bow to the judgement of his peers.
All Roman actions were conditioned by the fact that Roman society
ultimately agreed about its order; this unanimity was so strong as to
stamp itself, as it were, on the thinking of its members. They did not
desire what they had no business to desire. This applied to Pompey too.
The individual might be permitted a certain latitude and certain liberties;
he might on occasion kick against the pricks. Yet there were limits, and
these limits, for all their elasticity, became all the firmer the more they
were stretched. Everyone knew this. The citizens lived in the closest
mental contact with one another; this constituted the common reality.
Yet Caesar, as Cato sensed, did not share this reality; he inhabited a
different reality. While Pompey always remained attached to the
aristocracy, however much it tried to keep him at arm's length, Caesar
was detached from it. In a sense he always had been, but he made it clear
in 59; since then he had become his own master, and there was probably
good reason to think that he would be quite unscrupulous in asserting
himself in Rome.
It is admittedly not clear whether Cato and his allies really knew what
they were letting themselves in for by their implacable opposition to
Caesar. Did they really think they could attain their ends without a civil
war? And if not, were they aware of what that might mean? Insofar as it
is possible to judge from their later thinking, they seem to have been
unable to estimate the dangers they were conjuring up. They certainly
relied on Pompey, and overrated his power and potential. They probably
underrated Caesar, however much they feared him, because they hated
him. Their conviction that the old republic was the only true order may
have made it impossible for them to imagine that its opponent could be
so strong. They were more impressed by Caesar's alien quality than by
his ability, more by the evil he represented than by the power he
commanded.
Given this situation, he had three aims. First, he tried to ensure that the
magistrates for So, and especially the consuls and tribunes of the people,
should include men who would be forceful and decisive in representing
his cause. Secondly, he attempted to win over the Senate majority.
Thirdly, he did all he could to consolidate his power in Gaul, so that if the
worst came to the worst he would be prepared for a civil war.
In the autumn he sent the legions into winter quarters with the Belgae
and Haedui, the bravest and most respected of the Gauls, so that the
Romans could keep them under supervision. Only then did he return
across the Alps to Gallia Cisalpina and set up his headquarters at
Ravenna.
Yet however unjust he might be to Cato and his allies, his assessment of
the Senate majority was not wholly wrong. His achievements probably
impressed many of the senators, and they cannot have found it easy to
condemn the conqueror of Gaul. After all, they had often conferred high
honours on him. Yet for this very reason there were many who did not
relish the prospect of his return, and they were by no means in favour of
his being elected consul without laying down his command. Their
reluctance to pass a resolution to replace him was no doubt due largely to
their fear of him. To this extent their judgement was much the same as
Cato's. The difference was that they did not want to risk a war. Caesar
was not to be trifled with and must therefore be allowed to have his way.
In So Caesar's cause was championed above all by the tribune Gaius
Scribonius Curio and the consul Lucius Aemilius Paullus. He had gained
their support by paying them sums running into millions. We hear
nothing, however, of his having influenced the elections in their favour.
Paullus had rebuilt a large basilica by the forum and thereby incurred
large debts. Curio's debts were due mainly to his splendid theatre-
building and the games he had sponsored. Yet no price was too high for
Caesar to pay, though he himself, for all his huge wealth, is said to have
reached the limit of his resources. Curio needed ten millions and Paullus
thirty-six. The annual tribute from Gaul amounted to forty millions,
though the proceeds of the booty probably far exceeded this sum. Pompey
is reported to have said more than once that Caesar would have to start a
civil war because he would otherwise be unable either to complete his
building works or fulfil the expectations attendant upon his return.
When the Senate discussed Caesar's provinces on i March and the consul
Marcellus advocated the immediate sending of successors, Curio
prevented any decision. The consul Paullus helped to drag out the
deliberations. We do not know the precise course they took. But the
tactics of the Caesarians are clear: Curio was not unconditionally
opposed to replacing the governor, but he insisted that if Caesar laid
down his command Pompey must do the same. The republic would then
be free again. He made himself the advocate of the traditional order; it
must be restored. He was not troubled by the fact that Caesar's command
had run its term, while Pompey's was due to last several more years, and
that to shorten Pompey's would be to dishonour him. What was the
purpose of Pompey's being governor of the Spanish provinces if he was
still in Italy? If certain senators felt threatened by Caesar's legions, Curio
said, Pompey's were equally dangerous. Would it not be better if no one
could rely on a large army in order to exert pressure, if the
commonwealth were again ruled as it had been formerly, by the Senate
and people? By agitating for peace, Curio was appealing to the dearest
wishes of all the citizens, to weaknesses that were all the greater as the
citizen body could scarcely defend itself militarily any longer. Curio
therefore proposed that Caesar and Pompey should both lay down their
commands.
What Curio championed, the freedom of the Senate and the people, was
thus Caesar's strength. Yet however weak the republic seemed to Curio
and Caesar, the senators were equally weak. They must have told
themselves that if Curio's proposal were accepted it would at least be
possible to avoid civil war. We do not know how many senators attended
the meeting in question and what effect Curio's rhetoric had; perhaps he
took the Senate by surprise. Pompey was very indignant. In order to be
more of a match for Curio he is said to have taken fresh lessons in
rhetoric in his old age. He saw that he had to make some concession:
Caesar should retain his command for the summer and be relieved only in
mid-November. Many senators were agreeable to this. But it did not solve
Caesar's problem. Curio therefore entered his veto.
The Senate did not have to put up with this. It could use the device
known as `negotiation with the tribune', which meant putting strong
pressure on him and, in extreme cases, threatening to suspend him from
office. There were precedents for this. However, in view of the
independence of the tribunate, it could not necessarily be maintained that
such a suspension was lawful. And in any case this procedure could
succeed only if the Senate resolutely supported it. Since Curio was not
easily impressed, they had to be resolved on extreme measures. But
resolution was precisely what the Senate lacked. It therefore rejected the
proposal to negotiate with the tribune. Cicero's perceptive friend Caelius,
in a letter, drew the conclusion: `They have decided in effect that he must
be admitted to the election without surrendering his army and his
provinces.' It is true that he had observed a short while earlier: `If they
use every means to put pressure on Curio, Caesar will defend the
intercessor; if they recoil from this, as is likely, Caesar will stay as long
as he wishes.' In short, even the strongest pressures were unavailing if
there was an army in readiness to punish any violation of the hallowed
rights of the tribunes of the people. What Caesar had simply brushed
aside when it impeded him as consul he was now prepared to defend with
his army. And since everyone knew this, the Senate majority avoided a
test of strength.
Roman politics were again paralysed. There was a smog of lethargy and
anxious tension in the air. In April came news that the Parthians were
threatening war - in response to Crassus' invasion. Pompey proposed a
motion in the Senate that two legions should be sent to the east, one taken
from Caesar's army and one from his own. The Senate agreed. Pompey
then announced that he would make available the legion he had lent
Caesar in 53. Caesar would thus lose two legions, which in any case he
seems to have replaced by new levies. He gave every soldier a handsome
gift of money. Young Appius Claudius, who took over the troops in Gaul
on the Senate's instructions, reported that the proconsul was extremely
unpopular with his soldiers; they complained about their endless
hardships, the long and repeated wars, and demanded to be released. If
only Pompey were to show himself, he said, they would defect to him. He
had probably heard what he wanted to hear; the soldiers may well have
complained and cursed, but he failed to understand that the soldiers were
devoted to Caesar, in spite of - indeed because of - the hardships they had
endured, and that they would in any case willingly obey his commands if
they remained under his authority.
Pompey had just recovered from a serious illness. He had seen how first
Naples - where he had been staying - and then one Italian city after
another held thanksgiving festivals for his recovery. On his way back to
Rome he was ceremoniously received everywhere, greeted with flowers
and escorted by torchlight. He had the impression that he enjoyed
universal favour and felt strong vis-d-vis Caesar. In answer to anxious
questions as to how he would defend himself if it came to a civil war, he
replied that he had only to stamp his foot, and horsemen and foot soldiers
would spring out of the ground. Yet while the prosperous strata of society,
those whom Cicero called the `good' and who probably regarded
themselves as such, might demonstrate massively in Pompey's support,
they were far from willing to take up arms for him or the republic.
From his sickbed Pompey had sent a letter to the Senate, declaring his
willingness to lay down his command early. How different from Caesar,
who refused to lay down his even after it had run its term! Pompey
admittedly did not say when he intended to do so; Curio pointed this out
and complained about it.
Otherwise nothing happened for a long time. Yet the more things dragged
on, the more determined the consul and his allies became to cut the knot.
The showdown between Caesar and the group led by Cato could be
postponed for a while, but not prevented.
At the end of November there was uproar when the censor Appius
Claudius, the uncle of the young man just mentioned, wanted to expel
Curio from the Senate. His colleague Piso, Caesar's father-inlaw, and the
consul Paullus objected, and the censor had to give way, but he expressed
himself in such an offensive manner that the tribune of the people sprang
towards him and tore his toga. The consul Marcellus therefore made a
report on Curio, demanding that he should be reprimanded or even
suspended from office. Curio merely declared that he had sought to do
what was best for Rome and submitted to the judgement of the house.
The majority of the senators decided in his favour.
The first vote was of academic interest; it was the second that counted.
If they had to choose between Caesar and Pompey they preferred Pompey.
Above all, however, they were in favour of peace and this meant, since
Caesar seemed determined to do anything, that they were in favour of
Caesar. Strictly speaking, they were right, if they were against a civil war,
for that could only make things worse. But in all likelihood they voted for
it less because it was right than because they were cowardly - less
because they were thinking politically than because they were weak. Had
they been resolute and really approached the problem politically, they
could perhaps have induced Caesar to make concessions before it was too
late. As it was, he could only despise them. And on the other hand
Marcellus became increasingly troubled. Hence the Senate, in its desire
for peace, promoted war.
When Curio left the Senate, he was loudly applauded by the crowd of
bystanders. As the senators dispersed, Marcellus shouted to them that
they had now appointed Caesar himself as their master.
Marcellus, however, declared that if the Senate would not do its duty
he, as consul, must act on his own initiative. He went with the consuls
designate for 49 and a number of other senators to visit Pompey, who was
staying on the outskirts of the city. He carried a sword in front of him;
handing it to Pompey, he called upon him to protect the city. At the same
time he conferred on him the command of the two legions, which had not
yet set off for the Parthian war, and empowered him to make further
levies. Marcellus was acting out of his general responsibility as a citizen
and specifically as consul, without instructions or special powers. He saw
it as his duty. It was a fait accompli, designed to commit the Senate
majority, and Pompey himself, to removing Caesar from his command
and being ready for war if Caesar did not yield.
Even now Pompey could not make up his mind, but he did not turn
down the request; and the impression was bound to arise that he had
accepted it. Caesar's envoy, arriving in Rome on 6 December, no doubt in
order to negotiate with him about the impending crisis, was so outraged
that he at once hurried back to Ravenna. At last Pompey started to arm.
He took command of the two legions. On io December Curio's
tribuneship ended, and he immediately joined Caesar. He is said to have
advised him to go to war. Among the new tribunes of the people, Mark
Antony took over Curio's role as Caesar's representative. On 21
December he made a fiery speech attacking Pompey. If Caesar's
supporters were already adopting this tone, Pompey wondered, how
would Caesar himself act? He convinced himself that war was inevitable.
Antony, however, issued an edict prohibiting compliance with Pompey's
call to arms.
With Cato and his supporters, Pompey now bent all his efforts to
persuading the Senate to decide against Caesar on i January 49.
Supporters, including many old soldiers, were brought to Rome; troops
were ordered into the suburbs; the atmosphere was highly charged,
intimidating to some, encouraging to others. Before the session, pressure
was brought to bear on many senators.
Curio had not only brought his letter, but been given instructions as to
how he was to act if the Senate refused to be intimidated. Cicero acted as
go-between. It turned out that Caesar was willing to hand over the
province of Gallia Transalpina and eight legions. He dropped the demand
for Pompey to lay down his governorship, but expected him to depart for
Spain. Cicero finally won a further concession: Caesar would even give
up Gallia Cisalpina and two further legions, retaining only Illyricum and
one legion. This he insisted on. In return for these concessions his
privilege of seeking office in absentia was to be recognized.
If this offer had been taken up, Caesar would have virtually forfeited
the possibility of waging a civil war. At all events it would have been
difficult for him to mobilize those legions that had passed under a new
command. The Senate would admittedly have had to jump over its
shadow and promise Caesar's soldiers proper provision, so that they
would no longer be dependent on him. In one crucial point Caesar
remained adamant: he continued to insist on becoming consul without
entirely surrendering his command, so that he could not be arraigned.
On 7 January the Senate met again and passed the senatus consultum
ultimum: `That the consuls, praetors, tribunes of the people and he who
stands as proconsul outside the city shall see that no harm comes to the
commonwealth.' Against this there could be no intercession. On the
contrary, any future intercession could be suppressed on the basis of this
resolution. The two Caesarian tribunes, seeing themselves threatened, left
the city with Curio. The course of events from now on was predictable.
Pompey immediately began levying troops, ordered the delivery of
weapons and collected money from every possible source. In the night of
io/ii January, as soon as he had been informed of the news, Caesar
crossed the Rubicon.
As Cicero later remarked, he did not want war, but simply did not fear
it. It was his opponents who had wanted it.
This was a curious situation: the man whom the majority of the citizens
regarded with antipathy, distrust and fear was less intent upon war, far
more decisively and seriously in favour of peace, than those who opposed
him and had the sympathies of this very majority on their side.
The demands made by both sides related to the existence of Caesar and
the republic. Both were thoroughly justified, but the one precluded the
other.
On Cato's side was the work of centuries, one of the greatest heritages
of world history: he and his followers were in duty bound to preserve the
republic they had inherited from their forefathers. If Caesar saw
exclusively self-seeking motives at work in them - and Cicero now and
then concurred in his view - he was not entirely wrong. When are such
motives ever absent? They identified themselves with the
commonwealth, but this did not alter the fact that they felt a duty to it.
And they knew that they must triumph now or never, if they wanted to
thwart Caesar's unscrupulous and destructive power or indeed an
autocracy. Yet this meant risking a civil war, the outcome of which could
not be foreseen, especially as it might end with Pompey ruling Rome
instead of Caesar.
On the other hand, Caesar could not simply surrender to his opponents
after all he had achieved. It was all very well for Pompey to send him
word that he himself was acting solely in the interest of the republic and
that Caesar should bow to it too. Who, after all, was the republic at that
time, if not Pompey and his allies? True, Caesar had once declared
himself willing `to take anything upon himself for the sake of the
commonwealth'. There were some things, then, that the republic could
require even of him. But could they include risking his very existence?
After everything he had built up, it was indeed understandable and - from
Caesar's highly subjective viewpoint - justifiable that he should refuse to
take this sacrifice upon himself. Yet this meant that he had to begin the
civil war for his own sake.
On the one side, then, there was a great gulf between the necessary and
the practical and, on the other side, no less a gulf between the necessary
and the permissible. The opposing parties were forced to do what they
should never have done.
Moreover, those caught between these extremes were too weak. And it
was ultimately this weakness that expressed itself in their indecisiveness.
They were for Pompey, yet they acted for Caesar by being in favour of
peace. Wishing to stand above the parties, they fell between two stools.
Not wishing to take up a position on the side where they belonged, they
succeeded in making this side all the more inflexible.
This was the climax of the astonishing process by which the republic
moved towards its dissolution without anyone's desiring it - because it
was now impossible to act in any way but the wrong way. In Caesar and
his opponents two different realities confronted each other. This was a
situation that should never have been allowed to develop.
One may of course wonder whether there might not have been a way
out - at the beginning of 49 or at the end of So, or even earlier. And one
must not underrate the human capacity for mastering even the most
difficult situations. Yet the likelihood is that the situation left no
alternative, especially after the end of So. The laws of action were
determined far more by the positions within the overall configuration
than by the free will of the actors. This too was a feature of the situation.
It therefore seems to us paradoxical, contrary to all the expectations we
have of the human capacity for action. Yet we all know that such
situations arise from time to time.
How this particular situation arose is made outwardly clear by the course
of events. Moreover, when we realize that in the Roman aristocracy it
was possible for an outstanding outsider to conquer an entire country in
defiance of the Senate and win the devotion of his soldiers, some of the
structural background to these events becomes comprehensible. Yet this
is to understand only half of the historical process. Even in politics much
is decided not by the actors, but through them. The total effect of their
interaction always far exceeds what they settle between themselves. One
must therefore take a more detached view and study the process of the
crisis as such if one wishes to understand its seemingly paradoxical
outcome, the impasse of 5o/ 49, and the personality and position of the
man who started the civil war for extremely personal reasons - a
personality and a position that become increasingly puzzling, the more
we have to explain by reference to their particular character.
Human beings always do much the same things: they try to secure and
enjoy their lives, attend to their duties and their interests, make the best
of their opportunities, engage in administration and politics, contend
with their opponents and seek to distinguish themselves. However, when
the Romans of the late republic did these things they hastened the
dissolution of their order, whereas their predecessors in the classical
republic, acting no differently, had simply demonstrated its durability.
For the configurations had changed. Defending the traditional now had
the same effect as reform; attempts to restore order and lawful
procedures actually generated a stronger impulse to dissolution than
adherence to humdrum routine. Livy put it succinctly when he said, Nec
vitia nostra nec remedia pati possumus ('We can bear neither our
shortcomings nor the remedies for them'). By acting against one another,
the Romans produced side-effects that all tended in the same direction.
Prices rose. Whoever sought election incurred more and more expense.
For him it was merely a matter of being elected and pursuing a virtually
predestined career. But it had the side-effect of contributing to the
increasing corruption, growing expectations and worsening exploitation.
The process admittedly did not follow a straight course; in 52, for
instance, morals again improved.
Yet the interplay between the bulk of the senators and the individuals
who confronted them as outsiders, was a phenomenon of long standing.
It had occurred more than once since the time of the Gracchi. The
underlying cause was that Rome was faced with political tasks of such
magnitude that they could not be performed within the framework of
traditional senatorial solidarity.
The decline of the republic drew its real impetus, willy-nilly, from the
conflicts between Pompey and the Senate during the late Sixties and the
Fifties. These started with Pompey's demands arising from the need to
put an end to the depredations of the pirates and the difficulties caused
by Mithridates. He was concerned with specific tasks. The Senate's chief
concern, however, was with the power that was bound to accrue to
Pompey and its fear that he might no longer abide by the rules of
oligarchic equality. Hence it opposed him with its veto and its authority,
and as a result the republic suffered real damage. In the first place, its
institutions were impaired and, in the second, Pompey was obliged to
seek more than just a generally acknowledged position of privilege. He
now proceeded to build up an independent position in opposition to the
Senate, and this produced an enduring rift between him and the leading
senators. In the most important political conflict of the age, then, the
Senate no longer stood above the parties, as it had nearly always done in
the past. Rome was thus deprived of the supreme authority that could
ultimately effect a compromise or assert its will. Instead, the Senate
suffered repeated defeats, until Pompey finally resorted to the promotion
of anarchy in order to force the Senate to accept him. The context within
which a process operates not only involves the subsidiary consequences
of actions, but also produces `consequential actions'.
In earlier times the hand of fate would doubtless have been discerned
in a situation in which everyone destroyed what they wished to preserve.
It is obviously a case of the kind of involvement in history that can lead
conservatives to engineer revolutions and make reformers effectively
into enemies of change - that can make a lover of peace into an agent of
war, the forces of evil into a power for good. In such a complicated
situation the impulses of opponents who are resolved to fight one
another to the death may work in identical directions. From one angle
they may appear as opponents, from another as partners, if the
historically most significant outcome of their contention is the
destruction of a community's institutions.
There was a time when such experiences would have been summed up
by the apophthegm `Man proposes, God disposes' - and in relation to
some periods, of which the Roman republic is admittedly not one, the
past-tense version `Man mused, God was amused' seems to give it added
point. Yet this truth need not always produce a result that is so
paradoxical, so much at odds with normal expectations. The result
depends rather on the circumstances. Yet if an order fails to contain all
the possible tensions, but lets them develop into a powerful conflict with
itself, this then finds expression in the consequences - and naturally in
some way in the motives - of the actions taken within this order.
But it was probably rare, if not unique in world history, for events to
take such a striking course as they did in the Roman republic. The
republican order eventually became an issue not between, but beneath
the parties; it was no longer the subject, but the object, of controversy.
There were no conflicts about the order, but about the price of the order.
Superficially the dispute was about numerous individual questions, but
in the background lay only the positions of Pompey and Caesar within
the commonwealth. The real effect of the dispute consisted in the
accumulation of its side-effects, which contributed to the progressive
weakening of the traditional order. Controversy yielded to change. There
was in fact a notable discrepancy between what was at issue and what
was changing. Accordingly Roman society had little control over its
affairs; it produced no one who opposed the inherited order, but only
outsiders - no innovators who could have pointed it in new directions,
but only men of a new and different type. It was not by instituting
changes, but by trying to demonstrate their abilities in new ways, by
taking up unprecedented positions, that they contributed to the
momentum of the process. But the fact that the process took such a
strong hold on the republic as a whole was due in at least equal measure
to the defenders of tradition.
This situation could arise only because of the universal conviction that
the inherited order was the only just one. Had this not been so, the
Senate's many failures and its conspicuous weakness would inevitably
have raised serious doubts about the viability of its regime. As there was
no alternative to the existing order, the underprivileged, those suffering
hardship and deprivation - the potential rebels, in other words - had no
chance to unite and produce an intellectual and political counter-force.
No new ideas emerged about the governance of Rome, let alone any
prospect of linking such ideas with various interests in a purposeful
endeavour to create something new. Instead, there was general
satisfaction with the old order on the part of the powerful or potentially
powerful, and impotence on the part of the dissatisfied. The satisfaction
of the former was largely due to their realization that, if necessary, they
could assert themselves against the Senate. It was the very weakness of
the Senate that made its regime so popular. It was at this stage quite
impossible to take a detached view of the existing order and see it as
merely one option among several.
It is not clear whether the wider ranks of affluent Roman society clung
to the existing order because they were aware of the liberty it afforded
them or because they felt existing conditions to be part of a powerful
social identity. It may not even have occurred to them to consider the
function that the order should fulfil. In any case, they knew of nothing
different: the alternative was either an unjust order or none at all.
The unanimity of all the `good' (that is to say, the wealthy) in their
attachment to the Senate was so robust that Cicero could define good
politics as politics that pleased the good.
If the inherited order was the only legitimate one, it followed that the
leading senators must do everything in their power to preserve or restore
it. It was this that gave such force to Cato's position. It was not only
Cato's character that led him to resist so tenaciously, but the
expectations that society had of the leading senators - and of the rest of
the Senate, whose views they took into account when deciding what
attitude to adopt. The authoritative role of the leading senators had
always found its legitimation in promoting the interests of the Senate
and the republic as a whole.
Society could no longer cope with its problems within the framework
of traditional liberty, but it was unwilling to renounce this liberty. This
was the essence of the crisis without alternative. Yet in the absence of
any possible alternative, the existing order was bound to be destroyed -
in the struggle to defend it. It was simply worn down, not because
anyone wished to destroy it, not even despite the fact that everyone
wished to save it - but precisely because of this fact. The only possible
exception was Caesar, whose purpose may have been different.
What characterized Pompey was the fact that he had absorbed all the
contradictions inherent in the notion of a `communal state' ruling a
world empire. He combined the achievement and pretension of a man
who had solved numerous imperial problems and could think in
Mediterranean terms, yet showed a becoming respect for the Senate and
good society. This is what accounted for all his difficulties and his
political ineptitude. He was constantly forced to disavow himself and his
friends in order to preserve the semblance of total respect for
convention; he could do this only by enveloping himself in a fog and
constantly saying what he did not mean. With Pompey vacillation and
inconsistency seem to have become second nature.
His was a bright light on the dark Roman horizon. Not being
implicated in the complaisances and entanglements of Roman society, he
retained, as it were, the purity, freedom and innocence of the consistent
outsider.
Thus what struck him most about the Senate was the fact that it was
controlled by his opponents. It hardly seems to have occurred to him that
it was responsible for the commonwealth. He could impute only selfish
motives to his opponents and was apparently unable to appreciate that
the Senate was also very much concerned with preserving the inherited
republic and the senatorial regime. Hence, when he began the civil war,
he held that the body politic as a whole had no part in it. He was
probably quite unaware that he was completely brushing it aside, along
with all the institutions in which it was involved.
In Caesar's eyes no one existed but himself and his opponents. It was
all an interpersonal game. He classified people as supporters, opponents
or neutrals. The scene was cleared of any suprapersonal elements. Or if
any were left, they were merely props behind which one could take cover
or with which one could fight. Politics amounted to no more than a fight
for his rights. This was the angle from which Caesar viewed the various
positions and from which even the Senate and the citizens were assigned
their roles: as those who had to grant him his rights - and would have
done so had his opponents not used cunning and force to prevent them.
Under normal circumstances his extraordinary services to Rome, his
claim to honour (dignitas) would have received due recognition. If the
Senate and the popular assembly were only free he would have nothing
to fear. He therefore stated that he wanted to `free himself and the
Roman people from the domination of this small clique' - meaning his
opponents.
Whoever saw things in this way was no longer living in the same
reality as the society to which he belonged. Yet there was nothing
pathological in the way he had cut himself off from it and built up a
partial reality of his own - or if there was, it was part of a disease that
had taken hold of the whole commonwealth.
This becomes evident when we realize that his opponents too inhabited
only a partial reality. They acted in accordance with old and generally
recognized convictions, but the precondition for these convictions - the
ambience they presupposed - was no longer present. Hence, they too
were one-sided in insisting on their absolute authority. They acted as
much in the interest of the inherited order as against it. For although it
was established that the Senate was the supreme organ of the republic, it
was never envisaged that any impossible or highly dangerous enterprise
should be taken in hand to secure its regime. On the contrary, the
traditional order had been grounded in reality and always derived its
efficacy from the sense of reality possessed by its supporters. As the
Senate had more than once acknowledged the reality of the conquest of
Gaul, the policy adopted by Cato and his allies was at once justified and
unjustified.
They failed to see the absurdity of prosecuting a man who had done so
much for Rome during the past nine years. This was no less unrealistic
than Caesar's failure to appreciate how alive the republic still was in the
minds of the citizens and to understand that what he perceived in the
background was merely the truth as seen by an outsider, not the absolute
truth. It was a truth that, once perceived, empowered one to act, but not
one that would have carried conviction with Roman society.
The epic poet Lucan (AD 39-65) makes Caesar say at the Rubicon,
`Here I leave the basis of law, dishonoured as it is' (temerata iura
relinquo). Whether or not he said it or thought it, it was true that the
common basis of law, which had united the whole commonwealth and
embraced both Caesar and his opponents, no longer existed. The
preconditions for lawful action were no longer intact, because both sides
had moved too far apart. The majority of the citizens, caught in between,
no longer had the strength to bridge the gap.
Yet there is nothing to suggest that Caesar was in some way the
executive arm of a higher authority such as the `spirit of the age'. Nor
did he control what happened, at least not until the civil war began; he
was merely part of it. In fact he was very much caught up in the process
of reciprocal one-sidedness, which worked through him and with which
his career and the extraordinary development of his personality were
essentially bound up.
At best one may say with Jacob Burckhardt, `Great men are necessary
for our life, in order that the movement of world history can free itself
sporadically, by fits and starts, from obsolete ways of living and
inconsequential talk.'
This is not to say that Caesar was an exception in his day and did not
want to preserve the old republic. It may well be that he too could think
of nothing better than to preserve it, but that the preservation of the
republic was low on his list of priorities. It was, after all, not entirely
fortuitous that the ultimate form of the alternative was `Caesar or the
republic'.
13
Yet he could not take his fellow citizens seriously as citizens. This is
attested by his remark, `What befits a decent man and a peaceable,
honest citizen more than that he should remain aloof from civil
disputes?' In his opinion, the fate of the res pubiica, even in the hour of
its greatest need, was no concern of theirs.
This was the sole reason for the war. There is no point in quibbling.
Caesar's claim was not a programme, but a plea for his personal right,
for the honour he was owed on the basis of his achievements. The issues
were, on the one hand, Caesar's claim to dignitas and, on the other, the
defence of the republic. Accordingly, Caesar maintained that his quarrel
was only with his `opponents' whom he consistently called inimici.
They, by contrast, saw him as the enemy (hostis), who had attacked the
commonwealth from without. He claimed to be involved in `civil
disputes', but to them it was `civil war'. Cicero remarked that the war
was so civil that it arose not from disputes among the citizens, but from
the temerity of one depraved citizen. It was a conflict not of citizen
against citizen, but between two generals and the armies loyal to them.
This was the reality of the war, insofar as it was conducted by military
means. To this extent the bulk of the citizens behaved precisely as
Caesar expected: they took no part in the war. And even Cicero could
excuse this by saying that ultimately Pompey was fighting against
Caesar and that both were fighting for autocracy. There was of course a
difference: as Cassius Dio put it, Pompey merely wanted to be second to
none, while Caesar was intent on being the first among all.
Caesar failed because of the republic, but the republic also failed
because of Caesar, as soon became evident. Yet this, like any other
considerations regarding the dual reality of the time, belongs to the
historian's perspective. Contemporaries were unaware of them. To them
Caesar was simply an insubordinate governor who was leading his
troops against the city and from whom they had nothing good to expect.
In any case this was not his reason for starting the civil war. He wished
to take by force the rights that the Senate had ultimately refused to grant
him. And so he had to campaign for four-and-a-half years to obtain the
dignitas to which he believed he had established a claim in the preceding
nine. After that everything would be fundamentally different.
Pompey had privately sent deputies to tell him that he, Pompey, was
not acting out of personal enmity, but put the commonwealth above
everything. Caesar should do the same. Caesar, however, used the
opportunity to put new proposals to Pompey: he was ready to relinquish
his command immediately, even if Pompey retained his; he would seek
the consulship in Rome as a private citizen. He thus bowed to the
Senate's resolutions on the termination of his governorship. All Caesar
required was that Pompey should depart for Spain and that all armies in
Italy should be disbanded.
It is curious that Caesar should only now have put forward these
proposals, which, for all their modesty, substantially safeguarded his
interests. Had he, at the end of December, underestimated his opponents'
determination after all? Did he only now realize what a war could mean
and how long it might last? At all events, he once more did his best to
maintain the peace.
Pompey, most of the magistrates, and many senators had left Rome on
17 and 18 January on receiving news of Caesar's rapid advance. Pompey
had declared himself unable to defend the city. When Caesar's proposals
arrived at his headquarters on 23 January he was already in Campania, to
the north of Capua.
The evacuation of Rome sent shock waves throughout Italy. That the
magistrates and the Senate should retreat before Caesar did not speak
well for him. Above all there was mounting fear. And as nothing could
be done against Caesar, anger and disappointment were directed against
Pompey. People felt deceived. As the well-informed knew, he had long
toyed with the plan of giving up not only Rome, but the whole of Italy, in
order to meet Caesar in a large-scale strategic operation from both the
east and the west of the Mediterranean area simultaneously, using his
superior naval power. Whereas Caesar had at least eleven legions,
Pompey commanded only seven in Spain and two in Italy, though he
hoped to levy further legions. In the east, however he could call upon his
clients to supply huge contingents.
Pompey, Cato and their friends, however, decided that it was not for
them, but for the Senate, to decide on the disbandment of the armies and
the ending of the levies. According to time-honoured principle they
could make practical concessions, but the republican order, the
responsibility of the Senate, must be upheld. In other words, they wanted
to ignore the defeat they had already suffered and pretend that they were
voluntarily conceding to Caesar what he had won from them by
defiance. However, the Senate could only pass its resolutions in Rome,
in the proper buildings.
This would have met all Caesar's practical demands. He was refused
nothing; everything was generously conceded. The occasion for civil war
was removed, the struggle no longer necessary. How serious Pompey and
his allies were in their response to Caesar is demonstrated by the fact
that they at once made it public. `He would be mad to refuse, especially
as his demands are in themselves shameless,' wrote Cicero.
All the same Caesar did refuse. The reason he gives in his book `On
the Civil War' is not convincing. He complains that Pompey set no date
for his departure for Spain and, above all, that he, Caesar, was required
to withdraw while his opponents went on arming. In particular, however,
he was profoundly disappointed that Pompey was unwilling to meet him.
The letter was obviously intended for circulation. The passage just
quoted is extremely interesting in that it is linked with the information
that Caesar is making a fresh attempt at conciliation with Pompey.
Pompey, he writes, should be friends with him rather than with those
who have always been the bitterest enemies of them both, and whose
intrigues have brought the republic to its present pass.
Thus, even as he seeks and hopes for conciliation, Caesar speaks not
only of wanting to prepare or facilitate an understanding through
generosity, but of achieving a lasting victory. This underlines his
determination to win. We may presume that his conciliatory gesture
included Pompey's political existence and honour. He was not concerned
with anyone else; all his offers of peace were addressed to Pompey. Only
once, in the middle of 48, did he turn to Pompey's father-in-law,
Metellus Scipio. But as he expresses it here, Pompey's honour was a
function of Caesar's victory, dependent on Caesar and guaranteed by
him. The formulation was not very skilful for an open letter, though
Cicero called it `reasonable for all its unreason'. Yet this was how Caesar
saw things. His clemency was a means to victory. Conciliation and
victory, generosity and triumph, were obviously meant to produce the
same result.
Curio remarked at the time that Caesar showed such leniency only
because he thought it popular: fundamentally he was cruel, and his
cruelty would assert itself once it became clear that he could not
immediately attain his ends through leniency. Curio's testimony is
unreliable; we have no reason to think that Caesar was cruel. It is well
known, however, that he could show great displeasure and anger; these
arose from impatience and a determination to assert his will. And after
everything his opponents had said of him and done to him he had ample
cause to be angry with them. How would Dominus have acted if the roles
had been reversed and Caesar had fallen into his hands? Caesar must
often have found it hard to release opponents who were likely to return
at once to the enemy camp. He could at least have held them prisoner.
Yet he almost always showed mercy, even towards some whom he
captured a second time; there was hardly one whom he executed, and
few whom he banished.
Cicero later praised him for having triumphed over his victory and
thereby become almost godlike. At any rate the psychological
achievement is considerable. Montesquieu found Caesar's clemency
insulting and remarked, `One saw that he did not forgive, but merely
disdained to punish.' Frederick the Great, commenting on Montesquieu's
observation, remarked, `This reflection is exaggerated! If all human
actions are judged with such severity there is no longer any room for a
heroic deed.'
All the same, there were some things that facilitated Caesar's clemency,
that encouraged it and presumably placed it in a wider context. It was by
no means just a tactic, but in various ways a consequence and an
expression of Caesar's greatness and, seen as such, equivocal.
In the first place it was a consequence that Caesar drew from his cause.
No one who wages war only for his own sake, in order to fend off
injustice, can very well resort to murder. To the first consularis who
begged mercy from Caesar, he declared that he had not left his province
in order to perpetrate injustice, but in order to defend himself against the
indignities done to him by his opponents and to liberate himself and the
Roman people. These acts of mercy were thus consistent with his
decision to go to war for a highly personal cause. Both are expressions
of the same greatness - and the same enormity.
The claim it implies is clear not least from the displeasure that Caesar
is said to have shown on learning of the suicide of his chief opponent,
Cato: `I envy you this death, for you envied me the chance to save you.'
Many old opponents found Caesar's mercy offensive. They were hurt and
insulted by it. Through it Caesar won a second victory, as it were, this
time over their honour, by making them a gift of their lives and political
positions. The consciousness of having accepted his mercy was
extremely painful. Yet almost all survivors begged for it; and the
reproaches they had to make to themselves for doing so were turned
against him.
All this anger derived ultimately from the defeat that Caesar's
opponents had to endure and from the launching of the civil war. This
was the real offence. Caesar could do nothing to change it. Clemency
could only mitigate its consequences; it could not bring reconciliation.
Its efficacy was therefore limited.
In a letter written at the time Caelius asked Cicero, `Have you ever
read or heard of anyone fiercer in attack and more moderate in victory?'
The whole of Italy began to come to terms with him. We know that
inwardly the `good' remained on the side of Pompey and the Senate, but
they did not want to lose anything in Italy; as far as possible they wished
to go on living as before. And what were they to do? They did not want
to take up arms, and they could not influence events. Whatever they may
have thought, they were powerless, since they refused to defend
themselves. It was clear from their behaviour that the citizens' republic
had outlived itself. They might of course hope that Pompey would return
victorious, but meanwhile Caesar was the stronger of the two. One
always has to be on one's guard against the stronger party, especially in a
civil war.
Caesar took into his army the troops that had surrendered to him at
Corfinium and quickly moved southwards. On 9 March he arrived
outside Brindisi with six legions, three of them from Gaul and three
newly enrolled. The consuls had already crossed over to Greece. He
waited only for the return of the ships.
Intermediaries again went back and forth. But Pompey still refused to
meet Caesar in the absence of the consuls. Caesar had started on the
siege-work when Pompey finally set sail on 17 March.
Italy had fallen into Caesar's hands almost without a fight. However, he
failed in his intention of ending the war quickly if it could not be
avoided. For all his audacity he had been too weak to press forward fast
enough. He was now obliged to fight the Pompeians across half the
Roman empire. Apart from his own governorships in Gaul and
Illyricum, all Rome's provinces were in the hands of his enemies.
Moreover, they had control of the seas, while Caesar did not even
possess a fleet.
Caesar was thus unable to pursue Pompey, and his opponents won time
to train their legions, prepare them for war, and above all reinforce
them. In Labienus they had a military man who was intimately
acquainted with Caesar's strategy and tactics. And Pompey himself was
no mean general. Everything pointed to a long and arduous struggle. In
future Caesar would be dealing with quite different opponents, no longer
with the brave, but essentially naive Gauls, whom he had repeatedly
outwitted.
On his arrival he sought the support of the Senate and at least a partial
legitimation of his cause. Many senators had followed Pompey. He had
summoned them all to Saloniki, where the magistrates and the Senate
now resided, as Rome was now in enemy hands. Over half the Senate
had stayed on in Italy, however, not because they were against Pompey
or for Caesar, but because they had no wish to go abroad. Most of them
remained on their estates, awaiting events.
Caesar posted notices everywhere, announcing that the Senate should
assemble for an important session on i April; he attached particular
importance to the presence of those consulares who were still in Italy.
He was especially keen to secure Cicero's support. Early in March
Caesar had written to him. `Above all, because I intend to visit the city
soon, I am anxious to see you there, so that I can benefit from your
advice, your influence, your rank, and your help in all matters.'
He now met him on his way to Rome. Cicero reports that he had
expected Caesar to be more conciliatory. But he was quite direct. When
Cicero explained that he could not come to Rome, he thought this
amounted to a condemnation. Now the others would be inclined to
hesitate, he said. Finally he said, `Come then, and speak for peace.'
Cicero replied, `In the way I think right?' Caesar: `Am I to tell you what
to say?' Cicero: `I shall propose that it is displeasing to the Senate for
troops to go to Spain and an army to be sent across to Greece; and I shall
deplore the unfortunate situation of Pompey at length.' At this point
Caesar said testily, `But I do not want anything of the sort to be
said."That is as I thought,' replied Cicero; `that is why I do not wish to
be there. Either I must speak in this way and bring up many matters that
I cannot forbear to mention, or I cannot come.' The conversation closed
with Caesar asking Cicero to think again. On parting Caesar threatened
that if Cicero would not give him advice and support, he would get them
from those who would; he was prepared to consider anything.
What these words meant became clear to Cicero in front of the door of
his house: Caesar's followers were a `dreadful rabble'. `They included all
the good-for-nothings of Italy.' Nothing but desperadoes; it was shocking
to see them all gathered together. Caesar naturally had a magic attraction
for those who, by conventional standards, acted improperly in Rome; the
worrying thing was that he did not disown such riff-raff.
Antony and Cassius Longinus, the two tribunes of the people who had
fled from the city on 7 January, convened the Senate. Attendance was
poor; only three consulares had managed to bestir themselves. It was not
a proper meeting of the Senate, but an assembly of a number of senators.
Caesar made a speech in which he dwelt at length on the insults and
impositions he had suffered from his opponents; he maintained that he
had sought nothing unusual and been ready to make many concessions.
In particular he pointed to his many efforts for peace, which the others
had all rejected. He is said to have spoken with great moderation, though
he inveighed against those who wanted to make war on their fellow
citizens. He then invited the senators to `take over the commonwealth
and join with him in governing it', though he immediately added that `if
they refused out of fear he would no longer trouble them, but govern the
commonwealth himself. According to his own account, he proposed that
a peace delegation should to be sent to Pompey. Pompey had admittedly
said that such embassies were a sign of weakness, but this appeared to
him, Caesar, to be a petty judgement. `He for his part, just as he sought
to take the lead in deeds, wished to excel in justice and fairness too.'
Caesar does not speak of his other proposals. However, he wanted the
public treasure to be handed over and the commands of Curio and others
confirmed; he may also have sought a resolution to the effect that if his
opponents were not prepared to make peace, he himself would be
entitled to arm.
The senators, however, could not be convinced. Some may have been
opponents of Caesar, though if so it is not clear why they were present.
Many may have been indignant at the way in which this insubordinate
governor addressed them - in a moderate tone perhaps, but with
unconcealed threats, arrogantly offering them the chance to support him,
yet with no intention of really listening to them. We may also wonder
whether Caesar, after nine years of absence, was able to strike the right
note in addressing the fathers.
In the end Caesar angrily broke off the proceedings. He had neither the
time nor the inclination for further delay. He may have started with the
best intentions, but then everything turned out to be just as it had been in
59; in spite of all that he had achieved in the meantime, his relations
with the Senate had not changed. Ten years had passed, yet he seemed to
be as much of an outsider as ever, if not more so.
If he had really believed that the Senate, given the freedom to choose,
would be on his side, he must have been bitterly disappointed. But this is
unlikely to have troubled him for long. If the Senate would not co-
operate, this was ultimately a matter of indifference to him. There were
other ways of getting what he wanted. `In future everything will be
decided by me,' he declared. Martial law was in force, and he was in
control.
With a troop of soldiers he crossed the hallowed bounds of the city -
where, properly speaking, his military command ended, never to be
renewed - and went to the temple of Saturn by the forum. When
Metellus, the tribune of the people, blocked his path, Caesar, the
champion of tribunician rights, threatened to kill him. He added that it
was harder for him to say this than to do it. He had the door of the
temple broken open and seized the treasure, which the consuls had left
behind in the panic of their departure. The mood in Rome was so hostile
that he did not even dare to address the people, as he had intended.
Caesar's bad conscience is evident from his own account: he not only
omits to mention the incident, but even states, at another point, that the
consuls had left in such haste that they had opened the temple of Saturn
but failed to take the money with them.
Full of anger towards the Senate and embittered over the intercessions,
he set out for Spain. `Whatever he thinks and says is full of rage and
cruelty,' Caelius reports. Yet at about the same time Caesar was once
more writing friendly letters to Cicero, forgiving him for his absence
and seeking to strengthen him in his neutrality. It thus did not take long
for his superiority to overcome his vexation.
With the soldiers Caesar was again in his element. From now on the
praetor Marcus Aemilius Lepidus ruled the city on his behalf. He gave
Antony command over Italy and the legions that remained there. For
Caesar everything was back to normal: he could begin a new campaign.
For a while the armies faced each other. Finally battle was joined. The
Pompeians almost defeated Caesar's troops, thanks to the loose order of
battle that they had adopted from the Spaniards. The outcome was
undecided. Then floodwater destroyed the bridges over the river Sicoris
(the Segre, a tributary of the Ebro), which carried supplies to Caesar's
army. Their opponents, who had ample supplies and were able to block
Caesar's supply-routes from all sides, felt sure of victory. When their
reports reached Rome, the Romans began to celebrate.
He then had trenches dug and part of the waters of the Sicoris diverted,
in order to create a ford. The Pompeians, fearing that Caesar's cavalry
would cut them off from their supplies, withdrew to the south. Caesar
pursued them and barred their route by means of extraordinarily daring
and surprising operations. Wishing to avoid bloodshed, he deliberately
ignored various favourable opportunities to do battle. The soldiers urged
him to fight and became angry and rebellious when he refused, saying
that if he forfeited such a chance of victory they would not fight when he
wanted them to. They saw the reward of all their endeavours - victory
and plunder - within their grasp. Once, when the enemy leaders were
absent, the soldiers on the opposing sides began to confer with one
another. Old friends and acquaintances met. One of the Pompeian
commanders finally intervened with his Spanish bodyguard and ordered
the execution of all the Caesarians he could lay hands on. His soldiers
were compelled to swear an oath that they would not desert or betray the
army and its leaders. Caesar, however, sent the Pompeian soldiers back
unharmed.
After forty days he had annihilated the Pompeians' best army with
scarcely any bloodshed. He could now take over the Spanish provinces
without further fighting. In Hispania Ulterior he had excellent
connections, dating from his days as quaestor and praetor. He now
summoned two large councils in Corduba (Cordoba) and Tarraco
(Tarragona). He thanked and rewarded his supporters and returned the
moneys the Pompeians had confiscated. However, he imposed heavy
taxes on others. He then appointed the tribune Quintus Cassius Longinus
as governor of Hispania Ulterior and put four legions at his disposal. In
no time Quintus managed to produce a mood of rebellion in the
province, which had so recently been well disposed to Caesar. Cicero had
once wondered, `What companions or aides is Caesar to make use of?
Are the provinces and the commonwealth to be administered by men
who cannot keep their inheritance in order for two months?'
On the return march, Massilia, having held out bravely for a long time,
finally surrendered. The city was obliged to hand over all its weapons
and ships, together with the communal treasure. But it retained its
formal independence.
Caesar, we are told, did not let it be seen how much he relied on them.
Addressing his men, he announced that in accordance with established
custom he would decimate the ninth legion, where the mutiny had
broken out (this meant executing every tenth man), and send the rest
home as unfit for service. This took them by surprise; it was not what
they had bargained for. They were in fact devoted to him, and discharge
with ignominy was contrary to their honour. They begged to be allowed
to go on serving under him. Caesar at last reluctantly agreed, though he
demanded that the most guilty men should be named. There were about a
hundred and twenty of them. Of these he had every tenth man executed,
the victims being chosen by lot. Among those named was one who
turned out not to have been in the camp at the time in question. The
officer who had reported him was put to death instead.
The consulate of 48 was the first for which Caesar could legally be a
candidate. Before this, a law had been passed permitting the sons of
those proscribed by Sulla to seek office. For the first time the
Transpadani - the inhabitants of the Po Valley, recently admitted to
citizenship - were allowed to take part in the elections. They probably
came in great numbers to honour their old governor and benefactor.
Presumably Caesar had also seen to it that the politicians condemned
since 52 under the strict aegis of Pompey were given an amnesty and
allowed to return to Rome. As dictator he also celebrated the Latin
games, which the consuls had failed to do in their haste to leave the city.
It was a rebuke to the consuls; it was also correct, as befitted the
pontifex maximus. This was the old feast of the Latin league. The
consuls customarily announced it on assuming office, and they were not
supposed to join the army until it had been held. All the magistrates had
to participate. It took place outside Rome, near Alba Longa, the home of
the Julii, lasted for several days, and culminated in the sacrifice of a bull
to Juppiter. Originally it had to be a white bull; a later decision of the
Senate allowed the sacrifice of red beasts, but we do not know whether
this applied before 49.
At the end of December he laid down his dictatorship and left the city.
He seems to have started his consulship on the way to Brindisi, where he
set sail on 4 January.
The situation had changed substantially. Caesar was now consul. His
opponents could no longer claim to be the lawful rulers. The republic
was with him. A little later, after his initial successes in Greece, one of
his young followers tried to persuade Cicero to change his allegiance, or
at least to remain neutral. `You have done your duty to your party and
the republic you approve of,' he wrote; `what matters now is that we
should be where the republic now is, rather than follow the old one and
be in none.' It was a bold use of language to localize the republic in this
way; it was no longer just a question of the legitimacy of the
magistrates. Yet Caesar's claim is clearly mirrored in these words.
He claimed to represent the whole, and this was made all the easier by
his opponents, who had brought in numerous foreign potentates and
intended to conquer Italy with their aid, as though it were an enemy
country; Cato alone did all in his power to spare the citizens. When two
hundred senators had gathered for a meeting in Saloniki - at a place set
up for the taking of the auspices - he secured a resolution that no Roman
should be killed except in battle and that no town subject to Rome
should be plundered.
The Pompeians did not adhere strictly to it; Caesar, on the other hand,
did everything to mitigate the effects of the war. He had admittedly the
great advantage of being politically and militarily in control of
everything.
The Greek Campaign
(until September 48)
Before they embarked, Caesar told the soldiers that they had now
reached the end of all their exertions and dangers. Hence they should not
be afraid to leave their slaves and their baggage in Italy and go on board
with light packs; in this way more of them could be accommodated on
the ships. They should put all their hopes in victory and his generosity.
On hearing this the soldiers are said to have cheered.
Caesar had insufficient ships at his disposal. He could cross with only
seven legions. The wind was favourable, and, trusting to his swiftness
and his good fortune, he crossed over to Greece. It was a hazardous
undertaking, as he had only twelve warships for cover, while the enemy
fleet consisted of a hundred and ten. But the Pompeian commanders
probably did not expect the Caesarians to arrive so soon, and their ships
were still in port. Pompey had not yet arrived; he intended to take up
winter quarters along the coast near Apollonia (in the south of what is
now Albania) and Dyrrhachium. Thanks to the speed of his operations
Caesar forestalled him and took possession of Oricum and Apollonia,
though Pompey cut off the route to Dyrrhachium. The two armies
encamped opposite each other near Apollonia; Pompey was well
supplied, but Caesar was not. Pompey's fleet had now learnt its lesson
and cut Caesar off from the Adriatic.
Immediately after landing, Caesar once again made peace proposals.
Both commanders should commit themselves on oath to dismiss their
armies within three days. Full authority should then be restored to the
Senate. Pompey would not even listen to Caesar's terms: `What need
have I of life and citizenship,' he said, `if I appear to owe them to
Caesar's mercy?' And indeed, after his flight and Caesar's victories it
could scarcely appear otherwise. Things had changed considerably since
the spring of 49; there was no longer room for both of them. There was
now no justification for breaking off the war against Caesar, on which
the Pompeians had decided with good reason.
With the armies encamped close to each other, Caesar had Vatinius
shout the demand for peace negotiations to the other side. Why should
not citizens talk with citizens and exchange deputations? The Pompeians
said they would give their answer the following day. From both sides
soldiers flocked together, and Labienus began discussions with Vatinius.
Then suddenly a hail of missiles descended on the Caesarians. Vatinius
escaped them, but others were wounded. As the Caesarians withdrew,
Labienus shouted after them, `Let us have no more talk of reconciliation,
for only when Caesar's head is brought to us will peace be possible.' In
this way the door was shut on Caesar's attempt to win over the
opponents' men.
For a long time nothing happened. Pompey's army was superior, but he
hesitated to attack Caesar. He obviously hoped to be able to cut off his
supplies. Caesar, on the other hand, waited with growing impatience for
the remaining legions to arrive; with a favourable wind, he thought, they
should have been able to cross long ago, despite the superior strength of
the opposing fleet. At times he became distrustful of Antony and his
colleagues and wondered whether they were still firmly on his side. He
decided to cross over in a small boat, disguised as a slave, and fetch the
soldiers himself.
The boat ran into a violent storm, and the captain wanted to turn back.
Caesar insisted that he should go on and shouted in his ear, `Have no
fear! You are ferrying Caesar and his fortune.' The scene is reliably
attested.
Caesar had long known that fortune had supreme power in all things, and
especially in war. He repeatedly speaks of it in his writings. He felt he
was favoured by fortune, and indeed he was. `Let him have his fortune!'
remarked Cicero at the beginning of 49, showing that Caesar's relations
with fortune were also known in Rome. They derived from his descent
from Venus and had been confirmed time and again in love and war. But
naturally one could not simply rely on fortune. In one of his comedies,
Terence had said, `Fortune helps the brave' (fortes Fortuna adiuvat), and
the Latin language seemed to bear witness to the connection. Fortune
could be helped along; indeed it had to be. Caesar once told his men that
`if everything did not proceed fortunately they must come to the aid of
fortune with their zeal'; a similar idea is also to be found in Terence.
Caesar also knew that not only fortune, but understanding, helps the
brave. Suetonius writes, `It is difficult to say whether in his enterprises
he acted more with caution or more with boldness,' and Caesar was
certainly brilliant at reconnaissance and planning. Yet he could also
stake all on one card. From the beginning there was something of the
adventurer and the gambler in him; at first this was more a product of
wilfulness, but it was increasingly nourished by the experience of how
little resistance reality often offered if one took a firm grip on the facts
of a situation. This had been amply demonstrated in Gaul. Fortune was
of course fickle, but she could also be faithful. He enjoyed dicing. It was
in his nature; he would never have wished to be anxious and hesitant.
In this rather desperate situation Caesar once more devised a bold and
quite unusual strategy. As the land was hilly, he occupied various high
points in a wide area round Pompey's camp, fortified them, drew lines of
communication between them, and began to encircle his opponent. His
aim was to prevent the Pompeian cavalry from blocking the roads by
which he hoped to obtain supplies; he also wished to put the cavalry out
of action by cutting it off from its sources of fodder. But above all he
wished to deal a severe blow to Pompey's reputation by showing that this
famous general, with his worldwide clienteles and a greatly superior
army, was encircled and besieged, and probably had no stomach for
fight.
Unable to avoid encirclement - except through a large-scale battle -
Pompey confined himself to occupying numerous high points himself, in
order to control as wide an area as possible. His fortifications finally
extended for fifteen miles, compared with Caesar's seventeen. Pompey
thus had the advantage of the inner line; with the help of his archers and
slingers he could seriously impede the Caesarians' fortification work. He
also managed to force them back at several points.
Caesar himself shows how `new and unusual' this kind of warfare was
- and not just because of the extent of the fortifications. As a rule the
army with superior numbers and the more powerful cavalry besieged the
other; it was the besieged who starved, not the besiegers. Caesar had of
course successfully used a similar technique at Avaricum and Alesia.
Remembering this, his soldiers were infected with his defiance and
determination, however hard they had to work (for they too were now
older and worn down by ceaseless physical exertions). They often had to
make do with barley and pulse instead of wheat; even the meat that
Caesar was able to obtain in large quantities now seemed a delicacy.
Instead of corn they used roots for baking a kind of bread, and when the
Pompeians scoffed at their hunger they tossed a few loaves across to
them. It was on this occasion that Pompey remarked that he was dealing
not with human beings, but with wild beasts. He took care that this bread
disappeared at once, lest anyone should see it. Yet the pride of an army
can stiffen as conditions worsen; the soldiers said they would rather live
off the bark of trees than let Pompey escape. Above all they wanted the
war to end.
Rations were bound to improve as soon as the new corn was ripe, but
according to the Roman calendar it was still May, June or July -
corresponding to our spring. Yet even the Pompeians, who had much
better supplies, were soon unable to feed their animals. They apparently
did not slaughter them, and so the camp was filled with the stench of
rotting carcases. They were short of water, as Caesar had dammed or
diverted all the streams. The Pompeian soldiers had to dig wells, and as
they were in any case not used to fortification work, disaffection grew,
and more and more of them deserted.
A particular difficulty for Caesar was that he had to secure himself on
the outside. For Pompey could attack him in the rear from the seaward
side. On the coast there was a large gap in the ring encircling Pompey's
army. To make matters worse, Caesar had not enough soldiers to man his
long lines of communication. Significantly he does not mention this
when describing his unusual strategy, but it is obvious.
Smoke signals sent from hill to hill had alerted Caesar. He approached
hurriedly with twenty-five cohorts that he had had to withdraw from
another position. But Pompey was already setting up a large camp by the
sea for several legions; the encircling ring was breached. Caesar could
do no more than build new fortifications close by.
While he was occupied with the fortification work, it was reported that
at a spot not far away, hidden by trees, a Pompeian legion was occupying
an old camp that had previously been abandoned. The site lay three
hundred yards from the sea and five hundred from Pompey's new camp;
he obviously intended to widen the breach he had already made. Caesar
hoped to be able to overwhelm this legion. He took thirty-three cohorts
and secretly led them up to the camp by a devious route. He then ordered
them to attack in two divisions. The left-hand division, which he himself
commanded, threw the Pompeians from the dyke, then turned to the
middle gate, knocked out the ericius or `hedgehog' (a beam studded with
iron spikes) and entered the camp.
He had lost nine hundred and sixty soldiers and two hundred horse.
Most of them had not fallen in battle, but been crushed or trampled
during the flight. Caesar's troops had lost thirty-two standards in the
battle. Pompey was acclaimed imperator in accordance with time-
honoured custom. Labienus persuaded Pompey to hand over the
prisoners to him. He addressed them as comrades and asked them
scornfully whether it was usual for old soldiers to flee; he then had them
all massacred, as if they had to be punished for Caesar's defeat. This was
one of several occasions when the terrible hatred of Caesar was visited
on his soldiers, as it could not touch him. The hatred was all the more
malignant when Caesar manifested his superiority. It was as though his
opponents sensed their own weakness.
He called the army together and warned the soldiers not to take the
previous day's events too much to heart. He reminded them of all the
battles they had won. They must be grateful to fortune and come to her
aid with their zeal if things were not going well at present.
He explained to them that the defeat could have had many causes, but
their failure was least to blame; by their bravery they could make up for
it - as they had at Gergovia. Then Caesar publicly reprimanded and
demoted some of the standard-bearers.
At Apollonia Caesar saw that the wounded were tended. He then turned
eastwards towards Thessaly with the bulk of his army. He wanted to link
up with the troops he had previously sent there and force Pompey to do
battle far away from the Adriatic. If Pompey were to cross over to Italy,
however, he wanted to set off there through Illyria with his other troops.
In fact Pompey's senatorial allies urged him to return to Rome, but he
would not re-cross the Adriatic without having beaten Caesar.
The distance between the two armies was great enough to allow both to
charge. Pompey, however, intended to await Caesar's attack, hoping that
he would be better able to withstand it with closed ranks, when the
Caesarians were out of breath after running the double distance. Caesar
criticized this in his account, `because in everyone there is something of
an inborn urge and desire for deeds, which is fanned by eagerness for
battle. Commanders should not restrain this urge, but encourage it. It is
not for nothing that from ancient times the trumpets have sounded and
all have raised battle cries; it was believed that this frightened the
enemy and spurred on one's own men.
Yet despite the noonday heat Caesar did not let up. He had the camp
stormed. Shortly before this Pompey had ridden out of the back gate. In
the evening, surveying the battlefield strewn with the dead and wounded,
Caesar observed: `This is what they wanted; after such great deeds I,
Gains Caesar, should have been condemned if I had not sought help from
my army.' It is noteworthy that he was still exercised by the question of
who was to blame for the deaths of so many citizens.
It is said that Caesar instituted a special search for Marcus Brutus, the
son of his mistress Servilia, as he was concerned for his safety. He was
overjoyed to find him. To have Brutus as a supporter was particularly
important to him, because he was Cato's nephew and a very persuasive
advocate of the old republic.
The battle of Pharsalos may have decided the outcome of the civil war,
but the war was far from over. Pompey's fleets still controlled much of
the Mediterranean and had just retaken the island outside the entrance to
the port of Brindisi. Another fleet had destroyed Caesar's ships in the
strait of Messina. Africa too was still in the hands of his opponents.
Pompey might try to raise another army, either in the east or in the
province of Africa. There had been unrest in Rome and Italy too; it had
been put down by Caesar's supporters, but it could easily erupt again.
In his account of the battle Caesar tries to indicate how decisive it was.
When the outcome was known, it turned out that on the same day
remarkable signs had been witnessed. At Elis, in the Peloponnese, the
statue of Victoria, which faced that of Athene, had turned round to face
the door and threshold of the temple. At Antioch in Syria the battle cries
and trumpets of an army had twice been heard; they were so loud that
the citizens had armed and rushed to the walls. The same had happened
at Ptolemais (now Akko, in Israel). At Pergamon the kettledrums had
resounded in the remotest rooms of the temple. In the temple of Victoria
at Tralles in Asia Minor attention was drawn to a palm that had grown
up at the time from the joins between the stones.
Before the battle Caesar had sacrificed to Mars and Venus, and the
augur had predicted a great change in conditions. Just before dawn a
bright light is said to have appeared over Caesar's camp; flames rose
from it, as from a torch, and descended on Pompey's camp. Caesar
himself is said to have seen it while inspecting the guards. This is how
the ancient world recognized `historic events'.
Caesar reports only the facts. Yet did he not sense that at Pharsalos he
was favoured not only by fortune, but by Venus, his ancestress, and the
gods in general? We have no evidence of his religious faith. Signs
conveyed by lightning did not concern him unless they suited his
purpose. Suetonius reports that once, when a sacrifice was being
performed and the sacrificial animal escaped, he still continued his
march. Later, when he tripped on landing in Africa, he discerned a
propitious sense in this unpropitious omen and declared, `Africa, I am
holding you!' And when he heard that in Africa the name of Scipio was
invincible (it happened to be the name of the enemy commander) he
jestingly sent for one of his own soldiers, a man of particularly ill repute
who bore the same name, and kept him by his side throughout the
fighting. On the other hand, he took the trouble to celebrate the Latin
games. Was this only for the sake of propriety? Why did he so often
invoke the immortals? In 69, when he stated, in his funeral oration for
his aunt Julia, that kings were subject to the power of the gods, was this
just a form of words? And when he chose the battlecry `Venus Victrix'
before the battle of Pharsalos, did he do so out of superstition or because
of the beliefs of his men?
Rome awaited events. No one spoke publicly against Caesar, for fear
of informers, but he seems to have had few supporters, except perhaps
among the common people. As a precaution, the statues of Sulla and
Pompey were removed.
Caesar himself pushed ahead as far as possible every day with his
cavalry. One legion followed him in shorter daily marches. He at once
sent other troops across to Asia Minor. In September he arrived at the
Hellespont, having passed through Macedonia.
On arriving at Ilion (Troy), the town from which his supposed ancestor
Aeneas had set out for Rome, he exempted it from tribute; Alexander the
Great had formerly done the same. He was feted wherever he went, and
towns that did not lie on his route sent deputations.
At Ephesos he was honoured as `god and deliverer of humanity', as can
be deduced from the monument that was set up shortly afterwards. The
inscription reads: `To Gaius Julius Caesar, son of Gaius, pontifex
maximus, imperator, twice consul, manifest god (theos epiphanes)
descended from Ares and Aphrodite and common deliverer of humanity'.
He had made sacrifices to Mars and Venus before the battle of Pharsalos.
The two are associated in Greek myth, and Caesar must have known this.
As the god of war, Mars was clearly well disposed to him; so was Venus,
who was increasingly regarded as the goddess who conferred success.
Mars was the ancestor of Romulus and Remus, the founders of Rome,
and Caesar now represented the city. There were thus various reasons
why the Greeks, wishing to honour the descendant of Venus, should have
believed him to be descended from Mars too.
It was at all events to the Greeks' advantage to pay such honours to the
new master and thereby put themselves in good standing with him. After
all, he proved to be a benefactor to the province. He reduced the burden
of imposts after the large confiscations they had suffered under the
Pompeians. Caesar proudly points out that he preserved the great shrine
of Artemis at Ephesos from the confisca tion of its costly votive
offerings. Yet the likelihood is that he seized them himself; the war was
expensive, and his soldiers had earned their rewards.
Caesar spent only a few days in the province of Asia; on hearing that
Pompey had set off for Egypt, he crossed to Rhodes, in order to sail from
there to Alexandria. He was accompanied by two whole legions and
eight hundred horse. By now, however, the legions were reduced to
barely a third of their original strength and amounted jointly to little
more than 3,200 men. Caesar writes, however, that he thought the fame
of his deeds allowed him to embark upon the long journey, even with
such a small force. He believed that `every place was equally safe' for
him.
At all events he was in a hurry. The war had dragged on and on; it must
be brought to an end. Caesar was now fifty-two and had waged war for
nearly eleven years, fighting one battle after another and moving from
camp to camp. Time and again he had crossed Gaul on foot, on
horseback or on a litter, then repeatedly returned to Italy and Illyricum.
He had gone on to conquer the whole of Italy, Spain and large parts of
Greece. Now he had to set things to rights in the east. When would it
end? Impatience, which was in any case a marked trait in his nature,
must have driven him on, making him careless of his own safety.
At this time Egypt was partly independent and partly dependent, and
the more dependent it was, the more it insisted - or the more the
inhabitants of Alexandria insisted - on its independence and freedom.
Apart from the Parthian realm in Mesopotamia and farther east, the
kingdom on the Nile was the last of any size in the Mediterranean world,
as Rome had destroyed and annexed all the others. The Ptolemaic
dynasty came from Macedonia; the first of the Ptolemies had been
governing the country when Alexander the Great died, and later made
himself king. At times their rule extended far beyond Egypt, taking in
parts of Asia Minor and many of the Greek islands. At the beginning of
the first century B C, Cyprus and much of Cyrene (now Libya) had been
ruled by Egypt. Yet even then the monarchy was plagued by grave
structural weaknesses, foreign entanglements, and above all a series of
disputes between pretenders. At first the throne had passed to the king's
eldest son, but the Ptolemies later adopted the Egyptian custom of
sibling marriage, so that the kingdom was inherited by the eldest brother
and the eldest sister. Court intrigues gave rise to serious and at times
bloody and costly quarrels. Moreover, the Greek colony in Alexandria,
which was formally independent, was inclined to rebellion. It not only
wished to play a special role under the otherwise absolutist rule of the
Ptolemies, but seems to have evolved a special pride as a guardian of
Greek traditions and a centre of Greek intellectual life; this pride seems
to have spread to the city's non-Greek inhabitants, who had relatively
little part in its cultural life. The first Ptolemaic kings had been anxious
to appear particularly Greek in the alien world of Egypt and had founded
a library that was to become the greatest in classical antiquity - a kind of
academy in which Greek poets and scholars could live and work next to
the royal palace.
In the first century B C the country came more and more under the
influence of Rome. The Senate did not wish to assume responsibility in
Egypt, but it interfered in disputes over the royal succession and was at
times directly involved in them.
In accordance with the late king's will, his daughter Cleopatra VII and
her brother Ptolemy XIII had succeeded to the throne. In 48 Cleopatra
was twenty-one and Ptolemy thirteen; for all practical purposes the
country was ruled by the courtiers. They had lately come into conflict
with the queen and driven her into exile. Cleopatra now attempted, with
armed support from Syria, to return to Egypt. Her brother's army faced
her at Pelusium, a fortress on the eastern frontier.
One evening at dusk a small ship entered the harbour of Alexandria and
moored close to the palace. A Greek from Sicily disembarked with a
long bag, tied about with straps, which he carried into the palace, in
order to deliver it to the Roman consul. From this bag at Caesar's feet
the young queen emerged, attractively attired, as may be imagined; one
source describes her appearance as both majestic and pitiful. She
apologized charmingly for choosing this unusual way of coming to visit
Caesar. But how else could she have come? And had not Caesar
summoned her? Plutarch reports that the ruse won Caesar's heart and
that he was utterly captivated by her grace and charm.
Our sources would have us believe that she was not only beautiful, but
had a charming voice. `It was a delight to hear its tone; her tongue was
like a many-stringed lyre.' She is said to have had a bewitching manner
and radiated an irresistible fascination that had everyone spellbound.
Caesar may have begun to wonder what was the point of all his
endeavours. If so, he was probably the more inclined to open his heart to
a woman who understood him.
Not least important are the festivities with which Cleopatra regaled
Caesar. Suetonius tells us that their banquets went on till dawn. `There
had never been such merriment in his camp as there was during this
Alexandrian episode,' says Mommsen. Yet we do not know what part the
male company of the camp was allowed to play in this Alexandrian
gaiety. Probably none. For in Alexandria Caesar soon found himself in
extreme difficulties.
Ptolemy, learning that his sister had won Caesar's favour, stirred up the
populace. Its fury soon boiled over and the palace was stormed. Caesar's
soldiers were hard put to withstand the attack. At a popular assembly he
explained that under the will of the late king his two elder children,
Cleopatra and Ptolemy, were to rule Egypt, while the two younger
children were to rule Cyprus. Cyprus, a former Egyptian possession, had
been annexed to Rome by Clodius in 58. So desperate was Caesar's
plight that he now ceded it to Egypt, but this did nothing to improve the
situation.
For almost six months Caesar was besieged in the palace precincts. He
had taken Ptolemy prisoner, but immediately afterwards Ptolemy's
military commander ordered the king's army to march on the palace.
Caesar succeeded in keeping the harbour entrance free by occupying the
lighthouse on the island of Pharos. He also set fire to the Egyptian men
of war in the harbour. The fire destroyed not only the granaries and naval
arsenals by the harbour, but Alexandria's famous library; more than four
hundred thousand papyrus rolls were burnt. More than once the Romans
found themselves in desperate straits. At one stage they were almost cut
off from the underground drinking water system, but Caesar remedied
this by having wells dug. The Alexandrians hurriedly built a new fleet
with whatever wood they could find in the columned halls and public
buildings, but Caesar defeated this too. He then tried to take the offshore
island and the kilometre-long mole that linked it to the shore. He had
just built a bridgehead at the southern end of the mole when the oarsmen
from his ships went ashore to join in the successful fight by shouting and
hurling stones. Difficulties arose when the opponents attacked the
oarsmen in the flank, causing them to panic, flee to their ships, and start
casting off. At about the same time Caesar's soldiers took flight, fearing
that the ships were about to leave without them. There was a mad
scramble; the ships were overloaded and some sank. Caesar's own ship
could no longer be manoeuvred from the shore. He saved himself by
swimming to another that was already seaborne. In doing so he lost his
commander's cloak, which the enemy kept as a trophy.
At last relief arrived in the form of auxiliary troops from Cilicia and
Syria, among whom were three thousand Jews. Ptolemy marched against
them; Caesar followed by sea, taking a circuitous route. In the ensuing
battle the king was beaten and shortly afterwards lost his life in the Nile.
Caesar quickly seized the opportunity to lead his cavalry to Alexandria
and ride as victor into the enemy-held part of the city.
So long had the Alexandrian war lasted - a war that Caesar had taken
upon himself largely for the queen's sake. He had long been cut off from
the outside world. On 14 June 47 Cicero wrote that Caesar had sent no
letters to Rome since 13 December 48. Meanwhile Cato and others had
raised a new army in Africa. There was unrest in Spain, where one of
Pompey's sons soon fomented a rebellion. In Rome there was violent
agitation, as in the previous year, for a remission of debts. The veterans
in Campania were threatening to mutiny. Antony, Caesar's deputy, could
not control the unrest - or hesitated to take decisive action to suppress it.
The Pompeian army from Africa was expected to land at any time.
Caesar's army in Illyria had suffered a crushing defeat.
It seems that about this time he wrote his book on the civil war, which
was designed chiefly to convince the upper strata of Roman society of
the justice of his cause and the seriousness of his efforts for peace.
In late May or early June he set off for Syria, leaving three legions
behind to protect Cleopatra. They were commanded by Rufio, a brave
and seasoned officer who, as the son of an emancipated slave, was
unlikely to harbour political ambitions. In Syria Caesar quickly made his
dispositions, dispensing rewards or punishments, appointing or
dismissing rulers, granting privileges or demanding tribute, filling his
coffers and settling disputes. The Jews were allowed to rebuild the walls
of Jerusalem. Antipatros, the father of the later king Herod, was
rewarded with Roman citizenship for sending auxiliary troops to Egypt.
The very next day he departed for Bithynia, from where he set off
shortly afterwards for the province of Asia. Everywhere he quickly set
things to rights and finally returned to Italy, by way of Athens and
Patras. On 24 September he landed at Taranto. From there he went to
Brindisi, where he met Cicero. After Pompey's defeat Cicero had crossed
over to Brindisi, but could not leave the town without Caesar's
permission. Cicero was very anxious about approaching Caesar, not
because of his clemency, but because of the circumstances in which he
might exercise it. Yet on seeing Cicero, Caesar at once dismounted and
greeted him, and the two spoke long and amicably.
He alone could do this. And it was a task that he reserved largely for
himself. In some respects he could still rely on a number of independent
senators who put themselves at his disposal, for example Servilius, the
consul of 48. They were able to represent his interests with a fair degree
of autonomy, acting in accordance with the conventional understanding
of their function and with the support of the Senate, insofar as it was
present; they did so out of a sense of duty. They were often moved not by
opportunism, but by a desire to serve the commonwealth. Paradoxical
though it may seem, Caesar's most reliable supporters in the
administrative sphere were former Pompeians and neutrals, and they
would have supported him in the rebuilding of the commonwealth.
Among his supporters - apart from the soldiers and all the others with
an eye to gain - were the lowlier spirits who wished to serve Caesar
loyally, but were not exactly imaginative or able to act independently in
performing tasks of major, let alone overriding importance. On the other
hand there were those who saw themselves as little Caesars, spurred by
similar ambitions and intent on securing leading positions; many of
them were talented, even highly gifted, but self-sufficient in a way that
was not necessarily to Caesar's taste. They were true sons of the
aristocracy, but to some extent outsiders; they attached themselves to
Caesar largely in the hope of becoming, with his help, what Roman
nobles had always wanted to become - principes, the leaders of the
Senate and the republic. Depending on the circumstances under which
they happened to live, they had all the assurance of the ruling class.
Yet they had had an easier life than Caesar; they had not had to assert
themselves in isolation against all the rest, but been able to join him.
Their rise was hardly due to merit. They therefore found it hard to
conform. They were more interested in rights than in duties.
Foremost among them, after the death of his friend Curio, was Mark
Antony. He was a tall, handsome man. According to Plutarch, `his well-
shaped beard, wide forehead and curved nose gave him a manly
appearance that made him resemble Heracles, as represented in
paintings and statues.' He was in fact an outstanding `second man',
although he clearly regarded himself as the `first man'. He had great
abilities, but was too soft, too good-natured, and also too lascivious; in
any case he had not enough initiative or inward assurance, not enough
concentration or stability, to play an independent, superior role. It may
be that he owed both his charm and his weakness to the fact that he had
never quite grown up.
In his wild youth Mark Antony seems to have shared the role of second
man' with Curio. Curio having shown him the way, Antony plunged
himself deeply into debt, determined to cut a dash and live life to the
full. For a while he seems to have attached himself to Clodius, but is
said to have felt uneasy in this role. It is more likely that his mother,
reputedly one of the best and most virtuous women in Rome, wished to
draw him away from bad company. At all events, he went to Greece to
study rhetoric and train for military service.
His chief concern seems to have been the pursuit of pleasure. He was
the master, and he enjoyed living the life of a potentate, devoting his
nights to theatrical performances, wine and love, then sleeping it off
during the day or going around with a hangover; one morning he even
vomited in the popular assembly. He surrounded himself with actors,
musicians and ladies of easy virtue, and it caused widespread
disapproval when they then had to be lodged at the houses of the leading
citizens. Especially remarkable were the golden dishes he used when
entertaining, and his occasional practice of harnessing lions to his
chariot so that he could drive around like Bacchus. Cicero once
remarked that he was taken up more with festivities than with
stratagems. He could also be chivalrous, unless he forgot himself or was
severely provoked.
It is not clear how loyal Antony was to Caesar. For all his dependence
he probably had enough determination and detachment to be able to
decide on a different policy. In 47 the tribune Publius Cornelius
Dolabella, another of Caesar's bright young men, began to agitate for a
remission of debt, and as a result disturbances and street fights erupted
in Rome; but Antony hesitated for a long time before intervening. He
may simply have been too indolent, or he may have wished to keep all
his political options open. It is true that he finally cracked down with
such brutality as to forfeit the sympathy of the populace. When Caesar's
legions in Campania became restive and indiscipline spread, Antony at
first did nothing. There are indications that in 46 he was involved in
plans for a coup against Caesar. Later we find him engaged in a highly
equivocal policy to establish Caesar's authority and at the same time to
unmask him as a tyrant. When Caesar returned in 47, Antony fell into
disfavour, but Dolabella was received amicably.
We have a description of the war, the Bellum Africum, from the pen of a
senior officer who was able to observe Caesar closely, without
necessarily being privy to his plans. We learn that the young soldiers
were at first frightened and desperate, but found solace in the `wonderful
cheerfulness' of their commander, who seemed full of assurance and
self-confidence. We read that when the opposing army paraded in front
of his camp, Caesar directed his troops not from the wall, but from the
commander's tent. He was content for messengers to put him in the
picture and convey his orders. He also believed that his enemies were
not sufficiently confident of victory to attack his camp: his name and
reputation alone were bound to dampen their courage.
Caesar was very anxious and sent repeated instructions for the rest of
his troops to be shipped across; on one occasion he even sent orders that
they should be dispatched forthwith, in spite of the season and the
weather conditions. On the very same day that the courier had left,
Caesar complained of the dilatoriness of the army and the fleet; all the
time he looked angrily out to sea. Once, as in 48, he is said to have set
off himself to fetch the missing legions, only to encounter the
reinforcements on the high seas. Is it the reporter who makes Caesar
seem so much more anxious than he does in his own account? Or did
Caesar's anxiety arise from the difficulties of planning a campaign
overseas? Or had he really become more restless and incautious, as he
already seems to have been during the Egyptian campaign, unable to
wait for the war to end? Cicero later wrote that Caesar was especially
angry with those who had caused the African war, because they had
prolonged his military labours.
At last the ships began to arrive. Caesar had given orders that only the
soldiers and their weapons, `neither baggage nor slaves, nor anything
else that soldiers would normally bring with them, were to be stowed in
the ships'. He then found that one of his senior officers had requisitioned
a ship solely for his slaves and pack-animals. The author of the Bellum
Africum calls this a `trivial incident'; it casts a revealing light on the
armies of the time. As the officer in question had had a hand in
fomenting the Italian mutiny, Caesar dismissed him and others and sent
them back to Italy with only one slave apiece.
It stood him in good stead that the fame of his uncle Marius still lived
on in Africa and that the opposing generals obviously made hardly any
promises to their soldiers; hence many defected to his side. And a
number of towns surrendered.
He was at great pains to prepare the army to meet the new enemy. `He
drilled with his troops,' we are told, `not like a commander with an army
of veterans that had been victorious in the hardest battles, but like a
gladiatorial fencing master with new recruits, showing them how far to
step back from their opponents, how to face the enemy, how to resist in a
confined space, now advancing, now yielding, now feigning fresh
attacks; he almost went so far as to prescribe from what distance and in
what manner the javelins were to be used.'
With their skill and their highly versatile and deceptive tactics
Caesar's opponents obliged him to operate slowly and deliberately,
which was contrary to his custom. In order to practise fighting against
elephants and accustom his horses to their smell, appearance and
trumpeting, he had some sent over from Italy.
The `usual sickness' was epilepsy, from which various sources say he
suffered. We have evidence of other sudden attacks. After two thousand
years no diagnosis is possible, and nothing can be gleaned about the
exact nature of his illness or its physical and psychic consequences. An
epileptic attack might explain why Caesar lost control of the army at
Thapsus. The author of the Bellum Africum may have been mistaken
about his riding into the fray. Perhaps the horseman leading the charge in
the commander's cloak was not Caesar himself, this may have been one
of the best-kept secrets, though it need not have been kept from
everyone or for ever: behind Plutarch's sources there may have been a
close confidant of Caesar's.
The soldiers charged so fiercely that victory was soon won. The
enemy's elephants were subjected to a hail of missiles; the whistle of the
catapults and the impact of the stones and lead bullets caused them to
panic, turn tail and trample down the units ranged in serried ranks
behind them.
Cato took his life by falling on his sword. His son rushed in, and the
physician bound his wounds, but no sooner was he left alone than he
ripped off the bandage and bled to death.
Lucan wrote: victrix causa diisplacuit, sed victa Catoni (The victorious
cause pleased the gods but the defeated cause pleased Cato). The
immense authority that Cato enjoyed during his lifetime, as the
embodiment of the republic, became even greater through his death. No
one sensed this as strongly as Caesar - as witness the unbridled and
impotent hatred with which he pursued him, even in death, with at times
obscene invective - a hatred that presumably derived from his inability
to understand the source of Cato's authority. Pompey was great by virtue
of his achievements, but in many ways weak. The leading senators all
allowed themselves to be defeated somehow, and in the end Caesar
despised them. But if he despised Cato, his contempt must to some
extent have rebounded on himself. So hard, so Roman, was the stuff of
which Cato was made, so unshakable his faith in the republic he served.
Cato was one of the most remarkable politicians in world history, a man
whose adherence to principle verged on the bizarre and made him in
many respects a Quixotic figure. Yet for the Senate, which represented a
tradition of immense political wisdom, he was the most respected and,
in many ways, the most powerful politician of the age, enjoying the
highest authority, though not the highest rank. Caesar may not have
known, but must have sensed, that when he confronted Cato he was
confronting Rome, that Cato gave the lie to his pretensions. The res
publica alone could have produced such a man. Yet this also
demonstrates the difficulties that Caesar faced. It may be that Cato did
more than Caesar to determine the history of these years, in that he
determined the way in which Caesar acted.
There was a logic in Caesar's reaction to Cato's death. We are told that
he addressed him directly, as if standing in front of him, and his words
presumably reflected his true feelings: `I envy you this death, for you
envied me the chance to save you.' He had wanted the final triumph, but
now he saw that his opponent had robbed him of it. Only later did it
become clear what power Cato exercised even after his death. When
Caesar arrived at Utica, the inhabitants had already buried him with full
honours.
After a short stay at Utica, Caesar hurriedly departed for Numidia and
took over the kingdom of Juba, an opponent of long standing who had
defeated Curio in 49. Juba had fallen in a duel with a leading Pompeian;
it was a form of suicide. From Numidia, or part of it, Caesar carved out
the province of Africa Nova and appointed Sallust as governor. Sallust
proceeded to exploit the province so shamelessly that he was put on trial
in Rome and acquitted only after paying out large sums in bribes. Yet in
his historical work he affects to represent ancient Roman morality.
In Numidia Caesar was probably courted by neighbouring kings. We
hear that he was well disposed to Eunoe, the wife of Bogud, king of
western Mauretania (part of what is now Morocco), and gave many
costly gifts to her and her husband.
In mid June Caesar sailed to Sardinia, `the only one of his estates that
he had not yet inspected', as Cicero sarcastically remarked. Here too
punishments were meted out. From there he sent most of the fleet to
Spain, where unrest had spread and one of Pompey's sons had placed
himself at the head of the rebellion. Moreover, a Pompeian adventurer in
Syria had murdered Caesar's governor and taken over the province. Yet
Caesar no doubt hoped to deal with these troubles by proxy. For him the
war was over. On 25 July he was back in Rome.
`The difficulties increase, the nearer one comes to one's goal,' we read in
Goethe's Elective Affinities. Caesar had meanwhile grown more and
more impatient to see the end of the war. Could it be the kind of
impatience that, when the goal is ambitious, makes the difficulties seem
all the greater? But what if one has to ask oneself whether the goal of
securing one's own honour really justified all the expense of such long
and bloody wars? In Gaul the expense may have been commensurate
with the goal; Caesar probably thought the effort worth while, knowing
that it served his highest ambitions. With the same superiority that he
had shown in Gaul he had again mastered every situation, in spite of a
number of reckless decisions. Yet was not the endless warfare bound,
sooner of later, to seem pointless? Was it only his veterans who were
anxious for it all to end? And above all, was not the goal bound to
become higher, the greater the cost of attaining it? After all, he must
have felt a need, consciously or unconsciously, to find a reasonable
equation between the value of the goal and the cost of its attainment.
Caesar may have been overcome with fatigue, as often happens when
we come to the end of seemingly endless labours, when what has
absorbed us for so long is finished, when we have reached our goal, but
cannot yet enjoy it it. `I have lived long enough for both nature and
fame,' Caesar later said in Rome. We are told that he said it `all too
often'. He may have said it earlier, on the way back to Rome, or even
before he left; and he may have had similar feelings as his impatience
grew more urgent.
This would partly explain his long sojourn in Egypt, and his need for
someone with whom he could speak intimately about the purpose of all
his endeavours, about the purpose of his life. For this cannot have been
clear to him. And Cleopatra would have known how to respond, not only
theoretically. It was about this time that he invited her to Rome; she
seems to have arrived there in the autumn.
Roman society naturally went out to receive him at the gates of the
city when he arrived, accompanied by a few troops and a large civilian
escort and preceded by his lictors, their fasces adorned with the victor's
laurels.
This time he was in Rome not to make hurried preparations for war,
but to stay there indefinitely. Rome's good society flocked to meet him,
partly out of a need to put themselves in good standing with the victor,
partly out of curiosity.
No one knew what Caesar intended. He had obviously revealed nothing
but the date of his arrival and perhaps a few wishes regarding specific
powers and honours. There was much pessimism; the Romans feared a
monarchy. They used the term regnum, which is commonly translated as
`kingship', but which in Rome was understood as tyranny and had
connotations of usurpation, arbitrary rule and flouting of the law.
Unlike Sulla, he had no cause that united him with the Senate. He had
of course repeatedly declared that the republic should be free and that
everything should be decided by the Senate and the people; but would
this still apply if their decisions displeased him? Many declarations are
made in the quest for power, but how many remain valid once it is won?
Precisely because he had no cause, and of course because Rome's ruling
class regarded his war as unjust and viewed him with the utmost distrust,
his victory amounted to subjection. Unlike Sulla, Caesar had not
eliminated his opponents, and so the victor had to be on his guard
against the vanquished. Politically he was in a minority. And he was very
isolated. Whatever honours were heaped on him, he could not withdraw
from the scene; he could not remove himself, as Sulla had done, from a
reconstituted republic, but had to assert himself, defend himself, and
consolidate his position.
For all his generosity and charm - indeed because of it - no one could
be certain whether he intended to view the Senate and the citizens in
political or merely in social terms - as constituent parts of the republic
or merely as a society, which could go on enjoying life, welfare and
honours, but would no longer represent the whole of the commonwealth,
with a voice in its affairs and the power to make decisions.
Cicero later declared that `no one should be able to do more than the
laws and the Senate.' This was the essence of republican wisdom. For the
time being, however, Caesar could do anything. Rome had to wait and
see what he wanted. It was advisable to stay behind cover.
Before Caesar's return the senators had done only one thing, acting
perhaps partly on direct or indirect intimations from him: they had
resolved to grant him not only his triumphs, but a number of
extraordinary powers and honours. The supplicatio for his victory was to
last for forty days. His triumphal chariot was to be drawn by white
horses and preceded by seventy-two lictors. It was then to be placed on
the Capitol, before the statue of Juppiter; on it was to be a bronze statue
of Caesar standing on a globe (symbolizing the world); the inscription
was to describe Caesar as a demigod.
To the extent that these honours represented him as the ruler of the
world, they demonstrate that his dignitas had risen immeasurably. The
senators were consistent: they took his claim to be as absolute and as
superhuman as Caesar himself had done. The magnitude of his
achievements seemed to transcend everything known to Roman
experience - or indeed to human experience generally. They
acknowledged it accordingly. Caesar was to have no cause for complaint.
Even if the senators were not acting on his express wishes, they realized
that he expected no less. They had to recognize the stature of a man
whose wishes were known, who was powerful and feared, proud and pre-
eminent. The fact that he was descended from Venus and obviously
enjoyed her special favour may have made it easier for them to bestow
on him the status of a demigod.
If so, it was giving him monarchical powers, but making it clear that
they were exceptional. Essential to the office of dictator was its
exceptional character. The powers it customarily entailed related chiefly,
if not wholly, to military affairs. They were not precisely defined, but
depended on a given situation, as did those of all Roman magistrates.
What distinguished the dictator was that he had no colleague who could
restrain him by entering a veto; how far he could be restrained by a
tribune of the people was a moot point. It was expected that any
arbitrary action he took would be restricted to specific areas. The laws
were not suspended under a dictatorship, and the dictator knew that he
would subequently have to resume his place in the system of oligarchic
equality. Hitherto the Romans had thought it proper, in emergencies, to
confer such comprehensive powers on an individual because they
ultimately had faith in the republican constitution. In Caesar's case they
presumably did so because the established institution of dictatorship
would legitimate the power he already possessed and thus to some extent
restrict it. Conversely, the Senate may have hoped that after being
granted such powers Caesar would be better disposed to it and vouchsafe
it some role in decision-making.
Could Caesar now find a place in the republic? Or could he devise and
create a whole new order, higher and more embracing than the old,
which would induce society, for his sake, to accept monarchic rule? Or
could he make it clear to this society that he needed its help in solving
the present crisis, so that the republic could then survive without him?
Victory in the civil war had given him power within existing conditions.
The question was now whether he could gain power over these
conditions.
Caesar in Rome
THE PROBLEM AND HOW CAESAR SAW IT • CICERO CALLS FOR
THE RESTORATION OF THE REPUBLIC TO HAVE LIVED LONG
ENOUGH FOR HIMSELF AND HIS FAME? • AN UNWORTHY STATE
OF AFFAIRS TRIUMPHS, THEATRICAL PERFORMANCES, THE
COVERED FORUM THE OPENING OF THE FORUM JULIUM •
PROJECTS • THE PATHOS OF ACHIEVEMENT - A WORLD IN WHICH
ONLY TASKS AND PERSONS COUNT • MISUNDERSTANDINGS
DISAPPOINTMENTS
One wonders whether Caesar too did not ask himself how the
deplorable conditions of the pre-war period might be remedied or
mitigated within the framework of a new order.
They affected almost all parts of society and the empire - high and low,
rich and poor, soldiers and civilians, citizens and provincial subjects.
There was a wide discrepancy between law and practice, needs and
possibilities, expectations and demands. Many conflicts arose. Above
all, people no longer knew where they stood; this had been true even
before 49. Too much was uncertain, too much was possible. Everything
hung in the balance.
Caesar was responsible for creating the new order. He was the victor
and had been granted extensive powers by Senate and the people.
Nothing could be undertaken unless he willed it. Although he had not
been charged with the task of restoring the commonwealth, the
responsibility inevitably lay with him.
We are inclined to assume that the Romans must have pondered the
question of the political forms under which they wished to live and to
overcome the difficulties facing the city. We are inclined to look for
coherent conceptions and all too easily assume that men are naturally
willing to develop institutions that will be adequate to all their
problems.
Cicero now recalled Caesar's remark that he had lived long enough for
himself and his fame. Cicero disputed it: he had certainly not lived long
enough for the city. Whatever the war had cast down must be raised up
again: `Tribunals must be set up, loyalty and faith revived; the licence
that was rife on all sides must be checked; a new genera tion must be
brought on; everything that had dissolved and drifted apart must be
bound together again by strict laws.' The dignity and justice of the
republic, and everything that guaranteed its stability, had been sorely
shaken. Not even the foundations had been laid, though Cicero credited
Caesar with the intention of laying them. Caesar alone could heal the
wounds dealt by the war.
Cicero reminded Caesar that his fame exceeded that of any other man;
for that very reason he had not lived long enough if so much remained to
be done. `If, after your victory, you leave the commonwealth in its
present state, you must be anxious lest your divine capacity for
achievement should engender more amazement than praise.' In that case
his fame would be carried far and wide, but find no lasting abode. It
would find one only if Caesar discharged his obligations to the citizens,
the city of his fathers and the whole human race.
Yet Cicero clearly voiced his doubts: Caesar was again thinking only
of himself. His reference to `the whole human race' suggests that he may
have known of Caesar's thoughts at the Rubicon. It is not impossible.
But it need not be assumed, for everyone knew that Caesar's war had
affected the whole world. So why should he not be responsible for
everyone's welfare? All the more remarkable, then, is Cicero's
assumption that the only way to persuade Caesar to take on the task that
faced him was to remind him of the fame he would earn if he performed
it - and forfeit if he ignored it.
Yet in Cicero's opinion the Romans were not living in a res publica,
and it was unlikely that Caesar would do anything to change this. `Even
if he wishes the commonwealth to be as perhaps he too would like it to
be, and as we must all want it to be, he has still not done what he could
do - so deeply has he involved himself with many people.' Even Caesar,
he said, did not know what would happen, for he was dependent on
current conditions. He was not the master of his decisions. For there
were many things that the victor must do, Willy-nilly, to please those
who had made his victory possible. On another occasion Cicero wrote
that Caesar did not even ask his own people for advice. But he had to
accede to their wishes. At this time Cicero was on the best of terms with
Caesar's closest confidants, but unable to report on his plans. He found
everything obscure and uncertain. He was utterly in the dark.
Caesar thus seems to have left everything open. We have every reason to
suppose that he never contradicted the expectation that the old republic
would be restored. Yet at the same time he probably kept his own
intentions hidden, except for minor details, even from his closest
associates.
Admittedly, he once said, `The res publica is nothing - a mere name
without body or shape.' But this was probably said in a state of emotion.
We have similar observations by Cicero, who wrote in 54 that the
commonwealth had `lost not only all its sap, all its blood, but even its
colour and its earlier shape'. True, Cicero wrote this in a mood of regret.
However, Caesar's words - reported, moreover, by an opponent - must be
taken with a grain of salt, if only because at that time the term res
publica meant not only the `republic', but the `legal order' or the
`commonwealth' in the most general sense. Even if Caesar denied the
republic, he could not deny the legal order and the commonwealth. On
the contrary, Cicero was careful to avoid giving Caesar the impression
that he did not regard the present state of affairs as a res publica.
Cicero, for instance, later expressed a wish for peaceful conditions and
`some state of the commonwealth that, if not good, is at least stable'.
This seems like a move away from the old republic, but it still includes
`honourable concerns and endeavours'. Otherwise life would have little
to offer. Yet `honourable endeavours' must include the chance to win
success in political disputes without dependence on another's whim or
favour. He writes: `If dignitas means holding sound views on the
commonwealth and winning approval for them from the good, then I
have preserved my dignitas.' One indication of this was that Cicero's
morning reception - a custom observed by all members of the nobility -
was particularly well attended. `If, however, it means being able to put
whatever you think into action or at least to express it freely, then we
have no trace of dignitas left; it is an achievement if we can rule
ourselves in such a way as to endure with decency what partly exists
already and partly threatens to befall us.
After his return Caesar made conciliatory speeches to the Senate and
people. They should have no anxieties: he did not wish to set up a
tyranny, but to consult with the senators. He did in fact consult with
them, but not very often.
After the prisoners came the long line of lictors, their fasces entwined
with laurels, followed by the commander himself, riding on a chariot
drawn by three white horses and conventionally attired in a purple toga,
a laurel wreath on his head, an eagle sceptre in his hand, his face
coloured with red lead: for the victor was supposed to represent Juppiter,
whose power had made Rome's armies victorious. Over him a slave held
the golden wreath from the temple of the supreme god and constantly
repeated in his ear, `Remember you are human.' Finally came the
soldiers, who by tradition sang satirical songs, one of which ran
`Citizens, guard your womenfolk: we bring the bald adulterer.' There
were also allusions to Caesar's youthful liaison with King Nicomedes of
Bithynia. These offended him - so much so that he protested against the
imputation and swore that it was untrue. The effect is said to have been
ridiculous, but he no doubt took it seriously. The other jibe - that by
doing wrong he would become king - he let pass.
The act of triumph had probably once had a mainly ritual character,
but the aspect of honour had long since become predominant. When a
human being represented Rome's supreme god, he acquired an aura of
supernatural glory. He therefore had to be shielded from the danger of
hubris and divine envy. This was provided by the bulla, an amulet he
wore, by the slave's reminders of mortality, and by the soldiers' songs.
None of these was missing at Caesar's triumphs. Yet never before had a
commander so obviously represented the god. After all, the placing of
his triumphal chariot on the Capitol was meant to document his close
relations with Juppiter.
Each procession took up a whole day. During the Gallic triumph the
axle of the triumphal chariot broke in the Velabrum, in front of the
temple of Fortuna built by Lucullus. In token of propitiation Caesar
ascended the steps of the Capitol on his knees. The incident may have
made him truly uneasy. Having apparently come so close to the god, was
he not bound to regard the mishap as a kind of warning?
It is reported that after dinner on the last day of the triumphs Caesar
paid a visit to his forum, wearing slippers and garlanded with flowers of
all kinds. The celebrations were probably still in progress everywhere.
The crowd escorted him home. The route was lined by elephants
carrying burning torches in candelabra. Might this superbly staged
conclusion to the festivities have come as a surprise to him?
The vast expenditure that Caesar incurred at the time and the shedding
of so much blood - the fact that he `was not yet sated with blood' - are
said to have been much criticized. There was displeasure too at the great
man's capricious insistence that the sixtyyear-old Laberius, a member of
the equestrian order and a writer of pantomimes, should appear in one of
his own pieces; this was incompatible with his rank. Laberius avenged
himself by declaiming, `Hither, 0 citizens! We have lost our liberty!' or
`He whom many fear must go in fear of many!' Caesar compounded his
arbitrary behaviour by rewarding him generously and renewing his
knightly status with the gift of a gold ring.
After this the booty was shared out. Very large sums were allocated to
Caesar's veterans, but small amounts also went to the urban populace.
When the veterans complained indignantly that they should have
received it all, Caesar personally seized one of them and led him away to
be executed. He had two others ritually sacrificed by the priests on the
Campus Martius and their heads displayed in front of the Regia, the
official residence of the pontifex maximus. The religious background to
this, if there was one, remains obscure.
After his return to Rome, Caesar was preoccupied with the settlement
of his veterans. His agents purchased the land, but he reserved the right
to decide on all controversial matters. He began to plan and carry out a
comprehensive social programme. He reduced the number of those
entitled to subsidized grain from three hundred and twenty thousand to a
hundred and fifty thousand and seems to have revised the qualifications
for inclusion in the list. He instituted special payments for prolific
families in order to make up for the losses caused by war. Many
members of the Roman plebs were to be settled in provincial colonies; at
the time of his death eighty thousand had been settled. To prevent unrest,
he suspended the civic associations that Clodius had reintroduced in 58.
Apart from these and other reforms, work on many major and minor
projects, and the conduct of day-to-day business, he was occupied with
reviewing the cases of former opponents in the civil war, with
auctioning confiscated property and distributing rewards to supporters.
What Plutarch writes about Gains Gracchus could apply equally well
to Caesar: `He did not let himself be wearied by so many important
affairs, but dispatched each with unusual speed and energy, as though it
was the only one, so that even those who hated and feared him most
could not help admiring his industry and quickness.'
Here his old passion for achievement came into its own; in this he
could demonstrate his superiority over everyone else. Moreover, his
mode of operation was one that he had practised for more than twelve
years: he planned, gave orders, and made dispositions on a grand scale.
He now ruled the empire as he had once ruled his army, the theatre of
war, and his provinces. It called for tremendous effort, but the effort was
commensurate with the greatness he had assumed. A petition addressed
to Caesar at this time - or perhaps somewhat later - urged him:
`Therefore, by the gods, look after the res publica and walk straight
through all the difficulties, as is your wont.' He did just that.
He boasted about his laws, claiming that some of them held the
commonwealth together. If he felt an obligation to the citizens, he
doubtless thought that he must act in his accustomed manner, in
accordance with his nature.
One may of course wonder how far Caesar's ambition was reliant on a
public. Yet it is quite improbable that the consciousness of his
unprecedented achievements and the praise they deserved was sufficient
for him, and that he was indifferent to the judgement of Roman society.
In his earlier years in Gaul he may have believed that he must first lay
the foundation for his fame; he may have had an imaginary public in
mind. Failing to win the recognition that he felt to be his due, he could
resort to a kind of conspiracy theory and blame his opponents. He may
have convinced himself that influence and fame depended solely on
achievement and not on his attitude to others. He was therefore not
reliant on instant recognition. In 49, however, he seems to have been
very disappointed by the Senate and the people.
It is hardly conceivable that, at least after his victory, he did not think
of some body of authoritative opinion, apart from himself, for whose
applause and approval he secretly yearned. As long as he had opponents
and could assert himself against them all, he was sustained by their
resistance. But now he had reached his goal. His former faith in the
future must have been spent. The recognition he had probably gambled
on - the reward that would compensate him for all his efforts and justify
his career as an outsider - must now be due. It had surely not all been for
nothing. There was no cause, no ideology, no mission, to which he could
cling or behind which he could take refuge. Had he had such a cause,
vanity might have craved recognition, but lack of it would have simply
confirmed his superior judgement. He did not want to rule by force, as
an oppressor. Applause from his own court was scarcely sufficient.
Among the others, he was bound to attach most importance to the
senators, the leaders of Roman society; he might despise them as a
political force, but he could accept their judgement, at least if it was
favourable to him. Supreme dignitas meant supreme recognition. And
this should be accorded not only to his achievement, but to his nature, to
himself. Was he not bound to be convinced by himself, having used up
all his energies for Rome? Could he fail to be profoundly disappointed
when all this found no echo in Rome's good society? Of the reform of
the calendar, which Caesar saw as a significant achievement, Cicero
could only joke that even the stars in their courses now obeyed Caesar's
commands.
If Caesar was so disappointed by the Romans, must his pride not have
inclined him to ignore their judgement and defy them by being, in spite
of them, what he had wanted to be for their benefit - to remain true to
himself and to be from now on the only authority? If he really did not
care whether he `ruled over reluctant subjects', as one of our sources
puts it, such indifference presumably belonged to the last period of his
life.
After his victory in the civil war, Caesar stayed on in Rome for over
five months. Then, during the second leap-month, he had to leave
hurriedly for Spain. He arrived there at the beginning of December. He
had not even had time to conduct the elections. His colleague had him
elected as sole consul for 45. The dictator can hardly have needed this
office. But his election deferred the decision as to who should become
consul and - more importantly - who should not. It also obviated the
uncertainties of the electoral result. For Caesar probably had good
reason to wish to conduct all elections himself. The popular assembly
was not to be relied upon when it exercised its right of election. Caesar
was safe only when he was present in person. Instead of praetors, special
delegates known as praefects were appointed.
Seeing his troops pushed back and beginning to flee, Caesar barred
their way and asked them whether they were not ashamed to let him fall
into the hands of young cubs like Pompey's sons. He then jumped off his
horse, seized a shield and pressed forward into the front line. He is said
to have shouted that this would be his last day, and the last day of the
campaign for his army. He cursed his fortune for preserving him for such
an end. Then, under a hail of missiles, he faced the enemy, ignoring the
danger, and called after his soldiers that he would not follow them. They
should mark what kind of a commander they were deserting, and they
should remember the place. More out of shame than bravery they finally
halted. Bogud, the Mauretanian king whose wife Eunoe had been
Caesar's mistress, then forced a decision by attacking the flank of the
enemy camp; this caused the enemy to flee, first on one side and then on
much of the front. Fortune was forced back on to Caesar's side. He later
told his followers that he had often fought for victory, but never before
for his life.
In June and July Caesar made similar arrangements in his old province
of Gallia Transalpina. He decided to set up a colony for his veterans at
Arelate (Arles) and build the naval port of Forum Julii (Frejus). Various
Gallic communities were granted the Latin right, preliminary to the
conferment of full citizenship; this meant that the holders of high offices
obtained Roman citizenship for themselves and their descendants.
Roman society had not hoped for much from the war. A bleak alternative
emerges from Cicero's correspondence: slavery if victory went to
Caesar, murder and manslaughter if Pompey won. Gaius Cassius, one of
Caesar's murderers, wrote: `I will die if I am not full of anxiety and
would rather keep the old mild master than take my chances with a new
one, who is cruel.'
Caesar had long had other designs. In Spain he had decided to lead a
campaign against the Parthians, whose mighty empire began beyond the
Euphrates, on the borders of the Roman province of Syria, and extended
far into what is now Persia. In 53, when Crassus had launched a war
against them, they had inflicted an annihilating defeat on the Roman
army. They had now penetrated into Rome's eastern provinces. To make
matters worse, Syria was in the hands of a rebellious Pompeian It is not
easy to judge whether Caesar's intervention was really so urgently
necessary or whether it was bound to seem so on the basis of reports he
received from the theatre of war. And was there no one, apart from
Caesar, who could conduct such a war?
However, Caesar let it be known that he did not wish to leave until he
had `settled things'. He now seemed to be planning exactly what Cicero
had wished to recommend. Those in charge of his office must have been
surprised, but they could do no more than guess at his intentions. In
another of Caesar's letters he says that after his return he wishes initially
to stay in Rome to make sure that his laws will not be flouted - the
sumptuary law, for instance. This suggests that he too saw the crisis
chiefly in moral terms.
All the same he proceeded to arm for the Parthian war. Yet he decided
to spend the winter in Rome. Whether he thought this would give him
enough time to `settle things' - or indeed what he meant by this phrase -
is not clear. He may have used it merely as an initial response to the
demands for consolidation. One of our sources suggests that he planned
the campaign as a kind of `therapy'. According to Strasburger, this is `at
first sight absurd, yet perhaps not wholly wrong'. We may wonder
whether it was not intended as a flight from Rome, whether the tasks
that faced him there had not by now become so onerous that he was
reluctant to tackle them.
His planning was masterly. It was to be a campaign of conquest in the
style of Alexander the Great. Caesar's intention was not only to force the
Parthians into submission, but first to secure the northern border of
Macedonia against the Dacians. The Dacian king Burebista had extended
his dominion to the south of the Danube, from what is now Romania.
Possibly Caesar intended to make conquests here too, but in any case he
wanted to drive Burebista back within his borders. The last thing Rome
needed was a strong neighbour in this area. He then planned to cross into
Asia Minor and move against the Parthians, and finally to march round
the Black Sea from the Caucasus. He estimated that this would take
three to four years; when he set out he would be fifty-five years old.
Yet there was helplessness on the other side too. For the resolutions
passed by the Senate during several sessions after news arrived of the
victory at Munda reflected its inability to comprehend the phenomenon
of this man in normal human terms.
Yet this seems to have been the most important, perhaps the only
important link between the senators and the dictator. All they could do
was to shower him with fresh honours. Instead of finding a genuine
power-base in Rome's leading body, he was raised to dizzy heights. What
is more, he was content to let it happen. He saw no reason to refuse such
treatment: he may even have engineered it.
Cicero had long since withdrawn largely into philosophy and confined
his political activity to begging Caesar to show mercy to his friends. His
bad conscience at having reached a hasty compromise with the victor
made him doubly assiduous in this regard. Did he wish to put as many
others as possible in the same position?
Above all he was deeply despondent about the republic. In the past he
may often have been confused by the complexity of the political
situation, but he now had no doubts about Caesar: his regime was
intolerable. When working on his tract for Caesar, he made the
interesting observation that he found it an unworthy task, `but in these
matters we have already become callous and cast off all humanitas'. It is
the only passage in Cicero's writings where humanitas means something
like `human dignity': elsewhere it means `culture', `refinement',
`serenity', even `philanthropy'. And the dignity of the consularis was
dignitas. Cicero was no longer concerned with social judgements, but
with the human values underlying them. So profoundly was he affected
by recent events.
He then played fast and loose with the consulate. He suddenly resigned
his office and appointed two of his supporters as successors for the rest
of the year. This unprecedented act demonstrated that Caesar regarded
the consulate principally as an honour, a reward, a kind of booty. For in
the few weeks that were left the new consuls could scarcely take up their
official duties properly.
When one of them entered the theatre and was announced by the lictor,
the audience protested that he was not a consul. Perhaps Caesar had
merely appointed them, without having them elected. After all, the
Senate had empowered him to do so.
There was nothing new to be seen - only his contempt for the old. No
new age had dawned: Caesar had simply entered upon a new phase in his
life, not in his policy. He was no longer willing to impose restraints on
himself. The last threads that had bound him to Roman society were
severed. Was he now freeing himself from the question of a new order -
if he had ever considered it?
Many things may have contributed to his ruthlessness. And who would
deny that the old wilfulness, the desire to let himself be simply carried
along, may have been one of them? Just as he seems to have tempted
Fortune on occasion, in order to see how true she was, so now he
experimented with republican sentiments, in order to see how far he
could go in offending them.
The Senate exalted him into the sphere of the immortals, but there was
murmuring everywhere. What was to be done? Did he want to take
soundings? Or did he want to show that he would tolerate some things
and not others?
On one occasion Caesar is reported to have said publicly that people
should speak to him more circumspectly and take what he said as law.
Whether he was serious or merely parodying the role that had been
ascribed to him, whether he was indulging in mockery or whether power
had gone to his head, is a relatively unimportant question, given that he
now lived only partly in the solid world of human reality.
There seems to have been no lack of controversy in 45. For there was
resistance to Dolabella, for whom the second consulship was intended.
Caesar himself had encouraged him to stand. The details are not known.
At all events, Caesar announced on i January 44 that he would stand
down in Dolabella's favour before departing for the Parthian war.
Under existing law Antony and Dolabella were too young for consular
office. Antony was about thirty-eight, hardly old enough to be a praetor;
Dolabella is said to have been all of twenty-four years old and would
have had to wait six more years before becoming quaestor. Caesar had
hitherto respected the rules regarding age. Hence both candidates had
not yet moved far up the official ladder. Now, however, he ceased to be
bound by the rules.
In the summer Antony had gone to Gaul to meet him. Caesar had
received him amicably and been reconciled with him. He needed Antony,
as he was one of his ablest political associates. A little earlier Antony
had been informed by Gaius Trebonius, who had until then been Caesar's
governor in Spain and became consul in 45, of a plan to assassinate
Caesar (as has already been mentioned), but he did not betray his
knowledge.
During his last five and a half months in Rome, Caesar devoted himself
for the most part to his organizational projects.
He thus had his veterans dispersed throughout the Roman world; this
was, if nothing else, a way of safeguarding his rule. The same may be
said of the granting of the Latin right - the stage preceding full
citizenship - to the Sicilian communities and the conferment of Roman
citizenship on towns and individuals. These were substantial moves
towards the enlargement of the citizen body and the coalescence of the
different parts of the empire. This may have been Caesar's objective,
though there is no record of his intentions. All we know for certain is
that he continued, on a grand scale, the old Roman practice of increasing
the number of his supporters and strengthening their position.
Countless other matters required his attention. Work was put in hand to
improve roads and harbours. A great library was planned to house the
whole of literature. Roman law was to be codified, so that what was
`best and necessary' could be collected in a few books. Laws were passed
under which Caesar was made responsible for draining the Pontine
marshes and driving a canal through the isthmus of Corinth. Having
enlarged the empire, he followed the example of Sulla by extending the
hallowed bounds of the city.
During the building of the curia the speaker's platform (rostra), which
had stood on the comitium, was moved to the narrow west side of the
forum and probably rebuilt. Caesar thus took a decisive step towards a
unified design for the whole area, where there had formerly been an
assortment of unmatching buildings. Having first taken his place beside
it, as it were, by building his new forum, he now transformed the old
one. When the rostra was moved, he had the statues of Sulla and Pompey
re-erected; this met with universal approval. Was it his way of making
amends before departing from Rome?
It is not known what progress was made during his lifetime on the
marble voting hall on the Campus Martius, which he had planned since
54. During his dictatorship it was bound to acquire added significance -
as an attempt to replace liberty by marble.
The artificial lake created for his triumph was to be filled in and a
temple of Mars, larger than all the other temples, erected on the site. The
Campus Martius was to be developed and its function as a place for
assemblies, sporting activities and all kinds of games transferred to the
Campus Vaticanus. To provide a better link with the city, Caesar planned
to divert the Tiber to the foot of the Vatican hills. Enabling legislation
had already been drafted in the summer of 45.
Caesar was thus occupied with many ambitious and grandiose schemes
that would perpetuate his memory. The old urge for achievement was
now perhaps compounded by the fear that he might not have much
longer to live.
Caesar restored full rights to those of his opponents who had not yet
been pardoned; this probably happened in 44. The widows of those who
had fallen in the war and whose estates had been confiscated were given
their dowries, and their children were allowed to receive part of their
patrimony. In a sense this was the cornerstone of his policy of
reconciliation. The dictator apparently wished to do whatever he could
to right the wrongs of the civil war before setting out on the Parthian
campaign.
Did Caesar fail to see it? Or was he at a loss to know what to do about
it? Or had he a very clear idea of the new order he wanted to establish
and simply judged it inopportune to announce it at present? If so, he
must have had the establishment of a monarchy in mind.
Caesar may have recognized the many-sided talents that Octavius, who
later founded the monarchy, was to display soon after he himself had
died. Yet he could scarcely assume that the boy would be able to succeed
him at once as sole ruler of Rome. True, Octavius might have been able
to count on his adoptive father's supporters and inherit, with Caesar's
name, his claim to authority and the opportunity to win exceptional
power. But he could not inherit Caesar's special position. If monarchy
was to prevail in Rome, someone else would presumably have to assume
Caesar's role - and have the utmost difficulty in contending with
Caesar's heir. Caesar's will was quite conventional, that of a Roman
nobleman who sought an heir among his relatives. The Caesar who drew
up the will was quite different from the Caesar who had fought the civil
war and won control of Rome and her empire. Whatever view one takes
of the possibilities of finding other heirs or enrolling Octavius as his real
successor - and of much else besides - it is hard to avoid the conclusion
that if Caesar had wished to set up a monarchy he went about it very
ineptly.
In other words, there was no potent cause that would have required all
existing criteria to be changed. If there had been pressure for change in
Roman society - if there had been powerful expectations directed
towards new political forms - Caesar's watchwords would have been
available, and his monarchy (supposing he wanted it) could have locked
into a powerful trend - but only if he had had a cause. He could have
pointed to a suprapersonal goal and stated what needed to be done.
Everyone would have known where he stood. And Caesar could have
mobilized support in such a way that service to his cause would have
become the decisive criterion for the position, rank and prestige of his
supporters; they would have been the leading politicians in Rome.
In late 45 or early 44 the Senate was still devising fresh honours for
Caesar. They no longer related to his victories. He was to be allowed to
consecrate the so-called spolia opima, the spoils taken from the enemy
general slain by the Roman commander; Caesar did not qualify for this
honour. The fasces of his lictors were to be permanently entwined with
laurels. He was given the title of pater patriae; this was intended for
deserving politicians and had previously been conferred only once. His
birthday was declared a public holiday, to be marked by sacrifices. The
month of his birth was later renamed 'Julius' (July). In all Roman
temples and in all Italian cities statues of Caesar were to be set up. Two
were placed on the speaker's platform, one commemorating him as the
saviour of the citizens, the other as the liberator of the city from siege. A
temple of the New Concordia was to be built, to seal the peace
inaugurated by Caesar, and a temple of Felicitas - replacing the old curia
- to celebrate his fortune. Work on the Curia Julia was already in hand.
Caesar was granted tribunician inviolability. Later he was given the right
to use a golden chair, instead of the ordinary official chair, at meetings
of the Senate or at court hearings. He was to be permitted to wear the
gold wreath of the Etruscan kings. He had already appeared on occasion
in the high red boots of the Alban kings, which he liked and felt entitled
to wear as a descendant of Aeneas. The senators were to swear an oath
that they would protect his life, and he was given a bodyguard of
senators and knights. His acts of government were declared valid in
advance.
Much research has gone into examining the origin of the honours and
powers conferred on Caesar and the significance of their combination.
Yet in all probability the senators merely strung together whatever
occurred to them, trying to outdo one another in framing ever new
resolutions in session after session. The Senate was seized with a mania
for honours. Caesar accepted nearly all of them and occasionally
expressed his pleasure.
Yet whatever honours Caesar had received, one was still missing - the
title of `king'. The question on everyone's mind was whether he wanted
this too. After all that had happened, this might seem to have been just
one more honour - the last step. Yet the last step might be the longest.
For in the Roman republic kingship was punishable by death. Seen from
below, the distance that still separated him from it may have seemed
minimal. This question thus gave rise to suspicions that he could no
longer shake off.
On one occasion his statue on the speaker's platform was adorned with
a diadem. Two tribunes of the people had it removed. When Caesar rode
into the city on a6 January, some bystanders greeted him as `Rex'. With
great presence of mind he riposted that he was Caesar, not Rex, which
was a cognomen of his grandmother's family. But when the man who had
first uttered the hated word was led away to be prosecuted, to loud
cheers from the crowd, the two tribunes who ordered his arrest incurred
the wrath of the dictator. They replied in an edict that their official
freedom was threatened. Caesar convened the Senate and complained
that he must either act against his nature or suffer a loss of dignitas. The
Senate dismissed the tribunes and had them struck off the Senate roll.
Caesar even demanded that the father of one of them should disinherit
his son. The father refused, and Caesar let the matter rest. Once more it
became clear how lightly he took the rights of the tribunes, in defence of
which he had supposedly begun the civil war.
If Caesar felt that his honour was deeply offended because the tribunes
of the people arrested a man who greeted him as `Rex', this can only
mean that he was insulted by the suspicion that he sought the title.
Kingship was associated with arbitrary action against the lives of the
subjects; and Caesar could claim that he was innocent of any such
charge. But the distinction he drew between kingship and the autocracy
he already enjoyed - associated with all kinds of divine, indeed royal
attributes - was too fine to be really appreciated.
The incident can be variously interpreted. Caesar may have wanted the
diadem, but rejected it because he did not get the necessary applause. Or
he may have had it offered to him in full public view, so that he could be
seen to reject it and thereby counter all the suspicions that were abroad.
It has also been surmised that Antony acted without Caesar's prior
knowledge - in order to gain his favour, or alternatively to discredit him.
It is impossible to say which interpretation is correct. If Caesar had
really wanted the diadem, however, it is likely that the applause could
have been engineered. If so, he must have wanted to reject it. This seems
most probable. Yet perhaps he did want it - but only if it was freely
given. He is said to have bared his neck and chest, clearly indicating his
respect for the Roman view that whoever sought the crown deserved to
die.
But even that did not help. Rumour was rife. It was said that only the
absence of applause had made him reject the diadem. It was also said
that he planned to move the capital to Alexandria. This was a fantasy
inspired by the presence of Cleopatra, who still resided in Caesar's
gardens beyond the Tiber. It was rumoured also that legislation was
being drafted to allow Caesar to marry as many women as he wished in
order to beget male heirs. This was clearly directed against the son of
the Egyptian queen. Caesar could no longer do anything to escape the
suspicion that he sought the crown. His opponents certainly helped to
promote it. It was bruited abroad that at the Senate meeting on 15 March
a bill was to be brought in, on the basis of a sybilline prophecy,
nominating him king of the provinces. It no longer seemed incredible.
The mood was far too tense, reality too obscure, and anything was bound
to seem possible.
One wonders why Caesar resisted only at this last line, which
separated him from the crown. Why did he not call a halt to the honours
before it was too late? Did he really take pleasure in them? Or did he
merely go along with them willy-nilly? The former possibility seems the
more likely. They contributed to his fame by documenting his
outstanding qualities, his fortune, his achievements, his near-divinity.
This was not of course the kind of fame that is both coveted and
despised in the west, the gloria mundi that may seem vain within the
wider horizons of modern times, which are open to transcendency and
span the millennia. It was a fame that ensured that the memory of the
great Roman would live on in the minds of the citizens; it was the
ancient form of immortality. Though Caesar did not fear death, he
certainly feared transience. This was one of the motives behind his
deeds, the literary record he left of them, and the architectural
monuments he set up to perpetuate his memory. Was this not also the
reason for the unremitting exertions to which he subjected himself
during his last months? This fear was bound to become the more
oppressive, the less able he was to find a raison d'etre in the present.
Should not the senators at least confer marks of fame that could provide
him with a guarantee for the future? According to the Greek historian
Dio, `Pompey wanted to be honoured voluntarily, ... but Caesar did not
care if he awarded honours to himself'. Perhaps in the end he was
indifferent only to the cause of the honours, not to the honours
themselves. In that case, the goal of immortality must have become all-
important to him.
At the same time he may have found it quite in order that he should be
placed close to the gods, who had shown him such incredible favour
throughout his life and raised him so far above other mortals. The
Christian virtue of humility had no place in relation to the gods of
antiquity, and he had abandoned the republican virtue of equality. Was it
so wrong for the senators to understand Felicitas and Clementia as
divine forces and to represent him as enjoying the favourite of Victoria?
And if they distinguished him with the purple toga, could it be
displeasing to him if this made him increasingly unapproachable and
inaccessible?
Finally, he might well have been gratified by the way the senators -
both the successors of the old leaders of the republic and his own
supporters, who now revelled in their new dignity - bowed ever lower,
the higher they raised him. He probably despised them heartily. And he
would probably not have been himself had he not given free rein to his
contempt.
It is not blindness, wrote Ranke, that destroys men and states, `but there
is in them an instinct, favoured by their nature and strengthened by
custom, which they do not resist, and which drives them on while they
have any strength left.' Caesar was increasingly driven to be what he
knew how to be - the first man of Rome, unmatched by virtue of his
deeds and victories. This is what he wanted to remain. He had climbed
ever higher and defeated everyone. Where was it to stop?
While Caesar yielded to the plethora of powers and honours that were
bestowed on him, and was perhaps intoxicated by them, a number of
men agreed among themselves that he must be murdered.
The plan to assassinate Caesar was older. Cicero had promoted it, and
in the summer of 45 an attempt was made to win Antony over to it. The
conspirators, who numbered about sixty, decided not to bind one another
by oaths; among their number were former Pompeians and Caesarians.
The leading personalities all stood high in the dictator's favour.
Trebonius had been consul in 45; Decimus Brutus had been elected
consul for 42; Gains Cassius Longinus and his brother-in-law Marcus
Brutus were praetors, and it was probably intended that they should
become consuls in 41. Marcus Brutus became the real leader of the
conspiracy. He was predisposed to the role by his claim to be descended
from two men who had freed Rome from tyranny, by the fact that he was
Cato's nephew, and by the weight of his own personality. It is one of the
most curious links in the story that these three factors came together in
him - and that his mother was Caesar's favourite mistress. Thus all hopes
for the removal of the tyrant were concentrated on him; and at an earlier
date he had represented himself on his coins as a champion of republican
liberty. Yet he remained true to Caesar for a very long time, hoping that
he would join the `good'. His judgement had obviously been determined
by the alternative: restoration of the res publica or illegitimacy and
despotism. Since Caesar behaved so little like a despot he concluded that
he was benevolent.
At any rate he embraced the cause with a resolution that fully matched
his inner stature. Yet the seriousness of his resolve imposed its limits: he
insisted that only Caesar should be murdered, not Antony too.
The conspirators in fact believed that once the tyrant was removed
they would have achieved their aim. They made no preparations for a
seizure of power, without which they could hardly guarantee that the
Senate and the magistrates would be able to take over the leadership of
the republic. After all, Antony was consul and Lepidus was Caesar's
deputy as dictator; they had several legions at their disposal, and apart
from anything else Caesar had many veterans who were bound to try to
avenge him.
It has been said that Caesar's murder was not just a crime, but a
mistake. Yet if Caesar had died a natural death the result could hardly
have been very different. And is it a mistake to act in the only way one
can?
Brutus and his fellow conspirators were imbued with the same faith in
the res publica as the citizens at large. However much they pondered and
discussed the matter, however much they searched their consciences and
were assailed by doubts - what made them act was the potency and
clarity of the inherited political form: so much had it moulded them and
given meaning to their lives, as they now perceived.
And they were right. They may have been wedded to the old, but if
Caesar had really known anything new, he had not disclosed it. And
however beneficial some of his actions were, they had on the whole been
destructive. He had not pointed the way to a new order, but only
burdened the old with the civil war and the cost of his victory. In this
way he speeded the decline of the inherited institutions.
The one curious aspect of all this is that the destruction was the work
of a man who possessed not only extraordinary gifts, but immense
superiority and personal charm, a man who embodied, to a higher degree
than any other, all the potential of ancient humanity, Greek and Roman
alike. The culture of the age had endowed him with all that a man
needed in order to develop whatever lay within him, and he was
sufficiently gifted to make it his own.
Yet seemingly he did not have to pay the price for such an endowment:
he needed to adapt himself to this culture only to a limited degree. The
beneficent tension that had once existed between individual interests and
communal demands, and had already begun to slacken even before
Caesar's day, could not withstand his dynamism. He never understood
the workings of the republican institutions. At first he despised them
and, from his position of detachment, saw through them well enough to
be able to assert himself brilliantly within them. Yet he failed to
appreciate what purpose they served, how they sustained themselves,
how the forces within them were held in balance, what they demanded of
everyone. He then came into conflict with the institutions and was
rejected by them; only then, perhaps, was he forced to do many things
that he had not originally intended.
And since this process took place within an aristocracy that ruled the
world, it was possible for an outsider like Caesar, given the
disintegration of the aristocratic order, to win supreme power and
combine the fascination, the clarity and the freedom of his position with
immense scope for action. This was compounded by his incredible
successes, his wilfulness, his playful audacity, his air of superiority, and
not least his elegant nonchalance, which makes the most strenuous
endeavours appear effortless and contributes so much to the aesthetic
appeal of his greatness. For ultimately our susceptibility to Caesar's
greatness derives from an ideal that we all secretly cherish - the ideal of
self-sufficiency, of being able to act as we wish and to be what we
choose to be.
This undoubtedly involved a fair measure of immorality. Cicero later
went so far as to say that Caesar harboured `such a desire for wrong-
doing that he delighted in doing wrong even when he had no cause to'.
This is certainly unjust. If it is true, Caesar must have missed countless
opportunities for doing wrong. Cicero could of course justly claim that
Caesar `trampled on all divine and human ordinances'. And Cato could
accuse him of offending against universal law. Yet Caesar's immorality
is not as unequivocal as it appeared to his opponents. He certainly seems
to have been conscious of the wrong he did. When he blamed his
opponents at Pharsalos, he revealed not only his conviction that he was
in the right, but also his awareness of the enormity of the battle and the
agonizing question of responsibility. In 46, when Cicero pleaded for
Quintus Ligarius to be pardoned, it is reported that beforehand Caesar
arrogantly declared to his followers that he was looking forward to
hearing another speech by Cicero, but that it would not alter his
judgement. Yet when Cicero pulled out all the stops `Caesar's colour
changed more than once, clearly reflecting the turmoil of his soul. And
when the speaker referred to the battle of Pharsalos, Caesar completely
lost his composure; his whole body trembled and he dropped some of the
documents he was holding. He was so overcome that he finally acquitted
the man' (Plutarch). Nor was Caesar's clemency merely a manifestation
of his superiority and his will to win; it probably rested on a sense of
right and wrong.
Yet this sense of right and wrong did not prevent his trampling on
Rome's institutions for personal motives, conquering Gaul and launching
the civil war. It merely mitigated the human consequences. No moral
objection was strong enough to inhibit him from resorting to such
extremes in pursuit of his own interests. To this extent he must be
convicted of immorality, or rather of blindness to the moral standards
that were conventionally - and rightly - expected of a Roman aristocrat.
Yet if his freedom to flout tradition was justified only by his personal
honour, this merely demonstrates the absence of the powerful modern
forces for legitimation, which can both restrict and encourage the active
outsider: there could be no appeal to a transcendent religion or a
transcendent state - which in certain circumstances can legitimate any
immorality. We, obsessed with legitimacy, may find Caesar's self-
absorption monstrous, however mild, humane, and generous it really
was. And even in ancient times such legitimacy was claimed by Sulla,
who justified the terrible murders resulting from his proscriptions by
reference to the good of the republic. Caesar was quite incapable of such
action.
Caesar may have acted immorally, but what was much more important
was that he was different from the Romans of his age - alien,
inscrutable, and then at once repellent and fascinating. This was what
made him guilty vis-d-vis the republic. Yet far more important than this
was the fact that he built up his own reality beside that of the republic.
If the Roman republic had had its day without the Romans' knowing it
- if the citizens still believed in it - then it was responsible for its own
demise, whether this resulted from a long process of attrition or from the
actions of one outstanding man, who developed all the possibilities it
had to offer and turned them against it. As history took the latter course,
the fall of the republic was played out in the form of a drama. But drama
is concerned less with guilt than with fate. And it was Caesar's fatal
greatness that led to the catastrophe.
Although the conspirators had not let their intentions leak out, the
danger of an assassination attempt apparently did not remain entirely
hidden. Caesar was warned by loyal supporters that he should provide
himself with another bodyguard, but he refused. Nothing, he said, was
more miserable than having oneself guarded. Only someone who was
always afraid needed that. It was better to look death in the eye than live
in constant fear of it. He was superior even to death. On the evening of
14 March he was a guest of Lepidus, and while Caesar was signing
letters the conversation turned to the question of what was the most
pleasant death. Caesar said it was one that came suddenly and
unexpectedly.
The conspirators had decided that the murder should take place during
the Senate meeting of 15 March. Caesar intended to leave for the
Parthian war on the i8th. The Senate met in Pompey's curia. Caesar
arrived late, as he had been feeling unwell. He had at first wanted to
cancel his attendance, but one of the conspirators persuaded him to
change his mind. He was taken by litter to Pompey's theatre. On
alighting, he is said to have been approached by a Greek scholar,
Artemidoros of Knidos, who obviously knew something about the
conspiracy. Artemidoros was carrying a scroll that he wished to show to
Caesar. Seeing him about to hand it to his servant - like all other
documents presented to him - he is said to have cried, `Caesar, you must
read it, alone and quickly! It contains important matters of special
concern to you.' Caesar held on to the scroll, but never read it.
The augur Spurinna had prophesied that misfortune would befall him
on the ides of March. He is said to have been standing by the door to the
Senate. Seeing him, Caesar smiled with an air of mocking superiority
and said that the ides of March had come and nothing had happened to
him. Spurinna replied, `They have come, but they are not over.'
The senators rose from their seats. Caesar made his way forward
through their ranks. Some of the conspirators had taken up positions
behind his chair, which stood at the foot of a statue of Pompey. Others
approached him, as if wishing to support a petition that was presented to
him. When he refused, the petitioner tore the toga from Caesar's neck
with both hands. This was the agreed signal. Then they attacked him.
The first blow did not go deep. Caesar was able to seize the dagger. The
rest of the senators looked on in horror. Then the other conspirators drew
their daggers. They had agreed that each must strike once. Twenty-three
dagger-blows rained down on the dictator. For a while Caesar defended
himself, trying to evade the blows. At last, severely wounded, he drew
his toga over his head. No one should see him as he lay bleeding,
powerless, dying.
Afterword
When trying to acquaint the reader with a remote age, one should not
take its peculiarities for granted, but incorporate them into the
presentation. If modern historical research is incomprehensible to a
wider readership, this is largely because of the way in which a kind of
professional blindness induces the writers to take the alien, if not
positively exotic, features of past societies for granted without
elucidating them further. Paradoxical though it may sound, it is only
when one is fully aware of the strangeness and remoteness of a past age
that one can make it comprehensible to one's own. What is known as
structural history is thus an indispensable requirement for historical
narration, though it often employs difficult concepts.
Any historical account that seeks to present a full picture must after all
start from an awareness of the framework that it has to fill. A writer
whose choice of what to narrate is guided solely by sources that happen
to have survived is likely to remain farther from the truth - perhaps not
in detail, but in general - than one who is aware of the whole. And if the
degree of probability attaching to the individual statements is indicated,
as in the present work, the writer can take responsibility for everything,
including the details.
It would have been incompatible with the purpose of the book to
support every statement with chapter and verse. This would have
entailed not only extensive quotation of source material, but a full
critique of both the primary and the secondary literature.
From the vast literature on Caesar and the late republic I should like to
single out a number of works that I found especially important, in
addition to Gelzer's, and from which I quote in the text. These are:
Hermann Strasburger, Caesar im Urteil seiner Zeitgenossen (2nd edn.
Darmstadt 1968); Theodor Mommsen, Romische Geschichte; Eduard
Meyer, Caesars Monarchic and das Prinzipat des Pompejus (3rd edn.
Stuttgart and Berlin 1922); Alfred Heuss, Romische Geschichte
(Braunschweig 1960; Propylaen Weltgeschichte 4, Berlin 1963); Otto
Seel, Caesar-Studien (Stuttgart 1967); Hermann Frankel, 'Ober
philologische Interpretation am Beispiel von Caesars Gallischem Krieg',
Wege and Formen fruhgriechischen Denkens (Munich 1968); Friedrich
Klingner, Romische Geisteswelt. Essays zur lateinischen Literatur (5th
ed. Stuttgart 1979). Of special interest is an attempt by Walter Jens to
interpret the conspiracy against Caesar in a television play. The
quotation from Ronald Syme is taken from the German edition of his
Sallust (Darmstadt 1975); the quotation from Peter Sattler comes from
his book Studien auf dem Gebiet der Alten Geschichte (Wiesbaden
1962)
Hence a great crisis arose, the main feature of which was that for a
long time no alternative could emerge. An alternative did emerge in the
end, but only after a long phase in which fundamental features of Roman
society were worn down. It is to this long phase that the term `crisis
without alternative' applies.
The term is used here deliberately to counter the widely held view,
first advanced by Mommsen, that a revolution was taking place at the
time. The term `revolution', if it means anything more than a period of
unrest, implies the emergence of a new force that sets itself up in
opposition to the old and overthrows it, so that the community is placed
on a new basis. It is wrong to transfer the notion of revolution, informed
as it is by nineteenth-century experiences and expectations, to Roman
conditions. Such a transference is only apparently supported by certain
statements in the sources that seem to point to a two-party system. Quite
apart from the fact that political reality in Rome was much more
differentiated (and only occasionally produced a substantial opposition
between Senate and people), the people cannot be seen as a new force
that set itself up against the old one represented by the Senate.
At one point, for instance, Sallust writes that in the late republic the
nobility used its dignitas and the people its libertas as mere arbitrary
factors - that is to say, as pretexts for pursuing their own arbitrary aims.
Both dignitas and libertas entailed rights that could be exercised within a
definite framework. Now that the framework was fractured, assertions of
these rights began to proliferate, and grave conflicts ensued. Hence,
according to Sallust, the whole was torn into two parts; the republic,
lying between them, was rent apart: res publica, quae media fuerat,
dilacerata (Jugurtha S I, S). This at any rate accurately describes one
thing: the conflicts produced nothing new, but only the unleashing of old
hatreds or, to express it in modern terms, the disintegration of the
republic. The republic thus destroyed itself. It had to, for otherwise
nothing new, no alternative, would have emerged. And it destroyed itself
even though no one desired its destruction. Yet if an alternative was to
take shape, it would have been necessary for discontent to accumulate
and disaffection to be directed, sooner or later, against the order itself.
This was because the whole existence of Roman society, indeed its
identity, was so bound up with the inherited order as to block off any
thought of change. The republican order was not a means to an end -
such as the guaranteeing of work and prosperity - but the very element in
which the citizens lived. Admittedly this applied above all to the ruling
class of senators and knights. Yet the wider circles in Roman society and
throughout the empire, those who suffered deprivation and hardship,
could wish for nothing else: they had no possibility of striving for a
change in their favour, as no institutions would have been conceivable
with whose help they could have controlled the republic and its vast
empire.
Since this was not the case, only Augustus could provide an
alternative.
The civil war broke out again shortly after Caesar's death and went on
for many years. When Caesar's adopted son and heir finally won control
of the empire in 31 Bc, almost two decades of civil strife had passed and
a new generation had grown up; above all, Roman society had been worn
down.
He had learnt much, not least from the fate of Caesar. At an early
stage, being relatively weak in the struggle with Antony and therefore
dependent on alliances, he had promised to restore the republic. Above
all, he had realized that if he was to be strong he had to commit himself
to a cause. And by now there were causes to which a man of
extraordinary power and ambition could lay claim. His rival Antony had
allied himself with Cleopatra, and Caesar's adopted son could set up the
standard of Rome and Italy against him, as though control of the
Mediterranean were threatened from the East. He could plausibly claim
that victory for him meant peace, and peace was by now all that
mattered: the civil war had wrought havoc, and there was much that
needed to be restored - political institutions, morality, legal security, the
old religion, the infrastructure, the economy. This was best tackled by an
individual, especially as the Senate itself was in need of reform. There
were thus plenty of tasks through which Octavius could legitimate his
extraordinary power.
This was of course possible only if his power had a form that could
also be legitimated - that is to say, embodied in the republic. Caesar's
adopted son realized this. He pretended to restore the republic. It was
only with apparent reluctance that he took on particular tasks, the first of
which was to secure the border provinces. This meant assuming supreme
command of almost all the armed forces. In Rome itself, however, he
was merely the first citizen, and all his major powers and
responsibilities were of limited duration. He was careful to avoid the
appearance of wanting to establish a permanent power-base. Few
honours, and seemingly minor powers, were conferred on him for life,
largely in gratitude for the apparent restoration of the republic. Among
them was the conferment of the name Augustus.
It was one of the most difficult roles ever to be played on the world
stage, and quite un-Caesarian. He had to be an actor, and he knew this.
Just before his death he summoned his friends to his bedside and invited
them, in words used by the mimes in certain pieces on leaving the stage,
to applaud if they had enjoyed the farce. Beforehand, we are told, he had
had his hair carefully combed and his sagging cheeks massaged.
His person and his role finally merged: as a player he had become an
institution. He found himself by denying himself. Whatever Caesar and
his nephew Octavius had in common as regards power and political skill,
their personalities and identities developed in opposite directions, in
accordance with the situation in which each grew up and the different
ways in which each confronted it and was confronted by it. Caesar grew
up in the unruly and apparently provisional republic. Though he had high
ambitions, he was for a long time not really stretched, and when he at
last achieved personal greatness it was in a world of his own making.
Augustus, the dictator's heir, was thrust into politics at the age of
nineteen and forced to make all kinds of compromises; he too was
ambitious but, recognizing the difficulties he faced, he was prepared to
sacrifice himself to his ambition. He was thus able, in a quite different
situation, to found the Roman monarchy.
When Cicero declared that the republic was lost it was still in
existence. When Augustus said it was restored it had come to an end. Yet
it is typical of periods of decline that nothing is so predictable as the
paradoxical: at such times one must expect the unexpected.
Afterword to the Third German
Paperback Edition
My colleague Ernst Badian, one of the greatest prosopographical experts
on the late republic, has pointed out some omissions in earlier editions
of this work.
I should also have paid some attention to the inscription from Taranto
published by L. Gasperini. If the text is correctly restored, it designates
Caesar as dictator rei publicae constituendae. This would mean that he,
like Sulla, really had been charged with the restoration of the
commonwealth. I now think it likely that Caesar was empowered not
merely to act as he saw fit, but to reconstitute the republic, and that ten
years were mutually agreed as the time he would need to perform the
task. This may have been the only way to justify Caesar's longterm
dictatorship; or at any rate, to lay such a charge upon the dictator was
the best way to make it tolerable. Yet this does not alter the fact that,
apart from his organizing abilities, Caesar had no qualification for the
task. The evidence of the inscription is therefore interesting - and ought
not to have been omitted - but it does not essentially change our
understanding of Caesar's situation after the civil war.
I also failed to mention the fact that Caesar appointed Octavius to the
post of magister equitus. This shows that the dictator wished to give his
grandnephew, if only temporarily, an important military function that
conferred a special distinction and would at the same time contribute to
his training, though it is hard to see the appointment as evidence that
Octavius was being groomed to succeed Caesar as monarch. In the
following year the office was to be taken over by Domitius, the consul of
53•