Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Battle of Actium
Episode Date: October 15, 2025On September 2, 31 BC, one of the most important battles in history took place off the coast of Greece. The forces of Octavian, the posthumously adopted son of Julius Caesar, squared off against th...e forces of Mark Antony, the former right-hand man of Julius Caesar. After having been partners in ruling Rome for years, the two developed irreconcilable differences that had to be resolved on the battlefield. The outcome of the battle influenced the course of the Roman Empire for centuries. Learn more about the Battle of Actium, what caused it, and how it affected history on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase. Newspaper.com Go to Newspapers.com to get a gift subscription for the family historian in your life! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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On September 2nd, 31 BC, one of the most important battles in history took place just off the coast of Greece.
The forces of Octavian, the posthumously adopted son of Julius Caesar, squared off against the forces of Mark Antony, the former right-hand man of Julius Caesar.
After having been partners in ruling Rome for years, the two developed irreconcilable differences that had to be resolved on the battlefield.
The outcome of the battle influenced the course of the Roman Empire for centuries.
Learn more about the Battle of Actium.
What caused it and how it affected history on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Did you ever hear about the selfie that solved a murder or the jury that used a Ouija board to speak to a victim?
If that made you pause, you need to listen to Morning Cup of Murder.
I'm Karina B. Minas Durfer, and every single day on Morning Cup of Murder, I tell one chilling true crime story tied to that exact day in history.
With over 2,500 episodes to binge, you'll never run out of dark stories to start.
your mourning with. Go listen to Morning Cup of Murder wherever you get your podcasts. And remember,
stay safe. I've done many episodes on famous battles in history. Some of those battles were
relevant because of the size of the battle or because of the brilliant use of tactics or strategy.
Others were important because of the repercussions of the battle. The Battle of Actium definitely
falls into the latter category. It was one of the two great battles that defined the end of the
Roman Republic. The first was the Battle of Farsalis,
where Caesar defeated the Senate forces under Pompey. That pretty much ended the Republic.
The Battle of Actium is the bookend to the Battle of Farsalis, in that it was the one that created
the Roman Empire. To understand what happened, we need to revisit the events that led to the battle.
Back in the year 49 BC, 18 years before Actium, Julius Caesar marched into Italy with his legions
and began a civil war with the Senate led by the great General Pompey Magnus.
Pompey in the Senate fled Rome for Greece.
Caesar gave chase and defeated the Senate at Farsalis in 48 BC.
With that, Caesar was declared dictator for life and then was assassinated in 44 BC.
In the wake of his death, he left the majority of his vast estate to his 19-year-old grand
nephew, Octavian, whom he also posthumously adopted.
This created a split between Octavian and Caesar's primary lieutenant, Marcus Antonius,
a.k.a. Mark Antony. Mark Antony had served under Caesar and Gaul and ruled Rome why Caesar was away on
campaign. The two split the loyalty of the Roman forces and fought a civil war, but they put their
differences aside to jointly fight the forces of Caesar's assassins, and they defeated them at the
Battle of Philippi. After the battle, with Rome securely under their control, they agreed to share
power with Marcus Amelius Lepidus, one of Caesar's generals, and the person who assumed the
position of Pontivus Maximus after the death of Caesar. Their arrangement became known as the
Second Triumvirate, a subject that I've covered in a previous episode. Leppides was the junior
member and was given control of the relatively unimportant North Africa. Mark Antony was given control
of the Eastern Empire with its rich provinces, and Octavian stayed in Rome and was given control of
the West. Mark Antony was initially considered to have gotten the better end of the deal, as he was
able to enrich himself in the East. At the same time, Octavian had to deal with internal politics
back in Rome and with Sextus Pompey, the son of Pompey Magnus, who was wreaking havoc by committing
piracy in the seas around Italy and Sicily. The most important region in the East was not
technically a Roman province at this time, Egypt. Egypt produced a massive amount of grain that was
necessary to feed everyone in Rome. The leader of Egypt was Cleopatra, who had a relationship
and a child with Julius Caesar. When Mark Antony went east, one of the first things he did was
summoned Cleopatra to Tarsus, in what is today modern Turkey, to answer for accusations that
she had aided Cassius, one of Caesar's killers. Cleopatra, aware of Anthony's vanity and love
of spectacle, staged a magnificent entrance. She sailed up the Sidness River on a golden barge with
purple sails, dressed as the goddess Isis, surrounded by incense, music, and attendance.
Ancient sources like Plutarch described Antony as being utterly captivated.
Cleopatra's performance was political theater. She needed Anthony's support to secure her
throne against rivals and to restore Egypt's power. Anthony, in turn, needed her wealth and
Egypt's resources for his planned campaigns in the East. Their meeting turned into a prolonged stay,
and by the end of the year, Cleopatra had charmed Antony both politically and romantically.
Anthony followed Cleopatra back to Alexandria, where their relationship deepened.
The two became lovers, and Cleopatra bore him twins, Alexander Helios, and Cleopatra Selene in 40 BC.
Their time in Alexandria was marked by lavish feasts, games, and a kind of shared fantasy of power and divine identity.
They presented themselves as new incarnations of the Roman and Roman and the Roman and
in Egyptian gods, Dionysus and Isis.
Anthony had returned to Rome in 40 BC to address issues with Octavian and secure his position
within the triumvirate. To maintain peace with Octavian, Anthony married Octavian's sister,
Octavia, to create a temporary reconciliation between the two.
Cleopatra remained in Egypt, raising their children, and maintaining her rule.
By 37 BC, Anthony and Octavian were once again drifting towards conflict.
Anthony returned to the east and reunited with Cleopatra at Antioch, effectively resuming their partnership.
Cleopatra provided him with money, supplies, and ships for his renewed campaign against Parthia,
a costly and ultimately unsuccessful expedition.
In return, Antony restored Egyptian territories that had once belonged to the Ptolemaic kingdom,
including Cyprus and parts of Syria.
Their relationship was now both romantic and strategic.
Cleopatra's wealth underpinned Anthony's military ambitions,
and Anthony's Roman legitimacy bolstered Cleopatra's position in Egypt.
While relations had been tense between Mark Anthony and Octavius for years,
things got worse in the year 34 BC.
After his failed Parthian campaign, Anthony staged a grand triumph in Alexandria.
He publicly distributed territories to Cleopatra and their children
in a ceremony known as the Donations of Alexandria.
Cleopatra was proclaimed queen of kings, and their son Alexander Helios received Armenia,
Media, and Parthia, while Celine and their younger son Ptolemy, Philadelphia, were given other realms.
This alarmed Rome.
It seemed Anthony was founding a new dynasty that would rival or replace the Roman Republic
and using Roman territory to do it.
Anthony was always confident that his popularity amongst the Roman people was high enough that they would never turn.
turn on him. However, he had been away from Rome for years, and his actions made him very
unpopular. The donations of Alexandria, combined with Anthony's apparent rejection of his Roman wife
Octavia, gave Octavian powerful propaganda material. He betrayed Anthony as having become an
eastern despot, enslaved by Cleopatra's charms, and betraying Roman values for Egyptian luxury.
The event that truly turned public perception against Antony was when Octavian illegally seized
Anthony's will from the Vestal Virgins and read it publicly.
This act revealed Antony's wishes to be buried in Alexandria, which was a scandalous betrayal
of Roman tradition.
Octavian wasn't a skilled general, but he was a brilliant politician.
In 32 BC, Octavian forced the Roman Senate to declare war not on Antony, but on Cleopatra.
Octavian's war effort relied on the naval genius of Marcus Vipsanias Agrippa,
his closest friend and most capable admiral.
If you remember back to my episode on Agrippa,
he was arguably the best number two guy in history and a large reason for Octavian success.
Agrippa had rebuilt and trained a fleet of lighter, more maneuverable Laburnian ships
and secured reliable bases across the Ionian Sea.
Octavian also mustered veteran legions and dependable cavalry,
although he avoided risking a major land battle until conditions favored him.
Antony and Cleopatra assembled a large but motley armada. Contemporary sources vary, but
Anthony likely had a few hundred warships, many of them large and heavily built, with
reinforced rams and high fighting decks. Cleopatra brought a significant Egyptian contingent
that added ships, sailors, rowers, and money. Anthony also had sizable land forces in Greece,
yet his supply lines ran across the Aegean and Atriatic and were vulnerable to Agrippa's naval raids.
In the spring and summer of 31 BC, Agrippa moved first.
He seized the town of Methone and other positions on the Western Greek coast,
cut Anthony's communications, and took Lucas and the important harbor of Petrae.
These moves pinched Antony's access to grain, water, and fresh crews.
Disease and desertion nodded his camp.
Cleopatra's presence, far from unifying the command,
fueled suspicion amongst Roman officers.
Rather than storm Antony's troops on land,
Octavian and Agrippa chose to blockade and starve the enemy fleet,
which was holed up in the Embration Gulf.
Time favored them.
Every week Anthony's stores dwindled,
and every day that the crew sat idle,
they lost conditioning and morale.
Anthony faced an ugly choice.
He couldn't sustain a long siege.
A breakout at sea offered his best chance
to relocate the combined fleet and army to a friendly,
place. On the morning of September 2nd, the winds were light and the sea relatively calm.
Antony's fleet sailed out of the narrow mouth of the Gulf in three divisions, with Cleopatra's
squadron positioned in the rear center. They had about 500 ships. Octavian's line, directed by
Agrippa, fanned out into open water to avoid constriction and to force maneuver combat,
where his later Liberians excelled. They had about 400 ships. Antony's ships had advantages in
size and height, which made them superior in a straightforward ramming or boarding fight.
But Agrippa refused to play that game. Agrippa's captains harassed Antony's flanks,
used superior ore discipline, and exploited the better handling of his vessels. Instead of delivering
head-on rams, they aimed to break oars, strike at rudders, and set fires with incendiary
projectiles. The engagement became a test of discipline and stamina rather than a single decisive charge.
At a chosen moment, Cleopatra's squadron unfurled their sails and drove through a gap towards the open sea.
Whether this was a planned breakout for the whole fleet or an independent dash for safety by Cleopatra remains debated by ancient sources.
Anthony, seeing Cleopatra, took his own small escort and followed her.
Seeing the departure of both Antony and Cleopatra shattered the remaining fleet's morale.
isolated ships continued to fight with some determination, and some of Antony's largest galleys-resisted
capture even went on fire, but their command had failed. By the end of the day, Agrippa controlled
the waters and took or destroyed much of the enemy fleet. Anthony's army stranded on land without
naval cover or supply, melted away in the following weeks. With the destruction and abandonment
of Antony's fleet and army, nothing was stopping Octavian now.
Octavian advanced methodically.
He accepted the surrender of Greek cities that were formerly controlled by Antony,
reorganized the region, and prepared for the final move on Egypt.
In the summer of 30 BC, Octavian's forces finally reached Alexandria.
Anthony defeated in a brief clash on land, took his own life.
Cleopatra attempted negotiation, then committed suicide via a snake,
an event that rapidly became legendary.
Octavian annexed Egypt as his own personal province, seized the immense treasure of the kingdom,
and eliminated a key independent power that had influenced Roman politics for over a century.
Cleopatra was the last pharaoh in a line that extended back over 3,000 years.
Back in Rome, Octavian closed the doors of the Temple of Janus to symbolize peace
and celebrated a triple triumph in 29 BC.
He founded the city of Nicopolis near Actium and refounded the Actian Games to commemorate his victory.
The Senate granted him the title of Augustus in 27 BC, and during the years of his rule, he reshaped Rome into the Principate, or what we often call, the Roman Empire.
The victory at Actium became the turning point that ended the age of civil wars that began almost 50 years earlier, and marked the start of the long era of Pax Romana.
To understand just how important the Battle of Actium was,
you'd just have to consider how different the world would have been
if Octavian and Agrippa had lost.
If they lose, there's no Augustus,
and the position of Emperor is never established.
If Antony had gone through with the donations of Alexandria,
Rome would have been split into pieces,
and the next several centuries could have been one of constant warfare
between the splintered parts.
The next several centuries,
of Roman and later Byzantium history were all due to the events in 31 BC that took place
off of the coast of Greece. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer. My big thanks go to everyone who
supports the show over on Patreon. Your support helps make this podcast possible. And I also want to
remind everyone about the community groups on Facebook and Discord. That's where everything happens
that's outside the podcast. And links to those.
are available in the show notes.
As always, if you leave a review on any major podcast app
or in the above community groups,
you too can have it read in the show.
