The History of Rome - 012- The First Samnite War
Episode Date: February 25, 2010From 343-341 BC Rome fought a brief war against the Samnites, a powerful hill tribe who would plague the Romans for the rest of the century. The Romans won an inconclusive victory, but the war was onl...y the opening salvo in a long running struggle between the two peoples.
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Welcome to the History of Rome.
In a single generation, Rome had recovered from the devastation of the Galax Sack
and regained its dominant position within the region.
The plebes had demanded and received greater political power,
culminating with the election of the First Plebe Consul in 366 BC,
the year after Camilla Shepardered the Licinian Law through the Senate.
I did not mention this last week,
but the admittance of plebs under the consulship
also saw the end of military tribunes with consular power,
as one of the highest offices of state.
The dual consulship was reinstated for good,
and the obsolete office of military tribune was never revived.
Subsequent years would see other plebe first,
including the first plebe dictator in 356 BC,
and the first plebe censor in 351 BC.
Both feats achieved by a single man,
Gaius Marcius Routoulos,
who, over the course of his illustrious career,
would also be elected consul four times.
By 343 BC, the Romans
were once again seen as the great force in central Italy, and, as we were about to see,
this meant that their neighbors forever sought to involve them in squabbles that had nothing to do with
Rome or Roman interests. The Romans were the big kid on the block every other kid wanted on their
side. As I did last time, I would like to open this week with a quote from Livy, discussing the
year hostilities began with the Samnites, and it's significant in the greater arc of Roman history.
From now on, the wars described will be of greater importance.
Our enemies were more powerful, and campaigns lasted longer and were mounted in remote areas.
For this was the year when an attack was launched against the Samnites, a people who were strong both in resources and in arms.
After the Samnite War, which was inconclusive, Pyrus was the enemy, and after him the Carthaginians.
What a series of momentous events.
how often we were in mortal danger
to enable us to raise up our empire
to its present heights of grandeur
where only with difficulty it is sustained.
Rome was on the precipice of its rise to greatness.
The Samnites, as I've said previously,
were a semi-nomadic tribe from the south-central section
of the Apennines called Samnium.
Starting in the 300th BC, the Samnites,
along with a number of other hill tribes,
began to come down out of the hills
and onto the plains that lay between the mountains
and the coastline. Some moved south and began to encroach on the Greek cities of Magna Gratia.
Others, like the Samnite, began to move west and came down to a land known as Campania, which lay
southeast of Rome. The Greeks in the south sent envoys across the Adriatic to beg for assistance
in fighting off the hill tribes, and were answered by Alexander of Apiris, who sent an army
to help rid the Greeks of the encroaching menace. As we will see later, this introduction of
an army from a pirus would have far-reaching consequences for the Romans.
Sixty years later, an army from a pyrus would again answer Greek calls for aid,
only this time not to battle nomadic hill tribes, but rather the growing power of Rome.
But we still have a ways to go before we get to that.
The largest and most important city in Campania, where the Samnites were setting up shop, was Capua.
Known for its rich soil and soft lifestyle, Capua is no match for the hardened Samnite warriors,
so, like the Greeks, they cast about for a savior.
Envoys were sent to the largest and strongest power in the region, Rome, to beg for aid.
The Romans, however, turned the envoys away.
Rome had already concluded a treaty with the Samnites, and could not in good conscience break it.
They had, after all, sworn oaths before the gods.
The desperate Capuans then took an extraordinary step.
They formally surrendered Capua, its land, and citizens to Rome, willingly making themselves.
subjects of Rome. The Senate could not look this massive gift horse in the mouth. The land
controlled by Capua was some of the best in Italy, and the food it could provide would put the days
of grain famine in the rearview mirror forever. The Romans accepted the surrender and sent their own
invoice to Samnium, where they explained that Capua was now Roman territory, and, as per their treaty,
the Samnites must desist all attacks. The Samnites would have none of this and scoffed at the Roman
invoice, taking the insulting step of ordering a raid into Campania right in front of the Roman
legates. The Romans, offended by this obvious breach of protocol, felt they had no choice at this point
but to declare war. And so the first Samnite War began. The two consuls for that year,
343 BC, by our reckoning, were Alas Cornelius Caussus, a capable of forgettable leader,
and Marcus Valerius Corvus, a true blue member of the legendary Roman Heroes Club.
He was a member of the prominent Valerian family, whose famous ancestral patriarch was Publius Valerius Publa Cola himself.
The surname Corvus, or Raven, was earned as a young man while serving in the army.
The legions were squaring off against an army of Gauls when a huge Gallic fighter stepped forward and challenged any Roman to single combat.
Young Marcus Valerius, all of 22, stepped forward and accepted the challenge.
As he approached the Gaul, a raven landed on his shoulder, a sign that.
the gods favor him. The Gaul was worried by this clear omen, but proceeded with the fight anyway,
and the raven, far from leaving when the clash began, actually joined in, pecking at the Gaul's
eyes while Valerius ran him through with his sword. Belarious triumphant, the raven flew off.
The legions then swept into the Gallic line and defeated them almost without resistance,
and auspicious, if obviously embellished, beginning to a career to say the least.
Corvus would be elected consul for the first time the very next year at the unprecedented age of 23.
Before dying at the also unprecedented age of 100, he would be elected consul five more times and named dictator twice.
But getting back to the war with the Samnites, Corvus was sent to protect Campania and his colleague Kossus was sent to invade Samnium.
Between the two, they figured to have the Samnites at heel in no time.
Corvus was the first to meet the enemy, and after,
a fierce battle at the base of Madgaris, fiercer than the Romans expected, the Samnites were routed.
It was not an easy victory, and put the Romans on notice that they were not fighting
emulsion raiders anymore. Cossus, insamium, almost blundered his way into the destruction
of his own army, but was saved by one of his tribunes. The consul had led his army into a ravine,
and noticed only too late that the Samnites had taken up a position on the ridge, and stood ready to
shower them with projectiles.
One of his tribunes, Publius Decius, noticed that the Samnites were positioned in the shadows
of a steep hill, and if a company of Romans could take the hill, then they would be able to pin
down the Samnites, allowing the legions to escape.
Kossus immediately ordered Decius and a detachment of volunteers to execute the plan.
Decius slipped up and took the hill before the Samnites realized what was going on, and immediately
began pelting the Samnites with missiles.
In the confusion, Kossus was able to withdrawing.
draw his army to safety, but Deceus was left on the hill, surrounded by an army of angry Samnites,
who had just been denied an easy victory.
Secure on the high ground, the Roman detachment was able to hold out until nightfall,
at which point, recognizing their hopeless position, they decided to risk death by sneaking
through the Samnite army, rather than remaining on the hill and safely starving to death.
They'd gone about halfway through the camp when one of the soldiers dropped his shield on a
sleeping Sam Knight. Deceus immediately began yelling at his men to attack anything that moved.
The Samnites, half asleep and panicked by the sudden violent commotion, did not know what or who to
attack. Decius and his men made a break through the army, killing everything in their path.
When they emerged on the other side, Deceus took a headcount and realized to his great pleasure
that of the company of men he had led on a sure suicide mission, he had not lost a single man.
in the morning they made their way to the Roman camp and were greeted to thunderous applause.
Costas was about to launch into a speech praising Decius when the Tribune cut him off,
saying that the Samnites were in complete disarray and the time to finish the job was now.
Caustas took the advice and sent his army out.
The Romans found the Samnites exactly as Decius had described,
in confused disarray, attacked them immediately and won easily.
The Romans had now won their first two engagements.
with the Samnites. But the first had been an unexpectedly hard slog, and the latter would have
been a disaster had it not been for the tactical blunder the Samnites had committed by not immediately
falling on Kostas' legions. The third and final battle of the war was fight at Susula, knew the
border between Campania and Samnium. Envoys from that city came to Marcus Corvus with news that the
army he had driven off was regrouping and planning to reinvade. Corvus ordered his army forward
with all haste, leaving behind all non-essential personnel in gear,
marching only with its infantry, cavalry, and what could be carried on their backs.
This decision to pack light would prove, unexpectedly, to be the decisive factor in the coming
fight.
When Corbus arrived at Susula, he ordered a camp built.
Due to the paucity of men and material, the camp turned out to be physically much smaller
than the Samnites were used to seeing the Romans build.
They assumed this meant that a smaller force was encamped,
and all their strategic decisions flowed from this faulty assumption.
They decided that the best course would be to starve the small Roman garrison out
and began preparing for a siege.
The Samnite commanders, rather than keeping their army together,
ordered foraging parties out across the countryside for supplies to sustain their army
while they waited for the Romans to surrender.
Corvus caught wind of the Samnite activities,
and, as soon as the bulk of the army was scattered, he ordered his men to attack.
The Samnites were shocked when the whole world,
the legions came pouring out of the small camp, not the minor detachment they had supposed they
were dealing with. Corbus' army took the Samnite camp almost without a fight, and then spent the
rest of the afternoon rounding up the dispersed Samnite foraging parties. The battle of Susula was
over before it had really begun. This victory marked the end of the first Samnite war.
Corbus and Caustis were both awarded triumphs, and Decius was given the grass crown for his
heroics. The grass crown was the most prestigious and rarely given military honor, the highest
decoration a Roman soldier could receive. It was given to an individual who single-handedly,
or nearly single-handedly, saved an entire Legion from destruction. It was a rare honor because it
was granted only by a vote of the saved Legionnaires themselves, and it took extraordinary
circumstances for proud Roman soldiers to admit that they had to be rescued. But in this case,
it was universally understood that Decius had saved their butts, so Deceus got the grass crown.
After the fighting ended, however, the Romans were forced to deal with trouble from an unexpected
source, their own legions. During the winter of 342-341 BC, the legions were garrisoned across Campania
to keep an eye out for further Samnite aggression. The largest garrison was outside of Capua,
the city famous for its soft, easy living, and detrimental effect on military distance.
discipline. Indeed, as we would later see, some note a marked change in the power and endurance
of Hannibal's army after spending the winter in Capua during the second Punic War.
The Roman garrison, cooped up for the winter in camp, looked on at the comfortable Capuans
and began asking themselves why people who could not even defend themselves were allowed to
have so much when they, the soldiers who would secure the peace, were given so little.
The consuls for that year began to hear mutinous rumors coming from the Campani.
and legions and took steps to nip the conspiracy in the bud, but the move backfired.
Their plan was to quietly reassign the men identified as conspirators, and shuffle groups of
soldiers around so no hard plans could be laid. But the conspirators quickly caught on, and,
rather than reporting to their new assignments, they collected at an arranged point and
began to actively plot a rebellion. They were soon strong enough numbers-wise, but lacked a leader
to make them a cohesive unit.
In a classic display of counterproductive
ego and pride, nobody was willing
to submit to the command of anyone else,
so they remained a body without a head.
As they brainstorm
for ways out of their dilemma,
it was noted that an ex-general,
Titus Quintius, lived in the area.
Quinchis had retired fully
from public life, despising
the backstabbing intrigue of Roman politics,
and the conspirators decided
he was the perfect choice to lead them.
A company of men was
sent to persuade the old man to join their cause. Quinchus, however, wanted nothing to do with
a mutinous rabble, but was persuaded when the men threatened to kill him and his whole family
if he did not come along. Having successfully hijacked a leader, the revolt moved forward, and the
men marched towards Rome, though what exactly they hoped to accomplish is unclear. They probably
wanted to secure land grants and Campania, but how they thought the Senate or the people of Rome would
simply give them what they wanted and then go on as if nothing happened is a mystery.
The rebellion had taken on an irrational inertia all its own.
Upon hearing the news that a rebellious army was marching on Rome, the Senate immediately
named Marcus Corvus to the first of his two dictatorships, and he rode off at the head
of the Legion to stop the mutinous army.
They met each other at the Albion Mount, near the birthplace of Romulus and Ramos, but neither
side was destined to draw their swords in anger.
Instead, the occasion was defined by reconciliation and secured Corvus' place in the history books,
not just as a great warrior, but also a wise and compassionate leader of men.
He was loved not just by the men he led that day, but also by the mutineers,
most of whom had fought with him against the Samnites.
Corvus implored them to put down their swords and not draw the blood of their fellow citizens.
Quinchis, the hijacked general, who wanted no part of the rebellion anyway,
ordered his men to stand down, and the combined weight of these two towering figures compelled
them to give up. Corvus then led a combined force back into Rome, where he famously asked for
and received clemency for the rebellious soldiers. Corvus did not want the affair to remain a thorn
in the side of Roman solidarity, and he made sure no soldier was cast off the census rolls or in any
other way penalized for his actions. It was a singular case of leniency toward mutinous soldiers,
and, though Corvus was hailed forever as a great man for securing the leniency,
his example was rarely followed by later generations,
who treated any hint of mutiny quickly and without mercy.
Soon after the abortive rebellion, a truce was formalized with the Samnites.
The Compagnans, however, were in no mood for peace,
and allied themselves with a combined Latin army
that took the fight into Samnium as a punitive response to the Samnite invasion of Campania.
The Latin communities hoped to grab some Samnite land and enhance their own power in the region,
hopefully securing better terms of alliance with Rome.
The Samnites immediately appealed to the Romans to halt the attacks.
The Romans agreed to order the companions, who were now their subjects, to halt,
but claimed their treaty with the Latins granted them no authority over their own internal military decisions.
This decision had two effects.
For one, it offended the Samnites, who thought they were not.
thought the Romans were just hiding behind legalese and directing the Latins, subjects to
Roman all but name, to keep fighting illegally after the treaty had been established.
Second, it perked the ears of the Latins, who took the Roman decision to me that the Romans
did not believe they could stop the Latins from what they were doing.
The time was ripe, the Latins decided to renegotiate their status with Rome.
For over a hundred years, they had sent men and money to fight Roman wars, and were consistently
given only a pittance of the spoils in return. Full equality they decided was theirs for the
taking, and, turning away from the Samnites, they set their sights on Rome itself. Having just
concluded one war, the Romans were about to be embroiled in another, the Latin War, which would not
turn out exactly as the Latin's plan, resulting in not full equality, but full subservience to Roman rule,
and an end even to the appearance of independence. The first Samnite war would prove that,
to be mere foreplay between the Samnites and Romans.
The Romans had gotten the upper hand, but it could have just as easily gone the other way.
The second, or great Samnite War, would start 20 years later and not last for two years,
but 22 years.
In that war, the Samnites would hand the Romans some of their greatest and most humiliating defeats.
The Romans had, since their founding, used the Greek phalanx system for their army,
but soon found it unsuited for the mountainous terrestrial.
reign of Samnium, the Samnite cavalry and light infantry, where he will easily outman
maneuver the heavy Roman phalanx, forcing the Romans to completely overhaul their military
structure before they could beat the Samnites in the field. But that war was still a generation
away. Next week, the Romans will follow the old adage that the enemy of my enemy is my friend
and join forces with the Samnites to quash forever Latin dreams of independence.
