The History of Rome - 044- Caesar Triumphant
Episode Date: February 28, 2010Following a setback at Dyrrachium, Caesar decisively won the Battle of Pharsalus in 48 BC. After defeating Pompey, Caesar sailed for Alexandria, where settled a civil war by placing Cleopatra on the t...hrone.
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Hello, and welcome to the history of Rome.
Episode 44, Caesar Triumphant.
Last time, we left Caesar in a somewhat precarious position.
Sorry about that, Caesar.
On the far side of the Adriatic with only half his army.
The rest of Caesar's men had been turned back by the naval blockade led by Biblos,
who died denying the second half of his old enemy's army, an easy crossing.
Pompey, with his well-supplied and much larger army,
now numbering some 45,000, humming along nicely,
he made no attempt to attack Caesar right away,
even with the latter's army at half strength.
He knew that Caesar was in a rotten position
and would soon discover that food for his men and horses
would be hard to come by in this hostile country.
Let the rebels starve.
Best case scenario, they eventually surrendered
and no more Roman blood is spilled.
Worst case scenario, they refused to give up
and Pompey's well-fed army crushes Caesar's exhausted
and starving troops. The smart play was definitely to wait. The contrasting styles of the two generals
could not be more apparent during the coming campaign in Greece. Pompey was careful, methodical,
and well-organized. He had no need to take risks because time and numbers were both on his side.
Caesar, on the other hand, was flying by the seat of his pants, making it up as he went, and taking
wild risks every step of the way. I think 99 times out of 100, the Pompey model beats the
Caesar model, but every so often that one shot pops up.
Caesar may have been one of the most brilliant generals of the ancient world, but he was also,
by his own admission, one of the luckiest.
This luck was well on display when the two armies finally did meet at Durekium in May of 48 BC.
In the months after his landing, Caesar used every channel he could think of to secure a truce
with Pompey, from the highest diplomatic overtures to sending legionnaires to the outskirts of Pompey's
camp to try and get the foot soldiers on both sides to agree that fighting each other was crazy.
Caesar pursued peace not only because he wanted to build the case that he was not the aggressor,
but he was also in no position to actually, you know, win a battle.
It was this latter fact that kept Pompey and the Senate from taking Caesar's overtures too
seriously.
So as the winner slogged on, things were not looking good for Caesar.
Not only were his men struggling on a subsistence diet, but he began to suspect that his allies in
Italy were intentionally delaying the launch of the reinforcements Biblis had turned back.
Had he been betrayed?
Had he foolishly rushed into his own destruction?
A man of action, Caesar was unable to hold still and even attempted to cross back across
the wintry Adriatic Sea to fetch his missing troops, but was turned back by a storm.
He was left to brood in his tent, wracked with doubts about his position and his own abilities.
But just as he was beginning to lose heart, Mark Antony lit a fire under the legions waiting in Brindicium and led them boldly across the Adriatic.
Antony may have been crass, vulgar, and an unrepentant hedonist, but he was nothing if not a brilliant soldier and Caesar's most loyal captain.
There was no way he was going to hang his general out to dry, even if more than a few people had whispered in his ear that he ought to do just that.
When the spring came, the reinforcements linked up with Caesar, bringing his enough.
numbers up to a respectable 15,000.
Now at full strength and with Antonyed his side, Caesar felt confident about taking the fight to Pompey.
By May, the Republic's army was camped just south of Durekium, a port city which lay directly
across the Adriatic from Vrndysium in modern Albania.
In the dating for the rest of the war, I'm going to use the month the battles actually took place
in rather than the recorded historical dates.
In just a few years, Caesar will reset the Roman calendar to reflect the drift caused by centuries
of missing leap days, so the Battle of Durequium, which was recorded to have taken place
in July, actually took place in mid-May.
Just as Farsalis really took place in June, not August.
The difference in dates may seem trivial, but to understand Pompey's hope that he would
be able to starve Caesar into submission, you have to understand that everything took place
before the harvest season, not after it, as the misaligned old count.
under implied. So in May of 48 BC, Pompey was camped in a strong position with the sea and a link to
endless supplies at his back, surrounded by steep hills. No direct assault was possible, so Caesar decided
to try to recreate some of his success at Alicia and him Pompey in. He ordered the same men who had
built him a bridge across the Rhine in 10 days to build him a wall in a giant arc, starting at the
sea north of Pompey's camp, running up and down the hills to the east, and then rapidly,
back around and connecting to the Adriatic in the south.
He may not be able to prevent Pompey's access to food, but the wall would cut off his access
to fresh water, and the critical pasture land Pompey's cavalry needed to feed their horses.
Pompey responded by building his own parallel wall and trench system to keep Caesar's forces
out in case they tried an open assault.
Caesar notes in his commentaries on the civil wars that the two generals were essentially
inventing entirely new ways to wage war as they went along.
The ensuing weeks of siege and skirmishes fought in the no-man's land between the two walls
has often been compared to the modern trench warfare of World War I rather than a classical
era infantry battle.
Men would launch themselves over their respective walls on attack, only to be repulsed
by the superior defenses they assaulted.
They would then return to the safety of their own walls, and the whole bloody drama
would be played out in reverse.
The stalemate was broken when a few Gallic officers defected to Pompey and brought with them information about the weak points in Caesar's wall.
Pompey may have run his side of the war as conservatively as possible, but he could not ignore this opportunity.
He pointed his men at the spots identified by the defectors and attacked immediately.
Caesar tried to plug the hole, but failed miserably.
He lost some thousand troops in the fighting and was forced to abandon his wall and retreat.
But what initiative Pompey had shown by the war.
attacking was immediately negated by his hesitancy to pursue Caesar's fleeing army.
The old general let Caesar's reputation for cleverness trip him up, and he convinced himself
that Caesar was trying to lure him into a trap by running away. But there was no trap, just a pack
of disorganized troops running away after getting their pants beat off. Collecting himself far inland,
Caesar was amazed that he had managed to escape the day in one piece. He commented to one of his
officers. Today the victory had been the enemies, had there been anyone among them to gain it.
Caesar regrouped his army and marched inland, trying to put some distance between himself and
Pompey. He had been badly shaken by the defeated Durekium, but the fight had by no means gone out of
him or his men. Some in the senatorial camp urged Pompey to now make straightaway for Italy
and retake Rome. But Pompey wisely understood that this was not a battle of territory, this was
a battle of will.
The objective was not to control Rome.
It was to defeat Caesar.
Anything less would be a false summit
on the way up the mountain.
By June, Caesar had been
chased across northern Greece and was
in camp near the town of Farsalis and Thessaly,
just on the other side of the mountains
from the famous pass at Thermopylae.
He now had about
20,000 troops all told, stronger
than he had been, but numerically
no match for the 45,000
Pompey had in camp five miles to the
northwest. At Farsilus, Pompey held the high ground and all the advantages of being in friendly
country, and so was content to starve Caesar into submission. But he was surrounded by the Senate in exile,
who pressed Pompey to attack and end the war once and for all. Every day, Caesar would march his army
out onto the plane to offer battle, desperate for a conclusive fight, but Pompey would always decline.
After a few days of light skirmishes, though, he finally gave them to pressure from the
the Senate and marched out in full force.
He may have had misgivings about whether it was a good idea, but if it was a battle of the Senate
and Caesar wanted, a battle is what they would get.
The Senate was overjoyed as they looked past the battle to a post-Cesar world.
They argued in their tents about who would become Pontifex Maximus, who would be
consul in the next year, how Caesar's estates would be divided, everything it seemed, but the
battle itself.
Caesar was not so distracted.
The two armies were lined up with a river on Caesar's left and Pompey's right, making any attempt to flank the other on that front, a non-starter.
So both commanders looked to Caesar's right as the center of the action.
Pompey masked all his cavalry on that flank and intended to smash through Caesar's weaker horsemen and then surrounded the small army.
But Caesar immediately understood what Pompey's deployment meant and peeled off a cohort of men from each of his three lines and angled them as a fourth line as backup.
for his cavalry.
He deployed this fourth line under cover of dust and the marching of his light skirmishers,
so Pompey would not realize the additional wall of infantry existed.
The battle began when Caesar ordered his first line in a frontal assault on Pompey's infantry,
but Pompey had ordered his own troops to stand fast.
Standard tactics of the day dictated that both sides should run headlong at each other
and meet somewhere in the middle, but Pompey's plan was to force Caesar's veteran
fighters to run the whole way, giving his own less experienced troops a slight advantage.
But that veteran experience did not just mean they were better fighters. It also meant that they
were more disciplined. When Caesar saw Pompey's troops staying put, he signaled his centurions
to halt the charge, just short of spear range to catch their breath. It is no small thing to
halt the charge of an entire army when you have just whipped them into a murderous frenzy.
But Caesar had trained his men well. When he said stop, they stopped.
Only when they were sufficiently rested from their sprint did Caesar give the order to close the final distance.
Just like that, his men turned back on the murderous frenzy and threw themselves against Pompey's line.
The Battle of Farsallus had begun.
With the two infantry's engaged, Pompey ordered his cavalry to break through according to the plan.
They had no problem driving off Caesar's smaller cavalry, but when they cleared out the enemy horse,
they suddenly found themselves confronted with an unexpected line of Caesar's heavy infantry.
This time, it was Caesar's turn to defy convention.
Usually, when confronted by charging cavalry, infantry men would hurl their spears and then
try to hack at the legs of the riders with their short swords.
But Caesar ordered his men to hold on to their spears and used those to attack the heads of
the riders.
Totally surprised by this new tactic, Pompey's cavalry was completely thrown off and pulled up
short, trying to avoid being stabbed in the face by spears. In just a few minutes, Caesar's
fourth line had scattered the charging cavalry, and as soon as they had, the battle was as good
as over. The fourth line charged forward and was able to sweep around behind Pompey's infantry.
The siege now on two fronts, Pompey's less-experienced troops panicked, and the decisive
battle of the Civil War turned quickly from Titanic's struggle for the future of Rome to complete
an utter route.
Pompey himself seems to have snapped mentally when he saw his cavalry shattered and fled the
battlefield, leaving his army to fend for itself.
Seeing Pompey run ended any notion that the day might somehow be salvaged, and it soon
became every man for himself.
Senators, who had just that morning been splitting up the inevitable spoils of victory,
now scattered in every direction.
Caesar himself did not linger over his victory in the field, and immediately,
He was completely charged for Pompey's camp, hoping he could catch his defeated rival and finalize an official peace.
But despite his speed, he could not get there in time.
Pompey had gathered up his family, who had been with him since his flight from Rome, and abandoned the camp.
He loaded up as much gold as he could, but was forced to leave behind most of his possessions when word came that Caesar was headed straight for him.
He went so far as to throw off his general's cloak and disguise himself as a common camp follower to avoid.
avoid capture.
Pompey Magnus, who had fought his whole career for honor and glory, was reduced by defeat
to a pathetic shadow of his former self, abandoning his troops and running for his life.
But maybe that's too harsh.
It was not for nothing that Pompey fled for Egypt, and not for nothing that he made sure
he took with him as much gold as he could.
The Senate had an ally in King Juba of Numidia, and Pompey's plan was likely to gather another
army in North Africa, where allies of Caesar had just been defeated in that sub-theater of the
greater civil war. But it was not to be. Court ministers in Alexandria, the capital of Egypt,
learned that Pompey was headed their way and resolved to curry favor with Caesar by assassinating
his enemy. When Pompey arrived at the Egyptian coast, he was greeted by a small skiff that was
to take him to shore. But as soon as he was on board and separated from his bodyguards, the Egyptian
welcoming party attacked.
They stabbed Pompey repeatedly,
murdering him there on the shores of Egypt,
the second triumvir,
to meet a violent end after a life spent chasing greatness.
When Caesar heard the news,
he was enraged.
The conspiring ministers in Alexandria
could not have been more wrong about what Caesar wanted,
and their clever plan totally backfired.
Rather than making a friend in Caesar,
they had just cemented him as a furious enemy.
See, a Caesar's whole posture
had always been one of the magnanimous victor, the generous statesman who was forever pardoning
his enemies. After the battle of Farsalus, a whole contingent of senators decided that running
in order to keep up the fight was pointless and supplicated themselves before Caesar, expecting
the worst, but hoping for the best. Caesar pardoned them all, and declared it his greatest desire
to simply heal the divisions within the state and reunite Rome as one body. Among those who begged forgiveness
was Marcus Brutus, son of Caesar's old mistress Servilia,
whom Caesar had long regarded affectionately as a stepson.
He welcomed Brutus back to his side and told him to forget the past,
that together they would build a new future for Rome.
And this was exactly how he intended to handle his old friend Pompey the Great,
just as soon as he caught him.
So you can imagine Caesar's reaction when he landed in Alexandria in the autumn of 48 BC,
hot on Pompey's heels,
and instead of receiving information about which direction his rival had gone,
he was instead presented with Pompey's head.
The assassination denied Caesar his planned public relations coup de grace of pardoning Pompey
and asking that he served beside him as together they repaired Rome
and made the empire even greater than it had been before the Civil War.
When he saw the head, he wept bitter tears and to everyone's shock ordered that it be buried with full honors.
The ashes of Pompey's body were handed over to his grieving widow, who was allowed to return to Rome and perform the funeral rights becoming of a great hero.
When Caesar was done mourning his old partner and one-time son-in-law, he turned to the ministers who had engineered the assassination.
They were in big trouble.
Alexandria had been founded in 334 BC by Alexander the Great, and since that time, it had grown to become one of the most important cities of the ancient world.
world, nearly as wealthy and populous as Rome itself. When Alexander died, his domains had been
divided up by his former captains, with Egypt going to the general Ptolemy, and since then, the Ptolemaic dynasty
had ruled the Nile from the growing cosmopolitan capital of Alexandria. The Greek-speaking Ptolemy's
made no effort to integrate with the locals, and rarely left the safety of their palaces.
But with the death of Ptolemy the 12th and 51 BC, the ruling dynesians were the ruling dynes, made no effort,
dynasty was fractured. The dead king had decreed that his son and daughter ought to be
co-rulers in the Egyptian tradition. But the same court ministers who would later assassinate
Pompey had decided that the 10-year-old Ptolemy the 13th would be far easier to control than
his 18-year-old sister Cleopatra, and so worked diligently to marginalize her power.
But Cleopatra was savvy, and seeing that she was the target of palace intrigue, did something
totally radical. She turned to the local Egyptians for support. She became the first of the
Talmies to learn Egyptian and often took part in the local religious festivals in her role as
Queen. By ingratiating herself with the locals, the Queen became even more dangerous to the
ministers controlling her brother, and so, by the time Caesar arrived in Egypt, a full-blown
civil war was underway, with Cleopatra exiled from the capital, leading an army of local
Egyptians. But at that time in Egypt, support from the locals did not count for nearly as much
as support from the Greeks in Alexandria, so her position was dicey at best. And this is why it had been
such a huge mistake by the conspiring ministers to kill Pompey. It caused Caesar, in his disgust,
to turn away from the young king they controlled and look for other allies in Egypt to support.
Cleopatra fit the bill perfectly. So, rather than return to Rome and begin consolidating his
power there, Caesar announced his intention to stay in Alexandria and settle the civil war.
But placing an ally on the throne was not Caesar's only reason for staying in Egypt.
His endless campaigning was expensive, and he needed money.
With the rise of Rome, the Ptolemy's maintained the independence of Egypt by issuing massive bribes to
influential Romans, which in time included Crassus, Pompey, and Caesar.
Caesar reminded young Ptolemy the 13th that the last round of payments promised by his father,
had in no way been forgotten just because the old king had died.
Colomys ministers did everything they could to try to convince Caesar to leave,
promising payments as soon as he was back in Rome,
but Caesar would have none of it.
He was more than content to wait for payment,
and in the meantime, he could help them solve their little civil war.
I'll bet they were thrilled.
He called for Cleopatra to return to the royal palace to help sort out the conflict.
But knowing that if she were to simply appear at the gates,
it was likely that her brother's allies would have her killed before she could make it to the relative safety of Caesar's company.
So she famously hid in what amounted to a laundry bag and had a loyal slave smuggle her into the palace.
Caesar was immediately taken by the cunning young queen after she slipped through danger in such dramatic fashion.
Declaring only to be executing the will of the dead Ptolemy the 12th, Caesar re-elevated Cleopatra to co-ruler,
and not long after, the 21-year-old queen, for reasons of either policy,
politics or affection became Caesar's mistress.
The powers behind Ptolemy the 13th, however, were not going to take this lying down
and concluded that they were going to have to expel the Romans by force.
Caesar had brought with him to Alexandria, only a single understaffed legion of some
4,000 infantry and around 800 cavalry.
Reinforcements were on the way, but they were weeks out.
So if the ministers were planning to drive Caesar away, they knew they needed to do it
before the rest of his army arrived.
So they whipped the local Alexandrians into a frenzy,
declaring that Caesar was planning to make Egypt a province,
depriving them all of the liberty and wealth to which they had grown accustomed.
Nearly the whole city rose up in revolt and besieged the royal palace,
which was held by Caesar and his men.
What followed was weeks of bitter street fighting,
as Caesar was forced to try and conquer and hold the neighborhoods around the palace,
house by house, block by block.
Nothing in their long careers prepared the Romans for the rigors of urban warfare.
The cavalry was useless and traditional troop deployments were unworkable.
Their only advantage was that they were tougher and more disciplined soldiers than their opponents
and were able to withstand barrages from the locals as they moved to eradicate pockets of resistance.
Eventually the Romans leveled whole blocks to create a no-man's land the Alexandrians would be suicidal to try and cross.
The ticking clock was at the forefront of the Alexandrians mind.
While Caesar needed only to hold out until reinforcements arrived,
the Alexandrians needed to win before the reinforcements arrived.
But no matter how hard they tried, they couldn't break the Roman resistance.
Caesar was able to maintain access to supplies by winning a naval battle in the harbor,
but suffered casualties he could not afford,
and an ultimately successful but brutal assault on Faros Island,
home to one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, the great lighthouse of Alexandria.
Finally, though, in January of 47 BC, word came that the Roman reinforcements had completed their
overland march and were now on the outskirts of Egypt.
Caesar slipped his besieged men out of the palace under cover of night, and along with a contingent
of Cleopatra's Egyptian army, joined with the newly arrived legions to form an army of some
20,000. This combined force assaulted the base of young Ptolemy's army, which numbered around 20,000
itself. Used to fighting severely outnumbered, basing an army merely equal in size was a rare treat
for Caesar's legions. The Battle of the Nile was easily won by the Romans. Talmy the 13th drowned
when the ship he was escaping on capsized, and Cleopatra was placed back on the throne. Caesar,
though, never had any real intention of annexing Egypt.
The wealth of Alexandria, combined with its now thoroughly anti-Roman citizenry,
would prove a fertile center of rebellion, no matter how loyal a governor Caesar installed.
Better to leave it as a client kingdom, with Cleopatra in charge.
The queen understood that she owed her position to Caesar and Caesar alone,
so he knew she might be the one person on earth he could trust not to rebel the first chance she got.
But official province or not, Egypt was now firmly under Roman control.
The Hellenistic dynasty of the Talomies that had ruled since Alexander the Great was, for all intents and purposes, broken.
Rome's full encirclement of the Mediterranean was nearly complete.
Because I left Caesar in such desperate straits at the end of the last episode,
suffering through the winter with half an army deep and hostile territory,
this week I think he deserves to be left in a slightly better place.
So we'll leave him there in Egypt where, despite the fact that the remaining senatorial forces were regrouped,
in Numidia. The fact that Mark Antony's ruthlessly debauched management of Rome was turning the
city into a hellhole. The fact that his appointed governor of Spain was so corrupt and brutal
that the natives so recently won to Caesar's banner were in revolt, and the fact that nearly
every territory Rome had ever pacified was planning to declare its independence at the first
opportunity. Caesar took a month off in early 47 BC to enjoy a leisurely cruise up the Nile with
Cleopatra.
next week
Caesar will go back to the exhausting business
of consolidating power over the Roman Empire
but for now let's leave him be
I think he's earned a vacation
