The History of Rome - 118- The Palmyrene Wars
Episode Date: December 6, 2010In 272 Aurelian finally managed to bring the east back under Roman control by defeating Queen Zenobia of Palmyra....
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Hello, and welcome to the history of Rome.
Episode 118, the Palmyrene Wars.
Ever since the death of her husband in 267,
the Palmirene Queen Zinobia had shown herself to be a formidable new player
in the great game of power politics.
In an age where every soldier was a potential emperor
and every territory of potential new kingdom,
Zinobia had not only held on to the power and land she had inherited from Odinoth,
but little by little she managed to expand upon it.
The power and prestige of Rome was at an all-time low,
and Zinobia was taking full advantage of the Eternal City's eclipse.
She was shrewd and ambitious and capable,
and had the ball of fate bounce this way instead of that,
she might just have permanently severed Rome's claim to the east.
Empires evolved and devolved all the time,
and by Zinobia's estimation, the sun was setting on Rome's almost 350 years of dominance over the eastern Mediterranean.
Standing between Zinobia and a new independent Palmirean Empire, though, was an Illyrian emperor named Aurelian,
who, like his brother officers, was obsessed with the idea of reuniting the empire.
It had become their almost religious mission in life, and nothing was going to stop them,
certainly not some oriental queen.
Consumed as he was with Germanic invasions and riots in Rome, though,
Arellian was at first unable to deal with said Oriental Queen,
even as she thumbed her nose at Roman authority.
Probably upon receiving the news that Claudius was dead,
Zinobia and her top general Zabdis had taken the opportunity
to lead the Palmyrene army into Egypt,
expel the Roman garrison, and occupy Alexandria.
Whatever official or unofficial understanding existed between Roman Palmyrian,
Myra, the status of Egypt was never in play. It was a Roman province to be held by a Roman
prefect, duly appointed by a Roman emperor, just as it had been since the days of Augustus.
In other words, her invasion of Egypt was way, way out of bounds. But, matching her own
audacity in seizing Alexandria, Zinobia then pretended like nothing at all was amiss.
After the brief power struggle following Claudius' death confirmed Aurelian was the new master
of Rome. Zinobia dutifully issued coins from the Alexandrian mince, featuring Aurelian's name and image.
True, the back of those coins featured the image of her young son Vabolathus, who, it should be
recalled, Zinobia was ruling through, but her son was not presented as Augustus, as Erelion clearly
was. Further, official documents in the East were issued using letterhead that presented
Oralian's name first and Vobolithus is second. You see, nothing is a miss here.
Rome and Palmyra are partners in power. And as is just and as is right, Rome is and will remain
the senior and dominant partner. But while officially downplaying Palmyrian independence,
Zanobia was clearly not planning to stop with the annexation of Egypt. The Palmyrian
claims to the Eastern Empire had always been a weird mixture of personal prerogative and sanctioned
Super Authority. And as I mentioned a few episodes back, it is likely that the governance of
Syria and its various municipalities had been left in the hands of the same local officials
who had been running the show prior to the rise of Odinathus. Now Zinobia sought something
a little more concrete. Working through agents and allies in the various cities of Syria,
especially Antioch, she arranged for each in turn to begin the process of formally recognizing
Palmyra as their political master.
Through skillful diplomacy, Zinobia was able to secure direct control of Syria while avoiding
the use of military force.
Following up on this success, she initiated the same process in Asia Minor, and pretty soon,
half of Anatolia had come around to recognizing Palmyra as their capital.
These subtle power plays, though, were not lost on Aurelian.
Zinobia could issue all the coins and declarations.
under Eurelian's name that she wished, but it was obvious that it was all so much Kabuki.
The alliance Galeenus had made with Odenothus had been born of a particular set of circumstances
facing Rome at a time of emergency, and the mere fact of its perpetuation, now that the emergency
had passed, was already a daily slap in the face to the proud officers of the Roman High Command.
Zinobia's attempt to revise and extend the power of Palmyra was not just insulting then,
It was an act of war.
So in 271, Aurelian gathered up his Imperial Army and marched them out of Italy,
beginning a journey that would eventually see them march all the way to the gates of Palmyra and back again,
and then back to the gates of Palmyra.
And I can tell you, when Aurelian has to go back the second time,
he really, really isn't going to be happy about it.
But before the legions could begin their march to the east and earnest,
they had to settle the situation in the Balkans.
And despite the fact that the invasions of their countrymen were now routinely ending in defeat at the hands of the legions, some Gothic tribes were still keen on the idea of raiding the empire for its wealth.
So, as Aurelian reached the Danube frontier, he found the provinces once again littered with Gothic invaders.
This batch, though, was nothing like the massive waves that had come down south in the 260s, indicating that Gothic power had been significantly affected.
by the previous decades misadventures in Roman territory.
But there was still enough of them on the loose to require Orelian to stop short and deal with him.
He was entirely successful in his efforts, and the Goths were driven back across the river.
An interesting footnote to this brief Gothic campaign is that the tide of battle was turned
when the Gothic king leading the invasion was killed.
The sources have this Gothic king being named as some variation of Cana Buddhists,
which is similar enough phonetically to a certain Gothic king who, 20 years before,
had destroyed the legions at a Britus and killed two emperors,
to make some wonder if King Canabudas and King Keneva were not, in fact, the same person.
If they were, then his death would have been sweet revenge for the Romans,
much like Galerius's future capture of the Sassanid royal family,
will come as sweet revenge for the Persian imprisonment of Valerian.
As concerned with the future security of the Danube frontier as he was with the future security of Rome,
Aurelian likely took this moment to initiate his controversial plan to dramatically tighten up the Roman defensive line.
The province of Dacia, sticking out like a sore thumb north of the Danube,
had only avoided Hadrian's consolidation of Roman holding some 150 years before
because the blood, sweat, and tears that had gone into winning it was still fresh in everybody's mind.
To give it up would have been an affront to the memories of those who had just fought and died to take it.
So Hadrian was forced against his better judgment to leave it be.
Also, it had some pretty sweet gold and silver mines.
But the mines were dried up now, and in every way, Daesia was a lead weight around Rome's neck.
It added over 500 miles to the military perimeter of the empire without offering any kind of strategic or tactical value in Rome's neck.
return. The mountainous province had never been colonized or romanized properly, and, bottom line,
hanging on to Dacia, put the empire in greater danger than it needed to be in. The empire was already
in great danger. It didn't need to be in greater danger. So Aurelian ordered the evacuation of the
province. He was careful to make the process as steady and organized as possible. That is,
He didn't just go around blaring a siren telling everybody to grab what they could and get out.
But he made it very clear that in the near future, the order was going to come for the troops on the Dacian frontier to abandon their posts and re-entrench on the south bank of the Danube.
Anyone left in Dacia would be on their own.
Some living lives far closer to their, quote, barbarian enemies than their Roman neighbors, did indeed stay put.
But most everyone else packed up and headed south.
When the order finally came to remove the Roman troops, a collection of Goths was ready and waiting to move in.
Their migration into Dacia came with the approval of Aurelian, who worked out a deal involving trade rights and certain other concessions, in exchange for these new Dacian Goths, to agree to act as a military buffer to other Germanic tribes.
The new frontier line was thus not only shorter and easier to defend, but it came equipped with a buffer.
offer zone that absorbed the brunt of many a potential invasion force. The evacuation of Dacia was as
sound a policy as Rome had seen in a long time, but there was no mistaking the fact that good old
terminus, the implacable Roman god of boundaries, who, once planted, refused to be moved, had now
been moved. That did not bode well for the future. Probably because he was not totally insensible
to the optics of abandoning a fully incorporated province,
Aurelian carved out of Moesia, a new province, which he dubbed Dacia.
Now he could plausibly argue that he had not abandoned Dacia so much as moved it south of the Danube.
See, there it is right there on the map.
Okay, maybe he couldn't plausibly argue that,
but it is worth noting that a province called Dacia still existed after Trajan's territory had been abandoned.
The main point, though, was that while a-dacia still existed, the old Dacia was now gone.
It had long been a backdoor into the empire, exploited endlessly by Rome's enemies, and Aurelian had now locked that door.
Rome was safer and more secure for his decision.
With walls being built around the cities of the empire, and the long Danube frontier now left far more manageable,
Orrelian could finally turn body and soul to his divinely ordained mission.
Arrelian's priority list in 271 looked like this.
Number one, retake Egypt.
Number two, reassert Roman control over the rest of the eastern provinces.
And three, knock Paul Myra down a pegger five.
His own army was too cumbersome to quickly deal with the first priority.
So Orreleon ordered one of his officers, possibly the future emperor Probus,
to gather up a fleet and sail immediately for Alexandria.
With luck, Probus, or whoever it actually was,
there are good reasons to believe Probus was actually in Gaul through this whole period,
would be able to land in Egypt and drive off the Palmiring garrison
before Aurelian even set foot in Syria to handle the business of priority number two.
Once Egypt was retaken, the Imperial Army could focus all of its energy on regaining control of Syria.
Priority three would then be a foregone conclusion.
The preparations underway in the imperial camp did not pass unnoticed by Zinobia.
Knowing that Arellian was likely coming to matter what her next move was, the Palmyrian
Queen decided to go all in, abandoning any pretense of partnership with Rome and issuing
coins and orders under the auspices of Vabolethus alone, who was now styled finally Augustus.
The Palmyrian court then advanced to a Mesa.
where Zinobia set up a forward base from which to confront Aurelian when he emerged into Syria.
With a little luck, the cities of Asia minor that she had recently brought into the Palmyrian fold
would stick with their new eastern benefactor and resist the advance of Aurean,
leading the Roman emperor to either become bogged down in profitless sieges
or continue on without secure supply or communication lines back to the west.
Either outcome would have worked out to the Palmyring advantage,
and it would hopefully be a much worn-down Roman army that Zinobia and Zabdis would have to face.
But Aurelian, as I think I've mentioned, was a no-nonsense kind of guy.
He had no time for prolonged sieges and no intention of continuing without ensuring that all of Anatolia was subdued.
So, much to Zinobia's chagrin, Aurelian picked a third option from the hat.
forced the cities of Asia Minor to capitulate with minimal fighting, and then proceed safely and securely
onto Syria. The further west you went, the looser the ties to Palmyra, and as Aurelian advanced east,
the cities that he approached opened their gates without a fight. Arrellian had a fierce reputation,
and there was very little doubt that should he be defied, that the emperor's wrath would be swift and deadly.
Arrellian was well aware that his reputation was preceding him, and he used it to great effect,
but to no greater effect than when he finally reached a city that attempted to hold out.
Moving south towards the Solicilian gates, the Imperial Army reached the city of Taina.
Closer now to the center of Palmyra's power, the leaders of Tina made a calculated decision
to hold out against Erelian, and hopefully find great rewards for themselves in a new Palmyrian Empire.
But resisting Erelian and enduring a prolonged siege was not on the to-do list of everyone in Tina,
and the city was quickly betrayed into Ereliant's hands.
Everyone held their breath.
Here was a city that had essentially spit in the face of Rome.
How bloody was Erelian's retribution going to be?
The soldiers prepared to do some serious sacking,
the citizens prepared to endure some serious sacking.
But Erelion emerged from his tent,
and to the surprise of everyone, announced that there would be no reprisals, no sacking, no
punishments. Instead, a general pardon was declared. According to the official legend,
Aurelian had been visited in a dream by Apollonius, the famous philosophical son of Tina,
who by the third century was being put forward as a sort of pagan answer to the growing cult of Jesus
Christ. According to the legend, on the eve of Tina's capitulation, Apollonius visited around
and told the emperor that if he desired to rule, that he must abstain from shedding the blood
of innocence, and that if he plan to conquer, he must also plan to be merciful. Whether it was
the ghost of a dead philosopher or the shrewd mind of Aurelian that led Tina to be spared, the decision
was a master stroke. Further east, the leading men of the cities that had gone over solidly to
Palmyra had rightly feared punishment at the hands of Aurelian. But the example of Tina proved that
the emperor was in a forgiving mood. As the Imperial Army continued southeast, cities that would have
resisted out of a desperate belief that they were doomed one way or the other, now threw open their
gates. Each city was given the same light treatment, compounding a wave of capitulation that led
a reliant all the way to the doorstep of Antioch. The emperor's surprise decision to playoff
type led not just to a far easier campaign for his legions, but also it laid the groundwork for an
amicable return of the eastern provinces into the Roman fold. Orrelian wanted to reunify the empire.
Laying terrible waste to the countryside might allow him to occupy the east, but it would
unify nothing. As the emperor continued his march, a word came up from Egypt that the fleet
he had dispatched to retake Alexandria had landed and easily expelled the Palmyrian garrison,
meaning that Priority One was already now checked off the list.
Watching her recently won political gains melt away, an undeterred Zanobia prepared for war,
deploying Zabdis and the Palmyrene army between Arellian and Antioch.
Now, the Palmirene Army, especially the catafracts, their much vaunted armored cavalry,
was a force to be reckoned with in any situation.
But fighting on their home turf against legionaries not used to combat in the heat of the desert appeared to make them invincible.
But Aurelian was a master strategist and tactician, and he had a plan to defeat the Palmyrians, and troops who were disciplined enough to pull it off.
After a few days maneuvering around Antioch, Aurelian and Zabdis finally met in battle in May or June of 272.
Knowing that defeating the catafracts was the key to victory,
Aurelian employed the same ruse Claudius had used against the Goths at Nices.
A ruse, Aurelian knew the devastating effects of firsthand,
as he had been the general leading the cavalry that day.
While the infantry on both sides shuffled their feet,
Arrelian ordered his cavalry to directly attack the catafracts.
At a prearranged moment, the Roman cavalry suddenly broke apart
and began to flee from the field.
With the Roman horsemen retreating in what appeared to be a panic,
the Palmirean catafracts gave chase,
smugly convinced that they were about to secure their own legend
by crushing the cream of the Roman legions.
But you know what comes next.
After leading the catafracts on a merry chase
that wore out the heavily armored palmirines,
the Roman cavalry wheeled around at a second prearranged moment
and as one unit barreled straight into the surprised and exhausted cataphracks,
devastating their ranks and allowing only a few to escape with their lives.
As soon as Zabdis learned the fate of his armored cavalry, he knew that the battle was lost.
His infantry was no match for the Roman infantry, and wasting little time, Zabdis ordered a retreat back to Antioch.
Inside the city, panic gripped the local leaders, who had, rashly they now realized, thrown their lot in with the enemies of Rome.
Arrellian had thus far displayed almost supernatural clemency, but who knew how long that was going to hold out?
Nervous as they were, though, the city fathers figured that as long as the Palmirene army was there to protect him, that there was still hope.
Which is why they were mortified to wake up on the morning after the battle to find that Zabdis, recognizing the inevitability of Antioch's fall, had packed up and marched his army in the direction of Amisa in the middle of the night.
Arellian entered Antioch unchallenged, and was greeted by a citizen body prepared for the worst.
But again, Arellian proved to be of a much higher mind than anyone gave him credit for.
Another general pardon was issued, and Syria was back in Roman hands.
With priority one already accomplished and priority two well in hand, all that was left was priority three, the crushing of Palmyra.
Arellian lingered in Antioch for a few weeks, waiting on reinforcements to ensure they would only
have to make one trip into the desert. And when they finally arrived, the emperor headed northeast
to the city of Amisa, where Zinobia and Zabdis were holed up with the Palmyrian royal treasury
and an army 70,000 strong. The significance of the coming battle, nor the significance of the coming
battle's sight, were missed. Though it seemed like a lifetime ago, only 12 years had elapsed since Valerian
had walked out to meet his fate on the same plains beside Amisa. What Aurelian exorcist
or would the desert city become known to history as the slayer of emperors?
In the battle it followed, Aurelian once again attempted to lure the palm irons out with a fake retreat.
But this time, his lines came too close to the palmirines, and the chase was over before it got going.
The Roman ranks, infantry and cavalry alike, were soon engulfed in bloody confusion.
But the less disciplined palmirines pushed their advantage too hard, which led to a breakup of their line.
a breakup which was exploited to deadly effect by the Romans.
First flanking and then surrounding the Palmyrians, slaughter ensued.
Zabdis and a few officers escaped back to the city,
where they collected Zinobia and the rest of the royal family
and dashed back to the relative safety of Palmyra.
There was not even time to collect the treasury,
which was music to the ears of the cash-strapped Aurelian.
The rest was foregone conclusion.
Arrelian secured the Palmyrian treasury and then followed his enemies back to their home city.
Still defiant, Palmyra refused to yield just yet, and Aurelian was forced to begin a siege in the middle of the desert in the middle of summer.
Now, being the oasis city that it was, Palmyra was well situated to hold out against the Romans and their dicey supply lines, but that was just in the near term.
Long term, Zinobia recognized that they were going to need help if they wanted to get out of their fight with Rome alive.
The only place they could possibly turn to for help, though, was, awkwardly, the Sassonids.
The Persians were not likely to have forgotten that Odinathus had brought Palmyra to power by defeating and humiliating them.
But in her desperation, Zinobia felt that she had no choice but to turn to them for aid.
Unfortunately for the Palmyrians, though, Sharpur, the great king who had captured an emperor and sacked Antioch, was dying, and the sassanids were divided and distracted by the question of who was going to succeed him.
Under different circumstances, the Persians might have decided to go to war for Palmyra, but right now it was out of the question.
Zinobia, though, could not afford to take no for an answer.
so she decided to risk everything by traveling to the Sassanid capital and making her case in person.
By risking everything, though, she wound up losing everything.
Arellian was alerted to the fact that the queen had slipped out of the city and was heading east.
A Roman cavalry detachment quickly caught up and overtook the Palmirians, and Zinobia,
the eastern queen who very nearly made herself the equal of the Roman emperor, was now his prisoner.
The rank and file of the legions clamored for her death, but Aurelian would have none of it.
After a generation of bad news, Aurelian was finally putting together a record the Romans could celebrate,
and he planned to let them celebrate his victories with a good old-fashioned triumph.
And what was a triumph without Rome's enemies marched through the streets of the Eternal City and chains?
Back inside Palmyra, news of the Queen's capture sparked a brief fight between moderates and Dyer,
about whether to capitulate.
The war-weary moderates quickly suppress the diehards
and the gates of the city were opened.
As he had done for the entirety of his eastern campaign,
Aurelian showed restraint when dealing with the citizens of Palmyra,
announcing that there would be no bloody reprisals for their breach of faith.
Unlike the cities of the empire proper, though,
this time Aurelian allowed his men,
who had thus far been denied any real spoils,
a nice, organized sacking of the rich oasis city in the desert.
And of course, the Palmirene High Command could not be treated as lightly as the leaders of Antioch or Tina.
After a brief public trial, the leaders of Palmyra, including Zabdis, were put to death.
The fate of Vobalithus is unknown, though by one account he's going to die on the trip to Rome.
But he's not very important anyway.
Zinobia was the real prize, and Aurelian had her.
With the eastern half of the empire now back under Roman control, Aurelian could turn to the west.
The dream of a reunited empire was still only half fulfilled, and next week,
Aurelian will turn his full attention on the Gallic Empire.
The death of posthumous had left the western provinces without a strong leader,
and Aurelian reckoned that capturing Gaul would be a whole,
lot easier than recapturing Syria. And he was right. I want to close this week by letting you all
know that the history of Rome has apparently been nominated for a podcast award. We are in the
running for Best Educational Podcast of 2010, and the award will be decided by an internet vote.
So I figure that if every one of you takes a second to go to podcastawards.com, that again,
podcast awards.com and vote for us, then we have a pretty good shot at me forever after referring
to the history of Rome as award-winning podcast, The History of Rome. Kind of like the way Pabst has gotten
so much mileage out of that one blue ribbon they won that one time. You can vote once a day,
so feel free to go crazy, and let's win this thing. I also want to mention that the final nominees
were selected based on the number of nominations each show got, which means that some of you out
there took the time and effort to talk the show up, submit our name, and get us nominated.
Thank you very much.
And dare I say it?
Yes, I think I will.
It's an honor just to be nominated.
Podcastawards.com.
Go vote for us.
