READING HALL

"THE DOORS OF WISDOM "

THE CAMBRIDGE ANCIENT HISTORY

 

VOLUME VII


THE HELLENISTIC MONARCHIES

AND

THE RISE OF ROME

 

CHAPTER I. THE LEADING IDEAS OF THE NEW PERIOD By W. S. Ferguson

CHAPTER II. THE COMING OF THE CELTS By J. M. de Navarro

CHAPTER III. THE NEW HELLENISTIC KINGDOMS By W. W. Tarn

CHAPTER IV. PTOLEMAIC EGYPT By M. Rostovtzeff

CHAPTER V. SYRIA AND THE EAST By M. Rostovtzeff

CHAPTER VII. ATHENS By C. F. Angus

CHAPTER VIII. ALEXANDRIAN LITERATURE By E. A. Barber

CHAPTER IX. HELLENISTIC SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS By W. H. S. Jones

CHAPTER X. THE SOURCES FOR THE TRADITION OF EARLY ROMAN HISTORY By H. Stuart Jones

CHAPTER XI, THE FOUNDING OF ROME By Hugh Last

CHAPTER XII. THE KINGS OF ROME By Hugh Last

CHAPTER XIII. THE PRIMITIVE INSTITUTIONS OF ROME By H. Stuart Jones

CHAPTER XIV. THE EARLY REPUBLIC By H. Stuart Jones and Hugh Last

CHAPTER XVI. THE MAKING OF A UNITED STATE By H. Stuart Jones and Hugh Last

CHAPTER XVII. THE GALLIC WARS OF ROME By L. Homo

CHAPTER XVIII. THE CONQUEST OF CENTRAL ITALY By.  F. E. Adcock

CHAPTER XIX. AGATHOCLES By M. Cary

CHAPTER XX. PYRRHUS By Tenney Frank

CHAPTER XXI. ROME AND CARTHAGE: THE FIRST PUNIC WAR By Tenney Frank

CHAPTER XXII. THE STRUGGLE OF EGYPT AGAINST SYRIA AND MACEDONIA By W. W. Tarn

CHAPTER XXIII THE GREEK LEAGUES AND MACEDONIA

CHAPTER XXIV. THE CARTHAGINIANS IN SPAIN By A. Schulten

CHAPTER XXV. ROME AFTER THE CONQUEST OF SICILY By Tenney Frank

CHAPTER XXVI. THE ROMANS IN ILLYRIA By M. Holleaux

 

 

PREFACE

IN volumes V and VI Greece was the centre of the Mediterranean world; but the conquests of Alexander shifted the centre of gravity eastwards and left room for the emergence of a new great power, the Republic of Rome. Greece, in fact, was destined to lose her primacy in the West without gaining complete political or intellectual domination in the East. But in the early decades of the third century Rome was still occupied in making good her hold upon the Italian peninsula, and no observer of the time would have compared her progress with the brilliant expansion of the Greeks eastwards. Out of the confusion which followed the death of Alexander emerged the three great Hellenistic monarchies, Macedon, Egypt and the Seleucid Empire of the East, whose making and century organization are the main theme of the first part of this volume. These three predominant powers overshadowed the countries which bordered on the eastern Mediterranean. The great days of Pergamum and Rhodes belong to the next period, and the systematic account of their economy is reserved for volume VIII.

The third was an age of political experiment, and we witness the birth of the Great State, instinct with Greek and Macedonian ideas, learning from the ancient bureaucracies of the East, and transcending the bounds of race. But in Egypt and in Seleucid Syria the fusion of races was not complete: the military needs of these monarchies compelled them to accord a special position to Graeco-Macedonian settlers and to use the forms of the Greek city-state to make homes for the governing class. This fact doubtless did much to limit the efficacy of the new settlements as centres of Hellenic culture; and imposing as was the Seleucid Empire it had to face an Oriental reaction even before the tide of Greek expansion had reached its full. In Greece proper a marked advance was made in the federalism of the Aetolian and Achaean Leagues, which acquired a cohesion and a strength denied to the city-states, whose failure as political units had been proved by the history of the preceding century, Yet the polis meant much to the Greeks as the setting of their social life, and the Hellenistic world was covered With cities, even where these communities had no power to control their own fortunes.

Side by side with these political experiments we find in literature and in philosophy new movements, which, if less splendid than the achievements of the fifth and fourth centuries, were to exercise a more widespread influence. The age which witnessed the rise of the Stoic and Epicurean philosophies made Athens not only the school of Greece but also the school of the Mediterranean world. In Alexandria, for this purpose a part of Greece rather than a part of Egypt, there arose the first academic community which, though it had its pedants, yet pursued the Greek way of wisdom, the way of the seeker rather than of the sage. Most striking of all the intellectual achievements of this period were those of the great mathematicians and astronomers. Even at a time when Greece was beginning to lose the political primacy which had been hers, the Greeks of the home-land and of the Diaspora remained the most effective fraction of the human race.

The final achievement of the Hellenistic movement was the conception of the world, that is the world of ancient civilization, as in a sense a single community—the oecumene—with the Greek koine as almost a universal language. But the conception was ‘a leap of the imagination alone,’ and was not translated into political or economic fact. The farther East remained in essentials unchanged. There was in externals a fusion of religions within the borders of the Hellenistic kingdoms, but Judaism, Zoroastrianism and the local cults of Egypt bided their time, and the way was being prepared for a religious reaction of the East upon the West which was to have the most momentous consequences. In the East there was a species of passive resistance to be followed by reaction; in the West the unity of the oecumene was broken by the intrusion of the Celts, who in the fourth century crossed the Alps and in the third century the Balkans. Their first coming, transient as were its political effects, yet had its historical significance, and it is not only because of chronological necessities that the account of the Celts is placed where it is in this volume but also in order to give a strong contrast to the Hellenistic order which conceived of the world of men in terms of Hellenistic thought. And further, even when Celtic raiders had been repelled or absorbed, the Celts remained to bar the north-western expansion of the older Mediterranean states and turn them upon themselves. But these invasions had slight effects compared with the making of a united state at Rome and the attainment of a Roman hegemony in a united Italy.

This state so built up was to dominate the remaining history of the ancient world, to create not a monarchy but an empire, and to rival Greece in the deep imprint which it made upon the mind of the modern world.

In this volume we witness only the rise of Rome, but the political achievements of that rise rank with the creations of the Hellenistic monarchies and the Greek Leagues in their immediate importance and in their permanent effect as models for later institutions. The story is in itself less adventurous, because Rome’s problems were near at hand and did not call for the subtleties of Hellenistic statecraft. It was the good fortune of the Republic to keep clear of far-flung entanglements until its strength was able to break through them where its wisdom failed to solve them. Thus the influence of Rome on the general course of the Mediterranean world-history was delayed, and it is this fact as well as the need to treat continuously of what was so essentially continuous, that justifies the first appearance of Rome in this rather than in an earlier volume.

The oecumenical importance of Rome itself, which for longer than any other city was in reality or in sentiment the capital of the European world, lends a peculiar interest to the problems of its first foundation and its early monarchy; and the examination of these problems is particularly instructive in showing how the sciences of archaeology and historical research may correct, confirm, supplement or supplant tradition. The vigorous increase of archaeological research in Italy will lay students of the beginnings of Rome under ever deeper obligations.

Of yet greater importance is the study of Roman institutions, which presents to the historian a peculiarly difficult problem owing to the character of the ancient evidence. For the historical tradition of the Romans about the growth of their constitution was in the main the work of annalists who had little sense of historical criticism and of jurists who had little sense of historical development. In the chapters on the growth of the Roman constitution will be found a critical reconstruction intended to show how far logic and a highly practical grasp of fact combined to build up the strongest political structure which the world has yet seen. Side by side with this we can trace, despite the accretions of fiction which lie heavy on the Roman tradition, the shrewd tenacity which guided the young Republic both in diplomacy and in war. It is true that the advance of historical criticism has stripped the old glamour from the story, and we have no means of re-capturing a sense of close contact with the Rome of the fifth and fourth centuries such as that which invests the history of Athens with its peculiarly dramatic character. The Romans contrived to make it seem inevitable that they should dominate Italy, and it is hard to realize how unremitting were the efforts that gained them their reward. Yet tantae molls erat.

Gradually the advance of Rome’s power brought her into contact and conflict with the Greeks of Southern Italy; and in the  period which forms the main theme of the volume she measured her strength against Pyrrhus, a soldier of the new Greek school of war, and against the fleets and armies of Carthage, the oldest great power of the Western Mediterranean. Rome survived both these tests of her capacity and brought Sicily within the bounds of Roman Italy. Two centuries of wars in which the Republic had claimed as the reward of each war greater resources for the winning of the next had placed at her disposal a man-power stronger than that which any ancient state had yet controlled. This power rested not only on the military superiority of Rome but on ties of common interest and sentiment throughout Italy which the wise policy of the Roman federation had known how to evoke. Meanwhile the Greeks of the West had witnessed the career of Agathocles which both in its successes and its failures attested the political weaknesses which were to surrender the future to Rome. In the eastern half of the Mediterranean we see the struggle of Egypt with Syria and Macedonia and the rise in Greece of the two leagues, the Aetolian and the Achaean, whose fate it was to prevent the union of Greece under Macedon, while themselves achieving a form of union which transcended the limits of the Greek citystate. Finally, the pirate state of Illyria compelled the Republic to realize that the Adriatic has two coasts, and the Carthaginian Empire in Spain gave to Hannibal the means of accepting a conflict with Rome which was to end in the extension of Roman power along the northern coast of the Mediterranean to the Pillars of Hercules.

This conflict will be the first topic of volume VIII, which will proceed to treat of the period in which Rome thrust aside the Hellenistic monarchies and came to be acknowledged as the single great power in the Mediterranean world. It will also complete the picture of Hellenistic civilization and economic life and describe the rise of literature and the advent of philosophy in Rome herself, taken prisoner by the Hellenism which she dethroned.

 


 

 

THE CAMBRIDGE ANCIENT HISTORY