This is describing the immediate aftermath of Ventidius' third success
against the Parthians, where he had enticed them over the river
Euphrates, defeating them and Pacorus had been killed. As to
Ventidius' earlier successes, Dio is careful to point out that Antony
got the formal plaudits: "Καὶ αὐτὸς [sc. Ventidius] μὲν οὐδὲν ἐπ´
αὐτοῖς παρὰ τῆς βουλῆς, ἅτε οὐκ αὐτοκράτωρ ὢν ἀλλ´ ἑτέρῳ ὑποστρατηγῶν,
εὕρετο, ὁ δὲ Ἀντώνιος καὶ ἐπαίνους καὶ ἱερομηνίας ἔλαβεν.".
Dio. 48.21 implies, does it not, that the question of whether the
defeat of Pacorus was to be attributable to Antony only was the
subject of a vote of the Senate - ἐψηφίσαντο - that is a matter of
genuine controversy. The result seems to have been a pragmatic
compromise - award both Antony *and* Ventidius (separate) triumphs (in
relation to the same victory - is there any precedent for such?). It
looks to me as if Dio. preserves the argument that will have been
proferred by / on behalf of Ventidius: "ἅτε καὶ τὴν συμφορὰν τὴν ἐπὶ
τοῦ Κράσσου σφίσι γενομένην ἱκανώτατα τοῖς Πάρθοις διὰ τοῦ Πακόρου,
καὶ μάλισθ´ ὅτι ἐν τῇ αὐτῇ ἡμέρᾳ ἑκατέρου τοῦ ἔτους ἀμφότερα
συνηνέχθη, νομίζοντες ἀνταποδεδωκέναι". Why should that make a
difference - one explanation is that this is what Julius Caesar had
already been mandated by the people and senate to do?
As background to this, there is of course Antony and Octavian
jockeying for position. Would Ventidius have squared up to Antony off
his own bat? Particularly relevant is that 38BC seems to be when
Octavian took on the appellation "Imperator Caesar".
Rather than being an anachronism, the below ([Gallus] 54-6) looks very
much like (if not identical to) the argument taken by those at the
time who were trying to ensure that *Antony did not* get the credit
for this major defeat of the Parthians.
Victrices aquilas sub duce Ventidio:
Qui nunc Crassorum manes, direptaque signa
Vindicat, augusti[s] Caesaris auspiciis.
Nor do I understand
> Why should that make a
> difference - one explanation is that this is what Julius Caesar had
> already been mandated by the people and senate to do?
Why should what make a difference? If you mean the battle's being on the
same day and thus wiping out the ill-omen, that was extremely important to
the Roman mind (see Plutarch, Lucullus 27. 8-9, where Lucullus prepares to
defeat Mithridates on the same day, 6 October, as the rout at Arausio), but
it was not something that even Caesar could be mandated to do in advance,
since it depended as much on the enemy as on the Roman commander, however
resourceful.
Leofranc Holford-Strevens
67 St Bernard's Road
Oxford
usque adeone
OX2 6EJ scire MEVM nihil est, nisi ME scire hoc sciat
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tel. +44 (0) 1865 552808 (home)/353865 (work) fax +44 (0) 1865 512237
"Why should that make a difference - one explanation is that this is
what Julius Caesar had already been mandated by the people and senate
to do?" - the point here is: yes, obviously a victory of considerable
importance and again made that much more signal by being on the same
date, but *how does that at all advance the case on behalf of
Ventidius* that the triumph should be his rather than Antony's (this
being said to be the justification for V. getting a triumph as well)?
Other things being equal, it would be an argument to the contrary: the
more important the victory, the less likely it would be that it should
be attributed to a subordinate.
While Dio doesn't say this in terms, the issue is most likely to have
been: either 'Antony' or 'Ventidius' (rather than 'Antony' or 'Antony
+ Ventidius'), especially given that Antony is said to have "τῆς ἀρχῆς
αὐτὸν ἔπαυσε" (how could they be honoured together without slighting
Antony after that?) and given that it would be strange to have more
than one triumphator. And it further seems to me that Dio's whole
account is only explicable on the basis of a faction being astute to
try to ensure that Antony did not get the credit - which is
historically plausible, even likely, in any event.
The real question is: how does that faction get the argument off the
ground *at all*? - referring the auspices which the now deified Julius
Caesar had taken 6 years ago to do exactly what Ventidius has
(partially) done - i.e. avenge the Crassi - seems to me to be the sort
of argument that Caesar junior might come up with. It's the
explanation of [Gallus 54-6] that I'd earlier gravitated towards in
ignorance of this passage of Dio; i.e. in ignorance of the fact that
there was *actually* any controversy as to whether Ventidius' actions
were attributable to Antony.
A further potentially relevant background point is that it was Julius
Caesar who set Ventidius off on his meteoric rise from having been
displayed in Pompeius Strabo's triumph and being described as a
muleteer, becoming a general of JC's and a senator before JC's death.
It is not inconceivable that Ventidius would have served on JC's
abortive Parthian campaign, making the convenient elision that much
easier.
Another consideration which might be significant is whether Antony (or
anyone) had in fact taken any auspices referable to this encounter -
what seems to have happened is not that Ventidius attacked the
Parthians but that he tricked the Parthians into crossing the
Euphrates and attacking him in an area which he had deceived them into
thinking would be lightly defended.
On Oct 22, 10:06 pm, "Leofranc Holford-Strevens"
> > Vindicat, augusti[s] Caesaris auspiciis.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
1. In 38 BC, did 'Caesaris' mean 'Divi Iuli' or 'Imp. Caesaris'? If one
could still understand the former, the statement that Ventidius fought under
his auspices is highly questionable; if it had to be the latter, it is
downright false.
2. Although _augusta auspicia_ is guaranteed as legitimate Latin by Cicero,
_Pro Milone_ 43, and it may be subjective on my part to claim that even in
this context so weightily solemn a word is out of place in a pre-Augustan
elegy (I might find it easier if the couplet referred to something Ventidius
had done, rather than was in the process of doing, which is the only way
'vindicat . . . signa' can be justified), yet the cumulation of that
grandiosity with the coincidence that Gallus should happen to use a
collocation that could be corrupted into Augusti Caesaris, denoting the
wrong person by a name he did yet not possess, is rather a strain to
swallow. (Or if one wished to maintain the paradosis, interpreting it as
'the august Divus Iulius'', it would remain a stumbling-block that no-one is
said to have called him that either during his lifetime or afterwards.)
Leofranc Holford-Strevens
67 St Bernard's Road
Oxford
usque adeone
OX2 6EJ scire MEVM nihil est, nisi ME scire hoc sciat
alter?
tel. +44 (0) 1865 552808 (home)/353865 (work) fax +44 (0) 1865 512237
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