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Quintus Sertorius

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Quintus Sertorius
Bornc. 126 BC
Died73 or 72 BC
Cause of deathAssassination (Stabbed to death)
Occupation(s)Statesman, lawyer, general
Known forRebellion in Spain against the Roman Senate
Office
Military tribune 97 BC
Quaestor 91 BC
Praetor 85 or 84 BC[1]
Proconsul[2] (Hispania) 82–73 BC[3][4]
Military career
AllegianceRoman Republic
MariusCinna faction
Battles/warsCimbric War
Social War
Bellum Octavianum
Sulla's civil war
Sertorian War X

Quintus Sertorius (c. 126 BC[5] – 73 or 72 BC[6]) was a Roman general and statesman who led a large-scale rebellion against the Roman Senate on the Iberian peninsula. He first became prominent during the Cimbrian War fighting under Gaius Marius, and then served Rome in the Social War. Unsuccessful in his attempt for the plebeian tribunate c. 88 BC due to the hostility of Lucius Cornelius Sulla, in the aftermath of Sulla's consulship of 88 BC he joined with Cinna and Marius during the short civil war in 87 BC. He led in the assault on Rome and played a role in restraining the reprisals that followed. During the Cinnan domination of the republic he was elected praetor, some time before 83 BC and probably after 85 BC. He criticised Gnaeus Papirius Carbo and other Marians' leadership of the anti-Sullan forces during the civil war with Sulla and was, late in the war, given command of Spain.

In late 82 BC he was proscribed by Sulla and forced from his province. However, he soon returned the next year, taking in and leading many Marian and Cinnan exiles in a prolonged fight in which he presented himself as a Roman proconsul against the Sullan regime at Rome. He gathered support from other Roman exiles and the native Iberian tribes – in part by using his tamed white fawn to paint himself as a religious leader before them – employing irregular warfare to defeat commanders repeatedly sent from Rome to subdue him. Sertorius allied with Mithridates VI of Pontus and Cilician Pirates in his struggle against the Roman government.

Substantial efforts by the Sullan regime to forcibly suppress his anti-Sullan resistance, led by Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius and Pompey, were unsuccessful. After defeating Pompey in 76 BC at the Battle of Lauron, he however suffered substantial reverses in the following years. By 73 BC his allies had lost confidence in his leadership; his lieutenant Marcus Perperna Veiento assassinated him in late 73 or 72 BC.[5] His cause fell in defeat to Pompey shortly thereafter.[7] The Greek biographer and essayist Plutarch chose Sertorius as the focus of one of his biographies in Parallel Lives, where he was paird with Eumenes of Cardia, one of the post-Alexandrine Diadochi.

Early life and career

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Sertorius was born in Nursia (a town whose people had received Roman citizenship in 268 BC) in Sabine territory around 126 BC.[8] The Sertorius family were of equestrian status. It appears that he did not have any noteworthy ancestors and was thus a novus homo (a "new man"), ie the first of his family to join the senate.[9]

Sertorius' father died before he came of age and his mother, Rhea (perhaps Raia),[10] focused all her energies on raising her only son. She made sure he received the best education possible for a young man of his status. In return, according to Plutarch, he became excessively fond of his mother. Having inherited his father's clients, like many other young domi nobiles, Sertorius moved to Rome in his mid-to-late teens trying to make it big as an orator and jurist to begin a political career.[11]

His speaking style made a sufficiently negative impression on the young Cicero to merit a special mention in a later treatise on oratory:

Of all the totally illiterate and crude orators, well, actually ranters, I ever knew – and I might as well add 'completely coarse and rustic' – the roughest and readiest were Q. Sertorius ...[12]

After his undistinguished career in Rome as a jurist and an orator, he entered the military. His first recorded campaign was under Quintus Servilius Caepio as a staff officer and ended at the Battle of Arausio in 105 BC, where he showed unusual courage. When the battle was lost, Sertorius escaped while wounded by swimming across the Rhone, apparently still with his weapons and armour.[13] This became a minor legend in antiquity, still remembered in the time of Ammian.[14]

1st century BC marble portrait bust thought to be of Gaius Marius.

Serving under Gaius Marius, sometime between the autumns of 104 and 102 BC,[15] Sertorius succeeded in spying on the wandering Germanic tribes that had defeated Caepio. Marius likely wanted information regarding enemy dispositions, movements, and intentions. Sertorius likely did not know enough of the German languages to comprehend detailed information, but could report on their numbers and formations: "after seeing or hearing what was of importance", he returned to Marius.[13]

Sertorius became well-known and trusted by Marius during his service with him. He almost certainly fought with his commander at the great Battle of Aquae Sextiae (now Aix-en-Provence, France) in 102 BC and the Battle of Vercellae in 101 BC, in which the Teutones, Ambrones, and Cimbri were decisively defeated.[16] Some scholars, such as Philip Spann, believe that Sertorius' tactics and strategies in Hispania were substantially similar to Marius' and conclude that Sertorius' earlier service with Marius' was an important learning experience.[17] In 100 BC, Sertorius's patron Marius fell out of grace for his support of the demagogue Lucius Appuleius Saturninus and he and Sertorius had to leave Rome and stay away for a while. Sertorius travelled to Hispania Citerior and served its governor, Titus Didius, as a military tribune in 97 BC.

During his service, he was posted to the Roman-controlled Oretani (Iberian) town of Castulo. The local garrison had become hated by the native Iberians for their lack of discipline and constant drinking, and Sertorius either arrived too late to stop their impropriety or was unable to.[18] The natives invited a neighbouring tribe to free the town of the garrison, and they successfully slaughtered many of the Roman soldiers.

Sertorius escaped and gathered the other survivors. He secured the unguarded exits of the town, and then led his men inside, killing all barbarian men of military age irrespective of participation in the revolt. Once he learned some attackers had come from a neighbouring town, he had his men clothe themselves in the armour of the slain natives and led them there. The town opened the gates for Sertorius and his men, convinced they were their warriors returning with loot from the slain Roman garrison. Sertorius then killed many of the towns' inhabitants and sold the rest into slavery.[19]

Later in Hispania during his revolt, Sertorius did not billet his soldiers in native cities, "noting the stupidity of a policy which would cause rebellion in a hostile city, hostility in a neutral one, and corrupt the garrison into the bargain".[20] Pliny's remark regarding Sertorius possibly winning the Grass Crown, tied sometimes to the Castulo incident, is refuted by scholars.[19][21] Castulo did, however, earn Sertorius considerable fame in Hispania and abroad, aiding his future political career.

Didius returned to Rome in the June of 93 BC to celebrate a triumph, but it is not known whether Sertorius immediately returned with him. Spann argues that Sertorius, as one of Didius' experienced officers, remained in Hispania in 92 BC to continue subduing the Iberian tribes under Didius' successor, Gaius Valerius Flaccus.[22] Conversely, Konrad posits that Sertorius spent the year in Rome gathering support for his quaestorship, arguing that as a novus homo such political maneuvering would require time and effort.[23]

Social War and civil unrest

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In 92 BC, upon his return from his military tribunate in Spain, Sertorius was elected quaestor and assigned Cisalpine Gaul in the year 91.[24] His quaestorship was unusual in that he largely governed the province while the actual governor, perhaps Gaius Coelius Caldus, spent time across the Alps subduing remnants of the Cimbric invasion.[25] The same year, the Social War broke out, and Sertorius contributed by levying soldiers and obtaining weapons. He may have done more, though the existing sources do not record it. According to the historian Sallust:

Many successes were achieved under his [Sertorius] leadership, but these have not been recorded in history, firstly because of his humble birth and secondly because the historians were ill-disposed towards him.[26]

His quaestorship may have been prorogued into 90 BC.[27] Between 90–89 BC he almost certainly led as a commander and fought, along with providing men and materiel to the southern theatres of the war.[28] He served under a series of commanders, probably Marius, most certainly under Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo.[29] A wound sustained during the conflict cost him the use of one of his eyes.[30]

Sertorius used his wounds as personal propaganda. Being scarred in the face had its advantages. "Other men, he used to say, could not always carry about them the evidence of their heroic achievements. Their tokens, wreaths and spears of honour must at some times be set aside. His proof of valour remained with him at all times".[31]

Upon his return to Rome he apparently enjoyed the reputation of a war hero.[32] Sertorius then ran for tribune of the Plebs in 89 or 88 BC, but Lucius Cornelius Sulla thwarted his efforts, causing Sertorius to oppose Sulla. Sulla's reasons for doing so are not completely clear. It may have originated in a personal quarrel since both men served under Marius earlier in their careers.[33] It is also equally possible Sulla (and by extension the optimates, who he was closely tied to through marriage with Caecilia Metella and opposition to Marius) were uncertain about what manner of tribune Sertorius would be, and not being able to rely on his obedience led to their opposition.[33] Knowing Sertorius was popular with the common people and associated with Marius may have been enough to thwart his ambitions. In any case, Sertorius was a senator by 87 BC,[34] likely adlected due to his earlier quaestorship[citation needed].

Sulla's consulship and the bellum Octavianum

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In 88 BC, after Publius Sulpicius Rufus and Marius supplanted his eastern command, Sulla marched his legions on Rome and took the capital. He took revenge on his enemies and forced Marius into exile, then left Italy to fight the First Mithridatic War against Mithridates VI of Pontus. Sulla did not harm Sertorius, probably because he had not participated in Marius and Rufus' actions. After Sulla left, violence erupted between the optimates, led by the consul Gnaeus Octavius, and the populares, led by the consul Lucius Cornelius Cinna. Cinna, as "the enemy of his enemy [Sulla]" and "not so much... an old ally of Marius as the newly emerging leader of those who disapproved of Sulla's coup" represented a reemergence of Sertorius' political fortunes.[35][36] As a result of this, and remembering Sulla's opposition when he ran for tribune, Sertorius declared for Cinna and the populares.[37]

Cinna was driven from Rome in 87 BC during the Bellum Octavianum. Sertorius being one of his allies aided him in recruiting ex-legionaries and drumming up enough support to enable them, in their turn, to march on Rome. When Marius returned from exile in Africa to aid the Cinna-Marian cause, Sertorius opposed granting him any command either out of fear his position would be diminished, or because he feared Marius' vindictiveness and what he would do when Rome was retaken.[38] Sertorius advised not to trust Marius, and though he had a very bad opinion of Marius by then, he consented to Marius's return upon understanding that Marius came at Cinna's request and not of his own accord.

Oh, really? Here I was thinking that Marius had decided for himself to come to Italy, and so I was trying to decide what good it would do. But it turns out there's nothing to discuss. Since after all, you invited him, then you have to receive and employ him. There's no question about it.[39]

In October of 87 BC, Cinna marched on Rome. During the siege, Sertorius commanded one of Cinna's divisions stationed at the Colline Gate and fought an inconclusive battle with troops commanded by Pompeius Strabo. Sertorius and Marius also bridged the Tiber to prevent supply from reaching the city by river.[40] After Octavius surrendered Rome to the forces of Marius, Cinna, and Sertorius, Sertorius abstained from the proscriptions his fellow commanders engaged in. Sertorius went so far as to rebuke Marius and move Cinna to moderation.[41] After Marius's death he, probably with Cinna's approval, annihilated Marius's slave army which was still terrorizing Rome.

Civil war against Sulla

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The years 87–84 BC are often described as spent 'waiting for Sulla'[42] and what exactly Sertorius did while Cinna controlled Rome is unclear. He was not sent with Gaius Flavius Fimbria and Lucius Valerius Flaccus east for the First Mithridatic War. Sertorius certainly served in the government during this time; Cinna may have utilized his skill as a soldier and popularity with the common people to quell any remnants of revolt and stabilize Italy, thereby consolidating his power and that of the Marian government. He probably also helped train and levy soldiers for Sulla's inevitable return. Marius died in January 86 BC; eventually, Cinna himself was murdered in 84 BC, lynched by his own troops. It is probable that Sertorius became praetor in 85 or 84 BC.[43]

Marble portrait bust thought to be Sulla. Sulla's opposition and disfavour significantly altered the career and fate of Sertorius.

On Sulla's return from the East in 83 BC a civil war broke out. Sertorius, as a praetor, was among the men chosen to command the Marian forces against him. When the consul Scipio Asiaticus marched against Sulla, Sertorius was part of his staff. Sulla arrived in Campania and found the other consul, Gaius Norbanus, blocking the road to Capua. At the Battle of Mount Tifata Sulla inflicted a crushing defeat on Norbanus, with Norbanus losing six thousand of his men to Sulla's seventy.[44]

The beaten Norbanus withdrew with the remnants of his army to Capua. Sulla was stopped in his pursuit by Scipio's advance. However, Scipio was unwilling to risk a battle and started negotiations under a flag of truce. Sulla's motives in agreeing to the negotiations were not sincere,[45][46] in that he likely agreed intending to make Scipio's already disaffected army more likely to defect to him. Sertorius was present at the talks between the commanders, and advocated against letting Sulla's troops fraternize with Scipio's;[47] he did not trust Sulla and advised Scipio to force a decisive action. Instead, he was sent to Norbanus to explain that an armistice was in force and negotiations were underway.

Sertorius made a detour along his way and captured the town of Suessa Aurunca which had gone over to Sulla. When Sulla complained to Scipio about this breach of trust by Sertorius, Scipio gave back his hostages as a sign of good faith. Disappointed by the behavior of their commander and unwilling to fight Sulla's battle-hardened veterans, Scipio's troops defected en masse. Scipio and his son were captured by Sulla, who released them after extracting a promise that they would never again fight against him or rejoin Cinna's successor Carbo.[48]

Sertorius motives for seizing Suessa are debated. It is possible the city defected to Sulla during the armistice (perceiving Scipio's negotiations as a sign of weakness), and thus Sertorius, en route to Norbanus, conquered the town to restore the status quo.[49][50] It is also possible Sertorius, who distrusted Sulla and doubted the judgement of Scipio, conquered the city intending to force an end to negotiations. Spann believes that calling Sertorius' seizure of Suessa a "foolish action" is not wholly unjustified, but argues against trusting Appian's account (the only one that survives, based on Sulla's memoirs) which states Sertorius' capture of Suessa as being the main cause of negotiations ending and the defection of the Marian army.[51] So Konrad: "the loss of the Consul's [Scipio's] army was not caused by the seizure of Suessa".[45]

After Suessa, Sertorius departed to Etruria where he raised yet another army, some 40 cohorts, as the Etruscans, having gained their Roman citizenship through the Cinna-Marian regime, were fearful of a Sullan victory.[52] In 82 BC, Marius' son, Gaius Marius the Younger, became consul without having held the offices that a candidate for the consulship should have held, and at the unconstitutional age of 27. Sertorius, who probably qualified for the office, objected but his opinion was ignored.[53] Following this appointment, Sertorius returned to Rome and castigated the Marian leadership for their lack of action in combatting Sulla, pointed out Sulla's bravery, and stated his belief that unless met directly soon Sulla would inevitably destroy them. Plutarch sums up the events:

Cinna was murdered and against the wishes of Sertorius, and against the law, the younger Marius took the consulship while [ineffectual] men as Carbo, Norbanus and Scipio had no success in stopping Sulla's advance on Rome, so the Marian cause was being ruined and lost; cowardice and weakness by the generals played its part, and treachery did the rest, and there was no reason why Sertorius should stay to watch things going from bad to worse through the inferior judgement of men with superior power.[54]

Governor of Hispania and fugitive

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Iberia, showing the Roman Provinces in the time of Sertorius.

By late 83 or early 82 BC, having fallen out with the new Marian leadership, Sertorius was sent to Hispania as proconsul,[55] "no doubt by mutual agreement".[56] Sertorius may have been intended to go to Hispania even before Sulla's Civil War in order to relieve command of the two Spanish provinces (Hispania Ulterior and Hispania Citerior) from their governor, Gaius Valerius Flaccus, due to his doubtful loyalty to the Marian regime.[57]

When Sertorius marched through the Pyrenees mountain range he ran into severe weather and a mountain tribe that demanded a tribute for allowing his passage. His companions indignantly claimed it was an outrage; but while they considered it disgraceful to give in to extortion, Sertorius simply paid the tribe and commented that he was buying himself time, and that if a man had a lot to do, nothing is more precious than time.

Flaccus, the governor of the two Spanish provinces, did not recognize his authority, but Sertorius had an army at his back and used it to assume control. He did not meet with significant resistance in his first seizure of Hispania.[58] Sertorius persuaded the local chieftains to accept him as the new governor and endeared himself to the general population by cutting taxes, and then began to construct ships and levy soldiers in preparation for the armies he expected to be sent after him by Sulla. After gaining control of both provinces Sertorius sent an army, under Julius (possibly Livius)[59] Salinator, to fortify the pass through the Pyrenees.

Silver Denarius issued by Lucius Fabius Hispaniensis, quaestor to Gaius Annius Luscus in 82-81 BC. Fabius defected from the Senatorial armies to the Sertorians, probably after being proscribed in 81, and later took part in Sertorius' assassination.[60]

During his occupation of Hispania Sertorius collected news of the war in Italy. Likely from refugees and Marian exiles fleeing Sulla's veteran legions, by December of 82 BC[61] he had heard of Sulla's victory over the Marians in various battles, his second capture of Rome, and the Sullan proscriptions. Sertorius learned that he was one of the foremost among the proscribed, among the first names listed.[62][63]

By 81 BC all other significant Marian leaders were dead, and Sertorius' Spain had become a priority for the Sullan government. Sulla's forces, probably three or four legions[64] under the command of Gaius Annius Luscus, departed for Hispania early in 81 or very late in 82 BC, but were unable to break through the Pyrenees for a time until Livius Salinator was assassinated by P. Calpurnius Lanarius, one of his subordinates, who defected to the Sullans.[65] Annius then marched into Hispania.

Unable to convince the Spanish tribes to fight for him, Sertorius was seriously outnumbered and he decided to abandon his provinces. He fled to Nova Carthago and with 3,000 of his most loyal followers set sail to Mauritania, but was driven off by the locals who wanted no part of his rebellion. He then fell in with a band of Cilician pirates who were pillaging the Spanish coast. Together they attacked and took Pityussa, the most southerly of the Balearic Islands, which they started using as a base. When this was reported to Annius, he sent a fleet of warships and almost a full legion which drove Sertorius and his pirate allies from the Balearics.[66] The pirates defected and went to Africa to help install the tyrant Ascalis[67] on the throne of Tingis. Sertorius followed them to Africa, rallied the locals in the vicinity of Tingis, who were unhappy with Ascalis for they saw him as a puppet of Sulla, and defeated Ascalis's men and the pirates in battle.[68]

After gaining control over Tingis, Sertorius defeated Paccianus, one of Sulla's generals, who had been sent to put Ascalis on the throne.[69]

Local legend had it that Antaeus, the son of Poseidon and Gaia, and the husband of Tinge who gave name to Tingis, was buried in Mauritania. Sertorius had the tomb excavated for he wanted to see the body of Antaeus which was reported to be sixty cubits[70] in size. According to Plutarch, Sertorius was dumbfounded by what he saw and after performing a sacrifice, he filled the tomb up again, and thereafter was among those promoting its traditions and honours.[71]

The North African success won Sertorius the fame and admiration of the people of Hispania, particularly that of the warlike Lusitanians in the west, whom Roman generals and proconsuls of Sulla's party had plundered and oppressed. The Lusitanians, being threatened by a Sullan governor again, asked Sertorius to be their war leader. It is likely they were influenced by Sertorius' tenure as governor being far gentler than his predecessors, who often extracted very high taxes and warred against tribes arbitrarily for glory and plunder, neither of which Sertorius did.[72] While considering the offer, Sertorius learned of his mother's death and "almost died of grief", lying in his tent, unable to speak for a week.[73] With the aid of his friends and fellow exiles, Sertorius was eventually able to leave his tent. He decided to accept the Lusitanian offer, and prepared his army and fleet to return to Hispania.[74]

Sertorian War

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Quintus Sertorius and the horse tail, by Gerard van der Kuijl, 1638

Sertorius crossed the strait at Gibraltar at Tingis in 80 BC, landing at Baelo near the Pillars of Hercules. A small fleet under a Cotta (specific name not known) from the coastal town of Mellaria failed to stop him. After being reinforced by the Lusitanians he marched on Lucius Fufidius and defeated him at the Battle of the Baetis River, consolidating control over Hispania Ulterior.[75]

Brave, noble, and gifted with eloquence, Sertorius was just the man to impress the native warriors, whom he organized into an army and adjoined to his core Roman forces.[76] They spoke of him as the "new Hannibal" whom he resembled physically (having one eye) and in military skill; he was an extraordinary general who repeatedly defeated forces many times his own force's size. Many Marian exiles and Italian refugees joined him, and with these and his Spanish and African volunteers and mercenaries he completely defeated several of Sulla's generals (Fufidius, Thorius, and to some less-direct extent Domitius Calvinus and Manlius). Sertorius' power grew exponentially following these victories.

Between 79–77 BC, Sertorius' main enemy was Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius, an experienced Sullan general who had been given a proconsular command by the Senate specifically to defeat and drive him from Hispania Ulterior. Prior to Metellus' arrival, Domitius, propraetor of Hispania Citerior, marched against Sertorius only to be defeated by Lucius Hirtuleius, Sertorius' legate.[77] Sertorius, who referred to Metellus as 'the old woman', employed guerrilla warfare effectively and outmaneuvered Metellus through rapid and relentless campaigning.[78][79] Sertorius also defeated and killed Lucius Thorius Balbus, Metellus' legate.

Metellus' offensive in 79 BC was unsuccessful, and his calls for aid similarly failed. Sertorius gained control over both Hispanian Provinces with the aid of his legates. From 78 BC onward Metellus chose to campaign against Sertorian cities, but his systematic invasions were thwarted by Sertorius. One example is when Sertorius learned of Metellus' intention to siege Lacobriga. Sertorius supplied the city extensively in response, and prepared to meet Metellus there. When he arrived and sent out foragers, Sertorius ambushed them and killed many, forcing Metellus to leave, unsuccessful.[80] In 77 BC, Sertorius focused his attention on subduing Iberian tribes who had not yet accepted his authority in the interior.[81] Metellus did not extensively campaign against Sertorius in the year due to the revolt in Rome of the consul Marcus Aemilius Lepidus (father of the triumvir).

Sertorius and the Example of the Horses, after Hans Holbein the Younger. The drawing illustrates the example Sertorius gave to his followers that in the same way a horse's tail can be picked out hair by hair but not pulled out all at once, so smaller forces could defeat the Roman armies.[82]

Part of Sertorius' victories were due to his efforts in making the Iberians an organized army through Roman formations and signals.[83] He encouraged them to decorate their armaments with gold and silver, and thus made them more likely to retain their equipment between engagements. Many native Iberians pledged themselves to him, serving as bodyguards who would take their own lives if he perished.

Famously, while organizing his armies, Sertorius decided to give them a visual lesson in tactics. The Lusitanians, along with other natives under his command, wanted to take on the Roman legions head-on, something Sertorius knew would end disastrously.[84] Unable to convince them, he allowed the natives to do so in a minor engagement, presumably against Metellus, and rode to their rescue. Afterward, he had two horses brought in front of them, one strong, the other weak. He then ordered an old man to pull hairs from the strong horses' tail one by one, and a strong youth to pull on the weak horses' tail all at once; the old man completed his task, while the youth failed. Sertorius then explained that the Roman army was akin to the horse tail, in that it could be defeated if attacked piece by piece, but if taken all at once victory was impossible.[85]

Sertorius claimed to receive messages from Diana via a white fawn.[86]

Although he was strict and severe with his soldiers, Sertorius was particularly considerate to the people in general, and made their burdens as light as possible, despite considerable financial strain in his war effort.[87] This was likely partially pragmatic, as Sertorius had to retain the goodwill of the native Iberians if he had any chance of winning the war.

Spanus, one of the commoners who lived in the country came across a doe trying to escape from hunters. The doe fled faster than he could pursue, but the animal had newly given birth. He [Spanus] was struck by the unusual colour of the fawn, for it was pure white. He pursued and caught it.

Sertorius most famous strategy to this end was his white fawn, a present from one of the natives that he claimed communicated to him the advice of the goddess Diana. The superstitious Iberians were greatly impressed by the fawn, who was docile and calm in Sertorius' military camp and affectionate with him, and saw Sertorius as a divinely inspired leader. Sertorius would obscure information from military reports, claim Diana had told him of said information through the fawn in his dreams, and then act accordingly to further this belief.[88]

Contrebia and Lauron

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In the summer of that year, with Lepidus' revolt quashed, the Roman Senate recognized a greater force was needed to defeat Sertorius, as to this point all Sullan generals had failed and Metellus was doing miserably against him. Both sitting consuls, however, refused to command the war against Sertorius. The Senate resorted to giving an extraordinary command to Pompey to crush Sertorius' rebellion.[79] Soon after, in either late 77 or early 76 BC, Sertorius was joined by Marcus Perperna Vento, with a following of Roman and Italian aristocrats and a sizeable Roman-style army of fifty-three cohorts.[89] With this army Sertorius was able to meet the Roman commanders in open field engagements instead of only guerrilla warfare.

Sertorius successfully sieged the native city of Contrebia in that year.[90] Afterward, he wintered in the town of Castra Aelia, called together representatives of all the Iberian tribes, thanked them for their aid in providing arms for his troops, discussed the progress of the war and the advantages they would have if he was victorious, and then dismissed them.[91]

By the 76 BC campaigning season, Pompey had recruited a large army, some 30,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry from his father and Sulla's veterans, its size being evidence of the threat posed by Sertorius to the Sullan Senate.[92] His arrival in Hispania stirred up rebellious sentiments against Sertorius in the peninsula, due to Pompey's reputation as a skilled general. Sertorius paid close attention to Pompey's movements despite his open contempt.[93] He was now at this point at the height of his power, as near all of Iberia was under his control and he had several large armies throughout the peninsula with which to combat the Roman generals.[94]

Sertorius, apparently, did not intend to march on Pompey or expect him to offer battle.[91] He began the year with minor raids into the lands of the Berones and Autricones, presumably wanting to set a reliable headquarters in northern Hispania.[95] When Pompey marched toward Valentia, Sertorius rapidly moved south and blockaded the strategic city of Lauron in Citerior, which had recently allied itself to Pompey. Sertorius besieged the city, likely hoping to pull Pompey from Valentia by attacking a new ally of his. In response, Pompey made for Lauron, "drawn by Sertorius into a deadly trap".[96]

Pompey reached Lauron and saw Sertorius encamped there already, beginning the Battle of Lauron. Sertorius remarked that he would give a lesson to Pompey: that a general must look behind him rather than in front of him.[97] Sertorius thoroughly outmaneuvered Pompey during the battle, forcing him to stay in place by threatening an attack from the rear, then killed his foragers and a Pompeian legion sent to relieve the foragers. When Pompey tried to form up his entire army to salvage the situation, Sertorius led out his own army. Pompey, knowing he would be outflanked if he gave battle, desisted, unable to do anything as a third of his army was slaughtered. Sertorius let the native Lauronians go and burned down the city. He then executed an entire Roman cohort due to their attempts to plunder and ravage the Lauronians after he gave orders that they were to be unharmed.[98]

Sertorius owed some of his success to his prodigious ability as a statesman. His goal was to build a stable government in Hispania with the consent of the people. He established a senate of 300 members, drawn from Roman emigrants (probably also including some from the highest aristocrats of Hispania) and kept an Iberian bodyguard. For the children of the chief native families he provided a school at Osca (Huesca), his capital city, where they received a Roman education and even adopted the dress and education of Roman youths.[83] Sertorius held exams for the children, distributed prizes, and assured them and their fathers they would eventually hold some positions of power.[83] This followed the Roman practice of taking hostages. Late in his campaigns, a revolt of the native people arose and Sertorius killed several of the children that he had sent to school at Osca, selling many others into slavery.[89]

Sucro and Saguntum

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In 75 BC, Perperna and Herennius were defeated at the Battle of Valentia by Pompey.[99] Hearing this, Sertorius left the command against Metellus with Hirtuleius and marched his army to meet Pompey. Metellus defeated Hirtuleius at the Battle of Italica,[100] so Sertorius sent Perperna at the head of a large army to block Metellus from coming to Pompey's aid and engaged Pompey, who, for whatever reason, chose to accept the offer of battle rather than wait for his ally, beginning the Battle of Sucro late in the day.[101]

Each general took the right flank; Pompey faced a Sertorian legate, while Sertorius faced Lucius Afranius. When Sertorius saw his left wing falling to Pompey, he inspired them and led a fierce counterattack which shattered the Pompeian right, nearly capturing Pompey himself.[102] Afranius, however, had broken the Sertorian right and was plundering their camp; Sertorius rode over and forced Afranius to depart back to Pompey. The following day, both armies drew up again, but Sertorius then heard Metellus had defeated Perperna and was now marching to aid Pompey.[103] Unwilling to fight two armies who would outnumber him if joined, Sertorius decamped, bitterly commenting:

Now if the old woman had not made an appearance, I'd have thrashed the boy and packed him off to Rome.[101]

Sertorius negotiated with the formidable King Mithridates VI of Pontus during his war, likely in the winter of 75 BC. Mithridates wanted Roman confirmation of his occupation of the Roman Province of Asia, after relinquishing control of it to Sulla in the First Mithridatic War, along with the Kingdoms of Bithynia and Cappadocia, and saw Sertorius' Senate as a venue for this.[104] Sertorius assembled his Senate to discuss the issue, and decided that Mithridates could get Bithynia and Cappadocia (and possibly Paphlaglonia and Galatia as well) as they were kingdoms that "had nothing to do with the Romans".[105] But Asia, being a Roman province, would not be allowed to be his again. Mithridates accepted these terms and sent 3,000 talents of gold and forty ships to Sertorius.

Sertorius and his White Fawn, by Léon Pallière (1849).

Later on in the year, Sertorius was eventually forced by his native troops to give battle against Metellus and Pompey, likely when Metellus marched on the Celtiberian town of Segontia.[106] The coming Battle of Saguntum was the last pitched battle Sertorius fought, the largest battle of the war, and probably one he had not wanted in the first place. The fierce battle lasted from noon until night-time and resulted in the deaths of Gaius Memmius and Hirtuleius. Though Sertorius defeated Pompey on the wing, Metellus again defeated Perperna. The battle ultimately ended in a draw, with heavy losses for both sides.

Following the battle Sertorius finally disbanded his army, telling them to break up and reassemble at a later location rather than organizing a concerted retreat, for fear of Metellus' pursuit.[107] This was common for Sertorius, who "wandered about alone, and often took field again with an army... like a winter torrent, suddenly swollen".[108]

Clunia and the Final Years

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After the battle Sertorius reverted to guerrilla warfare again, having lost the heavy infantry Perperna had lent to his cause which enabled him to match the Sullan legions in the field. He retired to a strong fortress town in the mountains called Clunia. Pompey and Metellus rushed to beseige him, and during the siege, Sertorius made many sallies against them, inflicting heavy casualties.[109] Sertorius fooled Metellus and Pompey into thinking that he intended to remain besieged, and eventually broke through their lines, rejoined with a fresh Sertorian army, and resumed the war.[110]

The two Roman generals had pursued Sertorius into unfriendly lands and thus Sertorius regained the initiative. For the rest of the year he resumed a guerrilla campaign against them, eventually forcing Metellus and Pompey to winter out of Sertorian-aligned land due to lack of resources.[108] During that winter, Pompey wrote to the Senate for reinforcements and funds, without which, he said, he and Metellus would be driven from Hispania. Despite being weakened, Sertorius was still evidently a threat, so much so that in Rome it was said that he would return to Italy before Pompey did.[110] The Senate capitulated, and funds and men (two legions) were found with great effort and sent to the Roman generals.

With the men and materiel reinforcements from Pompey's letter, in 74–73 BC, Pompey and Metellus gained the upper hand. The two Roman generals began slowly grinding down Sertorius' rebellion via attritional warfare. Sertorius lacked the men to meet them in open combat, though he continued to relentlessly harry them with guerrilla warfare. Mass defections to the Roman generals began, and Sertorius responded to this with harshness and punishments.[111] Sertorius won some victories here and there, but it was by now clear he could not achieve complete victory,[112] and the Roman generals continued to occupy strongholds that were once under his control. In these later years, the once mild and just Sertorius became paranoid, irritable, and exceedingly cruel to his subordinates, descending into alcoholism and debauchery.[113][114] Plutarch writes that "as his cause grew hopeless, he became harsh toward those who did him wrong".[115]

Sertorius was in league with the Cilician Pirates, who had bases and fleets all around the Mediterranean. Near the end of his war he was also in communication with the insurgent slaves of Spartacus in Italy, who were openly in revolt against Rome. But due to jealousies and fears among his high-ranking Roman officers and some Iberian chieftains as well a conspiracy was beginning to take form.[111]

Conspiracy and death

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Metellus, seeing that the key to victory was removing Sertorius, had made his pitch toward the Romans still with Sertorius sometime during the war: "Should any Roman kill Sertorius he would be given a hundred talents of silver and twenty-thousand acres of land. If he was an exile he would be free to return to Rome".[73] This turned Sertorius paranoid, he started distrusting his Roman retinue; he no longer trusted his Roman bodyguard, exchanging it for a Spanish one.[116] This was deeply unpopular among his Roman followers.

By the autumn of 73 BC, the Roman aristocrats and senators who made up the higher classes of his domain were discontented with Sertorius. They had grown jealous of Sertorius's power, resentful from his paranoia and cruelty, and could now see that victory was growing impossible. Perperna, aspiring to take Sertorius's place, encouraged the jealousy of Sertorius' top Roman staff for his own ends, and led the conspiracy against him.[117] The conspirators took to damaging Sertorius by oppressing the local Iberian tribes in his name.[111] This stirred discontent and revolt in the tribes, which resulted in a cycle of oppression and revolt, with Sertorius none the wiser as to who was creating such mischief.

The Death of Sertorius, by Vicente Cutanda.

One of the conspirators, Manlius, told one of his lovers about the plot against Sertorius' life. This man then told another conspirator, Aufidius, who told Perperna. Perperna, accordingly, urged on by the "sharpness of their crisis and of their peril" took action.[118] He told Sertorius of a supposed victory over the Roman generals. Sertorius was elated by this news, while Perperna suggested a banquet and with effort persuaded Sertorius to attend in order to separate him from his bodyguards.[119] The banquet took place at Osca, Sertorius' capital.[116] The conspirators included many of Sertorius' top staff, such as Marcus Antonius, Lucius Fabius Hispaniensis, Gaius Octavius Graecinus, Gaius Tarquitius Priscus (all proscribed senators), Aufidius, Manlius, and Perperna himself. Sertorius' scribes, Versius and Maecenas, may have been involved since they were in perfect positions to forge evidence of Perperna's supposed victory.[120] Sertorius' loyal Spanish bodyguards were made drunk and kept outside of the banquet hall.[113]

While under most circumstances, any festivities to which Sertorius was invited were conducted with great propriety, this particular feast was vulgar, designed to offend the skillful general and get him off his couch and among the crowd where a knife could be shoved through his ribs without difficulty. Disgusted, Sertorius changed his posture on the couch, intent on ignoring them all. This position presented something of a problem as Sertorius, although in late middle age, had a well-deserved reputation as a skilled fighter. They changed their tactic; Perperna gave the signal to his fellow conspirators by dropping his goblet on the floor, and they attacked. Antonius slashed at Sertorius, but he turned the blow and would have risen if Antonius did not hold him down.[118] The others rushed in and stabbed him until he was dead.[121]

Aftermath

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Upon learning of the death of Sertorius, some of his Iberian allies sent ambassadors to Pompey or Metellus and made peace. Most simply went home. The Lusitanians (who were among Sertorius' greatest partisans) were infuriated by his assassination. What happened to Sertorius' white doe and his body is not known.

Perperna assumed control of the rapidly deteriorating rebel army after Sertorius' assassination. He resorted to harsh measures to retain power, executing several leading Sertorians. To make matters worse, Sertorius' will named Perperna his chief beneficiary. Already disgraced as the man who had slain his commander, the man who had given him sanctuary, Perperna was now also revealed to have killed his main benefactor and friend. And now that Sertorius was dead, his virtues were remembered, and his recent atrocities forgotten.[122]

People are generally less angry with those who have died, and when they no longer see him alive before them they tend to dwell tenderly on his virtues. So it was with Sertorius. Anger against him suddenly turned to affection and the soldiers clamorously rose up in protest against Perperna.[123]

After Sertorius' death his independent "Roman" Republic crumbled with the renewed onslaught of Pompey and Metellus. Metellus, who "considered it no longer a difficult task for Pompey alone to vanquish Perpenna" left for other parts of Hispania.[124] Pompey subsequently crushed Perperna's army and killed the rest of Sertorius' assassins (some fled to Africa and died there). The only survivor, Aufidius, "came to old age in a barbarian village, a poor and hated man".[125] Other Sertorian officers and soldiers who surrendered were well treated by Pompey.

Several Sertorian cities refused to surrender after the assassination of Sertorius, and Pompey remained in Hispania for some years pacifying these remaining holdouts. Most famously, the city of Calagurris resorted to cannibalism rather than submitting to the Roman siege, but was eventually conquered by the Senatorial army.[126] The two victorious generals, each desiring a triumph, wanted the war to be considered foreign rather than civil.[127] When Pompey crossed the Pyrenees to return to Rome in 71 BC, he erected a monument to his victory speaking of the more than eight hundred towns he subjugated.[128] The monument lacked any mention of Sertorius.[129]

During Gaius Julius Caesar's Gallic Wars, when his lieutenant Publius Licinius Crassus was conquering Aquitania in 56 BC, the alarmed Gauls sent ambassadors to many surrounding tribes for help, including Iberians from Hispania Citerior.[130] These Iberians were led by veterans who had fought with Sertorius during his war and had learned Roman military tactics from him; they showed "disconcerting proficiency in fighting Romans".[131] They confidently picked prime positions for camps, conducted raids on supply lines, and did not overextend themselves.[130] Crassus eventually defeated these Sertorian veterans.

Legacy

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Ancient sources generally concede Sertorius was a great military leader (magnus dux), and note his proficiency in warfare.[132] Appian (who was hostile to Sertorius)[133] states his belief that despite his descent into debauchery and paranoia, "if Sertorius had lived longer the war would not have ended so soon or so easily".[124] Spann, more analytically, agrees Sertorius was a skilled tactician and guerrilla warrior, but criticizes his strategy of delay during the war, which led to his eventual defeat by Pompey.[134]

During the Sullan Proscriptions, Sertorius was "especially feared"[62] and his war was not seen as a foregone conclusion while it was occurring. Some modern sources believe Sertorius was a traitor to Rome for his war against the Sullan senate, cooperation with native Iberians against Roman armies, and alliance with Mithridates; others believe he was a true patriot of a defeated regime.[135] While ancient historians scorn Sertorius' cruelty and the "savage and prodigal" man he became late in his war, others admire his "great, but ill-starred, valour".[136] Livy appears to have viewed Sertorius not as "an Iberianized robber baron" but "a great Roman whose life went all wrong".[137]

No busts or coinage of Sertorius have survived. Despite Valerius Maximus reporting the presence of a wife in Italy,[138] there is no evidence of Sertorius having had any children.

Porta Romana in Sertorius' birthplace, Norcia, constructed in the 19th century. Sertorius is depicted on the right medallion in circular profile, paired with Ufens, another Norcian "enemy of Rome".[139]

Sertorius' motives cannot really be known, though evidence suggests he saw himself fighting for the survival and re-enfranchisement of those disinherited and proscribed after Sulla's victory in 82 BC (including himself, who, like the rest, had no prospects in Sulla's republic).[140][141] Plutarch reports that Sertorius himself repeatedly sought terms with Metellus and Pompey to return to Rome (after a victory in the field), telling them he would rather "live in Rome as her meanest citizen rather than to live in exile from his country and be called supreme ruler of all the rest of the world together".[73]

Modern accounts that do not directly deal with Sertorius largely describe him and his war in terms of its impact on the Roman state, and his influence on the career of Pompey the Great. Leach calls Sertorius one of Pompey's "most brilliant adversaries",[142] and Collins refers to him as an "eccentric genius of guerrilla warfare".[143] Pompey's highly irregular career was initiated by the aftermath of the civil wars of Sulla and Marius, but it was the strong military threat Sertorius posed which necessitated his extraordinary, effectively proconsular, command and thereby deteriorated Senatorial control over the Roman legions.[144]

To the proscribed, Sertorius represented a chance for re-emergence in Roman politics, and a return to their properties and lives in Rome. Sertorius' war is, resultantly, seen as "an inheritance from the Sullan proscription",[127] and its end, along with his death, signalled the close of the civil wars started by Sulla's First March on Rome. Ironically, the defeat of Sertorius (and thus the last Marian resistance) may have been what precipitated the repealing of several optimate laws, as there was no longer "fear that the [Sullan] structure itself might crumble".[145]

According to Spann, "Sertorius, if successful in Spain, clearly meant to invade Italy. He would not have set up some sort of independent state in Spain".[146] and so Gruen, "Sertorius' target was the government in Rome... of his political enemies. Had he been victorious, there would have been a change in leadership, not in social or political system".[147] Spann and Konrad view Sertorius' success in a march on Rome as unlikely;[148][149] however, Konrad believes existing discontent within the Sullan government "might have provided him [Sertorius] with enough support to mount a serious challenge to the regime once he crossed the Alps".[150]

Many commentators described Sertorius's life as a tragedy.[151] Plutarch wrote that "He [Sertorius] was more continent than Philip, more faithful to his friends than Antigonus, and more merciful to his enemies than Hannibal; and that for prudence and judgment he gave place to none of them, but in fortune was inferior to them all".[152] Gruen writes that "only the divisive contests of civil war forced him to end his life as a declared outlaw rather than an esteemed senator".[153] Spann concluded, "Sertorius' talents were wasted, his life lost, in an inglorious struggle he did not want, could not win, and could not escape".[154]

In fiction

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See also

[edit]

Notes and references

[edit]
  1. ^ Brennan 2000, p. 503 (arguing against 86 and earlier as well as 83 and later), 849 n. 242 (citing Konrad 1994, pp. 74–76).
  2. ^ Konrad 1987, p. 525, "That Sertorius always thought of himself and acted as a Roman proconsul... should no longer be doubted" (emphasis in original); Brennan 2000, p. 507, "Sertorius, the outlaw pro consule for Spain".
  3. ^ Brennan 2000, p. 502. "Sertorius' provincia was apparently Hispania Citerior, which he set out for... in late 83... [H]e may have been intended to hold both Citerior and Ulterior".
  4. ^ Broughton 1952, p. 70, placing promagistracy starting in 82 BC.
  5. ^ a b Konrad 2012.
  6. ^ Konrad 1995, pp. 160–62 (arguing for 73); Brennan 2000, pp. 508 ("Konrad['s case]... ultimately fails to convince"), 514 (placing assassination to 72), 852 n. 290.
  7. ^ Badian, Ernst (2012). "Perperna Veiento, Marcus". Oxford Classical Dictionary (4th ed.). doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.4876.
  8. ^ Konrad 1994, pp. 38–39; Spann 1987, p. 1.
  9. ^ Spann 1987, pp. 1–2.
  10. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 35.
  11. ^ Spann 1987, pp. 4, 6.
  12. ^ Cicero, Brutus, 180.
  13. ^ a b Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 3.
  14. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 43.
  15. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 46.
  16. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 47.
  17. ^ Spann 1987, p. 17.
  18. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 51.
  19. ^ a b Spann 1987, p. 20.
  20. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 95; Spann 1987, p. 20.
  21. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 52.
  22. ^ Spann 1987, pp. 21, 161.
  23. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 53.
  24. ^ Pina Polo & Díaz Fernández 2019, pp. 312–13. See also Plut. Sert., 4.1.
  25. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 54.
  26. ^ Sallust, Histories, fragment 1.88.
  27. ^ Pina Polo & Díaz Fernández 2019, p. 313.
  28. ^ Spann 1987, pp. 21–22, 162.
  29. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 56.
  30. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the struggle for Spain, p. 22; Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 8.
  31. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 8.
  32. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 4
  33. ^ a b Spann 1987, p. 24.
  34. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 58.
  35. ^ Spann 1987, pp. 28–29.
  36. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 63.
  37. ^ Spann 1987, p. 29.
  38. ^ Spann 1987, p. 30.
  39. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 5.
  40. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 69.
  41. ^ Spann 1987, p. 32.
  42. ^ E. Badian, Waiting for Sulla, Journal of Roman Studies, vol 52 (1962), pp. 47–61.
  43. ^ Konrad 1994, pp. 74–76.
  44. ^ Lynda Telford, Sulla: A Dictator Reconsidered, p. 162; John Leach, Pompey the Great. p. 25; Philip Matyszak, Cataclysm 90 BC, p. 133.
  45. ^ a b Konrad 1994, p. 84.
  46. ^ Strisino 2002, pp. 36–37.
  47. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 82.
  48. ^ Leach 1978, p. 25.
  49. ^ Konrad 1994, pp. 83–84.
  50. ^ Strisino 2002, p. 39.
  51. ^ Spann 1987, pp. 36–37, 151.
  52. ^ Exsuperantius, De Marii, Lepidi, 46-48
  53. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 85.
  54. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 6.
  55. ^ Noguera, J; Valdés, P; Ble, E (2022). "New Perspectives on the Sertorian War in northeastern Hispania: archaeological surveys of the Roman camps of the lower River Ebro". Journal of Roman Archaeology. 35 (1): 22 – via Cambridge University Press.
  56. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 87.
  57. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 86.
  58. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 89.
  59. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 99.
  60. ^ Konrad 1987, pp. 521–22.
  61. ^ Spann 1987, p. 44.
  62. ^ a b Orosius, Histories against the Pagans, Book 5, 21.3
  63. ^ Spann 1987, p. 45.
  64. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 101.
  65. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 57; Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 7.
  66. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 59.
  67. ^ A local client of Sulla
  68. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, pp. 60–61.
  69. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the struggle for Spain, pp. 60–61; Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 9.
  70. ^ Sixty cubits is about ninety feet.
  71. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 9.
  72. ^ Philip Spann, Quintus Sertorius and the Legacy of Sulla, p. 54.
  73. ^ a b c Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 22.
  74. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 63.
  75. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, pp. 64–65.
  76. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, Book 1, 108.
  77. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, pp. 79-80.
  78. ^ John Leach, Pompey the Great, p. 39
  79. ^ a b Plutarch, Life of Pompey, 17
  80. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 84. Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 13.
  81. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 87.
  82. ^ Christian Müller in Hans Holbein the Younger: The Basel Years, 1515–1532, Christian Müller; Stephan Kemperdick; Maryan Ainsworth; et al, Munich: Prestel, 2006, ISBN 978-3-7913-3580-3, pp. 263–64.
  83. ^ a b c Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 14.
  84. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 78.
  85. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 16. Valerius Maximus, Memorable Deeds and Sayings, Book 7, 3.6
  86. ^ "Quintus Sertorius". Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
  87. ^ Adrian Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 160
  88. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 11
  89. ^ a b Sertorius, by Plutarch
  90. ^ Philip Matsyzak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 73
  91. ^ a b Livy, History of Rome, Book 91
  92. ^ John Leach, Pompey the Great, pp. 44–45
  93. ^ Plutarch, Life of Pompey, 18
  94. ^ Spann, Quintus Sertorius and the Legacy of Sulla, p. 91
  95. ^ John Leach, Pompey the Great, p. 46
  96. ^ John Leach, Pompey the Great, p. 47
  97. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 18
  98. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 101. Appian, Civil Wars, Book 1, 108
  99. ^ Plutarch, Life of Pompey, 18; John Leach, Pompey the Great, p. 48; Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, pp. 117–118.
  100. ^ Livy, Epitome, 91.4; Frontinus, Stratagems, 2.1.2 and 2.3.5; John Leach, Pompey the Great, p. 47; Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, pp. 118–119.
  101. ^ a b Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 19
  102. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, pp.121–122; Plutarch, Life of Pompey, 18; John Leach, Pompey the Great, p. 49.
  103. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, Book 1, 110
  104. ^ Philip Matsyzak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 138. Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 23
  105. ^ Appian, The Mithridatic Wars, 68
  106. ^ Philip Matsyzak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, pp. 125–126. Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 21
  107. ^ Frontinus, Strategems, Book 2, 13.3
  108. ^ a b Plutarch, Life of Pompey, 19
  109. ^ Livy, History of Rome (Epitome), Book 92
  110. ^ a b Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 21.
  111. ^ a b c Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 25.
  112. ^ Adrian Goldsworthy, In the Name of Rome, p. 168
  113. ^ a b Appian, Civil Wars, Book 1, 113.
  114. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 152.
  115. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 10
  116. ^ a b John Leach, Pompey the Great, p. 51.
  117. ^ Plutarch, Life of Pompey, 20.
  118. ^ a b Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 26
  119. ^ Matsyzak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 153
  120. ^ Konrad 1987, p. 522.
  121. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the struggle for Spain, pp. 153–154.
  122. ^ Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, pp. 156–157.
  123. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1.114.
  124. ^ a b Appian, Civil Wars, Book 1, 115.
  125. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 27.
  126. ^ Valerius Maximus, Memorable Deeds and Sayings, Book 7, 6e.3
  127. ^ a b Florus, Epitome of Roman History, Book 2, 10.22
  128. ^ Philip Matsyzak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 161
  129. ^ Pliny, Natural History, Book 7, 96
  130. ^ a b Caesar, Bellum Gallicum, 3.23.5.
  131. ^ Philip Matsyzak, Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain, p. 164
  132. ^ Spann 1987, p. 140.
  133. ^ Konrad 1994, p. lii.
  134. ^ Spann 1987, pp. 141–46.
  135. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 17.
  136. ^ Livy, History of Rome (Epitome), Book 96. Appian, Civil Wars, Book 1, 113. Florus, Epitome of Roman History, Book 2, 10.22.
  137. ^ Konrad 1994, p. xlvii.
  138. ^ Valerius Maximus, Memorable Deeds and Sayings, Book 9, 15.3
  139. ^ Spann 1987, p. 212.
  140. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 18.
  141. ^ Florus, Epitome, Book 2, 10.22
  142. ^ Leach 1978, p. 210.
  143. ^ H.P. Collins, The Decline and Fall of Pompey the Great, p. 101
  144. ^ Leach 1978, p. 45.
  145. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 27.
  146. ^ Spann 1987, pp. 213–14.
  147. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 413.
  148. ^ Spann 1987, pp. 147–48.
  149. ^ Konrad 1994, pp. 179–180.
  150. ^ Konrad 1994, p. 180.
  151. ^ Murphy, p. 1.
  152. ^ Plutarch, Life of Sertorius, 1.
  153. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 381, in a passage rejecting the trope that homines militares such as Sertorius were unsuited to civil political life.
  154. ^ Spann 1987, p. 152.
  155. ^ "The Sertorius Scrolls". Vincent Davis II. Retrieved April 3, 2024.

Bibliography

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Ancient sources

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  • Appian (1913) [2nd century AD]. Civil Wars. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by White, Horace – via LacusCurtius.
  • Appian (2019) [2nd century AD]. "The Iberian book". Roman History. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by McGing, Brian C. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-99647-2.
  • Cassius Dio (1914–27) [c. AD 230]. Roman History. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Cary, Earnest – via LacusCurtius. Nine volumes.
  • Livy (2003). Periochae. Translated by Lendering, Jona – via Livius.org.
  • Plutarch (1917) [2nd century AD]. "Life of Pompey". Parallel Lives. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 5. Translated by Perrin, Bernadotte. OCLC 40115288 – via LacusCurtius.
  • Plutarch (1919) [2nd century AD]. "Life of Sertorius". Parallel Lives. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 8. Translated by Perrin, Bernadotte. OCLC 40115288 – via LacusCurtius.
  • Sallust (2015) [1st century BC]. "The Histories". Fragments of the Histories. Letters to Caesar. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Ramsey, John T. ISBN 978-0-674-99686-1.

Modern sources

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