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BATTLES AND SIEGES IN AMMIANUS MARCELLINUS by C. P. T. Naude (Universitynf [he Wicwa[ersrand) Peter classifies battles and sieges - ~Schlachtbeschreibungen odee tiberhaupt kriegerischen Aktionen'-along with speechesamongthe'Ausstattungsstiicken' in ancient historiographyI, They areregarded as a department in the writing of hisrory where rhecorical conventions are observed with a disregard for the transmission of truth. This view was endorsed recently: 'Denn dOl den antiken Hisrorikern rur die Darsrellung von Schlachren vorwiegend kiinsc1erische Ge sichrspunktemassgebend waren,verschwandendie hiscorische Ziigemeisr hinter ciner Fiille von cffekrvollen Ausschmiickungen' :!. The military element looms large in ancient hisrory. Toynbee observed that as much as four-fif[hs of rhe co[al body of HeJJenis[ic hiscory rha[ has reacbed us is occupied by detailed accounts of military hiscory3. The descripdons of battles consdtute the climaxes, and they are governed by special convendons. A variation for instance in the even flowing style of the hisrorical narrative4 is prescribed in order co rise co the dignity and importance of the subjeCt5. Ir is the object of this article briefly to consider the climaxes in Ammianus MarceUinus, nor in the details of their facrual concent, out as an clement in his hiscoriography; and to assess their value, hiscorical De otherwise, as intended by the author in the light of the conventions by which he is led. Ammianus weare, as he informs us at the conclusion of his work, fit miles q/lolldam et GraecllsG. This statement is not purely biographical, cI, a foemer soldieraod a Greek' (Rolfe), butithas to domoreparticularlywith theauthor's hiscoriography - with his approach, with the traditions and principles he observed, and with his qualifications as an historian. Alongwith the rest of the paragraph it offers a resume, in all probability, of his lost preface. The phrase ttt Graeells refers to his genre in the perspective of traditional polemic and differentiation of aims and objectives in historical writing, of which he must have been aware. Ammianus wishes co convey to us that he wrote a species of 1 H. Peter, Die geuhirhtliche Li/era/tlr tiberdie ,omisehe KaiserzeiJ, II, leipzig 1897, pp. 296 and 307. G. AvenariU5, Lrtk.itlltS Sehrif/ ztlr Gescbiehtnehreibul1g, Meisenheimf Glan 1956, pp. 6;; and 145, classes them under lXqJ!]aOE1f: or E!!l-up'Eral, '•..die Glanzpartien, auf deren Ausarbeitung man eine besondcreSorgfalt venvandtc'. Cf. Lucian, de HilJ. e, aTJe 20 and 57. ::! Avcnarius, O.c., p. 66 n. 33. 3 A. Toynbee, Greek. HisJorical ThoughJ, p. xi. 4 H. Henze, Quomodo Cicero de hisJoria eiusque aUfJoribus iudic{l/leriJ, diss. Jena 1899, p. 29. See Cic. Or. 37f., 66, de Or. 2.64, and Luc. 55. 5 F.Wehrli, 'Dcr erhabene und dcr schlichtc Stil in der poctisch-rhctorischcn Theorie d2.ewrisAchnetnikcci'n,ePmh)a'lDIobdoelri{1Safcuhre PoreiJeenrtifelOrlIelndeurndJ\1etiinbJclmJ Baausfelde1n94H6o,rpe.r g2e8r:ic'hTtbecteunphSrtailstunhlaebre schieden'. Cf. Cic. Or. 39 on Thucydides and Marcell. 11iJa Time. 39. See also Avena-rius, a.c., 'U) :7tQbWI', pp.63ff. 031.16.9. 92 universal history7, rather than a history strictly in the Roman tradition of historiography - which in its evolution out of the local chronicle tends to be Roma-centric 8. In the view of Ammianus, apparently, a comprehensive account of the Roman Empire entailed what was ranr:unounc to a universal history:l. This feature ofhis work isrevealed in the extensive geographical excursions, the function of which was f}Pt/·s veritatem projeISmJ1. ill-vore10- i.e. they serve as a 'Hilfwissenschaft' to universal histOry11, a function which goes back to the universal historians, Ephorus and Polybius12. Bur at the same time, although he writes as a Greek, Ammianus derives his inspiration from Rome in her long standing grandeurl:J, and there are decided traces of the Roman annalistic tradition in his history with Rome as the centre 14. Vt miles reflects the author's approach to historical events. Ammianus is a soldierand he seeshistOry as asoldier. It ismilitary talent and leadership which commend an emperor in his eyes. Julian, whom he greatly admires, associates with his men, exhons them, inspires their loyalty by sharing their perils and 7 Polyb. 1.4.3-11, on the difference between universal and special histories. Cf. Polyb. 9. 1. 2--4; i.e. we have to do with :l species of universal history characterized by severity, which is contemporary and political, excludes genealogy and the foundation of cities, and which interests one type of reader only - the student of politics. For another species, ref. Dion., Alit. Rom, 1. 8. 1 and 4: it includes the distant past and mvthology, and caters for a variety of readers; see H. Lier:>, Die TheIJrie der Ge!chichtIIchreibllng des Diollrs von Halikclr1JaJJ, Progr. 194 Waldenburg 1886, pp. 2 and 6. These are lines ~lIongwhich we can distinguish betwt:en rhetorical, on theone hand, and thebest tradition of Greek and Roman pragmatic history, on the other. Cf. F. Jacoby, 'Die Entwkklung der griechischen Historiographic', K/io 9, 1909, in AbhclIldlllllgell ed. by H. Bloch, Leiden 1956, p. j1 n. 47, p. 34and p. 36: '...die Gattung... die vornehmstc und wichegste... ja die eigentlich allein 31s 'Geschichtsschreibung' gilt, die Zeitgeschichte'. The Rerum Gestarllm libriof Ammianus, with its predominantly contemporary interest, belongs in this category. 8 See e.g. F. Jacoby, Allhis, Oxford 1949, p. 397 n. 56: 'For as early an author 3S Fabius Rome aims at being a m;}.l~ •Ev"l"!1'II;; the Annales of the city may therefore Le taken as an erdo; of Greek local history, especially because they were wntten in Greek'. o 14.6.6: (I~ol11a) per omlles lamell qllol ortle JIJIII parlesqlle lerrarJI1J1, 111 dominrt 1flIcipilTirelregiJ1<l, 10 27.4.2; and link up 31. 16.9: 011111 verilalem projeIIlIm. II Jacoby, Abhrtndllll1gel1·Bloch p. 42. 1::! Stmbo 8.1.1; C 332: ot t'j' E1' .l7 XOIJ'll n;; [(nog/a; i'gurpl7 lwei; a:ro~d~ul'rt; TTll' .Wl' 7j:rtleWl' T:o:ro,'garp{a1' xa{)a:rte "Erpot!o~ E;r:olt]o£ Youl llo}.l!f)w;. Cf. thegeographical introductions to thevarious theatre"i of war by Hieronymus of Cardia, Jacoby, R.E., Hieronymos (IO) 1548. 13 Rome is the IIrbI aelema, vic/ma dllm erIwl homil1es, 14.6.4; so the Gods ordained - ditlil1i (/rbilrio JJ:l1l1il1is, qllod'lllxil ab illwllabllliI Rom:l1l1, IJerpelllamqlle fore spopon dil, 19.10.4; she rules - III domina ItlJcipilllr el regina - in virtue of her name alone - nomillesolo, 14.6.4 and 6; Rome is llellercrbili.r, 14.6.5, 22. 16. 12, and J(/cratiIIimtl, 17.3.3; Rome is the tempJII1Jl 1JJlIlldi IOlim, 17.4.13; the spiritual and political centre of the Empire- imlJerii IJir/II/111I1qlle omnillm Itlrel, 16. 10. 1;. Butsec also the commen tary of de Jonge on 14.6.3-6 for possible echoes from Uadition, 14 O. Seeck, 'Die Reihe der Stadtprafecten bei Ammianus Marcellinus', Hermes (IS) 1883, pp. 289: it seemed to be his purpose ldie Chronik der Roma vollstandig in sein Werk zuvenveben'. Itwas not a fruitful subject, e.g. the prefecture ofArlimius, 17.11.5: flec memornbiJe f]uicr]Jlam habllit. But there is an annual reference to the prefectures, 15.7.1-10, 19. ro. 1--4, 26.3. 1-6. 93 hardships15; he is active along the frontiers, and his interest is cenued in the protection and welfare of the provinces10, It is therefore understandable if the problems of the central government and its administration do not always receive the appreciation they deserve, and if CODStantius, 'who prefers to conquer through his generals' 17,is portrayed with a certain lack of sympathy1Jj. But by thephrase f~t miles quondam Aromianus alsowishes to convey to the reader- which is perhaps more relevant for thisstudy- that he fulfils certain qualifications prescribed by convention, qualifications in virtue of which his handling of military history and of the ouescandingmilitary eventS in particular is not only technically correct but :Usa historically reliable. These are aptly summed up in the methodology of Lucian. First and foremost the historian's spirit should be characterized by frankness and truth - r]j ')'l'WfL?]"., vnn?i,udJa nU{]{21]oEal' XUl a,hlD-EtaJ! 10. Without this quality in his character political understanding and power of expression - OVl'f.Ot" 1l0),my.J} xal dVJ'a/ur; ~{2/L1}l'E1lT.tXII ~o - may still fail in achieving the desired result. More specifically the historian should be capable ot administration, if need should arise - olor; y.ai 1r.(JOyPUOl '1.(!'}oao{}at «1', d htfrf!a..'7.eb] - and he should have a soldierly spirit and experience in military leadership - 'YJ'WfLl}V OreUT:lWn,a/l'....;mi. fpnE.1eiml areanJj'lx1/l'. He must have been in campI ev seen troops drilled and manoeuvred - y.at.. or(!aronMcp ye)'OlIWt; norE. xul YVfWUCopD'ovr; 7} ranopEl'OVt; orearUVT.Ut; EW(JUXW:, He must know about weapons and military engines - on).u ddwr; ;!f'1l pl]1.al"lflura. He must know cavalry and infantry tactics, frontal and flank attacks tn dE Y.Ul ri bd y.Eewr; y.ai 'ti bel flaw;r.ov, niiJr; oi 16XOL, nwr; oi fnJ[Et~. ou In shan he must be a man of action, and not a recluse - l'WJ' y.aT.Oly.lc51wll nr; 21. In his description of battles he must survey now his own party, now their adversaries, if they come co blows - aen ph' 'ta rdlU Ue(ll'w.,.lieu ra M IIeeo6'.w,.,el fU1XDtl'w. When they are drawn up in battle array, his eyes are nOt to be on one division - xat el' avrJi rfj :rtaeaT:a~EL pJ} :rt{]or; fll! flfeor; 0eaT.w.... His attention should be for the generals first of all; their Ta exhortations should be recorded,.. - e~robr;arean}')'obr;pf.1'TOL 1tgwra,xal F.ln nagExeJ.E.VOaJllo.., aY.1}XOVO{}w. When the engagement has begun, he should give us a bird's eye view of it - XOU'J} louo Ij fJia - and in 15 Cf. P. de longe, Komm. I p. 40: IJulianus ist del' Held unseres SchriftstelJers, wie Germanicus del' des Tacilus'. \'X'e may add, and 3S Eumenes was the hero of Hieronymus of Cardia, Jacoby, R.E., Hier. (10) 1558: 'Er hat... ein starkes GefUhl fUr ein neues Element der damaligen Zeit, flir die Treue des Dieners... des Beamten - gegen den Herr'. See also H. R. Breitenbach, Historiographiube Anub.,tlwngJ/ormel1 Xel1ophonJ, diss. B:l5el 1950, pp. 70ff. on 'Der Het:rfiihrcr und seine Soldaten', d. XeD. Cyrop. vna 1.6.25: rravra Y(;''1 Taura elr; Tel tptUio{}Qt nov af!lopbwv ov}J.ap{JuVEt, and also Amm. 25.4.13. and 23.5.25. 10 Amm. 25. 4, 25. 21. 5. 8-9, 23. 5. 18; cf. 29. 6. 2; (Vulenthlimli) studio mlmien- dorrrm limitl1111 gloriolo. 17 20.11.32, 18 14,10.16: jorJlmam eitlJ in malil tantllm &iviJibtlJ vigi/aue. Cf. 21. 16. 15. 10 De Hilt. &, art 44. 20 De Hilt. &, orte 34, Lucian describes political understanding as a gift of natur~ which cannot be le:1.Cnt. In this view he is isolated. See Avenarius, o,c" p, 31, also p. 36, 21 De Hilt, &, :JI'lC 37. 94 the end he must describe those in pursuit and those in flight alike ~u;, aVIIOLWX£rW xu;' aVfUpEVriTW 22. In the qualifications outlined by Lucian - the insistence on personal observation and experience - an old tradition is crystallized, which takes us back to the autopsy of the Ionian 'taroo;', ~a, and which is continued as a principle of research in Herodotus and Thucydides along with a change of emphasis in historiography to contemporary hismry. It is Polybius who prescribed participation itself as a qualification24 - at least in the more important happenings25. What matters is nOt personal knowledge of evecv recorded event, but the kind of experience which would make the historian a critical investigator~lil which would bring perspective and selectivity:!7, and the ability in the last resore to arrive at a synthesis on the basis of the available evidence. Indications of Ammianus' "1'Wp.1] are not far to seek. That the integrity of the author is the first condition for trustworthy history he would have regarded as axiomatic: emu exptica12dae rerum memoriae l~biq:te debeatttr integritaI fida28; and this spirit is reflected in the conclusion of his work: haec... pro viriftm expticavi memilra: op:t.J veritatem prOfeIS1IJ1J, nmnqllam (1ft arhitror) scie"lls silentio at~ms corrmnpere, vel melldacio 20. The excenr to which he conformed to the Other conditions or precepts laid down for the hiscorian and attempted co transmit whn.t is in the essentials true and relevant for hiscory as he understood it, must now be considered. The battles and sieges in Ammianus ace on the whole integrated wicb his 22 De Hist. c. rtrte 49. 23 'Dec Bericht von dem, was man gesehen und gehort hat', Ed. Schwartz, Pi;,zf Vor· Jrtige fiber den griechischell R01!1tllJ, Berlin 1896, pp. 10, 32, 68. Cf. W. den Boer, Be11tlderhflf1r Ver/edell, Leiden 1952, p. ;. 'Het ter t:U'el brcngcn van de kcnnis door het zicn opgedaan'. '" • .,..' ...', • 2,1 Polyb. 3.4.13: .../,,/ I'OI'OV avro:rr1J~, aV. wv 1'0' OVI'E:[IrO~, WI' ~F. Yoru Xtl!!'OTll~ r£}'oveval. Cf. Joseph. c. Ap. 1. SS.: ..;Jo},J.uivIIEl'a{,TOV~n'O~;JQa.~tWl'If}.darWl!lJ' a.vro;m}~ and Bel. Tud. 1. 3. 20 Polyb. 12.2; h,6, and d. 12.4c.4-5. 26 Polyb. 12.28 a.8; and d. Luc., o.c., 47. 27 Polyb. 12.25g. 1 and 3; d. Luc., o.c., 27. See also generally Polyb. 12.28.6, and 12.2801. 7-8. Avenarius, o.c., p. 39, believes that E/I;JE:l(!ln in Luci::m is not the same as in Polybios who equates it with al~rol)(]rja, e.g. 12.28a. 6, adding: 'Allr-h .I,;eht er mit seincr Forderung nacb ciner £/I~"TF.l(!jaaTeau1;'IX1/ nicht so weit, nur :Mililiirs zur Ge· schichtsschreibung zuzulassen'. All that Luci:m requires is ohst:rvatlOn ;Iud knowledge. Cf. M. Gelzer, chapter on the pragmatic hist'Oriography of Polybius, FeslulJrifl Jiir Carl 1I7eickerJ, Berlin 1955, p. 91, and he concludes that Lucian had not re:J.d Polybius, 'denn Polybios gehorte zu den hellenistischen Historikern. von denen schon der Attieist Diony· sios von Halibrnass sagte, dass niemand ihre Werke zu Ende lesen konne (De compo flerh. 4,30)'. Whether Ammianus was directly led by Lucian, is not strictly relevant; the principles there enunciated are on the whole e:itablishecl trnclition. But that Ammianus, who writes lit miles quondrtm, does reflect the Polybian approach, i.e. actunl participation as nqualifying experience, is my view. Note that Julian had read Polybius. Amm. 24. 2. 16, and Ammianus thought highlyof his trustworthiness: fIdes rerepJ(fscriptorum ve/erttl1J. For this indirect means of reference to :1 particular historian, cf. 18. 6. 23, 31. 4. 7-8. 28 Amm. 31.;.10; and cf. 16.1.3: fidel integr(t retlon; 22.8.1: perspicua fide. See \'Q. Ensslin, '21/" Geuhichtlchreihtmg lind T1'/e/tll/whfllumg des A1Jl1lJirtntlS MllrceJ/1I11/J', Klia, Beiheft 16 1923. p. 1t: 'Veri/as uod integra fides crscheint so flir ihn als das Hauptcrfordernis der Geschichtschreibung·. 20 Amm. 31. 16.9; d. 14.6.1, 15.1.1, 29.1.15, 31.5.10. 95 military narrative, which at first sight renders it difficult to isolate instanc~s appropriate for closersrudy. There are instances on which he lavishes his talent in conscious fulfilmenr of the conventions of his art, but there are also cases which cannot with certainry be classed as (high lights'. The battles depicted in detail are the battle of Strasburg30, the battle in which Julian was mortally wounded31, and the batrIe of Adrianople32; to which should perhaps be added the batrle at Chillons·sur-Marne3:1, the fighting this side of Ctesiphon34, and the battle prope oPPj{ltt1lZ SaliccJ3~. The exploits, however, of Constantius in the Danube region - like the conflict between the elder Theodosius and Firmus in Africa3G - comprise a series of events:Ji. Numerous battles and skirmishes are but briefly mentioned and summarily described witham any change in tbe tone of the narrative38. The selection of sieges is larger. It is a field inwhichtbe authorsbone. Themajority rookplace in the Eastwhere most of his military servicewas performed, and on:lterrain and in places with which he was familiar30. Those which he witnessed left a profound impression upon him, and £0 be caugh[ among me beleaguered was a [hiog he dreaded'•. The sieges whichmayberegarded as culminations in the narrative are the protraaed siegeofAmida,whereAmmianusplayed aparrin the conduct of tbe defence1\ mesiege ofSingaraand [he cwo sieges of Bezabde", [he sieges of AquiJeia.,a, Pirisabora-I-a, Maiozomalcha45, the shorr bur impressive siege of Cyzicus4G, and [he unsuccessful a[[emp[ by [he Go[hs on Adrianople". From what is known of Ammianus'careeronewouldregardthequalifications prescribed by rhe rules of hiswriography as adequa[ely fulfilled. He held a commission in the protectoreI donze-rtici - a select corps of high social standing48- and was attached CO the staff of Ursicinus, the magiJter cqllitll1J!, 30 Amm. 16.12.7-70. 31 25.3. 1-14. 32 31.12.10-13.19. :J:J 27.2.1-10. :1424.6.2-17. 35 31.7. lO-CL 30 29. 5.2fE. 37 17.13.1-29; cE. 17.13.25: lex/lIS recle far/orum, a series of events, as also 31. G. 1: hoc gel/orum leX/II ,irCllm/aIO. 38 E.g. 16. 2.13.17.6.2-3, and 25. 1. 16-18- vivid but succinct, revealing know. ledge ofPersian warfareand their inability to fight atclosequarters, laI/gII/dis iu COil/lie/II ••./JIIgl1f1re lorliter em/lllJJ CO/lIlIClil. 30 E.g. 19.8.5: IqlJrtlel1/lIll1 IJeri/lft /ocamm ...ttdilllusj d. 20.6.9: the isolation of Singara, (/qlMrum !JclIlIria CIIlle/is circtl111 arelltib,JJ loci!. ·10 18. 6. 11: qui" me obsidiol/ttleJ ttcrullll1ae terreb(//lI ... 41 19.1.1 - 19.8.4. It lasted JeIJtllagil1ta tresqlle diu, 19.9.9; and see 19.7.6: et tandem 111ulta versal1tiblls l10bis sedit c0l1siliu111 ... 4:! 20.6.3-7, Sing:ua; 20. 7. 1-15, Bezabde captured by Sapor; and 20.11. 6-24, Const:mtius' unsuccessful attempt to recover it. 49 21.12.4-20. 44 24.2.9-22. 45 24.4.2-26. 40 26.8.7-10. 47 31. 15.10-15. ·18 15. 5. 22, a regiment of men bound by blood and friendship, inter qllos ego quoque ...reJidui O11lIJes prolJiltqui et jamiliares. 96 of the East411, He served under him in Mesopotamia and in Gaul; and some time later he accompanied Julian on his ill-fated Persian campaign. In between he may have served under Conscantius, and if so he would have been present during the unfruitful investment of Bezabde,which be renders in great dctail;;o. His military experiences are duly drawn upon in the battles and sieges he describes; his ijJ7lEIQ{aor.Qa-eJn'Iy.1l is revealed in his share in the direCtion of the defence of Amida51. As one El' areawJrMcp "EI'Ol'W~....)!at tarrOflEl'ot'r; oreandJ'wr; E,co(}wuhr; he gives details of forces and their formations d bl;' y.EeWr; y.o], "lL bti j1EUfJ1l0V - with due regard to infantry and cavalry tactics52; not only of the Romans but also of the enemy53. Whatever criticism may be expressed of the fighdng at Strasburg, we are given a con vincing picrure of a solid infantry stand and the heavy casualties it entails: quos C1t1Jl, iam prope del1Jantes semet i1J ctmeos 1JOstrOntm eOllspexere elltetores, Jtetertt11t vestigiis fixis... velut illso/ttbili ?nitro flt1ldatis54; and the historian's knowledge is subtly revealed in sundry details 56. In accord with dle convention fU) 1leOr; El' fLigor; O~){i-cw fLll~e Er; EIJa L-r.1lEa 1j 1lECOJ' Ammianus surveys the whole battlefield, and we follow Julian's movements as he exhorts his men all along the battle linei11etltttiorsui hostitem tela praeter·volaJlJ50. The generals ra are made prominent as the rule prescribes - E~ "lOUr; ar(!ar171'0vr; fLEl'T.OL 1l'eonu - and Chonodornarius is depicted on his foaming steed wirh a flame coloured plume on his helmet armo'/I.1llqt~e1zitore C01lJpictttls ante alios, et, ,. praeter eeteros dt/ctor57. He is well informed. on the legions at different places, rhe histOry, temperament and individuality of each5ia. As an expert in siege operations - OnJ.a Eldwr; :v.ai ftllXaJ'llflaru - and as an eye-witness be describes the rams dragged up the narrow paths co the walls of Amida whilst the defending ballistae hurl darts and the scorpions shower stones along with 49 14.9. 1 and 3. 50 E. A. Thompson, The Hirtoric(fl ll/ork of Ammimws l\farcellil1t1s, (amb. 1947, pp. 3 and 20, and in general the chapter on 'Biography'. 51 19.6. S, 19.7.6. 52 16. 12.27: pedesJres copiae lel!Jis i1JccJIibm eduCli1Jtllr, eammque laleri equeSlres ili1JClae HIIlI furmae. inter quas ealaphmclarii era/II el sagilJarii; d. 24.1.2~, Julian's army marching in hostile country, with scouts ahead and on the flanks, Juli:m IIJque durlor 11111 el doeilitale firmatlls leading the infantry in the centre with servants and baggage p1:lccd between them, the lines extended to impress the enemy (d. 27.2.5), and the fleet nee residere nee 1Irnc(lII.,el'~ sinebaltll'. Even the names and the positions of the comman dersarcgiven. 53 16.12.21,16.12.34,36and 44; and notably 19.2.3, the disposition of thePersian forcesatAmida. Sol 16.12.20; and d. 16. 12.49: ad mque Pril1/(womm legiol1em ,.. locatam ill medio .. ,ubidnuior el ora'il1ibm freqlle1l.I, miles inslar Ilirrillll1 jixa firmitate (ollsis/em ... 55 16. 12.22: "oral1l el1im ii((!t pmde11lem ex eqllo bellatorem Cffm clibaflol'io 110SIl'0 eOl1gl'eUUlIl, jremt reJinclllem eJ scutum, basta twa mtlJl1I 1/ibr:llrt, tegmil1ibus ferreis abscoJ1dito bel/atori l10cere 110/1 posse, palilem verv inter ipsos disc,.iminum tJerJices... humiliter et occu/te repJal1l£lIl~ latel'e foralo ill111el1li, il1callJII1Il recJorem pr,ucipitem agere, lel,i llegolio trucidrtlldllm, 50 16.12.29: and see his short addresses, 16.12.30, 31, 32, 33, and 40 - the 'discorsi minori', G. B. Pighi, 1discorsi neUe storied'Ammial1o Marcellino, Milano 1936, pp. 29££. 57 16. 12. 24. Cf. Sapor, 19. 1. :5: portis obequitabat... ut ctiam vultus eius possit aperte cognosci; :lnd d. 19.7.8. 570. 18.9. 3-4, Amidn; 20. 6. 8, Singara; 20. 7. I, Bczabde. 97 wicker baskets blazing with burning pitch and bitumen5'. A carefully written andverynecessarydigression- Ul1aj'y.alOJI y.aL r.g£tiij(jf~ 0,'- onmuralarcillery prepares the reader, or more likely the listener, for Julian's eastern campaign:i~. The helepolis, devised to supersede the ordinary ram - pro hu arietlf.m. meditamentiI iam cfebritate despectis - is a fascinating machine and it was brought inca acdon against Pirisabora 00. The reader is regaled with an astOnish ing variety of siege cactics. At Aquileia the besiegers plttteoJ prae Ii! feren/cs cratesqrJc dCllsiUJ tex/as endeavoured to undermine the walls, and in the end double-sroried rowers were constructed - comment1lm cum veteribtlJ adm: 1'lmdum- and floated trige-mi.1zi]1Jav,b1lStowards thewalls along the Nuresiolil• The elephants used by the Persians are well described - looking like walking hills (j~, qllomm stridore, immanitateqttc corpormn ,zibil hll11Mlltle mentes terri hili/IS eermmtO:J. Siege operations in the last resort were the task of experts and trained forces; the Gallic legions at Amida, brave and experienced in battle in the open field, were useless with the artillery or in the construction of fortifi cations - Ja1Jtum profieicntes qflalJtmn in pt~blieo (tit aimJt) ilJeemlio, aqlltJ J tmills hominis ma11t~ adgeJttJ04. Ammianus is aware of the law which prescribes a loftier style when the subject demands it. Ila).lora unarm' jlaearci~Eat~ai. Jla7..aL~ ;!Ui. ·,·avpn.1.;QI~ aV/-,itJ.£.r.1]laL 65. He senses the greatness of his theme in narrating the deed5 of Julian in Gaul: proi1Jde quonimn - ttt Mantllanfts vates praedixit exeelstt! - Cmaitts opus moveo maiorque mibi rerum 1ltlJeitttr ordo.. / 00 All the J resources of his slender talent are drawn upon: instnnneuta o1rmia medioeris i1J.genii (si sft/fecerint) eommotltrftS67, He frankly tells us tlmt his subject borders on panegyric - ad laudativam pae1ze materiam pertinebit - and he doubtless expects his critics to make certain concessions to the flights of his spirit, as lucian purs it. bp~ f.,-rnov UXOVPE1'!1 rll Y"WPU foR. The battle of Strasburg must be regal'ded in [his light. He observes [he prescribed restraint I€' ta;:~ taW ogWl' ~ n.OW,UWll ~!lWll'Elmc; Oll, but the conventional change of style is reflected in the noticeably affected and somewhat stilted Latin in which the site ofAmida and of Pirisabora is described 70. The shorr digressions 58 20. 7. 2-7 and 10; 20. 6. 6, the r3m operating at Singa~. 59 Luc., o.c., :;7; Amm. 23.4. 1-14. 00 23.4.10-13; 24.2. 18-19, at Pirisabara. 01 21. 12.6, and 21. 12.8-9. 02 24.6.S. •3 19.7.6. G'I 19.5.2. Mackail suggested that Ammi:mus served as an artillery officer on Julian's expedition, 'The Last Great Roman Historian', ClaJ1iralSJudieJ, London 1925, p. 126. G5 Luc.,a.c.,45. GO 15.9.1. 67 16. 1.2. OB 16. 1.3; Luc., o.c., 45. (JO Luc., o.c., 57. 70 24.2. 12, the site of Pirisabara; cf. 18.9.2, the situation of Amida on the Tigris. 98 on rhe Rhine flowing rhrough lake Brigantia and on rhe pass of Succi 71 also fall in this category, as Pliny observed: deJc,.ipJiol~CJ locomm...1J0l1 hutorice tantmn sed prope poetice perIeqfti fas eS/72. The battles and siegesonwhichAmmianus bestows special carearegoverned bycertainprinciples of seleaion. Conversely,knowledge of these principles will aid the student in deciding which events he regarded as the climaxes in his narrative. In reviewing the devastating effecrs of rhetOric on historiography Peter refers to the "Willktir, mit dec sie die fiir ihre Zwecke geeigneten Thar sachen und Aufgabeo ausgewiiblr hat'. and he adds 'dass es liberall nach der Riickzicht auf dieWirkung geschehen isc'73, It is a matcer, however, which the serious historian has to face. Dionysius regards selection as third in order of importance: reil:OlI EOT:l.11 G1IOeO; lcrro(]t%oV, l:il'a 't£ of.i naeaJ.ap£il' bti. -d/l' "eafPlJl' near/laTa, %ai. 't6'a naeaA.I1lf.Ll' 7.1. In his methodology Lucian mentions taXOf:', i.e. brevity, as a governing principle75, and Polybius iosis~ 00 it for the writer of 'universal' history jU. The rule of economy makes it incumbent upon the historian to confine himself to what is truly important, as Xenophon observed: 'tclW :nea~f.WJ"" 'tOf:'... p.i'" ci~ia.; AOYOV nu!!,jow. Despite the lip service paid to these rules by historians who may be classified as 'rhetorical', selectivity is a principle (0 which Ammianus deferred. He does not dealwith every event: 11011 Ctmeta com#ecti1Jmr jB/ nor does he give all the details of the events he records: nequis a 110bis scmpl~lose gasta... exigat itl. The basis. as we can infer from Xenophon, is histOrical perspective. This is the spiritand the intention of the praecepta bistoriae,on which Ammianus focusses our attention, discurrere per lIegotiorttm celIitttdines BO, The batcles and sieges selected for special treatment were historically important in his eyes. After th~ account of Cha.lons·sur-Marne he passes over alia 1larrdtl~ mimts dig1Ja ... quae st~perflttttm est explicare, because nothing worth while resulted from them cttm 11eqtle operae pretimn aliqu~d eorttm habttere proventus - and he adds: 1lec bistoriam prodttcere per minrttiasignobiles decetRi. Strasburg is the climax i1 15.4.2-6; 21. 10.2-4. But they must not be confused with the longer geographi cal digressions, where e.g. the pass of Succi is included in a description of the Thracian provinces, 27.4. '5. The former, quoting Peter, 'z3.hlte zu den Ausstattungsstticken der Rhetorik', U:'ahrheil IJnd Kunst GeschichtsschreibJmg ulld Plagia/, Leipzig 1911, p. 342, and the latter may be regarded as a 'Hilfwissenschaft der Gcschichtc', Gesch. Lil. II, p. 210; cf. n. 11 above. i:! Ep. 2. '5. 5; sec also Cic. 0,'. 20.66. 73 Gesch. !it. II, pp. 2So-1. i-l Dian. ad Pomp. 3.767. 75 Luc., a.c" 56. 7. Polyb. 29. 12. j. 77 Xen. Hell. 4. 8. 1.Examples can bemultiplied from Tacitus, Pliny, Josephus, Straba, Cassius Dia; see Avenarius, o.c., pp. 127ff. 78 29. 3. 1. 79 31.'5.5. BO 26. 1. 1; cf. in geographical excursions: in descriptione mfil/iplici regiollu11J super exigI/is si/ere ros/ellis, l.c., also 23.6.74. But see Thompson, o.c., pp. 8GEf., more particularly in regard to lit et periClila declil1en/ur veri/ali saepe (onlig1la/ and also P. de Jonge, 'Censuur in de late Keisertijd', Tijdschr. v. Gesch. 61 1948, pp. 276£f, also 65 1952, pp. 99ff.; and R. Pack's criticism in Closs. Phil. ('53) 1958 of my dissertation Ammial1llJ MarcelJillJlJ in die Iig flan die Anlieke Geskiedskr)'willg, diss. Leiden, 1956. 81 21.2.11. 99 in the process of rescoring a broken province82'. The battle is memorable: hoc 1Jlemorabile bello, eomparal1do qttidem Pmlicis et Tetf.tomeis 63. The outcome was decisive: the Alamanni sued for peace84, and their chieftains now sub missively co-operated with the Romans 85. Eventually - a result not apparem at first sight - Julian was proclaimed Augustus by his troops au; and in his harangue he sums up their cammon achievement in its grandeur for posterity: et baee laborlt1/l, qttOS exbdllJimtfs, Galliae spectatnees post Imlera l1ltdta... 1eerea/ae, " posteritati per aetattt1}/. exam-i11a e011l11le11dabttnt87. In Amida the miseries of d1e whole Empire were concentrated: lIerttm cdeleste 1Jtt11UlJJttt RomflJJaereitotittsaemmlldSintra fmiltsregio1Jls concluder,]t t1mbittt1.'Z.,,88 Ammianus' sensitiveness to drama succumbed to the temptation of comparingitwith Troy. He describes the fighting of the first day to Iecover the body of Grumbates' son, ttt ap1fd Troiam Qlt01Uiam super comite Thassali duds eXflnimi socii ""farte acerrttno e01lflixertmt 89, We note the rhetorical touch in the circumlocution comesTbessali dueis90, Amida was to be punished for the young man's death - plactterat btlsta ttrbis subversae expiare piJrempti iuvenis malles91 - JUSt as Troy suffered because of Patroelus, Amida WdS cherefore selected for the impression it made on tbe ambor himself. Bur there Zore also other reasons. It entailed for che Persians the loss of 30,000 warriors; ic was a Pyrrhic victory as the king recalled rhat in obsidiolldliblts l1UJliI saepa l:tctIlOSt/J se pertttlisse iactttrtls 9:!. The delay, furthermore, prevented Sapor from completing his detour into Roman territory as he had plannedU~J and so from fulfilling his gloriosd coepta 94, It led to che dismissal of Ursicinus, in Am mjanus' view undeserved us. Lastly, ic was an added incentive for Julian's expedition as we significmtly infer from an address: sorsvero miseranda recens captamm lIrbimn ,,,eastrormnqlleamissiollesadhaec quae praposuimtf.s agenda bor/antltr00. Bezabde and Aquileia were strategic strongholds and a constant bone of contention. Sapor fortified and provisioned Bezabde after he rook it, fearing recapture by the Romans: verebatttT e1J.im ," 1lB amiuio11em Ctlstror1l1n i1lgen~ 52' 16. 1.1-2. 83 17.1.4. 8417.1.12. 85 17. 10.3-4, 17.10,9. 80 20.4.14, taken in conjunction with 20.4.1 and 2. 87 21. 5.3-5. flS 19. 1. 4; cr. 20. 11. 5: (COflstllll/im) Ilebllt cum gemiw, repu/mIJ 'lIMlis miJerandll cil,ilt/J pertuler#t cl{ldes, and also 18. 6. 17: cit,iltt/em Ilostca secmiJ da.1ibus illcllllallJ. 80 19,1.7-9. UD Peter, o.c,' P, 287, includes among the 'Arten von Schaden' wrought by rhetoric the 'Sparsamkeit mit Namen von Oertlichkeiten und Personen'. Ammianus is not ordinarily guilty of this defect. 91 19. 2. 1; :md d. 19. 6. 11,a reference toRhesus and theThr.lcians beforeTroy. 02 19.9.9. The highly doubtful method of computing the Persian casualties is not relevant: i1l1er!eetortll1l vero Persartll1l illaresmllt ill 11Jodu1I1 slipilllm corpora. OJ 18.7, 10. 04 19. 1.6: oran/ihm po/issimis dtuibm, .. lie II g/oriosis desciscerel coep/is, D5 20.2.5. See Thompson, o.c., pp. 51ff., for a correction of this view; Ursicinus was cap:1.ble but 'impossible as a subordinate'. !JO 23. 5. 18, For the part played by speeches in pragmatic history, see Polyb. 12.25a. 3, 12, 25b. 1 nnd 4, 12. 15i.8; and refer Gelzer. D.C" p. 89. 100 tium terentes aegre Romaniad eadem obshlenda·viribtu1nagnisaccil1..gere1Jtrlr'J7, Aquileia the hiswrian describes as... ttberem sitft et opibru, mltrisqrte circum datam, Vtdidir, and - as Julian knew from his extensive reading of history c;'vitatem circttmsessam quidem, aliqttotie1Js, 1/ftmqllam tamell, excisam alit deditn·m !lB. It controlled the passes of the Julian Alps, communication between eastern and western Europe, and was vital to Julian who depended upon reinforcements from Gaul in the coming conflict with Consranrius09. By studying therefore the bartles and sieges not as isolated events, elaborated rhewrically for rhe immediate effeer upon rhe listener100,bur in the context of the narrative as a whole with which rhey are integrated, rhe reader is given the historical perspective which it seems Ammianus steave to impart in fulfilment of his function as an historian. The perspective, however, is not confined to the events described, to rhe period selected by the authot as his specific field, but a linking up of past and present is to provide a larger view, This is evident from rhe paradeigmatic setting in which the so-called thigh lights' are made to appear. In the outlook of antiquity that which is imponanr and outstanding jn history, whether good or bad, serves as an example for posterity to follow or to avoid. At the same time present day events are evaluared in the light of parallels in tbe past101. The use of rhe exemplrtm in hisroriography is pardy due to the influence of Isocratean rhetoric, bur it is DOt necessarily a rhetorical abuse102, It is based on the doctrine that history repeats itself: 'Dec eigenrliche logische iWert des Beispiels jedoch ist begriindet auf den einfachen Analogieschluss: was friiher einmal geschehen ist. kann wieder geschehen'103. From rhis history derives its value as an education for the serious student - Ol(~d:,at TOV~ qJf,),Opu{}ovNor; - and the staresman104. In short where rhe historian is faced with rbe task of selection and the conventions of his craft prescribe,uei'ala and ol'aY;!Gla 105, 97 20.7.16. 9B 21.11.2, nnd 21.12.1. O!) 21. 12. 21: formid:tbal elJim ne,.. obJerali! angullii] A11Jir!m IU!illrrt111, provinci.1f el ad1l1ilJiw/a perduel, qllae exillde Iperabal ill diel. 100 U. von \'Uilamowitz, Reden mIdVorlrage II, Berlin 1926, p. 230: '\Vo dieRhetorik massgebend ist, kann die \X'ahrheit nicht geniigen, da entscheidet derEffekt'. 101 Liv. praef. 10: 0111ni1 Ie exempli dOCllfllelJla in ill/IIJlri pOlila mOlJ1l1nenlo illltieri; cr. inde libi... quod imilere rapias, iude. ,. quod tliles; and T:lc. AmI. 3.M.1. Ref. .3.lso B. Av:ln Groningen, III Ihe Gril' ojlhe PaIl, Leiden 1953, p. 31: 'Two comparable things are...put sideby side, thecontemporary onc asking for ancxplan:ltionoracorrobor3tion. the former onc furnishing these, .. The one bears all the characteristics of nn unstable, precarious :lnd restricted present of which the sense nnd the meaning remain to be discovered... The other is laden with sureness and certainty of the unalterable past,,. That is why it can serve as .3.n example'. 102 W. Jaeger. Pnideitl Ill, Oxford 1944-5, p. 102; and on its abuses, Peter, Gesch. Lil. J, pp. 13-23, 31-33. loa H. Schoenberger, BeiJpie/e (ltII der Geschirhle, eil1 rheloriJche KlIIl1lmille/ hI Cicero] Redell, diss. ErI:lngen 1910, p. 6; \Xf. den Boer, o.c., p. 25: '.,.dat dit gebeuren in het vecleden zo geschied is en zich in de loekomst zo herhalen zal. Deze overtuiging brengtThucydides erloezijn werk te noemen 'cen bt:zit voor altijd' '. Cf. Thucyd. 1. 22. ·1, 3.82.2, 2.48. 3f.; Polyb. 6.9. 10. 104 Polyb. 2. 56, 11, 1. 1. 2, 1. 35. 9, 9, 9. 9-10, and 3. 118. 12. 10;; Luc., 53. 101

Description:
MARCELLINUS by C. P. T. Naude (University nf [he Wicwa[ersrand). Peter classifies battles and sieges -. ~Schlachtbeschreibungen odee tiberhaupt.
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