PAX Romana - University of Arizona
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Slide 1
PAX ROMANA
Major Carlos Rascon
Slide 2
SOURCES
Jones, The Art of War in the Western World,
pp. 34-45, 72-86
Montrossm, War Through the Ages, pp. 7088
Preston and Wise, Men in Arms, pp. 39-49
Bradford, Julius Caesar, pp.113-164
Blois, The Roman Army and Politics in the
First Century B.C., pp. 6-21
Slide 3
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Know and identify the changes made in the
Roman military organization after the Third
Punic War and the causes of these changes
Know and describe the civil wars between
Caesar and Pompey, with emphasis on the
reasons for Caesar’s success militarily
Comprehend and explain the power struggle
after the death of Caesar, with emphasis on
the Battle of Actium
Slide 4
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Know and recall the key changes in the
Roman military system from Actium to
Adrianople and the causes of these changes
Comprehend and explain the concept of Pax
Romana
Slide 5
Slide 6
ROMAN MILITARY
CHANGES AFTER THIRD
PUNIC WAR
Legions shift to composition of Roman
and non-Roman citizens
– Scarce Recruits
– Voluntary enlistment replaced
compulsory
– Military becomes less popular with the
very rich
– Video 8min (Roman legions)
Slide 7
ROMAN MILITARY CHANGES
AFTER THIRD PUNIC WAR
Triarii, Principes and Hostati abolished in favor
of “Light” and “Heavy” troops
Professional Army Emerges
Rome’s key factor- Discipline
Slide 8
ROMAN MILITARY
CHANGES AFTER THIRD
PUNIC WAR
Enlistments and Loyalty
– Enlistments averaged 6 years (16 year
max)
– Soldiers swear allegiance to their
general over the state of Rome
– Proconsuls (governors of territories)
gained virtually unlimited power
– Head of Army less answerable to
senate
Slide 9
ROMAN MILITARY CHANGES
AFTER THIRD PUNIC WAR
Caius Marius
–Allowed proletarians (men with out
land) to join legion
–Improved training making full-time
soldiers
–Made the cohort his major tactical
unit (vice the maniple)
–Interval between cohorts
decreased, resembling a phalanx
–Ten Cohorts still made a Legion
Slide 10
JULIUS CAESAR
Greatest Roman political general
– Military Genius
– Quick, sure judgment
– Indomitable energy (Charisma)
– Personal interest in his men
– Willingness to under go every hardship his
soldiers endured
Slide 11
JULIUS CAESAR
– Age 40, set out to learn “Art of War”
– 61 - 60 B.C. - proconsul of Spain,
suppressed barbarian uprisings
– 60 B.C. - formed 1st Triumvirate
W/Pompey and Crassus
– 58 B.C. - Triumvirate appointed Caesar
proconsul of Gaul
– By 51 B.C. - expanded Roman power in
Gaul, quelled all revolts
Slide 12
JULIUS CAESAR
Caesar’s Legion
– Preceded by a Vanguard of cavalry
and heavy foot
– Main body plus baggage in center
– Rear guard disposed for immediate
action
– Light infantry flank guards
Slide 13
JULIUS CAESAR
The Civil War
– Crassus was killed in battle - 53 B.C.
– Pompey, jealous of Caesar, had Senate pass law
taking away Caesar’s political & Military power in
March of 49 B.C.
– Caesar then “Crossed the Rubicon” in Dec of 50 or
Jan of 49 B.C.
• Act of War (By law needed senate consent to cross
Rubicon (Italy north border) w/forces)
• Caesar had previously only fought barbarians, now he
would fight Roman legions
Slide 14
JULIUS CAESAR
Popular sympathy was with Caesar
Pompey & Senate fled to Epitus (West
coast of modern Greece)
Caesar was in Rome in less than two
months, master of all Italy
It took Caesar 5 years to defeat Pompey
and his supporters
Slide 15
JULIUS CAESAR
Ilerda Campaign
– Initially two unsuccessful frontal assaults on
Ilerda
– Followed by harassment, marches,
countermarches, cutting off supplies
– Forces enemy into weak defensive position,
then refused battle
– Pursued and harassed enemy continually
cutting off supplies
– Again refused battle
Slide 16
JULIUS CAESAR
Ilerda Campaign
– Made rapid countermarch to cut off enemy
from retreat into Ebro defiles
– Another rapid countermarch cuts off faltering
enemy from obtaining water at Sigoris
– Cuts off foes from their last resort of regaining
the fortified camp at Ilerda
Slide 17
JULIUS CAESAR
Ilerda Campaign
– Gained unconditional surrender
– Gained respect by sparing Romans from
slaughter and for his expert generalship
– Offered 70,000 prisoners liberty and safe
escort to Rome if they immediately enlisted in
his ranks
Slide 18
JULIUS CAESAR
Dyrrhachium
– 49 B.C. - Caesar had 12 legions @ Brundisium to
seek out Pompey
– Sailed for Greece
• Ships were scarce, only 7 legions initially (violated
principle of mass?)
• Pompey controlled sea
• Mid-winter - Pompey less vigilant (surprise?)
– Avoided Hostile Fleet, landed @ Palaeste
– Ships returned for Mark Anthony & 20,000 men of
his army
Slide 19
JULIUS CAESAR
Apsus River
– Caesar & Pompey made contact
– Pompey superior #’s, but inferior Quality
– Neither wanted to take offensive
• Caesar - waiting for Anthony
• Pompey hoped his fleet would block Anthony, forcing
Caesar to yield
– Anthony landed north of Dyrrhachium
– Pompey failed at preventing join-up
– Pompey fell back to Dyrrhachium
Slide 20
JULIUS CAESAR
Apsus River
– Caesar sent three legions for supplies and
decided to contain Pompey
– Both generals built lines (embankments) facing
each other
• Caesar couldn’t totally blockade (Pompey controlled
sea)
• Pompey broke out along coast, then pursued Caesar for
three days
– Had Pompey pursued harder, history may have
been different
Slide 21
JULIUS CAESAR
Pharsalus
– Caesar regrouped in Thessaly with about 30,000
infantry & 1,000 cavalry
– Met Pompey with disadvantage in #’s (1:2 infantry,
1:3 or 4 cavalry) on plains of Pharsalus
– Pompey’s plan:
• Secure his right flank along Enipeus River
• Use superior cavalry to flank Caesar on his
right, sweep around and attack his rear
Slide 22
Slide 23
JULIUS CAESAR
Pharsalus
– Caesar grasped Pompey’s plan
• Brought up cavalry to face Pompey’s cavalry
• Took 3rd line from Infantry and formed 4th line behind
Cavalry (decisive point)
– Pompey left initiative
• Caesar launched counter attack; Pompey met with
Cavalry, Archers, Slingers; Caesar had 4th line attack;
4th line had such vigor Pompey’s cavalry retreated
Slide 24
Slide 25
JULIUS CAESAR
Pharsalus
– Infantry now fully engaged
– Caesar flanked Pompey on his left with 4th line
– Caesar ordered 3rd Line (reserves) into fight
(timely use of reserves)
– Pompey fled and his forces surrendered in the
hills after being surrounded
Slide 26
Slide 27
JULIUS CAESAR
Ruspina
– Africa, Oct 47 B.C., Caesar surrounded by superior
force near Ruspina
– Formed single line of cohorts in favor of protecting
flanks
– Single line was pushed together with cavalry in
gaps
– Faced alternating cohorts to rear forming two back
to back lines and pushed out
– Imaginative action salvaged defeat
Slide 28
JULIUS CAESAR
Further operations in Africa/Spain were
successful
Caesar assassinated 15 March, 44 B.C.
Slide 29
BATTLE OF ACTIUM
Anthony and Cleopatra
ruled from Egypt ~200
ships
Octavian Ruled from
Rome had ~200 ships
Sea Battle conducted in
Ionian Sea
Over 400 galleys and
80,000 men involved
Slide 30
BATTLE OF ACTIUM
Slide 31
BATTLE OF ACTIUM
Deserters informed Octavian
Anthony’s Fleet sailed out
Agrippa formed up seaward and waited for
the wind also
Separation of the Squadrons
Anthony and Cleopatra defeated and
betrayed, Anthony fled
Slide 32
BATTLE OF ACTIUM
Established Roman Navy as the premier
navy of the time
Combined with army to secure frontiers and
to police Mediterranean
Octavian reaches Alexandria in July, 30 B.C.
; Anthony and Cleopatra commit suicide
Octavian takes the title of Caesar Augustus
Slide 33
PAX ROMANA
The period from Caesar Augustus (27 B.C.)
to the battle of Adrianople (378 A.D.)
Longest period of
peace Roman empire
had experienced
The Empire
– Internally Pacified
– Secure Frontiers
Slide 34
PAX ROMANA
13 B.C. Augustus reduced the army of the
Roman Empire to 25 Legions (about
300,000 soldiers)
In 6 A.D. he established a permanent
retirement fund
Encouraged retired soldiers to settle in the
provinces near their former legion
16 year tours (later 20 year enlistments)
Slide 35
PAX ROMANA
Defensively Orientated
Cavalry
War Engines
– By 4th Century 10 Catapults and 60
Ballistae were assigned to each legion
– This is one of the highest rations of “guns”
to soldiers in history
Slide 36
DECLINE OF ROME
Riot accelerated by decline in farming
The small farms
– Free peasants were forced to become coloni
– Proved insufficient, barbarians invited to work
Exhaustion of the soil
Lack of Agriculture
– More people drifted into the cities
– Unemployment
Slide 37
DECLINE OF ROME
Professional politicians
Reduced discipline and training
Increasing lack of confidence between
commander and troops
Sending units from one portion of the frontier
to reinforce units engaged elsewhere
Slide 38
THE BATTLE OF ADRIANOPLE
The Visigoths
– Originally friendly to the empire
– The local Roman officials allowed the Visigoths
to retain their weapons in return for certain
“favors”
– For over a year the Roman officials abused the
Goths
The Emperor Valens
Legion weakened by increasing number of
light foot and cavalry
Slide 39
Slide 40
THE BATTLE OF ADRIANOPLE
Valens came upon the Gothsen camp
He drew up his army
Believing that all the enemy were inside the
Laager, he attacked
Slide 41
THE BATTLE OF ADRIANOPLE
The Bulk of the Gothic Horsemen were
foraging
As the battle raged, the Gothic horsemen
charged down on the Roman left
The Roman cavalry disintegrated quickly
The Roman right fled, and the infantry was
slaughtered
Slide 42
Valens
and 40,000
infantry
annihilated
THE
BATTLE
OF ADRIANOPLE
Battle
of Adrianople
signified the end of the
Roman military tradition
Slide 43
THE BATTLE OF ADRIANOPLE
Collapse of Rome
A revolution in tactics
– Cavalry was now the chief arm
– Light Infantry would prepare and support the
attack by their fire
– Heavy infantry
• Base for defense
• Offense - ready reserve
Slide 44
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
Their were many changes to the Roman
military after the Third Punic War
Caesar won the civil wars against Pompey
Pax Romana was the longest period of
peace in Rome, during this period the army
was oriented to defense
Rome divides
Slide 45
QUESTIONS?