- Demetrius of Pharos
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Demetrius of Pharos King Demetrius Reign c.222 - 219 BC Greek Δημήτριος ἐκ Φάρου Titles Local Ruler, and Court Counselor Died 214 BC Place of death Messene Predecessor Teuta Successor Scerdilaidas Consort Triteuta Demetrius of Pharos (also Pharus) (Greek: Δημήτριος ἐκ Φάρου) was a ruler of Pharos involved in the First Illyrian War, after which he ruled a portion of the Illyrian Adriatic coast on behalf of the Romans, as a Client king.[1]
Demetrius was a regent ruler to Pinnes, the son of Agron who was too young too rule as king. When the Romans were occupied with their own problems, he had grown stronger as an ally of Macedonia and also by conquering Dimallum of Dalmatia, on the shore facing Issa. Together with Scerdilaidas, he sailed south of Lissus and broke the Roman treaty, attacking Roman allies in the Adriatic and by devastating and plundering many cities in the Cyclades and the Peloponnese. He was expelled from Illyria by Rome after the Second Illyrian War and became a trusted councilor at the court of Philip V of Macedon. He became a strong political influence to Philip V and encouraged him to clash with Rome. Demetrius remained there until his death at Messene in 214 BC while attempting to take the city.
Contents
Early career
Demetrius, described as Illyrian[2] or Greek,[3] was from the Greek colony on the island of Pharos (modern Hvar, founded in 385 BC, in Croatia), in the Adriatic Sea off the coast of Dalmatia. Under the Illyrian king Agron, he ruled Pharos, from his stronghold (Stari Grad), overlooking a sheltered harbor.[4] After Agron's death in 230 BC, Demetrius continued as ruler of Pharos under the regency of Queen Teuta, Agron's second wife and stepmother of Agron's son Pinnes, who was too young to rule.[5]
First Illyrian War
In 229 BC, continuing the expansion of Illyrian power that Agron had begun, Teuta systematically[6] attacked Issa, the polis of Korkyra and Epidamnus. Lissus, Apollonia and Corcyra Nigra were all threatened as Teuta annexed Epirus in the south. After a naval battle of the island of Paxos, the island of Korkyra surrendered, and Demetrius was placed in charge by Teuta as one of her philio's.[7]
When the Romans were on their way towards Corcyra in the first engagement of the First Illyrian War, Demetrius betrayed Teuta. Demetrius was slandered by Teuta and and feared her, and gave up Corcyra to the Romans, and went over to the Roman side, acting as their guide for their campaign in Illyria.[8] Rome was quickly victorious while Teuta fled to Rhizon in Dalmatia (modern Risan, Montenegro), and Demetrius was placed in charge of most of the rest of Ardiaean Kingdom, as a client of Rome.[9] Demetrius was rewarded with the rule of his birthplace , the island of Pharos, and a part of the land next to it, but this was only temporary. The Romans annexed the southern conquests of Teuta and also one of the conditions imposed by Rome, following the war, expressly prohibited Illyrian warships south of Lissus.[10]
Revival of power
The decade after 229 BC witnessed a revival of Illyrian power under Demetrius which succeeded Teuta. Following the war, Demetrius married Triteuta in or around 222 BC, Agron's first wife and mother of Pinnes which consolidated his position. His marriage to Triteuta mean that Demetrius formally took over the regency of the Ardiaean Kingdom. Demetrius' own influence was thereby greatly extended, and the fundamental weakness of the Ardiaean Kingdom after 229 BC, that there was no competent regent for Pinnes was relieved. The king began to renew traditional Illyrian ties with Macedonia.[11] In 222 BC an Illyrian corps of 1600 fought with distinction under the command of Demetrius at Sellasia, where the Macedonians won a conclusive victory over the Spartans.[12] After Sellasia, Demetrius began attempting to extend his control over Illyria at the expense of Rome.[13]
Before then, when Rome was preoccupied with a war against the Celtic peoples of the Po valley in northern Italy from 225-222 BC, Demetrius detached the Illyrian Atintani from their Roman alliance. In addition, he sailed south of Lissus, Lezhë in present day Albania, and engaged in piracy in contravention of the settlement in 228 BC. In 221 BC Demetrius also created an alliance with the Illyrian Histri at the head of the Adriatic, who were interfering with Roman supply ships. A Roman fleet soon attacked the Histri.[14] Early in the summer of 221 BC, when tension was rising in Greece as Macedonia made an alliance with the Achaean League against the Aetolian League, the Illyrian attacked in their traditional manner.
In 220 BC Demetrius and the Illyrian commander, Scerdilaidas sailed south of Lissus with ninety lembi. After an assault on Pylos in the western Peloponnese had failed they separated their forces, Demetrius taking his chances in plundering the Cyclades while Scerdilaidas returned north. On putting in at Naupactus with forty ships Scerdilaidas was encouraged by his broth-in-law Amynas, king of the Athamanes, to join the Aetolians in their planned invasion of Achaea. With help from Cynaethan traitors, they attacked, seized and burned Cynaetha, a town in the north of Arcadia, located on the northern slope of the Aroanian Mountains. They also attacked but failed to take Cleitor. Meanwhile Demetrius continued on into the Aegean with 50 ships. He sailed to the Cyclades, where he extorted tribute from some of the islands and plundered the others.[15] Chased by Rhodian warships,[16] Demetrius put into Cenchreae, a town on the Aegean coast of Greece near Corinth. At the same time the Macedonian representative in Achaea, Taurion, learned of Scerdilaidas' and the Aetolians' invasion. Taking his cue from the Aetolians, Taurion agreed to drag Demetrius' ships across the Isthmus to bring them into play in the Aegean, in return for Demetrius' assistance against the Aetolians. Although Demetrius conducted a few raids on the Aetolian coast, he was too late to hinder the Aetolians' return from Achaea.[17]
After returning to the Ardiaean Kingdom, Demetrius continued operations during the following winter, attacking and seizing Roman allied cities and communities in southern Illyria.[18] The Romans who hithero ignored the activities of their former ally, decided that the harbors on the coast of the Ardiaean Kingdom had now to be made secure, in view of the threat of another war with Carthage.[19] These events precipitated the Second Illyrian War.
The Second Illyrian War
Main article: Illyrian WarsUnlike Teuta in 229 BC, Demetrius was well prepared for the Roman invasion. He first placed a garrison in Dimallum, an Illyrian city-fortress from Apollonia. He eliminated his opponents in other places, those Illyrians who opposed his rule, and stationed 6,000 oh his best forces on his home island Pharos. As before, both consuls of the year accompanied the Roman expedition, but the leading role was placed by Aemilius Paullus, who was to be killed in the great Roman disaster at Cannae three years later. The Adriatic took on particular importance in Romes preperations for the Second Punic War from 218 to 201 BC. Anticipating a long and difficult war far away from Rome, the Roman Senate decided first to set matters right in Illyria.[20][21]
In 219 BC, having decided that Dimallum was crucial to Demetrius' power in the region, the consul prepared to besiege the city but was able to take it by direct assault within seven days.[22] and went to Pharos As a result all the Illyrian towns and cities of the area submitted to Roman protection, each receiving the appropriate terms and conditions. Next the Romans moved against Demetrius on the island of Pharos, who awaited the attack with good troops, ample provisions an war materials behind strong fortifications, that of the city of Issa at modern Stari Grad. In order to avoid a long siege Aemilius decided to risk another frontal attack. The Roman army moved from the mainland to a wooded area of the island.[23] Meanwhile the nest day, a small force of ships was sent out to tempt Demetrius from behind his fortifications. Demetrius marched down to the harbor to oppose the Roman landing. The strategy worked, and when the main Roman army appeared from another direction on the island, the Illyrian army was forced to give battle cut off from their city. Attacked on two sides, and cut off from the protection of the city walls, the battle was lost. in 218 BC, the Illyrian forces soon surrendered while Demetrius deserted the island and fled to Macedonia making his way to the court of Philip V of Macedon, who was now the Macedonian king following the death of Antigonus.[24].[25]
Aftermath
The Romans destroyed the fortifications of Pharos and before the summer was over Aemilius was back in Rome receiving congratulations for a job well done. Any threat to the Roman hold in Illyria had been eliminated, all the gains of the First Illyrian War had been secured, and the old restrictions of movement imposed on Illyrian kings.[26] Demetrius may have returned to the Ardeaian State and have been attacked by another Roman force, although the regime of Pinnes, now confirmed as king, was left intact. Rome supported a small Ardeaian State ruled Pinnes and his successors. The Roman republic called for the extradition[27] of Demetrius but Phillip refused. Pinnes was ordered to pay the arrears of tribute, reparations imposed after the war.
The weak Ardaeai State soon fell prey to Macedonia while the partial destruction brought onto the scene the urban koina of the Parthini, Byllines, Amanatini and others.[28]
Court counselor of Macedonia
Demetrius was received warmly by the young king whose father was also called Demetrius, becoming one of Philip's most trusted advisors. According to Polybius, Demetrius was instrumental in turning Philip's ambitions toward Illyria and Rome. In 217 BC when Philip learned of the victory of Hannibal, the Carthaginian general, over the Romans, at Lake Trasimene, Philip at first showed the letter only to Demetrius. Perhaps seeing a chance to recover his possessions in Illyria and exact a measure of revenge on Rome, Demetrius immediately advised the young king to make peace with the Aetolians, with whom Philip was currently at war, and turn his attentions westward. In a summary of the strategy the situation called for, Polybius makes Demetrius say:
- "For Greece is already entirely obedient to you, and will remain so: the Achaeans from genuine affection; the Aetolians from the terror which their disasters in the present war have inspired them. Italy, and your crossing into it, is the first step in the acquirement of universal empire, to which no one has a better claim than yourself. And now is the moment to act when the Romans have suffered a reverse."[29]
Philip was easily convinced and followed Demetrius' advice.[30] Evidence of Demetrius' influence can be seen in the treaty of alliance between Philip and Hannibal of 215 BC. One of its articles specified that any peace made with Rome would include as terms that the Romans would relinquish control of Corcyra, Apollonia, Epidamnus, Pharos, Dimale, Parthini, and Atintania andto restore to Demetrius of Pharos all those of his friends now in the dominion of Rome. [31] In 217 BC Philip made war against Scerdilaidas, to recover some territory recently lost and to expand his control westward. Demetrius thought it a matter of the most vital importance to bring Illyria into a state of good order, with a view to the success of all his projects, and above all of his passage into Italy. For Demetrius was so assiduous in keeping hot these hopes and projects in the king's mind, that Philip even dreamed of them in his sleep, and thought of nothing else but this Italian expedition. The motive of Demetrius in so acting was not a consideration for Philip, for he certainly did not rank higher than third in the calculations of Demetrius. A stronger motive than that was his hatred of Rome: but the strongest of all was the consideration of his own prospects. He had made up his mind that it was only in this way that he could ever recover his principality in Pharos.[32] Such "dreams" eventually led to war with Rome, the First Macedonian War, and Second Macedonian War.
Polybius also blamed Demetrius' influence for Philip's tyrannical behavior.[33] One incident involved Philip's apparent role in a massacre carried out by the people against their leaders that occurred at Messene in 215 BC.[34] Arriving on the scene the day after the massacre and wanting to seize the acropolis, Philip asked his advisors whether the entrails of a sacrifice which had been made indicated that he should quit the citadel or hold it. Demetrius responded by saying that, if you have the heart of an augur, to quit it as quick as you can: but if of a gallant and wise king, to keep it, lest if you quit it now you may never have so good an opportunity again, for it is by thus holding the two horns that you can alone keep the ox under your control.[35]
However, in this instance Philip took the more moderate advice of Aratus, who advised him to leave. Nevertheless, the incident at Messene marked, the beginning of Philip's deterioration of character, as well as his loss of popularity.[36] Comparing Demetrius to Aratus, Polybius says thatthe life of Aratus sufficiently proved that he would not have committed such an act of wickedness, but that such principles exactly suited Demetrius of Pharos.[37] The moderating influence of Aratus had caused the Greeks to regard Philipwith favour, owing to the greatness of character which he displays, while under Demetrius' guidance, Philiplost the goodwill of the allies and his credit with the rest of Greec[38]
Demetrius was killed the following year attempting to take Messene. After having rejected Demetrius' advice the previous year, Philip had returned in 214 BC, resolved to follow it.[39]
See also
- Illyrian warfare
- Illyrian Wars
- Macedonian Wars
- List of rulers of Illyria
- Scerdilaidas
- Philip V
Notes
- ^ Hammond, p. 257.
- ^ Walbank (2002), p. 117; Hoyos, p. 201; Edwards, p. 475
- ^ Budin (2000): p. 87;McGeough (2004): p. 69;Champion (2004): p. 113;Scullard (1980): p. 193;Chamoux, p 97; Sinnige, p. 104
- ^ Wilkes, p. 115.
- ^ Wilkes, p. 162.
- ^ Épire, Illyrie, Macédoine: mélanges offerts au professeur Pierre Cabanes by Danièle Berranger, Pierre Cabanes, Danièle Berranger-Auserve, page 136
- ^ Polybius, 2.10; Wilkes, p. 160.
- ^ Polybius II,11,6
- ^ Wilkes, p. 161; Polybius, 2.11.
- ^ Polybius, 2.12.
- ^ Wilkes, p. 162; Errington, p. 91.
- ^ Polybius, 2.65.
- ^ Polybius, 3.16.
- ^ Appian, Illyrike 8
- ^ Polybius, 3.16, 4.16, 4.19.
- ^ For the Rhodians, who made their living as maritime traders, piracy was a serious problem; with Macedon and Egypt having abandoned their control in the Aegean, it fell to Rhodes to police these waters. See: Walbank (1970), p. 109 and Strabo, 14.2.5.
- ^ Polybius, 4.19.
- ^ Hammond 1968
- ^ Dell 1967b
- ^ Polybius III 16,1
- ^ Rome and the Mediterranean to 133 B.C. By A. E. Astin, F. W. Walbank, M. W. Frederiksen
- ^ Wilkes, p. 163.
- ^ Appian, (Illyrike 8)
- ^ Polybius, 3.18–19.
- ^ Polybius (3.18-19)
- ^ Cassiu Dio. 12 frg.53
- ^ Épire, Illyrie, Macédoine: mélanges offerts au professeur Pierre Cabanes by Danièle Berranger,Pierre Cabanes,Danièle Berranger-Auserve,page 134
- ^ The Illyrians to the Albanians by Neritan Ceka pg~122-123
- ^ Polybius, 5.101.
- ^ Polybius, 5.102–105.
- ^ Polybius, 7.9.
- ^ Polybius, 5.108.
- ^ Polybius, 5.12.
- ^ Strabo 8.4.8; Livy 32.21; Plutarch, Aratus 49.3; Walbank (1970), p. 72.
- ^ Polybius, 7.11.
- ^ Polybius, 7.12.
- ^ Polybius, 7.13.
- ^ Polybius, 7.14.
- ^ Polybius, 3.19; Walbank (1970), p. 78.
References
- Chamoux, François, Hellenistic civilization, Wiley-Blackwell, 2003, ISBN 9780631222422.
- Edwards, Iorwerth Eiddon Stephen, The Cambridge Ancient History, Volume 7, Part 1, University Press, 1984.
- Errington, R.M. (1993). "Rome and Greece to 205 B.C.". In Walbank, F.W.; Astin, A.E.. The Cambridge Ancient History. VII. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23448-4. http://books.google.be/books?id=5Oe1u1H_OSMC&printsec=frontcover&hl=en&source=gbs_v2_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Hammond, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière, Collected Studies: Alexander and His Successors in Macedonia, 1994.
- Hoyos, B. Dexter, Unplanned Wars: The Origins of the First and Second Punic Wars, Walter de Gruyter, 1998. ISBN 9783110155648.
- Livy, History of Rome, Rev. Canon Roberts (translator), Ernest Rhys (Ed.); (1905) London: J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd.
- Plutarch, "Aratus" in Plutarch's Lives, Arthur Hugh Clough (editor), John Dryden (translator). Two volumes. Modern Library; Modern Library Paperback Ed edition (April 10, 2001). Downloadable version at Project Gutenberg. Vol. 2: ISBN 0375756779.
- Polybius, Histories, Evelyn S. Shuckburgh (translator); London, New York. Macmillan (1889); Reprint Bloomington (1962).
- Sinnige, William Gurnee, Arthur Edward Romilly Boak, A History of Rome to A.D. 565, Macmillan, 1977. ISBN 9780024108005.
- Strabo, Geography, translated by Horace Leonard Jones; Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd. (1924). Books 8-9: ISBN 0-674-99216-4, Books 13-14: ISBN 0-674-99246-6.
- Walbank, F. W., Philip V of Macedon, The University Press (1940).
- Walbank, F. W., Polybius, Rome, and the Hellenistic World: Essays and Reflections, Cambridge University Press (2002), ISBN 9780521812085.
- Wilkes, John, The Illyrians (Peoples of Europe), Blackwell Publishers, (December 1, 1995) ISBN 0-631-19807-5.
Categories:- Ancient Greek rulers
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- Roman-era pirates
- Hellenistic military personnel
- 3rd-century BC Greek people
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- 214 BC deaths
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