Lucius Aemilius Paulus Macedonicus
Lucius Aemilius Paulus Macedonicus (
229 BC-
160 BC) was a
Roman general and politician. His father was
Lucius Aemilius Paulus, the consul defeated and killed in the
battle of Cannae. Lucius Aemilius was, in his time, the head of his branch of the Aemilii Paulii, an old and aristocratic
patrician family. Their influence was immense, particularly due to their fortune and alliance with the
Cornelii Scipiones.
After the fulfilment of his military service as
military tribune, Paullus was elected
curule aedile in
193 BC. The next step of his
cursus honorum was the election as
praetor in
191 BC. At the term of this office he went to the Hispania provinces, where he campaigned against the
Lusitanians between
191 and
189 BC. Paullus was elected
consul for the first time in
182 BC, with Gnaeus Baebius Tamphilus as junior partner. His next military command, with
proconsular imperium, was in the next year, against the Ingauni of
Liguria.
The
Third Macedonian War breaks in
171 BC, when king
Perseus of Macedon defeated a Roman army led by the consul Publius Licinius Crassus in the
battle of Callicinus. After two years of indecisive results for both sides, Paulus was elected consul again in
168 BC (with Gaius Licinius Crassus as colleague). As consul, he was appointed by the
senate to deal with the Macedonian war. Shortly afterwards, in
June 22, he won the decisive
battle of Pydna. Perseus of Macedonia was made prisoner and the Third Macedonian War ended.
To set an example, Paulus ordered the killing of 500 Macedonians known for opposition against Rome. He also exiled many more to Italy and confiscated his belongings in the name of Rome but according to
Plutarch, keeping too much to himself. On the return to Rome in
167 BC, his
legions were displeased with their share of the plunder. To keep them happy, Paulus decided for a stop in
Epirus, a kingdom suspected of sympathizing with the Macedonian cause. The region had been already pacified, but Paulus ordered the sacking of 70 its towns. 150,000 people were enslaved and the region was left to bankruptcy.
Paulus' return to Rome was glorious. With the immense plunder collected in Macedonia and Epirus, he celebrated a spectacular
triumph, featuring no less than the captured king of Macedonia himself. As a gesture of acknowledgment, the senate awarded him the surname
Macedonicus. This was the peak of his career. In
164 BC he was elected
censor and died during his term in
160 BC.
With the death of Macedonicus, the fortunes of the Aemilii Paulii came to an end. The successes of his political and military career were not accompanied by a happy family life. He had been married to Papiria Masonis, from whom he divorced, according to Plutarch, for no particular reason. From this marriage four children were born: two sons and two daughters, one married to the son of
Marcus Porcius Cato, another to Aelius Tubero, a rich man of a plebeian family. Paulus Macedonicus then married a second time and had two sons. Since four boys were too many for a father to support across the
cursus honorum, he decided to give the oldest two up for adoption. One was taken by
Quintus Fabius Maximus and became Quintus Fabius Maximus Aemilianus. The other was adopted by Publius Cornelius Scipio, son of
Scipio Africanus, and became
Publius Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus. With the eldest sons safely adopted by two of the most powerful
patrician houses, Paulus Macedonicus counted on the two younger ones to continue his own name. This was not due to happen. Both of them died young, one shortly after the other, at the same time that Paulus celebrated his Triumph.
*
Scipio-Paullus-Gracchus family tree*
Adoption in Rome*Plutarch,
Aemilius Paulus. [
1]
*Livy,
History of Rome XLIV, 17 - XLVI, 41.
*Polybius,
Histories, XXXII, 8. [
2]