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Lucius Cornelius Sulla

This page is about the Roman dictator Sulla. For the Celtic goddess sometimes called Sulla, see Sulis.
| Lucius Cornelius Sulla "Felix"
Dictator of Rome| style="vertical-align: top; text-align: right;" | Died
style="text-align:center; font-size:larger;"

Sulla.jpg

Born 138 BC , Rome
78 BC, Puteoli
Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix (Latin: L·CORNELIVS·L·F·P·N·SVLLA·FELIX)Official name of Sulla. The meaning in English is "Lucius Cornelius Sulla, son of Lucius, grandson of Publius, the lucky." (c. 138 BC78 BC) Roman General and Dictator, was usually known simply as Sulla.Sulla's name is also seen as "Silla", presumably due to corruption of ancient writing "SVILLA" (Suilla), that went in the two directions of Sulla and Silla. It is also occasionally seen as "Sylla" (Often the Greek upsilon was transliterated into the Roman Alphabet as a "y"). His agnomen Felix — the fortunate — was attained later in his life, due to his skill and luck as a general.

His character was often described as being half fox, half lion due to his legendary cunning and bravery. Machiavelli later alluded to this description of Sulla in his work "The Prince". In character he was unusual for a Roman, in that he had a highly developed sense of humor and was completely unpredictable, both in his actions and moods. Although a clinically practical man he was also superstitious to the extreme. He believed in his luck, hence his choice of Felix as an agnomen. He was a thoughtful man, who would plan out his strategy, however if faced with an immediate adversity, he would strike swiftly and with extreme prejudice. Of all the great men of ancient Rome, he is perhaps the most mysterious and difficult to understand.

Early years

Sulla was born into a branch of the Cornelii gens, or family, of impeccable aristocratic (patrician) background but at the time financially challenged. Without any money, Sulla's youth was spent making friends among Rome's actors and low lives. They were to remain his friends throughout his life. It was at this time he met the famous Roman actor Metrobius. Despite this, he must have had a first rate education, as he was fluent in Greek. The means by which Sulla attained the fortune that enabled him to ascend the Cursus honorum are not clear, although some sources refer to family inheritances from his step-mother and others.

Africa and the capture of Jugurtha

In 107 BC, Sulla was nominated quaestor to Gaius Marius, who was taking control of the Roman army in the war against King Jugurtha of Numidia. The Jugurthine War had started in 112 BC but Roman forces under Quintus Caecilius Metellus had been suffering humiliating results. Under the command of Marius, the Roman forces ultimately defeated the enemy in 106 BC, thanks in large part to Sulla's initiative to capture the Numidian king by persuading King Bocchus of Mauretania to betray him. It was a fraught operation from the first, with the wily King Bocchus weighing up the advantages of handing over Jurgurtha to Sulla or Sulla to Jurgurtha. The publicity attracted by this feat boosted Sulla's political career. Much to the annoyance of Marius, a gilded equestrian statue of Sulla was erected in the Forum to commemorate his accomplishment.

The Cimbri and the Teutones

The next threat to Rome proved to be much more serious. In 104 BC the migrating Germanic tribes of the Cimbri and the Teutones seemed headed for Italy. Sulla continued to serve on Marius' staff during this campaign. Due to the immediate threat facing the city, Marius was elected Consul an unprecedented 5 years in a row. Finally, with his consular colleague Catulus, the Roman forces faced the tribes at the battle of Vercellae in 101 BC. Sulla had by this time transferred to the army of Quintus Lutatius Catulus Caesar. Sulla is generally credited as being the prime mover in the defeat of the tribes (Catulus being a hopeless general and quite incapable of cooperating with Marius). Marius and Catulus were both granted Triumphs as the co-commanding generals.

First steps on the Cursus Honorum and Cilician governorship

Returning to Rome, Sulla was elected 'Praetor urbanus' in 97 BC. According to rumour, this was done through massive bribery. The next year he was appointed pro consule to the province of Cilicia (in modern Turkey). While in the East, Sulla was the first Roman magistrate to meet a Parthian ambassador, Orobazus, and by taking the seat between the Parthian ambassador and the ambassador from Pontus (the center seat being the place of honour), he sealed the Parthian ambassador's fate. Orobazus was executed upon his return to Parthia for allowing Sulla to out-maneuver him. It was at this meeting he was told by a Chaldean seer, that he would die at the height of his fame and fortune. This prophecy was to have a powerful hold on Sulla throughout his life. In 92 BC Sulla repulsed Tigranes the Great of Armenia from Cappadocia. Later in 92 BC Sulla left the East and returned to Rome, where he aligned himself with the Optimates in opposition to Gaius Marius.

The Social War

The Social War was the result of Rome's arrogance in its governance of the rest of Italy. It was in reality the war with the "Socii" (these being Rome's allies in Italy). The Social War was, in part, caused by the assassination of Marcus Livius Drusus the Younger. His reforms would have granted the Roman allies Roman citizenship, which would have given them more of a say in the external policy of the Roman Republic — most local affairs came under local governance and were not as important to the Romans as, for example, when the alliance would go to war or how they would divide the plunder. When Drusus was assassinated most of his reforms addressing these grievances were declared invalid. This angered the Roman allies greatly, and most of them allied with one another against Rome.

At the beginning of the Social War (9187 BC), the Roman aristocracy and Senate were starting to fear Marius' ambition, which had already given him 5 consulships in a row from 104 BC to 100 BC. They were determined that he would not have overall command of the war in Italy. In this last rebellion of the Italian allies, Sulla served with brilliance as a general. He outshone both Marius and the consul Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo (the father of Pompey Magnus). For example, in 89 BC Sulla captured Aeclanum, the chief town of Hirpini, by setting the wooden breastwork on fire. As a result of his success in bringing the Social War to a successful conclusion, he was elected consul for the first time in 88 BC, with Quintus Pompeius Rufus (soon his daughter´s father-in-law) as his colleague.

The Grass Crown

Sulla served not only with brilliance as a general during the Social War, but also with immense personal bravery. He was awarded an "Obsidional Crown, also known as a Grass Crown" (corona obsidionalis - corona graminea) the highest possible Roman military honor. Awarded for personal bravery to a commanding general in the saving of a Roman Army in the field. Unlike all other Roman military honors, it was awarded by acclamation of the soldiers of the rescued army, and consequently very few were ever awarded.[1].

Consul and first march on Rome

As the consul of Rome, Sulla prepared to depart once more for the East, to fight the first Mithridatic War, by the appointment of the Senate. But he would leave trouble behind him. Marius was now an old man, but he still had the ambition to lead the Roman armies against King Mithridates VI of Pontus. Marius convinced the tribune Publius Sulpicius Rufus to call an assembly and revert the Senate's decision on Sulla's command. Sulpicius also used the assemblies to eject Senators from the Senate until there were not enough senators needed to form a quorum. As violence in the Forum ensued and the efforts of the nobles to effect a public lynching similar to what had happened to the brothers Gracchi and Saturninus were smashed by the gladitatorial bodyguard of Sulpicius, Sulla went to the house of Marius and made a personal plea to stop the violence which was ignored. Sulla´s own son-in-law was killed in those riots.

Sulla fled Rome and went to the camp of his victorious Social War veterans, in the South of Italy, ready to cross over to Greece. He incited them to stone the envoys of the assemblies who came to announce that Marius would be leading the Mithridatic war. Sulla then took six of his most loyal legions and prepared to march on Rome. This was an unprecedented event. No general before him had ever crossed the city limits, the pomerium, with his army. It was so unethical that most of his commanders (with the exception of Lucullus) refused to accompany him. Sulla justified his actions on the grounds that the senate had been neutered and the mos maiorum ("The way things were done" which as a reference amounted to a Roman constitution though none of it was codified as such) had been offended by the negation of the rights of the consuls of the year to fight the wars of that year. Armed gladiators were unable to resist Roman soldiers, Marius and his followers fled the city.

Sulla consolidated his position, ordered death for Marius and a few of his allies and addressed the Senate in harsh tones, portraying himself as a victim, presumably to justify his violent entrance into the city. After restructuring the city's politics and with the Senate's power strengthened, Sulla returned to his camp and proceeded with the original plan of fighting Mithridates in Pontus.

Marius, however, was not dead. He had fled to safety in Africa. With Sulla out of Rome, Marius plotted his return. During his period of exile Marius became determined that he would hold a seventh consulship, as foretold by the Sybil decades earlier. By the end of 87 BC Marius returned to Rome with the support of Lucius Cornelius Cinna and, in Sulla's absence, took control of the city. Marius declared Sulla's reforms and laws invalid and officially exiled Sulla. Then, through the proscriptions, Marius ordered the slaughter of many supporters of Sulla and others whom he considered had slighted him. The heads of the victims were displayed in the Forum. Some one hundred supporters of Sulla were killed during this time. Marius and Cinna were elected consuls for the year 86 BC. Marius died a few days after the election at which point Cinna ordered his own soldiers to kill Marius's men. Cinna was now in sole control of Rome

First Mithridatic War and the siege of Athens

In the spring of 87 BC Sulla landed at Dyrrachium, Greece. Asia was occupied by the forces of Mithridates under the command of Archelaus. Sulla's first target was Athens, ruled by a Mithridatic puppet; the tyrant Aristion. Sulla moved southeast, picking up supplies and reinforcements as he went. Sulla's chief of staff was Lucullus, who went ahead of him to scout the way and negotiate with Bruttius Sura, the existing Roman commander in Greece. After speaking with Lucullus, Sura handed over the command of his troops to Sulla. At Chaeronea, ambassadors from all the major cities of Greece with the exception of Athens, met with Sulla, who impressed on them the determination of Rome to drive Mithridates from Greece and Asia Province. Sulla then advanced on Athens.

On arrival, Sulla threw up a siege encompassing not only Athens but also the port of Piraeus. At the time Archelaus had command of the sea, so Sulla sent Lucullus to raise a fleet from the remaining Roman allies in the eastern Meditarranean. His first objective was Piraeus, without it Athens could not be re-supplied. Huge earthworks were raised, isolating Athens and its port from the land side. Sulla needed wood, so he cut down everything including the sacred groves of Greece, up to 100 miles from Athens. When more money was needed he "borrowed" from temples and Sybils alike. The currency minted from this treasure was to remain in circulation for centuries and prized for its quality.

Despite the complete encirclement of Athens and its port, and several attempts by Archelaus to raise the siege, a stalemate seemed to have developed. Sulla however patiently bided his time, despite the insults hurled from the walls of Athens by Aristion and his followers, alluding to Sulla's complexion (aggravated by the sun and heat) to the effect that his face looked like mulberry sprinkled with flour. Aspersions were also cast about his private life and his wife Metella. The Athenians were to later bitterly regret this episode. Soon his camp was to fill with refugees from Rome, fleeing the massacres of Marius and Cinna. These also included his wife and children as well as most of the Optimate party, not already dead.

Athens by now was starving and corn was at famine levels in price. Inside the city, the population was reduced to eating shoe leather and grass. A delegation from Athens was sent to treat with Sulla, but instead of serious negotiations they expounded on the glory of their city. Sulla sent them away saying: "I was sent to Athens, not to take lessons, but to reduce rebels to obedience."

His spies then informed him that Aristion was neglecting the Heptachalcum. Sulla immediately sent sappers to undermine the wall. Nine hundred feet of wall was brought down between the Sacred and Piraeic gates on the southwest side of the city. A midnight sack of Athens began, and after the taunts of Aristion, Sulla was not in a mood to be magnanimous. Blood literally flowed in the streets, it was only after the entreaties of a couple of his Greek friends (Midias and Calliphon) and the pleas of the Roman Senators in his camp that Sulla decided enough was enough. His then concentrated his forces on the Port of Pireaus and Archelaus seeing his hopeless situation withdrew to the citadel and then abandoned the port to join up with his forces under the command of Taxiles. Sulla not having a fleet as yet, was powerless to prevent Archeleus' escape. Prior to leaving Athens, he burnt the port to the ground. Sulla then advanced into Boeotia to take on Archeleus' armies, and remove them from Greece.

The Battle of Chaeronea

Sulla lost no time moving to intercept the Pontic army and moved to occupy a hill called Philoboetus that branched off Mount Parnassus. It overlooked the Elatean plain and had plentiful supplies of wood and water. The army of Archelaus, presently commanded by Taxiles had to approach from the north and proceed along the valley towards Chaeronea. Over 120,000 strong, it outnumbered Sulla's forces by at least 3 to 1. Archelaus was in favor of a policy of attrition with the Roman forces, but Taxiles had orders from Mithridates to attack at once. In the meantime, Sulla got his men digging. Next, Sulla occupied the ruined city of Parapotamii. It was impregnable and commanded the fords on the road to Chaeronea. He then made a move that looked to Archelaus like a retreat. He abandoned the fords and moved in behind an entrenched palisade. Behind the palisade were the field artillery from the siege of Athens. Archelaus advanced across the fords and tried to outflank Sulla's men, only to be hurled back on the Mithridatic right wing, causing even more confusion. Archelaus' chariots then charged the Roman center, only to be destroyed on the palisades. Next came the phalanxes, they too found the palisades impassible, added to the fact that they were receiving withering fire from the Roman field artillery. Next Archelaus flung his right wing at the Roman left, Sulla seeing the danger of this maneuver raced over from the Roman right wing to help. Sulla stabilized the situation at which point Archelaus flung more troops in from his right flank. This destabilized the Pontic army, giving it a slew towards its right flank. Sulla dashed back to his own right wing and ordered the general advance. The legions supported by cavalry dashed forward and Archelaus' army folded in on itself like closing a pack of cards. The slaughter was terrible and some reports estimate that only 10,000 of the original army of Mithridates survived. Chaeronea was one of the great battles of history, Sulla had defeated a vastly supperior force in terms of numbers, it was also the first time that the use of battlefield entrenchments are recorded to have been used. Sulla's innovation could be said to have come of age 2,000 years later at the battle of the Somme.

The Battle of Orchomenos

The government of Rome, read: Cinna, then sent out Lucius Valerius Flaccus with an army to relieve Sulla of command in the east. Flaccus had been given as second in command a certain Fimbria, an individual that history records had few virtues. (He was to eventually agitate against his commanding officer and incite the troops to murder Flaccus). In the meantime, the two Roman armies camped next to each other and Sulla, not for the first time, encouraged his soldiers to spread dissention among Flaccus' army. Many deserted to Sulla before Flaccus packed up and moved on north to threaten Mithridates' northern dominions. In the meantime Sulla moved to intercept the new Pontic army. He chose the site of the battle to come - Orchomenos. Not only was it a natural place for a smaller army to meet a much larger one, due to its natural defenses, but it afforded Sulla the ideal terrain to expand on his entrenchment innovations. This time the Pontic army was in excess of 150,000 and it encamped itself in front of the busy Roman army, next to a large lake. It soon dawned on Archelaus what Sulla was up to. Sulla had not only been digging trenches, but dykes, and before long he had the Pontic army in deep trouble. Desperate sallies by the Pontic forces they were repulsed by the Romans and the dykes moved onward. On the second day, Archeleus made a determined effort to escape Sulla's web of dykes, the entire Pontic army was hurled at the Romans, but the Roman legionaries were pressed together so tightly that their short swords were like an impenetrable barrier through which the enemy could not escape. The battle turned into a rout and once again the slaughter was on an immense scale. Plutarch notes that two hundred years later, armor and weapons from the battle were still being found. The battle of Orchomenos was another of the world's decisive battles. It determined that the fate of Asia Minor was with Rome and her successors for the next millennium.

Finishing the War

The Second March on Rome

Determined to regain control of Rome, Sulla returned to Italy. With the support of Metellus Pius and others, Sulla's armies marched up Italy from the Port of Brindisium. He chased the remnants of the Marians, led by Marius's son, into Praeneste and bottled them up. Shortly afterwards, following a mad dash march to Rome, Sulla's army defeated the Samnite forces of Pontius Telesinus in November, 82 BC at the battle of Colline Gate. The strength of the right wing, commanded by Marcus Licinius Crassus, proved crucial in securing victory. Sulla also had the aid of the young Pompey, who defeated Gneus Papirius Carbo´s supporters in Sicily and Africa.

Dictator of Rome

At the beginning of 82 BC, Sulla was appointed dictator,- "rei publicae constituendae causa" by the Senate, with no limit on time in office. Sulla had total control of the city and empire of Rome. This unusual honour (used hitherto only in times of extreme danger to the city, such as the Second Punic War, and only for 6 month periods) represented an exception to Rome's policy of not giving total power to a single individual. Sulla can be seen as setting the precedent for Julius Caesar's dictatorship, and the eventual end of the Republic under Octavian (Augustus).

In total control of the city and its affairs, Sulla instituted a reign of terror, the likes of which had never been seen in Rome before. Proscribing or outlawing every one of his political opponents, Sulla ordered some 1,500 Roman nobles (i.e., senators and equites) executed. The blood bath went on for months. Romans were executed for any reason or none at all. Helping or sheltering a person who was proscribed was also punishable by death. The State confiscated the wealth of the outlawed, making Sulla and his supporters vastly rich. (One option commonly taken by those who had been proscribed was suicide, which under Roman law allowed their property to pass as inheritance to their families, and not as spoils to Sulla.) The children of the outlawed who weren't killed outright were banned from future political office, a restriction not removed for over 30 years.

The young Caesar, as Cinna's son-in-law, was one of Sulla's targets and fled the city. He was saved through the efforts of his relatives, many of whom were Sulla's supporters, but Sulla noted in his memoirs that he regretted sparing Caesar's life because of the young man's notorious ambition. The historian Suetonius records that when agreeing to spare Caesar Sulla warned those who were pleading his case that he would become a danger to them in the future, saying "In this Caesar there are many a Marius."

Only Quintus Sertorius, the last Marius supporter, held out against Sulla's armies under Metellus Pius in distant Hispania.

Without any political obstacle, Sulla enacted a series of reforms to put control of the State firmly in the hands of the Senate. He arranged that the number of senators was doubled from 300 to 600 and that membership was automatic on election to the office of quaestor instead of at the decision of the censors. He also reduced the tribune's political power, and limited the Assembly's ability to pass laws or veto them without the Senate's approval. His goal was to return the Republic to a time before the Gracchi. In this, he was too late: Rome's politics had moved on, in an ominous direction. Finally, in a demonstration of his absolute power, he expanded the "Pomerium", the sacred boundary of Rome, untouched since the time of the kings.

After two years of unchallenged power, Sulla stunned Rome by resigning the Dictatorship. He disbanded his legions, re-established consular government (in accordance to his own rules, he stood for and was elected consul in 80 BC). He dismissed his lictors and walked unguarded in the forum, offering to give account of his actions to any citizen. This lesson in supreme confidence, Caesar later ridiculed - "Sulla did not know his political ABC's". In retrospect, of the two, Sulla was to have the last laugh, as it was he who died in his own bed.

Retirement

Lucius Cornelius Sulla - a denarius portrait issued by his grandson

After his second consulship he withdrew completely from political life to his country villa near Puteoli.

With a cool detachment, he probably figured he had done his best to put Rome back on a stable footing, and if Rome had not learnt the brutal lessons he had meted out to her, it was Rome's bad luck. Sulla's purpose now was to write his memoirs (completed just before his death, but now lost). He ended up surrounded by a troupe of actors and dancers. Amongst them was Metrobius, a famous actor that he had known since his youth. In his last address to the Senate, Sulla was keen to acknowledge him as his lifetime lover, to the dismay of the audience. With this merry company, Sulla died after a brief illness in 78 BC. The symptoms described in contemporary accounts indicate that the cause of death was liver failure, brought on by a lifetime of hard work and hard partying. His funeral was stupendous, and not matched until the death of Augustus in 14 AD.

His epitaph, written by Sulla himself, has become a common phrase used by those wishing to portray themselves as powerful. It has recently been popularized by Lieutenant General James Mattis as the motto of the 1st Marine Division of the United States Marine Corps.

"No greater friend, no worse enemy."

Sulla's legacy

Even though Sulla's laws reorganizing the legal system (courts), qualification for admittance to the Senate and regulation of governorships among many other initiatives remained on Rome's statutes for some considerable time, some of his legislation was repealed less than a decade after his death. The veto power of the tribunes and their legislating authority were soon reinstated, ironically during the consulship's of Pompey and Crassus.

However, his most lasting legacy and the one he tried hardest to avoid, was the feeling among his successors that: "...if Sulla could do it, so can I..." It is interesting to note that none of them followed his most extraordinary example, that of resigning power, most of them like Caesar ended up paying the ultimate price as a result.

He tried hard to instill in Rome a horror of absolute power, by his proscriptions, by his lifestyle and by his feared temperament. Had he carried through on his better judgement and had Julius Caesar killed, he may have preserved the Republic for a few more decades or even longer. In the end he could not undo his own example. Caesar, for all his disdain of Sulla, based his own grab for power very much on the Sullan model; he even based many of his greatest victories on Sulla's battles (use of battlefield entrenchments etc...). In the end, Sulla could not undo the damage done to the republican institution by the Gracchi, by Marius and finally by himself.

Sulla's marriages and children

* First wife, Ilia (possibly Julia)
** Cornelia Sulla, married first with Gnaeus Pompeius Rufus and later with Mamercus Aemilius Lepidus Livianus, mother of Pompeia Sulla, second wife of Julius Caesar
** Lucius Cornelius Sulla, died young
* Second wife, Aelia. Sulla divorced her due to her sterility.
* Third wife Caecilia Metella Dalmatica
** Faustus (I) Cornelius Sulla
** Fausta Cornelia Sulla, married Titus Annius Milo (praetor in 54 BC)
* Fourth wife, Valeria Messala
** Postuma Cornelia Sulla (delivered after Sulla's death)

Chronology

* around 138 BC – born in Rome
* 107 BC – nominated Quaestor to Marius
* 106 BC – end of Jugurthine War
* 104/103 BClegatus to Marius in Further Gaul
* 103 BClegatus to Quintus Lutatius Catulus Caesar in Further Gaul
* 101 BC – defeats the Cimbrii in the battle of Vercellae
* 94 BC – elected praetor urbanus
* 93 BC – governor of Cilicia
* 91/88 BC – general in the Social War
* 88 BC
**consulship with Pompeius Rufus
**invades Rome and outlaws Marius
* 87 BC – Command of Roman armies to fight King Mithridates of Pontus
* 86 BC – Sack of Athens, Battle of Chaeronea
* 85 BC – Battle of Orchomenus
* 84 BC – Expulsion of Mithridates' forces from Western Asia Minor & reorganization of Asia province
* 83 BC – Returns to Italy and invades Rome for the second time
* 82 BC – Appointed "Dictator - rei publicae constituendae causa"
* 80 BC – Resigns the dictatorship, elected consul with Metellus Pius
* 79 BC – Retires completely from political life
* 78 BC – Dies of liver failure, Funeral held in Rome

External links


*Plutarch's Life of Sulla
*Marius and Sulla
*Sulla and the proscriptions

Notes





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