Gaius Flavius Fimbria

Gaius Flavius Fimbria (114–85 BC) was a Roman soldier and one of the most violent partisans of Gaius Marius and Lucius Cornelius Cinna during the civil strife of the late Roman Republic. He fought with considerable skill and conspicuous brutality in the civil war between the consuls Cinna and Octavius and in Rome's war against the Pontic king Mithridates. Fimbria became infamous for his role in the purges of Marius' and Cinna's political enemies, for his mutiny and murder of the consul Valerius Flaccus, and for his savage wartime treatment of provincials.

Gaius Flavius Fimbria
Personal details
Bornc. 114 BC
Died85 BC (aged 28–29)
Pergamum, Roman Asia
Cause of deathassisted suicide
NationalityRoman
OccupationSoldier
Military service
AllegianceRoman Republic
Marius and Cinna
Years of service87–85 BC
RankProbably cavalry prefect and pro-quaestor
CommandsFimbrian legions
Battles/warsBellum Octavianum
First Mithridatic War

Life

Partisan of Marius

Born probably in 114 BC,[lower-roman 1] Gaius Flavius Fimbria was a son of the identically named Roman consul in 104, whose colleague in office had been the great statesman Gaius Marius. The son must have also had a close relationship with Marius himself, since he would support the Marian party in the civil strife of the Roman Republic in the 80s BC, and carry out the dirty work of eliminating Marius's political opponents.[2] Fimbria is first noted during the civil war in 87 BC between the two consuls, Lucius Cornelius Cinna and Gnaeus Octavius, serving in the army of the former, who was backed by Marius. He commanded a cavalry squadron, and probably held the rank of cavalry prefect (praefectus equitum).[3]

Cinna sent Fimbria as an envoy to negotiate an alliance with the Samnites, who were still fighting the Social War against the Roman government.[4] Fimbria brought the Samnites into the fold by accepting, as instructed, all their terms for peace, which had already been rejected by the consul Octavius and the Senate as preposterous.[5] When Octavius was finally forced to capitulate, and allow his rivals into Rome,[6] Fimbria helped undertake the subsequent purge of Marius' and Cinna's enemies in the city. He commanded the cavalry troop that hunted down and killed the father and brother of the future triumvir Crassus,[7][lower-roman 2] and likely had a hand in the deaths of the brothers Gaius and Lucius Julius Caesar.[9]

The following year, 86 BC, Cinna and Marius, now in undisputed control of the government, were declared consuls, the latter for his seventh time. Fimbria became a prominent figure in the Marian–Cinnan regime, and is described as one of their fiercest and loyalest partisans.[10] He was probably appointed quaestor to the elderly Marius,[11] who died two weeks into his term as consul. At his funeral, Fimbria threatened the pontifex maximus, Mucius Scaevola, apparently arranging for him to be murdered. Upon hearing that his victim survived, albeit with a severe wound, Fimbria launched against him a prosecution before the people (judicium populi[12]). When asked what charges could he possibly bring against such a well-reputed man, Fimbria declared that the victim had failed to submit his body to the full thrust of the blade.[13]

Cinna's government in 86 BC organized a military expedition to the province of Asia to manage Rome's ongoing war against the king of Pontus, Mithridates, and to serve as a political and military countermeasure to the now outlawed general Sulla, the regime's main opponent, who was at this moment also fighting Mithridates.[14] The expedition was to be led by Marius's replacement consul, Lucius Valerius Flaccus, and Fimbria, owing presumably to his position as quaestor,[lower-roman 3] joined him as the foremost member of his staff.[18] They were assigned two legions, usually known as the "Valerians" or "Fimbrians". Flaccus took his legions through Epirus, Macedon and Thrace to the Hellespont where he intended to cross over into Asia Minor.

March and mutiny

The expedition began badly, for after sailing from Brundisium several ships were lost to a storm at sea, and, after landing in Greece, an advance party was bloodied by Mithridatic forces nearby.[19] Moreover, Flaccus, a strict disciplinarian,[18] was unpopular with the troops, many of whom deserted the army to join Sulla. Fimbria, however, was popular with the army, which helped stem the tide of desertions.[19] He was also, however, extremely insubordinate, and made every attempt to undermine Flaccus's authority and make the soldiers loyal to him instead.[20]

Fimbria, encharged with the cavalry, led the advance guard of the army a few days ahead of the main force, and began to stir up trouble by allowing his troops to plunder the surrounding area as they marched through Macedonia and Thrace. After reports made their way back to the rest of the army, and Flaccus himself, he rebuked Fimbria, and ordered the soldiers to give up the stolen booty.[21] After scoring minor victories against isolated Mithridatic garrisons along the Via Egnatia, alongside the Thracian coast, the army camped outside Byzantium. Here Fimbria seized the opportunity to deliver a speech to the soldiers, denouncing Flaccus, accusing him of withholding their money and booty, and living in luxury within the city, while the soldiers endured storms and the winter cold outside.[22] Some of the men, roused to fury, stormed into the city and lodged themselves in places of their choosing.[23]

Fimbria, around this time, entered into a dispute with another officer over lodgings, and Flaccus showed little sympathy for his recalcitrant subordinate, deciding in favor of the latter party. Flaccus then discharged Fimbria and appointed another officer, Minucius Thermus, to take charge of the army while Flaccus himself crossed the Hellespont to Asia in advance. Once Flaccus had sailed to Chalcedon,[24] Fimbria fomented a full-scale mutiny among the rest of the troops at Byzantium.[20] He seized the fasces from Thermus, took command of the army, crossed the Bosphorus, and marched towards Nicomedia, where Flaccus had subsequently taken refuge. Fimbia had Flaccus murdered, his head hurled into the sea, and allowed his soldiers to plunder the city.[25]

In Asia

Flavius Fimbria now marched against the armies of the king, Mithridates, soundly defeating a large force under the command of the king's identically named son at the river Rhyndacus near Miletopolis. Fimbria managed to lure the Mithridatic cavalry, which had been skirmishing with success against his legions, into a deadly ambush. To deal with the enemy infantry, Fimbria broke camp before daybreak, crossed a stream while the rain concealed the sound of the army's march, and caught the Mithridatic army sleeping. After this decisive victory, many cities in Asia defected from Mithridates to Fimbria.[26] He chased the king himself into Pitane on the coast of Aeolis, and would undoubtedly have captured him had Lucullus, Sulla's admiral, co-operated and blockaded the port.

Fimbria treated most cruelly all the people of Asia who had revolted from Rome or sided with Sulla. Having gained admission to Ilium by declaring that, as a Roman, he was friendly, he massacred the inhabitants and burnt the place to the ground. But in 85 Sulla crossed over from Greece to Asia, made peace with Mithridates, and turned his arms against Fimbria, who, seeing that there was no chance of escape, committed suicide, with the assistance of a slave.[27] The two Fimbrian legions were made to serve in Asia till the end of the Third Mithridatic War, but two of his officers, Lucius Magius and Lucius Fannius, fled to Mithridates and were of long service to him.[28]

Notes

  1. Cicero called Fimbria an equal (in age) of Marcus Crassus, and Crassus an equal of Hortensius, who was born in 114 BC.[1]
  2. A confusing text fragment of Granius Licinianus mentions a battle between the elder Crassus and Fimbria.[8]
  3. According to Livy, Fimbria was a legate, while Appian made him a senator who accompanied Flaccus on his own accord.[15] Velleius called him a cavalry prefect and Strabo a quaestor. Lintott argued for a quaestorship, owing principally to Fimbria's prosecution of Scaevola, which would have required Fimbria to hold a public office.[16] His arguments for Fimbria being quaestor have been accepted by a number of scholars.[17][18]

Citations

  1. Sumner, pp. 76, 124.
  2. Lintott, p. 700.
  3. Sumner, p. 124; Lintott, p. 698; Broughton, pp. 49, 566.
  4. Lovano, p. 40.
  5. Broughton, p. 50.
  6. Lovano, pp. 44–45.
  7. Broughton, p. 49.
  8. Lovano, p. 44 n. 64.
  9. Lintott, p. 700; Broughton, p. 49.
  10. Lovano, pp. 57, 98.
  11. Lintott, pp. 697, 700; Sumner, p. 124.
  12. Lintott, p. 696.
  13. Cicero Pro Roscio Amerino 12.33
  14. Lovano, pp. 98–99.
  15. Lintott, pp. 696, 699.
  16. Lintott, pp. 696, 700.
  17. Sumner, p. 124.
  18. Lovano, p. 98.
  19. Appian Mithridatic Wars 51
  20. Lovano, p. 99.
  21. Bennett, pp. 47–48.
  22. Bennett, p. 48.
  23. Bennett, pp. 48–49.
  24. Appian Mithridatic Wars 52
  25. Bennett, pp. 49–50.
  26. Bennett, p. 51.
  27. Appian, History of Rome 12.9.60
  28. Emilio Gabba, Republican Rome, The Army, and the Allies (University of California Press, 1976), p. 113 online.

References

  • Bennett, Harold (1923). Cinna and His Times: A Critical and Interpretative Study of Roman History During the Period 87–84 BC (University of Chicago PhD). Menasha, WI: George Banta Publishing Company. OCLC 568722841.
  • Broughton, T. Robert S. (1952). The Magistrates of the Roman Republic Volume II: 99 B.C.–31 B.C. New York: American Philological Association.
  • Lintott, A.W. (1971). "The Offices of C. Flavius Fimbria in 86–5 BC". Historia. 20 (5/6): 696–701. JSTOR 4435231.
  • Lovano, Michael (2002). The Age of Cinna: Crucible of Late Republican Rome. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. ISBN 3-515-07948-3.
  • Sumner, G.V. (1973). The Orators in Cicero's Brutus: Prosopography and Chronology. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-5281-9.
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