Res Gestae

Ammianus Marcellinus

Ammianus Marcellinus. Ammianus Marcellinus, with an English translation, Vols. I-III. Rolfe, John C., translator. Cambridge, MA; London: Harvard University Press; W. Heinemann, 1935-1940 (printing).

The[*](§§ 12–17 are a digression on great disasters which Rome had suffered from invading barbarians.) Teutones with the Cimbri, coming from unknown parts

v3.p.417
of the ocean, suddenly overflowed Italy, but after inflicting enormous disasters on our country, in the final battles they were overcome by our great generals, and being destroyed root and branch, they learned from the uttermost perils what warlike might combined with prudent discipline can accomplish.

Again, when Marcus was ruling the empire, the united madness of different tribes, after endless alarms of war, after the woes of captured and plundered cities, after the destruction of forces shaken by the death of their able leader,[*](Macrinus Vindex, praetorian prefect of Marcus Aurelius; see Dio, lxxi. 3.) would have left only a small part of them unscathed.[*](Text and exact meaning are uncertain; for the events referred to, see Dio, lxxi. ff.; Eutrop. viii. 13; Orosius, vii. 15, 6 ff.)

But after calamitous losses the state was presently restored to its former condition, because the temperance of old times was not yet infected by the effeminacy of a more licentious mode of life, and did not crave extravagant feasts or shameful gains; but high and low alike with united ardour and in agreement hastened to a noble death for their country, as if to some quiet and peaceful haven.

Swarms of the Scythian peoples with two thousand ships[*](Treb. Poll., Claud. 8, 2, gives this figure: Zos. i. 42, 6000.) broke through the Bosporus and the shores of the Propontis, and after crossing inflicted bitter losses by land and sea; but they lost the greater part of their number and were obliged to retreat.

Emperor Decius and Decius his son

v3.p.419
fell in battle with the barbarians.[*](The chronology is at fault; cf. Aur. Vict., Caes. 29, 5.) The cities of Pamphylia were beleaguered,[*](Cf. Treb. Poll., Gallienus, 13, 6.) very many islands laid waste,[*](Crete, Cyprus, and Rhodes; cf. Treb. Poll., Claud. 12, 1; Zos. i. 46.) all Macedonia was given to the flames; for a long time the horde laid siege to Thessalonica[*](Under Valerian and Claudius; see note 1, above.) and to Cyzicus as well. Anchialos was taken, and at the same time Nicopolis, which the emperor Trajan founded to commemorate his victory over the Dacians.