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{{short description|Roman general and statesman}} | |||
'''Gnaeus ] ] Calvus''' (d. ]), Roman consul in 222 BC, was a ] general and statesman, and a member of an illustrious Roman patrician family known for producing consuls and censors. He was also the paternal uncle of the most famous member of that family - ]. | |||
{{Refimprove|date=June 2019}} | |||
'''Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus''' (died 211 BC) was a Roman general and statesman during the third century BC. He played a major part in the ], establishing Roman rule in the east of the Iberian peninsula and tying up several Carthaginian armies to keep them from reinforcing Hannibal. | |||
==Family== | |||
==Background and Ancestry== | |||
Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus was a member of the patrician family of the ]. His father was ], consul of 259 BC, the son of the ] ] of 280, ]. His younger brother was ], consul of 218 and father of the famous ] (the most famous of the Scipios). Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio was nicknamed Calvus (the bald) to distinguish him from his uncle, another ], who was nicknamed Asina (donkey) and who had been consul twice during the ]. | |||
==Consulship== | |||
Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio's father was ] (Lucius Cornelius L.f. Scipio), the patrician consul of 259 BC. The father was the younger son of the similarly named patrician censor of 280 (consul in 296), and the younger brother of ] nicknamed Asina (or donkey), who had been twice consul (260 and 254 BC) during the First Punic War. Thus, the father, the paternal uncle, and the paternal grandfather were all consuls. | |||
Gnaeus Cornelius was elected ] for ] with ] as his co-consul. Both consuls led their armies against the ] of ]. Scipio laid siege to ], while Marcellus engaged the Insubres at Clastidium. After Acerrae fell, Scipio marched towards ], drawing the Gauls out and routing them. He took that city and thereby forced the Gauls to submit to the Romans.<ref>Polybius, II.34.</ref> | |||
==The Second Punic War== | |||
Gnaeus's younger brother ], father of the most famous Scipio - ]. The brother became consul in 218 BC, and is notable for having failed to intercept ] in Gaul and losing most of his accompanying troops (along with receiving a severe injury) in an ambush at ]. Both Publius Cornelius Scipio and his son (allegedly responsible for saving his father's life) survived the skirmish. | |||
Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus fought in the Second Punic War. Though he never faced Hannibal himself, he played a major part in defeating him. At the start of the ] Gnaeus served as a legate in the army of his younger brother Publius, who was consul at the outbreak of the war in 218 BC. From 218 BC until his death in 211 BC he fought against the Carthaginians in Spain. | |||
===Marching against Hannibal=== | |||
Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio was nicknamed Calvus to distinguish him from his uncle, another ]. The word "Calvus" supposedly means "bald" in Latin, but it also probably means "the Younger". | |||
In 218, Gnaeus and his brother sailed with Publius' consular army to the allied Greek city of ] in southern Gaul. From there they planned to start operations against ] and the Carthaginian holdings on the Iberian peninsula. Publius was informed Hannibal was to the north in Gaul, so he sent a cavalry force north up the eastern bank of the ], which clashed with a similar force of ]n light cavalry. After a hard-fought skirmish, they managed to drive off the Numidians.<ref>John Francis Lazenby, ''Hannibal's War'', p. 37.</ref> Publius then marched his entire force north intending to do battle with Hannibal in Gaul. Meanwhile, Hannibal had marched east towards the ]. Arriving at the deserted Carthaginian camp, Scipio learned that Hannibal was three days' march away and decided to send his army to the Iberian peninsula under the command of his elder brother Gnaeus, while he himself returned to ] to organize the defences. | |||
===Invading the Iberian peninsula=== | |||
Scipio's mother and maternal family are unknown. He is known to be a widower, with two sons and two married daughters, by the time he and his brother were sent to Spain in 217. He may have been related to Gnaeus Servilius P.f. Geminus, the consul of 217, who was killed at ] and who was said to be allied politically and by marriage to the Scipios. | |||
Gnaeus, with 20,000 infantry (2 Roman ] and 2 allied ]), 2,200 cavalry and 60 quinqueremes, sailed from Massilia and landed in eastern Spain at ]. The Greek cities of Emporion and Tarraco welcomed the Romans, and Gnaeus began to win over the Iberian tribes north of the Ebro. Hannibal had left a certain Hanno with 10,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry to garrison the newly conquered territory north of the Ebro, he was seriously outnumbered so ], who had been left in command of the Carthaginian army in southern Spain, decided to reinforce him and marched north with 8,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry.<ref>Livy, XXI, p.23 and p.60.</ref> | |||
===Battle of Cissa=== | |||
{{Main|Battle of Cissa}} | |||
Hanno, afraid he would lose the Iberians and all of the Cartiginian territory north of the Ebro if he waited any longer, marched and attacked the Romans just north of Tarraco, near a place called Cissa or Kissa.<ref>Polybius, III 76, p.7.</ref> He fought a pitched battle, in which there were no brilliant maneuvers or ambushes; the armies just formed up and faced off. Being outnumbered two to one, Hanno was defeated relatively easily, losing 6,000 soldiers in battle. Furthermore, the Romans managed to capture the Carthaginian camp, along with 2,000 soldiers and Hanno himself. The camp contained all the baggage left by Hannibal.<ref>Lazenby, ''Hannibal's War'', p. 126.</ref> The prisoners also included ], an influential Iberian chieftain. The Romans also stormed the town of Cissa, though to the frustration of the Romans it did not contain any valuable booty.<ref>Livy, XXI, p.60</ref> | |||
===Battle of the Ebro River=== | |||
==Career== | |||
{{Main|Battle of Ebro River}} | |||
In spring 217 BC Gnaeus commanded a fleet of 55 warships (probably ]) during a naval battle near the mouth of the ].<ref>Livy, XII 20.4-10.</ref> The Carthaginian naval contingent of 40 warships facing him was totally defeated after a surprise attack by the Roman ships. The Carthaginians lost 29 ships and the control of seas around the Iberian peninsula. Furthermore, the victory enhanced Roman prestige among the warlike Iberians. | |||
Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvius served as ] in ], his co-consul being ], in the first of his five consulships. He was succeeded as patrician consul by his first cousin Publius Cornelius Scipio Asina as consul in 221 BC, and eventually his younger brother ] invaded Italy. | |||
===Battle of Dertosa=== | |||
In 218, Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus was sent as ]<http://www.livius.org/pp-pr/promagistracies/proconsul.html> to ] (modern Spain) to retake Sagentum, the Roman ally that was stormed by Hannibal, precipitating the Second Punic War. When his brother Publius failed to intercept Hannibal (before the Carthaginian general crossed the Alps into Italy), he sent on most of his troops to Iberia to help his brother harass Hannibal's supply lines and thus help check Hannibal's advance into Italy. The Carthaginian forces in Hispania were commanded by Hannibal's brother ]. After Publius Scipio was defeated and badly wounded at a skirmish at the Ticino ] River, upon recovery, he was sent as proconsul in 217 to join his brother in Iberia. The Brothers Scipio remained there from about 217 to their deaths in 211. | |||
{{Main|Battle of Dertosa}} | |||
In early 215 BC the Romans, under the joined command of the brothers Gnaeus and Publius Scipio, crossed the Ebro River. Hasdrubal marched north with his field army, and after some maneuvering the two armies faced of on the south bank of the ] across from the town of ]. The armies were about similar in size with the Scipio brothers having 30,000 infantry and 2,800 cavalry against Hasdrubal's 25,000 infantry, 4,000 cavalry and 20 elephants. Hasdrubal tried to emulate his brother Hannibal's envelopment tactic (see: ]) but failed because the Roman cavalry held out and he could not close the trap. The Scipio brothers continued with their policy of subjugating the Iberian tribes and raiding Carthaginian possessions. After losing most of his field army, Hasdrubal had to be reinforced with the army that was to sail to Italy and reinforce Hannibal. Thus, by winning this battle, the Scipios had indirectly prevented the situation in Italy from getting worse in addition to improving their own situation in Iberia. | |||
===Battles of the Upper Baetis=== | |||
In the first year of the war, the Brothers Scipio occupied Massilia (modern Marseilles) and then Tarraco (modern Tarragona) near the mouth of the Ebro. The brothers met with initial success, partly because of Carthaginian harshness towards the native population (notably their refusal to free noble hostages from the Celtiberian and Spanish tribes), partly because of their own diplomatic skills in winning local Iberian chiefs to their side. They defeated Hasdrubal and Hanno in 215 at Ibera (location unknown)<http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/bl/bl_pennellhistoryofrome15.htm> and captured ] (the city captured and sacked by Hannibal, starting off the Second Punic War or Hannibal's War) in 212. In one battle, the severely wounded Scipio Calvus was carried on the battlefield in a litter to direct his forces. | |||
{{Main|Battle of the Upper Baetis}} | |||
In 212 BC, the Scipio brothers captured Castulo, a major mining town and the home of Hannibal's wife Imilce.{{sfn|Hoyos|2015|p=168}} They then wintered at Castulo and Ilugia.{{sfn|Hoyos|2015|p=168}} | |||
Over the last couple of years the strength of the Scipios army had been reduced by losses and the need to garrison their recently conquered territories{{sfn|Hoyos|2015|p=169}} Therefore, the brothers had hired around 20,000 Celt-Iberian mercenaries to supplement their field army to 40,000 men.{{sfn|Hoyos|2015|p=169}} With a large army at their back and observing that the Carthaginian commanders had deployed separately from each other the Scipio brothers decided to divide their forces. Publius led an army of Roman and allied soldiers to attack Mago Barca near Castulo, while Gnaeus took one-third of the Romans and all of the mercenaries to attack Hasdrubal Barca. This stratagem would lead to two battles which took place within a few days of each other; the '''Battle of Castulo''' and the '''Battle of Ilorca'''. | |||
The Brothers Scipio met with remarkable success between 217 and 215 (when they blocked Hasdrubal from joining his more famous brother in Italy with reinformcements), and again between 215 and 213 BC. Carthage sent reinforcements under Hannibal's other brother Mago Barca to stop the Scipios; these reinforcements had been intended originally to help Hannibal storm the walls of Rome after the Battle of ]. These troops were however needed to combat unrest elsewhere in the Carthaginian empire, and thus the Brothers Scipio continued virtually unchecked in Iberia. They were able to capture ] in 212. However, by this time, the Iberian chiefs had grown to resent Roman occupation, and thought that they had merely exchanged masters with no rewards. Their disaffection would prove fatal for the brothers. | |||
====Battle of Castulo==== | |||
Carthage responded to reverses in Iberia by sending large reinforcements to terminate the war once and for all. Three commanders - Hasdrubal, his brother Mago, and Hasdrubal Gisco - were sent back to Iberia with fresh armies. The Brothers Scipio did not know the size of the armies sent to oppose them, and when they divided their forces, they became vulnerable. The Roman forces were surprised and overwhelmed. The younger brother Publius (father of Scipio Africanus) was killed first in the ] in 211 BC. Gnaeus was killed some weeks later in the ] near Carthago Nova. Both Scipios were reportedly capable commanders, but were finally outnumbered and outclassed. Despite their deaths, some of the Roman forces escaped. | |||
As Publius neared Castulo, he was harassed day and night by Numidian light cavalry under ].{{sfn|Hoyos|2015|p=169}} When informed that Indibilis was moving across his line of retreat with 7,500 Iberians, Publius decided not to face Mago but to attack the Iberian chieftain.{{sfn|Hoyos|2015|p=169}} Leaving 2,000 soldiers in his camp under the legate Tiberius Fonteus, he marched out at night, to evade Masinissa's cavalry, and launched an attack on the Iberians in the early morning. He caught Indibilis and his men by surprise and, with a numerical superiority, began to gain the upper hand in the ensuing action. The Iberians managed to hold off the Romans just long enough for Masinissa to arrive. | |||
With the Numidian horse attacking their flank, the Roman assault on the Iberians began to slacken. Then Mago and Hasdrubal Gisco arrived with their combined armies. The Romans, after a grim struggle, broke and fled, leaving Publius and most of their comrades dead on the field. Mago gave the Numidians enough time to loot the dead before force marching the army towards Hasdrubal Barca's position. A handful of Roman survivors managed to reach Fonteus's camp. | |||
== Aftermath == | |||
====Battle of Ilorca==== | |||
The three Carthaginian commanders fell out, with Gisco seeking to win glory for himself. While they quarrelled, in Italy, the Romans recaptured Capua and Sicily, thus allowing them to contain Hannibal and to turn their attention back to Iberia. | |||
Gnaeus Scipio had arrived at his objective first. Hasdrubal Barca decided to refuse battle and stayed within his fortified camp, he then managed to bribe the Celt-Iberian mercenaries to desert Gnaeus.{{sfn|Hoyos|2015|p=169}} This led to Hasdrubal's army outnumbering that of Gnaeus. Still Hasdrubal bided his time, avoiding any battles with the Romans. | |||
Gnaeus, having lost his numerical advantage, decided to withdraw north after Mago and Hasdrubal Gisco arrived with their armies. The Romans moved out of their camp, leaving their camp fires burning, and made for the Ebro at night. The Numidians located them the following day; their attacks forced the Romans to take position for the night on a hilltop near Ilorca. The combined Carthaginian armies arrived during the night. As the ground was too stony for digging the Romans tried to create a defensive wall with baggage and saddles. The Carthaginians easily overran these makeshift fortification, destroying Gnaeus's army. | |||
], the nephew and son of these two Roman generals, would avenge their deaths by invading Iberia in 210 and finally driving out the remnants of the Carthaginian forces in 206 BC after the ] near Sevilla. Iberia was renamed Hispania around 200 BC, and remained (often uneasily) under Roman occupation for several centuries. | |||
==Death== | |||
Gnaeus died in battle, fighting the Carthaginians who had overrun his makeshift camp during the battle of Ilorca. His death did not end the Scipios’ war against the Carthaginians. His nephew Publius would play an even greater part{{cn|date=November 2023}} in bringing down Hannibal and in establishing Roman rule over the Iberian peninsula. | |||
==Descendants== | ==Descendants== | ||
His son was ] (nicknamed Nasica for his pointed nose), who was consul in 191 BC. He was the first Scipio Nasica and founded the Nasica branch of the Scipiades. Scipio Nasica's son, another Scipio Nasica (nicknamed Corculum, with his full name being ]), married his second cousin Cornelia Africana Major, the eldest daughter of Scipio Africanus, and thus united the two lines. Their descendants in the male line continued until at least 46 BC, in the person of ] (who was adopted into the Caecilii Metelli family). | |||
==See also== | |||
Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus had two sons and two married daughters around 217. | |||
*] | |||
==References== | |||
His elder son was Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica (fl. 170 BC), consul in 191 BC, the first ] (nicknamed Nasica for his pointed nose), who founded the Nasica branch of the Scipiades. Scipio Nasica's son, another Scipio Nasica (nicknamed Corculum, with his full name being Publius Cornelius P.f. G.n. Scipio Nasica Corculum), married his second cousin Cornelia Africana Major, the eldest daughter of Scipio Africanus and thus united the two lines. Their descendants in the male line continued until at least 46 BC, in the person of ] (adopted into the Caecilii Metelli family). The first Scipio Nasica reportedly married a Caecilia Metella, possibly the daughter of Quintus Caecilius Metellus, consul of 206 BC, and his great-grandson the fourth Scipio Nasica (consul in 112 BC) married Caecilia Metella Macedonica Minor, the younger surviving daughter of the consul of 206's elder surviving son ]. | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
===Sources=== | |||
The younger son Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Hispallus (b. ca 220 BC; d 176 BC) became consul in 176 BC. Little is known of him or his career, other that he was elected a priest at a young age, presumably with the help of his elder cousin Scipio Africanus. He died in office, after falling from his horse. en route to take the aquae Cumanae for an illness (Livy 41.16.3–4).<journals.cambridge.org/production/action/cjoGetFulltext?fulltextid=438209> and <http://www.roman-empire.net/articles/article-024.html>. Scipio Hispallus had a son. | |||
* {{cite book |last=Hoyos |first=Dexter |title=Mastering the West: Rome and Carthage at War |year=2015 |publisher=] |location=Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-986010-4 }} | |||
{{S-start}} | |||
Nothing is known of the two daughters, other than the fact they married before 218 BC. It is assumed that they were his two older surviving children, followed by his elder surviving son Scipio Nasica and by his younger surviving son Scipio Hispallus. | |||
{{s-off}} | |||
{{s-bef|before=]|before2=]}} | |||
{{s-ttl|title=]|years=222 BC|with=]}} | |||
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{{S-end}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cornelius Scipio Calvus, Gnaeus}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
==Sources== | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Roman consuls from 264 to 134 BC <http://www.vroma.org/~jruebel/timeline/consuls264-134.html> and <http://www.roman-empire.net/articles/article-024.html> includes several members of the Scipio branch (or stirps) of the Cornelian family/ clan (or gens). | |||
] | |||
] | |||
War in Iberia 218-206 <http://www.livius.org/ha-hd/hasdrubal/hasdrubal3.html> | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Livy's History of Rome | |||
] | |||
] | |||
== Information about the Cornelii == | |||
Anecdotes about early Scipios <http://www.redflame93.com/Cornelius.html> | |||
More about the Cornelii <http://www.redflame93.com/Cornelii.html> and <http://www.forumancientcoins.com/numiswiki/view.asp?key=SCIPIO> | |||
See also: ] | |||
{{ancient-Rome-bio-stub}} | |||
{{mil-bio-stub}} | |||
<br/> | |||
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{{succession box|title=] of the ]|before=] and ]||after=] and ] and ]|years=''with ]''<br /> ]}} | |||
{{end box}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 18:23, 1 January 2025
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Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus (died 211 BC) was a Roman general and statesman during the third century BC. He played a major part in the Second Punic War, establishing Roman rule in the east of the Iberian peninsula and tying up several Carthaginian armies to keep them from reinforcing Hannibal.
Family
Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus was a member of the patrician family of the Cornelii Scipiones. His father was Lucius Cornelius Scipio, consul of 259 BC, the son of the patrician censor of 280, Lucius Cornelius Scipio Barbatus. His younger brother was Publius Cornelius Scipio, consul of 218 and father of the famous Scipio Africanus (the most famous of the Scipios). Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio was nicknamed Calvus (the bald) to distinguish him from his uncle, another Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio, who was nicknamed Asina (donkey) and who had been consul twice during the First Punic War.
Consulship
Gnaeus Cornelius was elected consul for 222 BC with Marcus Claudius Marcellus as his co-consul. Both consuls led their armies against the Insubres of Cisalpine Gaul. Scipio laid siege to Acerrae, while Marcellus engaged the Insubres at Clastidium. After Acerrae fell, Scipio marched towards Mediolanum, drawing the Gauls out and routing them. He took that city and thereby forced the Gauls to submit to the Romans.
The Second Punic War
Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus fought in the Second Punic War. Though he never faced Hannibal himself, he played a major part in defeating him. At the start of the Second Punic War Gnaeus served as a legate in the army of his younger brother Publius, who was consul at the outbreak of the war in 218 BC. From 218 BC until his death in 211 BC he fought against the Carthaginians in Spain.
Marching against Hannibal
In 218, Gnaeus and his brother sailed with Publius' consular army to the allied Greek city of Massilia in southern Gaul. From there they planned to start operations against Hannibal and the Carthaginian holdings on the Iberian peninsula. Publius was informed Hannibal was to the north in Gaul, so he sent a cavalry force north up the eastern bank of the Rhone River, which clashed with a similar force of Numidian light cavalry. After a hard-fought skirmish, they managed to drive off the Numidians. Publius then marched his entire force north intending to do battle with Hannibal in Gaul. Meanwhile, Hannibal had marched east towards the Alps. Arriving at the deserted Carthaginian camp, Scipio learned that Hannibal was three days' march away and decided to send his army to the Iberian peninsula under the command of his elder brother Gnaeus, while he himself returned to Northern Italy to organize the defences.
Invading the Iberian peninsula
Gnaeus, with 20,000 infantry (2 Roman legions and 2 allied alae), 2,200 cavalry and 60 quinqueremes, sailed from Massilia and landed in eastern Spain at Emporion. The Greek cities of Emporion and Tarraco welcomed the Romans, and Gnaeus began to win over the Iberian tribes north of the Ebro. Hannibal had left a certain Hanno with 10,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry to garrison the newly conquered territory north of the Ebro, he was seriously outnumbered so Hasdrubal Barca, who had been left in command of the Carthaginian army in southern Spain, decided to reinforce him and marched north with 8,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry.
Battle of Cissa
Main article: Battle of CissaHanno, afraid he would lose the Iberians and all of the Cartiginian territory north of the Ebro if he waited any longer, marched and attacked the Romans just north of Tarraco, near a place called Cissa or Kissa. He fought a pitched battle, in which there were no brilliant maneuvers or ambushes; the armies just formed up and faced off. Being outnumbered two to one, Hanno was defeated relatively easily, losing 6,000 soldiers in battle. Furthermore, the Romans managed to capture the Carthaginian camp, along with 2,000 soldiers and Hanno himself. The camp contained all the baggage left by Hannibal. The prisoners also included Indibilis, an influential Iberian chieftain. The Romans also stormed the town of Cissa, though to the frustration of the Romans it did not contain any valuable booty.
Battle of the Ebro River
Main article: Battle of Ebro RiverIn spring 217 BC Gnaeus commanded a fleet of 55 warships (probably quinqueremes) during a naval battle near the mouth of the Ebro River. The Carthaginian naval contingent of 40 warships facing him was totally defeated after a surprise attack by the Roman ships. The Carthaginians lost 29 ships and the control of seas around the Iberian peninsula. Furthermore, the victory enhanced Roman prestige among the warlike Iberians.
Battle of Dertosa
Main article: Battle of DertosaIn early 215 BC the Romans, under the joined command of the brothers Gnaeus and Publius Scipio, crossed the Ebro River. Hasdrubal marched north with his field army, and after some maneuvering the two armies faced of on the south bank of the Ebro River across from the town of Dertosa. The armies were about similar in size with the Scipio brothers having 30,000 infantry and 2,800 cavalry against Hasdrubal's 25,000 infantry, 4,000 cavalry and 20 elephants. Hasdrubal tried to emulate his brother Hannibal's envelopment tactic (see: Cannae) but failed because the Roman cavalry held out and he could not close the trap. The Scipio brothers continued with their policy of subjugating the Iberian tribes and raiding Carthaginian possessions. After losing most of his field army, Hasdrubal had to be reinforced with the army that was to sail to Italy and reinforce Hannibal. Thus, by winning this battle, the Scipios had indirectly prevented the situation in Italy from getting worse in addition to improving their own situation in Iberia.
Battles of the Upper Baetis
Main article: Battle of the Upper BaetisIn 212 BC, the Scipio brothers captured Castulo, a major mining town and the home of Hannibal's wife Imilce. They then wintered at Castulo and Ilugia.
Over the last couple of years the strength of the Scipios army had been reduced by losses and the need to garrison their recently conquered territories Therefore, the brothers had hired around 20,000 Celt-Iberian mercenaries to supplement their field army to 40,000 men. With a large army at their back and observing that the Carthaginian commanders had deployed separately from each other the Scipio brothers decided to divide their forces. Publius led an army of Roman and allied soldiers to attack Mago Barca near Castulo, while Gnaeus took one-third of the Romans and all of the mercenaries to attack Hasdrubal Barca. This stratagem would lead to two battles which took place within a few days of each other; the Battle of Castulo and the Battle of Ilorca.
Battle of Castulo
As Publius neared Castulo, he was harassed day and night by Numidian light cavalry under Masinissa. When informed that Indibilis was moving across his line of retreat with 7,500 Iberians, Publius decided not to face Mago but to attack the Iberian chieftain. Leaving 2,000 soldiers in his camp under the legate Tiberius Fonteus, he marched out at night, to evade Masinissa's cavalry, and launched an attack on the Iberians in the early morning. He caught Indibilis and his men by surprise and, with a numerical superiority, began to gain the upper hand in the ensuing action. The Iberians managed to hold off the Romans just long enough for Masinissa to arrive.
With the Numidian horse attacking their flank, the Roman assault on the Iberians began to slacken. Then Mago and Hasdrubal Gisco arrived with their combined armies. The Romans, after a grim struggle, broke and fled, leaving Publius and most of their comrades dead on the field. Mago gave the Numidians enough time to loot the dead before force marching the army towards Hasdrubal Barca's position. A handful of Roman survivors managed to reach Fonteus's camp.
Battle of Ilorca
Gnaeus Scipio had arrived at his objective first. Hasdrubal Barca decided to refuse battle and stayed within his fortified camp, he then managed to bribe the Celt-Iberian mercenaries to desert Gnaeus. This led to Hasdrubal's army outnumbering that of Gnaeus. Still Hasdrubal bided his time, avoiding any battles with the Romans.
Gnaeus, having lost his numerical advantage, decided to withdraw north after Mago and Hasdrubal Gisco arrived with their armies. The Romans moved out of their camp, leaving their camp fires burning, and made for the Ebro at night. The Numidians located them the following day; their attacks forced the Romans to take position for the night on a hilltop near Ilorca. The combined Carthaginian armies arrived during the night. As the ground was too stony for digging the Romans tried to create a defensive wall with baggage and saddles. The Carthaginians easily overran these makeshift fortification, destroying Gnaeus's army.
Death
Gnaeus died in battle, fighting the Carthaginians who had overrun his makeshift camp during the battle of Ilorca. His death did not end the Scipios’ war against the Carthaginians. His nephew Publius would play an even greater part in bringing down Hannibal and in establishing Roman rule over the Iberian peninsula.
Descendants
His son was Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica (nicknamed Nasica for his pointed nose), who was consul in 191 BC. He was the first Scipio Nasica and founded the Nasica branch of the Scipiades. Scipio Nasica's son, another Scipio Nasica (nicknamed Corculum, with his full name being Publius Cornelius P.f. G.n. Scipio Nasica Corculum), married his second cousin Cornelia Africana Major, the eldest daughter of Scipio Africanus, and thus united the two lines. Their descendants in the male line continued until at least 46 BC, in the person of Metellus Scipio (who was adopted into the Caecilii Metelli family).
See also
References
- Polybius, II.34.
- John Francis Lazenby, Hannibal's War, p. 37.
- Livy, XXI, p.23 and p.60.
- Polybius, III 76, p.7.
- Lazenby, Hannibal's War, p. 126.
- Livy, XXI, p.60
- Livy, XII 20.4-10.
- ^ Hoyos 2015, p. 168.
- ^ Hoyos 2015, p. 169.
Sources
- Hoyos, Dexter (2015). Mastering the West: Rome and Carthage at War. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-986010-4.
Political offices | ||
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Preceded byG. Flaminius P. Furius Philus |
Roman consul 222 BC With: M. Claudius Marcellus |
Succeeded byP. Cornelius Scipio Asina M. Minucius Rufus |