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{{short description|Roman general and politician}} {{Short description|Roman general and statesman (106–48 BC)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2024}}
{{about|Pompey the Great||Pompey (disambiguation)|and|Gnaeus Pompeius (disambiguation){{!}}Gnaeus Pompeius|and|Pompeia gens}}
{{hatnote group|
{{distinguish|Pompeii}}
{{Other uses|Pompey (disambiguation)|Gnaeus Pompeius (disambiguation)}}
{{Confuse|Pompeii|Pompei}}
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{{Infobox person {{Infobox person
| name = Pompey | name = Pompey
| image = Pompeius Kopenhagen.jpg | image = (Venice) Pompey the Great, Museo Archeologico Nazionale.jpg
| image_upright = 1.15 | image_upright = 1.15
| alt = White bust | alt = White bust
| caption = Bust of Pompey, copy of an original from 70–60 BC, ]
| caption = 1st-century AD bust of Pompey, after an original from {{c.}} 55–50 BC<ref>{{cite book |last=Kleiner |date=2010 |first=Fred S. |title=A History of Roman Art |edition=enhanced |publisher=Wadsworth |place=Boston, MA, US |orig-year=2007 |p=56 |isbn=978-0-495-90987-3 |url={{googlebooks|r-r0S-z-UxkC|pg=PA56|plainurl=y}} }}</ref>
| native_name = Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus | native_name = Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus
| native_name_lang = la | native_name_lang = la
| birth_date = 29 September 106 BC | birth_date = 29&nbsp;September 106&nbsp;BC
| birth_place = ], ], ] | birth_place = ], Italy
| death_date = {{nowrap|28 September 48 BC (aged 57)}} | death_date = {{nowrap|28&nbsp;September 48&nbsp;BC (aged 57)}}
| death_place = ], ] | death_place = ], Egypt
| death_cause = Assassination | death_cause = ]
| resting_place = ] | resting_place = ], Italy
| father = ]
| occupation =
| spouse = {{ubl|] (86–82&nbsp;BC, divorced) |] (82&nbsp;BC, her death) |] (79–61&nbsp;BC, divorced) |] (59–54&nbsp;BC, her death) |] (52–48&nbsp;BC, his death)}}
| party =
| children = {{hlist|] |] |]}}
| organization = ]
| relations = ]
| net_worth = <!-- Net worth should be supported with a citation from a reliable source -->
| occupation = Military commander and politician
| office = ] (70, 55, 52 BC)<br>] of ] (58–55 BC)
| net_worth = <!-- Net worth should be supported with a citation from a reliable source -->
| opponents = ]
| office = ] (70, 55, 52 BC)
| spouse = Antistia (86–82 BC, divorced)<br />] (82–82 BC, her death)<br />] (79–61 BC, divorced)<br />] (59–54 BC, her death)<br />] (52–48 BC, his death)
| module = {{infobox military person |embed=yes
| partner = <!-- (unmarried long-term partner) -->
| battles =
| children = ], ], and ]
{{tree list}}
| parents = ]
*]
| module = {{Infobox military person|embed=yes
*]
| allegiance = ]<br>]<br>]
*]
| serviceyears = 89–48 BC
*]
| serviceyears_label = Years
*]
| rank =
*]
| commands =
*]
| battles = ]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>Campaign against the ]<br>]<br>]
*]
| battles_label = Conflicts
{{tree list/end}}
| awards = 3 ]s}}
| awards = 3 ]}}
}} }}
{{Ancient Rome and the fall of the Republic}} {{Ancient Rome and the fall of the Republic}}
'''Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus''' ({{IPA|la|ˈŋnae̯ʊs pɔmˈpɛjjʊs ˈmaŋnʊs|lang}}; 29&nbsp;September 106&nbsp;BC&nbsp;– 28&nbsp;September 48&nbsp;BC), known in English as '''Pompey''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|p|ɒ|m|p|i}} {{respell|POM|pee}}) or '''Pompey the Great''', was a general and statesman of the ]. He played a significant role in the transformation of Rome from republic to ]. Early in his career, he was a partisan and protégé of the Roman general and ] ]; later, he became the political ally, and finally the enemy, of ].
<!-- This article has been substantially rewritten, using English. -->


'''Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus''' ({{IPA-la|ˈŋnae̯ʊs pɔmˈpɛjːʊs ˈmaŋnʊs|lang}}; 29 September 106 BC&nbsp;– 28 September 48&nbsp;BC), known in English as '''Pompey the Great''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|p|ɒ|m|p|iː}}), was a leading Roman general and statesman, whose career was significant in Rome's transformation from a ] to ]. He was for a time a political ally and later enemy of ]. A member of the senatorial nobility, Pompey entered a military career while still young and rose to prominence serving the later dictator ] as a commander in ], his success at which earned him the ] '']'' – "the Great" – after Pompey's boyhood hero ]. His adversaries also gave him the nickname ''adulescentulus carnifex'' ("teenage butcher") for his ruthlessness.<ref>Jm{{cite book|author= Leach, John|title=Pompey the Great')|page= 29}}</ref> Pompey's success as a general while still young enabled him to advance directly to his first ] without meeting the normal '']'' (required steps in a political career). He was consul three times and celebrated three ]s. A member of the senatorial nobility, Pompey entered into a military career while still young. He rose to prominence serving Sulla as a commander in ]. Pompey's success as a general while young enabled him to advance directly to his first ] without following the traditional '']'' (the required steps to advance in a political career). He was elected as consul on three occasions (70, 55, 52 BC). He celebrated three ], served as a commander in the ], the ], the ], and in various other military campaigns. Pompey's early success earned him the ] '']'' – "the Great" – after his boyhood hero ]. His adversaries gave him the nickname ''adulescentulus carnifex'' ("teenage butcher") for his ruthlessness.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=29}}


In 60 BC, Pompey joined ] and ] in the unofficial military-political alliance known as the ], which Pompey's marriage to Caesar's daughter ] helped secure. After Crassus and Julia's deaths, Pompey sided with the '']'', the conservative faction of the ]. Pompey and Caesar then contended for the leadership of the Roman state, leading to ]. When, in that war, Pompey was defeated at the ] in 48 BC, he sought refuge in Egypt, where he was assassinated. In 60&nbsp;BC, Pompey joined ] and ] in the informal political alliance known as the ], cemented by Pompey's marriage with Caesar's daughter, ]. After the deaths of Julia and Crassus (in 54 and 53 BC), Pompey switched to the political faction known as the '']''—a conservative faction of the ]. Pompey and Caesar then began contending for leadership of the Roman state in its entirety, eventually leading to ]. Pompey was defeated at the ] in 48&nbsp;BC, and he sought refuge in ], where he was assassinated by the courtiers of ].


==Early life and political debut== ==Early life and career==
], brought from Rome in 1627 by Galeazzo Arconati]]
Pompey was born in ] (modern ] and the northern part of ]) to a local noble family. Pompey's father, ], was first of his branch of the ] to achieve senatorial status in Rome, despite his provincial origins. The Romans referred to Strabo as a '']'' (new man). Pompeius Strabo ascended the traditional '']'', becoming ] in 104 BC, ] in 92 BC and ] in 89 BC. He acquired a reputation for greed, political double-dealing, and military ruthlessness. He fought the ] against Rome's Italian allies. He supported ], who belonged to the '']'', the pro-aristocracy faction, against ], who belonged to the '']'' (in favor of the people), in ] (88–87 BC). ] died during the siege of Rome by the Marians, in 87 BC—either as a casualty of an epidemic,<ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 1.68</ref> or by having been struck by lightning.<ref>Velleius Paterculus, ''Compendium of Roman History'' 2, 21. (Loeb) at Thayer: </ref><ref>Beesley, A., The Gracchi Marius and Sulla, Chapter X; Simpson, G., The Collapse of Rome: Marius, Sulla and the First Civil War, Chapter 4</ref> His twenty-year-old son Pompey inherited his estates and the loyalty of his legions.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20080503112904/http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/1930.html</ref>
<ref>http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/2808.html</ref>


Pompey was born in ] on 29 September 106 BC, eldest son of a provincial noble called ]. Although the dominant ] in Picenum, Strabo was the first of his branch to achieve senatorial status in ]; he completed the traditional '']'', becoming ] in 89 BC, and acquired a reputation for greed, political duplicity, and military ruthlessness. Pompey began his career serving with his father in the ].{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=13}}
] (Milan, Italy), brought from Rome in 1627 by Galeazzo Arconati]]
Pompey served under his father's command during the final years of the ].<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 13; The Asculum Inscription, Plate 1, nr. 30.</ref> When his father died, Pompey was put on trial due to accusations that his father stole public property.<ref>Beesley, A., The Gracchi Marius and Sulla, Chapter XIII</ref> As his father's heir, Pompey could be held to account. He discovered that the theft was committed by one of his father's freedmen. Following his preliminary bouts with his accuser, the judge took a liking to Pompey and offered his daughter Antistia in marriage, and so Pompey was acquitted.<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Pompey'', 4.</ref>


Strabo died in 87 BC during the short-lived civil war known as the {{Lang|la|]}}, although sources differ on whether he succumbed to disease, or was murdered by his own soldiers.{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=98}} Prior to his death, Strabo was accused of ]; as his legal heir, Pompey was held responsible for the alleged crime and put on trial.{{sfn|Beesley|1892|pp=167–170}} He was acquitted, supposedly after agreeing to marry the ] daughter, ].{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=100}}
Another ] broke out between the Marians and Sulla in 84–82 BC. The Marians had previously taken over Rome while Sulla was fighting the ] (89–85 BC) against ] in Greece.<ref>Boak, History of Rome, pp. 145–46</ref> In 84 BC, Sulla returned from that war, landing in Brundisium (]) in southern Italy. Pompey raised three legions from his father's veterans and his own clients in Picenum to support Sulla's march on Rome against the Marian regime of ] and ]. Cassius Dio described Pompey's troop levy as a "small band."<ref></ref>


One of the main issues at stake in 87 BC was the appointment of the ] ] as commander of the Roman army in the ongoing ], an opportunity to amass enormous wealth.{{sfn|Beard|2015|pp=241–242}} During his absence in the East, his political rivals led by ], ] and ] regained control of the ].{{sfn|Boak|1921|pp=145–146}} Sulla's return in 83 BC sparked ] within the Roman world.{{sfn|Beard|2015|p=272}}
Sulla defeated the Marians and was appointed as ]. He admired Pompey's qualities and thought that he was useful for the administration of his affairs. He and his wife, Metella, persuaded Pompey to divorce Antistia and marry Sulla's stepdaughter ]. ] commented that the marriage was "characteristic of a tyranny, and benefitted the needs of Sulla rather than the nature and habits of Pompey, Aemilia being given to him in marriage when she was with a child by another man." Antistia had recently lost both her parents. Pompey accepted, but "Aemilia had scarcely entered Pompey's house before she succumbed to the pangs of childbirth."<ref>Plutarch, ''The Live of Pompey'', 9.1–2</ref> Pompey later married Mucia Tertia, but there's no record of when this took place, the sources only mentioning Pompey's divorce with her. Plutarch wrote that Pompey dismissed with contempt a report that she had had an affair while he was fighting in the ] between 66 and 63 BC. However, on his journey back to Rome, he examined the evidence more carefully and filed for divorce.<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Pompey, 42.7</ref> Cicero wrote that the divorce was strongly approved.<ref>Cicero, Letters ad Atticum 1.12</ref> Cassius Dio wrote that she was the sister of ] and that Metellus Celer was angry because he had divorced her despite having had children by her.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.49.3</ref> Pompey and Mucia had three children: the eldest, Gnaeus Pompey (]); ], a daughter; and ], the younger son. Cassius Dio wrote that Marcus Scaurus was Sextus’ half-brother on his mother's side. He was condemned to death, but later released for the sake of his mother Mucia.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 51.2.5</ref>


==Pompey during Sulla's civil war==
==Sicily, Africa and Lepidus' rebellion==
{{main|Sulla's civil war}}
The survivors of the Marians, those who were exiled after they lost Rome and those who escaped Sulla's persecution of his opponents, were given refuge on Sicily by ]. Papirius Carbo had a fleet there, and ] had forced entry into the ]. Sulla sent Pompey to Sicily with a large force. According to Plutarch, Perpenna fled and left Sicily to Pompey. While the Sicilian cities had been treated harshly by Perpenna, Pompey treated them with kindness. However, Pompey "treated Carbo in his misfortunes with an unnatural insolence," taking Carbo in fetters to a tribunal he presided over, examining him closely "to the distress and vexation of the audience," and finally, sentencing him to death. Pompey also treated Quintus Valerius "with unnatural cruelty."<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Pompey'', 10.3</ref> His opponents dubbed him ''adulescentulus carnifex'' (adolescent butcher).<ref>Valerius Maximus, Nine Books of Memorable Deeds and Sayings, 6.2.8</ref> While Pompey was still in Sicily, Sulla ordered him to the province of ] to fight Gnaeus Domitius, who had assembled a large force there. Pompey left his brother-in-law, ], in control of Sicily and sailed his army to Africa. When he got there, 7,000 of the enemy forces went over to him. Domitius was subsequently defeated at the ] and died when Pompey attacked his camp. Some cities surrendered, some were taken by storm. King ] of ], who was an ally of Domitius, was captured and executed. Pompey invaded Numidia and subdued it in forty days, restoring ] to the throne. When he returned to the Roman province of Africa, Sulla ordered him to send back the rest of his troops and remain there with one legion to wait for his successor. This turned the soldiers who had to stay behind against Sulla, but Pompey said that he would rather kill himself than go against Sulla. When Pompey returned to Rome, everyone welcomed him. To outdo them, Sulla saluted him as ''Magnus'' (the Great), after Pompey's boyhood hero Alexander the Great, and ordered the others to give him this cognomen.<ref>Plutarch, ''The Life of Pompey'', 11, 12, 13.1-3</ref>
In the year prior to Sulla's return Pompey had raised and equipped a full ] from amongst his father's old clients and veterans in ]. In the spring of 83 Sulla landed in ]. As he marched north-west towards ], Pompey led his own legion south to join him. The government in Rome sent out three separate armies in an attempt to prevent the union between Pompey's and Sulla's army. Pompey attacked one of these armies and routed it. The three enemy commanders, unable to agree on a course of action, withdrew. Soon after Pompey arrived at Sulla's camp. He was greeted by Sulla with the official title of ] (General).{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=24–25}}


At some point in 83 BC, it is not clear when but definitely before the onset of winter, Sulla sent Pompey back to Picenum to raise more troops. When fighting broke out once more in 82 Sulla advanced towards Rome, while ] (one of his lieutenants), supported by Pompey, campaigned against the consul Gaius Papirius Carbo in ]. During this campaign Pompey acted as Metellus's cavalry commander.{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=25–26}}
Pompey asked for a ], but Sulla refused because the law allowed only a ] or a ] to celebrate a triumph, and said that if Pompey—who was too young even to be a senator—were to do so, he would make both Sulla's regime and his honor odious. Plutarch commented that Pompey "had scarcely grown a beard as yet." Pompey replied that more people worshiped the rising sun than the setting sun, implying that his power was on the increase, while Sulla's was on the wane. According to Plutarch, Sulla did not hear him directly, but saw expressions of astonishment on the faces of those that did. When Sulla asked what Pompey had said, he was taken aback by the comment and cried out twice "Let him have his triumph!" Pompey tried to enter the city on a chariot drawn by four of the many elephants he had captured in Africa, but the city gate was too narrow and he changed over to his horses. His soldiers, who had not received as much of a share of the war booty as they expected, threatened a mutiny, but Pompey said that he did not care and that he would rather give up his triumph. Pompey went ahead with his extra-legal triumph.<ref>Mary Beard, The Roman Triumph, The (2007) pp. 16-17.</ref> Sulla was annoyed, but did not want to hinder his career and kept quiet. However, in 79 BC, when Pompey canvassed for Lepidus and succeeded in making him a consul against Sulla's wishes, Sulla warned Pompey to watch out because he had made an adversary stronger than him. He omitted Pompey from his will.<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Pompey, 14-15</ref>


Metellus and Pompey defeated Carbo's lieutenant, the ] ], in a six-hour battle at the river Aesis, only to be blockaded by Carbo himself. When word of Sulla's victory at the ] reached them, Carbo retreated to his base at ], severely harassed by Pompey's cavalry. Some time later Metellus defeated ], another of Carbo's lieutenants, Pompey's cavalry caught Censorinus's fleeing troops outside their base at ], defeating them and plundering the town. While Metellus remained in the north-west, Pompey seems to have transferred to Sulla's command in the south.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=26}}
] of Pompey at the ], Paris]]
After Sulla's death in 78 BC, ] tried to revive the fortunes of the ''populares''. He became the new leader of the reformist movement silenced by Sulla. He tried to prevent Sulla from receiving a state funeral and from having his body buried in the Campus Martius. Pompey opposed this and ensured Sulla's burial with honours. In 77 BC, when Lepidus had left for his ]ar command (he was allocated the provinces of ] and ]), his political opponents moved against him and he was recalled from his proconsular command. When he refused to return, they declared him an enemy of the state, and, when Lepidus did move back to Rome, he did so at the head of an army.


Pompey advanced south-west along the ] towards ], where he joined Marcus Licinius Crassus, together they defeated Carrinas once again. Pompey laid siege to Carrinas in Spoletium but the latter managed to escape. Pompey resumed his march to join Sulla's command. Not long afterwards Pompey successfully ambushed another large force under Censorinus, which was trying to get through to ] where Carbo's consular colleague, Marius the Younger (who was the figurehead of the struggle against Sulla), was blockaded. It was the failure of these attempts to get through the Sullan blockade in ] and ], added to Metellus's success in winning control of the north, which broke the back of the government's resistance.{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=26–27}}
The Senate passed a ] (the Ultimate Decree) which called on the ] Appius Claudius and the proconsul ] to take necessary measures to preserve public safety. Catulus and Claudius persuaded Pompey, who had several legions' worth of veterans in Picenum (in the northeast of Italy) ready to take up arms at his command, to join their cause. Pompey, invested as a ] with ]ial powers, quickly recruited an army from among his veterans and threatened Lepidus, who had marched his army to Rome, from the rear. Pompey penned up ], one of Lepidus's lieutenants, in ].


At the end of the campaigning season of 82, the government forces made one final effort to march to the relief of Praeneste. They mustered 10,000 legionaries and marched to join forces with the ] and the ], fierce enemies of Sulla, who had campaigned against them in the Social War.{{efn|] and ] had remained virtually neutral during the war, but now decided to throw their lot in with the Roman government – their hatred for Sulla probably being the deciding factor.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=27}}}} Pursued by Pompey they united their forces and made for Praeneste. Unable to break through Sulla's blockade, they marched for undefended Rome, only to be caught just in time and defeated by Sulla at the ]. Pompey, who was pursuing the government forces, arrived just after the battle.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=27}}
After a lengthy siege, Brutus surrendered. ] wrote that it was not known whether Brutus had betrayed his army or whether his army had betrayed him. Brutus was given an escort and retired to a town by the river Po, but the next day he was apparently assassinated on Pompey's orders. Pompey was blamed for this, because he had written that Brutus had surrendered of his own accord, and then wrote a second letter denouncing him after he had him murdered.<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p.42; Plutarch, ''Life of Pompey'', 16.</ref>


By the end of 82 BC, Sulla had expelled his opponents from Italy, and engineered his nomination as Dictator by the Senate.{{sfn|Beard|2015|p=245}} Either through admiration of his abilities, or concern at his ambition,{{sfn|Haley|1985|p=49}} Sulla sought to consolidate his alliance with Pompey by persuading him to divorce Antistia, and marry his stepdaughter Aemilia.{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=99}} ] claims she was already pregnant by her former husband, and died in childbirth soon after.{{sfn|Haley|1985|p=50}}
Catulus, who had recruited an army at Rome, now took on Lepidus, directly defeating him in a battle just to the north of Rome. After having dealt with Brutus, Pompey marched against Lepidus' rear, catching him near Cosa. Although Pompey defeated him, Lepidus was still able to embark part of his army and retreat to ]. Lepidus fell ill while on Sardinia and died, allegedly because he found out that his wife had had an affair.<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', pp 41-43; Philip Matyszak, ''Sertorius'', pp 88-90; ], ''Historiae'', I, 55; ], ''Life of Pompey'', 16.</ref>


==Sicily, Africa and Lepidus' rebellion==
==Sertorian War, Third Servile War and first consulship==
The surviving Marians escaped to Sicily, where their ally ] was ]. They were supported by a fleet under Carbo, while ] occupied the ]. Perperna abandoned Sicily after Pompey landed on the island with a large force,{{efn|Six legions and a navy of 120 warships and 800 transport ships. Both men and ships were immediately available: the men and ships from Sulla's armies{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=28}}}} while Carbo was captured and later executed. Pompey claimed this was justified by Carbo's alleged crimes against Roman citizens, but his opponents nicknamed him ''adulescentulus carnifex'', or "young butcher", as a result.{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=100}}
]]]


]
===Sertorian War===
{{Main|Sertorian War}}
], the last survivor of the Cinna-Marian faction (Sulla's main opponents during the civil wars of 88-80 BC), waged an effective guerrilla war against the officials of the Sullan regime in ]. He was able to rally the local tribes, particularly the ] and the ], in what came to be called the ] (80-72 BC). Sertorius's guerrilla tactics wore down the Sullans in Hispania; he even drove the proconsul ] from his province of ]. Pompey, who had just successfully assisted the consul ] in putting down the rebellion of ], asked to be sent to reinforce Metellus. He had not disbanded his legions after squashing the rebels and remained under arms near the city with various excuses until he was ordered to Hispania by the senate on a motion of Lucius Philippus. A senator asked Philippus if he "thought it necessary to send Pompey out as ]. 'No, indeed!' said Philippus, 'but as proconsuls,' implying that both the consuls of that year were good for nothing."<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Pompey'', 17.</ref> Pompey's proconsular mandate was extra-legal, as a proconsulship was the extension of the military command (but not the public office) of a consul. Pompey, however, was not a consul and had never held public office. His career seems to have been driven by desire for military glory and disregard for traditional political constraints.<ref>Holland, ''Rubicon'', pp. 141–42.</ref>


Pompey now sailed for Africa, leaving Sicily in the hands of his brother-in-law, ].{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=30}} After defeating and killing Ahenobarbus at the ], Pompey subdued ] and executed its king ], a Marian ally.{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=100}} He restored the deposed ] to the Numidian throne.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=30–31}} Around this time, his troops began referring to him as ''Magnus'', or "the Great", after ], a figure much admired by the Romans. Shortly thereafter, Pompey formally made this part of his ].{{sfn|Gray}}
Pompey recruited an army of 30,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry, its size evidence of the seriousness of the threat posed by Sertorius.<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 44; Orosius, ''Historiae Adversus Paganos'', V. 23. 1-15.</ref> On Pompey's staff were his old lieutenant ], D. Laelius, ], C. Cornelius, probably ] and ].<ref name=JLP45>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 45.</ref> Gaius Memmius, his brother-in-law, who was already serving in Spain under Metellus, was transferred to his command and served him as a ].<ref name=JLP45/> On his way to Hispania, he opened a new route through the Alps and subdued tribes that had rebelled in ].<ref>Sallust, Histories 2.82; Cicero, ''Pro lege Manilia'', 30.</ref> Cicero later describes Pompey leading his legions to Spain through a welter of carnage in a transalpine war during the autumn of 77 BC.<ref>Cic. Imp. Cn. Pomp. 10-11; Luc. VIII. 808.</ref> After a hard and bloody campaign, Pompey wintered his army near the Roman colony of ].<ref name=JLP45/> In the spring of 76 BC, he marched on and entered the Iberian peninsula through the Col de Petrus.<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 46.</ref> He would remain in Hispania from 76 BC to 71 BC. Pompey's arrival gave the men of Metellus Pius new hope and led to some local tribes, which were not tightly associated with Sertorius, to change sides. According to Appian, as soon as Pompey arrived, he marched to lift the siege of Lauron, where he suffered a ] at the hands of Sertorius himself.<ref>Appian, ''the civil Wars'', 1.109.</ref> It was a serious blow to Pompey's prestige. Pompey spent the rest of 76 BC recovering from the defeat and preparing for the coming campaign.<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Sertorius'', 18.</ref>


On returning to Rome, he asked for a triumph to celebrate his victories, an unprecedented demand for someone so young.{{sfn|Seager|2002|p=28}} Pompey refused to disband his army until Sulla agreed, although the latter tried to offset the impact by awarding simultaneous triumphs to ] and ].{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=31–32}} Sometime during this period, Pompey married Mucia Tertia, a member of the powerful ] family. They had three children before their divorce in 61 BC; ], usually known as Gnaeus, a daughter, ], and a younger son, ].{{sfn|Haley|1985|p=50}}
In 75 BC, Sertorius decided to take on Metellus while he left the battered Pompey to two of his legates (Perpenna and Herennius). In a ], Pompey defeated Perpenna and Herennius and regained some of his prestige.<ref name=PluPom18>Plutarch, ''Life of Pompey'', 18.</ref> Sertorius, hearing of the defeat, left Metellus to his second-in-command, ], and took over the command against Pompey. Metellus then promptly defeated Hirtuleius at the ] and marched after Sertorius.<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Sertorius'', 18; Plutarch, ''Life of Pompey'', 18; Philip Matyszak, ''Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain'', p. 118.</ref> Pompey and Sertorius, both not wanting to wait for the arrival of Metellus (Pompey wanted the glory of finishing off Sertorius for himself and Sertorius did not relish fighting two armies at once), hastily engaged in the indecisive ].<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Sertorius'', 18; Plutarch, ''Life of Pompey'', 18.</ref> On Metellus’ approach, Sertorius marched inland. Pompey and Metellus pursued him to a settlement called "Seguntia" (certainly not the more known ] settlement on the coast, but one of the many Celtiberian towns called Seguntia, since Sertorius had withdrawn inland), where they fought ]. Pompey lost nearly 6,000 men and Sertorius half of that.<ref name=ApCW1.110>Appian, ''Civil Wars'', 1.110.</ref> Memmius, Pompey's brother-in-law and the most capable of his commanders, also fell. Metellus defeated Perpenna, who lost 5,000 men. According to Appian, the next day, Sertorius attacked Metellus' camp unexpectedly, but he had to withdraw because Pompey was approaching.<ref name=ApCW1.110 /> Sertorius withdrew to ], a mountain stronghold in present-day ], and repaired its walls to lure the Romans into a siege and sent officers to collect troops from other towns. He then made a sortie, passed through the enemy lines and joined his new force. He resumed his guerrilla tactics and cut off the enemy's supplies with widespread raids, while pirate tactics at sea disrupted maritime supplies. This forced the two Roman commanders to separate. Metellus went to Gaul, and Pompey wintered among the ] and suffered shortages of supplies. When Pompey spent most of his private resources on the war, he asked the senate for money, threatening to go back to Italy with his army if this was refused. The consul ], canvassing for the command of the ], believing that it would bring glory with little difficulty and fearing that Pompey would leave the Sertorian War to take on the Mithridatic one, ensured that the money was sent to keep Pompey.<ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives, the Life of Pompey'', 18, 19.1-4, 20.1 ''The Life of Sertorius'', 19, 21</ref> Pompey got his money and was stuck in Hispania until he could convincingly beat Sertorius. The "retreat" of Metellus made it seem like victory was further away then ever and led to the joke that Sertorius would be back in Rome before Pompey.<ref>Philip Matyszak, ''Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain'', p.135.</ref>


{{Location map many|Italy|caption =The Lepidan rebellion; key locations|relief=yes|border = black| width = 200| float = right
In 73 BC, Rome sent two more legions to Metellus. He and Pompey then descended from the Pyrenees to the ]. Sertorius and Perpenna advanced from Lusitania again. According to ], many of the senators and other high-ranking men who had joined Sertorius were jealous of their leader. This was encouraged by Perpenna, who aspired to the chief command. They secretly sabotaged him and meted out severe punishments on the Hispanic allies, pretending that this was ordered by Sertorius. Revolts in the towns were further stirred up by these men, which caused Sertorius to kill some allies and sell others into slavery.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Live of Sertorius 25</ref> Appian wrote that many of Sertorius' Roman soldiers defected to Metellus. Sertorius reacted with severe punishments and started using a bodyguard of Celtiberians instead of Romans. Moreover, he reproached his Roman soldiers for treachery. This aggrieved the soldiers, because they felt that they were blamed for the desertion of other soldiers and, since this was happening while they were serving under an enemy of the regime in Rome, in a sense, they were betraying their country through him. Moreover, the Celtiberians treated them with contempt as men under suspicion. These facts made Sertorius unpopular; only his skill at command kept his troops from deserting en masse.
|label = Cosa|pos=left|coordinates={{coord|42|25|N|11|17|E}}
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}}


Pompey supported ] as consul for 78 BC; Plutarch claims he did so against Sulla's advice, but most modern historians refute the idea.{{sfn|Rosenblitt|2014|pp=415–16}} When Sulla died in 78 BC, Lepidus sought to block his state funeral and roll back some of Sulla's laws, then became ] of Cisalpine and ] in January 77 BC.{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=101}} When the Senate ordered him back to Rome, Lepidus refused to comply unless granted another term as consul, a proposal that was rapidly rejected.{{sfn|Gruen|1995|p=15}} Assembling an army, he began marching on Rome; the Senate responded with a series of measures, one of which was to appoint Pompey to a military command.{{sfn|Gruen|1995|p=16}}
Metellus took advantage of his enemy's poor morale, bringing many towns allied to Sertorius under subjection. Pompey besieged Palantia until Sertorius showed up to relieve the city. Pompey set fire to the city walls and retreated to Metellus. Sertorius rebuilt the wall and then attacked his enemies who were encamped around the castle of Calagurris, which led to the loss of 3000 men. In 72 BC, there were only skirmishes. However, Metellus and Pompey advanced on several towns, some of them defecting and some being attacked. Appian wrote that Sertorius fell unto "habits of luxury," drinking and consorting with women. He was defeated continually. He became hot-tempered, suspicious and cruel in punishment. Perpenna began to fear for his safety and conspired to murder Sertorius.<ref>Appian The Civil Wars, 1. 112–13</ref> Plutarch, instead, thought that Perpenna was motivated by ambition. He had gone to Hispania with the remnants of the army of Lepidus in Sardinia and had wanted to fight this war independently to gain glory. He had joined Sertorius reluctantly because his troops wanted to do so when they heard that Pompey was coming to Hispania, but, in all reality, he wanted to take over the supreme command.<ref>Plutarch Parallel Lives, The Life of Sertorius, 15, 25</ref>


While Lepidus continued south, Pompey raised troops from among his veterans in Picenum, and moved north to besiege ], capital of Cisalpine Gaul. The town was held by Lepidus' ally ], who surrendered after a lengthy siege, and was assassinated next day, allegedly on Pompey's orders.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=42}} Catulus then defeated Lepidus outside Rome, while Pompey marched against his rear, catching him near Cosa. Lepidus and the remnants of his army retreated to ], where he died.{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=41–43}}
When Sertorius was murdered, the formerly disaffected soldiers grieved for the loss of their commander whose bravery had been their salvation and were angry with Perpenna. The native troops, especially the Lusitanians, who had given Sertorius the greatest support, were angry too. Perpenna responded with the carrot and the stick: he gave gifts, made promises and released some of the men Sertorius had imprisoned, while threatening others and killing some men to strike terror. He secured the obedience of his troops, but not their true loyalty. Metellus left the fight against Perpenna to Pompey. The two skirmished for nine days. Then, as Perpenna did not think that his men would remain loyal for long, he marched into battle, but Pompey ambushed and defeated him. Frontinus wrote about the battle in his stratagems:


==Sertorian War==
{{quote|text=Pompey put troops here and there, in places where they could attack from ambush. Then, pretending fear, he pulled back drawing the enemy after him. Then, when he had the enemy exposed to the ambuscade, he wheeled his army about. He attacked, slaughtering the enemy to his front and on both flanks.<ref>Frontinus, ''Stratagems'', 2.5.32.</ref>}}
{{Main|Sertorian War}}
The Sertorian War began in 80&nbsp;BC when ], a prominent ] Marian general, initiated a rebellion in ], where he was joined by other Roman exiles like Perperna. Supported by local ] tribes, he took control of ] and repeatedly defeated Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius through skillful use of ]. Sertorius defeated other Roman generals sent to oust him and soon conquered ] as well. Backed by his allies in the Senate, Pompey was appointed military commander in Spain with proconsular authority in order to defeat Sertorius. This act was technically illegal as he had yet to hold public office, illustrating Pompey's preference for military glory, and disregard for traditional political constraints.{{sfn|Holland|2004|pp=141–142}}


Pompey recruited 30,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry, evidence of the threat posed by Sertorius.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=44}} En route to Hispania, he subdued a rebellion in ], after which his army entered winter quarters near ].{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=45}} In early 76&nbsp;BC, he crossed the ] and entered the Iberian peninsula,{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=46}} where he would remain for the next five years. His arrival boosted the morale of Metellus' troops, while some rebels changed sides, but soon after he was defeated by Sertorius at the ],<ref>Appian, ''Bellum Civile'', 1.109</ref> losing one third of his army while inflicting next to no losses on Sertorius' army. This was a serious blow to Pompey's prestige, who spent the rest of the year re-organising his army.<ref name=":5">Plutarch, ''Life of Sertorius'', p. 18</ref> Metellus' failure to dislodge Sertorius and Pompey's defeat meant the senatorial generals made no progress in the year.
Pompey won against a poor commander and a disaffected army. Perpenna hid in a thicket, fearing his troops more than the enemy, and was eventually captured. Perpenna offered to produce letters to Sertorius from leading men in Rome who had invited Sertorius to Italy for seditious purposes. Pompey, fearing that this might lead to an even greater war, had Perpenna executed and burned the letters without even reading them.<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Pompey, 20.1, 4</ref> Pompey remained in Hispania to quell the last disorders and settle affairs. He showed a talent for efficient organisation and fair administration in the conquered province. This extended his patronage throughout Hispania and into southern ].<ref>Holland, T., ''Rubicon: The Triumph and Tragedy of the Roman Republic'', pg. 142</ref> His departure from Hispania was marked by the erection of a Triumphal monument at the summit off the pass over the Pyrenees. On it, he recorded that, from the Alps to the limits of Further Spain, he had brought 876 towns under Roman sway.<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 54; Pliny, ''Natural History'', 4.26.96.</ref>


{{Location map many|Spain|caption =Sertorian War in Spain; key locations mentioned in article|relief=yes|border = black| width = 400| float = left
===Third Servile War===
|label = Col de Portet|pos=top|coordinates={{coord|42|50|N|0|14|E}}
{{Main|Third Servile War}}
|label2 = Lauron|pos2=left|coordinates2={{coord|39|09|N|0|37|W}}
While Pompey was in Hispania, the rebellion of the slaves led by ] (the ], 73–71 BC) broke out. ] was given eight legions and led the final phase of the war. He asked the senate to summon Lucullus and Pompey back from the Third Mithridatic War and Hispania, respectively, to provide reinforcements, "but he was sorry now that he had done so, and was eager to bring the war to an end before those generals came. He knew that the success would be ascribed to the one who came up with assistance, and not to himself."<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Crassus, 11.2</ref> The senate decided to send Pompey, who had just returned from Hispania. On hearing this, Crassus hurried to engage in the decisive battle, and routed the rebels. On his arrival, Pompey cut to pieces 6,000 fugitives from the battle. Pompey wrote to the senate that Crassus had conquered the rebels in a pitched battle, but that he himself had extirpated the war entirely.<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Crassus, 11.7, The Life of Pompey, 21.2</ref>
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|label8 = Lusitania|pos8=left|coordinates8={{coord|38|46|N|7|13|W}}
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}}


In 75&nbsp;BC, Sertorius led the campaign against Metellus, while Pompey defeated his subordinates Perperna and Gaius Herennius outside ].{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=48}}{{sfn|Matyszak|2013|pp=117-118}} When Sertorius took over operations against Pompey, Metellus defeated his deputy ] at the ].{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=47}}{{sfn|Matyszak|2013|p=118}} Pompey faced Sertorius in the indecisive ],{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=49}}{{sfn|Matyszak|2013|pp=121-122}} in which Sertorius defeated Pompey's right flank and nearly captured Pompey himself, but his legate ] defeated the Sertorian right. Sertorius withdrew inland, then turned to fight at ], where Pompey lost 6,000 men, including his brother-in-law Memmius, reputedly his most effective subordinate.{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=49-50}}{{sfn|Matyszak|2013|p=126}} Sertorius himself suffered 3,000 casualties, one of whom was Hirtuleius.<ref name=ApCW1.110>Appian, ''Bellum Civile'', 1.110</ref>
===First consulship===
], Pompey's political rival turned begrudging ally, in the ], Paris]]
Pompey was granted a second triumph for his victory in Hispania, which, again, was extra-legal. He was asked to stand for the consulship, even though he was only 35 and thus below the age of eligibility to the consulship, and had not held any public office, much less climbed the '']'' (the progression from lower to higher offices). Livy noted that Pompey was made consul after a special senatorial decree, because he had not occupied the ]ship, was an ] and did not have senatorial rank.<ref name="Livy, Periochae, 97.6">Livy, Periochae, 97.6</ref> ] wrote that "Crassus, the richest statesman of his time, the ablest speaker, and the greatest man, who looked down on Pompey and everybody else, had not the courage to sue for the consulship until he had asked the support of Pompey." Pompey accepted gladly. In the ''Life of Pompey'', Plutarch wrote that Pompey "had long wanted an opportunity of doing him some service and kindness..."<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Pompey, 22.2</ref> In the ''Life of Crassus'', he wrote that Pompey "was desirous of having Crassus, in some way or other, always in debt to him for some favor".<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Crassus, 12.1</ref> Pompey promoted his candidature and said in a speech that "he should be no less grateful to them for the colleague than for the office which he desired."<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Crassus, 12.1, The Life of Pompey, 22.2</ref>


Although Metellus defeated Perperna in a separate battle, Sertorius was able to withdraw to ] late in the year, where he repaired the walls to lure his opponents into a siege, while forming garrisons from other towns into a new field army. Once this was ready, he escaped from Clunia and used it to disrupt Roman logistics on land and by sea. Lack of supplies forced Metellus to quarter his troops in ], while Pompey wintered among the ].<ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives'', ''Life of Pompey'', 18–20.1.</ref><ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Sertorius'', pp. 19–21</ref> Dire straits caused by this stretch of the campaign and Sertorius' guerrilla warfare led Pompey to write a letter to the Senate asking for funds and men, and scolding their lack of support for him and Metellus.<ref>Sallust, ''Histories,'' 1.2.82</ref>
Pompey and Crassus were elected consuls for the year 70 BC. Plutarch wrote that, in Rome, Pompey was looked upon with both fear and great expectation. About half of the people feared that he would not disband his army, seize absolute power by arms and hand power to the Sullans. Pompey, instead, declared that he would disband his army after his triumph and then "there remained but one accusation for envious tongues to make, namely, that he devoted himself more to the people than to the senate..."<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Pompey, 21.3-4</ref> When Pompey and Crassus assumed office, they did not remain friendly. In the ''Life of Crassus'', Plutarch wrote that the two men differed on almost every measure, and by their contentiousness rendered their consulship "barren politically and without achievement, except that Crassus made a great sacrifice in honour of Hercules and gave the people a great feast and an allowance of grain for three months."<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Crassus, 12.2-</ref> Towards the end of their term of office, when the differences between the two men were increasing, a man declared that ] told him to "declare in public that you should not suffer your consuls to lay down their office until they become friends." The people called for a reconciliation. Pompey did not react, but Crassus "clasped him by the hand" and said that it was not humiliating for him to take the first step of goodwill.<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Crassus, 12.2-4, The life of Pompey, 23.1-2</ref>


Pompey's letter had the effect of galvanizing the Senate into sending him more men and funds. Reinforced by two more legions, in 74&nbsp;BC he and Metellus began a ] against their enemy. As his chief opponent had lost most of his Roman legionaries and could no longer match him in the field, Pompey, along with Metellus, gained the upper hand, conquering more and more Sertorian cities, slowly grinding down Sertorius' revolt. By now, Sertorius was being undermined by internal divisions.{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=102}} Discontent in Sertorius' coalition of Iberian and Roman forces came to a head in 72 or 73&nbsp;BC when Perperna, leading a conspiracy with other prominent Sertorians, had Sertorius assassinated and assumed control of the rebel army.
Neither Plutarch nor ]<ref>Suetonius, The Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Julius Caesar, 19.2</ref> wrote that the acrimony between Pompey and Crassus stemmed from Pompey's claim about the defeat of Spartacus. Plutarch wrote that "Crassus, for all his self-approval, did not venture to ask for the major triumph, and it was thought ignoble and mean in him to celebrate even the minor triumph on foot, called the ] (a minor victory celebration), for a servile war."<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Crassus, 11.8</ref> According to ], however, there was a contention for honours between the two men—a reference to the fact that Pompey claimed that he had ended the slave rebellion led by Spartacus, whereas in actual fact Crassus had done so. In Appian's account, there was no disbanding of armies. The two commanders refused to disband their armies and kept them stationed near the city, as neither wanted to be the first to do so. Pompey said that he was waiting the return of Metellus for his Spanish triumph; Crassus said that Pompey ought to dismiss his army first. Initially, pleas from the people were of no avail, but eventually Crassus yielded and offered Pompey the handshake.<ref>Appian, the Civil wars, 1.121</ref>


Pompey engaged Perperna in battle and defeated him swiftly at the ]. Perperna was captured and attempted to persuade Pompey to spare him by giving over Sertorius' correspondence, allegedly containing proof of communications between the rebel leader and leading men in Rome. Pompey burned the letters unread and executed Perperna, and then spent some time restructuring the local Roman administration, showing a lack of animosity towards his former opponents, which extended his patronage throughout Hispania and into southern Gaul.{{sfn|Holland|2004|p=142}} Pompey and his army remained in Hispania for a few years conquering the Sertorian remnants, and then marched back to Rome.
Plutarch's reference to Pompey's "devot himself more to the people than to the senate" was related to a measure regarding the ]s, the representatives of the ]. As part of the constitutional reforms Sulla carried out after his ], he revoked the power of the tribunes to veto the '']'' (the written advice of the senate on bills, which was usually followed to the letter), and prohibited ex-tribunes from ever holding any other office. Ambitious young plebeians had sought election to this tribunate as a stepping stone for election to other offices and to climb up the ''cursus honorum''. Therefore, the plebeian tribunate became a dead end for one's political career. He also limited the ability of the ] (the assembly of the plebeians) to enact bills by reintroducing the ''senatus auctoritas'', a pronouncement of the senate on bills that, if negative, could invalidate them. The reforms reflected Sulla's view of the plebeian tribunate as a source of subversion that roused the "rabble" (the plebeians) against the aristocracy. Naturally, these measures were unpopular among the plebeians, the majority of the population. Plutarch wrote that Pompey "had determined to restore the authority of the tribunate, which Sulla had overthrown, and to court the favour of the many" and commented that "there was nothing on which the Roman people had more frantically set their affections, or for which they had a greater yearning, than to behold that office again."<ref>Plutarch, The Life of Pompey, 21.4-5</ref> Through the repeal of Sulla's measures against the plebeian tribunate, Pompey gained the favour of the people.


==First Consulship==
In the ''Life of Crassus'', Plutarch did not mention this repeal and, as mentioned above, he only wrote that Pompey and Crassus disagreed on everything and that, as a result, their consulship did not achieve anything. Yet, the restoration of tribunician powers was a highly significant measure and a turning point in the politics of the late Republic. This measure must have been opposed by the aristocracy, and it would have been unlikely that it would have been passed if the two consuls had opposed each other. Crassus does not feature much in the writings of the ancient sources. Unfortunately, the books of Livy, otherwise the most detailed of the sources, which cover this period have been lost. However, the ''Periochae'', a short summary of Livy's work, records that "Marcus Crassus and Gnaeus Pompey were made consuls... and reconstituted the tribunician powers."<ref name="Livy, Periochae, 97.6"/> Suetonius wrote that, when ] was a military tribune, "he ardently supported the leaders in the attempt to reestablish the authority of the tribunes of the commons , the extent of which Sulla had curtailed."<ref>Suetonius, The Twelve Caesars, Julius Caesar, 5</ref> The two leaders are presumed to have been the two consuls, Crassus and Pompey.
During Pompey's absence, Marcus Licinius Crassus was charged with suppressing the slave rebellion led by ] known as the ]. Pompey returned to Italy just before Crassus defeated the main rebel army in 71 BC, arriving in time to massacre 6,000 fugitives from the battle. His claim to have ended the war by doing so was a long-standing source of resentment for Crassus.<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Crassus'', 11.7</ref><ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives'', ''Life of Pompey'', 21.2.</ref>


] minted by Pompey for his second triumph in 71&nbsp;BC, featuring the head of Africa on the obverse (celebrating his victory against ]). The reverse shows Pompey in his triumphal chariot, with his son ] seated before and ] flying above.{{sfn|Crawford|1974|pp=412–413}}]]
==Campaign against the pirates==
] of Pompey minted in 49–48 BC]]
Piracy in the Mediterranean became a large-scale problem, with a big network of pirates coordinating operations over wide areas with many fleets. According to Cassius Dio, the many years of war contributed to this, as a large number of fugitives joined them, since pirates were more difficult to catch or break up than bandits. The pirates pillaged coastal fields and towns. Rome was affected through shortages of imports and the supply of grains, but the Romans did not pay proper attention to the problem. They sent out fleets when "they were stirred by individual reports" and these did not achieve anything. Cassius Dio wrote that these operations caused greater distress for Rome's allies. It was thought that a war against the pirates would be big and expensive, and that it was impossible to attack or drive back all the pirates at once. As not much was done against them, some towns were turned into pirate winter quarters and raids further inland were carried out. Many pirates settled on land in various places and relied on an informal network of mutual assistance. Towns in Italy were also attacked, including ], the port of Rome, with ships burned and pillaged. The pirates seized important Romans and demanded large ransoms.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.20-23.1-4</ref>


Pompey was granted a second triumph for his victory in Hispania, and nominated for the consulship. Since he was both too young and technically ineligible, this required a special senatorial decree.<ref name="Livy, Periochae, 97.6">Livy, ''Periochae'', 97.6</ref> ] suggests Pompey supported Crassus as his co-consul in order to put him under an obligation.<ref name=":7">Plutarch, ''Life of Crassus'', 12.1</ref> The two men were elected consuls for 70&nbsp;BC, but allegedly differed on almost every measure, rendering their term "politically barren and without achievement."<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Crassus'', 12.2</ref>
] had been a haven for pirates for a long time. It was divided into two parts: Cilicia Trachaea (Rugged Cilicia), a mountainous area in the west, and Cilicia Pedias (Flat Cilicia) in the east, by the Limonlu river. The first Roman campaign against the pirates was led by Marcus Antonius Orator in 102 BC, in which parts of Cilicia Pedias became Roman territory, but only a small part becoming a province. ] was given the command of fighting piracy in Cilicia in 78–74 BC. He won several naval victories off Cilicia and occupied the coasts of nearby ] and ]. He received his agnomen of Isauricus because he defeated the ], who lived in the core of the ], which bordered on Cilicia. He incorporated Isauria into the province of Cilicia Pedias. However, much of Cilicia Pedias belonged to the ]. Cilicia Trachea was still under the control of the pirates.<ref>Broughton, T.R.S., The Magistrates of the Roman Republic, Vol II, pp. 87–89</ref>


However, their consulship did see the ] recover powers removed by Sulla. One of the most significant was the ability to veto Senatorial bills, an act often seen as a turning point in the politics of the late Republic. Although popular with the people, the measure must have been opposed by the ''optimates'', and thus passing it required support from both consuls, although most extant sources barely mention Crassus.<ref name="Livy, Periochae, 97.6"/>
In 67 BC, three years after Pompey's consulship, the plebeian tribune ] proposed a law (]) for choosing "...from among the ex-consuls, a commander with full power against all the pirates."<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.23.4</ref> He was to have dominion over the waters of the entire Mediterranean and up to fifty miles inland for three years, empowered to pick fifteen lieutenants from the senate and assign specific areas to them, allowed to have 200 ships, levy as many soldiers and oarsmen as he needed and collect as much money from the tax collectors and the public treasuries as he wished. The use of treasury in the plural might suggest power to raise funds from treasures of the allied Mediterranean states as well.<ref name="ReferenceA">Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 25.2</ref> Such sweeping powers were not a problem because comparable extraordinary powers given to ] to fight piracy in Crete in 74 BC provided a precedent.<ref>Williams, C.E., "Pompey and Cicero: An Alliance of Convenience", MA theses, Texas State University, 2013, p. 12</ref> The '']'' in the Senate remained suspicious of Pompey—this seemed yet another extraordinary appointment.<ref>Boak, History of Rome, p. 160</ref> Cassius Dio claimed that Gabinius "had either been prompted by Pompey or wished in any case to do him a favor... he did not directly utter Pompey's name, but it was easy to see that if, once the populace should hear of any such proposition, they would choose him."<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.23.4-5</ref> Plutarch described Gabinius as one of Pompey's intimates and claimed that he "drew up a law which gave him not an admiralty, but an out-and-out monarchy and irresponsible power over all men."<ref name="ReferenceA"/>


==Campaign against the pirates==
Cassius Dio wrote that Gabinius’ bill was supported by everybody except the senate, which preferred the ravages of pirates rather than giving Pompey such great powers, and the senators nearly killed Pompey. This outraged the people, who set upon the senators. They all ran away, except for the consul Gaius Piso, who was arrested, but Gabinius had him freed. The ''optimates'' tried to persuade the other nine plebeian tribunes to oppose the bill. Only two, Trebellius and Roscius, agreed, but they were unable to do so. Trebellius tried to speak against the bill, but Gabinius postponed the vote and introduced a motion to remove him from the tribunate, which passed. Roscius did not dare to speak, but suggested with a gesture that two commanders should be chosen, for which the people booed him loudly. The law was passed and the senate ratified it reluctantly. Pompey tried to appear as if he was forced to accept the command because of the jealousy that would be caused if he would lay claim to the post and the glory that came with it. Cassius Dio commented that Pompey was "always in the habit of pretending as far as possible not to desire the things he really wished."<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.24</ref> <ref>Cassius Dio, ''Roman History'', 36.30, 37.1</ref>
{{Main articles|Pompey's campaign against the pirates}}

Pirates operated throughout the Mediterranean, while their fleets often formed temporary alliances with enemies of Rome, including Sertorius and Mithridates. Their power and range had increased over the past fifty years, partly because of the decline of traditional naval powers like ], while previous attempts to subdue them had been unsuccessful.{{sfn|Tröster|2009|pp=20–21}} However, Romans routinely referred to their opponents as "pirates" or "brigands", and some historians argue it is more accurate to see them as a conventional enemy, rather than disorganised outlaws.{{sfn|Tröster|2009|p=17}}
Plutarch did not mention Pompey being nearly killed. He gave details of the acrimony of the speeches against Pompey, with one of the senators proposing that Pompey should be given a colleague. Only Caesar supported the law and, in Plutarch's view, he did so "not because he cared in the least for Pompey, but because from the outset he sought to ingratiate himself with the people and win their support." In his account, the people did not attack the senators, only shouting loudly, resulting in the assembly being dissolved. On the day of the vote, Pompey withdrew to the countryside, and the lex Gabinia was passed. Pompey extracted further concessions and received 500 ships, 120,000 infantry, 5,000 cavalry and twenty-four lieutenants. With the prospect of a campaign against the pirates, the prices of provisions fell. Pompey divided the sea and the coast into thirteen districts, each assigned to a commander with his own forces.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, ''The Life of Pompey'', 25-2-7, 26</ref>

Appian gave the same number of infantry and cavalry, but the number of ships was 270, and the lieutenants were twenty-five. He listed them and their areas of command as follows: Tiberius Nero and Manlius Torquatus (in command of ] and the ]); Marcus Pomponius (] and ]); Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus and Publius Atilius (Africa, ], ]); ] and ] (]); Plotius Varus and Terentius Varro (] and the ], as far as ]); Lucius Sisenna (the ], ], ], ], ], and ]); Lucius Lollius (the Greek islands, the Aegean sea, and the Hellespont); Publius Piso (], ], the ] and the mouth of the ]); ] (], ], ], and ]). Pompey made a tour of the whole area. He cleared the western Mediterranean in forty days, proceeded to ] (]) and cleared the eastern Mediterranean in the same amount of time.<ref>Appian, ''The Mithridatic War'', 95</ref>

] of ] of ], minted at ], 83–69 BC]]
In Plutarch's account, Pompey's scattered forces encompassed every pirate fleet they came across and brought them to port, the remaining pirates escaping to Cilicia. Pompey attacked Cilicia with his sixty best ships; after that, he cleared the ], ], ], Sicily and the ]n Sea in forty days with the help of his lieutenants. Meanwhile, the consul Piso sabotaged Pompey's equipment and discharged his crews, and thus Pompey went back to Rome. The markets in Rome now were well-stocked with provisions again and the people acclaimed Pompey. Piso was nearly stripped of his consulship, but Pompey prevented Aulus Gabinius from proposing a bill to this effect. He set sail again and reached Athens, defeating the Cilician pirates off the promontory of Coracesium. He then besieged them and they surrendered, together with the islands and towns they controlled, the latter being fortified and difficult to take by storm. Pompey seized many ships, but he also spared the lives of 20,000 pirates. He resettled some of them in the city of Soli, which had recently been devastated by ], the king of ]. Most were resettled in ] in ], Greece, which was underpopulated and had plenty of good land. Some pirates were received by the half-deserted cities of Cilicia. Pompey thought that they would abandon their old ways and be softened by a change of place, new customs and a gentler way of life.<ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey'', 27–29</ref>


Principally based in ], in 68 BC they raided as far as ], Rome's port, and kidnapped two senators, to general outrage.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=66}}{{sfn|Seager|2002|pp=43–44}} Prompted by Pompey, ], tribune of the plebs in 67 BC, proposed the '']'', giving him a mandate for their suppression. It granted him proconsular authority for three years in any province within 50 miles of the Mediterranean, along with the power to appoint legates and significant financial resources.{{sfn|Flower|2014|pp=89–90}} Concerned by one man holding such wide-ranging powers, the Senate opposed the law but it was passed by the people.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=68}} Most of the difficulties Pompey faced came from officials who resented his authority. In Gaul, ] hampered his recruitment efforts, while in ], ] refused to comply with his instructions.{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=71,74}}
In Appian's account, Pompey went to Cilicia expecting to have to undertake sieges of rock-bound citadels. However, he did not have to. His reputation and the magnitude of his preparations provoked panic and the pirates surrendered, hoping to be treated leniently because of this. They gave up large quantities of weapons, ships and shipbuilding materials. Pompey destroyed the material, took away the ships and sent some of the captured pirates back to their countries. He recognised that they had undertaken piracy due to the poverty caused by the mentioned war and settled many of them in ], ], ] or any other uninhabited or thinly populated town in Cilicia. He sent some to ] in ]. According to Appian, the war against the pirates lasted only a few days. Pompey captured 71 ships and 306 ships were surrendered. He seized 120 towns and fortresses and killed about 10,000 pirates in battles.<ref>Appian, ''The Mithridatic Wars'', 96</ref>


Pompey spread his forces throughout the Mediterranean to prevent the pirates escaping a Roman fleet by moving elsewhere.{{sfn|Seager|2002|p=47}} Fifteen legates were given specific areas to patrol, while he secured the grain route to Rome. These measures won him control of the western Mediterranean in just 40 days, after which his fleets moved to the east, forcing the pirates back to their bases in Cilicia. Pompey led the decisive assault on their stronghold in ], winning the ] and concluding the war in only three months.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=72}}
In Cassius Dio's brief account, Pompey and his lieutenants patrolled "the whole stretch of sea that the pirates were troubling," and his fleet and his troops were irresistible both on sea and land. The leniency with which he treated the pirates who surrendered was "equally great" and won over many pirates, who went over to his side. Pompey "took care of them" and gave them land which was empty or settled them in underpopulated towns so that they would not resort to crime due to poverty. ] was among these cities. It was on the Cilician coast and had been sacked by ]. Pompey renamed it ].<ref>Cassius Dio, ''Roman History'', 36.37.3-6</ref>


Most of his opponents surrendered without fighting, thanks to Pompey's reputation for clemency.{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=102}} They were granted lands in cities devastated during the Mithridatic War, notably ], renamed Pompeiopolis, and ] in Greece, with others sent to towns in Libya and ]. These communities retained a strong attachment to both Rome and Pompey.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=73}}{{Sfn|Seager|2002|pp=47–48}}
Metellus, a relative of ], with whom Pompey had fought in ], had been sent to ], which was the second source of piracy before Pompey assumed command. He hemmed in and killed many pirates, besieging the remnants. The Cretans called on Pompey to come to Crete, claiming that it was under his jurisdiction. Pompey wrote to Metellus to urge him to stop the war and sent one of his lieutenants, ]. The latter entered the besieged strongholds and fought with the pirates. Metellus persisted, captured and punished the pirates, and sent Octavius away after insulting him in front of the army.


==Eastern Campaigns: Third Mithridatic War, Syria and Judea== ==Third Mithridatic War and re-organisation of the east==


=== Third Mithridatic War === === Third Mithridatic War ===
{{Main|Third Mithridatic War}} {{main|Third Mithridatic War}}
]
] by ], 15th century]]


] was conducting the ] (73–63 BC) against ], the king of ], and ], the king of ]. He was successful in battle; however, the war was dragging on and he opened a new front in Armenia. In Rome, he was accused of protracting the war for "the love of power and wealth" and of plundering royal palaces as if he had been sent "not to subdue the kings, but to strip them." Some of the soldiers were disgruntled and were incited by ] not to follow their commander. Commissioners were sent to investigate and the soldiers mocked Lucullus in front of the commission.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, the Life of Lucullus, 33-35</ref> In 73 BC, ], formerly one of Sulla's chief lieutenants, was made proconsul of ], and commander in the Third Mithridatic War. The war began in 74 BC, when the last ruler of ] died and left his kingdom to Rome, sparking an invasion by ] of ], and ] of ]. Lucullus was a skilled general who won numerous victories, but claims he was protracting the war for "power and wealth" led to a Senate investigation, while by 69 BC his troops were weary and mutinous.<ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives'', ''Life of Lucullus'', pp. 33–35.</ref>


In 68 BC, the province of ] was taken from Lucullus and assigned to ]. He refused a request for aid from Lucullus because his soldiers refused to follow him to the front. According to Cassius Dio, this was a pretext.<ref>Cassius Dio, History of Rome, 36.15.1, 17.2</ref> One of the consuls for 67 BC, ], was appointed to succeed Lucullus. However, when Mithridates won back almost all of Pontus and caused havoc in ], which was allied with Rome, Glabrio did not go to the front, but delayed in ].<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36. 14.4, 17.1</ref> In 68&nbsp;BC, ] replaced Lucullus in Cicilia, while ] received Bithynia. He also assumed leadership of the war against Mithridates, but failed to respond decisively when the latter re-occupied much of Pontus in 67 BC, then attacked ], a Roman ally.<ref>Cassius Dio, ''Roman History'', 36.14.4, 17.1.</ref> Seeing an opportunity, in 66 BC Pompey used the ] to pass the '']'', giving him extensive powers throughout Asia Minor in order to defeat Mithridates, in addition to those granted by the ''lex Gabinia''. The ''optimates'' were privately horrified that one man should hold so much influence, but fearful of his popularity allowed the measure to pass.<ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives'', ''Life of Pompey'', 30.1–5.</ref>


Incensed at being replaced, Lucullus called Pompey a "vulture" who profited from the work of others, a reference both to his new command and claim to have finished the war against Spartacus.{{sfn|Greenhalgh|1981|p=107}} Pompey agreed an alliance with ], king of ], whom he persuaded to invade Armenia. When Mithridates offered a truce, Lucullus argued the war was over, but Pompey demanded concessions which could not be accepted.<ref>Cassius Dio, ''Roman History'', 36.45–46.</ref> Outnumbered, Mithridates withdrew into Armenia, followed by Pompey, who defeated him at ] near the end of 66 BC.<ref>Cassius Dio, ''Roman History'', 36.47.</ref><ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives'', ''Life of Pompey'', 32.1–3.</ref>
Another plebeian tribune, ], proposed the ]. It gave Pompey command of the forces and the areas of operation of Lucullus, and, in addition to this, Bithynia, which was held by Acilius Glabrio. It commissioned him to wage war on Mithridates and Tigranes, allowing him to retain his naval force and his dominion over the sea granted by the lex Gabinia. Therefore, ], ], ], ], ], Upper ], Pontus and Armenia, as well as the forces of Lucullus, were added to his command. Plutarch noted that this meant the placing of Roman supremacy entirely in the hands of one man.


] of ] in the ], Paris]]
The ''optimates'' were unhappy about so much power being given to Pompey and saw this as the establishment of a tyranny. They agreed to oppose the law, but they were fearful of the mood of the people. Only ] spoke up, and the law was passed.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 30.1-5</ref> The law was supported by ] and justified by ] in his extant speech '']''.<ref>Greenhalg, P., Pompey, the Roman Alexander, pp. 101–04</ref> Former consuls also supported the law, with Cicero mentioning ] (consul in 72 BC), ] (73 BC), ] (76 BC) and Publius Servilius Vatia Isauricus (79 BC).<ref>Cicero, De lege Manilia, 68</ref> According to Cassius Dio, while this was happening, Pompey was preparing to sail to Crete to face Metellus Creticus.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.45</ref> Lucullus was incensed at the prospect of his replacement by Pompey. The outgoing commander and his replacement traded insults. Lucullus called Pompey a "vulture" who fed from the work of others, referring not merely to Pompey's new command against Mithridates, but also his claim to have finished the war against Spartacus.<ref>Greenhalg, P., Pompey, the Roman Alexander, p. 107</ref>


According to contemporary sources, Mithridates and a small contingent escaped the battle, outstripped their pursuers, and reached ] on the ].<ref>Cassius Dio, ''Roman History'', 36.48–50.</ref><ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives'', ''Life of Pompey'', 32.3–7.</ref> While there, he took control of the ] from its Roman-backed ruler, his son ], who later committed suicide.<ref>Appian, ''The Mithridatic Wars'', pp. 101–102.</ref> Meanwhile, Pompey invaded Armenia supported by ], whose father quickly came to terms; in return for the restoration of Armenian territories taken by Lucullus, he paid a substantial cash indemnity{{efn|Reportedly 6,000 talents for Pompey, with ] getting 10,000 drachmas each, ] 1,000, and enlisted men 50}} and allowed Roman troops to be based on his territory.
According to Cassius Dio, Pompey made friendly proposals to Mithridates to test his disposition. Mithridates tried to establish friendly relations with ], the king of ]. Pompey foresaw this, established a friendship with Phraates and persuaded him to invade the part of Armenia under Tigranes. Mithridates sent envoys to conclude a truce, but Pompey demanded that he lay down his arms and hand over the deserters. There was unrest among the scared deserters, which were joined by some of Mithridates' men, who feared having to fight without them. The king held them in check with difficulty and had to pretend that he was testing Pompey. Pompey, who was in ], prepared for war. Lucullus met him and claimed that the war was over and that there was no need for an expedition. He failed to dissuade Pompey and verbally abused him. Pompey ignored him, forbade the soldiers to obey Lucullus and marched to the front.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.45-46</ref> In Appian's account, when the deserters heard about the demand to hand them back, Mithridates swore that he would not make peace with the Romans and that he would not give them up.<ref>Appian, The Mithridatic War, 98</ref>
] of ] in the ], Paris]]


In 65 BC, Pompey set out to take Colchis, but to do so had first to ] various local tribes and allies of Mithridrates. After winning a series of battles, he reached ] and linked up with Servilius, admiral of his Euxine fleet, before a fresh revolt in ] forced him to retrace his steps. Victory at the ] enabled him to impose terms on the Albanians and agree truces with other tribes on the northern side of the Caucasus.<ref>Cassius Dio, ''Roman History'', 36.54, 37.2–5.1</ref> Pompey then wintered in Armenia, settling minor border contests and raids between his allies Phraates and Tigranes.<ref>Cassius Dio, ''Roman History'', 37.5.2–5, 6.</ref>
Cassius Dio wrote that Mithridates kept withdrawing because his forces were inferior. Pompey entered ], which was not under Tigranes' rule. Mithridates did the same and encamped on a mountain that was difficult to attack. He sent the cavalry down for skirmishes, which caused a large number of desertions. Pompey moved his camp to a wooded area for protection, setting up a successful ambush. When Pompey was joined by more Roman forces, Mithridates fled to the Armenia of Tigranes.


Relying on his naval blockade to wear down Mithridates, Pompey spent 64 BC annexing the independent and wealthy cities of ], which were incorporated into a new Roman province. In the process, he acquired large amounts of money and prestige, as well as criticism from his opponents in Rome, who argued doing so exceeded his authority. Meanwhile, an ageing Mithridates had been cornered in ] by another of his sons, ]. An attempt to commit suicide by taking poison allegedly failed due to his habit of taking "precautionary antidotes", and he was killed by the rebels. Pharnaces sent his embalmed body to Pompey, in return for which he was granted the ] and made an ally of Rome.<ref>Cassius Dio, ''Roman History'', 37.11–14.2.</ref>
In Plutarch's version, the location of the mountain is unspecified and Mithridates abandoned it because he thought that it had no water. Pompey took the mountain and had wells sunk. He then besieged Mithridates' camp for 45 days, however, Mithridates managed to escape with his best men. Pompey caught up with him by the river ], lined up for battle to prevent him from crossing the river and advanced at midnight. He wanted to just surround the enemy camp to prevent an escape in the darkness, but his officers convinced him to charge. The Romans attacked with the moon at their back, confusing the enemy who, because of the shadows, thought that they were nearer. The enemy fled in panic and was cut down.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.47</ref><ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 32.1-3</ref>


===Re-organisation of the East===
In Cassius Dio, this battle occurred when Mithridates entered a defile. The Romans hurled stones, arrows and javelins on the enemy, which was not in battle formation, from an elevated height. When they ran out of missiles, they charged those on the outside and those in the center were crushed together. Most were horsemen and archers, and they could not respond in the darkness. When the moon rose, it was behind the Romans, creating shadows and causing confusion for the enemy. Many were killed, but many, including Mithridates, fled. He then tried to go to Tigranes. Plutarch wrote that Tigranes forbade him from coming and put a reward on him, while Cassius Dio did not mention a reward. He wrote that Tigranes arrested his envoys because he thought that Mithridates was responsible for a rebellion by his son.
{{details|Pompey's eastern settlement}}
The final collapse of the ] allowed Pompey to annex ] in 64 BC, but its dissolution destabilised the region, while many of its cities had used the power vacuum to achieve independence.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=93}} In early 63 BC, Pompey left ] and marched south, occupying coastal cities like ], before crossing the ] and capturing ] and ].{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=96}}


] (blue) in 63 BC, after losing the ] (red) to the north]]
In both Plutarch and Cassius Dio, Mithridates went to ], on the southeastern shore of the ]). Cassius Dio added that Pompey had sent a detachment to pursue him, but he outstripped them by crossing the river Phasis. He reached the Maeotis (the ], which is connected to the north shore of the Black Sea) and stayed in the ]. He had his son ], who ruled it and had gone over to the Romans, killed and recovered that country. Meanwhile, Pompey set up a colony for his soldiers at Nicopolitans in ].<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.48-50</ref><ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 32.3-7</ref>


Pompey's incursion further south, into ], was occasioned on account of its inhabitants, under the leadership of ] and ], having ravaged ] and Pompey wanting to bring a stop to it.<ref>{{cite book |last=Cassius Dio |author-link=Cassius Dio|title=Dio's Roman History |publisher=Harvard University Press |editor=E.H. Warmington |series=The Loeb Classical Library |volume=3 |date=1969 |location=Cambridge |page=127 (book XXXVII)|language=en, Greek |oclc=264964964}}</ref> The initial onslaught was disrupted by the ], in which Pompey backed Hyrcanus&nbsp;II over his brother Aristobulus&nbsp;II. When he compelled the latter to surrender ], its defenders took refuge in the ], which the ], then looted. Judea became a client kingdom ruled by Hyrcanus, while its northern section was incorporated into the ], a league of semi-autonomous cities (see map). Both Judea and the League were made subordinate to the new province of Syria.<ref>Josephus, ''Jewish Antiquities'', 14.54.79</ref>
In Appian's account, Mithridates wintered at ] in Colchis, in 66/65 BC. He intended to travel around the Black Sea, reach the strait of the ] and attack the Romans from the European side while they were in ]. He also wanted to seize the kingdom of ], his son who had gone over to the Romans. He crossed the territory of the ]s (partly by permission, partly by force) and the ], who welcomed him, and he made alliances with their many princes. He contemplated marching through ], ] and ] and crossing the ] into ]. He gave some of his daughters in marriage to the more powerful Scythian princes. Machares sent envoys to say he had made terms with the Romans out of necessity, and then fled to the Pontic ], burning the ships to prevent Mithridates from pursuing him. However, his father found other ships and sent them after him, and Machares eventually killed himself.<ref>Appian, The Mithridatic Wars, 101-102</ref>


Other organisational changes included creating the province of ], with the rest of Mithridates' territories distributed among Roman allies. Elsewhere, ] was restored to his throne, while Lesser Armenia was taken from Tigranes and incorporated into ], with Pompey's client ] becoming ruler of the new kingdom. Finally, Cilicia received the coastal region of ], previously a centre of piracy, along with other inland areas and reorganised into six parts.{{efn|These were Cilicia Aspera, Cilicia Campestris, Pamphylia, ], ], ], and ]}} These actions significantly increased Roman state income and presented Pompey with multiple opportunities to increase his personal wealth and patronage base.{{sfn|Morrill|2017|pp=57–97}}
In Appian, at this stage, Pompey pursued Mithridates as far as Colchis and then marched against Armenia. In the accounts of Plutarch and Cassius Dio, instead, he went to Armenia first and to Colchis later. In Appian, Pompey thought that his enemy would never reach the sea of Azov or do much if he escaped. His advance was more of an exploration of that country, which was the place of the legends of the ], ], and ]. He was accompanied by the neighbouring tribes. Only Oroeses, the king of the ]ns, and Artoces, the king of the ]ns, resisted him. Learning of an ambush planned by Oroeses, Pompey defeated him at the ], driving the enemy into a forest and setting it on fire, pursuing the fugitives until they surrendered and brought him hostages. He then marched against Armenia.<ref>Appian, The Mithridatic Wars, 103</ref>


==Return to Rome and the First Triumvirate==
In Plutarch's account, Pompey was invited to invade Armenia by Tigranes’ son (also named Tigranes), who rebelled against his father. The two men received the submission of several towns. When they got close to ] (the royal residence), Tigranes, knowing Pompey's leniency, surrendered and allowed a Roman garrison in his palace. He went to Pompey's camp, where Pompey offered the restitution of the Armenian territories in Syria, ], ], ], and ], which Lucullus had taken. He demanded an indemnity and ruled that the son should be king of ], which Tigranes accepted. His son was not happy with the deal and remonstrated, for which he was put in chains and reserved for Pompey's triumph. Soon after this, ], the king of ] asked to be given the son in exchange for an agreement to set the river ] as the boundary between ] and Rome, but Pompey refused.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 33</ref>
]{{efn|The three wreaths on the reverse refer to the three triumphs of Pompey; the top wreath is the ] he received in 62; the globe in the center is a copy of the one paraded during the third triumph; the aplustre on the lower left alludes to his victory against the pirates}}<ref>{{harvnb|Crawford|1974|pp=449–451}}, though he only links the aplustre with Pompey's '']'' of 57.</ref>{{sfn|De Souza|2002|p=174}}]]


Before his return to Italy in 62 BC, Pompey paid his troops bonuses totalling around 16,000 ],{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=101}}{{efn|A Roman talent was roughly 32 kilograms of gold, making this distribution worth over $32 billion using 2023 prices}} but despite fears he intended to follow Sulla's example, they were dismissed upon arrival at Brundisium.{{sfn|Mitchell|1973|p=1}} His journey to Rome drew huge crowds wherever he stopped, showing that although opinion in the Senate was divided, Pompey remained as popular as ever with the masses. He was awarded a third triumph for his achievements in Asia Minor, celebrated on his 45th birthday in 61&nbsp;BC.{{sfn|Beard|2015|p=273}}
In the version of Cassius Dio, the son of Tigranes fled to Phraates. He persuaded the latter, who had a treaty with Pompey, to invade Armenia and fight his father. The two reached Artaxata, causing Tigranes to flee to the mountains. Phraates then went back to his land, and Tigranes counterattacked, defeating his son. The younger Tigranes fled and at first wanted to go to Mithridates. However, since Mithridates had been defeated, he went over to the Romans and Pompey used him as a guide to advance into Armenia. When they reached Artaxata, the elder Tigranes surrendered the city and went voluntarily to Pompey's camp. The next day, Pompey heard the claims of father and son. He restored the hereditary domains of the father, but took the land he had invaded later (parts of ], and ], as well as ] and ]) and demanded an indemnity, assigning Sophene to the son. This was the area where the treasures were, and the son began a dispute over them. He did not obtain satisfaction and planned to escape, so Pompey promptly put him in chains. The treasures went to the old king, who received far more money than had been agreed.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.51-2</ref>


Pompey claimed the new provinces established in the East had increased annual state income from 200 million to 340 million ], plus an additional payment of 480 million sesterces to the treasury.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=118}} He refused to provide details of his personal fortune, but given the amounts declared publicly, this must have been enormous. Some of it was used to build one of the most famous structures of Ancient Rome, the ].{{sfn|Kuritz|1987|p=48}}
Appian gave an explanation for the young Tigranes turning against his father. Tigranes killed two of his three sons, the first one in battle and the other while hunting, because, instead of helping him when he was thrown off his horse, he put a diadem on his head. Following this incident, he gave the crown to the third son, Tigranes. However, the latter was distressed about the incident and waged war against his father. He was defeated and fled to Phraates. Because of all this, Tigranes did not want to fight any more when Pompey got near Artaxata. The young Tigranes took refuge with Pompey as a suppliant with the approval of Phraates, who wanted Pompey's friendship. The elder Tigranes submitted his affairs to Pompey's decision and made a complaint against his son. Pompey called him for a meeting. He gave 6,000 talents for Pompey, 10,000 drachmas for each ], 1,000 for each ], and fifty for each soldier. Pompey pardoned him and reconciled him with his son.


However, the Senate then refused to ratify the treaties agreed by Pompey as part of his settlement of the East. Opposition was led by the ''optimates'' ] and ], whose sister Mucia had recently been divorced by Pompey, for reasons still disputed.{{sfn|Haley|1985|p=53}}{{efn|The divorce may also have been a factor in the defection of ], previously one of Pompey's main supporters, although the Metelli had their own political ambitions.{{sfn|Mitchell|1973|p=6}}}} They also defeated a bill to distribute farmland to his veterans, and landless members of the urban poor. A similar measure had been rejected in 63 BC, which arguably made the Senate over confident in their ability to control popular unrest.{{sfn|Mitchell|1973|p=2}}
In Appian's account, Pompey gave the latter both Sophene and ]. The father was left with the rest of Armenia and was ordered to give up the territory he has seized in the war: Syria (west of the river Euphrates) and part of Cilicia. Armenian deserters persuaded the younger Tigranes to make an attempt on his father, so Pompey arrested and chained him. He then founded a city in ] where he had defeated Mithridates, calling it ] (City of Victory).<ref>Appian, The Mithridatic Wars, 104–05</ref>


]; left to right, ], ], and Pompey]]
In Appian's account, after Armenia (still in 64 BC), Pompey turned west, crossed ] and fought ], the king of ], until the two made an alliance. He then fought Darius the Mede, and put him to flight. This was because he had "helped Antiochus or Tigranes before him."<ref>Appian, The Mithridatic Wars, 106</ref> According to Plutarch and Cassius Dio, instead, it was at this point that Pompey turned north. The two writers provided different accounts of Pompey's operations in the territories on the ] and ]. He fought in ] (inland and to the south of Colchis) and ] (or ], roughly corresponding with modern ]).


Although Pompey could not overcome ''optimate'' opposition on his own, the situation changed when Marius' nephew ] sought his endorsement for the consulship in 59 BC. A skilled, unscrupulous, and ambitious politician, Caesar used this alliance to harness Pompey's influence with the urban electorate.{{sfn|Mitchell|1973|p=3}} With additional support from Crassus, Caesar became one of the two consuls for 59&nbsp;BC, the other being the ''optimate'' ]. This meant Caesar could help pass legislation sponsored by Pompey and Crassus, while it was in his interest to keep them aligned, an important factor given the rivalry between his two patrons.{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=120–121}}
In Plutarch, the Albanians at first granted Pompey free passage, but in the winter they advanced on the Romans who were celebrating the festival of the ] with 40,000 men. Pompey let them cross the river Cyrnus and then attacked them and routed them. Their king begged for mercy and Pompey pardoned him. He then marched on the Iberians, who were allies of Mithridates. He routed them, killing 9,000 of them and taking 10,000 prisoners. Then, he invaded Colchis and reached ] on the Black Sea, where he was met by Servilius, the admiral of his Euxine fleet. However, he encountered difficulties there and the Albanians revolted again, so Pompey turned back. He had to cross a river whose banks had been fenced off, made a long march through a waterless area and defeated a force of 60,000 badly-armed infantry and 12,000 cavalry led by the king's brother. He pushed north again, but turned back south because he encountered a great number of snakes.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 33–36.1</ref>


Despite appearing to be the most junior, Caesar thus became central to the ], an informal political alliance designed to counter-balance the ''optimates''. Pompey's influence was based on his reputation as a military commander, and popularity with the Roman people.{{sfn|Mitchell|1973|p=17}} Crassus' wealth allowed him to construct extensive patronage networks, but he lacked the military clout essential for political success in the ].{{sfn|Beard|2015|p=275}}
In Cassius Dio, Pompey wintered near the river Cyrnus. Oroeses, the king of the Albanians, who lived beyond this river, attacked the Romans during the winter, partly to favour the younger Tigranes, who was a friend, and partly because he feared an invasion. He was defeated and Pompey agreed to his request for a truce, even though he wanted to invade their country, desiring to postpone the war until after the winter. In 65 BC, ], the king of the Iberians, who also feared an invasion, prepared to attack the Romans. Pompey learned of this and invaded his territory, catching him unaware. He seized an impregnable frontier pass and got close to a fortress in the narrowest point of the river Cyrnus, leaving Artoces with no chance to array his forces. He withdrew, crossed the river and burned the bridge, making the fortress surrender. When Pompey was about to cross the river, Artoces sued for peace. However, he then fled to the river. Pompey pursued him, routed his forces and hunted down the fugitives. Artoces fled across the river Pelorus and made overtures, but Pompey would agree to terms only if he sent his children as hostages. Artoces delayed, but l, when the Romans crossed the Pelorus in the summer, he handed over his children and concluded a treaty.


], leader of ''optimate'' opposition to the triumvirate who became an ally of Pompey]]
Pompey moved on to Colchis and wanted to march to the ] against Mithridates. However, he realised that he would have to confront unknown hostile tribes and that a sea journey would be difficult because of a lack of harbors. Therefore, he ordered his fleet to blockade Mithridates and turned on the Albanians. He went to Armenia first to catch them off guard and then crossed the river Cyrnus. He heard that Oroeses was coming close and wanted to lead him into a conflict. At the ], he hid his infantry and got the cavalry to go ahead. When the cavalry was attacked by Oroeses, it withdrew towards the infantry, which then engaged, letting the cavalry through its ranks. Some of the enemy forces, which were in hot pursuit, also ended up through their ranks and were killed, with the rest being surrounded and routed. Pompey then overran the country, granting peace to the Albanians and concluding truces with other tribes on the northern side of the Caucasus.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.54, 37.2-5.1</ref>


Once elected, Caesar secured the passage of a new agrarian bill, helped by Pompey's veterans, who filled the streets of Rome and allegedly intimidated the Senate. When Bibulus opposed the measure, he was attacked in the ], and spent the rest of his consulship under virtual house arrest.{{Sfn|Beard|2015|p=282}} Caesar then ensured ratification of Pompey's settlements in the east, while the '']'' made him governor of Gallia Cisalpina and ]. He was also assigned ] after its governor died in office, before leaving Rome to launch the ] in 58 BC. His alliance with Pompey was strengthened when the latter married Caesar's daughter Julia.{{sfn|Haley|1985|p=53}}
Pompey withdrew to ]. He sent a force under Afrianius against Phraates, who was plundering the subjects of Tigranes in ]. Afrianius drove him out and pursued him as far as the area of Arbela, in northern ].<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 33-36.2</ref> Cassius Dio gave more details. Phraates renewed the treaty with Pompey because of his success and because of the progress of his lieutenants. They were subduing Armenia and the adjacent part of Pontus, and, in the south, Afrianius was advancing to the river ]; that is, towards ]. Pompey demanded the cession of ], which Phraates was disputing with Tigranes, and sent Afrianius there, who occupied it unopposed and handed it to Tigranes before receiving a reply from Phraates. Afrianius also returned to Syria through Mesopotamia (a Parthian area), contrary to the Roman-Parthian agreements. Pompey treated Phraates with contempt, so the king sent envoys to complain about the suffered wrongs. In 64 BC, when he did not receive a conciliatory reply, Phraates attacked Tigranes, accompanied by the son of the latter. He lost a first battle, but won another, and Tigranes asked Pompey for help. Phraates brought many charges against Tigranes and many insinuations against the Romans. Pompey did not help Tigranes, stopped being hostile to Phraates and sent three envoys to arbitrate the border dispute. Tigranes, angry about not receiving help, reconciled with Phraates in order not to strengthen the position of the Romans.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.5.2-5,6</ref>


Senatorial opposition to the triumvirate was led by ], a long-standing Pompeian ally. Despite this, the latter supported the populist politician ] in an attack on Cicero for executing Roman citizens without trial during the ].{{sfn|Holland|2004|pp=238–239}} Although Clodius succeeded in having Cicero exiled, he was recalled to Rome by Pompey eighteen months later in 58 BC.{{sfn|Holland|2004|p=254}} As a result, when shortages of grain caused popular unrest in 57 BC, a grateful Cicero backed Pompey's appointment as '']'', a temporary position set up for such occasions.{{sfn|Holland|2004|p=254}}
], the fourth wife of Mithridates, surrendered Caenum, one of the most important fortresses of the king. Pompey also received gifts from the king of the Iberians. He then moved from Caenum to Amisus (modern ], on the north coast of ]). Pompey then decided to move south because it was too difficult to try to reach Mithridates in the ] and thus, he did not want to "wear out his own strength in a vain pursuit," content with preventing merchant ships reaching the Cimmerian Bosporus through his blockade, and preferred other pursuits. He sent Afrianius to subdue the Arabs around the Amanus Mountains (in what was then on the coast of northern Syria). He went to Syria with his army, annexing the country because it had no legitimate kings. He spent most of his time settling disputes between cities and kings or sending envoys to do so, gaining prestige as much for his clemency as for his power. By being helpful to those who had dealings with him, he made them willing to put up with the rapacity of his friends and was thus able to hide this. The king of the Arabians at ], ] of ], wanted to become a friend of Rome. Pompey marched towards Petra to confirm this, and was criticized because this was seen as an evasion of the pursuit of Mithridates. He was urged to turn against him, since there were reports that Mithridates was preparing to march on Italy via the river ]. However, while Pompey was encamped near Petra, a messenger brought the news that Mithridates was dead. Pompey left Arabia and went to Amisus.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 36.6-7, 38.1, 39, 41, 42.1</ref>


Pompey and Crassus were competing for command of a new expedition to Asia Minor, and in 56 BC they ] with Caesar to resolve these issues. Although Crassus was a long-standing rival, there are also indications Pompey felt his status as the foremost soldier of the Republic was threatened by Caesar's success in ].{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2006|p=253}} With this in mind, Pompey set aside his differences with Crassus to promote their joint candidature as consuls for 55&nbsp;BC. With Caesar's support, they were duly elected after prolonged periods of the violence which had become a feature of Roman political campaigns.{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=104}}
Cassius Dio wrote that Pompey "arbitrated disputes and managed other business for kings and potentates who came to him. He confirmed some in possession of their kingdoms, added to the principalities of others, and curtailed and humbled the excessive powers of a few." He united ] and ], which had been ravaged by the Arabians and Tigranes.<ref>Boak, A., History of Rome, p. 161</ref> Antiochus XIII Philadelphus (one of the last rulers of Syria) asked for them back, to no avail, and Pompey put them under Roman jurisdiction.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.7</ref>


Once in office, they ensured passage of a law giving Crassus the province of Syria and command of a punitive expedition against Parthia, providing him opportunities for both military glory and loot. Pompey was assigned the restive provinces of Hispania, along with Africa, while Caesar's governorships in Gaul were extended. All three men were given these positions for a period of five years, as well as the right to levy troops and "make peace and war with whomsoever they pleased."{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=104}}
Cassius Dio also mentioned that Mithridates planned to reach the river Danube and invade Italy. However, he was aging and becoming weaker. As his position became weaker and that of the Romans stronger, a series of incidents happened. Some of his associates became estranged, a massive earthquake destroyed many towns, there was a mutiny by the soldiers and some of his sons were kidnapped and taken to Pompey. All of this contributed to him becoming unpopular. Mithridates was mistrustful and had his wives and some of his remaining children killed. One of them, ], plotted against him. He won over both the men who were sent to arrest him and then the soldiers who were sent against him afterwards. In 64 BC, he obtained the voluntary submission of ], the city where Mithridates was staying. Mithridates tried to poison himself, but failed because he was immune, due to taking "precautionary antidotes in large doses every day." He was killed by the rebels. Pharnaces embalmed his body and sent it to Pompey as proof of his surrender, for which he was granted the kingdom of Bosporus and listed as an ally.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.11-14.1-2</ref>

=== Syria ===
] had once been the heart of the vast ], but, after the death of ] in 164 BC, it had become increasingly unstable. Continuous civil wars had weakened central authority. By 163 BC, the ] established the independence of ]. The ] gained control of the ]. In 139 BC, they defeated the Seleucid king ], and took ] from the Seleucids. The following year, they captured the king. His brother ] gained the support of the ], regained the submission of the once vassal kingdoms of ] and ], drove back the Parthians and retook ], Babylon, and ]. However, he was killed in battle and the Seleucids lost all of their gains. By 100 BC, the Seleucid Empire was reduced to a few cities in western Syria. It still had to put up with countless civil wars, surviving only because none of its neighbors took it over. In 83 BC, invited by a faction in one of the civil wars, ] of Armenia invaded Syria and virtually ended Seleucid rule. When ] defeated Tigranes in the Third Mithridatic War in 69 BC, a ] Seleucid kingdom was restored. However, the civil wars continued.

Pompey was concerned about the political instability to the southeast of Rome's new provinces in Asia Minor. Both Syria and Judea were lacking stability. In Syria, the Seleucid state was disintegrating, and in Judea, there was a civil war. Pompey's actions in Syria and Judea are known through the work of ], the ancient Jewish-Roman historian. In 65 BC, Pompey sent two of his lieutenants, Metellus and Lollius, to Syria, to take possession of ]. During the winter of 64/63 BC, Pompey had wintered his army at ], Seleucid Syria's capital. There, he received many envoys and had to arbitrate in countless disputes.<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 92</ref> At the beginning of the campaigning season of 63 BC, Pompey left Antioch and marched south. He took and destroyed two strongholds being used by brigands: Lysias, ruled over by a Jewish brigand named Silas, and Syria's old military capital, Apameia.<ref name=JLP93>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 93</ref> He then took on the robber gangs of the ] and the coast north of ].<ref name=JLP93/> He executed a brigand chief named Dionysius of ], and took over the country of ].<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 93; Josephus, ''Jewish Antiquities'', 13.8.11.3, 15.10.1-3</ref> Ptolemy was hated in Syria, Phoenicia and Judea; Pompey, however, let him escape punishment in exchange for 1,000 talents (24,000,000 sesterces).<ref name=JLP93/> This vast sum was used by Pompey to pay his soldiers, vividly illustrating the attractions of piracy and brigandage in the poorly controlled country.<ref name=JLP93/> He also took ]. The Pompeian army then crossed the Anti-Lebanon mountains, took ] and reached Damascus, where he was met by ambassadors from all over Syria, Egypt and Judea. This completed the takeover of Syria.<ref>Josephus, ''Jewish Antiquities'', 14.3.34-36</ref> From this time onward, Syria was to be a Roman province.

=== Judea ===

]

A ] between the brothers ] and ] over the succession to the ] throne began in ] in 69 BC, in which Aristobulus deposed Hyrcanus. Then, ] became the advisor to the weak-willed Hyrcanus and persuaded him to contend for the throne, advising him to escape to ], the king of the Arabian ]. Hyrcanus promised Aretas that, if he restored him to the throne, he would give him back twelve cities his father had taken from him. Aretas besieged Aristobulus in the ] for eight months (66–65 BC). The people supported Hyrcanus, with only the priests supporting Aristobulus. Meanwhile, Pompey, who was fighting Tigranes the Great in Armenia, sent ] (who was a ]) to Syria. Since two of Pompey's lieutenants, Metellus and Lollius, had already taken Damascus, Scaurus proceeded to Judea. The ambassadors of Aristobulus and Hyrcanus asked for his help, both offering Scaurus bribes and promises. He sided with Aristobulus because he was rich and because it was easier to expel the Nabateans, who were not very warlike, than to capture Jerusalem. He ordered Aretas to leave and said that, if he did not, he would be an enemy of Rome. Aretas withdrew, and Aristobulus gathered an army, pursued him and defeated him. Scaurus then returned to Syria.<ref>Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, 14.1.4-7, 14-15, 18. 2.19-20, 29-33</ref>

When Pompey went to Syria, he was visited by ambassadors from Syria and Egypt, with Aristobulus sending him a very expensive golden vine. A little later, ambassadors from Hyrcanus and Aristobulus went to see him. The former claimed that first ] and then Scaurus had taken bribes. Pompey decided to arbitrate the dispute later, at the beginning of spring, and marched to Damascus. There, he heard the cases of Hyrcanus, Aristobulus and those who did not want a monarchy and wanted to return to the tradition of being under the high priest. Hyrcanus claimed that he was the rightful king as the elder brother and that he had been usurped, accusing Aristobulus of making incursions in nearby countries and being responsible for piracy, thus causing a revolt. Aristobulus claimed that Hyrcanus' indolence had caused him to be deposed, and that he took power lest others seize it. Pompey reproached Aristobulus for his violence, and told the men to wait for him, for he would settle the matter after dealing with the ]. However, Aristobulus went to Judea. This angered Pompey, who marched on Judea and went to the fortress of Alexandreium, where Aristobulus fled to.<ref>Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, 14.3.34, 37, 38, 41-49</ref>

Aristobulus went to talk to Pompey and returned to the fortress three times to pretend he was complying with him, intending to wear him down and prepare for war should he rule against him. When Pompey ordered him to surrender the fortress, Aristobulus did give it up, but withdrew to Jerusalem and prepared for war. While Pompey was marching on Jerusalem, he was informed about the death of Mithridates. Pompey encamped at Jericho, where Aristobulus went to see him, promising to give him money, and received him into Jerusalem. Pompey forgave him and sent ] with soldiers to receive the money and the city. However, the soldiers of Aristobulus did not let them in, which led Pompey to arrest Aristobulus and enter Jerusalem. The pro-Aristobulus faction went to the Temple and prepared for a siege, while the rest of the inhabitants opened the city gates. Pompey sent in an army led by Piso and placed garrisons in the city and at the palace, yet the enemy refused to negotiate. Pompey built a wall around the area of the Temple and encamped inside this wall. However, the temple was well fortified and there was a deep valley around it. The Romans built a ramp and brought siege engines and battering rams from ].<ref>Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, 14.3.50-53, 4.54-62</ref>

Pompey took advantage of the enemy celebrating the Sabbath to deploy his battering rams, since Jewish law did not allow the Jews to meddle with the enemy if they were not attacking them on the day of the Sabbath. Therefore, the defenders of the Temple did not counter the deployment of the battering rams by the Romans, which, on the other days of the week, they had successfully prevented. The next day, the wall of the Temple was broken through and the soldiers went on a rampage.<ref>Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, 14.4.64-70</ref> According to Josephus, 12,000 Jews fell. Josephus wrote "No small enormities were committed about the temple itself, which, in former ages, had been inaccessible, and seen by none; for Pompey went into it, and not a few of those that were with him also, and saw all that which it was unlawful for any other men to see but only for the high priests. There were in that temple the golden table, the holy candlestick, and the pouring vessels, and a great quantity of spices; and besides these there were among the treasures two thousand ] of sacred money: yet did Pompey touch nothing of all this, on account of his regard to religion; and in this point also he acted in a manner that was worthy of his virtue." The next day, he ordered the men in charge of the Temple to ] it, and to bring offerings to God, as Jewish law required. Pompey restored Hyrcanus to the high priesthood "both because he had been useful to him in other respects, and because he hindered the Jews in the country from giving Aristobulus any assistance in his war against him."<ref>Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, 14.4.71-73</ref>

Pompey returned the Syrian cities the Jews had conquered to Syrian rule, thus bringing Judea back to its original territory. He rebuilt the city of Garara and restored seven inland cities and four coastal ones to its inhabitants. He also made Jerusalem a tributary of Rome and Judea a satellite of Syria. According to Josephus, Pompey then went to Cilicia, taking Aristobulus and his children with him, and, after this, he returned to Rome.<ref>Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, 14.54.79</ref>

This contrasts with the account of Plutarch, who did not mention any action in Judea. He wrote that Pompey marched on ] (the capital of the ]) to confirm Aretas, who wanted to become a friend of Rome. It was while he was encamped near Petra that he was told that Mithridates was dead, and he then left Arabia and went to Amisus.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 42.2</ref> Josephus did write that Pompey marched on Nabataea, but did not mention the reason for this. However, he also marched to Judea to deal with Aristobulus, and it was not mentioned whether he actually reached Petra before turning to Judea. He learned of the death of Mithridates when he was marching towards Jerusalem. When he completed matters in Judea, he went to Cilicia instead of Amisus.

] gave a brief account of Pompey's campaign in Judea and wrote that, after this, he went to Pontus, which fits with Plutarch writing that he went to Amisus.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.14.3, 15-17, 20.1</ref> ] in his ] gives a short account of Pompey's siege of the temple, in line with the account of Josephus.

Josephus wrote that after his siege of the Temple in Jerusalem, Pompey gave the governorship of Syria (for 62 BC) as far as the river ] and Egypt to ], giving him two legions. Scaurus made an expedition against Petra, in Arabian Nabataea. He burned the settlements around it because it was difficult to gain access to. His army suffered hunger, thus Hyrcanus ordered Antipater to supply grain and other provisions from Judea.<ref>Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, 14.5.80-81</ref> Josephus did not give an explanation for the actions of Scaurus, but it probably had to do with the security of the Decapolis. Josephus also wrote:

<blockquote>Now the occasions of this misery which came upon Jerusalem were Hyrcanus and Aristobulus, by raising a sedition one against the other; for now we lost our liberty, and became subject to the Romans, and were deprived of that country which we had gained by our arms from the Syrians, and were compelled to restore it to the Syrians. Moreover, the Romans exacted of us, in a little time, above ten thousand talents; and the royal authority, which was a dignity formerly bestowed on those that were high priests, by the right of their family, became the property of private men.<ref>Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, 14.4.77-78</ref></blockquote>

===Pompey's settlements in the East===
], France]]
Pompey set out to liberate a number of Hellenised towns from their rulers. He joined seven towns east of the river ] that had been under the ] of ], plus ], into a league. Philadelphia (today's ]), which had been under ], also joined the league, which was called the ] (Ten Cities). They were mostly in ] (now part of ]) and around the east of the ], part of which extended into Syria. It seems that Pompey organized the league as a means of preserving the sovereignty of the city-states. Although he put them under the protection of the ], each city-state was autonomous. It is thought that it was not organized as a political unit and that the cities cooperated on economic and security matters. Josephus mentioned five of these cities as being taken away from the Hasmoneans and restored to their inhabitants (i.e. they were given self-government). He also mentioned cities in Judea: Azotus (]), Jamneia (]), Joppa (]), Dora (], now an archaeological site), ] (Tel Maresha) and ] (now an archaeological site). He also mentioned Strato's Tower (later called ]), Arethusa (now replaced by ]) in Syria, and the city of ] as being restored to their people. Two other towns near Gaza, Anthedon (now an archaeological site) and Raphia (]), as well as another inland town, Adora (], near ]) were also restored.<ref>Kasher, Aryeh, Jews and Hellenistic Cities in Eretz-Israel, Mohr Siebeck, (1990), 176–77</ref>

The liberation of the cities was symbolised by the adoption of the ], which made it comparable to a new foundation. This calendar counted the years from 63 BC, the year when self-government started. Damascus continued to use the ]. A number of the cities in Judea and Galilee also adopted the Pompeian era. Several of the towns had been damaged during Hasmonean rule, but the damage was not extensive and reconstruction was completed by the time of the governorship in Syria of ] in 57 BC. Gaza and Raphia adopted the Pompeian era when reconstruction was completed, in 61 and 57 BC respectively. The town of Samaria adopted the appellation of Gabinian, presumably because reconstruction there was finished under the governorship of Gabinius. The towns also experienced repopulation, with some of the exiles returning home and probably new settlers for the nearby areas and Hellenized Syrians being brought in. A distinction between citizens of the polis and natives was restored. Jews were not counted as citizens because of religion, and were probably deported or saw their property confiscated in revenge, with some probably becoming tenants of Hellenized landowners. Such developments increased the long-standing hostility between Jews and Hellenized people.<ref>Kasher, Aryeh, Jews and Hellenistic Cities in Eretz-Israel, Mohr Siebeck, (1990), 177–78</ref>

Besides annexing Syria and turning Judea into a client kingdom and a satellite of Syria, Pompey annexed the coastal strip in the western part of the ] and merged it with ], turning both into the Roman province of ]. The kingdom of Bithynia had been bequeathed to Rome by its last king, ], in 74 BC, triggering the ]. During this war, it was not formally annexed. The territories Mithridates had conquered, apart for ], became client states. The eastern coast and the interior of Pontus plus the ] became client kingdoms under ], the son of Mithridates who had rebelled against his father and gone over to the Romans. Pompey installed ] as a client ruler in ]. He gave ] to ] under the Roman client king ] as a reward for his loyalty to Rome.

Pompey greatly expanded the province of ] along the coast (adding ] to its west) and inland. He reorganized it into six parts: Cilicia Aspera, Cilicia Campestris, Pamphylia, ] (north of Pamphylia), ] (east of Pisidia), ] (north of Cilicia Trachea) and the greater part of ] (north of Pisidia and Isauria). He left ] in control of ] and ], to the east of Cilicia Campestris. Tarcondimotus and his son and successor (Tarcondimotus II) were loyal allies of Rome.

As noted above, ancient Cilicia was divided into Cilicia Trachea, a mountainous region in the west, and Cilicia Pedias, in the east, by the river ]. Cilicia had been made the military operational area of ] for his 102 BC campaign against the pirates, and a small part of Cilicia Pedias then became Roman territory. It was made the military operational area for the 78–74 BC campaign of ]. However, Cilicia was not actually part of this, and he campaigned in eastern Lycia and Pamphylia. He incorporated the territories he subdued in those two areas in the province of Cilicia. However, Cilicia Trachea was still held by the pirates, and most of Cilicia Pedias belonged to Tigranes the Great, of Armenia. This area of Anatolia came truly under Roman control after Pompey's victories.

In 66 BC, following ]' campaigns there (69–67 BC), Crete was annexed as a Roman province. ] wrote: "Having subdued the Cretans, Quintus Metellus gave laws to their island, which had until then been independent."<ref>Livy, Periochae, 100.3</ref>

'''Overview:'''
* The Roman province of ] was enlarged and became the province of ] (Pompey added the western part of Pontus).
* ] was divided between ] ruling the ] in the west, Domnilaus ruling the ] in the middle, Brogitarus ruling the ] in the east, and Pylaemenes ruling Paphlagonia in the north.
* ] was restored to ] (Pompey actually increased his lands).
* The Roman province of ] was also enlarged (Pompey added Pamphylia and several other inland areas). Cilicia kept its name.
* The coastal strip from Gaza to the gulf of Issus was formed into a new Roman province, that is, Syria.
* Deiotarus (the ruler of the Tolistobogii) was given an extensive kingdom east of Bithynia et Pontus; consisting of the eastern part of Pontus and Lesser Armenia.
* ] was given to Aristarchus.
* ] was given to ].
* ] was given to Abgar.
* The ] range was given to Tarcondimotus.
* ] was allowed to remain king of Armenia.
* ] became independent of Armenia (but a client of Rome).
* ] became a client of Rome.
* ] was reinstated as ruler and high priest of ] (although much of the power in Judaea passed into the hands of ]).

==Return to Rome and third triumph==
Pompey went back to Amisus, where he found many gifts from Pharnaces and many dead bodies of the royal family, including that of Mithridates. Pompey could not look at Mithridates' body and sent it to Sinope. Before he departed for Rome, Pompey paid his army. The sum distributed amounted, we are told, to 16,000 talents (384,000,000 sesterces).<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 101.</ref> He then travelled in greater pomp. On his way to Italy, he went to ] on the island of ], and decided to build a theater in Rome modelled on that of this city. In ], he listened to the ] philosophers and gave them money. He also gave rewards to philosophers in Athens and gave the city money towards its restoration (it had been damaged by ] during the ]). In Rome, there were rumors that Pompey would march his army against the city and establish a monarchy. Crassus secretly left with his children and money, yet Plutarch thought that it was more likely he did this because he wanted to give credibility to the rumors rather than through genuine fear. However, Pompey disbanded his army when he landed in Italy. He was cheered by the inhabitants of the cities he passed on his way to Rome and many people joined him. Plutarch remarked that, if he arrived in Rome with such a large crowd, he would not have needed an army for a revolution.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 42.43</ref>
]
In the Senate, Pompey was probably equally admired and feared. On the streets, he was as popular as ever. His eastern victories earned him his third triumph, which he celebrated on his 45th birthday in 61 BC,<ref>Pliny, Natural History, 37.6</ref> seven months after his return to Italy. Plutarch wrote that it surpassed all previous triumphs, taking place over an unprecedented two days. Much of what had been prepared would not find a place and would have been enough for another procession. Inscriptions carried in front of the procession indicated the nations he defeated (], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], Syria, ], ], ], ] and ]) and claimed that 900 cities, 1,000 strongholds, 800 pirate ships and 1,000 pirates were captured and that 39 cities were founded. Some also claimed that his conquests were adding 85 million ] to the 30 million drachmas of the public revenues from taxes<ref>this was probably an exaggeration, Beard, M., The Roman Triumph, 2007, p. 9</ref> and that he brought 20,000 drachmas in silver and gold. The captives led in the triumph were the leaders of the pirates; the son of Tigranes the Great with his wife and daughter; a wife of ]; a sister and five children of ]; ], the king of the Jews; hostages from the ]ns and the ]; and the king of ].<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The life of Pompey, 45</ref>

Appian gave the names of the paraded children of Mithridates VI. They were the sons Artaphernes, Cyrus, Oxathres, Darius, and Xerxes, and the daughters ] and Eupatra. He specified that there were three Iberian chiefs and two Albanian ones. Olthaces, the chief of the Colchians; the tyrants of the ]ns; the female rulers of the ] and Menander the Laodicean, the commander of Mithridates' cavalry, were also paraded. In total, 324 people were paraded. The procession included images of Tigranes and Mithridates, who were not present, and the sons and daughters of Mithridates who had died. The image of Mithridates was made of gold and was four meters high. There was a tablet with the inscription "Ships with brazen beaks captured, 800; cities founded in Cappadocia, 8; in Cilicia and Coele-Syria, 20; in Palestine, the one which is now Seleucis. Kings conquered: Tigranes the Armenian; Artoces the Iberian; Oroezes the Albanian; Darius the Mede; Aretas the Nabataean and Antiochus of Commagene." There were two-horse carriages and litters laden with gold or ornaments, including the couch of Darius; the son of Hystaspes; and the throne and scepter of Mithridates. There were 75,100,000 drachmas of silver coin and 700 ships brought to the port. Appian also related that "Pompey himself was borne in a chariot studded with gems, wearing, it is said, the cloak of ], if anyone can believe that. It seems to have been found among the possessions of Mithridates that the inhabitants of ] had received from ]."<ref>Appian, The Mithridatic Wars, 117</ref>

] wrote that Pompey displayed "a chessboard made of two precious stones, three feet in width by two in length..." and remarked that his displays were "...more the triumph of luxury than the triumph of conquest."<ref>Pliny, Natural History 37.6</ref> Plutarch wrote "That which most enhanced his glory and had never been the lot of any Roman before, was that he celebrated his third triumph over the third continent."<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 45</ref> His triumphs were for victories in Africa, Hispania and Asia. Only ] had celebrated triumphs for victories in two continents (in Africa and Hispania). Cassius Dio wrote that Pompey displayed his "trophies beautifully decked out to represent each of his achievements, even the smallest; and after them all came one huge one, decked out in costly fashion and bearing an inscription stating that it was a trophy of the inhabited world". He also noted that he did not add any title to his name, as he was happy with his appellation as ''Magnus'' (the Great), and that he did not contrive to receive any other honor.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.21.2</ref>

Pompey increased the state's income by 70 percent (from 200 million sesterces to 340 million sesterces ''per annum''), and the value of the booty handed over to the treasury was a further 480 million sesterces.<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 118.</ref> Pompey never gave an insight into his own personal fortune, but it must have been vast. Many speculated that Pompey had surpassed Crassus in wealth.

==First Triumvirate==
{{Main|First Triumvirate}}
], ], and Pompey the Great]]

When Pompey returned to Rome from the ], he asked the Roman senate to ratify the acts of his settlements with the cities, kings and princes in the east. This was opposed by the senators, particularly the '']'', who were suspicious of the power Pompey had acquired with the lex Gabinia and the lex Manilia and the popularity he gained with his military successes. They saw him as a threat to their supremacy and as a potential tyrant. In 60 BC, the ''optimates'' also defeated a bill that would have distributed farmland to Pompey's veterans, and to some of the landless urban poor of Rome, who relied on a grain dole distributed by the state to survive. The consul ] opposed the bill very effectively. The other consul, Afrianius, whose election had been sponsored by Pompey, was of no assistance. According to Cassius Dio, he "understood how to dance better than to transact any business."<ref>Cassius Dio, ''Roman History'', 37.49.3</ref> In the end, lacking support, Pompey let the matter drop. The Pompeian camp proved to be inadequate to respond the obstructionism of the ''optimates''.<ref>Mitchell, T.N., Cicero, ''Pompey, and the Rise of the First Triumvirate'', pp. 19–20</ref>

Midsummer of 60 BC saw the return to Rome of ], flushed with success from his campaign in Hispania and determined to win the consulship. Caesar was a skilled and energetic politician and exactly the man Pompey was looking for. Caesar also enjoyed the support of ], allegedly Rome's wealthiest man and a political force on his own, who had also seen his agenda blocked by the ''optimates''. Caesar won the election for one of the two consulships for 59 BC, and could provide the kind of support needed for Pompey's and Crassus' bills to be passed. Caesar also pursued a policy of conciliating Crassus and Pompey, who had become rivals over the last decade.<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', pp 120-121</ref>

Thus, Caesar brought into being this alliance between these three men, which historians call the First Triumvirate. Together, these three men could break the resistance of the ''optimates''. Pompey's political clout was based on his popularity as a military commander and on the political patronage and purchase of votes for his supporters and himself that his wealth could afford. He also had the support of his war veterans: "Prestige, wealth, clients, and loyal, grateful veterans who could be readily mobilized—these were the ''opes'' which could guarantee brand of ."<ref>Mitchell, T., Cicero, Pompey and the rise of the First Triumvirate, Traditio, Vol. 29 (1973), p. 17</ref> Crassus was a property speculator and the richest man in Rome, who also had extensive patronage networks.

Caesar was elected, and proposed an agrarian bill to the plebeian council, which Pompey and Crassus publicly supported. The bill passed over the opposition of his colleague as consul, ], whose election had been funded by the ''optimates'' due to his opposition to Caesar and his bill. Calpurnius Bibulus subsequently retired from politics and Caesar had the acts of Pompey's settlements in the east passed.<ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 2.10-12</ref><ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 38.2.1, 4-7.6</ref><ref>Suetonius, The Twelve Caesars, Julius Caesar, 30.3</ref><ref>lutarch, Parallel Lives, The life of Caesar, 14.2-3; The Live of Pompey, 13</ref> A law that made Caesar governor of ] and ] also passed. When the governor of ] died, Caesar was given that province as well. Caesar tied Pompey to himself by marrying him to his daughter Julia, even though she was betrothed to another man.<ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 2.14</ref><ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, the Live of Caesar. 17.7, The Life of Pompey, 47.6</ref><ref>Suetonius, The twelve Caesars, Julius Caesar, 21</ref> He then left Rome to take on these governorships and got involved in his ], which lasted from 58 to 50 BC. Pompey and Caesar set ] against ], who was an opponent of the triumvirate. Clodius managed to have Cicero exiled, but soon, Pompey decided to have Cicero recalled to Rome, because Clodius turned against him. A grateful Cicero stopped opposing Pompey.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.2.7.5; 8.2, 5</ref><ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 2.13</ref><ref>Suetonius, The Twelve Caesars, Julius Caesar, 22.1</ref><ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The life of Caesar, 14.10</ref>

In 58 BC, food shortages in Rome caused popular unrest. Cicero persuaded the people to appoint Pompey as '']'' (prefect of the provisions) in Italy and beyond for five years. This post was instituted at times of severe grain shortages to supervise the grain supply. Clodius alleged that the scarcity of grain had been engineered to support a law that boosted Pompey's power, which had been decreasing. Both Plutarch and Cassius Dio thought that the law made Pompey "the master of all the land and sea under Roman possession." Pompey sent agents and friends to various places and sailed to ], ] and the ] (the ]s of the Roman empire) to collect grain. He collected it in such abundance that the markets were filled and there was also enough to supply foreigners. Appian wrote that this success gave Pompey great reputation and power. Cassius Dio also wrote that Pompey faced some delays in the distribution of grain because many slaves had been freed prior to the distribution and Pompey wanted to take a census to ensure they received it in an orderly way.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 49.4-6, 50</ref><ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 39.9. 24.1-2</ref><ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 2.18</ref>

In 56 BC, Caesar, who was fighting the Gallic Wars, crossed the Alps into Italy and wintered in Luca (], Tuscany). In the ''Life of Crassus'', Plutarch wrote that Caesar met Pompey and Crassus and agreed that the two of them would stand for the consulship and that he would support them by sending soldiers to Rome to vote for them. They were then to secure the command of provinces and armies for themselves and confirm his provinces for a further five years. In the ''Life of Pompey'', Plutarch added that Caesar also wrote letters to his friends and that the three men were aiming at making themselves the masters of the state.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Live of Pompey, 51.3-6; The Life of Crassus, 14. 4-6</ref><ref>Suetonius, The Twelve Caesars, Julius Caesar, 23, 24.1</ref><ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 2.17</ref> Cassius Dio, who wrote the most detailed account of the period, did not mention the ]. In his version, instead, Pompey and Crassus agreed to stand for the consulship between themselves as a counterpoise to Caesar. Pompey was annoyed about the increasing admiration of Caesar due to his success in the Gallic Wars, which, he felt, overshadowed his own exploits. He tried to persuade the consuls not to read Caesar's reports from Gaul and to send someone to relieve his command. He was unable to achieve anything through the consuls, and felt that Caesar's increasing independence made his own position precarious. He began to arm himself against Caesar and got closer to Crassus because he thought he could not challenge Caesar on his own. The two men decided to stand for the consulship so that they could be more than a match for Caesar.

Once elected, Pompey and Crassus got Gaius Trebonius, a plebeian tribune, to propose a measure that gave the province of Syria and the nearby lands to one of the consuls, and the provinces of ] and ] to the other. They would hold the command there for five years, being able to levy as many troops as they wanted and "make peace and war with whomsoever they pleased." The supporters of Caesar were unhappy, and therefore Crassus and Pompey extended Caesar's command in Gaul. According to Cassius Dio, this was for three years, not five.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 39.33</ref> In the ''Life of Pompey'', Plutarch wrote that the laws proposed by Trebonius were in accordance with the agreement made at Luca. They gave Caesar's command a second five-year term, assigned the ] and an expedition against ] to Crassus and gave Pompey the two provinces in Hispania (where there had recently been disturbances), the whole of Africa (presumably, Plutarch meant ], as well as the ]) and four legions. Pompey lent two of these legions to Caesar for his wars in Gaul at his request.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Live of Pompey, 52.3</ref> According to Appian, Pompey lent Caesar only one legion, when two of Caesar's lieutenants were defeated in Gaul by ] in 54 BC.<ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 2.29, 33</ref>


==From confrontation to civil war== ==From confrontation to civil war==
], a bust of ] in the Archaeological Museum of ], Italy]] ]


In 54 BC, Caesar continued his conquest of Gaul, Crassus opened his campaign against the Parthians, and Pompey remained in Rome, where his wife Julia died in child birth in September. Contemporary sources suggest that combined with the death of Crassus and his son [[Publius Licinius Crassus (son of triumvir)|
In 54 BC, Pompey was the only member of the triumvirate who was in Rome. Caesar continued his campaigns in Gaul and Crassus undertook his campaign against the Parthians. In September 54 BC, Julia, the daughter of Caesar and wife of Pompey, died while giving birth to a girl, who also died a few days later.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History 39.64.1</ref><ref>Appian, The Civil Wars 2.19</ref> Plutarch wrote that Caesar felt that this was the end of his good relationship with Pompey. The news created factional discord and unrest in Rome as it was thought that the death brought the end of the ties between Caesar and Pompey. The campaign of Crassus against Parthia was disastrous. Shortly after the death of Julia, Crassus died at the ] (May 53 BC), bringing the first triumvirate to an end. Plutarch thought that fear of Crassus had led Pompey and Caesar to be decent to each other and his death paved the way for the subsequent friction between these two men and the events that eventually led to civil war.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Live of Caesar 23.5-6; The Live of Pompey, 53.4-6</ref> Florus wrote "Caesar's power now inspired the envy of Pompey, while Pompey's eminence was offensive to Caesar; Pompey could not brook an equal or Caesar a superior."<ref>Florus, Epitome of Roman History, 2.13.14</ref> Seneca wrote that, with regard to Caesar, Pompey "would ill endure that anyone besides himself should become a great power in the state, and one who was likely to place a check upon his advancement, which he had regarded as onerous even when each gained by the other's rise: yet within three days' time he resumed his duties as general, and conquered his grief as quickly as he was wont to conquer everything else."<ref>Seneca, Dialogues, Book 6, Of Consolation: To Marcia, 6.14.3</ref>
Publius]] at ] in May 53 BC, this removed any obstacle to direct confrontation between Caesar and Pompey.<ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives'', ''Life of Caesar'', 23.5–6</ref><ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives'', ''Life of Pompey'', 53.4–6.</ref>{{efn|Historian ] wrote "Pompey could not brook an equal, or Caesar a superior."<ref>Florus, ''Epitome of Roman History'', 2.13.14</ref>}}


Consular elections in 52 BC had to be suspended due to widespread violence. Seeking to end his alliance with Caesar, the ''optimate'' Bibulus proposed Pompey be elected sole consul, an unprecedented act backed by both Cato and the tribunate.{{sfn|Ramsey|2016|pp=307–308}} Having restored order, Pompey married Cornelia, widow of Publius Crassus and daughter of ], whom he appointed as his colleague for the last five months of the year.{{sfn|Ramsey|2016|p=299}}
In the ''Life of Pompey'', Plutarch wrote that the plebeian tribune Lucilius proposed to elect Pompey dictator. ], who had been the fiercest opponent of the triumvirate, opposed this, and Lucilius came close to losing his tribunate. Despite all this, two consuls for the next year (53 BC) were elected as usual. In 53 BC, three candidates stood for the consulship for 52 BC. Besides resorting to bribery, they promoted factional violence, which Plutarch saw as a civil war. There were renewed and stronger calls for a dictator. However, in the ''Life of Cato'', Plutarch did not mention any calls for a dictator and, instead, he wrote that there were calls for Pompey to preside over the elections, which Cato the Younger opposed. In both versions, the violence among the three factions continued and the elections could not be held. The '']'' favored entrusting Pompey with restoring order. ], the former enemy of the triumvirate, proposed in the senate that Pompey should be elected as sole consul. Cato changed his mind and supported this on the ground that any government was better than no government. Pompey asked him to become his advisor and associate in governance, to which Cato replied that he would do so in a private capacity.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, the Life of Pompey, 54; The Life of Cato Minor, 47-49</ref>


As consul, Pompey helped enact legislation which some historians view as crucial to understanding the drift to war in 49 BC. Accused of using violence during his consulship in 59 BC, Caesar had previously been shielded by his proconsular immunity. With private support from Pompey, new laws made such prosecutions retrospective, which meant Caesar would probably be put on trial the moment he left Gaul and lost his '']''.{{sfn|Stanton|2003|p=73}} To avoid this, he had secured approval to stand for the consulship in 48 BC while still in Gaul, but another law backed by Pompey required electoral candidates to be physically present in Rome.{{sfn|Stanton|2003|p=75}}
Pompey married Cornelia, a daughter of ]. Some people disliked this, because Cornelia was much younger, and thought she would have been a better match for his sons. There were also people who thought that Pompey gave priority to his wedding over dealing with the crisis in the city, and he was also seen as being partial in the conduct of some trials. However, he succeeded in restoring order and chose his father-in-law as his colleague for the last five months of the year. Pompey was granted an extension of his command in his provinces in Hispania and was given an annual sum for the maintenance of his troops. Cato warned Pompey about Caesar's manoeuvres to increase his power by using the money he made from the spoils of war to extend his patronage in Rome, and urged him to counter Caesar. Pompey hesitated, and Cato stood for the consulship in order to deprive Caesar of his military command and have him tried, but he was not elected. The supporters of Caesar argued that Caesar deserved an extension of his command so that the fruit of his success would not be lost, which triggered a debate. Pompey showed goodwill towards Caesar, claiming that he had letters from Caesar in which he said he wanted to be relieved of his command, but Pompey opined that he should be allowed to stand for the consulship ''in absentia''. Cato opposed this and said that, if Caesar wanted this, he had to lay down his arms and become a private citizen. Pompey did not contest Cato's view, which gave rise to suspicions about his real feelings towards Caesar.<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, the Life of Pompey, 55-56</ref>


Although the two continued to co-operate in public,{{sfn|Stanton|2003|p=67}} Pompey clearly viewed his colleague as a threat, as did much of the Senate. Both consuls for 50 BC, ] and ], were opponents of Caesar, as was ], a plebeian tribune. They initiated legislation to remove Caesar from his command in Gaul, who allegedly bypassed this by bribing Paullus and Curio.{{sfn|Drogula|2019|p=240}} For whatever reason, Curio came up with an alternative proposal; Caesar and Pompey should disarm at the same time, or be declared enemies of the state.{{sfn|Drogula|2019|pp=241–242}}
] made during the reign of ] (27 BC – 14 AD), a copy of an original bust from 70–60 BC, ], Italy]]
Pompey was moving towards a power struggle with Caesar and relied on the support of the Senate and the ''optimates''. The bone of contention between the two men was the troops they both commanded. According to Plutarch, the rift between Pompey and Cato became exacerbated when Pompey fell seriously ill in Naples in 50 BC. Upon his recovery, the people of Naples offered thanksgiving sacrifices, and the resulting celebration spread throughout Italy. He was feted in towns he travelled to on his way back to Rome. Plutarch wrote that this was said "to have done more than anything else to bring about war. For while the public rejoicing was great, a spirit of arrogance came upon Pompey, which went beyond the calculations based upon facts, and, throwing to the winds caution... he indulged himself in unlimited confidence and contempt for Caesar's power, feeling that he would need neither an armed force to oppose him nor any irksome labor of preparation, but that he would pull him down much more easily than he had raised him up."<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 57.1-3</ref> This assessment is a bit exaggerated, especially with regard to the feeling of not needing an army. However, it is likely that the display of popular support made Pompey overconfident.


This was a clever move, since it was popular with those who wanted to avoid war, but unacceptable to the ''optimates'' who saw Caesar as a danger that had to be eliminated.{{sfn|Drogula|2019|p=243}} Rejection made open conflict more likely, and the Senate agreed to fund a consular army, organised by Pompey. When he fell ill while recruiting in ], the celebrations that followed his recovery allegedly convinced Pompey his popularity was sufficient to see off any opponent.{{sfn|Collins|1953|p=104}} In December, Caesar crossed the Alps with a single veteran legion and arrived at ], close to the border with the Roman Republic.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|p=558}}{{efn|Now in Northern Italy, Ravenna was then a federated ally of the ]}}
In 51 BC, the consul ] proposed to send a successor to take command of Caesar's provinces before his term of office had expired, whereas Pompey said that Caesar's command should come to an end on its expiration. In Appian's opinion, this was a pretense of fairness and goodwill. Two bitter enemies of Caesar, ] and ] (a cousin of the previous consul) were chosen as consuls for 50 BC. ], who was also opposed to Caesar, became one of the new plebeian tribunes. Caesar obtained the neutrality of Aemilius Paullus with a large sum of money, and the help of Curio by paying off his debts. When Marcellus proposed sending someone to assume command of Caesar's army, Paullus remained silent, and Curio seconded the motion, but added that Pompey should also give up his provinces and armies to remove fear of conflict, which encountered opposition. Curio maintained his stance that both men should lay down their command, because they were suspicious of each other and there would not be peace. The people praised him as the only politician who was willing to incur the enmity of both men for the good of Rome. Pompey promised to give up his governorship and armies, claiming that Caesar would do the same. According to Appian, the aim of this was to create prejudice against Caesar, who did not seem likely to give up his command, and to have a successor for Caesar's command appointed immediately, thus forcing Caesar to disband his armies, while Pompey retained his with impunity.


A significant number of senators opposed any concessions to Caesar, but many also mistrusted Pompey, who has been criticised for "weak and ineffectual leadership" in this period.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|pp=557–558}} On 1 January 49 BC, Caesar sent an ultimatum demanding acceptance of his compromise, failing which he would march on Rome "to avenge his country's wrongs". Confident their forces significantly outnumbered those available to Caesar, on 7 January the Senate declared him a public enemy; four days later, he crossed the ] into Italy.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|p=558}}
Curio exposed this, saying that promises were not enough and that Pompey should lay down his command immediately and that Caesar should disarm after this, because, if Caesar would do so first, Pompey, aiming at supreme power, would have no incentive to disarm. He also proposed that, unless both obeyed, both should be declared public enemies and troops should be levied against them. The Senate was suspicious of both men, but deemed Pompey to be less of a threat and hated Caesar because he had disregarded the Senate when he was consul. Some senators proposed that Caesar should disarm first, but Curio maintained that Caesar was a counterbalance to Pompey's power and that either Pompey should disarm first or both should do so simultaneously. The Senate disagreed and he dismissed the motion without coming to a resolution.<ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 2.26-29</ref>


==The Road to Pharsalus==
Despite this impasse, the Senate did pass a decree that Caesar and Pompey should send a legion to Syria to defend it against the Parthians who had defeated Crassus. Pompey took advantage of this to recall the soldiers he had lent Caesar. Caesar gave them 250 ] and sent them to Rome, together with a legion of his own. According to Appian, Pompey had lent him one legion; according to Caesar, it was two legions.<ref>Julius Caesar, The Civil War, 1.3</ref> However, the Parthian threat to Syria did not materialize and the legions were sent to ]. Pompey's soldiers said that Caesar's troops were worn out, longed to return home, and would defect to Pompey as soon as they had crossed the Alps. Whether through ignorance or corruption, this information was wrong; Caesar's soldiers were very loyal to him. Pompey believed the reports and did not levy troops to counter Caesar's forces.<ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 2.30</ref>

Caesar crossed the Alps with a legion and arrived at ], close to the border with Italy. Curio advised him to assemble his whole army and march on Rome, but Caesar decided to negotiate. He proposed to give up his governorships and troops, but retain two legions and the provinces of ] and ] until he should be elected consul. Pompey agreed, but the consuls refused. Curio went to Rome with a letter Caesar wrote to the senate and gave it to the two newly elected consuls, ] and ]. Caesar proposed that both he and Pompey lay down their arms at the same time and said that, if Pompey retained his, he would not expose himself to his enemies. Claudius Marcellus put forward the questions of sending a successor to Caesar and disarming Pompey separately. No senator voted for Pompey to give up his arms, because his troops were in the suburbs, whereas all but two voted for Caesar to disband his army. There was a false rumor that Caesar was marching on Rome, to which Claudius proposed that Caesar be declared public enemy and that the army at Capua be sent against him, but Curio opposed this on the ground that it was a false rumor. Two of the new plebeian tribunes, ] and ], did not allow the motions to be ratified. This angered senators, who debated a punishment for them, and the consul Cornelius Lentulus advised them to leave the Senate, for their safety. There were detachments of Pompey standing around the senate house, that secretly went to Caesar along with Curio.<ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 32–33</ref><ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 41.1-3.1-2</ref>

In Plutarch's version, Curio's demands were very popular. Pompey should be required to give up his troops, and if not, Caesar should retain his. In the latter case, the two men would remain a match for each other and would not cause trouble. However, weakening one of them would double the power of the other. Claudius Marcellus called Caesar a robber and urged for him to be voted a public enemy unless he should lay down his arms. Curio, helped by Antony and Piso, prevailed, moving for a vote about Caesar laying down his arms and Pompey retaining his command, which passed. Then, he moved for a vote on both men laying down their arms and relinquishing their command, for which only twenty-two favored Pompey. Curio felt that he had won the day and rushed before the people, being applauded and "pelted with garlands and flowers." However, Claudius Marcellus declared that "since he saw ten legions already looming up in their march over the Alps, he himself also would send forth a man who would oppose them in defense of his country."<ref>Plutarch, Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey, 58.3-6</ref>

According to Cassius Dio, the senators went to Pompey and gave him both funds and troops. According to Appian, Lucius Domitius was appointed as Caesar's successor, and he took to the field with 4,000 men from the active list. The Senate thought that the arrival of Caesar's army from Gaul would take time and that he would not rush with a small force, directing Pompey to levy 130,000 Italian soldiers (mainly from the veterans) and to recruit as many men as possible from the neighboring provinces. All the money from the public treasury and, if needed, from the private wealth of the senators, was to be used to pay for the soldiers. Contributions were also to be levied from the allied cities as quickly as possible. Caesar, accustomed to celerity and audacity, decided to advance with just the one legion, anticipating his enemy and seizing strategic positions in Italy.<ref>Cassius Dio, Roman History, 41 1.3</ref><ref>Appian, The Civil Wars, 32, 34</ref>

==Civil war and assassination==
{{Main|Caesar's civil war}} {{Main|Caesar's civil war}}
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Caesar sent a detachment to Ariminum (]), the first town in Italy, and took it by surprise. He then advanced towards Rome, having crossed the ] at the boundary of Italy. On hearing of this, the consuls directed Pompey to quickly recruit more troops. The Senate, still unprepared, was panicked at Caesar's unexpected speed. Cicero proposed sending messengers to Caesar to negotiate their safety, but the frantic consuls rejected this path.<ref>{{cite book|author=]|title= The Civil Wars}} 2.34-35.</ref> Therefore, Caesar marched on to Rome, winning over all the cities on the way without a fight, either because their garrisons were too weak or they preferred his cause. Pompey, after learning of this from a defector and having had no time to prepare a large enough force, sent Roman envoys to Caesar to request negotiations.


When the war began, Caesar was a rebel with no navy and three understrength legions, while Pompey was backed by all the resources of the Roman state and his clients in the East.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|p=557}} However, his position was weaker than it seemed, since he was simply an advisor to the Senate, many of whose members either preferred a negotiated solution, or regarded him with as much suspicion as Caesar. His military strategy had to be approved by the consuls, and he could only issue recommendations, which were not always followed. For example, Cicero rejected a request to help him with recruitment, and Cato refused to take command of Sicily, vital for control of Rome's grain supply.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|pp=558–559}}
Caesar agreed to negotiate. He promised the envoys that no one would suffer harm at his hands and that he would call for the immediate disbandment of the troops. However, the people of Rome feared war and were already calling for both men to disarm at the same time.


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Pompey knew that any negotiations would soon leave him inferior to Caesar rather than an equal partner. Therefore, before his envoys could return, Pompey planned his flight to ] to pursue the war from there. He ordered the senators and officials to go with him, and to seize the public treasury to pay for the troops they needed to recruit. However, after hearing exaggerated reports about Caesar's not being conciliatory, the senators disobeyed and hurriedly left Rome to their own estates without touching the money. The flight from Rome was disorderly. As Pompey rushed away, he hastily levied troops from the Italian cities on the road, setting up garrisons as he went.<ref>{{cite book|author=]|title= Roman History}} 41.4-6.</ref>


Plans to defend Italy were undone by the speed with which Caesar moved, advancing directly on Rome with minimal resistance. Although outnumbered, his troops were experienced veterans, while many of Pompey's were new recruits, a weakness made worse by lack of co-ordination. Cato's brother-in-law, the ''optimate'' leader ], was cut off and captured in a hopeless defence of ], and his 13,000 men incorporated into Caesar's army.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|pp=558–559}} Led by ], they were later used to occupy Sicily.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=183}}
Caesar stopped his march on Rome and claimed that he was fighting against his opponents and in defence of Rome. He sent letters throughout Italy that challenged Pompey, who responded with a letter campaign himself and tried to make Caesar look as if he had turned down reasonable terms.


Pompey had abandoned Rome, ordering all senators and public officials to accompany him as he withdrew south to ]. From there, he transported his troops across the ] to ] in ], an operation performed with almost complete success.{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=173–185}} Lacking ships to pursue him, Caesar first secured his rear by subduing Pompeian forces in Hispania, before returning to Rome in December 49 BC. This gave Pompey time to build an army nearly twice the size of his opponents, while his navy destroyed two fleets being built for Caesar, ensuring the Pompeians retained control of the sea lanes.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|p=559}}
In response, Caesar ordered his lieutenants to advance; Picenum, Etruria, and Umbria were taken. Caesar was joined by his Twelfth legion, which increased his numbers in Italy to two legions. Pompey did not want to send his newly-recruited green forces against Caesar's battle-hardened veterans, so he decided to abandon Italy and called on all loyalist commanders to retreat south.


Despite this, in January 48 BC Caesar managed to cross the Adriatic with seven legions and land in southern ].{{sfn|Boak|1921|p=176}}{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=192}} After capturing ] and ], he advanced on Pompey's main supply base at ]. The latter arrived in time to ] the attempt, and establish a fortified camp on the other side of the River ], where the two armies remained until spring.{{efn|Pompey was based at ],{{sfn|Wylle|1992|p=560}} a small port north of Dyrrhachium, roughly on the site of modern ] in Albania}} Neither commander was anxious to begin hostilities, since Caesar was too weak militarily, while as with Mithridates, Pompey preferred to starve his opponent into submission.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|p=560}}
Meanwhile, Caesar had set out against ], in central Italy, which was occupied by ]. Domitius had thirty-one cohorts at Corfunium and decided to make a stand.<ref>He must have figured that outnumbering Caesar 3:2 he had a chance to halt the Caesarian advance.</ref> Caesar quickly took the neighbouring town of Sulmo garrisoned by seven cohorts; Caesar's Eighth legion had arrived, increasing the number of his veteran legions to three, and Curio had brought up twenty-two cohorts of recruits. Caesar now outnumbered Domitius 5:3 and started building siege-works all around the city. Realising that escape for the whole army was impossible and that no relief was on its way, Domitius apparently decided to attempt to save himself and tried to escape the siege. His troops, however, found out his plans, seized Domitius as he was trying to escape, and took him to Caesar who let Domitius go and even let him take his money with him. Domitius's soldiers, however, were made to swear a new oath of loyalty (to Caesar) and were added to Caesar's army. They were eventually sent to Sicily under the command of Asinius Pollio and helped him take the island from Marcus Porcius Cato.<ref>Leach, John. ''Pompey the Great'', pp 182-183</ref>


]
Pompey hastened to ] and then to ], the main port for crossing to ]. He had finally decided to abandon Italy and to complete his war preparations in Greece. He wrote to the governors of the provinces, and also to the kings and cities he had won over in the ] asking them to send aid. Pompey knew he could not reach his troops in ] because Caesar controlled Gaul and therefore blocked the land route into the Iberian peninsula. He believed Caesar would be unable to pursue him to Greece because there were too few ships, and the winter, which made the Mediterranean difficult to sail, was approaching. Possibly because of the change of plan there were only enough transports for thirty out of his fifty cohorts. Pompey decided he should let the consuls and their new recruits cross over to ] first, they left by 8 March. On 9 March, after sixteen days of hard marching, Caesar's army arrived at Brundisium and proceeded to set up camp outside the town walls. The city was difficult to seize, and Caesar tried to negotiate peace and resume his friendship with Pompey. Pompey merely said that he would relay that to the consuls. Caesar besieged and attacked the city. Pompey repelled him until the ships returned and set sail at night. After this, Caesar seized the city and captured two ships full of men.<ref>Appian, ''The Civil Wars'', 2.38.</ref><ref>Cassius Dio. ''Roman History'', 41.10-11.</ref><ref>Caesar. ''The Civil War'', book I.</ref><ref>Leach, John. ''Pompey the Great'', pp 173-185.</ref>


In late March the stalemate was broken when ] finally managed to cross the Adriatic with four more legions and land at ], some 57 kilometres north of Dyrrachium. Pompey tried to prevent the two Caesarian armies from linking up, by marching north-east and laying an ambush for Antony. The ambush, however, was revealed to Antony by some local Caesarian sympathisers, and he stayed in camp until Caesar approached. Pompey not willing to be caught between the two Caesarian forces withdrew.{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=192–193}}
From Dyrrachium Pompey marched to ], where he set up a training area and a camp at ], a town in the lower ] valley sixty kilometers west of ]. Pompey rapidly proceeded to build his new army. He had already with him the five legions he brought from Italy, and to these were added four more; the veteran settlers in Macedonia and ] provided one, the remains of the two legions which formed the permanent garrison of ] provided one, and the consul ], now governor of Asia, recruited two more. Furthermore, ], the governor of ], was ordered to bring his two legions to Greece, but he had some difficulty bringing them across the ] and got no further than ] before deciding to put his men into winter quarters. Pompey also sent instructions to all the client rulers of the East to provide troops. ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ] all sent contingents. The infantry was distributed among the legions; there were also 3,000 archers, 1,200 slingers, and, the pride of the army 7,000 cavalry.<ref>Leach, John, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 186; Appian, ''Civil Wars'', II.8.49; Caesar, ''Civil Wars'', III.3 ff.</ref>


Caesar, his army now united with Antony's force, redeployed his forces by sending one-and-a-half legion to win support and gather supplies in ] and ], and a further two legions under ] to intercept ] in Macedonia. Meanwhile, ], Pompey's oldest son, managed to destroy Caesar's fleet at Oricum and ], making sure no more reinforcements and supplies would reach Caesar from Italy. Caesar tried to lure Pompey into a ] at Asparagium, but the latter refused. The next day Caesar outmaneuvred Pompey and marched for Dyrrachium again. When Pompey arrived at the city Caesar had already set up camp.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=193}}
Pompey also gathered a fleet, estimated by Plutarch at 500 fighting ships with many more transports and other craft, but probably nearer 300 fighting ships. They were under the supreme command of Marcus Bibulus and divided into five flotillas commanded by Gnaeus Pompey (60 ships from Egypt), Laelius and Triarius (the Asiatic fleet), Gaius Casius Longinus (70 ships from Syria), Marcellus and Coponius (20 from Rhodos), and Marcus Octavius and Scribonius Libo (the fleets from ] and ]). The task of the grand fleet was to maintain a patrol along the whole of the eastern coast of the Adriatic, to prevent corn from reaching the Italian ports and to safeguard the transport of essentials to the Pompeian forces and their supply bases. They were also to keep Caesar from crossing over. Sixteen ships were sent to assist Massilia which was under siege by Caesar's forces.<ref>Leach, John, Pompey the Great, pp 187-188; Plutarch, ''Life of Pompey'', 64; Appian, ''Civil Wars'', II.8.49; Caesar, ''Civil Wars'', III.3 ff.</ref>


Caesar lacked the siege equipment needed to take Dyrrhachium, and could not risk leaving Pompey to threaten his rear. He solved this by ].{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=194}} Although the latter had enough food, water was scarce because Caesar had dammed the local rivers, and the Pompeian cavalry lacked forage for their horses. Ending the stalemate became a matter of urgency, and in late July Pompey finally managed to break through part of Caesar's defensive lines. Since this made the blockade pointless, Caesar cut his losses and withdrew to Apollonia.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|p=560}}{{sfn|Leach|1978|pp=193–198}}
Caesar went to Rome, after which he embarked on an astonishing 27-day ] to ] and defeated the troops Pompey had there. Caesar then returned to Italy, crossed the Adriatic Sea and landed in what is now southern ], even though the Pompeian fleet controlled this sea.<ref>Boak, A. ''A History of Rome to 565 A.D''. Page 176.</ref>


At this point Metellus Scipio arrived in Thessaly. Caesar moved south to confront this threat and link up with Domitius Calvinus, allowing his men to sack ] en route. Pursued by Pompey, he then withdrew to the area near ], but failed to tempt Pompey into giving battle.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|p=561}}{{efn|The exact location of the battle is still disputed}} Although it was later claimed Pompey only did so after being pressured by his subordinates, the delay may simply have been a reflection of his natural caution.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|p=562}}
There, he advanced on ], which the commander of the garrison handed to him. Two lieutenants of Pompey's who were guarding merchant ships loaded with wheat for Pompey's troops sank them with their warships to prevent them from falling into Caesar's hands.


Regardless, Pompey's army of around 38,000 outnumbered the 22,000 men commanded by Caesar,{{efn|these numbers refer to legionaries and do not include the light-armed troops provided by allied rulers and nations{{sfn|Leach|1978|p=204}}}} with 7,000 cavalry to 1,000.{{sfn|Keppie|1984|p=109}} On 9 August he deployed his men in battle formation, planning to use his superior cavalry to outflank his opponent on his left. Caesar had anticipated this, and repulsed the cavalry which fled in confusion, exposing the infantry behind them. Under pressure from the left and in front, the Pompeian army collapsed.{{sfn|Wylle|1992|p=563}}
Caesar marched on ], and the inhabitants handed him the city. ], the commander of the garrison, abandoned the city.


==Death==
Caesar then headed for Dyrrachium (], Albania), where Pompey had an arsenal. Pompey hurried to defend Dyrrachium and arrived there first. The opposing forces fought the ]. Pompey's troops heavily outnumbered the enemy. He built a fortified camp south of the city, so Caesar started to build a ] to besiege it. At the same time, Pompey extended his own fortifications to force Caesar to stretch out his. Six attempts to break through by Pompey were repulsed. Caesar's troops suffered food shortages, while Pompey's was supplied by ships as his camp was near the sea. However, Pompey held a limited amount of land, which created shortages of fodder for his animals. Water was also scarce, because Caesar had cut off the local streams. When harvest time came close Caesar's troops were going to have plenty of grain.


]
Pompey needed to break the siege. Two deserters from Caesar's camp told him about a gap in Caesar's fortifications where two ]s near the sea had not been joined together. Pompey's troops attacked it and broke through. However, ] and Caesar brought in reinforcements and pushed them back.


Pompey escaped from the battlefield and made his way to ], where he was reunited with his wife Cornelia. Most of his Eastern allies were present at Pharsalus and had either been killed or captured. The main absentee was 14-year-old ], ruler of the wealthy and strategically important kingdom of ], making it an obvious destination. Cato announced his intention to continue the war from Africa, although most of his senatorial colleagues, including Cicero and ], made their peace with Caesar and returned to Rome.{{sfn|Holland|2004|p=323}}
Pompey entrenched a camp near this spot to gain land for fodder. He also occupied a small camp Caesar had abandoned and added an entrenchment so that the two camps were joined, and gained access to a stream.<ref>Caesar, Julius. ''The Civil War''. 3.31-69.</ref>


Pompey sailed from ] with a small fleet, and on 28 September 48 BC arrived at ] in Egypt, where Ptolemy was engaged in a bitter civil war with his co-ruler and elder sister, ]. When he went ashore to greet an official delegation, Pompey was killed by ], a Roman officer and former colleague serving in the Egyptian army. His body was cremated by two servants, while the head was kept as evidence.{{sfn|Beard|2015|p=290}}
Caesar attacked these new fortifications. However, he was outnumbered, and Pompey sent a large cavalry force to outflank Caesar's troops. Caesar withdrew and gave up the siege. Pompey could have destroyed Caesar's retreating army by pursuing it but did not. Caesar thought that victory was unexpected for Pompey, because a little earlier his troops were fleeing from their camp, and Caesar thought Pompey suspected an ambush. Moreover, Pompey's cavalry was hindered by the narrow passages of the fortifications, many of which were occupied by Caesar's troops. ] wrote that Caesar said to his friends: "Today victory would have been with the enemy if they had had a victor in command."<ref>Plutarch. ''Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey''. 65.5.</ref>


One suggestion is that Ptolemy and his advisors feared Pompey planned to seize control of Egypt, especially since many Egyptian army officers were Roman mercenaries like Septimius who had previously served with him. At the same time, it seemed an easy way to win Caesar's support against Cleopatra, although ultimately this proved not to be the case.{{sfn|Holland|2004|p=327}} Pompey's head was later returned to Cornelia for burial at his villa in the ], while his ignominious death prompted Cicero to write "his life outlasted his power".{{sfn|Beard|2015|p=290}}
Caesar went to Apollonia to leave his wounded men there, pay his army, encourage his allies, and leave garrisons in the towns. He sent off the baggage train at night, and during the day he left for Asparagum (also in ]). Pompey pursued him and encamped nearby. The next day Caesar marched on, sending the baggage train off at night again and then eluding Pompey. After four days Pompey gave up this fruitless pursuit.


==Marriages and issue==
Caesar marched speedily. He was in a hurry to join his lieutenant, ], to prevent his being blindsided by Pompey's arrival. Caesar considered three contingencies:
{{main|Wives of Pompey the Great}}
# to draw Pompey away from the coast and from his stores at Dyrrachium, and fight him in equal conditions;
Pompey had five wives:{{sfn|Haley|1985}}<ref>Plutarch, ''Parallel Lives'', ''Life of Pompey'', 5, 9, 15, 48.</ref>
# to go to Italy with his army and that of Gnaeus Domitius' via Illyria, should Pompey cross back to Italy;
* ]. They married in 86 BC and divorced in 82 BC. By her he had no issue.
# to blockade ], one of Pompey's lieutenants, to force Pompey to move to his aid, should Pompey try to besiege Apollonia and Oricum to cut Caesar off the coast.
* ]. When they married in 82 BC, Aemilia was pregnant by her former husband and died in childbirth in the same year.
Caesar informed Gnaeus Domitius about his plans, left garrisons at Apollonia, Lissus, and Oricum, and began a march through ] and ]. Pompey decided to hurry to Metellus Scipio to back him up or, should Caesar decide not to leave the coast, to attack Gnaeus Domitius himself.
* ]. They married in 79 BC and divorced in 61 BC. By her he had two sons and a daughter:

** ]
Both men marched quickly with light equipment. Pompey was marching towards ], a mountain district in Illyria.
** ]

** ]
Gnaeus Domitius and Metellus Scipio had been encamped close to each other. The former left to forage and moved towards Candavia, thus exposing himself to an attack by Pompey. Caesar was not aware of this. However, some Gallic scouts who had defected from Caesar to Pompey spotted some Gallic scouts of Domitius' and informed them about the situation after Dyrrachium. Domitius, who was only a four-hour march away, avoided the danger and joined Caesar who was on his way to Aeginium, a town just past the border of ]. Domitius arrived at Gomphi, the first town in ], from which envoys had offered their resources to Caesar and asked him for a garrison.
* ], the daughter of ]. They married in 59 BC and she died in childbirth in 54 BC. The child died a few days after birth.

* ]. They married in 52 BC and had no children together.
However, Pompey had spread exaggerated rumours about Caesar's defeat, and the governor of Thessaly cast his lot with Pompey. He ordered the gates of the city to be closed and asked Pompey to come help because the town could not withstand a long siege. However, although Metellus Scipio had already brought his troops to ], the capital of Thessaly, Pompey had not yet arrived.

Caesar besieged Gomphi to gain its resources and to frighten the neighbouring areas. He took it by storm in one day and quickly went to Metropolis. This town also closed its gates but surrendered when they heard about the fall of Gomphi. All Thessalian towns not held by Metellus Scipio's troops submitted to Caesar.<ref>Julius Caesar.'' The Civil War''. 3.73-79.</ref>

The two forces fought the ]. They were encamped near each other. With the joining of Pompey and Metellus Scipio's large armies, Pompey's supporters were confident of victory, and encouraged him to take to the field against Caesar rather than follow a strategy of attrition.

Caesar lined up his men close to Pompey's camp to test him. In the next few days he pushed his lines closer to the hill where Pompey's camp was. He got lightly armed young foot soldiers to intermix with the cavalry to get used to this kind of fighting and to prepare for confronting a cavalry force seven times larger.

Pompey always lined up on the lower spurs of the hill, on uneven ground that was unfavourable to Caesar. He would not be drawn into battle. Caesar kept moving his camp and was always on the march so that he could get supplies from various places and wear out Pompey's army. One day Pompey drew up his men further from the rampart of his camp. Caesar thought this looked like a chance to fight on more advantageous ground, and he prepared for battle.

Pompey's army outnumbered Caesar's almost two to one. Pompey tried to have his numerically superior cavalry outflank Caesar's left wing and rout his army. However, Caesar placed six select cohorts at the rear to stop this cavalry. It worked, and Caesar's men defeated the enemy.

Pompey left the field and went to his camp. When his men were driven within the rampart Caesar attacked the camp. The camp guards fought hard, but the men who had fled from the battlefield without arms were more keen on escaping than fighting. The men posted on the rampart could not withstand the shower of javelins and left their positions.

Pompey rode away from the camp and went to Larissa. From there, he reached the coast with a retinue of 30 cavalry and boarded a grain ship.<ref>Julius Caesar. ''The Civil War''. 3.92-96.</ref>
] of ] of ], mid-1st century BC, ], ], showing Cleopatra with a 'melon' hairstyle and ] royal ] worn over the head]]

Caesar pursued Pompey to prevent him from gathering other forces to renew the war. Pompey had stopped at Amphipolis, where he held a meeting with friends to collect money. An edict was issued in his name that all the youth of the province of Macedonia (i.e. Greece), whether Greeks or Romans, were to take an oath. It was not clear whether Pompey wanted new levies to fight or whether this was concealment of a planned escape.

When he heard that Caesar was approaching, Pompey left and went to ], on the island of ], to take on board his wife Cornelia and his son. Pompey then set sail and stopped over only when he needed to get food or water. He reached Attaleia (Antalya) in ], where some warships from Cilicia had been assembled for him.

There, Pompey heard that ] was sailing to Africa. Pompey blamed himself for not having used his superior navy and not having stationed at a place where he could have had naval back up if he had been defeated on land instead of fighting far from the coast. He asked the cities in the area for money to man his ships and looked for a temporary refuge in case the enemy caught up with him.

According to Plutarch, Pompey considered going to Parthia, but was advised Parthia's king, ], was untrustworthy and the place unsafe for Pompey's wife. This last point put Pompey off. He was advised to go instead to Egypt, which was only three days' sail away, and whose king, ], although only a boy, was indebted by the friendship and the help Pompey had given to his father, ].<ref>Plutarch. ''Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey''. Pages 75, 76.</ref>

According to Caesar, Pompey went from Mitylene to ] and ]. There he learned that the inhabitants of ] and the Romans resident there had taken up arms to prevent him from going there. The same action had been taken in ] against ], the consul of the previous year, and Publius Lentulus, an ex-consul, who were also escaping.

They reached the island and were barred from the port. The islanders had been informed that Caesar was approaching. Pompey gave up on going to Syria. He took funds from the tax collectors, borrowed money to hire soldiers, and armed 2,000 men. He boarded a ship with many bronze coins.<ref>Julius Caesar. ''The Civil War''. Pages 102–03.</ref>

Pompey set sail from Cyprus with warships and merchant ships. He heard that Ptolemy was in Pelusium with an army and that he was at war with his sister ], whom he had deposed. The camps of the opposing forces were close. Pompey sent a messenger to announce his arrival to Ptolemy and to request his aid.

] the eunuch, who was the boy king's regent, held a council with ], the king's tutor, ], the head of the army, and others. According to Plutarch, some advised driving Pompey away, and others welcoming him. Theodotus argued that neither option was safe: if welcomed, Pompey would become a master and Caesar an enemy, while if turned away, Pompey would blame the Egyptians for rejecting him and Caesar for making him continue his pursuit. Instead, assassinating Pompey would eliminate fear of him and gratify Caesar.<ref>Plutarch. ''Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey''. Pages 76–77.</ref>

Caesar thought this was decided because Ptolemy's forces included many of Pompey's soldiers who had been taken to Alexandria from Syria by ] to restore Ptolemy XII when he had been deposed. These soldiers had subsequently remained in Egypt as part of the Ptolemaic army. Caesar therefore assumed that the king's advisers had decided to murder Pompey in case he tried to manipulate the Roman contingent of the Egyptian forces in order to seize power.<ref>Julius Caesar. ''The Civil War''. Pages 103–4.</ref>

] the head of Pompey; etching, 1820]]
On September 28, Achillas went to Pompey's ship on a fishing boat together with ], who had once been one of Pompey's officers, and a third assassin, Savius. Pompey's associates saw this lack of pomp with suspicion and advised Pompey to put back out to open sea out of reach of the Egyptians' missiles. Achillas claimed that the sea's sandy bottom and shallows had not allowed him to approach with a ship. However, the royal ships were seen taking crews on board, and there were soldiers on the shore.

Cornelia thought Pompey was going to be killed, but he boarded the boat. The lack of friendliness on the boat prompted Pompey to tell Septimius that he was an old comrade. The latter merely nodded. He thrust a sword into Pompey, and then Achillas and Savius stabbed him with daggers. The people on Pompey's ship could see this and, horrified, fled. Because the wind was favourable, the Egyptians did not pursue them.

Pompey's head was severed, and his unclothed body was thrown into the sea. Philip, one of Pompey's freedmen who had boarded the boat, wrapped it with his tunic and made a funeral pyre on the shore. Pompey died the day before his 58th birthday.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Pompey-the-Great |title=Pompey the Great |encyclopedia=Britannica.com |access-date=October 21, 2018}}</ref>

When Caesar arrived in Egypt a few days later, he was appalled. He turned away loathing the man who brought Pompey's head. When Caesar was given Pompey's ], he cried.<ref name="Cesarscry">{{cite web |last1=Thayer |first1=BILL |title=Plutarch Life of Pompey |url=https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Plutarch/Lives/Pompey*.html |website=penelope.uchicago.edu |publisher=Loeb Classical Library |access-date=15 March 2020|page=80:5}}</ref>

Theodotus left Egypt and escaped Caesar's revenge. Pompey's remains were taken to Cornelia, who gave them burial at his Alban villa.<ref name="ReferenceB">Plutarch. ''Parallel Lives, The Life of Pompey''. Pages 78–81.</ref>


==Generalship== ==Generalship==
Pompey's military glory was second to none for two decades. Yet, his skills were occasionally criticized by some of his contemporaries. Sertorius or Lucullus, for instance, were especially critical.<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Sertorius'' and ''Life of Lucullus''.</ref> Pompey's tactics were usually efficient, albeit not particularly innovative or imaginative. They could prove insufficient against greater tacticians. However, Pharsalus was his only decisive defeat.<ref>''Pompey the great'', John Leach</ref> At times, he was reluctant to risk an open battle. While not extremely charismatic, Pompey could display tremendous bravery and fighting skills on the battlefield, which inspired his men.<ref name="Pompey the great, John Leach">Pompey the great, John Leach</ref> While being a superb commander, Pompey also earned a reputation for stealing other generals' victories.<ref>Brice, p. 145</ref>


Pompey's military glory was second to none for two decades, yet his skills were occasionally criticized by some of his contemporaries. Sertorius or Lucullus, for instance, were especially critical.<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Sertorius'' and ''Life of Lucullus''</ref> Pompey's tactics were usually efficient, albeit not particularly innovative or imaginative, and they could prove insufficient against greater tacticians. However, Pharsalus was his only decisive defeat.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p={{pn|date=September 2023}}}} At times, he was reluctant to risk an open battle. While not extremely charismatic, Pompey could display tremendous bravery and fighting skills on the battlefield, which inspired his men.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p={{pn|date=September 2023}}}} While being a superb commander, Pompey also earned a reputation for stealing other generals' victories.{{sfn|Brice|2014|p=145}}
On the other hand, Pompey is usually considered an outstanding strategist and organizer, who could win campaigns without displaying genius on the battlefield, but simply by constantly outmaneuvering his opponents and gradually pushing them into a desperate situation.<ref>John Leach</ref> Pompey was a great forward planner, and had tremendous organizational skill, which allowed him to devise grand strategies and operate effectively with large armies.<ref>''Pharsalus'', Si Sheppard.</ref> During his campaigns in the east, he relentlessly pursued his enemies, choosing the ground for his battles.{{Citation needed|date=October 2017}}


On the other hand, Pompey is usually considered an outstanding strategist and organizer, who could win campaigns without displaying genius on the battlefield, but simply by constantly outmaneuvering his opponents and gradually pushing them into a desperate situation.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p={{pn|date=September 2023}}}} Pompey was a great forward planner, and had tremendous organizational skill, which allowed him to devise grand strategies and operate effectively with large armies.<ref name=":8">Si Sheppard, ''Pharsalus''</ref> During his campaigns in the east, he relentlessly pursued his enemies, choosing the ground for his battles.<ref>{{Cite book |title=History of the Ancient & Medieval World Vol. 6 |publisher=Marshall Cavendish Corporation |year=1996 |isbn=0761403574 |edition=Revised |location=Tarrytown, NY |pages=731 |language=English}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Hazel |first=John |title=Who's Who in the Roman World |publisher=Routledge Taylor & Francis Group |year=2001 |isbn=0415224101 |edition=2nd |location=New York |pages=247–248 |language=English}}</ref>
Above all, he was often able to adapt to his enemies. On many occasions, he acted very swiftly and decisively, as he did during his campaigns in Sicily and Africa, or against the Cilician pirates. During the Sertorian war, on the other hand, Pompey was beaten several times by Sertorius. Therefore, he decided to resort to a ], in which he would avoid open battles against his chief opponent but instead try to gradually regain the strategic advantage by capturing his fortresses and cities and defeating his junior officers.<ref name="Pompey the great, John Leach"/> In some instances, Sertorius showed up and forced Pompey to abandon a siege, only to see him strike somewhere else.<ref>Appian</ref> This strategy was not spectacular but it led to constant territorial gains and did much to demoralize the Sertorian forces. By 72 BC, the year of his assassination, Sertorius was already in a desperate situation and his troops were deserting. Against Perpenna, a tactician far inferior to his former commander in chief, Pompey decided to revert to a more aggressive strategy and he scored a decisive victory that effectively ended the war.


Above all, he was often able to adapt to his enemies and showed determination. On many occasions, he acted very swiftly and decisively, as he did during his campaigns in Sicily and Africa, or against the Cilician pirates. During the Sertorian war, on the other hand, Pompey was beaten several times by Sertorius. Despite an abysmal first year of the war for Pompey in 76&nbsp;BC, he continued to campaign vigorously and as a result defeated many of Sertorius' subordinates. After Sertorius' army was greatly diminished, Pompey then decided to conduct a ], in which he would avoid open battles against his chief opponent but instead tried to gradually regain the strategic advantage by capturing his fortresses and cities and defeating his junior officers.{{sfn|Leach|1978|p={{pn|date=September 2023}}}} This strategy was unspectacular, but it led to constant territorial gains and did much to demoralize the Sertorian forces. By 73 or 72&nbsp;BC, when he was assassinated, Sertorius was already in a desperate situation and his troops were deserting. Against Perperna, a tactician far inferior to his former commander-in-chief, Pompey decided to revert to a more aggressive strategy and he scored a decisive victory that effectively ended the war.
Against Caesar too, his strategy was sound. During the campaign in Greece, he managed to regain the initiative, join his forces to that of Metellus Scipio (something that Caesar wanted to avoid) and trap his enemy. His strategic position was hence much better than that of Caesar and he could have starved Caesar's army to death.<ref>"Pharsalus"</ref> However, he was finally compelled to fight an open battle by his allies, and his conventional tactics proved no match to those of Caesar (who also commanded the more experienced troops).


Against Caesar too, his strategy was sound. During the campaign in Greece, he managed to regain the initiative, join his forces to that of Metellus Scipio (something that Caesar wanted to avoid) and trap his enemy. His strategic position was hence much better than that of Caesar and he could have starved Caesar's army to death.<ref name=":8"/> However, he was finally compelled to fight an open battle by his allies, and his conventional tactics proved no match to those of Caesar (who also commanded the more experienced troops).
==Later portrayals and reputation==
{{more citations needed|section|date=September 2017}}<!--entries are not cited-->
] minted in 40 BC by his son ]]]
For the historians of his own and later Roman periods, Pompey fit the ] of the great man who achieved extraordinary triumphs through his own efforts, yet fell from power and was, in the end, murdered through treachery.


== Literary heritage ==
He was a hero of the Republic, who seemed once to hold the Roman world in his palm, only to be brought low by Caesar. Pompey was idealized as a tragic hero almost immediately after Pharsalus' and his murder.
Pompey was so striking a figure, and his fall so dramatic, that his story became the subject of frequent literary treatment. In the century after his death, the civil war between himself and Caesar was retold in ]'s epic ''De Bello Civili'', now known as the '']'' after the culminating battle. In the poem's final sections, however, Pompey's vengeful ghost returns to possess those responsible for his murder in Egypt and bring about their death.<ref>Sean Easton, "Why Pompey Is better off dead", ''The Classical Journal'' 107.2 (2011), </ref>


In ] Britain, too, several plays returned to the subject of "Caesar and Pompey", including ]'s ''The Wars of Pompey and Caesar'' (c. 1604). Another contemporary treatment by ], ''Cornelia, or Pompey the Great, his faire Cornelia's tragedy'' (1594), was a translation from the French of ].<ref>''A Manual of Old English Plays'' (1892), </ref> Later in France, Pompey's story was told without the character appearing onstage in ]'s ''La Mort de Pompée'' (1643) and this too had English adaptations: as ''Pompey'' (1663) by ], as ''Pompey the Great'' by ] and others in 1664,<ref>Andrew Shifflett, ''Stoicism, Politics and Literature in the Age of Milton'', Cambridge University 1998, </ref> and later as '']'' (1724) by ].
] portrayed Pompey as a Roman ], pure of heart and mind, destroyed by the cynical ambitions of those around him. This portrayal of him survived into the ] and ] periods, for example in ]'s play, '']'' (1642).


Later in the 18th century, Pompey is made the recipient of a ] in rhyming couplets from a supposed former lover in ]'s "Flora to Pompey".<ref>Joseph Wharton, ''An Essay on the Genius and Writings of Pope'', (London, 1756), </ref><ref>Robert Dodsley, ''A Collection of Poems by Several Hands'', (London 1755), </ref> He also figures in narrative poems of the 19th century. ]'s "The Vale of Tempe" records the fugitive's desperate appearance as glimpsed by a bystander in the Greek valley;<ref>''The Broken Heart, with other poems'', London 1825, </ref> his arrival in Egypt is related by ] in "The Death of Pompey the Great",<ref>Alaric A. Watts, ''Lyrics of the Heart'', London 1851, </ref> and the ruined column raised to mark the site of his killing outside Alexandria is described by ] in ''Ruins of Many Lands''.<ref> "Pompey’s Pillar", ''Ruins of Many Lands'', London 1849, </ref> These were followed by ]'s prose drama '']'' of 1910, covering the period from his decision to fight Caesar to his assassination in Egypt.<ref>, London, 1910</ref> The play was later filmed for television in 1950 for the '']''.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://explore.bfi.org.uk/4ce2b7f3044be |title=The Tragedy of Pompey the Great |website=BFI Film Forever |publisher=British Film Institute|date=20 July 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120720043235/http://explore.bfi.org.uk/4ce2b7f3044be |archive-date=20 July 2012}}</ref>
Despite his war against Caesar, Pompey was still widely celebrated during the imperial period, as the conqueror of the Orient. For example, pictures of Pompey were carried at Augustus' funeral procession. And as a triumphator, he had numerous statues in Rome, one of which was on the forum of Augustus. Although the imperial power did not honor Pompey as much as his archenemy, who was considered a god, his reputation among many aristocrats and historians was equal or even superior to Caesar's.<ref>]. ''Pompey''.</ref>


Pompey's career is recapitulated a century later in series of historical novels. In ]'s '']'', Pompey is mainly featured in Books III-V, covering his rise to prominence through to his betrayal and murder in Egypt.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Rocío Gordillo Hervás |title=Historical Fiction and Ancient Rome: Colleen McCullough's ''Masters Of Rome'' Series |journal=Collection de l'Institut des Sciences et Techniques de l'Antiquité |date=9 February 2024 |volume=1476 |issue=1 |pages=206 ff |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/ista_0000-0000_2019_ant_1476_1_3780#ista_0000-0000_2019_ant_1476_1_T11_0198_0000}}</ref> Pompey is also a recurring character in ]'s '']'' crime fiction novels, where he brushes shoulders with Gordianus, the main protagonist of the series.<ref>{{cite web |website=Crime Fiction Lover |url=https://crimefictionlover.com/2014/10/interview-steven-saylor |title=Interview: Steven Saylor |author=Keith Nixon |date=19 October 2014}}</ref> Another fiction series in which Pompey plays a part in the historical background is ] trilogy of the life of ].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.thebookseller.com/author-interviews/robert-harris-interview-312032 |title=Robert Harris {{!}} 'Cicero had very good relations with Caesar but he was absolutely delighted to see him murdered before his own eyes' |website=The Bookseller |author=Benedicte Page |date=11 September 2015}}</ref>
== In Popular Culture ==
Pompey has appeared as a character in multiple modern works.

=== Comics ===
*Pompey makes a guest appearance in the French comic book '']''.
* In comics, Pompey appears as Julius Caesar's foe throughout '']'' series.

=== Films and theater ===
* A theatrical portrayal was ]'s play '']'' (1910).
* In the opening scene of the film '']'' (1961), he is played by actor ].

=== Literature ===
* In ]'s '']'' series of historical novels, Pompey's youthful exploits are depicted in '']'', the formation of the First Triumvirate and his marriage to Julia is a large part of '']'' and his loss of Julia, the dissolution of the First Triumvirate, his later political career, the civil war between him and Caesar and his eventual defeat and his betrayal and murder in Egypt are all told in '']''.
* Pompey is a recurring character in the '']'' series of novels by ], portraying his role in the Civil War with Caesar. His final appearance is in Saylor's novel '']'', which depicts his murder by Ptolemy in Egypt.
* Pompey also appears frequently in the ] by ], narrated by Senator ], a fictional nephew of Caecilius ]. Decius despises Pompey as a glory-seeker and credit-grabber, while acknowledging that he is a political dunce who was eventually swept up into the ''optimates''{{'}} feud with Caesar.
* Pompey is a major recurring character in ]'s trilogy of the life of ] (''Imperium'', ''Lustrum'' and ''Dictator'') in which Pompey is portrayed as bombastic and dim-witted, though fearsome.

=== Television ===
* In the television series '']'', he is portrayed by actor ].
* ] portrays Pompey in the miniseries '']'' (2002).
* He appears as a major character in the season 1 of the ], portrayed by ].
* He was played by ] in the BBC One docu-drama series, '']'' (2006).
* In the television series '']'', he is portrayed by actor ].
* He appears in the ] series '']'', played by ].

==Marriages and offspring==
* First wife, Antistia
* Second wife, ] (Sulla's stepdaughter)
* Third wife, ] (whom he divorced for adultery, according to ]'s letters)
* Offspring of marriage between Mucia and Pompey Magnus
** ], ] in 45 BC, after the ]
** ], married to ]; ancestor of ]
** ], who would rebel in ] against ]
* Fourth wife ] (daughter of Caesar)
** Julia died giving birth to a child of Pompey who was born prematurely and lived only a few days. The gender of the child is unknown because the sources are contradictory.
* Fifth wife, ] (daughter of Metellus Scipio)

==Pompey's Theatre==
{{main|Theatre of Pompey}}
After returning from his campaigns in the East Pompey spent a large part of his new wealth on building projects. The grandest of these was a great stone ] complex on the ] and the lower slopest of the ] in northern Rome. Based, so it was said, on that of Mityline it was Rome's first stone theatre and a landmark in the history of Roman architecture.<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', p. 117.</ref>

Pompey commissioned and collected hundreds of paintings and statues to decorate the theatre. Pliny records the names of several 'old masters' whose works were acquired, and there is evidence that Pompey patronised at least two contemporary Italian sculptors, ] and ].<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', pp 133-134.</ref><ref>Pliny, ''Natural History'', VII, 34.</ref>

On the twelfth of August of 55 BC the Pompey's Theatre was dedicated. Containing seats for an estimated 10,000 spectators it had a temple of ] (Pompey's patron goddess) constructed at the back of the ] or auditorium in such a way that the tiers of the seats formed the steps leading up to the front of the temple. Attached to the southeast side of the theatre was a great ] or rectangular garden, some 180 metres by 135 metres with covered colonnades running round the sides, which provides shelter for the spectators in the event of rain and a very popular place of recreation for citizens at all times. The walls of the colonnades were decorated with paintings gathered from the art collections of the Roman world. Either in the porticus or the theatre itself were numerous statues, the arrangement of which was entrusted to Cicero's good friend Atticus. They included fourteen statues representing the nations which Pompey had conquered, and one of Pompey himself was placed in a large hall attached to the porticus, where meetings of the Senate could be held.<ref>John Leach, ''Pompey the Great'', pp 146-147.</ref>

Plutarch tells us that Pompey built himself a house in the vicinity of the Theatre, 'like a dinghy behind a yacht', more splendid than his old house on the ] but not extravagant enough to excite envy.<ref>Plutarch, ''Life of Pompey'', 40.5.</ref>


==Chronology of Pompey's life and career== ==Chronology of Pompey's life and career==
* 106 BC September 29 – Born in ] * 29 September 106&nbsp;BC – Born in ];
* 86 BC – Marriage to Antistia;
* 89 BC - Serves under his father at Asculum (during the ])
* 89&nbsp;BC – Serves under his father at Asculum (during the ]);
* 83 BC – Aligns with ], after his return from the ] against King ];
* 83 BC – Pompey raises a legion and cavalry in hopes of joining ]<ref>{{cite book|last1=Goldsworthy|first1=Adrian|title=In the name of Rome|date=2004|publisher=Orion|location=London|isbn=978-0753817896|page=174|edition=3rd impr.}}</ref> * 83&nbsp;BC – Aligns with ], after his return from the ] against King ], raising a legion and cavalry in hopes of joining him;{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2004|p=174}}
* 83–82&nbsp;BC – Fights for Sulla during the war in Italy. First as cavalry commander then joint-commands and finally commanding an independent army.
* 82 BC – Marriage to ] at the behest of Sulla, Aemilia is already pregnant and eventually dies during childbirth<ref name="In the name of Rome">{{cite book|last1=Goldsworthy|first1=Adrian|title=In the name of Rome|date=2004|publisher=Orion|location=London|isbn=978-0753817896|page=179|edition=3rd impr.}}</ref>
* 82&nbsp;BC – Divorce by Antistia and marriage to Aemilia at the behest of Sulla, but Aemilia is already pregnant and eventually dies during childbirth;{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2004|p=179}}
* 82–81 BC – Defeats ]'s allies in Sicily (autumn of 82 BC) and Africa after his victory in Sicily
* 82–81&nbsp;BC – Defeats ]' allies in Sicily and Africa;
* 81 BC – Returns to Rome and celebrates first triumph
* 81&nbsp;BC – Returns to Rome and celebrates first triumph;
* 80 BC – Pompey marries Mucia of the Mucii Scaevolae family<ref name="In the name of Rome"/>
* 79&nbsp;BC – Pompey marries ], of the ] family;{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2004|p=179}}
* 79 BC – Pompey supports the election of ]. Lepidus openly revolts against the senate a few months later; Pompey suppresses the rebellion with an army raised from ] and puts down the rebellion, killing the rebel ], father of ] who assassinated ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Goldsworthy|first1=Adrian|title=In the name of Rome|date=2004|publisher=Orion|location=London|isbn=978-0753817896|pages=180, 181|edition=3rd impr.}}</ref>
* 79&nbsp;BC – Pompey supports the election of ], who openly revolts against the Senate a few months later. Pompey suppresses the rebellion with an army raised from ] and puts down the rebellion, killing the rebel ], father of ], who would go on to assassinate ];{{sfn|Goldsworthy|2004|p=180, 181}}
* 76–71 BC – Campaign in ] against ]
* 71 BC – Returns to Italy and participates in the suppression of a ] led by ]; second triumph * 76–71&nbsp;BC – Campaign in ] against ];
* 71&nbsp;BC – Returns to Italy and participates in the suppression of a ] led by ], obtaining his second triumph;
* 70 BC – First consulship (with ]) * 70&nbsp;BC – First consulship (with ]);
* 67 BC – Defeats the pirates and goes to Asia province * 67&nbsp;BC – Defeats the pirates and goes to the province of Asia;
* 66–61 BC – Defeats King Mithridates of Pontus; end of the Third Mithridatic War * 66–61&nbsp;BC – Defeats King Mithridates of Pontus, ending the Third Mithridatic War;
* 64–63 BC – Pompey's march through Syria, the Levant, and Judea * 64–63&nbsp;BC – Marches through Syria, the Levant, and Judea;
* 61 BC September 29 Third triumph * 61 BC Divorce by Mucia Tertia;
* 29 September 61&nbsp;BC – Third triumph;
* 59 BC April – The first ] is constituted; Pompey allies with ] and Licinius Crassus; marriage to ]
* April 59&nbsp;BC – The so-called first ] is constituted. Pompey allies with ] and Crassus, marrying Caesar's daughter ];
* 58–55 BC – Governs Hispania Ulterior by proxy, construction of Pompey's Theater
* 55 BC – Second consulship (with M. Licinius Crassus), dedication of the Theatre of Pompey * 58–55&nbsp;BC – Governs Hispania Ulterior by proxy, while the Theater of Pompey is constructed;
* 55&nbsp;BC – Second consulship (with Marcus Licinius Crassus), and the Theater of Pompey is finally inaugurated;
* 54 BC – ] dies; the first triumvirate ends
* 54&nbsp;BC – ] dies in childbirth, and the first triumvirate ends;
* 52 BC – Serves as sole consul for an ],<ref>See Abbott, 114</ref> third ordinary consulship with Metellus Scipio for the rest of the year; marriage to ]
* 52&nbsp;BC – Serves as sole consul for an ],{{sfn|Abbott|1963|p=114}} but has a third ordinary consulship with Metellus Scipio for the rest of the year, marrying his daughter ];
* 51 BC – Forbids Caesar (in Gaul) to stand for consulship in absentia
* 51&nbsp;BC – Forbids Caesar (in Gaul) to stand for consulship ''in absentia'';
* 50 BC – Falls dangerously ill with fever in Campania, but is saved 'by public prayers'<ref>Juvenal, Satire X, 283</ref>
* 50&nbsp;BC – Falls dangerously ill with fever in Campania, but is saved "by public prayers";<ref>Juvenal, ''Satire X'', p. 283</ref>
* 49 BC – Caesar crosses the Rubicon River and invades Italy; Pompey retreats to Greece with the conservatives
* 48 BC – Caesar defeats Pompey's army near Pharsalus, Greece. Pompey retreats to Egypt and is killed at ]. * 49&nbsp;BC – Caesar crosses the Rubicon river and invades Italy, while Pompey retreats to Greece with the conservatives;
* 48&nbsp;BC – Caesar defeats Pompey's army near Pharsalus, Greece. Pompey retreats to Egypt and is killed at ].


==Notes== ==Footnotes==
{{Reflist}} {{notelist}}


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist|20em}}
{{Wikiquotepar|Pompey the Great}}
{{Commons category|Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus}}


==Bibliography==
===Primary sources===
{{refbegin|30em}}
* Appian. (1996) ''The Civil Wars,'' Book 2. Penguin Classics. New edition. {{ISBN|978-0140445091}} Book 2 Accessed August 2016
* {{cite book |last1=Abbott |first1=Frank Frost |title=A History and Description of Roman Political Institutions |date=1963 |publisher=Biblo and Tannen |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3aQgAQAAIAAJ |language=en}}
* Appian. (2014). ''The Foreign Wars, Book 12, The Mithridatic Wars''. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. {{ISBN|978-1503114289}} Accessed August 2016
* {{cite book|last=Beard|first=Mary|title=SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome|publisher=Profile Press |year=2015|edition=2016|isbn=978-1846683817}}
* Julius Caesar. (1976). ''The Civil War: Together with the Alexandrian War, the African War, and the Spanish War.'' Penguin Classics. New impression edition. {{ISBN|978-0140441871}} Accessed August 2016
* {{cite book|last=Beesley|first=A.|title=The Gracchi Marius and Sulla Epochs of Ancient History |publisher=Pinnacle Press|year=1892 |edition=2017|isbn=978-1374894761}}
* Cassius Dio. (1989). ''Roman History''. Volume 3, Books 36–40. (Loeb Classical Library) Loeb New issue of 1916 edition. {{ISBN|978-0674990593}}; Vol. 4, Books 41–45, {{ISBN|978-0674990739}}. Books 36–41. Accessed August 2016
* {{cite book|last=Boak|first=Edward|title=A History of Rome to 565 AD|publisher=Wentworth Publishing |year=1921|edition=2016|isbn=978-1363094448}}
* Josephus. (2014). ''The Antiquities of the Jews'': Volume II (Books XI–XX). CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform; First edition. {{ISBN|978-1500894573}} Accessed August 2016
*{{cite book |last1=Brice |first1=Lee |title=Warfare in the Roman Republic: from the Etruscan Wars to the Battle of Actium |date=2014 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |location=Santa Barbara, Calif. |isbn=978-1610692991}}
* Plutarch. (1917). ''Lives, Vol V: Agesilaus and Pompey. Pelopidas and Marcellus''. (Loeb Classical Library). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. {{ISBN|978-0674990890}} Accessed August 2016
* {{cite journal|last=Collins|first=H.P. |title=Decline and Fall of Pompey the Great |journal=Greece and Rome|volume=22|issue=66 |year=1953|jstor=641489|pages=98–106 |doi=10.1017/S0017383500011888 |s2cid=161450990}}
* {{cite book |last=Crawford |first=Michael H. |title=Roman Republican coinage |publisher=Cambridge University Press |publication-place=London |date=1974 |isbn=0-521-07492-4 |oclc=1288923 |author-link=Michael Crawford (historian)}}
* {{cite book |last1=De Souza |first1=Philip |title=Piracy in the Graeco-Roman World |date=2002 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge |isbn=978-0-521-01240-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SOK-Jh1Zuk4C |language=en}}
* {{cite book|last=Drogula|first=Fred K. |title=Cato the Younger: Life and death at the end of the Roman Republic |date=2019|isbn=978-0190869021|publisher=Oxford University Press}}
* {{Cite book|last=Flower|first=Harriet |title=The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Republic |date=2014 |publisher=CUP|isbn=978-1107032248}}
* {{cite book|last=Goldsworthy|first=Adrian |title=In the name of Rome: The Men Who Won the Roman Empire |publisher=Phoenix |place=London |year=2004|isbn=978-0753817896}}
* {{cite book|last=Goldsworthy|first=Adrian |title=Caesar; The Life of a Colossus |publisher=Orion |year=2006|edition=2013 |isbn=978-0297864004}}
* {{cite web|last=Gray|first=Eric William |title=Pompey the Great|website=Encyclopaedia Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Pompey-the-Great|access-date=16 March 2023}}
* {{cite book|last=Greenhalgh|first=P. |title=Pompey: The Republican Prince|publisher=Littlehampton Book Services Ltd|year=1981|isbn=978-0297778813}}
* {{cite book|last=Gruen|first=Erich |title=The Last Generation of the Roman Republic|year=1995 |publisher=University of California|isbn=978-0520022386}}
* {{cite journal|last=Haley|first=Shelley|author-link=Shelley Haley|date=April 1985|title=The Five Wives of Pompey the Great |journal=Greece and Rome|volume=32|issue=1 |pages=49–59 |doi=10.1017/S0017383500030138 |jstor=642299 |s2cid=154822339 |issn=1477-4550}}
* {{cite book|last=Holland|first=Tom |title=Rubicon, The Triumph and Tragedy of the Roman Republic |publisher=Abacus|year=2004|isbn=978-0349115634}}
* {{cite book|last=Keppie|first=Lawrence |title=The Making of the Roman Army: From Republic to Empire |publisher=Routledge |date=1984|edition=2015|isbn=978-1138129139}}
* {{cite book |title =The Making of Theatre History |last=Kuritz| first=Paul |publisher=] |year=1987|isbn=978-0-13-547861-5}}
* {{cite book|last=Leach|first=John |title=Pompey the Great|publisher=Biddles Ltd|year=1978 |isbn=0-8476-6035-4}}
* {{cite book|last=Matyszak|first=Philip |title=Sertorius and the Struggle for Spain|year=2013 |publisher=Pen and Sword|isbn=978-1848847873}}
* {{cite journal|last=Mitchell|first=Thomas |title=Cicero, Pompey and the Rise of the First Triumvirate |journal=Traditio|volume=29 |year=1973|pages=1–26|jstor=641489 |doi=10.1017/S0362152900008953 |s2cid=152020610}}
* {{cite book|last=Morrill|first=Kit |title=Pompey, Cato, and the Governance of the Roman Empire|year=2017 |publisher=OUP|isbn=978-0198755142}}
* {{cite journal|last=Ramsey|first=John |title=How and why was Pompey Made Sole Consul in 52 BC? |journal=Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte|volume=65|issue=3|year=2016 |pages=298–324 |jstor=45019234}}
* {{cite journal|last=Rosenblitt|first=Alison |title=The Turning Tide: The Politics of the Year 79 B.C.E. |journal=Transactions of the American Philological Association |year=2014|pages=415–431|volume=144|issue=2 |doi=10.1353/apa.2014.0008 |jstor=43830445|s2cid=144556938}}
* {{cite book|last=Seager|first=R|title=Pompey the Great: A Political Biography|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |year=2002|isbn=978-0826203564}}
* {{cite journal|last=Stanton|first=John |title=Why Did Caesar Cross the Rubicon?|journal=Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte|volume=52|issue=1|year=2003|pages=67–94|jstor=4436678}}
* {{cite journal|last=Tröster|first=Manuel |title=Roman Hegemony and Non-State Violence: A Fresh Look at Pompey's Campaign against the Pirates|journal=Greece and Rome|volume=56 |issue=1|year=2009|jstor=40388852 |pages=14–33 |doi=10.1017/S0017383508000673 |s2cid=154000527}}
* {{cite journal|last=Wylle|first=Graham |title=The Road to Pharsalus|journal=Latomus|volume=51|issue=3 |year=1992|jstor=41541372|pages=557–565}}
{{refend}}


===Secondary sources=== ==Further reading==
* Christ, Karl (2004). ''Pompeius. Der Feldherr Roms. Eine Biographie'' . Munich: C. H. Beck, {{ISBN|3-406-51543-6}}.
* Abbott, F., ''History and Description of Roman Political Institutions'', Adamant Media Corporation, 2001; {{ISBN|978-0543927491}}
* Dingmann, Matthias (2007). ''Pompeius Magnus. Machtgrundlagen eines spätrepublikanischen Politikers'' . Rahden: Leidorf, {{ISBN|978-3-89646-733-1}}.
* Beesley, A., ''The Gracchi, Marius and Sulla'', Pinnacle Press, 2017; {{ISBN|9781374894761}}
* Boak, A., E., R., ''A History of Rome to 565 A.D.'', Cornell University Library, 2009; {{ASIN|B002EQA6AC}}
* Brice, Lee L., ''Warfare in the Roman Republic: From the Etruscan Wars to the Battle of Actium'', ABC-CLIO, 2014; {{ISBN|9781610692991}}
* De Souza, P., ''Piracy in the Graeco-Roman World'', Cambridge University Press, 2002; {{ISBN|978-0-521-01240-9}}
* Goldsworthy, A., ''In the name of Rome: The Men Who Won the Roman Empire'', Weidenfeld & Nicolson, New edition, 2004; {{ISBN|978-0753817896}}
* Greenhalgh, P., ''Pompey The Republican Prince'', Littlehampton Book Services Ltd; 1981; Littlehampton Book Services Ltd, 1981; {{ISBN|978-0297778813}}
* Hillman, T., P., ''The Reputation of Cn. Pompeius Magnus among His Contemporaries from 83 to 59 B.C.'', Diss. New York 1989. * Hillman, T., P., ''The Reputation of Cn. Pompeius Magnus among His Contemporaries from 83 to 59 B.C.'', Diss. New York 1989.
* Leach, John, ''Pompey the Great'', Biddles Ltd, Guildford. Surrey, 1978; {{ISBN|0-8476-6035-4}}
* Holland, Tom. ''Rubicon, The Triumph and Tragedy of the Roman Republic'', Abacus; New edition, 2004; {{ISBN|978-0349115634}}
* Nicols, Marianne Schoenlin. ''Appearance and Reality. A Study of the Clientele of Pompey the Great'', Diss. Berkeley/Cal. 1992. * Nicols, Marianne Schoenlin. ''Appearance and Reality. A Study of the Clientele of Pompey the Great'', Diss. Berkeley/Cal. 1992.
* Sampson, Gareth, ''The Collapse of Rome: Marius, Sulla and the First Civil War'', Pen and Sword Military, 2013; {{ISBN|9781848843264}}
* Seager, R., Pompey the Great: A Political Biography, Wiley-Blackwell; 2nd edition, 2002; {{ISBN|978-0826203564}} (paperback) {{ISBN|978-0631227205}} (hardcover)
* Southern, P., Pompey the Great: Caesar's Friend and Foe, The History Press, 2003; {{ISBN|978-0752425214}} * Southern, P., Pompey the Great: Caesar's Friend and Foe, The History Press, 2003; {{ISBN|978-0752425214}}
* Stockton, D., ''The First Consulship of Pompey'', ''Historia'' 22 (1973), 205–18. * Stockton, D., ''The First Consulship of Pompey'', ''Historia'' 22 (1973), 205–18.
* Tröster, Manuel. ''Roman Hegemony and Non-State Violence. A Fresh Look at Pompey’s Campaign against the Pirates'', ''Greece & Rome'' 56 (2009), 14–33.
* Van Ooteghem, J., ''Pompée le Grand. Bâtisseur d’Empire''. Brussels 1954. * Van Ooteghem, J., ''Pompée le Grand. Bâtisseur d’Empire''. Brussels 1954.
* Wylie, G., J., ''Pompey Megalopsychos'', ''Klio'' 72 (1990), 445–456. * Wylie, G., J., ''Pompey Megalopsychos'', ''Klio'' 72 (1990), 445–456.

==External links==
* - Jona Lendering details Pompey's conquest of Judea


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Latest revision as of 17:34, 11 December 2024

Roman general and statesman (106–48 BC)

For other uses, see Pompey (disambiguation) and Gnaeus Pompeius (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Pompeii or Pompei.
Pompey
Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus
White bustBust of Pompey, copy of an original from 70–60 BC, Venice National Archaeological Museum
Born29 September 106 BC
Picenum, Italy
Died28 September 48 BC (aged 57)
Pelusium, Egypt
Cause of deathAssassination
Resting placeAlbanum, Italy
Occupation(s)Military commander and politician
OfficeConsul (70, 55, 52 BC)
Spouses
Children
FatherGnaeus Pompeius Strabo
RelativesPompeia gens
Military career
Battles / wars
Awards3 Triumphs
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Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus (Latin: [ˈŋnae̯ʊs pɔmˈpɛjjʊs ˈmaŋnʊs]; 29 September 106 BC – 28 September 48 BC), known in English as Pompey (/ˈpɒmpi/ POM-pee) or Pompey the Great, was a general and statesman of the Roman Republic. He played a significant role in the transformation of Rome from republic to empire. Early in his career, he was a partisan and protégé of the Roman general and dictator Sulla; later, he became the political ally, and finally the enemy, of Julius Caesar.

A member of the senatorial nobility, Pompey entered into a military career while still young. He rose to prominence serving Sulla as a commander in the civil war of 83–81 BC. Pompey's success as a general while young enabled him to advance directly to his first consulship without following the traditional cursus honorum (the required steps to advance in a political career). He was elected as consul on three occasions (70, 55, 52 BC). He celebrated three triumphs, served as a commander in the Sertorian War, the Third Servile War, the Third Mithridatic War, and in various other military campaigns. Pompey's early success earned him the cognomen Magnus – "the Great" – after his boyhood hero Alexander the Great. His adversaries gave him the nickname adulescentulus carnifex ("teenage butcher") for his ruthlessness.

In 60 BC, Pompey joined Crassus and Caesar in the informal political alliance known as the First Triumvirate, cemented by Pompey's marriage with Caesar's daughter, Julia. After the deaths of Julia and Crassus (in 54 and 53 BC), Pompey switched to the political faction known as the optimates—a conservative faction of the Roman Senate. Pompey and Caesar then began contending for leadership of the Roman state in its entirety, eventually leading to Caesar's Civil War. Pompey was defeated at the Battle of Pharsalus in 48 BC, and he sought refuge in Ptolemaic Egypt, where he was assassinated by the courtiers of Ptolemy XIII.

Early life and career

Reputed statue of Pompey, now held at the Villa Arconati, Bollate, brought from Rome in 1627 by Galeazzo Arconati

Pompey was born in Picenum on 29 September 106 BC, eldest son of a provincial noble called Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo. Although the dominant family in Picenum, Strabo was the first of his branch to achieve senatorial status in Rome; he completed the traditional cursus honorum, becoming consul in 89 BC, and acquired a reputation for greed, political duplicity, and military ruthlessness. Pompey began his career serving with his father in the Social War (91–87 BC).

Strabo died in 87 BC during the short-lived civil war known as the Bellum Octavianum, although sources differ on whether he succumbed to disease, or was murdered by his own soldiers. Prior to his death, Strabo was accused of embezzlement; as his legal heir, Pompey was held responsible for the alleged crime and put on trial. He was acquitted, supposedly after agreeing to marry the judge's daughter, Antistia.

One of the main issues at stake in 87 BC was the appointment of the consul Lucius Cornelius Sulla as commander of the Roman army in the ongoing First Mithridatic War, an opportunity to amass enormous wealth. During his absence in the East, his political rivals led by Lucius Cornelius Cinna, Gnaeus Papirius Carbo and Gaius Marius the Younger regained control of the Roman Senate. Sulla's return in 83 BC sparked a civil war within the Roman world.

Pompey during Sulla's civil war

Main article: Sulla's civil war

In the year prior to Sulla's return Pompey had raised and equipped a full legion from amongst his father's old clients and veterans in Picenum. In the spring of 83 Sulla landed in Brundusium. As he marched north-west towards Campania, Pompey led his own legion south to join him. The government in Rome sent out three separate armies in an attempt to prevent the union between Pompey's and Sulla's army. Pompey attacked one of these armies and routed it. The three enemy commanders, unable to agree on a course of action, withdrew. Soon after Pompey arrived at Sulla's camp. He was greeted by Sulla with the official title of Imperator (General).

At some point in 83 BC, it is not clear when but definitely before the onset of winter, Sulla sent Pompey back to Picenum to raise more troops. When fighting broke out once more in 82 Sulla advanced towards Rome, while Metellus (one of his lieutenants), supported by Pompey, campaigned against the consul Gaius Papirius Carbo in Cisalpine Gaul. During this campaign Pompey acted as Metellus's cavalry commander.

Metellus and Pompey defeated Carbo's lieutenant, the praetor Gaius Carrinas, in a six-hour battle at the river Aesis, only to be blockaded by Carbo himself. When word of Sulla's victory at the Battle of Sacriportus reached them, Carbo retreated to his base at Ariminium, severely harassed by Pompey's cavalry. Some time later Metellus defeated Gaius Marcius Censorinus, another of Carbo's lieutenants, Pompey's cavalry caught Censorinus's fleeing troops outside their base at Sena Gallica, defeating them and plundering the town. While Metellus remained in the north-west, Pompey seems to have transferred to Sulla's command in the south.

Pompey advanced south-west along the Via Flaminia towards Spoletium, where he joined Marcus Licinius Crassus, together they defeated Carrinas once again. Pompey laid siege to Carrinas in Spoletium but the latter managed to escape. Pompey resumed his march to join Sulla's command. Not long afterwards Pompey successfully ambushed another large force under Censorinus, which was trying to get through to Praeneste where Carbo's consular colleague, Marius the Younger (who was the figurehead of the struggle against Sulla), was blockaded. It was the failure of these attempts to get through the Sullan blockade in Umbria and Etruria, added to Metellus's success in winning control of the north, which broke the back of the government's resistance.

At the end of the campaigning season of 82, the government forces made one final effort to march to the relief of Praeneste. They mustered 10,000 legionaries and marched to join forces with the Samnites and the Lucanians, fierce enemies of Sulla, who had campaigned against them in the Social War. Pursued by Pompey they united their forces and made for Praeneste. Unable to break through Sulla's blockade, they marched for undefended Rome, only to be caught just in time and defeated by Sulla at the Battle of the Colline Gate. Pompey, who was pursuing the government forces, arrived just after the battle.

By the end of 82 BC, Sulla had expelled his opponents from Italy, and engineered his nomination as Dictator by the Senate. Either through admiration of his abilities, or concern at his ambition, Sulla sought to consolidate his alliance with Pompey by persuading him to divorce Antistia, and marry his stepdaughter Aemilia. Plutarch claims she was already pregnant by her former husband, and died in childbirth soon after.

Sicily, Africa and Lepidus' rebellion

The surviving Marians escaped to Sicily, where their ally Marcus Perperna was propraetor. They were supported by a fleet under Carbo, while Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus occupied the Roman province of Africa. Perperna abandoned Sicily after Pompey landed on the island with a large force, while Carbo was captured and later executed. Pompey claimed this was justified by Carbo's alleged crimes against Roman citizens, but his opponents nicknamed him adulescentulus carnifex, or "young butcher", as a result.

Roman Province of Africa

Pompey now sailed for Africa, leaving Sicily in the hands of his brother-in-law, Gaius Memmius. After defeating and killing Ahenobarbus at the Battle of Utica, Pompey subdued Numidia and executed its king Hiarbas, a Marian ally. He restored the deposed Hiempsal to the Numidian throne. Around this time, his troops began referring to him as Magnus, or "the Great", after Alexander the Great, a figure much admired by the Romans. Shortly thereafter, Pompey formally made this part of his name.

On returning to Rome, he asked for a triumph to celebrate his victories, an unprecedented demand for someone so young. Pompey refused to disband his army until Sulla agreed, although the latter tried to offset the impact by awarding simultaneous triumphs to Lucius Licinius Murena and Gaius Valerius Flaccus. Sometime during this period, Pompey married Mucia Tertia, a member of the powerful Metellus family. They had three children before their divorce in 61 BC; Pompey the younger, usually known as Gnaeus, a daughter, Pompeia Magna, and a younger son, Sextus.

Pompey is located in ItalyCosaCosaRomeRomeMutinaMutinaSardiniaSardiniaPicenumPicenumclass=notpageimage| The Lepidan rebellion; key locations

Pompey supported Marcus Aemilius Lepidus as consul for 78 BC; Plutarch claims he did so against Sulla's advice, but most modern historians refute the idea. When Sulla died in 78 BC, Lepidus sought to block his state funeral and roll back some of Sulla's laws, then became proconsul of Cisalpine and Transalpine Gaul in January 77 BC. When the Senate ordered him back to Rome, Lepidus refused to comply unless granted another term as consul, a proposal that was rapidly rejected. Assembling an army, he began marching on Rome; the Senate responded with a series of measures, one of which was to appoint Pompey to a military command.

While Lepidus continued south, Pompey raised troops from among his veterans in Picenum, and moved north to besiege Mutina, capital of Cisalpine Gaul. The town was held by Lepidus' ally Marcus Junius Brutus, who surrendered after a lengthy siege, and was assassinated next day, allegedly on Pompey's orders. Catulus then defeated Lepidus outside Rome, while Pompey marched against his rear, catching him near Cosa. Lepidus and the remnants of his army retreated to Sardinia, where he died.

Sertorian War

Main article: Sertorian War

The Sertorian War began in 80 BC when Quintus Sertorius, a prominent proscribed Marian general, initiated a rebellion in Hispania, where he was joined by other Roman exiles like Perperna. Supported by local Iberian tribes, he took control of Hispania Ulterior and repeatedly defeated Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius through skillful use of guerrilla warfare. Sertorius defeated other Roman generals sent to oust him and soon conquered Hispania Citerior as well. Backed by his allies in the Senate, Pompey was appointed military commander in Spain with proconsular authority in order to defeat Sertorius. This act was technically illegal as he had yet to hold public office, illustrating Pompey's preference for military glory, and disregard for traditional political constraints.

Pompey recruited 30,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry, evidence of the threat posed by Sertorius. En route to Hispania, he subdued a rebellion in Gallia Narbonensis, after which his army entered winter quarters near Narbo Martius. In early 76 BC, he crossed the Col de Portet and entered the Iberian peninsula, where he would remain for the next five years. His arrival boosted the morale of Metellus' troops, while some rebels changed sides, but soon after he was defeated by Sertorius at the Battle of Lauron, losing one third of his army while inflicting next to no losses on Sertorius' army. This was a serious blow to Pompey's prestige, who spent the rest of the year re-organising his army. Metellus' failure to dislodge Sertorius and Pompey's defeat meant the senatorial generals made no progress in the year.

Pompey is located in SpainCol de PortetCol de PortetLauronLauronValenciaValenciaSucroSucroSaguntumSaguntumCluniaCluniaItalicaItalicaLusitaniaLusitaniaNarbo MartiusNarbo MartiusVaccaeiVaccaeiclass=notpageimage| Sertorian War in Spain; key locations mentioned in article

In 75 BC, Sertorius led the campaign against Metellus, while Pompey defeated his subordinates Perperna and Gaius Herennius outside Valencia. When Sertorius took over operations against Pompey, Metellus defeated his deputy Lucius Hirtuleius at the Battle of Italica. Pompey faced Sertorius in the indecisive Battle of Sucro, in which Sertorius defeated Pompey's right flank and nearly captured Pompey himself, but his legate Lucius Afranius defeated the Sertorian right. Sertorius withdrew inland, then turned to fight at Saguntum, where Pompey lost 6,000 men, including his brother-in-law Memmius, reputedly his most effective subordinate. Sertorius himself suffered 3,000 casualties, one of whom was Hirtuleius.

Although Metellus defeated Perperna in a separate battle, Sertorius was able to withdraw to Clunia late in the year, where he repaired the walls to lure his opponents into a siege, while forming garrisons from other towns into a new field army. Once this was ready, he escaped from Clunia and used it to disrupt Roman logistics on land and by sea. Lack of supplies forced Metellus to quarter his troops in Gaul, while Pompey wintered among the Vaccaei. Dire straits caused by this stretch of the campaign and Sertorius' guerrilla warfare led Pompey to write a letter to the Senate asking for funds and men, and scolding their lack of support for him and Metellus.

Pompey's letter had the effect of galvanizing the Senate into sending him more men and funds. Reinforced by two more legions, in 74 BC he and Metellus began a war of attrition against their enemy. As his chief opponent had lost most of his Roman legionaries and could no longer match him in the field, Pompey, along with Metellus, gained the upper hand, conquering more and more Sertorian cities, slowly grinding down Sertorius' revolt. By now, Sertorius was being undermined by internal divisions. Discontent in Sertorius' coalition of Iberian and Roman forces came to a head in 72 or 73 BC when Perperna, leading a conspiracy with other prominent Sertorians, had Sertorius assassinated and assumed control of the rebel army.

Pompey engaged Perperna in battle and defeated him swiftly at the Battle near Osca. Perperna was captured and attempted to persuade Pompey to spare him by giving over Sertorius' correspondence, allegedly containing proof of communications between the rebel leader and leading men in Rome. Pompey burned the letters unread and executed Perperna, and then spent some time restructuring the local Roman administration, showing a lack of animosity towards his former opponents, which extended his patronage throughout Hispania and into southern Gaul. Pompey and his army remained in Hispania for a few years conquering the Sertorian remnants, and then marched back to Rome.

First Consulship

During Pompey's absence, Marcus Licinius Crassus was charged with suppressing the slave rebellion led by Spartacus known as the Third Servile War. Pompey returned to Italy just before Crassus defeated the main rebel army in 71 BC, arriving in time to massacre 6,000 fugitives from the battle. His claim to have ended the war by doing so was a long-standing source of resentment for Crassus.

Aureus minted by Pompey for his second triumph in 71 BC, featuring the head of Africa on the obverse (celebrating his victory against Hiarbas). The reverse shows Pompey in his triumphal chariot, with his son Gnaeus seated before and Victory flying above.

Pompey was granted a second triumph for his victory in Hispania, and nominated for the consulship. Since he was both too young and technically ineligible, this required a special senatorial decree. Plutarch suggests Pompey supported Crassus as his co-consul in order to put him under an obligation. The two men were elected consuls for 70 BC, but allegedly differed on almost every measure, rendering their term "politically barren and without achievement."

However, their consulship did see the plebeian tribune recover powers removed by Sulla. One of the most significant was the ability to veto Senatorial bills, an act often seen as a turning point in the politics of the late Republic. Although popular with the people, the measure must have been opposed by the optimates, and thus passing it required support from both consuls, although most extant sources barely mention Crassus.

Campaign against the pirates

Main article: Pompey's campaign against the pirates

Pirates operated throughout the Mediterranean, while their fleets often formed temporary alliances with enemies of Rome, including Sertorius and Mithridates. Their power and range had increased over the past fifty years, partly because of the decline of traditional naval powers like Rhodes, while previous attempts to subdue them had been unsuccessful. However, Romans routinely referred to their opponents as "pirates" or "brigands", and some historians argue it is more accurate to see them as a conventional enemy, rather than disorganised outlaws.

Principally based in Cilicia, in 68 BC they raided as far as Ostia, Rome's port, and kidnapped two senators, to general outrage. Prompted by Pompey, Aulus Gabinius, tribune of the plebs in 67 BC, proposed the Lex Gabinia, giving him a mandate for their suppression. It granted him proconsular authority for three years in any province within 50 miles of the Mediterranean, along with the power to appoint legates and significant financial resources. Concerned by one man holding such wide-ranging powers, the Senate opposed the law but it was passed by the people. Most of the difficulties Pompey faced came from officials who resented his authority. In Gaul, Piso hampered his recruitment efforts, while in Crete, Quintus Metellus refused to comply with his instructions.

Pompey spread his forces throughout the Mediterranean to prevent the pirates escaping a Roman fleet by moving elsewhere. Fifteen legates were given specific areas to patrol, while he secured the grain route to Rome. These measures won him control of the western Mediterranean in just 40 days, after which his fleets moved to the east, forcing the pirates back to their bases in Cilicia. Pompey led the decisive assault on their stronghold in Coracaesium, winning the Battle of Korakesion and concluding the war in only three months.

Most of his opponents surrendered without fighting, thanks to Pompey's reputation for clemency. They were granted lands in cities devastated during the Mithridatic War, notably Soli, renamed Pompeiopolis, and Dyme in Greece, with others sent to towns in Libya and Calabria. These communities retained a strong attachment to both Rome and Pompey.

Third Mithridatic War and re-organisation of the east

Third Mithridatic War

Main article: Third Mithridatic War
Asia Minor and surrounding region, first century BC

In 73 BC, Lucius Licinius Lucullus, formerly one of Sulla's chief lieutenants, was made proconsul of Cilicia, and commander in the Third Mithridatic War. The war began in 74 BC, when the last ruler of Bithynia died and left his kingdom to Rome, sparking an invasion by Mithridates VI of Pontus, and Tigranes the Great of Armenia. Lucullus was a skilled general who won numerous victories, but claims he was protracting the war for "power and wealth" led to a Senate investigation, while by 69 BC his troops were weary and mutinous.

In 68 BC, Quintus Marcius Rex replaced Lucullus in Cicilia, while Manius Acilius Glabrio received Bithynia. He also assumed leadership of the war against Mithridates, but failed to respond decisively when the latter re-occupied much of Pontus in 67 BC, then attacked Cappadocia, a Roman ally. Seeing an opportunity, in 66 BC Pompey used the tribunate to pass the lex Manilia, giving him extensive powers throughout Asia Minor in order to defeat Mithridates, in addition to those granted by the lex Gabinia. The optimates were privately horrified that one man should hold so much influence, but fearful of his popularity allowed the measure to pass.

Incensed at being replaced, Lucullus called Pompey a "vulture" who profited from the work of others, a reference both to his new command and claim to have finished the war against Spartacus. Pompey agreed an alliance with Phraates III, king of Parthia, whom he persuaded to invade Armenia. When Mithridates offered a truce, Lucullus argued the war was over, but Pompey demanded concessions which could not be accepted. Outnumbered, Mithridates withdrew into Armenia, followed by Pompey, who defeated him at Lycus near the end of 66 BC.

Bust of Mithridates of Pontus in the Louvre, Paris

According to contemporary sources, Mithridates and a small contingent escaped the battle, outstripped their pursuers, and reached Colchis on the Black Sea. While there, he took control of the Cimmerian Bosporus from its Roman-backed ruler, his son Machares, who later committed suicide. Meanwhile, Pompey invaded Armenia supported by Tigranes the Younger, whose father quickly came to terms; in return for the restoration of Armenian territories taken by Lucullus, he paid a substantial cash indemnity and allowed Roman troops to be based on his territory.

In 65 BC, Pompey set out to take Colchis, but to do so had first to subdue various local tribes and allies of Mithridrates. After winning a series of battles, he reached Phasis and linked up with Servilius, admiral of his Euxine fleet, before a fresh revolt in Caucasian Albania forced him to retrace his steps. Victory at the Abas enabled him to impose terms on the Albanians and agree truces with other tribes on the northern side of the Caucasus. Pompey then wintered in Armenia, settling minor border contests and raids between his allies Phraates and Tigranes.

Relying on his naval blockade to wear down Mithridates, Pompey spent 64 BC annexing the independent and wealthy cities of Syria, which were incorporated into a new Roman province. In the process, he acquired large amounts of money and prestige, as well as criticism from his opponents in Rome, who argued doing so exceeded his authority. Meanwhile, an ageing Mithridates had been cornered in Panticapaeum by another of his sons, Pharnaces II of Pontus. An attempt to commit suicide by taking poison allegedly failed due to his habit of taking "precautionary antidotes", and he was killed by the rebels. Pharnaces sent his embalmed body to Pompey, in return for which he was granted the Bosporan Kingdom and made an ally of Rome.

Re-organisation of the East

Further information: Pompey's eastern settlement

The final collapse of the Seleucid Empire allowed Pompey to annex Syria in 64 BC, but its dissolution destabilised the region, while many of its cities had used the power vacuum to achieve independence. In early 63 BC, Pompey left Antioch and marched south, occupying coastal cities like Apamea, before crossing the Anti-Lebanon Mountains and capturing Pella, Jordan and Damascus.

Judea (blue) in 63 BC, after losing the Decapolis (red) to the north

Pompey's incursion further south, into Judea, was occasioned on account of its inhabitants, under the leadership of Hyrcanus II and Aristobulus II, having ravaged Phoenicia and Pompey wanting to bring a stop to it. The initial onslaught was disrupted by the Hasmonean Civil War, in which Pompey backed Hyrcanus II over his brother Aristobulus II. When he compelled the latter to surrender Jerusalem, its defenders took refuge in the Temple, which the Romans first stormed, then looted. Judea became a client kingdom ruled by Hyrcanus, while its northern section was incorporated into the Decapolis, a league of semi-autonomous cities (see map). Both Judea and the League were made subordinate to the new province of Syria.

Other organisational changes included creating the province of Bithynia and Pontus, with the rest of Mithridates' territories distributed among Roman allies. Elsewhere, Ariobarzanes I of Cappadocia was restored to his throne, while Lesser Armenia was taken from Tigranes and incorporated into Galatia, with Pompey's client Deiotarus becoming ruler of the new kingdom. Finally, Cilicia received the coastal region of Pamphylia, previously a centre of piracy, along with other inland areas and reorganised into six parts. These actions significantly increased Roman state income and presented Pompey with multiple opportunities to increase his personal wealth and patronage base.

Return to Rome and the First Triumvirate

Denarius minted in 56 BC by Pompey's supporter Faustus Sulla

Before his return to Italy in 62 BC, Pompey paid his troops bonuses totalling around 16,000 talents, but despite fears he intended to follow Sulla's example, they were dismissed upon arrival at Brundisium. His journey to Rome drew huge crowds wherever he stopped, showing that although opinion in the Senate was divided, Pompey remained as popular as ever with the masses. He was awarded a third triumph for his achievements in Asia Minor, celebrated on his 45th birthday in 61 BC.

Pompey claimed the new provinces established in the East had increased annual state income from 200 million to 340 million sesterces, plus an additional payment of 480 million sesterces to the treasury. He refused to provide details of his personal fortune, but given the amounts declared publicly, this must have been enormous. Some of it was used to build one of the most famous structures of Ancient Rome, the Theatre of Pompey.

However, the Senate then refused to ratify the treaties agreed by Pompey as part of his settlement of the East. Opposition was led by the optimates Cato the Younger and Metellus Celer, whose sister Mucia had recently been divorced by Pompey, for reasons still disputed. They also defeated a bill to distribute farmland to his veterans, and landless members of the urban poor. A similar measure had been rejected in 63 BC, which arguably made the Senate over confident in their ability to control popular unrest.

The First Triumvirate; left to right, Caesar, Crassus, and Pompey

Although Pompey could not overcome optimate opposition on his own, the situation changed when Marius' nephew Julius Caesar sought his endorsement for the consulship in 59 BC. A skilled, unscrupulous, and ambitious politician, Caesar used this alliance to harness Pompey's influence with the urban electorate. With additional support from Crassus, Caesar became one of the two consuls for 59 BC, the other being the optimate Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus. This meant Caesar could help pass legislation sponsored by Pompey and Crassus, while it was in his interest to keep them aligned, an important factor given the rivalry between his two patrons.

Despite appearing to be the most junior, Caesar thus became central to the First Triumvirate, an informal political alliance designed to counter-balance the optimates. Pompey's influence was based on his reputation as a military commander, and popularity with the Roman people. Crassus' wealth allowed him to construct extensive patronage networks, but he lacked the military clout essential for political success in the late Republican era.

Marcus Tullius Cicero, leader of optimate opposition to the triumvirate who became an ally of Pompey

Once elected, Caesar secured the passage of a new agrarian bill, helped by Pompey's veterans, who filled the streets of Rome and allegedly intimidated the Senate. When Bibulus opposed the measure, he was attacked in the forum, and spent the rest of his consulship under virtual house arrest. Caesar then ensured ratification of Pompey's settlements in the east, while the Lex Vatinia made him governor of Gallia Cisalpina and Illyricum. He was also assigned Gallia Transalpina after its governor died in office, before leaving Rome to launch the Gallic Wars in 58 BC. His alliance with Pompey was strengthened when the latter married Caesar's daughter Julia.

Senatorial opposition to the triumvirate was led by Cicero, a long-standing Pompeian ally. Despite this, the latter supported the populist politician Publius Clodius Pulcher in an attack on Cicero for executing Roman citizens without trial during the Catilinarian conspiracy. Although Clodius succeeded in having Cicero exiled, he was recalled to Rome by Pompey eighteen months later in 58 BC. As a result, when shortages of grain caused popular unrest in 57 BC, a grateful Cicero backed Pompey's appointment as praefectus annonae, a temporary position set up for such occasions.

Pompey and Crassus were competing for command of a new expedition to Asia Minor, and in 56 BC they met with Caesar to resolve these issues. Although Crassus was a long-standing rival, there are also indications Pompey felt his status as the foremost soldier of the Republic was threatened by Caesar's success in Gaul. With this in mind, Pompey set aside his differences with Crassus to promote their joint candidature as consuls for 55 BC. With Caesar's support, they were duly elected after prolonged periods of the violence which had become a feature of Roman political campaigns.

Once in office, they ensured passage of a law giving Crassus the province of Syria and command of a punitive expedition against Parthia, providing him opportunities for both military glory and loot. Pompey was assigned the restive provinces of Hispania, along with Africa, while Caesar's governorships in Gaul were extended. All three men were given these positions for a period of five years, as well as the right to levy troops and "make peace and war with whomsoever they pleased."

From confrontation to civil war

The Roman Empire and satellite states, prior to the outbreak of civil war c. 49 BC

In 54 BC, Caesar continued his conquest of Gaul, Crassus opened his campaign against the Parthians, and Pompey remained in Rome, where his wife Julia died in child birth in September. Contemporary sources suggest that combined with the death of Crassus and his son Publius at Carrhae in May 53 BC, this removed any obstacle to direct confrontation between Caesar and Pompey.

Consular elections in 52 BC had to be suspended due to widespread violence. Seeking to end his alliance with Caesar, the optimate Bibulus proposed Pompey be elected sole consul, an unprecedented act backed by both Cato and the tribunate. Having restored order, Pompey married Cornelia, widow of Publius Crassus and daughter of Metellus Scipio Nasica, whom he appointed as his colleague for the last five months of the year.

As consul, Pompey helped enact legislation which some historians view as crucial to understanding the drift to war in 49 BC. Accused of using violence during his consulship in 59 BC, Caesar had previously been shielded by his proconsular immunity. With private support from Pompey, new laws made such prosecutions retrospective, which meant Caesar would probably be put on trial the moment he left Gaul and lost his Imperium. To avoid this, he had secured approval to stand for the consulship in 48 BC while still in Gaul, but another law backed by Pompey required electoral candidates to be physically present in Rome.

Although the two continued to co-operate in public, Pompey clearly viewed his colleague as a threat, as did much of the Senate. Both consuls for 50 BC, Paullus and Gaius Claudius, were opponents of Caesar, as was Curio, a plebeian tribune. They initiated legislation to remove Caesar from his command in Gaul, who allegedly bypassed this by bribing Paullus and Curio. For whatever reason, Curio came up with an alternative proposal; Caesar and Pompey should disarm at the same time, or be declared enemies of the state.

This was a clever move, since it was popular with those who wanted to avoid war, but unacceptable to the optimates who saw Caesar as a danger that had to be eliminated. Rejection made open conflict more likely, and the Senate agreed to fund a consular army, organised by Pompey. When he fell ill while recruiting in Naples, the celebrations that followed his recovery allegedly convinced Pompey his popularity was sufficient to see off any opponent. In December, Caesar crossed the Alps with a single veteran legion and arrived at Ravenna, close to the border with the Roman Republic.

A significant number of senators opposed any concessions to Caesar, but many also mistrusted Pompey, who has been criticised for "weak and ineffectual leadership" in this period. On 1 January 49 BC, Caesar sent an ultimatum demanding acceptance of his compromise, failing which he would march on Rome "to avenge his country's wrongs". Confident their forces significantly outnumbered those available to Caesar, on 7 January the Senate declared him a public enemy; four days later, he crossed the Rubicon into Italy.

The Road to Pharsalus

Main article: Caesar's civil war

When the war began, Caesar was a rebel with no navy and three understrength legions, while Pompey was backed by all the resources of the Roman state and his clients in the East. However, his position was weaker than it seemed, since he was simply an advisor to the Senate, many of whose members either preferred a negotiated solution, or regarded him with as much suspicion as Caesar. His military strategy had to be approved by the consuls, and he could only issue recommendations, which were not always followed. For example, Cicero rejected a request to help him with recruitment, and Cato refused to take command of Sicily, vital for control of Rome's grain supply.

The Flight of Pompey after Pharsalus, by Jean Fouquet

Plans to defend Italy were undone by the speed with which Caesar moved, advancing directly on Rome with minimal resistance. Although outnumbered, his troops were experienced veterans, while many of Pompey's were new recruits, a weakness made worse by lack of co-ordination. Cato's brother-in-law, the optimate leader Lucius Domitius, was cut off and captured in a hopeless defence of Corfinium, and his 13,000 men incorporated into Caesar's army. Led by Asinius Pollio, they were later used to occupy Sicily.

Pompey had abandoned Rome, ordering all senators and public officials to accompany him as he withdrew south to Brundisium. From there, he transported his troops across the Adriatic to Dyrrhachium in Thessaly, an operation performed with almost complete success. Lacking ships to pursue him, Caesar first secured his rear by subduing Pompeian forces in Hispania, before returning to Rome in December 49 BC. This gave Pompey time to build an army nearly twice the size of his opponents, while his navy destroyed two fleets being built for Caesar, ensuring the Pompeians retained control of the sea lanes.

Despite this, in January 48 BC Caesar managed to cross the Adriatic with seven legions and land in southern Albania. After capturing Oricum and Apollonia, he advanced on Pompey's main supply base at Dyrrhachium. The latter arrived in time to block the attempt, and establish a fortified camp on the other side of the River Apus, where the two armies remained until spring. Neither commander was anxious to begin hostilities, since Caesar was too weak militarily, while as with Mithridates, Pompey preferred to starve his opponent into submission.

The Pharsalus campaign, 48 BC

In late March the stalemate was broken when Mark Antony finally managed to cross the Adriatic with four more legions and land at Nymphaeum, some 57 kilometres north of Dyrrachium. Pompey tried to prevent the two Caesarian armies from linking up, by marching north-east and laying an ambush for Antony. The ambush, however, was revealed to Antony by some local Caesarian sympathisers, and he stayed in camp until Caesar approached. Pompey not willing to be caught between the two Caesarian forces withdrew.

Caesar, his army now united with Antony's force, redeployed his forces by sending one-and-a-half legion to win support and gather supplies in Aetolia and Thessaly, and a further two legions under Domitius Calvinus to intercept Metellus Scipio in Macedonia. Meanwhile, Gnaeus, Pompey's oldest son, managed to destroy Caesar's fleet at Oricum and Lissus, making sure no more reinforcements and supplies would reach Caesar from Italy. Caesar tried to lure Pompey into a pitched battle at Asparagium, but the latter refused. The next day Caesar outmaneuvred Pompey and marched for Dyrrachium again. When Pompey arrived at the city Caesar had already set up camp.

Caesar lacked the siege equipment needed to take Dyrrhachium, and could not risk leaving Pompey to threaten his rear. He solved this by besieging Pompey in his camp. Although the latter had enough food, water was scarce because Caesar had dammed the local rivers, and the Pompeian cavalry lacked forage for their horses. Ending the stalemate became a matter of urgency, and in late July Pompey finally managed to break through part of Caesar's defensive lines. Since this made the blockade pointless, Caesar cut his losses and withdrew to Apollonia.

At this point Metellus Scipio arrived in Thessaly. Caesar moved south to confront this threat and link up with Domitius Calvinus, allowing his men to sack Gomphi en route. Pursued by Pompey, he then withdrew to the area near Pharsalus, but failed to tempt Pompey into giving battle. Although it was later claimed Pompey only did so after being pressured by his subordinates, the delay may simply have been a reflection of his natural caution.

Regardless, Pompey's army of around 38,000 outnumbered the 22,000 men commanded by Caesar, with 7,000 cavalry to 1,000. On 9 August he deployed his men in battle formation, planning to use his superior cavalry to outflank his opponent on his left. Caesar had anticipated this, and repulsed the cavalry which fled in confusion, exposing the infantry behind them. Under pressure from the left and in front, the Pompeian army collapsed.

Death

Death of Pompey Magnus; 18th century engraving

Pompey escaped from the battlefield and made his way to Mytilene, where he was reunited with his wife Cornelia. Most of his Eastern allies were present at Pharsalus and had either been killed or captured. The main absentee was 14-year-old Ptolemy XIII, ruler of the wealthy and strategically important kingdom of Egypt, making it an obvious destination. Cato announced his intention to continue the war from Africa, although most of his senatorial colleagues, including Cicero and Marcus Junius Brutus, made their peace with Caesar and returned to Rome.

Pompey sailed from Cyprus with a small fleet, and on 28 September 48 BC arrived at Pelusium in Egypt, where Ptolemy was engaged in a bitter civil war with his co-ruler and elder sister, Cleopatra VII. When he went ashore to greet an official delegation, Pompey was killed by Lucius Septimius, a Roman officer and former colleague serving in the Egyptian army. His body was cremated by two servants, while the head was kept as evidence.

One suggestion is that Ptolemy and his advisors feared Pompey planned to seize control of Egypt, especially since many Egyptian army officers were Roman mercenaries like Septimius who had previously served with him. At the same time, it seemed an easy way to win Caesar's support against Cleopatra, although ultimately this proved not to be the case. Pompey's head was later returned to Cornelia for burial at his villa in the Alban Hills, while his ignominious death prompted Cicero to write "his life outlasted his power".

Marriages and issue

Main article: Wives of Pompey the Great

Pompey had five wives:

  • Antistia. They married in 86 BC and divorced in 82 BC. By her he had no issue.
  • Aemilia Scaura. When they married in 82 BC, Aemilia was pregnant by her former husband and died in childbirth in the same year.
  • Mucia Tertia. They married in 79 BC and divorced in 61 BC. By her he had two sons and a daughter:
  • Julia, the daughter of Julius Caesar. They married in 59 BC and she died in childbirth in 54 BC. The child died a few days after birth.
  • Cornelia Metella. They married in 52 BC and had no children together.

Generalship

Pompey's military glory was second to none for two decades, yet his skills were occasionally criticized by some of his contemporaries. Sertorius or Lucullus, for instance, were especially critical. Pompey's tactics were usually efficient, albeit not particularly innovative or imaginative, and they could prove insufficient against greater tacticians. However, Pharsalus was his only decisive defeat. At times, he was reluctant to risk an open battle. While not extremely charismatic, Pompey could display tremendous bravery and fighting skills on the battlefield, which inspired his men. While being a superb commander, Pompey also earned a reputation for stealing other generals' victories.

On the other hand, Pompey is usually considered an outstanding strategist and organizer, who could win campaigns without displaying genius on the battlefield, but simply by constantly outmaneuvering his opponents and gradually pushing them into a desperate situation. Pompey was a great forward planner, and had tremendous organizational skill, which allowed him to devise grand strategies and operate effectively with large armies. During his campaigns in the east, he relentlessly pursued his enemies, choosing the ground for his battles.

Above all, he was often able to adapt to his enemies and showed determination. On many occasions, he acted very swiftly and decisively, as he did during his campaigns in Sicily and Africa, or against the Cilician pirates. During the Sertorian war, on the other hand, Pompey was beaten several times by Sertorius. Despite an abysmal first year of the war for Pompey in 76 BC, he continued to campaign vigorously and as a result defeated many of Sertorius' subordinates. After Sertorius' army was greatly diminished, Pompey then decided to conduct a war of attrition, in which he would avoid open battles against his chief opponent but instead tried to gradually regain the strategic advantage by capturing his fortresses and cities and defeating his junior officers. This strategy was unspectacular, but it led to constant territorial gains and did much to demoralize the Sertorian forces. By 73 or 72 BC, when he was assassinated, Sertorius was already in a desperate situation and his troops were deserting. Against Perperna, a tactician far inferior to his former commander-in-chief, Pompey decided to revert to a more aggressive strategy and he scored a decisive victory that effectively ended the war.

Against Caesar too, his strategy was sound. During the campaign in Greece, he managed to regain the initiative, join his forces to that of Metellus Scipio (something that Caesar wanted to avoid) and trap his enemy. His strategic position was hence much better than that of Caesar and he could have starved Caesar's army to death. However, he was finally compelled to fight an open battle by his allies, and his conventional tactics proved no match to those of Caesar (who also commanded the more experienced troops).

Literary heritage

Pompey was so striking a figure, and his fall so dramatic, that his story became the subject of frequent literary treatment. In the century after his death, the civil war between himself and Caesar was retold in Lucan's epic De Bello Civili, now known as the Pharsalia after the culminating battle. In the poem's final sections, however, Pompey's vengeful ghost returns to possess those responsible for his murder in Egypt and bring about their death.

In Renaissance Britain, too, several plays returned to the subject of "Caesar and Pompey", including George Chapman's The Wars of Pompey and Caesar (c. 1604). Another contemporary treatment by Thomas Kyd, Cornelia, or Pompey the Great, his faire Cornelia's tragedy (1594), was a translation from the French of Robert Garnier. Later in France, Pompey's story was told without the character appearing onstage in Pierre Corneille's La Mort de Pompée (1643) and this too had English adaptations: as Pompey (1663) by Catherine Philips, as Pompey the Great by Edmund Waller and others in 1664, and later as The Death of Pompey (1724) by Colley Cibber.

Later in the 18th century, Pompey is made the recipient of a 'heroical epistle' in rhyming couplets from a supposed former lover in John Hervey's "Flora to Pompey". He also figures in narrative poems of the 19th century. John Edmund Reade's "The Vale of Tempe" records the fugitive's desperate appearance as glimpsed by a bystander in the Greek valley; his arrival in Egypt is related by Alaric Watts in "The Death of Pompey the Great", and the ruined column raised to mark the site of his killing outside Alexandria is described by Nicholas Michell in Ruins of Many Lands. These were followed by John Masefield's prose drama The Tragedy of Pompey the Great of 1910, covering the period from his decision to fight Caesar to his assassination in Egypt. The play was later filmed for television in 1950 for the BBC Sunday Night Theatre.

Pompey's career is recapitulated a century later in series of historical novels. In Colleen McCullough's Masters of Rome, Pompey is mainly featured in Books III-V, covering his rise to prominence through to his betrayal and murder in Egypt. Pompey is also a recurring character in Steven Saylor's Roma Sub Rosa crime fiction novels, where he brushes shoulders with Gordianus, the main protagonist of the series. Another fiction series in which Pompey plays a part in the historical background is Robert Harris's trilogy of the life of Cicero.

Chronology of Pompey's life and career

  • 29 September 106 BC – Born in Picenum;
  • 86 BC – Marriage to Antistia;
  • 89 BC – Serves under his father at Asculum (during the Social War);
  • 83 BC – Aligns with Sulla, after his return from the First Mithridatic War against King Mithridates VI of Pontus, raising a legion and cavalry in hopes of joining him;
  • 83–82 BC – Fights for Sulla during the war in Italy. First as cavalry commander then joint-commands and finally commanding an independent army.
  • 82 BC – Divorce by Antistia and marriage to Aemilia at the behest of Sulla, but Aemilia is already pregnant and eventually dies during childbirth;
  • 82–81 BC – Defeats Gaius Marius' allies in Sicily and Africa;
  • 81 BC – Returns to Rome and celebrates first triumph;
  • 79 BC – Pompey marries Mucia Tertia, of the Mucii Scaevolae family;
  • 79 BC – Pompey supports the election of Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, who openly revolts against the Senate a few months later. Pompey suppresses the rebellion with an army raised from Picenum and puts down the rebellion, killing the rebel Marcus Junius Brutus, father of Brutus, who would go on to assassinate Julius Caesar;
  • 76–71 BC – Campaign in Hispania against Sertorius;
  • 71 BC – Returns to Italy and participates in the suppression of a slave rebellion led by Spartacus, obtaining his second triumph;
  • 70 BC – First consulship (with Marcus Licinius Crassus);
  • 67 BC – Defeats the pirates and goes to the province of Asia;
  • 66–61 BC – Defeats King Mithridates of Pontus, ending the Third Mithridatic War;
  • 64–63 BC – Marches through Syria, the Levant, and Judea;
  • 61 BC – Divorce by Mucia Tertia;
  • 29 September 61 BC – Third triumph;
  • April 59 BC – The so-called first triumvirate is constituted. Pompey allies with Julius Caesar and Crassus, marrying Caesar's daughter Julia;
  • 58–55 BC – Governs Hispania Ulterior by proxy, while the Theater of Pompey is constructed;
  • 55 BC – Second consulship (with Marcus Licinius Crassus), and the Theater of Pompey is finally inaugurated;
  • 54 BC – Julia dies in childbirth, and the first triumvirate ends;
  • 52 BC – Serves as sole consul for an intercalary month, but has a third ordinary consulship with Metellus Scipio for the rest of the year, marrying his daughter Cornelia Metella;
  • 51 BC – Forbids Caesar (in Gaul) to stand for consulship in absentia;
  • 50 BC – Falls dangerously ill with fever in Campania, but is saved "by public prayers";
  • 49 BC – Caesar crosses the Rubicon river and invades Italy, while Pompey retreats to Greece with the conservatives;
  • 48 BC – Caesar defeats Pompey's army near Pharsalus, Greece. Pompey retreats to Egypt and is killed at Pelusium.

Footnotes

  1. Samnium and Lucania had remained virtually neutral during the war, but now decided to throw their lot in with the Roman government – their hatred for Sulla probably being the deciding factor.
  2. Six legions and a navy of 120 warships and 800 transport ships. Both men and ships were immediately available: the men and ships from Sulla's armies
  3. Reportedly 6,000 talents for Pompey, with tribunes getting 10,000 drachmas each, centurions 1,000, and enlisted men 50
  4. These were Cilicia Aspera, Cilicia Campestris, Pamphylia, Pisidia, Isauria, Lycaonia, and Phrygia
  5. The three wreaths on the reverse refer to the three triumphs of Pompey; the top wreath is the corona aurea he received in 62; the globe in the center is a copy of the one paraded during the third triumph; the aplustre on the lower left alludes to his victory against the pirates
  6. A Roman talent was roughly 32 kilograms of gold, making this distribution worth over $32 billion using 2023 prices
  7. The divorce may also have been a factor in the defection of Metellus Nepos, previously one of Pompey's main supporters, although the Metelli had their own political ambitions.
  8. Historian Florus wrote "Pompey could not brook an equal, or Caesar a superior."
  9. Now in Northern Italy, Ravenna was then a federated ally of the Roman Republic
  10. Pompey was based at Petra, a small port north of Dyrrhachium, roughly on the site of modern Shkëmbi i Kavajës in Albania
  11. The exact location of the battle is still disputed
  12. these numbers refer to legionaries and do not include the light-armed troops provided by allied rulers and nations

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  155. Rocío Gordillo Hervás (9 February 2024). "Historical Fiction and Ancient Rome: Colleen McCullough's Masters Of Rome Series". Collection de l'Institut des Sciences et Techniques de l'Antiquité. 1476 (1): 206 ff.
  156. Keith Nixon (19 October 2014). "Interview: Steven Saylor". Crime Fiction Lover.
  157. Benedicte Page (11 September 2015). "Robert Harris | 'Cicero had very good relations with Caesar but he was absolutely delighted to see him murdered before his own eyes'". The Bookseller.
  158. Goldsworthy 2004, p. 174.
  159. ^ Goldsworthy 2004, p. 179.
  160. Goldsworthy 2004, p. 180, 181.
  161. Abbott 1963, p. 114.
  162. Juvenal, Satire X, p. 283

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Christ, Karl (2004). Pompeius. Der Feldherr Roms. Eine Biographie . Munich: C. H. Beck, ISBN 3-406-51543-6.
  • Dingmann, Matthias (2007). Pompeius Magnus. Machtgrundlagen eines spätrepublikanischen Politikers . Rahden: Leidorf, ISBN 978-3-89646-733-1.
  • Hillman, T., P., The Reputation of Cn. Pompeius Magnus among His Contemporaries from 83 to 59 B.C., Diss. New York 1989.
  • Nicols, Marianne Schoenlin. Appearance and Reality. A Study of the Clientele of Pompey the Great, Diss. Berkeley/Cal. 1992.
  • Southern, P., Pompey the Great: Caesar's Friend and Foe, The History Press, 2003; ISBN 978-0752425214
  • Stockton, D., The First Consulship of Pompey, Historia 22 (1973), 205–18.
  • Van Ooteghem, J., Pompée le Grand. Bâtisseur d’Empire. Brussels 1954.
  • Wylie, G., J., Pompey Megalopsychos, Klio 72 (1990), 445–456.
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Cn. Aufidius Orestes
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70 BC
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Intercalary Month, 52 BC
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