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Hellenistic kings, War, and the Economy1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
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My title links together kings, war, and the economy, and the linkage is deliberate. I do not of course wish to suggest that Hellenistic kings did nothing but fight wars, that they were responsible for all the wars in the period, that royal wars were nothing but a form of economic activity, or that the economy of the kings was dependent purely on the fruits of military success, though there would be an element of truth in all these propositions. But I wish to react against the frequent tendency to separate topics that are related, the tendency to treat notions relating to what kings were or should be as something distinct from what they actually did, and the tendency to treat political and military history on the one hand as something separate from economic and social history on the other.
A number of provisos should be made at the outset. The title promises more than the paper can deliver; in particular, more will be said about kings and war than about kings and the economy. The subject is handled at a probably excessive level of generalization and abstraction. I talk about Hellenistic kings in general, but in practice it would obviously be necessary to draw distinctions between different dynasties, different times and places, and individual rulers, and some of those distinctions I shall indicate. Conclusions are provisional and subject to modification and considerable expansion in detail. Finally, two points of terminology. I use the word ‘Hellenistic’ for no better reason than out of the force of acquired habit, but of course the word and the concept are modern inventions that were unknown to the ancient world.
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References
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4 3 vols. (Oxford, 1941).
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9 ii. 1150–4 (Ptolemies), 1155 (Seleucids). Apart from a longer passage in i. 192–206, references to booty in Rostovtzeff are usually brief and frequently give no source references, cf. i.129f. (Alexander), 146 (Successors), 203f., 287, 326f., 414 (Ptolemies), ii.710, 1152 (Ptolemies).
10 See for example i.23, 43, 189–206, ii.1242f. In i. 143–52, writing of the Age of the Successors, Rostovtzeff concedes for once that war could occasionally have a beneficent aspect, by putting into circulation money hitherto dormant in the great Persian treasures and so stimulating economic development. This conception is derived from Droysen, J. G., Geschichte des Hellenismus (Tübingen, 1952–1953, from the 1877 edition), i.436–9Google Scholar; an obvious colonial analogy lurks beneath the surface.
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12 See Rostovtzeff i.430f. on the Seleucids, but the implications of that view are not pursued.
13 Volume vii part 1 (Cambridge, 2nd ed. 1984).
14 See Rostovtzeff iii. 1746, index svv. unification, unity.
15 Droysen, op. cit. (n. 10), i.442, iii.422.
16 See especially the searching chapter, (8) by J. K. Davies on ‘Cultural, social and economic features of the Hellenistic world’.
17 Chapter 5.
18 Cf. Reinhold (n. 5), 372–6.
19 F. W. Walbank, chapter 3, 63, 66, 81f.
20 Id. 84.
21 Davies (n. 16), 291 gives a clear characterization of the competitiveness and military nature of the monarchies, but refers back to Walbank's chapter without further discussion.
22 Chapter 9(b).
23 Bibliographies on all aspects of Hellenistic history may be found in Préaux (n. 7), Ed. Will, , Histoire politique du monde hellénistique, 2 vols. (2nd ed., Nancy, 1979 and 1982)Google Scholar, and the new Cambridge Ancient History vii.1.
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49 Anth. Pal. 9.518.
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52 11.11.1; see Will (n. 23), ii.348–52.
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58 Polybius 18.41; for the connection between military victory and royal status, see also e.g. Diodorus 19.48.1 and 55.2 (Antigonus), 93.4 (Demetrius), 105.4 (the leading Successors), 20.79.2 (Agathocles); Polybius 1.9.8 (Hiero II), 10.38.3 and 40.2 (Scipio Africanus), 11.34.16 (Antiochus III).
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64 Pritchett (n. 27), ii chs. 1–3.
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70 OGIS 54.
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75 5.83.
76 Préaux (n. 7), i.208–10.
77 5.88–90.
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80 Dio 42.49.4.
81 18.50.2f.
82 19.56.5; for other instances see 18.16.2, 19.2, 53.2, 55.2; 19.56.2, 72.1, 78.1.
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91 See n. 85.
92 II Maccabees 8.9–10 explicitly connects the sale of Jewish war captives by a Seleucid general with the need to pay the Romans.
93 18.14.1:
94 OGIS 11, lines 10f.; Welles, C. B., Royal Correspondence in the Hellenistic Period (New Haven & London, 1934), no. 6 lines 6f.Google Scholar The Prieneans had in fact omitted to mention the ‘friends’ and were corrected on this point by Lysimachus. On Lysimachus see also Diodorus 21.12.1 (in 292).
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100 Phocion 18. Cf. Berve (n. 34), ii no. 816.
101 See for example Diodorus 18.14.1, 28.5–6, 19.86 (Ptolemy); 18.33–6 (Perdiccas and Ptolemy); 18.50, 53, 61–2, 19.25 (Antigonus and Eumenes); Plutarch, , Demetrius 49–50Google Scholar (Seleucus and Demetrius).
102 Livy 35.18.1; cf. also the competition between rival Seleucid rulers for the favour of Jonathan (Bikerman (n. 29), 44).
103 For a recent survey cf. Garlan (n. 22).
104 Bengtson, H., Die Strategie in der hellenistischen Zeit, 3 vols. (Munich, 1937 (repr. 1964), 1944, 1952)Google Scholar discusses the subject from a largely administrative point of view, with only incidental recognition of the problem of delegated military authority (ii.56–60, on the Seleucids); the resulting picture is much too tidy and impersonal, cf. his concluding survey in iii. 190–6. Against see Aymard, A., ‘Esprit militaire et administration hellénistique’, Études d'histoire ancienne (Paris, 1967), 461–73Google Scholar.
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108 This is implied by Polybius 15.25.11; see also the oath of Eumenes I and his mercenaries — after a major revolt (OGIS 266). Launey does not discuss the institution.
109 Launey (n. 106), ii.690–5 for some evidence.
110 Polybius 5.2, 4–5, 7, 14–16, 25–8.
111 Plutarch, , Demetrius 44Google Scholar (Pyrrhus and Demetrius).
112 Polybius 5.40–57.
113 For some examples see Préaux (n. 7), i.306–9.
114 Griffith (n. 105), 291f., 313 and n. 2; Launey (n. 106), index s.v. ‘butin’ (ii.1287), but the references are all brief and unsystematic. For Rostovtzeff see n. 9 above.
115 There is much material in the unpublished Cambridge Ph.D. thesis of Jackson, A. H., Plundering in War and other Depredations in Greek History from 800 B.C. to 146 B.C. (1969)Google Scholar. See also Bikerman (n. 29), 120f. (Seleucids); Préaux (n. 7), i.297f., 308, 366–70; Volkmann, H., Die Massenversklavungen der Einwohner erobeŕter Städte in der hellenistisch-römischen Zeit (Wiesbaden, 1961), 15–25, 61–5Google Scholar (unsystematic); more fully P. Ducrey (n. 34), esp. 83–92, 135–40, 159–70, 235–7.
116 See Polybius 4.3–37, 57–87; 5.1–30, 91–105; for his views on the legitimacy of booty see especially 5.9–11 and the revealing comparison between the practice of the Romans and others in 10.16–17.
117 Thus Préaux (n. 7), i.305.
118 FGrHist 260 F 42; Rostovtzeff (n. 4), ii.1150f.
119 F 43; Rostovtzeff does not mention or discuss this passage.
120 FGrHist 160 column ii. Travelling war chests were evidently sitting targets as large sums of money were involved; cf. in the Age of the Successors Diodorus 18.52.7 (600 talents), 19.57.5 (1000 talents), 19.61.5 (500 talents), 20.108.3 (3000 talents).
121 Ducrey (n. 34), 83–7.
122 Augustine, , Civitas Dei 4.4Google Scholar. For the ideological origin of this and similar passages see Shaw, B., Past and Present 105 (1984), 44–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar (51 n. 131 on Augustine's sources). The same theme occurs in connection with Alexander, but in a Scythian setting, in Quintus Curtius 9.8.12–30, esp. 19.
123 For examples of this in the Hèllenistic period, cf. Vogt, J., Slavery and the Ideal of Man (Oxford, 1974), 78–83Google Scholar.
124 Imperator in Augustine's Latin.
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