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Dilution of Oarcrews with Prisoners of War

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

J. S. Morrison
Affiliation:
Cambridge

Extract

At 10.17.6–16 Polybius relates how Scipio seized the opportunity offered by his capture of New Carthage in 209 B.C. to increase his fleet of quinqueremes by half as much again. There is a briefer passage on the same subject in Livy 26.47.1–3.

Polybius says that the total number of prisoners taken was nearly ten thousand, from whom Scipio separated two groups: first citizens, men and women with their young children, and secondly craftsmen. He freed the former, and made the latter, numbering about 2000, public slaves of Rome. In Livy's account women and children are not mentioned; the prisoners are said to be ten thousand free men. As in Polybius, the citizens are said to have been set at liberty and the two thousand craftsmen made public slaves. In Polybius Scipio is said to have selected from all those not in the first two groups ‘the strongest, the fittest looking and the youngest and mixed them up with his own crews. And making the whole body of oarsmen (ναται) half as many again as before he succeeded in manning the captured ships as well as his own στε τοὺς ἄνδρας κστῳ σκϕει βραχ τι λεπειν το διπλασους εἶναι τοὺς ὑπρχοντας τν προγενομνων, for the captured ships were eighteen in number and the original ships thirty-five’. The corresponding passage in Livy is as follows: ‘the remaining multitude [multitudinem, a word suggesting a larger number than the two former groups together] of young inhabitants and of strong slaves he handed over to the fleet to increase the number of oarsmen (remigum). And [an increase was needed because] he had added eight captured ships to the fleet’.

Type
Shorter Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1988

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References

1 incolae, presumably neither citizens nor slaves.

2 For ὑπηρεσα see my article JHS 104 (1984), 48ffCrossRefGoogle Scholar. For the use of legionaries as πιβται see, e.g., Polybius 3.95.5.

3 Büttner Wobst (Berlin, 1893).

4 Loeb edition (London and Cambridge, MA., 1968), iv. 140–5.

5 Commentary on Polybius ii (Oxford, 1979), p. 218Google Scholar.

6 The complement of the Roman quinqueremes at Ecnomus in 256 B.C. was 300 oarsmen and 120 troops etc. (Polybius 1.26.7).

7 Reiske, J. J.: Animadversionum ad Graecos auctores volumen quartum quo Polybii reliquiae pertractantur (Lipsiae, 1763), p. 518Google Scholar.

8 Berlin, 1870.

9 The precise arithmetic works out as follows: 47 × (198 + 102); 6 × (199 + 101).