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A33320 The life & death of Hannibal, the great captain of the Carthaginians who maintained wars against all the power of Rome for eighteen years together in Italy : as also The life and death of Epaminondas, the great captain of the Thebans ... / by Sa. Clarke ... Clarke, Samuel, 1599-1682. 1665 (1665) Wing C4528; ESTC R10270 71,770 112

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they that were neer him asked him what that meant He answered that it betokened that the Enemies braines were troubled and beclouded who having places of advantage hard by them yet encamped in the plaines Indeed the Lacedemonians waited there for their Allies who yet failed them For all of them having at leasure considered of the speech of Epaminondas at Sparta began to distast the ambition of the Lacedemonians Epaminondas seeing his advantage caused his Army to march with speed and wan the straights by the City of Coronea and encamped there Cleombrotus understanding that the Thebans had possessed themselves of that passe despairing to recover it he made his Army to march a great compasse about the Country of Phocide going along the Sea Coast through a dangerous and troublesome way and so at the last he entered into the Country of Boeotia and as he went he took in some little Towns and certain Gallies that lay upon the Coast and at the last arrived at Leuctres and there sate down to refresh his men who were overwearied with their tedious march Then did Epaminindas presently advance that way to meet them and having passed over some little Mountaines he discovered them in the plain of Luctres where his men were much amazed to see so great an Army of their Enemies The six Counsellors came together to consider whether they should go forward and fight few against many or else retreat waiting for some beter advantage In this Councel their opinions fell out to be equall Three judged it best to retreat the other whereof Epaminondas was one thought it best to fight and with these three Pelopidas who was Captain of the Sacred Band joyned whereupon they all agreed to give them Battel Epaminondas seeing his Souldiers somewhat affirighted at the former ill signes to put courage into them he suborned some that were newly come from Thebes to scatter a report that no man could tell at Thebes what was become of the Armes that hung up in the Temple of Hercules but it was commonly said that the Demigods their Ancestors had taken them away to aid their posterity at this present time He caused another also who was newly come from Trophonius hole to report that the God which gives his Oracles therein commanded him to tell the Boeotians that when they had overcome their enemies in the plain of Leuctres they should celebrate yearly Playes to the honour of Jupiter and to gain the more credit to these devices Leandridas a Spartan that was banished out of his own Country and now was assisting the Boeotians being brought before the Souldiers he encouraged them to fight valiantly that Day For he swore unto them that the Lacedemonians had many Oracles biding them to beware of Leuctres Epaminondas also assembling his Army encouraged them with strong and lively reasons to shew their valour so that at lasty Souldiers being freed from their superstitious feares longed for nothing more than to come to blowes Epaminondas ever concluded his Orations to them with these Words O worthy men embrace sacred Death Advance your selves to a most honorable and famous Fight for your Country for the Tombes of your Ancestors and for your Holy things Just at this very time there came to the Thebans an aid of five hundred Horse and fifteen hundred Foot all Thessalians conducted by Jason This Jason endeavored to have made peace with both parties but could not prevail Also as Cleombrotus retired with his Army out of Boeotia he met a great supply of Lacedemonians and their Allies brought to him by Archidamus the Son of Agesilaus These he sent before thinking to daunt the courage of the Thebans with the sight of them and himself with the rest of his Army suddenly returned into the plain of Leuctres being fully resolved to fight and the Boeotians for their part shrunk not an inch back and so on both sides they set their men in Battel array Epaminondas ordered his Battel after a new fashion never before practised by any Captain For having chosen out of his Army the best and most valiant Souldiers he placed them together in one of the Points of his Battel where himself meant to fight in Person seconded by Pelopidas and his three hundred chosen men called the Holy Band In the other Point he placed his weaker men commanding them expresly not to abide the charge of their enemies that should assaile them in Front but fair and softly retire when they saw them come near them and it fell out as he wished and he hoped to determine the Battel by the virtue and prowess of those where he had placed all the flower and choice of his Army Now the sign of Battel being given the Lacedemonians advanced with the two Horns of their Battel ordered in the form of a Crescent On the contrary one of the wings of the Battel of the Boeotians began to give back and the other with great fury ran to charge the enemy in the Flank and soon they were come to the Swords point At the first because either side fought desperately the Victory for a time stood doubtfull But at last Epaminondas his Troop brake in amongst the Lacedemonians and slew most of those that were about Cleombrotus Yet while the King was alive he kept back the Thebans from the victory being accompanied with all the flower of his Army who fought very valiantly about him But after he fell dead to the ground having received and given an infinite number of wounds then thronged they together on all sides and there was a bloody and cruell fight about his Body where were heaps of men slain one upon another and though Epaminondas did all that possibly he could yet the Lacedemonians made such resistance that at last they forced the Thebans somewhat to give back whereby they conveyed the Body of the King out of the presse But this continued not long For Epaminondas both by his words and example did so raise up and encourage the hearts of his men that they fought like Lyons and gave so fierce a second charge upon their enemies that they wholly routed them and made them fly for life and Epaminondas fiercely pursuing the flying enemy made a great slaughter of them and obtained the most glorious victory that ever Captain won having in a pitched Field overcome the most Noble and warlike Nation of all Greece and that with a far smaller number of men than his enemies had He also rejoyced more in this than in all his other victories because it happened to him in his Fathers life-life-time and he often used to say that of all the honest and happy Fortunes that befell him nothing joyed his heart more than that he had vanquished the Lacedemonians at Leuctres his Father and Mother living to see it and indeed he that day did not onely preserve their lives but of all his Citizens besides the Lacedemonians having fully resolved utterly to destroy the Thebans Epaminondas used at
all other times to come abroad fine and neat and with a pleasant countenance but the next day after this Battel he came out very sad heavy and pensive and when his Friends asked him whether he had heard any ill news which occasioned this posture he said No but said he I perceive by my self yesterday that being overjoyed with the victory I obtained my heart was more elevated than it ought and therefore to day I correct that joy which yesterday exceeded its due bounds He knowing that it was the manner of the Spartans as much as possible to conceal their losses he suffered them not to carry away all their dead Bodies together but every City one after another by which it appeared that there were four Thousand of them slain But of the Booetians there were not found above three hundred dead This Battel was fought in the beginning of the second year of the hundred and second Olympiade The Lacedemonians having by this overthrow lost the greatest part of their honour which they had maintained so long yet lost not their courage but to keep their youth still in heart and to take away all fear from such as had escaped they sent Agesilaus with an Army into Arcadia who was contented to take a few small Towns of the Mantineans and so to return home again Some say that Lycomedes Captain of the Arcadians making an inrode neer to Orchomene slew in an encounter Politropus Captain of the Lacedemonians and two hundred Spartans with him which provoked the Lacedemonians against them and thereupon the Arcadians finding themselves too weak for them they sought alliance and aid from the Thebans Sure it is that these two States were now at enmity which occasioned the Arcadians and Thebans to joyn together who with their Allies being led by Epaminondas entered into Laconia with an Army of fourty thousand men besides thirty thousand others that followed the Camp At this time the Athenians sent Captain Iphecrates with twelve thousand men to aide the Lacedemonians But before their coming Epaminondas was entered into Laconia and had sacked all the Country which had not been wasted by any enemy for six hundred years before The Spartans seeing their Country thus plundred and destroyed were desirous to have gone out with such Forces as they had but Agesilaus would not suffer them telling them how dangerous it was for them to leave their City and to set upon such a potent and numerous enemy This made them quiet and Epaminondas in the mean time marched with his Army towards the River Eurotas which at that time was risen very high because of the Winter raines He endeavoured all he could to draw forth Agesilaus to a Battel who beholding Epaminondas a great while marching with his Army in Battel aray along the River side at the Head of his Troops he wondred at his boldnesse and Valour but would by no meanes adventure out of his Fort So that when this Army had plundred all Laconia Epaminondas led them back again laden with a very rich Booty And though Agesilaus was commended for pteserving his City in safety yet Epaminondas had by this inrode and especially by his Victory at Leuctres so impoverished the Country that Sparta could never after recover that losse nor grow into that reputation and power which it had before Yea notwithstanding the aide sent by the Athenians and the skill and experience of Iphicrates Epaminondas returned with his Army intire as he came Epaminondas that he might keep the Lacedemonians still underfoot and heape new troubles upon them gave Counsell to the Arcadians and their Allies to re-edify and replenish with People the City of Messina which the Lacedemonians had long before destroyed and when all the whole Councel had given their consents to it he forthwith by diligent enquiry sought out all that had been ancient Inhabitants in that City and in the space of eighty five Dayes having repaired the ruined Houses he raised again one of the most Noble and ancient Cities of Gr●ece and left there a strong Garrison for their security This gat him as much if not more love and honour than any other service which he had ever done The Lacedemonians being freed from a great fear by his departure made an agreement with the Athenians leaving to them the chief command by Sea and reserving to themselves that by Land And afterwards by the assistance of the Athenians and that aide which came to them out of Sicily by little and little they recovered their Towns again The Arcadians to stop their proceedings assaulted the City of Pallene in Laconia and taking it by storme put all the Garrison therein to the Sword then razed the Town and plundred all the Country there abouts And expecting that the Lacedemonians would seek revenge they sent for aid to the Thebans who sent Epaminondas and the other Counsellers to assist them with six thousand Foot and five hundred Horse The Athenians having intelligence hereof sent their Army under the Conduct of Chabrias who marched directly to Corinth where he met with a good supply of Souldiers from the Megarians Pallenians and Corinthians so that now he had a Brigade of ten thousand men These intended to fortifie and stop all the passages and entrances into the Country of Poloponesus The Lacedemonians and their Allies joyning also with them made up an Army of twenty thousand men And accordingly beginning at the City of Cencrees unto the Haven of Lecheum they blocked all the wayes from one Sea to an other with mighty great peices of Timber laid acrosse and with a marvelous deep ditch and this great work was followed with such speed both by reason of the great multitude of labourers as also through the forwardnesse of them that prosecuted it with such earnestnesse that they had quite finished it before the Boeotians could arrive there Epaminondas when he came thither viewing this fortification perceiving that the easiest place to storme it was that which the Lacedemonians themselves guarded he sent to give them defiance though they were thrice as many in number as he was yet for all this they durst not come out but kept close under their fortification Notwitstanding he assaulted them in it and at last drave them out In the heat of the fight every one doing his best some assailing others defending Epaminondas chose out the valiantest men in all his Army and bravely charging the Lacedemonians he forced them to give back and in dispite of them he entred into Peloponnesus which of all other his Noble exlpoites was the most wonderfull and memorable action From thence he marched to the Cities of Epidaure and Troezen and so pillaged all the Country But he staied not to take any of the Towns because they had strong Garrisons in them Yet he put Sicyone Phuente and some other Towns into such fear that they yeilded themselves to him This being done he went to Corinth and overcame the
All that thou sees't and readest is Divine Learning thus vs'd is water turn'd to wine Well may wee then despaire to draw his minde View heere the case i' th Booke the Jewell finde THE LIFE DEATH OF HANNIBAL THE GREAT CAPTAIN OF THE CARTHAGINIANS Who maintained Wars against all the power of ROME for eighteen years together in ITALY AS ALSO The LIFE and DEATH of EPAMINONDAS the GREAT CAPTAIN of the THEBANS Who was famous both for his Virtues and Valour By SA CLARKE sometime Pastor in St Bennet Finck London LONDON Printed for William Miller at the Guilded Acorn in St Pauls Church-yard near the little North Door 1665. THE LIFE DEATH OF HANNIBAL the Great CARTHAGINIAN CAPTAIN Who maintained Wars in ITALY against the ROMAMS for eighteen years together By 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pastor in St Bennet Finck London LONDON Printed for William Miller at the Sign of the Guilded-Acorn in St. Pauls Churchyard near the little North door 1665. Licensed Roger L'estrange October 20. 1664. THE LIFE DEATH OF HANNIBAL THE GREAT HAnnibal the Son of Amilcar was about tweenty six years old when he was chosen Generall of the Carthaginian Forces in Spain He was elected by the Army as soon as Asdrubal their late Generall was dead and the election was approved and confirmed by the Senate of Carthage wherewith Hanno and his faction was nothing pleased This was now the third of the Barchine Famely so called of Amilcar whose surname was Barcas that commanded in chief over the men of War Hanno therefore and his Partizans being neither able to tax the Virtue of their enemies nor to perform the like services to the Common-wealth had nothing left whereby to value themselves excepting the generall reprehensions of War and cautelous advise of not provoking the Romans but they were little regarded For the Carthaginians saw apparently that the Oath of the Romans to the Articles of Peace was like to hold no longer than till the Romans could find some good advantage to renew the War It was therefore rather desired by the Carthaginians that whilst they were in a fit condition the War should begin rather than in some unhappy time of Famine or Pestilence or after some great losse in their Army or Fleet they should be driven to yeild to the impudent demands of their insulting enemies This disposition of his Citizens Hannibal well enough understood Neither was he ignorant that in making War with the Romans it was no small advantage to get the start of them Could he but bring his Army into Italy he hoped to find Friends and assistance even from those People that helped to encrease the Armies of the Romans But his design must be carried privately or else it would be prevented He resolved therefore to lay Siege to Saguntum in Spain where he now was with his Army which might seem not greatly to concern the Romans and would highly please the Carthaginians Having resolved hereupon neverthelesse he went orderly to work beginning with those that lay next in his way First therefore he entered into the Territory of the Ol●ades and besieging Althaea in a few dayes he became Master not only of it but of all the other Townes in their Country and the Winter coming on he rested his Army in New Carthage or Carthagena imparting liberally to his Souldiers of the Spoiles that he had gotten in his late Conquests In the Spring he made War upon the Vacc●i and with little difficulty wan first Salamanca and after it Arbucala though not without a long Seige and much difficulty But in his return he was put to the height both of his Valour and Prudence For all such of the Va●caei that could bear Armes being made desperate by the Spoile of their Country with diverse others that had escaped in the late overthrow joyning with the Toletans made up an Army of one hundred thousand able men waiting for Hannibal on the Banks of the River Tagus They knew that he was very adventurous and had never turned his back upon any enemy and therefore hoped that having him at such an advantage they should easily have foiled him But at this time our Great man of War knew as well how to dissemble his Courage as at other times to make good use of it For he withdrew himself from the River side as seeming fearfull to passe over it aiming thereby to draw over that great multitude from their Banks of advantage The Spaniards as Hannibal expected and desired thinking that he retreated out of feare thrust themselves in a disordered manner into the River to pursue him But when Hannibal saw them well neare over he turned back his Elephants to antertain them at their landing and thrust his Horsemen both above and beneath them into the River who by the advantage of their weapons slew almost all of those in the River without resistance and then pursued the rest who being amazed fled and so he made a very great slaughter of them The Saguntines perceiving the storme drawing near to them hastened their Ambassadours to Rome who complained that they were like to be undone onely for their Friendship to the Romans This so moved the Senate that some would have War presently proclaimed both by Sea and Land and the two Consuls sent with Armies one into Spain the other into Affrick But others went more soberly to work according to the Roman gravity whereby it was concluded that Ambassadours should be sent into Spain to view the State of their Confederates These Ambassadours found Hannibal at Carthagena where they had Conference with him who carried himself so reservedly that they departed as doubtfull as they came But whilst they were passing to and fro Hannibal prepared not only his Forces but some Roman pretences against Saguntum For the Tudetani who were neighbours to the Saguntines complained to him of sundry wrongs that they had received from them of Saguntum Probably Hannibal himself had hatched some of them Having therefore such an occasion he sat down with his whole Army before Saguntum The Romanes were glad of the Quarrel as hoping that Carthage with all belonging thereto would in short space become their own Yet were they not hasty to threaten before they were ready to strike but meant to temporize untill they had an Army in readinesse to be sent into Spain where they intended to make Saguntum the seat of War In the beginning of Hannibals Siege his Carthaginians were much discouraged by reason of the brave Sallies which the Saguntines made upon them in one of which Hannibal himself received a dangerous wound in the thigh that made him unable to stir for many dayes Yet in the meantime he was not unmindfull of his businesse but gave order to build certain movable Towers that might equall those upon the City walls and to prepare to batter the Curtaines and to make a breach These being finished and applied had soon wrought their desired effect A large breach was made
water But he was greatly assisted by those of Vivarets and Lionois for though many of them had transported themselves and their goods into Daulphine thinking to defend the Banks against him yet such as remained being willing to free their Country from such unwelcome Guests they helped him to make Boats informed him of a better passage higher up the River and sent him Guides When his Boats were ready he sent Hanno the Son of Bomilcar up the River to the Foard and himself in the mean time made a shew of entering the Foard below that Hanno charging the Gauls on their own side and himself at the same time passing the River in their faces might win the further Bank which was done accordingly though with some difficulty and thereby the enemies were dispersed Having passed this first brunt and overcome both the rage of the River and those that defended it he was visited by the Princes of the Cisalpine-Gauls that inhabited Piemont and Milan who had lately revolted from the Romanes These informed him that the passage over the Alps was not so difficult as report made it and gave him Guides with many other encouragements Yet found he himself extreamly encombred by the Savoyards and lost more of his Carriages and Carthaginians than he could well spare For he was twice strongly assaulted by them before he could recover the plaines on the other side He was fifteen dayes passing over the Alps wherein besides the trouble of his enemies he was much assaulted by foule weather and Snow it being now the begining of Winter But the fair and fertile plaines which they now were entring into with the assistance and encouragment of the Cisalpine Gauls gave them much comfort having nothing else of difficulty remaining but that which from the begining they made account to overcome by their proper valour and resolution namely the Romane Armies and resistance The Romane Ambassadours who had denounced War at Carthage in their return homewards took Spain in their way with a purpose to draw into their Alliance as many Cities and Princes as they could The first that they attempted were the Volcians from whom they received this answer that they would never joyn with them who had forsaken the Saguntines in their greatest need and that themselves had found the Cathaginians such good neighbours that they meant still to adhere to them From Spain the Ambassadours passed through Gaul perswading them not to suffer Hannibal to passe through their Countery and gloried much in their own strength But the Gauls laughed them to scorn and had scarce patience to hear them speak Telling them that they meant not to set their own Houses on Fire to save the Romanes from burning That the Carthaginians had never offended them as the Romanes had done who had already forced some of them out of their habitations and made others Tributaries who were as free as themselves With these unpleasing answers the Ambassadours returned home carrying no good newes of friends like to help them but rather that the Gauls intended to take part with their enemies And accordingly when the Cisalpine-Gauls heard that the Carthaginians had passed Iberus and were marching towards Rome the B●ij and Insubrians rose up against the Romans Their quarrel was the late planting of Roman Colonies at C●emona and Placentia within their Territories Relying therefore upon the Carthaginian succour which they thought to be at hand laying aside all regard of those Hostages that they had lately given to the Romans they fell upon those Colonies The Towns they could not win but they forced the Romane Comissioners which were abroad to fly into Modena where they besieged them But the Gauls having little skill in besieging Cities grew weary and were desirous of Peace This they did on purpose to draw on some meeting that laying hands on the Romane Deputies they might with them redeem their Hostages and it fell out in part according to their wish For Ambassadours comming to them from Rome to treat with them they made them Prisoners Manlius the Praetor hearing of this outrage marched with his Army to relieve the besieged But the Gauls laid an Ambush in his way that falling upon him utterly routed him and slew most of his Army except a few that escaped into a defensible place upon the River Po. This being heard of at Rome C. Atilius the other Praetor hasted with an other Army to relieve the besieged But as the Gauls were too hasty so the Romans were too slow in the begining of this War For they could not believe that Carthage which had almost servilely endured so many indignities from them in the late peace durst be so bold on a suddain as to attempt the Conquest of Italy itself Wherefore they appointed one of their Consuls to make War in Spain and the other in Africk Titus Sempronius went into Africk with one hundred and sixty Gallies of five to an Oare which preparations seemed to threaten Carthage her self P. Cornelius Scipio the other Consul hasted towards Spain and by the way touching at Massilia he was there informed that Hannibal had passed the River Rhodanus whom he had thought to have found busy in Spain Hannibal also heard of the Consuls arrivall with whom he meant to have nothing to do Yet both sent forth Scouts Hannibal sent out five hundred Numidians and Scipio three hundred of his best Horse They met and fought and the Romans had the better of it But when Scipio drew neer thinking to have me● with the Carthaginians he found that they were gone three dayes before with an intent to see the Walls of Rome Scipio hereupon sent his Brother Cn. Cornelius Scipio into Spain with the greatest part of the Army against Asdrubal and himself with the choisest returned ba●k and landing at Pisa he marched through Tuscany and Lumbardy where he drew together the broken Bands of Manlius and Atilius who were lately beaten by the Gauls intending therewith to oppose the enemy thinking to find them tired with their long Journey Five moneths Hannibal had spent in that tedious march from Carthagena When he had passed Rhodanus he had in his Army but thirty eight thousand Foot and eight thousand Horse the rest having perished with Diseases Enemies Rivers and Mountaines Having newly passed the Alps and scarce refreshed his wearied Army in Piemont he sought the friendship of the Taurini who being at this time in War with the Insubrians his good Friends the Taurini refused it whereupon he besieged their chiefe Town and in three dayes wan it the spoil whereof did much incourage his Army and the others Calamity terrified their Neighbours Most of those parts would willingly have joyned with Hannibal but when the Consul Scipio came amongst them they began to be better advised This wavering affection amongst the People made the Generals to hasten to a Battel Their meeting was a● Tie●nun● now Pavia where each of them wondred at the others expedition The
and saved them both Not long after the Lacedemonians by a stratagem won the strong Castle of Thebes called Cadmaea and put a strong Garrison into it and gave the Government of the City of Thebes unto Archias Philippus and Leontidas authors of all the mischief whereupon to avoid their Tyranny Pelopidas and many others were fain to save themselves by flight upon which they were banished by sound of Trumpet But as for Epaminondas they as yet said nothing to him but let him alone in the City for he was contemned as a man of no account because he was so much given to his Book and if he should have any mind to stir against them yet they judged he could could do nothing because of his Poverty Whilest Pelopidas and his Companions were at Athens they laid a plot to free Thebes from those Tyrants But Epaminondas not making a shew of any thing had devised an other way to effect it by raising the hearts and courages of the young men of the City For when they went out to play and exercise themselves he alwayes found out a way to make them wrestle with the Lacedomonians and when he saw the Lacedomonians throw them and give them shrewd falls they being the stronger he would prvately rebuke the Thebans and tell them that it was a shame for them to suffer the Lacedomonians to set their feet upon their throats for want of courage who yet were not half so strong and boiste●ous as themselves were All this while Pelopidas and his followers went on in their Plot and had such good success that one night they got privily into the City of Thebes and met at Charons House about forty eight in number Epaminondas knew all this well enough and at night some took him aside and endeavoured to perswade him to joyn with them in delivering their City from these Tyrants to whom he answered that he had taken order with his Friends and Gorgidas to put themselves into a readiness upon any such occasion but for his own part he would not have a hand in putting any of his Citizens to death unless they were legally condemned yet said he if you will make an attempt for the delivery of the City so as that it be without murther or blood shed I will joyn with you with all my heart But if you will persevere in your former determination pray you let me alone pure and not defiled with the blood of my Citizens that being blameless I may take hold of another occasion which may tend more to the good of the common wealth For the murthers that will be committed in this way cannot be contained within any reasonable bounds I know indeed that Pherecid●s and Pelopidas will especially set upon the Authors of the Tyranny but 〈◊〉 and S●mi●das being fierce and Cholerick men taking the liberty of the night will never sheath their swords till they have filled the whole City with murther and slain many of the chief Citizens Besides it s very convenient for the People of Thebes that some be left free and blamelesse of these murthers and guiltlesse of all that should be done in the fury of this action Notwithstanding all that was said the enterprise was executed and the Tyrants put to death the City was restored to her ancient liberty the Castle of Cadmaea was rendred up by composition and Lysandrad●s the Lacedemonian and other Commanders that were in it were suffered safely to depart with their goods and Souldiers This was the occasion of the long Wars which followed between the Lacedomonians and Thebans with whom the Athenians joyned in League Epaminondas still applyed himself to his Book yet at last he was put forwards by Pammenes a chief man amongst the Thebans and he began to follow the Wars very eagerly and in divers encounters gave good proof of his prudence hardinesse and valour insomuch as by degrees he attained to the highest charges of Government in the Commonwealth and his Citizens who before made small account of him till he was fourty years old after when they knew him better they trusted him with their Armies and he saved the City of Thebes that was like to be undone yea and freed all Greece from the servitude of the Lacedemonians making his virtue as in a cleer light to shine with Glory shewing the effects when time served Upon a time Agesilaus King of Lacaedemon entered into Boeotia with an Army of twenty thousand Foot and five thousand Horse wherewith he harrased and spoiled all the plain Country and presented Battel to the Thebans in the open Fields which yet they would not accept of finding themselves the weaker Howbeit they defended themselves so well by the assistance of the Athenians and the wise conduct of Epaminondas and Pelopidas that they caused Agesilaus to return home with his Army But when he was gone the Thebans went with their Companies before the City of Thespies which they surprized and put to the Sword two hundred of the Garrison and afterwards returned back with their Army to Thebes and P●aebidas the Lacedemonian who was then Governour of that City sallye● out of the Town and charged upon the Thebans in their retreat who intertained him so hotly that he lost five hundred of his men and himself was slain in the fight Not long after the Lacedemonians returned with their former Army to make War with the Thebans who having seized upon certain straights and places of advantage so blocked up the way that they could not over run the Country and spoile it as they had done before yet did Agesilaus so molest and trouble them that at last it came to a main Battel that held long and was very cruel and though at the first Agesilaus had the better yet the Thebans charged him so furiously that at the length he himself was wounded and forced to retire being well paid for teaching the Thebans Millitary Discipline And this was the first time that the Thebans knew themselves to be as strong and lusty as the Lacedemonians whereupon they Triumphed in signe of Victory and from that time forward they grew more couragious to make head against the Enemy and to present them battel But that which most encouraged them was the presence of Epaminondas who counselled commanded and executed very wisely valiantly and with great successe At another time they went with a great number of chosen men before the City of Orobomene where yet they prevailed not because there was a strong Garrison of the Lacedemonians that sallied out upon them and the fight was very sharp betwen them yet though the Lacedemonians were far more in number the Thebans gave them the overthrow which never happened to them before For all other Nations thought that they had done excellent well if with a far greater number they had overcome a small number of the Lacedemonians But this Victory and an other which fell out shortly after under the conduct of
Senate at Rome were much amazed at Hannibals arrival in Italy wherefore they sent presently to Sempronius and the other Consul now in Sicily to give him notice of it and to require him speedily to return with his Army for the safegard of Italy which accordingly he did Scipio and Hannibal were now so near that fight they must ere they could part and therefore each of them encouraged their Souldiers by the best arguments they had Hannibal assuring his men that there was no mean betwixt Victory and Death When the Armies approached near each to other Scipio sent forth his Horsemen of the Gauls to begin the fight lining them with his Darters for their assistance himself with his men at Armes followed slowly in good order The Gauls being in their Generals sight behaved themselves gallantly and were as bravely opposed but their Darters at the very first ran cowardly away without casting a Dart for fear of being trodden down by the enemies Horse Yet did the Gauls maintain it stoutly and did more hurt than they received neither was Scipio unmindfull to relieve them wherefore he adventured himself so far that he received a dangerous wound and had there perished if his Son afterwards called Africanus had not brought him off Whilst the Romans were busy in helping their Consul an unexpected storm assailed them at their backs Hannibal had appointed his Numidian Horsemen to charge the Romans in their Flank and to compass them about whilst he with his men at Arms sustained their charge and met them in the face The Numidians preformed it well cutting in pieces the scattered Foot that ran away at the first encounter and then falling on the backs of those that charged Hannibal by this impression the Romans were shu●●ed together and routed betaking themselves to their heels and leaving to their enemies the honour of the day Scipio perceiving how things were like to goe almost stole the Retreat with most of his Footmen yet unbroken and recovered the Bridge over Ticinus but notwithstanding his hast he lost six hundred of his men which brought up his Reare and should have broken down the Bridge It was two dayes after ere Hannibal could passe the River Scipio in the mean time refreshing his men and easing himself of his wound in Placentia But when Hannibal presented them Battel again and they durst not accept of it the Gauls which before assisted the Romans out of fear took courage and left them and thinking that now the time was come for the recovery of their liberty that night they fell upon the Roman Camp wounded and slew many especially of those that kept the Guard with whose Heads in their hands they fled over to the Carthaginians and presented their service Hannibal received them exceeding courteously and sent them to their own homes that they might preswade the rest of the Nation to become his confederates The same night the Consul stole a retreat as he had done before but not with the like successe For Hannibal had an eye upon him and ere he was gone far he sent his Numidians after him and himself followed with the Body of his Army Then had the Romans received a great blow but the Numidians greedy of prey fell to ransacking their Camp and thereby gave them liberty of escaping only some in the Reare were either slain or taken Prisoners Scipio being unable to travel by reason of his wound and judging it meet to stay for the coming of his fellow Consul entrenched himself strongly upon the Banks of the River Trebia which so diminished his reputation that every day more of the Gauls fell to Hannibal amongst whom came in the Boij that brought with them the Roman Commissioners Hitherto they had keept them as pledges wherewith to recover their own Hostages but now they delivered them to Hannibal as tokens of their affection to him Hannibal being in great want of victuals he attempted the taking of Clastidium wherein the Romans had laid all their Store and Amunition and a Brundusian that had the keeping of it surrendred it to him for a little money The newes of these disasters coming to Rome filled the Senate and People with a desire of revenge their Foot wherein their greatest strength lay being yet entire they therefore hasted away Sempronius with his Army who by speedy marches came to Scipio upon the Banks of Trebia The Consuls took counsel what was fittest to be done now that their Armies were conjoyned Sempronius was eager to fight before Scipio recovered of his wound that he might get the whole glory of the Victory He also feared the election of new Consuls his time being almost expired But Scipio perswaded the contrary by many arguments yet would not Sempronius be taken off wherewith Hannibal was exceedingly pleased who feared nothing so much as delayes To further the desire of Sempronius the Gauls that inhabited near to Trebia complained of injuries done to them by the Carthaginians Indeed they neglected to supply Hannibal with necessaries and therefore he was bold to be his own Carver Hereupon Sempronius sent forth a thousand Horse which coming unlooked for upon Hannibals Forragers who were heavy laden they cut many of them in pieces and chased the rest even to their Camp This indignity made the Carthaginians to sally out who caused them to retire faster than they came Sempronius relieved his own men and Hannibal did the like So that at length the Roman Army was drawn forth and Battel offered if the Carthaginians had not refused it This Victory for so the Consul would name it made the Romans very desirous to try it out in open Field notwithstanding Scipios diswasion from it This Hannibal was informed of by the Gauls that were in the Roman Camp therefore he resolved to secure the Victory by adding a Stratagem to his fortes He found in a hallow place overgrown with Reeds a fit trench to cover an Ambush Therein he cast his Brother Mago with a thousand choise Horse and as many Foot The rest of his Army when he had well fed and refreshed them he led into the Field and marched towards the Consuls Early in the morning he had sent over the River some Numidian Horsmen to brave the enemy and draw him forth to a bad Dinner before he had broken his Fast. Sempronius readily embraced the oportunity of fighting and forthwith sent over the River in a miserable cold day his Footmen who were almost to the armeholes which together with the wa●t of food did much enfeeble them The Romans were strong in Foot having in all thirty six thousand the Masse of those were ranged in a grosse Battalion guarded on the Flanks with three thousand Horse thrusting their light-armed and Darters in loose Companies before the rest in the nature of a Vau●●guard The Carthaginians equalled them in Foot and exceeded them in Horse when therefore the Roman Horse were broken by the Numidians when their Foot were
charged both in Front and Flank by the Spaniards Gauls and Elephants and when all were pressed in the Rea●e by Mago and his men out of the Ambush then fell the Romans by heaps under their enemies Swords and were beaten down as well fighting as flying so that of thirty six Thousand there escaped no more than ten thousand of all sorts The remainder of this broken Army was collected by Scipio who got therewith into Placentia stealing away the same night which was very rainy Sempronius e●caped with great danger and fled to Rome where he did his Office in choosing new Consuls for the year following and then returned to his Province with a fresh supply against Hannibal The Winter proved very sharp and unfit for service which well pleased the Romans who lay warme in Placentia and Cremona Yet did not Hannibal suffer them to lie very quiet but vexed them with continual Alarms assaulting divers places and taking some He also wan the Lygurians to him who to testifie their faithfull love presented him with two Roman Questors Treasure●s two Collonels and five young Gentlemen the Sons of Senators These and all his other Prisoners Hannibal held in streight places loaden with Irons and misserably fed But their followers he intreated courteously and sent them to their own Countries without ransome protesting that he undertook the War in Italy to free them from the oppression of the Romans By these meanes he drew many to his party and assistance But some of the Gauls fearing that their Country should be made the seat of War conspired against his Life others discovered the danger to him who yet soon after were ready to practice the same which enforced H●●nibal to use Perukes and false Beards the better to conceal himself from them At length when Summer was come he resolved to leave these giddy Companions and so passed the Appeni●● Hills that he might approach nearer to Rome So away he went having his Army much recruted with Ligurians and Gauls and to prevent the obstructions in the ordinary way he chose to travel through the Fennes of Tuscany In those Marshes and Bogs he lost all his Elephants save one with one of his own eyes through the moistnesse of the Aire and by lodging on the cold Ground Yet at last with much ado he recovered the firme and fertile Plaines and Quartered about Arretium where he somwhat refreshed his weary Army and heard newes of the Romane Consuls C. Flaminius and Cn. Servilius were newly chosen Consuls for this year The first a tractable man wholly governed by the Senate the other a hotheaded man who fearing some obstruction gat him out of the City before the day of Election that he might as soon as he was chosen take possession of his Office fearing least he should lose his Honour which he hoped to gain in the War The Senators were so displeased at this that they sent for him back but he neglected their Command and hasted to meet with the Carthaginians whom he found at Arretium Hannibal was well pleased with the fiery disposition of this Consul and therefore provoked him by many indignities hoping thereby to draw him to fight ere Servilius came with the rest of the Army For which end he put to Fire and Sword all the Country round about him even under the Consuls nose By this Flaminius thought his Honour to be much empaired and therefore advanced towards the enemy Many advised him to stay for his Colleague but he would not be perswaded Then he commanded the Army to march All the Territory of Cortona as far as to the Lake of Thrasymene was on a light fire which whilst Flaminius thought to quench with his enemies bloud he pursued Hannibal so unadvisedly that he fell with his whole Army into an Ambush from thence he was charged unaware from all sides so that he knew not which way to turne nor how to make resistance There was he slain in that place accompanied with the carcasses of fifteen thousand of his Countrymen About six thousand of his Vantguard took courage out of desparation and breaking through their enemies they recovered the tops of the Mountains but being discovered there Maharbal was sent after them who overtook them by night in a Village and surrounded them with his Horse and so they yielded rendering up their Armes upon promise of life and liberty This accord Hannibal refused to confirme and so made them all Prisoners At this time he had about fifteen thousand Prisoners all that were not Romans he set free without ransome still portesting that for their sakes he came into Italy But the Romans he kept in streight Prison and held them to hard meat Presently after the Battell of Thrasymene C. Sempronius with four thousand Horse came neere to Hanaibals Camp He was sent from Ariminum by Servilius the other Consul to encrease the strength of Flaminius but coming too late he only encreased the misadventure Hannibal sent out Maharbal to intercept him who finding them amazed at the ill newes of the late losse charged and brake them killing almost half of them and drew the rest simply to yeild to mercy Servilius hearing of the overthrow and death of his Colleague hasted to Rome for the defence of it Greatly were the Romans amazed at these disasters and their aproaching danger Wherefore they had recourse to a remedy which had been long out of use and that was to choose a Dictator whose power was above the Consuls and scarcely subject to the Controll of the whole City And now they chose Q. Fabius Maximus the best reputed man of War in the City and Fabius chose M. Minutius Rufus Master of the Horse who was as the Dictators Leiutenant The first act of Fabius was the reformation of somewhat that was amisse in matter of Religion then were the Walls and Towers of Rome repaired and fortified the Bridges upon Rivers were broken down and all care taken for the defence of Rome it self Four Legions the Dictator raised in hast and from Ariminum he received the Army which Servilius had conducted thither With these he marched apace after Hannibal not to fight but to affront him He always lodged upon high grounds and of hard accesse knowing that the Roman Horse were far inferior to the Numidians Hannibal in the mean while pursued his Victory and ranged over all the Countries using all manner of cruelty towards the Inhabitants especially those of the Roman Nation of whom he put all to the Sword that were able to bear Armes Passing by Spoletum and Ancona he encamped upon the Adriatick shores refreshing his diseased and over-traveled Army and armed his Africans after the Roman manner and made his dispatches for Carthage presenting his Friends which were very many with part of the Spoils that he had gotten Having refreshed his Army cured his wounded and fed his Horses he followed the course of the Adriatick Shore towards Apulia a Northern
drew neer in good order to relieve them and doing therein the office of a good Citizen regarding more the good of his Country than the disgrace which he had wrongfully sustained Upon Fabius his approach Hannibal retired Fearing as he said to be well wet with the cloud that had hung so long upon the Hil-tops Minutius forthwith submitted himself to Fabius by whose favour he acknowledged that his life was preserved Thence forward the War went on slowly whilst Fabius his Dictatorship lasted and the year following also when he had delivered up his charge to the Consuls that followed his instructions With little pleasure did they of the poorer sort in Rome hear the great commendations which were given to Fabius by the principall Citizens because the War was not finished nor much done tending thereto And this affection was very helpfull to Terentius Varro in his suit for the Consulship and farther to help him he had a kinsman Bibius Herennius Tribune of the People He boldly affirmed that Hannibal was drawn into Italy and suffered there to range at his pleasure by the Noblemen that without a Plebeian Consul the War would never be ended c. By which perswasions the multitude were won to be wholly for Terentius to the great vexation of the Nobles who could not endure such an upstart But nothing could hinder the choise of Terentius Wherefore the Nobles to ballast this hot-headed man set up L. Aemilius Paulus a gallant man and a brave Captain to stand for the other Consuls place and he easily carried it These new Consuls Varro and Paulus omitted no diligence in preparing for the War wherein though Varro made the greater noise boasting what wonders he would do if he could but once see Hannibal yet the care and Prudence of Paulus did tend much more towards the effecting of it He wrote to the two old Consuls to forbear fighting and yet to ply the Carthagians with daily Skirmishes and so to weaken them by degrees that when he and his Fellow Consul came with the new Army they might find the four old Legions well accustomed to the Enemy and the Enemy well weakned These new Consuls raised an Army of above eighty thousand Foot and six thousand Horse Hannibal all this while lay at Geryon where all his provision and store was The Romanes to be neer him lodged about Canusium laying up most of their provisions in the Castle of Cannae This place Hannibal wan and thereby not only furnished himself but compelled his enemies to want many necessaries Hereby he also enabled himself to stay in that open Country fit for the service of the Horse Of this mishap when Servilius had informed the Senate it then seemed needfull to them to adventure a Battell with the Carthaginian rather than to suffer him thus to root himself in Italy When all things were ready in the City and the season of the year commodius the two Consuls with their Army set forward against Hannibal This was done with great solemnity Sacrifices and solmne Vowes were made to Jupiter and the other Gods for good successe and Victory and the Generals were accompanied with a great number that brought them out of the City and dismissed them with Friendly leave-taking and good wishes These new Generals arriving at the Camp dismissed M. Atilius one of the last years Consuls because of his age and retained Servilius with them as their Assistant Aemilius laboured to encourage his men telling them that the enemy had stole all the former Victories by his Ambushes that otherwise the Romans were far beyond them in Valour c. and therefore he exhorted them to play the men and to do their best This set them on fire to be dealing with the Carthaginians and herein Varro concurred with them longing for an oportunity to get the honour which he promised to himself having now such a numerous Army By this means the Romans fell into a great inconvenience by the disagreement of of their Generals Varro would fight and Aemilius would not for the present hoping for better advantage ere long when the enemy should be forced to dislodge out of the plain Country The Consuls command in in turnes every day Aemilius lodged six miles from Hannibal where the ground was uneven Terentius the next day descended into the plaines his Colleague beseeching him to stay but could not prevaile He sat down neer to the Carthaginian who yet gave him but a rude welcome and intertainment The Carthaginian Horse and light Armature fell upon the Roman Vant-Courriers and put the whole Army into a tumult whilst it was yet in its march but the Carthaginians were beaten off though not without losse The next day Aemilius who could not securely draw back the Army encamped upon the River Au●●us sending part of his Forces over the River where they encamped themselves with the rest he fortified and kept within his Trenches Varro was perswaded that it concerned him in honour to make good his word to the People of Rome When therefore it was his turne to Command 〈◊〉 the break of Day he began to passe the River with●out staying to bid his Colleague good morrow But Paulus came to him labouring by all meanes to disswade him Terentius had nothing to answer but that his honour was engaged Hannibal had twice or thrice b●aved them which must not be endured When Aemilius perceived that he could not prevaile he was carefull that what must be done might be done well Ten thousand Foot he caused to be left behind in the Camp opposite to the Carthaginians to the intent that Hannibal might be forced to do the like or else when they were in fight these might fall upon his Camp and take it with all the wealth therein which would much distract the Carthaginians This done the Consuls drew forth their Army over the Water and ranged them in order of Battell This Hannibal was very glad of and therefore without any delay passed over the River also leaving in his own Camp enow to defend it and no more To encourage his men he told them how fit the ground was wherein they were to fight and that therefore they were to thank the Gods who had so infatuated the enemies as to choose such a place where the stronger in Horse was sure to pervail Besides said he These are the men whom you have beaten as often as you have seen them and now you are to fight for their Cities and all the Riches that are in them and ere many houres passe ye shall be Lords of all that the Romans enjoy This set his men on fire to be at it and at the same time came his Brother Mago whom he had sent to view the countenance of the enemy to whom he said What newes What worke are we like to have Work enough answered Mago for they are a horrible company As horrible a many as they be said Hannibal I tell thee that amongst them all there is not one
man whose name is Mago and therewith he fell a laughing which all the Souldiers also took for a good Omen In this great day the Carthaginian excelled himself expressing abundance of Military skill and of gre●tnesse of spirit and courage He so marshalled his Army that all hands were brought to fight where every one might do the best service His Darters and Slingers he sent before to encounter the Roman Velites His Africans Armed after the Roman manner made the two Wings very deep in File Between these he ranged the Gauls and Spaniards armed the first with broad Swords and the other with short and well-pointed Blades The Gauls were strong of Body and furious in giving the Charge but soon wearied spending their violence at the first brunt The Spaniards were lesse eager but more wary These Hannibal caused to advance leaving void the place wherein they had stood and into which they might fall back if they were over-hardly pressed Between the left Batallion by the River side were the Gauls and Spanish Horse under Asdrubal On the right Wing was Maharbal with the Numidian Horse Hannibal himself with his Brother Mago led the Rear His Army this day was ten Thousand Horse and fourty Thousand Foot His enemies had two to one against him in Foot and he five to three against them in Horse The Roman Army was marshalled after their usuall manner On the right hand were the Roman Horsemen under the Consul Paulus On the left Wing was Var●o with the rest of the Horse which were of the Latines and other associates and Servilius had the leading of the Battel The Sun was newly risen and offended neither part the Carthaginians having their faces Northward and the Romans Southward After some light Skirmishes between the two Forlorns Asdrubal brake in upon the Consul Paulus and after a rough charge and much execution done the Roman Horse were overborn and driven by plain force to a staggering recoil When the Battels came to joyning the Roman Legionaries found work enough and more than enough to break that Body upon which at first they fell yet at last Hannibals men were forced to a hasty retreat But whilst the Legions following their supposed Victory rushed on upon those that stood before them and thereby engaged themselves deeply within the principal strength of the enemy the two African Battalions on either side advanced so far that getting beyond the Rear of them they almost wholly inclosed them Asdrubal having broken the Troops of the Roman Horse followed them along upon the River side beating downe and killing most of them without regard of taking Prisoners The Consul Paulus left his Horse and cast himself amongst the Legions as hoping by them to make good the day But he failed of his expectation Yet did he cheer up his men as well as he could both by Words and Example slaying many with his own hands The like did Hannibal amongst his Carthaginians in the same part of the Battel but with better successe For the Consul received a blow from a Sling that wounded him much and though a Troop of Roman Gentlemen did their best to save him from further harm yet was he so hardly laid at that by wounds and weaknesse he was compelled to forsake his Horse whereupon all his company also allighted Hannibal being near and seeing this said pleasantly I had rather he would have delivered them to me bound hand and foot meaning that he had them almost as safe as if they had been so bound All this while Varro with his associates in the left Wing was marvelously troubled with Maharbal and his Numidians who beating up and down upon the great Sandy plain raised a foul dust which by a strong South wind was driven into the eyes and mouths of the Romans These using the advantage both of their number and lightnesse wearied the Consul and his followers exceedingly neither giving nor sustaining any charge but continually making offers and then wheeling about Yet at the first they seemed to promise him a happy day of it For when the Battels were even ready to joyn five hundred of these Numidians came pricking away from their fellows with their Shieldes on their backs as was the manner of those which yeilded and throwing down their Armes yielded themselves Varro had no leasure then to examine them but bad them to rest quietly behind his Army till all was done These crafty marchchants did as he bad them for a while till they had oportunity to put their designe in execution Under their Jackets they had short Swords and Poniards with which and other weapons that they gathered up of those that were slaine they flew upon the hindmost of the Romans whilst all eyes were bent another way where they did much mischief and raised great terrour Thus Hannibal in a plain ground found meanes to lay an Ambush at the back of his enemies The last blow that put an end to all was given by the same hand that gave the first Asdrubal having routed and slain all the Roman Horse save the company of Aemilius that joyned themselves to the Foot did not stay to charge upon the face of the Legions but fetching a compasse he came up to the Numidians with whom he joyned and gave upon Terentius This fearfull cloud prognosticated a dismal storme wherefore Terentius his followers having wearied themselves much in doing little and seeing more work towards than they were like to sustain thought it their safest not how to use a Victory and God had otherwise determined When Hannibal had sacked the Roman Camps and trused up the spoils he dislodged and marched away to Samnium finding a disposition in many People thereabouts to forsake the Romans and to make aliance with him The first Town that opened their Gates to him was Cossag where he laid up his Baggage and leaving his Brother Mago to take in other p●aces he hastened into Campania He dismissed all his Prisoners that were not Romans without ransome whereby he won the affections of most of the Common People in Italy to incline to him He also gave leave to his Roman Prisoners to send to Rome to procure their ransome with whom he sent Carthal● the General of his Horse to see how Rome stood affected to peace The Senate commanded Carthal● to depart out of their Territories and refused to redeem their Prisoners probably because they wanted Mony wherewithall to do it Campania is a most pleasant and fruitfull Country and Capua the chief City in it rich and wealthy the Citizens despised now the unfortunate virtue of the Romans and sent Ambassadours to Hannibal with whom these Articles were agreed upon That the Campans should be absolutly free and Governed by their own Lawes That no Citizens of theirs should be subject to any Carthaginian Magistrate in War or Peace and that Hannibal should deliver to the Campans three hundred Roman Prisoners such as themselves should choose whom they might exchange for their Gentlemen
they declined the fight The Carthaginian Battel was herewith more terrified then before so that refusing to give way to the Mercenaries they sell out amongst themselves and forbore to make head against their Enemies Thus were many of them beaten down and slain through their own indiscretion And this gave the Romans such advantage that the made a great slaughter both of the Carthaginians and Mercenaries who could neither fight nor easily fly Such as could ran towards Hannibal who kept his ground and would not stir to help these run-wayes Then did Scipio advance against Hannibal who intertained him after an other manner than ever he had been received in his life before All the former dayes work seemed but a Pastime in comparison of this The Romans were incouraged because they had prevailed all the day before they were also far more in number But Hannibals old Blades were fresh and the better men They fought with such obstinate resolution that no man gave back one Foot but rather chose to die than to lose their ground so that for a long time the Victory was uncertain But the return of Massanissa and Laelius with the Horse from the pursute of the Enemies was to the Romans most happy and in a needfull time These upon a suddain charging Hannibal upon the Reer overbore them with meer violence and put them to ●ou● Hannibal with a few Horse saved himselfe by flight and staid not till he came to Carthage where coming into the Senate he told them plainly that there was no other way left but to make such a Peace as could be procured Amongst other things it was agreed that the Carthaginians should pay to the Romans two hundred Talents a year for fifty years together Which mony when it came to be collected there was pitious lamentation amongst the People the Roman yoak begining to pinch them already that some of the Senators could not forbear weeping but Hannibal could not refrain from laughter For which Asdrubal Haedus one of Hanno's faction checked him saying that it ill becommed him to laugh since he had been the cause why all others did weep He answered that laughter did not alwayes proceed from joy but sometimes from indignation Yet said he My laughter is more seasonable and lesse obsurd than your teares For you should have wept when you gave up your Ships and Elephants and when you bound up your hands from use of Armes without the good leave of the Romans This miserable condition keeps us under and holds us in assured sevitude But of these things you had no feeling Now when a little mony is wrung from you you are very sensible of that God grant that the time come not wherein you shall acknowledge that it was the least part of your misery for which you have shed these teares Afterwards Hannibal in the Civill administration of the City gave an overthrow or two to the Judges which at that time bore all the sway in Carthage having all the lives goods and fame of the rest in their power Shortly after Hannibal was chosen Praetor by virtue of which Office he was superiour to them for that year He sent upon an occasion for one of the Treasurers to come to him but he proudly refused wherupon Hannibal sent a Pursevant for him and brought him in Judgment before the People accusing not only him but the rest of the Judges for their insolency and unbridled power withall propounding a Law that the Judges should be chosen from year to year He found also that they had robbed the Treasury which caused the Taxes to be laid upon the common People whereof he made such plain demonstration that they were compelled to restore with shame what they had gotten by knavery This so irritated his Enemies who were of the Romans Faction that they complained to the Roman Senate that the Barchine Faction grew strong again and that Hannibal would shortly be in Armes For he was like a wild Beast that could never be tamed that he held secret intelligence with King Antiochus who was an enemy to the Romans c. Hereupon the Senate sent three Ambassadors to Carthage to demand Hannibal but he kept such good espiall upon the Romans that he was informed of their intentions against which he was never unprepared And therefore when night was come he stole out of the City accompanied with two Friends whom he could trust and having Horses in a readinesse he rode all night and came to a Tower of his own by the Sea s●●e and having provided a Ship in readinesse he bad Africk farewel lamenting the misfortune of his Country more than his own and shaped his course to Tyre which was the Mother City of Carthage There he was intertained Royally in whose worth and honour the Tyrians thought themselves to have interest because of the affinity between the Cities Thence went he to Antiochus who was exceeding glad of his coming intending War against the Romans To him Hannibal gave excellent advice how he might carry on his War against the Romans with best advantage but Antiochus hearkned more to his Courtiers than to him and so was shamfully beaten by the Romans at which time he admired Hannibal as a wise man yea as a Prophet who long before had foreseen and foretold him what now was come to passe and when it was too late wished that he had followed his Counsel To be brief Antiochus was forced by the Romans to sue for Peace which at last the Romans yeilded to Provided amongst other things that Hannibal might be delivered into their hands Hannibal getting an incling of this fled to Gortina in Creet where he lived a long time very quietly but at length he fell into the envy of many by reason of his great wealth whereupon he filled certain great chests with Lead and deposited them in the Temple of Diana there as if he kept the Treasure for a dead lift and thereupon the People having such a Pledge as that of him looked lesse after him But he in the mean time stole away to Prusias King of Bythinia having first molten his Gold and powered it into some hollow Statues of Brasse which he carried away with him Shortly after there fell a War between Prusias and Eumenes King of Pergamus Prusias being encouraged to break his League and to make War upon him by his confidence in Hannibal whom he had there to mannage his War for him The War therefore grew hot betwixt them both by Land and Sea But Eumenes by the assistance of the Romans overpowred Prusias in both And whereas Prusias was but weak of himself Hannibal procured him the assistance of some other Kings and States and those of very Warlike Nations and amongst them the aide of Philip King of Macedonia who sent him Philocles his General with a very considerable Army to help him When Prusias had received an overthrow from Eumenes by land he sought to try his
Fortune by Sea wherein yet he was too weak for him wherefore Hannibal advised him to try whether he could not do that by Policy which by plain force he was not able to effect He put therefore a multitude of all sorts of Serpents into Earthen Pitchers to be hurled aboard the Enemies Ships when they were in fight giving order to the Souldiers and Sea-men to set all upon the Ship wherein Eumenes himself was and to defend themselves from the rest as well as they could and that he might the more certainly know in which Ship Eumenes was he sent an Herauld beforehand with a Letter containing nothing but a meer flout to Eumenes and full of abuses to his Person Whenas therefore Prusias his men came to it they fought neither against great nor small but on-against the Ship wherein Eumenes was whereupon he he was fain to seek his safety by flight yet had he perished had he not thrust in upon the next shore where he had placed for a relief upon all occasions a company of his men As for Eumenes his other Ships when they pressed hard upon the Enemy they let fly amongst them their Earthen Pitchers full of Snakes which at first seemed to them a ridiculous thing but when the Pitchers falling upon the Decks brake in pieces out flew the Snakes so that they could stir no where in the Ships by reason of the Serpents whereby they found themselves no lesse annoied by their stings than with the Arrowes of their Enemies which caused them to give over fighting and to fly to their Camp which was upon the Shoar Thus Hannibal by this trick got the better of Eumenes in that fight Nor then only but also in sundry other encounters and by one Stratagem or other he ever put Eumenes to the worst And once when he advised Prusias to fight and he durst not because the entrailes of the Beast said he forbid me What said Hannibal will you r●ly more upon a litle piece of flesh in a Calfe than upon the Judgment of an old experienced Captain in the Field Now as soon as newes of these things came to the Senate at Rome they sent T Quinti●s Flaminius Ambassador to Prusias not so much to withdraw him from prosecuting the War against Eumenes as to intreat him to deliver to them Hannibal the most spitefull enemy they had in all the world Prusias to gratifie the Romans resolved either to kill Hannibal or to deliver him alive into the hands of Flaminius for which end he sent a Troop of Souldiers to inviron the lodging where Hannbal lay But Hannibal having before found cause to suspect the faith of Prusias had made some secret sallies under ground to save himself from any Treasonable or sudden assault But finding now that all passages were shut up against him he had recourse to his last remedy which he was constrained to put in practice as well to frustrate his enemies from their Triumphing over him as to save himself from their torture and mercilesse hands who as he well knew would neither respect his famous enterprises his Honour nor his Age. When therefore he saw no other way of escaping he took the poison which he alwayes had in readynesse for such an exigent and being ready to swallow it down he uttered these Words I will now said he deliver the Romans from the fear which hath so long possessed them that fear which makes them impatient af attending the Death of an old man This Victory of Flaminius over me which am disarmed and betrayed into his hands shall never be numbred in the rest of his Heroicall deeds No it shall make it manifest to all the Nations of the World how far the Antient Roman virtue is degenerated and corrupted For such was the Noblenesse of their fore-fathers as when King Pyrrhus invaided them in Italy and was ready to give them Battel at their own doors they gave him intelligence of the Treason intended against him by Poyson whenas these of a latter race have imployed Flaminius a man who heretofore hath been one of their Consuls to practice with Prusias contrary to the honour of a King contrary to his Faith given for my safety and contrary to the Lawes of Hospitality to slay or deliver up his own Guest Then drank he off that Poison and died P. Scipio Africanus in a discourse which he had with Hannibal asked him which of all the famous Captaines that ever lived he judged most worthy Hannibal gave to Alexander the great the first place to Pyrrhus the second and the third he challedged to himse●f But Scipio who thought his own Title better then that it ought to be forgotten asked yet further What then wouldest thou have said Hannibal if thou hadst vanquished me The Carthaginian replyed Then would I not have given the first place to Alexander but have claimed it as due unto my self When the Conditions of Peace granted by the Romans to the Carthaginians were reported to the Citizens they were very unpleasing whereupon one Gesco stood up to speake against them perswading the People not to yeild to such intollerable demands But Hannibal observing what favourable audience was given to this vain Orator by the unquiet yet unwarlike multitude he was bold to pull him down from his standing by plain force Hereat all the People murmured as if their common liberty were too much wronged by such insolence of this presumptuous Captain Which Hannibal perceiving rose up and spake unto them saying That they ought to pardon him if he had done otherwise than the Customs of the City would allow for as much as he had been thence absent ever since he was a boy of nine years old until he was now a man of five and fourty Having thus excused himself he exhorted them to embrace the Peace as wanting ability to defend themselves had the demands of the Enemy been yet more rigorous His Father Amilcar at what time he did Sacrifize being ready to take his journey into Spain called his Son Hannibal being than but nine years old caused him to lay his hand upon the Alter and to swear that being come to mans estate he should pursue the Romans with immortall hatred and that he should work them all the mischief that possibly he could THE LIFE DEATH OF EPAMINONDAS THE GREAT CAPTAINE OF THE THEBANS THe Father of Epaminondas was Polymnis who was descended of one of the most ancient and renowned Famelies amongst the Thebans the most part of which Noble linage had upon their Bodies for a naturall Birthmark the resemblance of a Snake This Polimnis had two only Sons Caphisias and Epaminondas whom he educated very carefully and had them very well instructed in all the liberall Arts and honest Sciences especially Epaminondas who had the more stayed witt and Was most inclined to Virtue desirous to learne humble obedient and won●erfull docible and of one Dyonisius he learned to be very skilfull in Singing and
Epaminondas This young man went to him and told him the occasion of the other mans coming to Thebes But D●omedon being present Epaminondas said to him I have no need of mony If the King of Persia wish well to the Thebans I am at his service without taking one penny If he hath any other meaning he hath not Gold nor Silver enough wherewith to corrupt me For I will not sell the love which I bear to my Country for all the Gold in the World and as for thee that dost now tempt me not knowing me but judging me like unto thy self I pardon thee for this time but get thee quickly out of the City lest thou corrupt others having failed to prevail over me and for thee Mycethus deliver him his mony again which if thou dost not presently I will send thee before a Justice Hereupon Diomedon besought him that he would let him go away in safety and carry that with him which he brought thither Yea said Epaminondas but it shall not be for thy sake but for my honour-sake lest thy Gold and Silver being taken from thee some man should accuse me that I had a share in that privately which I had refused openly Saying further whither wouldst thou that I should cause thee to be conveyed To Athens said Diomedon This was done accordingly and he had a strong convoy sent with him and that he might not be troubled by the way betwixt the Gates of Thebes and the Haven wherein he was to imbark himself Epaminondas gave Chabrias the Athenian charge of him that he should see him safe at his jorneys end Though Epaminondas was very Poor yet would he never take any thing of his Citizens or Friends and being so inured to poverty he was enabled to bear it the more patiently by his study of Philosophy For on a time having the leading of an Army of the Thebans into the Country of Peloponnesus he borrowed five Crownes of a Citizen for the defraying of his necessary chatges in that Journey Pelopidas being a man of great wealth and his very good Friend could never possibly force upon him any part of his Goods but he rather learned of him to love Poverty For Epaminondas taught him to think it an honour to go plainly in his Apparrel to eat moderately to take paines willingly and in War to fight lustily Yet when he had occasion to relieve others he would make bold with his Friends goods which in such cases were common to him If any of his Citizens were taken Prisoners by the Enemy or if any Friend of his had a Daughter to be married and was not able to bestow her he used to call his Friends together and to assesse every one of them at a certain summe after which he brought him before them who was to receive the mony and told him how much every one had bestowed upon him that he might returne thanks to them all But once he went far beyond this For he sent a poor Friend of his to a Rich Citizen of Thebes to ask of him six hundred Crownes and to tell him that Epaminondas desired him to let him have them The Citizen being amazed at his demand went to Epaminondas to know what he meant to charge him so deeply as to make him to give six hundred Crowns to the other It is said Epaminondas because this man being an honest man is poor and thou who hast robbed the Commonwealth of much art rich He lived so soberly and was such an enemy to all superfluity and excesse that being on a time invited to Supper to one of his Neighbours when he saw great preparation of dainty meats made dishes and perfumes he said unto him I thought thou hadst made a Sacrifice by this excesse and superfluity and so immediatly went his way The like also he spake of his own Table saying that such an Ordinary was never guilty of Traytors and Treason On a time being at a Feast with some of his Companions he drank Vinegar and when they asked him what he meant by it and whether he drank it for his health I know not said he but this I am sure of it puts me in remembrance how I live at home Now it was not that his stomach was an enemy to dainty meats or that he lived so penuriously at home for he was marvelous noble minded But he did it that by his strict and unreprovable life he might bridle and restraine many insolencies and disorders which then raigned amongst the Thebans and to reduce them to the former temperance of their Ancestors Upon a time a Cook giving up an account to him and his Fellows of their ordinary expences for certain dayes he could find fault with nothing but the quantity of Oyle that was spent which his Companions marvelling at Tush said he it is not the expence which offends me but because we have powred in so much Oyle into our Bodies The City of Thebes upon an occasion made a publick Feast where they were very merry and jolly But on the Contrary Epaminondas went up and down without Oyle and perfumes or decked with brave apparrell seeming very sad Some of his Familiar Friends meeting him in this posture and wondering at him asked him why he walked so alone and ill apparrelled through the City Because said he you may in the meane time freely and safely drink your selves drunk and make merry taking thought for nothing His modesty also was such that it would in no wise suffer him to seek advancement but on the contrary he withdrew himself from Government that he might with the more quiet apply himself to the study of Philosophy It happened upon a time that the Lacedemonians intreated aide of the Thebans who at that time were in League with them and acordingly they sent them certain Foot Companies at which time Epaminondas being about thirty five years old Armed himself and went along with them At this time it was that that intimate Friendship began betwixt Pelopidas and him which continued even to the end of their lives These two being in a Battel the one by the other against the Arcatians whom they had in front against them in the plaines of Mantinea it fell out that one of the points of the Battel of the Lacedemonians in which they were retired and many fled But these two resolved rather to dy than fly and accordingly they stood to it gallantly till Pelopidas being wounded in seven places fell down upon a heap of dead Bodies Then did Epaminondas though he took him for dead step resolutly before him to defend his Body and Armes he alone fighting against many resolving rather to die in the place than to leave Pelopidas amongst the dead men until that himself being thrust into the breast with a Pike and wounded in the Arme with a Sword was ready to faint at which time Providence so ordered it that King Agesipolis came on with the other point of the Battel
Pelopidas did so lift up and encourage the Thebans that they became more famous than 〈…〉 were before The year following Artaxerxes King of Persia intending to make War against Aegypt and therein to intertain diverse strangers laboured to make Peace amongst the Grecians in hope that they being at Peace amongst themselves would be the more willing to have Souldiers leavied amongst them For which end he sent Ambassadours to all the Townes of Greece to preswade and intreat them to be at Peace amongst themselves The Greeks were very willing to harken hereto being wearied on all sides with such long Wars and so were easily drawn to make Peace wherein it was especially agreed and concluded that all the Cities of Greece should be free and use their own Lawes and Commissioners were sent abroad to withdraw all the Garrisons where any were kept Unto this the Thebans only refused to agree that every Town should severally capitulate for it requesting that the Towns in the Country of Boeotia should be comprehended under the City of Thebes but the Athenians mightily opposed themselves against this and Calistratus one of their Orators made a notable Oration about it before all the States of Greece Epaminondas on the contrary made an excellent and vehement speech in defence of the right of the Thebans insomuch as this controversy was left undecided and the Treaty of Peace was universally agreed to amongst all the other Grecians the Thebans only excepted who were not comprised in it At this time the Athenians and Lacedemonians who had long contended amongst themselves about the Principality of Greece now agreed that the one should command by Sea and the other by Land And therefore they could not endure that the Thebans should aspire to be chief which made them seek to dismember the other Towns of Boeotia from them the rather for that the Thebans being strong and lusty of Body and much encouraged by their late Victories over the Lacedemonians would now contend with them for their superiority having a wonderfull confidence in the Wisdom and Prowesse of their Captaines especially of Epaminondas Matters resting thus doubtfull the Citizens of Plataees a Town of Boeotia were desirous to enter into League with the Athenians promising that if they would send them Souldiers they would put the Town into their hands But the Governours of Boeotia having intelligence of it and being desirous to prevent the Athenians brought a party of Souldiers against it who came before Plataees before the Citizens heard any newes of them so that part of them were surprised in the Field by the Horsmen and the rest fled into the Town where having no aid they were faign to accept of such tearmes as it pleased the Thebans to grant them which were presently to depart the Town with bag and baggage and never to returne again into the Country of Boeotia Then did they raze the City to the ground and saked the Town of Thespies which also was at enmity with them The Ambassadours of Persia again solicited the Greeks to a Generall Peace and Commissioners from every Town were to meet at Sparta about it Epaminondas was yet scarce known having laboured to conceal himself and in all his exploits of War had ever preferred the advancement of his great Friend and Companion in Armes Pelopidas before himself He was now chosen by the Thebans to go to Sparta where finding that the other Commissioners did much comply with Agesilaus he spake boldly and plainly not only in behalf of the Thebans but for all Greece also making it evident to all that War still encreased the greatnesse of Sparta only which kept all the other Towns of Greece under He therefore advised them to establish a firme Peace which would last the longer when all comprized in it should be equals Agesilaus perceiving all the Commissioners to be very attentive to and well pleased with this speech he asked him aloud if he thought it just and equal that all Boeotia should be set at liberty Epaminondas resently and boldly asked him if he thought it not also iust and reasonable that all Laconia should be set at liberty Thereupon Agesilaus in great anger stood up and commanded him to answer plainly if they should not restore all the Towns in Boeotia to their Liberty and Epaminondas answered him as before This so displeased Agesilaus who had an old grudge to the Thebans that immediatly he put their Name out of the List of those that should be comprized within the Treaty of Peace and proclaimed open War against them and now there was no remedy but the Thebans must bear the whole brunt alone for there was no one Town that durst send them any aid because they were all sworn to the Peace insomuch as all judged them to be utterly undone Friends pittied there estate and their enemies rejoyced verily believing that they could never stand before the Lacedemonians Then did the Lacedemonians send King Cleombrotus with an Army towards Thebes who being come neer to Chaeronea with ten thousand Foot and a thousand Horse he pitched his Camp there staying for his Allies The Thebans being informed of the approach of the enemy chose Epaminondas to be their Captain Generall giving him the charge of this War with six other Counsellers to be assisting to him Now there came Oracles to Thebes from all parts some promising Victory and others threatening their overthrow and Epaminondas commanded them to set those on the right hand of the chaire for Orations that promised Victory and the other on the left hand which being so disposed of he gat up into the chaire and said to his Citizens If you will be obedient to your Captains and valiant against your enemies these Oraoles on the right hand belong to you But if through faintness of heart ye refuse dangers those on the left hand shall be your Portion Then did he list the Names of all the Thebans which were able to bear Armes and chose out of some parts of Boeotia such as he thought fittest for the Wars His Presence exceedingly cheered up his Army and all the time that he was Captain the Thebans never saw in their Campany of those which they call sudden feares He used to say that there was no Death more honest and desirable than to die in the Wars and that the body of a Souldier should be hardened to endure any labour or paines He could not abide fat men and therefore cashired a whole Company of them as unprofitable burdens in his Army He had in all but six thousand fighting men and as they marched forwards they met with some unlucky signes as many esteemed them but he valued them not thinking that a resolution to fight in a good cause ought to be much stronger and of more force to raise up in him good Hope than these evill signes that appeared to make him fear the worst As he was marching towards the Lacedemonians they heard it Thunder and
Corinthians in a set Battel and beat them home even to the Gates of their City Yea some of his men were so unadvised trusting to their own valour that they entered the Gates of their City pel mel with those that fled which put the Corinthians into such a terrible fear that they ran with all speed possible to shelter themselves in their Houses But Chabrias making head beat them out again and slew some whereupon he caused a token of Triumph to be set up as if he had given the Thebans an overthrow for which Epaminondas laughed him to scorn The Boeotians brought their Army as neer unto Corinth as they could and Chabrias with his Army encamped without the Walls in a very strong Place of advantage and there were many Skirmishes betwixt them in which Chabrias behaved himself with such Valour that he gained great reputation even of Epaminondas himself who upon a time being asked whom he thought to be the Greatest Captain himself Chabrias or Iphicrates It s hard said he to judge whilst we are all alive Newes was brought to him that the Athenians had again sent an Army into Poloponnesus furnished with new Armor Indeed this Army consisted of ten thousand Spaniards and Gauls whom Dyonisius the Tyrant sent out of Sicily to aide the Lacedem●nians having paid them for five moneths they did some reasonable service in this War and at the end of Summer returned home again It fell out in these last encounters that Epaminondas having forced the Lacedemonians that guarded the fortification before mentioned had many of them in his power to have slain them but he contented himself only with this Glory that in dispite of them he had entered into Peloponnesus seeking to do them no more hurt which gave occasion to those that envied his Glory to blame him and to accuse him of Treason as having willingly spared the enemies because they should in particular thank him only But here it will not be improper to take notice how he behaved himself amongst his Citizens and how wisely he defended his own Integrity Amongst all those that envied his Glory and virtue there was one Meneclides an Orator and an eloquent man but with all most wicked and very malicious He finding that Epaminondas won so much honour by the Wars never left perswading the Thebans to embrace Peace and prefer it before War and that because hereby they should not alwayes live under the obedience and command of one man But Epaminondas one day told him in the open Counsel Thou wilt said he deceive the Thebans whilst thou advisest them to leave the Wars and highly commending ease and Peace thou goest about to put iron bolts upon their feet For War begets Peace which yet cannot hold long but amongst them that know how to maintain it with the Sword Then turning himself to the Citizens he said If you will have the Principallity and command of all Greece you must shroud your selves in your Tents and lie in your Pavillions in the open Fields and not follow sports and Pastimes here at home For he knew well enough that the Boeotians undid themselves by ease and Idlenesse which made him endeavour continually to keep them in exercise and War Upon a time when the Thebans were to choose Captains they went about to choose Epaminondas one of the six counsellers whereupon he said to them My Masters pray you consider of it now you are at leasure before you choose me For I tell you plainly if I be chosen your Captain you must to the Wars He used to call the Country of Boeotia which was a plain and Champion Country the Stage of War saying that it was impossible to keep it unlesse the Inhabitants had their Targets on their Armes and their Swords in their hands and this was not because he did not love Peace and privacy to study Philosophy or that he was not more carefull of them that were under his charge than he was of himself using alwayes to watch and forbear his meat when the Thebans were at their Banquets and Feasts giving themselves over to their pleasures but because he knew them well enough and was never more carefull of any thing than to keep his Army from idlenesse Upon a time the Arcadians desired him that some of his Companies might come into one of their Towns to lie dry and warm there all the winter but he would by no means yeild to it For said he to his Souldiers now they see you exercising your selves in Arms they wonder at you as brave and valiant men but if they should see you at the fire side parching of Beans they would esteem no better of you than of themselves Neither could he endure Covetousness for if at sometimes he gave his men leave to go a free●booting his meaning was that whatsoever they got should be bestowed in furnishing them with good Arms and if any went about to fill his Purse with money he judged him unworthy to be a Souldier Upon a time he understood that his Target-bearer had received a great summe of money for the ransome of a Prisoner whereupon he said to him Give me my Target and go thy wayes home and buy thee a Tavern wherein to spend the rest of thy life for I perceive thou wilt no more like an honest man put thy self in danger in the Wars as formerly thou hast done because now thou art grown rich and wealthy Though Epaminondas was thus virtuous and unblameable in his life yet the aforementioned Menectides would never cease contending and reproaching of him and one day he went so far as to upbraid him because he had no children and was not married and that he magnified himself more than ever King Agamemnon had done To this Epaminondas answered Thou hast nothing to do to counsel me to marry and in this respect there is never a man here whose advise I would less make use of than thine and this he spake because the other was taken notice of to be an Adulterer And whereas thou thinkest that I envy the fame and renown of Agamemnon thou art fowly deceived Yet let me tell thee that whereas he was ten years in winding one City I on the contrary by putting the Lacedemonians to flight in one day have delivered not onely our own City but all Greece from their slavery But thanks be to you My Lords Thebans speaking to all the Assembly by your assistance I did it and thereby overthrew the power and government of our insulting enemies Yet after all his brave deeds both he and Pelopidas were ill rewarded for all their good service by their ingratefull Citizens For at their return from Laconia they with some other of the six Counsellers were accused that after the time that their Government was expired they retained their power four months after the time appointed by the Law With much ado Pelopidas was quitted But Epaminondas willed all his other Companions to lay the fault upon
him who by his Authority forced them to it and instead of excusing himself he told them all the brave exploits which he had done at that time Adding withall that he was willing and ready to die if they so pleased Provided that they wrote upon his Tomb that Epaminondas was put to death because he had compelled the Thebans against their wills to burn the Country of Laconia which in five hundred years before had never been plundered That he had repeopled the City of Messina with Inhabitants two hundred and thirty years after it had been laid wast by the Lacedemonians That he had brought all the people and Towns of Arcadia to be as one Body in League together and had set all the Greeks at liberty and all these things said he we did in that Journey The Judges when they heard this worthy and true defence they all arose from their seats and laughed heartily and would not take up their Balls to Ballot against him But for the second accusation to wit that he had shewed favour to the Lacedemonians for his own particular honour he would make no particular answer to it before the People but rising out of the Theater he passed through the Assembly and went into the Park of Exercises Upon this the people being incensed against him refused to chuse him into Office as they had wont to do though there was great need of him and Created other Counsellers to go into Thessaly and the more as they thought to despite him they commanded him to go that expedition as a private Souldier which he refused not but went very willingly Pelopidas being sent a second time into Thessaly to make peace between the people and Alexander the Tyrant of Pheres was by this Tyrant not regarding that he was an Ambassadour and a Theban committed to prison together with Ismenias Upon this the Thebans being justly offended sent an Army of eight thousand Foot and five hundred Horse against him howbeit under the conduct of unskillfull Captains who wanting judgement to use their advantages thought good to return home without doing any thing But as they went back Alexander being stronger in Horse than they pressed hard upon their Reer killing some and wounding others so that the Thebans knowing neither how to go forward nor backward were in great distresse and that which aggravated their misery was that their victuals were almost spent Being thus almost out of hope ever to get home in safety Epaminondas being at that time a common Souldier amongst the Foot both the Captaines and Souldiers earnestly intreated him to help to redresse this disorder He thereupon chose certaine Footmen that were light armed and all the Horsmen and with these putting himself into the Rere of the Army he so lustily repulsed the Eenemy that the rest of the Army afterwards marched in great safety and still making Head as occasion served and keeping his Troops in good order he at last brought them all well home This brave Act Crowned him with new Glory confounded his enemies and made him well spoken of every where and by it he obtained the love and good will of the Citizens who set great Fines upon the heads of those Captaines who had behaved themselves so unworthily in that expedition And now the People seeing that by so many worthy deeds he had stoped the slanderous mouths and confuted the accusations of his ill willers they chose him again their Captain Generall to conduct a new Army into Thessaly At his coming all the Country wonderfully rejoyced only the Tyrant with his Captaines and Friends were exceedingly dejected and possessed with feare being Thunder-struck with the fame of so Noble a Captaine and his subjects had a good mind to rise up against him hoping that they should shortly see the Tyrant fully recompenced for all the wicked and cursed deeds that he had done amongst them Epaminondas when he came into Thessaly preferred the safety and deliverance of his Friend Pelopidas before his own honour and Glory and fearing lest Alexander when he should see himself and his State in danger to be overthrown should in his rage revenge himself upon Pelopidas he therefore purposly drew this War out in length marching often about him but never setting upon him in good earnest often seeming to make preparations and yet still delaying and this he did to mollify the heart of this Tyrant and not to provoke to the danger of his Friend the inhumane and unbridled passion of this cruel Bloudsucker Yet he being a Monster compounded of cruelty and cowardlinesse was so afraid of the very name and reputation of Epaminondas that he presently sent some to him to excuse his fact and to crave Peace But Epaminondas was not willing that his Thebans should make Peace and Alliance with so wicked a man only he was content to grant him a Truce for thirty Dayes upon the delivering to him Pelopidas and Ismenias So with them he returned back to Thebes and alwayes continued a faithfull Friend to Pelopidas so long as they lieved together Yet would he never share with him in his Riches but did still perseveare in his former strict poverty and Discipline He was very bold and yet it was mingled with a winning sweetnesse and a livly grace as may appear in sundy Examples Besides his bold speech to Agesilaus mentioned before At another time the Argians having made a League with the Thebans the Athenians sent their Ambassadors into Arcadia to see if they could gain the Arcadians to be their Friends And these Ambassadors began roundly and hotly to charge and accuse both the one and the other and Callistratus speaking for them reproached them with Orestes and Oedipus Epaminondas being present at that Assembly stood up and said My Lords we confesse that in times past we had a man that killed his Father and in Argos one that killed his Mother but as for us now we have banished all such wicked murtherers out of our Country and the Athenians have intertaned them At another time when the Spartans had laid many great and grievous imputations to the charge of the Thebans he said If they have done nothing else my Lords of Sparta yet at least they have made you forget to speak little But that which was most excellent and observable in Epaminondas and which indeed did stop the mouth of envy it self was his moderation and temperance knowing how to use any state or condition and never to rage either against himself or others alwayes bearing this mind that howsoever they took him and in what place soever they set him he was well contented so that he might but advance the good of his Country As may appear by this Example on a time his evil-willers thinking to bring him into disgrace and meerly out of spite made him superintendant or overseer of all the customs whilst others of his inferiors unworthy to be compared with him were placed in the most honourable
Thessalians amongst them men very skilfull in their Bowes who so plyed the Athenians that they wholly brake them and put them to the rout yet in their flight they did not run amongst their Footmen which made them somewhat recover their Honour which they had lost by running away On the contrary part as they fled they met with some Companies of Negropont whom the Arcadians had sent to take in certain Hills hard by the plain where the Battel was fought whom they put all to the Sword The men at Arms of the Thebans seeing them turn their backs did not pursue them at all but presently gave charge upon a great Battalion of Footmen forcing them all they could to break and run through them So the fight was very cruel and sharp yet in the end the Athenians were forced to quit the place whereupon a Collonel of Horsemen of the Elians who stood as a reserve to guard the Rere defended them and encountering with the Bo●otians he resisted them and made them give back which reinforced the fault of the left point of their Army But in the right point after the Horsemen had charged one another the fight was soon determined For by reason of the great number of men at Armes of the Thebans and Thessalians the Mantineans and their partakers were soon put to rout and haveing lost a great number of their men they sheltered themselves under the Battalion of their Footmen and this was the issue of the fight between the Horsemen As for the infantry after they came once to the Sword it was a marvellous bloody and cruel fight For never before that time was there so many Greeks in the Field one against another nor so great and expert Captains nor such valiant Souldiers as were now The two Nations that at that time bare the name to be the bravest Footmen in all the world to wit the Thebans and Lacedemonians were now set in Front one against the other and they began to charge neither sparing Life nor limb The first charge they gave was with their Pikes which being soon broken with the huge blows they gave each other then they came to it with their Swords and lustily laying about them Body to Body Death raged in every place and there was a mighty carnage made for neither part shrunk back or gave over with wearinesse but stood to it like undaunted men And so continued this dangerous Fight for a long time by reason of the valiantness of either party the victory stood doubtfull for a great while and it could not be judged which side was like to have the upper hand For every one that fought had this resolution in his heart not to fear Death whatsoever befell them But rather desiring to make proof of their utmost Valour they willingly parted with their lives to lye in the Bed of Honour By reason whereof though the fight was sharp and cruel yet the event remained for a long space so uncertain that it could not be discerned to which side the Victory should fall But at last Epaminondas seeing no other remedy but that the issue of this doubtfull fight depended upon his own virtue and valour he resolved with himself to adventure his life upon it and presently gathering about him all the best and choisest men of his Army and of them having compounded a Company of stout and resolute Blades he ran with great fury into the thickest and greatest press of all his enemies marching himself the foremost man in all his Troop with a Spear in his hand with the which at the first blow he gave he slew the Captain of the Lacedemonians and straightway the rest of his company began to assail their enemies But Epaminondas laying about him like a Lion slew so many in the place where he stood with his own hands that at last he opned the Battel of the Lacedemonian whom he pursued laid on them so lustily that they being unable any longer to defend themselves against the irristable fury of himself and his followers were enforced to give back and leave the place to the Boeotians who yet followed them at their heels beating them down so eagerly that in a short space the whole Field was covered with dead Bodies lying on heapes one upon another But in the end the Lacedemonians seeing that they could no way save themselves gathered courage out of despair and a Company of them joyning together all set upon Epaminondas throwing an infinite number of Darts at him of which some he avoided others he received upon his Target but yet there were many that stuck in his Body which he pulled out and fought with the same weapons against those that had thrown them at him At last when he had done more than a man and beyond all humane strength thereby to win Honour to his Country by gaining them the victory a certain L●co●ian called Anticrates thrust him into the breast with a Dart with such force as breaking the wood he left the iron Head sticking in his Body Having received this deadly wound he fell immediately to the ground But then was there a more cruel fight about him than ever there was before which occasioned great slaughter on both sides till the Thebans by fine force made their enemies to flie for their lives and when they had pursued them a while they returned back to their Camp that they might keep the dead Bodies in their power which was a certain signe that the victory was theirs and then they sounded a retreat and so the Battel ended Both sides challenged the victory and made Triumphs for it The Lacedemonians did it because the Athenians had slain those of Negropont that were sent to seize upon the Hils before mentioned and kept their Bodies in their power The Thebans on the other side having overcome the Spartans had the Bodies of them that were slain in the Battel in their power which was by far the greater number wherefore they said that they were the Victors Thus both standing upon their tearms it was a good while before either would send a Trumpet or Herauld to the other for leave to bury their dead Yet at last the Lacedemonians sent first and then they all betook themselves to give the dead an Honourable Burial And as for him that had killed Epaminondas he was highly esteemed and honoured for his valiant act and the Lacedemonians gave him many rich Presents and made him and his Posterity free from all publick Taxes and contributions in the Common-wealth As for Epaminondas he was brought yet alive into his Tent how beit his Physitians and Surgeons being called together to dresse his wounds they all concluded that so soone as they plucked the head of the Dart out of his Body he must needs die And truly he made a most noble and worthy end For first he called for his Target-bearer who was alwayes at his hand in the Battel and asked him Is my Target safe He brought it
strait Then he asked who had the Victory The Boeotians answered the Target-bearer Then he commanded them to bring to him Diophantus and Jolidas they told him they were both dead Upon this he advised his Citizens to make Peace with their enemies for that they had not any Captain of skill to lead them to the Wars And now said he it is time for me to die and therefore pluck the Dart Head out of my Body At this word all his Friends that were about him fetched grievous sighs and even cryed out for sorrow and one of them weeping said unto him Alas Epaminondas Thou diest now and leavest no Children behind thee Yea said he that I do Eor I leave two faire Daughters behind me whereof the one is the Victory at Leuctres and the other this of Mantinea So they pulled out the Dart and immediatly he gave up the Ghost without shewing any signe that he was at all troubled at it He used often to say That War is the Bed of Honour amd that it is a sweet Death to dye for ones Country He was one of the bravest Captaines that ever we read of For whereas others excelled in some one or two Virtues by which they made their Fame great and glorious he excelled in all the Vertues and good Parts that could be desired in a Grave Politick and Great Captain to make him compleat in all things that could be expected in an Heathen In his time he advanced his Country to the Principality of all Greece But after his Death they soon lost it and not long after Alexander the Great utterly ●rake them in peices made slaves of those that survived and razed their City to the very ground A● in hi● life time he had alwayes detested covetou●n●sse so after his Death the Thebans were faigne to bury him at the common charge of the City because they found no mony in his house to defray the least patt of the Funerall expences FINIS Courteous Reader be pleased to take notice that these Books following are Printed for and sold by William Miller at the 〈…〉 in St Pauls Church-yard near the little North Door HIckes Revelation Revealed Folio Clarkes Martyrology Compleat with the Persecutions of England to the end of Queen Maries Reign Folio Lives of ten Eminent Divines some being as follow Bishop Vsher Dr Gouge Dr Harris Mr Gataker Mr Whittaker c. and some other famous Christians Life of Christ 4º Life of Herod the Great 4º Life of Nebuchadnezzar and Cyrus the Great the one the first founder of the Baylonian Empir the other the first founder of the Empire of the Medes and Persians 4º Life of Alexander the Great the first founder of the Grecian Empire As also of Charles the Great commonly called Charlemagne the first founder of the French Empire 4º A Prospect of Hungary and Transylvania together with an account of the qualities of the Inhabitants the Commodities of the Countries the Chiefest Cities Towns and Strong-holds Rivers and Mountains with an Historycal Narration of the Wars amongst themselves and with the Turks continued to this year 1664. As also a Brief Description of Bohemia Austria Bavaria Steirmark Cr●atia Dalmatia Moravia and other Adjacent Countries contained in a Map joyned therewith by which Map you may know which Places are in the Power of the Turk and which Christians have 4º Cradock's KNOWLEDGE and PRACTICE Or a Plain Discourse of the Chief Things necessary to be KNOWN BELIEVED and PRACTISED in Order to SALVATION 4º Ford of Baptism 8º Cotton on the Covenant of Grace 8º Culverwell of Assurance 8º Records Urinal of Physick 8º Ravins Oriental Grammer 12º Peacocks Visitation 12º Dr Tuckney's Good Day well Improved 12º Death Disarmed 12º Balm of Gilead 12º Clamor Sanguinis 12º Aristipp●● or B●lsac's Master piece 12º 〈◊〉 Charles's Works 24º Hannibal chosen General He besieges and takes many Townes His Valour and Policy His Victory He besieges Saguntum Saguntum taken Roman Ambassadors sent to Carthage The Carthaginians answer War denounced by the Romanes Hannibal prepares for Italy He Conquers much of Spain His passage through France He is opposed His Victory in France Some Gauls incourage him He passeth the Alps. The Gauls rise aganst the Romans They besiege Modena The Romans send an Army into Spain Hannibals losses in his march Hannibal prepares to fight A Battel The Romans beaten The Gauls forsake the Romans Hannibal beates the Consul He wins Clastidium Hannibals Forragers beaten Another Battel The Romans beaten Hannibals Policy Treacheries against him His dangerous march The Romans beaten again· The Romans beaten Great fea● at Rome A Dictator chosen Fabius his warinesse Hannibals Policy Fabius his wisdom Hinnibals Stratagem Hannibal Forragers beaten Minutius made equall with Fabius A Battel The Romans beaten Cannae Castle taken Varro makes hast to fight They prepare to fight The great Battel at Cannae Hannibals Policy The Romans beaten Many Towns inertain Hannibal Capua intertains him The Romans mourn Their Superstition A Dictator chosen Hinnibal beaten Acerrae taken by Hannibal Cassiline besieged· Mago sent to Carthage Large supplies promised to Hannibal Diverse Cities taken The promised Supplies come not Gracchus his Prudence The Capuans beaten Cuma besieged The Siege raised Hannibal delaies A Battel The Carthaginians b●aten The Romans poverty how supplyed Cassil●ne taken by the R●mans Arpi taken by the Romans The Romans beaten Tarentum●ake ●ake by Hannibal The Carthaginians beaten Capua besieged by the Consuls The Seige raised by Hannibal The Romans beaten Another victo●y Capua besieged again Hannibal comes to relieve them Hannibal intends for Rome and leaves it Capua taken The Consuls cruelty The publick wants supplied Salapia yeilded to Marcellus The Romans beaten A Battel A Battel The Romans beaten Tarentum taken The Romans beaten Locry besieged The Romans beaten The Consuls slaine The Romans beaten Great fear at Rome Asdrubal comes into Italy A Battel Asdrubal slaine Hannibal retires into Brusia His Prudence Scipio coms from Spain· Is chosen Consul He go● into Sycily Sends inti Africk And goes himself Vtica besieged The Carthaginians beaten And a second time They sue for Peace They dealt deceitfully Hannibal leaves Italy Comes into Afrck. An interview of the Generals Hannibals Speech to Scipio Scipios reply They prepar to fight A Battel Hannibal beaten He flies to Carthage and perswades them to seek Peace His Civil imployment He is complained of to the Romans He flies from Carthage to Tyre· He goes to Antioccus His counsel neglected He flies to Prusias Who betrays him His last Speech He poisons himself His Parentage and Education His parts He exercises and studies His Discourse with a Phylosopher His contempt of Riches His Poverty His Charity His Sobriety His Vigilance His Valor Tyran's in Thebes His prudence The Tyrants slain His Modesty He is advanced to Honour The Spartans beaten A Battel The Spartans beaten Peace among the Greeks The Thebans are excepted Plataees destroyed Hi● wisdom And courage His Prudence Fat men cashired His Prudence And Policy A Battel The Spartans beaten His Humility He plunders Laconia He braves the Spartans Messina re-edified Pallene destroyed Peloponesus fortified He beates the Spartans His Clemency He is envied His prudence He is accused and abused Pelopidas imprison ed by a Tyrant His Policy His Prudence Pelopidas released His witty speeches His Humility Megalopelis built The Thebans build a Navy New Wars A notable atempt An other but frustrated A Battel He is deadly wound●d The Spartans beaten His advice to the Thebans His death His character H●s poverty