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Cassander
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CASSANDER
[40] ALTHOUGH Antipater, on his return to Macedon, came back
loaded with honors, and in the full and triumphant
possession of power, his situation was still not without its
difficulties. He had for enemies, in Macedon, two of the
most violent and unmanageable women that ever lived—Olympias
and Eurydice—who quarreled with him incessantly, and who
hated each other even more than they hated him.
Olympias was at this time in Epirus. She remained there,
because she did not choose to put herself under Antipater's
power by residing in Macedon. She succeeded, however, by her
maneuvers and intrigues, in giving Antipater a great deal of
trouble. Her ancient animosity against him had been very
much increased and aggravated by the failure of her plan for
marrying her daughter Cleopatra to Perdiccas, through the
advances which Antipater made in behalf of his daughter
Nicæa; and though
[41] Nicæa and Perdiccas were now dead, yet the transaction was
an offense which such a woman as Olympias never could
forgive.
Eurydice was a still greater source of annoyance and
embarrassment to Antipater than Olympias herself. She was a
woman of very masculine turn of mind, and she had been
brought up by her mother, Cynane, to martial exercises, such
as those to which young men in those days were customarily
trained. She could shoot arrows, and throw the javelin, and
ride on horseback at the head of a troop of armed men. As
soon as she was married to Philip she began at once to
assume an air of authority, thinking, apparently, that she
herself, being the wife of the king, was entitled to a much
greater share of the regal authority than the generals, who,
as she considered them, were merely his tutors and
guardians, or, at most, only military agents, appointed to
execute his will. During the memorable expedition into
Egypt, Perdiccas had found it very difficult to exercise any
control over her; and after the death of Perdiccas, she
assumed a more lofty and imperious tone than ever. She
quarreled incessantly with Pithon, the commander of the
army, on the return from Egypt; and she made the
[42] most resolute and determined opposition to the appointment
of Antipater as the custodian of the persons of the kings.
The place where the consultation was held, at which this
appointment was made, was Triparadeisus,
in Syria. This was the place where the expedition of
Antipater, coming from Asia Minor, met the army of Egypt on
its return. As soon as the junction of' the two armies was
effected, and the grand council was convened, Eurydice made
the most violent opposition to the proceedings. Antipater
reproved her for evincing such turbulence and
insubordination of spirit. This made her more angry than
ever; and when at length Antipater was appointed to the
regency, she went out and made a formal harangue to the
army, in which she denounced Antipater in the severest
terms, and loaded him with criminations and reproaches, and
endeavored to incite the soldiers to a revolt. Antipater
endeavored to defend himself against these accusations by a
calm reply; but the influence which Eurydice's tempestuous
eloquence exerted on the minds of the soldiery was too much
for him. A very serious riot ensued, which threatened to
lead to the most disastrous results.
[43] For a time Antipater's life was in most imminent danger, and
he was saved only by the interposition of some of the other
generals, who hazarded their own lives to rescue him from
the enraged soldiery.
The excitement of this scene gradually subsided, and, as the
generals persisted in the arrangement which they had made,
Eurydice found herself forced to submit to it. She had, in
fact, no real power in her hands except that of making
temporary mischief and disturbance; and, as is usually the
case with characters like hers, when she found that those
around her could not be driven from their ground by her
fractiousness and obstinacy, she submitted herself to the
necessity of the case, though in a moody and sullen manner.
Such were the relations which Antipater and Eurydice bore to
each other on the return of Antipater to Macedon.
The troubles, however, in his government, which Antipater
might have reasonably expected to arise from his connection
with Olympias and Eurydice, were destined to a very short
continuance, so far as he personally was concerned; for, not
long after his return to Macedon, he fell sick of a
dangerous disease, under
[44] which it was soon evident that the vital principle, at the
advanced age to which he had attained, must soon succumb. In
fact, Antipater himself soon gave up all hopes of recovery,
and began at once to make arrangements for the final
surrender of his power.
It will be recollected that when Craterus came from Asia to
Macedon, about the time of Alexander's death, he brought
with him a general named Polysperchon, who, though nominally
second in command, really had charge of the army on the
march, Craterus himself being at the time an invalid. When,
some time afterward, Antipater and Craterus set out on their
expedition to Asia, in the war against Perdiccas,
Polysperchon was left in charge of the kingdom of Macedon,
to govern it as regent until Antipater should return.
Antipater had a son named Cassander, who was a general in
his army. Cassander naturally expected that, during the
absence of his father, the kingdom would be committed to his
charge. For some reason or other, however, Antipater had
preferred Polysperchon, and had intrusted the government to
him. Polysperchon had, of course, become acquainted with the
duties of government, and had acquired an extensive
knowledge of
Mace- [45] donian affairs. He had governed well, too, and the
people were accustomed to his sway. Antipater concluded,
therefore, that it would be better to continue Polysperchon
in power after his death, rather than to displace
Polysperchon for the sake of advancing his son Cassander. He
therefore made provision for giving to Cassander a very high
command in the army, but he gave Polysperchon the kingdom.
This act, though Cassander himself never forgave it, raised
Antipater to a higher place than ever in the estimation of
mankind. They said that he did what no monarch ever did
before; in determining the great question of the succession,
he made the aggrandizement of his own family give place to
the welfare of the realm.
Antipater on his death-bed, among other councils which he
gave to Polysperchon, warned him very earnestly against the
danger of yielding to any woman whatever a share in the
control of public affairs. Woman, he said, was, from her
very nature, the creature of impulse, and was swayed in all
her conduct by the emotions and passions of her heart. She
possessed none of the calm, considerate, and
self-controlling principles of wisdom and prudence, so
essential for the proper administration of the affairs of
states
[46] and nations. These cautions, as Antipater uttered them, were
expressed in general terms, but they were understood to
refer to Olympias and Eurydice, whom it had always been very
difficult to control, and who, of course, when Antipater
should be removed from the scene, might be expected to come
forward with a spirit more obtrusive and unmanageable than
ever.
These counsels, however, of the dying king seemed to have
had very little effect upon Polysperchon; for one of the
first measures of his government, after Antipater was dead,
was to send to Epirus to invite Olympias to return to
Macedon. This measure was decided upon in a grand council
which Polysperchon convened to deliberate on the state of
public affairs as soon as the government came into his
hands. Polysperchon thought that he should greatly
strengthen his administration by enlisting Olympias on his
side. She was held in great veneration by all the people of
Macedon; not on account of any personal qualities which she
possessed to entitle her to such regard, but because she was
the mother of Alexander. Polysperchon, therefore, considered
it very important to secure her influence, and the prestige
of her name in his
[47] favor. At the same time, while he thus sought to propitiate
Olympias, he neglected Cassander and all the other members
of Antipater's family. He considered them, doubtless, as
rivals and antagonists, whom he was to keep down by every
means in his power.
Cassander, who was a man of a very bold, determined, and
ambitious spirit, remained quietly in Polysperchon's court
for a little time, watching attentively all that was done,
and revolving silently in his mind the question what course
he himself should pursue. At length he formed a small party
of his friends to go away on a hunting excursion. When he
reached a safe distance from the court of Polysperchon, he
called his friends around him, and informed them that he had
resolved not to submit to the usurpation of Polysperchon,
who, in assuming the throne of Macedon, had seized what
rightfully belonged, he said, to him, Cassander, as his
father's son and heir. He invited his friends to join him in
the enterprise of deposing Polysperchon, and assuming the
crown.
He urged this undertaking upon them with very specious
arguments. It was the only course of safety for them, as
well as for him, since they—that is, the friends to whom
Cas- [48] sander was making these proposals—had all been friends of
Antipater; and Olympias, whom Polysperchon was about to take
into his counsels, hated the very name of Antipater, and
would evince, undoubtedly, the most unrelenting hostility to
all whom she should consider as having been his friends. He
was confident, he said, that the Asiatic princes and
generals would espouse his cause. They had been warmly
attached to Antipater, and would not willingly see his son
and rightful successor deprived of his legitimate rights.
Besides, Philip and Eurydice would join him. They had every
thing to fear from Olympias, and would, of course, oppose
the power of Polysperchon, now that he had determined to
ally himself to her.
The friends of Cassander very readily agreed to his
proposal, and the result proved the truth of his
predictions. The Asiatic princes furnished Cassander with
very efficient aid in his attempt to depose his rival.
Olympias adhered to Polysperchon, while Eurydice favored
Cassander's cause. A terrible conflict ensued. It was waged
for some time in Greece, and in other countries more or less
remote from Macedon, the advantage in the combats being
sometimes on one side and sometimes on the other. It is
[49] not necessary to detail here the events which occurred in
the contest so long as the theatre of war was beyond the
frontiers of Macedon, for the parties with whom we are now
particularly dealing were not directly affected by the
conflict until it came nearer home.
It ought here to be stated that Olympias did not at first
accept the invitation to return to Macedon which
Polysperchon sent to her. She hesitated. She consulted with
her friends, and they were not decided in respect to the
course which it would be best for her to pursue. She had
made a great many enemies in Macedon during her former
residence there, and she knew well that she would have a
great deal to fear from their hostility in case she should
return, and thus put herself again, as it were, into their
power. Then, besides, it was quite uncertain what course
affairs in Macedon would finally take. Antipater had
bequeathed the kingdom to Polysperchon, it was true; but
there might be great doubt whether the people would
acquiesce in this decision, and allow the supreme power to
remain quietly in Polysperchon's hands. She concluded,
therefore, to remain a short time where she was, till she
could see how the case would finally turn. She accordingly
continued
[50] to reside in Epirus, keeping up, however, a continual
correspondence with Polysperchon in respect to the measures
of his government, and watching the progress of the war
between him and Cassander in Greece, when that war broke
out, with the utmost solicitude and anxiety.
Cassander proved to be too strong for Polysperchon in
Greece. He had obtained large bodies of troops from his
Asiatic allies, and he maneuvered and managed these forces
with so much bravery and skill, that Polysperchon could not
dislodge him from the country. A somewhat curious incident
occurred on one occasion during the campaign, which
illustrates the modes of warfare practiced in those days. It
seems that one of the cities of Peloponnesus, named
Megalopolis, was on the side of Cassander, and when
Polysperchon sent them a summons to surrender to him and
acknowledge his authority, they withdrew all their property
and the whole of their population within the walls, and bid
him defiance. Polysperchon then advanced and laid siege to
the city.
After fully investing the city and commencing operations on
various sides, to occupy the attention of the garrison, he
employed a corps of sappers and miners in secretly
undermining a
[51] portion of the wall. The mode of procedure, in operations
like this, was to dig a subterranean passage leading to the
foundations of the wall, and then, as fast as these
foundations were removed, to substitute props to support the
superincumbent mass until all was ready for the springing
of the mine. When the excavations were completed, the props
were suddenly pulled away, and the wall would cave in, to
the great astonishment of the besieged, who, if the
operation had been skillfully performed, knew nothing of the
danger until the final consummation of it opened suddenly
before their eyes a great breach in their defenses.
Polysperchon's mine was so successful, that three towers
fell into it, with all the wall connecting them. These
towers came down with a terrific crash, the materials of
which they had been composed lying, after the fall, half
buried in the ground, a mass of ruins.
The garrison of the city immediately repaired in great
numbers to the spot, to prevent the ingress of the enemy;
while, on the other hand, a strong detachment of troops
rushed forward from the camp of Polysperchon to force their
way through the breach into the city. A very desperate
conflict ensued, and while the men of
[52] the city were thus engaged in keeping back the invaders, the
women and children were employed in throwing up a line of
intrenchments further within, to cover the opening which had
been made in the wall. The people of the city gained the
victory in the combat. The storming party were driven back,
and the besieged were beginning to congratulate themselves
on their escape from the danger which had threatened them,
when they were suddenly terrified beyond measure by the
tidings that the besiegers were arranging a train of
elephants to bring in through the breach. Elephants were
often used for war in those days in Asiatic countries, but
they had seldom appeared in Greece. Polysperchon, however,
had a number of them in the train of his army, and the
soldiers of Megalopolis were overwhelmed with consternation
at the prospect of being trampled under foot by these huge
beasts, wholly ignorant as they were of the means of
contending against them.
It happened, however, that there was in the city of
Megalopolis at this time a soldier named Damides, who had
served in former years under Alexander the Great, in Asia.
He went to the officers who had command within the city and
[53] offered his aid. "Fear nothing," said he, "but go on with
your preparations of defense, and leave the elephants to me.
I will answer for them, if you will do as I say." The
officers agreed to follow his instructions. He immediately
caused a great number of sharp iron spikes to be made. These
spikes he set firmly in the ends of short stakes of wood,
and then planted the stakes in the ground all about the
intrenchments and in the breach, in such a manner that the
spikes themselves, points upward, protruded from the ground.
The spikes were then concealed from view by covering the
ground with straw and other similar rubbish.
The consequence of this arrangement was, that when the
elephants advanced to enter the breach, they trod upon these
spikes, and the whole column of them was soon disabled and
thrown into confusion. Some of the elephants were wounded so
severely that they fell where they stood, and were unable to
rise. Others, maddened with the pain which they endured,
turned back and trampled their own keepers under foot in
their attempts to escape from the scene. The breach, in
short, soon became so choked up with the bodies of beasts
and men, that the assailants were compelled to give up
[54] the contest and withdraw. A short time afterward,
Polysperchon raised the siege and abandoned the city
altogether.
In fact, the party of Cassander was in the end triumphant in
Greece, and Polysperchon determined to return to Macedon.
In the mean time, Olympias had determined to come to
Macedon, and aid Polysperchon in his contest with Cassander.
She accordingly left Epirus, and with a small body of
troops, with which her brother Alexander, who was then King
of Epirus, furnished her, went on and joined Polysperchon on
his return. Eurydice was alarmed at this; for, since she
considered Olympias as her great political rival and enemy,
she knew very well that there could be no safety for her or
her husband if Olympias should obtain the ascendency in the
court of Polysperchon. She accordingly began to call upon
those around her, in the city where she was then residing,
to arm themselves for her defense. They did so, and a
considerable force was thus collected. Eurydice placed
herself at the head of it. She sent messengers off to
Cassander, urging him to come immediately and join her. She
also sent an embassage to Polysperchon, commanding him, in
the name of
[55] Philip the king, to deliver up his army to Cassander. Of
course this was only a form, as she could not have expected
that such a command would have been obeyed; and,
accordingly, after having sent off these orders, she placed
herself at the head of the troops that she had raised, and
marched out to meet Polysperchon on his return, intending,
if he would not submit, to give him battle.
Her designs, however, were all frustrated in the end in a
very unexpected manner. For when the two armies approached
each other, the soldiers who were on Eurydice's side,
instead of fighting in her cause as she expected, failed her
entirely at the time of trial. For when they saw Olympias,
whom they had long been accustomed almost to adore as the
wife of old King Philip, and the mother of Alexander, and
who was now advancing to meet them on her return to Macedon,
splendidly attended, and riding in her chariot, at the head
of Polysperchon's army, with the air and majesty of a queen,
they were so overpowered with the excitement of the
spectacle, that they abandoned Eurydice in a body, and went
over, by common consent, to Polysperchon's side.
EURYDICE IN PRISON
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Of course Eurydice herself and her husband
[56] Philip, who was with her at this time, fell into
Polysperchon's hands as prisoners. Olympias was almost
beside herself with exultation and joy at having her hated
rival thus put into her power. She imprisoned Eurydice and
her husband in a dungeon, so small that there was scarcely
room for them to turn themselves in it; and while they were
thus confined, the only attention which the wretched
prisoners received was to be fed, from time to time, with
coarse provisions, thrust in to them through a hole in the
wall. Having thus made Eurydice secure, Olympias proceeded
to wreak her vengeance on all the members of the family of
Antipater whom she could get within her power. Cassander, it
is true, was beyond her reach for the present; he was
gradually advancing through Thessaly into Macedonia, at the
head of a powerful and victorious army. There was another
son of Antipater, however, named Nicanor, who was then in
Macedon. Him she seized and put to death, together with
about a hundred of his relatives and friends. In fact, so
violent and insane was her rage against the house of
Antipater, that she opened a tomb where the body of another
of his sons had been interred, and caused the remains to be
brought out and
[57] thrown into the street. The people around her began to
remonstrate against such atrocities; but these
remonstrances, instead of moderating her rage, only excited
it still more. She sent to the dungeon where her prisoners,
Philip and Eurydice, were confined, and caused Philip to be
stabbed to death with daggers; and then, when this horrid
scene was scarcely over, an executioner came in to Eurydice
with a dagger, a rope, and a cup of poison, saying that
Olympias sent them to her, that she might choose herself by
what she would die. Eurydice, on
[58] receiving this message, replied, saying, "I pray Heaven that
Olympias herself may one day have the like alternative
presented to her." She then proceeded to tear the linen
dress which she wore into bandages, and to bind up with
these bandages the wounds in the dead body of her husband.
This dreadful though useless duty being performed, she then,
rejecting all three of the means of self-destruction which
Olympias had offered her, strangled herself by tying tight
about her neck a band which she obtained from her own
attire.
Of course, the tidings of these proceedings were not long in
reaching Cassander. He was at this time in Greece,
advancing, however, slowly to the northward, toward Macedon.
In coming from Greece into Thessaly, his route lay through
the celebrated Pass of Thermopylæ. He found this pass
guarded by a large body of troops, which had been posted
there to oppose his passage. He immediately got together all
the ships, boats, galleys, and vessels of every kind which
he could procure, and, embarking his army on board of them,
he sailed past the defile, and landed in Thessaly. Thence he
marched into Macedon.
While Cassander had thus been slowly
ap- [59] proaching, Polysperchon and Olympias had been very
vigorously employed in making preparations to receive him.
Olympias, with Roxana and the young Alexander, who was now
about five years old, in her train, traveled to and fro
among the cities of Macedonia, summoning the people to arms,
enlisting all who would enter her service, and collecting
money and military stores. She also sent to Epirus, to
Æacides the king, the father of Pyrrhus, imploring him to
come to her aid with all the force he could bring.
Polysperchon, too, though separate from Olympias, made every
effort to strengthen himself against his coming enemy.
Things were in this state when Cassander entered Macedon.
Cassander immediately divided his troops into two distinct
bodies, and sending one, under the command of an able
general, to attack Polysperchon, he himself went in pursuit
of Olympias. Olympias retreated before him, until at length
she reached the city of Pydna, a city situated in the
southeastern part of Macedon, on the shore of the Ægean Sea.
She knew that the force under her command was not sufficient
to enable her to offer her enemy battle, and she accordingly
went into the city, and fortified herself there.
[60] Cassander advanced immediately to the place, and, finding
the city too strongly fortified to be carried by assault, he
surrounded it with his army, and invested it closely both by
land and sea.
The city was not well provided for a siege, and the people
within very soon began to suffer for want of provisions.
Olympias, however, urged them to hold out, representing to
them that she had sent to Epirus for assistance, and that
Æacides, the king, was already on his way, with a large
force, to succor her. This was very true; but, unfortunately
for Olympias, Cassander was aware of this fact as well as
she, and, instead of waiting for the troops of Æacides to
come and attack him, he had sent a large armed force to the
confines between Epirus and Macedon, to intercept these
expected allies in the passes of the mountains. This
movement was successful. The army of Æacides found, when
they reached the frontier, that the passages leading into
Macedonia were all blocked up by the troops of the enemy.
They made some ineffectual attempts to break through; and
then the leading officers of the army, who had never been
really willing to embark in the war, revolted against
Æacides, and returned home. And as, in the case of deeds of
violence and
re- [61] volution, it is always safest to go through and finish the
work when it is once begun, they deposed Æacides entirely,
and raised the other branch of the royal family to the
throne in his stead. It was on this occasion that the infant
Pyrrhus was seized and, carried away by his friends, to save
his life, as mentioned in the opening paragraphs of this
history. The particulars of this revolution, and of the
flight of Pyrrhus, will be given more fully in the next
chapter. It is sufficient here to say, that the attempt of
Æacides to come to the rescue of Olympias in her peril
wholly failed, and there was nothing now left but the wall
of the city to defend her from her terrible foe.
In the mean time, the distress in the city for want of food
had become horrible. Olympias herself, with Roxana and the
boy, and the other ladies of the court, lived on the flesh
of horses. The soldiers devoured the bodies of their
comrades as they were slain upon the wall. They fed the
elephants, it was said, on saw-dust. The soldiers and the
people of the city, who found this state of things
intolerable, deserted continually to Cassander, letting
themselves down by stealth in the night from the wall. Still
Olympias would not surrender; there was one more
[62] hope remaining for her. She contrived to dispatch a
messenger to Polysperchon with a letter, asking him to send
a galley round into the harbor at a certain time in the
night, in order that she might get on board of it, and thus
escape. Cassander intercepted this messenger. After reading
the letter, he returned it to the messenger again, and
directed him to go on and deliver it. The messenger did so,
and Polysperchon sent the galley. Cassander, of course,
watched for it, and seized it himself when it came. The last
hope of the unhappy Olympias was thus extinguished, and she
opened the gates and gave herself up to Cassander. The whole
country immediately afterward fell into Cassander's hands.
The friends of the family of Antipater were now clamorous in
their demands that Olympias should be brought to punishment
for having so atrociously murdered the sons and relatives of
Antipater while she was in power. Olympias professed herself
willing to be tried, and appealed to the Macedonian senate
to be her judges. She relied on the ascendency which she had
so long exercised over the minds of the Macedonians, and did
not believe that they would condemn her. Cassander himself
feared that they would not; and although he was unwilling to
murder her while she was a defenseless
prison- [63] er in his hands, he determined that she should die. He
recommended to her secretly not to take the hazard of a
trial, but to make her escape and go to Athens, and offered
to give her an opportunity to do so. He intended, it was
said, if she made the attempt, to intercept and slay her on
the way as a fugitive from justice. She refused to accede to
this proposal, suspecting, perhaps, Cassander's treachery in
making it. Cassander then sent a band of two hundred
soldiers to put her to death.
These soldiers, when they came into the prison, were so
impressed by the presence of the queen, to whom, in former
years, they had been accustomed to look up with so much awe,
that they shrank back from their duty, and for a time it
seemed that no one would strike the blow. At length,
however, some among the number, who were relatives of those
that Olympias had murdered, succeeding in nerving their arms
with the resolution of revenge, fell upon her and killed her
with their swords.
As for Roxana and the boy, Cassander kept them close
prisoners for many years; and finally, feeling more and more
that his possession of the throne of Alexander was
constantly endangered by the existence of a son of
Alexander, caused them to be assassinated too.
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