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Table of Contents
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Scipio
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Clovis the First
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Belisarius
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Charles Martel
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Pepin the Short
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Charlemagne
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Olaf Tryggvesson
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William the Conqueror
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Godfrey de Bouillon
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Saladin
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Edward I of England
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Edward III of England
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Edward the Black Prince
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Bertrand du Guesclin
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Henry V of England
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John Huniades
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Warwick the Kingmaker
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Hernando Cortez
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Francisco Pizarro
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Gaspard de Coligni
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Henry IV of France
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Sir Francis Drake
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Sir Walter Raleigh
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Miles Standish
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Albrecht von Wallenstein
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Gustavus Adolphus
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Marshal Turenne
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Charles XII of Sweden
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John, Duke of Marlborough
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Prince Eugene of Savoy
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General James Wolfe
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Frederick the Great
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Lord Robert Clive
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Francois Kellerman
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Michel Nev
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Napoleon Bonaparte
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Arthur, Duke of Wellington
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Lord Horation Nelson
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Israel Putnam
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Anthony Wayne
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Francis Marion
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John Paul Jones
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Tecumseh
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James Lawrence
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Stephen Decatur
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Oliver Hazard Perry
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Sam Houston
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Winfield Scott
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Ulysses Simpson Grant
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William Tecumseh Sherman
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Philip Henry Sheridan
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Robert Edmund Lee
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Letter from Lee to his Son
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Thomas Jonathan Jackson
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David Glascoe Farragut
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David Dixon Porter
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Giuseppe Garibaldi
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Count Von Moltke
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George Dewey
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SCIPIO AFRICANUS MAJOR
(235-183 B.C.)
CORNELIUS SCIPIO Cornelius Scipio, Africanus Major, was the son of that
P. Cornelius Scipio who was defeated by Hannibal at the
Ticinus. If it be true that at the age of seventeen
Scipio fought in this battle, and rescued his wounded
father, he must have been born in B.C. 235. He was in
the battle of Cannæ (B.C. 216) as a tribune, and was
among those who, after the defeat, escaped to Canusium.
Here the chief command of the remaining troops was
unanimously entrusted to him and another. On this
occasion it was owing to his presence of mind that the
remnants of the Roman army did not, in their despair,
quit Italy.
In B.C. 212, Scipio was curule ædile, though he had not
yet attained the legitimate age. The tribunes of the
people endeavored to prevent his election, but they
were obliged to give up their opposition, for the
people, who seem to have perceived the extraordinary
abilities of the young man, elected him almost
[19] unanimously. In B.C. 211 his father and uncle fell in
Spain, and the Carthaginians again took possession of
the country, which they had almost entirely lost. When
Capua had fallen again into their hands, and Italy no
longer required their exclusive attention, the Romans
determined to act with more energy against the
Carthaginians in Spain. On the day of the election, no
one ventured to come forward to undertake the command
in this war. Young Scipio, then scarcely twenty-four
years of age, at last offered to take the command of
the army in Spain. The people were struck with
admiration at the courage of the young man, and gave
him command, with pro-consular power, which was
afterward prolonged to him for several years (B.C.
210-206).
The extraordinary power which young Scipio exercised
over his contemporaries was perhaps partly owing to
superstition, for he was believed to be a favorite of
the gods. Ever since he had risen to manhood, he went
every morning into the Capitol, where he spent some
hours in solitude and meditation. Hence all he did was
considered by the people to be the result of his
intercourse with the gods. Scipio himself partook in
this opinion, and cherished it; and the extraordinary
success of all his enterprises must have strengthened
his belief.
Toward the end of the summer, in B.C. 210, or, as Livy
says, at the beginning of spring, Scipio set out for
Spain with an army of 11,000 men, landed at the mouth
of the Iberus, and undertook the command of the whole
Roman forces in Spain. He was accompanied by his
friend, Lælius. His first object was to gain possession
of New Carthage, where the Carthaginians kept their
Spanish hostages. Lælius made the attack with the fleet
from the seaside, while Scipio conducted the operations
on land. The town soon fell into the hands of the
Romans, and the generosity with which Scipio treated
the Spanish hostages gained over a great number of
Spaniards. The hostages of those tribes who declared
themselves allies of the Romans were sent home without
ransom. It is also related that a very beautiful maiden
having fallen to his special lot in the division of
the booty, Scipio finding her sad, inquired the cause,
and learning that she was betrothed to a neighboring
chief, sent for the lover, and personally restored the
maid in all honor to his arms. A short time after the
conquest of this place Scipio went to Tarraco, where he
received embassies from various Spanish tribes, who
offered to become the allies of the Romans or to
recognize their supremacy.
Scipio is said not to have set out against Hasdrubal
until the year following, but it can scarcely be
conceived why the Carthaginians should have been so
long
[20] inactive, and it is a probable supposition that the
battle with Hasdrubal, which Livy and Polybius assign
to the year B.C. 209, was fought very soon after the
taking of New Carthage. In this battle Scipio gained a
great victory; 8,000 Carthaginians were slain, and
22,000, with their camp, fell into the hands of the
victor. Many of the Spaniards now wished to proclaim
Scipio their king, but he refused the honor.
Hasdrubal fled with the remainder of his army toward
the Tagus and the Pyrenees. Scipio did not follow him,
partly because he thought his enemy too much weakened
to be dangerous, and partly because he feared lest he
might expose himself to the combined attacks of the two
other Carthaginian generals, Mago, and Hasdrubal, son
of Gisco. Hasdrubal Barcas, the defeated general,
however, had carried considerable wealth with him in
his flight, and with these means he raised an army in
Spain, to lead into Italy to the assistance of his
brother Hannibal, hoping thus to bring the war to an
end in Italy. During these preparations of Hasdrubal,
Scipio was engaged against the two other Carthaginian
generals, one of whom (Mago) was defeated, in B.C. 208,
by the proprietor Silanus, in the country of the
Celtiberians, and Hanno, who came with an auxiliary
army from Africa, was taken prisoner. After this
success of the proprietor, Scipio united his forces
with those of Silanus to attack Hasdrubal, son of
Gisco. But as this general had retired to the south of
Spain, and had distributed his army in the fortified
places on the Bætis as far as Gades, Scipio (through
his brother Lucius) only took the important town of
Oringis, and then gradually returned across the Iberus.
The power of the Carthaginians in Spain was, however,
already broken, and in the year following (B.C. 207)
Scipio gained possession of nearly all Spain by a
victory, the place of which is not clearly ascertained,
some calling it Silpia or Bæcula, some Hipa, and others
Carmo.
GENEROSITY OF SCIPIO.
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Scipio, now in the almost undisputed possession of
Spain, began to turn his eyes to Africa, and,
accompanied by his friend Lælius, he ventured to pay a
visit to King Syphax, with whom Lælius had already
commenced negotiations. Here Scipio is said to have met
Hasdrubal, son of Gisco, and to have made a very
favorable impression on Syphax as well as on Hasdrubal.
After a short stay in Africa, Scipio returned to Spain,
where he first punished several towns for their
faithlessness, and subdued some of the Spanish chiefs
who ventured to claim their former independence. During
these occupations Scipio was attacked by a severe
illness, from which, however, he recovered in time to
quell an insurrection of 8,000 Roman soldiers, who
were discontented from not having derived from their
conquests those advantages which they had expected, and
who are said also to have been bribed by the
Carthaginians. Mago had in the meantime withdrawn to
the Balearic Islands, and thence to Liguria. Gades, the
last place which the Carthaginians possessed in Spain,
was now taken from them, and thus the war in Spain was
at an end.
Toward the close of the year B.C. 206, Scipio
surrendered the command of the Roman forces in Spain to
the proconsuls L. Lentulus and L. Manlius Acidinus,
and returned to Rome. He delivered to the ærarium the
immense
treas- [21] ures which he brought from Spain. He evidently wished for a
triumph, but the senate paid no attention to his
wishes, for no one had ever triumphed at Rome before he
had held the consulship. In the year B.C. 205, Scipio
was made consul with P. Licinius Crassus, who was at
the same time pontifex maximus, and was consequently
not allowed to leave Italy. If, therefore, a war was to
be carried on abroad, the command necessarily devolved
upon Scipio. His wish was immediately to sail with an
army to Africa, but the more cautious senators, and
especially Q. Fabius, were decidedly opposed to his
plan, partly because Hannibal, as long as he was in
Italy, appeared too formidable to be neglected, and
partly because they were influenced by jealousy.
All that Scipio could obtain was that Sicily should be
assigned to him as his province, with thirty vessels,
and with permission to sail over to Africa in case he
should think it advantageous to the republic. But he
did not obtain from the Senate permission to levy an
army, and he therefore called upon the Italian allies
to provide him with troops and other things necessary
for carrying on the war. As they were all willing to
support the conqueror of the Carthaginians in Spain, he
was soon enabled to sail to Sicily with nearly seven
thousand volunteers and thirty ships. Soon after his
arrival in Sicily he sent his friend Lælius with a part
of his fleet to Africa, partly to keep up the
connection which he had formed there, on his visit from
Spain, with Syphax and Massinissa (for to the latter
Scipio had sent back a nephew who had been taken
prisoner in the battle of Bæcula), and partly to show
to his timid opponents at Rome how groundless their
fears were. He himself employed his time in Sicily most
actively, in preparing and disciplining his new army.
Massinissa, dissatisfied with the Carthaginians, was
anxious for the arrival of Scipio in Africa, but Syphax
had altered his policy, and again joined the
Carthaginians. The enemies of Scipio at Rome at last
got an opportunity of attacking him, and they nearly
succeeded in depriving him of his post. Without being
authorized by the Senate, Scipio had taken part in the
conquest of Locri, in Southern Italy, and had left his
legate, Q. Flaminius, as commander of the Roman
garrison in that place. The legate treated the Locrians
with such severity and cruelty that they sent an
embassy to Rome to lay their complaints before the
Senate. As Scipio, although acquainted with the conduct
of Flaminius, had nevertheless left him in command, his
enemies attacked him on this and other grounds, and
Fabius Maximus even proposed that he should be
recalled. A commission was sent out to inquire into the
state of affairs and to bring Scipio home, if the
charges against him were found true. Scipio proved that
his army was in the best possible condition; and the
commissioners were so surprised at what they saw, that
instead of recalling the consul, they bade him sail to
Africa as soon as he might think it proper, and to
adopt any measures that he might think useful.
Scipio, in consequence of this, sailed in B.C. 204 as
proconsul, with a large army, from Lilybæum to Africa,
and landed in the neighborhood of Utica. Here he made
successful incursions into the neighboring country, and
Has- [22] drubal, who attempted to prevent them, suffered a great defeat.
But Scipio could not gain possession of Utica, which
was of the greater importance to him and his fleet as
the winter was approaching, and he was obliged to spend
the season on a piece of land extending into the sea,
which he fortified as well as he could. Toward the
close of the winter the Carthaginians, united with
Syphax, intended to make a general attack on Scipio's
army and fleet, but being informed of their plans, he
surprised the camps of Hasdrubal and Syphax in the
night, and only a small number of the enemy escaped.
Syphax withdrew into his own dominions, but was
defeated by Massinissa and Lælius, and taken prisoner
with his wife and one of his sons. Massinissa married
Sophonisba, the wife of Syphax, who had formerly been
engaged to him, but had been given to Syphax for
political reasons. Scipio, fearing the influence she
might have on Massinissa (for she was a Carthaginian),
claimed her as a prisoner belonging to the Romans, and
Massinissa poisoned her, to save her from the
humiliation of captivity.
The fears and apprehensions of the Carthaginians now
increased to such a degree that they thought it
necessary to recall Hannibal from Italy, and at the
same time they sued for peace. The terms which Scipio
proposed would have concluded the war in a manner
honorable to the Romans. The Carthaginians, however,
whose only object was to gain time, made no objections
to the conditions, but only concluded a truce of
forty-five days, during which an embassy was to be sent
to Rome. Before this truce was at an end, the
Carthaginian populace plundered some Roman vessels with
provisions, which were wrecked off Carthage, and even
insulted the Roman envoys who came to demand
reparation. Scipio did not resent this conduct and
allowed the Carthaginian ambassadors, on their return
from Rome, to pass on to Carthage unmolested. About
this time (it was the autumn of the year B.C. 203)
Hannibal arrived in Africa, and soon collected an army
in numbers far exceeding that of Scipio. He first made
a successful campaign against Massinissa. Scipio was at
this time informed that the consul Tib. Claudius Nero
would come with an army to cooperate with him against
Hannibal.
Scipio, who wished to bring the war to a conclusion,
and was unwilling to share the glory with anyone else,
determined to bring Hannibal to a decisive battle. The
Carthaginian at first avoided an engagement; but when
Scipio, in order to deceive the enemy, hastily
retreated as if he intended to take to flight, Hannibal
followed him with his cavalry and lost a battle in the
neighborhood of Zama. A tribune of Scipio soon
afterward cut off a large convoy of provisions which
was on its way to the camp of Hannibal, and this
suddenly threw him into such difficulties that he began
to negotiate with Scipio for peace. The conditions,
however, which Scipio now proposed were so humiliating,
that the Carthaginians would not accept them. Hannibal,
therefore, though he saw the impossibility of gaining
any further advantages, was compelled to decide the
affair by a last and desperate effort. In a personal
interview between the two generals Scipio was
inexorable as to the conditions. Hannibal's army was in
a bad condition; and in the ensuing battle, to the west
of Zama, the
vic- [23] tory of Scipio was complete. This defeat (in B.C. 202) was
the death-blow to Carthage.
Scipio, on his return to Italy, was received with the
greatest enthusiasm; he entered Rome in triumph, and
was henceforward distinguished by the name of
Africanus. He now for several years continued to live
at Rome, apparently without taking any part in public
affairs. In B.C. 199 he obtained the office of censor
with P. Ælius Pætus, and in B.C. 194 he was made consul
a second time with Tib. Sempronius Longus, and princeps
senatus, a distinction with which he had already been
honored in B.C. 196, and which was conferred upon him
for the third time in B.C. 190. In B.C. 193, during one
of the disputes between the Carthaginians and
Massinissa, Scipio was sent with two other
commissioners to mediate between the parties; but
nothing was settled, though, as Livy observes, Scipio
might easily have put an end to the disputes. Scipio
was the only Roman who thought it unworthy of the
republic to support those Carthaginians who persecuted
Hannibal; and there was a tradition that Scipio, in
B.C. 193, was sent on an embassy to Antiochus, and that
he met Hannibal in his exile, who in the conversation
which took place, declared Scipio the greatest of all
generals. Whether the story of the conversation be true
or not, the judgment ascribed to Hannibal is just; for
Scipio as a general was second to none but Hannibal
himself.
In the year B.C. 190, some discussions arose in the
Senate as to what provinces should be assigned to the
two consuls, Lælius and L. Cornelius Scipio, brother of
the great Africanus. Africanus, although he was
princeps senatus, offered to accompany his brother, as
legate, if the Senate would give him Greece as his
province, for this province conferred upon Lucius the
command in the war against Antiochus. The offer was
accepted, and the two brothers set out for Greece, and
thence for Asia. Africanus took his son with him on
this expedition, but by some unlucky chance the boy
was taken prisoner, and sent to Antiochus. The king
offered to restore him to freedom, and to give a
considerable sum of money, if the father would
interpose his influence to obtain favorable terms for
the king. Africanus refused; but the king,
notwithstanding, soon after sent the boy back to his
father, who just then was suffering from illness, and
was absent from the camp. To show his gratitude,
Africanus sent a message to Antiochus, advising him
not to engage in a battle until he himself had returned
to the Roman camp. After the great battle near Mount
Sipylus, Antiochus again applied to Scipio for peace,
and the latter now used his influence with his brother
Lucius and the council of war, on behalf of the king.
The conditions of the peace were tolerably mild, but
they were afterward made much more severe when the
peace was ratified at Rome.
The enemies of Africanus at Rome had now another charge
against him. The peace with Antiochus, and the
conditions proposed by Africanus and his brother
Lucius, were regarded by the hostile party as the
result of bribes from Antiochus, and of the liberation
of the son of Africanus. A charge was therefore brought
against the two brothers, on their return to Rome, of
having accepted bribes of the king, and of having
retained a part of the treasures which
[24] they ought to have delivered up to the ærarium. At the
same time they were called upon to give an account of
the sums of money they had taken from Antiochus.
Lucius was ready to obey; but his brother Africanus
with indignation snatched the accounts from the hands
of his brother and tore them to pieces before the
Senate. The tribune of the people, C. Minucius
Augurinus, however, fined Lucius; and when he was going
to be thrown into prison until he should pay the heavy
fine, Africanus dragged him away; and the tribune Tib.
Gracchus, though disapproving of the violence of
Africanus, liberated Lucius from imprisonment.
Africanus himself was now summoned before the people by
the tribune M. Nævius; but instead of answering the
charges he reminded the people that it was the
anniversary of his victory at Zama, and bade them
rather thank the gods for such citizens as he.
After these troubles he withdrew to his villa near
Liternum, and it was owing to the interposition of Tib.
Gracchus that he was not compelled to obey another
summons. The estates of his brother Lucius, however,
were confiscated (B.C. 187), but the sum produced by
their sale did not make up the amount of the fine. His
friends and clients not only offered to make up the
sum, but their generosity would even have made him
richer than he had been before; but he refused to
accept anything beyond what was absolutely necessary
for his support. Africanus never returned from his
voluntary exile, and he spent the last years of his
life in quiet retirement at his villa. He is said to
have wished to be buried on his estate; but there was,
as Livy says, a tradition that he died at Rome, and was
buried in the tomb of his family near the Porta Capena,
where statues of him, his brother Lucius, and their
friend Q. Ennius, were erected. The year of his death
is not quite certain; for, according to Polybius, he
died in the same year with Hannibal and Philopœmen
(B.C. 183); according to others, two years earlier
(B.C. 185).
In judging of Scipio Africanus as a general, we may
adopt the judgment ascribed to Hannibal; but as a Roman
citizen he is very far from deserving such praise. His
pride and haughtiness were intolerable, and the laws of
the constitution were set at nought whenever they
opposed his own views and passions. As a statesman he
scarcely did anything worth mentioning. By his wife
Æmilia, daughter of Æmilius Paullus, he had two
daughters, one of whom married P. Cornelius Scipio
Nasica Corculum, the other, the celebrated Cornelia,
married Tib. Sempronius Gracchus, and was the mother of
the two Gracchi, the tribunes of the people.
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