CHAPTER XII - SULLA IN GREECE AND ASIA
Sura was sent by the Roman governor
of Macedonia to make head against the invaders.
He won a naval battle and captured Sciathus, where
all the spoils of the enemy were stored. Then he marched into Boeotia, and, after
a three days’ engagement with the combined forces
of Archelaus and Aristion, pushed Archelaus back to
the coast. The war, perhaps, might have been
ended here; but at this moment Lucullus came to announce
the approach of Sulla, and to warn Sura that the war
had been entrusted to him. So Sura retired to
Macedonia. Sulla had left Brundusium
in 87, and, landing on the coast of Epirus, gathered
what supplies he could from Aetolia and Thessaly,
and marched straight for Athens. It was soon
seen that the foundations of the empire of Mithridates
were based on sand. The Boeotians at once submitted,
including Thebes, which had joined the king. Sulla then began
two sieges, that of the Piraeus where Archelaus was,
and that of Athens defended by Aristion. Archelaus
had before shown himself an intrepid soldier, and he
baffled all Sulla’s efforts with equal ingenuity
and courage. After an unsuccessful attempt to
storm the walls, Sulla retired to Eleusis and Megara,
thus keeping up his communications with Thebes and
the Peloponnese, and set to work constructing catapults
and other engines, and preparing an earthwork from
which he meant to attack the wall with them.
For these purposes he cut down the trees of the Academia
and the Lyceum. He was kept informed of intended
sallies by two slaves inside the town, who threw out
leaden balls with words cut on them. But as fast
as the earthwork rose Archelaus built towers on the
walls opposite to it, and thence harassed the besiegers. He was also reinforced by Mithridates,
and then came out and fought a battle which was for
some time doubtful; but he was forced to retire at
length with the loss of 2,000 men. He himself
remained till the last. The gates were shut and
he had to be drawn up by a rope over the wall.
Sulla hastened to his aid, and Archelaus,
seeing him coming, instantly counter-marched and attacked
Sulla’s right in his absence, while Taxiles
assailed Murena on the left. But Sulla hastened
back, too, after leaving Hortensius to support
Murena, and, when he appeared, the right wing drove
back Archelaus to the Cephissus. Murena was equally
triumphant on the left wing, and the barbarians fled
pell-mell to the Cephissus, only 10,000 of them reaching
Chalcis in Euboea. Appian says the Romans lost only
thirteen men, while Plutarch, on the authority of Sulla’s
Memoirs, says that they lost four. This is absurd.
Sulla seems to have told some startling lies in his
Memoirs, perhaps to prove that he had been the favourite
of fortune, which was a mania of his.