cover of episode Caesar, Pompey, Crassus: The First Triumvirate (Encore)

Caesar, Pompey, Crassus: The First Triumvirate (Encore)

2025/1/16
logo of podcast Everything Everywhere Daily

Everything Everywhere Daily

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
G
Gary
无足够信息创建详细个人资料。
Topics
我将讲述公元前60年形成的罗马第一三巨头联盟的故事。这个联盟由盖乌斯·尤利乌斯·凯撒、格奈乌斯·庞培·马格努斯和马库斯·利西尼乌斯·克拉苏这三位罗马最有权势的人物组成。他们为了各自的利益而暂时搁置了彼此间的矛盾。这个联盟持续多年,期间这三位巨头掌控了罗马共和国的权力,但最终还是走向了瓦解。在公元前一世纪初,罗马共和国正处于混乱之中。从公元前83年到公元前81年,马略和苏拉两位将军之间的内战摧毁了罗马的贵族阶层。公元前71年,由角斗士斯巴达克斯领导的奴隶起义席卷意大利,直到克拉苏和庞培将其镇压。公元前63年,罗马又经历了卡提林阴谋,险些落入一小撮人的掌控。这些事件塑造了罗马共和国的这一时期,而参与这些事件的人物也将在本集中扮演核心角色。在罗马历史上,元老院级别的贵族男性为了权力和声望不断竞争。他们会竞选一系列官职,最终目标是执政官职位。这些都是选举产生的职位,要当选需要具备声望、金钱和强大的政治网络。声望可以通过当选低级官员和为民众举办游戏来获得,但最好的方式是取得军事成就。竞选需要资金,尤其是在晋升过程中,需要钱来支付平民的食物和游戏费用。罗马的庇护制度是一个非正式的系统,地位和财富较高的人会成为地位或财富较低的人的庇护人。双方都会为对方提供服务,庇护人可能会贷款给客户,而客户可能会支持庇护人的政治措施。一个人的客户可能是另一个人的庇护人。这个系统是非正式的,但每个人都知道谁是谁的庇护人。克拉苏非常富有,被认为是罗马共和国时期最富有的人。他通过在苏拉独裁统治时期进行房地产投机积累了财富。据说他创建了罗马第一个消防队,雇佣了500多人,他们会冲到着火的建筑物,但什么也不做,克拉苏会以极低的价钱买下着火的建筑物。如果业主同意出售,克拉苏的消防队员就会灭火;如果不愿出售,他们就让它烧毁。克拉苏虽然富有,但军事成就有限。斯巴达克斯起义爆发时,他确保自己被任命为指挥官来镇压起义。这虽然提升了他的声望,但也两难:镇压奴隶起义不会令人印象深刻,而失败则意味着输给了奴隶军队。公元前70年,克拉苏当选执政官,他的同事是他的主要竞争对手庞培。庞培的崛起与克拉苏不同,克拉苏有钱,而庞培靠军事胜利获得地位。他很年轻时就被任命为将军,在内战期间为苏拉效力。他前往西西里和北非,镇压了对苏拉的抵抗,并在战斗中轻松击败了努米底亚国王。苏拉对他印象深刻,给了他“马格努斯”(伟大)的称号。在斯巴达克斯起义期间,元老院派庞培去帮助克拉苏,这激怒了克拉苏,因为他不想分享功劳。庞培被派去镇压地中海的海盗,他以残酷的效率完成了任务。当罗马与本都国王米特里达特发生冲突时,他们派庞培去解决问题,庞培也完成了任务,扩张了帝国,并将亚美尼亚变成了罗马的附庸国。尽管庞培取得了军事上的成功,但他仍然被元老院的元老们视为局外人。元老们是来自古老家族的资深元老。当他于公元前61年凯旋回罗马并试图通过立法向他的退伍军人分配土地时,这个问题就出现了。民众对庞培非常狂热,但元老院否决了他的提案,而反对派的首领是克拉苏。三巨头中的最后一位是凯撒。然而,当时的凯撒还不是我们熟知的凯撒。当时的凯撒是克拉苏的客户。与克拉苏和庞培不同,凯撒的家族属于马略派。事实上,他是马略的侄子,不得不逃离罗马以避免被处决。凯撒年轻时就获得了罗马最高的军事荣誉——草环,相当于国会荣誉勋章。公元前63年,他决定竞选最高祭司,这是一个终身职位,凯撒为此负债累累,但他轻松获胜。作为最高祭司,他可以解释预兆,决定元老院何时开会以及何时采取特定行动。克拉苏同意偿还凯撒的大部分债务,以换取凯撒在政治上支持他反对庞培的议程。凯撒作为马略派,深受平民欢迎,支持土地和社会改革立法。他当选为保民官,并被任命为西班牙行省的总督,拥有行省总督的权力,这使他免于起诉,考虑到他的债务,这是一个大问题。公元前60年,凯撒在任期结束前从西班牙返回罗马,以便竞选公元前59年的执政官。问题是他有权因在西班牙的成功而举行凯旋式,但他不能在凯旋式之前进入罗马。但如果他想竞选执政官,就必须在罗马亲自参加。每个人都认为这会阻止他竞选执政官,因为没有人会放弃凯旋式。然而,凯撒正是这么做的。作为竞选执政官的一部分,他获得了克拉苏和庞培的支持。他们三人都与元老院的元老派有矛盾。凯撒成功地说服两人放下分歧,共同努力。每个人都会从这项安排中获益。凯撒将成为执政官。作为执政官,凯撒将安排通过庞培为他的退伍军人提供的土地拨款。克拉苏将通过他的法案,并有机会获得他一直想要的军事荣誉。他们三人可以控制参议院的大多数选票,并确保他们至少有一名候选人每年当选执政官。协议的一部分包括庞培与凯撒的女儿尤利娅结婚。这在两人之间建立了家庭纽带,以确保双方都不会背叛对方。庞培和尤利娅的婚姻奇怪之处在于,据所有描述,他们似乎真的相爱了,这在罗马婚姻中非常罕见。他们甚至在公共场合表达爱意,大多数罗马人认为这非常粗俗。三巨头联盟并非基于对罗马未来共同的政治观点,而是为了实现个人野心。我应该提到,据说他们试图让西塞罗加入,但他太尊重法律而拒绝了。因此,凯撒最终赢得了执政官的职位,而他当年的同事是马库斯·卡尔普尔尼乌斯·比布利乌斯,他得到了元老派的支持。比布利乌斯试图阻止凯撒和庞培的立法,但他被愤怒的民众赶回了家,并在余下的时间里无能为力。这使得三巨头联盟得以通过他们想要通过的大部分立法。凯撒从中得到的一件事是,在他担任执政官之后,他获得了高卢行省五年的任命,后来又延长了五年。凯撒十年没有回到罗马,在这十年里,他成为了我们所熟知的凯撒。两件事导致了三巨头联盟的瓦解。第一件事发生在公元前54年9月,尤利娅在分娩时去世。她生下了一个女儿,两天后女儿也去世了。随着尤利娅的去世,凯撒和庞培之间的联系消失了,这导致了恶性循环,后来又导致了另一场内战。如果尤利娅和她的女儿还活着,世界历史将会大不相同。另一件导致三巨头联盟瓦解的事情是克拉苏的死亡。克拉苏被任命为叙利亚总督,在那里他将以最大的方式获得他的军事荣誉。他将击败帕提亚帝国,这是罗马从未征服过的敌人。然而,这并没有发生。相反,在公元前53年5月的卡莱战役中,他和他的大部分军队都被杀害了。传说,帕提亚人将熔化的金子倒进他的喉咙,以此嘲笑他的财富。如果你想知道权力的游戏第一季中那个场景的灵感来自哪里,那就是克拉苏。庞培和凯撒的结局也好不到哪里去。凯撒,正如你们大多数人所知,在元老院的议事大厅被刺杀了23次,而庞培在法萨卢斯战役后在埃及被斩首,他在内战中输给了凯撒,最终证明了谁才是更好的将军。罗马历史学家李维指出,三巨头联盟是“其三位主要公民对国家的阴谋”。李维是对的。第一三巨头联盟只是罗马共和国走向终结的又一步。在第一三巨头联盟垮台十年后,另外三个人再次走到一起,组成了另一个三巨头联盟。凯撒的养子屋大维、凯撒的得力助手马克·安东尼和另一个名叫马库斯·莱皮杜斯的人。他们将共和国瓜分,试图控制它。然而,这是另一个故事了。

Deep Dive

Chapters
The unlikely alliance of Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus, known as the First Triumvirate, dominated the Roman Republic. Their collaboration, driven by mutual ambition rather than shared political ideology, allowed them to control the Senate and advance their individual agendas. The alliance ultimately crumbled due to personal ambitions, deaths, and the lack of a unifying political vision.
  • Formation of the First Triumvirate in 60 BC between Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus.
  • Each member's individual motivations and goals within the alliance.
  • The role of political maneuvering and strategic alliances in Roman politics.
  • The impact of Julia's death and Crassus' death on the Triumvirate's stability.
  • The eventual collapse of the Triumvirate and its contribution to the decline of the Roman Republic.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Hey everyone, this is Gary. I'm going to be gone the next few days because I have the privilege of inducting my friend Chris Christensen into the Podcasting Hall of Fame. Chris is the host of the Amateur Traveler podcast on which I've appeared as a guest over 20 times. So until I come back, please enjoy these Encore episodes.

In the year 60 BC, a very unlikely alliance was formed between three of Rome's most powerful men. Gaius Julius Caesar, Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, and Marcus Licinius Crassus agreed to put aside their differences for mutual gain. For many years, their alliance worked, and the three men were able to run the Roman Republic. Until it eventually all fell apart. Learn more about the First Triumvirate on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Intro

This episode is sponsored by Mint Mobile. One of the things I've noticed traveling around the world is how much more expensive American mobile phone plans are. In most countries I've visited, data and phone plans were very affordable. In the U.S., they tend to be really expensive. Mint Mobile has solved that problem by offering some of the most affordable mobile plans that you can find. All Mint Mobile wireless plans are $15 a month when you purchase a three-month plan.

Mint Mobile's secret is that they sell wireless services online. They don't have retail stores or salespeople. Moving to Mint Mobile is super easy. They use the same cell towers and networks as major carriers, and you can use your current phone and phone number.

To get this new customer offer and your new 3-month unlimited wireless plan for just $15 a month, go to mintmobile.com. That's mintmobile.com. Cut your wireless bill to $15 a month at mintmobile.com. $45 upfront payment required, equivalent to $15 a month. New customers on first 3-month plan only. Speed slower above 40 gigabit on unlimited plan. Additional tax fees and restrictions apply. See Mint Mobile for details.

This episode is sponsored by Quince. I speak from first-hand experience when I tell you that dressing properly is the key to surviving winter. For the ultimate cold weather necessities made from premium materials, you've got to check out Quince. I literally write almost every episode of this podcast when I'm sitting on the couch covered in my Quince Fisherman's Blanket. It's incredibly warm, it's heavy, and it looks great. It is the best blanket that I've ever owned and I love it.

By partnering directly with top factories and cutting out the cost of the middleman, Quince passes the savings on to you. Quince only works with factories that use safe, ethical, and responsible manufacturing practices. They use premium fabrics and finishes for that luxury feel in every piece. Luxuriate in coziness without the luxury price tag. Go to quince.com slash daily for 365-day returns plus free shipping on your order.

That's Q-U-I-N-C-E dot com slash daily to get free shipping and 365-day returns. Quince.com slash daily.

In the early 1st century BC, the Roman Republic was a mess. From 83 to 81 BC, the generals Marius and Sulla fought a civil war that devastated the Roman aristocracy. In 71 BC, a slave revolt led by the gladiator Spartacus erupted in Italy until Crassus and Pompey put it down. In 63 BC, Rome survived the Catiline Conspiracy, which threatened to put a small group in control of Rome.

I've touched on or have devoted entire episodes to each of those items which shaped this period of the Roman Republic. And in those episodes, I've mentioned the actors who will be central to this episode. At this point in Roman history, aristocratic Roman men of senatorial rank would constantly vie for power and prestige. There was a set of political offices, known as the cursus honorum, that you could hold, accumulating in the position of consul. These were all elected positions, and to get elected, you needed to do several things.

First, you needed what was called actoritas. Actoritas was a Latin term that encompassed the ideas of clout, influence, and prestige. You could gain actoritas in different ways, including being elected to lower offices and hosting games for the public. However, the best way to gain actoritas was probably to have some sort of military accomplishment that you could point to. Some sort of military glory was important but not absolutely necessary if you wanted to climb the cursus honorum.

Second, you needed money. There were a lot of palms to grease in campaigning cost cash. Especially as you worked your way up the ranks, you needed money to pay for food and games for the plebeians. Finally, you needed a strong network of patrons and clients. The Roman patronage system was an informal system where people with high wealth and status would serve as patrons to those who were lower in status or wealth, or perhaps just starting out.

Each side of the relationship would provide services to the other. A patron might extend a loan to allow a client to run for office. And a client might support the political measures of their patron. One person's client might be someone else's patron. This system was highly informal, but everyone knew who was whose patron. Having said that, let's now look at the three men who made up the triumvirate. The first person, and the oldest of the group, was Marcus Licinius Crassus.

Crassus was rich. He was widely believed to be the richest person during the entire Republican period of Rome.

He amassed his fortune engaging in real estate speculation during the dictatorship of Sulla, under whom he served as an officer. He supposedly created the first fire brigade in Rome. He employed over 500 men who would rush to buildings that were on fire. When they arrived, they would do nothing, and Crassus would offer to buy the burning building for a pittance. If the owner agreed to sell, Crassus' firemen would put out the fire, and if they didn't agree to sell, they would let it burn to the ground.

While Crassus was rich, he didn't have much to show in the way of military accomplishments. When the Spartacus slave revolt erupted, Crassus made sure that he was appointed as the commander to crush the revolt. While it did probably boost his auctoritas, it was sort of a no-win situation. If you put down a slave revolt, no one would be really impressed beating a bunch of slaves. If he lost, he would be the guy who lost to an army of slaves.

In the year 70 BC, Crassus won election as consul, and his co-consul for the year was his main rival, Pompeius Magnus. Nias Pompeius Magnus came to govern with Crassus via a very different path. Whereas Crassus had money, Pompey had earned his position via military victories. He was appointed general at a very young age, serving under Sulla during the Civil War. He went to Sicily and North Africa, where he put down resistance to Sulla, and also easily defeated the King of Numidia in battle.

Sulla was so impressed that he gave him the cognomen Magnus, which means the great in Latin. During the Spartacus revolt, the Senate sent Pompey to help Crassus, which angered Crassus to no end because he didn't want to share the glory. It was Pompey who was sent to crush piracy in the Mediterranean, which he did with ruthless efficiency. When Rome was having issues with King Mithridates of Pontus, they sent Pompey to fix the problem, which he did, growing the empire and also establishing Armenia as a client kingdom of Rome.

Despite all his military success, Pompey was still considered an outsider by the optimates in the Senate. The optimates were the established senators from ancient families. This became an issue when he came back to Rome in 61 BC to a triumph, and then tried to get legislation passed to distribute farmland to his veterans. The people went nuts for Pompey, but the Senate killed his proposal, and the head of the opposition was Crassus. The final member of this group was Julius Caesar. However, at this time, he still wasn't the Julius Caesar that everybody knows.

Caesar at this time was a client of Crassus. Unlike Crassus and Pompey, Caesar's family was on the Marian side of the civil war. In fact, he was the nephew of Marius and had to flee Rome so he wouldn't get executed.

Caesar also had won the Grass Crown, the highest military award in Rome at a very young age. It was basically the equivalent of the Congressional Medal of Honor, and I've covered this in a previous episode. In 63 BC, he decided to run for Pontifus Maximus, which was the head priest in Rome. It was an elected position, and outside of the normal cursus honorum. But it was a lifetime position, so Caesar put himself heavily into debt to win the election, which he did easily.

In his role as Pontifus Maximus, he could interpret auspices that could determine when the Senate could sit and when specific actions could be taken. Crassus agreed to pay for much of Caesar's debts in exchange for political support to oppose Pompey's agenda. Caesar, being a Marian, was popular with the populares, the common people, and supported land and social reform legislation.

He won election as praetor and was appointed the governor of Hispania Ulterior with pro-consular powers, which made him immune to prosecution, which was a big deal considering his debts. In 60 BC, Caesar came back to Rome from Hispania before his term of office was done so he could run for consul in 59 BC.

The problem was that he was entitled to a military triumph for his success in Hispania. However, he couldn't enter Rome before the triumph. But if he wanted to run for consul, he had to do so in person inside of Rome. Everybody thought this would prevent him from running for consul because nobody in their right mind would pass up a triumph. However, that is exactly what Caesar did.

As part of his campaign for consul, he managed to get the support of both Crassus and Pompey. All three of them had problems with the Optimates faction in the Senate. Caesar managed to convince both men to put aside their differences to work together. Everyone would get something out of this arrangement. Caesar would become consul. As consul, Caesar would then arrange to get Pompey's land grant for his veterans passed. Crassus would get his pet legislation passed and an opportunity to finally get the military glory that he always wanted.

Between the three of them, they could pretty much control the majority of the votes in the Senate and get at least one of their choices for consul elected every year going forward. Part of the deal included Pompey marrying Julia, the daughter of Caesar. This established a family bond between the two men to ensure that neither would turn on the other. The odd thing about the marriage of Pompey and Julia is that the two of them, by all accounts, actually seemed to love each other, which was very rare in a Roman marriage.

They actually showed affection in public, which most Romans considered to be very tacky. The triumvirate was not a union of three men with common political views for the future of Rome. This was a coming together so each man could achieve their personal ambitions. I should note that supposedly they tried to get Cicero on board, but he had too much respect for the law and declined. So Caesar ends up winning the consulship, and his co-consul for the year is a guy by the name of Marcus Calpurnius Biblius, who was supported by the optimates.

Biblius tried to block Caesar and Pompey's legislation, but he was pretty much forced to retreat to his house by an angry mob, and he was ineffectual for the rest of the year. This allowed the triumvirate to push through much of the legislation that they wanted to pass. One of the things that Caesar got out of this was that after his tenure as consul, he received a five-year appointment as the governor of Cis and Transalpine Gaul, which was then later extended by another five years.

Caesar didn't return to Rome for a decade and spent those 10 years becoming the Julius Caesar that everyone is familiar with. Two things caused the downfall of the triumvirate. The first occurred in September of 54 BC when Julia died in childbirth. She gave birth to a daughter who died two days later. With the death of Julia, the ties between Caesar and Pompey were gone, and it resulted in a downward spiral which later resulted in another civil war.

World history would have been profoundly different if Julia and her daughter had lived. The other thing which killed the triumvirate was the death of Crassus. Crassus was appointed as the governor of Syria, and it was there that he would finally get his military glory in the biggest way possible. He was going to defeat the Parthian Empire, the one enemy that Rome was never able to conquer.

However, that didn't happen. Instead, at the Battle of Carrae in May of 53 BC, he and most of his troops were killed. According to legend, he was killed when the Parthians poured molten gold down his throat to mock his wealth. If you ever wondered where the inspiration for that scene in Season 1 of Game of Thrones came from, it was Crassus.

The endings for Pompey and Caesar weren't much better. Caesar, as most of you know, was assassinated on the floor of the Senate, stabbed 23 times, and Pompey was beheaded in Egypt after the Battle of Pharsalus when he lost to Caesar in the Civil War, proving once and for all who the better general really was. The Roman historian Livy noted that the Triumvirate was, quote, a conspiracy against the state by its three leading citizens. Livy was right. The first Triumvirate was just one more step along the path towards the end of the Roman Republic.

And it would only be 10 years after the fall of the first triumvirate that three more men would once again come together to form another triumvirate. Caesar's adopted son Octavian, Caesar's right-hand man Mark Anthony, and some other guy by the name of Marcus Lepidus. They would divide up the Republic in an attempt to control it. However, that is a story for another episode. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.

I want to give a big shout out to everyone who supports the show over on Patreon, including the show's producers. Your support helps me put out a show every single day. And also, Patreon is currently the only place where Everything Everywhere Daily merchandise is available to the top tier of supporters. If you'd like to talk to other listeners of the show and members of the Completionist Club, you can join the Everything Everywhere Daily Facebook group or Discord server. Links to everything are in the show notes.