Object Metadata
The army of Sapor II. attacks two Roman fortresses, whose defenders panic and surrender.

Related Conflict :Roman-Persian Wars of Constantius II. and Sapor II.
Perpetrator (Group) :
  • Persian Army of Sapor II. Origin: Mixed, Age: adult, Activity: soldier
  •  
    Victim (Group) :
  • Roman Army of Constantius II. Origin: Mixed, Age: adult, Activity: soldier, Reaction: surrender
  • Origin: Mixed, Age: mixed, Activity: other, Direct Consequence: capture
  •  
    Third Party (Person) :
  • Sapor II. Origin: Sasanian, Age: adult, Activity: monarch/ruler
  •  
    Level :intersocial
    Source :Ammianus Marcellinus, History (Rerum Gestarum) 18.10.2 Paste CTS-Link
    Time Periode :Roman Empire
    Century :A.D. 4
    Year :A.D. 359
     
    Context :war/military campaign
    Motivation :tactical/strategical
    economical
    Long-Term Consequence :conquest
    plunder
     
    Original Text :Aviditate itaque rapiendi aliena festinans, petit impetu fidenti castella, unde subita animi consternatione defensores armorum varietate praestricti, se cunctosque prodidere, qui ad praesidia confugerunt, et digredi iussi confestim claves obtulere portarum, patefactisque aditibus, quicquid ibi congestum erat eruitur, et productae sunt attonitae metu mulieres, et infantes matribus implicati, graves aerumnas inter initia tenerioris aetatis experti.
     
    Translation :Accordingly the king, with a haste due to his greed for seizing others' property, attacked the fortresses with fiery confidence, whereupon the defenders, overcome with sudden panic and dazzled by the variety of arms, surrendered themselves and all those who had taken refuge with the garrison; and when ordered to depart, they at once handed over the keys of the gates. When entrance was given, whatever was stored there was brought out, and the women, paralysed with fear, were dragged forth with the children clinging to their mothers and experiencing grievous woes at the beginning of their tender years.
     
    Edition :Ammianus Marcellinus. With An English Translation. John C. Rolfe, Ph.D., Litt.D. Cambridge. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1935-1940.
     
    Remark :victim: The captured women were treated well, according to Ammianus 18.10.3-4: "And when the king by inquiring whose wife the lady was had found that her husband was Craugasius, he allowed her, fearing as she did that violence would be offered her, to approach nearer without apprehension; and when she had been reassured and covered as far as her very lips with a black veil, he courteously encouraged her with sure hope of regaining her husband and of keeping her honour unsullied. For hearing that her husband ardently loved her, he thought that at this price he might purchase the betrayal of Nisibis. Yet finding that there were others also who were maidens and consecrated to divine service according to the Christian custom, he ordered that they be kept uninjured and allowed to practise their religion in their wonted manner without any opposition; to be sure he made a pretence of mildness for the time, to the end that all whom he had heretofore terrified by his harshness and cruelty might lay aside their fear and come to him of their own volition, when they learned from recent instances that he now tempered the greatness of his fortune with kindliness and gracious deportment."
    long-term consequence: Among the captured women was the wife of the influential Craugasius of Nisibis, who would later join the Persians due to this. (18.10.1-4; 19.9.5-7.)
     
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    Created at :2021-06-28 : 09:40:35
    Last changed :2021-08-02 : 01:05:56
    MyCoRe ID :Antiquity_violence_00009617
    Static URL :https://ml-s-eris.rrz.uni-hamburg.de/receive/Antiquity_violence_00009617