Marcus Plautius Silvanus (consul 2 BC) explained

Marcus Plautius Silvanus was a Roman politician and general active during the Principate. He was consul in 2 BC as the colleague of the emperor Augustus.[1]

Biography

Marcus Plautius Silvanus the son of another Marcus Plautius Silvanus and Urgulania,[2] a close friend of the empress Livia who was of Etruscan descent. It is suggested by Ronald Syme,[3] extrapolating from Tacitus,[4] that it was Urgulania's influence over Livia that allowed Silvanus to climb the cursus honorum, enabling him to reach the consulate in 2 BC alongside Augustus. Silvanus was then made proconsul of Asia in 4-5 AD,[5] followed by appointment as legatus pro praetore of the imperial province of Galatia in 6 AD, where he was involved in suppressing the Isaurians[6] as mentioned in Cassius Dio.[7] He was also a septemvir of the Epulones.[8]

Although Silvanus served under Tiberius for the duration of the Great Illyrian Revolt or Bellum Batonianum, Syme suggests that the future emperor had doubts about him, due to his close connection, via his mother, with Livia.[9] [10] Certainly Silvanus does not appear in the histories after the events in Illyricum during AD 6–9.

Suppression of the Isaurians

In the year AD 6, Silvanus was assigned as Proconsul to the province of Galatia, which by that date included the coastal region of Pamphylia. Cassius Dio writes that the Isaurians began a series of 'marauding expeditions', and did not desist until they were faced with 'grim war.'[7] The modern historian, Noel Lenski, following Syme and Mitchell, writes that the client king, Archelaus I, was unable to handle the uprising himself, 'and thereby forced the Romans to commit at least two legions under Marcus Plautius Silvanus to regain control.'[11] [12] Mitchell also suggests that one of these legions was Legio VII Macedonica which was stationed at Antioch during the period.[13]

Participation in the Great Illyrian Revolt, or Bellum Batonianum

Late in AD 6, the Great Illyrian Revolt or Bellum Batonianum began in Illyricum.[14] In AD 7, probably late in autumn of early in winter, Silvanus was summoned by Tiberius, who had been assigned to the command of the military situation in Illyricum, to bring more forces to help suppress the revolt.[15] The ancient writers do not state where these legions came from; however modern historians have deduced that he brought two (or possibly three) legions, possibly Legio IV Scythica and Legio V Macedonica, perhaps drawn from Syria.[16] [17] [18]

Regarding the year in which Silvanus arrived in Illyricum, the ancient writers all give the year AD 7,[14] [15] which was followed by the twentieth century historian Syme who stated the 7 AD date was 'indisputable.'[19] [20] However, some modern historians have suggested a contradictory, and probably erroneous, 'amphibious landing' during AD 6.[21]

Velleius Paterculus seems to suggest that Silvanus joined Caecina Severus, the imperial legate of Moesia, in his province before they marched together towards Illyricum. During the march, they were joined by a cavalry force of Thracians, led by King Rhoemetalces. This force was unexpectedly attacked en route by the enemy near the Volcaean marshes, in northern Pannonia near Siscia (modern Sisak), but successfully defeated them.[22] Dio, however, does not mention Silvanus' involvement in this incident,[23] while modern historians explicitly state that this event only involved Caecina and his Moesian forces.[24] [25]

Once the two generals, Silvanus and Caecina Severus, and their legions had joined forces and successfully reached Illyricum, they fought a major battle against the rebels near Sirmium. The Roman forces were victorious, but suffered heavy losses. Velleius Paterculus mentions the deaths of military tribunes, a number of prefects, a camp prefect and some centurions, including some of the front rank. No number is given of total deaths.[26] Paterculus called this battle 'an almost deadly defeat' and states that the victory 'won more glory [for the soldiers] than was left over for their officers,' due to their failure to follow Tiberius' example and send out scouts to ascertain the location of the enemy.[26]

Following this unpromising beginning, Silvanus with his two 'eastern legions', accompanied by Caecina's legion, marched to Siscia (modern Sisak) to join Tiberius and the two legions already assembled there.[27] Once the men had had time to recover, Tiberius immediately split the forces into four, sending Caecina back to Moesia, and marching with Silvanus and the 'eastern legions' back to Sirmium where they wintered, and where Silvanus continued to operate from for the remainder of the conflict.[27] Paterculus states that Tiberius took them on a 'long and extremely arduous march, the difficulties of which are hardly describable,'[28] though he does not mention Silvanus' role specifically.

During AD 8, Dio relates that Silvanus personally led a successful campaign to defeat the Breucians, and won the allegiance of some other Illyrian tribes without a fight.[29]

In the final year of the revolt, AD 9, Silvanus remained in Illyricum, acting out of Sirmium. Dio states that his forces were ravaging Pannonia, which caused the remaining tribes to make terms.[29] For his actions, he was granted triumphal honours along with the other commanders,[30] attested by the inscription which appears on Silvanus' tomb in Tivoli, Italy.

Family

Marcus Plautius Silvanus was the son of another Marcus Plautius Silvanus (unattested) and Urgulania, a close friend of Livia.[2] It is possible that the family is descended from Marcus Plautius Hypsaeus, consul in 125 BC, however this is doubted by Syme.[31]

Silvanus married Lartia. Their known children include:

He is also the first cousin of Aulus Plautius, who was the father of Aulus Plautius, leader of the Invasion of Britannia in 43 AD.[2]

Mausoleum of the Plautii

The mausoleum in which Marcus Plautius Silvanus was interred still stands in modern Tivoli, Italy. A large inscription outlining Silvanus' achievements is still in place, and includes his wife, Lartia and one of his sons, Aulus Plautius Urgulanius, alongside the separate, very detailed stone of his adopted grandson Tiberius Plautius Silvanus Aelianus.

The Latin inscription reads: "M Plautius M F A N/ Silvanus/ Cos VIIvir Epulon/ huic senatus triumphalia/ ornamenta decrevit/ ob res in Ilyrico/ bene gestas/ Lartia CN F Uxor/ A Plautius M F/ Urgulanius/ vixit ann IX."

The mausoleum was famously painted as 'The Lucano Bridge and Mausoleum Plauti', and engraved from two different places by Giovanni Battista Piranesi,[34] and amongst others, by Franz Knebel and Onorato Carlandi. It also featured on Spode ceramics, the design called 'Bridge of Lucano' during the early 19th century.[35]

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. [Attilio Degrassi]
  2. [Lily Ross Taylor]
  3. Syme, The Augustan Aristocracy (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986), p. 88; The Roman Revolution (Oxford: University Press, 1939), pp. 385, 399
  4. Tacitus, The Annals of Imperial Rome, Penguin, 1956, p. 93
  5. Syme, Roman Revolution, p. 435; Augustan Aristocracy, p. 340
  6. Syme, Augustan Aristocracy, p. 333; also "Galatia and Pamphylia under Augustus: The Governorship of Piso, Quirinus and Silvanus", Klio, 27 (1934), pp. 122-148.
  7. Cassius Dio, The Roman History, LV, 28
  8. Attested in the inscription on his Mausoleum in Tivoli (ILS 986), and
  9. Syme, Augustan Aristocracy, 1986, p. 88
  10. Tacitus, Annales, II, 34.
  11. Lenski, N. (1999) "From Assimilation and Revolt in the Territory of Isauria, from the Sixth Century BC to the Sixth Century AD"
  12. Syme, "Galatia and Pamphylia under Augustus: The Governorship of Piso, Quirinus and Silvanus", Klio 27 (1934), pp. 122-148.
  13. S. Mitchell, "Legio VII and the Garrison of Augustan Galatia", Classical Quarterly, 26 (1976), pp. 298-308.
  14. Cassius Dio, Roman History, Bk 55, ch 29
  15. Velleius Paterculus, The Roman History, II, 111.2
  16. Syme, "Some Notes on the Legions Under Augustus", Journal of Roman Studies (1933), p. 29.
  17. Daniel Dzino, The Failure of Greater Illyricum (2010), pp. 152-3
  18. J.J. Wilkes, Dalmatia (1969), pp. 92-93
  19. Syme, "Some Notes on the Legions Under Augustus", p. 28.
  20. Syme, Augustan Aristocracy, p. 289
  21. For example, Jason R. Abdale, The Great Illyrian Revolt (2019), p. 144
  22. Velleius Paterculus, The Roman History, II, 112.4
  23. Cassius Dio, Roman History, LV, 31
  24. Daniel Dzino, The Failure of Greater Illyricum, p. 151
  25. Syme, "Some Notes on the Legions Under Augustus"
  26. Velleius Paterculus, The Roman History, Bk 2, ch 112.5
  27. Dzino, Failure of Greater Illyricum, p. 153
  28. Velleius Paterculus, The Roman History II, 113.3
  29. Cassius Dio, Roman History LV, 34
  30. Cassius Dio, Roman History, LVI, 17
  31. Syme, Augustan Aristocracy, p. 87
  32. Tacitus, Annales IV.22.3
  33. Syme, Augustan Aristocracy, p. 418
  34. Web site: The Ponte Lucano with the Tomb of the Plautii.
  35. See for example https://www.blueandwhite.com/products.asp?p=19CN34962