Perseus, at the beginning of winter not daring to go out from the borders of Macedonia, lest the Romans burst into his kingdom while it lay empty, near the time of the solstice—when the depth of the snow makes the mountains impassable from Thessaly—reckoning that here was an opportunity to break the hopes and spirits of his neighbors, lest there be any danger from them while he was turned away to the Roman war (since from
Thrace Cotys, and from
Epirus Cephalus by a sudden defection from the Romans, secured him peace, and a recent war had subdued the
Dardani, and he saw that the only hostile side of Macedonia was the one that lay open from Illyricum, the Illyrians themselves being far from quiet and affording an approach to the Romans, and that, if he should subdue the nearest of the Illyrians, Gentius too, the king who had long been wavering, could be enticed into alliance), set out with ten thousand foot, part of whom were phalangites, and two thousand light-armed and five hundred horse, and came to
Stuberra. From there, grain for several days being taken and the apparatus for the assaulting of cities ordered to follow, on the third day he pitched camp at Uscana—the largest city of the Penestian land—yet before he brought force to bear, sending men to sound now the feelings of the prefects of the garrison, now of the townsmen. There was there a Roman garrison with the young men of the Illyrians. After they brought back nothing of peace, he set about assaulting it and tried to take it by encirclement. When, without intermission, by day and by night, some succeeding others, part brought ladders to the walls, part fire to the gates, the defenders of the city nonetheless withstood that storm, because there was hope that the Macedonians could not long endure the violence of winter in the open, and that there would not be so much respite from the Roman war for the king that he could tarry. But after they saw mantlets being moved up and towers raised, their stubbornness was overcome. For, besides that they were no match against force, there was not within even a supply of grain or of any other thing, as in an unlooked-for siege. And so, since there was no hope of resisting,
Gaius Carvilius of Spoletium and
Gaius Afranius were sent from the Roman garrison to seek of Perseus, first, that he allow them to depart armed and carrying their own goods with them; then, if they obtained that less, that they receive a guarantee only of life and liberty. This was promised by the king more generously than it was made good; for, having ordered them to go out carrying their goods with them, he first took away their arms. When these had gone out of the city, both the cohort of the Illyrians—they were five hundred—and the Uscanenses surrendered themselves and their city. Perseus, placing a garrison in Uscana, led off to Stuberra the whole multitude of those who had surrendered, almost equal in number to his own army. There, the Romans—they were four thousand men—being distributed, except the leaders, into the custody of the states, he sold the Uscanenses and the Illyrians, and led his army back into
Penestia to reduce into his power the town of
Oaeneum—conveniently situated besides, and the passage that way is into the
Labeates, where Gentius reigned. As he was passing by a populous fort, Draudacum by name, one acquainted with that region said that there was no need of taking Oaeneum unless Draudacum too were in his power; it was even more conveniently placed for everything. When the army was brought up, all surrendered themselves at once. Heartened by this hope at a swifter surrender, after he noticed how great the terror of his column was, he reduced eleven other forts into his power by the same fear. At very few was force needed; the rest surrendered of their own will; and among these fifteen hundred Roman soldiers, stationed throughout the garrisons, were taken in. Carvilius of Spoletium was of great use in the parleys, by saying that no cruelty had been done against the men themselves. They came to Oaeneum, which could not be taken without a regular siege. It was both stronger than the others in its young men and strong in its walls, and on this side a river, Artatus by name, on that a very high mountain, hard of approach, girt it. These things gave the townsmen hope of resisting. Perseus, having walled the town around, set about leading an earthwork from the higher part, by whose height he might overtop the walls. While this work was being completed, in frequent battles meanwhile—by which, through sallies, the townsmen both protected their own walls and hindered the enemy’s works—a great multitude of them was consumed by various mischances, and those who survived were rendered useless by the toil of day and night and by their wounds. As soon as the earthwork was joined to the wall, both the royal cohort—whom they call the Nicators—climbed over, and with many ladders an assault was made on the city at several points at once. All the grown males were killed; their wives and children he gave into custody; the rest of the booty fell to the soldiers. Returning thence victorious to Stuberra, he sent to Gentius as envoys
Pleuratus the Illyrian, an exile with him, and
Adaeus the Macedonian from
Beroea. These he ordered to set forth his deeds of that summer and winter against the Romans and the Dardani, to add the recent works of the winter expedition in Illyricum, and to urge Gentius to join in friendship with him and with the Macedonians. These, having crossed the ridge of Mount Scordus through the wastes of Illyricum—which the Macedonians had deliberately made by ravaging, lest the passages should be easy for the Dardani into Illyricum or Macedonia—reached
Scodra at last with vast toil. At
Lissus was King Gentius. Thither the envoys, summoned, setting forth their commission, were kindly heard; who carried back an answer without effect, that he did not lack the will to make war with the Romans, but that, to attempt what he wished, he lacked above all money. These things they reported to the king at Stuberra, then at the very height of selling his captives from Illyricum. At once the same envoys, with Glaucias added from the number of the bodyguards, were sent back without mention of money—without which, not being given, the needy barbarian could not be driven to war. Having then ravaged Ancyra, Perseus led his army back again into Penestia, and, the garrisons of Uscana and of the forts round about which he had recovered being strengthened in every place, he withdrew into Macedonia.
Perseus principio hiemis egredi Macedoniae finibus non ausus, ne qua in regnum vacuum inrumperent Romani, sub tempus brumae, cum in exsuperabilis ab Thessalia montes nivis altitudo facit, occasionem esse ratus frangendi finitimorum spes animosque, ne quid averso se in Romanum bellum periculi ab iis esset, cum a
Threcia pacem
Cotys, ab
Epiro Cephalus repentina defectione ab Romanis praestarent,
Dardanos recens domuisset bellum, solum infestum esse Macedoniae latus, quod ab Illyrico pateret, cernens, neque ipsis quietis Illyriis et aditum praebentibus Romanis, si domuisset proximos Illyriorum, Gentium quoque regem iam diu dubium in societatem perlici posse, cum decem milibus peditum, quorum pars phalangitae erant, et duobus milibus levium armorum et quingentis equitibus profectus
Stuberram venit. inde frumento conplurium dierum sumpto iussoque apparatu oppugnandarum urbium sequi tertio die ad Uscanam—Pensestianae terrae ea maxima urbs est—posuit castra prius tamen, quam vim admoveret, missis, qui temptarent nunc praefectorum praesidii, nunc oppidanorum animos. erat autem ibi cum iuventute Illyriorum Romanum praesidium. postquam nihil pacati referebant, oppugnare est adortus et corona eam capere conatus est. cum sine intermissione interdiu noctuque alii aliis succedentes pars scalas muris, pars ignem portis inferrent, sustinebant tamen eam tempestatem propugnatores urbis, quia spes erat neque hiemis vim diutius pati Macedonas in aperto posse, nec ab Romano bello tantum regi laxamenti fore, ut posset morari. ceterum postquam vineas agi turresque excitari viderunt, victa pertinacia est. nam praeterquam quod adversus vim pares non erant, ne frumenti quidem aut ullius alterius rei copia intus erat ut in necopinata obsidione. itaque cum spei nihil ad resistendum esset,
C. Carvilius Spoletinus et
C. Afranius a praesidio Romano missi, qui a Perseo peterent primo, ut armatos suaque secum ferentis abire sineret, dein, si id minus impetrarent, vitae tantum libertatisque fidem acciperent. promissum id benignius est ab rege quam praestitum; exire enim sua secum efferentibus iussis primum arma ademit. his urbe egressis et Illyriorum cohors—quingenti erant—et Uscanenses se urbemque dediderunt. Perseus praesidio Uscanae inposito multitudinem omnem deditorum, quae prope numero exercitum aequabat, Stuberram abducit. ibi Romanis—quattuor milia autem hominum erant—praeter principes in custodiam civitatum divisis, Uscanensibus Illyriisque venditis in Penestiam exercitum reducit ad
Oaeneum oppidum in potestatem redigendum et alioqui opportune situm, et transitus ea est in
Labeates, ubi Gentius regnabat. praetereunti frequens castellum, Draudacum nomine, peritorum quidam regionis eius nihil Oaeneo capto opus esse ait, nisi in potestate et Draudacum sit; opportunius etiam ad omnia positum esse. admoto exercitu omnes extemplo dediderunt sese. qua spe celeriore deditione erectus postquam animadvertit, quantus agminis sui terror esset, undecim alia castella eodem metu in potestatem redigit. ad perpauca vi opus fuit, cetera voluntate dedita; et in his recepti mille et quingenti dispositi per praesidia milites Romani. magno usui Carvilius Spoletinus erat in conloquiis dicendo, nihil in ipsos saevitum. ad Oaeneum perventum est, quod sine iusta oppugnatione capi non poterat. et maiore aliquanto, quam cetera, iuventute et validum oppidum moenibus erat, et hinc amnis, Artatus nomine, hinc mons praealtus et aditu difficilis cingebat. haec spem ad resistendum oppidanis dabant. Perseus circumvallato oppido aggerem a parte superiore ducere instituit, cuius altitudine muros superaret. quod opus dum perficitur, crebris interim proeliis, quibus per excursiones et moenia sua oppidani tutabantur et opera hostium inpediebant, magna eorum multitudo variis casibus absumpta est, et qui supererant, labore diurno nocturnoque et volneribus inutiles erant. ubi primum agger iniunctus muro est, et cohors regia, quos nicatoras appellant, transcendit et scalis multis simul partibus impetus in urbem est factus. puberes omnes interfecti sunt; coniuges liberosque eorum in custodiam dedit; praedae alia militum cessere. Stuberram inde victor revertens ad Gentium legatos
Pleuratum Illyricum, exulantem apud se, et
Adaeum Macedonem a
Beroea mittit. iis mandat, ut exponerent aestatis eius hiemisque acta sua adversus Romanos Dardanosque, adicerent recentia in Illyrico hibernae expeditionis opera; hortarentur Gentium in amicitiam secum et cum Macedonibus iungendam. hi transgressi iugum Scordi montis per Illyrici solitudines, quas de industria populando
Macedones fecerant, ne transitus faciles Dardanis in Illyricum aut Macedoniam essent,
Scodram labore ingenti tandem pervenerunt.
Lissi rex Gentius erat. eo acciti legati mandata exponentes benigne auditi sunt; qui responsum sine effectu tulerunt, voluntatem sibi non deesse ad bellandum cum Romanis, ceterum ad conandum id, quod velit, pecuniam maxime deesse. haec Stuberram rettulere regi, tum maxime captivos ex Illyrico vendenti. extemplo iidem legati addito Glaucia ex numero custodum corporis remittuntur sine mentione pecuniae, qua non data barbarus inops inpelli ad bellum non poterat. Ancyram inde populatus Perseus in
Penestas rursum exercitum reducit firmatisque Uscanae et circa eam per omnia castella, quae receperat, praesidiis in Macedoniam sese recipit.