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Aulus Gabinius

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Name
  
Aulus Gabinius

Role
  
Statesman

Died
  
Solin, Croatia


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Aulus gabinius



Aulus Gabinius (?-48 or 47 BCE) was a Roman statesman, general and supporter of Pompey. He was a prominent figure in the later days of the Roman Republic.

Contents

Career

In 67 BC, when tribune of the plebs, he brought forward the law (Lex Gabinia) which gave Pompey the command in the war against the Mediterranean pirates, with extensive powers that gave him absolute control over the sea and the coasts for 50 miles inland. By two other measures of Gabinius, loans of money to foreign ambassadors in Rome were made non-actionable (as a check on the corruption of the Senate) and the Senate was ordered to give audience to foreign envoys on certain fixed days (February 1 - March 1).

In 65 BC, then a legate to Pompey, he marched with two legions into Northern Mesopotamia. This pressured the Parthian king Phraates III into a treaty with Pompey.

In 61 BC, Gabinius, then praetor, tried to win public favour by providing games on a scale of unusual splendour, and in 58 BC managed to secure the consulship, although not without suspicion of bribery. During his term of office he aided Publius Clodius Pulcher in bringing about the exile of Marcus Tullius Cicero. In 57 BC Gabinius went as proconsul to Syria. On his arrival he reinstated Hyrcanus II in the high-priesthood at Jerusalem, suppressed revolts, introduced important changes in the government of Judaea, and rebuilt several towns.

In 55 BC, Gabinius was sent by Pompey to Egypt, without the consent of the Senate, to restore Ptolemy XII Auletes to his kingdom. He succeeded in fulfilling his task after a short successful campaign, in which he was supported by the young Mark Antony. He left a part of his troops, the so-called Gabiniani, in Egypt to protect Ptolemy XII. These Gabiniani fought against rebellious subjects of the king and later, after his death, against Gaius Julius Caesar.

During Gabinius' absence in Egypt, Syria had been devastated by robbers, and Alexander, son of Aristobulus, had again taken up arms with the object of depriving Hyrcanus II of the high-priesthood. With some difficulty Gabinius restored order, and in 54 BC handed over the province to his successor, Marcus Licinius Crassus. The Roman equites (knights), who as tax collectors had suffered heavy losses during the disturbances in Syria, were greatly embittered against Gabinius, and, when he appeared in the Senate to give an account of his governorship, he was brought to trial on three counts, all involving a capital offense.

On the charge of maiestas (high treason) incurred by having left his province for Egypt without the consent of the Senate and in defiance of the Sibylline Books, he was acquitted; it is said that the judges were bribed, and even Cicero, an enemy of Gabinius, was persuaded by Pompey to say as little as he could. On the second charge, that of repetundae (extortion during the administration of his province), with special reference to the 10,000 talents paid by Ptolemy XII for his restoration, he was found guilty, in spite of evidence offered on his behalf by Pompey and witnesses from Alexandria and the eloquence of Cicero, who had been induced to plead his cause. Nothing but Cicero's wish to do a favour to Pompey could have induced him to take on the task; it is hinted that the half-heartedness of the defence contributed to Gabinius's condemnation. The third charge, that of ambitus (illegalities committed during his canvass for the consulship), was consequently dropped; Gabinius went into exile, and his property was confiscated.

After the outbreak of Caesar's Civil War, he was recalled by Gaius Julius Caesar in 49 BC and entered his service, but took no active part against his old patron Pompey. After the Battle of Pharsalus, he was commissioned to transport some recently levied troops to Illyricum. On his way by land, he was attacked by the Dalmatians and with difficulty made his way to Salona (Dalmatia). There he defended himself against the attacks of the Pompeian commander, Marcus Octavius, but a few months later died of illness (48 BC or the beginning of 47 BC).

Tribuno of the town

The resentful senate postponed his appointment as one of the legacies of Pompey, and therefore could not accompany him to Asia. Later Gabinio was made to build a mansion near the one that had Lucullus in Tusculum, that surpassed in a lot the magnificence of the one of the general.

Gabinio also proposed a law regulating the money that the provincials could loan to Rome and declared all contracts of more than twelve percent interest (legislation against usury) invalid. Another law was his that forced in the senate to receive the foreign ambassadors between the 1 of February and the 1 of March, since according to the previous law ( Lex Pupia ) the senate could not gather in days of elections.

Consulate

In the year 61 a. C. Gabinio was appointed Praetor and organized sumptuous games. In the interval between his tribune and his pretura he seems to have been in the East, and to have accompanied Marcus Aemilius Scaurus to Judea, where, in the conflict between Maccabees, received a bribe of 300 talents of Aristobulus II.

In the year 58 a. C. was appointed consul along with Lucius Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus , favoring from this position the action that the tribune of the plebian Publio Clodio Pulcro was undertaking against Cicero, that was sent to the exile for having illegally condemned to death to the citizens who had participated in The second conjuction of Catiline ( 63 BC ).

By an edict the consuls forbade the senate to show any mourning for the exile, and the lands of the villa of Cicero in Tusculum were incorporated into the town of Gabinio. When Clodius became envious of Pompey, Gabinius remained loyal to his patron and was then a victim of Clodius's hostility which broke the fasces (symbol of the power of the consuls) and imposed a law ( lex sacrata ) that dedicated the lands of Cicero of Tusculum To the gods.

Marriage and children

Gabinius married a Roman noblewoman called Lollia from the Lollia (gens), perhaps a daughter of Marcus Lollius Palicanus, tribune of the plebs in 71 BC. Lollia bore him a son called Aulus Gabinius Sisenna.

Aulus Gabinius is referenced several times in John Maddox Roberts' SPQR series, notably in The Tribune's Curse, and appears as a character in The Princess and the Pirates (ISBN 0-312-33723-X), set in Cyprus in 50 BC during Gabinius's exile.

References

Aulus Gabinius Wikipedia