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A13977 Thabridgment of the histories of Trogus Pompeius, collected and wrytten in the Laten tonge, by the famous historiographer Iustine, and translated into English by Arthur Goldyng: a worke conteynyng brieflie great plentie of moste delectable hystories, and notable examples, worthie not onelie to be read but also to be embraced and followed of all menne; Historiae Philippicae. English Justinus, Marcus Junianus.; Trogus, Pompeius. Historiae Philippicae.; Golding, Arthur, 1536-1606. 1564 (1564) STC 24290; ESTC S118539 289,880 382

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punished for the death of Phylomenes Antiochus and all hys host is slayn by the men of the countrie the cyties of Grece make complaynt of Phylyp kyng of Macedone at Rome he is absoyled by the 〈◊〉 of his sonne Demetrius who by the false accusacions of his brother Perfes is brought in displen sure with his father and put to death Phylyp dyeth for sorrowe Perses maketh 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 against the romans thoriginall of the I strians The ignominie of the Daces Prusias vppon trust of Hannybal that fled from Antiochus vnto him breaketh the truce ●…gaynst Eumenes the ●…ollicy of Hanniball conueyng hymself oute of Candie Prusias is 〈◊〉 vpon the land Hannibal throgh ●… suttle inucncion vanquisheth the ●…nemie vppon the sea Ambassa ●…ours are sent from Rome to set the two kynges at one and to desyre to haue 〈◊〉 yelded vnto thē Hannibal poisoneth himself The conteyntes of the. xxxiii Boke PAulus Emilius encoun●…ereth with Perses the valiant demeanor of Cato Per●…es is ouercomme and taken with hys sonnes flying towards Samothrace with whome 〈◊〉 of Mac●…done endeth the noblemen of Etoly with their wyues and children are led prysoners to Rome The conteyntes of the. xxxiiii Boke THe Romaynes subdue the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 doune Antiochus maketh warre agaynst Prolomy kyng of Egyt and 〈◊〉 him out of hys countrie P. Popilius is sent Ambassador to byd hym depart out of Egyyt the seuerity of Popilius in executyng his commission Antiochus dyeth his brother Demetrius 〈◊〉 leth pryuely from Rome and killyng hys yonge nephew vsurpeth the crowne Prusias is deposed and murdered by hys owne sonne The conteyntes of the. xxxv Boke 〈◊〉 maketh warre agaynst 〈◊〉 kyng of Cappadocia supporteth his brother Holofernes aganyst him whō afterward for treason prepensed he k●…peth in pryson one Prō palus is suborned as the sonne of Antiochus by the name of Alex●…der agaynst 〈◊〉 by whome Demetrius is depryued of lyfe and kyngdome Demetrius the ●…on of Demetrius recouereth his fathers kyngdome The conteyntes of the. xxxvi Boke Demetrius maketh warre agaynste the Parthians a●…d is taken prysoner 〈◊〉 vsurpeth the kyngdome of Syria Antiochus the brother of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it out of his handes and subdueth the Iewes Thoriginall of the Iewes the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 the goyng of the 〈◊〉 oute of Egypt vnder Moyses the halowyng of the sabboth day the srute sulnesse of Iurie with a description of the vale of 〈◊〉 and of the dead sea of Attalus kyng of 〈◊〉 ▪ of hys ●…rueltie and his madnesse and howe he made the people of Rome his heyre Aristomicus the b●…stard sonne of 〈◊〉 chalengeth the crown and is ouercome by the Romās The conteyntes of the. xxxvii Boke THe Massyliens entreate the Romaynes to r●…lease theire displeasure agaynst the 〈◊〉 the romains reward the kings that ayded them agaynste 〈◊〉 ▪ and the crueliye of 〈◊〉 toward her owne children the byrthe education and daunger●… of Mythridates he subdueth the Scythians he trauaileth through ●…sia disguysed he putteth his wyfe ●…o death for goyng about to poi son him his warlyke conuersacion he entereth in league with Nico medes kyng of Bythima and they iointlie conquer Paphlagonia he subdueth also Galatia contrary to the prohibitio of the Romans Nicoinedes al●…ereth the name of his sonne an●… proclaymeth hym kyng of Paphlagonta The conteyntes of the. xxxviii Boke MIthridates destroyeth Ariarathes kyng of Cappadocia and Nicomedes inuadeth the kyngdome My●…hridates vnder pre tence of helpyng his systers sonne dryueth Nicomedes out of the realme by a cautele ryddeth his sayd systers sonne of his lyf and and maketh one of his owne sonnes kyng The Cappad●…cians rebeil and set vp Ariarathes the brother of the king slayn before whō Mythridates ouercommeth and dryueth him oute of the realme the sayde Ariarathes dyeth wherevpyon Nicomedes suborneth a beautifull yong man vnder the color of beyng brother to the sayde Ariarath●…s to sue to the Senate of Rome for the kyngdome Mythridates dothe the lyke with an other of his owne sonnes the Cap padocians beyng set at lybertie desyre a kyng Ariobarzanes is appoynted by the Senate Mythridates entereth in leage with Tygranes kyng of Armeny who expulseth Ariobarzanes out of Cappadocia the Romans sent their Lieutenaunte●… to set Ariobarzanes agayn in his kyngdome Mythridates maketh greate preparicions and forniture for the warres he encourageth his souldiers and consulteth of thorderyng of his warres Ptolomy kyng of Cyrene obteynyng the kyngdome of Egypt after the death of his brother wor keth moste extreme crueltie agaynste thauthors of his promocion the Ambassadours of Rome come to Alexandria Ptolomye flyeth out of Egypt maketh warre agaynste the same committeth moste execrable cruelnesse agaynst his owne children the courtesie shewed by the kyng of Parthia to Demetrius beyng th●…yr prisoner Demetrius stealeth away twyse and is set backe agayne Antiochus the brother of Demetrius maketh warre agaynst the Parthians Demetrius is let go into Syria Antiochus is slayn and all his host murd●…red by a sodayne conspiracie Demetrius escapeth into hys kyngdome The contents of the. xxxix Booke DEmetrius whyle he goeth aboute for to conquere the whole ●…alme of Egypte loseth his owne Realme by sodayn rebelion the kyng of Egypt suborneth one as adopted by Antiochus to chalenge the kynged●… of Syria proclaimyng him by the name of Alexander who ouercōmeth Demetrius and ●…ylieth him Grypho the sonne of Demetrius is crow̄ned kyng by name his mother bearyng all the rule he is supported by the power of the Egyptians agaynst Alexander whome he vanquisheth Alexander is taken by theues brought vnto Grypho and put to death The mother of Grypho offeryng her sone a cup of poyson is comp●…lled to drynke it her sclfe His brother Cyrice●…us maketh insurreccion agaynst him the Kyng of Egypt dyeth Grypho ouercom●…eth Cyri cenus the crueltie of Gryphin towardes her syster Cleopatra the wyfe of Cyricenus Cyricenus vanquisheth Grypho and reuengeth his wyfes dea●…h vppon her sister Cleopatra Quene of Egypt s●…tteth vp and pulleth downe her sonnes at her pleasur and 〈◊〉 length is slayne by Alexander the yonger of them who for his labor is bannished the Realme and his brother P●…olomy made kyng in his stede The kyng of 〈◊〉 b●…queateth his kyngdome to the Ro maynes Hero●…yinus kyng of Araby in●…teth Egypt and Syria The cont●…yntes of the. xl Boke TYgranes king of armeny is creat●…d kyng of Syria by elecciō a great earthquake in Syria A●…granes is vanquished by Luc●…llus by whome the kyngdome of Syria is gyuen to Antiochus the sonne of Cyricenus whome Pompeius afterwarde depose●…h and maketh the Realme a pronynce of the Romaynes The xli Booke THe Originall encrease and habitacion of the Parthiās the order of their common weale their lenguage and apparell the maner of the warres and th●…ducacion of their bondmen theyr trade of lyuyng bur●…all supersti●…ion and naturall inclynacion How they serued vnder diuerse kyngs whose Realmes they afterward brought in subie●…ion Of the kyngdom of Bactria The foundacion of the Parthian Empyre by A●…aces with
were they inflamed with hatred againste the Phocenses that vtterly forgetting their owne slaughters they had rather pearishe them selues then to suffer them vndestroyed and had rather to abide the cruelty of Philip which they knew all redy by experience then by anye meanes to for bear their enemies On the contrary part the 〈◊〉 wyth thambassadours of Lace and Athens besought hym that he would not make warre the whyche they hadde all ready iii. times bought of at his hand with their monye Surely it was a foule and miserable sight to behold Grece which euen yet at that time bothe in strength and dignity was princesse of the whole world alwaies a conqueresse of kinges and countries and as yet the Lady of many cities daunsing attendaunce in a forain land and there entreting for warre or peace to put her hed vnder a nother mannes girdle And that the reuengers of the whole world should be brought to that poynte through their own discorde and ciuil warres that they were glad to fawne and hang vpon their sleues who not longe before were accompted as the vilest part of their retinue and hangers on ▪ and that in espe cially to be don of the Thebanes and Lacedemonians who lately before ruled the whole rost betwixt them and now in the time that Grece bare the souerainty wer enemyes one of anothers estate Philip in the meane season for the aduauncement of his owne glory debated as concerninge the preheminence and estate of so mighty cities deuising of which he were best to make most accompt And therfore when he had seacreatly heard thambassades of both partes seuerally he promised the one to discharge them of the warres taking an othe of them not to bewray his answer to anye man On the contrary part he promised the other to come and helpe them geuing both parties straight charge and commaundemēt not to fear or prepare for any warre Through this variable answer it came to passe that while euerye man kepte him self in quiet he toke the straightes of Thermopile Then first of all the Phocenses perceiuing them selues entrapped by the pollicy of Philip fearfully tooke them to their weapons But they had no leisure either to surnish their owne battels or to send for succor to their neighbors And Philip threatned he would vtterly destroy them onlesse they yelded incontinent Being therfore ouercome with necessity they yelded them selues simply their liues only saued But euen of as muche force was this composition as was hys promise before to discharge them of the warres Therfore they were euery wher slain and spoiled The children wer not left to their parents nor the wiues to their husbands nor the Images of the Goddes in the temples One onlye comfort had this wretched people that wheras Philip defrauded his owne companions of their parte of the praye they saw nothing of theirs in their enemyes hands When he was returned into his kingdome like as Grasiers shift their cattel somtime into one layer sometime into another according as the season of the yere requireth euen so remo ued he at his owne pleasure whole countries and Cityes according as he thought the places mete to be replenished or forsaken It was a miserable sight to behold in al places and in respect euen like to a desolation For this feare was not like as when the ennemy approcheth or when men of warre run vp and downe a Citye or when two hostes encounter vielently in the fielde nor when men are slaine in the stretes their goods taken away perforce but a secret sorow mourning fearing leaste euen their forced teares shuld be taken for contimacy the grief encresed by the cloking therof so much the depelier persing the hart as it had lesse liberty to vtter it selfe Somtime they considered the sepulchres of their ancestors somtime their old housholde gods somtime the houses wher they were begotten had begotten children them selues Bewailing eft their owne case in that they had liued to that day eft the state of their children y ● it had not bene their fortune to be borne after y e time Some people he placed in the vtmost boundes of his kingdom euen in his enemies mouthes other he set in the furthermost borders of all his realme other some that wer mete for the warres he put in garrison in cities as nede required And so of many kindes of people manye nations he made one entire kingdom one people The affaires of Macedonie being set at a stay through fraud pollicy he toke the chief of the Dardamans other borders and subdued their coūtries Nether withheld he his hand frō his own kinred For he determined to put Arymba king of Epyrus his wife Olympias neare kinsman from his royalty And thervpon he sent for Alexander his sonne in law brother of his wife Olympias a boy of excellent beuty in his sisters name to com vnto him into Macedonie And ther by al meanes possible ha uing entised him with hope of the kingdom vnder pretens of counterfet loue abused him in most filthy buggery thin king that either shame and remorse of his own conscience or elsse the making of him king should cause him to be the more at his commaundement Therefore when the chylde was come to xx yeres of age he toke the kingdom from Arymba and gaue it to him being a very boy playinge a wicked part with them bothe For neither delt he like a natural kinsman with him from whome he toke the kingdome and him to whome he gaue it he made a harlot before he made him king The ninthe Booke VUhen Philip was come into Grece allured with the sacking of a few cities the spoil of a few smal townes ther vpō gathering in his minde how great wer the richesse of them all he determined to make warre against all Grece To the furtherance wherof he thought it wold greatlye aduauntage him if he myghte bring in his subiection the noble hauen town of Byzance as a refuge for his hostes both by-sea lād The same because they shut their gates against him he besieged This Citye was builded at the first by Pansanias kinge of the Spartanes by him was possessed by the space of vii yeres ▪ Afterward as victory enclined to either part it belonged eft to the Lacedemonians and eft to the Atheniens The which vncertain possession made it to stand stiflye in the defence of her own liberty forasmuch as neither partye succored or rescued it as their owne Phillip therfore hauing spent his treasure with the long continuaunce of his siege made a shifte to get mony by rouing on the Lea. And hauing taken lxr shippes laden with marchaundise he refreshed his gready necessity for a while Furthermore because so great an army shoulde not be deteined aboute the siege of one city he went with a nomber of the stoutest of his souldioures and wan manye cities of Chersonesus Moreouer he sente for hys
the coun trye not deliuered For Satir the brother of Clearche after the same sort toke vpon him the tiranny aud the Heracleans many yeres after by degre of descent were vnder subiection of Tirannes ¶ The. xvii Booke ABout the same time well nie ther hapned a maruelous great earthquake in the countries of H●…llespont and Chemesosus and the Citye Lylimachia being builded by Ly●…imachus not past a two and twenty yeres before was ouerthrowne the which wonder betookened horrible misfortune to Lysimachus and his ofspring with the decaye of his kingdome and the destruction of those countries that were vered therwyth And loke as was betokened therby so cam it to pas For within a short time after Lysimachus conceiuing a deadly hatred not only beyōd the course of a naturall father but also beyond all manhode and humanity against his sonne Agathocles whom he had proclaimed heir apparent of his kingdom by whom he had atcheued many battels prosperously by the mean and working of his stepmother A●…syrice he poysoned This was the first sore of the mischief that was towards him this was the beginning of y ● ruin that hung ●…uer his head For after the murthering of his own sonne he fel to killinge of his noble men whome he executed for none other o●…fence then because they bewa●… led the death of his son By meanes wherof such as were chief officers in his campe reuolted by plumpes vnto S●…leucus whom being of himself prone thervnto vpōdisda●… enuy at thother mannes glory they compelled to make war against Lysimacbus This was the last contention betwene them that had serued Alexander in the warres as it were a match reserued by fortune for exāples sake Lysimachus was lxxiiii yeares olde and Seleueus ▪ lxxvii but in this age there was none of them both but he hadde a yong mannes ●…art and an i●…satiable desyre of dominion For when as they two alone held the whole worlde betwene them yet they thoughte them selues enclosed in a straight measuring the terme of their life not by the length of their yeres but by the boundes of their Empyre In that battell Lysimachus hauing loste before by dyuers chaunces xv children now dying manfully lastlye made himself the full and finall decaye of his owne house Seleucus reioys●…ng in so great a victory and that which he thought to be a greater matter then the victory that he onlye of Alexanders retinew remained and became conqueror of the conquerors bosted that it was not the work of mā but the very gift of God being v●…terly ignoraunte that it should not be long after ere he himself should become an example of the frailty of man For about vii moneths after by the pollicye of Ptolomy who had taken the syster of Ly●…machus in mariage he was surprised and sla●…ne and so with his life lost the kingdome of Macedone that he had taken from Lysimachus Ptolomy therfore being very diligent to curry fauour with the comminalty in remembraunce of his father Ptolomy the Great and for reueng●…g y ● death of Lysimachus fyrst of all determined to win the sonnes of Lysimachus vnto him and thervpō made sute to their mother Arsinoe his sister to haue her to his wife promisinge to adopt the 〈◊〉 to th entent that when he had succeded in their roume what for reuerence to their mother or for the name of father they should not be so bolde as to attempt any thing agaynst him Moreouer he earnestlye sued by his letters to haue the fauor of his brother y e king of Egipt protestinge that he bare him no displeasure for takyng his fathers kingdome from him and y ● he woulde not any more s●…ke the thing at his brothers hand whiche he had with more honor gotten at the hand of his fathers enemy Furthermore he sought all the meanes he coulde deuise to winde him selfe into fauor with Emn●…nes and Antigonus the sonnes of Demetrius and with antiochus the sōne of Seleucus with the which he was like to ●…aue warre to ●…ntent he would not haue to do with iii. enemies at ones Nether omitted he P●…rrhus king of Epyre as one that was like to be no small furtheraunce to what parte so euer he enclined himself who also coueting to set them all beside the sadle made fair countenaunce and set himselfe as it were to sale to them al. Therfore when as he was about to aid the Tarentines againste the Romaines he desyred of antigonus to lend him shippes to conuey ouer his armye of antiochus who was better furnished with rychesse then with men of warre he requested to borow a pece of mony of Ptolomy he demaunded to send to his ayd a crewe of the souldioures of Macedone But Ptolomy who by reason of his owne weaknesse was not able to bear with him long lent him fiue thousand footemen foure thousande horsemen and fifty Elephantes for no lenger time then ii yeres In consideration wherof taking the daughter of Ptolomy in mariage ▪ Pyrrhus left him for protectoure of hys kingdome But forasmuch as we fall in remembrance of Epyre I thinke good to entreat a little of the originall of the same First of all the Molosses raigned in that region Afterward Pyrrhus the sonne of achilles hauynge loste hys fathers kingdome by being absent at the battell of Troy reasted in the same countrye which after his name were first called Pyrrhides and after Epyrotes But Pyrrhus when he came into the Temple of Iupiter of Dodone to aske counsell rauished there anasa the nece of Hercules by whom afterward takinge her to wife he begate viii children Of the whiche some of theym beynge verye gentle and beutifull younge Ladies he marryed to the kynges that were his neighboures by meanes of whiche aliaunces he purchased great power and richesse And so leauyng the kingdome of the Chaonians with andromache the wife of Hector which in the diuision of the boty at the winnynge of Troye fel to his lot to be his wife vnto Helenus the sonne of king Pri●…mus for his singuler knowledge in Prophecy within a while after by the treason of Orestes the sonne of Agamemnon he was slayne at Delphos euen before the aultare of the God After him succeded his sonne Pylates At lengthe by order of successyon the kingdom descended to Arymba Ouer whome because he was fatherlesse and that there were no moo alyue of that noble race but he of verye earnest desyre that the whole realme had to preserue him and bring him vp there wer certain protectoures appoynted by the common consent of the realm to haue the ouer syght and gouernance of hym Furthermore he was sente to Athens to schoole and looke howe muche he was better learned then hi●… predecessoures so much also was he better beloued amonge his subiectes For he was the fyrste that made lawes ordained a counsell appoynted yearely officers and established the estate of the common
put in greate feare at the contemplation of his excessiue cruelty and to reuenge the deathe of her whome they purposed to haue defended they yelded them selues to Ptolo●…y Who doutlesse subdued all the kingdome of 〈◊〉 if he had not ben driuen to retire home to suppresse an insurrection in Egypt So great hatred did that wicked and abhominable murdering of his owne brother purchase the one party the vnworthy death of his s●…ster so cruelly killed purchase fauor to thother party After the departure of Ptolomy Seleucus hauing gathered together a great flete against the cities that had reuolted so●…enly as it were by the vengeans of the Gods for his horrible murder by meanes of a gr●…at tempest loste all his flete by 〈◊〉 And of all that great furniture for the warres fortune lefte him not any thing at all more then his naked bodye and his life and a few companions eskapinge with him from shippewracke It was surelye a miserable case but yet suche a one as Seleucus coulde not haue wished the lyke for hys owne behofe For the cities which for hatred y ● they bare towards him had reuolted vnto Ptolomy as though they had bene satisfied with the punishmente that the Goddes as indifferent iudges had laid vppon him throughe a sodain mutation of ▪ theyr mindes being moued to pity him by reason of his shipwracke submitted them selues vnder his dominion again Where vpon ●… eioysinge in his happy aduersity and beinge made richer by his losses as one now able to match him in power and strengthe he made warre against Ptolomy But as if he had beene borne for none other purpose but for fortune to make her laughing stocke of him or as if he had recouered so great welth and power of the kingdome for none other entent then to lose them again he was vanquished in battel and eskapynge from the fielde not muche better accompanied then after his shipwrack fearfully conueyed himself into antioche From thēce he directed letters to his brother Antiochus wherin he besought him of his help offeringe him in reeompence of his pains all Asia that 〈◊〉 wythin the precinct of the mountaine Taurus Antiochus beinge of the age of xiiii yeres but yet couetous of d●…minion aboue his yeres toke thoccasion ere it came to the ground not with so frendly hart as it was offered For the boye couetynge like a theefe to berene his brother of all his whole kyngedome was as bolde and hardy in executinge his w●…ckednesse as if he h●…d bene a man Wh●…vpon he was 〈◊〉 named 〈◊〉 because he spente his life in takinge oth●…r mennes goodes away wrongfully not after the manner of a man but after the manner of a Gosse ●…auke In the meane time Ptolomye hearinge that Antiochus came to reskew Seleucus to 〈◊〉 he 〈◊〉 not h●…ue warre with two at once toke a truce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. yeres But the peace that was geuen by his enemy was brokē by his brother ●…ho hiring an hoste of the french souldioures in stead of helpe vrought warre and in steade of a brother shewed himself an ennemy ●…n th●…t battel throughe the puissaunce of the french men ▪ Antiochus gate the vpper hand But the frenchmen supposing tha●… Seleucus ha●… beene slaine in the bat●…ell tourned theyr weapons againste 〈◊〉 himselfe thincking to waste the country of Asia the more frely wythout feare or checke if they mighte vtterlye destroye the bloude royall whiche thinge when Antiochus ones perceiued hee was faine to raunsome himselfe for monye as if it had bene from r●…bbers and entered in league of society with his hired souldiers In the meane season Emnenes king of Bythi●…a perceiu●…ng the brothers to be consumed and dispersed throughe intestiue ●…cord among them selu●…s intending to inuade t●…e wanderinge possession ●…f 〈◊〉 assailed the conqueror antiochus and his frenchmen and by reson that they wer yet sore and wearye of theyr late conflicte and his menne stronge and lusty he easely put them to the worse For at that tyme all the warres thatwere made tended euer to the destruction of asia euerye manne that coulde make him self strongest 〈◊〉 vpon asia as his pray The. ii brothers eleurus and antiochus made warre for asia Ptolomye kinge of Egipte vnder pretence of reuengynge his sisters deathe gaped for asia On the one sode Emnenes kynge of Bythinia and on the other syde the french menne the common hire lynges wasted asia but among so many robbers there was none to be found that would once set in his fote to defende Asia After that Antiochus was vanquished and that Emnenes had seysed into his handes the mooste parte of Asia the brothers could not yet agree for all y ● the pray was loste for which they striued so sore but leauynge the forain ennemy they renued the warre one to destroye another In the whyche Antiochus being againe vanquished and wearyed wyth flying many dayes together at length came to his father in lawe Artamenes kinge of Cappadocia Of whome at the fyr●…e he was gently entertained But within a fewe dayes after vnderstanding that he went about to entrap him for the sauegarde of his life he fledde agayne from thence Therfore when he saw he could not rest in safetye in no place he was fayne to resort for succoure to hys ennemy Ptolomy whose faith he thoughte to be more stedfast then his brothers considering eyther what ●…e would ●…aue done to his brother or what he had deserued at hys brothers hand But Ptolomye by this his yealdynge and submission made not so much his frend as his ennemye commaunded him to be kept in straighte prisonne From thence also antiochus eskaped by the healpe of a certayne harlot with whome he had had familiare companye but hauing eskaped from his kepers as he fled theues mette him and killed him Seleucus wel nie about the same instant hauing lost his kingdom fell of his horse and brake hys necke So bothe the brothers as it were by lyke miffortune like outlawes after the losse of their kingdomes suffered due punyshements for theyr vngratious doinges The. xxviii Booke OLympias the daughter of Pyrrhꝰ king of the Epyrotes hauing lost her husband alexāder which was also her owen brother when she had taken vpon her the bringyng vp and keepinge of Pyrrhus and Ptolomy the sonnes whom he had begotten by her and the gouernement of the realme she was compelled by the aetolians whiche went aboute to take perforce from her a part of acaruania whiche she being mother and protector of the children had receiued to helpe to maintaine the warres withall to resorte for succoure to Demetrius kinge of Macedone and vnto him hauynge a wife all readye the sister of antie chus kinge of Syria she gaue her daughter Phithia in mariage to the entent she might get the help at his hand by right of affinity which she could not get for pity and compassion The marryage therfore was
richesse in old tyme the which they should not nede to go to fyght for but to go to take possession of For Asia was so desyrous of their commyng that she called cryed to them a loude to make speade So greate a hatreded toward the Romayns hadde the greadie rauenousnesse of their Proconsultes the pollyng and shauing of their tolle gatherers the wrongfull delyng in sutes and controuer lies of the lawe of their officers rooted in the hartes of them all Wherefore he willed them to doe no more but followe him manfully ponder with themselfes what so great an army might be able to doe hauyng such a Capitayne as he was whome they themselfes had sene without the helpe of any of his souldiers by his own industrie onely slea the kyng of Cappadocia seyze his kyngdome who onely of all the men that euer lyued conquered all the countries borderyng vppo●… the sea of Pontus Scythia also the whiche before his tyme no man could trauel through no nor go vnto in sauftie As for his own Iustice and lyberalitie he woulde not refuse that his souldiers which had had sufficient tryall and experience of them should beare wytnesse to the same as of the whiche these were manifest tokens that he only of all kyngs enioyed not onely the kyngdomes that his father possessed before him but also for his bountie and magnificence was adopted to be heyre of other forreyne Realmes as Colchos Paphlagonia and Bosphorus whiche he nowe peaceablie helde ▪ When he had thus encouraged his souldiers after the. xxiii yere of his reygne he entered into warre agayn●… the Romayns At that tyme in Egypte after the death of P●…olomy kyng of Cyrene both the kyngdome and the Quene Cle●…patra his syster to be his wy●…e ▪ ●…lomy was glad in that he had recoured his brothers king dome without battell the which he knewe his mother Cleopatra and certeyn of the noble men went preuelye about to assure vnto his brothers sonne But assone as b●… came vnto Alexandria to the great displeasure of all the Cytie he caused all such as fauored the chylde to be put to death The chylde himself also he slew in his mothers armes the very same day that he maried her in the myd des of all the feastyng and solemne ceremonies of wed●…cke And so he wēt to bed with his syster all bestayned with the blood of her sonne After the whiche dede he became euen as meke to his other countreymen that had called him to the kyngdome For he gaue his souldiers which were straungers leaue to kill whome they wold so that daylie all places were on a gore blood and he put away his syster and toke to wyfe her daughter a fayre yong mayden hauyng firste rauished her per force with the which thynges the people wer so dysmayed that they shronke away so●…e one whether and some another forsakyng theire natife countrie like banished folk for dread of death Ptolomy beyng left alone with his souldioures in so greate a Cytie when he sawe howe he was a Kynge of emptie houses and not of men made proclamacion that straungers shoulde come and inhabite the Cytie after whose resor thyther he went forth to mete the Romayn Ambassadors Scipio Affricanus Spurius Mumius and Lucius Metellus which came to see howe the Realmes of their confederates wer ordered But loke howe cruell he was to all his owne countriemenne so much was he a laughyng stocke to the Roma●…ns For he was yll visaged a dwarfe of stature he had such a fat paunche that he semed more lyke a beast then a man the whiche fouldnesse and deformitie his smal shyrle voyce and his thinne garmentes dyd more encrease as thogh of set purpose he had set oute the thynges to be sene which he that had any regarde of shame oughte with all care and studie to haue hydden moste secretlie After the departure of Thambadoures of the whiche Affricanus whiles he behelde the Cytie was himselfe a spectacle to the Alexandrians Ptolomy beyng nowe hated euen of his Alientes also fledde preuely oute of the Realme with his sonne whome he had begotten of hys syster and with his wyfe her owne mothers paramour for feare of treason and hauyng gotten an hoste of hyred souldiours he made warre bothe agaynst his syster and agaynst his owne countrie Afterwarde he sent for his eldest sonne from Cyrene for bycause the Alexandrians shoulde not make him kyng agaynste him he putte hym to deathe Then the people in despyght of him brake doune his ymages and tare doune hys pictures The which thyng thynkyng to be doone by the procuremente of hys syster he slew the sonne whome he hadde begotten uppon her and then cuttyng hys bodie in gobbettes closed it vp in a Casket and sent it for a present to the mother as she was makyng feast and great chere vpon the day of her byrth The whiche was a bitter and sorowfull syght not onelie to the Quene herself but also to all the whole Cytie and it cast such a grief vppon that ioyfull feast that sodaynlie in all the Court was nothyng but mournyng and lamentyng The noble men therfore turnyng themselfes from feastyng to funeralles shewed to the people the mangled bodie declaryng what hope they oughte to haue of theyr kyng who hadde so cruelly murdered his owne chylde Cleopatra after that the sorow for losse of her sonne was ceased perceyuyng herselfe to be sore infested by her brothers warre Demaunded help of Demetrius Kyng of Syria by his Ambassadors whose chances were strange and worthie to be spoken of For Demetrius as it is shewed before makyng warre agaynst the Parthians gettyng the victorie in manie encounters was sodaynlie sur prised by pollicie and besydes the losse of his armie was also himself taken prysoner Whome Arsaces kyng of the Parthians sent into Hyrcanie and of his noble and Royall courage not onely gaue him enterteynement lyke a kyng but also gaue him his daughter in mariage promisyng moreouer to restore him the kyngdome of Syria which Tryfo hadde vsurped in his absence After whose death Demetrius beynge past hope of returnyng into his kyngdome and beyng not able to away with captiuitie beyng wearie of his priuate lyfe though he lyued neuer so welthelie assayed a faithfull frende to steale home into his owne kyngdome His counseler and companyon in this enterprise was a frend of his called Callimander who after his Maisters captiuitie hyryng guydes for mo ny himself disguysed in Parthian apparell came oute of Syria through the deserts of Arabie vnto Babylon But Phrahartes which succeded Arsaces sent oute post horses after him who made such spede by gayner ways that they ouertoke him and brought him back agayn When he came before the kyng Callimander was not only par doned but also highlie rewarded for his faithfulnesse towards his Master But Demetrius with a great rebuke was sent agayn to his wyfe into Hyrcanie and ther
but of loue Whervppon callyng to her the souldiers she sent certayn of them herself to thrust her syster through Who enteryng into the temple when they could not pull her oute they cut of her handes as she had clasped them about the Image of the Goddesse Then Cleopatra cursyng those wicked murderers besechyng the Goddes whose sanctuary they had defyled to reuenge her vppon them dyed It was not long after but Cyricenus encountered again with his brother where gettyng ●…hupper hand he tooke Gryphin the wyfe of Grypho prysoner which latelie had put her syster to death with execucion of whome he dyd obsequies to his wyues Ghoste But in Egypt Cleopatra beyng greued that her sonne Ptolomy should be partener with her in the kyngdome incensed the people agaynste him and hauyng taken his wyfe Seleuce awaye from him which was so much to more griefe to him bycause he had begotten two sonnes by her bannished him the Realme sendyng for her yonger sonne Alexander whome she crowned kyng in his brothers stead And yet beyng contented to haue banished her sonne she pursued him with battell where he kept as a bannished man in Cyprus When she had dryuen him from thence also she put the Capitayn of her host to death bycause he had suffered him to escape alyue out of his handes Albeit to say the truthe Ptolomy departed oute of the Ilande rather because he was ashamed to fyghte with his mother then that he was not of power able to encounter her Alexander therefore dreadyng this his mothers crueltie departed his waye and left her alone desyring rather to lyue meanely in quiet saufegarde then to reygne as a kyng alwayes in daunger of his lyfe Cleopatra fearyng least Cyricenus should helpe her elder sonne Ptolomy to recouer the kyngdome of Egypt sent great ayde to Grypho and her daughter Seleuce to be his wyfe to th entent he should persyst enemie to her fyrst husband as he had ben before and also sent Ambassadors to her sonne Alexander to call him to the kyngdome agayne Agaynst whome as she was practisyng of mischief to bryng him to destruccion she was by him preuented and put to death and so she ended her lyfe not by naturall destynie but by deserued murder Surelie she was well worthie of such a slaunderous death which had defyled her owne mothers bed and put her besyde her husband whiche had made two of her daughters so oftentymes wydowes by choppyng and chaungyng of their husbandes which had banished th one of her sonnes pursewyng him with battell when she had done and hauyng wrested the kyngdome from thother had practised also to bryng him to his ende through treason Neuerthelesse Alexander himself escaped not altogyther vnpunished for committyng so abhominable a murder For assone as it was knowen that the mother was slayne by the wickednesse of her sonne the people rose agaynst him and draue him into exyle and callyng home Ptolomy agayne set him in possession of the kyngdome who was of that modestie that he would neyther make warre agaynste his mother nor yet chalenge that of his brother by force which was his before by right of inheritance Whyle these thynges were a doyng a bastard brother of his to whome his father had by his laste will bequeathed the kyngdome of Cyrene deceased and lefte the people of Rome to be his heyre For by this tyme the fortune of Rome was such ▪ that beyng not content with the boundes of Italie it began to stretche itselfe to the kyngdomes of the East By meanes whereof that part of Lybie was at that tyme made a prouynce and shortlie after Candy and Cilicia beyng subdued in the warres agaynst the Pyrates were brought in lykewyse in order of prouynces By the which dede bothe the kyngdomes of Syria and Egypt were streightned by the neyboured of the Romaynes and whereas before tymes they were wonte to encrease their Dominion by warryng vppon their borderers now beyng abridged of their lybertie to roue wh●…r they lyst they turned their power to their own confusion In so much that beyng cōsumed through cōtinuall feightyng they were had in despight of their next neighbours and were as a praye to the Arabians whiche before that tyme were neuer knowen to be menne of warre Whose kyng Herotymus vppon trust that he had in his syx hun dred sonnes whiche he had begotten of his concubynes with sundrie Armies made rodes somtimes into Egypt and sometyme into Syria by meanes whereof within a while through the weaknesse and feblenesse of his neighbours he made the name of the Arabians famous and redoubted The. xl Boke THe kyng kyngdome of Syria being consumed through the natural hatred of the brothers and through the deadlie enmytie of their children succedyng in their fathers steppes one after an other with so mortal warre as neuer could be appeased the people resorted to straungers for refuge and be gan to loke about them for some forreyn kyng Therfore when as some thought it good to sende for Mithridates kyng of Pontus and some for Ptolomy kyng of Egypt and that it came to their remembraunce that Mithridates on th one syde was entangled with the warres of the Romayns and that Ptolomy on thother syde hadde euer ben an enemie to the kyngdome of Syria they consented all vppon Tygranes kyng of Armenia who besydes the power of his owne countrie was also supported by confederacie with the Parthians and by aliance with Mythridates Beyng therfore crowned king of Syria he enioyed the kyngdome excedyng quietlie by the space of eyghtene yeres hauyng no nede at all eyther to assayle others him selfe or to repulse others that assayled him But as Syria was in sauftie from forreyne 〈◊〉 ●…o was it greatlie wasted with an erthquake in the which ther perisshed an hundred threskore ten thousand men besydes the ruine of manie cities The whiche wonder the soothesayers interpreted to betoken a great alteracion of thynges For when Lucullus had ouercome Tygranes he proclaymed Antiochus the sonne of Cyricenus kyng But that which Lucullus had gyuen Pompeius afterward toke awaye who tolde him that he would not haue made him kyng of Syria no though he had sewed for it and muche lesse put it in his mouthe without chalengyng it Consyderyng that duryng the eyghtene yeres that Tygranes held Syria he had lyen lurkyng in a corner of Sylicia but assone as the Romayns had ouercome the sayde Tygranes he put himselfe forthe to sue for the reward of other mennes trauell Therfore lyke as yf he had had the kyngdome before he would not haue taken it from him euen so seyng he coulde fynde in his hart to suffer Tygranes to enioye it peaceablie so long he would not bestowe the thyng vppon him which he knew not howe to defende for doubte lest he might be an occasion that the Jewes and Arabiās should enterprise to robbe and spoyle the countrie of Syria agayn So
neighbors and shortly after other forrain people nations thempire therof was dilated euen to the vttermooste borders of the East In the region of Peonic whiche nowe is a portion of 〈◊〉 raigned by report 〈◊〉 the father of astriopeus whose name we here spoken of in the battel of Troy among the chiefest and moste ●…aliaunt defendours of the Citye And on the one side of Hellespont in Europe raigned a kig called Europe Caran●… also with a great multitude of Grekes being commaunded by thaunswer of the Oracle to seeke an habitation in Macedony when he came into emathia following a heard of Goats that ●…ed out of the shour of rain entred wan the ●…eld of edissa ere the mē of the town perceiued his cōming by reson of the greatnesse of the storm whervpon calling to minde the answer of the Oracle by which he was commaunded to seke a kingdome wher gotes should be his guides he appoynted it to be the seat of his kingdom And euer after he obserued deuoutly●… that whether so euer he led any hoste he woulde haue the same gotes before his standerde to the entent that as they wer thautors of his kingdom so might they be also as leaders in all his enterprises And in remembraunce of thys benefit he chaunged the name of edyssa and called it 〈◊〉 the people therof 〈◊〉 Afterward when he had expulsed Midas for he also held a parte of Macedonie diuers other kings in the stead of thē all he succeded alone ●…irst of al gathering knitting together sōdry sorts of people made as it wer one entire body of Macedonie laid a strong foūdatiō for his kingdom hereafter to grow vpon After him raigned Perdicas whose life was notable the warnings at his last departure which wer as thanswer of an oracle worthy to be remebred For when he drue toward his end by reason of age he shewed his sonne Argeu●… the place in the which he wold be buried willing not only his owne body but also all the bodies of thē that shuld succede him in the kingdō to be buried in the same place prophecying before that as long as the bones of his posterity were buried there so long the kingdō shuld cōtinue in his line family And vpon this superstition it is beleued that his ofspringe failed in great Alexander because he chaūged the place of burial argeus hauing gouerned the kingdō with iustice and loue of his people left to succede him his sōne Philip who being surprised by hasty death substituted his heir Europe a very babe But the Macedones wer at continuall debate strife with the Thracians Illyrians by whose warres as by daily exercise being hardened they grew so famous redouted in feats of armes that all their neighbours were afraid of thē The Illirians therfore despising thinfancy of the yong king assailed the Macedones with battel who be ing put to the worse brougbt forth their king in his cradel set him before the battel beginning the field new againe as thoughe they had bene vanquished before vpon none other occasion but because they wanted y ● good luck of their king in the battell thincking to get the vpper hand and it were for none other cause elsse then that vpon this superstition they had perswaded them selues they shoulde win Moreouer they had pity compassion of the infant whome it was none other like but they should make a captine of a king if they should happen to be ouercome In the meane season Darius king of Perfia beinge put to shamefull flighte and driuen oute of S●…ythia because he wold not seme to be dishonored euery wher by his losses in the warres sent 〈◊〉 with part of his army to subdu●… Thrace thother kingdoms of that climat among the which for the slender regard estimation therof he should take Macedonie for one who shortly executing his masters cōmaundement sent ambassadors to Amyntas king of Macedonie demaunding hostages for performance of the peace that shuld be concluded betwene thē But thābassadors be ing gently enterteined as they began to be somwhat ouer come with drink desired Amyntas that forasmuch as he had made them such a sūptuous feast he wold also graūt them the rights duties of familiarity that is to say that theyr sonnes their wiues their daughters mighte come kepe them cōpany at the banket for it was counted amonge the Persians as a sure token pledge of hospitality frendlye entertainment Who comming in to bear them company the Persians began to daly with more wantonly then was semely conuenient Wher vpon Alexāder the son of amino tas desired his father to haue respect to his age grauity to withdraw himselfe from the banket promising to fynde meanes to delay the dalians of his quests wel inough whē ●…yntas was gone Alexander called out the women one by one as though it had ben to dresse attire thē more gorgeously so to bring them in again In whose sted he dressed in womens apparel he sent yong men commaūding them to represse the wātonnes of thambassadors with their we pons that they caried vnder their garmēts The which being done al thambassadors killed Mogabyzus knowing nothing hereof when he saw his ambassadors returned not a gaine sent thither Bubares with a parte of his hoste as to a war so easy so mean as that he disdained to troble himself therwith least men should speke dishonor of him for fighting against so base vile a kinde of people But 〈◊〉 be fore the battel being taken in loue with Amintas daughter leauing of the warres solempniled the marriage laying a side all rancor and emnity ioyned him self in aliaunce with his enemy After the departure of Bubares out of Macedone the kinge Amyntas deceased Unto whose sonne successor Alexander this affinity of Bubares did great ple sure For by meanes therof he not onlye liued in peace all the time of Darius but also grew in greate fauor wyth Xerxes In so muche that when like a tempest he inuaded all Grece he gaue him the seniory royalty of al the coūtries betwene the mountaines of Olympus and Hemus Yet notwithstanding he enlarged his kingdom as much by his own prowes as by the liberality of the Persians At lēgth by order of succession the kingdom of Macedone cam vnto Amyntas the sonne of his brother Menelaus This man al so was notable for his actiuity and endowed with al royall and warlike qualities He begate of his wife Eurydice thre sonnes Alexāder Perdicas and Philip the father of great Alexander and a da●…ghter named Euryone And of a nother wife called Cygea he engendred Archilaus Aridens 〈◊〉 who had sore warres first with the Illyrians and after wyth the Olynt●…ans But he had ben cut short by the treson of his wife Eurydice who concluding priuely a mariage wyth her sonne
his sonne that he shoulde not truste anye man sauing Thessalus and his brothers For this cause therfore was the bankette prepared and dressed in the house of 〈◊〉 Philip and 〈◊〉 which wer wonte to be the kynges cuppe bearers and his tasters had the poyson in colde water the whiche water they tasted and caste it vpon the drinke The fourthe daye after Alexander perceiuing there was no way with hym but death sayde he acknowledged the desteny of the house of his 〈◊〉 For the Aeacides for the mooste parte dyed 〈◊〉 they came to xxx yeres of age Then he appeased hys sou●… dioures whiche began to make an vprore mistrusting the kinge to be killed by treason and beinge borne vp into the highest and openest place that could be founde in all the city●… and there laide for the vpon a couch he admitted them all to his presence and put forthe his righte hand to them to kisse as they stode wepinge about him And wheras all the company wept to beholde him in that case he not onlye shed forthe neuer a teare but also was withoute any kinde of token ofsorowe or 〈◊〉 in so much that he comforted certayne of them that made greate sorowe and lamentation for the matter Unto some he gaue commaundements and errands to doo to their frendes from him So that like as hys harte was inuincible toward the enemy so was it inuincible also againste deathe When he had sente awaye his souldioures he demaunded of hys frendes as they stode about hym whether they thought they shuld finde the like kynge againe or no. Euerye man holdynge his peace he sayde that as he knew not that so he perfectly knew and prophesied yea and in maner saw it presently before his eies how much bloud Macedone shoulde spende in that quarel and with how greate slaughter occision of men it should do obsequies for him after his departure At the last he willed his body to be buried in the Temple of Hammon When hys frendes sawe him drawe on they asked who shoulde be heir of hys Empyre He aunswered the worthiest So greate was the courage of hys harte that wheras he left behinde him hys sonne Hercules hys brother Arideus and his wife Roxanes great with chylde for gettinge all 〈◊〉 and aliaunce hee denounced him to be his heire that was worthyest As thoughe it hadde not beene lawfull for anye man to succeade a valiaunt manne then as valiaunte a man as he or to leaue the richesse of so great a kingdome to any other then to such as were tride men with thys word as though he had blowen a trompet among his noble men or sowne the sede of mischief and delate euery one became enemy to other in his hart wyth colourable flattery priuely sought the good wils and fauor of the men of warre The vi day whē his speche was gon he tooke a ringe of his finger and deliuered it to Perdicas the which thinge appeased the dissention of his frendes all ready beginning to bud For allbeit he were not pronounced heir by word by mouthe yet notwithstanding it semed it was his minde he should be his heire Alexander deceased of the age of xxxiii yeares and one monthe a man endued with stoutnesse of courage aboue the power of mannes fraile nature The same nighte that his mother Olympias conceiued him she dreamed she had to do with a great dragon neither was she deceiued of God in her dreame for out of all dout she bare in her wombe a piece of worke exceding the frailnesse of mannes nature And althoughe she were renowmed bothe for the house of Aeacus frō whence by auncient descent of so many C. yeres ●…he was lineallye ●…xtract and also because her father her brother her husbād and all her auncestors and progenitoures were kinges yet was she in none of all those respectes so muche to be estemed as for her owne sonne Many wondrous foretokens of his greatnesse appered euen at his birth For the same day that he was borne two Egles stode all day vpon the toppe of his fathers house representing a token of his dowl Empire of Europe and Asia And the very same daye also hys father had tid●…nges broughte him of two victories the one of a battell against the Illyrians the other of the gamynge at the mountaine Olympus vnto the which he hadde sent his chariots The whyche was a token that the child shuld be conqueror of all countries Duringe hys childehode he was brought vp straightly to his learning when he grew towarde mannes estate he encreased in knowledge vnder Aristotle the 〈◊〉 teacher of al Philosophers A●…terward when he had taken the kingdome vpon him he proclaimed himself king of all landes and of the whole world and so behaued himself among his souldiers that if he 〈◊〉 with them there was no enemy could make them afraide although they had beane naked them selues Therfore he neuer encountred with any enemy but he ouercame him he neuer besieged city but he wan it nor neuer entred any country but he subdued it And yet at the last he was ouercome not by force of the enemy but by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 treason of his owne subiectes The thirtenthe Booke ALexander y ● great being dispatched out of the way in the very floure of his age and of his conquests al men were striken in so heauye dumpes and in especially all the citye of Babilon But the nations whome he had subdued could not geue credite to the reporte because that as they beleued him to be inuincible so also they thoughte him to be immortall calling to remembraunce how often he had bene deliuered from present death and how oftentimes when he had loste his weapon sodainly he shewed himself amonge hys men not only safe and sound but also gettinge the vpper hande But when they were throughlye perswaded that he was dead in dede all the barbarous nations whom he had conquered a litle before mourned for him not as for an ennemye but as for a father Moreouer the mother of Darius whome after the losse of her sonne beinge her selfe fallen from the stage of so highe estate it repented not of her lyfe vnto that day for the great clemency and fauoure that she found in ●…er conqueror when she hard of Alexāders death did rid herselfe oute of this life not because she sette more by her ennemy then by her own sonne but because she had found the naturall loue of a sonne in him whome she toke for her enemy On the other part the Macedones cleane cōtrary mour ned not for him as for their countryman or as for a kinge of such a maiesty but reioysed as if they had lost an enemy cursing his ouergreat seueritye and continuall ieoperdies that he put them vnto by his warres Besides this the princes gaped for the pertition of his kingdomes and prouinces and the common souldioures for his treasures and for a great masse of gold as a
solempnised wherby the newe wedded wife fel in great fauor and the old wife in displeasure For the fyrst wife as thoughe she had beene deuorced of her owne accord departed to her brother antiochus and prouoked him to war vpon her husband The acarnanians also distrusting the Epyrotes and thervpon ●…equiring healpe of the Romaines obtained of the Senate of Rome that ambassadours were sent to commaund the aetolians to withdraw their garrisons from the cities of acarnania and to suffer them to liue ●…ree out of bondage whiche all only in old time sent no help to the Grekes against the Troianes thautors of their beginning But the Aetolians hard the ambassade of the Romaines proudly and disdainfully Casting them in the tethe with the Carthaginenses the frenchmen by whom they had ben so aff●…cted in so many battels so oftentimes vtterly slain saying it was me●…e for thē first to open their gates against the ●…thaginenses which they had shut vp for fear of y ● warr●…s of affrick ere they toke vpon them to make warres in Grece Moreouer they bad them remember whome they manased for they were not able to defend their owne city agaynste ●…he frenchmen but y ● when it was taken t●…ey were fayne to redeme it with mony ▪ not recouer it by the sworde The which nation entring into Grece with a nother maner of host they them 〈◊〉 had not only without the aid of any other forain power but also not so much as helped wyth their own houses vtterly destroyed made their realm a place for their bur●… which they had determined to make the ●…eat and key of their kingdome Wheras on the contrary part Italye the Ro●…es yet still tremblynge for fear of the la●…e burning of their city was wel 〈◊〉 whollye subdued by the frenchmen Wherfore it was 〈◊〉 ●…or thē first to driue the frenchmen out of Italye ere they presumed to manase the aetolians and first to defēd their own ere they toke in hand to defend other mennes And what maner of men were the Romains in good faith no better but a sort of ragged shepherdes y ● rongfully held a piece of ground taken from the right owners by robery which being not able to get thē wiues for the dishonesty of theyr beginning were fain to rauish them by open force and to be short which bui●…ded their city with moste cruel and vnnaturall 〈◊〉 and bestained the foundations of the●…r walles with brothers bloud But the Aetolians wer euer the princes of Grece and 〈◊〉 as they passed all 〈◊〉 in estate and worthinesse so they excelled them in ●…owesse and actiuity and they wer the men alone which had euer despised the Macedones florishinge in thempire of all the whole world which feared not king Philip which disdained to obey the lawes of alexander the great after he had subdued the Persians and Indians when all other men dyd moost fear and dread his name Wherfore they counselled the Romaines to holde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wyth theyr present estate and not to pro●…ke these weapons agaynst them through which they sawe bo●…he the frenche men slayne and also the Macedones despised When they they had in this wise dismissed the Romain ambassadors to the entent they woulde not seeme to haue talcked more boldly then they woulde doo in dede they forrayed all the borders of the kingdome of Acaruania By this tyme had Olympias deliuered the kingdome to her sonnes and in stead of his brother Pyrrhus deceased Ptolomy succe●…ed in the whole kingdome Who geynge wyth an ●…ooste of men well furnyshed againste his ennemies as by the waye taken with a disease and died Olympias also ere it was longe time after beinge wounded with sorowe for the death of her two sonnes skarse able to draw her painfull breathe liued a small while after her children There remayned of the bloude royall no moo but ●…nlye a younge mayde called Nereis and her sister Laodamia Nereis was maryed vnto Gelo sonne of the kinge of Sicil And Laodamia flying for her sauegard to the aultare of Diana was there by the concourse of the people sla●… The whiche offence the Goddes immortal reuenged and punished with continuall slaughters of that natyon and well neare wy●…h the vtter d●…structyon of all the whole realme For first and formost being punished with dearth and hunger and beinge 〈◊〉 with ciuill discorde laste of all they were in manner quite consu●…ed by the warres of foraine nations and Milo who killed Laodamia fallyng oute of his wittes so mangled his bodye sometyme wyth yron sometime with stones and in fine so rente and tare hys owne bowels with his teethe that wythin xii daies he died moost miserably While these thinges were a doinge in Epyre Demetrius dyed in Macedone leauynge a lyttle sonne called Phillip to be hys heir Ouer whome Antigonus beinge made protector tooke the chyldes mother to his wife and went about to make himself kynge Within a while after when as the Macedones makynge insurrection against him threatninge to kill him had besieged him in his own palace he came forth to them with out any gard casting among them his crowne and hys purple robe of estate bade them bestow those thinges vpon some other person which ether knew how to rule thē or to whome they coulde finde in theyr hartes to obey for as for him he had not hitherto during the time he had the gouernment of that odious kingdome felt or tasted of any plesures but of labor of trauel of perill and of leoperdy Then he rehersed what he had done for them how he had punished suche of their confederates as had reuolted how he had asswaged the courage of the Dardanians and Thessalians triumphing at the death of Demetrius and finally how he had not only maintained but also augmēted thestate of thempire of Macedone Of the which thinges if so be it they repented them he was contente to depose himself and to surrender his office into their hands and let them seke them a king whom they mighte rule as they liste them selues When the people beinge strycken with shame willed him to take his kingdome vppon hym again he refused it vtterly so long vntill the authours of the rebellion were yelded vnto him to punish them at hys pleasure After this he made war agaynst the Spartanes which all only despised the warres of Philip and Alexander and the Empire of the Macedones with the knyghthode and chiualry so sore redoubted ouer all the worlde The warre was prepared for withall the furniture and power that could be made on bothe partes betwene these two noble and famous nations The one fighting for the auncient renowne of Macedone the other not only for the maintenaunce of their vntouched liberty neuer before vn lated but also for theyr common sauegarde The Lacedemonians being vāquished not only they them selues but also their wiues and children toke their misfortune with very stout courage For there
his losses semed euer to be made more terrible to them Finally at the length he was not vanquished as an enemie but in his oldeage leauyng his 〈◊〉 to be his heire he dispatched himselfe by wilfull death in his owne kyng dome where his auncesters had raygned of long continuance The very wonders of heauen dyd prognosticate what a great man he shoulde be for bothe the same yet ▪ that he was borne and the same yere he firste began his reygne there appered by the space of threskore and tenne dayes at both tymes suche a blasyng starre that all the skye semed to be on fyre For it was so bygge that it occupied a quarter of the heauen it was so brighte that it blemished the light of the Sunne when it rose or went doune it consumed fower howers at eche tyme. When he was a chylde his owne Gouernours wente about to destroy hym settyng hym vppon a rough horse and compellyng him to lern to ryde and to torney The which attempt followyng not their myndes as they woulde haue had the yong Prince Mythridates rulyng the horse better then was loked for in one of his age they assayed him with poyson The which he standyng in doubt of before dronke tryacle oftentymes by meanes whereof he so stayed his bodie with tryed and exquisite medicines that when he was olde he would haue poysoned himselfe and coulde not After this fearyng least his enemies woulde compasse the thyng by weapon which they could not doe by venim he coūterfeyted a desyre of huntyng whervppon by the space of fower yeres he came not vnder anie roofe eyther of house in the Cytie or cotage in the countrie but wandered vp and doune the forestes and woods rested the night time in the mountayns sometime one where and sometime another no man knowyng where was his haunt enuryng himself eyther to chase or to pursue the wylde beastes on foote and with some of them to encounter with playne force By meanes whereof he both auoyded all treason and also hardened his bodie to abyde all kynde of trauell and exercyse Afterward when he came to take the k●…gdome vppon him immediatlie he set his mynde not so muche of gouernyng as of enlargyng thesame Therefore he maruelous fortunately subdewed and brought in subiection the S●…ythians who before that day were neuer conquered whiche had vtterlie destroyed Zopyron the Capitayne of greate Alexander with thirtie thousand armed men whiche had slayne Cyrus kyng of Persia with two hundred thousand men of warre and which had put to flyght Philyp kyng of Macedones Being thus encreased in strength he conquered Pontus and consequentlie Cappadocia Then with certayn of his frendes he went secretly disguysed out of his owne kyngdome without knowledge of anie man and wanderyng through Asia vewed the situacion of all the Cyties and Prouynces of the same From thence he trauayled ouer Bythinia and as though he had ben alreadie Lorde of Asia he deuised all thynges that might helpe to f●…rther him toward his conquest After this when all men beleued he had ben dead he returned home into his own Realme where he found a lytle sonne whome Laodice his syster and wyfe had brought him forth in his absence But in the myddes of the ioye that was made for his returne and for the birth of his chyld he was in daun ger to be poysoned For his syster Laodice beleuyng him to be dead and therevppon abusyng her bodye with his frendes as though the might haue hydden her offence by committyng of a greater cryme prepared a cuppe with poyson to welcome him home withall Wherof Mythridates hauyng intelligence by a Damosell punished the offence vppon the deuisers thereof After when wynter drew nigh he spent not the time in feastyng but in f●…ates of armes not in 〈◊〉 but in exercise not amōg carpet knights but eyther in yo●…sting and tournying in runnyng on foote or on horsebacke or els in wrestlyng and tryal of strength among his p●…res Also he daylie enured his men of warre by ly●…e exercyse to abyde labor and trauell as well as himself by mean●…s wherof as he was i●…incible himself so made he his host inuincible also Then he entred in league with Nicomedes and inuaded Paphlagonia the which he conquered and parted it with his companyon When woorde was brought to the Senate that these kyngs had subdued the countrie they sent Ambassadours to them both cōmaun dyng them to set it in the lyke estate as they found it My thridates thinkyng himself nowe able ynough to matche the puissaunce of the Romayns answered proudelie that the kyngdome was his fathers by inheritaunce and that he maruayled they should make alteration with him for it hauyng not done the lyke to his father Moreouer he set so lyght by their Manaces that he inuaded Galatia also Nicomedes for asmuch as he was not able to make his partie good by anie tytle answered he woulde surrender it to the rightfull kyng and so chaungyng the name of his owne sonne he called him Phylomenes by the name of the kyngs of Paphlagonia by which conueyance vnder a counterfect name he helde still the kyngdome as though he had restored it to the right heire The Romayne Ambassadoures beyng thus had in derision returned to Rome with a mocke Morrouer he sent his wyfe Laodice to Rome to testifye that she ha●…e t●…ree sonnes by Ariarathes The which thyng when Mithridates knew of he also with lyke impudent vnshamefastnesse sent Gordius vnto Rome to auouche before the Senate that the chylde to whome he had deluded the kyngdome of Cappadocia was the sonne of the same Ariarathes whiche in the quarell of the Romaynes was slayne in the battell agaynst Aristouicus But the Senate vnderstandyng the meanyng and endeuour of both the kynges wold not gene other mens kingdoms to vsurpers that tooke wrong names vppon them Whereupon they tooke Cappadocia from Mithrydates and to comfort him withall they toke Paphlagonia from Nicomedes And to th entent it should not seme they wold take any thynges from the kynges in despight of them to bestowe it vppon others bothe the Nacions were se●…at at free lybertie But the Cappadocians refusyng the gyfte of ly●…ertie sayd that their countrie could not liue without a kyng Whervppon Ariobarzanes was appointed by the Senate to be their kyng There was at the same tyme one Tygranes king of Armenia kept in hostage not long before by the Parth●…ās and now lately remitted by them into his fathers kyngdome Hym dyd Mithridates couet to allure to take his part in the warres that he had of lōg tyme purposed agaynst the Romaynes Wherfore by the meanes of Gordius he pers●…ded him as one that knew not what it was to displease the Romaynes to make war vppon Ariobarzanes who was a very cowarde And to th entent it shoulde not seme be dyd it for anye cautele or pollicy he gaue him his daughter Cleopatra in mariage At the fyrst
nose was surnamed Grypho was created kyng by his mother vppon this cōdicion that he should bear the name but she herself haue all the power and authoritie of the whole Empyre But Alexander the vsurper of the kyngdome of Syria being puffed vp with contynuall successe in his affayres began of greate pryde and insolencie to mocke and despyse Ptolomie himselfe by whome he was put in and inuested in that kyngdome Ptolomy therfore reconcyling to his syster endeuored by all the meanes he coulde deuise to depose Alexander from his Royaltie the which he had obteyned by his help for hatred that he bare towardes Demetrius Wherevppon he sent ayd to Grypho into Grece and his daughter Gryphin also to be his wyse to th entent he mighte procure the people to helpe his nephew not only by confederacie but also by alsance of affinitie And the matter came so to passe in dede For after the time they perceyued that Grypho was supported with the power of Egypte they began by litle and litle to reuolt euerychone from Alexander Afterwarde there was a battell foughte betwene them in the which Alexāder beyng put to the worse fled vnto Antioche Ther for want of mony hauing not wher with to pay his souldiers their wages he commaunded a sygne of victory of Massie golde to be taken out of the Tēple of Iupiter coloryng his sacryledge with a pleasaunt skoffe For he sayd that Iuppiter had lent him victorie Within a 〈◊〉 dayes after when he had geue cōmaundement preuely to pull oute of the temple the Image of Iupiter made all of cleane gold of an vnknowen weight and that beyng taken in doyng of the dede he was put to flyght by the multitude that came to the reskowe he was oppressed by the violence of a tempest and forsaken of his owne men and taken by theues and brought vnto Grypho and there put to death Furthermore Gripho hauing recouered his fathers kyngdom beyng delyuered from owtwarde daungers was assaulted by the treason of his owne mother who beyng inflamed with desyre of Soueraintie after she had betrayed her husbande Demetrius and kylled her other sonne for spight and malice that her authoritie and estimacion should be diminished by the victory of this other sonne offered him a cup of poison as he came from his pastyme But Grypho hauyng intel ●…gēce of his mothers treason as though he had stryued with her for courtesie desyred her to drynke to him the which vppon her refusall he requested more earnestlie At the length bringyng forth the author of the reporte he layde the matter to her charge affirming he would admit none other excuse to defend her offence with al but yf she wold drynke the same herself that she had profered to him The Quene beynge by this meanes conuicted of her mischeuous intent by receyuing the poyson herself that she had prepared for her sonne was depryued of her ●…yfe Grypho hauyng thus brought his Realme in quietnesse not only lyued himself at hartes ease but also gouerned his kyngdome in tranquillitie by the space of eyght yeres after the which terme beyng expyred there arose an enemie to his kyngdome namely his owne brother Cyricenus borne of his own mother but begotten by his vncle Antiochus Whome whiles he went about to ryde out of the way by poysonyng he styrred him the soner to contende with him by force for the kyngdome Among these parrycidiall discordes of the Realme of Syria dyed Ptolomy kyng of Egypt leauyng the kyngdome to his wyfe and one of his sonnes which so euer she would chose as though the state of Egypt should be in better quiet then the realme of Syria when the mother by chosyng the one of her sonnes should make thother her enemie Therefore whereas she was of herself more enclyned to the yonger sonne the peo ple compelled her to chose the elder From whome before she gaue him the kyngdome she toke away his wyfe and hauyng compelled him to forgo his moste dear beloued syster Cleopatra she caused hym to marry his yonger syster Seleuce Wherein she delt not lyke a mother betwixt her daughters cōsyderyng she tooke her husband from th one and gaue him to thother Cleopatra beyng not so muche put away by her husband as by violent diuorce separated from him hy meanes of her mother was maried to Cyricenus in Syria and to thintent she woulde not seme to haue brought nothyng elles vnto him more then the bare name of wyfe she raysed an host of men in Cyprus and brought it to her husband for her doury Cyricenus beyng now made as strong as his brother encountred with him in open fyelde where beynge vanquished and put to flight he came vnto Antioche Then Grypho beseged Antioche where Cleopatra the wyfe of Cyricenus lay At the takyng whereof Gryphin the wife of Grypho toke care for nothyng so much as to fynd oute her syster Cleopatra not to thyntent to helpe saue her out of captiuitie but to thyntent she should not escape the mi●…eries of captiuitie Because as she thought in disdanye of her estate she had entred forciblie into that kyngdome inespeciallie and by marying herselfe to her s●…sters ennemie had made herselfe an ennemie to her Alledgyng agaynst her moreouer that she had raysed forreyn powers agaynste her brother she had maryed herselfe agaynst her mothers will oute of the Realme of Egypte On the con trarie parte Grypho besought her that she woulde not constreyne hym to committe so shamefull an acte For it was neuer hearde that any of his auncestours among so manie ciuill and so manie outwarde warres dydde after the victorie extend crueltie agaynste women the whiche for thymbecilliti of their nature had euer ben accustomed to be exempted bothe from the daungers of the warres and also from the crueltie of the conquerors A nowe in this case besydes the lawe of armes there was also the bounde of aliaunce to withhold him from doyng suche a wickednesse For on th one syde she was her owne syster whose blood she sought so cruellie and on the other syde she was his cousyne Germane yea and moreouer she was aunte to the chyldren of them bothe Moreouer besydes all those boundes of kynred and greate aliaunce he 〈◊〉 alledged that it was not right or lawefull for to suffer to violate the Temple in the whiche she had hyd her selfe and the whiche she hadde taken for saufegard of her lyfe but that the Goddes with so muche the more humilitie and deuocion ought to be re●…erenced on his parte as by theire greate mercye and fauour be hadde gotten the victorye at that tyme ouer hy●…●…nnemyes For neyther by killyng her could he any thyng abate the strength of Cyricenus neyther by preseruyng their lyfe anie thyng encrease his power But the more vnwyllyng that Grypho was the more was she of womanlie wilfulnesse incensed agaynst her syster supposyng him to speake these wordes not of pytie and compassion
kyng of Syria when as the warre was fynished ere they came and thei in reproche of their late cōmyng were defrauded of their hyre beyng greued to haue trauailed so farre for nothing when as they demaunded eyther theire wages for theire paynes takyng or els some other ennemie to fyght with such a skornefull aunswere was gyuen them that they beyng offended therewith began to waste the borders of Parthia Phrahartes therefore when he should take his iourney agaynst the Scythians left to gouuerne his Realme in his absence one Hym●…rus highlie in fauour with him for thabuse of him in the florisshing prime of his childhod Who forgettyng bothe his owne former lyfe and whose persone he represented through his tyrannous crueltie vexed importunatlie bothe Babylon and man●…e other ci ties And Phrahartes himselfe ledde to the warres with him the Grekysh hoste the whiche he hadde taken in the warres of Antiochus had entreated cruelly proudelie quite forgettynge that their captiuitie hadde not mitigated their enemielyke myndes so much but y ● his wrongfull demeanor towardes the had more styrred the to displeasur against him Therfore when they espied that the Parthien battel began to haue the worse end of the stāffe they turned themselfes and tooke part with the enemie and so with the bloudie slaughter of the Partbien hoste of the kyng Phrahartes himselfe they executed the reuengement of their wrongfull captiuitie which they had so longe tyme desyred In stead of him at his vncle Artabanus was created kyng And the Scythians beyng con tented with the victorie after that they had wasted Parthia returned into their owne countrih But Artabanus dyed immediatlie of a wounde in his arme that he receyued in a battell agaynst the Colchatarians After him suc ceded his sonne Mythridates who for his noble acts was surnamed the Greate For beyng enflamed with desyre to excell in prowesse he behaued himself so noblie that in magnanimitie he surmounted al his famous progenitors Therefore he accomplished manie warres agaynste his neighbours with greate prowesse and subdewed manie nacions vnder the Dominion of Parthia Moreouer he foughte diuerse tymes to his aduauntage agaynste the Scythians and reuenged the displeasur doone to his predecessours At the laste he made warre agaynst artoadistes kyng of the Armenians But forasmuche as we be passyng into Armenie I thynke it necessarye to repete thoriginall thereof somewhat deper For me thynkes it is not lawfull to passe ouer so great a kyngdome with sylence cōsyderyng that next vnto Parthia it surmounteth al other kingdoms in greatnes For armenia is in lēgth from Cappadocia vnto the Caspian sea eleuen hundred myles and in bredthe seuen hundred myles It was foun ded by Armenius one of the companyons of Iason the Thessalien whome kyng Pelias couetyng to destroy for his notable prowes which semed dangerous to his kingdome for feare least he should depose him told him what a noble viage ther was for him into Colchos perswading him to take thenterprise vpon him to fetche the golden fliece y ● was so famous notably talked of 〈◊〉 y ● worlde Hopyng that eyther through so long and per●…llous a saylyng or eis by feightyng agaynst so sau●…age and Barbarous a people he might br●…ng the aduenturous knight t●… confusion Iason therefore when he had made proclamacion of so notable a voyage and that therevppon the noble yong men almoste of all the whole worlde resorted in great number vnto him he assembled an armie of moste valiaunt knightes whiche were all called by the name of Argonantes Whome when after thaccomplishement of his aduenturous enterprises he had brought home again in sauftie he was expulsed agayn oute of Thessaly by the sonnes of Pelias Wherevppon with a great multitude which for the renowme of his prowesse daylie resorted to him oute of all Realmes hauyng in his companie his wyfe Medea whome after his late diuorcement for pytie of her exilement he had receyued agayn with her sonne Medeus begotten by Egeus kyng of Athenes he wente agayn to Colchos and restored his father in lawe to his kyngdome from whiche he was deposed After that he made manie battels with his neighbours and their Cyties whiche he had taken he partlie annexed to the kyngdome of his father in lawe to th entent to abolishe the reproche of his former warfare wherein he had both ledde away his daughter Medea and 〈◊〉 slayne his sonne Aegialus and partly gaue them to the 〈◊〉 that he broght with him to inhabyte By report he was the fyrste of all men next after Hercules and Liber whiche as the same goeth were kynges of the East that conquered that clymate of the worlde Ouer some Nacions he assygned captaynes Phrygius and Ansystratus the wageners of Castor Pollur He made a league with the Albanes which as it is reported followed Hercules out of Italy frō the mountayn Albanus when after the slaying of Gerion he draue his cattell through Italie who also bearyng in mynde that they came oute of Italie saluted the armie of Pompeius by the name of broth●…rs whē he warred with Mythridates By meanes whereof all the whole 〈◊〉 almoste buylded Temples and dyd diuine honors to Iason as to their fyrst founder The whiche Parmenion one of the Capitaynes of great Alexander manie yeres after commanded to be beaten doun to th entent that no mans name shoulde be had in more honor in the East then the name of Alexāder after the death of Iason Medus being an earnest follower of his vertues in honor of his mother Medea buylded the cytie M●…dea and established the kingdome of the Medes callyng it after his own name which in continuance of tyme grewe to that estate that all the Cast was in subieccion to th empyre thereof The Albans are next neighbors to the Amazones whose Quene Tha lestres manie authours haue reported to ●…aue desyred the carnall companie of Alexander Armenius beyng also a Thessalien and one of the number of Iasons Capitains hauyng gathered togyther the multitude whiche after the death of Iason their kyng wandred vp and doune euery where founded the toune of Armenie in the mountaynes whereof springeth the riuer Tygris which at the fyrst is a very small streame Then a good waye from the head it falleth into the grounde and a fyue and twentie myles beyonde it ryseth vp a great 〈◊〉 in the contrie Sophone and so is receyued into the lakes of Eufrates Therefore Mythridates kyng of the Parthians after his warre in Armenie was for his crueltie deposed from the kyngdome by the counsell of the Realme His brother Ho rodes inuadyng the Royal sea beyng vacant beseged Ba bylon a greate whyle bycause his brother Myth idates was fledds thither so long vntill he 〈◊〉 them for famyn to yeld vp the toune Mythridates vppon trust and cōfidence in that he was so ners of his kynne willynglie submitted himself to his brother Horodes But
is beatē downe Antiochus maketh war vpon Ptol●…my king of Egypt An example of an vncorrupted minde and of great●… seuerity The death of An●…ochus Demetrius stealeth from Rome ▪ and obtaineth the kyngdome of Syria Prusias diggeth a pit for his sonne and falleth there in hym selfe An example of singuler in gratitude The hatred of dyuers kings against Demetrius The 〈◊〉 nes and 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 D●…etrius the sonne of 〈◊〉 recou●…reth hys fathers kyngdome Demetrius maketh war against the Parthi●…ns Demetrius is tak●…n prisoner kept like a kynge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ▪ The 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 The history of Ios●…phe in 〈◊〉 An 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Moses and of the goyng of the 〈◊〉 out of Egipt The ●…inge of the sa●… day 〈◊〉 Of ●…growing only in 〈◊〉 The ●…tion of the countrye of Iericho 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ▪ Who fyrste subdued the Iewes The doyngs of Attalus kyng of Asia the lesse The sorowe●…ul repentans of Attalus The dea●… of A●…alus ▪ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ▪ The 〈◊〉 of cou●…ousnesse The Romaynes reward theyr partakers The vnnatural cruelty of a mother Not without de●…ert Mythridates the great and of hys byrth educatyon successe pearyls and aduentures A Com●… ▪ Mythridates subdueth the so●…thsayers The wife of Mythridates put teth hym in daunger of his lyfe ●…he 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 tes 〈◊〉 the winter 〈◊〉 He conquereth Paph●…gonia The Romain a●…bassae to Mythrodat●… and hys aunswer there vnto Th order taken by the senate Ariobarzanes is made kyng of Cap padocta Mithridatis recouereth Cappadacia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nations 〈◊〉 vp 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The oratyon of Mythridates to hys captains and men of warre He returneth to the storyes of Egipt The crueltye of Ptolomy Ptelomy is had in deris●… by the Romain ambassade The vnnat●… ral cru●…sse of Ptolomy towarde hys own children He returneth to the story of Demetrius taken pryson net by the Parthiens in the. xxxvi booke A faythfull fre●…d An example of clemency in in a barbarus prince Demetrius is taken flying the 〈◊〉 tyme and brought 〈◊〉 agay●…e Antiochus 〈◊〉 deth an host a gaynste the Parthiens Antiochus 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is let go into Syria A 〈◊〉 conspiracy against 〈◊〉 The death of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is hated of his sub●…ects for his pryde An 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 king agaynst 〈◊〉 The due reward of sacri ledge and vsurped autho ritye The desire of souerainty The 〈◊〉 an kyng is put to flyght The 〈◊〉 ●…warde o●… sacryledge and vsurp●…d authority The desire of Souerainty The death of the Quene The death of Ptolomy king of egipt An vnequall dealinge of a mother War betwene Gryphus and his brother 〈◊〉 A cruell syster ●…he ●…syon of Gryph●…s from that cruelty Gryphin sen deth to kyll her syster Cle o●…atra The death of Cleopatra Such mesure as she dyd mete is ●…ten to her The Quene of Egypt deposeth one of ●…er sonnes setteth vp an 〈◊〉 Lyfe is dearer then a ●…yngdome The death of the Quene of Egyp●…e Alexander 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyrene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Romains The original Herotymus great number ●…f sonnes Tygranes is made kyng of Syria An 〈◊〉 earthquake 〈◊〉 o●… Tygranes maketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Syria is 〈◊〉 ●…e a prouynce of the 〈◊〉 of the Parthēs with their encreasement and battels The situaciō of Par●…hia The●…e of y ● cōmon weale of Parthia Their language Their Apparell The order of their warres The briging vp of their bondmen ●…horder of their warres Their Armoure Their seueritie ●… keptng their wiues Their dyet Their continuall rydyng The differen ce betwene their gentlemen their slaues Their burial Their 〈◊〉 Their naturall disposicion Un●…er whō the Parthians serued When the Parthians first rebelled Arsaces the first king of Parthia Arsaces refor meth the cōmon weale of 〈◊〉 ▪ The bu●…ding and situacion of the cytie D●…a The 〈◊〉 of Arsaces The seconde Emperour of Parthia The thyrde Empeour Pampatius The fourth Emperour ▪ An example of loue towardes a mans countrey The fyfthe 〈◊〉 Euera●…des king of ●…tria The valiant prow●…s of Eucratides An vnnaturall and abho minable mur ther. The conque●…tes of Mythridates y ● ▪ iiii kynge of Parthia The. i. ●…peroure of Parthia of his doinges ▪ It is 〈◊〉 trustynge them to whom a mā hath d●… displeasure The sixthe Emperonr of Parthia The seuenth Emperour and of his doynges The original of the Armentans The situaciō of Armenie The viage for the golden 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iason The original of the Alban●…s in As●…a The great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thoriginal of the Armeni●… The head of the riuer Tygris He returne●…h to the storie of the 〈◊〉 The viii king of 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 of Horodes to wardes his brother The death of 〈◊〉 A 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 T●…e 〈◊〉 warres betwene 〈◊〉 and Pomp●…y The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A gr●…at 〈◊〉 ter of the Pa●… thians 〈◊〉 the kynges 〈◊〉 Horodes falleth besyde hym selfe for sorow The nynthe Emperor of Parthia 〈◊〉 is killed by hys sonne Phrohartes 〈◊〉 is deposed restored by y ● Scythians The tent●… Emperour of Parthia Phrahar●…es sendes Embassadours to Rome The 〈◊〉 ans submitte them s●…lues to Augustus The first inhabiters of Italy The Iustice and equitie in the tyme of Saturne The 〈◊〉 of Saturn●… The 〈◊〉 The cōming of Euand●…r into Italy The ●…tynge of L●…tinus The cōming of Eneas into Italy The building of 〈◊〉 The building of long Alba. The byrth of Romulus Remus w t their educacion R●…mus is 〈◊〉 kē brought to the kynge ▪ Romulus Remus mak a conspyracie against Numitor The building of Rome The buiding of 〈◊〉 A mariage The 〈◊〉 of the Ma 〈◊〉 A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 applyed Treson against the Mas silians Women can kepe no coun sell. The fortunate successe of the Mas●… The 〈◊〉 of Caram●…us A faythfull frend is tried in aduersytie The auncestours of ●…rogus Pō pcius Thauncient names of Spayne The situaciō of Spayne the fertilitie therof The platte bygnesse of Spayne The nature and disposition of the S paniardes A notable ex ample of constant paciēce The doyngs and cōmenda cions of Uiriatus The swiftenes of the Spanish Ge nettes 〈◊〉 of the Gallecians in 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Inuentions of Gargoris That which God wyll haue saued can not be 〈◊〉 The doyngs of 〈◊〉 The Story●… of Geryon Howe the Carthaginobteyned the 〈◊〉 ●…f Spayn The doyngs of the Cartha ginenses in Spayne How the Ro maynes conquered spaine
is no more abased thereby then should the vertue of a precious stone by settyng it in brasse or yron or by carying it in a closur of Leather If any errours haue escaped me in the doyng herof as I doe not thynke but that some thynges worthie to be corrected may haue escaped my hande I desyre the lerned Reader as well to admonishe me frendly of myne errour as also to put his helpyng hand to thamendmēt of the same In doyng wherof as he shal greatly benefyte others so let him assure himself he cannot doe me a greater pleasure nor a higher frendshippe And thus wishyng that my trauell and labour in doyng hereof may turne to thy commoditie and profyte I bid the Fare well The Succession of the kinges of the three Monarchies mencioned in this Booke taken out of 〈◊〉 Berosus and Megasthenes ¶ The first Monarchie of 〈◊〉 1. NInus the Son of 〈◊〉 Belus the first Emperour of Assi●…ia reigned 〈◊〉 yeres 2. 〈◊〉 wyfe of the sayo Ninus 〈◊〉 yeres 3 〈◊〉 Nineas other wise cal led 〈◊〉 sonne of the foresaid Ninus and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yeres 4 Artus xxx yeres 5 Aralius xl yeres 6 Baleus 〈◊〉 xxx yeres 7 〈◊〉 xxxvlii yeres 8 Belothus the priest of Baal xxxv yeres 9 Baleus lii yeres 10 〈◊〉 xxxii yeres 11 Mamytus xxx yeres 12 Manealeus xxx yeres 13 Sterus or Pherus xx yeres 14 〈◊〉 xxx yeres 15 〈◊〉 xl yeres 16 Ascatades xl yeres 17 〈◊〉 xlv yeres 18 Belothus xxv yeres 19 Bellopares xxx yeres 20 Lamprydes xxxii yeres 21 Sosares xx yeres 22 Lampares xxx yeres 23 〈◊〉 xiv yeres 24 〈◊〉 xix yeres 25 Mytreus xxvii yeres 26 Tautanes xxxii yeres 27 Tautens xl yeres 28 Tineus xxx yeres 29 Dercilius xl yeres 30 Eupalus xxxviii yeres 31 〈◊〉 xlv ye●…es 32 〈◊〉 xxx yeres 33 Ophrateus ▪ xx yeres 34 Ophratanes l. 〈◊〉 35 Ocrasapes xlii yeres 36 Tonos Concoleros at Sar●…a napolis xx yeres This Empyre continued M. C C. xxix yeres The second Monarchie of the Medians and Persian●… The Medee 1 〈◊〉 xxviii yeres 2 Mandanes l. yeres 3 Sosarmon xxx yeres 4 〈◊〉 ▪ l. yeres 5 〈◊〉 xxii yeres 6 Arcens xl yeres 7 Artines xxii yeres 8 Astybares xx yeres 9 Astyages xxx yeres The kynges of M●…dia held the Empyre Clxxxxii yeres The Persians 1 ●…yrus xxx yeres 2 〈◊〉 vii y●…res v. 〈◊〉 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…pers vii 〈◊〉 4 Darius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5 〈◊〉 xx 〈◊〉 6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vii monthes 7 〈◊〉 lōgimanus xl 〈◊〉 8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 9 〈◊〉 viii 〈◊〉 10 Darius the 〈◊〉 xix yeres 11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ▪ xl 〈◊〉 12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yeres 13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yeres 14 〈◊〉 the son●…e of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Codo●… vi yeres The kynges of Persia held Thempyrs CC. xxx yeres and. v. monthes The seconde Monarchie of the Medes and Persians endured 〈◊〉 yeres v. months The third Monarchie of the Macedones 1. Alexāder the great after whose death his kyngdome was ●…ded among his noble mē xii y●… 2. Aridens vii yeres 3. Cassander xviii yeres 4 Antipater Alexād iiii yeres 5 Demetrius vi yeres 6 Py●…rhus vi monthes 7 Lysimachus v. yeres 8 Ptolomeus Ceramicus i. yere 9 〈◊〉 ii months 10 Antipater 〈◊〉 yere 11 Sosthenes ii yeres 12 Antigonus 〈◊〉 xxxvi ye 13 〈◊〉 x. yeres 14 Antigonus xv yeres 15 Phylip. xlii yeres 16 Perses the last kyng x. yeres Th ēpyre of Macedone lasteth with Alexander 〈◊〉 yeres viii monthe●… The kynges of Asia Antigonus xviii yeres Demetrius 〈◊〉 xvii ye The kynges of Syria 〈◊〉 Nicanor xxxii yer The kynges of Syria and Asia Antiochus Soter xliiii yeres Antiochus Theos xv yeres Sileucus callinicus xx yeres 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 iii. yeres Antiochus the grea●…e xxxvi 〈◊〉 Seleucus 〈◊〉 xii yeres 〈◊〉 Epiphanes xi yeres 〈◊〉 Eupater ii yeres 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 xxii yeres Alexander x. yeres 〈◊〉 iii. yeres 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ix yeres 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 iiii yeres Antiochus 〈◊〉 xxi yeres Anciochus 〈◊〉 xviii yer Phylyppe ii yeres The kyngdome of Syria endured 〈◊〉 lxxxix 〈◊〉 The kynges of Egypt Ptolomeus the son of Lagus xl ys Ptolomeus 〈◊〉 hus lviii y Ptolomeus Euergetes xxvi yer Ptolomeus Philopater xvii yeres Ptolomeus Epiphanes xxiiii yer Ptolomeus 〈◊〉 xx yeres Ptolomeus phiscō al. 〈◊〉 xvii y. 〈◊〉 Alexander x. yeres Ptolomeus Lathyrus viii 〈◊〉 Ptolomeus 〈◊〉 xxx 〈◊〉 Cleopatra xxii yeres Th empyre of Egypt 〈◊〉 after Alexander 〈◊〉 lxxxviii yeres The Monarchie of Alexander continued in altogyther 〈◊〉 yeres FINIS The Contentes of the. xliiii Bookes of Iustine The contentes of the syrst Booke NInus layeth the ●…ondacion of the Monarchie of Assyria 〈◊〉 conterfayteth herself to be a man buildeth Babylon conquereth Ethiope 〈◊〉 warre against Inde and is slayne by her son Ninus Sa●… danapolis is deposed for his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and with his lyfe endeth th empyre of Assyria Arbactus translateth th empyre to the Medes 〈◊〉 causeth Cyrus to be cast away as sone as he is borne he is 〈◊〉 by the prouidēce of God Harpagus loseth his sonne for the same Syrus ouercōm●… 〈◊〉 ges and translateth th empyre from the Medes to the Persians Babylon rebelleth and is subdued Cresus is taken prisoner hys real●…e brought to miserable subieccion Candaules throughe his owne ●…oliy is slayne by Gyges who enioyeth the kingdome for his 〈◊〉 Cyrus with two hūdred thouand Persians is slayn by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Massagettes His 〈◊〉 cambyses succedeth he conque●…h Egypt commaundeth his brother Sinerdes to be murd●… and is slayne with his owne sworde Comaris 〈◊〉 stes 〈◊〉 Orthanes boutteth out their treason Seuen of the noble men cons●…e their deathes Darius is made king by the neyng of his horse he 〈◊〉 kyng Cyrus daughter recouereth Babylon by the helpe of 〈◊〉 and prepareth warre agaynst the Scithians The contentes of the second Boke THe Scy●…thians and Egyptians contende for thantiquitie of their countries The descript●…on of 〈◊〉 with the maners and customes of the people their fortunate enterprises the Empyres founded by them Plynos and Scolopythus are dryuen out of Scythia with a great number of youthe and are slayne by a 〈◊〉 their wifes reueng their deathes and set vp th empyre of ●…mazone The maners and customes of the Amazones the succession of 〈◊〉 Quenes of Amazonie Hercules excha●…geth Menalyppe for the Quenes ar●…or Penthesilea coydeth the Troyans agaynst the Grekes Thalestris hauyng obtayned the companie of great Alexander returneth and dyeth ▪ with whome the name of Amazons de cayeth The Scythians are receyued wi●…h warre by their ●…men Darius warreth vppon them and flyeth shametully he cōquereth Asia and Macedone and vendeth himself agaynst the Atheniens Thoriginall of Thathe●…ens their in●…utions the succession of their kynges the chaunge of their gouernment the ●…wes of So●…on and his pollicie Pysistratus vsurpeth Hyppias is deposed and flyeth to Darius the notable battell of Marathon wherin Hippias is slayn Darius dyeth Xerxes succedeth he reneweth the warres agaynst Gre●… and is ouercome the notable prowesse of Leonidas Xerxes retyreth fearfully and dishonorablye
the temple of Ha●…o in Egypt ▪ buyldeth the cytie Alexandria receyueth letters twyse from Darius and replyeth to thesame mourneth for the death of Darius wyse 〈◊〉 the thyrd letter from 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 thereunto 〈◊〉 Darius and 〈◊〉 the Monarchie of the 〈◊〉 with th empyre of Asia rewardeth his souldiers and fyndeth ●…eadyng riches in the cytie 〈◊〉 Da rius is bounde by his ●…wne 〈◊〉 found by a souldier half dead and sore wounded 〈◊〉 whome he 〈◊〉 his mynde and dyeth and Alexander causeth him to be 〈◊〉 accordyng to his estate The conteyntes of the twelueth Boke ALexander buryeth his souldiours sumptuously Agis kyng of 〈◊〉 maketh insurreccion in Grece and is 〈◊〉 ▪ Al●…xander kyng of Epyre warreth in Italy is 〈◊〉 to death ●…yron with his hoste is slayn by the Scyth●…s Alexanders souldiours beyng in Parthia desyre to returne home he subdueth Hyrcanie and the mardes Thalestris Quene of ●…hamazones companyeth with Alexander he vsurpeth the maners of the Persians frequenteth feastyng licenceth his souldiers to mary their prysoners outrageth agaynst his noble menne conquereth the people that inhabite the foote of Cancasus in the which tyme Bessus that kylled Darius is brought bounde vnto him whome he deliuereth to be punished to Oxatres the brother of Darius he buyldeth Alexandria vppon Tanais kylleth Clytus at the table falleth in great dispayre for the same receyueth countries by composicion putteth Calisthenes and other noble men to death gyueth his souldiers syluer Bucklars entereth into Inde where a Quene called Cleophis yeldyng herself and her kyngdome vnto him recepueth it agayne at his hande ouercommeth kyng Porus. buyldeth two cyties subdueth fow●… Nacions is desyred by his souldieurs agayne to return home vanquisheth the Eu●…ytes ●…ceyueth by cōposicion the Gessones Asybanes conquereth the Ambres Sycābres is sore wounded in the citie of y ● Dpydrakes preserueth his host from poysoned woundes by thadmonishment of a dreame buy●…deth a Cytie in the mouthe of the ryuer Indus returneth to Babylon putteth the Lieuetenauntes of diuers countries to deathe punisheth a 〈◊〉 among his souldiers mourneth for the death of 〈◊〉 on enterteyneth thambassadours of Carthage Spayne Fraunce c. is poysoned by Antipater comforteth his souldiers makyng 〈◊〉 tumult for his death deliuereth his ryng to Perdiccas and dye●… The contentes of the thirtenth Boke THe mother of Darius dyeth for sorrowe Aridens is made kyng th empyre is d●…utded among the noblemen of Alexander Thatheniens and A●…tolians dryue ●…ntypater oute of Grece Perdiccas make●…h warre agaynst 〈◊〉 kyng of Cappadocia the noblemen of Macedone fal at varians among themselfs the foundacion of the cytie 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 Perdiccas is hated for his pry●… and Eumenes wynneth two fieldes ▪ The contentes of the fourtenth Boke EUmenes preuenteth the policies of his enemies he is beseged by A●…tigonus rescowed by Antipater resorteth to the A●…gyraspides for succor is ouer come by Antigonus and is betrayed by his owne souldiers Cassander is made Regent of Grece the Lacedemonians enclose their Cytie with a wal Eurydice and Arideus are slayne at the commaundement of Olympias Cassander lykewyse putteth Olympias to death and ●…prysoneth the sonne of Alexander The conteyntes of the xv Boke THe Conquerours fall at debate for partyng of the pray the Abderties are dryuen out of their countrey with frogges myce Cassander put●…eth the sonnes of Alexander to death Ptolomy is vanquished on the sea by Demetrius Alexanders Lieuetenauntes proclay me the●…es kynges Lysymachus taketh part with Cassander agaynst Antigonus a discourse of the doynges of the sayde Lysimachus the wonderfull 〈◊〉 of Seleucu●… with his par takyng agaynst Antigonus and his conquestes in the East Sandrocotte deliu●…th the Indians from the subiection of Macedone and oppressed them with Tyrannie himself ▪ Antigonus is slayne his son Demetrius put to flight the Conquerors ●…al at bar●…ans agayne among themselues and Cassander dyeth The conteyntes of the. xvi Boke ▪ THabominable murder of Antipater the sonne of 〈◊〉 for the which his brother Alexander proclay●…th warre agaynste him Demetrius slayeth Alexander and vsurpeth his part of Macedone Lysimachus yeld●…h vnto him the porcion of Antipater also Ptolomy Lysimachus Seleucus Pyrrhus yoine themselfes in league agaynst Demetrius Pyrrhus dryueth Demetrius oute of Macedone Lysimachus putteth his son in law Antipater to death in whome the house of Cassander is extincted Demetrius yeld ▪ th himself prisoner to Seleucus Ptolomy dieth debate falleth betwē Lysimachus Pyr●… he expuls●…th Pyrthus out of Macedone ▪ the buyldyng of the Cytie Heraciea in Pon●…us the g●…es of the Heracleans their cour●…e towarde their enemies their miserable oppression by tyrannie the bolde enterpryse of Chion and Leonides and the death of them The conteyntes of the. xvii Boke THe horrible Earthquake in Hellesponte and Chersonesus the crueltie of Lysimachus to his owne children by thinstigacion of their ●…tepmother Arsyrice the last warre betwene the succ●…ssoro of Alexander wherein 〈◊〉 is slayn by Seleucus who also within a while after is slayne by Ptolomy the kynges brother of Egypt Pyrrhus ayd●…th the ●…tynes agaynst the Romaynes a discourse of the Realme of Epyre with a declaracion of thactes of the kynges thereof The contentes of the. xviii Booke PYrrhus 〈◊〉 the Romayns Mage Duke of Carthagbrynge●…h ayd to them and is sent home agayne the Romayues take a truce with Pyrrhus the whiche is ●…ynged by Appius Claudius ▪ Pyr●…us tak●…th vppon him the kyngdome of Sy●…l the foundacion of Sydon and Tyre with a declaracion of th●…re Histories Dydo buyldeth Carthage and sleath herself The Carthaginenses 〈◊〉 abhominable kynde of sacrifice they su●…er losse by warre and p●…ens Macheus Duke of Carthage 〈◊〉 hys owne 〈◊〉 winneth Carthage is accused of treason and 〈◊〉 put to death The conteyntes of the. 〈◊〉 Boke MAgo Duke of Carthage dyeth his sonnes Hasor●…ball Hamilcar succede the Carthaginenses are ouercome by the 〈◊〉 ▪ fres and pay the rent for their cytie s●…ill they make warre in Sardynia and Sycill themessage of the Ambassadours of Darius to the Earthaginenses the Afres are compelled to releace the rent ▪ the army of Hamilco perishe●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pescilent influence of the star res the remnant whereof he bryngeth home and kylleth hymself The contents of the. xx Booke DEnnys the elder dryueth the Carthagine●…ses out of Sycill and maketh warre in Italy a declaracion of the fondacion of the cyties in Italy the warres betwene the 〈◊〉 and the Locrenses the lyfe doctrine and death of Pythagoras Dennys is ouercomme by the Croteniens and concludeth a league with the Frenchemen the doynges of the Frenchemen in Italy Dennys re turneth into Sycill agaynste the 〈◊〉 and is slayn by his owne men The contentes of the. xxi Boke THe yonger Dennys exercyseth all kynde Tyranny is expulsed the realme exercyseth moste vnspeakable tyranny at Locres in Italy ▪ is dryuen from thence and taketh Syracuse Hanno goeth about to oppresse the cōmon weale of Carthage is ●…rayed twyse and put to death Dennys deposeth
himself and flyeth to Corynthe where he lyueth a fylthie lyfe 〈◊〉 surnamed Rhodanus veweth the doynges and counselles of great Alexander ●…yeth his countrymen therof and at his returne is put to death for his labor The contentes of the. xxii Booke AGathocles ryseth from abase Degre lyke as yf it were by lowe steppes to the Kyngedome of Sycill he exerciseth great cruelty v●…xeth the consederates of the Carthaginenses by the sufferans o●… Hamilcar whose death preuenteth the secrete verdites of the Carthaginenses 〈◊〉 is veseged by Hamilcar the sonne of ●…ysgo he remoueth the war into 〈◊〉 vanquisseth the ●…arthagine whervppon the Aphres reuol●… vnto him he kylleth the kyng of Cy rene ouercommeth the 〈◊〉 agayn he rayseth the siege before Syracuse is receyued with a mutinie is ouercomme by vnaduisednesse forsaketh his men of warre and his children which are put to death for his sake he maketh peace with the Carthaginenses in Sycill The conteyntes of the. xxiii Boke ▪ A Gathocles maketh warre in Italy the trades and customes of the Lucanes ▪ the Originall of the Brutians the miserable e●…de of Agathocles the Carthaginenses inuade Sycill Pyrrhus oryueth them out r●…turneth into Italy whervppon Sycill reuolteth he is diseomfyted by the R●…mayns retyreth with great losse and dishonor into his kyngdome the byrthe educacion and commendacion of Hiero. The contentes of the. xxiiii Booke THe Lacedemonians stirre the Grekes to rebellion and are ouercome by the Etolian shepeherdes the wicked and abhomi nable 〈◊〉 of Ptolomy toward his syster and her children Rome is sacked by the Frenchemen wherof some place themselfes in Italy and some in Pannokie they of 〈◊〉 rayse a power deuidyng themselfes in two hostes of which th one kylleth Ptolomy kyng of Maccdone and are suppressed by Sosthenes thother vnder the conduct of Bremso inu●…deth Macedone agayn ouercom meth Sosthenes spoyleth the Realme inuadeth the temple of Delphos the situacion wherof is there deseribed is vanquished with lightnyng and thunder and Bremis sleath himself The conteintes of the. xxv Boke THe Frenchemen of Pannony rayse an other power inuade Ma cedone Antigonus ouercommeth them by a pollicy the Frenchmen are so redouted that all kynges craue their aide they succor the kyng of Bythinia and deuyde his Realme with him callyng themselfes Frenchegrekes Pyrrhus expulseth Antigonus out of Macedone he maketh warre agaynst the Lacedemonians the force and hardines of Ptolomy his sonne who is slayne in the wynnyng of Lacedemon Pyrrhus is slayn at Argos the moderacion and gentlenes of Antigonus with a commendacion of the sayd Pyrrhus The contentes of the. xxvi Boke THe extreme cruelty of 〈◊〉 Tyrant of Epyre the wyse inuention of old Helematus in suppressyng of him the cruelnesse of the Frenchegrekes towardes their wyues and children whome Antigonus ouercommeth viterly d●…stroyeth 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 bothe of his kyngdome men of warre by Alexander the sonne of Pyrrhus kyng of Epyre Demetrius the sonne of Antigonus not onely recouereth his fathers kingdome but also spoyleth Alexander of his kyngdome of Epyre Alexander by thelpe of the 〈◊〉 and the fauour of his owne countrymen is restored to his kyngdom agayn Agas kyng of ●…yrene dyeth Demetrius the brother of Antigonus by meanes of Beronice the ●…aughter of king Agas is slay●… in her mothers bed The conteyntes of the. xxvii Boke SEleucus kyng of Spria putteth hys step mother Beronice her sonne to death Ptolomy kyng of Egypte in reuengemente of her death inuadeth Syria 〈◊〉 suffereth a happy ship wreke for by m●…anes therof for pytie and cōpassion the cyties that Ptolomy had obteyned r●…uolted agayn he is vanquished in battell by Ptolomy and 〈◊〉 ayd of his brother 〈◊〉 Ptolomy maketh peace with Seleu●…us Antiochus warreth vppon his brother and ouercommeth him by the helpe of the Frenchgrekes who after the battell bend themselfes agaynst Antiochus and he raunsometh himself from them Eumenes kyng of Bythinia setteth vp pon Antiochus and the Frenchemen taketh the most part of Asia from them the brothers continew̄ still at deba●…e by meanes whero●… they comme bothe to a mis●…rable ende The contentes of the. xxviii Booke 〈◊〉 Quene of Epyre by the mariage of her daughter Pythia setteth variaunce betwene Demetrius kyng of Ma cedone and Antiochus kyng of Syria the proude answer of the Atolians to the Ambassadours of Rome Olympias dyeth for sorrow for the death of her two sonnes Laodomia is 〈◊〉 at the Altar of Diana 〈◊〉 dyeth Antigonus beyng left protector of the sonnes of Demetrius maketh himself kyng he subdueth the Lacedemonians wherin appereth as wel the stoutnes of the Spar tanes in aduersity as also the modeste and gentle behauiour of Antigonus in prosperitie The conteyntes of the. xxix Boke THe alteracion of the famousest kyngdomes by the succession of yong kynges Demetrius kyng of 〈◊〉 seweth to Phylippe kyng of Macedone for help agaynst the Ramaynes Philyp exhor●…eth the Grekes to concorde he proclaymeth open warre agaynste the Romaynes the D●…rdanians inuade Macedone he maketh peace 〈◊〉 the Romapnes Phylopemenes causeth the Acheans to reuolt from him The 〈◊〉 of the. xxx Boke THe 〈◊〉 of Ptolomy kyng of Egypt Antiochus in undeth Egypt and is put to the 〈◊〉 Ptolomy geueth him self vtterly to slouth and 〈◊〉 he dyeth his concubines are hanged vp the Romaynes take the gouernance of the yong kynge the 〈◊〉 rebell agaynste Philip kyng of Macedone he desyreth peace of the Romayns a quauyng of the Sea an earthquake in Asia Philip is vanquished in battell by the Romayns and speyled of all his Dominions sauyng onely the r●…alme of Macedone the E to lyans prouoke 〈◊〉 to warre vppon the Romayns The conteintes of the. xxxi Boke ANtiochus inuadeth the territories of the Dominion of Egypt the Romayns proclayme warre against him Nabis kyng of La cedemon subdueth many cyties in Grece y ● Romans send an Ambas sador to note Hannibals doynges in 〈◊〉 and to kyll hym he espieth their purpose and flyeth vnto Antiochus Nabis is vanquished by Flaminius after whose departure he followeth the warres agayne Hanniball is highly enterteyned by Antiochus he geueth councell how to procede in his warres agaynst the Romayns sendeth a messenger to Carthage to stirre them to rebellion the Romayns send an Ambassade to Antiochus who through their dayly conuersacion with Hannyball bryng him in the kynges displeasur who neuerthelesse sheweth his opynion of as concernyng the warres with the Romans the which is neglected antiochus is ouercomme of the Romans and taketh Hannibal into fauor agayn Han niball is put to the worse vppon the sea the magnimitie of Scipio affricanus articles of peace are propounded and by Antiochus reiected the romayns come to ●…roye Antiochus is vanquished with a great slaughter and peace geuen hym vppon the foresayd articles The conteyntes of the. xxxii Boke THe 〈◊〉 are subdued the 〈◊〉 Acheans 〈◊〉 for the souerainty Phylopemenes ●…aptayne of thacheans is is taken prysoner and poysoned by the 〈◊〉 the Mesnians are ouercomme and
a reher sall of thactes of him and his successours the exe●…rable dede of 〈◊〉 sonne of Eucratides and the for●…unate assayres of Mythrida●…s kyng of the Parthians The contentes of the. xlii Booke THe Scythians make warre vppon the Parthians Phr●…haties kyng of Parthia for his crueltie is betrayed and slayne Actabanus succedeth after whose death reygneth Mythridates surnamed the greate who greatly enlarged the Parthian Empyre Thore●…nall and description of Armenie the History of Iason and Med●… and of the Argonantes Thoriginall of the Albanes in the Easte the descryption of the riuer Tygris Mithridat●…s is deposed and slayne by his brother Horodes The battelles of the Parthians agaynst the Romaynes the furi●… and madnesse of horo●…s for the death of his sonne Pacorus the great wickednesse of Phrahar●…es who ouercommeth Themperout Antony is deposed and set vp agayn by the Scythians Tyridates who duryng his absence was created kyng hearyng of his returne flyeth to Augustus Themperour Phrahartes sent Ambassadoures for hym Augustus subdued the Par●…tians with the Maiestie of hys Name The contentes of the. xliii Booke THe fyrst inhabiters of Italy the commyng thither of Euander and Eneas and of his warrres there the buyldyng of long alba with the succession of the kynges therof the buyldyng of Rome by Remus and Romulus the buildyng of Marsieles in Fraūce with the prayse and commendacion and with the warres therof the stead fast ●…ayth of the Massiliens toward the Romayns the auncestors of thauthor of this worke The contentes of the. xliiii Boke THe situacion fertilitie and description of Spayn a wonderful example of pacience the dedes of Uiriatus Captayne of the Spanyardes of the genettes and of the steele that is in that countrie what thynges were inuented by Gargoris howe Gargoris assayed by all meanes to put his daughters childe to death and coulde not wherevpon moued with compassion for the perilles he had escaped he made him his heire whose name was Habis the inuentions of the sayd Habis the story of Hercules and Gerion the inhabityng of the Gades vppon what occasion the Carthaginenses entered fyrst into spayn and of the doyngs of their Captayns there ●…ynallie howe it was subdued by Augustus ●…hemperour and made a Prouynce of the Romaynes A PREFACE OF SIMON Grineus to the Reader as concerning the profite of readyng Hystoryes IF it were as Easye for euery man to take out and vse to hys owne be hofe the examples and instructiōs left in Hystories as the Hystories haue sure aud grounded examples to leane vnto I wold geue all men aduise to runne the strayie and nea rest way into the most plentifull fruiteful fieldes of Histories without tariens For what 〈◊〉 be thought more pleasaunt or profitable than sytting as it were in the Theatre or Stage of mans life the whiche an Historye hath most exquisitely furnished in all pointes and to all ententes and purposes to be made ware and wyse at the perilles of other men without any daunger on his owne behalfe to take ensample of all sortes the which a man may apply to his owne behoofe and vtilitie in euery thyng and at such●… time as he shall chaunce to be present among●… gret men when with greatest aduisement they do debate most weighty affaires to be able to discusse the ende and sequele of the same which thing we al doe chiefely desire and couet and that which otherwise considering the shorteness●… of mans life were a thing impossible to comprise in memory the times of many hundred yeares past to behold the beginninges the procedinges and the endinges of the gretest Empyres of all euilles eyther priuate or publike manyfest ly to discerne the ground and occasion In euerye hard and difficult matter to haue one to trie out the ieoperdyes and perilles before thee and to haue as it were a lod●…sman to go before thee in euerye daunger neuer to be de●…itute of tryed experience and to be briefe of thinges paste whyche properlye and peculiarlye apper●…ayneth to the dutye of a wise man polliti●…ely to fore see what maye followe in all chaunces and so to iudge of them as if they were present Nowe forasmuche as we oughte to come to the readyng of Histories so muche the better furnyshed as an Historye is more replenished and laden with plenteous fruite and for as muche as it is as difficulte a matter to geue ryght iudge mente of another mannes lyfe as of his owne and that no manne is able be he neuer so sharpe syghted in this case to viewe another mannes lyfe well that can not viewe hys owne both are to be vnderstanded namely that there is in this case very great difficultnesse and also that longe tyme before we enterprise hereunto we ought not onely to haue a little snatche of ciuile pollicy but also that we ought to be fully resolued and established in our selues as concernynge the whole tenour of our lyfe onles we will continually wauer in our mindes and be miserably led about with vayne imaginacions of this lyfe lyke vnto ghostes For in lyke ma ner as at a greate and sumptuous feaste that is furnyshed with al kynde of deynties and delicate viandes it commeth to passe that one thing is set before one man another to another fewe taste of one thing euery man of that he lyketh best the r●…eners of all that come before them and as euery mans taste and dyete is so taketh hepleasure of the deinties that stande before him yet notwithstandynge there shoulde be some one kynde of measure whiche nature hath appoynted and some one kynde of meat simple and in anye wise vncorrupted that is most for the health and nourish●…ment of the bodye from eyther of the whyche whosoeuer steppeth aside and followeth his owne appe●…ite beyond eyther measure or thordinaunce of nature he may take more hurt than pleasure of the delicates Euen so in that gret variety of mann●…s lyfe although there be a thousande sundrye sortes of thynges and a thousand purposes and after what sorte so euer a man 〈◊〉 led by fancie or stayed by iudgement so doth he deeme of his owne lyfe and of other mennes yet there is but one onelye pathwaye of vertue in the whyche who so walketh aduisedly is only to be counted to liue wel All others like as they did at the sumptuous feast when al thynges prouoke them beynge able neyther in their owne lyfe nor yet in another mannes at any time to fynd what is best to folow or howe to procede But if nature haue geuen any thyng to man the whiche he maye vse or abuse at hys pleasure certesse he ought most circumspectely to vse this But I pray you what man is there almost that applyenge the rule of vertue vnto all sayenges and doynges aswell of his owne as of other mennes doth with more aduisement aduenture vpon them then vpon the daintye dishes set before him on the table or which thynketh not hym selfe sufficiently learned in this behalfe In the whiche
obseruing and executyng of a mannes duetye as it doth to men of the countrey whyche in the sackyng of a citie come to the ryffling of some Apothecaries of Grocers shoppe plenteouslye furnyshed with al thynges belongyng to the crafte and beyng allured with the swetenesse of the confections and spices which they chaunce first to laye their handes on thynking all the residue to be of the same sorte do eate suppe deuour cramme in and lycke vp all that comes to hand in such wise that some fal sicke some runne madde some dye out of hand and euery one of them be maruaylou●…ye distempered so that all the armye laugh them to skorne for their labour For euen as the life is full of commodities and discommodities euen so is an hystorye which is the ymage and representacion of the life And the wysedome of the life consisteth onely in the vsage of the lyfe Farewell enioye these thinges to thy most furtheraunce and commoditye THE PREFACE OF THE MOST famous Historiographer Iustine vpon the Histories of Trogus Pompeius unto anto●…ye the Emperour WHereas many of the Romaines euen such as were of the state of Consuls had put thactes of the Romaynes in writing both in Greeke and also in other straunge language Trogus Pompeius a man of aunciente eloquence whether it were for desyre of lyke renowne and glory or for pleasure that he hadde in the varietie and straungenesse of the worke compiled as well the hystories of the Grekes as the Histories of al the whole world besides in the Lating toūg to th entent that as our Chronicles are redde in Greeke so the Chronicles of the Greekes myght be red in our toung also Wherein he enterprysed a piece of worke of great payne both to bodye and mynde For seyng that many Authours which haue taken vpon them to put in writing the doinges of some one kynge or of some one peculiar kynd of people do thynke theym selues to haue taken a matter of great weyght in hand may we not wrothelye thynke Pompeius to haue bene as bolde as Hercules that durst aduenture vpon the whole world in whose bookes are conteyned the doinges of all ages of all Kynges of all nacions and of all contreyes And those thinges that the Greeke Chroniclers haue entreated vpō disorderly as euery man thought moste conueniente for hym selfe all the same thynges hath Pompeius plaring them in theyr tymes and settyng them in due order compyled in Hystorye omittyng all such thinges as were not profytable to be spoken of Therfore of these xliiii volumes for so many dyd Pompeye set forth by leasure durynge the tyme that I was in the Cytie I drewe out all such thinges as I thought worthy to be knowen ●… leauing out such thinges the knowledge wherof could not haue delyghted nor yet were necessary for example I haue gathered as it were a little bundle of flowres to th ētent that such as haue learned Greeke might haue whereby to be admonyshed and they which haue not learned Greeke whereby to be instructed The whyche I haue dedicated vnto youre maiesty not so much to read as to peruse and correcte and also to th entent to geue an acc●…unpte of spending my time whereof Cato willeth a due accompte to be made For it suffiseth me at this present yf your highenes do allow my doynges trusting hereafter that when the brunte of slaunderous enuye is ouerpaste they that come after me shall beare witnesse of my trauaile and paynes takynge Farewell ¶ The first Booke OF THABRIDGEMENT OF Histories taken out of the Hystorye of Trogus Pompeius by Iustine the Historiographer IN the first beginnyng of thinges the rule and gouernement of countreyes and nacions was in the handes of kynges Who were aduaunced to this hyghe estate and preheminence not through ambicion and fauour of the comminaltye but for their vertuous and modeste behauioure suffycientlye tryed and approued amongest good men There were no lawes to bynd men to their obedience but the commaundementes of Princes were in steade of lawes whose custome was rather to defend tha●… enlarge y ● borders of their kyngdomes And there was none that woulde vsurpe or take vpon him further than in his owne countreye where he was borne Ninus kyng of Thassirians did first alter and breake this olde and aunci●…t custome of the Gentiles through a straunge desyre of bearyng rule For he first made warre vpon his neyghbours and conquered the nacions whyche yesiknewe not howe to make resystence agaynste hym euen vnto the borders of Affricke There were before his tyme two auncient kynges Uexores kyng of Egypt and Tanais kyng of Scithia of the which th one made a voyage into Pontus and the other into Egypt But they made warre a farre of and not nere home not of purpose to enlarge theyr empyre but to wine honour and renowne of Chiualry to their subiectes and so beyng satisfyed with the victory they absteined from bearing rule But Ninus continually dilated his Empire by seizing into his possession such countreyes as he wonne By reason whereof hauing subdewed his neyghbours and ioyning theyr power vnto his and so goyng euer stronger and stronger to the next eche former victory beyng an occasion and furtheraunce to the next followyng he conquered all the Easter parte of the world The last fyeld that he fought was with zoroastres kyng of the Bactrians who is reported to haue first inuēted art Magicke and diligētly to haue serched out the beginning of the world and the mouinge of the starres This zoroastres beyng slaine Ninius him selfe also dyed leauynge behinde him a sonne as then vnder age called Ninus by his wyfe Semiramis She durst neyther put the gouernement of the Empyre to the child beyng vnder yeares of discrescion nor yet her selfe take it vppon her openly Wisely foreseing and thinkinge with her selfe that so manye and so mightye nacions whych scarcelye by their good willes would obey a man would muche lesse abyde to be subiect to a woman Therefore where as she was Ninus wyfe she fayned her selfe to be his sonne and whereas she was a woman she fayned her selfe to be a boye And she myght well do it For they were both of a meane stature both of them spake small and in the ●…amentes and proporcion of bodye was lytle difference betwyxte them Wherefore she put on mannes apparayle and close hosen and on her head she ware a kynde of coy●…e called Tyara And for bycause folke shoulde not mistrust any thyng to be hidden vnder this newe found apparell she commaunded the people to be apparelled after the same sorte the whyche kynde of attyre all Thassirians haue euer vsed frō that day to thys Thus at the fyrste by counterfaytyng the kynde she was taken for a boye Afterward she atchieued manye noble enterprises by the greatnesse whereof when she thoughte she had ouercome enuye she confessed who she was and whō she counterfeyted Neyther dyd this her doyng diminishe the honour and estimation
of her empyre but rather broughte her in greater admiration of all menne that she beynge a woman had surmounted in prowesse not only women but also men She buylded Babilon and enclosed it with a wall of brycke enterlayed with sand and Bytamen which is a kynd of slymye mortar yssuyng out of the ground in diuers places of that countrye Many other noble enterprises this Queene atchieued For beyng not content to maynteyne the state of th empyre and boundes of the same as her husbande lefte it vnto her she subdued Aethyop thereunto And besides that she made warre vpon Indie whereunto there was neuer any that durst geue the aduenture sauyng she onely and great Alexander At the last vnnaturallye desyryng to company with her owne sonne she was by him slayne whē she had reygned xlii yeares after the death of her husbande Ninus Her sonne Ninus beyng contented with the countreyes wonne by his parentes layeng asyde all Chiualrye and knighthoode as though he had chaunged nature with his mother was seldome seene of men but spente hys tyme among a sorte of women His posterity also followynge his example gaue aunswere to the people to ambassadours by messengers The Empyre of Thassirians whyche afterward were called Syrians continued 1300. yeres The last kyng that reigned amonge theym was Sardanapalus a man more vicious than any woman Unto whose presence Arbactus whom he had made lyeuetenaunt ouer the Medes beyng by long suyte had much intreataunce hardly at length admitted which thing was neuer graunted to any man be fore found him amonge a sorte of concubines spinning purple on a rocke in womans apparayle passyng all the womē there in softenesse of body and nycenesse of countenaunce and weyeng out to eche of them theyr taske At the whiche light Arbactus disdayning that so manye men shuld be subiect to such a woman and that so many valiaunte knyghtes and men of warre should be slaues to a woman went forth and tolde his peres what he had sene sayeng he coulde not fynde in his hart to serue and obey such a one as had rather be a woman then a man Whereupon the Lordes confedered them selues together and had him battell Who hearing thereof not like a man entendyng to defend his kyngdome but as women are wont to do for feare of death first sought a corner to hyde his head and soone after with a few and out of aray he came into the felde where beynge vanquished he retired into his pallace there makyng a great bonefire cast him selfe and all his ryches thereinto plainge the man in this only poynt After this Arbactus the worker of his confusion which before was lieutenaunte ouer y e Medes was instituted made kyng And he translated the empire frō the Assirians to the Medes In processe of tyme after many kynges by order of descent the kyngdom came vnto Astyage This man hauing done issue sauing one onely daughter dreamed that he sawe spryng out of her priuye members a vine whose braunches shadowed all Asia The interpretours of dreames and wonders beyng asked theyr iudgement and aduice in the matter made aunswere that hys daughter shoulde brynge hym fothe a nephewe whose greatnesse was by his vision declared before and that by him be should he deposed from his kingdome The kyng being not a litle abash●…d with this interpretacion maryed hys doughter neyther to a Noble man nor to one of his owne countrey least the nobilitie of the parētes should aduaunce encourage his nephewe to take much vpon him but vnto a man of meane estate and liuing of the countrey of Persia which in those ●…ayes was reputed as a base countreye and of no regard or estimation Neuerthelesse beyng not by this acte quite dispatched of the feare of this dreame he sent for his doughter beyng great with childe that as soone as she were deliuered he myght see the babe kylled ▪ Assoone as the childe was borne it was deliuered to be ●…layne vnto Harpagus one of y e kinges priuye counsaile Harpagus fearing that if after the decease of the kyng because he had no yssue male to succede him the kingdome should descend vnto his doughter she would reuenge the death of her chylde vpon him being a subiecte which she could not do vpon her father ▪ deliuered the childe to the kinges herman commaū ding him to cast it away By chaunce the verye same tyme the herdman him selfe had a sonne newlye borne Whose wife hearing of the casting away of the kynges childe earnestly besought her husbande to fetche the childe vnto her that she myght see hym The shepeherd ouercome with the earnest intreataunce of his owne wife returned into the wood where he founde a bytche geuing the childe sucke and defending it frō foules and wilde beastes Then beyng moued with pitie to see the bytche so naturall and pitifull he tooke vp the childe bare it home to his cottage the bitche folowing him egerlye all the waye Assoone as the woman tooke the babe in her armes he smiled and played with her as though he had knowen her and there appeared in him such a chearfulnesse as it were a certayne smiling and flattering countenaunce that she desyred the shepeherd herhusbande to cast awaye his owne childe and suffer her to bryng vp that in the sted of it such was the good fortune of the childe or els the hope that she of hym conceyued And so the destinye of the two children beyng chaūged the kinges nephewe was brought vp for the shepeherdes sonne and the shepeherdes sonne was cast away for the kynges nephewe the nources name was afterward called Sparcon bicause the Persiās do cal a bytche so in theyr language The childe beyng broughte vp amonge the shepeherdes was named Cyrus And in the meane tyme beyng chosen kynge amonge children as they were a playeng when in sporte he whypped suche as wer stubbourne agaynst him the parentes of the children made thereof a great complaynt to the kyng sayeng it stoode not with their honour that their children should be beaten like slaues of the kynges bondman The kyng sendynge for ●…he chylde demaunded of hym whye he dyd so He aunswered without any chaungyng of countenaunce at all for the mat ter that he had done as it became a kynge to do The kyng maruayling at his audacitye came in remembraunce of his dreame and the interpretacion thereof and so when bothe the countenaunce of the chylde and also his lykenesse vnto him selfe the time of his castyng away and the examinaciō of the shepeherd agreed in one he acknowledged him to be his nephewe And for bycause he thoughte him selfe dispatched of his dreame in as much as the childe had played the kyng among the shepeherdes the cruell hart that he bare toward the child was clerely thereby relented But to his frende Harpagus he became so deadly an enemy for sauing of his nephewe that to reuenge his
th one estate he was like to displese the other that he gate like fauor at bothe theyr handes Amongst the noble actes of this man whiche were many this is in especially worthy to be remembred The Atheniens and Megarenses had fought together for the chalen ging of the I le of Salamine almost to their vtter destructiō After many great slaughters it begā to be taken for a heinous matter among the Atheniens if any man shuld go about to make any claim or title to the Iland Solon therfore being sorowful least by holdinge his peace he should not so greatly further the common wealth as he ought to doo or by putting forth his counsell bring him self in daunger sodenly fained himself mad vnder pretens wherof he might not only say but also doo thinges forbidden He ran abrode in a foles cote like a disard and in a great company of men that gathered aboute him the more to cloke his pretensed purpose in rimes and meters to him vnaccustomed he begā to moue the people to that thing which was vnlawful wherin he so perswaded them all that forthwith they proclaimed warre against the Megarenses in the which they vā quished their enemies and reduced the Iland vnder theyr subiection In the meane season the Megarenses being mindful of the warres that the Atheniens made against them and b●…ing lothe to leaue without some gain toke shipping of purpose to take the noble women and matrones of Athens as they wer celebrating the sacri●…ces vnto Ceres in the night time at Elensis The which thing beinge knowen Pisistratus captain of the Atheniens laid bushments of men in places conuenient commaundinge the women to celebrate their ceremonies with like noise and hurly burly as they were wont to doo euen when their ennemies came to th entent they should not suspecte that their commynge was heard of When the Megarenses were come out of their shippes he sodainly brake vpon them and ●…ue them euery one and forthwith entring into their ships the whiche he entermedled with women to make a show as though thei had bene the matrones taken prisoners he went straighte to Megara The townes men seing their owne shippes and the women in them whiche they supposed to be the ●…ootye that they soughte for wente forthe to the hauen to meete them the whiche company Pysistratus ●…ue and missed but little of winninge the City So by their owne pollicye the Megarenses gaue their ennemies the victory But Pysistratus as though he had won to his owne behoofe and not to the behoofe of his Country by craft and pollicy made him selfe king For at home at his owne house when he hadde of set purpose caused his body to be rent and māgled with scourging and whipping he came abrode and ther sommoning the people together shewed them his woundes makynge exclamation of the crueltye of the Noble menne at whose hands he surmised himself to haue suffered this hurte As he spake he wept and with his spiteful wordes set the light people on fire assuringe them that for the loue he bare to them he was hated of the Senate 〈◊〉 hervpon he obtained a garde of menne for the safetye of his personne by whose meanes he vsurped the Luperioritye and raigned xxxiiii yeares After his deathe Diocles one of his Sonnes as he rauished a maiden perforce was by the brother of the same maide slaine His other sonne named Hyppias possessynge his fathers kingdome commaunded him that slue his brother to be apprehended who being compelled by tormēts to appeale such as were necessarye to the murder named all the Tyrannes frendes whiche being put to deathe and the Tyran demaunding if there were yet anye moo a Counsell or preuye to the deede there is no moo quod he aliue whome I would gladly see die sauing the Tyran hym selfe by whiche sayinge he declared him selfe bothe to haue the vpper hand of the Tyran and also to haue reuenged the cha stity of his sister The city through his stoutnesse being put in remembraunce of their liberty at length deposed Hyppias from his kingdom and banished him their coūtry Who taking his iourny into Persie offred him self to Darius making warre againste the Atheniens as is before specified as a captain against his own country Wherfore the Atheniens hearing of Darius approche sent for aid to the Lacedemonians who at that time were in leage with them But perceiuing that they were busied aboute matters of religion for the space of iiii daies they thought not good to tary the cōming of their succors but with x. M well apoynted of their own citizens and one thousād of the 〈◊〉 which came to their aid they went forth to battell against vi C. M. of their enemies in the plains of Marathon Melciades was Captain of this war counseller not to tary 〈◊〉 their succors Who was of such corage that he thought ther was 〈◊〉 aduantage in spedy settinge forward then in lingering for succor Therfore they ran into the battell with wonderful cherefulnesse In so muche that when the ii armies wer a mile a sondre they hasted forwarde as fast as they could ●…un to ioyn with their ennemies before they mighte discharge their arowes Neither wanted this boldnesse good successe For the battell was fought wyth suche corage that a man wold haue thought the one side to haue ben men and thother to haue ben beasts The Persians be ing vanquished fled to their ships wherof many wer drow ned and many wer taken In that battel the prowesse and manhode of euery man was so great that it were harde to iudge who deserued most to be praised How be it amongst all other brast forth the glory of a yonge man called Themistocles in whom euen then appered such towardnesse as it was like he should for his valiauntnesse hereafter be made their chiefe captain gouernor The glory of one Cynaegirus also a souldior of Athens is highly commended set for the with great praises among wryters who after innumerable slaughter in the battel when he had pursued his ennemies to their shippes as they fled he caught holde of a ship that was laden with his right hand and would not let goo his holde till he had loste his hande His righte hand being cutte of he laid holde on it with his left hande the whyche also beinge loste in likewise at the laste he held the shyppe with his teethe Suche was his courage that being not wearied with so manye slaughters nor discouraged with the losse of bothe his handes at the last being vtterly maimed like a sauage beast he fought with his teethe The Persians loste in that battell two hundred thousand menne beside their shippes Hyppias also the Tyran of Atbens the author and stirrer of this warre through the iust vengaunce of God whyche punished him for his country sake was there slayne In the meane time Darius as he was aboute to renewe the warre
captain of the Atheniens elected his fellow in the warre what by working againste his enterprises and what foreseing wiselye what was like to ensue disclosed the entent and purpose of his treason Whervpon ere it was long after Pansanias was arrained and condemned Xerxes therfore when he perceiued that his secrete conspiracies were disclosed determined to proclaime open warre againe The Grecians also appoynted for their captaine Cymo of Athens the sonne of Milciades their graundcaptaine at the battell of Marathon a noble yong gentleman whose naturall and godly disposition declared before hand what great honor he was like to come vnto For when his father being cast in prison for robbing of the common tresure was there departed and could not be buried he by taking his fathers irons vppon him redeamed his body and buried it Neither wer they any thing at all deceiued that chose him to be their soueraign Captain For being a man of no lesse prowesse then was his father he vanquished Xerxes both vpon the sea and vppon the land and compelled him fearfully to retire into his own kingdome The third Booke XErxes king of Persia of whome all nations a litle before stode in feare after he had sped so vn fortunatelye in his warres in Grece began to be had in contempt euen of his own subiectes For Artabanus his lieuetenaunt perceiuing the kings estate dailye to decaye beinge therwith broughte in good hope to obtain the kingdom one euening wyth vii of his sonnes all men growen and stout men of their handes entred the kings palace For he was so well be trusted and beloued with the king that he might come in whenso euer he wold Wherfore whē he had slain the king he wrought by pollicy to destroy his children whome he knewe to be a lette to his enterprise As for Artaxerxes whiche was but a childe to speake of he toke no great thought and therfore the sooner to compasse his matters he surmised that Darius which was a tall strippling had slaine his father to the entent he might the soner possesse the kingdom Wherby he compelled artaxerxes to reuenge murder with murder When they came to Darius lodginge they founde him as it were neither sleping nor waking and there killed him Afterward artabanus perceiuing that for all the mischief he could deuise there was yet one of the kinges sonnes aliue and fearing that the peres of the realme wold stand in con tention with him for the kingdome made of his Counsell one Baccabassus who being content with his present estate bewrayed the whole matter to artaxerxes howe his Father was slain how his brother vpon false presumption of murder was put to death and finallye howe there was treason a woorking againste his owne personne When artaxerxes knew that fearing to attempt any thing rashly or agaynst artabanus because he had so many of his sonnes about hym he commaunded his army to be in a readinesse in their armour before him the next day sayinge that he woulde take musters of them him selfe and see a trial of euery mannes behauioure howe he coulde handle his weapon Therfore when as among the rest artabanus himselfe stoode by in his harnesse the kinge fained that his Curet was to shorte for him commaundinge artabanus to chaunge with him As he was putting it of the king espying him naked thrust hym throughe with his sworde and ther with all commaunded all his sonnes to be laide hande on And by this meanes the worthy yong Prince reuenged the death of his father and the murder of his brother and saued him selfe oute of the bandes of traitoures While these things were a doing among the Persians in the mean season all Grece deuiding it self in ii parts wherof the one folowed the Lacedemonians thother the Atheniens turned their wepons from forain enemies agaynste their owne bowels Of one people was made two bodies the souldiers of one campe wer parted into ii hostes of deadly and mortall enemies On th one side the Lacedemonians drue to their parte all suche as were before times waged at the common charges of al the cities for the defēce of the whole country On thother side the Atheniens being renowmed as wel for their antiquity and long continuance as also by their dedes of cheualry trusted all to their own strength And so two of the mightiest people of all Grece egall by the statutes of Solon and lawes of Lycurgus throughe enuy one at anothers estate fel together by the eares amonge them selues For Lycurgus succeadinge his brother Polybita in the kingdome of Sparta when as he might lawfullye haue chalenged it to him selfe surrendred the same with as muche faithfulnesse as mighte be vnto his sonne Charilans whyche was borne after the deathe of hys father assone as he came to mannes estate To the entent that all men myghte vnderstande howe muche good men doo set more by rightuousnesse then by al the richesse in the world In the meane while therfore that the childe grew of whom as protector he had the gouernment he deuised lawes for the Spartanes whiche hetherto hadde none in whyche doing he deserued not more renowne for inuenting of them then for geuyng example in keeping them For certainlye he ordayned no law for any other man wherof he gaue not ensample first of all by him selfe He taughte the people due obedience to their Princes and the Princes to minister iu●…ice indifferently to al their subiectes He counselled all estates to vse temperance and frugalitye thincking that throughe the dailye and accustomable vse therof the trauell and penye of warfare should seeme much more light and easy he commaunded all things to be bought not for mony but for exchaunge of wares The vse of golde and siluer as the occasion of all mischief he vtterly toke away The gouernment of the publike weale he distributed to certain estates and degrees Unto the kinges he gaue power absolutely in all matters concerning the warres vnto the magistrates authority in iudgementes and matters of lawe whome he would to continue in office but one yeare at ones vnto the Senatoures to see the lawes executed and kept to the cōmons power to chuse the Senatoures or to create what officers they listed He parted all their landes equallye amongste them portion and portion like to the entent that euery man hauing like liuelihode no man shuld take more vpon him then other He ordained that they should all eate and drinke together openlye to the entent that no manne should secreatly vse any excesse or super●…uitye he permitted not the yong men to weare anye moo garmentes then one all the yere nor one to go gayer then another nor one to fare better then an other leaste by followinge one anothers example they should fall to riot Children vnder xv yeares age were not suffred to come into the Courte but were commaunded to keepe in the Country to the entent they might
battels before wherwith they were brought to luche a dèspaire that forthwith they put away alcibiades chose conon to be theyr captain in his stead Thincking them selues to haue beene vanquished not by the chaunce of warres but through the treson of their captaine whiche more regarded the old displesure then the benefits newly bestowed vpon him And that he had vanquished his ennemies in the former battels for ndne other purpose but only to shewe vnto them what a captain they had despised and to th entent to sel them the victory the derer And to say the truthe alcibiades had so suttle a hed was therwith so muche geuen to vice and lasciuious liuing that it was like inough he wold worke such a thing Fering therfore the displesure of the people in their rage of his own wil he banished him self againe Then Conon beinge put in the roume of Alcibsades hauinge before his eies what a captaine he had suc●…eded furnished his nauy with all diligence and circumspectinesse tha tmyght be But there wanted men to furnish the shippes for the ●…ou test and strongest souldiours wer lost in the forraginge of Asia Yet notwithstanding old menne and berdlesse boyes wer armed and so filled vp the nomber of souldiers without any strength of the host Yet for al that they letted not to encounter with their enemies by whom like weak and vnable soldiers they were euerye where beaten downe or els taken running away And there was suche a destruction what of them that were slaine and what of them that were taken that not only the Empire but euen the verye name of the Atheniens semed to be vtterly extinct By the which battel they wer brought to so low an ebbe and lefte so bare by reson all their warlike men wer consumed and spent that they were driuen folet their city to straungers to set their slaues bondmen fre and to geue pardō to such as were condempned to die And with this rout of raskals wherof their army was compact they which lately before wer lords of al Grece were now skarse able to maintaine their owne libertye Neuerthelesse they determined yet once again to try their fortune vpon the sea So stout were their stomakes so coragious wer their harts that wheras a litle before they wer in despair of their own safegard they were now in good hope to get the victor●…e But these were not the souldioures that were able to vphold the honor of Athens nether was that the power wherwith they wer wont to geue their ennemies the ouerthrow neyther was there suche knowledge of feats of armes in those that had bene kepte in prison and not in the campe Therefore they were all either slaine or taken prisoners The captain Conon which eskaped alone frō the battel fering the cruelty of his country men toke viii ships and sailed to Eu●…goras king of cyprus But the captaine of the Lacedemonians hauing atcheued al thinges prosperously and according to his own desire proudly reioysig at thaduersity of his enemies sent the ships that he had taken withall the boty gotten in the warres decked garnished in maner of a triumph vnto Lacedemon receiued by composition all the cities that wer tributary to the Atheniens which as yet continued in their due obediēce because they knew not to what end the war wold come leuing nothing vnder the dominion of the Atheniens sauing only the bare city Of al the which mise ries whē tidings came to Athens all the people forsakyng their houses ran vp and down the city amased one askyng an other what tidings seking for him that brought vp first the newes not the children their wāt of discretion not the old men want of strength not the women the weaknesse delibity of nature could kepe at home so sore did the feling of that misfortune perce vnto alages They met together in the market sted and ther al night long lamēted and bewailed their cōmon misfortune some made mone for theyr brothers some for their sonnes some for their fathers som for their kinsfolk other some for their frends which wer derer to them then their kinsfolk and amōg theyr priuate mischances was alwaies repeated the cōmon misfortune loking for none other but present vtter destruction both to them selues to their country esteming them that were aliue to be in worse case then them that were deade Eche person setting before their eies besiegement hunger and the arrogant enemy hauing them in his hād to worke hys plesure vpon thē And therwith cam to their remēbrās the ouerthrow burninge of their city the captiuitye of them selues the most miserable seruitude bōdage which they were all like to be brought vnto Thincking the first ouerthrow of the city by the Per. to be coūted hapy in cōparisō in the which their wiues childrē parēts kinsfolk remaining in safegard they lost nothīg but their houses wheras now they had no ships left whervnto thei might fly for su●… had no army of souldiours through whose help they might be defended til they were able to builde a fairer Citye And as they werthus bewailing their misfortune and misery their enemies cōming vpō them enuironed the town with a strong siege and constrained them greatly with hū ger For it was wel knowen that there were not many of the soldioures left aliue within the towne and they wer so straightly loked to that no new succors could be broughte in By which mischeues the Atheniens being brought low after long famin and daily pestilence desired peace There was longe debatinge betwene the Lacedemonians their adherentes whether it was to be graunted or no. When many gaue counsel vtterly to rote out the name of the Atheniens to put the city to the fire the Spartanes sayde they would not in any wise condiscend that if the two eyes of Grece the one shoulde be put out And so they graunted thē peace vpon condition they should cast down the armes of the walles that stretched toward the hauen of Pyreum de liuer vp all their ships that were left and receiue at theyr hand xxx rulers to gouern their cōmon welth Upon these articles the city was yelded to the Lacedemonians who cō mitted thordering therof to the discretion of theyr captaine Lysander This yeare was worthy to be noted bothe for the winning of Athens for the deth of Darius king of Persia also for the banishment of Dyonise tiraunt of Sicil. The estate of Athens being thus altered the estate of the people was altered also The xxx rulers of the common welth fel to tiranny For at their firste comminge they chose them a gard of thre M. men wheras in al the city remained skarse as manye moo they were so wasted and consumed by the warres afore And yet not so content as though this bande were to weake to keepe the Citye in awe they borowed DCC souldiours of
againe Of the whiche sorte he made three hundred iudges and rulers of the City Before whome when all the greatest men of the Citye were araigned as giltye of their wrongfull banishment they were of suche constancye that they all confessed them selues to haue bene authors therof in deede Affirmynge y ● it was better with the common wealthe when they were condempned then when they were restored again It was out of doubte a meruelous audacitye ●…or prisoners to geue sentence on their iudges that sate vppon their life death as who would say they disdained to be acquite at their ennemies handes and for asmuch as they coulde not reuenge them selues in worke to vsurpe their libertye in woordes When Phillip had set thinges at a staye in Grece he commaunded all the cityes to sende ambassadors to Corynthe for the reformation of the thinges that were a misse Ther he enacted a statute of peace for al Grece accordyng to the deseruinges of euery City and he elected oute of them all one Counsell and as it were one Senate Onlye the Lacedemonians despised bothe the king and his lawe accōpting that peace but as a seruitude or bondage which was not agreable to the cities them selues but was geuen at y ● pleasure of the conqueror Furthermore euery city was apoyn ted what manner of men they should setforth to y ● warres if the king should haue neade either to assiste him when he wer assailed by foraine power or els to make warre vnto others vnder him For it was to be thoughte none other but that all this great preparation was made to assayl the Empire of the Persians The summe of al his succors was two hundred thousand footemen and fiftene hundred horsemen Besides this nomber was also the hoste of Macedone and other barbarous nations bordering ther vpon whom he had subdued In the beginning of y ● spring he s●…t ouer before into Asia which belōged to the Persians thre captains Parmenio Amyntas Attalus Whose sister hauinge put away Olympias the mother of Alexander vpon suspition of aduoutry he had lately taken in mariage In the meane season while his succors were assemblynge out of Grece he solemnized a mariage betwene his daughter Cleopatra and Alexander whome he had made kynge of Epyre. That day was great solempnity and feasting according to thestate of the two kings th one geuing his daughter thother taking her in mariage And there wanted no kinde of royall showes and pageauntes that coulde be deuised to see the which as Philip was going forth withoute any gard in the middes betwene the two Alexanders hys sonne and sonne in law A noble yong manne of Macedone called Pansanias mistrusted of no man where aboutes he w●…nt stept vpon the king in a strait and as he would haue passed by slue him turning the day into sorowe and heauinesse that was appoynted to mirth and pleasure This Pansa●…as in the first prime of his youthe had suffered Attalus perforce against his wil to abuse him moost filthely wherwith being not contented he offred him this villanye besides He brought him into a banket and there making him dronken cōpelled him like a st●…king strompet to sustaine not only his beastly lechery but also the shamelesse and abhominable lust of al y ● guests wherby he madehim a laugh ing stock to all men when he came amonge hiscōpanions Pansanias being with this his doinge sore agreued did oftentimes make complainte therof to the kinge At whose hand being with diuers delaies put of not without a mock for his labor and perceiuing his aduersary to be aduaunced furthermore to a captainship he turned his wrathe vppon the king him self and for because he could not be reuenged vpon his aduersary he reuenged him vpon the wrongfull iudge It is thoughte that he was sent by Olympias the mother of Alexander and that Alexander him self ●…as pre uy to his fathers murthre For it is not vnlike but that Olympias toke ber deuorcement and the preferment of Cle opitra as greuously as Pansanias did his abusing and that Alexander feared his brother begotten of his stepmother as an enemy of his kingdome Whervpon it came to passe before this time that he fell at woordes at a banquet fyrste with Attalus and after with his father In so muche that his father pursued him with his sworde drawne and hys frendes had much a doo to entreate him to holde his hande from killing him Uppon which occasion Alexander wyth his mother fled vnto his vncle into Epyre and frō thence went to the kinge of Sclauonye and would skarse by anye meanes be reconciled to his father when he sente for hym in so muche that his frendes coulde not in manner by anye intretaunce compell him to returne agayne Olympias al so was procuring her brother Alexander king of Epyre to raise warre against Philip and had obtained her sute if he had not preuented him with the mariage of his daughter and made him his sonne in lawe These thinges therefore were as spurres vnto Pansanias iust displeasure prickyng him forward to the accomplishment of this acte vpon hys complaint sorowing to be so shamefully abused and coulde haue no redresse This is certaine that Olympias had laid poste horses to conuey him awaye when he had striken the king Afterward when she hard of the murder of the king she came to his funerals the same night vnder pretence of doing obsequies to him and there the very same night that she came she set a crowne of golde vpon Pansanias hed as he ●…ong vpon the galowes the which thing no body durst haue bene so bold to haue doone but she Philip hauynge a sonne a liue And within a few daies after she toke downe the body of Pansanias and burned it vppon her husbandes ashes and builded him a tombe in the same place causyng yerely certaine Ceremonies and obsequies to be doone for him wherby she draue a superstitiō into the peoples heds This doone she compelled Clep●…tra for whose sake Phillip had diuorsed him self frō her hauing first killed her daughter euen in the mothers lap to hang her self and in beholdinge her howe she hong enioyed the reuengement vnto which she made so muche hast by the murder of her owne hus●…and Last of al she consecrated the sword wherwith the kyng was stain vnto Apollo by the name of Myrtalis for that was Olympias name when she was a litle one Al y ● which things wer don so openlye that it was to be thoughte she shoulde haue feared least her doing wold not be alowed or rather as though she cared not who knew that she had doone the dede ▪ Philip deceased of thage of xlvii yeares when he had raigned xxv yeres He begate of Larissa a daunsing damosel a sonne named Arideus that raigned after Alexander He had many other sonnes begotten of diuers women as the manner of kings is of whome some died of theyr naturall death
made lieuetenaunte of the Armenians In processe of time after y ● death of king Ochus in remēbrans of hys former prowesse the people created him kyng And to th entent nothing shuld want in him that appertained to thestate of a king they called him by the renowmed name o●… Darius Who afterward with great prowesse held warre a long time with greate Alexander somtime to his gaine and sometime to his losse At laste beinge vanquished of Alexander and slain of his own kinsmen he ended his life to gether with the Empire of the Persians The eleuenth Booke IN tharmy of Philip as there were sondry sorts of people Euen so after y ● time that he was slain their mindes wer diuersly moued For some that were oppressed with wrongfull seruitude comforted them selues with hoope of libertye Others wearye of the warfares so far frō their natiue country reioysed to thinke y ● the viage shuld be broken vp and they dismissed Manye were sory to see the Tapers y ● were made to set before the daughter at her mariage stand vpon the herse of the father His frēds also wer not a litle amased at so sodain mutation of things considering how Asia was lately chalenged Europe scarsly yet cōquered and howe the Illyrians Thracians Dardanians other barbarous nations wer of minde vnconstāt and vnwauerig of promise vnfaithful not to be trusted to All the which people if they should forsake their obediens rebel all at ones it were not possible by any meanes to resist them Unto all these mischeues the comming of Alexander was as it wer a presēt salue Who in an oration so c●…forted forted encoraged al the people for the time y ● he bothe exempted al fear out of their harts and made them to conceiue good hope expectation of him self He was then xx yeres old in the which he promised many things of him self wyth suche modesty y ● it appered he wold do more when it came to the profe then he spake of He gaue the Macedones a quite discharge of al things sauing he wold not exempt them from the warres by the which dede he purchased him selfe such at al mens hands y ● they said they had changed the body of their king but not his vertues the first chiefest regard y ● he had was to enter his father accordinge to his estate In executing wherof before al other things he caused all such persons to be put to death vpon his fathers tombe as wer accessary to the same Only he pardoned Alexander of Lyncests his brother reseruing in him the good fore token of his own estate for as much as he was y ● firste that saluted him by the name of a king Moreouer he caused Caranus his mother in lawes sonne his brother in law to be put to death as one that loked to be a partner with him in the kingdom In the beginning of his raigne he subdued many countries that rebelled and suppressed manye insurrections euen in the very rising Whereby beinge greatlye encouraged he went leiserly into Grece wher after the example of his father sommoning the Cities to appeare before him at Corinthe he was substituted captaine general in his stead And thervpon he went immediatly in hand wyth y ● wars against the Persians which his father had begone While he was busy in the furniture therof tidinges was brought him that the Atheniens the Lacedemonians and the Thebanes were reuolted from him to the Persians that the author of this reuolting was the orator Demosthen●…s corrup ted by ●…he Persians for a great sum of golde who auowed before the people that the king of Macedone wyth all hys hoste was slaine of the Tribales bringinge the tales man in open audience who to make good the matter sayde he was wounded hym selfe in the same battel that the kynge was slayne Uppon the whyche reporte the minds almost of all the Cities were chaunged and the Garrisons of the Macedones besieged The whyche motions intendynge to preuent he entred into Grece with an host well aparelled and in good order with suche celerity that they skarse beleued their owne e●…es when they sawe him because they hearde not of his commynge In hys waye thither warde he exhorted the Thessalians to keepe their allegiaunce putting them in minde of the benefites of his father Phillip toward them and of the kinred that was betwixte hym and them by his mothers side which came of the stocke of A●…acus The Thessalians were glad to heare those wordes of him and thervpon made him lieuetenaunte generall of al their country as his father had bene before and rendred vnto hym all the tributes and reuenues that he was wont to haue But the Atheniens as they were the firste that reuolted so were they the first that repented turnyng the disdaine of their ennemy into admiration and wondremēt and extollinge the childehode of Alexander whyche before they had in despite aboue the prowesse of the auncient captaines Therfore they sent ambassadors desiringe pardon and that they mighte haue peace Whom Alexander hard and with greuous rebuke graunted them their request From thence he turned his power toward Thebes intending to haue shewed like mercy if he had found like repen taunce But the Thebanes went to it with force of armes and not with intretaunce and submission Beinge therfore vanquished they suffred most greuous punishment of miserable captiuity When the matter came to debatinge in counsel as concerning the d●…truction of the citye the Phocenses the Platecenses the Thespienses and the Orchome●…ians Alexanders companions in armes and partakers of his victory rehersed the crueltye of the Thebanes in destroyinge their Cities and the good wil that they alwayes bare to y ● Persians not only at that time but also of old time to the open preiudice and domage of the liberty of Grece whiche thing was not to be borne withall In consideration wher of they were worthelye hated of all people ▪ for the proofe wherof there neaded none other triall nor witnesse then this that they all bounde them selues with an othe to rase Thebes assone as euer they hadde ouercome and made an end with the Persians Furthermore they tolde what enterludes had bene made of their former noughtinesse in so muche that there was wel nie no stage wheron they made not open showes therof to the entent they should be hated and abhorred not only for their presēt vnfaithfulnesse but also for their olde follye and madnesse Then Eleadas one of the prisoners hauing liberty geuen him to speake said that the Thebanes had not reuolted from th●… king in as much as they hard say he was slain but from the kings heirs In which doing if there were anye trespasse it was rather to be imputed as an ou●…rsight for being so light of credit then as a promise br●…aking or vnfaithfulnesse and yet if it were so they had all redy suffred great
in armour in the field by the consente of them all he called certaine seditious personnes oute of euerye bande and caused them priuelye to be put to death The whiche done he returned againe and deuided the prouinces amonge the princes to the entent he myght send out of the way suche as wer his backe frendes and al so make them all to thinke that it was throughe hys goodnesse that they obtained suche authority First of all Egipt with a part of Affricke and Arabie fell by lot vnto Ptolomy whome Alexander for his manhode and valia●…tnesse had promoted from a raskall souldioure And to pntte him in his office was appoynted Cleomenes which builded Alexandria The next prouince adioyninge thervnto which was Syria was cōmitted to Laomedō of Mytilene Phylotas his son toke Cylicia Sclauonie Ouer the greater Media was made ruler Acr●…pat ouer the lesser Alcet the brother of Perdicas The country of Susa nie was assigned to Syno the greater Phrygia vnto Antigonus the son of Philip Learchus chaunced by lot vpon Lycia and Pamphylia Cassander vpon Caria and Menan der vpon Lydia Unto Leonatus happened the lesser Phri gia vnto Lysymachus Thrace the countries bordering vpon y ● sea of Pontus Cappadocia with Paphlagonia wer geuen vnto Emnenes The marshalship of the campe fortuned to Seleuchus the sonne of Antiochus Cassander the sonne of Antipater was made captain of the kings garde In the further Bactria and in the countries of Indie the former lieuetenants wer cōmaunded to kepe their offices stil sauing that Taxilles had the gouernaunce of all y ● lays betwene the two riuers of Hydaspes and Indus And that Phyton the son of Agenar was sent to haue the rule of the new townes that were builded in Indie Ariarches tooke vpon him the gouernment of the Parapomenians people that inhabite the vttermost parts of the mountain Cancasus Statener toke to gouern the Dracans and Argeans Amyntas the Bactrians Scythens obtained the Sogd●…ās Nicanor the Parthians Phillip the Hyrcanians Phrataphernes the Armenians Neoptolemus the Persians Pēcestes the Babylonians Arthius the Pelasgians and Archesilaus Mesapotamia This pertition like as it chaunced to euery one of them as his fatall charge so was it vnto ma nye of them the grounde and foundation of their encreasement and prosperity For ere it was any longe time after as though they hadde deuided kingdomes and not lieuetenauntships so being made kings of lieuetenaūts they not only got greate richesse to them selues but also lefte them to their posterity While these things were a doing in the Ea●…te the Atheniens and the Aetolians renued y ● warres in Grece withall the power they wer able to make which they had all redy begon while Alexander was aliue The occasion of this warre was because that Alexander at hys retourne from Inde wrote his letters into Grece by the whiche all suche as were banished out of their natiue coun tries of what city so euer they were suche as were attainted of murder onlye excepted were restored to their countries againe The which being openly red in the presens of all Grece at the marte of Olympus caused much busines because that diuers of them were banished not by order of law but through discord and partaking of the princes fearing y ● if they shuld be reuoked again they might bear grea ter sway autority in the common welth thē they Whervpon euen then many cities murmured saying opely that it wer mete to set them selues at liberty by the sword But the chefe doers and ringleaders in this quarell wer the Atheniens and the actolians Wherof assone as alexander had knowledge he enioyned his confederates to finde hym a thousande gallies to make warre withall in the West pur posing by the way to make a rhode againste athens and to destroy it vtterly The atheniens therfore hauinge raysed an army of thirty thousande souldiers two hūdred ships made warre with Antipater to whome the gouernmente of Grece fel by lot whom for as much as he durst not geue them battel in the field but kept himself within the walles of the city Hiraclea they besieged The very same time De mosthenes the orator of athens who beinge before banished his country for his offence in taking a bribe of Harpa lus that fled for fear of alexanders crueltye because he had moued the city to warre againste him by chaunce liued as an outlaw at Megara hearing that the atheniens had sent Hyperides of ambassade to moue the Pelopomiesians to take their part in these warres folowed him and with hys eloquens perswaded Sycion argos and Corinthe and all the other cities to ioyne them selues with the atheniens For the which his doing the Atheniens sent a ship for him and called him home out of exile In the meane season at the siege of Antipater Leosthenes captaine of the Atheniens was slaine wyth a Darte throwne at him from the wall as he passed by The which thinge gaue suche encouragemente to Antipater that he burste open his barriers and aduenture into the Trenche of his enemies Neuerthelesse he was fain to send his messengers to Leonatus for succour The Atheniens hearing that he was comminge towarde them with an hoste went to meete him in order of battell where amonge the horsemen he receiued so sore a wounde that he died for thwyth Antipater allbeit he sawe his reskowes put to flyghte yet notwithstanding he was gladde that Leonatus was dead For by meanes therof he was bothe rid of a backe frende and also encreased in strengthe by attaininge of his hoste Therfore assone as he had receiued his armye being nowe able to matche with his ennemies in plaine field they raised their siege and he departed into Macedone The Grekishe hoste also hauinge driuen the enemy oute of the borders of Grece went home euerye man to his owne citye In the meane while Perdicas making warre againste the innocent Ariarathes king of Cappadocia and gettinge the vpper hand in the field won nothing therby but woundes and pearils For his enemies retiring out of the battel into the city slue their wiues and children and set their houses and all that euer they had on fire Moreouer when they had throwen there into all theyr richesse they caste them selues also hedlong after them to the entent their enemy hauing gotten the victory shoulde enioy nothing of theirs more then the beholdyng of y ● fire After this to th entent that to thestablishment of his strēgth he might get himself thautority of a king he entended to mary Cleopatra the sister of great Alexander and some time the wife of the other Alexander not without the con sent of her mother Olympias But first of al he coueted to surprise antipater vnder pretence of ioyninge aliaunce with him And therfore he pretended to desire his Daughter in mariage to th entent he might the more easly obtain a sup plement of yong souldiers oute of
his person that in hautinesse of courage in knowledge of Philosophy and in strength of body he farre excelled all them by whome the Easte was conquered For when Alexander the greate being very fore moued to anger against Callysthenes the Philosopher for speaking agaynste the adoring of him after the manner of the Persians had appeached the said Callysthenes of treason and there vpon cruelly mangled him by cuttinge of his eares hys nose his li●…pes that all menne pitied and lamented to behold howe miserablye he was handled and moreouer caried him about with him shutte vp with a dogge in a cage to the terrible ensample of all other Then Lysimachus who was wont euer before to hear Callysthenes and to receiue enstructions of vertue at his hand taking pity and compassion to see so worthye a manne punished not for anye fault but for vsinge his libertye in speakinge gaue hym poyson to ridde him out of his calamities Wherwith Alexander was so sore agreued that he commaunded hym to be cast vnto a fierce Lion But when the Lion at the first sight of him came running with open mouthe vpon him Lysimachus wineding his arme in a Towell thruste his hand into the Lyons mouth and pulling out his tong killed the beast The which thing when it was declared to the kyng he thought it such a wonder that he was appeased towardes him and euer after sette more store by him for his so great stedfastnesse in vertue Lysimachus also with a noble courage toke the despight that the kynge had doone to him as mekely as if it had bene done by his owne father Finally putting quite oute of his minde the rememberaunce of this displeasure Afterwarde in Inde as the kyng pursued certaine of his ennemies that were dispersed when he hadde throughe the swiftnesse of hys horse lost the companye of all his gard This Lysimachus alone ran foote by foote with him and kepte him company by his horse side through vnmeasurable fieldes of dry sande The whiche thinge his brother Philippe attempting before to haue doone died betweene the Kynges handes But as Alexander alyghted from his horse hee wounded Lysimachus so sore in the fooreheade wyth the poynt of his speare that the bloude coulde not otherwise be stopped but that to bynde vp the wound wythall the kyng was fain to take the Drademe from hys own hed and set it vpon his the which was then firste of all a fortunate fortoken that Lysimachus should after aspire to the estate of a kinge And after the death of Alexander when the prouinces were deuided among his successoures the cruellest natyons were assigned to Lysimachus as to the valiantest person of all others for farre did he by the consent of al men excede all the residue in manhoode and prowesse Before the battell shoulde be foughte betwene Ptolomy and hys adherentes against Ant●…onus Seleuchus departing sodenly out of the greater Asia became a new ennemye vnto antigonus This mannes prowesse also was notable and his begetting wonderfull For his mother Laodice beinge maried to Antiochus a noble manne among the captaynes of king Philip dreamed in her sleepe that she conceyued and was greate with childe by apollo and that in recom pence for lying with him the God gaue her a Kynge in the stone wherof was engraued the lykenesse of an A●…ker commaundinge her to geue it to her sonne whome she should bryng forth This vision was wonderful both for the ringe of the same engrauinge that was feunde in her bedde the next morning and for the figure of the anker which was founde in the thighe of Seleuchus beinge a little Babe when he was newly borne and so continued and grewe with him Wherfore Laodice when Seleucus should go with great Alexander to the warfare agaynste the Persians enforming him of the maner of his begetting gaue him the ringe Wheras after the deathe of Alexander obtaining the Empire of the East he builded a City and there consecrated the memoriall of the original of the stone For he both called the Citye Antioche after the name of hys father and also dedicated the fieldes about the city to Apollo The token of his begettinge remained also with his posterity For his children and childrens children had an Anker in their thigh as a naturall marke of their linage He made many battels in the Eastafter the deuision of the kingdome of Macedone amonge the pieres of the realme First he toke Babilon by force then being encrease din power by reason of that victory he conquered the Bactrians Afterwarde he made an enteraunce into Inde whiche after the deathe of Alexander hauing as it were caste of the yoke of bondage from their neckes had slaine all his lieuetenauntes The author of this libertye was one Sondrocotte but after the victorye he turned this pretence of libertye into seruitude For by vsurping vppon him the kingdome he oppressed wyth hys owne tiranny the people whome he had deliuered from foraine subiection This man was borne of low●…degree but driuen to take the kingdom vpon him by the present aid of God For when he had vpon a time offended Alexander with his malapertnesse and that the king had com maunded him to be put to death he saued his life by swift nesse of his fete After the which being very wearye and lying fast a sleepe A Lyon of maruelous hugenesse came to him as he slept ▪ and with his tounge licked of the swet that issued from him and when he awaked went gentlye away B●…ing by this wonderfull foretoken firste moued to h●…pe of the kingdome he gathered together ano●…ber of robbers and stirred the Indians ▪ to rebellyon Afterward as he was makinge preparation for the warres against ▪ Alexanders lieuetenaunts a wylde Elephant of maruelous bignesse offred hymselfe to him of hys owne accord and as though he had bene tame mekely receyued hym vppon hys backe ▪ and he became a valiaunt captain and a notable warryo●…re Sandrocotte hauynge thus gotten the kyngdome the verye same time that Seleucus layed the foundation of the greatnesse that he after grew vnto held all Inde ▪ with whome Seleucus entery●…ge a league and hauing set his affaires at a stay in the Easte came to the warres set against Antigonus The armyes therfore of the confederates beinge assembled together there was a field fought In the whyche Antigonus was slayne ▪ and hys sonne Demetrius put to flyghte But the confederates after they had by battell dispatched theyr ▪ enemies fell together by the eares againe amonge them selues and for because they could not agree in parting of the pray they sundred them selues into two partes Seleucus ioyned himselfe with Demetrius and Ptolomy with Lisimachus Cassander being deceased his sonne Philippe succeded him And so new warres sprong vp a fresh agayn in Macedone ¶ The. xvi Booke AFter the deathe of Cassander and hys sonne Philip one immediatly ensuinge the other Thessalonice the Quene and wife
of Cassander ere it was long time after entreatynge for her life e●…en by she wynge her brestes to moue him to pitye was crue●…ly slain by her sonne antipater The cause of the murther was this by reason that after the death of her husband when the kyngdome should be deuided she semed to be more fa uourable to Alexander The whych act apeared so much the more heynous in all mennes eyes by reason the mother ment no deceipte in the matter And yet to saye the trouthe there canne be no cause alledged iustly to excuse one for killing their father or theyr mother Alexander therfore vpon this occasyon entendynge to make warre vpon hys brother to reuenge hys mothers death desired healpe of Demetrius And Demetrius was easye to entreat in hope to inuade the kingdome of Macedone Of whose cōming Lysimachus being afraid perswaded hys son in law Ant●…pater to fal to agremēt with his brother rather then to suffer his fathers enemy to enter into Macedone Demetrius perceiuing that a reconcilement was entreted vpon betwene the. ii brethren slew Alexander through great treson inuading the kingdome of Macedone to the entent to excuse himself of the murder before his men of war he called them together There he aledged y ● Alexander had lien in wait for him before and that he hadde not committed but only preuented the treason Saying it was more reson he himself shuld be kyng then the other bothe for because of his yeares he was of more discretion experiens and also for other consyderations For his father had accompanied both king Phillip gr●…at Alexander in all their warres and afterwarde had serued Alexander as a captain in pursuing the rebels Where as on the contrary parte Antipater the graundfather of these yongmen was alwaies a more roughe gouernoure of the kingdome then the kinges them selues And Cassander the father of them the roter vp of the kings house spared neither women nor children nor neuer ceased vntill he had vtterly destroyed all the ofspring of the kings posteritye The reuengement of these milcheues for because he could not execute it vpon Cassander him self he said was transferred vnto his children Wherefore both Phillip and Alexander if the dead haue anye perseueraunce woulde not that the roters out of them and their issue but rather the punishers of those traitors should enioy the kingdome of Macedone The people being by this meanes mitigated proclaimed him king of Macedone Lysimachus also beinge entangled with the warres of Dromychet king of ●…hrace to y ● entent he would not be constrained to haue battel the self same time with Demetrius also yelded to him thother part of Macedone that fell to the lot of his sonne in law Antipater and made peace with him Demetrius therfore being furnished with the whole power of all Macedone when as he was mineded to conquere Asia Ptolomy Seleuchus and Lysimachus hauing tried by the former conflict what a strength concord was of entred in league againe and ioyning their hastes together remoued the warres into Europe against Demetrius Pyrrhus kinge of Epyre hoopinge that Demetrius might as easly and lightly forgoo Macedone as he cam by it ioyned him self with them as a fellowe and companion in their war And his hope deceiued him not For he foūd the meanes to corrupt his army with rewardes whereby he put him to flight and seised the kingdome of Macedone into his owne handes While these thinges were a doing Lysimachus put his sonne in law Antipater to deathe because he repined and 〈◊〉 that the kingdome of Macedone hys ▪ rightfull inheritaunce was taken from him throughe the falshod of his father in law And because his daughter eurydice toke her husbands part in making like exclamatiō he put her in pryson And so al the house of Cassāder part ly by murder and partly by execution suffred due punishment in the behalfe of great Alexander whether it were for working of his death or for destroying of his issue and posterity Demetrius also being ouercharged with so many hostes wheras he might haue died honorablye chose rather to yeld himself to Seleuchus shamefully When theese warres were ended Ptolomy with great renowme of hys actes and enterprises died He contrary to the cōmon law of all nations somewhat before he fell sycke had resigned the kingdome to the yongest of his sonnes and of hys so doing he rendred a reason to the people who fauored the sonne no lesse for receiuing the kingdome then the father for deliuering of it Amonge other examples of naturall loue and affection shewed on both partes betwene the father and the sonne ▪ this thing wan the hartes of the comminalty to the yōg man that the father after the time he had openly surrendred the kingdome vnto him executed the office of one of the garde and serued the kinge as an other priuate person sayinge it was far more honorable for a man to be father to a kinge then to be a kynge hym selfe But discorde the continuall mischief among pieres stirred vp strife betwene Lysimachus and Pyrrhus a litle be fore fellowes and confederates agaynste Demetrius Lysimachus getting the vpper hand droue Pyrrhus oute of Macedone and toke it into his owne hād After this he made war against Thrace and then against the city Heraclea y ● original end of which city wer wonderful both of thē For vpon a time whē the Beo●…ans wer afflicted wyth a sore plage answer was geuen them at thoracle of delphos y ● they shuld build a city in the country of Pontus dedicate it vnto Hercules Now when as for fear of the long perillous sayling desiring al to die in their own country rather then to enterprise so lōg a iourny the matter was omitted y ● Phocenses made war against thē By whō being diuers times put to Y e worse they ran to the oracle again for coūsel Answsr was made them y ● the same thing y ● shuld remedy ●…he pestilens shuld remedy y ● war Wher vpon gathering a litle nōber of men they sailed into Metapont builded the city Heraclea And forasmuch as thes had ben brought thither by thordinance of god w tin short space after they grew to great welth In proces of tyme this city had many battels with their neighbors much mischefe among thē selues through ciuil dissetiō Among other honorable dedes this in especially is worthye to be remēbred At suche time as the Atheniens bare the souerainty and hauing vanquished the Persians had raised a taxe bothe in Grece Asia for the maintenaunce of theyr flete wheras all other to saue thē selues harmlesse gladly gaue thē their asking onlye the Heracliens for the fauor they bare to the kings of Persia refused to be cōtributary to y ● taxe Malachus therfore being sent frō Athens wyth an army to take perforce the thing y ● was denied whyles he wēt abrode to wast
to liue vppon the spoyle made the country so hot that no man almost durste stirre abroade Dennis therfore king of Sicil being in manner wearyed with the continuall complaintes of his confederates sent ouer syre hundred Afres to suppresse them whose castle by the treason of a woman called Brutia they won and there builded a city which was soone peopled by the confluens of the shepheardes resorting thither vpon hope of the new city and they called them selues Brutians after the name of the woman The firste warre that they had was with the Lucanes the authors of their begynninge With the which victory being encouraged and hauynge concluded an equall and indi●…erent peace with thē they conquered their other neighbours by the sword and they gat so great richesse and power within a while that they seemed pernitious and able to doo displeasure euen vnto kinges Finally A lerander king of Epire comminge into Italy with a great hoste to the aid of the Greke Cityes was wythall his army by them vtterly destroyed Wher vppon their cruelnesse being enflamed wyth contynuall successe of prosperity became terrible to their neighbors a long time after At the last Agathocles beinge called to help in hope to enlarge his kingdome passed out of Sicilie into Italy As he was comming toward them for fear of his puissaunce they sent their ambassadoures to hym requesting him of peace and frendship Whome Agathocles biddinge to supper to the entent they shoulde not see the shippinge of his armye appoynted to common wyth them the next day and so in the meane while toke shippe priuely and stale ouer from them But the ende of thys fraude was not to be reio●…sed at For within a few daies after he was constrained to retourne into Sicill by the force of a disease wherwith he was taken ouer all his body ▪ the pestilent humor spreding it self throughe euery sinew and ioynt as thaugh that euery member had ben at ciuil war one against another Of the whiche no hope of recouery appering there arose war betwene his sone and his nephew eche of them chalenging the kingdome as if he had bene dead all redy in the which his son was slain and his nephew vsurped the kingdom Agathocles therfore when he saw the grief of his disease the thought of his minde stil greuouser and greuouser eche encreasyng by the furtherance of the other being vtterly in despair caused his wife Theogen to take his two litle sōnes that he hadde begotten of her withal his treasure housholde houshold stuffe and princelye furniture appertaining vnto him of which no king was better stored then he was and to saile into Egipte from whence he tooke her to hys wife for feare least his nephewe who had robbed hym of his kingdom shuld also play the enemy with them How be it his wife entreted him earnestly a great while that she mighte not be drawen from him in his sicknesse least her departure might be worthely likened to the murther done by his nephew and men might reporte that she had as cruelly abandoned her husbande as he had supplanted his graundfather saying that when she was marryed to him he toke her not to be his companion and partaker of prosperitye onlye but of all other fortune what so euer should happen Wherfore it should not greue her to loose her life so she mighte tarye with her husband to the laste gaspe and according to her duty as she was boūd of loue and womanhode to do see him honorably entred whyche thing were she ones gone no man would take vpon hym to do When the litle ones should goo away they embraced their father and held him aboute the necke wepynge and crying oute on the other side the wife as she that neuer loked to se her husband more had neuer done kissyng him And it was a lamentable thing to se how pit●…ouslye thold man wept the children bewailing the father ready to die and the father moning his banished children The one sorowing to leaue their sicke and diseased olde father all alone as desolate the other lamentinge to leaue hys sonnes in penury whom he had begotten to inherite his kingdome Moreouer all the palace range with the noyse of such as stode about weping and sorowing to se ●…o cruel a deuorce and departure At the lengthe the necessitye of their forced departing was the end of their wepyng and the death of the king ensued immediatly vpon the departure of the children While these thinges were a doinge the Carthaginenses hauing intelligence howe the world went in Sicil thincking good occasion to be geuen thē of recouering the whole Iland sailed thither with a greate power subdued manye cities The same time Pyrrhus made warre against the Romains who as is said before beinge desired to come to the ayde of the Sicilians when he came to Syracuse and hadde subdued many Cityes he was proclaimed king of Sicil like as he was of Epyre. In the prosperous successe of which things greatly reioysing he appoynted that his sonne Heleu should be king of Sicil as in the righte of his graundfather for he was begotten of king Agathocles daughter and his sonne Alexander should be king of Italy After this he foughte many prosperous battels with the Carthaginenses Wythin a while after there came ambassadors from his con●…ederates in Italy bringing him word that it was not possible to make resistens againste the Romaines but that they must nedes yeld onlesse he reseued them Being troubled with so doutful a daunger and not knowing what to do or which of them he might rescue fyrst he toke spedy aduice as concerning both For the one side the Carthaginises assailed him and on the other side the Romaines so that it semed a daungerous matter not to passe his army into Italy and yet more daungerous to lead his hoste 〈◊〉 of Sicil least the one should be lost for want of succoure or the other by withdrawing his helpe from them In this rage of daungers the sure●… hauen of all other counsels and aduises semed to be fyrst with al his power to try the matter in Sicil and then hauing vanquished y ● Carthaginenses to transport his victorious army into Italy Therfore all be it he gate the vpper hande in that battel yet notwithstanding for as muche as he went hys way out of Sicil he was accompted to run away as a vāquished person and therefore his alies and confederates reuolted from him By meanes wherof he lost the kyngdome as lightly as he came by it easly Furthermore finding no better successe in Italye then he had in Sicill be retired into Epire. The wonderfull chaunce of bothe is to be noted for ensample For euen as before throughe prosperous fortune all things flowing beyond his desire and expectation he had gotten the Empire of Italye and Sicill with so manye victories againste the Romaines so now when fortune had chaunged her copy as it were
to make a show of the frailty of man throwinge downe the thinges she had builded besides the losse of Sicil she paid him home with shipwracke on the sea wyth a shamefull ouerthrow against the Romaines and with a dishonorable departure out of Italye After the departure of Pyrthus oute of Sicil Hiero was created chiefe officer who was a man of such modesty that by the fauorable consent of all the Cities he was first made captayne agaynste the Carthaginenses and afterwarde kinge Of this royall estate to come his bringing vp when he was a very babe was as it were a foreteller For he was begotten of a noble man called Hieroclytus whose pedegre was fet from Gelus an auncient king of Sicil. But by his mothers side he was borne of a base and verye dishonorable stocke for he was be gotten of a bondwoman and therefore caste away by his father as a dishonor and reproch to his stock But the Bees fineding the litle babe without healpe of man wroughte their combes aboute him and nouryshed him with honny many dayes together Uppon which occasion his father at thē warnynge of the southsayers which tolde him that the childe shoulde be a king toke the childe to him and brought him vp wythall diligence in hoope of the state that was be highte him As the same childe sate at his boke in the schole among other of his felowes sodainly there came in a wolfe among thē and snatched the boke out of his hande Moreouer beyng a yongman when he went firste to the warres an Eagie came and ●…ate vppon his target and an Owle vppon hys speare The whiche wonder betokened that he should be aduised in councel ready of hand and also that he shuld be a king Finally he fought hand to hand agaynst many chalengers and euer went away with the victory Kyng Pyrrhus rewarded him with many rewardes of ch●…alry He was of personage exceding beautiful of strengthe wonderfull as mighte be in a man gentle to talke vnto iust in his dealinges in his gouernment vprighte and indifferent so that nothing in the world wanted in him appertaining to a king saue only a kingdome ¶ The. xxiiii Booke WHile these thinges were a doing in Sicil in the meane time in Grece through the dissention and warres of Ptolomeus Ceraunicus Antiochus Antigonus amonge them s●…lues almoost all Grece at the instigatyon of the Spartanes the ringe leaders therof encouraged with hope of liberty as if occasion had ben geuen to pul their neckes oute of the yoke of bondage sendynge ambassadoures one to another to knit them selues togetogether in aliance and society fel to rebellyon And least they might seme to haue taken wepon in hande agaynste Antigonus vnder whose gouernaunce they were they assailed the Aetolians his confederates pretendynge the cause of their warre to be for that the said Aetolians had entred held by force the feld Cyreus which by y ● who le consent of Grece was consecrated to Apollo As captaine of this war they chose one Aran. Who assemblynge hys whole power together spoyled the townes foraged the corne that was situate and growinge in the forenamed fields such as they could not carye away with them he set on fire The which thing the shepherds of the Aetolians beholding out of the mountaines gathered them selues to the nomber of fiue hundred and fell vpon theyr enemies as they were skattered and not knowinge how many there were of them by reson that the sodaine feare together with the smoke of the fyres had takē their sight from them and hauing slaine nine thousand of them put the residue of the foragers to flighte Aft●…rwarde when the Lacedemonians went aboute to renue the warres again many cities denied them aid because they thoughte they sought the souerainty and not the liberty of Grece In the meane season the warre was ●…yshed among the kynges For Ptolomy hauinge expulsed Antigonus and seised the whole kingdome of Macedone into hys hande tooke a truse with Antiochus and ioyned aliaunce wyth Py●…hus by geuing him his daughter in mariage Afterward being rid of outward fear he turned his vngodly wicked mind to deuising mischief against his own house ▪ imagining treson against his sister ▪ 〈◊〉 to the entent to depriue her children of their liues and her of the possession of the city Cassanoria The fyrst ●…ynte of his crafty conuey●…nce was vnder the pretence of coūterfet loue to desire his 〈◊〉 in mariage For otherwise then vnder colour of concord he coulde not compasse to get her chyldren into his handes whose kingdome be hadde wrongefully taken front them But his ●…ister knewe his wicked entent wel mough Whervpon perceiuinge that she trusted him not he sent her word that he wold make her chil dren felowes in Empire with him Against whom he had made warre not because he was minded to take the king dome from them but because he desired that they should haue it of his free gift and mere liberty For the more assuraunce wherof he willed her to send some trusty frend of hers to receiue an othe of him and he wo●…ld in the presence of the party before the Gods of his countrye bynde himself with what othe or curse she wold desire in all the world Arsinoe being in doubte what she were best to do for if she sent she knew she should be deceiued by forsweringe of himselfe and if she sent not she was a frayde sh●… should prouoke her cruel brother to rage taking more care for her children then for herselfe whome she partlye hoped to saue by meane of this marriage sent one of her frendes called Dyon Whome Ptolomy brought into the most holy temple of Jupiter the aunc●…test place of religion of greatest reu●…rence in all Macedone there laying his handes vpon the aultares and touching the very images of the godd●…s as they stode in their shrines sware before him with suche terrible othes extreme curses as neuer wer hard of that he desired his sisters marriage w t out any fraud craft deceipt or dissimulation and that he wold proclaim her Duene not purposinge to take any other wife to spite her withall or to haue any other childrē then her sonnes Arsinoe after the time she was thus fulfilled with hope and deliuered from fear came and commoned with her brother her self Whose smilinge l●…s flattering countenaunce pretending as much good ●…ayth as he promised by his othe brought her into such a fooles paradise that she consented to marrye with her brother contrary to the minde of Ptolomye her sonne who euer tolde her there was deceite in the matter The maryage was solempnised with great sumptuousnesse and ioye Furthermore he sommoned all his hoste before him an●… there himself setting the crown vpon his sisters hed proclaimed her Duene Whervpon ar●…noe being exceadynge glad and ioyful for as much as she had recouered y ● which she had lost by the
certain of his most trusty frends exhorted them to the deliuerance of their country from bondage When he perceiued how they stoke to put them selues in daunger for the sauegard of the whole realme and that they demaunded leisure to take aduysement in the matter he called his seruaunts to him commaunding them to lock in the dores and to bear word to the Tirant that he shuld send immediatly to his house to apprehend traitors that had cōspired against him threatning vnto each of them that seing he could not be the author of deliueraunce of his country he wold at least wise finde the meanes to be reuenged vppon them for wythdrawing their helpe from it Then they being circum●…ted with the doutful danger chu●…ing the hone●…er way of both sware the death of the Tyrant and so Aristotimus was dispatched the fifth moneth after he had vsurped the kingdome In the meane season Antigonus beinge wrapped in many warres at ones bothe of king Ptolomy and the Spartanes besides the hoste of the Frenche grekes which newly became his enemies left a few souldioures in his campe for a shew against the other two and went himself with his whole power against the Frenche men The French men hearinge therof made them selues redy to the battel and slue sacrifice for thobtaining of good successe in that encounter By the inwardes of the which beastes perceiuing that there was toward them a great slaughter and the vtter destruction of them all they wer there vpon turned not into feare but into madnesse For in hope to pacify the wrath of the Gods by the bloudshed of theyr owne people they killed their wiues and chyldren beginning to perfourme through their own slaughter the euill lucke that was manased them by y e warres So extreme a madnesse was entred into their cruell hartes that they spared not the yonge children whome euen the enemy would haue spared but that they made deadly and mortall warre with their childrē and the mothers of them in defence of whome menne are wonte to make warres Therfore as though they had by their vnspeakeable wickednesse purchased them selues bothe lyfe and victory bloudy as they were after the freshe slaughter of theyr wiues and children they proceded into battel with as good successe as foretoken For as they were fighting the remorse of their owne consciences for their vnspeakable slaughter the ghostes of thē that they had murdered wauing before theyr ●…ies first and formost discouraged them ere they were oppressed by the enemy and so they were ●…aine euery mothers chiid There was made so great a slaughter that it shuld seme the Goddes had conspired with menne to the vtt●…r destruction of those murderers After the good and fortunate chaunce of this battell Ptolomy and the Spartanes eschuing the victorious army of their ennemy Antigonus retired into places of saue garde and defence Antigonus when he saw they were retired while his mē wer yet freshe and couragious by reason of their late victory made warre to the A●…heniens Nowe whiles he was occupied in the same in the meane time Alexander kyng of Epire coueting to reuenge the death of hys father kinge Pyrrhus inuaded the borders of Macedone Againste whome when Antigonus was retourned oute of Grece all his souldioures reuolted from him and so he lost both the kingdome of Ma●…done and his army His sonne Demetrius being a verye childe leuyinge a power in the absence of his father not only recouered Macedone that his father had lost but also berest Alexander of his kingdom of Epire. So great was either the vnstedfastnesse of the souldiours or elsse the 〈◊〉 of fortune that kinges by course euen now banished men and anene kinges againe Alexander therfore beinge fled to the arcadians was as wel by the fauor of the Epyrotes as by the healpe of hys confederates restored into his kingdome againe Aboute the same time deceased agas kyng of Cyrene who before his last infirmity to the entent to cease and end all stryfe with his brother Ptolomy betrouthed his only daughter Beronice to his sonne But after the deathe of kinge Argas Arsinoe the mother of the maid to th entent to breke the mariage that was contracted against her wil sent for Demetrius the brother of king Antigonus out of Macedone to take vpon him the mariage of the maide and the kingdome of Cyrene who also was begotten of one of Ptolomies daughters And Demetrius made no taryaunce Therfore when as through prosperous wynde he was spedely arriued at Cyrene vpon trust of his beauty through which he began to like his mother in law to wel by and by after his comming he bare himself very proud ly and outragiously in the courte and against the men of warre and he cast his desyre of pleasing from the daughter to the mother The which thing being espted was ill taken first of the maid and also of the commō people and of the greate noumber of the souldioures Wher vpon all mennes mindes were tourned to the sonne of Ptolomy and the deathe of Demetrius was conspired For as he was in bed with his mother in lawe men were sent in to kil him But Arsinoe when she hard the voyce of her daughter standing at the chamber dore and geuinge thē charge to spare her mother couered and defended her peramour a while with her own body Neuerthelesse he was slaine and so Beronice with safetye of her naturall loue and duty did bothe reuenge the dishonourable aduoutry committed with her mother and also followed the determination of her father in taking of her husband ¶ The. xxvii Booke AFter the decese of Antiochus king of Syria his sonne Seleucus succeding in his roume by the in●…igation of his mother Laodice whi che ought to haue with helde hym from doing any suche thinge began his raigne with murder For he put to death his mother in law Beronice the sister of Ptolomye king of Egipt with his little brother begotten vpon her By doing of the which wickednesse he both brought him selfe in a foule slaunder and infamye and also entangled himself in the warres of Ptolomye Furthermore when Beronice vnderstode that men were sente to kill her she kept herself close in a pleasaunt manor of her fathers called Daphn●… When the cities of Asia harde that she her litle sonne were there besieged in remembraunce of the dignity of her father and of her ancestors and for pitye to se her so vnworthely intreated they sent aid vnto her Her brother Ptolomy also being stirred with the pearil of his sister left his owne kingdome and came in all haste to her reskue withall the power he was able to make But Beronice before her rescowes came at her where as she could not be taken by force was surprised by pollicye and put to death It semed a cruel and horrible act to all men Wherfore when al the cities that made iniurrectyon had made a great nauy sodainly beinge
confederates ▪ iudginge it a greater reward to the Romaines to haue honoure and renowue then possessyons gotten by force For he said it was mete for a Romaine to chalenge glorye and fame and to leaue the superflouity of richesse to his partakers The xxxii Boke ▪ THe Aetolians which hadde prouoked Antiochus to warre againste the Romaines after the time that he was onercome remained all only againste the Romaines both 〈◊〉 to match them in strength and also destitute of all healpe and comforte By meanes where of within a 〈◊〉 after they were vanquished and lost their liberty the which they all only among so manye cities of Grece had reteined vntouched against the dominion of the Atheniens and Lacedemonians The which estate of bondage was so much the bitterer vnto them as it was later or it came ▪ r●…oltynge with them selues those times in the which with the only power of theyr owne countrye they had withstoode and burne oute the greate force and power of the Pers●…ans in the which they hadde repressed the violence of the 〈◊〉 men so terrible to Asia and Italye in the bat●…ell at Delphos the glor●…ous remembraunce of which things kindled in them a 〈◊〉 desire of liberty While these thinges were a doing in the meane time the Messenians and the Acheans f●…ll ●…irst at conte●…ion anone after to plain sighting for the s●…raigntye In that battel Philopenienes the noble graund captain of the Acheans was tak●…n prisoner not through his own defaulte because he 〈◊〉 not fyghte for sauynge of hys life but as he was about to bringe his men in araye that were s●…attered in the leapinge of a ditche his 〈◊〉 ouerthrew and so his enemies clustered about him and tooke him ere he coulde r●…couer vp againe And y●…t the Messenians when they fo●…nd him ouerthrowen whether it were for f●…are o●… his prowess●… or for reuerence of hys estate durst not kill him Therfore as though by taking of hym they had finished all the warre they led him like a prisonner about all the citye in manner of a triumphe the people ruuninge out by heapes to meete hun as if their own captaine and not the captaine of their enemies had bene comming And I beleue the Acheans would not haue ben more desirous to haue sene him if he had gotten the vpper hande then were the Messenians his enemies to beholde him being a prisonner For they led him into a Theatre to the entente t●…ey mighte all beholde him whome they thought an vncredible and vnposs●…ble m●…tter to be taken From thence they couueyed him to prysō wher for shame of the villany they had offred to such a worthy estate they gaue him poyson the which he drancke with as mearye a cheare as if he had wonne the victory Demaundyng first of all whether Lycortas the lieuetenante of the Acheane whome he knewe to be the manne of best knowledge in feates of armes nerte vnto hymselfe hadde eskaped in safetye or no. When he vnderstoode that he was eskaped he sayde the world goeth not alltogether against the Acheans wyth that word he gaue vp the ghoste But ere it was longe after the warre was renued in which the Messenians being vanquished suffered worthy punishment for putting Philopemenes to death In the meane season Antiochus kinge of Syria beinge sore ouercharged with the tribute that he should pay to the Romaines and seinge hymselfe vanquished and burdened whether it were that he were compelled for want of mony or that he were allured with couetousnesse because he hoped that vnder pretence of the necessity the whiche he was put to for the payment of the tribute he should be held the better excused if he committed sacriledge he assembled an armye and in the nyghte time assaulted the temple of Iupiter of Dodon the which attempte was bewrayed and he withall his hooste was slayne by the inhabitauntes of the countrye that resorted to the reskue At Rome when many cities of Grece were come thither to complaine of the iniuries that Phillyppe king of Macedone hadde d●…one vnto them and that there was great contention in woordes in the senate house betwene Demetrius the sonne of Phillippe sent thither by his father to make satisfaction as the Senate shuld think righte and the ambassadoures of the Cities the yonge man beinge confounded with the noyse and exclamatyon of the appellantes sodenly helde his peace Then the Senate being moued with his modest shamefastnesse for the whiche he had bene well beloued of all men before times when he lay in hostage at Rome gaue iudgement on hys syde And so Demetrius obtained pardone for his father not by defending his righte but by the helpe of his modesty and shamefastnesse The which thinge was signifyed vnto him by the decree of the senate to th entent it should appeare that the kinge was not acquited as giltlesse but rather pardoned for his sonnes sake the whiche thynge purchased vnto Demetrius not thanke for his behauiour in that ambassade but hatred through the maliciousnesse of backebyters For with his brother Perses who sought by al meanes to surprise him it procured him enuy and with his father when he knew the occasion of his acquitall it procured him displeasure disdaininge that ●…he person of his sonne shoulde be of more force or strengthe with the Senate then the authority of the father or the estimation of his estate being a king Perses therfore per ceiuing his fathers disease made complaintes daily vnto him of his brother Demetrius and first he broughte him in mistrust with him and shortly in vtter displeasure obiecting against him that he sought the freudshippe of the Romaines to betray his father At the last he surmised that he went about tr●…ason for the prouse where of he broughte in recorde and suborned false witnesses to vphold ●…he crime that he charged hym wythall By meanes whereof he compelled his father to murder his owne sonne and brought all the courte in sorow and heauinesse After Demetrius was thus put to death the party being dispatched out of the way whome he feared as his enemye Perses beganne to be not onlye more slacke in doing his duety but also more stubborn against his father behauing himselfe not like an heire but like a kinge Phillip beinge sore offended with his misdemenor bewailed the deathe of Demetrius verye vnpaciently from day to daye Where vppon mistrustynge hym self to be deceiued by cautele and treason he put the wytnesses and record bearers to torture Throughe whyche hauing boulted out their treason he was vexed as much with the wickednesse of Perses as with the vndeserued death of Demetrius And he hadde punished him for hys laboure had not death preuented him of hys purpese For shortly after throughe very sorow and pensiuenesse of hart he fell sicke and died leauing behinde hym greate furniture for the warres against the Romaines the whiche Perses afterward vsed Moreouer he had allured the Frenchmen called Rascians to
he fled to Alexandria to Ptolomye hys yonger brother with whome he parted his kingdom and so they sente ambassadoures ioyntlye together to the Senate of Rome requestinge healpe by the ryghte of the league in the whiche they were bounde in alyauns wyth them The Senate being moued at the sute of the brethrē ther vpon sent Pub. Popilius ambassadour to Antiochus to wil him to abstaine from Egipt or if he were all ready entered to voide thence When he had founde hym in Egypt and that the kynge offered to kysse him for at suche time as Antiochus lay in hostage at Rome among others he had Popilius iu great estimation and reuerence Popilius willed him to let cease all priuate frendship vntill he hadde executed the commaundemente of his countrye or while matters concerning his country were in hand and there withall drawinge forthe the decre of the senate and deliueringe it vnto him when hee sawe him pause at the matter askinge leisure to consulte theron wyth his frendes there Popilius with a wand that he had in his hand 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 circle aboute him willynge hym to call hys frendes to counsell to him and not to set foote ou●…e of the place befor●… he had geuen the Senate a direct aunswere whether he would haue peace or warr●… with the Romaines This rigorousnesse so ●…uche abated the kinges courage that he made aunswer he was contente to be ruled by the Senate Antiochus after his return into his kingdome deceased ▪ leauinge his heire a 〈◊〉 babe Whome the realme assigned to the gouernaunce of certayne Protectoures Here vppon his vncle Demetrius who laye in hostage at Rome hearinge of the ●…eath of his brother an●…iochus went vnto the Senate sayinge that he came thither for an hostage duringe his brothers life after whose decease he knewe not for whome he should lye any longer in hostage Wherfore he ought of right to be discharged that he myght go and chalenge the kingdome the which as by the vniuersall lawe of all nations it appertayned ●…o his elder brother so now of reason it was due to hym because he was of more y●…res of discretion then the babe When he perceiued the Senate would not licence hym to goo in as muche as they were perswaded in their owne iudgementes that the kingdome should remayn in more safetye and quietnesse in the childes hande then in hys vnder pretence of ri●…ing a hunting he stale to D●…ia and there with a fewe of his retinue that were preuye to hys doinges he priuelye tooke shipping Assone as he was ariued in Syria he was receiued with greate ioye and fauoure of all men and the Protectours killing their ward did put him in possessyon of the kin●…dom The same time almoste Pru●…as kyng of Bythinia wente about secreatly to kill his owne sonne 〈◊〉 for none other occasion but onlye to anaunce hys yonger sonnes that he had begotten vpon his seconde wife whiche laye in hostage at Rome But the matter was be wrayed to the yonge man by them that should haue doone the deede and they counsailed him that for as muche as hys father by his cruelty hadde prouoked hym thereto he shoulde preuente the conspiracye and tourne the mischiefe vppon the deuysers heade It was no harde matter to perswade hym Therfore assone as he was by theyr enticemente entered into hys fathers realme he proclaymed himselfe kynge Prusias beinge deposed from hys owne sonne from hys royal estate to the degree of a priuate personne was forsaken euen of his owne seruauntes And as he laye hidden in a secreat place his sonne as cruelly slue him as he had wicked lye commaunded hys sonne to be put to death before The. xxxv Boke DEmetrius the vsurper of the kingdome of Syria supposinge it to bee a daungerous matter if vpon his new aduauncemente he shoulde geue hym selfe to idlenesse determined to enlarge the borders of his kingdome and to augmente his richesse by subduing his neighbors Wherevppon for displeasure he bare to Ariarathes kyng of Cappadocia for refusing his sister in mariage he main tained againste him his brother Holofernes who beynge wrongfully driuen out of the realme resorted to hym for succoure and for ioy that he had so honest a title to make warre he purposed to sette him in possession of the kyngdome againe But Holofernes beinge of a cankered and malitious nature entering in league with the Antiochiens being at that time offended with Demetrius tooke counsell how to depriue him of his kyngdome that went aboute to restore him into hys kingdome Demetrius hauinge knowledge there of spared his life because ariarathes shoulde not bee deliuered from the feare of hys brothers warre Neuerthelesse he caused him to be apprehended and put him in prisone in the citye Seleucia Yet notwithstanding the antiochiens were not so discouraged by the detection of their conspiracye that they woulde cease from their rebellion Therefore by the helpe of Ptolomye king of Egipt attalus king of asia and ariarathes kyng of Cappadocia all the whiche Demetrius hadde by hys warres stirred againste him they suborned one Prompalus a man of the basest sorte to chalenge the kyngdom by force of armes as thoughe it had bene hys by right of inheritaunce and to the entent there should want nothyng to spite Demetrius withall they proclaimed hym by the name of Ale●…ander and reported him to be the sonne of Antiochus So sore hatred was Demetrius amongste all men that by an vniuersal consent they not only gaue his aduersarye the power of a kinge but also attributed vnto him nobility of birth and lignage Alexander therfore by meanes of this wonderfull exchaunge of thinges forgetting his owne old villainage beinge accompanied wyth the power almoste of all the whole Caste made warre againste Demetrius whome he vanquished and depryued bothe of life and kingdome Howe be it Demetrius wanted no courage to withstand the brunt of the warres For at the first encounter he put his enemy to flight and whē the king renued the battel againe he slue many thousand of theyr men in the field and yet at the last being of an inuincible courage he was slaine fighting most valiantlye among the thickest of his enemies In the beginninge of the warres Demetrius had committed to the charge of his hoste of Guydus in Lycia his two sonnes and a great summe of golde to the entent they should be bothe oute of ●…operdye of the warre and also if it shoulde so happen be preserued to reuenge theyr fathers death The elder of them named Deme●…rius being past childes age hearyng of the riotous demeanor of Alexander who for the ioye he had in his richesse vnhoped for and in the ornamentes of a nother mannes felicity kept himself like a cowardlye carpet knight at home in his palaice among a company of concubines and brothels by the helpe of the Caudiens assailed him carelesse as he was and fearing no hostility at all The Antiochiens also to make
Horodes takyng him rather for an enemie then for a brother commaunded him to be cruelly slayne before his face After this he made warre with the Romaynes and vtterlie destroyed their graund capytay●… Crassus with his sonne and all the Romayne hoste His sonne Pa●…orus beyng sent to pursewe the remnaunte of the Romayne battell after that he hadde atcheued manie hault enterpryses in Syria was called home agayne as mistrusted of his father Duryng whose absence the host of the Parthians that he left behynd him in Syrta was with all the Captayne 's thereof vtterlie slayn by Cassius Lieuetenaunt of Crassus These thynges thus done not long tyme after arose the Ciuill warres betwene Cesar and Pompey in the which the Parth●…ans toke part with Pompey bothe for the frendshyp that was betwene them and Pompey in his warres agaynst Mythridates and also for the death of Crassus whose sonne they hearde say helde with Cesar whome they knew well ynough wold reuenge his fathers death yf Cesar should chaunce to get thupper hand Therfore after that Pompey and his adhe rentes had taken the foyle they bothe ministred ayde to Cassius and Brutus agaynste Augustus and Antonie and also after th end of the warre enteryng in leage with Labienus vnder the conduct of Pacorus they wasted Siria and Asia and moreouer gaue a proude assaulte vppon the camp of Uentidius who after Cassius in the absence of Pacorus hadde gyuen the Parthien armie an ouerthrowe But Uentidius pretendyng a counterfeact feare kept himself in a good while and suffered the Parthians for a tyme to vaunte 〈◊〉 At the length he sent out part of his host vppon them as they were mery and careless●… with whose sodayne asfaulte the Parthians beyng dismayde fledde hither and thither to ●…aue themselfes Pacor●…s supposynge that his menne whiche were ●…led had withdrawen all the Romayne Legions after them assayled in haste the Campe of Uentidius in hope that he shoulde haue found it withoute defendantes Then Uentidius sendyng quicklie oute the residue of his Legions slewe all the whole band of the Parthians with the king Pacorus himself also Neyther dyd the Parthians at anie tyme receaue a greater losse When tydinges hereof was brought into Parthia Horodes the father of Pacorus which latelie before hearyng that the Parthians had wasted Syria and inuaded Asia had boasted that his sonne Pacorus was a conqueror of the Romayne ▪ when he ones hearde of hys death and of the slaughter of his army sodaynlie for sorrowe he fell m●…dde Manie dayes after he would not talk to anie man he would not take anie sustenaunce he wold not speake anie one worde in so much that a man would haue thought he had ben domme After that manie dayes were expyred when sorow had losened his tong he spake of nothyng but Pacorus he thought he sawe Pacorus he thought he heard Pacorus he woulde talke as though he had ben with him he woulde stand still as though he had stood with him and anone he would lamentably bewaile the losse of him When he had mourned thus a long season an other heauinesse came vppon the miserable olde man namelie which of his thyrtie sonnes he should ordeyne kyng in Pacorus stead He had manie concubynes of whome he begate al that youth of the which euery one makyng sute for her owne chylde dyd as it were besiege the olde mans mynd But it was the destinie of Parthia in the which it is an ordinarie custome to haue vnnaturall murderers to their kynges that the wickedest and vn graciousest of them al whose name was Phrahartes was substituted kyng Therfore as though it semed his father would not dye naturallie he forthwith kylled him put his thirtie brothers to death Neyther ceased he his slagh ter in the children For when he perceyued that the noble men hated him for his outrageous cruelti and continual workyng of mischief and that there was none that might be nominated kyng he cōmaunded his owne sonne who was man growen to be put to death Agaynst this man Antonie with syxtene of his strongest Legions made warre for ministeryng ayd agaynst hymself and Cesar. But he was so sore afflicted in many battels that he was fayne to flye backe oute of Parthia Through the whiche victorie Phrahartes beyng made more proude and insolēt when as he 〈◊〉 to deale cruellie in manie thynges he was dryuen into exil●… by his owne subiectes Wherevppon after longe and earnest sute made vnto the countries borde●…yng vppon Parthia at the lengthe by muche intreatans he so perswaded the Scythians that through their ayde he was restored to his kyngdome agayne In the tyme of his absence the Parthians hadde constituted one Tyridates kyng who hearyng of the comming of the Scythians fled with a great bande of his frendes to Cesar Augustus makyng war at that tyme in Spayn bryngyng with him to Themperor the yongest sonne of Phra ●…artes for a pledge whome through the negligēce of such as were put in trust with the kepyng of hym he had stolen away Uppon knowledge whereof Phrahartes forth with sent his Ambassadors to Cesar requiryng him to sende him home his seruaunt Tyridates and his sonne with him Themperour when he had hearde thambassadours of Phrahartes and vnderstode well the requestes of Tyridates for he also desyred to be set in possession of his kyngdome agayn assuryng that Parthia should euer after be at the commaundemente of the Romaynes y●… it would please him to bestowe the kyngdome vppon him answered howe he wolde neyther deliuer Tyridates into the handes of the Parthians nor yet minister ayd to Tyridates agaynst them Neuerthelesse bycause it should not seme that they had obteyned no part of their demand at Themperours hand he sent Phrahartes his sonne without raunsome and allowed Tyridates ●…onorable enterteynement to fynd him with as longe as he lysted to abyde with the Romaynes After this hauyng fynished his warres in Spayn when he came into Syria to set a stay in affayres of the East he put Phrahartes in such a feare that to th entent he should not make warre vppon Parthia all the Captiues and pri soners that wer in the Realme either of y ● army of Crassus or of th armie of Antonie wer gathered togyther and with all the baners and Antesygnes takē at those times sent agayn to Augustus Moreouer Phrahartes gaue to Augustus his sonnes and nephewes in hostage Them peror dyd more with the onely Maiestie of his name then anie other Emperour could haue done by force of Armes The. xliii Boke T●…ogus Pōpeius hauyng made a long discourse of the doynges of the Parthians ofy ● East and wel nye of al the whole worlde returneth as it were after a long pylgrimage home to the fondacion of the Cytie of Rome thinkyng it the part of an vnthankfull cytizen yf when he had paynted out the actes of all nacions he should speake nothyng at all of his owne
natife countrie Therfore he toucheth brieflie the beginnyng of the Romayne Empyre so that he neyther excedeth the boundes which he propounded to himselfe in his worke nor yet passeth ouer with silence the fondacion of that Cytie which out of doubt is head of all the world The fyrste inhabiters of Italye were the Aborigines whose kyng Saturne is reported to haue ben of suche Iustice and vprightnesse that duryng his ●…eygne ther was not any slaue or bondman nor any man that had oughte priuate to himself but all thynges were common and vndeuided to all menne a lyke as thoughe it hadde benne one Patrymonie and one Inheritaunce equallie belongyng to all menne In remembraunce of the which example it is enacted that in the feast of S●…turne no man shoulde be more set by then another but that the bondemen should syt doune to their meale fellowelyke with theire Maysters eueryewher Furthermore Italy was called Saturnia after the name of the foresayd kyng The Hyll also where he dwelled was called Saturne on the which at this day Iupiter hauyng as it were remoued Saturne out of his place standeth the Capitoll After him in the thirde place by reporte reygned Faunus in whose tyme Euander with a small companie of his countrymen came from Palantener a cytie of Arcadie into Italie to whome Faunus of gentlenesse and courtesie assigned landes to lyue vppon and the mountayne which afterward he called Palātine In the foote of this hill he builded a Temple to Lycens whome the Grekes call Pan and the Romaynes Lupercus The Image of the God beyng otherwise naked is clade in a goates skynne in the whiche maner o●… attyre menne are yet wonte to runne vp and doun the stretes of Rom●… in the celebracion of the feastes kepte vnto Pan. Faunus had a wyfe named Fatua whiche beyng continuallie rauished with a holy spirite as it were in a furie Prophecied of thynges to comme whervppon such as are wonte to be so inspyred are sayd to playe fatua vnto this day Of the daughter of Faunus and Hercules who the same tyme hauyng kylled Gerion draue his cattel which he had gotten in reward of his victorie throughe Italie was vnlefull begotten Latinus Duryng whose raygne Aeneas after that Troye was destroyed by the Grekes ▪ came from thence into Italie Where at his fyrst arriuall he was bydden battell But when he hadde brought his menne into the field before thencounter they fell to communicacion In the whiche he brought Latinus in suche admiracion of him that he was content to make him Compartener of hys kyngdome and also made him his sonne in lawe by geuyng him his daughter Lauinia in mariage After this they made warre 〈◊〉 agaynste Turnus kyng of the Rutilians who chalenged them for defraudyng him of Lauinia that by promis should haue ben his wyfe In the which bothe Turuus Latinus wer slayn Aeneas therfore obteynyng bothe the nacions by the law of armes buylded a cytie gaue it the name of his wyfe Afterward he made warre agaynste Mezentius kyng of the Hetruscians in the which he was slayne and his son Ascanius succeded in his stead Who leauing Lauinium buylded Alba longa the whiche for the space of thre hundred yeres togyther was the head of the kyngdom After manie kynges of this Cytie at length raygned Numitor and Amulius But Amulius hauyng wrongfully deposed his elder brother Numitor to thentente none yssue male should ryse of the stock of Numitor to chaleng the croune thrust his daughter Rhea into a nonrie there to leade all her lyfe in vow●…d virginitie clokyng his iniurie with an honorable color that men might suppose she was not put there as a condemned persone but rather made chief prio resse of the place by election Beyng therefore as a recluse in the Groue consecrated to Mars she was delyuered of two sonnes whether she conceyued them by aduouterye or by Mars no manne is able to say of a truthe Amulius vppon knowledge hereof beyng in more feare then euer he was by reason of the byrth of the two children cōman ded them to be cast away and layd their mother in prison through distresse wherof she dyed But fortune prouiding before hand for thoriginall of the Romaynes sente a she-wolfe to nource the children the whiche hauyng loste her whelpes for desyre to haue her dugges drawen that wer payned with fulnesse of mylke offered herselfe to be nourice to the chyldren As ●…he came and went oftentymes to the children lyke as yf they had ben her whelpes A shepeherde named Faustulus perceyued the matter and stealyng them from the wolfe brought them vp lyke shepeherdes among his Cattel Now whether it were for that they were borne in the Groue of Mars or for that they were nourished by a wolf which is in the tuicion of Mars it was beleued to be as a manifest proofe that they were the sonnes of Mars The one of thē was named Remus thother Romulus When thei were men growen they accustomed to trye Maystries daylie one with an other wherby they encreased as well in strength as in agilitie and swyftnes Therfore when they had oftentymes man fully pollitiquely chased away the thefes from stealyng of the cattell Remus was taken by the sayde thefes as though he had ben th●… same himself whiche he had prohibited thothers to doe was brought before the kyng and there accused for a stealer of Numitors cattell Whervppon the kyng deliuered him to Numitor to punish as he thought good But Numitor hauyng pitie of the yonge man had half a mistrust that he should be one of his nephewes that were cast away by reason he resembled his daughter so much in fauor and makyng by reason that the tyme of her deliueraunce was agr●…able vnto his yeres As he was in this doubtfull perplexitie with himself Faustulus came sodaynlie in with Romulus by whome beyng further instructed of the byrthe bringyng vp of the children they made a conspiracie and toke weapon in hand the yong men to reuenge their mothers death and Numitor to recouer the kyngdome wrongfully witholdē from him Amulius was slayne and Numitor restored to the crowne Anone after the yongmen builded the cytie of Rome The whiche beyng finished there was ordeyned a Senate of an hundred elders which were called fathers Then because the neighbours disdeyned to marry their daughters to shepeherdes they rauished the maydens of the Sabines aud hauyng subdued the people that were next about them fyrst they gate thempore of Italy and anone after th empyre of the whole worlde At those dayes as yet the kynges in stead of Diademes hadde maces which the Grekes call Scepters For euen from the fyrst begynnyng of thynges men in olde tyme dyd worship maces for Goddes In remembraunce of which Religion the ymages of the Goddes are yet styll ●…ade with Maces in their handes In the tyme of kyng Tarquine a companie of the Phocenses
the Sun with thynter pretatiō ther of Agathocles setteth hys ships on fyre A slaughter of the Ca●…tha ginenses The cities o●… A●…icke reuolte to Agathocles A slaughter of the Carth●… ginenses in Sic●… The kynge Cyrene Cyrene 〈◊〉 teth to Agathocles Another great slaug●… ter of the 〈◊〉 thaginienses The punyshment of Bomilcar The wordes of Bomilcar vppon the 〈◊〉 Agatho●…les returneth into Sicil and rais●…th the siege of Syracuse A mutiny Agatho●…es taketh a 〈◊〉 by 〈◊〉 ▪ Agathocles steal●…th fro●… his 〈◊〉 Agathocl●…s sonns are 〈◊〉 to death Agathocl●… taketh 〈◊〉 wyth the C●… thaginenses Agathocles maketh war in Italy The manner of the educati on of the Lucanes The 〈◊〉 of the Bru●…ans The war●… of ●…he Brut●…ans Agathocle●… arriued in 〈◊〉 ▪ taly Agathocles falleth syck●… A fay●…hful and louynge wyfe A descriptyon of a lamentable departure The death 〈◊〉 Agatho●…s The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…uade 〈◊〉 He 〈◊〉 to the 〈◊〉 of Pyrrhus mentioned 〈◊〉 the. xviii boke Pyrrhus lo●…eth the king dome of Sicill A notable example of the variablenesse of fortune Of the educa tion and preferment of Hiero. H 〈◊〉 l●…ft th●… xvi 〈◊〉 Ant●…chus the sonne of 〈◊〉 and An●…gonus the sonne of 〈◊〉 The Grekes rebeil agaynst them●…yre The Grekes are ●…ut to ●…ght by the ●…lian ●…heardes He pursueth the treachery and deceit of Ptolomy ●…ē●…oned in the xvi boke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ryeth hys owne●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iudas 〈◊〉 The naturall affectyon of amother The 〈◊〉 crucity of P●…o 〈◊〉 toward hys syster Murd●… 〈◊〉 peth not 〈◊〉 pun●… Of the ●…ges of the 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 hardynesse of Ptolomy The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 The ●…ful 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 men inuade ●…gayne The malap●…r te scoffyng of Brennus The situatiō of the temple of Delphos The description of the place where the 〈◊〉 are geuen The ●…of Euridanus and 〈◊〉 salonus The Oracle before the 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 The frenche men assalte the citie of Delphos note the ilusi on of y ● 〈◊〉 The frenche men are put to the 〈◊〉 and oppressed wyth lyght●… and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 ●… men 〈◊〉 of Grece and the vtter destrucryon of them Here foloweth the storye 〈◊〉 in the beginning of the laste booke The French men inuade Macedone the thyrd●… tyme. Antigonus po licy to 〈◊〉 himselfe and hys A slaught●… of the french men The greate encreaseof the frenchmen and theyr redouted prow 〈◊〉 The original of the French grekes in Asia the lesse Loke the xxiii boke Pyr●…hus con quereth Ma●… 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 again The doinge●… of Pyrrhus The 〈◊〉 raygne of ●…he tirant 〈◊〉 The prudent deuise of Helemat in suppressyng the Tyrant The poli●…yke celerity of An tigonus in suppressyng his enemyes The furious cruelty of the frenthmen towardes theyr owne wiues and children The 〈◊〉 slaughter of the 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 ful 〈◊〉 of fortune Read more of the stories of Epyre in the. xxviii booke A gas kyng of ●…yrene ●…uoutry re ●…enged 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a●…d put to death The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The fortuna●…e mischās of Seleucus 〈◊〉 is vanquished by 〈◊〉 kynge of Egypt The wicked and ambitious ●…urde of Antiochus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 brother 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vanquished by Emne●…s kinge of Bythi●…a Asia the 〈◊〉 mon pray●… 〈◊〉 kynges Antiochus is ouercome of Se●…cus 〈◊〉 is slayne by theues 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hys 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 history of ●… 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 ▪ 〈◊〉 He was the soune of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…pussed by 〈◊〉 The good an swer of the Ae●…yans to the ambassadoures of Rome The A●…ly ▪ ans inuade Acar●… The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cay of the ●…loud royall in Epyre. The ●…aunce of God for 〈◊〉 murd●… The pollicy of Antigonus in retaynyng the kyngdom of Macedone Warre betwene the Spartanes and the Macedones The couragy ousnesse of 〈◊〉 kyng of the Lacedemonians The 〈◊〉 of Antigonus hauing got●… the victory The sonne of Demetrius An alteratiō of kingdomes by the successi on of younge kynges The occas●…on of the wars betwene the Rom●…es and the Macedones Philip perswadeth the Grekes to peace and tranquilitye Philip 〈◊〉 defianc●… to the Romaines The Romaines and Phil ●…ip sollicit the Ac●…olians th one agaynst the other The Darbanians inuade Macedone Phillip is ●…exed wyth the cōplaints of his confederates Phillip t●…keth truse wyth the Ro maines See what the euyll ensample 〈◊〉 a prince dot●… ▪ God sende●… fortune to fooles The 〈◊〉 and abheminable 〈◊〉 of P●…olomy Ph●… pat●…r The death of Prolomy and the banyshment of hys strumpets The Rom●…nes are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Egypt Complaint●… 〈◊〉 a●…st Phil●… a●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made agay●… hym by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An earthquake Phillip encourageth the Macedones a gainst the Romaines 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 Phillip 〈◊〉 ●… 〈◊〉 ▪ Antiochus inuadeth the Empyre of Egypt King of the Lacedemonians An ambassa●… sent into ●…fricke to surprise 〈◊〉 Hanniball pr●…uenteth the deuyses of the Romaines Nabis is o●…ercome Nabis renu●…th the wars 〈◊〉 ▪ The 〈◊〉 of Philopemenes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with Antiochus He that ●…kens wyth out hys hoste muste 〈◊〉 twise Hannibals counsel to An tiochus agaynste the Romaines A messenger is sent to Carthage from ●…ball The 〈◊〉 ger is apprehended The messanger eskapeth and returneth to Hannibal An ambassad sente from Rome to Antiochus Flatterye Antiochus is displeased 〈◊〉 Haniball for kepyng compani with the Romaines The effect of the Romayne ambassade the answer of Antiochus Consultation concernyng the warres of the 〈◊〉 nes Hannibals adusye as cōcernyng the maintenance of the wars with the Romaines The nature of 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 ▪ 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 flygh●… ▪ Hannibal is taken into 〈◊〉 uor again ▪ Hannibal being made admiral of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 by the Romaines ▪ Antiochus ●…esyreth peace The constāte and vncorupt minde of Affricanus towarde hys countrye Articles of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A battel betwene 〈◊〉 and the 〈◊〉 The magnam●…ty of the Romain●…s The Aetolians are subdued by the Romaines The 〈◊〉 ou 〈◊〉 the ●…ans and th●… Achca●…s ▪ The 〈◊〉 ble courage of Philopemenes a●…hys death The death of Antiochus The modesty of D●…metrius wyth the frute therof ●…rtue pro●…●…nuy Wh●…e 〈◊〉 a man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 worse neyghboure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bringeth 〈◊〉 home The death of Phil●…yp kyng of 〈◊〉 What natyons Perses procured to take his part agaynste the Romaines The punyshmente of Sa●…ledge The original of the Istrians Cowardise punysh●…d with r●…proch Warre betwene Prusias as and Eumenes The 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ha●…ibals ●…tageme The deathe of Hanniball The commen dation of Hāniball The preparat●…on of the Ro mains and of Philip one against another The Eclipse of the moone The baliant nesse of M. Cato Perses flyeth and is taken prysonner with his chil dren The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the monarchy of 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 of the Roma●… nes agaynst the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…o 〈◊〉 befor●… 〈◊〉 net Corynthe