10.37
The
other consul, Postumius, finding nothing for his troops to do amongst the
Samnites, led them into Etruria and began to lay waste the district of
Volsinia. The townsmen came out to defend their borders and a battle
ensued not far from their walls; 2800 of the Etruscans were killed, the rest
were saved by the proximity of their city. He then passed over into the
Rusellan territory; there, not only were the fields harried, but the town itself
was successfully assaulted. More than 2000 were made prisoners, and under
2000 killed in the storming of the place. The peace which ensued this year in
Etruria was more important and redounded more to the honour of Rome
than even the war which led to it. Three very powerful cities, the chief cities
in Etruria, Vulsinii, Perusia, and Arretium, sued for peace, and after agreeing
to supply the troops with clothing and corn, they obtained the consul's
consent to send spokesmen to Rome, with the result that they obtained a
forty years' truce. Each of the cities was at once to pay an indemnity of
500,000 ases. For these services the consul asked the senate to decree him a
triumph. The request was made more as a matter of form, to comply with
the established custom, than from any hope of obtaining it. He saw that some
who were his personal enemies and others who were friends of his colleague
refused his request on various grounds, some alleging that he had been too
late in taking the field, others that he had transferred his army from Samnium
to Etruria without any orders from the senate, whilst a third party were
actuated by a desire to solace Atilius for the refusal which he had met with.
In face of this opposition he simply said: "Senators, I am not so mindful of
your authority as to forget that I am consul. By the same right and authority
by which I have conducted wars, now that these wars have been brought to a
successful close, Samnium and Etruria subdued, victory and peace secured, I
shall celebrate my triumph." And with that he left the senate.
A sharp contention now broke out between the tribunes of the
plebs. Some declared that they should interpose to prevent his obtaining a
triumph in a way which violated all precedent, others asserted that they
should give him their support in spite of their colleagues. The matter was
brought before the Assembly, and the consul was invited to be present. In his
speech he alluded to the cases of the consuls M. Horatius and L. Valerius
and the recent one of Gaius Marcius Rutilus, the father of the man who was
censor at the time. All these, he said, had been allowed a triumph, not on the
authority of the senate but by an order of the people. He would have brought
the question before the people himself had he not been aware that certain
tribunes of the plebs who were bound hand and foot to the nobles would
veto the proposal. He regarded the goodwill and favour of a unanimous
people as tantamount to all the formal orders that were made. Supported by
three of the tribunes against the veto of the remaining seven and against the
unanimous voice of the senate he celebrated his triumph on the following day
amidst a great outburst of popular enthusiasm. The records of this year vary
widely from each other. According to Claudius, Postumius, after taking
some cities in Samnium, was routed and put to flight in Apulia, he himself
being wounded, and was driven with a small body of his troops to Luceria;
the victories in Etruria were won by Atilius and it was he who celebrated the
triumph. Fabius tells us that both consuls conducted the campaign in
Samnium and at Luceria, and that the army was transferred to Etruria, but he
does not say by which consul. He also states that at Luceria the losses were
heavy on both sides, and that a temple was vowed to Jupiter Stator in that
battle. This same vow Romulus had made many centuries before, but only
the fanum, that is the site of the temple, had been consecrated. As the State
had become thus doubly pledged, it became necessary to discharge its
obligation to the god, and the senate made an order this year for the
construction of the temple.