General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels - Volume 18 - By Robert Kerr














































































































 -  The inability of the Romans
to attend to them, and the success and encouragement they obtained, induced
them to conduct - Page 284
General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels - Volume 18 - By Robert Kerr - Page 284 of 1007 - First - Home

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The Inability Of The Romans To Attend To Them, And The Success And Encouragement They Obtained, Induced Them To Conduct Their Piracies On A Regular, Systematic, And Extensive Plan.

Their ships were constantly at sea:

All commerce was interrupted; with their 1000 galleys - for so numerous were they - they exercised a complete sovereignty over all the coasts of the Mediterranean. They formed themselves into a kind of commonwealth, selected magistrates and officers, who appointed each fleet its respective station and object, and built watch-towers, arsenals, and magazines. They depended chiefly on Cilicia for the necessary supplies for their fleets. Emboldened by their success, and by the occupation afforded to the Romans by Mithridates, they ravaged the whole line of the Italian coast; sacked the towns and temples, from which they expected a considerable booty; plundered the country seats on the sea-shore; carried off the inhabitants for slaves; blocked up all the ports of the republic; ventured as far as the entrance of the Tiber; sunk part of the Roman fleet at Ostia, and even threatened Rome itself, which they more than once deprived of its ordinary and necessary subsistence. The scarcity of provisions was, indeed, not confined to Rome; but no vessel venturing to sea in the Mediterranean without being captured, it extended to those parts of Asia and Africa which lie on that sea. Their inveteracy, however, was principally directed against the Roman commerce, and the Romans themselves. If any of their captives declared himself to be a Roman, they threw themselves in derision at his feet, begging his pardon, and imploring his protection; but after they had insolently sported with their prisoner, they often dressed him in a toga, and then, casting out a ship's ladder, desired him to return home, and wished him a good journey.

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