The Starting-point of the History
My History begins in the 140th Olympiad. The events
note
from which it starts are these. In Greece, what
is called the Social war: the first waged by
Philip, son of Demetrius and father of Perseus,
in league with the Achaeans against the Aetolians. In Asia, the war for the possession of
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Coele-Syria which Antiochus and Ptolemy
Philopator carried on against each other. In
Italy, Libya, and their neighbourhood, the conflict between
Rome and Carthage, generally called the Hannibalian war.
My work thus begins where that of Aratus of Sicyon leaves off.
Now up to this time the word's history had been, so to speak,
a series of disconnected transactions, as widely separated in
their origin and results as in their localities. But from this
time forth History becomes a connected whole: the affairs of
Italy and Libya are involved with those of Asia and Greece,
and the tendency of all is to unity. This is why I
have fixed upon this era as the starting-point of my work.
For it was their victory over the Carthaginians in this war,
and their conviction that thereby the most difficult and most
essential step towards universal empire had been taken, which
encouraged the Romans for the first time to stretch out their
hands upon the rest, and to cross with an army into Greece
and Asia.
Now, had the states that were rivals for universal empire
note
been familiarly known to us, no reference perhaps to their previous history would have been
necessary, to show the purpose and the forces
with which they approached an undertaking of
this nature and magnitude. But the fact is that
the majority of the Greeks have no knowledge of the previous
constitution, power, or achievements either of Rome or Carthage. I therefore concluded that it was necessary to prefix this
and the next book to my History. I was anxious that no one,
when fairly embarked upon my actual narrative, should feel at
a loss, and have to ask what were the designs entertained by
the Romans, or the forces and means at their disposal, that
they entered upon those undertakings, which did in fact
lead to their becoming masters of land and sea everywhere
in our part of the world. I wished, on the contrary, that
these books of mine, and the prefatory sketch which they
contained, might make it clear that the resources they
started with justified their original idea, and sufficiently explained their final success in grasping universal empire and
dominion.
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