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The Site of the Battle of Pharsalia

The long and heated controversy on the site of the great battle seems drawing to a conclusion. The disquisitions of Dr. Rice Holmes first in the Classical Quarterly ii (1908) pp. 271-292, and secondly, improved and strengthened, in the third volume of his ‘Roman Republic’ (1923) pp. 452-467, and the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of Roman studies 1922-11, Vol.12, p.187-191
Main Author: Postgate, J. P.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The long and heated controversy on the site of the great battle seems drawing to a conclusion. The disquisitions of Dr. Rice Holmes first in the Classical Quarterly ii (1908) pp. 271-292, and secondly, improved and strengthened, in the third volume of his ‘Roman Republic’ (1923) pp. 452-467, and the topographical researches and arguments of Mr. F. L. Lucas, Annual of the British School at Athens, no. xxiv, pp. 34-53, have shown, I think, beyond cavil that it was fought on the north side of the Enipeus and that the theories of Leake, Mommsen, Heuzey, Stoffel, Kromayer and other advocates of a site to its south may be dismissed again to the obscurity from which they never should have emerged. Of these the reconstruction of Colonel Stoffel 1887 (against which I vainly protested in 1896, as Dr. Holmes records), had the longest reign, as might have been expected from the imposing confidence of its author and the excellence of the plans and views in his atlas. Sir Wm. Napier in Long's Decline of the Roman Republic, v, 220 sq., General von Göler, 1880, and Mr. B. Perrin, 1885 (American Journal of Philology, vi, pp. 170-189) had maintained that the battle could not have been fought to the south of the river; but the self-sufficient French Colonel knew or cared nothing about their contentions. The schemes of the two experts were vitiated by the lack of trustworthy maps; but Mr. Perrin's presentation of his results ‘that the camps both of Pompey and Caesar were on the side of the Enipeus toward Larissa and that the camp of Pompey was on the southern-slope of the hills bounding the northern edge of the Pharsalian plain’ needed but a little precision in details to bring it into exact accord with the most recent investigations.
ISSN:0075-4358
1753-528X
DOI:10.2307/296187