Aulus Postumius Albinus (consul 99 BC)

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Aulus Postumius Albinus
Bornc. 151 BC
Died89 BC
Near
Marsic War

Aulus Postumius Albinus (c. 151 – 89 BC) was a Roman senator and military commander. In 110 BC, he went to serve on the staff of his brother,

Social War
in Italy, but proved to be an unpopular commander and was murdered by his troops.

Biography

This coin is supposed by Joseph Hilarius Eckhel and others to refer to this Albinus. One side is a woman's head with the letters "HISPAN", perhaps a reference to his ancestor L. Albinus. The other side has a man and an eagle, a military standard; behind him the fasces with the axe, and the letters "A. POST. ABIN" (instead of "ALBIN").[1]

Aulus Postumius Albinus belonged to a patrician family which had been prominent since the beginning of the Roman Republic. He was probably a son of Spurius Postumius Albinus Magnus, Roman consul in 148 BC. Aulus must have been born in or not long before 151 BC, and probably held the office of praetor by 111 BC.[2] Cicero considered him a good public speaker.[3]

In 110 BC, Aulus joined the staff of his older brother, the consul Spurius Postumius Albinus, as his pro-praetorian deputy (legatus pro praetore), in a military expedition against the Numidian king Jugurtha.[4] Spurius accomplished little[5] and eventually had to return to Rome and oversee the election of next year's magistrates, leaving Aulus in charge of the Roman camp in Numidia.[6] Problems with the elections forced Spurius to linger in Italy longer than expected, and, in early 109, despite it being winter, Aulus allowed himself to be tempted into a bold military move on his own against the town of Suthul, where Jugurtha's treasury was located.[7] After the Romans failed to immediately take the town, they were successfully lured away by Jugurtha into a devastating ambush. The King forced Aulus into a humiliating treaty, by which the Romans would pass under the yoke and leave Numidia within 10 days.[8]

Aulus's treaty was quickly repudiated by the Roman Senate,[6] and the disaster led a tribune of the plebs to set up a commission to investigate misconduct or treasonable behavior by magistrates in the Jugurthine war.[9] Among those condemned was Aulus's brother, Spurius, who was blamed for his legate's blunder during his absence.[10] There is no evidence Aulus himself was condemned, and he was in sufficiently good standing to be elected for the consulship of 99 BC, with the orator Marcus Antonius as his colleague.[i] It has been suggested that he owed his election to anti-demagogic feeling in the aftermath of the death of the populist tribune Saturninus.[14] No actions of his during his term of office are known, and he was the last of the Postumii Albini to hold the consulship.[3]

In 89 BC, Aulus was once again on military duty,

History says the soldiers did so because they suspected Albinus of treacherous behavior. Orosius blamed the commander's intolerable arrogance for his demise, while the author Valerius Maximus maintained that there was nothing but baseless suspicions to justify the killing.[19] Albinus's superior, Sulla, declined to punish the murderers and address the indiscipline in the army, allegedly because he was looking forward to his candidacy for the consulship of the following year.[20]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Münzer had no doubt that Aulus shared his brother's disgrace during the trials and thus could not be identified with the identically named consul of 99.[3] There is no evidence, however, that Aulus was condemned, and later historians have preferred to identify the two.[11][12][13]
  2. ^ Plutarch claimed the man in question was of praetorian rank, whereas Orosius said he was a former consul. Münzer rejected, once again, an identification with the consul of 99 BC,[15] but later historians, following the testimony of Orosius, believed they should indeed be the same person.[16][17]

Citations

  1. ^ Joseph Hilarius Eckhel, vol. v. p. 288
  2. ^ Sumner, p. 84; Brennan, pp. 540, 743.
  3. ^ a b c d Münzer, col. 909.
  4. ^ Münzer, col. 908; Sumner, pp. 82, 84.
  5. ^ Broughton I, p. 543.
  6. ^ a b Brennan, p. 540.
  7. ^ Brennan, p. 540; Münzer, col. 908.
  8. ^ Münzer, col. 908.
  9. ^ Broughton I, p. 546.
  10. ^ Brennan, pp. 540–541.
  11. ^ Badian, pp. 388, 404 (note 19).
  12. ^ Brennan, pp. 540, 869 (note 125).
  13. ^ Broughton I, p. 544.
  14. ^ Sumner, p. 84.
  15. ^ Münzer, coll. 909–910.
  16. ^ Brennan, p. 376.
  17. ^ Broughton II, p. 37.
  18. ^ Broughton II, p. 37; Brennan, p. 376.
  19. ^ Pease, p. 7; Brennan, p. 778 (note 166); Münzer, col. 909.
  20. ^ Brennan, p. 778 (note 166).

References

  • Badian, Ernst (1990). "The Consuls, 179–49 BC". Chiron. 20 (106): 371–414.
  • .
  • Broughton, T. Robert S. (1951). The Magistrates of the Roman Republic Volume I: 509 B.C.–100 B.C. New York: American Philological Association.
  • Broughton, T. Robert S. (1952). The Magistrates of the Roman Republic Volume II: 99 B.C.–31 B.C. New York: American Philological Association.
  • Münzer, Friedrich, Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft (RE, PW), volume XXII.1, columns 908–910: Postumius 32, 33 and 34 (Stuttgart, 1953).
  • JSTOR 282736
    .
  • Sumner, G.V. (1973). The Orators in Cicero's Brutus: Prosopography and Chronology. University of Toronto Press. .
Political offices
Preceded by
Roman consul
99 BC
With: Marcus Antonius
Succeeded by