Legio III Cyrenaica

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Third Legion Cyrenaica
Legio III Cyrenaica
Legio Tertia Cyrenaica
Bostra (Busra, Syria), in Arabia Petraea province, from AD 125 until as late as the 5th century
Active35(?) BC until as late as 430 AD
CountryRoman Republic (closing years) and Roman Empire (nearly all existence)
TypeRoman legion
Denarius minted by Mark Antony to pay his legions. On the reverse, the aquila of his Third legion.
Roman re-enactors portraying Legio III Cyrenaica.

Legio III Cyrenaica, (lit. Third Legion "

Syria
at the beginning of the 5th century. The legion symbol is unknown.

History

Origins and service in Egypt

The origins of the legion are unclear, but it is first attested as part of

Marcus Aemilius Lepidus before 36 BC and of Mark Antony after that date; either of them might have established the Legio III.[1] Pollard and Berry suggest that the legion was established by Lucius Pinarius Scarpus, an ally of Mark Antony who was his governor of Cyrenaica in the 30s BC.[2] The legio III is one of the many legions that appear in Mark Antony's Legionary denarii
produced in 32-31 BC.

After

Ammon.[1] In either 7 AD or 9 AD the legion was transferred to Alexandria.[1]

In 26-25 BC a vexillatio of III Cyrenaica took part in a disastrous Roman attack on Arabia Felix.[1] The campaign was commanded Aelius Gallus, the prefect of Egypt.[1] This caused the province of Egypt to be unprotected, as the legions were off fighting.[1] Because of this the Nubian kingdom of Meroë attacked Upper Egypt.[1] In 24 BC a Roman governor named Gaius Petronius took the legions, one of which was III Cyrenaica, and marched upstream along the Nile and reached Napata, the capital of Nubia.[1] After this, the Nubians attacked the Romans a lot less.[1]

Service beyond Egypt

On other occasions, vexillationes were sent abroad.

Jews of Alexandria.[1]

In the civil war of the Year of the Four Emperors (69 AD), the III Cyrenaica were among the first supporters of the new emperor Vespasian.[1] This could be because a subunit of the III Cyrenaica took part in the Siege of Jerusalem in 70 AD.

Second century AD

In 106 AD the legion was transferred to the province of Arabia Petraea.[1] Its base was at Bosra.[1] It subsequently returned to Egypt, perhaps in connection with the emperor Trajan's war against the Parthians, and/or the rebellion of the Jews of Alexandria in the Kitos War (115-117 AD).[1] The legion returned to Arabia once more after 125 AD.[1] Between 132 AD and 136 AD, subunits of this legion fought against the Jews in the Bar Kokhba revolt. During the reign of Antoninus Pius, they were stationed in Hegra in Arabia, but subunits fought in Mauretania against the Mauri.[1] Later, subunits of the III Cyrenica took part in the Parthian War of Lucius Verus from 162 to 166 AD.[1] In 175 AD, the legion sided with Avidius Cassius, a Roman general who revolted against Marcus Aurelius, but was killed by his own officers.[1]

Later history

During the civil war following the death of the emperor Commodus in 192 AD the Legio III Cyrenaica sided with the eastern pretender Pescennius Niger.[1] Niger was defeated by Septimius Severus.[1] Subsequently, Severus invaded Mesopotamia to fight against the Parthians and it is possible that the Legio III took part in these campaigns.[1] It certainly participated in the Parthian war launched by Severus' son Caracalla in 216 AD.[1] The legion may also have taken part in Severus Alexander's war against the Sasanian Empire from 231 to 233[1] In 260 AD, the Sasanians took the Roman emperor Valerian captive, and several Roman provinces in the east became independent under Odaenathus of Palmyra.[1] Odaenathus led Roman units against the Persians, one of which was the III Cyrenica. In 273 AD the legion helped build roads in Jordan.[1] The later history of this unit is unclear, but the third Cyrenaican legion was still at Bosra at the beginning of the fifth century.[1]

Timeline

The following is a list of campaigns and actions thought to have been seen by Legion III Cyrenaica during much of its existence:

See also

External links and references

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad "Legio III Cyrenaica - Livius". www.livius.org. Retrieved 2020-08-02.
  2. ^ Pollard N. & Berry J., The Complete Roman Legions, p. 156
  • Richard Alston - "Soldier and Society in Roman Egypt: A social history", Routledge Press 1995.
  • Emil Ritterling - "Legio" article published in Realencyclopädie of Klassischen Altertumswissenschaft in 1925 [1]
  • H. A. Sanders - JSTOR article written 1941)
  • John Paul Adams - [2] (California State University, Northridge)
  • Adrian Goldsworthy - "The Complete Roman Army", Thames & Hudson 2003.
  • Peter Connolly - "Greece and Rome at War", Greenhill Books 1981, 1998.
  • Phil Barker - "The Armies and Enemies of Imperial Rome", Wargames Research Group Publications 1981.
  • Bishop & Coulston - "Roman Military Equipment", Oxbow Books 1993.
  • De Imperatoribus Romanis (On the Roman Emperors) [3]

Osprey books:

  • Simkins / Embelton - The Roman Army from Caesar to Trajan (Men at Arms #46)
  • Cowan / McBride - Roman Legionary: 58 BC - AD 69 (Warrior #71)
  • Sumner - Roman Military Clothing 1,2,3 (Men at Arms #374, 390, 425)
  • Campbell / Hook - Siege Warfare in the Roman World (Elite #126)
  • Cowan / Hook - Roman Battle Tactics: 109 BC - AD 313 (Elite #155)
  • Gilliver / Goldsworthy / Whitby - Rome At War: Caesar and his Legacy (Essential Histories)

Bibliography

  • Emil Ritterling, Legio, Realencyclopädie of Klassischen Altertumswissenschaft, 1925, Columns 1506–1514
  • H. A. Sanders, "The Origin of the Third Cyrenaic Legion", American Journal of Philology, 62 (1941), pp. 84–87.
  • Johannes Kramer, "Die Wiener Liste von Soldaten der III. und XXII. Legion (P. Vindob. L 2)", Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 97 (1993), pp. 147–158
  • G. W. Bowersock, "A Report on Arabia Provincia",
    Journal of Roman Studies
    , 61 (1971), pp. 219–242
  • Karl Strobel, "Zu Fragen der frühen Geschichte der römischen Provinz Arabia und zu einigen Problemen der Legionsdislokation im Osten des Imperium Romanum zu Beginn des 2. Jh.N.Chr", Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 71 (1988), pp. 251–280
  • John Peter Oleson, M. Barbara Reeves, Barbara J. Fisher, "New Dedicatory Inscriptions from Humayma (Ancient Hawara), Jordan", Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 140 (2002), pp. 103–121
  • P.-L. Gatier, "La Legio III Cyrenaica et l'Arabie", in dans Les légions de Rome sous le Haut-Empire, I, Lyon, 2000, p. 341–344
  • A. Kindler, The Coinage of Bostra (Warminster 1983) 87–95.
  • D. Kennedy, "Legio VI Ferrata: The Annexation and Early Garrison of Arabia", Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, 84 (1980) 282–309