Page:Political History of Parthia.pdf/239

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THE CAMPAIGN OF CORBULO
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from Illyria and Egypt, the latter probably part of the XXII Deiotariana, and auxiliaries from allied kings were also assembled there.

Corbulo as he advanced into Armenia over the route followed by Lucullus and Paetus destroyed citadels and spread terror throughout the countryside. Proposals of peace arrived from Tiridates and Vologases, and the Parthian ambassadors were accompanied on their return by some Roman centurions who carried messages of a conciliatory nature. Vologases craftily proposed that a meeting be arranged at Rhandeia, where Paetus had been forced to surrender. Tiberius Alexander and Annius Vinicianus, son-in-law of Corbulo, went to the camp of Tiridates as pledges against ambush. The leaders, each accompanied by twenty horsemen, met and agreed that Tiridates was to receive Armenia, but only from the hands of Nero. In a formal ceremony some days later the Armenian monarch removed the crown from his head before the assembled Roman and Parthian troops and laid it at the feet of a statue of Nero erected for that purpose.

This agreement was reached late in 63, but it was not until 66 that it was consummated.[1] A part of


    Hasluck, "Inscriptions from the Cyzicus District, 1906," JHS, XXVII (1907), p. 64, No. 5; A. von Domaszewski, "Kleine Beitrage zur Kaisergeschichte," Philologus, LXVII (1908), 5–8. This is the Asper of Tac. Ann. xv. 49 ff.

  1. Tac. Ann. xv. 24–31; cf. Josephus Bell. ii. 379, speech of Agrippa in 66; Mommsen, Prov. Rom. Emp., II, 64; CAH, X, 770–73.