in the town. But suddenly, seeing the forces
of Sittas who by now were coming down upon them from
the high ground, and having no means of estimating
their number, since owing to the summer season a great
cloud of dust hung over them, they thought they were
much more numerous than they were, and, hurriedly
abandoning their plan of closing in the town, they
hastened to mass their force into a small space.
But the Romans anticipated the movement and, separating
their own force into two detachments, they set upon
them as they were retiring from the fortifications;
and when this was seen by the whole Roman army, they
took courage, and with a great rush they poured out
from the fortifications and advanced against their
opponents. They thus put the Persians between
their own troops, and turned them to flight.
However, since the barbarians were greatly superior
to their enemy in numbers, as has been said, they still
offered resistance, and the battle had become a fierce
fight at close quarters. And both sides kept
making advances upon their opponents and retiring
quickly, for they were all cavalry. Thereupon
Florentius, a Thracian, commanding a detachment of
horse, charged into the enemy’s centre, and
seizing the general’s standard, forced it to
the ground, and started to ride back. And though
he himself was overtaken and fell there, hacked to
pieces, he proved to be the chief cause of the victory
for the Romans. For when the barbarians no longer
saw the standard, they were thrown into great confusion
and terror, and retreating, got inside their camp,
and remained quiet, having lost many men in the battle;
and on the following day they all returned homeward
with no one following them up, for it seemed to the
Romans a great and very noteworthy thing that such
a great multitude of barbarians in their own country
had suffered those things which have just been narrated
above, and that, after making an invasion into hostile
territory, they should retire thus without accomplishing
anything and defeated by a smaller force.
At that time the Romans also acquired certain Persian
strongholds in Persarmenia, both the fortress of Bolum
and the fortress called Pharangium, which is the place
where the Persians mine gold, which they take to the
king. It happened also that a short time before
this they had reduced to subjection the Tzanic nation,
who had been settled from of old in Roman territory
as an autonomous people; and as to these things, the
manner in which they were accomplished will be related
here and now.
As one goes from the land of Armenia into Persarmenia
the Taurus lies on the right, extending into Iberia
and the peoples there, as has been said a little before
this[19], while on the left the road which continues
to descend for a great distance is overhung by exceedingly
precipitous mountains, concealed forever by clouds
and snow, from which the Phasis River issues and flows
into the land of Colchis. In this place from the