This article is about a Roman general of the Second Punic War. For other Romans of similar name, see Marcus Junius Silanus.
Marcus Junius Silanus was one of the most successful Roman commanders in the Spanish theatre of the Second Punic War. He is best remembered for his defeat of Hanno and Mago in Celtiberia in 207 BC.[1][2]
Early career
A member of the celebrated plebeiangens Junia, Silanus first appears in history in 216 BC, when he was appointed prefect over the Roman garrison at Neapolis, one of the cities of Magna Graecia that had requested protection from the Carthaginian general Hannibal.[3][4] He was praetor in 212, and assigned the province of Etruria, where he remained as propraetor the following year. During this time, he purchased and despatched grain for the Roman army besieging Capua.[5][6]
When Scipio took his army to conquer Carthago Nova in 209, Silanus remained in command of the forces south of the Iberus, holding the region the following year.[10][11][12] In 207, at Scipio's direction, he attacked a large army that had been gathered by the Carthaginian commanders Hanno and Mago in Celtiberia, utterly defeating them with his much smaller force.[13][14][15]
Nothing further is reported of Silanus, unless as some scholars suppose, he is to be identified with the Marcus Junius Silanus who, as praefectus socium under the command of Marcus Claudius Marcellus in 196 BC, was slain in battle against the Boii, along with his colleague, Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus.[22][1][23] However, this Silanus was probably his son.[24]
Notes
^As Silanus had never been consul, scholars generally presume that his authority remained that of a propraetor; but it may be that like Scipio, who likewise had yet to hold the consulship, the Roman Senate granted him imperium pro consule, thereby giving him a level of authority equal to the other Roman commanders in Spain.[7]
References
^ abcDictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. III, p. 819 ("Silanus, Junius", No. 1).