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Antony himself was more concerned with Armenia. He was clearly determined to exact vengeance from Artavasdes; and he doubtless considered he was being prudent as well as vindictive, for he still dreamed of a second Parthian campaign. (He was indeed to embark on one two years later.) For this a secure Armenia was essential; but that could never be, as long as Artavasdes was king. Matters now took an unexpected turn, for an envoy arrived in Alexandria from the Median Artavasdes, Antony's enemy of the previous year: an envoy in fact of peculiar distinction, King Polemo himself. Antony's designs on Arme­nia would seem no surprise, and Median Artavasdes offered Antony an alliance. Antony accepted, and set out from Egypt during the summer.

Perhaps he pretended that he was attacking the Parthians; but his immediate goal was surely Armenia.[100]

For the present it came to nothing, for a different sort of crisis supervened. Octavia arrived in the East. Whatever people were saying about her husband and Cleopatra, she was still his wife. (Her journey indeed demonstrates that Italians at least could not yet think of Antony as married to Cleopatra: otherwise she would surely have divorced him by now.)[101] It may well be that Octavian himself had encouraged his sister in the mission, as some suspected;[102] it was certainly deeply embarrassing to Antony — and not just because of Cleopatra, who was away from Antony's company at present, tactfully at home in Alexandria.[103] The real problem was that Octavia was bringing with her 2,000 elite troops from her brother, besides money and supplies to replace those lost in Parthia, and perhaps some Italian cavalry.[104] Octavian in fact owed Antony far more than this, all the 20,000 troops that he had promised at Tarentum in return for Antony's 140 ships.[105] Those ships had been most useful in the war against Sextus, and since then Octavian had returned half of them; but that was hardly enough.[106] It would be a triumph for Octavian if Antony accepted the troops, but insulting to Octavia if he refused - and probably politically damaging as well, for Octavian was soon to show himself adept at building propaganda from his sister's maltreatment.[107] Sensibly, Antony accepted. But that was all the annoyance he was prepared to take from Octavia's presence for the moment, and he told her to stay in Athens, perhaps even to return to Rome.[108] He himself retired to Alexandria for the winter of 3 5 /4. (It was evidently too late in the season to resume the Armenian expedition.) Cleopatra was more congenial company than Octavia; Octavian could make of that what he wished. In fact, he would make a great deal.

In early 34 Antony turned to Armenia again. First, during the winter, came diplomacy: he sent Dellius to ask the Armenian Artavasdes for the king's daughter, pretending he wished to marry her to his son Alexander Helios. She would of course make a splendid hostage. Artavasdes was shrewd enough to refuse. In the spring Antony appeared suddenly at

Nicopolis on the Armenian border, and sent for the Armenian king to discuss a new Parthian campaign; Artavasdes again refused. While Dellius travelled once more to ask Artavasdes to a conference, Antony himself marched quickly on Artaxata; Artavasdes was finally forced by his own nobility and soldiers to come to Antony, despite his suspicions of such curious friendliness. Antony took him captive, and quickly occupied the whole country: he left his troops there for the winter, and within a year at least sixteen legions would be there.[109] His enemies, first among them Octavian, might claim that the victory was all dishonour­able, won through perfidy; his friends would retort that Artavasdes' own treachery justified it quite sufficiently.[110] At least, it was something to restore Antony's paling prestige. On coins he could celebrate a conquest at last: ARMENIA DEVICTA.[111]

Artavasdes himself was conveyed to Alexandria. The thing could be done in style: his chains were silver, or perhaps gold.[112] And the victory merited celebration. A great Dionysiac procession took place in Alexan­dria in late 34, as was only fitting for Antony as Dionysis-Osiris, and amply precedented in the city. Not everything went according to plan: Artavasdes and his fellow captives refused to pay obeisance to Cleopatra. But it was still a ceremony in which Antony could bask.

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