"VAR" (Varus) Despite his father's political allegiances, Varus became a supporter of Julius Caesar's heir,
Augustus. Varus accompanied Augustus on a three-year tour of the eastern provinces between 22 BC and 19 BC, winning public acknowledgement while he was there. Around 15 BC, Varus spent a year or more serving as the
legate of the 19th Legion while it was stationed at Dangstetten, as evidenced by a luggage-tag bearing his name and position excavated from the site. When
Marcus Agrippa died in early 12 BC, Varus delivered the funeral eulogy alongside the future emperor
Tiberius. With his political career thus boosted, he was elected
consul in 13 BC as the colleague of Tiberius.
Governor of Africa, Syria, and Judaea In 8–7 BC, Varus governed the
African province. Later, he went on to govern
Syria and
Judaea in the
Levant from 7–6 BC to 4 BC with four legions under his command. He was notorious for his harsh rule and high taxes.
Jewish revolt in Judaea (4 BC) The Jewish historian
Josephus mentions the swift action of Varus against a messianic revolt after the death of the Romans' Jewish client king
Herod the Great in 4 BC. After occupying
Jerusalem, he crucified 2000
Jews, making him one of the prime objects of popular resentment against Roman rule in Judaea. Per archeological evidence, the people of Judaea took part in a popular full-scale boycott of Roman pottery (red slipware) in protest of Varus' cruelty. Following the massacre, Varus returned to
Antioch.
Governor of Germania Between 10 BC and 6 AD, Tiberius, his brother
Drusus,
Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus, and
Germanicus conducted long campaigns in Germania, the area north of the upper
Danube and east of the
Rhine, in an attempt at achieving a further major expansion of the Roman Empire together with a shortening of its frontier line. They subdued several Germanic tribes, such as the
Cherusci. In 6 AD, Tiberius declared Germania
pacified, and Varus was appointed to govern it. Tiberius, who would later rule as emperor, left the region to suppress the
Great Illyrian Revolt.
Augustus made Publius Quinctilius Varus the first "officially appointed" governor of the newly created
Roman province of Germania in 7 AD.
Battle of the Teutoburg Forest (AD 9) In September of 9 AD, Varus was preparing to leave his summer headquarters in
Vetera (modern day
Xanten, Germany) and march three legions – the
Seventeenth,
Eighteenth, and
Nineteenth – to
Moguntiacum (modern day
Mainz). News arrived from the Germanic prince
Arminius, a Roman citizen and leader of an auxiliary cavalry unit, of a growing revolt in an area of the
Rhine to the west. Ignoring a warning from
Segestes not to trust Arminius, Varus followed Arminius' lead. Segestes and Arminius had publicly quarrelled, and so Varus had reasonable doubt regarding the accusations against Arminius. depicting Varus falling on his sword during the
Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, 1830s Not only was Varus' trust in Arminius a terrible misjudgement, but Varus compounded it by placing his legions in a position where their fighting strengths would be minimized and those of the Germanic tribesmen maximized, as he expected no ambush and very little trouble in intimidating the rebels. Arminius and the
Cherusci, along with other allies, had skillfully laid an ambush, and in the
Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in September at
Kalkriese (north of modern
Osnabrück), the Romans marched right into it. The heavily forested and swampy terrain made the infantry manoeuvres of the legions impossible to execute and allowed the Germanic coalition to
defeat the legions in detail. On the third day of fighting, Germanic fighters overwhelmed the Roman troops at Kalkriese Hill, north of Osnabrück. Accounts of the defeat are scarce, due to the totality of the defeat, but the Roman historian
Velleius Paterculus testifies that some Roman cavalrymen abandoned the infantry and fled towards the Rhine, but were intercepted by Germanic tribesmen and killed. Varus himself, upon seeing all hope was lost, took his own life by
falling on his sword. Arminius
cut off Varus' head and sent it to
Bohemia as a present to
Maroboduus of the
Marcomanni, the other most important Germanic leader, whom Arminius hoped to coax into an anti-Roman military alliance, but Marboduus declined the offer and sent the head on to
Rome for a proper burial. Some captured Roman soldiers were caged and
burned alive; others were enslaved or ransomed. The Roman historians
Tacitus and
Florus report that the victorious Germanic tribes tortured and sacrificed captive Roman officers to
their gods on altars that could still be seen years later. The
Roman army later recovered the lost legions'
eagles, one each under
Germanicus in 15 AD, 16 AD, and 42 AD.
Suicide and aftermath Due to the shame and the ill luck thought to be created by the Roman defeat, the XVII, XVIII and XIX legions never again appeared in the Roman Army's order of battle. The loss at the Teutoburg Forest was keenly felt by Augustus in his remaining years. According to the biographer
Suetonius, upon hearing the news, Augustus tore his clothes, refused to cut his hair for months and, for years afterwards, was heard, upon occasion, to yell, "Quinctilius Varus, give me back my legions!" (). Roman historians referred to the battle as the
clades Variana ("Varian disaster").
Gibbon describes Augustus' reaction to the defeat as one of the few times the normally stoic ruler lost his composure. Varus' political legacy in Rome was destroyed and the government blamed him for the defeat. His son's (
the younger Varus) chances for a political career were ruined. Tiberius himself fell under severe criticism for recommending Varus as the governor of Germania. Tiberius, according to Gaius Stern, was forced to sacrifice his friend and former brother-in-law to save his career. Furthermore, Varus himself had been one of the figures on the
Ara Pacis, but the figure is lost today. Stern has proposed that common citizens vandalized the Ara Pacis by damaging Varus in anger over their lost loved ones, leaving the regime, which had blamed Varus, uncertain as to whether or not to fix the damage. Claudius welcomed them home after their long captivity, their stories arousing much pity. ==In popular culture==