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20 Ekim 2018 Cumartesi

Battle of Carrhae in 53 BC

Battle of Carrhae in 53 BC

Crassus one of the most powerful politicians in the era of corruption, Marcus Licinius Crassus (115-53 B.C.), not surprisingly was also one of the richest Roman. Born into a wealthy family, he acquired his riches, according to Plutarch, through "fire and rapine." Crassus became so powerful that he financed the army that put down the slave revolt led by Spartacus.

Marcus Crassus decided to invade Parthia with seven legions and succeeded in capturing a number of border cities. In 53 BC, Crassus crossed the Euphrates in search of the military glory that had so far eluded him in his successful career. His goal was the Parthian capital of Seleucia but, as he advanced, Parthian mounted troops enveloped the large but cumbersome Roman army in the desert, using sustained archery to weaken and wear down their opponents.

As the Roman force advanced further into Parthia they met up with the Parthian army, all cavalry, mostly horse archers with around a thousand heavily armoured cataphracts in support. The Battle of Carrhae was fought in June 53 BC.

Forces sent to drive the horse archers away were surrounded by Parthians and destroyed. With more than 20.000 soldiers killed (Crassus among them) and another 10.000 legionaries taken into captivity by the Parthian cavalry, as a result of the Battle of Carrhae . Only 6,000 Romans managed to fight their way out of the situation.

Marcus Crassus was captured by the Parthians, who according to legend, poured molten gold down his throat when they realized he was the richest man in Rome. The reasoning of the act was that his lifelong thirst for gold should quench in death.

The battle of Carrhae exposed the art of Parthian warfare, essentially based on the cooperative actions of two cavalry branches: the lightly armed regiments of highly skilled mounted bowmen, known as the ‘pelatai’, and the squads of heavy armed horsemen called the ‘cataphracti’, together capable of inflicting devastating damage to the enemy.

The outcome of the 53 B.C. confrontation had also signalized the need of improving the overall range of battle tactics employed by the Romans, though it does not seem to have had a decisive influence on the overall structure of the imperial army as such.
Battle of Carrhae in 53 BC

13 Kasım 2017 Pazartesi

Battle of Mu'tah

Battle of Mu'tah

According to the scholars of history, the battle of Mu’tah was in the 8th year of Hijrah (629 AD). The background of this battle was that the Prophet Muhammad had sent a letter to the ruler of Busra, but the messenger was intercepted on the way and killed by Al-Ghassani, the Governor of Al-Balqa.

This was considered to be a very serious crime had amounted to declaration of war. Urwah Ibn Zubair said Prophet Muhammad sent this expedition to Mu’tah in in Jumadah Al-Ula in the 6th year of Hijrah and appointed Zaid Ibn Harithah as the commander of the force, and said: ‘If Zaid were slain, then Ja’far Ibn Abi Talib was to take command, and of he were killed then ‘Abdullah Ibn Rawahah’.

Their number was 3,000. They went on their way as far as Ma’an in Syria where they heard that Heraclius had come down to Ma’ab in the Balqa’ with 100,000 Greeks joined by 100,000 men from Lakhm, Judham, Al-Qayn, Bahra and Bali.

The two armies met in or near the village of Mu’tah. After Muslims had arranged themselves in rows, each of the three commanders dismounted his shoes and fought on foot in hand-to-hand combat.

When fighting began Zaid ibn Harithah fought holding the Messenger’s standard, until he died from loss of blood among the spears of the enemy. Then Ja’far took it and fought with it until he was martyred, Abdullah Ibn Rawahah took the standard and fought until he died a martyr.

According to ostensible eyewitnesses, Ja’far received thirty or more wounds on the lower part of his body and exactly seventy-two sword blows and one spear wound on the upper part of his torso.

It was Thabit b. Arqam came forward and grabbed the standard and when he saw Khalid Ibn Walid he ordered him to take hold of the standard. Khalid was elected as the commander and he was able to maintain his heavily outnumbers army of 3,000 men against an army of 10,000 of the Byzantine Empire and Ghassanid Arabs.

Khalid Ibn Walid said: on the day of the battle of Mu’tah nine swords were broken in my hand, and nothing was left in hand except a Yemenite sword of mine.

Twelve Muslim men were martyred on that day. The casualties among the Romans were unknown.
Battle of Mu'tah

7 Mayıs 2017 Pazar

Battle of Watling Street (AD 60)

Battle of Watling Street (AD 60)

Watling Street was originally a track used by the Britons for hundreds of years before the Romans returned to the island in AD 43. As the army made its way inland, they set up new Roman towns, Britons tribes that got in its way including the Iceni were told to cooperate or surrender.

The Iceni lands were in east-central England. In around AD 60 the Iceni king died. He left his lands to his daughters and to the Roman emperor. But Emperor Nero wouldn’t share. He took over. The king’s wife, Boudicca objected. As punishment, Nero’s deputy had Boudicca beaten and her daughter’s raped.

Boudicca reached out to other abused Briton tribes. Their hugh army marched to the new Roman towns.
The Battle of Watling Street was between an alliance of indigenous British people led by Boudicca and a Roman army led by Gaius Suetonius Paulinus. The Romans were very heavily outnumbered but won a decisive victory that ended resistance to Roman in the southern half of Britain.

The main part of Watling Street connected Canterbury in Kent with St Albans in Herefordshire, just a few miles north of Radlett. The Roman took it over, straightened it, paved it and used it to link Dover and Richborough in Kent with London.

During the Viking period, Watling Street appears to have functioned as a boundary between the area of Scandinavia settlement and the area that remained under English control. The archeologist who excavated the settlement of Tripontium, on Watling Street near Rugby suggested in 1997 that the battle took place on the nearby Dunsmore plain.
Battle of Watling Street (AD 60)

11 Haziran 2015 Perşembe

Third Punic war (149–146 BC)

Third Punic war (149–146 BC)

A fight over Messina in 264 BC brought on the first of three Punic Wars between the two largest powers in the Mediterranean – Rome and Carthage.

The cause of the Third Punic War can be attributed to the loss of Scipio Africanus’ moderating influence when he fell victim to political in-fighting and his replacement by Cato with his advocacy of vigorous confrontation with Carthage.

The third Punic War was a security measure meant to protect Rome from future confrontations with a resurgent Carthage.

Cato the sensor, flush with triumph from Greek and Asia Minor campaigns, argued before the Roman Senate that Carthage was a deadly enemy close to home and convinced it to demand that Carthage give up its port and move inland.

When Carthage refused this deliberately outrages demand, the Romans invaded, seized the city and systematically slaughtered the inhabitants. In a war in which Rome showed neither mercy nor pity and in which Carthage was besieged for two years, the cruel order was finally given in 146 BC that Carthage must be utterly destroyed.

The Third Punic War, terminated by the destruction of Carthage, continued but four years and some months.

After leveling the city, the whole site was ploughed, salt was sprinkled on the earth, and a solemn curse was pronounced upon whomever would attempt to rebuild the city.
Third Punic war (149–146 BC)

14 Nisan 2015 Salı

2nd Punic war (218-201 BC)

2nd Punic war (218-201 BC)

After 1st Punic War, in 241 BC Carthage has no alternative to accepting the Roman peace terms and surrendering possession of the whole of Sicily to Rome. Three years later the Senate took advantage of Carthage’s difficulties to seize Sardinia.

Hannibal Barca, one of the most brilliance generals in history, led a rejuvenated Carthage against Rome. In 2nd Punic War, Hannibal with a full baggage train and elephants, marched eastward along the Mediterranean’s north coast from Spain and crossed the Alps in a journey into Italy, where he had success against Roman forces.

The Carthaginians victory in the Battle of Cannae in 216 BC was one of the worst defeats in Roman history.

In 202 BC at Zama, northwest of Carthage, Hannibal was defeated by a Roman army under General Scipio Africanus Major (Scipio the Elder) which led to loss of Spanish colony.

Rome became undisputed master of the western Mediterranean and the Romans rapidly moved into the vacuum that Carthage had left in Spain.
2nd Punic war (218-201 BC)

20 Şubat 2015 Cuma

Roman-Parthian War of Lucius Verus (161–166)

Roman-Parthian War of Lucius Verus (161–166)

Vologeses IV, the Parthian king, entered Kingdom of Armenia and cut to pieces a Roman army, led by the governor of Cappadocia to its defence.

The Parthian monarch then invaded Syria and defeated the governor of the province in late 161.

Marcus Aurelius who had become emperor on Antoninus Pius death in 161, wishing to remove his brother Lucius Verus from the seductions of Rome, and give him an opportunity of acquiring military fame.

Lucius Verus and his general Gaius Avidius Cassius were sent with an expeditionary force to subdue the Parthians.

It lasted four years: success was generally on the side of the Romans, and Cassius crossed the Tigris took Ctesiphon and destroyed the royal palace.

The war appears to have been concluded by a treaty, by which the Parthian monarch resigned all claim to the country west of the Tigris.

The real hero of the Parthian was Avidius Cassius, a native Syrian from Cyrrhus, rather than the indolent Emperor Lucius Verus.

Avidius Cassius was a brave soldier, an able general and a strict disciplinarian, whose severity often became cruelty; yet he was loved by the soldiers, and he possessed many great and good qualities.
Roman-Parthian War of Lucius Verus (161–166)

16 Aralık 2014 Salı

First Punic War (264-241 BC)

First Punic War (264-241 BC)

Punic War derived their name from the Roman word for Carthaginian, Punici. The first two Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage were of an unprecedented scale of ancient Mediterranean warfare in terms of the expenditure of manpower and material resources.

Before the first Punic War the position of Carthage in the Mediterranean world is seen as an immediate threat to Rome, forcing Rome into action the rationale of which is reminiscent of a theory of defensive imperialism.

At that time Rome had acquired control of the entire Italian peninsula and had begun to look both east, toward Greece, and west toward Carthage.

The Romans’ first task was to capture the western half of Sicily, which Carthage had used as a fulcrum of its empire. Carthage could not permit the loss of Sicily, and so the war began.

The first war between Rome and Carthage is seen as the beginning of a new era. It was fought over control of Sicily. The First Punic War marked the beginning of Roman imperial expansion which ultimately engulfed the Mediterranean basin and much of its hinterland.

In the aftermath of the final battle Roman victory near the Aegates Islands, while Carthage was embroiled in war with its rebellious mercenaries, Rome seized the Carthaginian provinces of Sardinia and Corsica.

In 241 BC at the end of the First Punic War the Carthaginian general Hamilcar Barca was forced to make peace with the Romans, after a naval defeat by the Roman consul Gaius Lutatius Catulus and to give up holdings in Sicily. In this war Carthage also lost her Spanish colonies.
First Punic War (264-241 BC)

3 Aralık 2014 Çarşamba

Battle of Thermopylae (191 BC)

Battle of Thermopylae (191 BC)

Antiochus III was King of Syria (223-187 BC), son of Seleucid II. He invaded Egypt (212-202 BC), seizing land from Ptolemy V. He recaptured Palestine, Asia Minor and the Thracian Cheronese.

The Romans overwhelmed him at Thermopylae in 191 BC. The battle of Thermopylae ended the Greek phase of the war between Rome and the Seleucid emperor Antiochus III.

In this war, Antiochus III was defeated in a battle against the consul Marcus Acilius and Cato, a general in that army. He was forced to flee back to Asia and his own territories were then invaded by the Romans, and the battle of Magnesia was finally brought to a close by the two Scipios.

The treaty of Apamea of 188 BC, took place after Roman victories in the battle of Thermopylae (191 BC), in the Battle of Magnesia (190) and after Roman and Rhodian naval victories over the Seleucid navy.

In this treaty Antiochus III had to abandon Europe altogether and all of Asia west of the Taurus. He was allowed to retain only twelves ships of war and required to pay a 15,000 talent indemnity, 500 immediately, 2,500 when the Romans government ratified the agreement, and thereafter 1,000 annually for 12 years.
Battle of Thermopylae (191 BC)

22 Mayıs 2014 Perşembe

Battle of Magnesia

Battle of Magnesia

The Battle of Magnesia, took place sometime at the end of 190 BC or at the beginning of 189 BC, at the confluence of the Phrygian and Hermus rivers on the Hyrcanian plain about 15km east of Magnesia and Lydia and 50 km east-northeast of Aegean city of Smyrna in Asia Minor.

The opposing forces were the army of Antiochus, and Roman army under the Scipios Africanus, Lucius Cornelius and Publius Cornelius.

The Romans were assisted in this battle by Eumenes (who founded the city of Eumenia in Phrygia), the brother of King Attalus.

Born in 241 BC, Antiochus III, surnamed ‘the Great,’ was only a boy when ascended the Seleucid throne in 233 and appears to have experienced some difficulties in maintaining himself in power.

Fifty thousand cavalry of Antiochus were slain in this battle. The Seleucids had continued to employ elephants in battle since acquiring them from the Mauryans, but at the climax of the battle the beasts were stampeded by Roman cavalry and trampled their own troops.

Roman infantry rushed into the gaps, routing the Seleucid army with considering slaughter,

After his defeat at Magnesia, Antiochus made peace with the Romans and withdrew from most of Anatolia, leaving it to the Romans and their allies.

Antiochus was to leaves from Europe and Asia and stay near Mt, Taurus. All the cities of Asia that Antiochus had lost in the war were given to King Eumenes.
Battle of Magnesia

21 Nisan 2014 Pazartesi

Battle of Corinth (146 BC)

Battle of Corinth (146 BC)

The Battle of Corinth happened in 146 BC was a battle fought between the Roman Republic and the Greek state of Corinth and its allies in the Achaean League.

At the regular meeting of the league in May 146 BC, in Corinth, the Roman delegates were insulted, threated and when they complained of the treatment they received, they were virtually chased out of the meeting by the mob assembled for the occasion by the anti-Roman faction.

Upon received the news, the Roman Senate ordered Lucius Mummius the consul of 146 BC, to lead a fleet and land-force against Achaeans.

The Romans defeated and destroyed their main rival in the Mediterranean, Carthage, and spent the following months in provoking the Greeks.

The Roman consul Mummius, with 23,000 infantry and 3,500 cavalry (probably two legions plus Italian allies) with an unspecified number of Cretans archers and Pergamese contingent sent for Pergamon by King Attalus, advanced into the Peloponnese against the revolutionary Achaean government.

The Achaean general Diaeus prepared to defend Corinth. But popular terror had succeeded to popular passion. Diaeus camped at Corinth with 14,000 infantry and 600 cavalry (plus possibly some survivors of another army that had been defeated earlier).

The overbold and partly untrained army of Diaeus met the Romans in open battles in the isthmus at a place called Leucopetra. The result was an overwhelming defeat for the Achaeans.

Diaeus, who had fought fled in despair to his native city of Megalopolis. He killed his wife that she might not become the slave of a Roman and having himself take poison, he set fire to his house.

Three days after the battle, Mummius entered the defenseless city of Corinth, and ordered it to be plundered and destroyed by fire; all the male inhabitants were put to the sword and all the women and children as well as the remaining slaves were sold.
Battle of Corinth (146 BC)