The Campaigns of Alexander (Classics) (40 page)

BOOK: The Campaigns of Alexander (Classics)
13.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Anyone who belittles Alexander has no right to do so on the evidence only of what merits censure in him; he must base his criticism on a comprehensive view of his whole life and career. But let such a person, if blackguard
Alexander he must, first compare himself with the object of his abuse: himself, so mean and obscure, and, confronting him, the great King with his unparalleled worldly success, the undisputed monarch of two continents, who spread the power of his name over all the earth. Will he dare to abuse him then, when he knows his own littleness and the triviality of his own pursuits, which, even so, prove too much for his ability?

It is my belief that there was in those days no nation, no city, no single individual beyond the reach of Alexander’s name; never in all the world was there another like him, and therefore I cannot but feel that some power more than human was concerned in his birth; indications of this were, moreover, said to be provided at the time of his death by oracles; many people saw visions and had prophetic dreams;
118
and there is the further evidence of the extraordinary way in which he is held, as no mere man could be, in honour and remembrance. Even today, when so many years have passed, there have been oracles, all tending to his glory, delivered to the people of Macedon.

In the course of this book I have, admittedly, found fault with some of the things which Alexander did, but of the man himself I am not ashamed to express ungrudging admiration. Where I have criticized unfavourably, I have done so because I wished to tell the truth as I saw it, and to enable my readers to profit thereby. Such was the motive which led me to embark upon this History: and I, too, have had God’s help in my work.

 
APPENDIX A
The Change to Regiments (Hipparchies) in the Companion Cavalry
 

Arrian says nothing of this change, which has to be deduced from his narrative. The earliest mention of ‘regiments’, apart from one instance in the first year of the campaign (1.24.3), occurs in the autumn of 329, when Ptolemy is sent with a force including ‘three regiments of Companions’ to arrest Bessus (3.29.7). Later in the same year in a great battle against the Scythians we again hear of regiments of the Companions (4.4.6–7). However, in his valuable article on ‘Alexander’s Macedonian Cavalry’ Professor Brunt has suggested that Arrian uses the term ‘regiment’ anachronistically, since at this time Hephaestion and Black Cleitus shared the command of the Companions and ‘it is obvious that so long as there were only one or two “hipparchs” the term “hipparchy” was inappropriate for each of the eight units in which the Companions were still formed’.
1
He suggests that the change took place after the murder of Geitus late in 328, and was indeed a consequence of it, since Alexander considered it dangerous to entrust so large and important a body of cavalry to a single commander who might resent, as Cleitus had done, his adoption of Persian dress and Persian court practice. This is an attractive suggestion. Unfortunately, a close examination of Arrian’s narrative of the Scythian battle demonstrates, in my opinion beyond doubt, that the ‘regiments’ were already in existence in 329, well before Cleitus’ death. In this battle Alexander first launched against the Scythians ‘a regiment (hipparchy) of mercenary cavalry and the four squadrons (
ilai
) of Lancers’, and later he ordered to charge them ‘three regiments of Companions and all the mounted javelin-men’, while he himself charged at full speed ‘with his squadrons in column’. This is a careful and detailed description, evidently
based on Ptolemy, and it is inconceivable that Arrian confused ‘squadrons’ and ‘regiments’.
2
In fact, we do not know when the change took place. The last mention of the Royal squadron occurs late in 331 at the Persian Gates (3.18.5), in conjunction with the obscure term ‘tetrarchy’ for a body of cavalry. Later, first in 327 (4.24.1), we hear of a bodyguard (
agema
), evidently the same unit as the former Royal squadron.

 

More important than the date at which regiments were introduced is the question of their composition, particularly if, as it seems reasonable to assume, the squadrons remained at roughly their former strength. For the regiments were larger units containing two or more squadrons, and it seems impossible that the heavy Macedonian cavalry can have provided enough men to fill all the squadrons. It is not disputed that the Companions numbered 1,800 at the start of the expedition, that a draft of 300 joined Alexander at Gordium early in 333, and a further 500 soon after Gaugamela late in 331. Professor Brunt, however, deduces from Polybius (12.19.2) that 500 more Macedonian cavalry reached Alexander before the battle of Issus, and regards as probable the arrival of an additional 500 in 328/7, about the time when the hipparchies were constituted. In both cases he is mistaken. What Polybius says is that, according to Callisthenes, 800 cavalry
from Macedonia
reached Alexander before he entered Cilicia, and, as Callisthenes is calculating the maximum number of cavalry that Alexander can have had in the battle of Issus, it is clear that he did not record the arrival of any cavalry except these 800. We may safely conclude that they were the cavalry which Arrian (1.29.4) records as having joined Alexander at Gordium, 300 Macedonians, 200 Thessalians, and 150 from Elis. The remaining 150 Arrian omits to mention, perhaps because they were mercenaries. Brunt considers that Sir William Tarn has probably shown ‘that a seventh infantry battalion was formed from new Macedonian troops, which Sopolis, Epocillus and Menidas were sent from Nautaca to bring to him
(Arrian 4.18.3).’ But Arrian does not mention the arrival of any Macedonian troops after this date and the mission may have been cancelled. Moreover, Professor R. D. Milns has demonstrated
3
that the seventh infantry battalion, which Tarn considers
must
be part of ‘the army from Macedonia’ that the officers were sent to bring to Alexander, was in existence early in 330. We must conclude, then, that the total of Macedonian heavy cavalry available to Alexander at the end of 331 was 2,600 less losses, which we can only conjecture. Let us say 2,500. Surely more cavalry was required to make up the new regiments. If the ‘Scouts’ or ‘Lancers’ were Macedonians, it is reasonable to suggest, as Brunt does, that they might have been incorporated in the Companions. But, as we have seen from Arrian (4.4.6–7), they existed, unless Arrian is utterly mistaken, as a separate unit at a time when the regiments had already been formed.

But if the ‘Scouts’ were not incorporated in the regiments, what cavalry was? Much the most probable solution, it seems to me, is that put forward by G. T. Griffith who suggests that it was the Western Iranian cavalry. As he points out, it is difficult to believe that if Alexander had units of Bactrian and Sogdian cavalry by the end of 328 (4.17.3), at a time when fighting was still going on in this region, he had not called upon the excellent cavalry of Western and Central Iran. Yet it is not until 324 that we hear of this cavalry in Alexander’s army, when it is described as ‘integrated’ into the Companion cavalry. In this passage (7.6.2–5) Arrian lists the various grievances – the arrival of the 30,000 young Persians, the marriages at Susa, the ‘orientalism’ of Peucestas, Alexander’s Median dress – which later led the Macedonians to mutiny at Opis. Professor Brunt has shown that these grievances are of recent origin, and it would seem to follow that their resentment at the ‘integration’ of Eastern cavalry into the Companions and the enrolment of certain distinguished Persians into the Guard (agema) was also recent. However, immediately
before the mutiny Arrian recapitulates (more briefly) the Macedonian grievances (7.8.2.) ‘During this whole campaign’, he writes, ‘the Macedonians had been vexed by the importation of foreign cavalry into the ranks of the Companions’. ‘This whole campaign’ must refer to the Indian campaign (or, assuming rhetorical exaggeration, to the entire expedition), certainly not to the period after his return from the East. If, then, Mr Griffith is correct in distinguishing between ‘integration’ and ‘importation’ into the Companions, we see two successive stages of the policy which he pursued in general towards the Persians, a policy which finds its clearest expression in his prayer at Opis for ‘harmony and fellowship in the empire between Macedonians and Persians’. If he is not correct in making this distinction, and if the two passages in Arrian are ‘doublets’, as Professor Badian has argued,
4
then it seems probable that, while the final reorganization of the Companions was recent, the grievance felt by the Macedonians at the introduction of Iranians extended several years into the past. This is certainly true of their resentment of Alexander’s adoption of Oriental dress.

 
APPENDIX B
The Chronology of the Expedition
 

Arrian dates by the Attic months a number of events, such as the end of the siege of Tyre, and frequently refers to the seasons at which Alexander leaves or arrives at a town or district. Exact dating of events is not possible, but with the help of information provided by other writers, particularly the geographer Strabo, a reasonably satisfactory chronology can be reconstructed. References to Arrian and other authorities are given in brackets.

 

334

 

Spring

 

Invasion of Asia

 

(1.11.3)

 

334/3

 

Winter

 

Alexander at Gordium

 

(1.29.3)

 

333

 

?Spring

 

Departure from Gordium

 

(2.4.1)

 

 

 

November

 

Battle of Issus

 

(2.11.10)

 

332

 

Jan.–August

 

Siege of Tyre

 

(2.24.6; Plutarch,
Alexander
24.5)

 

 

 

Sept.–Oct.

 

Siege of Gaza

 

(Diodorus 17.48.7)

 

 

 

Nov. 14

 

Alexander enthroned as Pharaoh at Memphis.

 

 

 

332/1

 

Winter

 

Expedition to Siwah

 

(3.3.4)

 

331

 

April 7

 

Foundation of Alexandria

 

(Pseudo-Callisthenes 1.32)
*

 

 

 

Late Spring

 

Departure from Egypt

 

(3.6.1)

 

331

 

Sept. 20/21

 

Eclipse of the moon before Gaugamela.

 

(3.7.6)

 

 

 

Oct. I

 

Battle of Gaugamela

 

(Plutarch,
Alexander
31.8)

 

330

 

Jan.–May

 

Stay at Persepolis

 

(Plutarch,
Alexander
37.6)

 

 

 

Mid May

 

Burning of the palace

 

(Curtius 5.6.12)

 

 

 

July

 

Death of Darius III

 

(3.22.2)

 

329

 

Spring

 

Alexander reaches Hindu Kush.

 

(Strabo 15.2.10; cf Arrian 3.28.4)

 

 

 

Midsummer

 

Battle against Scythians north of R. Jaxartes.

 

(4.4.8)

 

329/8

 

Midwinter

 

Alexander at Zariaspa (Bactra)

 

(4.7.1)

 

328

 

?Spring

 

Advance to R. Oxus

 

(4.15.7)

 

328/7

 

Winter

 

Alexander at Nautaca

 

(4.18.2)

 

327

 

Beginning of Spring

 

Attack on Sogdian Rock

 

(4.18.4)

 

 

 

End of Spring

 

Departure from Bactria

 

(4.22.3)

 

326

 

May

 

Battle of R. Hydaspes

 

(5.19.3)

 

326

 

November

 

Start of voyage down Hydaspes

 

(Strabo 15.1.17)

 

325

 

July

 

Arrival at Pattala

 

(Strabo 15.1.17)

 

 

 

End August

 

Alexander leaves Pattala

 

(6.21.2)

 

 

 

Sept. 20/21

 

Nearchus leaves Pattala

 

(
Indica
21.1)

 

325/4

 

Winter

 

Alexander in Carmania

 

(6.28.7)

 

324

 

Spring

 

Alexander arrives at Susa

 

 

 

324/3

 

Winter

 

Campaign against Cossaeans

 

(7.15.3)

 

323

 

Spring

 

Return to Babylon

 

(7.15.4)

 

 

 

June 10

 

Death of Alexander

 

(Pseudo-Callis thenes 3.55; Babylonian text).

 
BOOK: The Campaigns of Alexander (Classics)
13.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Earl Claims His Wife by Cathy Maxwell
A Jane Austen Encounter by Donna Fletcher Crow
Killer's Kiss by R.L. Stine
Aubrielle's Call by Bowen, C. Marie
A Sea Change by Veronica Henry
The Best Man by Hutchens, Carol