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TheBattle of Callinicumtook place on Easter Saturday, 19 April 531 AD, between an army of theByzantine EmpireunderBelisariusand aSasaniancavalry force commanded byAzarethes.After being defeated at theBattle of Dara,the Sasanians moved to invadeRoman Syriain an attempt to turn the tide of the war. Belisarius' rapid response foiled the plan, and his troops pushed the Persians to the Syrian border through maneuvering before forcing a battle in which the Sasanians won aPyrrhic victory.
Battle of Callinicum | |||||||
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Part of theIberian War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Byzantine Empire Ghassanids |
Sasanian Empire Lakhmids | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Belisarius Hermogenes Sunicas&Simmas Ascan† Peter Longinus† Stephanacius† Al-Harith ibn Jabalah Domnentiolus(POW)[2] |
Azarethes Al-Mundhir III ibn al-Nu'man | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
Heavy | Heavy |
Prelude
editIn April 531 AD, the Persian kingKavadh Isent an army under Azarethes, consisting of a cavalry force numbering about 15,000Aswaranwith an additional 5,000LakhmidArab cavalry[5]under Al-Mundhir, to invade Syria, not through the heavily fortified frontier cities ofRoman Mesopotamia,but through the less conventional but also less-defended route inCommagene[4]in order to capture Syrian cities such asAntioch.
The Persian army crossed the frontier atCircesiumon theEuphratesand marched north. As they nearedCallinicum,Belisarius set out to follow them as they advanced westwards. Belisarius' forces consisted of about 5,000 men and another 3,000GhassanidArab allies, for the remainder of his army had been left to secureDara.The Byzantines blocked the Persian advance atChalcis,where reinforcements underHermogenesalso arrived, bringing the Byzantine force to some 20,000 men. The Persians were forced to withdraw to the east, followed by the Byzantines.
The battle would occur on Easter Sunday, and the convention at the time was to fast on the day and well into the night. Due to this, ifBelisariuswere to give battle he would have to fight using hungry troops.[7]Azarethes sent a message to Belisarius asking him to honor the fast for the sake of the Christians and Jews in his army, as well as the Christian forces of Belisarius himself. Belisarius was willing to agree[2]and originally intended to drive off the Persians without a risky battle. The Byzantine troops, however, were over-confident after their recent victories at Dara andSatalaand clamored for battle. After failing to convince his men, and realizing they would possiblymutinyunless he agreed,[8]Belisarius prepared his force for battle.
Deployment
editThe two armies met outside Callinicum on 19 April 531. Belisarius anchored his left flank on the Euphrates, composed of the Byzantine heavy infantry under the command of the emperorJustinian's bodyguard Petrus. The Byzantine cavalry was stationed in the center, many of which werecataphractsunder the command ofAscan.Next were theLycaonianand/orIsaurianinfantry under Stephanacius and Longinus, positioned such that their right was anchored on a rising slope occupied by the army's right wing, which consisted of the 5,000 allied Ghassanid cavalry. Belisarius himself took up a position in the center of his army.[9]Unlike his deployment at Dara, he concentrated his best cavalry in the center and the infantry and allied cavalry on the wings, possibly because he anticipated the infantry and Ghassanid cavalry could flee.[10]
Azarethes, who was an "exceptionally able warrior" according to Byzantine historian and chroniclerProcopius,chose a more conventional deployment by dividing his army into three equal parts: the allied Lakhmid cavalry under Al-Mundhir forming the Sasanian left wing, opposing the Ghassanids, while his own cavalry formed the center and right flank.[9][10]It is possible that he also held a reserve of elite Aswaran behind his center.
Battle
editThe battle began with extensive exchange of arrow shots,[11]with Procopius noting the rapidness of the Persian archery. This difference in archery is also mentioned in theStrategikonof Maurice,who had advised closing in with the Persians without any delay.[9]This, combined with a westerly wind, caused the Byzantine side to suffer more casualties at this stage.[10]According to Ian Hughes, however, the casualties were balanced due to the greater penetrative force of Byzantine archery.[11]
Later, after "two-thirds of the day" had elapsed, Azarethes found a weak spot in the Byzantine force and redeployed some of his cavalry to his left wing; this was a similar tactic used at Dara, where the Persians tried to find a weak spot and overwhelm it by creating local numerical superiority. This maneuver was not observed by Belisarius and proved to be a turning point. The Ghassanids wereroutedoff the field with such ease as to later inspire accusations of treachery. This exposed the right flank of the Lycaonian infantry, who were no match for the Persian cavalry and were also routed, while their commanders were killed. The right flank of Ascan's heavy cavalry was now exposed; they fought as best they could, but Ascan was killed and his force defeated.[11]
The Persian cavalry and their Lakhmid allies now controlled the rising ground looking down on the rest of the Byzantine force. As the remainder of the Byzantine cavalry fled and Belisarius was unable to reform his line, the Byzantine infantrymen found themselves pressed against the river. They formed a U-shapedphoulkon(fulcum) formation to defend against the missile attacks, with the top of the "U" being closed by the river and foot-archers in the center of the "U" loosing arrows at the attacking Persians. They withstood the Persian attacks until nightfall, when they safely escaped across the Euphrates to Callinicum.[11]Apparently, the repeated charges by the Persian cavalry against the Byzantine infantry did not achieve anything more than increasing the casualties on both sides.
The primary sources reporting this phase of the battle are confusing. According to Procopius, Belisarius dismounted and fought alongside the infantry until nightfall, while Malalas reports that Belisarius had fled earlier across the Euphrates on a boat, while his subordinates Sunnicas andSimmasdismounted and fought alongside the infantry. Hughes argues this latter scenario is more probable.[11][12]
Zacharias of Mytilenesaid of the battle: "[The Romans] turned and fled before the Persian attack. Many fell into the Euphrates and were drowned, and others were killed."[13]However, it is unknown what stage of the battle Zachariah was referring to.
The factuality of Procopius's description of the events in this battle has been questioned.[11]Both Procopius and Malalas provide a detailed description of the events, but their emphasis is different: Procopius emphasizes Belisarius' success in preventing a complete rout and the Sasanian losses, while Malalas emphasizes Belisarius' early flight from the battlefield, noting that the successful prevention of the rout was led by thedoukesSunicas and Simmas. Both accounts agree on the poor performance of the Lycaonian infantry and possible treachery by the Ghassanids.[2]
Aftermath
editThe Byzantine defeat wiped out the benefits of the victory at Dara and gave the initiative once again to the Persians.[11]The strategic outcome of the battle was something of a stalemate; the Byzantine army had lost many soldiers and would not be in fighting condition again for months, but the Persian army had also taken such heavy losses that it was useless for its original purpose of the invasion of Syria.
Following the battle, an inquiry headed by Constantoilus was made against Belisarius due to the defeat at Callinicum and his earlier loss atThannuris.Belisarius blamed the troops for their impetuous urge to engage in battle at Callinicum and was cleared by the inquiry; however he was relieved of his position asmagister militum per Orientemand was recalled to Constantinople by Justinian.[11]
The Sasanian emperorKavadh Iremoved Āzārethes from command and stripped him of his honors, due to the very high Persian casualties.
The mutual disaster of Callinicum ended the first of Justinian's series of relatively unsuccessful wars against the Sassanids, leading Byzantium to pay heavy tributes in exchange for thePerpetual Peacetreaty signed in the summer of 532.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^The Empire at War,A.D. Lee,The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Justinian,ed. Michael Maas, (Cambridge University Press, 2005), 122.
- ^abcGreatrex, Geoffrey; Lieu, Samuel N. C. (2002).The Roman eastern frontier and the Persian Wars. Part II, AD 363–630: a narrative sourcebook.London: Routledge. pp. 92–93.ISBN0-415-14687-9.
- ^Quraysh and the Roman Army: Making Sense of the Meccan Leather Trade,Patricia Crone,Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies,University of London Vol. 70, No. 1 (2007), 73.
- ^abcHughes, Ian (Historian).Belisarius: the last Roman general.Barnsley.ISBN9781473822979.OCLC903161296.
- ^abGeoffrey Greatrex and Samuel N.C. Lieu,The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars AD 363–628,Part 2, (Routledge, 2002), 92.
- ^According to Zacharias, just before the battle begins, the Romans found the Sasanians like a "little flock".
- ^Caesarea, Procopius (2018).History of the Wars.Seltzer Books. p. 86.ISBN9781455407699.
- ^Brogna, Anthony (1995).The Generalship Of Belisarius.Hauraki Publishing.
- ^abcElton, Hugh (2018).The Roman Empire in Late Antiquity: A Political and Military History.Cambridge University Press. p. 327.ISBN978-0-521-89931-4.
- ^abcRome and Persia at War, 502–532.Francis Cairns. 1998. p. 202.ISBN978-0-905205-93-9.
- ^abcdefghHughes, Ian (2009).Belisarius: The Last Roman General.Pen and Sword. pp. 55–59.ISBN978-1-84468-941-5.
- ^Cameron, Averil (1985).Procopius and the Sixth Century.University of California Press.ISBN9780520055179.
- ^HistoriaIX.4, 95.4–95.26
Sources
edit- Greatrex, Geoffrey; Lieu, Samuel N. C. (2002),The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars (Part II, 363–630 AD),Routledge,ISBN0-415-14687-9
- Martindale, John R.; Jones, A.H.M.; Morris, John (1992),The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire – Volume III, AD 527–641,Cambridge University Press,ISBN0-521-20160-8
- Shahîd, Irfan (1995).Byzantium and the Arabs in the sixth century, Volume 1.Dumbarton Oaks.ISBN978-0-88402-214-5.
- Stanhope, Phillip Henry (1829).The Life of Belisarius.Bradbury and Evans Printers.