READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECECHAPTER XCII
ASIATIC CAMPAIGNS OF ALEXANDER
A year and some months had sufficed for Alexander to
make a first display of his energy and military skill, destined for
achievements yet greater; and to crush the growing aspirations for freedom
among Greeks on the south, as well as among Thracians on the north, of
Macedonia. The ensuing winter was employed in completing his preparations; so
that early in the spring of 334 B.C. his army destined for the conquest of Asia
was mustered between Pella and Amphipolis, while his fleet was at hand to lend
support.
The whole of Alexander’s remaining life—from his
crossing the Hellespont in March or April 334 B.C. to his death at Babylon in
June 323 B.C., eleven years and two or three months—was passed in Asia, amidst
unceasing military operations, and ever-multiplied conquests. He never lived to
revisit Macedonia; but his achievements were on so transcendent a scale, his
acquisitions of territory so unmeasured, and his thirst for further
aggrandisement still so insatiate, that Macedonia sinks into insignificance in
the list of his possessions. Much more do the Grecian cities dwindle into
outlying appendages of a newly-grown Oriental empire. During all these eleven
years, the history of Greece is almost a blank, except here and there a few scattered
events. It is only at the death of Alexander that the Grecian cities again
awaken into active movement.
The Asiatic conquests of Alexander do not belong
directly and literally to the province of an historian of Greece. They were
achieved by armies of which the general, the principal officers, and most part
of the soldiers, were Macedonian. The Greeks who served with him were only
auxiliaries, along with the Thracians and Paeonians. Though more numerous than
all the other auxiliaries, they did not constitute, like the Ten Thousand
Greeks in the army of the younger Cyrus, the force on which he mainly relied
for victory. His chief-secretary, Eumenes, of Kardia,
was a Greek, and probably most of the civil and intellectual functions
connected with the service were also performed by Greeks. Many Greeks also
served in the army of Persia against him, and composed indeed a larger proportion
of the real force (disregarding mere numbers) in the army of Darius than in
that of Alexander. Hence the expedition becomes indirectly incorporated with
the stream of Grecian history by the powerful auxiliary agency of Greeks on
both sides—and still more, by its connexion with previous projects, dreams, and
legends long antecedent to the aggrandisement of Macedon—as well as by the
character which Alexander thought fit to assume. To take revenge on Persia for
the invasion of Greece by Xerxes, and to liberate the Asiatic Greeks, had been
the scheme of the Spartan Agesilaus, and of the Pheraean Jason; with hopes grounded on the memorable expedition and safe return of the
Ten Thousand. It had been recommended by the rhetor Isocrates, first to the
combined force of Greece, while yet Grecian cities were free, under the joint
headship of Athens and Sparta—next, to Philip of Macedon as the chief of united
Greece, when his victorious arms had extorted a recognition of headship,
setting aside both Athens and Sparta. The enterprising ambition of Philip was
well pleased to be nominated chief of Greece for the execution of this project.
From him it passed to his yet more ambitious son.
Though really a scheme of Macedonian appetite and for
Macedonian aggrandisement, the expedition against Asia thus becomes thrust into
the series of Grecian events, under the Pan-Hellenic pretence of retaliation
for the long-past insults of Xerxes. I call it a pretence, because it
had ceased to be a real Hellenic feeling, and served now two different
purposes; first, to ennoble the undertaking in the eyes of Alexander himself,
whose mind was very accessible to religious and legendary sentiment, and who
willingly identified himself with Agamemnon or Achilles, immortalised as
executors of the collective vengeance of Greece for Asiatic insult—next, to
assist in keeping the Greeks quiet during his absence. He was himself aware
that the real sympathies of the Greeks were rather adverse than favourable to
his success.
Apart from this body of extinct sentiment,
ostentatiously rekindled for Alexander’s purposes, the position of the Greeks
in reference to his Asiatic conquests was very much the same as that of the
German contingents, especially those of the Confederation of the Rhine, who
served in the grand army with which the Emperor Napoleon invaded Russia in
1812. They had no public interest in the victory of the invader, which could
end only by reducing them to still greater prostration. They were likely to
adhere to their leader as long as his power continued unimpaired, but no
longer. Yet Napoleon thought himself entitled to reckon upon them as if they
had been Frenchmen, and to denounce the Germans in the service of Russia as
traitors who had forfeited the allegiance which they owed to him. We find him
drawing the same pointed distinction between the Russian and the German
prisoners taken, as Alexander made between Asiatic and Grecian prisoners. These
Grecian prisoners the Macedonian prince reproached as guilty of treason against
the proclaimed statute of collective Hellas, whereby he had been declared
general and the Persian king a public enemy.
Hellas, as a political aggregate, has now ceased to
exist, except in so far as Alexander employs the name for his own purposes. Its
component members are annexed as appendages, doubtless of considerable value,
to the Macedonian kingdom. Fourteen years before Alexander’s accession,
Demosthenes, while instigating the Athenians to uphold Olynthus against Philip,
had told them1—“The Macedonian power, considered as an appendage, is of no mean
value; but by itself, it is weak and full of embarrassments.” Inverting the
position of the parties, these words represent exactly what Greece herself had
become, in reference to Macedonia and Persia, at the time of Alexander’s
accession. Had the Persians played their game with tolerable prudence and
vigour, his success would have been measured by the degree to which he could
appropriate Grecian force to himself, and withhold it from his enemy.
Alexander’s memorable and illustrious manifestations,
on which we are now entering, are those, not of the ruler or politician, but of
the general and the soldier. In this character his appearance forms a sort of
historical epoch. It is not merely in soldierlike qualities—in the most forward
and even adventurous bravery—in indefatigable personal activity, and in endurance
as to hardship and fatigue,—that he stands preeminent; though these qualities
alone, when found in a king, act so powerfully on those under his command, that
they suffice to produce great achievements, even when combined with generalship not surpassing the average of his age. But in generalship, Alexander was yet more above the level of his
contemporaries. His strategic combinations, his employment of different
descriptions of force conspiring towards one end, his long-sighted plans for
the prosecution of campaigns, his constant foresight and resource against new
difficulties, together with rapidity of movement even in the worst country—all
on a scale of prodigious magnitude—are without parallel in ancient history.
They carry the art of systematic and scientific warfare to a degree of
efficiency, such as even successors trained in his school were unable to keep
up unimpaired.
We must recollect however that Alexander found the
Macedonian military system built up by Philip, and had only to apply and
enlarge it. As transmitted to him, it embodied the accumulated result and
matured fruit of a series of successive improvements, applied by Grecian
tacticians to the primitive Hellenic arrangements. During the sixty years
before the accession of Alexander, the art of war had been conspicuously
progressive—to the sad detriment of Grecian political freedom. “Everything
around us (says Demosthenes addressing the people of Athens in 342 B.C.) has been in advance for some years past—nothing is
like what it was formerly—but nowhere is the alteration and enlargement more
conspicuous than in the affairs of war. Formerly, the Lacedaemonians as well as
other Greeks did nothing more than invade each other’s territory, during the
four or five summer months, with their native force of citizen hoplites: in
winter they stayed at home. But now we see Philip in constant action, winter as
well as summer, attacking all around him, not merely with Macedonian hoplites,
but with cavalry, light infantry, bowmen, foreigners of all descriptions, and
siege batteries.”
I have in several preceding chapters dwelt upon this
progressive change in the character of Grecian soldiership. At Athens, and in
most other parts of Greece, the burghers had become averse to hard and active
military service. The use of arms had passed mainly to professional soldiers,
who, without any feeling of citizenship, served wherever good pay was offered,
and became immensely multiplied, to the detriment and danger of Grecian
society. Many of these mercenaries were lightly armed—peltasts served in
combination with the hoplites. Iphicrates greatly improved and partly re-armed
the peltasts; whom he employed conjointly with hoplites so effectively as to
astonish his contemporaries. His innovation was further developed by the great
military genius of Epaminondas; who not only made infantry and cavalry,
light-armed and heavy-armed, conspire to one scheme of operations, but also
completely altered the received principles of battlemanoeuvring,
by concentrating an irresistible force of attack on one point of the enemy’s
line, and keeping the rest of his own line more on the defensive. Besides these
important improvements, realised by generals in actual practice, intelligent
officers like Xenophon embodied the results of their military experience in
valuable published criticisms. Such were the lessons which the Macedonian
Philip learnt and applied to the enslavement of those Greeks, especially of the
Thebans, from whom they were derived. In his youth, as a hostage at Thebes, he
had probably conversed with Epaminondas, and must certainly have become
familiar with the Theban military arrangements. He had every motive, not merely
from ambition of conquest, but even from the necessities of defence, to turn
them to account; and he brought to the task military genius and aptitude of the
highest order. In arms, in evolutions, in engines, in regimenting, in
war-office arrangements, he introduced important novelties; bequeathing to his
successors the Macedonian military system, which, with improvements by his son,
lasted until the conquest of the country by Rome, near two centuries
afterwards.
The military force of Macedonia, in the times anterior
to Philip, appears to have consisted, like that of Thessaly, in a well-armed
and well-mounted cavalry, formed from the substantial proprietors of the
country—and in a numerous assemblage of peltasts or light infantry (somewhat
analogous to the Thessalian Penestae): these latter
were the rural population, shepherds or cultivators, who tended sheep and
cattle, or tilled the earth, among the spacious mountains and valleys of Upper
Macedonia. The Grecian towns near the coast, and the few Macedonian towns in
the interior, had citizen-hoplites better armed: but foot service was not in
honour among the natives, and the Macedonian infantry in their general
character were hardly more than a rabble. At the period of Philip’s accession,
they were armed with nothing better than rusty swords and wicker shields, no
way sufficient to make head against the inroads of their Thracian and Illyrian
neighbours; before whom they were constantly compelled to flee for refuge up to
the mountains. Their condition was that of poor herdsmen, half- naked or
covered only with hides, and eating from wooden platters; not much different
from that of the population of Upper Macedonia three centuries before, when
first visited by Perdikkas the ancestor of the Macedonian kings, and when the
wife of the native prince baked bread with her own hands. On the other hand,
though the Macedonian infantry was thus indifferent, the cavalry of the country
was excellent, both in the Peloponnesian war, and in the war carried on by
Sparta against Olynthus more than twenty years afterwards. These horsemen,
like the Thessalians, charged in compact order, carrying as their principal
weapon of offence, not javelins to be hurled, but the short thrusting-pike for
close combat.
Thus defective was the military organisation which
Philip found. Under his auspices it was cast altogether anew. The poor and
hardy Landwehr of Macedonia, constantly on the defensive against predatory
neighbours, formed an excellent material for soldiers, and proved not
intractable to the innovations of a warlike prince. They were placed under
constant training in the regular rank and file of heavy infantry: they were
moreover brought to adopt a new description of arm, not only in itself very
difficult to manage, but also comparatively useless to the soldier when
fighting single-handed, and only available by a body of men in close order,
trained to move or stand together. The new weapon, of which we first hear the
name in the army of Philip, was the sarissa—the
Macedonian pike or lance. The sarissa was used both
by the infantry of his phalanx, and by particular regiments of his cavalry; in
both cases it was long, though that of the phalanx was much the longer of the
two. The regiments of cavalry called Sarissophori or
Lancers were a sort of light-horse, carrying a long lance, and distinguished
from the heavier cavalry intended for the shock of hand combat, who carried the xyston or short pike. The sarissa of this cavalry may have been fourteen feet in length, as long as the Cossack
pike now is; that of the infantry in phalanx was not less than twenty-one feet
long. This dimension is so prodigious and so unwieldy, that we should hardly
believe it, if it did not come attested by the distinct assertion of an
historian like Polybius.
The extraordinary reach of the sarissa or pike constituted the prominent attribute and force of the Macedonian
phalanx. The phalangites were drawn up in files
generally of sixteen deep, each called a Lochus;
with an interval of three feet between each two soldiers from front to rear. In
front stood the lochage, a man of superior
strength, and of tried military experience. The second and third men in the
file, as well as the rearmost man who brought up the whole, were also picked
soldiers, receiving larger pay than the rest. Now the sarissa,
when in horizontal position, was held with both hands (distinguished in this
respect from the pike of the Grecian hoplite, which occupied only one hand, the
other being required for the shield), and so held that it projected fifteen
feet before the body of the pikeman; while the hinder portion of six feet was so
weighted as to make the pressure convenient in such division. Hence, the sarissa of the man standing second in the file, projected
twelve feet beyond the front rank; that of the third man, nine feet; those of
the fourth and fifth ranks respectively six feet and three feet. There was thus
presented a quintuple series of pikes by each file to meet an advancing enemy.
Of these five, the three first would be decidedly of greater projection, and
even the fourth of not less projection, than the pikes of Grecian hoplites
coming up as enemies to the charge. The ranks behind the fifth, while serving
to sustain and press onward the front, did not carry the sarissa in a horizontal position, but slanted it over the shoulders of those before
them, so as to break the force of any darts or arrows which might be shot over
head from the rear ranks of the enemy.
The phalangite (soldier of
the phalanx) was further provided with a short sword, a circular shield of
rather more than two feet in diameter, a breast-piece, leggings, and a kausia or broadbrimmed hat—the head-covering common
in the Macedonian army. But the long pikes were in truth the main weapons of
defence as well as of offence. They were destined to contend against the charge
of Grecian hoplites with the one-handed pike and heavy shield; especially
against the most formidable manifestation of that force, the deep Theban column
organised by Epaminondas. This was what Philip had to deal with, at his
accession, as the irresistible infantry of Greece, bearing down everything before
it by thrust of pike and propulsion of shield. He provided the means of
vanquishing it, by training his poor Macedonian infantry to the systematic use
of the long two-handed pike. The Theban column, charging a phalanx so armed,
found themselves unable to break into the array of protended pikes, or to come
to push of shield. We are told that at the battle of Chaeronea, the front rank
Theban soldiers, the chosen men of the city, all perished on the ground; and
this is not wonderful, when we conceive them as rushing, by their own courage
as well as by the pressure upon them from behind, upon a wall of pikes double
the length of their own. We must look at Philip’s phalanx with reference to the
enemies before him, not with reference to the later Roman organisation, which
Polybius brings into comparison. It answered perfectly the purposes of Philip,
who wanted it mainly to stand the shock in front, thus overpowering Grecian
hoplites in their own mode of attack. Now Polybius informs us, that the phalanx
was never once beaten, in front and on ground suitable for it; and wherever the
ground was fit for hoplites, it was also fit for the phalanx. The
inconveniences of Philip’s array, and of the long pikes, arose from the
incapacity of the phalanx to change its front or keep its order on unequal
ground; but such inconveniences were hardly less felt by Grecian hoplites.
The Macedonian phalanx, denominated the Pezetaeri or
Foot Companions of the King, comprised the general body of native infantry, as
distinguished from special corps d’armée. The
largest division of it which we find mentioned under Alexander, and which
appears under the command of a general of division, is called a Taxis. How many
of these Taxeis there were in all, we do not know;
the original Asiatic army of Alexander (apart from what he left at home)
included six of them, coinciding apparently with the provincial allotments of
the country: Orestas, Lynkestae, Elimiotae, Tymphaei, &C. The writers on tactics give us a
systematic scale of distribution (ascending from the lowest unit, the Lochus of sixteen men, by successive multiples of two, up
to the quadruple phalanx of 16,384 men) as pervading the Macedonian army. Among
these divisions, that which stands out as most fundamental and constant, is the
Syntagma, which contained sixteen Lochi. Forming thus
a square of sixteen men in front and depth, or 256 men, it was at the same time
a distinct aggregate or permanent battalion, having attached to it five
supernumeraries, an ensign, a rear-man, a trumpeter, a herald, and an attendant
or orderly. Two of these Syntagmas composed a body
of 512 men, called a Pentakosiarchy, which in
Philip’s time is said to have been the ordinary regiment, acting together under
a separate command; but several of these were doubled by Alexander when he
reorganised his army at Susa, so as to form regiments of 1024 men, each under
his Chiliarch, and each comprising four Syntagmas.
All this systematic distribution of the Macedonian military force when at home,
appears to have been arranged by the genius of Philip. On actual foreign
service, no numerical precision could be observed; a regiment or a division
could not always contain the same fixed number of men. But as to the array, a
depth of sixteen, for the files of the phalangites,
appears to have been regarded as important and characteristic, perhaps
essential to impart a feeling of confidence to the troops. It was a depth much
greater than was common with Grecian hoplites, and never surpassed by any
Greeks except the Thebans.
But the phalanx, though an essential item, was yet
only one among many, in the varied military organisation introduced by Philip.
It was neither intended, nor fit, to act alone; being clumsy in changing front
to protect itself either in flank or rear, and unable to adapt itself to uneven
ground. There was another description of infantry organised by Philip called
the Hypaspists—shield-bearers or Guards; originally
few in number, and employed for personal defence of the prince—but afterwards
enlarged into several distinct corps d'armée.
These Hypaspists or Guards were light infantry of the
line; they were hoplites, keeping regular array and intended for close combat,
but more lightly armed, and more fit for diversities of circumstance and
position than the phalanx. They seem to have fought with the one-handed pike
and shield, like the Greeks; and not to have carried the two-handed phalangite pike or sarissa. They
occupied a sort of intermediate place between the heavy infantry of the phalanx
properly so called— and the peltasts and light troops generally. Alexander in
his later campaigns had them distributed into Chiliarchies (how the distribution stood earlier, we have no distinct information), at least
three in number, and probably more. We find them employed by him in forward and
aggressive movements; first his light troops and cavalry begin the attack; next
the hypaspists come to follow it up; lastly, the
phalanx is brought up to support them. The hypaspists are used also for assault of walled places, and for rapid night marches. What
was the total number of them we do not know.
Besides the phalanx, and the hypaspists or Guards, the Macedonian army, as employed by Philip and Alexander, included a
numerous assemblage of desultory or irregular troops, partly native
Macedonians, partly foreigners, Thracians, Paeonians, &c. They were of
different descriptions; peltasts, darters, and bowmen. The best of them appear
to have been the Agrisines, a Paeonian tribe expert
in the use of the javelin. All of them were kept in vigorous movement by
Alexander, on the flanks and in front of his heavy infantry, or intermingled
with his cavalry,—as well as for pursuit after the enemy was defeated.
Lastly, the cavalry in Alexander’s army was also
admirable—at least equal, and seemingly even superior in efficiency, to his
best infantry. I have already mentioned that cavalry was the choice native
force of Macedonia, long before the reign of Philip; by whom it had been
extended and improved. The heavy cavalry, wholly or chiefly composed of native
Macedonians, was known by the denomination of the Companions. There was besides
a new and lighter variety of cavalry, apparently introduced by Philip, and
called the Sarissophori, or Lancers, used like
Cossacks for advanced posts or scouring the country. The sarissa which they carried was probably much shorter than that of the phalanx; but it
was long, if compared with the xyston or
thrusting-pike used by the heavy cavalry for the shock of close combat. Arrian,
in describing the army of Alexander at Arbela, enumerates eight distinct
squadrons of this heavy cavalry—or cavalry of the Companions; but the total
number included in the Macedonian army at Alexander’s accession, is not known.
Among the squadrons, several at least (if not all) were named after particular
towns or districts of the country—Bottiaea,
Amphipolis, Apollonia, Anthemus, &c.; there was one or more, distinguished
as the Royal Squadron—the Agema or leading body of cavalry—at the head of which
Alexander generally charged, himself among the foremost of the actual
combatants.
The distribution of the cavalry into squadrons was
that which Alexander found at his accession; but he altered it, when he
remodelled the arrangements of his army (in 330 B.C.) at Susa, so as to subdivide the squadron into two Lochi,
and to establish the Lochus for the elementary
division of cavalry, as it had always been of infantry. His reforms went thus
to cut down the primary body of cavalry from the squadron to the half-squadron
or Lochus, while they tended to bring the infantry
together into larger bodies—from cohorts of 500 each to cohorts of 1000 men
each.
Among the Hypaspists or
Guards, also, we find an Agema or chosen cohort which was called upon oftener
than the rest to begin the fight. A still more select corps were, the BodyGuards; a small company of tried and confidential men,
individually known to Alexander, always attached to his person, and acting as
adjutants or as commanders for special service. These Body-Guards appear to
have been chosen persons promoted out of the Royal Youths or Pages; an
institution first established by Philip, and evincing the pains taken by him to
bring the leading Macedonians into military organisation as well as into
dependence on his own person. The Royal Youths, sons of the chief persons throughout
Macedonia, were taken by Philip into service, and kept in permanent residence
around him for purposes of domestic attendance and companionship. They
maintained perpetual guard of his palace, alternating among themselves the
hours of daily and nightly watch: they received his horse from the grooms,
assisted him to mount, and accompanied him if he went to the chase: they
introduced persons who came to solicit interviews, and admitted his mistresses
by night through a special door. They enjoyed the privilege of sitting down to
dinner with him, as well as that of never being flogged except by his special
order. The precise number of the company we do not know; but it must have been
not small, since fifty of these youths were brought out from Macedonia at once
by Amyntas to join Alexander, and to be added to the company at Babylon. At the
same time the mortality among them was probably considerable; since, in
accompanying Alexander, they endured even more than the prodigious fatigues
which he imposed upon himself. The training in this corps was a preparation,
first for becoming Body-Guards of Alexander,—next, for appointment to the great
and important military commands. Accordingly, it had been the first stage of
advancement to most of the Diadochi, or great officers of Alexander, who after
his death carved kingdoms for themselves out of his conquests.
It was thus that the native Macedonian force was
enlarged and diversified by Philip, including at his death:—
1. The phalanx, Foot-companions, or general mass of
heavy infantry, drilled to the use of the long two-handed pike or sarissa—
2. The Hypaspists, or
lighter-armed corps of foot-guards—
3. The Companions, or heavy cavalry, the ancient
indigenous force consisting of the more opulent or substantial Macedonians
4. The lighter cavalry, lancers, or Sarissophori. With these were joined foreign auxiliaries of
great value. The Thessalians, whom Philip had partly subjugated and partly
gained over, furnished him with a body of heavy cavalry not inferior to the
native Macedonian. From various parts of Greece he derived hoplites, volunteers
taken into his pay, armed with the fullsized shield
and one-handed pike. From the warlike tribes of Thracians, Paeonians,
Illyrians, &c., whom he had subdued around him, he levied contingents of
light troops of various descriptions, peltasts, bowmen, darters, &c., all
excellent in their way, and eminently serviceable to his combinations, in
conjunction with the heavier masses. Lastly, Philip had completed his military
arrangements by organising what may be called an effective siege-train for
sieges as well as for battles; a stock of projectile and battering machines,
superior to anything at that time extant. We find this artillery used by
Alexander in the very first year of his reign, in his campaign against the
Illyrians. Even in his most distant Indian marches, he either carried it with
him, or had the means of constructing new engines for the occasion. There was
no part of his military equipment more essential to his conquests. The
victorious sieges of Alexander are among his most memorable exploits.
To all this large, multifarious and systematised array
of actual force, are to be added the civil establishments, the depots,
magazines of arms, provision for remounts, drill officers and adjutants,
&c., indispensable for maintaining it in constant training and efficiency.
At the time of Philip’s accession, Pella was an unimportant place; at his
death, it was not only strong as a fortification and place of deposit for regal
treasure, but also the permanent centre, war office, and training quarters, of
the greatest military force then known. The military registers as well as the
traditions of Macedonian discipline were preserved there until the fall of the
monarchy.1 Philip had employed his life in organising this powerful instrument
of dominion. His revenues, large as they were, both from mines and from
tributary conquests, had been exhausted in the work, so that he had left at his
decease a debt of 500 talents. But his son Alexander found the instrument
ready-made, with excellent officers, and trained veterans for the front ranks
of his phalanx.
This scientific organisation of military force, on a
large scale and with all the varieties of arming and equipment made to
co-operate for one end, is the great fact of Macedonian history. Nothing of the
same kind and magnitude had ever before been seen. The Macedonians, like Epirots and Aetolians, had no other aptitude or marking
quality except those of soldiership. Their rude and scattered tribes manifest
no definite political institutions and little sentiment of national
brotherhood; their union was mainly that of occasional fellowship in arms under
the king as chief. Philip the son of Amyntas was the first to organise this
military union into a system permanently and efficaciously operative, achieving
by means of it conquests such as to create in the Macedonians a common pride of
superiority in arms, which served as substitute for political institutions or
nationality. Such pride was still further exalted by the really superhuman
career of Alexander. The Macedonian kingdom was nothing but a well-combined
military machine, illustrating the irresistible superiority of the rudest men,
trained in arms and conducted by an able general, not merely over undisciplined
multitudes, but also over free, courageous, and disciplined citizenship, with
highly gifted intelligence.
During the winter of 335-334 B.C., after the
destruction of Thebes and the return of Alexander from Greece to Pella, his
final preparations were made for the Asiatic expedition. The Macedonian army,
with the auxiliary contingents destined for this enterprise, were brought
together early in the spring. Antipater, one of the oldest and ablest officers
of Philip, was appointed to act as viceroy of Macedonia during the king’s
absence. A military force, stated at 12,000 infantry and 1500 cavalry, was left
with him to keep down the cities of Greece, to resist aggressions from the
Persian fleet, and to repress discontents at home. Such discontents were likely
to be instigated by leading Macedonians or pretenders to the throne, especially
as Alexander had no direct heir: and we are told that Antipater and Parmenio
advised postponement of the expedition until the young king could leave behind
him an heir of his own lineage. Alexander overruled these representations, yet
he did not disdain to lessen the perils at home by putting to death such men as
he principally feared or mistrusted, especially the kinsmen of Philip’s last
wife Cleopatra. Of the dependent tribes around, the most energetic chiefs
accompanied his army into Asia, either by their own preference or at his
requisition. After these precautions, the tranquillity of Macedonia was
entrusted to the prudence and fidelity of Antipater, which were still further
ensured by the fact that three of his sons accompanied the king’s army and
person. Though unpopular in his deportment, Antipater discharged the duties of
his very responsible position with zeal and ability; notwithstanding the
dangerous enmity of Olympias, against whom he sent many complaints to Alexander
when in Asia, while she on her side wrote frequent but unavailing letters with
a view to ruin him in the esteem of her son. After a long period of unabated
confidence, Alexander began during the last years of his life to dislike and
mistrust Antipater. He always treated Olympias with the greatest respect;
trying however to restrain her from meddling with political affairs, and
complaining sometimes of her imperious exigencies and violence.
The army intended for Asia, having been assembled at
Pella, was conducted by Alexander himself first to Amphipolis, where it crossed
the Strymon; next along the road near the coast to the river Nestus and to the towns of Abdera and Maroneia;
then through Thrace across the rivers Hebrus and Melas; lastly, through the
Thracian Chersonese to Sestos. Here it was met by his fleet, consisting of 160
triremes, with a number of trading vessels besides, made up in large
proportions from contingents furnished by Athens and Grecian cities. The
passage of the whole army—infantry, cavalry, and machines, on ships, across the
strait from Sestos in Europe to Abydos in Asia—was superintended by Parmenio,
and accomplished without either difficulty or resistance. But Alexander
himself, separating from the army at Sestos, went down to Elaeus at the southern extremity of the Chersonese. Here stood the chapel and sacred
precinct of the hero Protesilaus, who was slain by
Hektor; having been the first Greek (according to the legend of the Trojan war)
who touched the shore of Troy. Alexander, whose imagination was then full of
Homeric reminiscences, offered sacrifice to the hero, praying that his own
disembarkation might terminate more auspiciously.
He then sailed across in the admiral’s trireme,
steering with his own hand, to the landing-place near Ilium called the Harbour
of the Achaeans. At mid-channel of the strait, he sacrificed a bull, with
libations out of a golden goblet, to Poseidon and the Nereids. Himself too in
full armour, he was the first (like Protesilaus) to
tread the Asiatic shore; but he found no enemy like Hektor to meet him. From
hence, mounting the hill on which Ilium was placed, he sacrificed to the
patron-goddess Athens; and deposited in her temple his own panoply, taking in
exchange some of the arms said to have been worn by the heroes in the Trojan
war, which he caused to be carried by guards along with him in his subsequent
battles. Among other real or supposed monuments of this interesting legend, the Ilians showed to him the residence of Priam with its
altar of Zeus Herkeios, where that unhappy old king
was alleged to have been slain by Neoptolemus. Numbering Neoptolemus among his
ancestors, Alexander felt himself to be the object of Priam’s yet unappeased
wrath; and accordingly offered sacrifice to him at the same altar, for the
purpose of expiation and reconciliation. On the tomb and monumental column of
Achilles, father of Neoptolemus, he not only placed a decorative garland, but
also went through the customary ceremony of anointing himself with oil and
running naked up to it: exclaiming how much he envied the lot of Achilles, who
had been blest during life with a faithful friend, and after death with a great
poet to celebrate his exploits. Lastly, to commemorate his crossing, Alexander
erected permanent altars in honour of Zeus, Athene, and Herakles; both on the
point of Europe which his army had quitted, and on that of Asia where it had
landed.
The proceedings of Alexander, on the ever-memorable
site of Ilium, are interesting as they reveal one side of his imposing
character—the vein of legendary sympathy and religious sentiment wherein alone
consisted his analogy with the Greeks. The young Macedonian prince had nothing
of that sense of correlative right and obligation which characterised the free
Greeks of the city community. But he was in many points a reproduction of the
heroic Greeks, his warlike ancestors in legend, Achilles and Neoptolemus, and
others of that Eakid race, unparalleled in the
attributes of force—a man of violent impulse in all directions, sometimes
generous, often vindictive —ardent in his individual affections both of love
and hatred, but devoured especially by an inextinguishable pugnacity, appetite
for conquest, and thirst for establishing at all cost his superiority of force
over others—“Jura negat sibi nata, nihil non arrogat armis”—taking
pride, not simply in victorious generalship and
direction of the arms of soldiers, but also in the personal forwardness of an
Homeric chief, the foremost to encounter both danger and hardship. To
dispositions resembling those of Achilles, Alexander indeed added one attribute
of a far higher order. As a general, he surpassed his age in provident and even
long-sighted combinations. With all his exuberant courage and sanguine temper,
nothing was ever omitted in the way of systematic military precaution. Thus
much he borrowed, though with many improvements of his own, from Grecian
intelligence as applied to soldiership. But the character and dispositions,
which he took with him to Asia, had the features, both striking and repulsive,
of Achilles, rather than those of Agesilaus or Epaminondas.
The army, when reviewed on the Asiatic shore after its
crossing, presented a total of 30,000 infantry, and 4500 cavalry, thus
distributed:—
Infantry.
Macedonian phalanx and hypaspists 12,000
Allies 7,000
Mercenaries 5,000
Under the command of Parmenio 24,000
Odryssians, Triballi (both Thracians), and
Illyrians 5,000
Agrianes and archers 1,000
Total infantry 30,000
Cavalry.
Macedonian heavy—under Philotas son of Parmenio 1,500
Thessalian (also heavy)—under Kallas 1,500
Miscellaneous Grecian—under Erigyius 600
Thracian and Paeonian (light)—under Kassander 900
Total cavalry 4,500
Such seems the most trustworthy enumeration of
Alexander’s first invading army. There were however other accounts, the highest
of which stated as much as 43,000 infantry with 4000 cavalry. Besides these
troops, also, there must have been an effective train of projectile machines
and engines, for battles and sieges, which we shall soon find in operation. As
to money, the military chest of Alexander, exhausted in part by profuse
donatives to his Macedonian officers, was as poorly furnished as that of
Napoleon Buonaparte on first entering Italy for his brilliant campaign of 1796.
According to Aristobulus, he had with him only seventy talents; according to
another authority, no more than the means of maintaining his army for thirty
days. Nor had he even been able to bring together his auxiliaries, or complete
the outfit of his army, without incurring a debt of 800 talents, in addition to
that of 500 talents contracted by his father Philip. Though Plutarch wonders at
the smallness of the force with which Alexander contemplated the execution of
such great projects, yet the fact is, that in infantry he was far above any
force which the Persians had to oppose him; not to speak of comparative
discipline and organisation, surpassing even that of the Grecian mercenaries,
who formed the only good infantry in the Persian service; while his cavalry,
though inferior as to number, was superior in quality and in the shock of close
combat.
Most of the officers exercising important command in
Alexander’s army were native Macedonians. His intimate personal friend
Hephaestion, as well as his body-guards Leonnatus and Lysimachus, were natives
of Pella: Ptolemy the son of Lagus, and Pithon, were Eordians from Upper Macedonia; Kraterus and Perdikkas, from
the district of Upper Macedonia called Orestis; Antipater with his son
Kassander, Kleitus son of Dropides, Parmenio with his
two sons Philotas and Nikanor, Seleucus, Koenus, Amyntas, Philippus (these two
last names were borne by more than one person), Antigonus, Neoptolemus,
Meleager, Peukestes, &c., all these seem to have
been native Macedonians. All or most of them had been trained to war under
Philip, in whose service Parmenio and Antipater, especially, had occupied a
high rank.
Of the many Greeks in Alexander’s service, we hear of
few in important station. Medius, a Thessalian from Larissa, was among his
familiar companions; but the ablest and most distinguished of all was Eumenes,
a native of Kardia in the Thracian Chersonese.
Eumenes, combining an excellent Grecian education with bodily activity and
enterprise, had attracted when a young man the notice of Philip, and had been
appointed as his secretary. After discharging these duties for seven years
until the death of Philip, he was continued by Alexander in the post of chief
secretary during the whole of that king’s life. He conducted most of
Alexander’s correspondence, and the daily record of his proceedings, which was
kept under the name of the Royal Ephemerides. But though his special duties
were thus of a civil character, he was not less eminent as an officer in the
field. Occasionally entrusted with high military command, he received from
Alexander signal recompenses and tokens of esteem. In spite of these great
qualities—or perhaps in consequence of them—he was the object of marked
jealousy and dislike1 on the part of the Macedonians,—from Hephaestion the
friend, and Neoptolemus the chief armour-bearer, of Alexander, down to the
principal soldiers of the phalanx. Neoptolemus despised Eumenes as an unwarlike
penman. The contemptuous pride with which Macedonians had now come to look down
on Greeks, is a notable characteristic of the victorious army of Alexander, as
well as a new feature in history; retorting the ancient Hellenic sentiment, in
which Demosthenes, a few years before, had indulged towards the Macedonians.
Though Alexander had been allowed to land in Asia
unopposed, an army was already assembled under the Persian satraps within a few
days’ march of Abydos. Since the reconquest of Egypt and Phenicia, about eight
or nine years before, by the Persian king Ochus, the
power of that empire had been restored to a point equal to any anterior epoch
since the repulse of Xerxes from Greece. The Persian successes in Egypt had
been achieved mainly by the arms of Greek mercenaries, under the conduct and
through the craft of the Rhodian general Mentor; who, being seconded by the preponderant
influence of the eunuch Bagoas, confidential minister
of Ochus, obtained not only ample presents, but also
the appointment of military commander on the Hellespont and the Asiatic
seaboard. He procured the recall of his brother Memnon, who with his
brother-in-law Artabazus had been obliged to leave Asia from unsuccessful
revolt against the Persians, and had found shelter with Philip. He further
subdued, by force or by fraud, various Greek and Asiatic chieftains on the
Asiatic coast; among them, the distinguished Hermeias,
friend of Aristotle, and master of the strong post of Atameus.
These successes of Mentor seem to have occurred about 343 B.C. He, and his
brother Memnon after him, unheld vigorously the
authority of the Persian king in the regions near the Hellespont. It was
probably by them that troops were sent across the strait both to rescue the
besieged town of Perinthus from Philip, and to act against that prince in other
parts of Thrace; that an Asiatic chief, who was intriguing to facilitate
Philip’s intended invasion of Asia, was seized and sent prisoner to the Persian
court; and that envoys from Athens, soliciting aid against Philip, were
forwarded to the same place.
Ochus,
though successful in regaining the full extent of Persian dominion, was a
sanguinary tyrant, who shed by wholesale the blood of his family and
courtiers. About the year 338 B.C., he died poisoned by the eunuch Bagoas, who placed upon the throne Arses, one of the king’s
sons, killing all the rest. After two years, however, Bagoas conceived mistrust of Arses, and put him to death also, together with all his
children : thus leaving no direct descendant of the regal family alive. He then
exalted to the throne one of his friends named Darius Codomannus (descended from one of the brothers of Artaxerxes Mnemon),
who had acquired glory, in a recent war against the Kadusians,
by killing in single combat a formidable champion of the enemy’s army.
Presently, however, Bagdas attempted to poison Darius
also; but the latter, detecting the snare, forced him to drink the deadly
draught himself. In spite of such murders and change in the line of succession,
which Alexander afterwards reproached to Darius, the authority of Darius seems
to have been recognised, without any material opposition, throughout all the
Persian empire.
Succeeding to the throne in the early part of B.C. 336,
when Philip was organising the projected invasion of Persia, and when the first
Macedonian division under Parmenio and Attalus was already making war in
Asia—Darius prepared measures of defence at home, and tried to encourage antiMacedonian movements in Greece. On the assassination
of Philip by Pausanias, the Persian king publicly proclaimed himself (probably
untruly) as having instigated the deed, and alluded in contemptuous terms to
the youthful Alexander. Conceiving the danger from Macedonia to be past, he imprudently
slackened his efforts and withheld his supplies during the first months of
Alexander’s reign, when the latter might have been seriously embarrassed in
Greece and in Europe by the effective employment of Persian ships and money.
But the recent successes of Alexander in Thrace, Illyria, and Boeotia,
satisfied Darius that the danger was not past, so that he resumed his
preparations for defence. The Phenician fleet was ordered to be equipped; the
satraps in Phrygia and Lydia got together a considerable force, consisting in
part of Grecian mercenaries; while Memnon, on the seaboard, was furnished with
the means of taking 5000 of these mercenaries under his separate command.
We cannot trace with any exactness the course of these
events, during the nineteen months between Alexander’s accession and his
landing in Asia (August 336 B.C. to March or April 334 B.C.). We learn
generally that Memnon was active and even aggressive on the north-eastern coast
of the Aegean. Marching northward from his own territory (the region of Assus or Atarneus skirting the Gulf of Adramyttium) across
the range of Mount Ida, he came suddenly upon the town of Cyzicus on the
Propontis. He failed, however, though only by a little, in his attempt to
surprise it, and was forced to content himself with a rich booty from the
district around. The Macedonian generals Parmenio and Kallas had crossed into
Asia with bodies of troops. Parmenio, acting in Aeolis, took Grynium, but was compelled by Memnon to raise the siege of Pitane; while Kallas, in the Troad,
was attacked, defeated, and compelled to retire to Rhoeteium.
We thus see that during the season preceding the
landing of Alexander, the Persians were in considerable force, and Memnon both
active and successful even against the Macedonian generals, on the region
north-east of the Aegean. This may help to explain that fatal imprudence,
whereby the Persians permitted Alexander to carry over without opposition his
grand army into Asia, in the spring of 334 B.C. They possessed ample means of
guarding the Hellespont, had they chosen to bring up their fleet, which,
comprising as it did the force of the Phenician towns, was decidedly superior
to any naval armament at the disposal of Alexander. The Persian fleet actually
came into the Aegean a few weeks afterwards. Now Alexander’s designs,
preparations, and even intended time of march, must have been well known not
merely to Memnon, but to the Persian satraps in Asia Minor, who had got
together troops to oppose him. These satraps unfortunately supposed themselves
to be a match for him in the field, disregarding the pronounced opinion of
Memnon to the contrary, and even overruling his prudent advice by mistrustful
and calumnious imputations.
At the time of Alexander’s landing, a powerful Persian
force was already assembled near Zeleia in the Hellespontine Phrygia, under
command of Arsites the Phrygian satrap, supported by several other leading
Persians—Spithridates (satrap of Lydia and Ionia), Pharnaces, Atizyes, Mithridates, Rheomithres, Niphates, Petines, &c.
Forty of these men were of high rank (denominated kinsmen of Darius), and
distinguished for personal valour. The greater number of the army consisted of
cavalry, including Medes, Bactrians, Hyrcaniana, Cappadocians,
Paphlagonians, &. In cavalry they greatly outnumbered Alexander; but their
infantry was much inferior in number, composed however, in large proportion, of
Grecian mercenaries. The Persian total is given by Arrian as 20,000 cavalry,
and nearly 20,000 mercenary foot; by Diodorus as 10,000 cavalry, and 100,000
infantry; by Justin even at 600,000. The numbers of Arrian are the more
credible; in those of Diodorus, the total of infantry is certainly much above
the truth—that of cavalry probably below it.
Memnon, who was present with his sons and with his own
division, earnestly dissuaded the Persian leaders from hazarding a battle.
Reminding them that the Macedonians were not only much superior in infantry,
but also encouraged by the leadership of Alexander—he enforced the necessity of
employing their numerous cavalry to destroy the forage and provisions, and if
necessary, even towns themselves—in order to render any considerable advance of
the invading force impracticable. While keeping strictly on the defensive in
Asia, he recommended that aggressive war should be carried into Macedonia; that
the fleet should be brought up, a powerful land-force put aboard, and strenuous
efforts made, not only to attack the vulnerable points of Alexander at home,
but also to encourage active hostility against him from the Greeks and other
neighbours.
Had this plan been energetically executed by Persian
arms and money, we can hardly doubt that Antipater in Macedonia would speedily
have found himself pressed by serious dangers and embarrassments, and that
Alexander would have been forced to come back and protect his own dominions;
perhaps prevented by the Persian fleet from bringing back his whole army. At
any rate, his schemes of Asiatic invasion must for the time have been
suspended. But he was rescued from this dilemma by the ignorance, pride, and pecuniary
interests of the Persian leaders. Unable to appreciate Alexander’s military
superiority, and conscious at the same time of their own personal bravery, they
repudiated the proposition of retreat as dishonourable, insinuating that Memnon
desired to prolong the war in order to exalt his own importance in the eyes of
Darius. This sentiment of military dignity was further strengthened by the
fact, that the Persian military leaders, deriving all their revenues from the
land, would have been impoverished by destroying the landed produce. Arsites,
in whose territory the army stood, and upon whom the scheme would first take
effect, haughtily announced that he would not permit a single house in it to be
burnt. Occupying the same satrapy as Pharnabazus had possessed sixty years
before, he felt that he would be reduced to the same straits as Pharnabazus
under the pressure of Agesilaus—“of not being able to procure a dinner in his
own country.” The proposition of Memnon was rejected, and it was resolved to
await the arrival of Alexander on the banks of the river Granicus.
This unimportant stream, commemorated in the Iliad,
and immortalised by its association with the name of Alexander, takes its rise
from one of the heights of Mount Ida near Skepsis, and flows northward into the
Propontis, which it reaches at a point somewhat east of the Greek town of Parium. It is of no great depth: near the point where the
Persians encamped, it seems to have been fordable in many places; but its right
bank was somewhat high and steep, thus offering obstruction to an enemy’s
attack. The Persians, marching forward from Zeleia, took up a position near the
eastern side of the Granikus, where the last declivities of Mount Ida descend
into the plain of Adrasteia, a Greek city situated between Priapus and Parium.
Meanwhile Alexander marched onward towards this
position, from Arisbe (where he had reviewed his army)—on the first day to
Perkote, on the second to the river Praktius, on the third to Hermotus;
receiving on his way the spontaneous surrender of the town of Priapus. Aware
that the enemy was not far distant, he threw out in advance a body of scouts
under Amyntas, consisting of four squadrons of light cavalry and one of the
heavy Macedonian (Companion) cavalry. From Hermotus (the fourth day from
Arisbe) he marched direct towards the Granikus, in careful order, with his main
phalanx in double files, his cavalry on each wing, and the baggage in the rear.
On approaching the river, he made his dispositions for immediate attack, though
Parmenio advised waiting until the next morning. Knowing well, like Memnon on
the other side, that the chances of a pitched battle were all against the
Persians, he resolved to leave them no opportunity of decamping during the
night.
In Alexander’s array, the phalanx or heavy infantry
formed the central body. The six Taxeis or divisions,
of which it consisted, were commanded (reckoning from right to left) by
Perdikkas, Koenus, Amyntas son of Andromenes, Philippus, Meleager, and
Kraterus.1 Immediately on the right of the phalanx, were the hypaspistae, or
light infantry, under Nikanor son of Parmenio—then the light horse or lancers,
the Paeonians, and the Apolloniate squadron of
Companion-cavalry commanded by the Ilarch Socrates,
all under Amyntas son of Arrhibaeus—lastly the full body of Companion-cavalry,
the bowmen, and the Agrianian darters, all under Philotas (son of Parmenio),
whose division formed the extreme right. The left flank of the phalanx was in
like manner protected by three distinct divisions of cavalry or lighter
troops—first, by the Thracians, under Agathon—next, by the cavalry of the
allies, under Philippus son of Menelaus—lastly, by the Thessalian cavalry,
under Kallas, whose division formed the extreme left. Alexander himself took
the command of the right, giving that of the left to Parmenio; by right and
left are meant the two halves of the army, each of them including three Taxeis or divisions of the phalanx with the cavalry on its
flank—for there was no recognised centre under a distinct command. On the other
side of the Granikus, the Persian cavalry lined the bank. The Medes and Bactrians
were on their right, under Rheomithres—the
Paphlagonians and Hyrcanians in the centre, under Arsites and Spithridates—on
the left were Memnon and Arsamenes, with their divisions. The Persian infantry,
both Asiatic and Grecian, were kept back in reserve; the cavalry alone being
relied upon to dispute the passage of the river.
In this array, both parties remained for some time,
watching each other in anxious silence. There being no firing or smoke, as with
modern armies, all the details on each side were clearly visible to the other;
so that the Persians easily recognised Alexander himself on the Macedonian
right from the splendour of his armour and military costume, as well as from
the respectful demeanour of those around him. Their principal leaders
accordingly thronged to their own left, which they reinforced with the main
strength of their cavalry, in order to oppose him personally. Presently he
addressed a few words of encouragement to the troops, and gave the order for
advance. He directed the first attack to be made by the squadron of Companion-cavalry
whose turn it was on that day to take the lead—(the squadron of Apollonia, of
which Sok rates was captain—commanded on this day by Ptolemaeus son of Philippus) supported by the light horse or Lancers, the Paeonian darters
(infantry), and one division of regularly armed infantry, seemingly hypaspista. He then himself entered the river, at the head
of the right half of the army, cavalry and infantry, which advanced under sound
of trumpets and with the usual war-shouts. As the occasional depths of water
prevented a straightforward march with one uniform line, the Macedonians
slanted their course suitably to the fordable spaces; keeping their front
extended so as to approach the opposite bank as much as possible in line, and
not in separate columns with flanks exposed to the Persian cavalry. Not merely
the right under Alexander, but also the left under Parmenio, advanced and
crossed in the same movement and under the like precautions.
The foremost detachment under Ptolemy and Amyntas, on
reaching the opposite bank, encountered a strenuous resistance, concentrated as
it was here upon one point. They found Memnon and his sons with the best of the
Persian cavalry immediately in their front; some on the summit of the bank,
from whence they hurled down their javelins—others down at the water’s edge, so
as to come to closer quarters. The Macedonians tried every effort to make good
their landing, and push their way by main force through the Persian horse, but
in vain. Having both lower ground and insecure footing, they could make no
impression, but were thrust back with some loss, and retired upon the main body
which Alexander was now bringing across. On his approaching the shore, the same
struggle was renewed around his person with increased fervour on both sides. He
was himself among the foremost, and all near him were animated by his example.
The horsemen on both sides became jammed together, and the contest was one of
physical force and pressure by man and horse; but the Macedonians had a great
advantage in being accustomed to the use of the strong close-fighting pike,
while the Persian weapon was the missile javelin. At length the resistance was
surmounted, and Alexander, with those around him, gradually thrusting back the
defenders, made good their way up the high bank to the level ground. At other
points the resistance was not equally vigorous. The left and centre of the
Macedonians, crossing at the same time on all practicable spaces along the
whole line, overpowered the Persians stationed on the slope, and got up to the
level ground with comparative facility. Indeed no cavalry could possibly stand
on the bank to offer opposition to the phalanx with its array of long pikes,
wherever this could reach the ascent in any continuous front. The easy crossing
of the Macedonians at other points helped to constrain those Persians, who were
contending with Alexander himself on the slope, to recede to the level ground
above.
Here again, as at the water’s edge, Alexander was
foremost in personal conflict. His pike having been broken, he turned to a
soldier near him—Aretis, one of the horseguards who generally aided him in mounting his
horse—and asked for another. But this man, having broken his pike also, showed
the fragment to Alexander, requesting him to ask some one else; upon which the
Corinthian Demaratus, one of the Companion-cavalry close at hand, gave him his
weapon instead. Thus armed anew, Alexander spurred his horse forward against
Mithridates (son-in-law of Darius), who was bringing up a column of cavalry to
attack him, but was himself considerably in advance of it. Alexander thrust his
pike into the face of Mithridates, and laid him prostrate on the ground: he
then turned to another of the Persian leaders, Rhoesakes, who struck him a blow
on the head with his scimitar, knocked off a portion of his helmet, but did not
penetrate beyond. Alexander avenged this blow by thrusting Rhoesakes through
the body with his pike.1 Meanwhile a third Persian leader, Spithridates, was
actually close behind Alexander, with hand and scimitar uplifted to cut him
down. At this critical moment, Kleitus son of Dropides—one
of the ancient officers of Philip, high in the Macedonian service—struck with
full force at the uplifted arm of Spithridates and severed it from the body,
thus preserving Alexander’s life. Other leading Persians, kinsmen of
Spithridates, rushed desperately on Alexander, who received many blows on his
armour, and was in much danger. But the efforts of his companions near were
redoubled, both to defend his person and to second his adventurous daring. It
was on that point that the Persian cavalry was first broken. On the left of the
Macedonian line, the Thessalian cavalry also fought with vigour and success;
and the light-armed foot, intermingled with Alexander’s cavalry generally, did
great damage to the enemy. The rout of the Persian cavalry, once begun,
speedily became general. They fled in all directions, pursued by the Macedonians.
But Alexander and his officers soon checked this
ardour of pursuit, calling back their cavalry to complete his victory. The
Persian infantry, Asiatics as well as Greeks, had
remained without movement or orders, looking on the cavalry battle which had
just disastrously terminated. To them Alexander immediately turned his
attention. He brought up his phalanx and hypaspistae to attack them in front,
while his cavalry assailed on all sides their unprotected flanks and rear; he
himself charged with the cavalry, and had a horse killed under him. His
infantry alone was more numerous than they, so that against such odds the
result could hardly be doubtful. The greater part of these mercenaries, after a
valiant resistance, were cut to pieces on the field. We are told that none
escaped, except 2000 made prisoners, and some who remained concealed in the
field among the dead bodies.
In this complete and signal defeat, the loss of the
Persian cavalry was not very serious in mere number—for only 1000 of them were
slain. But the slaughter of the leading Persians, who had exposed themselves
with extreme bravery in the personal conflict against Alexander, was terrible.
There were slain not only Mithridates, Rhoesakes, and Spithridates, whose names
have been already mentioned,—but also Pharnakes, brother-in-law of Darius,
Mithrobarzanes satrap of Cappadocia, Atizyes, Niphates, Petines, and others;
all Persians of rank and consequence. Arsites, the satrap of Phrygia, whose
rashness had mainly caused the rejection of Memnon’s advice, escaped from the
field, but died shortly afterwards by his own hand, from anguish and
humiliation. The Persian or Perso-Grecian infantry, though probably more of
them individually escaped than is implied in Arrian’s account, was as a body
irretrievably ruined. No force was either left in the field, or could be
afterwards re-assembled in Asia Minor.
The loss on the side of Alexander is said to have been
very small. Twenty-five of the Companion-cavalry, belonging to the division
under Ptolemy and Amyntas, were slain in the first unsuccessful attempt to pass
the river. Of the other cavalry, sixty in all were slain; of the infantry,
thirty. This is given to us as the entire loss on the side of Alexander. It is
only the number of killed; that of the wounded is not stated; but assuming it
to be ten times the number of killed, the total of both together will be 1265.
If this be correct, the resistance of the Persian cavalry, except near that
point where Alexander himself and the Persian chiefs came into conflict, cannot
have been either serious or long protracted. But when we add further the
contest with the infantry, the smallness of the total assigned for Macedonian
killed and wounded will appear still more surprising. The total of the Persian
infantry is stated at nearly 20,000, most part of them Greek mercenaries. Of
these only 2000 were made prisoners; nearly all the rest (according to Arrian)
were slain. Now the Greek mercenaries were well armed, and not likely to let
themselves be slain with impunity; moreover Plutarch expressly affirms that
they resisted with desperate valour, and that most of the Macedonian loss was
incurred in the conflict against them. It is not easy therefore to comprehend
how the total number of slain can be brought within the statement of Arrian.
After the victory, Alexander manifested the greatest
solicitude for his wounded soldiers, whom he visited and consoled in person. Of
the twenty-five Companions slain, he caused brazen statues, by Lysippus, to be
erected at Dium in Macedonia, where they were still
standing in the time of Arrian. To the surviving relatives of all the slain he
also granted immunity from taxation and from personal service. The dead bodies
were honourably buried, those of the enemy as well as of his own soldiers. The
two thousand Greeks in the Persian service who had become his prisoners, were
put in chains, and transported to Macedonia there to work as slaves; to which
treatment Alexander condemned them on the ground that they had taken arms on
behalf of the foreigner against Greece, in contravention of the general vote
passed by the synod at Corinth. At the same time, he sent to Athens three
hundred panoplies selected from the spoil, to be dedicated to Athene in the
acropolis with this inscription—“Alexander son of Philip, and the Greeks except
the Lacedaemonians (present these offerings'), out of the spoils of the
foreigners inhabiting Asia.” Though the vote to which Alexander appealed
represented no existing Grecian aspiration, and granted only a sanction which
could not be safely refused, yet he found satisfaction in clothing his own
self-aggrandising impulse under the name of a supposed Pan-Hellenic purpose:
which was at the same time useful as strengthening his hold upon the Greeks,
who were the only persons competent, either as officers or soldiers, to uphold
the Persian empire against him. His conquests were the extinction of genuine Hellenism,
though they diffused an exterior varnish of it, and especially the Greek
language, over much of the Oriental world. True Grecian interests lay more on
the side of Darius than of Alexander.
The battle of the Granicus, brought on by Arsites and
the other satraps contrary to the advice of Memnon, was moreover so unskilfully
fought by them, that the gallantry of their infantry, the most formidable corps
of Greeks that had ever been in the Persian service, was rendered of little
use. The battle, properly speaking, was fought only by the Persian cavalry; the
infantry was left to be surrounded and destroyed afterwards.
No victory could be more decisive or terror-striking
than that of Alexander. There remained no force in the field to oppose him. The
impression made by so great a public catastrophe was enhanced by two
accompanying circumstances; first, by the number of Persian grandees who
perished, realising almost the wailings of Atossa, Xerxes, and the Chorus, in
the Persae of Aeschylus, after the battle of
Salamis—next, by the chivalrous and successful prowess of Alexander himself,
who, emulating the Homeric Achilles, not only rushed foremost into the melée, but killed two of these grandees with his own hand.
Such exploits, impressive even when we read of them now, must at the moment
when they occurred have acted most powerfully upon the imagination of
contemporaries.
Several of the neighbouring Mysian mountaineers, though mutinous subjects towards Persia, came down to make
submission to him, and were permitted to occupy their lands under the same
tribute as they had paid before. The inhabitants of the neighbouring Grecian
city of Zeleia, whose troops had served with the Persians, surrendered and
obtained their pardon; Alexander admitting the plea that they had served only
under constraint. He then sent Parmenio to attack Daskylium, the stronghold and
chief residence of the satrap of Phrygia. Even this place was evacuated by the
garrison and surrendered, doubtless with a considerable treasure therein. The
whole satrapy of Phrygia thus fell into Alexander’s power, and was appointed to
be administered by Kallas for his behalf, levying the same amount of tribute as
had been paid before. He himself then marched, with his main force, in a
southerly direction towards Sardis—the chief town of Lydia, and the main
station of the Persians in Asia Minor. The citadel of Sardis—situated on a
lofty and steep rock projecting from Mount Tmolus, fortified by a triple wall
with an adequate garrison—was accounted impregnable, and at any rate could
hardly have been taken by anything less than a long blockade, which would have
allowed time for the arrival of the fleet and the operations of Memnon. Yet
such was the terror which now accompanied the Macedonian conqueror, that when
he arrived within eight miles of Sardis, he met not only a deputation of the
chief citizens, but also the Persian governor of the citadel, Mithrines. The
town, citadel, garrison, and treasure were delivered up to him without a blow.
Fortunately for Alexander, there was not in Asia any Persian governors of
courage and fidelity such as had been displayed by Maskames and Boges after the repulse of Xerxes from Greece.
Alexander treated Mithrines with courtesy and honour, granted freedom to the Sardians and to the other Lydians generally, with the use
of their own Lydian laws. The betrayal of Sardis by Mithrines was a signal good
fortune to Alexander. On going up to the citadel, he contemplated with
astonishment its prodigious strength; congratulating himself on so easy an
acquisition, and giving directions to build there a temple of Olympian Zeus, on
the spot where the old palace of the kings of Lydia had been situated. He named
Pausanias governor of the citadel, with a garrison of Peloponnesians from
Argos; Asander, satrap of the country; and Nikias, collector of tribute. The
freedom granted to the Lydians, whatever it may have amounted to, did not
exonerate them from paying the usual tribute.
From Sardis, he ordered Kallas, the new satrap of
Hellespontine Phrygia—and Alexander son of Aeropus, who had been promoted in
place of Kallas to the command of the Thessalian cavalry—to attack Atarneus and
the district belonging to Memnon, on the Asiatic coast opposite Lesbos.
Meanwhile he himself directed his march to Ephesus, which he reached on the
fourth day. Both at Ephesus and at Miletus—the two principal strongholds of the
Persians on the coasts as Sardis was in the interior—the sudden catastrophe at
the Granikus had struck unspeakable terror. Hegesistratus, governor of the
Persian garrison (Greek mercenaries) at Miletus, sent letters to Alexander
offering to surrender the town on his approach ; while the garrison at Ephesus,
with the Macedonian exile Amyntas, got on board two triremes in the harbour and
fled. It appears that there had been recently a political revolution in the
town, conducted by Syrphax and other leaders, who had
established an oligarchical government. These men, banishing their political
opponents, had committed depredations on the temple of Artemis, overthrown the
statue of Philip of Macedon dedicated therein, and destroyed the sepulchre of
Heropythus the liberator in the agora.1 Some of the party, though abandoned by
their garrison, were still trying to invoke aid from Memnon, who however was
yet at a distance. Alexander entered the town without resistance, restored the
exiles, established a democratical constitution, and directed that the tribute
heretofore paid to the Persians should now be paid to the Ephesian Artemis. Syrphax and his family sought refuge in the temple, from
whence they were dragged by the people and stoned to death. More of the same
party would have been despatched, had not the popular vengeance been restrained
by Alexander; who displayed an honourable and prudent moderation.
Thus master of Ephesus, Alexander found himself in
communication with his fleet, under the command of Nikanor; and received
propositions of surrender from the two neighbouring inland cities, Magnesia and
Tralleis. To occupy these cities, he despatched Parmenio with 5000 foot (half
of them Macedonians) and 200 of the Companion-cavalry; while he at the same
time sent Antimachus with an equal force in a northerly direction, to liberate
the various cities of Aeolic and Ionic Greeks. This officer was instructed to
put down in each of them the ruling oligarchy, which acted with a mercenary
garrison as an instrument of Persian supremacy—to place the government in the
hands of the citizens—and to abolish all payment of tribute. He himself—after
taking part in a solemn festival and procession to the temple of Ephesian
Artemis, with his whole army in battle-array—marched southward towards Miletus;
his fleet under Nikanor proceeding thither by sea. He expected probably to
enter Miletus with as little resistance as Ephesus. But his hopes were
disappointed : Hegesistratus, commander of the garrison in that town, though
under the immediate terror of the defeat at the Granikus he had written to
offer submission, had now altered his tone, and determined to hold out. The
formidable Persian fleet, four hundred sail of Phenician and Cyprian ships of
war with well-trained seamen, was approaching.
This naval force, which a few weeks earlier would have
prevented Alexander from crossing into Asia, now afforded the only hope of
arresting the rapidity and ease of his conquests. What steps had been taken by
the Persian officers since the defeat at the Granikus, we do not hear. Many of
them had fled, along with Memnon, to Miletus; and they were probably disposed,
under the present desperate circumstances, to accept the command of Memnon as
their only hope of safety, though they had despised his counsel on the day of
the battle. Whether the towns in Memnon’s principality of Atarneus had
attempted any resistance against the Macedonians, we do not know. His interests
however were so closely identified with those of Persia, that he had sent up
his wife and children as hostages, to induce Darius to entrust him with the
supreme conduct of the war. Orders to this effect were presently sent down by
that prince;4 but at the first arrival of the fleet, it seems not to have been
under the command of Memnon, who was however probably on board.
It came too late to aid in the defence of Miletus.
Three days before its arrival, Nikanor the Macedonian admiral, with his fleet
of one hundred and sixty ships, had occupied the island of Lade, which
commanded the harbour of that city. Alexander found the outer portion of
Miletus evacuated, and took it without resistance. He was making preparations
to besiege the inner city, and had already transported 4000 troops across to
the island of Lade, when the powerful Persian fleet came in sight, but found
itself excluded from Miletus, and obliged to take moorings under the
neighbouring promontory of Mykale. Unwilling to abandon without a battle the
command of the sea, Parmenio advised Alexander to fight this fleet, offering
himself to share the hazard aboard.
But Alexander disapproved the proposition, affirming
that his fleet was inferior not less in skill than in numbers; that the high
training of the Macedonians would tell for nothing on shipboard; and that a
naval defeat would be the signal for insurrection in Greece. Besides debating
such prudential reasons, Alexander and Parmenio also differed about the
religious promise of the case. On the sea-shore, near the stern of the
Macedonian ships, Parmenio had seen an eagle, which filled him with confidence
that the ships would prove victorious. But Alexander contended that this
interpretation was incorrect. Though the eagle doubtless promised to him
victory, yet it had been seen on land—and therefore his victories would be on
land: hence the result signified was, that he would overcome the Persian fleet,
by means of land operations. This part of the debate, between two practical
military men of ability, is not the least interesting of the whole;
illustrating as it does, not only the religious susceptibilities of the age,
but also the pliancy of the interpretative process, lending itself equally well
to inferences totally opposite. The difference between a sagacious and a
dull-witted prophet, accommodating ambiguous omens to useful or mischievous
conclusions, was one of very material importance in the ancient world.
Alexander now prepared vigorously to assault Miletus,
repudiating with disdain an offer brought to him by a Milesian citizen named Glaukippus—that the city should be neutral and open to him
as well as to the Persians. His fleet under Nikanor occupied the harbour,
blocked up its narrow mouth against the Persians, and made threatening
demonstrations from the water’s edge; while he himself brought up his
battering-engines against the walls, shook or overthrew them in several places,
and then stormed the city. The Milesians, with the Grecian mercenary garrison,
made a brave defence, but were overpowered by the impetuosity of the assault. A
large number of them were slain, and there was no way of escape except by
jumping into little boats, or swimming off upon the hollow of the shield. Even
of these fugitives, most part were killed by the seamen of the Macedonian
triremes; but a division of 300 Grecian mercenaries got on to an isolated rock
near the mouth of the harbour, and there prepared to sell their lives dearly.
Alexander, as soon as his soldiers were thoroughly masters of the city, went
himself on shipboard to attack the mercenaries on the rock, taking with him
ladders in order to effect a landing upon it. But when he saw that they were
resolved on a desperate defence, he preferred admitting them to terms of capitulation,
and received them into his own service. To the surviving Milesian citizens he
granted the condition of a free city, while he caused all the remaining
prisoners to be sold as slaves.
The powerful Persian fleet, from the neighbouring promontory
of Mykale, was compelled to witness, without being able to prevent, the capture
of Miletus, and was presently withdrawn to Halikarnassus. At the same time
Alexander came to the resolution of disbanding his own fleet; which, while
costing more than he could then afford, was nevertheless unfit to cope with the
enemy in open sea. He calculated that by concentrating all his efforts on land
operations, especially against the cities on the coast, he should exclude the
Persian fleet from all effective hold on Asia Minor, and ensure that country to
himself. He therefore paid off all he ships, retaining only a moderate squadron
for the purpose of transport.
Before this time, probably, the whole Asiatic coast
northward of Miletus—including the Ionic and Aeolic cities and the principality
of Memnon—had either accepted willingly the dominion of Alexander, or had been
reduced by his detachments. Accordingly he now directed his march southward
from Miletus, towards Karia, and especially towards Halikarnassus, the
principal city of that territory. On entering Karia, he was met by Ada, a
member of the Karian princely family, who tendered to him her town of Alinda
and her other possessions, adopting him as her son, and entreating his
protection. Not many years earlier, under Mausolus and Artemisia, the powerful
princes of this family had been formidable to all the Grecian islands. It was
the custom of Karia that brothers and sisters of the reigning family intermarried
with each other: Mausolus and his wife Artemisia were succeeded by Idrieus and his wife Ada, all four being brothers and
sisters, sons and daughters of Hekatomnus. On the
death of Idrieus, his widow Ada was expelled from
Halikarnassus and other parts of Karia by her surviving brother Pixodarus; though she still retained some strong towns,
which proved a welcome addition to the conquests of Alexander. Pixodarus, on the contrary, who had given his daughter in
marriage to a leading Persian named Orontobates, warmly espoused the Persian
cause, and made Halikarnassus a capital point of resistance against the
invader.
But it was not by him alone that this city was
defended. The Persian fleet had repaired thither from Miletus; Memnon, now
invested by Darius with supreme command on the Asiatic coast and the Aegean,
was there in person. There was not only Orontobates with many other Asiatics, but also a large garrison of mercenary Greeks,
commanded by Ephialtes, a brave Athenian exile. The city, strong both by nature
and by art, with a surrounding ditch forty-five feet broad and twenty-two feet
deep, had been still further strengthened under the prolonged superintendence
of Memnon; lastly, there were two citadels, a fortified harbour with its
entrance fronting the south, abundant magazines of arms, and good provision of
defensive engines. The siege of Halikarnassus was the most arduous enterprise
which Alexander had yet undertaken. Instead of attacking it by land and sea at
once, as at Miletus, he could make his approaches only from the land, while the
defenders were powerfully aided from seaward by the Persian ships with their
numerous crews.
His first efforts, directed against the gate on the
north or north-east of the city, which led towards Mylasa, were interrupted by
frequent sallies and discharges from the engines on the walls. After a few days
thus spent without much avail, he passed with a large section of his army to
the western side of the town, towards the outlying portion of the projecting
tongue of land, on which Halikarnassus and Myndus (the latter farther westward)
were situated. While making demonstrations on this side of Halikarnassus, he at
the same time attempted a night attack on Myndus, but was obliged to retire
after some hours of fruitless effort. He then confined himself to the siege of
Halikarnassus. His soldiers, protected from missiles by moveable penthouses
(called Tortoises), gradually filled up the wide and deep ditch round the town,
so as to open a level road for his engines (rolling towers of wood) to come up
close to the walls. The engines being brought up close, the work of demolition
was successfully prosecuted; notwithstanding vigorous sallies from the
garrison, repulsed, though not without loss and difficulty, by the Macedonians.
Presently the shock of the battering-engines had overthrown two towers of the citywall, together with two intermediate breadths of wall;
and a third tower was beginning to totter. The besieged were employed in
erecting an inner wall of brick to cover the open space, and a wooden tower of
the great height of 150 feet for the purpose of casting projectiles. It appears
that Alexander waited for the full demolition of the third tower, before he
thought the breach wide enough to be stormed; but an assault was prematurely
brought on by two adventurous soldiers from the division of Perdikkas. These
men, elate with wine, rushed up singlehanded to attack the Mylaean gate, and slew the foremost of the defenders who came out to oppose them, until
at length, reinforcements arriving successively on both sides, a general combat
took place at a short distance from the wall. In the end, the Macedonians were
victorious, and drove the besieged back into the city. Such was the confusion,
that the city might then have been assaulted and taken, had measures been
prepared for it beforehand. The third tower was speedily overthrown;
nevertheless, before this could be accomplished, the besieged had already
completed their half-moon within, against which accordingly, on the next day,
Alexander pushed forward his engines. In this advanced position, however, being
as it were within the circle of the city-wall, the Macedonians were exposed to
discharges not only from engines in their front, but also from the towers yet
standing on each side of them. Moreover, at night, a fresh sally was made with
so much impetuosity, that some of the covering wickerwork of the engines, and
even the main woodwork of one of them, was burnt. It was not without difficulty
that Philotas and Hellanikus, the officers on guard, preserved the remainder;
nor were the besieged finally driven in, until Alexander himself appeared with
reinforcements. Though his troops had been victors in these successive combats,
yet he could not carry off his dead, who lay close to the walls, without
soliciting a truce for burial. Such request usually counted as a confession of
defeat: nevertheless Alexander solicited the truce, which was granted by
Memnon, in spite of the contrary opinion of Ephialtes.
After a few days of interval, for burying his dead and
repairing the engines, Alexander recommenced attack upon the half-moon, under
his own personal superintendence. Among the leaders within, a conviction gained
ground that the place could not long hold out. Ephialtes especially, resolved
not to survive the capture, and seeing that the only chance of preservation
consisted in destroying the besieging engines, obtained permission from Memnon
to put himself at the head of a last desperate sally. He took immediately near
him 2000 chosen troops, half to encounter the enemy, half with torches to burn
the engines. At daybreak, all the gates being suddenly and simultaneously
thrown open, sallying parties rushed out from each against the besiegers; the
engines from within supporting them by multiplied discharges of missiles.
Ephialtes with his division, marching straight against the Macedonians on guard
at the main point of attack, assailed them impetuously, while his torch-bearers
tried to set the engines on fire. Himself distinguished no less for personal
strength than for valour, he occupied the front rank, and was so well seconded
by the courage and good array of his soldiers charging in deep column, that for
a time he gained advantage. Some of the engines were successfully fired, and
the advanced guard of the Macedonian troops, consisting of young troops, gave
way and fled. They were rallied partly by the efforts of Alexander, but still
more by the older Macedonian soldiers, companions in all Philip’s campaigns;
who, standing exempt from night-watches, were encamped more in the rear. These
veterans, among whom one Atharrias was the most
conspicuous, upbraiding the cowardice of their comrades, cast themselves into
their accustomed phalanx-array, and thus both withstood and repulsed the
charge of the victorious enemy. Ephialtes, foremost among the combatants, was
slain, the rest were driven back to the city, and the burning engines were
saved with some damage. During this same time, an obstinate conflict had also
taken place at the gate called Tripylon, where the
besieged had made another sally, over a narrow bridge thrown across the ditch.
Here the Macedonians were under the command of Ptolemy (not the son of Lagus),
one of the king’s body-guards. He, with two or three other conspicuous
officers, perished in the severe struggle which ensued, but the sallying party
were at length repulsed and driven into the city. The loss of the besieged was
severe, in trying to get again within the walls, under vigorous pursuit from
the Macedonians.
By this last unsuccessful effort, the defensive force
of Halikarnassus was broken. Memnon and Orontobates, satisfied that no longer
defence of the town was practicable, took advantage of the night to set fire to
their wooden projectile engines and towers, as well as to their magazines of
arms, with the houses near the exterior wall, while they carried away the
troops, stores, and inhabitants, partly to the citadel called Salmakis—partly to the neighbouring islet called Arkonnesus—partly to the island of Kos. Though thus
evacuating the town, however, they still kept good garrisons well provisioned
in the two citadels belonging to it. The conflagration, stimulated by a strong
wind, spread, widely. It was only extinguished by the orders of Alexander, when
he entered the town, and put to death all those whom he found with firebrands.
He directed that the Halikarnassians found in the
houses should be spared, but that the city itself should be demolished. He
assigned the whole of Karia to Ada, as a principality, doubtless under
condition of tribute. As the citadels still occupied by the enemy were strong
enough to require a long siege, he did not think it necessary to remain in
person for the purpose of reducing them; but surrounding them with a wall of blockade,
he left Ptolemy and 3000 men to guard it.
Having concluded the siege of Halikarnassus, Alexander
sent back his artillery to Tralles, ordering
Parmenio, with a large portion of the cavalry, the allied infantry, and the
baggage waggons, to Sardis.
The ensuing winter months he employed in the conquest
of Lycia, Pamphylia, and Pisidia. All this southern coast of Asia Minor is
mountainous; the range of Mount Taurus descending nearly to the sea, so as to
leave little or no intervening breadth of plain. In spite of great strength of
situation, such was the terror of Alexander’s arms, that all the Lycian towns—Hypama, Telmissus, Pinara, Xanthus, Patara, and thirty others— submitted to
him without a blow. One alone among them, called Marmareis,
resisted to desperation. On reaching the territory called Milyas,
the Phrygian frontier of Lycia, Alexander received the surrender of the Greek
maritime city, Phaselis. He assisted the Phaselites in destroying a mountain fort erected and garrisoned against them by the
neighbouring Pisidian mountaineers, and paid a public compliment to the
sepulchre of their deceased townsman, the rhetorician Theodektes.
After this brief halt at Phaselis, Alexander directed
his course to Perge in Pamphylia. The ordinary mountain road, by which he sent
most of his army, was so difficult as to require some leveling by Thracian light troops sent in advance for the purpose. But the king himself,
with a select detachment, took a road more difficult still, called Klimax, under the mountains by the brink of the sea. When
the wind blew from the south, this road was covered by such a depth of water as
to be impracticable; for some time before he reached the spot, the wind had
blown strong from the south—but as he came near, the special providence of the
gods (so he and his friends conceived it) brought on a change to the north, so
that the sea receded and left an available passage, though his soldiers had the
water up to their waists. From Perge he marched on to Side, receiving on his
way envoys from Aspendus, who offered to surrender
their city, but deprecated the entrance of a garrison; which they were allowed
to buy off by promising fifty talents in money, together with the horses which
they were bringing up as tribute for the Persian king. Having left a garrison
at Side, he advanced onward to a strong place called Sy Ilium, defended by
brave natives with a body of mercenaries to aid them. These men held out, and
even repulsed a first assault; which Alexander could not stay to repeat, being
apprised that the Aspendians had refused to execute
the conditions imposed, and had put their city in a state of defence. Returning
rapidly, he constrained them to submission, and then marched back to Perge;
from whence he directed his course towards the greater Phrygia, through the
difficult mountains, and almost indomitable population, of Pisidia.
After remaining in the Pisidian mountains long enough
to reduce several towns or strong posts, Alexander proceeded northward into
Phrygia, passing by the salt lake called Askanius to
the steep and impregnable fortress of Kelsenae,
garrisoned by 1000 Karians, and 100 mercenary Greeks.
These men, having no hope of relief from the Persians, offered to deliver up
the fortress, unless such relief should arrive before the sixtieth day.
Alexander accepted the propositions, remained ten days at Kelaenae,
and left there Antigonus (afterwards the most powerful among his successors) as
satrap of Phrygia, with 1500 men. He then marched northward to Gordium on the
river Sangarius, where Parmenio was directed to meet him, and where his
winter-campaign was concluded.
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