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Battle of Pharsalus

The Battle of Pharsalus was the decisive battle of Caesar's Civil War fought on 9 August 48 BC near Pharsalus in Central Greece. Julius Caesar and his allies formed up opposite the army of the Roman Republic under the command of Pompey.[6] Pompey had the backing of a majority of Roman senators and his army significantly outnumbered the veteran Caesarian legions.

Battle of Pharsalus
Part of Caesar's invasion of Macedonia during Caesar's Civil War
Date9 August 48 BC
Location39°22′15″N 22°20′01″E / 39.3707°N 22.3335°E / 39.3707; 22.3335
Result Caesarian victory
Territorial
changes
Most of the Eastern Roman provinces defect to Caesar[1]
Belligerents
Caesarians Pompeians
Commanders and leaders
Julius Caesar
Mark Antony
Gnaeus Domitius Calvinus
Publius Cornelius Sulla
Pompey
Titus Labienus
Metellus Scipio
Lucius Domitius 
Lucius Cornelius Lentulus
Units involved
  • Syrian legions
  • Cilician legions
  • Legio I
  • Legio III
  • Strength
    23,000+
    41,000–52,000+
    • c. 36,000–45,000 legionaries
    • 5,000–7,000 cavalry
    • Thousands of light infantry
    Casualties and losses
    200–1,200 killed 30,000–39,000[2][3][4][i]
    • 6,000–15,000 killed
    • 24,000 captured
    class=notpageimage|
    Location within Greece

    Pressured by his officers, Pompey reluctantly engaged in battle and suffered an overwhelming defeat, ultimately fleeing the camp and his men, disguised as an ordinary citizen. Eventually making his way to Egypt, he was assassinated upon his arrival at the order of Ptolemy XIII.[7]

    Prelude edit

    Following the start of the Civil War, Caesar had captured Rome, forced Pompey and his allies to withdraw from Italy, and defeated Pompey's legates in Spain.[8] In the campaign season for 48 BC, Caesar crossed the Adriatic and advanced on Dyrrachium. There, he besieged it, but was defeated.[9]

    Caesar then withdrew east into Thessaly, partly to relieve one of his legates from attack by Metellus Scipio's forces arriving from Syria. He besieged Gomphi after it resisted him. Pompey pursued, seeking to spare Italy from invasion by concluding the war on Greek soil, to prevent Caesar from defeating Metellus Scipio's forces arriving from Syria, and under pressure from his overconfident allies who accused him of prolonging the war to extend his command.[10][11]

    Date edit

    The decisive battle took place on 9 August 48 BC according to the Republican calendar.[12]

    Location edit

    The location of the battlefield was for a long time the subject of controversy among scholars. Caesar himself, in his Commentarii de Bello Civili, mentions few place-names;[13] and although the battle is called after Pharsalos by modern authors, four ancient writers – the author of the Bellum Alexandrinum (48.1), Frontinus (Strategemata 2.3.22), Eutropius (20), and Orosius (6.15.27) – place it specifically at Palaepharsalus ("Old" Pharsalus). Strabo in his Geographica (Γεωγραφικά) mentions both old and new Pharsaloi, and notes that the Thetideion, the temple to Thetis south of Scotoussa, was near both. In 198 BC, in the Second Macedonian War, Philip V of Macedon sacked Palaepharsalos (Livy, Ab Urbe Condita 32.13.9), but left new Pharsalos untouched. These two details perhaps imply that the two cities were not close neighbours. Many scholars, therefore, unsure of the site of Palaepharsalos, followed Appian (2.75) and located the battle of 48 BC south of the Enipeus or close to Pharsalos (today's Pharsala).[14] Among the scholars arguing for the south side are Béquignon (1928), Bruère (1951), and Gwatkin (1957).

    An increasing number of scholars, however, have argued for a location on the north side of the river. These include Perrin (1885), Holmes (1908), Lucas (1921), Rambaud (1955), Pelling (1973), Morgan (1983), and Sheppard (2006). John D. Morgan in his definitive "Palae-pharsalus – the Battle and the Town",[15] shows that Palaepharsalus cannot have been at Palaiokastro, as Béquignon thought (a site abandoned c. 500 BC), nor the hill of Fatih-Dzami within the walls of Pharsalus itself, as Kromayer (1903, 1931) and Gwatkin thought; and Morgan argues that it is probably also not the hill of Khtouri (Koutouri), some 7 miles north-west of Pharsalus on the south bank of the Enipeus, as Lucas and Holmes thought, although that remains a possibility. However, Morgan believes it is most likely to have been the hill just east of the village of Krini [el] (Krini Larisas, formerly Driskoli) very close to the ancient highway from Larisa to Pharsalus.[16] This site is some six miles (9.7 km) north of Pharsalus, and three miles north of the river Enipeus, and not only has remains dating back to neolithic times but also signs of habitation in the 1st century BC and later. The identification seems to be confirmed by the location of a place misspelled "Palfari" or "Falaphari" shown on a medieval route map of the road just north of Pharsalus. Morgan places Pompey's camp a mile to the west of Krini, just north of the village of Avra (formerly Sarikayia), and Caesar's camp some four miles to the east-south-east of Pompey's. According to this reconstruction, therefore, the battle took place not between Pharsalus and the river, as Appian wrote, but between Old Pharsalus and the river.

    An interesting side-note on Palaepharsalus is that it was sometimes identified in ancient sources with Phthia, the home of Achilles.[17] Near Old and New Pharsalus was a "Thetideion", or temple dedicated to Thetis, the mother of Achilles. However, Phthia, the kingdom of Achilles and his father Peleus, is more usually identified with the lower valley of the Spercheios river, much further south.[18][19]

    Name of the battle edit

    Although it is often called the Battle of Pharsalus by modern historians, this name was rarely used in the ancient sources. Caesar merely calls it the proelium in Thessaliā ("battle in Thessalia"); Marcus Tullius Cicero and Hirtius call it the Pharsālicum proelium ("Pharsalic battle") or pugna Pharsālia ("Pharsalian battle"), and similar expressions are also used in other authors. But Hirtius (if he is the author of the de Bello Alexandrino) also refers to the battle as having taken place at Palaepharsalus, and this name also occurs in Strabo, Frontinus, Eutropius, and Orosius. Lucan in his poem about the Civil War regularly uses the name Pharsālia, and this term is also used by the epitomiser of Livy and by Tacitus.[20] The only ancient sources to refer to the battle as being at Pharsalus are a certain calendar known as the Fasti Amiternini and the Greek authors Plutarch, Appian, and Polyaenus.[20] It has therefore been argued by some scholars that "Pharsalia" would be a more accurate name for the battle than Pharsalus.[21]

    Opposing armies edit

    The total number of soldiers on each side is unknown because ancient accounts of the battle focused primarily on giving the numbers of Italian legionaries only, regarding allied non-citizen contingents as inferior and inconsequential.[22] According to Caesar, his own army included 22,000 Roman legionaries distributed throughout 80 cohorts (8 legions), alongside 1,000 Gallic and Germanic cavalry. All of Caesar's legions were understrength; some only had about a thousand men at the time of Pharsalus, due partly to losses at Dyrrhachium and partly to Caesar's wish to rapidly advance with a picked body as opposed to a ponderous movement with a large army.[23] Another source adds that he had recruited Greek light infantry from Dolopia, Acarnania and Aetolia; these numbered no more than a few thousand.[24] Caesar, Appian and Plutarch give Pompey an army of 45,000 Roman infantry. Osorius describes Pompey as having 88 cohorts of Roman infantry, which at full strength would come to 44,000 men, while Brunt and Wylie estimated Pompey's Roman infantry as being as 38,000 men, and Greenhalgh said they contained a maximum of 36,000.[25][ii]

    It was in his auxiliary troops and in particular his cavalry, all of which vastly outnumbered Caesar's own, that Pompey had his greatest advantage.[28] He seems to have had at his disposal anywhere between 5,000 and 7,000 cavalry, and thousands of archers, slingers and light infantrymen in general.[29] These all formed a remarkably diverse group, including Gallic and Germanic horsemen alongside all polyglot peoples of the east – namely Greeks, Thracians, and Anatolians from the Balkans and Syrians, Phoenicians and Jews from the Levant. To this heterogeneous force Pompey added horsemen conscripted from his own slaves.[30] Many of the foreigners were serving under their own rulers, for more than a dozen despots and petty kings under Roman influence in the east were Pompey's personal clients and some elected to attend in person, or send proxies.[28]

    Caesarian legions edit

    Caesar had the following legions with him:

    • the VI legion (later called Ferrata) veterans of his Gallic Wars
    • the VII legion (later called Claudia Pia Fidelis) veterans of his Gallic Wars
    • the VIII legion (later called Augusta) veterans of his Gallic Wars
    • the IX legion (later called Hispania) veterans of his Gallic Wars
    • the X legion (Equestris, later called Gemina) veterans of his Gallic Wars
    • the XI legion (later called Paterna and Claudia Pia Fidelis, the same title as the seventh) veterans of his Gallic Wars
    • the XII legion (later called Fulminata) veterans of his Gallic Wars
    • the XIII legion (later also called Gemina, the 'twin' to the tenth) veterans of his Gallic Wars

    The bulk of Caesar's army at Pharsalus was made up of his veterans from the Gallic Wars; very experienced, battle-hardened troops who were absolutely devoted to their commander.

    Deployment edit

     
    Initial deployment of forces at the Battle of Pharsalus, August 48 BC

    The two generals deployed their legions in the traditional three lines (triplex acies), with Pompey's right and Caesar's left flanks resting on river Enipeus.[31] As the stream provided enough protection to that side, Pompey moved almost all of his cavalry, archers, and slingers to the left, to make the most of their numerical strength.[32] Only a small force of 500–600 Pontic cavalry and some Cappadocian light infantry was placed on his right flank.[33] Pompey stationed his strongest legions in the center and wings of his infantry line, and dispersed some 2,000 re-enlisted veterans throughout the entire line in order to inspire the less experienced.[34] The Pompeian cohorts were arrayed in an unusually thick formation, 10 men deep: their task was just to tie down the enemy foot while Pompey's cavalry, his key to victory, swept through Caesar's flank and rear.[35] The column of legions was divided under command of three subordinates, with Lentulus in charge of the left, Scipio of the center and Ahenobarbus the right.[36][iii] Labienus was entrusted with command of the cavalry charge,[38] while Pompey himself took up a position behind the left wing in order to oversee the course of the battle.[39]

    Caesar also deployed his men in three lines, but, being outnumbered, had to thin his ranks to a depth of only six men, in order to match the frontage presented by Pompey. His left flank, resting on the Enipeus River, consisted of his battle-worn IXth legion supplemented by the VIIIth legion, these were commanded by Mark Antony. The VI, XII, XI and XIII formed the centre and were commanded by Domitius, then came the VII and upon his right he placed his favored Xth legion, giving Sulla command of this flank – Caesar himself took his stand on the right, across from Pompey. Upon seeing the disposition of Pompey's army Caesar grew discomforted, and further thinned his third line in order to form a fourth line on his right: this to counter the onslaught of the enemy cavalry, which he knew his numerically inferior cavalry could not withstand. He gave this new line detailed instructions for the role they would play, hinting that upon them would rest the fortunes of the day, and gave strict orders to his third line not to charge until specifically ordered.

    Battle edit

    There was significant distance between the two armies, according to Caesar.[40] Pompey ordered his men not to charge, but to wait until Caesar's legions came into close quarters; Pompey's adviser Gaius Triarius believed that Caesar's infantry would be fatigued and fall into disorder if they were forced to cover twice the expected distance of a battle march. Also, stationary troops were expected to be able to defend better against pila throws.[41] Seeing that Pompey's army was not advancing, Caesar's infantry under Mark Antony and Gnaeus Domitius Calvinus started the advance. As Caesar's men neared throwing distance, without orders, they stopped to rest and regroup before continuing the charge;[42] Pompey's right and centre line held as the two armies collided.

    As Pompey's infantry fought, Labienus ordered the Pompeian cavalry on his left flank to attack Caesar's cavalry; as expected they successfully pushed back Caesar's cavalry. Caesar then revealed his hidden fourth line of infantry and surprised Pompey's cavalry charge; Caesar's men were ordered to leap up and use their pila to thrust at Pompey's cavalry instead of throwing them. Pompey's cavalry panicked and suffered hundreds of casualties, as Caesar's cavalry came about[43] and charged after them. After failing to reform, the rest of Pompey's cavalry retreated to the hills, leaving the left wing of his legions exposed to the hidden troops as Caesar's cavalry wheeled around their flank. Caesar then ordered in his third line, containing his most battle-hardened veterans, to attack. This broke Pompey's left wing troops, who fled the battlefield.[44]

    After routing Pompey's cavalry, Caesar threw in his last line of reserves[45] – a move which at this point meant that the battle was more or less decided.[citation needed] Pompey lost the will to fight as he watched both cavalry and legions under his command break formation and flee from battle, and he retreated to his camp, leaving the rest of his troops at the centre and right flank to their own devices. He ordered the garrisoned auxiliaries to defend the camp as he gathered his family, loaded up gold, and threw off his general's cloak to make a quick escape.[citation needed] As the rest of Pompey's army were left confused, Caesar urged his men to end the day by routing the rest of Pompey's troops and capturing the Pompeian camp. They complied with his wishes; after finishing off the remains of Pompey's men, they furiously attacked the camp walls. The Thracians and the other auxiliaries who were left in the Pompeian camp, in total seven cohorts, defended bravely, but were not able to fend off the assault.[44]

    Caesar had won his greatest victory, claiming to have only lost about 200 soldiers and 30 centurions and assigning the Optimate losses to be 60,000 men.[5] These numbers seem suspiciously exaggerated with Appian suggesting the Caesarean losses to be as many as 1,200 men and the Pompeian losses to be 6,000. In his history of the war, Caesar would praise his own men's discipline and experience, and remembered each of his centurions by name. He also questioned Pompey's decision not to charge.[46]

    Aftermath edit

    Pompey, despairing of the defeat, fled with his advisors overseas to Mytilene and thence to Cilicia where he held a council of war;[47] at the same time, Cato and supporters at Dyrrachium attempted first to hand over command to Marcus Tullius Cicero, who refused, deciding instead to return to Italy.[11] They then regrouped at Corcyra and went thence to Libya.[47] Others, including Marcus Junius Brutus sought Caesar's pardon, travelling over marshlands to Larissa where he was then welcomed graciously by Caesar in his camp.[48] Pompey's council of war decided to flee to Egypt,[49] which had in the previous year supplied him with military aid.[7]

    In the aftermath of the battle, Caesar captured Pompey's camp and burned Pompey's correspondence. He then announced that he would forgive all who asked for mercy. Pompeian naval forces in the Adriatic and Italy mostly withdrew or surrendered.[11]

    Hearing of Pompey's flight to Egypt, Caesar remained in hot pursuit, first landing in Asia and reaching Alexandria on 2 October 48 BC, where he learnt of Pompey's murder and then was embroiled in a dynastic dispute between Ptolemy XIII and Cleopatra.[50]

    Importance edit

     
    An anachronistic 14th century miniature by Niccolò da Bologna showing Caesar, the victor over Pompey at the Battle of Pharsalus

    Paul K. Davis wrote that "Caesar's victory took him to the pinnacle of power, effectively ending the Republic."[51] The battle itself did not end the civil war but it was decisive and gave Caesar a much needed boost in legitimacy. Until then much of the Roman world outside Italy supported Pompey and his allies due to the extensive list of clients he held in all corners of the Republic. After Pompey's defeat former allies began to align themselves with Caesar as some came to believe the gods favored him, while for others it was simple self-preservation. The ancients took great stock in success as a sign of favoritism by the gods.[citation needed] This is especially true of success in the face of almost certain defeat – as Caesar experienced at Pharsalus. This allowed Caesar to parlay this single victory into a huge network of willing clients to better secure his hold over power and force the Optimates into near exile in search for allies to continue the fight against Caesar.[citation needed]

    In popular culture edit

    The battle gives its name to the following artistic, geographical, and business concerns:

    In Alexandre Dumas' The Three Musketeers, the author makes reference to Caesar's purported order that his men try to cut the faces of their opponents – their vanity supposedly being of more value to them than their lives.[52]

    In Mankiewicz's 1963 film Cleopatra, the immediate aftermath of Pharsalus is used as an opening scene to set the action in motion.[53]

    Notes edit

    1. ^ According to Caesar, the Pompeians lost 60,000 soldiers[5]
    2. ^ According to Caesar, Pompey had 45,000 Roman legionaries in 110 cohorts. Other ancient sources estimated 60,000–70,000 Italians fought in the battle, with the Pompeians outnumbering the Caesarians by anywhere from 50% to 100%. Caesar's figures are often rejected as exaggerations, partly because Pompey did not have had all of his 110 cohorts at the battle, and the correct number is probably 88.[25] Greenhalgh, keeping to Caesar's own proportions, says Pompey had a maximum of 36,000 legionaries;[26] Brunt and Wylie allow for approximately 38,000.[27]
    3. ^ The sources are confused on the position of Pompey's commanders. In the version of Caesar and Lucan (Pharsalia 7.217–223), Pompey, Lentulus, and the 1st and 3rd legions are said to be on the left wing, and Ahenobarbus on the right. Appian and Plutarch, on the other hand, place Pompey and Lentulus on the right and Ahenobarbus on the left. Morgan favors the testimony of Caesar and Lucan since the former was an eyewitness, and because Pompey is more likely to have placed himself where the decisive engagement was expected to occur, the left wing.[37]

    Citations edit

    1. ^ History, Military (8 July 2019). "The Battle of Pharsalus, 9 August 48 BC | The Past". the-past.com. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
    2. ^ "Battle of Pharsalus | Summary, Facts, & Significance | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
    3. ^ "Pharsalus (48 BCE) - Livius". www.livius.org. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
    4. ^ History, Military (8 July 2019). "The Battle of Pharsalus, 9 August 48 BC | The Past". the-past.com. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
    5. ^ a b Caesar, BC III 99,1.
    6. ^ "The Battle of Pharsalus". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
    7. ^ a b Goldsworthy, p. 431.
    8. ^ Rawson 1992, pp. 424–31.
    9. ^ Rawson 1992, p. 432.
    10. ^ Goldsworthy, p. 423.
    11. ^ a b c Rawson 1992, p. 433.
    12. ^ Fasti Amiternini; Fasti Antiates (CIL I, 324, 328),
    13. ^ Bellum Civile 3.81–98
    14. ^ Map with conjectured locations, Annual of the British School at Athens, No. XXIV, 1921 [1]
    15. ^ The American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 87, No. 1, Jan. 1983
    16. ^ See Google maps.[full citation needed]
    17. ^ Holmes (1908), p. 275; cf. Strabo, Geography, 9.5.6; Little Iliad frag. 19; Euripides Andromache 16ff.
    18. ^ Allen, T. W. (1906). "Μυρμιδόνων Πόλις". The Classical Review, Vol. 20, No. 4 (May, 1906), pp. 193–201; cf. p. 196.
    19. ^ Phthia in Brill's New Paully encyclopaedia.
    20. ^ a b Morgan (1983), p. 27.
    21. ^ Postgate (1905); Bruère (1951).
    22. ^ Sheppard, p. 60.
    23. ^ . militaryhistory.com. Archived from the original on 25 June 2013. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
    24. ^ Greenhalgh, p. 247; Sheppard, p. 60.
    25. ^ a b Greenhalgh, pp. 249, 302; Wylie, p. 562; Delbrück, p. 545; Brunt, p. 692.
    26. ^ Greenhalgh, pp. 249, 302.
    27. ^ Brunt, p. 692; Wylie, p. 562.
    28. ^ a b Sheppard, pp. 38, 60–61.
    29. ^ Greenhalgh, pp. 249, 301, 302.
    30. ^ Sheppard, pp. 38, 60–61; Greenhalgh, p. 247.
    31. ^ Goldsworthy, pp. 425, 427; Greenhalgh, p. 249.
    32. ^ Delbrück, p. 538; Greenhalgh, p. 250; Holmes, p. 167.
    33. ^ Greenhalgh, p. 249; Holmes, p. 167 (note 5); Delbrück, p. 547.
    34. ^ Goldsworthy, p. 425; Holmes, p. 167.
    35. ^ Goldsworthy, pp. 425–426; Greenhalgh, p. 250; Delbrück, pp. 538, 539.
    36. ^ Morgan, p. 54; Holmes, p. 167 (and note 1).
    37. ^ Morgan, p. 54.
    38. ^ Delbrück, p. 538.
    39. ^ Sheppard, p. 56.
    40. ^ Caesar, BC III 92,1.
    41. ^ Caesar, BC III, 92,2.
    42. ^ Caesar, BC III, 93,1.
    43. ^ "Roman Armageddon at Pharsalus". 14 December 2016.
    44. ^ a b James, Steven. "48 BC: The Battle of Pharsalus".
    45. ^ Caesar, BC III, 93,4
    46. ^ Caesar, BC III, 92,3.
    47. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 62.
    48. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 62–3.
    49. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 63.
    50. ^ Rawson 1992, pp. 433–4.
    51. ^ Paul K. Davis, 100 Decisive Battles from Ancient Times to the Present: The World’s Major Battles and How They Shaped History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), 59.
    52. ^ Dumas, Alexander (2009). The Three Musketeers. Oxford University Press. p. 620. ISBN 978-0199538461.
    53. ^ "37.2.Gardner". Society for Classical Studies. 13 November 2012. Retrieved 12 September 2020. "Rex Harrison's regretful musings on the field of Pharsalus at the opening scene of Cleopatra.

    References edit

    • Brunt, P.A. (1971). Italian Manpower 225 B.C. – A.D. 14. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-814283-8.
    • Delbrück, Hans (1975) [1900]. History of the Art of War volume 1: Warfare in Antiquity. Translated by Walter J. Renfroe Jr. (3rd ed.). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-6584-0.
    • Goldsworthy, Adrian (2006). Caesar: The Life of a Colossus. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-84620-5.
    • Greenhalgh, Peter (1981). Pompey: The Republican Prince. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-77881-1.
    • Holmes, T. Rice (1908). "The Battle-Field of Old Pharsalvs". The Classical Quarterly. 2 (4): 271–292. doi:10.1017/S000983880001795X. ISSN 0009-8388. JSTOR 636174. S2CID 170176812.
    • Morgan, John D. (1983). "Palaepharsalus – The Battle and the Town". American Journal of Archaeology. 87 (1): 23–54. doi:10.2307/504663. JSTOR 504663. S2CID 191384102.
    • Rawson, Elizabeth (1992). "Caesar: Civil War and Dictatorship". Cambridge Ancient History. Vol. 9. ISBN 0-521-25603-8.
    • Sheppard, Simon (2006). (PDF). Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84603-002-1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 February 2020.
    • Tempest, Kathryn (2017). Brutus: the noble conspirator. New Haven. ISBN 978-0-300-18009-1. OCLC 982651923.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
    • Wylie, Graham (1992). "The Road to Pharsalus". Latomus. 51 (3): 557–565. ISSN 0023-8856. JSTOR 41541372.

    Further reading edit

    • Bruère, Richard Treat, (1951). "Palaepharsalus, Pharsalus, Pharsalia". Classical Philology, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Apr., 1951), pp. 111–115.
    • Gwatkin, William E. (1956). "Some Reflections on the Battle of Pharsalus", Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, Vol. 87.
    • James, Steven (2016). "48 BC: The Battle of Pharsalus".
    • Lucas, Frank Laurence (1921). "The Battlefield of Pharsalos", Annual of the British School at Athens, No. XXIV, 1919–21. [2]
    • Nordling, John G. (2006). "Caesar's Pre-Battle Speech at Pharsalus (B.C. 3.85.4): Ridiculum Acri Fortius ... Secat Res". The Classical Journal, Vol. 101, No. 2 (Dec. – Jan., 2005/2006), pp. 183–189.
    • Pelling, C. B. R. (1973). "Pharsalus". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. Bd. 22, H. 2 (2nd Qtr., 1973), pp. 249–259.
    • Perrin, B. (1885). "Pharsalia, Pharsalus, Palaepharsalus". The American Journal of Philology, Vol. 6, No. 2 (1885), pp. 170–189.
    • Postgate, J. P. (1905). "Pharsalia Nostra". The Classical Review, Vol. 19, No. 5 (Jun., 1905), pp. 257–260.
    • Rambaud, Michel (1955). "Le Soleil de Pharsale", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte , Vol. 3, No. 4.
    • Searle, Arthur (1907). "Note on the Battle of Pharsalus". Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Vol. 18 (1907), pp. 213–218.

    External links edit

    • Caesar's account of the battle

    battle, pharsalus, other, battles, that, took, place, pharsalus, disambiguation, decisive, battle, caesar, civil, fought, august, near, pharsalus, central, greece, julius, caesar, allies, formed, opposite, army, roman, republic, under, command, pompey, pompey,. For other battles that took place at Pharsalus see Battle of Pharsalus disambiguation The Battle of Pharsalus was the decisive battle of Caesar s Civil War fought on 9 August 48 BC near Pharsalus in Central Greece Julius Caesar and his allies formed up opposite the army of the Roman Republic under the command of Pompey 6 Pompey had the backing of a majority of Roman senators and his army significantly outnumbered the veteran Caesarian legions Battle of PharsalusPart of Caesar s invasion of Macedonia during Caesar s Civil WarDate9 August 48 BCLocationPalaepharsalus Greece39 22 15 N 22 20 01 E 39 3707 N 22 3335 E 39 3707 22 3335ResultCaesarian victoryTerritorialchangesMost of the Eastern Roman provinces defect to Caesar 1 BelligerentsCaesariansPompeiansCommanders and leadersJulius CaesarMark AntonyGnaeus Domitius CalvinusPublius Cornelius SullaPompeyTitus LabienusMetellus ScipioLucius Domitius Lucius Cornelius LentulusUnits involvedLegio VI Legio VII Legio VIII Legio IX Legio X Legio XI Legio XII Legio XIIISyrian legions Cilician legions Legio I Legio IIIStrength23 000 22 000 legionaries1 000 cavalryA few light infantry41 000 52 000 c 36 000 45 000 legionaries5 000 7 000 cavalryThousands of light infantryCasualties and losses200 1 200 killed30 000 39 000 2 3 4 i 6 000 15 000 killed24 000 capturedclass notpageimage Location within Greece Pressured by his officers Pompey reluctantly engaged in battle and suffered an overwhelming defeat ultimately fleeing the camp and his men disguised as an ordinary citizen Eventually making his way to Egypt he was assassinated upon his arrival at the order of Ptolemy XIII 7 Contents 1 Prelude 2 Date 3 Location 4 Name of the battle 5 Opposing armies 5 1 Caesarian legions 6 Deployment 7 Battle 8 Aftermath 9 Importance 10 In popular culture 11 Notes 12 Citations 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksPrelude editMain article Caesar s Civil War Following the start of the Civil War Caesar had captured Rome forced Pompey and his allies to withdraw from Italy and defeated Pompey s legates in Spain 8 In the campaign season for 48 BC Caesar crossed the Adriatic and advanced on Dyrrachium There he besieged it but was defeated 9 Caesar then withdrew east into Thessaly partly to relieve one of his legates from attack by Metellus Scipio s forces arriving from Syria He besieged Gomphi after it resisted him Pompey pursued seeking to spare Italy from invasion by concluding the war on Greek soil to prevent Caesar from defeating Metellus Scipio s forces arriving from Syria and under pressure from his overconfident allies who accused him of prolonging the war to extend his command 10 11 Date editThe decisive battle took place on 9 August 48 BC according to the Republican calendar 12 Location editThe location of the battlefield was for a long time the subject of controversy among scholars Caesar himself in his Commentarii de Bello Civili mentions few place names 13 and although the battle is called after Pharsalos by modern authors four ancient writers the author of the Bellum Alexandrinum 48 1 Frontinus Strategemata 2 3 22 Eutropius 20 and Orosius 6 15 27 place it specifically at Palaepharsalus Old Pharsalus Strabo in his Geographica Gewgrafika mentions both old and new Pharsaloi and notes that the Thetideion the temple to Thetis south of Scotoussa was near both In 198 BC in the Second Macedonian War Philip V of Macedon sacked Palaepharsalos Livy Ab Urbe Condita 32 13 9 but left new Pharsalos untouched These two details perhaps imply that the two cities were not close neighbours Many scholars therefore unsure of the site of Palaepharsalos followed Appian 2 75 and located the battle of 48 BC south of the Enipeus or close to Pharsalos today s Pharsala 14 Among the scholars arguing for the south side are Bequignon 1928 Bruere 1951 and Gwatkin 1957 An increasing number of scholars however have argued for a location on the north side of the river These include Perrin 1885 Holmes 1908 Lucas 1921 Rambaud 1955 Pelling 1973 Morgan 1983 and Sheppard 2006 John D Morgan in his definitive Palae pharsalus the Battle and the Town 15 shows that Palaepharsalus cannot have been at Palaiokastro as Bequignon thought a site abandoned c 500 BC nor the hill of Fatih Dzami within the walls of Pharsalus itself as Kromayer 1903 1931 and Gwatkin thought and Morgan argues that it is probably also not the hill of Khtouri Koutouri some 7 miles north west of Pharsalus on the south bank of the Enipeus as Lucas and Holmes thought although that remains a possibility However Morgan believes it is most likely to have been the hill just east of the village of Krini el Krini Larisas formerly Driskoli very close to the ancient highway from Larisa to Pharsalus 16 This site is some six miles 9 7 km north of Pharsalus and three miles north of the river Enipeus and not only has remains dating back to neolithic times but also signs of habitation in the 1st century BC and later The identification seems to be confirmed by the location of a place misspelled Palfari or Falaphari shown on a medieval route map of the road just north of Pharsalus Morgan places Pompey s camp a mile to the west of Krini just north of the village of Avra formerly Sarikayia and Caesar s camp some four miles to the east south east of Pompey s According to this reconstruction therefore the battle took place not between Pharsalus and the river as Appian wrote but between Old Pharsalus and the river An interesting side note on Palaepharsalus is that it was sometimes identified in ancient sources with Phthia the home of Achilles 17 Near Old and New Pharsalus was a Thetideion or temple dedicated to Thetis the mother of Achilles However Phthia the kingdom of Achilles and his father Peleus is more usually identified with the lower valley of the Spercheios river much further south 18 19 Name of the battle editAlthough it is often called the Battle of Pharsalus by modern historians this name was rarely used in the ancient sources Caesar merely calls it the proelium in Thessalia battle in Thessalia Marcus Tullius Cicero and Hirtius call it the Pharsalicum proelium Pharsalic battle or pugna Pharsalia Pharsalian battle and similar expressions are also used in other authors But Hirtius if he is the author of the de Bello Alexandrino also refers to the battle as having taken place at Palaepharsalus and this name also occurs in Strabo Frontinus Eutropius and Orosius Lucan in his poem about the Civil War regularly uses the name Pharsalia and this term is also used by the epitomiser of Livy and by Tacitus 20 The only ancient sources to refer to the battle as being at Pharsalus are a certain calendar known as the Fasti Amiternini and the Greek authors Plutarch Appian and Polyaenus 20 It has therefore been argued by some scholars that Pharsalia would be a more accurate name for the battle than Pharsalus 21 Opposing armies editThe total number of soldiers on each side is unknown because ancient accounts of the battle focused primarily on giving the numbers of Italian legionaries only regarding allied non citizen contingents as inferior and inconsequential 22 According to Caesar his own army included 22 000 Roman legionaries distributed throughout 80 cohorts 8 legions alongside 1 000 Gallic and Germanic cavalry All of Caesar s legions were understrength some only had about a thousand men at the time of Pharsalus due partly to losses at Dyrrhachium and partly to Caesar s wish to rapidly advance with a picked body as opposed to a ponderous movement with a large army 23 Another source adds that he had recruited Greek light infantry from Dolopia Acarnania and Aetolia these numbered no more than a few thousand 24 Caesar Appian and Plutarch give Pompey an army of 45 000 Roman infantry Osorius describes Pompey as having 88 cohorts of Roman infantry which at full strength would come to 44 000 men while Brunt and Wylie estimated Pompey s Roman infantry as being as 38 000 men and Greenhalgh said they contained a maximum of 36 000 25 ii It was in his auxiliary troops and in particular his cavalry all of which vastly outnumbered Caesar s own that Pompey had his greatest advantage 28 He seems to have had at his disposal anywhere between 5 000 and 7 000 cavalry and thousands of archers slingers and light infantrymen in general 29 These all formed a remarkably diverse group including Gallic and Germanic horsemen alongside all polyglot peoples of the east namely Greeks Thracians and Anatolians from the Balkans and Syrians Phoenicians and Jews from the Levant To this heterogeneous force Pompey added horsemen conscripted from his own slaves 30 Many of the foreigners were serving under their own rulers for more than a dozen despots and petty kings under Roman influence in the east were Pompey s personal clients and some elected to attend in person or send proxies 28 Caesarian legions edit Caesar had the following legions with him the VI legion later called Ferrata veterans of his Gallic Wars the VII legion later called Claudia Pia Fidelis veterans of his Gallic Wars the VIII legion later called Augusta veterans of his Gallic Wars the IX legion later called Hispania veterans of his Gallic Wars the X legion Equestris later called Gemina veterans of his Gallic Wars the XI legion later called Paterna and Claudia Pia Fidelis the same title as the seventh veterans of his Gallic Wars the XII legion later called Fulminata veterans of his Gallic Wars the XIII legion later also called Gemina the twin to the tenth veterans of his Gallic Wars The bulk of Caesar s army at Pharsalus was made up of his veterans from the Gallic Wars very experienced battle hardened troops who were absolutely devoted to their commander Deployment edit nbsp Initial deployment of forces at the Battle of Pharsalus August 48 BC The two generals deployed their legions in the traditional three lines triplex acies with Pompey s right and Caesar s left flanks resting on river Enipeus 31 As the stream provided enough protection to that side Pompey moved almost all of his cavalry archers and slingers to the left to make the most of their numerical strength 32 Only a small force of 500 600 Pontic cavalry and some Cappadocian light infantry was placed on his right flank 33 Pompey stationed his strongest legions in the center and wings of his infantry line and dispersed some 2 000 re enlisted veterans throughout the entire line in order to inspire the less experienced 34 The Pompeian cohorts were arrayed in an unusually thick formation 10 men deep their task was just to tie down the enemy foot while Pompey s cavalry his key to victory swept through Caesar s flank and rear 35 The column of legions was divided under command of three subordinates with Lentulus in charge of the left Scipio of the center and Ahenobarbus the right 36 iii Labienus was entrusted with command of the cavalry charge 38 while Pompey himself took up a position behind the left wing in order to oversee the course of the battle 39 Caesar also deployed his men in three lines but being outnumbered had to thin his ranks to a depth of only six men in order to match the frontage presented by Pompey His left flank resting on the Enipeus River consisted of his battle worn IXth legion supplemented by the VIIIth legion these were commanded by Mark Antony The VI XII XI and XIII formed the centre and were commanded by Domitius then came the VII and upon his right he placed his favored Xth legion giving Sulla command of this flank Caesar himself took his stand on the right across from Pompey Upon seeing the disposition of Pompey s army Caesar grew discomforted and further thinned his third line in order to form a fourth line on his right this to counter the onslaught of the enemy cavalry which he knew his numerically inferior cavalry could not withstand He gave this new line detailed instructions for the role they would play hinting that upon them would rest the fortunes of the day and gave strict orders to his third line not to charge until specifically ordered Battle editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message There was significant distance between the two armies according to Caesar 40 Pompey ordered his men not to charge but to wait until Caesar s legions came into close quarters Pompey s adviser Gaius Triarius believed that Caesar s infantry would be fatigued and fall into disorder if they were forced to cover twice the expected distance of a battle march Also stationary troops were expected to be able to defend better against pila throws 41 Seeing that Pompey s army was not advancing Caesar s infantry under Mark Antony and Gnaeus Domitius Calvinus started the advance As Caesar s men neared throwing distance without orders they stopped to rest and regroup before continuing the charge 42 Pompey s right and centre line held as the two armies collided As Pompey s infantry fought Labienus ordered the Pompeian cavalry on his left flank to attack Caesar s cavalry as expected they successfully pushed back Caesar s cavalry Caesar then revealed his hidden fourth line of infantry and surprised Pompey s cavalry charge Caesar s men were ordered to leap up and use their pila to thrust at Pompey s cavalry instead of throwing them Pompey s cavalry panicked and suffered hundreds of casualties as Caesar s cavalry came about 43 and charged after them After failing to reform the rest of Pompey s cavalry retreated to the hills leaving the left wing of his legions exposed to the hidden troops as Caesar s cavalry wheeled around their flank Caesar then ordered in his third line containing his most battle hardened veterans to attack This broke Pompey s left wing troops who fled the battlefield 44 After routing Pompey s cavalry Caesar threw in his last line of reserves 45 a move which at this point meant that the battle was more or less decided citation needed Pompey lost the will to fight as he watched both cavalry and legions under his command break formation and flee from battle and he retreated to his camp leaving the rest of his troops at the centre and right flank to their own devices He ordered the garrisoned auxiliaries to defend the camp as he gathered his family loaded up gold and threw off his general s cloak to make a quick escape citation needed As the rest of Pompey s army were left confused Caesar urged his men to end the day by routing the rest of Pompey s troops and capturing the Pompeian camp They complied with his wishes after finishing off the remains of Pompey s men they furiously attacked the camp walls The Thracians and the other auxiliaries who were left in the Pompeian camp in total seven cohorts defended bravely but were not able to fend off the assault 44 Caesar had won his greatest victory claiming to have only lost about 200 soldiers and 30 centurions and assigning the Optimate losses to be 60 000 men 5 These numbers seem suspiciously exaggerated with Appian suggesting the Caesarean losses to be as many as 1 200 men and the Pompeian losses to be 6 000 In his history of the war Caesar would praise his own men s discipline and experience and remembered each of his centurions by name He also questioned Pompey s decision not to charge 46 Aftermath editPompey despairing of the defeat fled with his advisors overseas to Mytilene and thence to Cilicia where he held a council of war 47 at the same time Cato and supporters at Dyrrachium attempted first to hand over command to Marcus Tullius Cicero who refused deciding instead to return to Italy 11 They then regrouped at Corcyra and went thence to Libya 47 Others including Marcus Junius Brutus sought Caesar s pardon travelling over marshlands to Larissa where he was then welcomed graciously by Caesar in his camp 48 Pompey s council of war decided to flee to Egypt 49 which had in the previous year supplied him with military aid 7 In the aftermath of the battle Caesar captured Pompey s camp and burned Pompey s correspondence He then announced that he would forgive all who asked for mercy Pompeian naval forces in the Adriatic and Italy mostly withdrew or surrendered 11 Hearing of Pompey s flight to Egypt Caesar remained in hot pursuit first landing in Asia and reaching Alexandria on 2 October 48 BC where he learnt of Pompey s murder and then was embroiled in a dynastic dispute between Ptolemy XIII and Cleopatra 50 Importance edit nbsp An anachronistic 14th century miniature by Niccolo da Bologna showing Caesar the victor over Pompey at the Battle of Pharsalus Paul K Davis wrote that Caesar s victory took him to the pinnacle of power effectively ending the Republic 51 The battle itself did not end the civil war but it was decisive and gave Caesar a much needed boost in legitimacy Until then much of the Roman world outside Italy supported Pompey and his allies due to the extensive list of clients he held in all corners of the Republic After Pompey s defeat former allies began to align themselves with Caesar as some came to believe the gods favored him while for others it was simple self preservation The ancients took great stock in success as a sign of favoritism by the gods citation needed This is especially true of success in the face of almost certain defeat as Caesar experienced at Pharsalus This allowed Caesar to parlay this single victory into a huge network of willing clients to better secure his hold over power and force the Optimates into near exile in search for allies to continue the fight against Caesar citation needed In popular culture editThe battle gives its name to the following artistic geographical and business concerns Pharsalia a poem by Lucan Pharsalia New York U S Pharsalia Technologies Inc In Alexandre Dumas The Three Musketeers the author makes reference to Caesar s purported order that his men try to cut the faces of their opponents their vanity supposedly being of more value to them than their lives 52 In Mankiewicz s 1963 film Cleopatra the immediate aftermath of Pharsalus is used as an opening scene to set the action in motion 53 Notes edit According to Caesar the Pompeians lost 60 000 soldiers 5 According to Caesar Pompey had 45 000 Roman legionaries in 110 cohorts Other ancient sources estimated 60 000 70 000 Italians fought in the battle with the Pompeians outnumbering the Caesarians by anywhere from 50 to 100 Caesar s figures are often rejected as exaggerations partly because Pompey did not have had all of his 110 cohorts at the battle and the correct number is probably 88 25 Greenhalgh keeping to Caesar s own proportions says Pompey had a maximum of 36 000 legionaries 26 Brunt and Wylie allow for approximately 38 000 27 The sources are confused on the position of Pompey s commanders In the version of Caesar and Lucan Pharsalia 7 217 223 Pompey Lentulus and the 1st and 3rd legions are said to be on the left wing and Ahenobarbus on the right Appian and Plutarch on the other hand place Pompey and Lentulus on the right and Ahenobarbus on the left Morgan favors the testimony of Caesar and Lucan since the former was an eyewitness and because Pompey is more likely to have placed himself where the decisive engagement was expected to occur the left wing 37 Citations edit History Military 8 July 2019 The Battle of Pharsalus 9 August 48 BC The Past the past com Retrieved 8 August 2023 Battle of Pharsalus Summary Facts amp Significance Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 18 July 2023 Pharsalus 48 BCE Livius www livius org Retrieved 18 July 2023 History Military 8 July 2019 The Battle of Pharsalus 9 August 48 BC The Past the past com Retrieved 18 July 2023 a b Caesar BC III 99 1 The Battle of Pharsalus World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 22 November 2021 a b Goldsworthy p 431 Rawson 1992 pp 424 31 Rawson 1992 p 432 Goldsworthy p 423 a b c Rawson 1992 p 433 Fasti Amiternini Fasti Antiates CIL I 324 328 Bellum Civile 3 81 98 Map with conjectured locations Annual of the British School at Athens No XXIV 1921 1 The American Journal of Archaeology Vol 87 No 1 Jan 1983 See Google maps full citation needed Holmes 1908 p 275 cf Strabo Geography 9 5 6 Little Iliad frag 19 Euripides Andromache 16ff Allen T W 1906 Myrmidonwn Polis The Classical Review Vol 20 No 4 May 1906 pp 193 201 cf p 196 Phthia in Brill s New Paully encyclopaedia a b Morgan 1983 p 27 Postgate 1905 Bruere 1951 Sheppard p 60 Battle of Pharsalus militaryhistory com Archived from the original on 25 June 2013 Retrieved 18 June 2013 Greenhalgh p 247 Sheppard p 60 a b Greenhalgh pp 249 302 Wylie p 562 Delbruck p 545 Brunt p 692 Greenhalgh pp 249 302 Brunt p 692 Wylie p 562 a b Sheppard pp 38 60 61 Greenhalgh pp 249 301 302 Sheppard pp 38 60 61 Greenhalgh p 247 Goldsworthy pp 425 427 Greenhalgh p 249 Delbruck p 538 Greenhalgh p 250 Holmes p 167 Greenhalgh p 249 Holmes p 167 note 5 Delbruck p 547 Goldsworthy p 425 Holmes p 167 Goldsworthy pp 425 426 Greenhalgh p 250 Delbruck pp 538 539 Morgan p 54 Holmes p 167 and note 1 Morgan p 54 Delbruck p 538 Sheppard p 56 Caesar BC III 92 1 Caesar BC III 92 2 Caesar BC III 93 1 Roman Armageddon at Pharsalus 14 December 2016 a b James Steven 48 BC The Battle of Pharsalus Caesar BC III 93 4 Caesar BC III 92 3 a b Tempest 2017 p 62 Tempest 2017 pp 62 3 Tempest 2017 p 63 Rawson 1992 pp 433 4 Paul K Davis 100 Decisive Battles from Ancient Times to the Present The World s Major Battles and How They Shaped History Oxford Oxford University Press 1999 59 Dumas Alexander 2009 The Three Musketeers Oxford University Press p 620 ISBN 978 0199538461 37 2 Gardner Society for Classical Studies 13 November 2012 Retrieved 12 September 2020 Rex Harrison s regretful musings on the field of Pharsalus at the opening scene of Cleopatra References editBrunt P A 1971 Italian Manpower 225 B C A D 14 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 814283 8 Delbruck Hans 1975 1900 History of the Art of War volume 1 Warfare in Antiquity Translated by Walter J Renfroe Jr 3rd ed Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 6584 0 Goldsworthy Adrian 2006 Caesar The Life of a Colossus London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 297 84620 5 Greenhalgh Peter 1981 Pompey The Republican Prince London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 0 297 77881 1 Holmes T Rice 1908 The Battle Field of Old Pharsalvs The Classical Quarterly 2 4 271 292 doi 10 1017 S000983880001795X ISSN 0009 8388 JSTOR 636174 S2CID 170176812 Morgan John D 1983 Palaepharsalus The Battle and the Town American Journal of Archaeology 87 1 23 54 doi 10 2307 504663 JSTOR 504663 S2CID 191384102 Rawson Elizabeth 1992 Caesar Civil War and Dictatorship Cambridge Ancient History Vol 9 ISBN 0 521 25603 8 Sheppard Simon 2006 Pharsalus 48 BC Caesar and Pompey Clash of the Titans PDF Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84603 002 1 Archived from the original PDF on 22 February 2020 Tempest Kathryn 2017 Brutus the noble conspirator New Haven ISBN 978 0 300 18009 1 OCLC 982651923 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wylie Graham 1992 The Road to Pharsalus Latomus 51 3 557 565 ISSN 0023 8856 JSTOR 41541372 Further reading editBruere Richard Treat 1951 Palaepharsalus Pharsalus Pharsalia Classical Philology Vol 46 No 2 Apr 1951 pp 111 115 Gwatkin William E 1956 Some Reflections on the Battle of Pharsalus Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association Vol 87 James Steven 2016 48 BC The Battle of Pharsalus Lucas Frank Laurence 1921 The Battlefield of Pharsalos Annual of the British School at Athens No XXIV 1919 21 2 Nordling John G 2006 Caesar s Pre Battle Speech at Pharsalus B C 3 85 4 Ridiculum Acri Fortius Secat Res The Classical Journal Vol 101 No 2 Dec Jan 2005 2006 pp 183 189 Pelling C B R 1973 Pharsalus Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte Bd 22 H 2 2nd Qtr 1973 pp 249 259 Perrin B 1885 Pharsalia Pharsalus Palaepharsalus The American Journal of Philology Vol 6 No 2 1885 pp 170 189 Postgate J P 1905 Pharsalia Nostra The Classical Review Vol 19 No 5 Jun 1905 pp 257 260 Rambaud Michel 1955 Le Soleil de Pharsale Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte Vol 3 No 4 Searle Arthur 1907 Note on the Battle of Pharsalus Harvard Studies in Classical Philology Vol 18 1907 pp 213 218 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Pharsalus Caesar s account of the battle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Pharsalus amp oldid 1219574913, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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