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Cophen campaign

The Cophen campaign was conducted by Alexander the Great in the Kabul (Sanskrit: "Kubha") Valley between May 327 BC[1] and March 326 BC.[2] It was conducted against the Aspasioi, the Guraeans, and the Assakenoi tribes in the Kunar valley of Afghanistan, and Panjkora (Dir) and Swat valleys in what is now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. The goal of the campaign was to secure the Macedonian line of communications so that the Macedonian army could proceed into India proper.

Alexander's Indian campaign
Part of Indian campaign of Alexander the Great

The Valley of the Cophen
DateMay 327 BC – March 326 BC
Location
modern Kabul valley, Afghanistan and Pakistan
35°12′00″N 72°29′00″E / 35.2°N 72.483333°E / 35.2; 72.483333
Result Macedonian victory
Territorial
changes
Hellenic conquest of the Cophen country, modern Kunar, Panjkora, and Swat valleys.
Belligerents
Macedon
League of Corinth
Aśvaka
Kasmira
Guraeans
Assakenoi
Commanders and leaders
Alexander the Great (WIA)
Craterus
Perdiccas
Ptolemy I Soter (WIA)
Leonnatus (WIA)
Cleophis
Abisares
others
class=notpageimage|
Location of the Cophen Valley
1200km
820miles
Babylon
15
Malavas
14
Hydaspes
13
Cophen
12
Cyropolis
11
Persian Gate
10
Uxians
9
Gaugamela
8
Alexandria
7
Gaza
6
Tyre
5
Issus
4
Miletus
3
Granicus
2
Pella
1
  current battle

Background edit

It had been Alexander's purpose to conquer the whole of the Persian Empire which extended as far as Gandara.[3] A previous king of the Persian Achaemenid Empire, Darius the Great, had sent one of his generals, Skylax, to sail down the Indus.[4] Following this expedition, Darius was able to conquer the surrounding Indian territory and receive tribute of 350 Euboic talents per annum.[5] Relatively little is known about the Punjab in Alexander's day.[5] There were a variety of princelings and republics, which the Indians called, "kingless"[6] peoples. All were vying for power over the region.

The King of Taxila, Omphis, whom the Macedonians called "Taxila" after his capital city,[7] had invited Alexander to come to his aid in his struggle against the neighbouring potentate Porus.[3] Porus was considered to be the most powerful prince in the region. Another king, Sisicotus, had served in the Persian Army at Gaugumela[3] and had later been Alexander's vassal.[8] Alexander gained useful intelligence concerning the region from these individuals.[8]

Alexander had begun planning the expedition two years before, in 329 BC,[9] but had been delayed in carrying out the expedition by a series of revolts that had taken place in Aria, Sogdiana and Bactria. He was held up in putting down these revolts as he had been marching through the Hindu Kush mid-winter and decided to camp in the mountains.[10] It was during this time that he founded the city of Alexandria ad Caucasum.[10] This city was some twenty five miles north-west of modern Kabul, in Afghanistan.

Returning to Alexandria ad Caucasum in May 327 BC[1] he found a surfeit of victual and supplies ready for the army for its expedition into India.[11] However, there were administrative matters that required his attention. Both the satrap of the Paropamisadae, Proëxes, and the commander of the garrison, Neiloxinus, were replaced due to their unsatisfactory conduct. When Alexander set out for Nicaea, it is said that he had 150,000 soldiers.[8] Historians have expressed doubts about the veracity of these numbers. Alexander had in his army soldiers from Greece, Thrace and Agriania as well as soldiers from various territories within his new empire.[8][12] Leaving Alexandria ad Caucasum, Alexander marched to Nicaea, where he sacrificed to Athena (which was his habit at the beginning of every campaign) and exclaiming that he was following in the footsteps of his ancestor Heracles, began his advance towards the Indus along the Cophen River.[13]

First phase—Aspasians edit

While on the march Alexander sent ambassadors ahead to the various tribes that were ahead of him ordering them to submit and provide him with hostages.[7] Taxila and a number of other princes came to him bringing him gifts as proof of their vassalage and paying tribute with gifts for the Macedonians.[7] Amongst the gifts that the Macedonians had never seen before, the Indian potentates furnished Alexander with 25 elephants[11][14]

As Alexander had now effectively replaced Darius III as King of Persia, Alexander was now effectively the new overlord of the Empire including this easternmost region.[15] Therefore, Alexander was able to treat anyone who resisted him as in revolt against him. While descending into the Cophen valley, Alexander informed his new vassals of his intentions. He planned to spend the rest of the summer and autumn reducing the region ahead of him up to the Indus river.[7] From there, he was going to proceed beyond the Indus and punish the Indian states and tribes which had not recognised him as their overlord and had not sent him ambassadors with tribute.[7]

However, he found that the campaign was far more difficult than he had anticipated. At Nicaea, he took the time to split his army into two separate forces with the object of retaining the interior lines so that he could reinforce his army at any point should any particular section of his army become threatened during the course of his campaign in the valley of the Cophen. In addition to this, these two forces were to keep the Indian rulers in the region from combining their forces and coordinating their efforts against the Macedonians.[16]

The army that was to march along the river Cophen was to be commanded by Perdiccas and Hephaestion.[14] They were accompanied by the king of Taxila to take advantage of his knowledge of the region.[14][17] They were to proceed along the southern bank of the Cophen. They had at their disposal three brigades led by Gorgias, Clitus and Meleager, half the Companion (mostly Macedonian noblemen who were equipped with a spear,[18] a shield and were disciplined to such an extent that they have been called "the first real cavalry")[18] and all the Greek mercenary cavalry.[14][17] Their instructions were to follow the river to the Indus bringing all the cities and fortifications to submission on the way through either systematic reduction or by terms.[14][16] Then they were to build a bridge upon their arrival at the Indus[14] so that when the King arrived and after the winter when Alexander had wintered his army in the region, they could proceed to cross the river and punish the tribes across the Indus.[16]

Meanwhile, Alexander had at his disposal the bulk of the forces in his army.[16] These forces comprised the shield bearing guards (known as the "silver shields"), four regiments of Companion cavalry, the Phalanx (other than those who marched with the first column), the foot agema, the archers, the other half of the horse archers, the Agrianians and the horse lancers.[19][16]

Alexander's plan was to march along all the valleys that were in between Nicaea and the river Indus with the aim of subduing those tribes that had not paid tribute.[19][20]

Alexander received information that the Aspasians, the first tribe whose lands he had entered had retreated to their capital. Eager to defeat them, the Macedonians crossed a river with all the cavalry and eight hundred Macedonian infantry mounted on horses.[21][22] They arrived quickly enough to kill a number of the Aspasians and drive them within their walls.[22] The rest of the army came up the next day and took the city. However, a number of the Aspasians decided to flee before the city was taken, seeing their cause as lost. The Macedonians followed them and killed a great many of them.[22][23] Alexander's men, enraged to see that their king had been injured during the course of the siege, razed the city to the ground. The Macedonians marched off to the next town, Andaca, which capitulated.[22]

 
The King's campaign through the Aspasian territory.

Alexander then left Craterus, whom he had probably kept in hand in case of just such an occasion, in command of a force responsible for gaining and keeping control of the tribes living in the surrounding valleys.[22]

Alexander's next destination was Euspla,[22] where the King of the Aspasians was based. At this point, deeming their cause lost, the Aspasians burned this city and fled.[22] The Macedonians pursued them. During the ensuing combat, one of the Aspasians thrust his spear right through Ptolemy's breast plate,[19] but the spear did not make contact with him due to the armour stopping the severity of the blow.[19][24] It was at this point that Ptolemy killed the King of the Aspasians.[19][24]

Second phase—Guraeans edit

After defeating the Aspasians and thus securing his lines of communication, the Macedonians marched towards the Guraean fortified city of Arigaeum. On hearing news of Alexander's capacity as a general and besieger, the populace razed the fortress.[25] It was at this particular point that Craterus returned to Alexander after gaining control over the Aspasian valleys, including Andaca.[25] Alexander ordered Craterus to set up a number of new colonies in the region, including Arigaeum. Control of Arigaeum and Andaca were important in controlling the Choaspes river, and occupying the fortresses with healthy garrisons would prove advantageous to Alexander in the case of revolts.[25]

The Guraeans had retreated after burning their fortified city, joined up with their fellow tribesmen and prepared themselves to face Alexander.

Siege of Arigaeum edit

 
The King's force takes up the center of the Macedonian line while Ptolemy and Leonnatus' forces take a circuit to catch the barbarians by surprise.

Ptolemy, who had been sent ahead on a foraging expedition,[25] came back to the main contingent of the army under Alexander and reported that there was a very large force assembled and preparing to face the Macedonians.[25]

When the Macedonians arrived where the assembled force had gathered, Alexander divided his army into three parts with Ptolemy taking up the left (he commanded a third of the hypaspists, the brigades of Philip and Philotas, two squadrons of horse archers, the Agrianians and half the remaining cavalry).[25] Leonnatus was ordered to take up the right flank, with Attalus' and Balacrus' brigades.[26] Alexander took up the centre opposed to the Guraean centre.[26] Alexander sent Ptolemy and Leonnatus to their respective flanks by routes that the Guraeans could not observe,[26] thus hiding these two particular flanks of his army (lined roughly obliquely with his centre line[26]) from the Guraeans. Alexander's contingent was comparatively small, and his plan was to lure them out and to fight them while Leonnatus and Ptolemy took their flanks.[26]

As expected, the Guraeans attacked Alexander's small contingent and after Ptolemy faced rough fighting,[26] he was able to achieve victory on his flank. Leonnatus' victory was comparatively easier, after which time the enemy surrendered.[27] It is said that 40,000 Guraeans were captured.[27]

Third phase—Assacenians edit

Following his victory over the Guraeans, Alexander marched down the Garaeus river subduing the tribes of this region to tribute paying status. From there he proceeded into the valley of the Suastos where there was a force of two thousand cavalry, thirty thousand infantry and thirty elephants.[28] Alexander raced forward with the van, trying to do all he could to upset their preparations, while Craterus followed up at a more methodical pace with the main force.[27] It is specifically mentioned that he had the siege engines with him.[27] It must have been a great relief for the Macedonians to proceed into the relatively flat lands of this region of the Indus compared to the mountainous regions they had been in.[27] The speed with which the Macedonian van proceeded was such that Alexander was able to prevent facing a full complement of enemy forces. In response to Alexander's tactics, it was written that each of the enemy tribes retreated to their respective territories.[29]

Siege of Massaga edit

Alexander then marched towards Massaga, the largest Assacenian fortified city and their capital.[29] The Assacenians had acquired the services of 7,000 mercenaries from beyond the Indus.[28] These mercenaries were soldiers of considerable capability, and as a result of their presence, the Assacenians as well as the mercenaries themselves were confident of victory against the Macedonians.[28][29]

Upon arriving at Massaga, Alexander ordered that the camp be set up outside of the capital. However, so the Assacenians were so confident thanks to support of their mercenaries that they decided to immediately attack.[28][29] Seeing an opportunity, Alexander ordered his men to retreat to a hill about a mile distant from the town.[28][30] In pursuing the Macedonians, the Assacenians lost their discipline and became disordered due to their excitement at the prospect of having caught the Macedonians so off guard. However, when they finally came within range of the Macedonian bows, Alexander ordered his bowmen to fire on the Assacenians.[28][30] The mounted javelin men, Agrianians and archers at once dashed forward to attack.[28] These were swiftly followed by the phalanx, which Alexander led in person.[28] Alexander was injured during the course of this action and is alleged to have stated, "They may call me son of Zeus, but I suffer none the less like a mortal. This is blood, not ichor!"[30]

A subsequent assault on Massaga proved to be unsuccessful[31] with the professional mercenaries showing that they were worth the gold they were getting paid. The next day, Alexander ordered the siege equipment to be brought up and ordered a section of the wall to be battered down.[30] However, the mercenaries were successful in preventing this action from succeeding.[30] As a result, Alexander ordered that a tower and terrace be built; this took nine days.[30] Alexander then ordered that the tower be advanced toward the wall.[30] Archers and slingers, most likely from Cyprus, were stationed on the tower as it was moved forward in order to keep the defenders at a distance.[30]

 
Alexander ordered that a tower and terrace be built—it took nine days—after which time he ordered that archers and slingers be stationed on top of the tower and force the defenders from the ramparts.

The mercenaries fought fiercely and would not let the Macedonians through.[28] The next day, Alexander ordered that from the tower they extend a bridge and would have the same men who stormed Tyre from the bridges built on the mole to storm the Assacenians. Meanwhile, the archers and slingers would continue to fire as before. However, again the mercenaries put up fierce resistance. While this was going on, Alexander ordered that a unit of hypaspists charge across the bridge at the mercenaries. However, too many of them rushed upon it too quickly and the hastily built bridge[31] collapsed under their weight.[28] Seeing the opportunity, the Assacenians fired volleys of arrows, stones and even fireballs into the ditch on top of the men.[31] The pit the hypaspists had fallen into was to be their tomb, and a great many of them were slain. However, Alexander saved those he could by attacking this sortie with a counter-attack of his own.[32]

The next day, the Macedonians built another bridge and attacked in a similar manner.[31] However, during the course of the attack the Macedonians managed to kill the leader of the mercenaries.[33] Consequentially, the Assacenians decided to negotiate their surrender.

Alexander's conditions for their surrender were that the Assacenians agree to serve under him and they surrender to him the Massagan king's family as hostages.[33] However, the Assacenians were unwilling to agree to this as this would mean fighting their fellow tribes and clans.[33] They decided to retreat from the encampment they had made near the city after they had surrendered to Alexander.[33] On hearing of this, Alexander had his troops surround the hill where the Assacenians were camped. As the Assacenians attempted to make their escape, all hell broke loose and the Macedonians killed a great many of them.[33] After this, the Macedonians proceeded back to Massaga and took it with ease, and killed all the soldiers in the garrison of the city. During the course of the siege, the Macedonians had lost no more than 25 men, however a number of them were wounded.[32]

Sieges of Bazira and Ora edit

During the course of the siege of the fortress of Massaga, Alexander was of the view that the taking of Massaga would strike the tribes in the surrounding territory with fear as to his power and ability.[32] When it became clear that the stronghold would surrender,[32] Alexander decided to dispatch a number of his lieutenants to the surrounding fortress towns to follow up on this victory. He ordered Coenus to proceed to Bazira[32] with the expectation that this town would capitulate as a result of Massaga.[32] Simultaneously, he sent Alcetas, Attalus and Demetrius to Ora with the very specific orders to blockade Ora until he could arrive himself and take it.[32]

Upon arriving at Ora, Alcetas was attacked by Ora's inhabitants.[34] However, Alcetas was easily able to drive this sortie back into the town.[34] Bazira, which stood on the precipice of a mountain was fortified by "nature and art" and showed no signs of capitulating.[34] After receiving the submission of Massaga and massacring its inhabitants,[32] Alexander set out in the direction of Bazira.[34] However, while proceeding to Bazira he received the news that Abisares, the ruler of Hazara, was going to cross the Indus[35] with his soldiers to interrupt the siege and assist Ora.[34] Alexander changed his plans and set out for Ora with all the forces under his immediate command.[34] In addition to this, he ordered Coenus to establish a camp and fortify it as an eventual base of operations against the town of Bazira.[34] Coenus was then to leave a suitable garrison at that base to observe Bazira and while he joined Alexander and his forces at Ora.[34]

However, when Coenus left Bazira, the town's inhabitants sallied out and attacked the encampment he had set up.[34] These tribesmen lost 500 of their fellow tribesmen during the course of this attack, and were easily driven back.[34] A few days later, the Macedonians were able to take Ora, after which point the inhabitants of Bazira saw their cause as lost, abandoned Bazira to the Macedonians and headed off to Aornus.[34]

It was as a result of these conquests that Alexander did to conquer the inhabitants of the Peshawar valley.[34] The Peshawar valley ran perpendicularly to the Swat river, which was flowed on a north–south axis.[34][35] This valley was effectively an opening through which Abisares could pass through.[34] It was therefore critical for Alexander to take the whole of the valley so that no reinforcements could be brought up into the valley and file through either the north or south exit of the valley and attack Alexander while he was besieging Aornus.[34] A historian of Alexander's, who took up the issue and examined the topography of the region, had this to say about the strategic situation that Alexander had developed for himself as a result of this campaign

to understand the sound strategic reasons which caused Alexander, before attacking Aornus, first to turn south to the Peshawar valley. Once he had consolidated his hold there and made his arrangements for crossing the Indus quite secure, he could safely move up to the right bank and attack the mountain retreat of the Swat fugitives from the south. He thus avoided the entanglement of the mountainous region that would have attended and hampered direct pursuit from the Swat side. The fugitive host could be cut off from retreat to the east of the Indus and from such assistance as Abisares, the ruler on that side, might offer. Finally, when attacking Aornus from the south, Alexander could command all the advantages that the Indus valley and the fertile plains of the Peshawar valley would offer in respect of supplies and other resources[36][37]

Siege of Aornus edit

 
The Aornos is located to the north of Taxila.

Aornos (modern Swat, Pakistan) was the site of Alexander the Great's last siege, "the climax to Alexander's career as the greatest besieger in history" according to Alexander's biographer Robin Lane Fox.[38] The siege took place in the winter of 327–326 BC. (The site has been identified as being near the Pir-Sar mountain in Swat by Aurel Stein in 1926, and has been confirmed by archaeologists.) It offered the last threat to Alexander's supply line, which stretched in a dangerously vulnerable manner, over the Hindu Kush back to Balkh. The site lies north of Attock in Punjab, on a strongly reinforced mountain spur above the narrow gorges in a bend of the upper Indus River. It had a flat summit well supplied with natural springs and wide enough to grow crops. Therefore, it could not be starved to submission. Neighbouring tribesmen who surrendered to Alexander offered to lead him to the best point of access.

Ptolemy and Alexander's secretary Eumenes, whose account provided material for all later records of the event, reconnoitred and reinforced a neighbouring spur to the west with a stockade and ditch. Their signal fire to Alexander also alerted the defenders of Pir-Sar, and it took two days of skirmishing in the narrow ravines for Alexander to regroup. At the vulnerable north side leading to the fort, Alexander and his catapults were stopped by a deep ravine. To bring the siege engines within reach, an earthwork mound was constructed to bridge the ravine with carpentry, brush and earth. The first day's work brought the siege mound 50 metres (60 yards) closer, but as the sides of the ravine fell away steeply below, progress rapidly slowed. Nevertheless, at the end of the third day, a low hill connected to the nearest tip of Pir-Sar was within reach and was taken, after Alexander in the vanguard and his first force were repelled by boulders rolled down from above. Three days of drumbeats marked the defenders' celebration of the initial repulse, followed by a surprise retreat. Alexander hauled himself up the last rock face on a rope. Alexander cleared the summit, slaying some fugitives (inflated by Arrian to a massacre), and erected altars to Athena Nike, Athena of Victory, traces of which were identified by Stein.[39]

Siege of Nysa edit

When Alexander arrived at the city of Nysa, which was between the rivers Cophen and Indus, the city's citizens sent out to him their president, whose name was Acuphis (Ἄκουφις), and thirty of their most distinguished men as envoys. When they entered the Alexander's tent and saw him, they made a Proskynesis. When Alexander told them to rise, the Acuphis started his speech. In his speech he said that the god Dionysus founded the city and named it Nysa and the land Nysaea (Νυσαία) after his nurse and also he named the mountain near the city, Meron (Μηρὸν) (i.e. thigh), because he grew in the thigh of Zeus and Alexander should leave their city independent for the sake of the god. Alexander believed them and left the city self governed but asked from the Acuphis to send his own son, his daughter's son and some horsemen to accompany him.[40][41][42]

Then, together with his Companion cavalry went to the mountain and they made ivy garlands and crowned themselves with them, as they were, singing hymns in honor of Dionysus. Alexander also offered sacrifices to Dionysus, and feasted in company with his companions.[41] On the other hand, according to Philostratus although Alexander wanted to go up the mountain he decided not to do it because he was afraid that when his men will see the vines which were on the mountain they would feel home sick or they will recover their taste for wine after they had become accustomed to water only, so he decided to make his vow and sacrifice to Dionysus at the foot of the mountain.[43]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Dodge 1890, p. 509
  2. ^ Dodge 1890, p. 540
  3. ^ a b c Dodge 1890, p. 510
  4. ^ Smith, Vincent (1914). The Early History of India. England: University of Oxford.
  5. ^ a b Smith 1914, p. 37
  6. ^ Dodge 1890, p. 539
  7. ^ a b c d e Dodge 1890, p. 513
  8. ^ a b c d Dodge 1890, p. 511
  9. ^ Smith 1914, p. 513
  10. ^ a b Dodge 1890, p. 452
  11. ^ a b Dodge 1890, p. 512
  12. ^ Smith 1914, p. 48
  13. ^ Dodge 1890, p. 225
  14. ^ a b c d e f Arrian, XXII
  15. ^ Fuller 1959, p. 126
  16. ^ a b c d e Dodge 1890, p. 515
  17. ^ a b Dodge 1890, p. 514
  18. ^ a b Delbrück 1990, p. 177
  19. ^ a b c d e Arrian, XXIV
  20. ^ Delbrück 1990, p. 231
  21. ^ Arrian, XXIII
  22. ^ a b c d e f g Dodge 1890, p. 517
  23. ^ Delbrück 1990, p. 232
  24. ^ a b Dodge 1890, p. 518
  25. ^ a b c d e f Dodge 1890, p. 519
  26. ^ a b c d e f Dodge 1890, p. 520
  27. ^ a b c d e Dodge 1890, p. 521
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Fuller 1959, p. 245
  29. ^ a b c d Dodge 1890, p. 522
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h Dodge 1890, p. 523
  31. ^ a b c d Dodge 1890, p. 524
  32. ^ a b c d e f g h Fuller 1959, p. 246
  33. ^ a b c d e Dodge 1890, p. 525
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Fuller 1959, p. 247
  35. ^ a b Fuller 1959, p. 125
  36. ^ Fuller 1959, p. 247–248
  37. ^ Stein 2004, p.123–4
  38. ^ Lane Fox, p. 343ff.
  39. ^ Lane Fox (1973); Arrian.
  40. ^ Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander, 5.1
  41. ^ a b Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander, 5.2
  42. ^ Pliny the Elder, Natural History, 6.23.5
  43. ^ Philostratus, Life of Apollonius of Tyana, 2.10

References edit

  • Delbrück, Hans (1990). Warfare in Antiquity: History of the Art of War. Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. p. 604. ISBN 978-0-8032-9199-7.
  • Fuller, J. F. C. (1958). The Generalship of Alexander The Great. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, Ltd.
  • Dodge, Theodore (1890). Alexander. Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books. p. 681. ISBN 978-1-85367-179-1.
  • Smith, Vincent (1914). The Early History of India. England: University of Oxford.
  • Arrian. "Annabasis Alexandri". Retrieved 20 November 2011.
  • Lane Fox, Robin. Alexander the Great. Penguin, 1973, ISBN 978-0-14-008878-6, 1973.
  • (in French)
  • Stein, Sir Aurel (1929). On Alexander's Track to the Indus. Bhavan Books & Prints.

cophen, campaign, conducted, alexander, great, kabul, sanskrit, kubha, valley, between, march, conducted, against, aspasioi, guraeans, assakenoi, tribes, kunar, valley, afghanistan, panjkora, swat, valleys, what, khyber, pakhtunkhwa, pakistan, goal, campaign, . The Cophen campaign was conducted by Alexander the Great in the Kabul Sanskrit Kubha Valley between May 327 BC 1 and March 326 BC 2 It was conducted against the Aspasioi the Guraeans and the Assakenoi tribes in the Kunar valley of Afghanistan and Panjkora Dir and Swat valleys in what is now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistan The goal of the campaign was to secure the Macedonian line of communications so that the Macedonian army could proceed into India proper Alexander s Indian campaignPart of Indian campaign of Alexander the GreatThe Valley of the CophenDateMay 327 BC March 326 BCLocationmodern Kabul valley Afghanistan and Pakistan35 12 00 N 72 29 00 E 35 2 N 72 483333 E 35 2 72 483333ResultMacedonian victoryTerritorialchangesHellenic conquest of the Cophen country modern Kunar Panjkora and Swat valleys BelligerentsMacedonLeague of CorinthAsvakaKasmiraGuraeansAssakenoiCommanders and leadersAlexander the Great WIA Craterus Perdiccas Ptolemy I Soter WIA Leonnatus WIA CleophisAbisares othersclass notpageimage Location of the Cophen Valley Alexander the Great1200km820milesBabylon15Malavas14Hydaspes13Cophen12Cyropolis11Persian Gate10Uxians9Gaugamela8Alexandria7Gaza6Tyre5Issus4Miletus3 Granicus2 Pella1 current battle Contents 1 Background 2 First phase Aspasians 3 Second phase Guraeans 3 1 Siege of Arigaeum 4 Third phase Assacenians 4 1 Siege of Massaga 4 2 Sieges of Bazira and Ora 4 3 Siege of Aornus 4 4 Siege of Nysa 5 Notes 6 ReferencesBackground editIt had been Alexander s purpose to conquer the whole of the Persian Empire which extended as far as Gandara 3 A previous king of the Persian Achaemenid Empire Darius the Great had sent one of his generals Skylax to sail down the Indus 4 Following this expedition Darius was able to conquer the surrounding Indian territory and receive tribute of 350 Euboic talents per annum 5 Relatively little is known about the Punjab in Alexander s day 5 There were a variety of princelings and republics which the Indians called kingless 6 peoples All were vying for power over the region The King of Taxila Omphis whom the Macedonians called Taxila after his capital city 7 had invited Alexander to come to his aid in his struggle against the neighbouring potentate Porus 3 Porus was considered to be the most powerful prince in the region Another king Sisicotus had served in the Persian Army at Gaugumela 3 and had later been Alexander s vassal 8 Alexander gained useful intelligence concerning the region from these individuals 8 Alexander had begun planning the expedition two years before in 329 BC 9 but had been delayed in carrying out the expedition by a series of revolts that had taken place in Aria Sogdiana and Bactria He was held up in putting down these revolts as he had been marching through the Hindu Kush mid winter and decided to camp in the mountains 10 It was during this time that he founded the city of Alexandria ad Caucasum 10 This city was some twenty five miles north west of modern Kabul in Afghanistan Returning to Alexandria ad Caucasum in May 327 BC 1 he found a surfeit of victual and supplies ready for the army for its expedition into India 11 However there were administrative matters that required his attention Both the satrap of the Paropamisadae Proexes and the commander of the garrison Neiloxinus were replaced due to their unsatisfactory conduct When Alexander set out for Nicaea it is said that he had 150 000 soldiers 8 Historians have expressed doubts about the veracity of these numbers Alexander had in his army soldiers from Greece Thrace and Agriania as well as soldiers from various territories within his new empire 8 12 Leaving Alexandria ad Caucasum Alexander marched to Nicaea where he sacrificed to Athena which was his habit at the beginning of every campaign and exclaiming that he was following in the footsteps of his ancestor Heracles began his advance towards the Indus along the Cophen River 13 First phase Aspasians editWhile on the march Alexander sent ambassadors ahead to the various tribes that were ahead of him ordering them to submit and provide him with hostages 7 Taxila and a number of other princes came to him bringing him gifts as proof of their vassalage and paying tribute with gifts for the Macedonians 7 Amongst the gifts that the Macedonians had never seen before the Indian potentates furnished Alexander with 25 elephants 11 14 As Alexander had now effectively replaced Darius III as King of Persia Alexander was now effectively the new overlord of the Empire including this easternmost region 15 Therefore Alexander was able to treat anyone who resisted him as in revolt against him While descending into the Cophen valley Alexander informed his new vassals of his intentions He planned to spend the rest of the summer and autumn reducing the region ahead of him up to the Indus river 7 From there he was going to proceed beyond the Indus and punish the Indian states and tribes which had not recognised him as their overlord and had not sent him ambassadors with tribute 7 However he found that the campaign was far more difficult than he had anticipated At Nicaea he took the time to split his army into two separate forces with the object of retaining the interior lines so that he could reinforce his army at any point should any particular section of his army become threatened during the course of his campaign in the valley of the Cophen In addition to this these two forces were to keep the Indian rulers in the region from combining their forces and coordinating their efforts against the Macedonians 16 The army that was to march along the river Cophen was to be commanded by Perdiccas and Hephaestion 14 They were accompanied by the king of Taxila to take advantage of his knowledge of the region 14 17 They were to proceed along the southern bank of the Cophen They had at their disposal three brigades led by Gorgias Clitus and Meleager half the Companion mostly Macedonian noblemen who were equipped with a spear 18 a shield and were disciplined to such an extent that they have been called the first real cavalry 18 and all the Greek mercenary cavalry 14 17 Their instructions were to follow the river to the Indus bringing all the cities and fortifications to submission on the way through either systematic reduction or by terms 14 16 Then they were to build a bridge upon their arrival at the Indus 14 so that when the King arrived and after the winter when Alexander had wintered his army in the region they could proceed to cross the river and punish the tribes across the Indus 16 Meanwhile Alexander had at his disposal the bulk of the forces in his army 16 These forces comprised the shield bearing guards known as the silver shields four regiments of Companion cavalry the Phalanx other than those who marched with the first column the foot agema the archers the other half of the horse archers the Agrianians and the horse lancers 19 16 Alexander s plan was to march along all the valleys that were in between Nicaea and the river Indus with the aim of subduing those tribes that had not paid tribute 19 20 Alexander received information that the Aspasians the first tribe whose lands he had entered had retreated to their capital Eager to defeat them the Macedonians crossed a river with all the cavalry and eight hundred Macedonian infantry mounted on horses 21 22 They arrived quickly enough to kill a number of the Aspasians and drive them within their walls 22 The rest of the army came up the next day and took the city However a number of the Aspasians decided to flee before the city was taken seeing their cause as lost The Macedonians followed them and killed a great many of them 22 23 Alexander s men enraged to see that their king had been injured during the course of the siege razed the city to the ground The Macedonians marched off to the next town Andaca which capitulated 22 nbsp The King s campaign through the Aspasian territory Alexander then left Craterus whom he had probably kept in hand in case of just such an occasion in command of a force responsible for gaining and keeping control of the tribes living in the surrounding valleys 22 Alexander s next destination was Euspla 22 where the King of the Aspasians was based At this point deeming their cause lost the Aspasians burned this city and fled 22 The Macedonians pursued them During the ensuing combat one of the Aspasians thrust his spear right through Ptolemy s breast plate 19 but the spear did not make contact with him due to the armour stopping the severity of the blow 19 24 It was at this point that Ptolemy killed the King of the Aspasians 19 24 Second phase Guraeans editAfter defeating the Aspasians and thus securing his lines of communication the Macedonians marched towards the Guraean fortified city of Arigaeum On hearing news of Alexander s capacity as a general and besieger the populace razed the fortress 25 It was at this particular point that Craterus returned to Alexander after gaining control over the Aspasian valleys including Andaca 25 Alexander ordered Craterus to set up a number of new colonies in the region including Arigaeum Control of Arigaeum and Andaca were important in controlling the Choaspes river and occupying the fortresses with healthy garrisons would prove advantageous to Alexander in the case of revolts 25 The Guraeans had retreated after burning their fortified city joined up with their fellow tribesmen and prepared themselves to face Alexander Siege of Arigaeum edit nbsp The King s force takes up the center of the Macedonian line while Ptolemy and Leonnatus forces take a circuit to catch the barbarians by surprise Ptolemy who had been sent ahead on a foraging expedition 25 came back to the main contingent of the army under Alexander and reported that there was a very large force assembled and preparing to face the Macedonians 25 When the Macedonians arrived where the assembled force had gathered Alexander divided his army into three parts with Ptolemy taking up the left he commanded a third of the hypaspists the brigades of Philip and Philotas two squadrons of horse archers the Agrianians and half the remaining cavalry 25 Leonnatus was ordered to take up the right flank with Attalus and Balacrus brigades 26 Alexander took up the centre opposed to the Guraean centre 26 Alexander sent Ptolemy and Leonnatus to their respective flanks by routes that the Guraeans could not observe 26 thus hiding these two particular flanks of his army lined roughly obliquely with his centre line 26 from the Guraeans Alexander s contingent was comparatively small and his plan was to lure them out and to fight them while Leonnatus and Ptolemy took their flanks 26 As expected the Guraeans attacked Alexander s small contingent and after Ptolemy faced rough fighting 26 he was able to achieve victory on his flank Leonnatus victory was comparatively easier after which time the enemy surrendered 27 It is said that 40 000 Guraeans were captured 27 Third phase Assacenians editFollowing his victory over the Guraeans Alexander marched down the Garaeus river subduing the tribes of this region to tribute paying status From there he proceeded into the valley of the Suastos where there was a force of two thousand cavalry thirty thousand infantry and thirty elephants 28 Alexander raced forward with the van trying to do all he could to upset their preparations while Craterus followed up at a more methodical pace with the main force 27 It is specifically mentioned that he had the siege engines with him 27 It must have been a great relief for the Macedonians to proceed into the relatively flat lands of this region of the Indus compared to the mountainous regions they had been in 27 The speed with which the Macedonian van proceeded was such that Alexander was able to prevent facing a full complement of enemy forces In response to Alexander s tactics it was written that each of the enemy tribes retreated to their respective territories 29 Siege of Massaga edit Alexander then marched towards Massaga the largest Assacenian fortified city and their capital 29 The Assacenians had acquired the services of 7 000 mercenaries from beyond the Indus 28 These mercenaries were soldiers of considerable capability and as a result of their presence the Assacenians as well as the mercenaries themselves were confident of victory against the Macedonians 28 29 Upon arriving at Massaga Alexander ordered that the camp be set up outside of the capital However so the Assacenians were so confident thanks to support of their mercenaries that they decided to immediately attack 28 29 Seeing an opportunity Alexander ordered his men to retreat to a hill about a mile distant from the town 28 30 In pursuing the Macedonians the Assacenians lost their discipline and became disordered due to their excitement at the prospect of having caught the Macedonians so off guard However when they finally came within range of the Macedonian bows Alexander ordered his bowmen to fire on the Assacenians 28 30 The mounted javelin men Agrianians and archers at once dashed forward to attack 28 These were swiftly followed by the phalanx which Alexander led in person 28 Alexander was injured during the course of this action and is alleged to have stated They may call me son of Zeus but I suffer none the less like a mortal This is blood not ichor 30 A subsequent assault on Massaga proved to be unsuccessful 31 with the professional mercenaries showing that they were worth the gold they were getting paid The next day Alexander ordered the siege equipment to be brought up and ordered a section of the wall to be battered down 30 However the mercenaries were successful in preventing this action from succeeding 30 As a result Alexander ordered that a tower and terrace be built this took nine days 30 Alexander then ordered that the tower be advanced toward the wall 30 Archers and slingers most likely from Cyprus were stationed on the tower as it was moved forward in order to keep the defenders at a distance 30 nbsp Alexander ordered that a tower and terrace be built it took nine days after which time he ordered that archers and slingers be stationed on top of the tower and force the defenders from the ramparts The mercenaries fought fiercely and would not let the Macedonians through 28 The next day Alexander ordered that from the tower they extend a bridge and would have the same men who stormed Tyre from the bridges built on the mole to storm the Assacenians Meanwhile the archers and slingers would continue to fire as before However again the mercenaries put up fierce resistance While this was going on Alexander ordered that a unit of hypaspists charge across the bridge at the mercenaries However too many of them rushed upon it too quickly and the hastily built bridge 31 collapsed under their weight 28 Seeing the opportunity the Assacenians fired volleys of arrows stones and even fireballs into the ditch on top of the men 31 The pit the hypaspists had fallen into was to be their tomb and a great many of them were slain However Alexander saved those he could by attacking this sortie with a counter attack of his own 32 The next day the Macedonians built another bridge and attacked in a similar manner 31 However during the course of the attack the Macedonians managed to kill the leader of the mercenaries 33 Consequentially the Assacenians decided to negotiate their surrender Alexander s conditions for their surrender were that the Assacenians agree to serve under him and they surrender to him the Massagan king s family as hostages 33 However the Assacenians were unwilling to agree to this as this would mean fighting their fellow tribes and clans 33 They decided to retreat from the encampment they had made near the city after they had surrendered to Alexander 33 On hearing of this Alexander had his troops surround the hill where the Assacenians were camped As the Assacenians attempted to make their escape all hell broke loose and the Macedonians killed a great many of them 33 After this the Macedonians proceeded back to Massaga and took it with ease and killed all the soldiers in the garrison of the city During the course of the siege the Macedonians had lost no more than 25 men however a number of them were wounded 32 Sieges of Bazira and Ora edit During the course of the siege of the fortress of Massaga Alexander was of the view that the taking of Massaga would strike the tribes in the surrounding territory with fear as to his power and ability 32 When it became clear that the stronghold would surrender 32 Alexander decided to dispatch a number of his lieutenants to the surrounding fortress towns to follow up on this victory He ordered Coenus to proceed to Bazira 32 with the expectation that this town would capitulate as a result of Massaga 32 Simultaneously he sent Alcetas Attalus and Demetrius to Ora with the very specific orders to blockade Ora until he could arrive himself and take it 32 Upon arriving at Ora Alcetas was attacked by Ora s inhabitants 34 However Alcetas was easily able to drive this sortie back into the town 34 Bazira which stood on the precipice of a mountain was fortified by nature and art and showed no signs of capitulating 34 After receiving the submission of Massaga and massacring its inhabitants 32 Alexander set out in the direction of Bazira 34 However while proceeding to Bazira he received the news that Abisares the ruler of Hazara was going to cross the Indus 35 with his soldiers to interrupt the siege and assist Ora 34 Alexander changed his plans and set out for Ora with all the forces under his immediate command 34 In addition to this he ordered Coenus to establish a camp and fortify it as an eventual base of operations against the town of Bazira 34 Coenus was then to leave a suitable garrison at that base to observe Bazira and while he joined Alexander and his forces at Ora 34 However when Coenus left Bazira the town s inhabitants sallied out and attacked the encampment he had set up 34 These tribesmen lost 500 of their fellow tribesmen during the course of this attack and were easily driven back 34 A few days later the Macedonians were able to take Ora after which point the inhabitants of Bazira saw their cause as lost abandoned Bazira to the Macedonians and headed off to Aornus 34 It was as a result of these conquests that Alexander did to conquer the inhabitants of the Peshawar valley 34 The Peshawar valley ran perpendicularly to the Swat river which was flowed on a north south axis 34 35 This valley was effectively an opening through which Abisares could pass through 34 It was therefore critical for Alexander to take the whole of the valley so that no reinforcements could be brought up into the valley and file through either the north or south exit of the valley and attack Alexander while he was besieging Aornus 34 A historian of Alexander s who took up the issue and examined the topography of the region had this to say about the strategic situation that Alexander had developed for himself as a result of this campaign to understand the sound strategic reasons which caused Alexander before attacking Aornus first to turn south to the Peshawar valley Once he had consolidated his hold there and made his arrangements for crossing the Indus quite secure he could safely move up to the right bank and attack the mountain retreat of the Swat fugitives from the south He thus avoided the entanglement of the mountainous region that would have attended and hampered direct pursuit from the Swat side The fugitive host could be cut off from retreat to the east of the Indus and from such assistance as Abisares the ruler on that side might offer Finally when attacking Aornus from the south Alexander could command all the advantages that the Indus valley and the fertile plains of the Peshawar valley would offer in respect of supplies and other resources 36 37 Siege of Aornus edit Main article Siege of Aornos nbsp The Aornos is located to the north of Taxila Aornos modern Swat Pakistan was the site of Alexander the Great s last siege the climax to Alexander s career as the greatest besieger in history according to Alexander s biographer Robin Lane Fox 38 The siege took place in the winter of 327 326 BC The site has been identified as being near the Pir Sar mountain in Swat by Aurel Stein in 1926 and has been confirmed by archaeologists It offered the last threat to Alexander s supply line which stretched in a dangerously vulnerable manner over the Hindu Kush back to Balkh The site lies north of Attock in Punjab on a strongly reinforced mountain spur above the narrow gorges in a bend of the upper Indus River It had a flat summit well supplied with natural springs and wide enough to grow crops Therefore it could not be starved to submission Neighbouring tribesmen who surrendered to Alexander offered to lead him to the best point of access Ptolemy and Alexander s secretary Eumenes whose account provided material for all later records of the event reconnoitred and reinforced a neighbouring spur to the west with a stockade and ditch Their signal fire to Alexander also alerted the defenders of Pir Sar and it took two days of skirmishing in the narrow ravines for Alexander to regroup At the vulnerable north side leading to the fort Alexander and his catapults were stopped by a deep ravine To bring the siege engines within reach an earthwork mound was constructed to bridge the ravine with carpentry brush and earth The first day s work brought the siege mound 50 metres 60 yards closer but as the sides of the ravine fell away steeply below progress rapidly slowed Nevertheless at the end of the third day a low hill connected to the nearest tip of Pir Sar was within reach and was taken after Alexander in the vanguard and his first force were repelled by boulders rolled down from above Three days of drumbeats marked the defenders celebration of the initial repulse followed by a surprise retreat Alexander hauled himself up the last rock face on a rope Alexander cleared the summit slaying some fugitives inflated by Arrian to a massacre and erected altars to Athena Nike Athena of Victory traces of which were identified by Stein 39 Siege of Nysa edit When Alexander arrived at the city of Nysa which was between the rivers Cophen and Indus the city s citizens sent out to him their president whose name was Acuphis Ἄkoyfis and thirty of their most distinguished men as envoys When they entered the Alexander s tent and saw him they made a Proskynesis When Alexander told them to rise the Acuphis started his speech In his speech he said that the god Dionysus founded the city and named it Nysa and the land Nysaea Nysaia after his nurse and also he named the mountain near the city Meron Mhrὸn i e thigh because he grew in the thigh of Zeus and Alexander should leave their city independent for the sake of the god Alexander believed them and left the city self governed but asked from the Acuphis to send his own son his daughter s son and some horsemen to accompany him 40 41 42 Then together with his Companion cavalry went to the mountain and they made ivy garlands and crowned themselves with them as they were singing hymns in honor of Dionysus Alexander also offered sacrifices to Dionysus and feasted in company with his companions 41 On the other hand according to Philostratus although Alexander wanted to go up the mountain he decided not to do it because he was afraid that when his men will see the vines which were on the mountain they would feel home sick or they will recover their taste for wine after they had become accustomed to water only so he decided to make his vow and sacrifice to Dionysus at the foot of the mountain 43 Notes edit a b Dodge 1890 p 509 Dodge 1890 p 540 a b c Dodge 1890 p 510 Smith Vincent 1914 The Early History of India England University of Oxford a b Smith 1914 p 37 Dodge 1890 p 539 a b c d e Dodge 1890 p 513 a b c d Dodge 1890 p 511 Smith 1914 p 513 a b Dodge 1890 p 452 a b Dodge 1890 p 512 Smith 1914 p 48 Dodge 1890 p 225 a b c d e f Arrian XXII Fuller 1959 p 126 a b c d e Dodge 1890 p 515 a b Dodge 1890 p 514 a b Delbruck 1990 p 177 a b c d e Arrian XXIV Delbruck 1990 p 231 Arrian XXIII a b c d e f g Dodge 1890 p 517 Delbruck 1990 p 232 a b Dodge 1890 p 518 a b c d e f Dodge 1890 p 519 a b c d e f Dodge 1890 p 520 a b c d e Dodge 1890 p 521 a b c d e f g h i j Fuller 1959 p 245 a b c d Dodge 1890 p 522 a b c d e f g h Dodge 1890 p 523 a b c d Dodge 1890 p 524 a b c d e f g h Fuller 1959 p 246 a b c d e Dodge 1890 p 525 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Fuller 1959 p 247 a b Fuller 1959 p 125 Fuller 1959 p 247 248 Stein 2004 p 123 4 Lane Fox p 343ff Lane Fox 1973 Arrian Arrian Anabasis of Alexander 5 1 a b Arrian Anabasis of Alexander 5 2 Pliny the Elder Natural History 6 23 5 Philostratus Life of Apollonius of Tyana 2 10References editDelbruck Hans 1990 Warfare in Antiquity History of the Art of War Nebraska University of Nebraska Press p 604 ISBN 978 0 8032 9199 7 Fuller J F C 1958 The Generalship of Alexander The Great London Eyre amp Spottiswoode Ltd Dodge Theodore 1890 Alexander Pennsylvania Stackpole Books p 681 ISBN 978 1 85367 179 1 Smith Vincent 1914 The Early History of India England University of Oxford Arrian Annabasis Alexandri Retrieved 20 November 2011 Lane Fox Robin Alexander the Great Penguin 1973 ISBN 978 0 14 008878 6 1973 Arrian Anabasis IV chapters 28 1 30 4 in French Stein Sir Aurel 1929 On Alexander s Track to the Indus Bhavan Books amp Prints Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cophen campaign amp oldid 1218626462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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