AUSTERLITZ
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THYMBRA 547BC - RISE OF PERSIA
BACKGROUND :
Western Asia mid 6th century BC.On the ashes of the assyrian empire of mesopotamia four powers dominate west asia and the middle east.In asia minor the Lydian kingdom,had been a small-time power but the discovery of gold and silver mines had changed everything. Lydia had become the richest of all Middle Eastern kingdoms due to its mines,populous coastal cities and control over the trade routes.The wealth of king Croesus of lydia is legendary.(Croesus is credited with issuing first standardized gold coins).Egypt is a pale shadow of its former glory,but a native pharaoh still reigns there.Mesopotamia is contested between the Neo-babylonians and the Median empire.
The region of Persis,till now a vassal of the medians has rebelled under its young prince Cyrus.Cyrus is the grandson of the median king Astyages.Persians and Medes were both considered aryan people,and ethnically similar.Herodotus describes -
''The Persian nation is made up of many tribes. Those which Cyrus assembled and persuaded to revolt from the Medes,were the principal ones on which all the others are dependent. These are the Parsagadae, the Maraphians, and the Maspians, of whom the Parsagadae are the noblest. The Achaemenids, from which spring all the Persian kings, is one of their clans. The rest of the Persian tribes are the following: the Panthilaeans, the Derusians, the Germanians, who are engaged in husbandry, the Daans, the Mardians, the Dropicans, and the Sagartians, who are nomads.''
Between 555 and 551 b.c,Cyrus outnumbered fought a series of battles against the generals of King Astyages and was defeated as often as he was victorious. In the climactic battle the Persians and the Medes fought all day, while the Persian women stood on one of the nearby heights to call out in support of their men. The battle was long and hard but Cyrus eventually prevailed, and this time he took King Astyages prisoner. He treated him well and kept him as an honored prisoner and advisor.By about 550 b.c., Cyrus had become king of the Medes as well as of the Persians.There is mutual respect between the former enemies,and they also share ethnic,linguistic and matrimonial bonds.Cyrus treats his new subjects same as the persians,appointing them to high positions and begins the process of their fusion into one entity.
Cyrus doesn't oblige.Breaking the norms of ancient world warfare,Cyrus waited a few days so Croesus had a head start, then quietlyfollowed him across the plains and valleys of central Turkey.So quietly did they move, and so well did they use their scouts, that the Persians followed Croesus all the way to Sardis before he knew they were upon his heels. Just a few days after arriving at his capital city, Croesus found himself besieged.Croesus knew that all his allies and mercenaries would return in the spring, but he was not certain he could hold out that long.A day after Cyrus’s arrival, Croesus forms up for battle and goes out to meet cyrus.Despite not having available all his mercenaries,even so he manages to gather a force roughly twice the size of that of cyrus .A victory would crush cyrus in unknown territory ,a defeat would mean disaster as the battlefield is only a few miles from croesus's capital sardis and there is nowhere left to regroup or retreat.The 2 armies collide on the battlefield of thymbra.
THE LYDIAN ARMY :
Cyrus's vast wealth allowed him to raise a very powerful army despite his limited indigineous manpower pool.The infantry was mainly professional mercenaries -greek and egyptian heavy spearmen supported by middle eastern levy infantry and archers.Notably he had sent his best heavy infantry the greeks away for the winter at Thymbra and they were possibly not present in any large numbers.The main strength of the Lydian army however lay in its famed heavy cavalry.Above shows Lydian cavalrymen with scale armour,axes and lances and shields for protection.
The most reliable of Croesus's infantry would have been his Egyptian Speramen who fought in a phalanx like formation.Their long shields and spears presenting a solid front with the egyptian curved Khopesh as secondary weapon for close combat.The right picture also shows an unarmoured levy infantryman which would have constituted the majority of the combatatants.
To the left is a typical middle eastern archer.The archer was the dominant infantry soldier type ever since the Assyrian empire in the middle east.To the right is a heavy infantryman with circular breastplate,spear and wooden shield.The babylonians and egyptians sent contingents to support croesus.
Croesus's army by modern estimates was 105,00 men.He outnumbered Cyrus 2 to 1.
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