Sassanid campaign of Severus Alexander explained

Conflict:Sassanid campaign of Severus Alexander
Place:Armenia, Media, Mesopotamia and Osroene
Partof:Roman–Persian Wars
Result:
  • Uncertain, however Severus claimed victory
Combatant1:Roman Empire
Combatant2:Sasanian Empire
Commander1:Severus Alexander
Commander2:Ardashir I
Date:From 232
Strength1:About 150,000
Strength2:About 150,000
Casualties1:Numerous, equal to the Persian ones
Casualties2:Numerous, equal to the Roman ones

The Sassanid campaign of Alexander Severus was an episode of the Roman–Sasanian Wars (224-363) that saw the Roman Empire ruled by Emperor Alexander Severus (222-235) confront the dominance of the Sasanids, led by Ardashir I (224-241): the war was fought between 230 and 232, originating from an attempted Sasanian expansion into the eastern Roman provinces, and resolved with a return to the status quo ante.

Historical context

Between 224 and 226/227, an important episode changed the fate of relations between the Roman and Persian Empires: in the East, the last Parthian emperor, Artabanus IV, was overthrown after being defeated in "three battles," and the insurgent, Ardashir I, founded the Sasanian dynasty, destined to be the eastern adversary of the Romans until the 7th century. Specifically, between about 229 and 232, Sasanids and Romans clashed for the first time.

On the Roman front, however, the new Severan dynasty that ruled the Roman Empire between the end of the 2nd and the first decades of the 3rd century (from 193 to 235, with a brief interruption during the reign of Macrinus between 217 and 218), and whose progenitor had been Septimius Severus, was now in the hands of a young emperor, Alexander Severus, who a few years later would be killed, proving to be the last descendant. The new dynasty had been born on the ashes of a long period of civil wars, where three other contenders besides Septimius Severus (Didius Julianus, Pescennius Niger, and Clodius Albinus) had faced each other.

Casus belli

The casus belli was the claim by the Sasanids, who considered themselves descendants of the Persians, to possession of the entire Achaemenid Empire, including the territories, now Roman, of Asia Minor and the Near East, as far as the Aegean Sea.According to Herodian's account, Alexander proposed to Ardashir that the status quo be maintained, reminding him of Roman victories over the Persians (from Augustus, to Trajan, Lucius Verus, and on to Septimius Severus), but it had no effect on the Sasanian ruler, who soon afterwards took to the battlefield and in 230, penetrated the Roman province of Mesopotamia trying, unsuccessfully, to conquer Nisibis and making several raids into Syria and Cappadocia.[1]

Forces in the field

Sasanids

It is not known precisely how many and what armies were fielded by the Sasanids. Cassius Dio recounts that it was certainly a large army, ready to terrorize not only the Roman province of Mesopotamia, but also that of Syria, west of the Euphrates. Herodian adds that it was equal to the Roman one, thus around 150,000 armed men or perhaps more. The Historia Augusta speaks of the employment in battle of 700 war elephants, 1,800 scythed chariots, and 120,000 cataphracts.

What we know of this army is that it was not permanent like the Roman army, with professional soldiers paid regularly for their work. There was only an eventual division of the final spoils. Rather, there was a system similar to the feudal one, where for each campaign it was necessary to assemble an army from time to time, composed of nobles at the head of their "clans," subjected then under the command of a prince of the royal house. There were therefore no officers expert in weapons who served continuously, nor was there a lasting system of recruitment, as there were no permanent military units, although there were many nobles at the disposal of the Sasanian army. For these reasons, they often hired mercenary armies. They mainly used the bow and the horse in warfare, unlike the Romans who favored infantry, so much so that the Sasanians are said to have grown up from childhood, riding and shooting with arrows, constantly living for war and hunting.

It should be added, however, that unlike the Arsacid Parthians, they tried to keep their contingents under arms for more years during major military campaigns, speeding up the recruitment of their armies, as well as better assimilating the siege techniques of their Roman opponents, which they never really learned from their predecessors.

Romans

It is known that for the Romans, the forces put in charge were the legions and auxiliary troops stationed along the eastern limes, which unfortunately, according to Cassius Dio, were not in an acceptable state of preparedness, discipline, and morale to cope with this new eastern danger, so much so that they thoughtlessly put to death their own governor of the province of Mesopotamia, Flavius Heracleo. Below is a list of the legions and their respective fortresses:

No. of legionary fortresses of the eastern limesLegionary unitAncient locationModern locationRoman province

1

Legio XV ApollinarisSatalaSadaghCappadocia

2

Legio XII FulminataMeliteneMeliteneCappadocia

3

Legio III ParthicaNisibisNusaybinMesopotamia

4

Legio I ParthicaSingaraSinjarMesopotamia and Osrhoene

5

Legio IV ScythicaZeugmaBelkisSyria Coele

6

Legio XVI Flavia FirmaSuraSuraSyria Coele

7

vexill. Legio II ParthicaApameaSyria Coele

8

Legio III GallicaDanabaMehinSyria Phoenicia

9

Legio X FretensisAelia CapitolinaJerusalemSyria Palaestina

10

Legio VI FerrataCaparcotnaKfar OtnaySyria Palaestina

11

Legio III CyrenaicaBostraBosraArabia Petraea
These legions, already present on the eastern front, were joined by others from the Danube and other western regions such as:

as well as some vexillationes from other fronts such as:

The total forces fielded by the Roman Empire along the entire eastern limes may have been around 150,000 Roman soldiers involved or perhaps more (including 30,000 phalangarii, from six legions),[2] half of whom were legionaries, the remainder auxiliaries.

Stages of the war

There are two contrasting accounts of Alexander Severus' Sasanian campaign: one by Herodian, who has no qualms about showing the Roman emperor's mistakes in the conduct of the war and describes a negative situation for the Romans, only to later recount that the Sasanians accepted the status quo ante bellum; on the other hand, in the Historia Augusta, Aurelius Victor's Caesares, Eutropius' Breviary of Roman History and St. Jerome's Chronicon there are accounts of Alexander's glorious victory over his enemies.[3]

231

Emperor Alexander Severus then organized a new military expedition against the Sasanids, enlisting a new legion in Italy, Legio IIII Italica. Herodian reports the speech Alexander made in front of the deployed troops and tells how the soldiers were encouraged by the emperor's words:After distributing money to the troops, he went to the Senate to make a similar speech and make his intentions public. On the day of his departure for the eastern front (perhaps in the spring of the same year), after attending the ritual sacrifices, Alexander left Rome (231), to reach Antioch, his headquarters.

After crossing Illyricum, where he gathered more troops, he reached Antioch toward the end of the year (231), where he had troops trained in the environmental conditions of the eastern provinces. He then made a final attempt at mediation, offering peace and friendship to Ardashir, which, however, he refused. The latter, in fact, not only sent back the Roman ambassadors empty-handed, but in turn sent a delegation of four hundred mounted archers, looking imposing and richly dressed in gold harness, to intimidate the Romans and invite Alexander to abandon all territories as far as the Bosporus. This provocation irritated Alexander to the point that he had them arrested, later sending them to cultivate lands in Phrygia, but without putting them to death.

232

As Alexander Severus was preparing to cross the Tigris and Euphrates rivers and lead his army into Sasanian territory, several mutinies occurred among his troops, especially among soldiers from Egypt and those from Syria, where there was an attempt to proclaim a new emperor (a certain Taurinius) and the subsequent disbandment of an entire legion (the II Traiana Fortis), which was reformed shortly afterwards. These defections were quickly discovered and suppressed, although this led the Roman emperor to keep with him only those troops particularly loyal to him.

On the advice of his generals, Alexander divided the army into three parts, keeping for himself the strongest one destined for the center of the attacking front (which was probably to pass through Singara, as reads an inscription of the same year) and which is supposed to have been an advanced "headquarters" of the expedition, while the other two were to march on its sides: one farther north, through the "client" kingdom of Armenia, to Media; another farther south, which, passing through Palmyra, would lead to Dura Europos, then Circesium on the Euphrates, to where this river almost "touches" the course of the nearby Tigris, near the two Persian capitals of Ctesiphon and Seleucia. The idea was to attack the Sasanids from various directions, hoping to find the enemy unprepared for this particular strategy, and believing that forcing the Sasanian army to split up would result in a better tactical outcome in battle for the Roman armies:

Herodian relates that the cause of Alexander's indecision was his fear of putting his own life on the line or the "feminine fears" of his mother Julia Mamaea, who had followed him to the East. News of the defeat reached the emperor as he had fallen ill, causing him to despair. The soldiers themselves, undermined by illnesses caused by the unhealthy environment and the scarcity of supplies, accused the emperor of having caused the destruction of the army by his inability to implement the established plans. Alexander then ordered the two surviving groups of troops to return to winter in Antioch, ready to reschedule a new campaign for the following year. Of the two returning armies, Alexander's army lost many soldiers en route to disease due to the torrid climate; the army from the north was virtually decimated by the frigid temperatures in the mountains of Armenia. Herodian believes that of the initial army, perhaps less than half returned because of these events, and he blamed the emperor's inexperience.

232-233 (Winter)

Returning to Antioch, Alexander together with his two armies was able to recover quickly with them, thanks to the fresh air and good water of the city, after he had suffered from the drought in Mesopotamia. The emperor tried to console his soldiers for their suffering with a new distribution of money, in the belief that this was the only way he could regain their discipline and their desire for revenge. Herodian reports that Ardashir, who had disbanded his army and sent every soldier back to his country (as was customary among the Sasanids), though having beaten the Roman army because of his troops' better resistance to the torrid climate of those regions, was not satisfied. The Sasanian armies were also exhausted by the numerous skirmishes in Media and the battle in Parthia, where they had suffered heavy casualties of killed and wounded. The Romans had not, therefore, been resoundingly defeated; on the contrary, they had caused much damage to the enemy and had lost in the direct confrontation only because they were clearly outnumbered, while the Historia Augusta even speaks of a Roman victory and a well-deserved triumph for Alexander. Finally, Herodian summarizes Alexander and Ardashir's military campaign as follows:It should be added that, while Alexander was assembling a new army and preparing to march against the Persians for the spring of 233 (considering that he was unlikely to be able to raise such a large army in the following years, should he decide to forgo a new military campaign against the Sasanians), the sudden news of new invasions by the northern barbarians (Alemanni) along the Rhine and Danubian fronts forced him to permanently suspend preparations for a new campaign against Ardashir.

Consequences

See also: Barracks emperor and Mesopotamian campaigns of Ardashir I. The clashes between the Romans and Sasanids, however, had also greatly weakened Ardashir's army, and he ordered its disbandment for the winter break between 232 and 233. The news reached Alexander, whose health had improved in Antioch, after he had attempted to regain the favor of his men with a donation and while he was preparing the continuation of the campaign. Although he was convinced that the danger was over, Alexander decided to end hostilities in the East partly because of the arrival of news that the Alemanni had broken through the limes of Rhine and Danube and were preparing to plunder fields and cities in full force. The death of the young emperor at the hands of one of his generals, Maximinus Thrax (in 235), and the subsequent military anarchy in which the Roman Empire poured for about fifty years, resulted in a few advantages in favor of the fledgling Sasanian Empire, which did not miss the opportunity for surprising revenge, even going so far as to occupy Antioch itself in 252 and 260.

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. ;
  2. The forces estimated at 150,000 soldiers on the Roman side, means considering that a large part of these remained to defend the imperial borders (at least half, amounting to 75,000 soldiers), while the remainder (the other half), may have constituted the three "invasion" armies: a first one directed into Media-Armenia (20,000 soldiers), a second one along the Euphrates (another 20,000 soldiers) and the central one of Alexander Severus (approx. 35,000 more).
  3. ; ; ;