Certain military
formations are pretty well-known. The Roman three line approach, the
bristling spear points of a Greek phalanx and so on. But what
happened when daring chaps shunned military practice and adapted their
formation to face a specific enemy? Often, they got completely
buggered.
Cannae is one of the
most famous battles in the world, and is still studied today, such
was the absolute thrashing Hannibal gave a massive Roman army.
However, a significant benefit he enjoyed was that Varro, his
opposite number, was a bit over-confident due to numerical advantage.
Romans normally adopted a so-called checkerboard formation between
maniples (literally ‘handfuls’, in practice two centuries paired
up) which gave great flexibility.
Varro decided to make
best use of his substantial manpower by getting rid of the gaps and
cramming the soldiers more closely together. We don’t know how
Cannae would’ve gone if he hadn’t done this, and whilst keeping
the checkerboard formation might not have saved the day it might’ve
made the defeat less crushing. Hannibal surrounded the Roman army (an
impressive feat, given he had fewer men) and slaughtered the vast
majority.
The Battle of Magnesia
was fought a couple of decades later, in 190BC. The Romans, and their
allies from Pergamum, faced off against Antiochus III, master of the
Seleucid Empire.
Antiochus had a large
phalanx, as you might expect, but broke it up with lots of little
intervals. Into each of these intervals he put a couple of war
elephants (worth nothing here that the Romans had first encountered
war elephants long ago when they faced Pyrrhus).
Antiochus was about to
discover that there was a very good reason why the Macedonians hadn’t
shoved elephants in the middle of tightly clustered and not very
manoeuvrable foot soldiers.
The battle did not go
well for the Seleucids, and (as often happened, such as the Battle of
Beneventum which saw Pyrrhus suffer final defeat by the Romans) the
elephants panicked. Naturally, this made an orderly withdrawal for
the phalanx all but impossible. Fighting Romans was never easy at
this period in history, and trying to do so when a large number of
berserk elephants are trampling all over you is even harder.
It’s the 600th
anniversary of Agincourt this year. Henry V deserves great credit for
the fantastic triumph, but it’s also worth noting the very helpful
role the French nobility played. As well as enjoying a substantial
numerical advantage over the English, Henry V had dug the army in
defensively, so the initiative lay entirely with the French.
The English had several
problems, not least of which was lack of supplies and being a bit
diseased. The French had been pursuing Henry for a while, and finally
catching him saw their morale very high. Unfortunately, they assumed
victory was a foregone conclusion.
The longbows at
Agincourt did great work, but it’s worth knowing that the French
actually had thousands of crossbowmen at their disposal. But they
didn’t let them fire. The crossbowmen and French archers were
deployed behind the men-at-arms, and appear not to have done very
much. Instead, the French charged (on horse and on foot) the English
lines. Fierce hand-to-hand combat was had, but the English longbows
and Henry’s perfect choice of battlefield (narrow ground, with mud
so thick a man in armour would struggle to get to his feet if he
fell) gave the victory to the outnumbered English.
The three battles have
a few things in common. The side that changed formation had a
substantial numerical advantage (NB at Magnesia ancient sources
reckon Antiochus had 40,000 more men, but modern historians reckon it
was closer to 50,000 each). The side that changed formation took the
offensive (most especially at Agincourt), and lost.
There are several
reasons why sticking in formation is almost always the best thing to
do. Not only is it proven to work, the men know what they’re doing.
If you’re in a phalanx and an elephant ten feet away suddenly goes
berserk and you’ve never been in that situation before, it’s not
ideal when several thousand Romans are trying to kill you at the same
time.
Clever moves can be
made with formations (also at Cannae, Hannibal deliberately deployed
his centre in a weak, convex formation to deliberately tempt the
Romans into attacking. This then [as planned] became concave and
proved critical to surrounding the Romans). But unless you’re a
military genius, it may well ruin your prospects.
Thaddeus
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