Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-n9wrp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-21T11:53:03.089Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Arms, Tactics and Strategy in the Persian War

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Extract

At all times arms, tactics and strategy must be in one sense or another interdependent. But in modern warfare I imagine it would be generally agreed that strategy was less mutable and more important than tactics or armament. Even here there are obvious and notable exceptions to the general rule. In the Austro-Prussian War, it was the superiority of the Prussian breech-loading needle-gun to the Austrian muzzle-loader which won the battle of Königgratz, and so justified the bold strategy of Moltke. In the late war, the heavy German and Austrian howitzers broke down with unexpected rapidity the resistance of the elaborate Belgian fortresses, and thus compelled the retreat from Mons; again, the use of tanks, both heavy and light, on a large scale was a decisive factor in more than one of the great struggles that led up to the final defeat of the Germans. Nevertheless in modern warfare such differences are in the main temporary and accidental; if, for instance, the Germans began the war with superior heavy artillery, before its close they were surpassed by the Allies; if they secured an initial advantage by the use of poison gas, here too the Allies in the end showed themselves superior to the inventors of this deadly instrument of war. The advantage gained by inventors is mainly that of surprise, and is therefore evanescent, not permanent. In the main the fleets and armies on either side are equipped in the same way, and (if we leave out of account the morale, numbers and resources of the nations engaged) victories are gained and wars decided most of all by strategy, the massing of troops at the right time and place, and secondarily by tactics, the best use of them in actual battle.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1923

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 History of the Art of War, p. 294.

2 Cf. Dio Cass., xli. 15. Plutarch, , Crass., 24 f.Google Scholar

3 Oman, loc. cit.

4 vii. 184–6.

5 vii. 61–99.

6 Cf. my commentary on Herodotus, vol. ii. pp. 363–8.

7 Geschichte der Kriegskunst, I.2 p. 48.

8 Hdt., vii. 81, and my commentary, vol. ii. p. 367.

9 Thuc., v. 66.

10 Hdt., vii. 115.

11 Liv., xxxix. 27.

12 Hdt., vii. 36.

13 Ibid., vii. 22 f., 37.

14 Ibid., vii. 25.

15 Ibid., vii. 183; ix. 3.

16 Ibid., vii. 183.

17 Ibid., vii. 181.

18 Hdt., ix. 31, 68.

19 Ibid., ix. 28, 29.

20 Ibid., vii. 229; viii. 25.

21 Ibid., ix. 22, 60.

22 Thuc., iii. 97 f.

23 Ibid., iv. 33 f.

24 Ibid., ii. 79.

25 Ibid., v. 10.

26 Ibid., vii. 6.

27 Ibid., v. 71.

28 The story that the Spartans fought at Dipaea in a single unsupported line (Isocr., Archid., § 99) may be confidently regarded as a fiction of rhetoric.

29 Thuc., iv. 94.

30 Xen., Hell., ii. 4, 34.

31 Thuc., vi. 67.

32 Ibid., v. 68.

33 Xen., Hell., iii. 2, 16.

34 Ibid., vi. 4, 12.

35 Thuc., vi. 67.

36 Xen., Hell., iv. 2, 13 and 18.

37 Ibid., iv. 2, 18.

38 The Thebans were twenty-five deep at Delium in 424 B.C. (Thuc., iv. 94).

39 Xen., Hell., vi. 4, 12.

40 Ibid., ii. 4, 11.

41 Hdt., vii. 225; ix. 62. Thuc., iv. 96.

42 Polyb., ii. 69.

43 Thuc., iv. 33 f.

44 Polyb., xviii. 14.

45 Cf. Macan, Hdt., vii.–ix., vol. ii. pp. 167–75.

46 Hdt., vii. 72–9, 91, 2.

47 Ibid., vii. 74.

48 Ibid., vii. 90, 93–5.

49 Ibid., vii. 63.

50 Ibid., vii. 89.

51 Ibid., vii. 61, 2.

52 Ibid., viii. 113; ix. 22.

53 Hdt., v. 49 and 97.

54 Cf. Munro, in J.H.S., xix. 188 f.Google Scholar

55 Cf. J.H.S., xxxix. 53.

56 Hdt., vi. 109; cf. 100, 1.

57 Cf. Suidas, χωρὶς ἱππεῖς.

58 Cf. c. Q., xiii. 42.

59 Hdt., vi. 111.

60 Hdt., vi. 113.

61 Ibid., v. 63.

62 Thuc., i. 111.

63 Ibid., vii. 4, 6, 13.

64 Xen., Anab., iii. 3 and 4.

65 Gesch. der Kriegskunst, I2. p. 144.

66 Xen., Anab., vi. 5, 30; cf. § 9.

67 Loc. cit., § 28.

68 Loc. cit., § 14 f.

69 Xen., Hell., iii. 4, 15.

70 Delbrück, op. cit., p. 73.

71 Cf. Munro, in J.H.S., xxiv. 144, 152Google Scholar, and my commentary on Herodotus, ii. pp. 298 f., 364, 366.

72 Hdt., ix. 6 f.

73 Thuc., ii. 57; cf. i. 141.

74 Hdt., ix. 28.

75 Ibid., ix. 20 f.

76 Hdt., ix. 41.

77 E.g. the men of Elis and Mantinea Hdt., ix. 77).

78 Hdt., ix. 36–8.

79 Grundy, , Great Persian War, p. 473.Google ScholarWoodhouse, , in J.H.S., xviii. 41, 45.Google Scholar

80 Hdt., ix. 40, 49.

81 Macan, Hdt., vii.–ix., vol. ii. p. 379.

82 Hdt., ix. 39.

83 Ibid., ix. 49.

84 Hdt., ix. 59.

85 Cf. the tactics of Richard Coeur de Lion at the battle of Arsouf, A.D. 1191 (Oman, op. cit., 309 f.).

86 Hdt., ix. 61–3.

87 Thuc., vii. 34, 36.

88 Polyb., i. 22.

89 Thuc., i. 49.

90 Ibid., ii. 83, 84.

91 Ibid., ii. 90.

92 Ibid., vii. 36–41, 52, 70.

93 Ibid., vii. 60, 62, 67.

94 Cf. Grundy, , Thucydides, p. 308.Google Scholar

95 Forty on each ship (Hdt., vi. 15), while ten was the normal number on Athenian ships in the Peloponnesian War. Cf. Thuc., ii. 23; iii. 94, 95; iv. 76 compared with iv. 101.

96 Cf. Wilcken, in Hermes, xli. 103 fGoogle Scholar.; Tarn, in J.H.S., xxviii. 216Google Scholar; and for a like precaution, Xen., Hell., i. 6, 29–31.

97 Hdt., viii. 10 and 60.

98 Thuc., i. 49 et sup.

99 Thuc., ii. 83.

100 Hdt., viii. 17.

101 Ibid., vii. 89.

102 Ibid., vii. 184. Even if we doubt the statement as it stands, we can hardly reduce the total number of marines below thirty. Cf. Macan, Hdt., vii.–ix., vol. ii. p. 154.

103 Diod., xi. 19, 3.

104 Aeseh., Pers., 410. Hdt., viii. 87, 90.

105 Hdt., viii. 84, 92.

106 Aesch., Pers., 415. Hdt., viii. 87–90.

107 Hdt., viii. 92. Simon, fr. 13, ap. Plut, de Malign., 36.

108 Hdt., viii. 85.

109 Ibid., viii. 90.

110 Ibid., ix. 98.

111 Hdt., viii. 10 and 60.

112 Gesch. der Kriegskunst, I2. 75–6.

113 Hdt., viii. 60. Thuc., i. 74.

114 Hdt., vii. 184; cf. 61 f.

115 Ktesias, 26.

116 Plutarch, Them., 14: cf. Munro, in J.H.S., xxiv. 147.Google Scholar

117 As against Beloch, Klio, viii. 485. Obst., Der Feldzug des Xerxes, p. 142.

118 Aesch., Pers., 355 f. Hdt., viii. 75.

119 Custance, , War at Sea, pp. 26, 27.Google Scholar

120 Hdt., vii. 150–2.