155 Roman Battle Tactics 109 BC - AD 313 Osprey Elite
155 Roman Battle Tactics 109 BC - AD 313 Osprey Elite
INTRODUCTION 3
• The size and organization of the legion - campaign attrition
• From maniple to cohort: the cohort's functional identity -
command structure
• Basic battle formations
• Intervals in the battle line: control and cohesion - the
ROSS COWAN was formerly interval as a channel for attack and a defensive trap -
a research student at the the size of intervals
University of Glasgow where
he was recently awarded
a PhD for a thesis on the
LEGIONARY BATTLE LINES AND MANOEUVRES 13
Roman Army entitled 'Aspects • Simplex acies: Forum Gallorum, 43 BC - Ruspina, 46 BC -
of the Severan Field Army
Carrhae, 53 BC: disastrous result of the abandonment of
AD 193-238'. The major
themes of the thesis are the
the simplex acies
organization of the Praetorian • Duplex acies: Ilerda, 49 BC - Maximinus' agmen quadratum,
Guard and Legio II Parthica, AD 238 - Arrian's array against the Alans, AD 135
their recruitment, numbers • Triplex and quadruplex acies: Ilerda, 49 BC - the {muthul},
and equipment. Ross also
109 BC - Chaeronea, 86 BC - Pistoria, 62 BC - Caesar in
completed his first degree
at Glasgow. In 1999 he was
Gaul, 58 BC - Pharsalus, 48 BC: the devotio - Uzzita, 46 BC -
elected a Fellow of the Society the Rhyndacus, 85 BC: use of field entrenchments -
of the Antiquaries of Scotland. Thapsus, 46 BC: mixed triplex and quadruplex acies -
Second Philippi, 42 BC
• Detached forces and surprise attacks: Tigranocerta, 69 BC -
Aquae Sextiae, 102 BC: the morale value of noise -
Lauron, 76 BC - Segovia, 75 BC: the refused centre
• Downhill and uphill charges: Mts Armanus & Gindarus,
39 & 38 BC - Ilerda and Dyrrachium, 49 and 48 BC -
First Philippi, 42 BC - Mons Graupius, 84 AD
PLATE COMMENTARIES 59
INDEX 64
Elite • 155
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2
ROMAN BATTLE TACTICS
109BC-AD313
INTRODUCTION
he study of Roman battle tactics has been likened to crossing a
minefield. Doubt has been cast over previous attempts to
reconstruct the 'battle mechanics' of the cohortal legion - the
principal Roman unit of our period - because its size and organization,
command structure and methods of deployment are imperfectly
understood (Speidel 1992, 6; Wheeler 1998, 649). This book will focus
Legionaries of the 1st century AD
in battle, from a column base on the tactics of the legion, because that is the formation for which we
in the legionary headquarters possess the most evidence, especially the legions of the Late Republic.
building at Mainz, Germany. Note The tactics of the auxiliary infantry cohorts and cavalry alae of the
the typical sword-fighting stance Empire will be considered where appropriate.
of the leading legionary, while his
comrade - still holding a pilum -
The time span of this book has been chosen to reflect the period in
lifts his shield to block a blow or which the cohortal legion dominated the Roman battlefield. In 109 BC
intercept a missile. (Photo the last vestiges of the manipular legion can be discerned in the battle
Jasper Oorthuys) fought between Metellus and Jugurtha by the River Muthul; and AD 313
saw what was perhaps last great encounter of legion against
legion (or at least of legionary 'vexillations' - detachments
of one or two cohorts) near Adrianople. Soon after
this date the legion was greatly reduced in size
and status by the army reforms of the emperor
Constantine. There are few detailed literary
accounts of the legions of the late 3rd and early
4th centuries AD in action; but the evidence
of inscriptions indicates the continuity of
traditional centurial and cohortal organization,
and we can assume that many of the tactics and
manoeuvres carried out by the legions of Julius
Caesar (our principal source for such matters)
were still practiced.
During the 4th century AD the formation
that had conquered the Roman Empire, and
had successfully defended it for centuries,
was whittled down to a unit of c.400 men. The
reasons for this decline are outlined in my
Imperial Roman Legionary, AD 161-284 (Osprey
Warrior series 72). Yet even in this reduced form
the legion lived on until the 7th century AD.
When the Muslims invaded Syria and Egypt
in the 630s and 640s, the Roman armies that
met them at Yarmuk, Heliopolis and Babylon
(Cairo) were composed, in part, of legions or
units descended from them. 3
The size and organization of the legion
The size of legions varied considerably. The preferred number of soldiers
in the legion of the Late Republic (the period c. 133-31 BC) was 5,000 to
6,000, the latter being an optimum figure and probably seldom realized
(Serv. Aen. 7.247). During the course of an extended war the effective
fighting strength of a legion would fall dramatically. In 54 BC Julius Caesar
marched with two legions to relieve the camp of Quintus Cicero, which
was besieged by the Nervii, with two legions that totalled 7,000 men
(Caes. BG 5.49). At the battle of Pharsalus in 48 BC Caesar's legions were
even more reduced: having fought through the Ilerda and Dyrrhachium
campaigns, the average strength of a legion was 2,750 men. The legions
of the opposing Pompeian army were each about 4,000 strong (Caes.
BC 3.88-89). Following Pharsalus, Caesar pursued the fugitive Pompey
to Egypt with two legions, but their combined strength amounted to only
3,200 men (Caes. BC 3.106). One of the legions was the Sixth, recruited
by Caesar in 52 BC; it suffered yet more casualties in Egypt, and arrived at
the battlefield of Zela in Pontus (47 BC) with less than a thousand men
(Anon. BAlex. 69). If legio VI had been raised with a strength of c.5,000, it
had lost more than 80 per cent of its effectives in six years of campaigning.
The legions that Mark Antony took to Parthia in 36 BC, including a
replenished Sixth (which by then bore the title Ferrata- 'Ironclad'), had
A legionary of the 1st century an average strength of 3,750 each (Plut. Ant 37.3) In that year, however,
BC, from the so-called Altar of the legions of Lepidus were only 'half full', so with c.2,500 to 3,000 men
Domitius Ahenobarbus. Note the
per legion, and potentially even fewer if they were only half the strength
tall bronze helmet of so-called
Montefortino type, the mail shirt,
of the fuller legions of the period, i.e. those approaching 4,000 effectives
and the oval scutum shield with (Veil. Pat. 2.80.1). The two legions with which Lucullus won his great;
a central boss and reinforcing victory at Tigranocerta (69 BC) were each a little over 4,000 strong -
ridge. (Steven D.P.Richardson) powerful units by the standards of the day (Plut. Luc. 27.2).
The Imperial legion had a paper strength of about 5,000 soldiers, but
again, actual numbers were often far below this. During the early stages
of the Illryian Revolt (AD 6-9) the Twentieth Legion was at only half
strength when it won a striking victory against 20,000 of the enemy (Vell.
Pat. 2.112.2).
What we can say with certainty of the legions of both periods is that;
they were divided into ten cohorts, and that each cohort was made up of
six centuries divided between three maniples (cf Aul. Gell. NA 16.4.6).1
In the Early Imperial legion the century numbered 80 men, divided
into ten contubernia (Hyg. De. Mut. Castr. 1). The eight soldiers of a
contubernium formed a mess and tent group, and it has been suggested
that they would form a file in the battle line, but there is no ancient
evidence to confirm this.
Hastati
Principes
Triarii
5
Funerary memorial raised by
his brother to Marcus Caelius,
53-year-old senior centurion of
the Eighteenth Legion, killed
in the battle of the Teutoburg
Forest (AD 9). Note his numerous
military decorations, especially
the civic crown of oak leaves,
awarded for saving the life
of a fellow-soldier in battle.
Decorations were habitually
worn in combat; we read that a
courageous centurion who was
killed while restoring a buckling
Caesarian battle line at Munda
(45 BC) went to his death in full
insignia, and was stripped by the
Pompeian legionaries after he
fell. During the same campaign
the aristocratic officers
Pompeius Niger and Antistius
Turpio advanced from their
respective battle lines to fight
a single combat 'with their
shields and battle decorations
shining' (Anon. BHisp, 23, 25).
(RHC Archive)
When the battle formation of the army was completed, the hastati
were the first to engage. If they failed to repulse the enemy, they
slowly retired through the intervals between the maniples of the
principes who then took up the fight, the hastati following in their
rear. The triarii, meantime, were resting on one knee under their
standards, their shields over their shoulders and their spears
planted on the ground with the points upwards, giving them
the appearance of a bristling palisade. If the principes were also
unsuccessful, they slowly retired to the triarii, which has given rise
to the proverbial saying, when people are in great difficulty, that
'matters have come down to the triarii'. When the triarii had
admitted the hastati and principes through the intervals separating
their maniples, they rose from their kneeling posture and,
instantly closing their maniples up, they blocked all passage
through them, and in one compact mass fell on the enemy as
the last hope of the army. The enemy who had followed up the
others, as though they had defeated them, saw with dread a new
and larger army rising apparently out of the earth (Livy 8.8.9-13) 11
Scene from Trajan's Column, The replacement of whole or segments of battle lines made up of
which was decorated with a cohorts is reported by Caesar, whose legions regularly formed up in
spiral frieze charting the course
three lines - a 4-3-3 formation of cohorts. It seems unlikely that cohorts
of the Dacian Wars, AD 101-102
and 105-106. Here legionary were separated by intervals the same size as the frontage of a cohort
reserves are led into action Line replacement of the type that occurred at Pharsalus - where
by standard-bearers (top right), Caesar's third line of cohorts moved to the front and relieved the first
while a wounded legionary and and second lines (Caes. BC 3.94) - seems more feasible if the centuries
auxiliary are treated by medical
were separated by intervals equalling their frontage (or a little bigger),
orderlies (bottom centre right).
(RHC Archive) so that they could move back or forward in the manner described by
Livy for maniples. If cohorts did deploy with century-sized gaps between
the centuries (and perhaps therefore only the same between adjacent
cohorts), then the appearance of a cohortal legion (see Plates D/E)
would not have been very different from that of a manipular legion.
Livy's description of the tactics of the manipular legions ends with
the maniples closing up into a single, unbroken line. The legions
may have done this at the final stage of the battle of Zama (202 BC),
delivering one last massed charge of irresistible weight (Livy
30.34.11-13). Cohorts, and the centuries that made them up, could
also form unbroken lines, for example in Arrian's closed defensive
12 formation against the Alani. At Ilerda (49 BC) three cohorts of the
Ninth Legion were forced to fight shoulder-to-shoulder on the narrow
uphill approach to the town. Despite these close confines, Caesar still
managed to replace exhausted cohorts with fresh (this battle against the
Pompeians lasted for five hours) Unfortunately Caesar does not tell
us how the withdrawal and replacement of cohorts was done; perhaps it
was achieved by removing one century at a time? This battle was mostly
fought with missiles, and the duration of the fighting suggests that there
must have been some lulls, allowing replacements to come up in relative
safety (Caes. 3C 1.45-46)
13
attempt to ambush them, these units ignored orders to hold back, and
advanced on the enemy. The nature of the terrain meant that eight
cohorts of the legio Martia formed the right wing of the battle line on
Funerary portrait from Padova the marshy ground to the right of the road; the praetorian cohort of
of Minucius Lorarius, centurion of Octavian (adopted son and heir of Julius Caesar) formed the centre, on
the legio Martia; his rank is shown
the raised causeway of the Via Aemilia; and the left, also in marshy
by his vine stick and his sword
slung on the left hip. This is the ground on the other side of the road, was formed by the two remaining
earliest known full-length funerary cohorts of the legio Martia and the praetorian cohort of the consul
portrait of a centurion. Lorarius Hirtius. This battle line suggests that the eight cohorts of the legion
(the name means 'flogger') may Martia had formed the head of the marching column, the praetorian
have been killed at the battle of
cohorts following, and the other two legionary cohorts bringing up
Forum Gallorum in 43 BC during
the civil war following the the rear. These units were acting as the escort to four newly raised
assassination of Julius Caesar. legions, and the veterans of the legio Martia ('legion of Mars') bluntly
(Steven D.P.Richardson) told the recruits to keep out of the way.
Facing the eight cohorts of the legio Martia was Antony's
complete legio XXXV, but despite its extra two cohorts the
Antonian legion was forced back. Appian's grim description of
the hand-to-hand combat is famous:
Julius Caesar's favourite battle array was the triplex acies (see below)
but at Ruspina (46 BC) the small size of his expeditionary army
compelled him to form a simplex acies when confronted by a far
greater force of Pompeian cavalry and light infantry under Labienus.
The ensuing battle was desperate, yet it illustrates how effective
legionary cohorts arrayed in simplex acies could be - when directed by
a master tactician.
The Pompeians advanced in a single line of extraordinary length,
seemingly with infantry in the centre and a considerable force of cavalry
on either flank. As the line neared the Caesarians it became apparent
that the centre of the Pompeian army was actually composed of cavalry
in exceptionally close order interspersed with light infantry - Numidian
javelineers. To avoid being enveloped at the first onset, Caesar formed 15
BELOW LEFT Funerary portrait his three legions into a simplex acies of 30 cohorts. His 150 archers
from Wiesbaden of C.Valerius rapidly summoned from the fortified camp at Ruspina when the
Crispus, a 1st century AD
legionary of legio VIII Augusta.
dust cloud thrown up by the Pompeians was first spotted - formed a
Note his sword slung on his thin screen before the line of cohorts. Caesar had only 400 cavalry;
right hip, his heavy pilum javelin these were divided between the flanks, tasked with preventing the
and rectangular curved scutum overwhelming cavalry of the enemy from outflanking the battle line,
shield. His body armour is Eventually, that is what happened; the Caesarian troopers fought
a mail shirt with doubled
thickness at the shoulders.
desperately and extended their line until it became too thin to hold
(Steven D.P.Richardson) the Pompeians back, and the enemy's corona ('crown' - an encircling
manoeuvre) was successful.
BELOW RIGHT Funerary portrait While the cavalry fought in vain to prevent envelopment, Caesar's
of M.Aurelius Lucianus, a cohorts received the combined frontal charge of the Pompeian cavalry
praetorian of the 3rd century AD,
found in Rome. He carries a
and Numidian light troops. The cavalry attacked, disengaged, then
fustis, used like a baton for wheeled about and attacked again; the Numidians held the ground they
crowd control, and wears a long- gained and bombarded the legionaries with javelins. The Caesarian
sleeved tunic gathered by a belt infantry counter-attacked; but their sallies and futile pursuit of
with a ring buckle, and a fringed cavalrymen disordered the battle line, and Caesar passed orders that
sagum cloak. His sword is slung
on his left hip from a broad
no man was to advance more than four paces from the standards,
decorated baldric; the pommel (Presumably the archers had been received into the ranks of the
seems to be of 'eagle's head' legionaries before the enemy charge.)
style, and the scabbard has a Once surrounded, the Caesarians huddled together, the centuries
wheel chape. Note his double-
closing up perhaps in orbis formation (see below). Titus Labienus had
weighted pilum - the weights
aided penetration but greatly
been Caesar's ablest lieutenant during the conquest of Gaul, but was his
decreased the practical throwing bitterest enemy in the subsequent civil war; now he rode up to the front
range. (Steven D.P.Richardson) rank of Caesar's troops. It seems that all three of these legions were
16
formed of recent recruits, and Labienus was
taunting the frightened young men; but he
was confronted by a veteran who had formerly
served in the Tenth Legion ~ Caesar's
favourite. Killing Labienus' horse with his
pilum, this seasoned legionary shouted
'That'll teach you, Labienus, that it's a soldier
of the Tenth that you're dealing with!' This
detail of the battle is noteworthy in that it
suggests that new legions were being formed
around a cadre of veterans. Also, despite
there being no clear evidence for file leaders
of the type common in Hellenistic and Late
Roman armies, it suggests that the front
rank in Late Republican and Early Imperial
armies was composed of experienced veterans
(cf. Pistoria, below)
Caesar was now surrounded by a larger
and more mobile force - in an echo of Rome's
terrible defeat by Hannibal's Carthaginians
at Cannae (216 BC) - and some of his green
recruits were beginning to falter; but before
the enemy closed in, Caesar gave the order to
extend the battle line as far as possible.
Extending line was achieved by reducing the
depth of the files and bringing men forward
between them. A late Roman tactical manual
stated that extending the line of an army in close order was a time- A soldier equipped with a flat
consuming manoeuvre (Strategicon 12.B17), but on this occasion the oval shield and light javelins.
Conventionally interpreted as
young soldiers seem to have accomplished it quickly. Caesar then
showing an auxiliary, this carving
ordered every second cohort to turn about, so that its standards were to - one of a series on column
the rear. Having about-turned, the rear rank of each cohort now faced bases from the late 1st century
the enemy, and presumably the optiones assumed leadership of their AD legionary headquarters
centuries. Caesar had effectively transformed his single line of cohorts building at Mainz - may in fact
depict a light-armed legionary;
into a duplex acies or double battleline (one is irresistibly reminded of
such expediti are mentioned in
the British 28th Foot at Alexandria in 1801, when the Glosters won their Julius Caesar's army. (Photo
unique 'back badge'). Jasper Oorthuys)
Meanwhile, his cavalry appear to have broken through the
encirclement, and the Pompeians were forced to form into two lines
to counter the new cohort formation. The divided Pompeians were
then scattered by a sudden charge and hail of missiles from each of
Caesar's battle lines. The legionaries and cavalry gave pursuit over a
short distance, but not so far as to become disordered and vulnerable
to counter-attack; then Caesar started to fall back to his fortified camp
at Ruspina, three miles distant.
The Pompeians rallied when Marcus Petreius and Gnaeus Piso
appeared with reinforcements of 1,600 cavalry and a large number of
infantry, and moved to harry the rear of the Caesarians. Caesar's army
was retreating in battle formation, but it is not clear if it was still in two
lines; when the Pompeians came up, Caesar ordered his army to turn
about and renew the battle. As before, the Caesarians were encircled,
but the Pompeians refused to come to close quarters, preferring to wear 17
down their opponents with missiles; Caesar's men may have formed
testudo to counter this (the 'tortoise' formation, where the inner ranks
lifted their shields over their heads and overlapped them to form a
protective roof - see below) As the Pompeians' supply of missiles
diminished and their energy for the fight waned, Caesar encouraged his
men to prepare for another break-out; he readied the surviving cavalry
and some select cohorts to attack on a given signal, and this time
ordered them to keep up their pursuit (Anon. BAfr. 11-18) It is not
clear if this was a massed attack at a single point of the Pompeian circle
or a simultaneous attack at many points, but the result was decisive:
An example of a foolish failure to employ the simplex acies was the battle
of Carrhae (53 BC), when Gaius Cassius Longinus counselled Marcus
Licinius Crassus to deploy his army in that formation to engage the
Parthians' horse archers and cataphracts. (Infamous to history as a
leader in the assassination of Caesar, Cassius proved his military ability
by retrieving the situation on the Parthian front after Carrhae.) 'Extend
the legionaries as far as possible across the plain in a shallow line', he
Gravestone of Q.Luccius advised Crassus, 'and put the cavalry on either flank; that will prevent
Faustus, a signifer (standard- the enemy from surrounding us' Initially Crassus followed this advice -
bearer) of the Fourteenth Legion
but then changed his mind, and rearranged the seven legions into a
from Upper Germany, where the
legio Gemina Martia Victrix was
hollow square formation (perhaps known as the orbis - see below). Each
based before AD 43. Note the legion had eight cohorts present, since two were detached on garrison
caped doubling at the shoulders duties elsewhere; each side of the huge square was formed of 12
of his mail shirt; the face-mask cohorts, and another eight were stationed outside its left flank, along
on his helmet, which is also
with 500 light troops, and 1,300 of the best cavalry, to act as a mobile
covered with the skin of an
animal head, its paws falling
force. There were probably about 4,000 cavalry and 4,000 archers,
over his shoulders; his small slingers and javelinmen in total, and cavalry and light troops were
oval shield; and his sword - see attached to each cohort in the formation, probably positioned in the
page 62, left hand example. The intervals between them.
inscription tells us that he died
Readers familiar with the outcome of the battle may be surprised to
at the age of 35, after 17 years
of service. This monument has learn that at Carrhae the Romans outnumbered the Parthians by three to
often been studied as evidence one. The Parthian general, the Surena, had 1,000 armoured cataphracts
for the appearance of centurial and 10,000 horse archers - but also a train of 1,000 camels laden with
standards. The six discs, set arrows to replenish their quivers. On the Mesopotamian plains cavalry
between the wreathed motif
at the top and the Capricorn
were free to hit and run, and Crassus' decision to form square was foolish
decoration and apparent tassels in the extreme. The Parthian cataphracts readily swatted his light troops
at the bottom, suggest a aside, then withdrew as their horse archers came up and began to bring
temptingly simple interpretation the Roman formation under a withering arrow-storm, gradually moving
- that the number of discs to envelop it
Indicated the number of the
century within the cohort; but
Strangely, although the Romans formed a close shield wall (with each
ancient sources do not confirm man occupying half the usual space so that the rim of his shield was hard
this, and other explanations against that of his neighbour), it does not seem that they formed testudo
are possible. (RHC Archive) for many were wounded by arrows shot at a steep angle to drop down
18 on to them. Crassus' legionaries, unaware of the camel train, expected
the archers to exhaust their supply of shafts
soon, and presumably wanted to be able
to deploy rapidly for the counter-attack.
(Yet Mark Antony used the hollow square
in testudo to great effect against the Parthian
archery in 36 BC, and his veteran legionaries
were able to charge out from their 'tortoise'
rapidly - experience was perhaps the key to
this contradiction, since Crassus' legions were
probably new formations.)
As their true dilemma became clearer,
Crassus ordered his son Publius to take
the force of cavalry and cohorts stationed
outside the square to charge the enemy. The
Parthian cavalry fell back before the attack,
raising dust and drawing Publius* cavalry
into a trap; they far outstripped the legionary
cohorts, and blindly ran into the volleys of
the horse archers, who had halted their
apparent flight. The Roman troopers pressed
on, but were then met by the cataphracts
and at length were put to flight; turning
back the way they had come, they reunited
with the detached cohorts of legionaries and
retreated to a small hill. The legionaries
and dismounted troopers formed a shield
wall around it but, because the slopes were
steep and bumpy, and the horses were in
the centre, it was neither a strong wall nor a
roofed testudo, and was gradually destroyed
by the Parthian archers. Publius, wounded
and despairing, ordered his shield-bearer
(i.e. the servant who followed him in battle
with a remount and spare weapons) to kill
him so that he would not fall into the hands
of the enemy alive.
When the Parthians overran the hill
Publius' head was cut off, stuck on the point
of a cataphract's lance, and carried around the main Roman formation Gravestone of Aurelius Alexys,
to torment Crassus. With the best cavalry destroyed, and the sallies of a heavy infantryman of an elite
cohort of Spartans, who may
the remaining horsemen and light troops from its ranks half-hearted
have been killed at Nisibis in
and ineffective, Crassus' square was now tormented on all sides by the AD 217. (Author's photo)
horse archers until nightfall. Despite this sustained mauling, the Roman
square was not broken - perhaps it had finally formed into a testudo.
Under the cover of darkness the decision was made to abandon the
4,000 wounded and leave the dead unburied; this was shameful in the
extreme, as it violated the Roman military oath, and was indicative of a
total collapse of morale.
The survivors retreated safely to the city of Carrhae, but were forced
to abandon it the following evening due to lack of supplies, and
retreated towards the Armenian foothills. It was during this second
confused and panicky night retreat that the Roman army fell apart, and 19
the following day the Parthians picked off the
isolated groups of cohorts. Crassus was briefly
saved from capture when a senior officer named
Octavius, who had succeeded in leading 5,000
legionaries to a strong hill position, left his
strongpoint to aid Crassus' hard-pressed band of
fugitives on the level ground; he drove off tm
Parthians, and surrounded the general with a
proper testudo, boasting that 'No Parthian arrow
can strike our general now!'
The Parthians became dispirited at their
inability to break the formation as it slowly drew
nearer to the safety of broken, hilly terrain
unsuitable for their tactics. The Surena called
off the attacks, coming in person - with his bow
symbolically unstrung - to offer negotiations
for a Roman withdrawal. Plutarch tells us that
Crassus was suspicious of this offer, believing
that the Parthians would anyway have to stop:
fighting when the approaching night fell, but
his exhausted troops nevertheless demanded
that he agree to the parly. Crassus went forward
warily, accompanied by Octavius and a few other
officers; but the offer was indeed a trap. Plutarch
states that a Parthian called Promaxathres struck
Crassus down, but the historian Dio quoted a
suggestion that he was actually killed by his own
men in order to prevent the disgrace of a Roman
general falling into the hands of the enemy.
Pompeius Magnus, 'Pompey Those troops who had urged Crassus to treat with the Surena either
the Great': a soldier since his surrendered themselves, or scattered under cover of darkness. Only a
teens, he was acknowledged few made it back to Roman territory (including Cassius, with a handful
as the greatest general of his
generation, but was ultimately
of cavalry); from a field army of more than 30,000 soldiers, some
defeated by Julius Caesar 20,000 were killed and 10,000 passed into slavery (Plut. Crass. 23-31;
at Pharsalus in 48 BC. Dio 40.21-27).
(RHC Archive) At Nisibis (AD 217) - the last battle the Romans ever fought against
the Parthians before the latter were overthrown by the Sassanian
Persians - the Roman army formed exactly as Cassius had advocated
before Carrhae. For three days it resisted every attempt by the
Parthian cavalry to envelop its flanks, by continually extending line
and manoeuvring a strong force of cavalry to protect each wing (Her
A cohortal legion drawn up in
4.15.1-5) Nisibis ended in stalemate, with the opposing armies
a 5-5 duplex acies formation. exhausted and the battlefield so littered with the bodies of men, horses
(Author's drawing) and camels that it was impossible to advance across it.
V IV III II I
X IX VIII VII VI
20
Duplex acies
As well as Caesar's novel use of the duplex acies
at Ruspina, it was also employed against him by
a Pompeian general during the final stage of
the Ilerda campaign (49 BC) in Spain. Lucius
Afranius confronted Caesar with five legions in
duplex acies, each legion presumably in a 5-5
formation of cohorts - 25 cohorts in each of the
two battle lines. Afranius also had a third reserve
line of Spanish auxiliary cohorts, but this was
presumably some distance behind the legionary
formation; Caesar clearly did not consider
Afranius' army as being drawn up in a triple
battle line. If the third line of auxiliaries was a
reserve - and presumably a static one, whereas
the legionary formation was to be mobile - then
the second line of legionary cohorts must have
been intended to support, reinforce and, if
necessary, to relieve/replace the first line. The
second line could also turn about or wheel to
face an enemy coming at the rear or flanks, and
so fight as a simplex acies.
The late 4th or early 5th century AD writer
Vegetius applies the duplex acies 5-5 formation of
cohorts to his description of the legio antiqua -
the ancient legion' It has been suggested that
this element of his problematical description
was derived from an early Imperial source and
therefore represents the typical battle array of
the Imperial legions. In Vegetius' duplex acies, the more powerful first Julius Caesar: a masterful
cohort is positioned on the right of the first line. The fifth cohort holds tactician, he outfought all his
opponents through skilful use
the left, and accordingly has stronger soldiers than cohorts two, three of legions drawn up in simplex,
and four. The sixth and tenth cohorts hold the right and left of the duplex, and even quadruplex
second line respectively, and also contain the strongest soldiers because acies. (RHC Archive)
of the potential vulnerability of the flanks (Veg. Epit 2.6, 18)
However, the duplex acies does not receive ready confirmation in the
battle accounts of the first three centuries AD In fact, we are generally
much more poorly served by the surviving Imperial sources for battle
arrays. Tacitus' account of Mons Graupius (AD 84) seems fairly clear: a
simplex acies of auxiliary cohorts, and the legions held back in reserve
(Tac. Agric 35). From Tacitus' accounts of the two battles of Cremona
during the civil war of AD 69 we are again left with the impression of the
opposing armies in simplex acies, though the use of reserves is mentioned
at the first battle (Hist. 2.45).
Tacitus goes into some detail about the marching order of
Germanicus' army as it proceeded to the battle of Idistaviso (AD 16).
The marching column (agmen) was arranged so that the legions,
praetorian cohorts and auxiliary units could simply turn or wheel
into battle line; however, the brief description of the battle itself
does not suggest anything other than a simplex acies. Admittedly, the
descriptions of all the above battles are essentially so vague about
cohort deployment that, for all we can tell, the cohorts of Germanicus' 21
(A) Battle of Mons Graupius,
AD 84. Auxiliary cohorts and alae
in a simplex acies, with the
legions in reserve.
legions might have been arranged in more than one line (Ann. 2.16-17;
cf 13.40 for Corbulo's marching-cum-battle formation in Armenia).
When the soldier-emperor Maximinus marched into rebellious Italy
in AD 238, he advanced on the city of Emona in an agmen quadratum
This was a hollow square or rectangular marching formation, with the
baggage protected in the centre; but such marching formations were
also designed to deploy readily into battle lines. Maximinus' formation
was a shallow rectangle: legionary infantry formed the front;
Maximinus was at the rear with the praetorians and other guard
units; and the sides were formed by cavalry and light troops, including
cataphracts and horse archers. Maximinus' agmen quadratum, like all
such formations, was therefore effectively a duplex acies (Her. 8.1.1-2)
with cavalry wings; however, it clearly was not a duplex acies based on
5-5 arrangements of legionary cohorts.
25
Heavily armoured legionary from the pincer movement. Perhaps at the command of Caesar himself or
one of the Adamklissi metopes. one of his senior officers, or at the direction of their centurions drawing
Note his scale body armour,
upon long experience (cf Caes. BG2.21), the veterans in the third line
leather or linen pteruges to
protect his thighs, the articulated
of cohorts then wheeled to face the Tulingi and Boii, while the first and
guard on his sword arm, and the second lines pressed on to resume the fight with the revitalized Helvetii
crossed reinforcing braces on his Two battles were fought simultaneously, one on the right by simplex acies,
helmet skull; other carvings from the other at the front by duplex acies; in both the Romans were eventually
the same monument show this
combination with mail shirts.
successful, the enemy being slaughtered and their camp ransacked
Some scholars have suggested (Caes. BG 1.24-26).
that this considerable increase Later in 58 BC Caesar deployed all six legions in a triplex acie,
in protection was a specific when fighting the German king Ariovistus (Caes. BG 1.51-53). Like the
response to the weapons
Helvetii, Ariovistus' Germans formed a dense, close-order phalanx; but
encountered in the Dacian wars
- the lethal scythe-like falces.
because Caesar had offered battle so near to the German camp, and
However, an articulated arm because the onset of the enemy was so swift, the legionaries had no time
guard is also seen on the Mainz to open combat with their customary volley of pila. The javelins were
gravestone of S.Valerius Severus dropped, swords drawn and a counter-charge launched. Both armies
of legio XXII Primigenia, so
its use seems unlikely to have
were victorious on their right, traditionally the stronger wing in ancient
been purely local. (Steven armies. The hard-pressed Roman left was rescued by the quick thinking
D.P.Richardson) of P.Licinius Crassus (later killed at Carrhae - see above):
Caesar again used a variation of the triplex acies when he finally brought
the Pompeians to battle at Thapsus (46 BC). Scipio's war elephants were
formed in front of the wings of his infantry and cavalry. To strengthen
his array, Caesar placed five cohorts of legio V Alaudae in front of the
wings facing the elephants. His legionary infantry may then have been
in quadruplex acies, with a projecting first line, on the left and right, but
it seems more likely that the fourth lines formed by the Fifth legion were
on either side of the triplex acies, reinforcing the archers and slingers
(Anon. BAfr. 81-84).
The battle started before Caesar wished, when the veteran
legionaries on the right wing grew impatient and intimidated a tubicen
(a trumpeter, responsible for sounding tactical signals) into blowing
30 the call for 'attack'. The triplex acies on the right surged forward; Caesar
accepted the situation, and gave the signal for the rest of the army to
follow. The archers and slingers on the right loosed their missiles against
the elephants on Scipio's left, who turned under this stinging hail and
crashed back through their own lines. Scipio's Mauretanian cavalry on
the far end of this flank turned and fled now that the protective wall of
elephants had disappeared. The right Caesarian triplex acies swept over
the ramparts of Scipio's lightly defended camp, which was immediately
behind where his left wing had been: the Pompeians now had nowhere
safe to retreat to. The Mauretanians' departure was the final straw that
triggered the general flight of the rest of Scipio's army, but there was
some fighting on the other wing:
After the battle the elephant was adopted as the emblem of legio V
Alaudae (App. BC 2.96).
A
THE TESTUDO
See text commentary for details
THE CUNEUS AND PIG'S HEAD*
BATTLE ARRAY
See text commentary for details
D
E
LEGIONARY CENTURY CHARGING
See text commentary for details
LANCIARII ATTACKING
PARTHIAN CATAPHRACTS
See text commentary for details
CAVALRY WEDGE & TESTUDO
See text commentary for details
H
Appian's account of the battle is of a purely frontal, head-on collision
of legions. As in his description of Forum Gallorum, 'the bodies of the
fallen were carried back and others stepped into their places from the
reserves'; but the battle finally turned in the Caesarians' favour when
Octavian's legionaries forced back Brutus' first battle line, 'as though
they were turning round a heavy machine' - which suggests a wheeling
movement. At first the Republican legionaries fell back step by step,
but orderly retreat soon dissolved into full-scale flight. As the first line
ran, the men in the second and third lines did not hold firm but also
turned on their heels. The fugitives of the first line ran into those of
the second, and they into the third: the Republican triplex acies became
a disorganized mass (App. BC4.128).
Plutarch's description of the battle makes no mention of Brutus'
triplex acies, and offers more complex reasons for the collapse of the
Republicans. Commanding the right of the battle line, Brutus
succeeded in defeating the Caesarian left and put it to flight; but the
Republican left was itself hard pressed by the superior numbers of the
enemy. Those in command of the wing gave the order to extend line
to prevent envelopment, but the thinning ranks could not resist the
pressure of the deeper Caesarian formations. It was at this point that
the Republican legionaries on the left turned and fled. The Caesarian
right did not pursue but wheeled their line to hammer into Brutus' now
exposed left flank (Plut Brut 49.5-7)
The triplex acies is absent from the battle descriptions of the early
Empire but, as already mentioned, the sources for the Imperial period
are usually vague when it comes to the fine details of deployment in
battle. It is entirely possible that the triplex acies gradually fell out of
general use, for it was best suited to large legionary armies, and not
all battles were on the same scale as Pharsalus. One might assume that
the formation was still widely employed during the Augustan conquests,
i.e. while the generals of Augustus (the name Octavian took when he
became the first emperor) were veterans of the civil wars in which the
triplex acies had played such a decisive role.
The cataphracts did not wait for the Romans, but, with loud cries
and in most disgraceful flight, they hurled themselves and their
horses upon the ranks of their own infantry, before it had so
much as begun to fight, and so all those tens of thousands were
defeated without the infliction of a wound or the sight of blood.
The great slaughter began at once when they fled, or rather tried
to flee, for they were prevented from doing so by the closeness
and depth of their own ranks. Tigranes rode away at the very
42 onset with a few attendants, and took to flight... It is said that
more than 100,000 of the enemy's infantry perished, while of
the cavalry only a few, all told, made their escape. Of the Romans
only 100 were wounded, and only five killed... They were almost
ashamed, and laughed one another to scorn for requiring arms
against such slaves (Plutarch, Lucullus 28.5-7)
43
circumstance - retreated down the hill on to level
ground. The Germans' leading ranks took the
opportunity to re-form the battle line, but their
rear ranks were in complete disarray It was now
that Marcellus appeared:
Downhill a n d u p h i l l c h a r g e s
In 39 and 38 BC the Parthians invaded Roman Syria, but were soundly
defeated by Mark Antony's lieutenant, Ventidius Bassus. Learning from
Crassus' disastrous tactics at Carrhae, Ventidius offered battle on high
ground at Mount Amanus (39 BC), and when the over-confident
Parthian cataphracts charged directly up the slope he simply counter-
charged down the slope with his infantry at the run. The leading
Parthian ranks were thrown back in confusion by the force and speed In this memorial carving Ares
(left), a legionary of the later
of the assault, and as Ventidius' legionaries and light troops assailed
2nd century AD, offers his sword,
them with missiles and swords they attempted to turn and retreat; shield and helmet to the war god
but other Parthian squadrons were still coming up from behind, and Mars. (In the British Museum;
their ranks dissolved into a chaotic mass (Dio 48.40.1-3). author's photo)
In 38 BC Ventidius did not
oppose the Parthian army as it
crossed the River Euphrates, but
remained in his camp on the slopes
of Mount Gindarus. The Parthians
took this inaction as a sign of
weakness and advanced on the
camp; however, they had learned
from the rout at Mount Amanus,
and the cataphracts were now
supported by horse archers. The
Romans again made a sudden
running charge (over 500 paces,
claims Frontinus) in order to
minimize their time 'under fire',
and the legionaries slammed into
the horsemen, driving the leading-
ranks back down the slope and
reducing the assault formation
to disarray. Ventidius' slingers
funditores) followed up, their heavy
lead bullets (glandes) bringing down
armoured cataphracts and horse
archers - whose bows they easily
outranged - with equal ease. When
the Parthian crown prince Pacorus
fell his retainers fought desperately
to recover his body, but when
they were also slain the rest of
the Parthian troopers gave up the
hellish uphill struggle and fled back
to the Euphrates (Dio 49.20.1-3;
Front. Strat. 2.2.5) 45
The tactical advantages of holding a position allowing a downhill
charge are obvious; and mention has already been made, in some of
the previous accounts in this text, of the problems of advancing and
charging up slopes. Nevertheless, Roman armies won some notable
victories by fighting their way uphill.
After being pinned down for five hours on the steep approach
Ilerda (49 BC), three cohorts of the Ninth Legion drew their swords -
their supply of pila being long exhausted - and made a desperate charge
up the slope to scatter the surprised Pompeians (Caes. BC 1.46). The
Ninth made another successful uphill charge the following year at
Dyrrhachium (ibid. 3.46). Mark Antony led that charge; and perhaps
with its success in mind, he overwhelmed Cassius' outer works and
camp at the first battle of Philippi (42 BC) by making an audacious
uphill advance. This attack was all the more extraordinary in that it
was accomplished at the run, the legionaries being burdened with
ladders and tools, and the line of advance was oblique (App. BC 4.111).
Finally, the advance made by the Batavian and Tungrian auxiliary
cohorts up the side of Mons Graupius (AD 84) carried them so deep
into the ranks of the Caledonians that they were temporarily enveloped
(Tac. Agric. 36-37).
The potency of the cuneus is clear, but what exactly was it? The Latin
word means 'wedge'; but Tacitus' description of the Batavian cunei at
Bonn does not suggest triangular formations, but formations with four
sides - which is why translators of the passage normally render cuneus Early 2nd-century AD legionaries
as 'square' or 'column' Tacitus describes legionaries fighting in cunei march across a bridge of boats
to begin the Dacian campaign,
at the first battle of Cremona (AD 69), but there the term is used of
on Trajan's Column. The
those soldiers who could not form a regular extended battle line trumpeters and standard-bearers
because of obstacles such as trees, ditches and vineyards in the (right) are distinguished by the
agricultural landscape (Hist. 2.42). Tacitus' use of cuneus suggests that pelts of animal heads over their
it was a term that could broadly be applied to any deep but narrow- helmets and shoulders; among
the standards are examples of
fronted formation.
the signum, vexillum, aquila and
The Romans even applied the term to descriptions of the those of praetorian units with
Macedonian phalanx (Livy 32.17.11). This, of course, was a very deep multiple wreathed images. The
but wide linear formation, so this usage is puzzling. Perhaps cuneus legionaries (centre) march with
actually applied to the individual units making up the phalanx. The shields and helmets slung,
carrying their kit on T-shaped
basic unit of the Macedonian phalanx was the speira of 256 men poles. The cargo boats (left)
arranged shoulder to shoulder in files of 16, and with a front of 16 men. are a visual reminder of the
Every phalangite was armed with the great sarissa pike, and block after importance of logistics in any
block of speirai combined to form a seemingly impenetrable wall of iron campaign. (RHC Archive)
47
pike heads. The Romans also viewed the
manipular legion, with its individual maniple
arranged at regular intervals in three lines, as
forming rows of cunei (Front. Stmt. 2.3.20)
The cunei in the battle against Boudicca may
therefore have been the individual cohorts or
centuries in very close order (cf the legionary
array in Plates D/E)
Vegetius says that late Roman soldiers
nicknamed the curneus the 'pig's head' (caput
porcinum), and describes it as narrower at the front
than it was at the rear. The name suggests that this
kind of formation did not taper to a point but, like
a pig's snout, had a flat front (see Plate G, insets),
one imagines that a literally triangular formation
would have its point rapidly blunted by enemy
missiles. Vegetius adds the interesting details that
the cuneus or 'pig's head' also allowed the missiles
of as many soldiers as possible to bear on a single
A legion of ten cohorts in orbis point of the enemy battle line, but that it was vulnerable to a counter-
or agmen quadratum formation. formation called the for/ex ('forceps'), which was shaped like a V and
The arrangement of cohort
could envelop the cuneus (Veg. Epit. 1,26, 3.17-19).
numbers indicates that the
legion moved into this defensive
It has also been suggested that a wedge-like cuneus was achieved
formation from a trip/ex acies by two dense columns advancing obliquely at converging angles, so
battle line. (Author's drawing) that the heads of the columns would meet, or nearly so, and strike the
enemy battle line at the same point (Lammert 1940) Once the heads
struck the enemy line, the two columns could swing forward like gates
around this pivot, to fight as a regular line. Of course, such a tactic
would also have had a huge psychological impact on those soldiers
directly in its path; the cuneus would be vulnerable to volleys of missiles
and to envelopment, but it would not be surprising if soldiers facing
it lost their nerve before the actual physical impact (see Plate C,
main image).
The orbis
Orbis means 'world' or 'circular' but, like the cuneus, when used of a
formation the term was not necessarily literal. The orbis was usually
formed in emergencies, when a unit or complete army was surrounded
by the enemy, and it was clearly designed for all-round defence.
When Marius was marching towards Cirta (105 BC), his army was
surprised at dusk by the combined cavalry of Jugurtha and Bocchus,
king of Mauretania. The enemy attacked 'not in orderly lines', wrote
Sallust, 'but in swarms' The Romans defended themselves as best they
could, but as the marching column of foot and horse coalesced into
disorganized masses the Africans surrounded the Roman army.
Gradually, however, under the guidance of centurions and veterans, the
groups formed into orderly orbes, 'thus at once protecting themselves on
all sides and presenting an orderly front to the attacks of the enemy'.
Using his bodyguard of picked cavalry, Marius aided the orbes under
most pressure and, by hand signals - for vocal orders could not be heard
over the din of combat - he eventually succeeded in co-ordinating a
48 retreat to two nearby hills.
The following day, just before dawn, the Romans charged down from
the hills, screaming warcries and with trumpets blaring. The Numidians
and Mauretanians camped at the foot of the hills were too befuddled
after a night of raucous celebrations to react to the unexpected assault;
many were cut down, while the rest, including Jugurtha and Bocchus,
scattered. Marius resumed his march, but in an agmen quadratum (hollow
square or rectangle) formation (Sall. BJug. 97-101).
Some modern scholars have suggested that the orbis was in fact
similar to the agmen quadratum - cf Crassus' formation at Carrhae;
Vegetius refers to the hollow square as the acies quadrata - four-sided
battle line (Epit 1.26) It is perhaps easier to imagine the orbis formed
by the legionaries of Sabinus and Cotta in 54 BC, when they were
ambushed by treacherous Ambiorix and the Eburones, as roughly
The orbis enabled the Caesarian legio XXXVI to escape with minor
casualties from a defeat at Nicopolis (47 BC) in Armenia Minor
(Anon. BAlex. 38-40). Fighting the invading army of Pharnaces, king
of Bosphorus (and son of Mithridates of Pontus), Domitius Calvinus
had the experienced Thirty-Sixth Legion holding the right wing
of his army, the locally recruited legio Pontica on the left, and two
legions raised by Deiotarus, the king of Armenia Minor and Galatia,
in the centre. However, Calvinus only allowed the Deiotarian
legions a narrow frontage and most of their cohorts were held in
reserve. Pharnaces' infantry were drawn up between two trenches
dug to protect their flanks and extending as far forward as the king
planned to advance, but all of his cavalry were stationed outside
these trenches.
The opposing commanders gave the signal to charge almost
simultaneously. Legio XXXVI cut through the cavalry facing it, swung in
to cross one trench, and assaulted Pharnaces' infantry from the rear;
but a similar manoeuvre by the legio Pontica failed, and many of its men
were trapped in the trench covering Pharnaces' right. Meanwhile the
Deiotarian legions had fled in the face of the assault by Pharnaces'
infantry, and legio XXXVI found itself cut off:
Victorious on their own right wing and at the centre of the line,
the king's forces now turned on legio XXXVI. However, the legion
bravely resisted the attack... and, despite being surrounded by
large enemy forces, had the presence of mind to form an orbis
and so made a fighting withdrawal to the foot of the mountains.
Pharnaces was unwilling to pursue because of the steepness of
the terrain. So, with the Pontic legion almost totally lost and a
large proportion of the soldiers of Deiotarus killed, legio XXXVI
retreated to higher ground with losses no greater than 250 men
(Anon., Alexandrian War 40). 51
Legionaries in testudo formation This retreat into the hills, accomplished under enemy pressure and
approach an enemy fortification. without losing cohesion, was clearly no mean feat. In AD 9 the future
Note the various missiles thrown
emperor Tiberius arranged part of his army into a dense square
down onto the roof of the
formation - rocks, cartwheels,
formation (an acies quadrata}) to assault the Dalmatian hill fortress
flaming brands, even pots of of Andretium. Even before the Dalmatians started lobbing missiles
boiling oil or water. From the and rolling boulders down on the Romans, the square formation had
Column of Marcus Aurelius. broken up:
(RHC Archive)
The soldiers [of legio XIII Gemina], raising their shields above
their heads, advanced on the rampart in a dense testudo
formation. Both sides used typical Roman tactics. The Vitellian
legionaries rolled down heavy stones, and when they had split and
loosened the overlapped shields, they thrust at the testudo with
lances and pikes until they broke up its close structure and hurled
their dead and mangled foes to the ground with great slaughter
(Tacitus, Hist 3.Z7).
The emperor Severus Alexander The Parthians eventually gave up attempts to come to close quarters
(r.AD 222-235), who was doomed with the Romans and simply harassed them with showers of arrows,
by his defeat at the hands of
especially at the rear of the marching square. The enemy did make one
King Ardashir in AD 233, when
the Sassanians managed to
last major attempt to break the Roman formation as it was about to cross
destroy a testudo or agmen a river, but again the light troops sallied out, while the legionaries at the
quadratum formation. He was rear formed testudo (presumably retaining intervals for the light troops'
already despised by the soldiery to retreat into), and the Parthians declined to assault it. Meanwhile
for his effeminacy, and his failure
Antony saw to it that his wounded were first to cross the river and
during the Persian war caused
burning resentment. When in
drink - hunger and thirst were now the main enemies of the Romans,
AD 235 he tried to avoid a war accounting for half of Antony's losses; then he came up with all the
against the Alamanni - an cavalry to act as a screen while the infantry crossed. The Parthians did
emerging Germanic confederacy not attack; close as they were to the border with Armenia, they unstrung
- by paying them a subsidy,
their bows and saluted the Romans. Six days after this - the eighteenth
he was lynched by legionary
recruits, and the general battle of the retreat - the Romans were back in friendly territory (Plut.
Maximinus was hailed as Ant 41-50; Dio 49.24-31).
emperor. (RHC Archive) More than 260 years after Antony's abortive invasion of Parthia
another Roman army advanced eastwards, making for Ctesiphon, now
capital of the Sassanian Persian empire. The Sassanians had overthrown
their Parthian overlords in c.AD 224, and almost immediately declared
their intention to seize Rome's eastern provinces. Mesopotamia was
overrun in AD 229; the Romans reconquered the province in AD 231,
and in AD 233 sent three armies into Persian territory to extract
revenge. One army, following Antony's route from Armenia into Media,
caused chaos. A second followed the Euphrates towards Ctesiphon (just
south of modern Baghdad), expecting to rendezvous on the way with a
third army under the command of the emperor Severus Alexander, but
he failed to leave Roman Mesopotamia. The Sassanian king, Ardashir,
abandoned attempts to contain the Romans in the north, and gathered
his forces (the usual cataphracts and horse archers) for an all-out attack
on the second invading army. Ardashir found the Romans completely
unprepared, and surrounded them. A testudo was formed but it did not
56 save the Romans:
Under missile attack from all sides, the Roman soldiers were
destroyed, because they were unable to stand up to the superior
numbers and were continually having to shield their exposed Maximinus (r.AD 235-238) was
sides that formed a target for the enemy... In the end they were so called because he began his
career as a common cavalryman
all driven into a mass and fought from behind a testudo, as though
but was promoted to the highest
they were in a siege. Bombarded from every side, they held out military commands - the name
bravely for as long as they could, but finally they were all means something like
destroyed. This terrible disaster, which no one cares to recall, was 'Greatest-Smallest'. He was the
a setback to the Romans, since a vast army, matching anything first emperor recorded as having
fought in battle in person while
in earlier generations for courage and endurance, had been holding the throne; his features
destroyed (Her. 6.5.9-10). present a striking contrast to
those of Severus Alexander, and
The Romans had been lulled into a false sense of security because the soldiers revered him as one
their advance had so far encountered no opposition, but above all they of their own. After taking power
he crossed the Rhine, and during
believed that the emperor's main army had advanced and was no the ensuing campaign he found
doubt trouncing Ardashir even as they moved on his defenceless his battle line hesitant to follow
capital. Evidently advancing without scouts, and not in a marching the Alamanni, who were
order that could readily form a line of battle, the Romans paid the withdrawing into a marsh.
'Maximinus plunged into the
ultimate price.
marsh on horseback (even
though the water... came over
the horse's belly), and killed
EPILOGUE many of the barbarians who
resisted'; this example shamed
his troops back into action (Her.
When the armies of the rival emperors Licinius and Maximinus Daia
7.2.6-7). Despite his courage and
met in battle near Adrianople in AD 313, it was one of the last great military charisma, Maximinus too
encounters of legionary armies organized in cohorts and centuries. would soon fall victim to the
The armies advanced, centurions and standard-bearers leading the chronic instability of the 3rd
centuries, and came within missile range; but Daia's soldiers had century empire. (Author's photo)
58
REFERENCES AND FURTHER READING
M.J.V.Bell, 'Tactical Reform in the Roman Republican Army', Historia 14
(1965), 404-422
A.Hyland, Training the Roman Cavalry: From Arrian's Ars Tactica (London,
1993)
B.Isaac, 'Hierarchy and Command-Structure in the Roman Army' in
Y.Le Bohec (ed.), Le hierarchie (Rangordnung) de l'armee romaine sous le
Haut-Empire (Paris, 1995), 23-31
L.Keppie, The Making of the Roman Army: From Republic to Empire (rev. ed.,
London, 1998)
J.Kromayer & G.Veith, Heerwesen und Kriegfuhrung der Griechen und Romer
(Munich, 1928)
F.Lammert, 'Der Keil in der Taktik des Altertums', Gymnasium 51 (1940),
15-31
J.F.Lendon, Soldiers and Ghosts: A History of Battle in Classical Antiquity
(New Haven & London, 2005)
R.Rance, 'The Fulcum, the Late Roman and Byzantine Testudo: The
Germanization of Roman Infantry Tactics?', Greek, Roman and
Byzantine Studies 44 (2004), 265-326
T.Rice Holmes, Caesar's Conquest of Gaul (2nd ed., Oxford, 1911)
M.RSpeidel, The Framework of an Imperial Legion (Cardiff,1992)
G.Veith, Geschichte der Feldzuge C. Julius Caesars (Vienna, 1906)
G.Veith, 'Die Taktik der Kohortenlegion,' Klio 7 (1907), 303-334
E.L.Wheeler, T h e Legion as Phalanx', Chiron 9 (1978), 303-318
E.L.Wheeler, 'Battles and Frontiers', Journal of Roman Archaeology 11
(1998), 644-651
E.L.Wheeler, 'The Legion as Phalanx in the Late Empire (I)' in Y.Le
Bohec 8c C.Wolff (eds), L'Armee romaine de Diocletien a Valentinien Ier
(Paris, 2004), 309-358
PLATE COMMENTARIES
A: LEGIONARY C E N T U R I E S IN CLOSE AND each soldier occupies a space 6ft by 6ft (1.83m square).
OPEN ORDER The number of ranks is also suggested by Arrian's formation
Two legionary centuries, one prior (front) and one posterior against the Alani; while there is no direct evidence for such a
(rear), are depicted in close and open order respectively. The chessboard formation, it has long been favoured by scholars
prior century is formed in eight ranks and ten files, each because it would allow more soldiers to use their weapons.
legionary occupying a space 3ft wide and probably 3ft deep In both centuries the 'command group' of centurion,
(0.91m square). This spacing is given by Polybius in his standard-bearer and trumpeter (centurio, signifer, cornicen) -
account of the manipular legion, and appears to have remained here keyed C, S & Tr - are located in the centre of the first and
standard into the Late Roman period (Poiyb. 18.30.6). The second ranks. Most reconstructions place the centurion at the
number of soldiers in a contubernium (tent or mess group) was right of the front rank; but we know that in Late Roman cavalry
eight, and scholars have suggested that the contubernium also units the commander, standard-bearer and trumpeter were
formed a file in the battle line, but there is no ancient evidence grouped together at the front centre {Strategicon 3.2-4), and
to confirm this. In the battle formation that Arrian drew up this arrangement also seems sensible for the century. To the
against the Alani (AD 135), the legionaries did form eight ranks. rear of the century are positioned the optio - here keyed O -
However, when on the march Arrian's legionaries marched four the centurion's second-in-command; and the tesserarius - T -
abreast, so his battle line may have been formed by posterior the 'holder of the watchword' Polybius tells us that the optio's
centuries drawn up immediately behind prior centuries, each place was in the rear, and the long staff with which he is often
century formed in four ranks and 20 files. depicted suggests that he would shove soldiers back into
The posterior century is depicted in open formation, the rank (cf Strategicon 12.B.17; Speidel 1992, 24-26). Tesserarii
legionaries drawn up in four ranks and 20 staggered files. are depicted with a similar long staff, and presumably aided
Again following Polybius (18.30.7), in this open formation the optio at the rear of the century when in battle. 59
TOP Legionary helmet lost in the River Po during one of
the battles of Cremona, AD 69. This rather crudely made
bronze piece, now in the Museo Stibbert in Florence, was
classified by H.Russell Robinson as Imperial Italic Type C.
(Stephen D.P.Richardson)
B: T H E TESTUDO
The testudo ('tortoise') is famous for its use in siege warfare,
but it was also widely employed in field battles, because it
offered excellent protection against missiles. Here (1 & 2) we
see part of the testudo formed by Mark Antony against horse
archers during his retreat from Parthia in 36 BC. Antony's
testudo appears to have been different from other such
formations, in that all his legionaries knelt down; the first rank
formed the shield wall, and the second and third ranks lifted
their shields to create the forward-sloping roof (2). When the
Parthians saw that the complete Roman army had halted
its march and was kneeling down, they believed that the
Romans had become too dejected to fight. The testudo
formation protected them from the horse archers' arrows, so
the Parthians gave up their hit-and-run tactics, took up their
lances and attacked the formation at close quarters. This
was exactly what Antony wanted: as soon as the Parthians
came near, the legionaries leapt out of formation (1, centre)
and finally got to grips with them (Plut. Ant. 45).
At (3) we show a file in a fulcum, a late Roman variant
of the testudo that was much used as a defence against
enemy cavalry (Strategicon 12.B.16; Ranee 2004).
F: L E G I O N A R Y C E N T U R Y C H A R G I N G
In the previous plate the legion's centuries were arrayed
so as to f o r m a row of cunel with the potential to puncture
an opposing battle line. Here we see a late Republican or
early Imperial century making a furious charge against the
enemy. The leading t w o ranks have thrown their pila and
sprint towards the enemy; the Roman soldier attempted
to topple his opponents (Tac. Hist. 2.42), so speed was
essential, and we can see here how the shield was used sing a paean to the war god Mars; the Romans believed
as a battering ram. Behind the sprinting swordsmen, that this gave the troops confidence and intimidated the
the legionaries in ranks three and four have paused enemy. The legionaries in the rear ranks do not throw their
momentarily to hurl their pila over the heads of the leading pila because of the risk of hitting their comrades in the
ranks and into the enemy. The remaining four ranks follow leading ranks.
up at an easy j o g ; while the preceding ranks have opened The dust and hazy atmosphere is typical of Roman
up, these legionaries retain good close order. As was battles, which were usually fought in the summer months,
typical in battles of the Republic, and presumably also the so the volume of dust raised by thousands of feet and
62 Empire, they drum their pila against their shields, and hooves was immense. At the battle of Vercellae (101 BC)
there was so much dust that for a time the Romans could Similar tactics were successfully employed by the
not see the huge army of the Cimbri, and when some Romans against the Parthians at the epic three-day battle
Roman units advanced into the dust cloud they unwittingly of Nisibis in AD 217 (Her. 4.15.1-4). Lanciarii belonging
marched past the enemy (Plut. Mar. 26.3). to legio II Parthica fought at this battle, but their exact
function is debated. Here they are presented as
G: LANClARll ATTACK P A R T H I A N skirmishers, like the velites of the manipular legion; but
CATAPHRACTS some suggest that the lanciarii were positioned to the
Here we see a century of lanciarii (inset 1) - light-armed rear of the battle line, hurling their javelins over a heavy
legionaries equipped with lanceae - deploying from the infantry shield wall (cf the rear four ranks of Arrian's
interval between two centuries of heavy legionary infantry legionary formation against the Alani).
(inset 2), to swarm around a squadron of Parthian
cataphracts in a battle of the 3rd century AD. Fooled by H: CAVALRY WEDGE & TESTUDO
the tempting gap between the centuries of heavy infantry, Triangular wedge and rhomboid cavalry formations had
the cataphracts - fully armoured cavalry (inset 3) - have been employed by the ancient Greeks and Macedonians.
charged on to a line of caltrops, leg-breaking pits and other The 2nd-century AD Roman genera! Arrian commends
booby-traps hidden in the sandy grassland before the the wedge in his Tactical Handbook, but it remains unclear
Roman battle line. As the lanciarii bombard the stricken if the formation was actually used by Roman cavalry (Arr.
cavalry with their light javelins, another Parthian squadron Tact. 16). This plate presents at (1) a 3rd-century turma of
wheels away before it hits the booby-traps. 30 contarii (lancers) in a hypothetical wedge or cuneus of
three ranks. The decurion (1D),
commander of the turma, forms
the point, and the draconarius
standard-bearer (1S) rides in the
rank behind him. Other under-
officers, including a trumpeter
(cf Strategicon 3.2), were
probably concentrated in the
leading ranks, so that 'all of
the leaders fall on the enemy
together.' Behind the turma
the decurion's servant - calo,
often a slave (1C) - follows on
one of the decurion's remounts
and leads the other on a long
rein; officers and under-officers
went into battle with spare
horses. The servant also carries
a spare contus (lance) for the
decurion.
At (2) we show another
variation of the testudo, here
a loose shield wall formed by
3rd-century cavalrymen, who
have formed up in a slightly
oblique rank, with the horses'
heads turned in, so as to present
their shielded side to the enemy.
The oblique line means that
each trooper's shield also offers
some protection to the head
of the horse of the next rider
(Arr Tact. 36.1).