Siege of Amida

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from Battle of Amida)
Jump to: navigation, search
Siege of Amida
Part of the Roman-Persian Wars
Taq-e Bostan - High-relief Shapur II and Shapur III.jpg
Shapur II, conqueror of Amida, along with Shapur III
Date 359
Location Amida, Mesopotamia
Result Decisive Sassanid victory
Territorial
changes
Sassanids capture Amida.
Belligerents
Roman Empire Sassanid Empire
Commanders and leaders
Count Aelianus[1]
Sabinianus
Ursicinus
Shapur II
Grumbates
Antoninus
Strength
Legio V Parthica (garrison force)
Legio XXX Ulpia
Legio X Fretensis
Superventores,
Praeventores
Comites Sagittarii (Household mounted archers)
Legions from Gaul loyal to Magnentius
Sassanid army
Xionites
Gelani
Albani
Segestani
Casualties and losses
entire city massacred fewer than romans(all roman forces massacred)

The Siege of Amida took place when the Sassanids under Shah Shapur II besieged the Roman city of Amida in 359.

In this battle Ammianus Marcellinus, a historian of Greek origin from Antioch, was a Roman army officer; he described the siege in his work (Res Gestae).

Contents

[edit] Background

When Shapur II took control of the Sassanid Empire he sought to regain old territories previously lost to the Roman Empire. After crushing the Arabs in the south, he moved east to deal with nomadic forces, the most prominent being the Xionites.[2] Following a prolonged struggle from (353-358) the Xionites were forced to conclude a peace, and their king, Grumbates, accompanied Shapur II in the war against the Romans.[3] [4]. In 358 the Romans had failed to dissuade Shapur from attacking Mesopotamia, so the next year Shapur decided to invade.[5]

Shapur started the western campaign in 359. The Sassanid plan was to bypass difficult fortresses like Nisibis and to then march straight into Syria. When his forces approached Amida, the Sassanids were provoked into attacking the city.[6] The Sassanids began the attack with siege towers and attempted to take the city hastily, but the siege dragged on for 73 days with the Sassanids finally capturing the city, according the Ammianus while losing 30,000 men in the process.[7]

[edit] Siege

The walls of Amida, built by Constantius II before the Siege of Amida of 359.

According to Ammianus Marcellinus[1]

The king himself [Shapur II], mounted upon a charger and overtopping the others, rode before the whole army, wearing in place of a diadem a golden image of a ram's head set with precious stones, distinguished too by a great retinue of men of the highest rank and of various nations. But it was clear that he would merely try the effect of a conference on the defenders of the walls, since by the advice of Antoninus he was in haste to go elsewhere.

He continues with the account of how he reached the safety of the city just as the Sassanids were descending on the city:

I myself, having taken a direction apart from that of my comrades, was looking around to see what to do, when Verennianus, one of the guard, came up with an arrow in his thigh; and while at the earnest request of my colleague I was trying to pull it out, finding myself surrounded on all sides by the advancing Persians, I made up for the delay by breathless speed and aimed for the city, which from the point where we were attacked lay high up and could be approached only by a single very narrow ascent ; and this was made still narrower by mills which had been built or the cliffs for the purpose of making the paths. Here, mingled with the Persians, who were rushing to the higher ground with the same effort as ourselves, we remained motionless until sunrise of the next day, so crowded together that the bodies of the slain, held upright by the throng, could nowhere find room to fall, and that in front of me a soldier with his head cut in two, and split into equal halves by a powerful sword stroke, was so pressed on all sides that he stood erect like a stump.

The siege took 73 days. Shapur attempted to capture the city several times but every time it ended with disaster. Many times siege towers were set on fire by the Romans. During the siege, plague broke out in Amida but ended after ten days by a light rain. A day before capture of the city, Ammianus Marcellinus escaped to Melitene, and thence returned to Antioch.

[edit] Outcome

After capturing the city, Shapur II advanced further and took Singara and some other fortresses in the following years. In 363, Emperor Julian, at the head of a strong army, advanced to Ctesiphon, but was killed in a battle. His successor Jovian signed a treaty of peace, by which the districts on the Tigris and Nisibis (totalling five Roman provinces) were ceded to the Persians, and the Romans promised to interfere no more in Armenia.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Ammianus Marcellinus (1982). Res Gestae. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 18.8.2. 
  2. ^ Ammianus Marcellinus (1982). Res Gestae. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 16.9.4. 
  3. ^ Ammianus Marcellinus (1982). Res Gestae. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 18.8.2. 
  4. ^ Sassanian Iran- economy, society, arts and crafts, N.N.Chegini and A.V. Nikitin, History of Civilizations of Central Asia: The crossroads of civilizations, (UNESCO, 1996), 38.
  5. ^ Blockley, R. C. (Autumn). "Ammianus Marcellinus on the Persian invasion of A.D. 359". Phoenix 42 (3): 244-260. 
  6. ^ Blockley, R. C. (Autumn). "Ammianus Marcellinus on the Persian invasion of A.D. 359". Phoenix 42 (3): 244-260. 
  7. ^ Mattthews, John (1989). The Roman Empire of Ammianus. London: Gerald Duckworth & Co. Ltd.. pp. 58. 

[edit] Sources

  • Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae (translated by J. C. Rolfe), Cambridge MA, 1982.
  • Abd al-Husayn Zarrin’kub, Ruzgaran: tarikh-i Iran az aghz ta saqut saltnat Pahlvi, Sukhan, 1999. ISBN 964-6961-11-8

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 37°55′N 40°13′E / 37.917°N 40.217°E / 37.917; 40.217

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages