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Hammer and anvil

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Hijiri88 (talk | contribs) at 13:48, 21 July 2018 ("classical period" is ambiguous; "classical Greece" specifically describes the period BEFORE Alexander, but here we seem imply that Alexander popularized the tactic and it was later used in PW2. Also, "throughout" is not supported by the source. https://books.google.co.jp/books?id=sRnxxGxfMLYC&pg=PT497&lpg=PT497&dq="quite+a+number+of+battles+in+antiquity"). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Hammer and Anvil tactic is a military tactic used since the beginning of organized warfare. It was used mostly in the ancient world, including by Alexander the Great and Eastern cataphracts.

Description

It is a relatively simple maneuver. It begins with two infantry forces of varying strengths engaging in a frontal assault. While the infantry lines are fixed in the engagement, a cavalry force maneuvers around the enemy and attacks from behind, sandwiching it into the friendly infantry. Generally, the force attempting the maneuver needs to have a superior amount of cavalry to be successful.

Examples

It was popular in a number of battles fought by the ancient Greeks and Romans. In addition to being used in many of Alexander the Great's battles, it was also used during the Second Punic War during the Battle of Cannae and the Battle of Zama.[1]

The maneuver's origins are Hellenistic and so it often relied on light cavalry. The tactic also worked well, however, with the heavy cataphracts of the Eastern world.

Many generals have used the tactic of a "hopping" hammer and anvil. That requires the cavalry to be a "hit-and-run", relying on the impact. The "hopping" maneuver relied on the cavalry hitting an extreme left or right flank, then hammer-and-anvilling towards the center of the infantry. That would weaken and rout the entire flank, leaving the remaining forces to run down the scattering enemies.

References

  1. ^ Gat, Azar. War In Human Civilization. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006. 340.