User:Llywrch/Battle of Cannae

Coordinates: 41°18′23″N 16°7′57″E / 41.30639°N 16.13250°E / 41.30639; 16.13250
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Battle of Cannae
Part of the Second Punic War

Hannibal's route of invasion
Date2 August 216 BC
Location41°18′23″N 16°7′57″E / 41.30639°N 16.13250°E / 41.30639; 16.13250
Result Carthaginian victory[a]
See the Aftermath
Belligerents
Carthage
Allied African, Spanish, and Gallic tribes
Roman Republic
Allied Italian states:
Etruscans
Samnites
Commanders and leaders
Hannibal
Maharbal
Mago
Gisgo
Hanno
Hasdrubal
Gaius Terentius Varro
Lucius Aemilius Paullus 
Gnaeus Servilius Geminus 
Strength
50,000:
32,000 heavy infantry,
8,000 light infantry,
10,000 cavalry
86,400:
40,000 Roman infantry,
40,000 allied infantry,
2,400 Roman cavalry,
4,000 allied cavalry
Casualties and losses
Killed:
5,700 (Polybius)
* 4,000 Gallic
* 1,500 Spanish and African
* 200 cavalry

Polybius:
85,630

  • 70,000 infantry killed
  • 5,630 cavalry killed
  • 10,000 infantry captured

Livy:
67,500

  • 45,500 infantry killed
  • 2,700 cavalry killed
  • 17,800 infantry captured
  • 1,500 cavalry captured
Battles of Trebia, Lake Trasimene and Cannae, anticlockwise, from top

The Battle of Cannae (/ˈkæni, -, -/)[b] was a major battle of the Second Punic War that took place on 2 August 216 BC in Apulia, in southeast Italy. The army of Carthage, under Hannibal, surrounded and decisively defeated a larger army of the Roman Republic under the consuls Lucius Aemilius Paullus and Gaius Terentius Varro. It is regarded both as one of the greatest tactical feats in military history and as one of the worst defeats in Roman history.

Having recovered from their losses at Trebia (218 BC) and Lake Trasimene (217 BC), the Romans decided to engage Hannibal at Cannae, with approximately 86,000 Roman and allied troops. They massed their heavy infantry in a deeper formation than usual, while Hannibal used the double-envelopment tactic and surrounded his enemy, trapping the majority of the Roman army, who were then slaughtered. The loss of life on the Roman side was one of the most lethal single day's fighting in history; Adrian Goldsworthy compares the death toll in that battle to "the massed slaughter of the British Army on the first day of the Somme offensive in 1916."[1] Only about 15,000 Romans, most of whom were from the garrisons of the camps and had not taken part in the battle, escaped death. Following the defeat, Capua and several other Italian city-states defected from the Roman Republic to Carthage.

As news of this defeat reached Rome, the city was gripped in panic. Authorities resorted to extraordinary measures, which included consulting the Sibylline Oracles, dispatching a delegation led by Quintus Fabius Pictor to consult the Delphic oracle in Greece, and burying alive four humans as a sacrifice to their Gods. To raise two new legions, the authorities lowered the draft age and enlisted criminals, debtors and even slaves. Despite the extreme loss of men and equipment, and a second massive defeat later that same year at Silva Litana, the Romans refused to surrender to Hannibal. His offer to ransom survivors was brusquely refused. With grim determination the Romans fought for 14 more years until they achieved victory at the Battle of Zama.

Although for most of the following decades the battle was seen solely as a major Roman disaster, by modern times Cannae acquired a mythic quality, and is often used as an example of the perfect defeat of an enemy army. It was studied by German strategists prior to World War II, and General Norman Schwartzkopf claimed to have drawn inspiration for his devastatingly effective land offensive in the First Gulf War.

Historical sources[edit]

There are two main accounts of the battle, neither contemporary. The one closest in time of the two is Polybius, who wrote his account 50 years after the battle. The expert consensus includes Polybius as one of the best and most accurate of ancient historians. "The books of Polybius," wrote the German historian Theodor Mommsen, "are like the sun shining on the field of Roman history; where they open, the mists ... are lifted, and where they end a perhaps even more vexatious twilight descends." Nevertheless, Polybius has his flaws. One problem he faced for his account of this battle was the fact there were few survivors of this disaster, and they had little interest in revisiting the horrors of the day and no encouragement from their peers. Polybius had access to Carthaginian sources, which filled some of the gaps.


Livy wrote in the time of Augustus. However, as the historian Gary Forsythe observes, "Livy was not particularly concerned with ascertaining detailed points of historical fact. Rather, he was much more interested in larger moral and patriotic themes. Like many other ancients, he believed that the value of history lay in providing people with good and bad models of conduct to be emulated and to be avoided respectively. His history has a decidedly moral and patriotic tone."[2] Livy portrays the Senate in the role of hero and hence assigns blame for the Roman defeat to the low-born Varro. Blaming Varro also serves to lift blame from the Roman soldiers, whom Livy has a tendency to idealize.[3]

Other sources are further removed in time, and are thus of lesser accuracy. While Appian, a writer of the second century, describes events that have no relation with those of Livy and Polybius,[4] scholars tend to discount his account. The verdict of Philip Sabin—"a worthless farrago"—is typical.[5] Dio Cassius, who wrote in the early third century, is even later still, and while his account agrees with Appian's, it is unclear if he used sources independent of those we already have.[6]

Plutarch's Parallel Lives provides us biographies of many famous Romans, some of whom were active at the time, such as Fabius Maximus, Marcellus, and Titus Quinctius Flaminius, but unfortunately Plutarch did not write ones for Hannibal or Scipio Africanus. Cornelius Nepos, a Roman biographer of the first century BC, composed a life of Hannibal which provides information otherwise not available, but it is very short.

Other historians provide us with the occasional tidbit or insight. The usual sources for ancient history of inscriptions and numismatics fail us for this early time.

Background[edit]

Shortly after the start of the Second Punic War, Hannibal crossed into Italy by traversing the Pyrenees and the Alps during the summer and early autumn.[7] He quickly won major victories over the Romans at Trebia and at Lake Trasimene.[8][9] After these losses, the Romans appointed Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus as dictator to deal with the threat.[10][11] Fabius used attrition warfare against Hannibal, cutting off his supply lines and avoiding pitched battles. These tactics proved unpopular with the Romans who, as they recovered from the shock of Hannibal's victories, began to question the wisdom of the Fabian strategy, which had given the Carthaginian army a chance to regroup.[12] The majority of Romans were eager to see a quick conclusion to the war. It was feared that, if Hannibal continued plundering Italy unopposed, Rome's allies might defect to the Carthaginian side for self-preservation.[13]

Fabius was compelled to return to Rome to defend his actions under the guise of observing religious obligations. Marcus Minucius Rufus, left in command, managed to catch the Carthaginians off guard near their camp in Geronium and inflict severe losses on them in a large skirmish, while losing 5,000 Romans killed. This action caused the Romans to elevate Minucius to the equal rank of the dictator. Minucius took command of half the army and camped separately from Fabius. Hannibal, informed of this development, laid an elaborate trap, which drew out Minucius and his army. The timely arrival of Fabius with the other half of the army enabled Minucius to escape with a substantial number of Romans killed. Hannibal made Geronium his winter quarters.[14]

When Fabius came to the end of his term, the Senate did not renew his dictatorial powers and command was given to consuls Gnaeus Servilius Geminus and Marcus Atilius Regulus.[15] In 216 BC, when elections resumed, Gaius Terentius Varro and Lucius Aemilius Paullus were elected as consuls, placed in command of a newly raised army of unprecedented size and directed to engage Hannibal.[16]

Polybius wrote:

The Senate determined to bring eight legions into the field, which had never been done at Rome before, each legion consisting of five thousand men besides allies. ...Most of their wars are decided by one consul and two legions, with their quota of allies; and they rarely employ all four at one time and on one service. But on this occasion, so great was the alarm and terror of what would happen, they resolved to bring not only four but eight legions into the field.

— Polybius, The Histories of Polybius[17]

Roman command[edit]

Consuls were each assigned two of the four legions to command, rarely employing all four legions at once to the same assignment. However, the Senate feared a real threat and not only deployed all four legions to the field but all eight, including allies.[18] Ordinarily, each of the two consuls would command his own portion of the army, but since the two armies were combined into one, Roman law required them to alternate their command on a daily basis.

The traditional account puts Varro in command on the day of the battle, and much of the blame for the defeat has been laid on his shoulders.[19] However, his low origins seem to be exaggerated in the sources, and Varro may have been made a scapegoat by the aristocratic establishment.[19] He lacked the powerful descendants that Paullus had, descendants who were willing and able to protect his reputation — most notably, Paullus was the grandfather of Scipio Aemilianus, the patron of Polybius (one of our main sources of this history).[20]

Historian Martin Samuels has questioned whether it was in fact Varro in command on the day on the grounds that Paullus may have been in command on the right. The warm reception that Varro received after the battle from the Senate was in striking contrast to the savage criticism meted out to other commanders. Samuels doubts whether Varro would have been received with such warmth had he been in command.[21] Gregory Daly notes that, in the Roman military, the right was always the place of command. He suggests that at the Battle of Zama Hannibal was quoted saying that he had fought Paullus at Cannae and concludes that it is impossible to be sure who was in command on the day.[22]

Hannibal moves on Cannae[edit]

In the spring of 216 BC Hannibal left his winter quarters and seized the large supply depot at Cannae, in the Apulian plain, placing himself between the Romans and their crucial source of supply.[23] As Polybius noted, the capture of Cannae "caused great commotion in the Roman army; for it was not only the loss of the place and the stores in it that distressed them, but the fact that it commanded the surrounding district".[24] The consuls, resolving to confront Hannibal, marched southward in search of him.[25] After two days' march, they found him on the left bank of the river Aufidus, and encamped five miles (8 km) away.[25]

The two armies held their respective locations for two days. During the second day (August 1) Hannibal, aware that Varro would be in command the following day, left his camp and offered battle, but Paullus refused.[26] When his request was rejected, Hannibal, recognizing the importance of water from the Aufidus to the Roman troops, sent his cavalry to the smaller Roman camp to harass water-bearing soldiers that were found outside the camp fortifications.[26] According to Polybius,[24] Hannibal's cavalry boldly rode up to the edge of the Roman encampment, causing havoc and thoroughly disrupting the supply of water to the Roman camp.[27]

Varro, in command on the first day, is presented by contemporary sources as a man of reckless nature and hubris, who was determined to defeat Hannibal. While the Romans were approaching Cannae, some of Hannibal's light infantry and cavalry ambushed them.[28] Varro repelled the attack and continued slowly on his way to Cannae.[28] This victory, though essentially a mere skirmish with no lasting strategic value, greatly bolstered the confidence of the Roman army, perhaps leading to overconfidence on Varro's part. Paullus, however, was opposed to the engagement as it was taking shape. Unlike Varro, he was prudent and cautious, and he believed it was foolish to fight on open ground, despite the Romans' numerical strength. This was especially true since Hannibal held the advantage in cavalry (both in quality and quantity). Despite these misgivings, Paullus thought it unwise to withdraw the army after the initial success, and camped two-thirds of the army east of the river Aufidus, sending the remainder to fortify a position on the opposite side one mile (2 km) away from the main camp.[29] The purpose of this second camp was to cover the foraging parties from the main camp and harass those of the enemy.[30]

On the morning of the battle, as the forces drew up, a Carthaginian officer named Gisgo reportedly remarked to Hannibal that the size of the Roman army was astonishing. Hannibal coolly replied, "There is one thing, Gisgo, yet more astonishing, which you take no notice of". He then explained, "In all those great numbers before us, there is not one man called Gisgo", provoking laughter that spread through the Carthaginian ranks.[31]

Battle[edit]

Date and location[edit]

Ancient historians rarely provide the precise dates for the events they describe; for example, Livy provides no dates for any of the battles of the Second Punic War. We are fortunate, therefore, that Macrobius, citing the Roman annalist Quintus Claudius Quadrigarius, states the battle was fought ante diem iiii nones Sextilis, or 2 August.[32]

Unfortunately, the months of the pre-Julian Roman calendar are known to not to correspond to its namesake Julian day; for example, Livy records a lunar eclipse in 168 BC as occurring on 4 September, when astronomical calculations show it happened on Julian day 21 June of that year.[33] This discepency arose from the failure of the pontifices to properly perform intercalations, either by accident or for political advantage. A review of the evidence led P.S. Derow to identify the equivalent Julian date would be 1 July 216 BC.[34]

Armies[edit]

Modern interpretation of a slinger from the Balearic Islands (famous for the skill of their slingers)

Figures for troops involved in ancient battles are often unreliable, and Cannae is no exception. They should be treated with caution, especially those for the Carthaginian side.[35]

The Carthaginian army was a combination of combatants from numerous regions, and may have numbered between 40,000-50,000. Along with the core of an estimated 8,000 Libyans, there were 8,000 Iberians, 16,000 Gauls (8,000 were left at camp the day of battle) and around 5,500 Gaetulian infantry. Hannibal's cavalry also came from diverse backgrounds. He commanded 4,000 Numidian, 2,000 Iberian, 4,000 Gallic and 450 Libyan-Phoenician cavalry. Finally, Hannibal had around 8,000 skirmishers consisting of Balearic slingers and mixed-nationality spearmen. The uniting factor for the Carthaginian army was the personal tie each group had with Hannibal.[36][37]

Rome typically employed four legions each year, each consisting of 4,000 foot soldiers and 200 cavalry.[38] Perceiving the Carthaginian army as a real threat, for the first time ever the Senate introduced eight legions, each consisting of 5,000 foot soldiers and 300 cavalry, with allied troops numbering the same amount of foot soldiers but 900 cavalry per legion—more than triple the legion numbers.[18] Eight legions—some 40,000 Roman soldiers and an estimated 2,400 cavalry—formed the core of this massive new army.[39] Livy quotes one source stating the Romans added only 10,000 men to their usual army.[40] While no definitive number of Roman troops exists, all sources agree that the Carthaginians faced a considerably larger foe.

Equipment[edit]

Rome's forces used typical Roman equipment including pila (heavy javelins) and hastae (thrusting spears) as weapons as well as traditional bronze helmets, bodyshields and body armor.[41] On the other hand, the Carthaginian army used a variety of equipment. The Iberians fought with swords suited for cutting and thrusting, as well as javelins and various types of spears.[42] For defense, Iberian warriors carried large oval shields and the falcata.[42] The Gauls were likely wearing no armor, and the typical Gallic weapon was usually a long, slashing sword.[43] The heavy Gallic cavalry used the four-horned saddle.[42] The Numidian cavalry were very lightly equipped, lacking saddles and bridles for their horses, and used no armor but carried small shields, javelins and possibly a knife or longer blade.[42] Skirmishers acting as light infantry carried either slings or spears. The Balearic slingers, who were famous for their accuracy, carried short, medium and long slings used to cast stones or bullets. They may have carried a small shield or simple leather pelt on their arms, but this is uncertain. Hannibal himself was wearing musculata armor and carried a falcata as well.[44]

The equipment of the Libyan line infantry has been much debated. Head has argued in favor of short stabbing spears.[45] Polybius states that the Libyans fought with equipment taken from previously defeated Romans. It is unclear whether he meant only shields and armor or offensive weapons as well,[46] though a general reading suggests he meant the whole panoply of arms and armor, and even tactical organization. Apart from his description of the battle itself, when later discussing the subject of the Roman legion versus the Greek phalanx, Polybius says that " . . . against Hannibal, the defeats they suffered had nothing to do with weapons or formations" because "Hannibal himself . . . discarded the equipment with which he had started out [and] armed his troops with Roman weapons".[43] Daly is inclined to the view that Libyan infantry would have copied the Iberian use of the sword during their fighting there and so were armed similarly to the Romans.[47] Connolly has argued that they were armed as a pike phalanx.[48] This has been disputed by Head, because Plutarch states they carried spears shorter than the Roman triarii[45] and by Daly because they could not have carried an unwieldy pike at the same time as a heavy Roman-style shield.[46]

Deployment for battle[edit]

A modern monument near the site of the Battle of Cannae

The conventional deployment for armies of the time was placement of infantry in the center, with the cavalry in two flanking wings. The Romans followed this convention fairly closely, but chose extra depth rather than breadth for the infantry in hopes of breaking quickly through the center of Hannibal's line.[49] Varro knew how the Roman infantry had managed to penetrate Hannibal's center at Trebia, and he planned to recreate this on an even greater scale.[50] The principes were stationed immediately behind the hastati, ready to push forward at first contact to ensure the Romans presented a unified front. As Polybius wrote, "the maniples were nearer each other, or the intervals were decreased . . . and the maniples showed more depth than front".[24][51] Even though they outnumbered the Carthaginians, this depth-oriented deployment meant that the Roman lines had a front of roughly equal size to their numerically inferior opponents. The typical style of ancient warfare was to continuously pour infantry into the center and attempt to overpower the enemy. Hannibal understood that the Romans fought their battles like this, and he took his outnumbered army and strategically placed them around the enemy to win a tactical victory.[52]

Initial deployment and Roman attack (in red)

Hannibal had deployed his forces based on the particular fighting qualities of each unit, taking into consideration both their strengths and weaknesses.[53] This aspect of Hannibal's leadership was highlighted in the use of a Spanish unit, the Balearic slingers, whom he placed behind the infantry to hurl their ranged missiles into the masses of Roman troops.[42] He placed his Iberians and Gauls in the middle, alternating the ethnic composition across the front line, with himself at the front and center.[54] Infantry from Punic Africa was on the wings at the very edge of his infantry line.[55] These infantry were battle-hardened, remained cohesive and would attack the Roman flanks.

Hasdrubal led the Iberian and Gallic cavalry on the left (south near the river Aufidus) of the Carthaginian army.[56] By placing the flank of his army on the Aufidus, Hannibal prevented this flank from being overlapped by the more numerous Romans. Hasdrubal was given 6,000–7,000 cavalry, and Hanno had 3,000–4,000 Numidians on the right.[57][56]

Hannibal intended that his cavalry, comprising mainly medium Hispanic cavalry and Numidian light horse, and positioned on the flanks, would defeat the weaker Roman cavalry and swing around to attack the Roman infantry from the rear as it pressed upon Hannibal's weakened center.[58] His veteran African troops would then press in from the flanks at the crucial moment, and encircle the overextended Romans.[56]

The Romans were in front of the hill leading to Cannae and hemmed in on their right flank by the river Aufidus, so that their left flank was the only viable means of retreat.[59] In addition, the Carthaginian forces had maneuvered so that the Romans would face east. Not only would the morning sun shine low into the Romans' eyes, but the southeasterly winds would blow sand and dust into their faces as they approached the battlefield.[51] Hannibal's deployment of his army, based on his perception of the terrain and understanding of the capabilities of his troops, proved decisive.

Engagement[edit]

As the armies advanced on one another, Hannibal gradually extended the center of his line, as Polybius described: "After thus drawing up his whole army in a straight line, he took the central companies of Hispanics and Celts and advanced with them, keeping the rest of them in contact with these companies, but gradually falling off, so as to produce a crescent-shaped formation, the line of the flanking companies growing thinner as it was prolonged, his object being to employ the Africans as a reserve force and to begin the action with the Hispanics and Celts." Polybius described the weak Carthaginian center as deployed in a crescent, curving out toward the Romans in the middle with the African troops on their flanks in echelon formation.[24] It is believed that the purpose of this formation was to break the forward momentum of the Roman infantry, and delay its advance before other developments allowed Hannibal to deploy his African infantry most effectively.[60] While the majority of historians feel that Hannibal's action was deliberate, some have called this account fanciful, and claim that the actions of the day represent either the natural curvature that occurs when a broad front of infantry marches forward, or the bending back of the Carthaginian center from the shock action of meeting the heavily massed Roman center.[61]

Destruction of the Roman army

When the battle was joined, the cavalry engaged in a fierce exchange on the flanks.[62] Polybius describes the Hispanic and Celtic horse, upon encountering the Roman horse on the one flank, and fighting man to man. Eventually the Hispanic and Celtic soldiers gained the upper hand and defeated the Romans, killing most of them and forcing the rest to flee along the bank of the Aufidius, where they were harried and slaughtered.[63] According Livy, the consul Aemilius Paullus was with this group, where he was severely wounded.[64] On the other flank the Numidians engaged in a way that merely kept the Roman allied cavalry occupied.[65] Hasdrubal kept his victorious Hispanic and Gallic cavalry under control and did not chase the retreating Roman right wing.[65] Instead, he led them to the other side of the field to attack the Roman allied cavalry, who were under the direct command of the other consul Terentius Varro.[66] Assailed from both sides, the allied cavalry broke before Hasdrubal could charge to contact and the Numidians pursued them off the field.[24][66]

While the Carthaginians were in the process of defeating the cavalry, the masses of infantry on both sides advanced towards each other in the center of the field. The wind from the east blew dust in the Romans' faces and obscured their vision. While the wind was not a major factor, the dust that both armies created would have been potentially debilitating to sight.[51] Although it made seeing difficult, troops would still have been able to see others in the vicinity. The dust, however, was not the only psychological factor involved in battle. Because of the somewhat distant battle location, both sides were forced to fight on little sleep. Another Roman disadvantage was thirst caused by Hannibal's attack on the Roman encampment during the previous day. Furthermore, the massive number of troops would have led to an overwhelming amount of background noise. All of these psychological factors made battle especially difficult for the infantrymen.[67]

The light infantry on both sides engaged in indecisive skirmishing, inflicting few casualties and quickly withdrawing through the ranks of their heavy infantry.[68] As the Roman heavy infantry attacked, Hannibal stood with his men in the weak center and held them to a controlled retreat. The crescent of Hispanic and Gallic troops buckled inwards as they gradually withdrew. Knowing the superiority of the Roman infantry, Hannibal had instructed his infantry to withdraw deliberately, creating an even tighter semicircle around the attacking Roman forces. By doing so, he had turned the strength of the Roman infantry into a weakness. While the front ranks were gradually advancing, the bulk of the Roman troops began to lose their cohesion, as they began crowding themselves into the growing gap.[69] Soon they were compacted together so closely that they had little space to wield their weapons. In pressing so far forward in their desire to destroy the retreating and seemingly collapsing line of Hispanic and Gallic troops, the Romans had ignored (possibly due to the dust) the African troops that stood uncommitted on the projecting ends of this now-reversed crescent.[61] This also gave the Carthaginian cavalry time to drive the Roman cavalry off on both flanks and attack the Roman center in the rear. The Roman infantry, now stripped of protection on both its flanks, formed a wedge that drove deeper and deeper into the Carthaginian semicircle, driving itself into an alley formed by the African infantry on the wings.[70] At this decisive point, Hannibal ordered his African infantry to turn inwards and advance against the Roman flanks, creating an encirclement in one of the earliest known examples of a pincer movement.[71]

Carnage[edit]

When the Carthaginian cavalry attacked the Romans in the rear and the African flanking echelons assailed them on their right and left, the advance of the Roman infantry was brought to an abrupt halt.[72] Polybius notes that the Roman host broke up as they responded to this assault from an unexpected quarter, fighting singly or in maniples against the advancing Carthaginian heavy infantry.[73]

O'Connell notes at this point that the battle tactically was over, "but the killing had just begun."[74] There was no alternative to the extermination of the Roman soldiers: the force was still too large and full of fight to be taken prisoner; further, their remaining leadership was immobilized amid disintegrating units pressed together, so there was no one to negotiate a surrender with. Polybius provides a terse description of what O'Connell describes as "the most horrific several hours in all of Western military history."[75] "The Roman legions held on as long as they could turn and present a front to the enemy that now surrounded them. But as their outer ranks were continually cut down, and the survivors forced to pull back and huddle together, they were finally all killed where they stood."[76]

Even at this point, the Romans still outnumbered the Carthaginians, at least 50,000 of them facing no more than than number.[77] Yet the trapped Romans succumbed to their enemy, with no known survivors from this group. O'Connell devotes several pages exploring the likely psychology of both the murderous victors and the doomed defeated. He notes that the ancients believed the trapped Romans fought stubbornly to the end; however, based on modern studies, he doubts this: "Given what has been learned... Even among elite units, when sufficient casualties have been suffered, the whole group slides into a state of apathy and depression more extreme than is encountered in almost any other kind of human experience."[78] On the other hand, killing people with sword and shield is obviously hard work distasteful to anyone who is not a sociopath: the Carthaginian officers had to repeatedly urge their men back to their butchery until the sun set and darkness fell over the killing fields.


As Livy described, "So many thousands of Romans were dying... Some, whom their wounds, pinched by the morning cold, had roused, as they were rising up, covered with blood, from the midst of the heaps of slain, were overpowered by the enemy. Some were found with their heads plunged into the earth, which they had excavated; having thus, as it appeared, made pits for themselves, and having suffocated themselves."[79] Victor Davis Hanson claims that nearly six hundred legionaries were slaughtered each minute until darkness brought an end to the bloodletting.[80] Only 14,000 Roman troops managed to escape, most of whom had cut their way through to the nearby town of Canusium.

Casualties[edit]

Roman[edit]

The Death of Aemilius Paullus by John Trumbull, 1773

Polybius writes that of the Roman and allied infantry, 70,000 were killed, 10,000 captured, and "perhaps" 3,000 survived. He also reports that of the 6,000 Roman and allied cavalry, only 370 survived.[81]

Livy wrote, "Forty-five thousand and five hundred foot, two thousand seven hundred horse, there being an equal number of citizens and allies, are said to have been slain."[82] He also reports that 3,000 Roman and allied infantry and 1,500 Roman and allied cavalry were taken prisoner by the Carthaginians.[82] Another 2,000 Roman fugitives were rounded up at the unfortified village of Cannae by Carthaginian cavalry commanded by Carthalo, 7,000 fell prisoner in the smaller Roman camp and 5,800 in the larger.[82] Although Livy does not cite his source by name, it is likely to have been Quintus Fabius Pictor, a Roman historian who fought in and wrote on the Second Punic War. It is Pictor whom Livy names when reporting the casualties at the Battle of Trebia.[83] In addition to the consul Paullus, Livy goes on to record that among the dead were 2 quaestors, 29 of the 48 military tribunes (some of consular rank, including the consul of the previous year, Gnaeus Servilius Geminus, and the former Magister equitum, Marcus Minucius Rufus), and 80 "senators or men who had held offices which would have given them the right to be elected to the Senate".[82]

Later Roman and Greco-Roman historians largely follow Livy's figures. Appian gave 50,000 killed and "a great many" taken prisoner.[84] Plutarch agreed, "50,000 Romans fell in that battle... 4,000 were taken alive".[85] Quintilian: "60,000 men were slain by Hannibal at Cannae".[86] Eutropius: "20 officers of consular and praetorian rank, 30 senators, and 300 others of noble descent, were taken or slain, as well as 40,000 foot-soldiers, and 3,500 horse".[87]

Some modern historians, while rejecting Polybius's figure as flawed, are willing to accept Livy's figure.[88] Other historians have come up with far lower estimates. In 1891, Cantalupi proposed Roman losses of 10,500 to 16,000.[89] Samuels in 1990 also regarded Livy's figure as far too high, on the grounds that the cavalry would have been inadequate to prevent the Roman infantry escaping to the rear. He doubts that Hannibal even wanted a high death toll, as much of the army consisted of Italians whom Hannibal hoped to win as allies.[90]

Carthaginian[edit]

Livy recorded Hannibal's losses at "about 8,000 of his bravest men."[91] Polybius reports 5,700 dead: 4,000 Gauls, 1,500 Spanish and Africans, and 200 cavalry.[81]

Aftermath[edit]

Never when the city was in safety was there so great a panic and confusion within the walls of Rome. I shall therefore shrink from the task, and not attempt to relate what in describing I must make less than the reality. The consul and his army having been lost at the Trasimenus the year before, it was not one wound upon another which was announced, but a multiplied disaster, the loss of two consular armies, together with the two consuls: and that now there was neither any Roman camp, nor general nor soldiery: that Apulia and Samnium, and now almost the whole of Italy, were in the possession of Hannibal. No other nation surely would not have been overwhelmed by such an accumulation of misfortune.

— Livy, on the Roman Senate's reaction to the defeat[92]

For a brief period, the Romans were in complete disarray. Their best armies in the peninsula were destroyed, the few remnants severely demoralized, and the only remaining consul (Varro) completely discredited. As the story goes, Rome declared a national day of mourning as there was not a single person who was not either related to or acquainted with a person who had died. The Romans became so desperate that they resorted to human sacrifice, twice burying people alive[93] at the Forum of Rome and abandoning an oversized baby in the Adriatic Sea[93] (perhaps one of the last instances of human sacrifices by the Romans, apart from public executions of defeated enemies dedicated to Mars).

Philip V of Macedon pledged his support to Hannibal following the Carthaginian victory.

Within just three campaign seasons (20 months), Rome had lost one-fifth (150,000) of the entire population of male citizens over 17 years of age.[94] Furthermore, the morale effect of this victory was such that most of southern Italy joined Hannibal's cause. After Cannae, the Hellenistic southern provinces of Arpi, Salapia, Herdonia, Uzentum, including the cities of Capua and Tarentum (two of the largest city-states in Italy) revoked their allegiance to Rome and pledged their loyalty to Hannibal. As Livy noted, "How much more serious was the defeat of Cannae than those which preceded it, can be seen by the behavior of Rome's allies; before that fateful day, their loyalty remained unshaken, now it began to waver for the simple reason that they despaired of Roman power."[95] That the same year the Greek cities in Sicily were induced to revolt against Roman political control, while the Macedonian king, Philip V, pledged his support to Hannibal, initiating the First Macedonian War against Rome. Hannibal also secured an alliance with the new King Hieronymus of Syracuse, the only independent king left in Sicily.

Hannibal counting the signet rings of the Roman knights killed during the battle, statue by Sébastien Slodtz, 1704, Louvre

Livy illustrates the state of Roman morale with two vivid anecdotes. The first concerns Hannibal's brother Mago, who had returned to Carthage with news of the victory. He reported to their senate that in several engagements with the Romans Hannibal had killed over 200,000 soldier and taken 50,000 prisoner; of six commanders, two consuls and a Master of horse had been slain; and a number of Roman allies had gone over to the Carthaginians. Then Mago concluded his report by having a collection of golden rings poured upon the council floor in front of the assembled senators. He explained that each ring belonged to one equites who had been slain in battle and had earned the ring through exceptional bravery. Livy notes one unnamed authority stated the volume of jewelry amounted to three and one-half measures, only to add "it is generally and more credibly held that there was not more than one measure of them.[96]

The second concerns Lucius Caecilius Metellus and three other military tribunes, who had taken refuge at Canusium with other Roman refugees. Demoralized at the defeat, they discussed the possibility of setting sail overseas and finding employment as mercenaries for some foreign prince. Word of this meeting reached the young Publius Cornelius Scipio who, with only a few followers, strode to where the discussion was underway and burst into the chamber holding his naked sword over their heads. Before the wavering men Scipio is reported to have cried,

I swear with all the passion in my heart that I will never desert our homeland, or permit any other citizen of Rome to leave her in the lurch. If I willfully break my oath may Jupiter, Greatest and Best, bring me to a shameful death, with my house, my family, and all I possess! Swear the same oath, Caecilius! And the rest of you, swear it too. If anyone refuse, against him this sword is drawn.[97]

Hannibal sent a delegation led by Carthalo to negotiate a peace treaty with the Senate on moderate terms. Despite the multiple catastrophes Rome had suffered, the Senate refused to parley. Instead, they redoubled their efforts, declaring full mobilization of the male Roman population, and raised new legions, enlisting landless peasants and even slaves.[98] So firm were these measures that the word "peace" was prohibited, mourning was limited to only 30 days, and public tears were prohibited even to women.[51]: 386 

Hannibal's failure to march on Rome[edit]

Following the battle, the commander of the Numidian cavalry, Maharbal, urged Hannibal to seize the opportunity and march immediately on Rome. It is told that the latter's refusal caused Maharbal's exclamation: "Of a truth the gods have not bestowed all things upon the same person. You know how to conquer, Hannibal; but you do not know how to make use of your victory."[99]

Hannibal had good reasons to judge the strategic situation after the battle differently from Maharbal. As the historian Hans Delbrück pointed out, due to the high numbers of killed and wounded among its ranks, the Punic army was not in a condition to perform a direct assault on Rome. It would have been a fruitless demonstration that would have nullified the psychological effect of Cannae on the Roman allies. Even if his army was at full strength, a successful siege of Rome would have required Hannibal to subdue a considerable part of the hinterland to cut the enemy's supplies and secure his own. Even after the tremendous losses suffered at Cannae and the defection of a number of her allies, Rome still had abundant manpower to prevent this and maintain considerable forces in Iberia, Sicily, Sardinia and elsewhere despite Hannibal's presence in Italy.[100] Hannibal's conduct after the victories at Trasimene (217 BC) and Cannae, and the fact that he first attacked Rome only five years later, in 211 BC, suggests that his strategic aim was not the destruction of his foe but to dishearten the Romans by carnage on the battlefield and to wear them down to a moderate peace agreement by stripping them of their allies.[101][102][103]

"In fact there were many good reasons for not marching on Rome," military expert Robert O'Connell writes, "and only one good reason for going."[104] While the scholars provide reasons not to march, a soldier, Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, believed Maharbal was right; when a more powerful adversary is down, he must be dispatched. "Hannibal's single chance of winning the larger war was to begin marching his army towards Rome," O'Connell adds. "In the end it still would have been a long shot. But it was his only shot. Instead, Hannibal chose another route, and the war became only a matter of time."[104]

Historical significance[edit]

Effects on Roman military doctrine[edit]

Shield of Henry II of France depicting Hannibal's victory at Cannae, an allusion to France's conflict with the Holy Roman Empire during the 16th century.

Cannae played a major role in shaping the military structure and tactical organization of the Roman Republican army. At Cannae, the Roman infantry assumed a formation similar to the Greek phalanx. This left them vulnerable to Hannibal's tactic of double envelopment since their inability to maneuver independently from the mass of the army made it impossible for them to counter the strategic encirclement used by the Carthaginian cavalry. The laws of the Roman state requiring command to alternate between the two consuls restricted strategic consistency.[citation needed]

In the years following Cannae, striking reforms were introduced to address these deficiencies. First, the Romans "articulated the phalanx, then divided it into columns, and finally split it up into a great number of small tactical bodies that were capable, now of closing together in a compact impenetrable union, now of changing the pattern with consummate flexibility, of separating one from the other and turning in this or that direction."[105] For instance, at Ilipa and Zama, the principes were formed up well to the rear of the hastati—a deployment that allowed a greater degree of mobility and maneuverability. The culminating result of this change marked the transition from the traditional manipular system to the cohort under Gaius Marius, as the basic infantry unit of the Roman army.[citation needed]

In addition, a unified command came to be seen as a necessity. After various political experiments, Scipio Africanus was made general-in-chief of the Roman armies in Africa, and was assured this role for the duration of the war. This appointment may have violated the constitutional laws of the Roman Republic but, as Delbrück wrote, it "effected an internal transformation that increased her military potentiality enormously" while foreshadowing the decline of the Republic's political institutions. Furthermore, the battle exposed the limits of a citizen-militia army. Following Cannae, the Roman army gradually developed into a professional force: the nucleus of Scipio's army at Zama was composed of veterans who had been fighting the Carthaginians in Hispania for nearly sixteen years, and had been moulded into a superb fighting force.[citation needed]

Status in military history[edit]

Cannae is as famous for Hannibal's tactics as it is for the role it played in Roman history. Not only did Hannibal inflict a defeat on the Roman Republic in a manner unrepeated for over a century until the lesser-known Battle of Arausio, the battle has acquired a significant reputation in military history. As military historian Theodore Ayrault Dodge wrote:

Few battles of ancient times are more marked by ability... than the battle of Cannae. The position was such as to place every advantage on Hannibal's side. The manner in which the far from perfect Hispanic and Gallic foot was advanced in a wedge in échelon... was first held there and then withdrawn step by step, until it had the reached the converse position... is a simple masterpiece of battle tactics. The advance at the proper moment of the African infantry, and its wheel right and left upon the flanks of the disordered and crowded Roman legionaries, is far beyond praise. The whole battle, from the Carthaginian standpoint, is a consummate piece of art, having no superior, few equal, examples in the history of war.[106]

As Will Durant wrote, "It was a supreme example of generalship, never bettered in history... and it set the lines of military tactics for 2,000 years".[107]

Hannibal's double envelopment at Cannae is often viewed as one of the greatest battlefield maneuvers in history, and is cited as the first successful use of the pincer movement within the Western world to be recorded in detail.[108]

"Cannae Model"[edit]

Apart from being one of the greatest defeats inflicted on Roman arms, Cannae represents the archetypal battle of annihilation, a strategy whose successful implementation has been rare in modern history. As Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force in World War II, wrote, "Every ground commander seeks the battle of annihilation; so far as conditions permit, he tries to duplicate in modern war the classic example of Cannae". Furthermore, the totality of Hannibal's victory has made the name "Cannae" a byword for military success, and is studied in detail in military academies around the world. The notion that an entire army could be encircled and annihilated within a single stroke led to a fascination among Western generals for centuries (including Frederick the Great and Helmuth von Moltke), who attempted to emulate its tactical paradigm of envelopment and re-create their own "Cannae".[80] Delbrück's seminal study of the battle had a profound influence on German military theorists, in particular the Chief of the German General Staff, Alfred von Schlieffen, whose eponymous "Schlieffen Plan" was inspired by Hannibal's double envelopment maneuver. Schlieffen taught that the "Cannae model" would continue to be applicable in maneuver warfare throughout the 20th century:

A battle of annihilation can be carried out today according to the same plan devised by Hannibal in long forgotten times. The enemy front is not the goal of the principal attack. The mass of the troops and the reserves should not be concentrated against the enemy front; the essential is that the flanks be crushed. The wings should not be sought at the advanced points of the front but rather along the entire depth and extension of the enemy formation. The annihilation is completed through an attack against the enemy's rear... To bring about a decisive and annihilating victory requires an attack against the front and against one or both flanks...

Schlieffen later developed his own operational doctrine in a series of articles, many of which were translated and published in a work entitled Cannae.[citation needed]

In 1991, general Norman Schwarzkopf Jr., commander of Coalition forces in the Gulf War, cited Hannibal's triumph at Cannae as inspiration for the rapid and successful Coalition operations during the conflict.[109]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Although some authors state the result was a decisive victory for Carthage, the majority of authors do not apply this label to the result.
  2. ^ See Traditional English pronunciation of Latin

References[edit]

  1. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 159.
  2. ^ Forsythe, A Critical History of Early Rome (Berkeley: University of California, 2006), pp. 66f
  3. ^ Daly 2002, pp. 24–25.
  4. ^ Daly 2002, pp. 17–18.
  5. ^ Philip Sabin, Lost Battles, p. 183.
  6. ^ O'Connell, p. 10
  7. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 28.
  8. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 33.
  9. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, pp. 36–37.
  10. ^ Polybius, Histories, iii.87
  11. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 38.
  12. ^ Liddell Hart, Basil. Strategy. New York City, New York: Penguin, 1967.
  13. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxi.19
  14. ^ Polybius, Histories, iii.101-104
  15. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 40.
  16. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 60.
  17. ^ Polybius, Historiae ("The Histories"), iii.107; translated by Evelyn S. Shuckburgh, taken from "Internet Ancient History Sourcebook". Fordham University website.
  18. ^ a b Polybius, Historiae, iii.107
  19. ^ a b Daly 2002, p. 119.
  20. ^ Daly 2002, pp. 119–120.
  21. ^ Samuels 1990, p. 23.
  22. ^ Daly 2002, p. 120.
  23. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 75.
  24. ^ a b c d e Cite error: The named reference polybius was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  25. ^ a b Goldsworthy 2001, p. 77.
  26. ^ a b Goldsworthy 2001, p. 82.
  27. ^ Caven, B. Punic Wars. London: George Werdenfeld and Nicholson Ltd., 1980.
  28. ^ a b Goldsworthy 2001, p. 80.
  29. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 81.
  30. ^ Cottrell, Leonard. Enemy of Rome. Evans Bros, 1965, ISBN 0-237-44320-1. p94
  31. ^ Plutarch, Parallel Lives, "Fabius Maximus".
  32. ^ Macrobius, Saturnalia, 1.1.6.26
  33. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, XLIV.37.8
  34. ^ Derow, "The Roman Calendar, 218-191 B.C.", Phoenix, 30 (1976), pp. 277f
  35. ^ Daly 2002, p. 32.
  36. ^ Daly 2002, pp. 29–32.
  37. ^ Daly 2002, pp. 81–112.
  38. ^ Polybius, Historiae, i.16
  39. ^ The Cambridge Ancient History VIII: Rome and the Mediterranean 218–133 BC, Cambridge University Press, 1965.
  40. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxii.36
  41. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 44.
  42. ^ a b c d e Goldsworthy 2001, p. 54.
  43. ^ a b Polybius, Historiae, iii.114
  44. ^ Daly 2002, pp. 107–108.
  45. ^ a b Duncan Head, Armies of the Macedonian and Punic Wars (Wargames Research Group, 1983) p. 144.
  46. ^ a b Daly 2002, p. 89.
  47. ^ Daly 2002, p. 90.
  48. ^ Connolly (1998), p. 148.
  49. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 100.
  50. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 102.
  51. ^ a b c d Dodge, Theodore. Hannibal. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Da Capo Press (reprint edition), 1891, ISBN 0-306-81362-9.
  52. ^ Mills, Cliff. Hannibal. New York: Chelsea House, 2008. Print.
  53. ^ Cottrell, Leonard. Enemy of Rome. Evans Bros, 1965, ISBN 0-237-44320-1. p95
  54. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 110.
  55. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, pp. 110–111.
  56. ^ a b c Goldsworthy 2001, p. 112.
  57. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 108.
  58. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, pp. 111–112.
  59. ^ Bradford, E. Hannibal. London: Macmillan London Ltd., 1981.
  60. ^ Healy 1994, p. 77.
  61. ^ a b Healy 1994, p. 84.
  62. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, pp. 118–120.
  63. ^ Polybius, III.115
  64. ^ Livy
  65. ^ a b Goldsworthy 2001, p. 126.
  66. ^ a b Goldsworthy 2001, p. 149.
  67. ^ Daly 2002.
  68. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, pp. 114–116.
  69. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 147.
  70. ^ Cottrell, Leonard. Enemy of Rome. Evans Bros, 1965, ISBN 0-237-44320-1. p99
  71. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 148.
  72. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 150.
  73. ^ Polybius, III.115
  74. ^ O'Connell, p. 157
  75. ^ O'Connell, p. 158
  76. ^ Polybius, III.116
  77. ^ O'Connell, p. 157; Goldsworthy, p. 150
  78. ^ O'Connell, p. 159
  79. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxii.51
  80. ^ a b Hanson, "Battle of Cannae" The Reader's Companion to Military History, Cowley, Robert and Parker, Geoffrey (edd.), p. 70. Houghton Mifflin Company, 1996, ISBN 0-395-66969-3.
  81. ^ a b Polybius, Historiae, iii.117
  82. ^ a b c d Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxii.49
  83. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxii.7
  84. ^ Appian 1999, 4.25.
  85. ^ Plutarch 1916, 16.8.
  86. ^ Quintilian. Institutio Oratoria, 8.6.26.
  87. ^ Eutropius. Abridgement of Roman History, iii.10.
  88. ^ Daly 2002, p. 202.
  89. ^ Cantalupi, P. "Le Legioni Romane nella Guerra d'Annibale", Beloch Studi di Storia Antica.
  90. ^ Samuels 1990, p. 25.
  91. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxii.52.6
  92. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxii.54
  93. ^ a b Palmer, Robert EA (1997). Rome and Carthage at peace. Stuttgart, F. Steiner. ISBN 978-3-515-07040-9.
  94. ^ Cottrell, Leonard. Enemy of Rome. Evans Bros, 1965, ISBN 0-237-44320-1. p102
  95. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxii.61
  96. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxiii.11-12
  97. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxii.53
  98. ^ Cottrell, Leonard. Enemy of Rome (Evans Bros, 1965) ISBN 0-237-44320-1 p. 104
  99. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, xxii.51
  100. ^ Delbrück 1964, pp. 353–354.
  101. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, pp. 162–163.
  102. ^ Delbrück 1964, pp. 354–355.
  103. ^ Delbrück 1964, pp. 384–385.
  104. ^ a b O'Connell, p. 165
  105. ^ Peter Paret, Gordon A. Craig, Felix Gilbert, Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1986), page 337.
  106. ^ Theodore Ayrault Dodge, Hannibal (N.Y., N.Y.: Perseus Publishing, 2004), pages 378–379.
  107. ^ Will Durant, The Story of Civilization, vol. III (N.Y., N.Y.: Simon and Schuster, 1944), page 51.
  108. ^ O'Neill, Timothy R. "Reconnaissance on the Rappahannock Field Manual" (PDF). p. 65. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 30, 2015. Retrieved July 4, 2013.
  109. ^ Goldsworthy 2001, p. 180.

Sources[edit]

Online[edit]

Printed[edit]

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]