Friday, 20 January 2023

Units of History - Carthaginian War Elephants DOCUMENTARY

Elephants are the largest land animals on the  planet. Twice as tall as a man and weighing 60   times as much, they are giant manifestations  of nature’s power. As with fire however,   it wouldn’t be long before humans  sought to tame this raw force. The   end result is that as early  as the first millennium BC,   these animals were forged into tools of war  and by the time of antiquity would become the   most feared weapons on the battlefield. This  is especially true in the west when we turn   to the region of North Africa. Today let us  explore the famed War Elephants of Carthage. this video was sponsored by Magellan TV they're  an awesome documentary streaming service run by   filmmakers with a selection of over 2000 videos  to choose from among the categories of history   science nature space and more when it comes  to history documentaries Magellan TV has the   richest and most varied content anywhere  ancient modern current war biography and   even related genres like science and crime  which are historical in nature if you like   our content I can highly recommend you check  out the documentary series ancient Greece the   greatest show on earth which covers the  fascinating history of ancient Greece   through the lens of its theater performances  Magellan TV is compatible with roku amazon   firetv Apple TV Google Play and iOS which  means you can watch it anytime anywhere on   your television laptop or mobile device sign  up today to get a one-month free membership   trial by visiting the link in the description  below or going to try Magellan tv.com/invicta Carthage was founded in 814 BC as a Phoenician  colony in North Africa.


It inherited much from   its mother city, becoming a formidable trade and  naval power. However this did not include a strong   tradition of land warfare or a familiarity with  elephants. Over time though as the Carthaginian   Empire expanded so too did its military. This  evolution mainly involved augmenting or outright   replacing its native troops with auxiliary  and mercenary forces. Doing so allowed the   Punic army to leverage the military expertise  of many nations whilst shielding the Punic   citizenry from military losses. In this way,  the Carthaginians were able to fight dozens   of wars of expansion which won them a vast  Empire. We should note that all of this took   place in the first 500 years of its history  without the use of the famed war elephants. These mighty animals first entered the  picture in the late 3rd century BC during   the campaigns of Pyrrhus of Epirus.


The  ambitious general had come to defend the   Greeks in the west and had brought with  him not just a crack army, but also 20 war   elephants. They were first used against the  Romans in Italy and then the Carthaginians   in Sicily. Despite their relatively limited  killing power, the elephants made quite the   psychological impression on the battlefield and  were shown to be a promising x-factor. In fact,   their use was quickly spreading across the  Mediterranean. This was largely a result of   Alexander the Great’s campaigns in the east and  the escalating warfare between his successors.   Carthage did not want to be left behind in the  arms race and now seems to have joined the trend.


To do so it likely would have imported  elephants and specialists from India   through the intermediaries of Egypt and Syria.  These were Asian elephants (Elephas Maximus),   which stood roughly 3m tall at the shoulder  and weighed almost 4 tons. They had a long   history of warfare in the east and were  highly prized possessions. While Carthage   was certainly quite wealthy and capable  of buying them in significant quantities,   it proved far more economical to source  their pachyderms closer to home. As a result,   they turned to the exploitation  of native African elephants. In these matters they would have had the choice  between two options, the Savanna Elephants   (Loxodonta Africana) and the Forest Elephants  (Loxodonta Cyclotis). The former stood 4m tall at   the shoulder and weighed 5 tons while the latter  stood only 2.7m tall at the shoulder and weighed   3 tons. Taming the Savanna species would have  meant taming the largest terrestrial animal on the   planet.


However even the skilled Indian trainers  were not up to the task. As a result, Carthage   was left to capture the more diminutive Forest  Elephants. These were more widespread than today   and could have been acquired from the surrounding  lands of Libya, Numidia, and Mauretania. The specific method for recruiting and  training them is unknown. However it is   likely that such activities were similar  to those practiced in India. In this case,   wild elephants would be captured by herding  them into corrals with fire, loud noises,   or females. The newly caught animals would then  be tied to a post amongst already tamed elephants   to lose their aggression by example. If they  continued to defy trainers, they might be beaten   or starved.


Once submissive, elephants would then  be accustomed to the sights, sounds, and smells   of battle. Handlers would also teach them how to  answer commands, how to maneuver, and even how   to kill. This arduous process would be repeated  for every war elephant as it proved prohibitively   difficult to to breed and raise the animals in  captivity given their long reproductive cycle and   huge resource demands. But despite these hurdles,  Carthage committed itself to the task and within   a decade had formed its very own elephant corp. Our earliest record of their use was during the   First Punic War. While initially employed quite  clumsily they eventually proved to be effective   tools and became a staple of the Carthaginian  military.


Such was the North African Empire’s   commitment to this new weapon system that  their capital was supposedly equipped with   stables to house up to 300 elephants at a  time. If these were full then at its peak,   Carthage would have boasted the largest  force of war elephants in the Mediterranean. An elephant in and of itself is a terrifying  creature to be facing on the battlefield. Their   massive size, weight and strength mean they can  inflict significant damage against individuals   and groups of soldiers. We have records  of them trampling men under their feet,   goring troops with their tusks, and even picking  up and smashing cavalry with their trunks. But as   war elephants they would have been equipped  with gear to make them even more powerful. Defensively this often meant layering on  protection. This might be something as   simple as a cloak to offer padding, catch  missiles, and make the elephant look more   intimidating. Other times though this might  be upgraded to actual armour. For instance,   vulnerable areas like the legs, neck, and  trunk could be wrapped in flexible laminar   bands of leather or metal.


Larger swaths of the  elephant’s body could be protected by sheets of   scale armour. In some cases we even have records  of the elephants being outfitted with specialized   helmets. Often these included a top plate  and frill of feathers to protect the mahout. In terms of offense, this mostly came in the  form of human riders. A driver always sat on   the elephant's neck but their job was largely  restricted to controlling the elephant. Instead,   killing power came from additional crew who joined  them on the elephants' back wielding close range   weapons like a lance or long range weapons like  a javelin or bow.


Most war elephants could hold   about three of these. The larger elephants might  support more weight but given the limited space   available they would instead be equipped with  a tower. Such howdahs measured about 1 by 2m   and were secured on the elephant’s back by  way of ropes and chains. Made of wood and   adorned with additional armor, they served as  robust weapons platforms for mounted warriors. A fully equipped war elephant was thus  a fearsome instrument of war. However we   should note that not all animals were  armed to the maximum extent. In fact,   many ancient depictions of war elephants show  them virtually bare.


null


But why? Well for one,   specialized gear could be hard to procure  and maintain. It also imposed restrictions   on mobility. Thus a commander might opt  to use stripped down war elephants who   were perfectly capable of getting the job done  with their own natural advantages. Additionally,   there would be limitations imposed by the  type of elephant in question. For example,   the African forest elephant was on average smaller  than its Indian counterpart and thus less suitable   for bearing the burdens of heavy gear like a  tower. While scholarly debate still surrounds the   question of whether standard Punic war elephants  carried high tier equipment like howdahs, it is   very likely that Carthage was capable of fielding  elephants which could when the need arose. Clearly elephants are strong and powerful  but how do you use them in battle? This   was something of a dilemma that was solved  through experimentation on the battlefield.   Rather than deal with individual cases we can  look broadly at the most common practices.  In terms of deployment there were two principle  formations. The first involved placing war   elephants front and center with a massed line of  anywhere from 20 to over 100 beasts.


The second   involved placing them on one or both flanks. In  either case, the elephant units were placed ahead   of the main body of heavy infantry or cavalry.  Within the elephant unit, animals were spaced out   15 to 20 m in one or two lines. Between them were  placed supporting, light infantry detachments.   According to Diodorus, 50 men per elephant was  fairly standard in the Mediterranean. These   troops would be tasked with softening up enemy  formations and keeping them from getting at the   vulnerable underbellies and legs of the elephants. Now that we’ve covered deployment, let’s move on   to combat. This almost exclusively involved  taking the offense in the form of a massive   charge. The commander would usually order  this attack at the start of the battle with   the war elephants thundering across the field  towards the enemy like battering rams.


For   those on the receiving end, this must have been  a terrifying sight. Loose, poorly trained troops   often broke before first contact while horses  unaccustomed to the strange sights, sounds,   and smalls were known to bolt in panic. Strong  forces like a phalanx were far more likely to   hold their ground. Yet cohesion alone would not  protect them as might be the case against cavalry.   Elephants and their support team were more than  capable of literally ripping apart formations.  Here are a couple incredible descriptions  from ancient historians: ”Where the creatures   joined the fighting some perished underfoot  trampled down together with their armour;   others were encompassed with their trunks  and flung down against the ground: people   died a terrible death; many breathed their  last pierced through with elephants’ tusks.”   “It was especially terrifying to see the elephants  seizing armed men with their trunks and passing   them overhead to the drivers who slayed them  like captured game.” “The action was unlike   any of previous contests; for wherever the  beasts could wheel round, they rushed forth   against the ranks of the infantry and demolished  the phalanx of the Macedonians, dense as it was.”  Truly war elephants were a force to be reckoned  with.


However they were by no means unstoppable.   They were animals after all, never fully under  control even in the best of circumstances and   prone to running amok amongst their own lines.  In addition, many militaries eventually devised   effective countermeasures to fighting them.  But that discussion will have to wait for   another time. Let us now turn to the service  history of the Carthaginian War Elephants. According to our records, their earliest  deployment was in 262 BC at the Battle of   Agrigentum during the opening stages  of the First Punic War. Here the   Carthaginians were only beginning  to master this new arm of warfare,   apparently deploying their 60 elephants  in the second battle line.


They would   pay the price for this hesitancy when the  retreating front line spooked the elephants,   causing them to panic and trample the rest of  the army leading to its swift disintegration. Following this humiliating defeat the  Carthaginian elephant corp was put on   a tight leash. It would only see use again  6 years later when the Roman consul Regulus   launched an invasion of North Africa. This  time nearly 100 elephants were deployed   in a massive line at the front. Their  charge struck the Romans like a mighty   hammer while cavalry swept around the side  and flanks to finish the job. For years,   surviving legionaries would tell horror stories  of that traumatizing defeat. The Carthaginians   had regained confidence in their elephants and  now sent them back to Sicily. In response the   Romans avoided pitched battle at all costs.  However in 251 BC the legions would use a   ruse outside of Panormus to draw the feared beats  into an ambush beneath the city walls.Thus we see   that throughout the First Punic War, elephants  would rack up a mixed record of wins and losses.


Shortly after concluding its conflict with Rome,  the Carthaginians were embroiled in a bitter   internal struggle known as the Mercenary War. Once  again the Punic army would turn to its elephants   for a miracle. Thankfully they would deliver  in the final climactic battle when the general   Hamilcar Barca managed to use them to shatter a  rebel army twice his size. From this low point,   Carthage would bounce back to reassert itself as  a powerful empire. War elephants were used in the   following campaigns to re-secure North Africa  and in the Barcid conquest of Spain. It's from   here that they would be roped into Hannibal’s  bold plans to invade Rome during the Second   Punic War. Famously, 27 of these elephants would  brave the alps and make it into the first battle   with the Romans at the River Trebia. While  they played their part in achieving victory,   the presence of the elephants would be short lived  when all but one perished in the following weeks.


Elephants would continue to pop up over the course  of the Second Punic War. They again appear to have   had mixed results and largely take a backseat in  the narrative of battles as compared to the more   decisive moves of cavalry forces. However they  would once again be placed front and center of the   action at the epic battle of Zama between Hannibal  and Scipio. Here 80 war elephants were unleashed   on the Roman lines. In response the legions  brilliantly neutralized their charge by opening   up lanes, blowing loud horns, and attacking from  all sides with skirmishers. Ultimately Carthage   was defeated in battle and in turn the war. As  a result they were forced to sign a harsh peace   treaty with strict military restrictions. These  included an absolute ban on the possession of War   Elephants. Thus the reign of the Carthaginian  elephants had officially come to an end. In reality however their story would not end here.  War elephants had proven themselves possible of   great achievements and would continue to  see action in Mediterranean warfare for   years to come. In fact the Romans themselves  would even adopt their own war elephants,   many of which would come from  the same North African herds.


There will be much more to discuss in  the future but for now we will conclude   our episode. I hope you’ve enjoyed this  closer look at one of the most feared units   of antiquity. Definitely let us know what  Units of History you want us to cover next. A huge thanks is owed to our supporters on Patreon  and the many talented researchers, writers,   and artists who made this video possible. Please  consider contributing to fund future content. If you found this topic interesting,  check out these related videos about   our fascinating past! Be sure to like and  subscribe for more history and check out   our description for ways to support  the channel. Thanks for watching..

African instruments here

https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/units-of-history-carthaginian-war-elephants-documentary/

No comments:

Post a Comment