Battle of the Silarus

The Battle of the Silarus was fought in 212 BC between Hannibal's army and a Roman force led by centurion Marcus Centenius Penula. The Carthaginians were victorious, destroying the entire Roman army and killing 15,000 Roman soldiers in the process.

Battle of the Silarus
Part of the Second Punic War

Battles in 212 BC and the locations of the legions
Date212 BC
Location
near Silarus River (modern Sele River), Italy
Result Carthaginian victory
Belligerents
Carthage Roman Republic
Commanders and leaders
Hannibal Marcus Centenius Penula 
Strength
Unknown 16,000
Casualties and losses
Unknown 15,000 killed

Prelude

Hannibal had lifted the siege of Capua after mauling two Roman consular armies in the Battle of Capua. The Roman consuls had split their forces, with Fulvius Flaccus moving towards Cumae, while Appius Claudius Pulcher marched towards Lucania. It is not sure why they had done so, because their forces still outnumbered Hannibal's army, even with the losses suffered in the battle. Hannibal decided to follow Claudius.[1]

Claudius managed to evade the pursuit of Hannibal, but a centurion, Marcus Centenius Penula, had appealed to the Roman Senate for independent command against Hannibal, claiming that with his knowledge of Campania he could best the Carthaginians.[1] His appeal was granted and 4,000 citizen soldiers and 4,000 allies were detached to serve under him, possibly from the army of Gracchus which was stationed in Lucania.[1] To this force another 8,000 volunteers from Campania, Lucania, and Samnium were added.[1]

While Appius Claudius and his consular army marched west to join his fellow consul, Centenius set off to attack Hannibal in Lucania.[1] Hannibal learned of the Romans' approach and halted his pursuit of Claudius.[1] Prior to the battle, Hannibal had his cavalry secure all roads in the area to stop any Roman retreat.[2]

Battle

The opposing columns spotted their enemies and immediately drew up into battle lines.[2] The poorly equipped Romans held off Hannibal's veterans for two hours until Centenius was killed in action.[2] The Roman army collapsed into a rout and 15,000 Roman soldiers were killed in the battle and pursuit, with only 1,000 escaping the Carthaginian cavalry blockade.[2]

Aftermath

After the battle, Hannibal did not pursue the army of Claudius. Instead, he marched east into Apulia, where a Roman army under Praetor Gnaeus Flavius Flaccus was operating against towns allied to Carthage. The Roman consular armies, free of Hannibal, united and resumed their harassment of Capua. Hanno the Elder remained in Bruttium.

Casualties

Out of 16,000 Romans, only 1,000 survived.[2] These survivors were sent to join the disgraced legions of Cannae survivors after they had been rounded up.

gollark: Hmm. I can't tell if the electrical grid is temporarily slightly beeing or if my lights merely *appear* to be flickering because of background lightning.
gollark: You realized it would, then erased your memory of it since admitting your wrongness would be embarrassing?
gollark: Macron idea: Macron should automatically detect any form of sum and come up with a closed-form formula for it inductively.
gollark: I did so, but you disliked it.
gollark: Why not?

References

  1. Livy 2006, p. 279.
  2. Livy 2006, p. 280.

Bibliography

  • Livius, Titus (2006). Hannibal's War: Books Twenty-One to Thirty. Translated by J.C. Yardley, introduction and notes by Dexter Hoyos. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-283159-3.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.