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IRANIAN HISTORY: PARTHIAN EMPIRE GENERAL SURENÂ The Hero of Carrhae
December 1998
Eran Spahbodh Rustaham Suren-Pahlav was born sometime in
the late 1st century BCE. The name under which he appears in the
western classical sources was no more than his hereditary title, that of
‘Surena’, and he continued to be referred to using this appellation in
Iranian records far into Sasanian times. Plutarch describes General Surena as: “.
. [not] an ordinary person, but in wealth, family, and reputation, the second
man in the kingdom, and in courage and prowess the first, and for bodily stature
and beauty no man like him. Whenever he travelled privately, he had one thousand
camels to carry his baggage, two hundred chariots for his concubines, one
thousand completely armed men for life-guards, and a great many more
light-armed; and he had at least ten thousand horsemen altogether, of his
servants and retinue. The honour had long belonged to his family, that at the
king's coronation he put the crown upon his head, and when this very king
Hyrodes had been exiled, he brought him in; it was he, also,
that took the great city of Seleucia, was the first man that scaled the walls,
and with his own hand beat off the defenders. And though at this time he was not
above thirty years old, he had a great name for wisdom and sagacity, and,
indeed, by these qualities chiefly, he overthrew Crassus”.
". . Surena was the tallest and finest looking man himself, but the delicacy of his looks and effeminacy of his dress did not promise so much manhood as he really was master of; or his face was painted, and his hair parted after the fashion of the Medes . .". Surena’s victory at Carrhae against the Romans and his personal "feat of arms there was certainly the most celebrated of the whole Arsacid era" (Bivar), but it is not directly attributed to him in the Shahnameh, the Iranian national epic.
In this book, the record of the Arsacids seems to have been suppressed at its true chronological point – for example the story concerning the Arsacid warrior Gotarz / Goudarz was transferred to the later legendary period of Key-Kavous, and incorporated there.
Surena’s historical personality is, however, curiously parallel to the stories about – and attributes of – Rustam, the mightiest of the Shahnameh’s heroes (Bivar). The atmosphere of the episodes in which the latter features is also strongly reminiscent of the Arsacid period.
Surena’s name is therefore preserved indirectly amongst
the throng of epic heroes whose deeds are recalled in the Kayanian (Kianian)
section of the Shahnameh.
Background to the battle of Carrhae The Parthian empire was perpetually menaced by hostile
armies both in the east and in the west and was already deeply injured by the
encroachments of Pompey. However, its decentralized and feudal structure may
help to explain why it never mounted a strong offensive after the days of
Emperor Mithradates II. Instead, Iran tended to remain on the defensive. The
wars between Iran and Rome therefore were initiated not by the Iranians – but
by Rome itself. Rome considered itself obliged to claim the inheritance of
Alexander of Macedonia and, from the time of Pompey, continually attempted the
subjection of the former Hellenistic countries as far as the Euphrates River. As
part of the attempt to extend Roman control further eastward, Marcus Licinius
Crassus, the Roman triumvir, took the offensive against Iran in 54 BCE. Such
then were the protagonists in the decisive battle that was about to develop. Before the Roman march towards Parthia began, Crassus had
been advised by a Roman ally, Artavasdes, king of Armenia, to lead his forces
through the mountains of that country, to shelter from the Iranian cavalry.
However, Crassus ignored this advice, being anxious to include in his army the
substantial Roman garrisons posted during the previous season in the towns of
Mesopotamia. Then, after crossing the Euphrates at Zeugma, he also rejected the
plan of his legate Cassius, that he should follow the course of the river to
Babylon. Instead Crassus followed the guidance of an Arab chief, whose name is
given by Plutarch as Ariamnes. This seems improbable, and other sources name the
guide as Abcar or Abgar, and identify him as the chief of the city of Edessa.
This guide, suspected by historians of collusion with Surena, led the Romans away
from the river into the desert, and towards the main Iranian force.
The strength of the two armies With regard to the size of the two armies, that of the
Romans was reportedly greatly superior in numbers. According to the most
reliable account, that of Plutarch, Crassus commanded "seven
legions, [with] little less than four thousand horse, and as many light-armed
soldiers".
A quarter of the latter were Gaulish troops lent by Julius Caesar. Other
commentators have given somewhat higher total estimates. At the minimum
estimate, the army of Crassus would have numbered thirty-six thousand men. The Iranian forces under Surena consisted, according to
Plutarch, of a thousand fully armored lancers, the cataphracts, who formed the
bodyguard of the General. Nine thousand horse-archers formed the main body of
the troops, and a baggage-train of a thousand camels was available to bring up
extra stocks of arrows. The entire force was mounted, and therefore highly
mobile under the desert conditions. However, in numerical terms, the Roman force
seemed sufficient for the task in hand. Events showed, nevertheless, that in two critical respects
the Romans had underestimated the Iranian forces. The power of the
horse-archers’ arrows to penetrate the legionnaires armour had not been
appreciated, perhaps because the Roman commanders were unaware that the compound
bow which the Iranians employed was a more powerful weapon than the lighter bows
found at that time in Rome. Additionally, the Romans had anticipated that the
Iranian cavalry would quickly exhaust their stock of arrows; but the camel train
of General Surena made it possible for him to bring up plentiful
stocks of arrows as the quivers of his men were emptied. Additionally, the Romans were also ill-adapted to the open terrain of the battlefield. The vast distances of the Mesopotamian plain, and the heat (for the battle took place in June) put the Roman infantry at a disadvantage. Moreover, the Roman means of retaliation against their adversaries were ineffective, since the range of the Roman javelin was obviously limited, and the Gaulish horsemen relied on for a counter-attack were provided only with short javelins, as well as being lacking in adequate defensive armour.
With all these miscalculations, even the squares of Roman
legionnaires could not hold their own against the Iranians.
The battle
At first the Romans prepared to advance to the encounter in extended line. Then Crassus formed the legions into a square, and so advanced to the River Balissus (Balikh). Contrary to the opinion of his officers, he decided not to camp by the water, but hurried the troops across, and before long came in sight of the advance-guard of the Iranians. The strength of their main body was at first concealed. Then the thunder of the Parthian drums burst on the ears of the Romans. The mailed cavalry of Surena's bodyguard uncovered their armour, and the sun glittered on their steel helmets. "When they had sufficiently terrified the Romans with their noise, they threw off the covering of their armour, and shone like lightning in their breastplates and helmets of polished Margianian steel, and with their horses covered with brass and steel trappings . .".
The first attack was a
charge by the lancers of the bodyguard, led in person by the towering figure of
General Surena. Then, seeing the steadiness of the Roman legionnaires, the
Iranian horse-archers began their work. What followed was more like a massacre
than a battle. The Romans had tried to offset their lack of cavalry by
using light infantry mixed with their Gaulish horsemen. But such makeshift
tactics were of little avail against the finest cavalry in the world. The
legionnaires were soon hard pressed and all but surrounded, so that Crassus was
reduced to ordering his son, Publius, who commanded one of the wings, to attempt
a diversionary charge with his forces. Publius led thirteen hundred horse, five hundred archers,
and eight cohorts of the infantry, the latter totalling some four thousand men,
into the attack. At first the Iranians retired in front of them, but after
Publius’ men were separated from the main Roman force they were quickly
surrounded, offering an all but helpless mark to the rain of arrows. The threat
of a charge by the Cataphracts forced the Romans into close order, thereby
reducing their chances of escape. Though the Gauls caught hold of the Iranian
lances to pull down the riders, and ran under the horses of their enemies to
stab them in the belly, these were no more than tactics of desperation. Soon the
young Publius was disabled, and the remnant of his force retired to a mound to
make their last stand. The young and naïve commander ordered his Armour-bearer
to end his life, although five hundred of his soldiers survived to be taken as
slaves. This agonizing diversion had temporarily relieved pressure
on the main Roman force. But the magnitude of the disaster became clear when the
Iranians rode back with Publius’ head on a spear. Thereafter the main Roman
body had to defend themselves as best they could for the rest of the day under
the constant hail of missiles. Only when it grew too dark to shoot did the
Iranians draw off, leaving the Romans to pass a melancholy night, encumbered as
they were with the many wounded, and anyway anticipating their final destruction
on the following morning.
The Roman retreat By this time, Crassus himself was prostrate with despair.
Octavius and Cassius, his lieutenants, resolved that the only hope was to escape
under cover of darkness and seek shelter behind the walls of the city of
Carrhae. Thus they slipped away silently from the camp in the darkness. Those of
the wounded who could be moved obstructed the march, and the majority, who had
to be abandoned, raised the alarm with their cries. Understandably, retreating
in the dark, the Romans fell into disorder. A party of three hundred horsemen
did reach the city at midnight, and warned Coponius, commander of the garrison
there, that Crassus had fought a great battle with the Iranians. They then
turned west to make their escape across the Euphrates. Another detachment of two
thousand men under the Roman officer Varguntius lost their way in the dark, and
were found by the Iranian forces in the morning, marooned on a hill. Of these,
only twenty made their escape. At Carrhae, Coponius suspected a mishap, and
called his men to arms. Then he marched out, and led Crassus and the main body
of the Romans into the city. There were no supplies in Carrhae for a long siege, nor
hope of relief from the outside, since Crassus had concentrated all the forces
in the Roman East in his army. The Roman commander therefore determined to break
out of the city on the second night, and make his way to safety in the shelter
of the Armenian hills. Once again, his guide, Andromachus, was a Parthian
sympathizer, who was rewarded after the Roman debacle with the governorship of
Carrhae. It is said that Andromachus misled the main Roman column in the dark,
so that by dawn they were over a mile from the shelter of the hills. Octavius
had a reliable guide and took refuge in the mountains. At daybreak, Crassus and
his force had occupied a spur connected by a low ridge to the main mountain
range. When they came under attack, Octavius and his men moved down from the
heights to offer support. At this moment Surena rode forward to offer terms of peace
and to spare the Roman’s lives. It is not clear whether Crassus
accepted voluntarily, or under pressure from his men, but he and Octavius, with
a small group of Romans, went down to meet the Iranians. The latter mounted
Crassus upon a horse, to take him away for the signing of the treaty. Octavius,
suspecting foul play, seized the bridle of the horse, and, when a scuffle broke
out, drew his sword. In the melee that followed, all
the Romans in the party were slain and their leaderless troops then either
surrendered or scattered. Very few were successful in making good their escape.
Of the entire force, twenty thousand are said to have been killed; while ten
thousand were captured and deported to distant Margiana
as slave labourers. Thus ended the disastrous Roman campaign of Carrhae.
The Euphrates was firmly established as the boundary between the two Empires. Despite the crushing defeat of the Romans, the Iranians made no attempt to follow up their victory or to invade the Roman Empire. The Romans learnt to introduce cavalry into their army, just as nearly a thousand years earlier the Assyrians had learnt from the first Iranians arriving on the Plateau. The Roman defeat won unquestioned recognition for Iran
as a military power superior to Rome and the resurrection of Iran as a united
nation.
The Death of General Surena The success had excited the jealousy of Orodes II, the Parthian king, and soon after the battle of Carrhae General Surena was executed. Iran was thus deprived of an exceptional commander.
Bibliography
Keywords: Surena, Suren, Soren, Souren, Sooren, Suren-Pahlav, Rostam, Rostaham, Rustam, Rustaham, Parthians, Arsacids, Ashkanians, Ashakanids, Pahlavas, Parni |
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