(Darius III at Issus, c. 1st century BCE, found in Pompeii, [Public
Domain] via Creative Commons)
When Alexander the Great
began his fateful invasion of the Persian Empire in 334 BCE, the Persians were
by no means the underdogs of the war. Even though Alexander had landed an army
of around 50,000 men within the Persian Empire, that number was only a small
fraction of what the Persian Great King, Darius III, could field in defense of
his lands.
Ancient Greek historians
loved to embellish numbers. They often drastically increased the scale of
battles to make their great accomplishments seem even greater. Nevertheless,
even with the most conservative description of Darius III’s military force, the
Persians had a distinct manpower advantage against the forces of Alexander the
Great.
(The Battle of Alexander at Issus (cropped), by
Albrecht Altdorfer (1480–1538), [Public
Domain] via Creative Commons)
Drawing from all the
resources in the Persian Empire, Darius III gathered an army in Babylon, a
force he would lead personally against Alexander’s marauding army. The pool of
manpower at the disposal of the empire was staggering. From Persia’s heartland
in modern Iran, the empire had spread east toward the Indus River Valley of
India, as well as westward into Turkey, and south into Egypt. From these lands
(also including some of central Asia), a safe estimate is that the Darius III
could muster around 100,000 infantry and 20,000 cavalry. Along with this
impressive army, Darius had access and means to hire immense numbers of
mercenaries—he is thought to have employed more Greek soldiers than Alexander
the Great.
The military might that Darius
III gathered at Babylon in 333 BCE was awe-inspiring. It apparently took a
whole day for the army to march before their Great King in parade. Even though
much of the Persian army had not yet arrived, Darius III felt he had a great
enough force to crush the young Macedonian upstart.
Darius III first met
Alexander the Great in the Battle of Issus in 333 BCE. The Pinarus River
separated the two forces and the riverbank was rough and elevated on the side
of the Persian camp. In addition, Darius had the clear numerical
advantage—ancient sources such as Curtius, Diodorus Siculus, Polybius,
Plutarch, Justin and Arrian estimate between 300,000-600,000 Persian troops in
attendance. Modern estimates, however, reduce the forces of Darius III to
around 75,000 men at Issus, which still leaves him with a significant manpower
advantage.
Despite the formidable
Persian show of force, Alexander the Great did not falter. The Macedonian king
did what few generals would suggest—he charged across the river and up the
incline to crash against the larger Persian forces and outflank Darius III’s
elite center, causing the mighty Persian army to flee. Despite having a smaller
force and terrible terrain, Alexander the Great won a decisive victory against
Darius III’s truly spectacular army.
Written by C. Keith Hansley.
- Alexander the Great by Philip Freeman. New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, 2011.
- Alexander the Great: The Story of an Ancient Life by Thomas R. Martin and Christopher W. Blackwell. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012.
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