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Battle of the Metaurus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Battle of the Metaurus
Part of the Second Punic War

Date 207 BC
Location Metaurus River, Marche, Italy
Result Roman victory
Combatants
Carthage Roman Republic
Commanders
Hasdrubal Barca Marcus Livius Salinator
Gaius Claudius Nero
Strength
30,000 37,000
Casualties
about 10,000 unknown
Second Punic War
Saguntum – Lilybaeum – Ticinus – Trebia – Cissa – Lake Trasimene – Ebro River – Cannae – 1st Nola – Dertosa – 2nd Nola – Cornus – 3rd Nola – 1st Capua – Silarus – 1st Herdonia – Syracuse – Upper Baetis – 2nd Capua – 2nd Herdonia – Numistro – Asculum – Tarentum – Baecula – Grumentum – Metaurus – Ilipa – Crotona – Utica – Bagbrades – Cirta – Po Valley – Great Plains – Zama

The Battle of the Metaurus was a pivotal battle in the Second Punic War between Rome and Carthage, fought in 207 BC near the Metaurus River in Italy.

The Carthaginians were led by Hannibal's brother Hasdrubal Barca, who was supposed to bring the siege equipment and reinforcements for Hannibal to defeat Rome. The Roman armies were led by the consuls Marcus Livius Salinator and Gaius Claudius Nero.

Claudius Nero had just fought Hannibal in Grumentum, some hundreds kilometers south of the Metaurus river, and reached Salinator with a forced march which went unnoticed by both Hannibal and Hasdrubal, so that the Carthaginians suddenly found themselves outnumbered.

Contents

[edit] Prelude

Hasdrubal's campaign to come to his brother's aid in Italy had gone remarkably well up until the Battle of the Metaurus. After completely outmaneuvering Publius Scipio in Spain and making his way into Gaul in the winter of 208, Hasdrubal had waited until the spring of 207 to make his way through the Alps and into Northern Italy. Hasdrubal made much faster progress than his brother had, partly due to the constructions left behind by Hannibal's army when he had passed via the same route a decade earlier, but also due to the removal of the Gallic threat that had plagued Hannibal during said expeditions. The Gauls now feared and respected the Carthaginians, and not only was Hasdrubal allowed to pass through the Alps unmolested, his ranks were bolstered by many enthusiastic Gauls. Hasdrubal, in the same fashion as his brother, succeeded in bringing his war elephants, raised and trained in Spain, over the Alps.

Rome was still reeling from the devastating blows which Hannibal had landed on it in rapid succession ten years earlier, and the prospect of fighting two sons of "the Thunderbolt" (a rough translation of Hamilcar Barca's surname) at once terrified the Romans. The hastily elected consuls Nero and Salinator were dispatched to face Hannibal and Hasdrubal respectively. Neither consul engaged his intended target initially. Nero's force of over 40,000 men was too formidable for Hannibal to engage openly, and so the two played an unproductive game of cat and mouse in Bruttium; meanwhile, Salinator, despite the added bulwark of two of the many Roman armies scattered across Italy - yielded cautiously to Hasdrubal, allowed him to push beyond the Metaurus as far south as the town of Sena.

It was not until Hasdrubal sent messengers to Hannibal that decisive measures were taken. Hasdrubal wished to meet with his brother in South Umbria, and then lead a full-fledged assault on Rome, however, this was not to be. Hasdrubal's messengers were captured, and his plans laid in the hands of the consul Nero, who quickly departed to the North with 7,000 men, 1,000 of whom were cavalry, in order to meet with Salinator. Nero, recognizing the urgency of the situation and the enormous threat that a merging of the Carthaginian brothers' armies would present to Rome, circumvented the authority of the Senate, instead advising them to organize levies for their own protection.

[edit] Union of the Two Consuls

Nero quickly reached Salinator, who was camped at Sena along with the praetor Porcius. Hasdrubal was camped approximately a half-mile to the North, however, since Nero had conveniently arrived at night, his presence was not detected until the next day, when the Romans drew themselves up for battle. Hasdrubal drew his army up as well, but upon closer observation of the forces assembled before him, noticed that Salinator's army seemed to have grown considerably over the course of the night, and that he had a much larger contingent of cavalry. Hasdrubal remembered hearing a trumpet in the Roman camp heralding the arrival of an important figure the night before - a sound he had become familiar with during his entanglements with the Romans in Spain - and now correctly concluded that he was in fact facing both Roman consuls. Unnerved, he retired his troops from the field.

The rest of the day passed without event, for the Romans did not endeavour to advance on Hasdrubal's fortifications. When nightfall came, Hasdrubal quietly led his army out of his camp with the intent of retreating into Gaul, where he could safely establish communications with Hannibal. Early on in the march, however, Hasdrubal's guides betrayed him, and left him lost and confused along the banks of the Metaurus, searching with futility for a place to cross.

The night passed with no change in Hasdrubal's forces, and the morning found his army uncertain and confused, and a great many of his gallic troops drunk. With the Roman cavalry fast approaching and the legions under the two consuls not far behind, Hasdrubal reluctantly prepared for battle.

[edit] The Battle

The exact numbers of troops on both sides are not known. Hasdrubal's army is estimated to have been about 30,000 in strength, and Salinator's initial army equal that, plus the 7,000 troops who had accompanied Nero. It is certain that Hasdrubal was indeed outnumbered, and that he was also very much lacking cavalry, of which the Romans had ample numbers. Nonetheless, he arranged his troops in the most practical manner available to him.

Like most Carthaginian armies, Hasdrubal's was a mish-mash of many different cultures and ethnicities, few of which were of African origins. Hasdrubal's best troops were Spaniards, armed with shields and swords, and these troops he placed on his right flank along with the few African troops that he did have (not much is known about these troops - they may have been spearmen drawn from some Carthaginian territory, or from another part of Africa). In his center he drew up a formidable force of Ligures who were not as well-trained as the men on his right flank. Finally, on his left, he placed the disorderly Gauls, who he hoped would be shielded by the intraversable terrain in front of them. Hasdrubal also had ten elephants in his army.

The Romans advanced on Hasdrubal in a very orderly fashion. Nero was given command of the Roman right flank, facing the inaccessible Gauls. It was Salinator who initiated battle, charging the veteran Spanish infantry, and Porcius followed soon after by attacking Hasdrubal's Ligurians. The initial combat was favorable to Hasdrubal, whose elephants succeeded in breaking the Roman line and spreading mass confusion throughout Salinator's troops. Hasdrubal's right wing held firmly, and his Ligurians, too, held their ground. Nero struggled to overcome the terrain that blocked his path to the unprepared Gauls on Hasdrubal's left, and, seeing the futility in wasting further time attempting to reach them, instead took some of his men and led them away from the Gauls, behind Salinator and Porcius, who were preoccupied with battle, and marched to the extreme Roman left, swinging his troops around and crashing into the Spaniards' flank with such sudden force and intensity that the Spaniards panicked and fled in confusion, collapsing onto the Ligurians, who continued to fight until they were cut down.

Hasdrubal's only remaining forces, the Gauls, who were still totally unfit for combat following their activities the night before, were no longer protected by their sober comrades who had been guarding their flank. The Romans descended mercilessly upon them, meeting almost no resistance.

The Carthaginian general, seeing that there was nothing more he could do, and presumably doubtful of his own prospects of escape, or simply unwilling to be taken captive, charged into the thick of the nearly concluded battle and met a glorious, if pointless death.

[edit] Aftermath

Nero showed neither respect nor compassion for his fallen adversary following the battle of the Metaurus. He ordered Hasdrubal's head severed from his body, and had it thrown into Hannibal's camp as a sign of the brother's defeat.

Lord Byron wrote of the battle:

"The consul Nero, who made the unequalled march which deceived Hannibal and deceived Hasdrubal, thereby accomplishing an achievement almost unrivaled in military annals. The first intelligence of his return, to Hannibal, was the sight of Hasdrubal's head thrown into his camp. When Hannibal saw this, he exclaimed, with a sigh, that 'Rome would now be the mistress of the world.' To this victory of Nero's it might be owing that his imperial namesake reigned at all. But the infamy of the one has eclipsed the glory of the other. When the name of Nero is heard, who thinks of the consul? But such are human things."

Though history may not remember Nero the Consul, the effects of the battle he won and the Empire which it safeguarded are certainly well-known. With his brother dead and his soldiers routed or killed, and no hope of help from Carthage - which was too concerned with its own political battles to send him aid - Hannibal's dream of quenching his thirst for Roman blood by burning the capital to the ground were crushed. He remained in Italy for several years, unmolested by Rome, and attempted to maintain the loyalty of the Italian allies whom he had won early on in his campaign. He dared not face Rome again, either in direct action or in battles away from the city. It was not until Scipio Africanus led a campaign directly against Carthage that Hannibal left Italy. The two generals faced one another at the Battle of Zama in 202 BC, where Hannibal, like his brother, faced a superior force, offered a good fight, and was ultimately defeated.

Had Hasdrubal succeeded in linking up with his brother, the outcome of the Second Punic War might have been very different. The addition of Hasdrubal's men to his ranks would have swelled Hannibal's army to a number great enough to lead a direct advance on Rome itself, and in the event of such a siege, it is quite possible that Hannibal's forces would have succeeded in taking the city. Even if Rome did not fall to Hannibal, the presence of the brothers' combined armies in Italy would only add to the political strife that already existed there, not to mention the anxiety that lingered throughout Rome. History is too unpredictable to say what might have happened had the Battle of the Metaurus not occurred; however, the fact that it did was clearly in the best interests of Rome.

The significance of the Battle of the Metaurus is recognized amongst historians. It is included in Edward Creasy's The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World (1851), the rationale being that it effectively removed the Carthaginian threat from Rome's ascendancy to global dominion by leaving Hannibal stranded in Italy. Like the Battle of Tours, however, the significance of the Battle of the Metaurus is greatly understated in most circles. It is very much overshadowed by other battles of the Second Punic War, such as Hannibal's awesome victory at the Battle of Cannae or his ultimate defeat at Zama. Nonetheless, the effects of Nero and Salinator's victory at the Metaurus have earned it a significant standing amongst historians, not only in the history of Rome, but in that of the entire world.

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