Sunday 27 April 2014

Hannibal Barca


                                           'Hannibal ad portos'


I don’t think Hannibal (Chenu Bechala- ‘Beloved of Baal’) is a ‘good’ general I consider him a great general; Xanthippus was a ‘good’ general. Mayhap you consider Alexander ‘The Great’ the greatest general in antiquity, but I disagree. ‘But most illustrious and perfectly formed Flaxen’, you say. ‘Hannibal was ultimately defeated by Scipio Africanus at the battle of Zama in 202 BC.  Surely the man who defeated him must be greater than the one he defeated.  But this would represent a superficial analysis indeed. Listen to my analysis and weep.

Alexander was a bold tactician and exhibited a breathtaking and singular strategic vision. He was also rash and on occasion exceedingly lucky. Furthermore, as Macedonian king, he had complete control over the direction of the war and could bear resources in both men and finances, according to his will. The Persian Empire and the system of Satrapies were in a state of decline and rife with dissension.  A bold adventurer had only to kick in the portal and watch the rotten edifice collapse. After three decisive battles the Persians and Medes were defeated conclusively. Alexander never lost a battle and is rightly considered as the greatest of all the ancient captains, bar one. However, to truly judge a man as a general we can’t totally rely on what we observe after victory. How a general deals with defeat is the defining characteristic of greatness. Arse.

Hannibal at the start of the second Punic war was faced with numerous problems. A lesser general would have waited for the Romans to invade Spain and fight the battles on his own soil. This would cede the initiative to the Romans who were also preparing to invade Northern Africa and eventually Carthage via Sicily. Hannibal did something completely unexpected. He invaded Italy by land and embraced all the hardships that this entailed.

When he debouched in Northern Italy he took the Romans completely off guard. They were so alarmed that the consular army destined for Sicily was rerouted to engage Hannibal in Italy. After passage through the Alps Hannibal’s army of Iberian mercenaries and Africans quickly obtained a victory over Roman forces on the Ticinus. Before the engagement, Hannibal had a total of 26,000 men. The fruits of victory were swift. Great numbers of vacillating Gallic warriors came over to Hannibal’s standard and filled the ranks of his depleted army. Hannibal went on to inflict three further great defeats upon the Romans, culminating in the masterly battle of Cannae (216 BC). Hannibal realised that he couldn’t achieve total victory over the Romans by defeating them in the field. Battles of attrition were a means to a political end. He needed to break up the Roman confederation and thus deprive Rome of its greatest asset: a virtually unlimited supply of men. It is to be recalled that during the war the Romans raised 750,000 troops of which Hannibal killed 300,000.

Carthage ultimately failed Hannibal. They kept him chronically deprived of money and more importantly, men. They lacked the strategic vision of Hannibal and squandered resources in fruitless expeditions in Sicily and elsewhere. They failed to support their brilliant general in the only strategic theatre that actually mattered. In spite of his many disadvantages, Hannibal managed to maintain his army on hostile territory against a formidable foe for 14 years. The Romans were no Persians. This is why Hannibal deserves the first position amongst the ancients.

The historical consequence of Hannibal’s defeat was that Western civilisation was subsequently based on rugged Indo-European Rome rather than lush Semitic Carthage. Hannibal’s enterprise was doomed before it started and the battle of Zama had been lost centuries before it was fought.         


6 comments:

  1. Thank fuck for that - someone else who truly understands the greatness of Hannibal; and I thought it was only me ...

    Only just realised that you had your own site, Mr. S. Good O, say I.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Mr C. The sites only been running since Jan. Its good to have you aboard.

      Delete
  2. Hhhssshhhhh! Don't tell them I helped you set it up or the MF mob won't talk to you.....

    ReplyDelete
  3. Dioclese, for what it's worth I defend the principle of Free Speech no matter who speaks it. Christ, I even defended Andy Choudary's right to speak his load of old bollocks once :-)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Glad to hear it Caratacus. Also glad you're talking to me. I'm blocked at MF and all I tried to do was help! I gather from 'John Smiths Bitter' that this even extends to any comment that mentions my name.

    I'm with you. Free speech is good - as long as the other guy can disagree. It just gets me that a blog that proclaims itself to be a bastion of free speech censors comments. I really hate hypocrisy!

    Trust you'll continue to patronise the old Saxon then. It's not a bad blog. At least it's a bit different!

    I must stop fretting over MF - although I have to admit it wrankles just a bit. Very pleased you took the trouble to reply. Thanks. (I mean that!)

    ReplyDelete