Alexander

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by Guy Maclean Rogers


  Bactria; and Dionysos was supposed to have started out on his triumphal march westward from India.

  Herakles, too, one of Alexander’s ancestors and rivals, supposedly had visited India.

  Never one to be outdone, Alexander was determined to surpass the accomplishments of Zeus’ other

  sons. They had merely passed through India; he came to establish a lasting empire.

  From Bactra, therefore, Alexander and his army marched for ten days back over the Caucasus and

  reached the city he had founded during his first expedition into Bactria, Alexandria-in-the-Caucasus

  (modern Begram). There he dismissed the local hyparch for governing poorly and then appointed

  Nicanor as governor of the city. Tyriespis was made satrap of the region of Parapamisadae and the

  land up to the Cophen River (now the Kabul). More people from the area and all the soldiers

  declared unfit for fighting were settled in the city. Having settled these matters, by way of Nicaea,

  where he offered sacrifice to Athena, Alexander then marched for the Cophen toward the plain of the

  Indus River.

  CHAPTER 18

  In the Footsteps of Dionysos

  THE FIRST GREAT GAME

  For his route to the Indus, Alexander had chosen to pass through the region that more than 2,000 years

  later would comprise the Northwest Frontier of British India. In that mountainous and inhospitable

  territory, solitary, brilliant, and often eccentric officers of the Indian army, such as “Bokhara” Burnes,

  Captain Arthur Conolly, and Francis Younghusband, often disguised as horse traders or Tibetan holy

  men, played the Great Game against Britain’s indigenous and European enemies. Twenty-three

  centuries earlier Alexander played his own brutally effective game against the local tribesmen.

  Before setting out, Alexander divided his army into two columns. Hephaestion and Perdiccas were

  put in charge of three battalions, half the Companions, and all the mercenary cavalry. These troops

  were sent along the main road through the Khyber Pass into the territory of Peucelaotis toward the

  Indus River. Hephaestion’s battle group therefore holds the distinction of being the first documented

  military force to make the thirty-mile trek through the famous pass in the Safed Koh mountains, now

  on the border between modern Afghanistan and Pakistan.

  Alexander, with the Guards, the rest of the Companion cavalry, the phalanx regiments from Upper

  Macedon, the archers, the Agrianes, and the mounted javelin men, took a more northerly route, which

  followed the river Choes (modern Kunar) into the mountain country through Bajaur and Swat (in

  modern Pakistan).

  They assaulted the first town they came upon after crossing the Choes, and here Alexander was

  slightly wounded in the shoulder by an arrow that pierced his corselet. Nevertheless, he and the

  Macedonians easily stormed the settlement, and all the prisoners taken in the town were massacred in

  revenge for Alexander’s wound. As usual the Macedonians were particularly ferocious and

  unmerciful toward their enemies when Alexander was hurt in battle.

  The town of Andaca capitulated, and Craterus was left there with the other infantry commanders to

  destroy any other cities that did not surrender. When Alexander advanced into the territory of the

  hyparch of the Aspasians, the inhabitants burned their city and fled into the mountains. Ptolemy killed

  the local leader in hand-to-hand combat, and the Macedonians again prevailed.

  After Alexander and his men crossed the mountains into the region of Bajaur, they came to the town

  of Arigaion (Acadira), where they were met by Craterus and his colleagues. The city was now

  fortified and settled with volunteers from the area and soldiers unfit for duty. Greeks called such a

  settlement at a strategically or commercially important site synoikismos.

  At the news that Ptolemy had sighted barbarian fires ahead more numerous than in Alexander’s

  camp, Alexander once again split the army into three columns and attacked the locals after they had

  descended into the plain. We are told that no fewer than 40,000 men and 230,000 oxen were captured.

  The finest of the latter were sent back to Macedon. Within weeks Alexander had pacified—by lance

  and fire—a region the British later struggled to control for more than fifty years.

  IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF DIONYSOS

  Sometime during the campaign in the Bajaur region, the people of a town named Nysa sent out to

  Alexander their chief, Acuphis, with thirty envoys, to ask Alexander to leave their city to their god.

  Acuphis explained that Dionysos had founded their city (with discharged soldiers who were also his

  Bacchoi) on his return to the Greek Sea after his conquest of the Indians, naming the city Nysa after

  his nurse.

  Alexander bought Acuphis’ story, granting freedom and independence to the settlers of Nysa, only

  demanding that the Nysaeans send 300 cavalrymen to accompany him. The persuasive Acuphis

  subsequently was appointed governor of the territory.

  While he was in the area, a “desire” seized Alexander to see Mount Merus, where the Nysaeans

  displayed memorials of Dionysos. Ivy and laurel grew there in abundance. Alexander and the

  Macedonians had not seen these plants, so characteristic of the Greek landscape, in seven years.

  Alexander offered sacrifice on the spot (presumably to Dionysos), and some of his officers reportedly

  crowned their heads in ivy and performed a Bacchic revel. Regrettably, none of the sources tell us

  what the local tribesmen made of the spectacle of drunken, ivy-wreathed Macedonian soldiers

  roaming the mountainside, crying out “Euhoi, Euhoi,” as the women Bacchants in Euripides’ last and

  greatest tragedy had done.

  The inhabitants of the kingdom of the Assaceni of the lower Swat Valley, who could claim no life-

  saving connection to any Greek god, were far less friendly. They had prepared for battle with 2,000

  cavalry, 30,000 infantry, and 30 elephants. One by one, however, their fortresses, including Massaga,

  Ora, and Bazira, were seized, assaulted, or abandoned. The inhabitants of Massaga were cut down,

  but reportedly only after their mercenaries, whom Alexander had granted leave of the city, appear to

  have gone back on an agreement with Alexander to join his army.

  THE ROCK OF AORNOS

  The survivors from these towns fled to the Rock of Aornos (in southern Swat), identified today with

  Pir-Sar, a flat-topped ridge rising 8,000 feet above sea level, and commanding the Indus about

  seventy-five miles north of Attock City. Atop the rock there was a perennial spring, as well as wood

  and arable land. By legend, Herakles himself had tried to capture the Rock of Aornos, but had failed

  because of an earthquake.

  Naturally, a longing seized Alexander to succeed where Herakles had failed. Any labor at which

  Herakles had come up short was a welcome challenge to Alexander. After appointing a satrap of the

  region, Alexander therefore advanced toward Aornos, accepting the surrender of towns in the area

  and establishing garrisons and a supply base at Embolima.

  Despite its intimidating history and height, Aornos proved relatively easy to capture. Some of the

  neighboring people who had surrendered guided Ptolemy, the Agrianes, and other lightly armed units

  up to the first saddle of the mountain, where they established a stockade and fought off a

  counterattack. Alexander then brought up the rest of the army.
/>   For four days the Macedonians worked on building up an earthen mound from the crest of the hill

  they occupied to the level of the Rock itself. From the mound, slingers fired on the Indians, and

  missiles were flung from the Macedonian siege engines to give cover to the Macedonians as they

  worked. Alexander’s use of artillery to cover field operations (as opposed to siege warfare) was

  another brilliant adaptation, one that has been copied by virtually every commander since.

  Recognizing that defeat was certain once the Macedonians had completed the mound, the defenders

  of Aornos then used a delay during surrender negotiations to concoct a plan to escape and scatter at

  night to their homes. Unfortunately for them, Alexander led an assault team of bodyguards and elite

  guards (hypaspists) onto the plateau itself before they could carry out their plan. The king was the first

  to scale the Rock. Many of the refugees were killed as they fled. Some panicked and threw

  themselves over the cliffs of the Rock. Alexander had surpassed Herakles. Altars in honor of Athena

  the Victorious were duly set up.

  Resistance among the Assaceni then collapsed. As he made his way toward the Indus River,

  Alexander now learned that the Indians of the district had fled to the kingdom of Abisares (to the east

  of the Indus), but had left their elephants grazing near the Indus. The surviving elephants were

  captured and incorporated into Alexander’s army. Meanwhile, Hephaestion and Perdiccas had

  pressed along through the Cophen Valley, seriously opposed only by the prince of Peucelaotis, whose

  capital (modern Charsadda) was stormed after thirty days.

  Beating Alexander to the Indus, Hephaestion and Perdiccas had constructed a bridge for the

  crossing of the great river, perhaps at Ohind (Udabhandapura). For the crossing itself, many smaller

  boats and two thirty-oar ships had been prepared as well; and awaiting Alexander at the crossing

  point were gifts from the local Indian ruler, Taxiles, including 200 talents of silver, 3,000 oxen,

  10,000 sheep for sacrifices, and 30 elephants. Taxiles also had sent 700 cavalry as fighting allies and

  had surrendered Taxila (present-day Takshiçila, about twenty miles northwest of Islamabad), the

  largest city between the Indus and Hydaspes Rivers.

  CROSSING THE INDUS

  Before crossing the Indus, Alexander sacrificed to the gods whom it was his custom to honor and then

  held a contest of athletics and cavalry. The sacrifices turned out to be favorable to the crossing.

  Exactly how Alexander crossed this immense river—about two and a half miles wide today at its

  broadest point—unfortunately is not known. Arrian reports only that Alexander crossed with the army

  and then made customary sacrifices on the far side of the river. Alexander certainly was the first (and

  last) Greek or Macedonian ever to reach India at the head of a large army.

  Once across the mighty Indus, Alexander made his way first to Taxila, where he granted Taxiles’

  son Mophis (who took the name Taxiles after his father’s death) and the Indians of the district as much

  of the territory bordering on their own as they asked for. This, of course, was a reward for the gifts

  that Taxiles had left for Alexander. In Taxila Alexander also received representatives from Abisares,

  king of the Indian hill tribes east of the Indus (modern Kashmir), who brought presents but also the

  somewhat alarming news that Abisares kept two snakes, one 80 cubits in length and the other 140

  cubits. This was a reminder to Alexander and the Macedonians that they were a long way from home;

  it should have been a warning, too.

  Perhaps Alexander’s presence unnerved Taxiles/Mophis, for he kept up a shower of gifts: 56

  elephants, large numbers of sheep, and some 3,000 bulls. He also revealed to Alexander how much

  grain he had supplied to the forces under Hephaestion, and gave golden crowns to Alexander and his

  friends. As if all this were not enough, he added eighty talents of coined silver. Alexander was so

  pleased that he returned all the gifts and added 1,000 talents from his booty, gold and silver

  dinnerware, Persian clothing, and thirty horses with their trappings. After he had drunk too much at

  dinner, one of Alexander’s Macedonian officers, Meleager, sarcastically congratulated Alexander on

  having at least found one man in India now worth 1,000 talents. Remembering another party that had

  ended disastrously, Alexander controlled his anger, remarking that “envious men only torment

  themselves.”

  After the usual sacrifices and games, Alexander left Philip as governor of the district, along with

  any men who were sick or unfit for duty. Alexander and the army, its ranks swelled by the addition of

  5,000 Indian troops led by Taxiles/Mophis and the governors of the district, then made their way to

  the Hydaspes River (the modern Jhelum).

  Awaiting them on the far side of the Hydaspes was Porus (Indian Paurava), ruler of the rich and

  densely populated country between the Hydaspes and Acesines (modern Chenab) Rivers. The

  geographer Strabo of Amaseia later claimed that there were no fewer than 300 cities within Porus’

  realm.

  While in Taxila Alexander had sent a representative, Cleochares, to Porus to instruct him to pay

  tribute and to meet Alexander at the point of entry to his territory. Porus agreed to be present when

  Alexander entered his kingdom—but under arms. These “arms” included about 2,000 cavalry, 20,000

  infantry, and perhaps 85 war elephants. Because horses will not charge elephants, these last were the

  greatest threat to the Macedonians. Overall, however, Porus’ army was far smaller than the Persian

  army Alexander had faced at Gaugamela, and was smaller too than the army Alexander now was

  leading, which perhaps totaled 75,000 combatants.

  Once Alexander got to the Hydaspes, Porus was observed on the far bank of the river in a strong

  defensive position. The exact location of what proved to be the battlefield remains controversial, but

  Sir Aurel Stein has made strong arguments for the area of Malakwal (on the Jhelum) opposite

  Haranpur. Once the Macedonians had arrived, Porus himself moved to guard the best crossing point.

  At the other parts of the river where a crossing was possible, the Indian king had posted guards. His

  strategy clearly was to prevent the Macedonians from crossing the river and to attack Alexander if he

  tried. Overall, Porus was in a very strong defensive position; the problem facing Alexander has been

  aptly compared to that which faced Napoleon before the battle of Wagram in 1809, when Napoleon

  was confronted by the Austrian army led by the Archduke Charles on the other side of the Danube. At

  the Hydaspes Alexander faced the greatest tactical challenge of his career.

  CHAPTER 19

  The Battle of the Hydaspes

  PREPARATIONS FOR BATTLE

  With Porus’ position in mind and his forces in view, Alexander planned his counter-measures with

  great care and skill. The Hydaspes was no mere trickle of water, as Alexander had scornfully called

  the Granicus. Moreover, Porus would prove a far more formidable adversary than the Persian satraps

  of Asia Minor.

  The flotilla Alexander had used to cross the Indus had been disassembled and transported in carts

  to the Hydaspes. Grain was also brought from all the territory controlled by Taxiles/Mophis.

  Alexander divided up his forces into a number of smaller units an
d moved these up and down the

  river, destroying any enemy possessions, but all the while looking for a ford.

  After a while it was clear to Porus that Alexander meant to remain in the neighborhood of the

  Hydaspes until the water fell sufficiently to allow Alexander to effect a crossing at any one of a

  number of places. The low-water point would come in September 326.

  But Porus had underestimated his opponent. Alexander was determined to bring matters to a head

  even before the river reached its high-water mark in late June (when the river would be swollen by

  the melting snows from the Himalayas and the advent of the monsoon season).

  Since the river could not be crossed openly in the face of Porus’ forces, however, Alexander

  decided to get his army across the river by cunning. Unlike Piero Soderini, the Gonfalonier (chief

  official) of the Florentine Republic, Macedon’s greatest prince had learned how to play the Fox as

  well as the Lion; he knew when to roar and when to deceive. Alexander noisily moved his mounted

  troops up and down the river every night, until Porus and the elephants got tired of shadowing his

  movements.

  Alexander then discovered a crossing point about seventeen (or so) miles upriver from his base

  camp, around modern Haranpur. There, at a sharp bend in the river, was a projecting headland of

  thickly wooded land (perhaps near Jalalpur). Just off the spit was an uninhabited island (Adana).

  On the night of the intended crossing, Craterus, perhaps Alexander’s most reliable general, was to

  be left at the base camp with his own cavalry regiment, two mounted contingents, two Macedonian

  infantry battalions, and 5,000 Indians. His orders were not to attempt to cross the river until Porus had

  moved to attack Alexander (who would have crossed the river in secret with a strong force at the

  spit) or until Craterus was sure that Porus was in retreat and the Macedonians were victorious. If

  Porus opposed Alexander with only part of his forces, Craterus was to stay put. But if the Indian king

  moved his whole contingent of elephants against Alexander, then Craterus was to attack across the

  river immediately. Craterus and the men under his command thus were to be used as a “pinning

 

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