- Babylonian War
Babylonian War (311-309 BC): armed conflict between the
Diadochi Antigonus Monophthalmus andSeleucus I Nicator , ending in a victory by the last-mentioned. After this war, restoration of the empire ofAlexander the Great was no longer possible, a result confirmed in theBattle of Ipsus .Preliminaries
After the death of
Alexander the Great on 11 June 323 BC, his empire disintegrated. Officers who were trying to safe it were defeated during theFirst War of the Diadochi . During theSecond War of the Diadochi , the power ofAntigonus Monophthalmus , who had created a state of his own inAnatolia andSyria , was growing; this caused alarm among the other generals, but in theThird War of the Diadochi , Antigonus managed to keepPtolemy I Soter of Egypt andCassander ofMacedon in check. In December 311, the warring parties concluded the Peace of the Dynasts, and recognized each other. The only ruler who was excluded, wasSeleucus I Nicator . Antigonus had expelled thissatrap fromBabylonia in 316, [All dates according to Tom Boiy, "Between High and Low. A Chronology of the Early Hellenistic Period" (2007).] but Ptolemy had given him an army, which he now used to return to his satrapy. [Diodorus Siculus , "World History", 19.90.]Campaigns
Seleucus, reinforced with Macedonian veterans from
Harran , reached his former capitalBabylon in the second half of May 311. [ [http://www.livius.org/cg-cm/chronicles/bchp-diadochi/diadochi_03.html Chronicle of the Diadochi, rev., iv.1'.] ] He was soon recognized as the new ruler. [TheSeleucid Era is reckoned from this moment: [http://www.livius.org/cg-cm/chronicles/bchp-diadochi/diadochi_03.html Chronicle of the Diadochi, rev., iv.3-4'.] ] Only the fortress remained occupied by a garrison loyal to Antigonus. Seleucus now built a dam in theEuphrates and created an artificial lake; in August, he suddenly broke the dam, and a flood wave destroyed the walls of the fortress. [ [http://www.livius.org/cg-cm/chronicles/bchp-diadochi/diadochi_03.html Chronicle of the Diadochi, rev., iv.7'.] ]Antigonus' satraps in Media and Aria, Nicanor and Euagoras, now decided to intervene with an army of 10,000 infantry and 7,000 horsemen, but Seleucus and an army of 3,000 infantry and 400 cavalry had been waiting for them near the
Tigris since September 311. [ [http://www.livius.org/cg-cm/chronicles/bchp-diadochi/diadochi_03.html Chronicle of the Diadochi, rev., iv.9-10'] ; for the numbers, Diodorus, "World History", 19.91.] By hiding his men in one of the marshes and attacking by night, Seleucus was able to defeat the Macedonian soldiers in the army of Nicanor and Euagoras, after which the Iranian soldiers decided to side with the ruler of Babylonia (November 311). [ [http://www.livius.org/cg-cm/chronicles/bchp-diadochi/diadochi_03.html Chronicle of the Diadochi, rev., iv.11'] with Diodorus, "World History", 19.91.] Without any problems, Seleucus could move through the Zagros Mountains, occupyEcbatana (the capital of Media), and continue toSusa (the capital ofElam ). He now controlled southern Iraq and the greater part of Iran.News of the defeat of Nicanor and Euagoras must have reached Antigonus at about the time of his signing the Peace of the Dynasts (December 311). He ordered his son
Demetrius Poliorcetes to restore order; he arrived in the early spring of 310, when Seleucus was still in the east. Although Demetrius managed to enter Babylon, he was not able to cope with the resistance that Seleucus' adherents were able to organize, and he returned to Syria without having achieved his goal. [Diodorus, "World History", 19.100.] His father Antigonus tried again in the autumn of 310, and also managed to enter Babylon, [ [http://www.livius.org/cg-cm/chronicles/bchp-diadochi/diadochi_03.html Chronicle of the Diadochi, rev., iv.14-20'.] ] but was forced to leave the city in March 309. [ [http://www.livius.org/cg-cm/chronicles/bchp-diadochi/diadochi_03.html Chronicle of the Diadochi, rev., iv.22'.] ] Returning to the northwest, he met the army of Seleucus, who ordered his soldiers to have their meal during the night, attacked Antigonus' soldiers while they were having breakfast, and won a decisive victory. [Polyaenus , "Strategems" 4.9.1; cf. Pat Wheatley, "Antigonus Monophthalmus in Babylonia, 310-308 B.C." in: "Journal of Near Eastern Studies" 61 (2002), 39-47.]ignificance
Antigonus retreated and accepted that Babylonia, Media, and Elam belonged to Seleucus. The victor now moved to the east and reached the Indus valley, where he concluded a treaty with
Chandragupta Maurya . The raja received the Punjab and gave Seleucus a formidable force of five hundredwar elephants . [Strabo , "Geography" 15.2.1.] By adding all of Iran and Afghanistan, Seleucus became the most powerful ruler since Alexander the Great. [Arrian of Nicomedia , "Anabasis", 7.22.5.] Restoration of Alexander's Empire was, after the Babylonian War, no longer possible. This outcome was confirmed in theFourth War of the Diadochi and theBattle of Ipsus (301).ources
Our knowledge is based on
Diodorus Siculus , "World History", 19.90-93 and 19.100. He discusses Seleucus' battle against the satraps and Demetrius and offers plausible numbers for the armies, but ignores the campaign of Antigonus. This is described in one of the contemporaryBabylonian Chronicles , the [http://www.livius.org/cg-cm/chronicles/bchp-diadochi/diadochi_01.html Chronicle of the Diadochi] (= ABC 10 = BCHP 3), which also offers the chronological framework. Since the publication of this cuneiform tablet, now in theBritish Museum , our understanding of this conflict has much increased.Literature
* T. Boiy, "Between High and Low. A Chronology of the Early Hellenistic Period" (2007).
* I. Finkel &R.J. van der Spek , "Babylonian Chronicles of the Hellenistisc Period" (= BCHP; forthcoming)
* A.K. Grayson, "Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles" (= ABC; 1975, 1977)
* Pat Wheatley, "Antigonus Monophthalmus in Babylonia, 310-308 B.C." in: "Journal of Near Eastern Studies" 61 (2002), 39-47.References
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