Battle of Chaeronea (338 BC)
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Battle of Chaeronea | |||||||
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![]() Battle plan of Chaeronea |
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Combatants | |||||||
Macedon | Athens, Thebes | ||||||
Commanders | |||||||
Philip II of Macedon, Alexander the Great |
Chares of Athens, Lysicles of Athens, Theagenes of Boeotia |
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Strength | |||||||
22,000 infantry, 2,000 cavalry |
35,000 | ||||||
Casualties | |||||||
3,800 killed | 5,000 Athenians killed, At least 254 Boeotians killed, 3,000 captured |
Wars of Alexander the Great |
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Chaeronea – Granicus – Issus – Tyre – Gaugamela – Hydaspes River |
The Battle of Chaeronea (338 BC), fought near Chaeronea, in Boeotia, was the greatest victory of Philip II of Macedon. There, Philip (with 22,000 men) defeated the combined forces of Athens and Thebes, securing Macedonian hegemony in Greece.
The battle itself pitted the classical phalanx of the Athenian and Theban confederates against the Macedonian phalanx of Philip. The confederate battle line formed with the Athenians holding the left wing and the Thebans holding the right wing (with the all-important extreme right flank protected by the Sacred Band). Athenians and Thebans occupied the center of the line. In the Macedonian line, Philip commanded the right wing, while Alexander commanded the left wing — albeit supervised by the best Commanders of the King. The famed Companion Cavalry was situated to the rear of the Macedonian line.
Ancient sources tell us that the two sides fought bitterly for a long time. It would appear that Philip deliberately withdrew his troops on the right wing, in order to break up the Greek lines. Most sources are agreed in saying that Alexander was the first to break into the Theban lines, followed by a courageous band (presumably his kinsmen and friends); upon seeing this, Philip urged his forces to attack with great fury and the Athenians — ardent but untrained — were unable to resist his Macedonian veterans. With the rout of the Athenians, the Thebans were left to fight for themselves and crushed. Of the famed 300-strong Sacred Band of Thebes, 254 fell on the field of battle, while 46 were wounded and captured.
According to Diodorus Siculus, the battle was hotly contested for a long time, until finally Alexander forced his way through the enemy line and put his opponents to flight.[1] More than a thousand Athenians fell in the battle and no less than two thousand were captured. Likewise, many of the Boeotians were killed and not a few taken prisoners.[1]
A different account of the battle was advanced by the Alexander historian Nicholas G. L. Hammond which has established itself as the popular version in latter years. He speculated that it was Alexander, in person, who at the head of the Companion cavalry drove into the gap and outflanked the Greek lines; however none of the sources we have (the main ones being Plutarch, Frontinus and Diodorus) mention this feature of the battle. It should be noted that Hammond never pretended that this was anything more than speculation, but the story has subsequently been propagated in many history books and web sites as historical fact.
[edit] Effect
Macedon's supremacy over the Greek city-states was finally established, that was sanctioned later that year by the birth of the League of Corinth, dominated by Philip.
The battle is also of great importance in the fact that it signaled the decline of the city-state institution--and along with it went Greek democracy--and the rise of the territorial states; to this it can be added that it prepared the ground for the Macedonian conquest of the Persian Empire a few years later as well as the later Hellenistic domination of much of the known world.