283 captures
22 Nov 2004 - 17 Dec 2025
Apr MAY Jun
06
2012 2013 2014
success
fail

About this capture

COLLECTED BY

Organization: Internet Archive

The Internet Archive discovers and captures web pages through many different web crawls. At any given time several distinct crawls are running, some for months, and some every day or longer. View the web archive through the Wayback Machine.

Collection: Wide Crawl started April 2013

Web wide crawl with initial seedlist and crawler configuration from April 2013.
TIMESTAMPS

The Wayback Machine - http://web.archive.org/web/20130506073459/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarissa
 



Sarissa

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

Jump to: navigation, search  
Macedonian phalanx

The sarissaorsarisa (Greek: σάρισα) was a 4 to 7 meter (13–21 feet) long spear used in the ancient Greek and Hellenistic warfare. It was introduced by Philip II of Macedon and was used in the traditional phalanxes of Philip II of Macedon as a replacement for the earlier dory, which was considerably shorter. The phalanxes of Philip II of Macedon were known as Macedonian phalanxes. The word remained in use throughout the Byzantine years to sometimes describe the long spears of the Byzantine infantry.[1][2]

Contents

[edit] Composition and utility

The sarissa, made of tough and resilient cornel wood, was very heavy for a spear, weighing approximately 12 pounds (5.4 kg) for a 15-foot (4.6 m) sarissa and approximately 14.5 pounds (6.6 kg) for an 18-foot (5.5 m) sarissa.[3] It had a sharp iron head shaped like a leaf and a bronze butt-spike that would allow it to be anchored to the ground to stop charges by enemy soldiers.[4] The butt-spike served to balance out the spear, making it easier for soldiers to wield. The butt-spike could be used as a back-up point should the main one break.

The sheer bulk and size of the spear required the soldiers to wield the spear with both hands, allowing them to carry only a 24 inch shield (pelta) suspended from the neck to cover the left shoulder.[5] Its great length —up to eighteen feet in two lengths joined by a central bronze tube[6]— was an asset against hoplites and other soldiers bearing shorter weapons, because they had to get past the sarissas to engage the phalangites. However, outside the tight formation of the Phalanx the sarissa was useless as a weapon and a hindrance on the march.

[edit] Tactics

Complicated training ensured that the phalanx wielded their sarissas in unison, swinging them vertically to wheel about, then lowering them to the horizontal. The uniform swish of the sarissas daunted the Illyrian hill tribesmen against whom the young Alexander fought in an expedition early in his reign.[7]

The sarissa-bearing phalanx would usually march to battle in open formation to facilitate movement. Before the charge, it would tighten its files to close formation or even compact formation (synaspismos). The tight formation of the phalanx created a "wall of pikes", and the pike was so long that there were fully five rows of them projecting in front of the front rank of men—even if an enemy got past the first row, there were still four more to stop him. The back rows bore their pikes angled upwards in readiness, which served the additional purpose of deflecting incoming arrows. The Macedonian phalanx was considered invulnerable from the front, except against another such phalanx; the only way it was ever generally defeated was by breaking its formation or outflanking it.

[edit] History of use

The invention of the sarissa is credited to Philip II, father of Alexander the Great. Philip drilled his soldiers, whose morale was at first low, to use these formidable pikes with two hands. The new tactic was unstoppable, and by the end of Philip's reign the previously fragile kingdom of Macedon, once of the Hellenised periphery, controlled the whole of Greece, and Thrace.

His son, Alexander, used the new tactic across Asia, conquering Egypt, Persia and the Pauravas (northwest India), victorious all the way. The sarissa-wielding phalanxes were vital in every early battle, including the pivotal battle of Gaugamela where the Persian king's scythe chariots were utterly destroyed by the phalanx, supported by the combined use of companion cavalry and peltasts (javelineers). During his later campaigning, Alexander gradually reduced the importance of the phalanx and the sarissa, as he modified his combined use of arms to incorporate 'Asian' weapons and troops, not specifically trained in Hellenistic battle tactics.

The sarissa, however, remained the backbone for every subsequent Hellenistic, and especially Diadochi army. The Battle of Raphia between the Seleucids and Ptolemy IV may represent the pinnacle of sarissa tactics, when only an elephant charge seemed able to disrupt the opposing phalanx. The Successor Kingdoms of Macedon's empire tried expanding upon the design, creating pikes as long as 22 feet (6.7 m), but all of these ideas were eventually abandoned in favor of the battle-tried Philipine-Alexandrian sarissa. Battles often ended up stalemated in what Oliver Cromwell later described as "the terrible business of push of pike".

Subsequently, a lack of training and too great a reliance on the Phalanx instead of the combined use of arms (Alexander's and Philip's great contributions) led to the final defeat of Macedon by the Romans at the Battle of Pydna. Part of the reason for the rapid deterioration of the sarissa's ability was that, after Alexander, generals ceased to protect phalanxes with cavalry and light-armed troops, and phalanxes were destroyed too easily by flank attacks owing to the sarissa's tactical unwieldiness. The sarissa was gradually replaced by variations of the gladius as the weapon of choice. Only Pyrrhus of Epirus was able to maintain a high standard of tactical handling with armies based around the sarissa, but with the dawn of the manipular system, even he struggled for his victories.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ 11th century, Michael Attaleiates, The History, A.1047
  • ^ 6th century, Agathias Scholasticus, Histories, B.43
  • ^ Markle 324
  • ^ Fox76f.
  • ^ Markle 326
  • ^ Fox, p. 75
  • ^ Described by Fox, pp 84f.
  • [edit] References

    [edit] External links


    Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sarissa&oldid=546045536" 

    Categories: 
    Personal weapons
    Ancient weapons
    Pole weapons
    Ancient Greek military terminology
    Ancient Macedonian military equipment
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles needing additional references from July 2008
    All articles needing additional references
    Articles containing Greek language text
     

    Navigation menu

     

    Personal tools



    Create account
    Log in
     



    Namespaces



    Article

    Talk
     


    Variants








    Views



    Read

    Edit

    View history
     


    Actions












    Navigation




    Main page

    Contents

    Featured content

    Current events

    Random article

    Donate to Wikipedia
     



    Interaction




    Help

    About Wikipedia

    Community portal

    Recent changes

    Contact Wikipedia
     



    Toolbox




    What links here

    Related changes

    Upload file

    Special pages

    Permanent link

    Page information

    Cite this page
     



    Print/export




    Create a book

    Download as PDF

    Printable version
     



    Languages




    العربية

    Български

    Català

    Česky

    Deutsch

    Ελληνικά

    Español

    Euskara

    Français



    Bahasa Indonesia

    Italiano

    עברית

    Latina

    Lietuvių

    Magyar

    Македонски

    Nederlands



    Norsk bokmål

    Polski

    Português

    Română

    Русиньскый

    Русский

    Slovenščina

    Suomi

    Svenska



    Edit links
     





    This page was last modified on 21 March 2013 at 18:20.

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. 
    Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
     


    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Mobile view
     


    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki