Paralus wrote:Another sixty-four posts….

(sigh) Yes, seemingly. We have now been around this mulberry bush twice, without a shred of evidence for your assertions regarding Neoptolemus succeeding Nicanor emerging, and the reasonably strong evidence for there being no overall commander of the Hypaspists after Nicanor's death being studiously ignored....because it cannot be reasonably refuted. Case closed - or should be!
The argument that the infantry reforms of Sittakene relate to the hypaspists corps rest, in the greater part, upon the fact that chiliarchies are created. On your own logic, if "the implication is all, including the phalanx”, the Macedonian phalanx is reduced to four units commanded by eight chiliarchs (not including hypaspists). There is no attestation of phalangite chiliarchs in Alexander’s army.
This simply isn't so. Chiliarchies are indeed created [Curtius V.3] "
the first time the forces were divided into that number." ( note: forces, not Hypaspists ). Moreover 8 chiliarchs are appointed at this time, and perhaps others on other occasions, and since there are reckoned no more than 4 chiliarchies of Hypaspists then some, if not all, of these are appointed to the phalanx. Previously, each 'Taxis' of the phalanx had been divided into sub-units 4 lochoi of 512 men ( yes, I know some reckon three, but that discussion must await the 'numbers' thread), but from this point on would consist of 2 chiliarchies of 1,024 men for a nominal total of 2,048 in a phalanx 'Taxis'. as before. The reason there is no mention of phalangite chiliarchs is simple. Whilst the largest individual unit of Hypaspists was henceforth a chiliarchy commanded by a chiliarch, in the phalanx it was only a sub-unit, and the largest individual unit remained the Taxis, commanded by Taxiarchs such as Coenus and Craterus....
I don't understand why you think the Macedonian sarissaphoroi phalanx is 'reduced' to just four units ? The phalanx Taxeis are now made up of two 'chiliarchys' instead of the previous 4 'lochoi', in all probability.
So, as I say, the main reason for supposing this reform refers to the hypaspists is the creation of chiliarchs. The only attested Macedonian infantry so brigaded in Alexander’s army are the hypaspists. Your “later manuals” are simply that: not relevant here.
See above. There must have been chilarchies in the phalanx on the strength of Curtius' evidence.The fact that Curtius refers to at least 8 means that the rank and organisation was not just restricted to the Hypaspists - indeed it would be perverse to suggest this, based on the evidence we have.The fact that later, chiliarchies are attested as sub-units of the phalanx is corrobarative of this, and shows continuity.
"...not relevant here"? On what do you base that, other than that it's an inconvenient piece of evidence which doesn't suit your point ? We have two 'dots' of information - that Alexander introduced 'chiliarchies' to the Macedonian army, and that later, the same Macedonian phalanx still had sub-units of chiliarchies. That suggests continuity of organisation, with only some minor name changes along the way.
Xenophon wrote:Paralus wrote
I’m afraid that this does not follow. In all set piece battles the king commands the right and, until his murder, Parmenion the left. In every such situation we are informed that the hypaspists, under the command of Nikanor, held the right wing of the infantry phalanx whilst, on the left, Krateros commanded the left wing of the infantry phalanx. Thus the overall command of the right (and the army) was Alexander and the overall command of the left was Parmenion. Removal of the commander of the hypaspists means the right is no longer in keeping with the left. Moreover, it makes little military sense to remove a commander of the most important infantry unit of the most important wing.
Most of this is irrelevant, since after the death of Nicanor from illness in the Spring or early Summer of 330 after Gaugemala, the only major battle is Hydaspes, which does not conform to the ‘standard’ deployment. There, Alexander took a large detachment away some 17 miles to the LEFT flank to cross the river. On that occasion he seems to have commanded the Hypaspists as a whole in person. Evidently Alexander did not agree with you that not having a separate commander of the Hypaspists made “little military sense” – not even when the three chiliarchies are on detached service, when one of the Chiliarchs, Antiochus is given temporary command of all three. [Arrian 4.30.6 ]
A “detachment” some 13,000 strong including two phalanx divisions (one of your “training” missions for the somatophylakes?) It is clear that whilst he took the hypaspists a whole, he did not command them in person in the actual battle. The narrative has the hypaspists as part of the phalanx centre and Alexander’s cavalry charge as an entirely separate action.
Is there a point to your comment, other than the unnecessary sarcasm ?
We are not told who, if anyone was commander of the phalanx under Alexander's command at Hydaspes. As to numbers, whilst the paper strength of the units concerned adds up to 13,000, in a rare example, Arrian tells us that the actual number was 11,000 - 5,000 cavalry and 6,000 infantry - and evidently the infantry are 25% down on their nominal strength.( or 12.5 % for those who think a phalanx Taxis numbered only 1,500 men )
As far as Nikanor is concerned, he died late in the spring the year following Gaugamela. Curtius places the reorganisation of the hypaspists (?) following the departure from Babylon. You are correct that “the re-organisation of the Macedonian army probably did not take place overnight at Sittakene/Susa”. What did happen at Sittakene is the reorganisation of a section of the Macedonian infantry – not the entire army (the splitting of the Companion cavalry comes later as does the addition of Asian cavalry for example) – unless you wish to dismiss your own oft referred to passage of Curtius. After this reorganisation (and expansion of the hypaspists to a size not conducive to one man’s control), Nikanor is still referred to unequivocally as commander of the hypaspists.
Well, I am glad we agree about the approximate timing of Nicanor's death, and the fact that he held his position until his death, at which time he may or may not have commanded four chiliarchies - which doesn't alter the fact that Arrian does not mention any successor, either at this point or later, not to mention the other evidence I have referred to repeatedly, of there NOT being another commander of Hypaspists........it is simply not good historical method to baldly assert an opinion, whilst not in possession of all the relevant facts, and to turn a Nelsonian blind eye to evidence which is contrary to that (wrong) opinion.
....and I simply suggested 'control' along with'politics' as two
possible reasons why Alexander didn't appoint a commander. As I remarked elsewhere, only Alexander knew his reasons.
Incidently, it is quite wrong to suggest that only the infantry were re-organised at Susa/Sittakene, for Arrian [III.16.11] says that from then on, each 'Ile'/squadron was formed of two 'lochoi'/companies where previously there had been none.
My point on the balance of army command still remains. You, yourself, claimed that the removal of a commander of the hypaspists brought the command structure of the right into balance with that of the left. This, as I’ve shown, is a nonsense.
No, you simply misinterpreted what I wrote, and as it wasn't germane to the question under discussion, I did not bother to correct the matter.
That the right required a commander of the infantry is surely indicated by the fact that the left of the phalanx required such. More so in fact. The left, in all the major battles related, is the ‘holding’ wing – no decisive cavalry charge here – as opposed to the right where the commander in chief launches the decisive cavalry charge. Yet it is only the left that requires a commander of the infantry as well as an overall commander, not the right? My view is that the premier infantry corps of the army 'led up' the infantry line and so too did its commander.
Whilst we are told on occasion that Craterus commanded the infantry of the left ( Issus and Gaugamela for example) under the overall command of an aged Parmenion, there is no such corresponding infantry commander of the right - according to Arrian [III.11] Nicanor commands only the Hypaspists, in marked contrast to the left, where we are
specifically told Craterus commanded the infantry of the left as well as his own Taxis.Same at Issus [II.8]
Once again, your view is not based on the evidence, such as it is. Whilst from a drill perspective the Agema and Hypaspists were the 'right marker' for the phalanx and it's advance, there is no command, according to Arrian, of the right wing infantry as a whole - nor is there a need for such, strictly speaking. Each succeeding unit simply conforms to the one to it's right. Perhaps the appointment of an infantry commander for the left wing, effectively a second-in-command, has something to do with Parmenions' age ? ( around 67 at the time)
At the time Alexander had no idea that the only other ‘major’ battle would be Hydaspes. I do not think he will have removed the commander of the premier infantry unit of the right.
Since, according to our sources there was no overall commander of the Hypaspists after Nicanor, there was no-one for Alexander to 'remove' .
Xenophon wrote:Again, I would not be so certain if I were you !! The term ‘hipparchias’/commander of cavalry dates back to Xenophon ( Cavalry Commander III.13 for example ) and also pseudo-Xenophon ‘Constitution of Athens’ to have a generic meaning of “a cavalry command” thus pre-dating Alexander.[ c.f. the word ‘taxis’]. Thus at I.24.3 the word may be being used correctly in its generic sense so that Parmenion was given “a force consisting of a cavalry command of the Companions, the Thessalian cavalry.... “
Much later, when the ‘iles’ were combined, they may have been originally called a ‘tetrarchy’ ( i.e. 4 ‘lochoi') commanded by a ‘Hipparch’ ( Arrian speaks of the other cavalry being organised into ‘tetrarchies’ at III.18.5 ), and later [after the crossing of the Oxus III.29.7] uses the word ‘hipparchy’/cavalry command in its new specific, or technical, sense of ‘cavalry command’ consisting of two iles/squadrons to describe this unit.The units would appear to be given their new title of "a cavalry command" at this time.
Thus there need not be, and probably isn’t, an anachronism here!
You wish to relate much to classical Greek terminology – “Xenophontic” terminology. You problem is that we are dealing with a Macedonian army, not Greek and, even more pertinently, Macedonian sources - not Xenophon (the Athenian Spartiate). The terms used here in Arrian’s sources are used by Macedonians hence ‘chiliarch’ and ‘hipparchy’ refer to a Macedonian nomenclature; not classical Greek. As much as you would love to see Arrian’s use of ἱππαρχίαν as “a cavalry command” throughout, this is simply desperate special pleading. This is clearly a Macedonian term for a unit of the Companion cavalry. Arrian uses exactly the same word at 1.24.3 as he does throughout the rest of his work and it is clearly used anachronistically.
Oh dear ! "desperate special pleading"? Pot calling kettle ,hhh..mm ?
My comments merely demonstrated ( with evidence)that the words 'hipparch' meaning 'cavalry commander' and 'hipparchy' meaning a cavalry command/unit were in use prior to Alexander's day, and accordingly it's use in the generic sense by Arrian need not be an anachronism.
What
is 'special pleading' is the idea that the term was somehow only 'invented' after Gaugemala, or that somehow it was specifically 'Macedonian'. But the Macedonians did not invent the words at all ! As we have seen, the name and it's meaning existed long before Alexander's day. In fact, ALL the terminology used of Macedonian organisation is Greek. 'Hipparchy' is simply not a 'Macedonian' term in origin at all - it is a standard Greek term applied to a Macedonian unit, when it acquires a specific meaning in context - like taxis, phalagga, lochoi, agema, hypaspist etc . Since the word, like the others, pre-existed it's usage of Companion cavalry units, then pretty obviously it need not be anachronistic.... ( and similarly with 'chiliarchos' - see ante in previous posts )
I must say that it is surprising that rather than modify your 'view' in the light of newly presented evidence, you prefer to keep to the fossilised version, and 'explain away' the evidence in an extremely unconvincing form of 'special pleading'......
It was you who wrote:
Unless one can conclusively prove error it is far better to accept the text as given.
.....and here, as with Addaios the 'chiliarchos', there is good evidence that the terminology is NOT anachronistic at all, but the terms were in use much earlier.....so no "conclusive proof" of anachronism, rather conclusive proof that the words are NOT anachronistic.
The reason that Xenophon is referred to is that he is the only prior 'technical military' writer to come down to us, hence it is foolish to imply that the word is somehow "Xenophontic".
Later following the cavalry Companion re-organisation at Susa/Sittakene, the newly organised units are divided into generic 'lochoi'/ companies, [ Arrian III.16.11] of which 4 make up ( probably) a 'tetrarchy', [III.18.5 - used of other cavalry but likely to apply to the Companions too] and shortly afterward we hear their new designation of 'Hipparchy'/cavalry command/unit, following the crossing of the Oxus [III.29.7] For a time the 'Ile Basilikoi'/Royal squadron continued to exist [e.g. III.19.6] but eventually is evidently renamed 'Agema' [ e.g. IV.24.2] - perhaps, possibly following an increase in strength from 300 odd to the 512 of a 'Hipparchy'.