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Battle of Dara
Part of the Iberian War
Battle of Dara-battleplan
Battleplan
Date530
LocationDara, southern Turkey
Result Byzantine victory
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire,
Heruli,
Huns
Sassanid Empire
Commanders and leaders
Belisarius,
Hermogenes,
Pharas,
John of Lydia
Sunicas
Perozes,
Pityaxes,
Baresmanas
Strength
25,000 men[1] 50,000 men[2]
(originally 40,000 men[1])
Casualties and losses
Unknown 8,000+ men[3]


The Battle of Dara was fought between the Sassanids and the Byzantine Empire in 530. It was one of the battles of the Iberian War.

Background[]

The Byzantine Empire was at war with the Sassanids from 507, supposedly because Kavadh I had tried to force the Iberians to become Zoroastrians. The Iberian king fled from Kavadh, but Kavadh tried to make peace with the Byzantines, and attempted to have Justin I adopt his son Khosrau. Justin and his nephew and heir, Justinian I, refused and sent his generals Sittas and Belisarius into Persia, where they were initially defeated. Justinian tried to negotiate but Kavadh instead sent 40,000 men towards Dara in 529. Belisarius was sent back to the region with Hermogenes as his co-commander and 25,000 men in 530; Kavadh replied with another 10,000 troops under the general Perozes, who set up camp about five kilometers away at Ammodius.

The battle[]

Despite being outnumbered, Belisarius decided to give battle to the numerically superior Persians. He dug a number of ditches to block the Persian cavalry; leaving gaps between them to allow a counterattack. These were pushed forward on either flank of his position; while his center was refused back. Here he placed his unreliable infantry behind the center ditch. On the left and right flanks were the Roman cavalry, of questionable quality. Supporting them on their interior flanks were small bodies of Huns: 300 Hun cavalry under Sunicas and Aigan supporting the left; and as many more Huns on the right under Simmas and Ascan. Belisarius also placed a body of Heruli cavalry under Pharas in ambush position off of his left flank. A reserve composed of his own bucellarii household cavalry was held behind his center and commanded by Armenian John; his trusted lieutenant and boyhood companion. On the first day, there was no general engagement, but instead a series of challenge fights between champions of both sides. One particular combat involved a Persian knight, who challenged Belisarius to a single combat; but was instead met by a Roman bath slave named Andreas. Andreas, who had been secretly training with Belisarius' own household troopers, killed not only this Persian champion, but also a second challenger later in the day. The Persians then withdrew to Ammodius for the night.

On the second day of the battle, 10,000 more Persian troops arrived from Nisibis. The Persians and Byzantines exchanged volleys of arrows, resulting in minor casualties on each side. The Persians formed two lines: the right flank under Pityaxes and the left under Baresamanes. The first wave of the Persian attack was directed against the Roman left flank. The Persians forced a crossing of the ditch, pushing back the Roman cavalry. But the intervention of Sunicas' Huns attacking from the interior of the Roman line; as well as Pharas' Herulians attacking out of ambush from the opposite side, forced the Persians wing to retreat. The Persians then attacked the Byzantine right wing, where Perozes sent the Persian Immortals, the elite Persian armored lancers. The Roman cavalry defending the ditch, were pushed back here as they had been on the right. But Belisarius counterattacked with his reserve bucellari cavalry, and split the Persian troops in two. Half the Persians pursued the Byzantine cavalry, but the rest were trapped, and Baresmanes was killed along with 5,000 other men. The Byzantine cavalry also recovered and routed their pursuers. Belisarius allowed a pursuit for a few miles, but let the majority of Persian survivors escape.

Outcome and later attacks[]

The victory didn't last long for the Byzantine Empire. Following the defeat, the Lakhmid King al-Mundhir IV ibn al-Mundhir, a Sassanid vassal, sent his troops to aid the Sassanid army. With Lakhmid aid, on 19 April 531, under the command of the Spahbod Azarethes, the Persians heavily defeated Belisarius at the Battle of Callinicum, partly due to the insubordination of Belisarius' officers, which led the Byzantines to pay heavy tributes for years in exchange for a peace treaty.

In 540 and 544 Dara was attacked by Khosrau I, who was unable to take it either time. Khosrau finally captured it in 573; its fall was said to have caused Justin II to go insane. Justin's wife Sophia and his friend Tiberius II Constantine took control of the empire until Justin died in 578. Meanwhile the Persians were able to march further into the empire, but Khosrau died in 579.

Maurice defeated the Persians at Dara in 586 and recaptured the fortress, but the Persians under Khosrau II defeated the Byzantines in 604. This time Persians destroyed the city, but the Byzantines later rebuilt it in 628. In 639 the Muslim Arabs captured it, and it remained in their hands until 942 when it was sacked by the Byzantines. It was sacked again by John Tzimisces in 958, but the Byzantines never recaptured it.

The battle in media[]

The Battle of Dara is depicted in 2005 in the TV series Time Commanders.

Citation[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 J. Haldon, The Byzantine Wars, 29
  2. J. Haldon, The Byzantine Wars, 31
  3. J. Haldon, The Byzantine Wars, 31-32

Sources[]

  • Procopius, History of the Wars, book I, chapter xiii.
  • Warren Treadgold, History of the Byzantine State and Society
  • John Haldon, The Byzantine Wars
  • Christopher Lillington-Martin, "Archaeological and Ancient Literary Evidence for a Battle near Dara Gap, Turkey, AD 530: Topography, Texts & Trenches", British Archaeological Reports (BAR) –S1717, 2007 The Late Roman Army in the Near East from Diocletian to the Arab Conquest Proceedings of a colloquium held at Potenza, Acerenza and Matera, Italy (May 2005) edited by Ariel S. Lewin and Pietrina Pellegrini with the aid of Zbigniew T. Fiema and Sylvain Janniard. ISBN 978-1-4073-0161-7. (pages 299-311).

External links[]

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