And Caesar had a better army with heavey armor and reliable weapons with cohorts made up into legions against naked untrained barbarians. I don’t see much of a difference here.
The difference was the conquest of Gaul against a trained army while the army of Persians were made up primarily people who were raised on the spot… hardly a trained experienced army. The "naked’ Barbarians in Europe as you put it fought much harder than Persians. Ceasar conquered all of Gaul (including spain and France and invaded Britain and latter Ceasar crossed the rhine and fought against the best "naked’ savages with clothes that the world had seen up to that time. Plus Vercingetorix was by far a better adversary than say the riff raff Alexander had to go against.
I don’t see that it does. So, Caesar defeats a 200 000 man army. Alexander defeats a 250 000 army at Gaugamela with 40 000.
Yes but caeasar was laying seige to a city while outnumbered and also fighting yet another force at his back again at huge odds. A seige is by far the hardest tactic to employ in ancient times as it leads to major loses but Ceaser accomplished this feat greater than any other including alexander who was considered an excellent master himself of the seige. Thats what makes caeaser better. But to Alexanders credit he also fought and won battles of great odds. The difference was the situation surrounding the two battles rather than the odds.
Well, the Greeks with their hoplite infantry fought in a Phalanx long before Phillip came along. Phillip developed the Macedonian phalanx, which was far larger. The
Macedonian phalanx had as many as 32 ranks compared with the 8 of the Greeks and their spears were 19ft-23ft. The back ranks of Phillip’s phalanx were usually not in armor which saved money. The sure weight from this form of attack would be very difficult for the smaller Greek phalanx to withstand regardless of how well they were trained.
Right then you agree with me that Alexander really didnt bring anything new to the scene in terms of major military developments. he rested on what was allready in use before. Ceaser on the other hand made improvements in how the legions were deployed and tactics. he also created the last word on ancient art of seige warfare… an often attributed skill to alexander. However, ceaser won the greatest battle of this type at Alesia.
What kind of new tactics did Caesar implement? I’m curious. And yes, the Greeks changed there tactics when a Greek Phalanx was destroyed by Skirmishers, the Greeks move toward lighter armour and longer spears so it was easier to engage light troops. I don’t know much about Caesar’s seiges. He may well have been the good at it but it doesn’t make him the best general.
Read up on Alesia its one of the most important battles of the ancient world
Well, so far I haven’t read or have seen you post an example of Caesar commanding any army larger than anything Alexander did. I will say that Caesar’s supply line was no where near as far reaching as Alexander’s
Here you go:
http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/gabrmetz/gabr0009.htm
Key portion:
“Philip of Macedon could field a combat army of 32,000 men organized in four divisions of 8,192 men each, and the army of Alexander sometimes exceeded 60,000 men. Roman military forces, which at the end of the empire totaled 350,000 men, could routinely field armies upward of 40,000. At the Battle of Cannae the Roman force arrayed against Hannibal was 80,000 men strong. Of these, 70,000 were destroyed in a single day! The one exception to the ability of Iron Age states to deploy large armies was the armies of classical Greece. Being products of relatively small city-states, classical armies were unusually small even for the Bronze Age. Ahab, for example, at the Battle of Ai could field 30,000 men, while at the Battle of Marathon the Greeks were able to field only 10,000 men against the Persian force of 50,000.”
BTW Cannae was before Ceasar… he had no part in that debacle.