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词条 Battle of Adrianople (324)
释义

  1. Background

  2. Battle

  3. Aftermath

  4. Notes

  5. References

{{About||battles on other dates|Battle of Adrianople (disambiguation)}}{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict =Battle of Adrianople
|partof =the Civil Wars of the Tetrarchy| image = Constantine-cameo.jpg
| image_size = 300
|caption =Constantine I crowned as a victorious general – 4th century cameo
|date =July 3, 324
|place =Near Adrianople (modern Edirne, Turkey)
|coordinates =
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|result =Constantinian victory
|status =
|combatants_header =
|combatant1 =Forces of Constantine
(Western Empire)
|combatant2 =Forces of Licinius
(Eastern Empire)
|commander1 =Constantine I
|commander2 =Licinius
|units1 =
|units2 =
|strength1 =130,000[1]
|strength2 =165,000[1]
|casualties1 =Unknown
|casualties2 =34,000 dead[1]
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|campaignbox ={{Campaignbox Fourth Century Roman Civil Wars}}{{Campaignbox Constantine Wars}}
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The Battle of Adrianople was fought on July 3, 324,[2] during a Roman civil war, the second to be waged between the two emperors Constantine I and Licinius; Licinius suffered a heavy defeat.

Background

Constantine had, in a previous war (in 316), defeated Licinius at the Battle of Cibalae and conquered from him all the Balkan Peninsula, with the exception of Thrace.[3] A peace had been arranged but the relationship between the two emperors remained uneasy. By 324 Constantine was ready to renew the conflict and when his army, in pursuit of a raiding Visigothic, or possibly Sarmatian, force, crossed into Licinius' territory an opportune casus belli was created. The reaction of Licinius to this incursion was overtly hostile and this induced Constantine to go on to the offensive. Constantine invaded Thrace in force; his army was smaller than that of Licinius, but it contained many battle-hardened veterans and, as he had control of the Illyrian region, the finest quality of new recruits.[4]

Battle

Licinius encamped his army in a strong position near Adrianople (Hadrianopolis), the major city of inland Thrace. Constantine advanced eastward from Thessalonica until he came to the Hebrus River, on which Adrianople stands, and set up his own camp. Licinius arranged his battle line, of 200 stades in length,[5] in a strong position between a height overlooking the town and the confluence of the Hebrus with a tributary. The two armies remained in position for a number of days before battle was joined,[5] as both sides were reluctant to chance the crossing of the river against a well-prepared and battle-arrayed enemy.

Eventually, Constantine used a ruse to get his troops across the Hebrus. Having noticed a suitable crossing point where the river narrowed and was overlooked by a wooded hillside, he ordered material and ropes to be conspicuously assembled at another place on the river, well away from his chosen crossing, to give the impression that he intended to build a bridge to cross there.[5] On the wooded hillside, he secretly assembled 5,000 foot archers and a force of cavalry. He then led his cavalry over the river crossing at the narrows, and fell on the enemy unexpectedly. The surprise attack was a complete success and the remainder of his army then crossed at the same point.[5] With his position on the river outflanked, Licinius' withdrew his forces and took up a defensive position on higher ground. However, this gave Constantine the initiative once more, and his attack was again successful.[6] What followed, in the words of the historian Zosimus, was "a great massacre": Licinius' army, according to Zosimus, received losses of 34,000 dead.[5][7]

During the onslaught, Constantine directed the guard of his overtly Christian standard, the labarum, to move it to any part of the field where his troops seemed to be faltering. The appearance of this talisman emboldened his own troops and dismayed those of Licinius.[8] Constantine, who had been slightly wounded in the thigh,[9] halted his attack at sunset and darkness allowed Licinius and the remains of his force to withdraw to Byzantium, the coast, and the safety of his fleet.[1][5] The battle was one of the largest of the 4th century.[1] Though Zosimus attributes the success of the Constantinian forces to the courage and martial prowess of Constantine himself, whom he alleges to have led the cavalry in person in the charge which broke Licinus' defenses, other contemporary accounts ascribe his success to the discipline of the troops and Constantine's felicitas, his 'good fortune'.[10][11]

Aftermath

Constantine's effort to start a civil conflict proved successful, as did his campaign against Licinius. Following the battle at Adrianople, Constantine moved to besiege Byzantium. At this point in the campaign, control of the narrow waters separating Thrace and Asia Minor became of the utmost importance to both emperors. Constantine's son Crispus commanded his navy in a struggle with the larger fleet of Licinius. Following Crispus' naval victory in the waters of the Hellespont, Constantine crossed with his army into Bithynia.[12] He met Licinius' army in the final battle of the war at Chrysopolis on the Asiatic shore of the Bosporus. Constantine won an overwhelming victory.[13] Initially, yielding to the pleas of his sister Constantia, Constantine spared the life of his brother-in-law, but some months later he ordered his execution, thereby breaking his solemn oath. Licinius was suspected of treasonable actions and the army command pressed for his execution.[14] A year later, Constantine's nephew the younger Licinius also fell victim to the emperor's anger or suspicions.[15] Constantine became the first man to be master of the entire Roman world since the elevation of Maximian as co-emperor by Diocletian in 285.

Notes

1. ^Grant, p. 46
2. ^{{cite book|author=Eutropius |translator-first=H. W. |translator-last=Bird |title=The Breviarum Ab Urbe Condita of Eutropius: The Right Honourable Secretary of State for General Petitions|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BSlGy6kLCVAC&pg=PA155|accessdate=1 July 2018|year=1993|publisher=Liverpool University Press|isbn=9780853232087|page=155}}
3. ^Odahl, p. 164
4. ^Grant, p. 45
5. ^Zosimus, II.22.3–7
6. ^Syvanne, p. 270
7. ^Edward Gibbon, The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire, (The Modern Library, 1932), ch. XIV., p. 379
8. ^Odahl, p. 178
9. ^Lieu and Montserrat, p. 47
10. ^Gibbon, Ibid.
11. ^Stephenson, p. 180
12. ^Odahl, pp. 179–180
13. ^Odahl, p. 180
14. ^Odahl, p. 160
15. ^Grant, pp. 47–48

References

Primary source
  • Zosimus, Historia nova, English translation: R.T. Ridley, Zosimus: New History, Byzantina Australiensia 2, Canberra (1982).
    • 1814 English translation at Wikisource
Secondary sources
  • Grant, Michael (1993), The Emperor Constantine, London. {{ISBN|0-7538-0528-6}}
  • Lieu, S.N.C and Montserrat, D. (Ed.s) (1996), From Constantine to Julian, London. {{ISBN|0-415-09336-8}}
  • Odahl, C.M., (2004) Constantine and the Christian Empire, Routledge 2004. {{ISBN|0-415-17485-6}}
  • Stephenson, P. (2009) Constantine: Unconquered Emperor, Christian Victor, Quercus, London
  • Syvanne, I. (2015) Military History of Late Rome 284-361 Pen and Sword, Barnsley Yorks.
{{coord|41.6667|N|26.5667|E|source:wikidata|display=title}}

6 : 324|4th-century conflicts|Battles involving the Roman Empire|Roman Thrace|Battles of Constantine the Great|320s in the Roman Empire

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