Phoebus wrote:Hi again, Semiramis
You raise very interesting points. Against them, I can only question what Alexander felt he could gain by misleading his soldiers about the distance to Ocean's shores.
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Could he have been so desperate for one more conquest?
Hi Pheobus,
Amyntors and Paralus have covered these topics wonderfully. I have nothing as valuable to add, but here goes.
I don't know that the conquest of the Kingdom of the Nandas would have to have any special motive compared to the other conquests. According to the sources the invaders had heard that this kingdom was even more powerful and wealthy compared to the others they had come across in India. Judging by the large number of troops and elephants the Nandas were reported to have, the chance to take that treasury would have been rather lucrative. I also can't help but notice the numerous times the sources specifically mention the elephants Alexander took after the other Indian conquests. Macedonians seem to have recognized their importance as weapons of war.
Arrian wrote:He then sent Porus with his forces to the cities which had submitted to him, to introduce garrisons into them ; whilst he himself with his army, advanced to the river Hyphasis,’ to subjugate the Indians beyond it. Nor did there seem to him any end of the war, so long as anything hostile to him remained.
IT was reported that the country beyond the river Hyphasis was fertile, and that the men were good agriculturists, and gallant in war; and that they conducted their own political affairs in a regular and constitutional manner. For the multitude was ruled by the aristocracy, who governed in no respect contrary to the rules of moderation. It was also stated that the men of that district possessed a much greater number of elephants than the other Indians, and that they were men of very great stature, and excelled in valour.
Plutarch wrote:For they were told the kings of the Gandaritans and Praesians expected them there with eighty thousand horse, two hundred thousand foot, eight thousand armed chariots, and six thousand fighting elephants. Nor was this a mere vain report, spread to discourage them. For Androcottus, who not long after reigned in those parts, made a present of five hundred elephants at once to Seleucus, and with an army of six hundred thousand men subdued all India.
Phoebus wrote:If he had an understanding of the geographical issues you brought up, he had to have known that his obfuscations wouldn't last long.
If Alexander had managed to persuade his troops about the ocean and they had found out later that there was no such thing, perhaps they still would have had no choice but stay loyal to Alexander. The Macedonians had refused to go on before, and he had made motivational speeches before. The difference is, this attempt was the most desperate so far.
These were men who were very far from home, feared and hated by the local populations - a significant number of whom they had recently butchered. They were under constant threat of attack from those same populations, and forced to rely on conscripts from other lands that they had recently conquered. As if that wasn't enough, they were commanded by ambitious officers who were at times openly hostile to each other. The soldiers would have known that the army would likely fragment without Alexander and had to trust him to lead them back safely. The decision to march through the Markan Desert was yet to come of course.
We simply don't have enough information to judge whether it was in Alexander's character to lie. Off the top of my head, I can think of at least one specific mention in the sources, regarding the killing of Indian mercenaries at Massaga. From Plutarch of all people - usually so effusive in his praise for Alexander's mission civilatrice.
But the best soldiers of the Indians were mercenaries, who entered into the pay of several
of the cities, and undertook to defend them, and did it so bravely, that they put Alexander to a great deal of trouble, till at last, after a capitulation, upon the surrender of the place, he fell upon them as they were marching away, and put them all to the sword. This one breach of his word remains as a blemish upon his achievements in war, which he otherwise had performed throughout with that justice and honour that became a king.
Arrian tells a slightly different story. But neither version is pretty.
He was glad to preserve the lives of brave men ; so he came to terms with the Indian mercenaries on this condition, that they should be admitted into the ranks with the rest of his army and serve as his soldiers. They therefore came out of the city with their arms, and encamped by themselves upon a hill which was facing the camp of the Macedonians; but they resolved to arise by night and run away to their own abodes, because they were unwilling to take up arms against the other Indians. When Alexander received intelligence of this, he placed the whole of his army round the hill in the night, and intercepting them in the midst of their flight, cut them to pieces.
Make of that what you like..
