Imagine, for a moment, you are a Roman soldier at war. In the midst of battle, you are confronted with an enormous and loudly trumpeting creature you’ve never seen before.
It appears to have sharp spears protruding from either side of its mouth and a bizarre, powerful limb extending from its face. Armed men ride atop this towering beast, which, running toward you at speed, is crushing your comrades underfoot.
Roman soldiers were reportedly terrified the first time they faced war elephants on the battlefield. It’s hard not to feel bad for the elephants too, as using animals this way in war is undoubtedly cruel.
But Rome’s enemies, particularly various Hellenistic kingdoms and the Carthaginians, did indeed use war elephants. So, how did they acquire and deploy them in battle – and how did the Romans respond?
Details
Title
Romans were terrified by war elephants at first – but eventually found a way to defeat them in battle
Creators
Michael B Charles - Southern Cross University, Management
Publication Details
The Conversation
Publisher
The Conversation Media Group
Identifiers
991013214111102368
Academic Unit
Management; Faculty of Business, Law and Arts
Language
English
Resource Type
Magazine article
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Romans were terrified by war elephants at first – but eventually found a way to defeat them in battle