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Falerno
Agro
Falerno

L'Ager Falernus è una regione
storica della Campania settentrionale, tra il monte Massico e il
Volturno, corrispondente all'odierna Piana di Carinola. Era nota
presso i Romani, che la occuparono nel 340 aC fondandovi (318) la
tribù Falerna, per la fertilità della sua terra e per la produzione
del famoso vino falerno.
Il
Falerno è un vino di antichissime origini, spesso citato nella
letteratura latina come bevanda in uso nell'antica Roma. Attualmente
viene prodotto col nome di Falerno del Massico DOC nei comuni di
Sessa Aurunca, Cellole, Mondragone, Falciano del Massico e Carinola,
in provincia di Caserta, nelle tipologie bianco, rosso e primitivo.
Il
bianco è prodotto con uve falanghina, ciciniello e altre locali, ha
colore giallo paglierino carico, sapore asciutto e tenore alcolico di
12 gradi. Il rosso è prodotto con uve aglianico, piedirosso e
primitivo, ha colore rosso granato, sapore asciutto e caldo, tenore
alcolico elevato (14-16 gradi) e deve essere invecchiato almeno un
anno prima di essere commercializzato. Il primitivo è prodotto con
uva primitivo con aggiunta di altre locali, ha colore rosso granato,
sapore asciutto e corposo, tenore alcolico di 14-16 gradi; anch'esso
deve essere invecchiato almeno un anno prima della
commercializzazione.
I
Romani a tavola

Fra
tutti i vini il più famoso era il Falerno che si produce ancora oggi
nei pressi da Sessa Aurunca, Mondragone, Falciano del Massico e altre località
tra il Lazio e la provincia di Caserta.Ne esiste di rosso, bianco e
rosato.Al tempo dei Romani era soltanto rosso e veniva descritto come
forte e durevole e, se giovane, talmente aspro da non poterlo
bere.Piaceva solo dopo anni e anni di invecchiamento.
Orazio
lo chiamava vino di fuoco e Persio lo definiva indomito.Si pretendeva
che il suo periodo di invecchiamento andasse dai 10 ai 20 anni.
Orazio parla di un Falerno, prodotto nelle sue vigne che aveva come
lui 33 anni. Cicerone invece diceva che un invecchiamento eccessivo
rendeva il Falerno imbevibile. Secondo molti studiosi il Falerno
doveva assomigliare, tra i vini che oggi beviamo, non tanto
all'attuale omonimo rosso quanto allo sherry ed era di un colore
paglierino scuro. Se ne trovavano di due tipi: quello secco e quello
semidolce.
Quest'ultimo
lo si otteneva praticamente per caso a seconda dell'andamento
stagionale. Se nel periodo della vendemmia il vento soffiava
costantemente da sud, le uve si "asciugavano" di più e la
loro concentrazione zuccherina aumentava.
Fonte: www.bibliolab.it
Marziale e
il vino Falerno
Marco
Valerio Marziale nacque in Spagna a Bilbilis fra il 38 e il 41 dC da
una famiglia modesta. Nel 64 si trasferì a Roma, dove, dopo essere
stato accolto da Seneca e Lucano, in seguito condannati al suicidio,
si trovò sperduto, andò incontro a profonde delusioni e non riuscì
mai a liberarsi dalla condizione di "cliente".
In
seguito alla pubblicazione del Liber de spectaculis, in onore
dell'inaugurazione dell'anfiteatro Flavio, si affermò come
scrittore. Sotto l'impero di Domiziano divenne tribuno e venne
ammesso al rango equestre; a questo periodo risalgono i rapporti con
Quintilliano, Giovenale, Plinio il Giovane e Silio Italico. Egli,
tuttavia, non riuscì mai a raggiungere un'agiata condizione di vita,
tanto che, alla morte di Domiziano, dopo aver cercato invano di
ottenere i favori dei nuovi potenti, decise di tornare a Bilbilis,
dove morì tra il 101 e il 104 dC.
Negli
Xenia, Marziale scrive una sorta di catalogo di vini, per
altro ben assortito e di grande valore documentario. Molti sono
quelli presenti, descritti con minuta attenzione, ma quello che fra
tutti primeggia è il Falerno, famoso vino rosso:
Falernum
CXI (Epigrammaton libri)
"De sinuessanis venerunt Massica
prelis:
condita quo quaeris consule? Nullus erat."
Falerno
"Questo
vino massico è venuto dai torchi di Sinuessa.
Mi chiedi sotto
quale console fu imbottigliato? Non c'erano ancora i consoli."
Il
Falerno è il re dei vini, fatto di mulsum, passito
proveniente da Creta e miele attico, cioè miele molto pregiato.
Sotto il titolo "Falernum" si celebra il Massico,
proveniente dal monte Massico, a sud di Sinuessa; il suo pregio
deriva anche dalla sua mitica vecchiaia, che risale addirittura
all'età dei re dell'antica Roma. Una particolare caratteristica di
questa descrizione di vini è l'assenza quasi completa di quelli
greci. Orazio aveva cercato di elogiare attraverso i suoi scritti i
vini italiani; mentre per Marziale il vino è un tema trascurato ma
non marginale. Un altro elemento che accomuna i due autori è il
senso della misura:
(X
47):
"Convictus facilis, sine arte mensa;
nox non ebria,
sed soluta curis."
"Una
mensa senza raffinatezze in compagnia cordiale;
notti senza
ubriachezza ma libere d'affanno."
Il
vino infatti, deve essere bevuto con moderazione per entrambi:
Marziale sembra non preoccuparsene troppo, Orazio sembra propenso a
violare la misura, purché si tratti di occasioni particolari. In
Marziale il vino è legato alla gioia di vivere poiché è utile per
scacciare l'ombra della morte, ma non è solo questo, è anche
ispirazione poetica. Infatti il poeta afferma che se beve risulta più
facilmente ispirato. Dunque Marziale non propone in modo rigido la
misura, ma disdegna l'ubriachezza cronica che risulta ancora più
ripugnante nelle donne.
Negli
Epigrammata, il Falerno ricopre un ruolo rilevante,
primeggiando su tutti gli altri vini. Marziale attribuisce grande
importanza agli strumenti per il trasporto del vino e dell'acqua da
utilizzare per la miscela, un esempio è il nimbus, utilizzato
per spruzzare l'acqua. Normalmente, contrariamente agli oggetti
dell'antichità, si riscontra la mancanza di ornamenti. Un altro
elemento del convito, che attirava Marziale, era la bellezza del
coppiere (puer delicatus):
(VIII
55 [56])
"Adstabat domini mensis pulcherrimus ille
marmorea
fundens nigra Falerna manu,
et libata dabat roseis carchesia
labris
quae poterant ipsum sollicitare Iovem"
"Stava
il giovane bellissimo presso la mensa del padrone, versando il nero
Falerno con la mano candida come il marmo, e offriva le coppe
delibate dalle sue labbra rosee, che avrebbero potuto tentare lo
stesso Giove."
Qui
l'autore, mentre rimpiange la generosità di Mecenate, pone l'amore
del coppiere tra i piaceri offerti ai poeti. Da notare il contrasto
tra la mano bianchissima del fanciullo e il colore scuro del Falerno,
la scena è avvolta da una grazia impalpabile e da uno scenario
surreale.
Fonte: www.liceoberchet.it
The
Battle of Ager Falernus
The Battle of Ager Falernus (or
the Battle of the Falernian Territory) was a skirmish during the
Second Punic War between the armies of Rome and Carthage. After
winning the Battle of Lake Trasimene in Italy in 217 BC, the army
commanded by Hannibal Barca marched south and reached Campania. The
Carthaginians ultimately moved into the district of Falernum, a very
fertile river valley surrounded by mountains. Quintus Fabius Maximus,
who had been elected dictator and commander of the Roman field forces
after the disastrous defeat at Trasimene, had dogged Hannibal and
stuck to a strategy to fight only under favourable conditions (Fabian
Strategy). He now occupied all the river crossings and mountain
passes leading out of the valley, thus blocking the Carthaginians
inside. After stripping the area of grain, cattle and other supplies,
Hannibal displayed brilliant tactics to provoke the Roman guard to
leave one of the passes. Despite the protests of his staff officers
Fabius, who was camped near the pass with his main forces, refused to
attack the Carthaginian army and it escaped the trap unscathed.
Strategic
situation
The Carthaginian victory in the
Battle of Lake Trasimene had removed the Roman consular army blocking
the Carthaginian army from marching on Rome. The second Roman
consular army in Northern Italy, under Gnaeus Servilius Geminus, was
on the other side of the Appenine mountains, near Ariminum, and it
was in no position to hinder Hannibal from marching south. This force
also had lost most of its reconnaissance capabilities as its cavalry
of 4,000 men had been destroyed in an ambush by the Hannibal's
lieutenant Maharbal possibly near Assisi, immediately after the
battle of Lake Trasimene. The Roman army retreated back to Ariminum
after this debacle, and was busy checking the Galic raids taking
place near the Po valley. The initiative now rested with Hannibal,
and the Romans had temporarily lost the ability to defend their
Italian allies until a new army could be raised.
Hannibal's
movement in central Italy
It is a matter of speculation why
Hannibal did not march on Rome or what might have happened had he
done so immediately after Trasimene. The Carthaginian army instead
marched south-east into Umbria, through Perugia, although Livy refers
to a failed siege of Spoletum, a Latin colony, Polybius does not
mention it, and it is likely that only some Carthaginian raiders
troubled the Latin colony. Hannibal, all the while ravaging the
countryside, marched through Picenum towards the Adriatic coast,
reaching Herita 10 days after leaving Lake Trasimene. Here Hannibal
rested his army, who were suffering from scurvy, refitted the
Libyan/African troops with captured Roman equipments and retrained
them, and by using low grade local wine (acetum)as an ointment,
brought the cavalry horses back to health. With no Roman army
situated near him, Hannibal was free to choose his next course of
action unhindered.
Romans
make ready
There was panic and disorder in
Rome when rumors about Trasimene spread among the city population,
which were confirmed when the praetor Marcus Pomponius curtly
announced in the Forum "We have been defeated in a great
battle". The Senate met in continual session to debate the next
course of action until three days later the news of the defeat of the
Roman cavalry by Maharbal arrived in Rome. The Roman senate and the
people, realizing the gravity of the situation, decided to elect a
dictator (for the first time since 249 BC) to direct the war effort.
As one of the elected consuls was dead and the other one away with
his army, the dictator was elected by the senate instead of being
nominated by one of the consuls.
Fabius
to the fore
Quintus Fabius Maximus, a member
of the patrician Fabii, who had suggested that an election should be
held, was elected into office by the assmbled centuries of the
people, his term in office being set for the next six months. Fabius,
no spring chicked at 58 years of age, nearly 30 years older than
Hannibal, at that time carried the nickname "Verrucosus" or
"Spotty" because of a wart on his face. His past political
record was anything but spotty, he had fought in the First Punic War,
and had been elected consul in 233 and 228 BC, and was one of the
elected censors in 230 BC, and had been granted a triumph for his
efforts against the Ligurians. Normally a dictator chose his own
deputy, the Master of Horse, but Fabius received as his Master of
Horse Marcus Minucius Rufus (a plebeian who was consul in 221 BC), in
an unusual political gesture. It was suggested that the post of
Fabius was that of a pro-dictator (acting dictator), but it seems
Fabius enjoyed all the powers of a dictator during his term.
The Romans needed to prepare a
proper reception should Hannibal decided to show up in Rome with his
army. Fabius first set about restoring the morale of the Roman people
and then tackled the task of preparing the defences of Rome after
receiving his post. He took meticulous care in observing all the
religious procedures attached to state affairs and all the civil
procedures related to state administration to boost the morale of the
city population, after having blamed the Trasimene disaster on the
lack of proper religious observations by the dead consul Flaminius.
The senate consulted the Sybilline books at the suggestion of Fabius
and a prator was assigned to appease the Roman gods through generous
sacrifices. Devine duties taken care of, Fabius next went about
preparing for Hannibal's anticipated visit to Latium, being ignorant
of his location and intention st that time.
The city walls were repaired,
Minucius was put in charge of preparing a "reception committee"
by to raising 2 Roman and 2 allied legions and attached cavalry units
to defend the city in nearby Tibur. The unwalled towns in Latium were
ordered to be abandoned, and their inhabitants were moved into walled
towns. Certain bridges were torn down to deny the Carthaginians easy
passage through Latinum. Once it was clear that Hannibal was not
marching towards Rome, Fabius ordered the army of Servilius into
Latium. Fabius left Rome, met and took over command of the army of
Servilius near Narnia, or a few miles south at Ocriculum, then joined
the army of Minucius at Tibur and marched along via Appia into
Apulia. Servilus was sent to command the Roman fleet at Ostia with
the rank of procounsul. With the Roman army concenrtated, Fabius
needed to implement the next phase of his plans: how to defeat the
Carthaginian army. Fabius in his chieldhood had been named ovicula
(Little Sheep) for his mildness and willingness to follow others
about, and in the coming months his activities gave the impression
that he was doing his utmost to live up to that nickname.
The
strategy
Hamilcar Barca, who commanded the
Carthaginian land forces from 247 BC to 241 BC, probably lacked the
manpower to take on the Roman armies station in Sicily. So instead of
fighting pitched battles, he simply placed his camp on an
unassailable position near the Roman controlled area and launched a
harrasment campaign. Hamilcar won several minor victories, shrugged
off failures and with his immunity to defeat, kept the Carthaginian
cause alive. After six years of harassment, the bankrupt and near
exhausted Roman state borrowed money from it's citizens to create a
fleet and defeated the Carthaginians at sea to end the First Punic
War.
Having assembled an army that was
close to the Carthaginian one in sizw if not in skill, The Roman
dictator had the choice of seeking battle with Hannibal or trying a
new ploy. Fabius was about to pull something similar to Hamilcar
Barca's strategy on Hamilcar's own son Hannibal. The irony is, Fabius
was not lacking in manpower like Hamilcar, nor would he fight a
static campaign.
A
Game of prudence and patiance
While the Romans were busy raising
an army and sorting out political/religious matters, Hannibal had
marched in a leisurely manner south from Hartia. His army, rested,
restored to health, retrained and re-equipped, cut a path of
destruction through central Italy as they collected grain, cattle,
provisions and supplies during the march. Hannibal followed the
coastal plain before turning west. Near the town of Arpi, the Roman
army under Fabius made contact with the Carthaginian army and camped
at Aecae, six miles away from the Carthaginian camp. Hannibal drew up
his army and offered battle, but Fabius ignored the offer and the
Roman army remained in their camp. The stage was set for Fabius to
reveal his plans, which would tax the patience of the Romans and the
political clout of Fabius to the limit and ultimately be credited by
later historians as the most prudent, if economically costly,
strategy against the threat of Hannibal.
The following months saw Fabius
employ what would later be known as Fabian Strategy, and earn him the
title of "The Delayer". Despite whatever provocation
Hannibal thought up, the Roman army always refused to fight pitched
battles, shadowed the Carthaginians from a distance, manoeuvred to
keep to the high ground to deny the Carthaginian cavalry any
advantage and always moved to keep between Rome and their enemy. The
Roman army sought to encamp on grounds which were unlikely to be
attacked by the Carthaginians, and Roman foragers were covered by
flying columns of light infantry and cavalry at all times.
Carthaginian foragers and stragglers caught at a disadvantage were
cut down whenever possible. With this strategy, Fabius left the
initiative to Hannibal and failed to prevent the Carthaginian army
from looting and destroying Roman and Italian allied property, but
the Roman army gained invaluable combat experience and remained
intact, and the threat of intervention by Fabius kept wavering
Italian allies from defecting to Carthage. Thus a deadly game of
"Follow the leader" was played in a grand scale between two
hostile armies in Italy during the summer of 217 BC, with Hannibal
leading and Fabius following him, resulting in the destruction of a
large portion of the Roman economic assets and trying the patiance of
the Roman people to the limit.
Carthaginians
in Ager Falernus
After leaving Arpi, Hannibal
marched west into Samnium, and then moved to Beneventum, ravaging the
countryside at will. Fabius cautiously followed the Carthaginians
keeping to the high ground. From Beneventum, which had shut its gates
against Hannibal, the Carthaginians moved north to capture a town
called either "Venosia" or Telesia. From this place
Hannibal struck south west towards Ager Falernus, a fertile river
plain which lay on the south of Latinum, and to the north of Capua.
After going through Allifae, Callifae, across the Volturnus River to
Cales and then down on the plain the Carthaginians finally arrived
near Casilinum. Hannibal let loose his soldiers on the rich land, and
all through the summer collected a rich booty of cattle, grain,
supplies and prisoners unhindered by Roman military activity.
Hannibal had entered the potential trap because either his Italian
guides had mistaken "Casinum" as "Casilinum", or
some Campanian prisoners had suggested that Capua might defect once
Carthaginians reached Campania, which did not materialise at this
point of time. It had also been suggested that Hannibal had invaded
Ager Falernus to show the Italians the inability of Romans to defend
their own property, after failing to get Fabius to fight. Although
there were eight possible routes out of Ager Falernus, but being
positioned north of the Volturnus River, and with all the bridges in
Roman hands, there were only three that Hannibal could take to leave
the river plain. Fabius seized this strategic opportunity presented
to him and set about to trap the Carthaginian army.
Hannibal
hemmed in
Fabius first reinforced the Roman
garrison at Casilinum, which guarded one such bridge, and Cales on
the south of Ager Falernus. Minucius took up position to the north of
the plain to watch both the via Latina and via Appia with a
detachment, while Taenum was also garrisoned. The main Roman army
camped near Mount Massicus, north of the plain to the west of
Minucius, ready to support his position. A detachment of 4,000 troops
was sent to watch the passes of Mount Callicula to the east of the
plain near Allifae, one of the possible passes through which Hannibal
might chose to leave the plain. The exact location is still unknown
and remains debatable. Thus, the Roman dispositions hemmed the
Carthaginians in the plain, trapping them. It seemed that Hannibal
would have to attack a Roman position directly to break out; the only
question was whether he would choose such a dangerous manoeuvre
before or after his supplies had failed. Fabius had ensured the best
possible situation for Rome in his view. All the Romans now had to do
is wait until the Carthaginians ran out of supplies and then were
forsed to take desperate measures.
Having covered all possible routes
Hannibal could take to leave the plain, Fabius sat tight, observing
the Carthaginian army but doing nothing to force an decisive
engagement. With this strategy Fabius kept his army safe but his
political position began to suffer in Rome. His staff and the Roman
senate demanded swift action to crush Hannibal since the
Carthagionians were already trapped. When L. Hostilius Mancinus, sent
to scout the Numidians with 400 horsemen dared to engage the
Carthaginians, he was killed and his entire force destroyed by the
Carthaginian cavelry under Carthalo, prompting the Romans to stick to
the waiting game for the time being. Fabius in the meantime had
visited Rome to perform certain religious duties. The Roman landed
rich were feeling the pinch with Hannibal destroying their property,
so defending his strategy was another reason for this visit.
Pre
battle situation
Hannibal, after his plundering
mission was completed, decided to leave the plain, choosing not to
winter there. While Fabius, with secure supply lines, had the luxury
to sit and wait until his term as dictator expired or the
Carthaginians finally attacked him, Hannibal, having stripped the
area bare of all supplies, could not afford to stay put indefinitely
and ultimately face a supply shortage. The Romans, guided by Fabius,
still refused to attack him despite whatever provocation he came up
with. Hannibal, on the other hand, did not wish to suffer severe
casualties by a head on assault on the Romans settled in fortified
camps on the high ground. Since both commanders sought to fight on
favorable conditions, the stalemate continued. The Carthaginian army
finally moved east towards the pass beside Mount Callicula through
which they had originally entered the plain. Fabius, anticipating the
move, had blocked the pass with 4,000 troops, and encamped on a
nearby hill with the main army. Minucius then joined this army with
his contingent.
Carthaginian
preparations
Hannibal made careful preparations
to break out of the trap, but not through a pitched battle the Romans
had hoped. The day before Hannibal put his plan in motion, he had
most of his men eat a hearty supper and go to bed early while leaving
the campfires burning. 2,000 oxen from the captured herds were
selected, along with 2,000 camp followers to drive the cattle and
2,000 spearmen to guard the whole gang, cattle and all. Dry wood and
faggots were tied on the horns of the oxen. An officer called
Hasdrubal, in charge of army supplies as his role as Quarter master
general (the same who would later lead the heavy cavalry at Cannae),
oversaw the whole operation. Once the preparations were complete,
this group was to move towards the pass being guarded by 4,000
Romans. However, combat with the Romans or capturing the pass was not
to be their objective. There was a saddle below the camp of Fabius to
the east, and on the north west of the pass, at the foot of Mount
Callicula. The Carthaginian spearmen were to capture and hold the
saddle. There is a story recorded by Appain (Roman History 7.3.14)
that Hannibal executed 5,000 prisoners so that they would not cause
trouble before the march, an incident which is not mentioned by
either Polybius or Livy.
The
night action
At the appointed time, after the
third part of the night had ended, the Carthaginian Army roused
itself and made ready to march as silently as possible. The picked
force with the oxen marched to the saddle, and when they approached
the slopes, the wood and faggot tied to the horns were lit by the
camp followers. The terrified oxen began to flee and stampede up the
slopes of the saddle, creating an illusion of thousands of torches
moving up the mountainside. The lights and sounds of the spectacle
attracted the attention of the Romans in the camp of Fabius, and also
the Roman detachment guarding the pass. The reaction of the forces
were quite different.
Fabius refused to budge from his
camp despite the pleas of his officers and the urgings of Minucius.
The Roman army made ready and stood at arms but did not move out.
Fabius did not want to fight a night battle, fearing a Punic trick to
draw the Romans into a battle over broken, uneven ground, where Roman
infantry will lose their edge as their lines would be broken, and
communication would be hampered. Hannibal had previously hoodwinked
and destroyed two Roman armies at Trebbia and Trasemene and the
cautious Fabius did not want his army to be the third. Thus, although
Hannibal still managed to trick the Romans, the Romans only suffered
lose of face but not the loss of another army.
The Roman force stationed at the
pass, with no Fabius to restrain them, deserted their posts at the
head of the pass to attack what they thought was the main
Carthaginian army trying to outflank their position and escape across
the saddle. As soon as the Romans left their position, Hannibal's
main army left camp, with the African infantry leading, the cavalry,
the baggage train and the cattle herds marching in line after them,
and Celts and Iberian infantry guarding the rear. The Carthaginian
army moved through the pass unmolested, as Fabius did not challenge
them. The Roman force attacking the saddle was bewildered when they
confronted the lights on the saddle. The cattle ran amok, breaking
their lines, the Carthaginian spearmen ambushed them, and a wild
melee ensued. As dawn broke to make matters clear, a group of Iberian
infantry was seen scaling the saddle walls to join the ongoing
pandemonium on the saddle. The Iberians, being experts in mountain
warfare, engaged the now scattered Roman soldiers and killed over
1,000 of their number, and managed to rescue the Carthaginian camp
followers, the spearmen guard and some of the cattle as well before
the main Roman army could intervene.
Aftermath
The political clout of Fabius
began to wane after this incident, as displeasure with his tactics
grew in Rome. Hannibal, after escaping from the trap he had gotten
himself into, marched east towards Apulia, ravaging the Roman estates
at will. Fabius cautiously followed him still keeping to the Fabian
strategy. He would order towns burned, and crops destroyed in the
path of Hannibal. The scorched earth policy was designed to hamper
the movement of the Carthaginian army, which, unlike the Roman one,
did not have a secure supply chain and had to live off the land. The
prudence of this tactic may have hampered the Carthaginians but the
Romans were pushed to the limit of their patience because of this.
Hannibal marched east through Samnium into Apulia, and selected the
town of Geronium as his winter base. The Carthaginian would again
dupe part of the Army of Fabius in Battle of Geronium. The impatiance
of the Romans with Fabius would be a factor which would aid Hannibal
in devising his "trick".
Importance
The battle itself was smaller in
scale when compared to the Battle of Ticinus. Although Fabius was not
duped by Hannibals moves, his blocking force at the pass was.
Leonard Cottrell, in his book Hannibal: Enemy of Rome, wrote
that the trick was designed to be recognized by Fabius as a trick.
Hannibal had studied the mind of his opponent, and devised a plan to
make him do exactly what Hannibal needed him to do. Fabius thought
Hannibal was trying to get him to fight a night action over broken,
uneven ground, where Roman infantry would lose their greatest
advantages of discipline and teamwork, as their formations would
become disorganized. Since Hannibal was choosing the battle ground
and the hour; he might have sprung other surprises to gain further
advantages on the Romans. Fabius predictably did what Hannibal had
anticipated: nothing. The Romans guarding the pass, with no Fabius to
keep them in check, though they were doing their job when they rushed
out: preventing a Carthaginian escape. Again, they acted as Hannibal
had anticipated, and the Carthaginians took advantage of their
actions to escape.
It seems both commanders here were
following the one of the observations of Sun Tzu, A battle avoided
cannot be lost. Fabius, who had avoided fighting a pitched
battle with Hannibal because he now held the upper hand, faced
Hannibal, who now had to avoid a pitched battle, because he would
have to assault fortified Roman positions directly. As B.H. Liddell
Hart had observed in his books Strategy and Great Captains Unveiled,
successful generals normally understand the concept of economy of
force and the value of indirect approach, and also the implications
of another Sun Tzu observation, Know your enemy and know yourself,
and victory will be yours. Hannibal demonstrated all these factors
in planning, implementing and orchestrating this small but
significant episode. In one years time, he would give a very
devastating demonstration of his tactical abilities at a place in
Apulia called Cannae. Also, a night operation is always hazardous,
and requires a certain amount of discipline and administrative
control, which was superbly demonstrated by the Carthaginians.
Fabius:
cautious or genius?
When Fabius took command of the
Roman army, half of it was raw levy and the other half inspired
little confidence, having survived a bad scare against Hannibal. The
Carthaginian army were made of veteran soldiers and held the edge
over the Roman army. Hannibal had gobbled up three Roman armies in
succession, and Fabius did not need to see his army become the fourh.
Avoiding battle was a prudent course of action at that time. The
reasons why Fabius may stuck to his strategy of are speculated as:
By avoiding battle Fabius made it
near impossible for Hannibal to defeat the Romans in battle. This
kept the Roman army intact, and also had the added advantage of
frustrating Hannibal's war aims. Hannibal needed to win victories to
get the allied Italian cities to defect to Carthage. By being immune
to defeat, Fabius prevented Hannibal from achieving his aims, and
also nullified the effects of Hannibal's tactical advantage (ability
to beat Romans in battle).
The Romans army had a secure
supply line, while the Carthaginians needed to live off the land. By
ordering Romans and Italians to destroy food and fodder in the areas
Hannibal was moving, Fabius denied Hannibal provisions and kept him
moving from place to place. Thus, by "kicking the enemy in the
stomach", as the Romans called it, Fabius was indirectly hurting
Hannibal without fighting. The possession of former Carthaginian
territories, Sardinia and Sicily, gave the Roman state the option to
import/requisition grain. Hannibal had no such support system to
sustain his army. However, it is possible that the scortched earth
policy was not fully carried out by the Roman and Italian citizens.
Without a secured supply system,
Hannibal was forced to keep a good part of his army dispursed to
collect forage and fodder while securing his camp with sufficient
troops to guard againt a sudden Roman sally. This gave the initiative
to Fabius, who could choose the time and place of engagement. This
threat caused Hannibal to limit his number of foragers, thus
dinimishing his ablity to secure provisions while giving the Romans a
chance to strike at isolated Carthaginians at a time and place of
their own choosing.
Fabius had the full might of the
Roman state behind him while Hannibal was cut-off from
reinforcements. With Roman patrols harressing Carthaginian foragers,
Hannibal's soldiers suffered a steady stream of casualties. Fabius
thus again played to his strength, as he could make good his losses
while Hannibal could not, being adrift in hostile country. The
confidence and skill of the Roman soldiers increased as Fabius stuck
to his methods.
It is not known if Fabius had
taken into account the possible reaction of the Romans to his
strategy. Besides the threat of Hannibal, Fabius was also forced to
manage the anger and indignation his passive strategy was invoking in
Rome. This had forced him to travel to Rome in at least two
occations, pretending to perform religious duties, to answer for his
actions.
In short, the caution of Fabius
was well suited for the best possible strategy to employ against
Hannibal during the summer of 217 BC. For his role during that
period, he was later to be hailed as the "Shield of Rome",
a definite improvement over "spotty" or "Sheep".
Fonte: http://www.summagallicana.it/lessico/f/Falerno.htm