First Punic War > Battles > Battle of Bagradas
Battle of Bagradas
Battle of Badradas
- Part of the First Punic War
- Date: 255 BC
- Location: Tunis
- Coordinates: 36.7975°N 10.1659°E
- Battle Victor: Carthaginians
Combatants
Military Forces
- 15,000 Infantry
- 500 Cavalry
- 12,000 Infantry
- 4,000 Cavalry
- 100 Elephants
Aftermath
- 12,000 Dead
- 500 Captured
- 800 Dead
Background
The Battle of Bagradas, also known as the Battle of Tunis was a major battle of the First Punic War that occurred between the Carthaginians and the Roman Republic in 255 BC. The battle was a great success for the Carthaginians, owing to the expertise supplied by the mercenary Spartan general named Xanthippus who engaged the Romans on an open-field to utilize the strengths of the Numidian cavalry and the war elephants.
The Roman army would be commanded by the consul Marcus Atilius Regulus based near Tunis who wanted to crush the Carthaginians before his year long term was up. The Romans would have overall 15,000 infantry and 500 cavalry deployed in the typical legion formation of the time which had the infantry in the center and the cavalry on the flanks.
The Carthaginians deployed their military with a phalanx in the center and with mercenary infantry on the right. The 100 war elephants were placed in front of the 12,000 total infantry and distributed the 4,000 Numidian cavalry along the flanks.
Battle
The Carthaginians began the engagement by moving to attack with their war elephants. The successful use of these greatly interfered with the Roman infantry and the Roman cavalry was likewise crushed when they were outnumbered nearly eight to one. The left flank of the Romans had some level of success however, where 2,000 troops managed to push the Carthaginian mercenaries back into their camp.
In the center of the formation the war elephant attack had been withstood by the Romans, but only a few of the infantry managed to get past them to engage the Carthaginian center phalanx. Any troops that did were quickly destroyed. The remaining Roman troops left were quickly decimated by the returning Carthaginian cavalry. The 2,000 troops that were victorious were the only ones that managed to escape to the Roman ships.
Aftermath
In the aftermath of the battle the Romans would lose 12,000 men and have 500 more captured including the consul Regulus himself. The Carthaginians on the other hand would only lose 800 men. According to the account by Polybius,
It resulted that in this battle the Carthaginians lost about eight hundred of the mercenaries, who had faced the Roman left wing, while of the Romans there were saved but about two thousand, whom the pursuit of the mercenaries I mentioned above carried out of the main battle.
His story is disputed, with some later Roman writers saying he had his eyelids cut off and was trampled by a war elephant but no other sources such as Diodorus and Polybius. Following this defeat along with a few disasters at sea meant the last of the Roman forays into North Africa for the rest of the First Punic War.
First Punic War
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Battles
- Battle of Adys
- Battle of Agrigentum
- Battle of Bagradas
- Battle of Messana
- Battle of Panormus
- Siege of Apsis
- Siege of Drepana
- Siege of Lilybaeum (250 BC)
Naval Battles
- Battle of Cape Ecnomus
- Battle of Drepana
- Battle of the Aegates Islands
- Battle of the Lipari Islands
- Battle of Mylae
- Battle of Sulci
- Battle of Tyndaris
Treaty of Lutatius
Generals
Bibliography
Polybios: Histories, Book 1 9.
Lost Battles, Philip Sabin p174
Lost Battles, Philip Sabin p175
Kistler, John M. War Elephants. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2006. p.100.
Carthage and the Carthaginians, R Bosworth Smith.