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Nineteenth-century historians were fascinated by the Macedonian phalanx and its characteristic weapon, the sarissa. However, some were convinced that reports of the sarissa’s extreme length must be mistaken, while others struggled to reconcile the testimony of different ancient writers and even resorted to altering the original texts. Looking back over a century-and-a-half of scholarship, we can see how the debate was derailed by misinformation and finally brought back on track by the discovery of an unexpected source.
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An obscure debate over a very long spear
HOW LONG W\S HE MACEIDNIAN SARLSSA? Nineteenth-century historians were fascinated by the Macedonian phalanx and its characteristic weapon, the sarissa. However, some were convinced that reports of the sarissa's extreme length must be incorrect, while others struggled to reconcile the testimony of different ancient writers and even resorted to altering the original texts. looking back over a century-and-a-half of scholarship, we can see how the debate was derailed by misinformation and finally
brought back on track by the discovery of an unexpected source.
IBy Duncan B Campbell of thi s new weapon was "so prodigious
and so unw ieldy, that we should hardly be lieve it, if i t d id not come attested by the n 1854, the eminent hi stori an George distinct assertion of an histori an li ke PolyGrote was hard at work on the twelfth b ius" , When the vo lume duly appeared in and fi nal vo lume of hi s ambiti ous His1856, he decided th at the chapter on 'Thetory of Greece, in w hich he ca rried As iatic Campa igns of Alexander' should the story from the access ion of Al exander be fo llowed by a short appendi x 'On the the Gl'eat in 336 BC down to the death of length of the M acedonian sa rissa or pi ke', Agathocles in 288 BC Natu l'all y, military exp la ining the matter to hi s readers, affairs bu lked large, and so, in order to
present the latest wisdom on the subject, The ancient writersGrote consulted the recently publi shed
Geschichte des griechischen Kriegswesens According to Rustow and Koch ly, the Macedonian sa rissa was "1 4-16 feet in length", by the German military historians W ilhelm but Grote's read ing of the ancient sou rcesRustow and Hermann Kochly, convinced him th at "(the sarissa) of the in One topic requiri ng special explanafantry in pha lanx was not less than 21 feetti on was the long pike know n as the sa ris long" , How had such a di screpancy ari sen? sa, w hich was the hallmark of the M acedo
I n fact, the German histori ans hadni an phalanx, (Purists consider sarisa to be reached their conclusion by convolu ted rea the correct for m, but th e G reeks used both soning, First, they con ceded that "all reports,versi ons, and the spell ing with a double's' w ith the single exception of Arrian's in thehas passed into common Engl ish usage,) Taktika, give the length of the MacedonianGrote assured hi s read ers that the length sarissa as 16 cubits or 24 feet", This is not
48 Ancient Warfare VIII-3
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strictly true. Besides two Byzantine compi lations, only one ancient source gives this precise length. This is Polyaenus, who alleged that, when Cleonymus of Sparta besieged Edessa in around 275 Be, the garrison sallied out in phalanx, and "each sarisa was 16 cubits long" (Stratagems 2.29.2).
We may imagine that, although Polyaenus wrote during the reign of Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus (AD 161-169), he drew upon information from the thil'd century BC for this story. Nevertheless, Rustow and Kbchly were suspicious of such a late source. The only authority they were will
ing to acknowledge was Polybius, whose involvement in Rome's Third Macedonian War (171-168 BC) and whose authorship of a now-lost treatise on tacti cs bolstered his credibility as a military historian.
However, it is noticeable that his de
scription of the sarissa is closer to Polyaenus' version than to Rustow and Kbchly's: "Since (. . . ) the length of the sarisa is, ac
cording to the original design, 16 cubits, but as adapted to actual practice, 14 cubits - from which we must subtract the distance between the (bearer's) hands and (the length of) the counterweight behind the projecting part, being 4 cubits in all - it is evident that the sarisa must extend 10 cubits beyond the body of each hoplite, when he charges the enemy grasping it with both hands."
Much the same information is found in the tactical treatise of Aelian, composed over
two centuries later, around AD 100. Explaining the Macedonian phalanx, Aelian wrote that "the length of the sarisa is, according to
the original design, 16 cubits, but in reality 14; from this 2 cubits (should be subtracted) from the projecting part for the distance between the hands; the (remaining) 12 cubits projects beyond the bodies" (Tactics 14.2-3).
Another ancient treatise on tactics, this time by Asclepiodotus, was written in the late first century Be, and thus dates from the
period roughly midway between Polybius
How long is a cubit? The ancient Greeks used units of measure based on body parts. The "foot" (pous; pl. podas) was divided into 16 "fingers" (daktyloil or 4 "palms" (palaistai). The foot used
at Athens (for other city-states had their own standard measure, which could vary significantly) was long thought to have measured 30.83cm, but is now thought to have
been closer to 29 .5cm, which has the virtue of being equal to the standard Roman foot. The ancient Greeks also employed a measure called the "forearm" (pechys; pl.
pecheis), whi ch equated to a foot and a half. In the system of body parts, this was supposedly the distance from the finger tips to the elbow. The Romans called the same measurement an "elbow" (cubitum), from which we derive our word cubit. In a system
based on a 29.5cm foot, the cubit will have measured 44.25cm or thereabouts, which is only 2cm shorter than the cubit previously advocated by nineteenth-century scholars.
· ••••• Reeanactor equipped with sarissa against two regular hoplites. Note how the lance bends across its length. © Hetairoi e.V.
Ancient Warfare VIII-3 49
••••••••• and Aelian. Asclepiodotus, too, mentioned the Macedonian phalanx and its characteris
tic weapon. However, where Aelian clearly lifted his explanation from Polybius, Asclepiodotus preserved a slightly different version. He claimed that "the spear (of the Macedonians) is not shorter than 10 cubits, so that
the projecting pali is not less than 8 cubits, but is never longer than 12 cubits, so that the
projecting pali is 10 cubits" (Tactics 5.1).
This passage and others demonstrate the complex relationship between the soca lled 'tactical writers'; although they seem ultimately to have derived much of their information from Pol ybius, one or other of them also relied upon the now -lost work
of Posidonius, who was Asclepiodotus' teacher. Both Polybius and Posidonius were credited as sources by Arrian, the third of the 'tactical writers' after Asclepiodotus and Aelian, who wmte his Art of Ta ctics in AD 137. His account comes closer to Asclepi
odotus than to Aelian, for he claimed th at "the size of the sarisa was 16 feet. Of this,
4 (feet) are for holding it by hand and the remainder extends from the body, so th at 12 (feet) pmject beyond the body of eac h front-rankel'" (Art of Tactics 12.7).
Commentators have always found AI'rian 's account problematic. Already in the
seventeenth century, Johannes Scheffer
suggested a mix-up of feet and cubits, so that, rather than a 1 6-foot sarissa, Arrian had actuall y envisaged a 16-cubit sar issa. However, the German scholar Johannes
Kromayer, reviewing the whole subject of Greek and Roman warfare (in the journal
Hermes 35, 1900), pointed out that it was at least as likel y that Arrian himself had decided to shorten the sarissa, as one of the many small additions and improvements he made to his soul'ce material. A 16-foot
weapon may have seemed more practical to him than a 16-cubit one.
Scheffer'S origi nal suggestion perhaps planted th e seed of an idea in Rustow and Kochly's minds, for - rather than agreeing
with Scheffer outright - th ey dec ided to apply his theory in revel'se, and proposed that, in th e tex t of th e generally reliable
Polybius, an original reference to 14 podas ("feet") had been changed to 14 pe
cheis ("cubits") by mistake.
Conseq uent ly, Rustow and Kochly altered every instance of "c ubits" to read "feet", thus al'rivin g at th eir preferred 1416-foot sarissa. In their view, anything lon ger would have been ridiculous, for they calculated that a 24-foot (7.4m) ash-wood sarissa, narrowing from a diameter of 2" (5cm) at the butt down to
11J4" (3.5cm) at the point, would weigh around 1 71bs (or 8kg). Furthermore, they reckoned that maintaining this length of pike in a couched position exerted an intolerable strain (they calculated 30lbs, or 13. 5kg) on th e bearer's right hand. Hence,
it was dismissed as unhistorical.
A different hypothesis It is obvious that Rustow and Kochly's case for a 14-foot sarissa was misconceived. Their emendation of every text but Arrian's
was unjustifiable and their criticism of Po
Iybius was groundless. Grote pointed this out in Volume 12 of his History of Greece,
but if he hoped that the matter had now been laid to rest, such optimism was misplaced . In 1888, the al'chaeologist D.G. Hoga rth , one-time President of the Royal
Geographical Society and an associate of Lawrence of Arabia, took issue with
Grote's opinion (in the journal of Philology
17), ca lling his 21-foot pike " the last resort of military incompetency."
Like Rustow and Kochl y, Hogarth mistrusted Pol ybius, but onl y concern
ing his know ledge of Alexander's phalan x. Hogarth presumed that this original pha lanx must have been far more mobile and flexible than the phalanx of Pol ybius '
own day, which had easily fallen prey to the Roman legions. Wh iIe happy to accept Polybius' 14-cubit sarissa as commonplace in the warfare of the second century BC - "he must have seen it often
enough, and could hardly make an error of 7 feet in its length" - he emphas ized that "it is needless to credit Al exander's
pikemen with so monstrous a weapon as
50 Ancient Warfare VIII-3
this; it belongs to the days of decline when generals, deficient in tactical ability, had
reverted to solid immobile formations as more within their power to handle".
Hogarth decided to champion Arrian's Art of Tactics, which he (wrongly) presumed to be "the earliest and best version" of the tactical treatises, and which
he (wrongly) quoted as advocating a 14foot pike. Thus, he simply cherry-picked those elements of Rustow and Kochly 's argument that allowed him to equip Alexander's phalanx with a shorter sarissa.
Although Hogarth's theory found no adherents, Rustow and Kochly's opinion continued to influence scholars. For ex
ample, the original reference to "a spear more than 20 feet long" in J.G. Droysen's Ceschichte Alexanders des Cro(!,en ('His
tory of Alexander the Great', published in 1833) had been replaced by "a spear of 14-16 feet in length" , by the time of the book's third edition in 1880.
An unexpected source Ironically, it was Droysen's son Hans who,
in 1889, first ex posed the weakness of Rustow and Kochly's theory, in his Heer
wesen und Kriegfuhrung del' Criechen
("Army organization and warfare among the Greeks"), for he had unearthed an obscure source that they had overlooked. This was the philosopher Theophrastus, Aristotle's successor as head of the
Lyceum in Athens and a friend of Cassander; as a contemporary of Alexander the Great, he had probably observed the original Macedonian phalanx in person .
At any rate, he expected his readers to be familiar with the phalanx's distinctive
weapon, as a throw-away comment in his Enquiry into Plants demonstrates; for he claimed that the height of the Carnelian cherry tree " is about 12 cubits, which is
as big as the longest sarissas" (3. 12.2). Droyse n realized that this was crucial
ev idence for the phalanx of Alexander's day using a 12-cubit sarissa; but still being in thrall to Rustow and Kochly's wisdom
regarding the supposed error of Polybius
and the 'tactical writers', he concluded that the sarissa, originally 18 feet long,
had later been reduced to 14 feet. However, it took the pel'spicacity of
Johannes Kromayer finally to question Rustow and Kochly's high-handed treatment of
the sources. He listed three false assumptions: (1) that Pol yb ius recorded a 16-cubit
sarissa, when he actually said it measured 14 cubits (a difference of nearly 90cm); (2)
that the sarissa must have weighed over 8kg, which (Kromayer reckoned) was double the likely weight; and; (3) that the bearer
gripped the sarissa by the final 2 feet of its haft, which simply increased the pressure on the right hand unnecessarily.
For comparison, he cited the pike of the medieval Landsknechte, which at 5.2m was only a little shy of 12 cubits,
and which weighed a mere 3.285kg. Interestingly, at virtually the same time, Kro
mayer's contemporary, Edmund Lammert constructed a 6.5m sarissa out of green ash-wood, which (so he claimed) proved to be easily handled, despite weighing 6.5kg. A second vel'sion, made from seasoned wood, weighed only S.6kg. Lam
mert calculated that, wielding the pike in its couched position, the pressure on the bearer's right hand, far from Rustow and
Kochly's 13.Skg, was only around 6kg. Kromayer's correction of Rustow and
Kochly's misinformation dul y took its place in his new handbook, Heerwesen und
KriegfUhrung del' Criechen und Romer,
wh ich he joi ntly authored with Georg Veith
in 1928. In the section on Macedonian affairs, he wrote that "the longest sarissas in Alexander's time were 12 cubits long (which is S.Sm)", while for the Hellenistic period, he suggested that "the sarissas were
lengthened to 16 cubits (. .. ) and by Polybius' time, men were content with sarissas only 14 cubits (6.2 1 m) long". As we shall see, this seems broadly correct.
A different unit of measurement? Meanwhile, across the Channel in Britain, an eccentric theory was evolving in the mind of w.w. (later Sir William) Tarn. In
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A detail from the famous Alexander Mosaic in Pompeii, now on display at the Archaeological Museum in Naples, gives an impression of an array of pikes. © Public domain
Ancient Warfare VIII-3 51
The debate •• •••••••••
Two reenactors with lances; the extreme length of the weapons is quite evident. © Hetairoi e. v.
1930, Tarn delivered the Lees-Knowles Lectures in Military History at Cambl·idge Uni
versity, and later that year, published them as a booklet (Hellenistic Military and Naval
Developments), in which he floated a radical new idea. Like Hogarth, he was troubled by the thought of Alexander's famously manoeuvrable phalanx carrying 18-foot pikes. The only solution seemed to be to reinterpret Theophrastus' measurement. The
result was Tarn's famous 'short Macedonian cubit'. His justification lay in the knowledge that different Greek states operated different standards of measurement; but, whereas known cubits varied from 0.44m up to around 0.48m, Tarn's was barely 0.33m!
Despite the complete absence of corroborating evidence, this hypothesis was hailed as a major breakthrough and flourished well beyond Tarn's death in 1957. Even as late as 1969, Professor J.R. Hamilton, in his commentary on Plutarch's Life of
Alexander, wrote that "Tarn has argued con
vincingly that thel·e was a short Macedonian cubit of about 12-14 inches". It was only in
1973, with Robin Lane Fox's Alexander the
Great, that the 'short Macedonian cubit' was finally exposed as a fantasy.
A new hypothesis Most twentieth-century scholal's have fol
lowed Kromayer and accepted that Alexander's original sarissa of 12 cubits (18 feet)
somehow grew to 16 cubits, falling back to 14 by the time of Polybius. In this scheme, Arrian's 16-foot sarissa has always proved an embarrassment. Generally, scholars followed Scheffer's suggestion that Arrian's "feet" must
be amended to read "cubits"; only Minor Markle stood apart in believing that "perhaps he is providing only an average dimension" (American Journal of Archaeology Vol. 81, 1977), presumably of Alexandel"s sarissas,
since (as we have seen) Asclepiodotus gives a range of 1 0-12 cubits (of which the average
would be 161f2 feet). However, Professor Frank Walbank,
in his influential Historical Commentary
on Polybius (Vol. 2, 196h perhaps realized the difficulties of Arrian's measure
ment when he wrote that "podas must be emended to pecheis", because Arrian also
specifies a two-foot spacing between the ranks (as opposed to the other sources' two-cubit spacing), which would not allow much room for movement. Nevertheless, like Kromayer before him, the Arrian scholar Professor Philip Stadter preferred to retain Arrian's 16-foot sarissa, pointing out that "the mistake - or correction - is
An'ian's" (Classical Philology 73, 1978).
A new hypothesis was suggested by Alejandro Noguel·a. Proceeding from the consensus that Theophrastus accurately described the sarissa of Alexander's day, Noguera suggested that both Arrian and Asclepiodotus were describing Alexander's
phalanx, since (as we have noted) Arrian's 16-footer falls within the range of sarissas mentioned by Asclepiodotus, whose longest sarissas match Theophrastus' version.
This theory has the twin benefits of
explaining why Arrian's testimony doesn't fit the description given by Polybius, while shedding a little light on the 'tacti cal writers', for it seems likely (if we fol
low Noguera) that, while Aelian followed Polybius in describing the later Hellenistic phalanx, Asclepiodotus was following Posidonius' account of Alexander's phalanx (which is now lost). Not only has Grote's faith in Polybius been vindicated,
but the debate over the length of the sa
rissa may open up another debate that has barely begun; namely, the I'elationship between the 'tactica I writers'. NV
Dr Duncan B. Campbell is a regular contributor.
Further reading • E. Lammert, 'Sari sse', in: Re
alencyc/opadie vol. 1 A.2 (1920), cols.2515-2530
• A. Noguera Borel, 'L'evolution de la phalange macedonienne: Ie cas de la sari sse', in: Ancient
Macedonia 6 (Thessalonica 1999), pp. 839-850.
52 Ancient Warfare VIII-3