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The Battle of Gaugamela 331 B.C.: Alexander’s Operational Command and the Collapse of Persian Empire. Epic Battles of Ancient History, #5

Par : Antonios athenaeus
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8233347290
  • EAN9798233347290
  • Date de parution03/03/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurLinda Balsamo

Résumé

At Gaugamela, numbers did not decide the battle. Command did. In 331 B. C., Alexander of Macedon faced an empire that vastly outnumbered him. The Persian army possessed scale, resources, and political authority. What it lacked was cohesion. The Battle of Gaugamela was not a test of courage or chance-it was a decisive confrontation between two fundamentally different systems of command. This book presents Gaugamela as an operational case study in unified command, battlefield tempo, and the collapse of imperial power.
Rather than retelling a familiar heroic narrative, it analyzes how leadership structure, disciplined execution, and decision-speed determined the outcome. Drawing on ancient sources including Arrian, Diodorus, Curtius Rufus, and Plutarch, the study reconstructs the engagement with strategic clarity. Alexander's calculated rightward drift, the stretching of the Persian line, and the coordinated employment of phalanx, Hypaspists, and Companion Cavalry are examined as elements of an integrated operational system.
The Persian response-mass cavalry deployment, scythed chariots, and attempted envelopment-is assessed through a tactical lens, revealing why numerical superiority could not compensate for structural weakness. Particular attention is given to moments of operational risk: Parmenion's pressure on the left, the danger of overextension, and the management of cohesion under strain. Gaugamela was not inevitable.
It was decided by maintaining control at the critical point. The volume includes detailed battlefield diagrams, operational reconstructions, and a dedicated section on strategic and operational lessons for modern commanders. It is written for readers seeking disciplined military analysis rather than romanticized narrative. Gaugamela was not simply Alexander's greatest victory. It was the moment when strategy overcame scale-and an empire ceased to function.