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Aeneas was perhaps a general, and certainly author of several
didactic military works of which the sole survivor is that on
defence against siege. From it we can deduce that he was a
Peloponnesian of the fourth century BCE who served in the Aegean
and in Asia Minor and composed the work from direct knowledge and
from oral and some literary tradition, possibly in 357-6 BCE. It is
devoted entirely to defence of fortified places and deals specially
with use of defending troops; defensive positions; morale;
resistance to attacks and to actual assault; guards; obviation of
treachery and revolution; and other subjects.
Asclepiodotus, philosopher and pupil of the Stoic Posidonius,
wrote a rather dry but ordered work on Tactics as if a subject of
the lecture room, based not on personal experience but on earlier
manuals. His main subjects were the branches of a military force;
infantry; cavalry; chariots; elephants; arms; maneuvers; military
evolutions; marching formation. The work ends with words of
command.
Onasander (Onasandros), a Platonic philosopher, dedicated his
work "The General" to the Roman Veranius, who was a consul in 49
CE. The work deals in plain style with the sort of morals and
social and military qualities and attitudes expected of a virtuous
and militarily successful general. It is also concerned with such
matters as his choice of staff; attitude to war; religious duties;
military formations; conduct in allied and hostile lands; difficult
terrains; camps; drill; spies; guards; deserters; battle formations
and maneuvers; and other matters, ending with conduct after
victory.
Aineias Tacticus (mid-fourth century BC) is not only the earliest
but also one of the most historically interesting of ancient
military writers. Important, too, as a social commentator, he sheds
valuable light on the nature of life and the psychological and
strategic preoccupations of a typical Greek city-state (polis) at a
time dominated by two extraordinarily atypical ones, Athens and
Sparta. In Aineias' work we see what conditions were like in a
polis obliged to play a minor and much more passive role in the
history of its age - not laying siege like the big players but
suffering it. His practical recommendations derive clearly from
accumulated personal experience in the first place; but at the same
time he also draws copious illustrative material from both
Herodotus and Thucydides. This edition has the Greekless reader
firmly in mind, providing a fresh modern translation of "How to
Survive Under Siege", a comprehensive introduction to Aineias and
his work, and a full historical commentary.
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