Wars of the Diadochi - The Babylonian War
Date310 B.C.
Location
Result Seleucid victory
Belligerents
Antigonid faction Seleucid faction
Commanders and leaders
Demetrius
Archelaus
Patrocles
joined by Seleucus
Strength
Initially
19,000
At the end
6,000
Initially
a few thousands
At the end
20,000
Casualties and losses
moderate
6,000 captured
few

The Second siege of Babylon took place during the Babylonian War in 310 BC. Antigonid forces under Antigonus's oldest son, Demetrius, besieged the Seleucid garrison of the city of Babylon under the command of Patrocles.

Prelude

In 311 BC Seleucus defeated the Antigonid forces in the satrapy of Babylonia. In response Antigonus sent his son Demetrius with 15,000 infantry and 4,000 cavalry to retake the region.[1] In 310 BC, while Seleucus was campaigning in the east, Demetrius arrived at Babylon. Seleucus had left a small force in the city under the command of an admiral and geographer called Patrocles. The defenders launched guerrilla attacks at the young Antigonid's troops, and Patrocles also managed to hold off Demetrius by using the irrigation canals to flood the area.[2]

The siege

Before Demetrius arrived, Patrocles ordered an evacuation of civilians from the city, then he withdrew with his troops into Babylon’s two citadels. Demetrius capturing the city without opposition besieged the citadels. Eventually, Demetrius´s soldiers manage to capture and plunder one of the citadels.[3] Despite this success Antigonus ordered him back to Asia minor. In 309 BC Demetrius marched back west with the majority of his army, but left Archelaus, one of his trusted generals, with 6,000 troops and orders to take the remaining citadel. Meanwhile Seleucus, who had refused to be distracted from his eastern campaign, now returned and started to recover Babylonia.[4]

The aftermath

Seleucus, after an extensive campaign against Archelaus, which seemed to have caused widespread devastation, reconquered the satrapy. In the end Archelaus's troops surrendered while Archelaus managed to escape to Antigonia, in Syria.[5]

Sources

https://www.livius.org/articles/concept/diadochi/diadochi-6-the-babylonian-war/

https://www.livius.org/sources/content/diodorus/demetrius-babylonian-campaign/

Antigonus the One-Eyed: Greatest of the Successors by Jeff champions

Alexander's Heirs: The Age of the Successors by Edward M Anson

https://www.livius.org/articles/concept/diadochi/diadochi-6-the-babylonian-war/

Richard A. Billows, Antigonos the One Eyed and the Creation of the Hellenistic State, pp 141-142

Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca Historica, book XIX

Plutarch, Life of Demetrius, 7,2-3

Babylonian Chronicles, rev. lines 34-41

Patrocles (geographer)

References

  1. Billows, Antigonos, p.141; Diod. XIX 100, 4-5.
  2. Billows, Antigonos, p.142; Diod. XIX 100, 5-6.
  3. Billows, Antigonos, p.142; Diod. XIX 100, 6-7; Plut. Dem, 7,2.
  4. Billows, Antigonos, p.142.
  5. Babylonian Chronicles, rev. lines 34-41.

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