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Why Was the Parthian Empire So Powerful

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[[File: Parthian_king_ashur.jpg|300px250px|thumbnail|left|Bust of an Anonymous Parthian King]] __NOTOC__
Today, most people in the West know little about the Parthian Empire and if they do it is in reference to the Parthians being the enemies of Rome. The Parthians and Romans were eternal enemies for much of Rome’s late Republic and early Imperial phases, with the Parthians often inflicting humiliating defeats on the Romans. The Parthians defeated the Roman general Crassus at Carrhae in 53 BC, Mark Antony in 36 BC, and took several Roman eagle standard over the course of their many wars. Eventually, though, the Romans were able to decisively defeat the Parthians in the late second century AD, but by that time the Parthian Empire had been in a long state of decline.
====The Background of the Parthians====
[[File: Parthian_Empire.png|300px250px|thumbnail|left|Map Depicting the Parthian Empire at Its Height with the Borders of Modern Nation-States Outlined]]
The men who ruled the Parthian Empire were descended from an ethnic group known as the Parni, which is where the people and the region of Parthia in Persia received their names. The Parni originally hailed from the eastern shores of the Caspian Sea and later migrated west after Alexander the Great’s invasions into the region during the fourth century BC. <ref> Colledge, Malcon A. R. <i>The Parthians.</i> (London: Thames and Hudson, 1967), p. 25</ref>
The Parni spoke a northern dialect of the Middle Persian language, but the rulers of the Parthian Dynasty, sometimes referred to as the “Arsacids” for the first king of the dynasty, Arsaces I (ruled ca. 247-217 BC), actually adopted Greek as their official language. <ref> Colledge, p. 68</ref>
===Parthian Trade===
[[File: Vologases_V.jpg|300px250px|thumbnail|left|Silver Coin of Parthian King Vologases V (Ruled AD 192-208)]]
When it came to economics, the Parthians were the beneficiaries of a favorable geographic location. The Parthians were not known for being particularly excellent merchants the way other ancients peoples such as the Phoenicians and Palmyrenes were, but they controlled the lucrative caravan routes that snaked their way through central Asia, connecting the early Western and Eastern worlds. These caravan routes would collectively become known as the “Silk Road.” The most important early contacts the Parthians made were with the Chinese when in 121 BC the Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty sent an embassy to Mithridates II (reigned 124-88 BC) to establish formal relations between the two empires. The Chinese knew the Parthians as “An-Hisi” and were particularly interested in developing an alliance with the martial-minded central Asian people and to gain access to their horses, which could be used to combat nomadic hordes. <ref> Brosius, pgs. 83-90</ref> Parthia’s trade with China had the combined effect of opening diplomatic relations with the Han Dynasty and also the emergence of the Silk Road.
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Although the Silk Road had been in operation in some form before the Parthians, the Parthians established a control over the road that allowed them to collect sizable profits from the nascent silk trade, which they then used to fund their military. After the Chinese established control over the Tarim Basin around AD 90, silk merchants from northern China only had to pass through four kingdoms: China, Kushan, Parthia, and Rome. The Parthians were able to charge a hefty tax on silk passing through their kingdom from China, which was then processed in Roman territory. Interestingly, the raw silk that made its way into Rome was rewoven in factories in Syria, where it was then made into the brocade that is associated with silk today. From there the finished silk would make its way to Rome proper and ironically back east to China. <ref> Thorley, J. “The Silk Trade between China and the Roman Empire at Its Heights.” <i>Greece and Rome</i> 18 (1990) pgs. 73-77</ref>  The Parthians profited twice from their position; first by charging the raw silk to pass through their kingdom to the west and then when they charged to send the finished silk back through their kingdom to the east. The caravans went through the Parthian city of Merv daily and could be quite large – a single caravan could include up to 1,000 Bactrian camels with each camel carrying 400 to 500 pounds of goods. <ref> Brosius, p. 123</ref> Once the Parthian kings received their cut of the profits from the trade, they reinvested much of it into their state of the art army.
====The Parthian Military====
[[File: ParthianHorseman.jpg|300px|thumbnail|left|Statue of a Mounted Parthian Archer]]
The Parthian military was the vanguard of the empire’s territorial expansion, defeating several rebellious tribes in central Asia and fighting the Romans for control of Armenia and Mesopotamia. Cavalry comprised the most important core of the Parthian army and it was the nobility who were the overwhelming majority of the horse-borne fighters. The nobles were the only members of society who could afford horses, which they fought on wearing mailed armor with a variety of different weapons.  In exchange for their service to the king, the noble cavalrymen were given an increased amount of autonomy in their own lands. <ref> Brosius, p. 116</ref> According to a variety of different ancient sources, the bow was the preferred weapon of the Parthians, which they put to great use on foot and horseback. The third century AD Roman historian Cassius Dio wrote:
“The Parthians make no use of a shield, but their forces consist of mounted archers and pikemen, mostly in full armour. Their infantry is small, made up of the weaker men; but even these are all archers. They practise from boyhood, and the climate and the land combine to aid both horsemanship and archery. The land, being for the most part level, is excellent for raising horses and very suitable for riding about on horse-back; at any rate, even in war they lead about whole droves of horses, so that they can use different ones at different times, can ride up suddenly from a distance and also retire to a distance speedily.” <ref> Cassius Dio. <i> Roman History.</i> Translated by Earnest Cary. (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1954), XL, 15, 3-4</ref>
The Parthian tactic to attack and then retreat quickly that Dio mentions became known as the “Parthian Shot.” More specifically, the Parthian Shot involved the horsemen going into a tactical or even feigned retreat, enticing the enemy to give chase at a full speed. The Parthian horsemen then turned and shot arrows at their enemy as they retreated. Besides references made by Roman historians to the tactic, it was depicted in art as early as the late Hellenistic period. The earliest portrayals of the tactic are in a non-Parthian context, dated to eight and seventh century BC Assyrian and Phoenician art. <ref> Rostovtzeff, M. “The Parthian Shot.” <i>American Journal of Archaeology</i> 47 (1943) p. 180</ref> Numerous pottery, statues, and figurines, excavated in Mesopotamia and central Asia show horsemen, dressed in Parthian garb, riding while turning their heads and bodies to shoot at their enemies behind them. <ref> Rostovtzeff, p. 177</ref> The Parthians employed this tactic for their entire history because it was so effective; even when it did not prove to be decisive it still caused confusion among the enemy ranks.
====Conclusion====

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