Kadesh 1274 BC - 2nd Oldest Battle in History DOCUMENTARY

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The Mediterranean Bronze Age is undeniably  one of the most interesting periods in all   of human history. The era owes part of its  allure to a vague similarity to our own time.   From the Mycenaean and Minoan Greeks in the  west, to the ancient Mesopotamian kingdoms   of Babylon and Assyria in the east, the Bronze Age  saw the development of a complex multipolar system   of highly organised states. Although rivals  for influence and power, these kingdoms also   depended on one another for the crucial trade  resources needed to keep civilization going.   Two of the heavyweight monarchies during the  later Bronze Age were Egypt’s New Kingdom and   the Hittite Empire. As the 13th century  BC began, these two military powerhouses   fought for hegemony over the rich lands  of Syria. This clash of titans eventually   culminated in the first battle in all history  to be recorded in detail - the Battle of Kadesh. 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The sooner you   start using Keeps, the more hair you’ll save!  Keeps has more 5-star reviews than any of its   competitors - hundreds and thousands of men trust  Keeps for their hair loss prevention medication.   If you’re ready to act and prevent hair loss,  go to keeps.com/kings or click the link in   the description to receive 50% off your first  order. That’s K-E-E-P-S dot com slash kings. Syria during the late bronze age served as  the overflowing entrepôt of the interconnected   ancient near-eastern world. Trading vessels from  across the Aegean docked at thriving port cities   such as Ugarit, swelling their markets with  wares including ivory, textiles, food, timber,   as well as the two components of bronze itself  - tin and copper. Land trade routes snaked   throughout the middle-east and distributed these  wares, returning with exotic eastern materials   such as the mystical lapis lazuli. Complementing  a flourishing commerce, the region was itself   blessed with a great agricultural fertility  and wealth of natural resources. This bounty,   together with Syria’s vast array of squabbling  city-states and small kingdoms, rendered the   region vulnerable to surrounding powers. In the  fifteenth-century BC, the two major predators   fighting for control over the resources of Syria  were Egypt’s militaristic New Kingdom and the   Kingdom of Mitanni. Having only recently cast off  the yoke of the Asiatic Hyksos, Egypt’s new rulers   sought to create a strategic buffer of vassals to  prevent such an occupation from happening again.   After generations of internecine warfare, Mitanni,  under threat from a dynamic new force in Anatolia,   and this new Egyptian Empire finally  concluded a lasting peace in around 1420BC1.  This era of tranquility and brotherhood between  great powers marked the apex of the late bronze   age, especially for the Pharaonic empire. Vast  tribute from Egypt’s Canaanite vassal states   poured into Memphis’ coffers  and flooded the kingdom in gold,   while trade routes functioned unimpeded by  warfare. Such prosperity, however, was not   to last. A few generations after the concordat,  in roughly 1344, the growing threat on Mitanni’s   northwestern frontier finally made its move. Led  by the warlike usurper-king Suppiluliuma I, this   budding Hittite Empire burst forth from its rough  Anatolian heartland astride great war chariots and   launched two lightning wars of conquest against  Mitanni. These conflicts culminated in the sack   of the Mitanni capital and the kingdom’s  final destruction. Crucially, the Hittites   intruded in Syria as part of their attacks,  usurping the strategically vital city of Kadesh   and pushing Egypt’s control south. This external  threat came at a particularly inopportune time   for the dominion of the Pharaohs. The contentious  reign of the so-called heretic Pharaoh Akhenaten,   followed by the weakness of his son Tutankhamun  and the subsequent fall of the eighteenth dynasty2   ensured Egypt was distracted at home for many  years. All the while, the Hittites consolidated   power in Syria and flipped the Nile realm’s  vassals to their allegiance. That status quo   soon changed once more with the advent of  yet another new line of Nilotic monarchs.  Seti I of the nineteenth dynasty personally led  Egyptian armies into Asia for the first time in   decades, asserting Pharaonic imperial authority,  recapturing the traitorous vassals of Kadesh and   Amurru, and even defeating a Hittite force.  Unfortunately for Seti, however, he proved   unable to maintain tight control over territories  so distant from the center of his authority3   and eventually concluded peace. By the time of  Seti’s death in 1279BC, both Amurru and Kadesh   had once more fallen under the Hittite aegis. Seti  was succeeded by his prodigious son - Ramesses II.   Egypt’s new monarch first dealt with Sherdan  pirates and nomads on his western frontier   before turning his attention to Canaan.  Understanding the unsuitability of Thebes as a   royal seat when conducting military expeditions in  Asia, Ramesses II built an entirely new capital on   the eastern Nile delta which he, ever so humbly,  renamed Pi-Ramesses - the House of Ramesses. The   new capital served as a clear statement that he  fully intended to reassert the authority of the   twin crown4 on Canaan. The sequence of events that  triggered Egypt’s direct intervention in Syria   is obscure in our records. However, it is likely  that Amurru, playing the dangerous game of vassal   politics, again changed sides and swore allegiance  to Egypt. In the fourth year of his reign - 1275,   Ramesses II marched his army north to secure  the subject state and make a bold statement   of intent to the ‘vile’ Hatti. The Pharaoh  returned to Pi-Ramesses at the conclusion of   the relatively quiet campaigning season, ready  for a climactic conflict in the next year.  The Hittites had been fighting  internecine skirmishes in the north,   east and west of their realm for years,  and that had weakened their response.   Matters, however, had calmed by the mid 1270s.  So, in the winter of 1275, King Muwatalli II5   levied warriors from across the territories he  controlled and hired mercenaries, and in doing so   assembled the greatest army in the history of the  Hittite Empire… In 1274, Muwatalli and Ramesses   both led their armies into Syria, where they  encountered one another near the city of Kadesh.   Before we detail the fascinating clash  of these late bronze age heavyweights,   we must first detail the armies with which they  went to battle. In contrast to the classical   and Medieval eras of history, in which infantry,  cavalry and iron weapons were the norm in warfare,   bronze age warfare was very different.  It was marked by two standout features.   Firstly - bronze itself, an alloy of tin  and copper used to forge the tools, weapons,   and armour of the era. Secondly - horse-drawn  chariots, the elite mounted force of the age.  The Pharaonic army of Ramesses II utilised  incredibly versatile chariots whose deadliest   attributes were speed and maneuverability.  These vehicles appeared lightweight and even   fragile at first glance but were in reality  reliable and robust. Much like the later   forces of light cavalry horse archers employed  by civilisations such as the Huns and Mongols,   Egyptian chariots were similarly designed to turn,  wheel, and loose rains of deadly arrows into the   enemy ranks while avoiding a grueling melee. When  we look at the raw numbers for any given battle,   it is common to split the armies into  different troop types - infantry and cavalry,   for example. However, this disguises the tactical  flexibility of Ramesses’ chariot corps. Rather   than serving in one large block, the aristocratic  charioteers of the New Kingdom’s great empire   were instead divided among the infantry regiments  to create a combined-arms military force.   Overall, it is likely that the Pharaoh mustered  around 2,000 chariots, manned by 4,000 men,   for the campaign of 1274BC. While the dashing  superstars of the age were these charioteers,   the true workhorses of Egypt’s well-oiled military  remained its ever-reliable infantry formations.   During Ramesses’ Kadesh campaign,  the army’s 16,000 foot troops,   raised with the aid of Egypt’s  famously stringent bureaucracy,   were arrayed in divisions raised locally and  named after a local god. These were Amun6,   Ra7, Ptah8, and Set9, each possessing 4,00010  infantry and an accompanying 500 chariots.  Critics both ancient and modern have criticised  Ramesses for dividing his army in such a way, but   the value of being able to march without depleting  the land of supplies and pursuing many tactical   objectives simultaneously made it worth the  risk. As for the infantry themselves, experienced   professionals known as menfyt would form the front  ranks, while raw recruits or nefru made up the   rear and reserves. Foreigners or mercenaries  including Canaanites, Libyans, Sherdens,   and particularly Nubian archers also served in  Pharaoh’s army. We know far less about Muwatalli’s   army than we do about that of Ramesses, but  there are cogent details we can piece together.   Most notable were the brutal Hittite chariots.  In contrast to the vehicles of their Egyptian   enemies, these vehicles were far heavier, clearly  built for weight and power on the charge. With   a centrally balanced axle and a three-man crew  wielding large thrusting spears, Hittite chariots   focused on smashing into masses of enemy infantry  and breaking them apart by force. In addition to   the heartland forces raised from Hatti itself,  Muwatalli marched to war at the head of troops   from 18 allied and vassal states. They included  the previously mentioned city-state of Ugarit,   Carchemish, subjugated Mitanni, and Arzawa - a  land on the faraway Aegean coast of Asia Minor.   This Hittite army seems to have slightly  outnumbered its southern foe, counting around   15,000 infantry and 10,000 charioteers. Again  in contrast to Egypt, Muwatalli’s forces were   indeed focused on the shock chariot assault  as their primary tool for achieving victory.  On the ‘ninth day of the third month’ of  1274’s summer season - sometime in late May,   Pharaoh Ramesses was encamped with his vanguard  Amun division in hill country one day’s march   south of Kadesh. Half a day behind Amun marched  the Ra division, followed by Ptah and Set   half a day each further south still. Shortly after  daybreak, Ramesses broke camp and marched north   along the east bank of the Orontes before fording  the river near Ribla. This took several hours,   and it was at this point that the army captured  two Shasu Bedouin nomads and brought them into   the Pharaoh’s august presence. According to  Egyptian sources, when pressed for information,   these seemingly innocuous cattle-herders told  Ramesses that ‘the Fallen one of Hatti is in the   land of Khaleb, to the north of Tunip.’ For the  Egyptians, this news was very welcome. They had   apparently arrived at Kadesh first and therefore  had complete control over the battlefield,   while the Hittites languished in fear days away.  However, it is likely that these informants were   in fact sent by the cunning Muwatalli to  mislead the Pharaoh. As unknown to him,   the Hittites were in fact very close at hand11. As  yet unaware of his dire peril, Ramesses pushed the   Amun division onto Kadesh, where it constructed  a camp equipped with a defensive perimeter   and embankments with soldiers’ shields placed  around the top for additional protection. The   very center of the camp contained a shrine  to the god Amun and Pharaoh’s royal pavilion.  Scouts were dispatched to reconnoiter the  surrounding land late in the day and one   of them swiftly returned with something curious.   Two prisoners had been lurking suspiciously near  the Egyptian encampment. Initially, these men   refused to respond to the Pharaoh’s questions.  However, after being given a sound beating,   they gave up information that was both invaluable  and terrifying in equal measure. Apparently,   in confusion, Ramesses asked “What are you?”,  attempting to ascertain who had sent them.   They admitted to being sent by Muwatalli.  Ramesses’ heart would’ve dropped. In truth,   the Hittites were shrouded behind a nearby mound  to the northeast at Old Kadesh, ‘furnished with   their infantry and their chariotry carrying their  weapons of warfare, and are more numerous than the   sand of the river banks.’ To Ramesses’ credit,  his reaction seems to have not been one of panic   or over-hasty, but efficiency and eagerness to  remedy his own mistake in a comprehensive manner.   He also seems to have owned that mistake, as the  Egyptian sources do not attempt to conceal it.   Regardless, the Pharaoh immediately sent senior  officials south in order to hurry the other three   divisions of Ra, Ptah and Set12 to Kadesh at top  speed. Another speculative messenger was also sent   north to summon a fifth division of foreign troops  who might’ve been able to help - the Ne’arin.  South of Ramesses’ camp, Ra crossed the Orontes  and began trudging towards their lord’s camp,   about 7 miles north, in haste. At the same time,  by Old Kadesh, Muwatalli received reports that an   Egyptian army of some size had closed in. He  was, however, as of yet unsure where exactly   the Pharaoh was, or the true size of his enemy’s  forces. Based on what happened next, it is assumed   that the Hittite monarch sent a 500-strong chariot  contingent south as a reconnaissance in force,   instructed to gather as much information as  possible. While the 5,000 troops of Ra made for   Ramesses’ camp, Muwatalli’s substantial chariot  scouting force skirted the hill on which Kadesh   was built and then crossed the Orontes, emerging  to the right of Ra’s desperately exposed marching   column. Unable to re-cross the river, the heavy  Hittite chariots improvised and, now with little   other option, launched a direct charge at the  Egyptian reinforcement division. Utterly taken   aback, the Egyptian chariots screening Ra’s right  flank were swept away. The unprotected infantry   failed to assume formation and immediately  broke apart. Rather than staying to destroy Ra   which, given a concerted Hittite attempt, almost  certainly could have been done, the assaulting   chariots simply carved through the column and  emerged from the other side. Egyptian warriors,   probably a greater portion of the untested nefru,  fled to all points of the compass, but it is clear   that the chariots and some menfyt veterans made  an orderly withdrawal in Ramesses’ direction.  Thus ensued a race against time - swift Egyptian  chariots seeking to warn their Pharaoh of the   danger versus lumbering Hittite vehicles on the  attack. Fresh from their near destruction of the   unfortunate Ra division just minutes earlier,  the Hittites swept north in an arc and beelined   directly at the western side of the Pharaoh’s  camp. The camp itself, having received the   withdrawing chariots and able to see the incoming  dust cloud, was abuzz with panicked activity.   Amun division soldiers and Ramesses’ guard  armed themselves and rushed to the defence.   Pharaoh’s family members hurried  to the other side of the camp.   Then, the Hittites struck, smashing straight  through the shield wall and beginning a melee.   Although more Egyptian soldiers panicked, ran,  or died where they stood, the obstructive tents,   vast wealth stores, and other camp distractions  were slowing and disorienting the Hittite assault.   Many charioteers, no doubt  believing victory had been achieved,   turned to looting, and their momentum died.  In turn, the Egyptian infantry turned about   and advanced slowly, pulling Hittite chariot crews  out of their now-impotent vehicles and dispatching   them with the famously arced Khopesh blade.  Every advantage of a chariot charge was gone.  Within the royal pavilion and bedecked in a  long coat of armour, Ramesses II donned the   Khepresh war crown of the Pharaohs and mounted the  royal chariot pulled by his own personal steeds   ‘Victory-in-Thebes’ and ‘Beloved-of-Amun’. With  a command to Menna - his own chariot driver,   the Pharaoh gathered whatever of the Amun and  Ra chariotry remained and led it out of camp   by the eastern approach. With Ramesses at their  head, the Egyptians swept northwest and prepared   to confront the Hittites chariot for chariot. At  their divine king’s signal, the Egyptian chariots   swooped down upon the numerically greater enemy  throng at rapid speed, unleashing arrow volleys   and wheeling about to do so again and again.  All the while, the Hittites failed to react.   As a Rameside source known as the Bulletin tells  us: “Then His Majesty entered into the host of   the Hatti enemies, His majesty being like Set  the great of strength and like Sahkmet13 at the   moment of her raging, and his majesty killed the  entire host of the wretched fallen one of Hatti.”   The disordered Hittite formation shattered just  as the Ra division had, Hatti warriors fleeing   desperately just as Ramesses pressed  the counterattack with greater force.   A greater portion of the Anatolian empire’s  500 chariots lay broken on the field along with   their riders, and Egyptian infantry followed  up to finish the job with clinical brutality.  Muwatalli, observing this disaster from a vantage  near Kadesh, was accompanied only by his elite   charioteers and vassal rulers. But realising he  had to act now, the Hittite king formed them up   and prepared to make his own attack. Muwatalli had  his vassals cross the Orontes and launch an attack   against the eastern part of the now-almost  undefended Egyptian camp. Ramesses and his   chariots were elsewhere, and it seemed that the  Hittites were about to flip the battle once more.   However, at the moment of catastrophe and  the possible capture of Pharaoh’s family,   the Ne’arin division arrived from the north  like agents of the Egyptian gods themselves,   and engaged the newly arrived Hittite force.   As a grateful Ramesses would later have  inscribed on his mortuary temple at Thebes:   “The Ne’arin broke into the host of the wretched  Fallen one of Hatti as they were entering the camp   of Pharaoh, and the servants of His Majesty killed  them…’ Muwatalli’s chariot force also routed back   across the Orontes, leaving behind many destroyed  vehicles as they went. Ramesses drew back into the   ruin of his camp to rest. Later that day,  the Ptah division arrived from the south,   together with a number of shamed Ra and Amun  troops who had fled during the fighting.  The next day, Ramesses lined up those troops of  Amun and Ra whose bravery had been found wanting,   on the plains outside Kadesh. The  Pharaoh had them all executed as   punishment for their transgression, almost  certainly in full view of Muwatalli.   The psychological impact of this fearful  display and the extensive losses in men and   morale among the Hittite king’s chariot forces  led him to propose a truce to the Egyptians.   Ramesses, who had also taken substantial losses  in the inconclusive battle, accepted. Pharaonic   sources attempted to magnify Ramesses’ tactical  triumphs during the Battle of the Kadesh,   but it cannot be said to be anything other  than a strategic disaster for the New Kingdom.   Weakened as his army had been by the clash  with the Hittites, the Pharaoh was forced   to withdraw back to Egypt. In his wake came  Muwatalli, who, tailing Ramesses, occupied the   province of Upe. Worse still, the perceived  failure of Egypt’s campaign sparked a great   anti-Egyptian revolt throughout Canaan. Ramesses  II, later to be known as Ramesses the Great,   fought a number of further campaigns in Canaan  and Syria during the subsequent years of his reign   with the aim of recovering territories lost in the  post-Kadesh revolts. However, the crucial vassals   of Kadesh and Amurru would remain in Hittite hands  permanently. Sixteen years after the Battle of   Kadesh, Ramesses concluded the world’s earliest  surviving peace treaty with Muwatalli’s successor   Mursili III. The two allied kingdoms remained at  peace until the notorious Bronze Age Collapse,   when the entire civilisation of the near-east  came to a chaotic end. We will talk more about the   Bronze Age in our future videos, so make sure you  are subscribed and have pressed the bell button.   Please consider liking, commenting, and sharing;  it helps immensely. Our videos would be impossible   without our kind Patron supporters and Youtube  channel members, whose rank you can join via the   links in the description to know our schedule, get  early access to our videos, access our Discord,   and much more. This is the Kings and Generals  channel and we will catch you on the next one.
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Channel: Kings and Generals
Views: 996,585
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Keywords: oldest battle in history, Muwatalli II, Ramesses, Egypt, Hittites, bronze age, kadesh, 1274, issus, Granicus, Achaemenid Empire, Asia Minor, Balkan, Alexander, great, conquest, Tyre, Issus, Halicarnassus, Gaza, Gaugamela, macedon, macedonia, greek, greeks, illyrians, roman, kingdom, history documentary, kings and generals, history channel, history lesson, world history, animated documentary, documentary film, decisive battles, military history, animated historical documentary, king and generals, battle
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Length: 23min 13sec (1393 seconds)
Published: Sun Jan 02 2022
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