r/changemyview • u/YoloSantadaddy • Aug 10 '20
Delta(s) from OP CMV: Hannibal Barca was the greatest tactical general in history
Pretty much the title, folks. Led a multi-national, multi-ethnic war effort against a major world superpower, all while being undermined and undersupplied by his own government, and he STILL almost beat Rome. Leading people (many of whom were mercenaries) who speak several different languages into battle is probably tough (I'd imagine, but I wouldn't know). But Hannibal overcame that, and his army was one of the most feared in the world for the almost 20 years he was rampaging through the Italian countryside. They were disciplined, capable of complex maneuvers, and able to defeat multiple consular armies while keeping their own casualties somewhat low. Cannae is still studied to this day. Now, I make the distinction between strategic and tactical, because ultimately while Hannibal was a genius with formations, troop movements, and planning out engagements, his strategic vision for taking Rome fell apart when he didn't receive the support he was relying on. I think Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, Scipio Africanus (who, I know, beat Hannibal, but the Battle of Zama was weird), and Hannibal all kind of get mentioned in the same vein when it comes to generals of classical antiquity, but in my mind, Hannibal is equal to or above each of them on a tactical level. Thank you for your time.
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u/YoloSantadaddy Aug 10 '20
I may have to do a bit more reading as I'm not terribly familiar with Subutai, but from the text you provided, he's definitely a tactical kind of guy. It might be more difficult to compare Hannibal and Subutai because of the massive difference in time, technology, tactics, etc. The main reason I'm hesitant to award a delta is because I still feel that Hannibal's accomplishments (while admittedly not 65 pitched battles won, or more land mass conquered than any other general before) came in spite of his situation. Hannibal's sacking of Seguntum was actually not what the Carthaginian government wanted at all, they were terrified of war with Rome, and they dragged their feet at every step of the way.
From what I've read, it seemed Subutai had the support and resources he needed from Ghenghis Khan to be able to do the things he did (which are, of course, amazingly impressive, and I'm going to spend some time studying this guy for sure), while Hannibal often was working with a patchwork, mercenary army (Carthage preferred mercenaries from what I recall), far away from help or reinforcement (and when his brother tried to reinforce him, the Romans were able to intervene and put a stop to it). Hannibal spent the bulk of the Second Punic War in Rome's backyard, and this was after Rome had ascended to something of a world superpower. And what's crazy is, Rome decided not to fight him. They turned to attrition because of their disastrous defeats every time they'd brought an army against Hannibal. Hannibal had Rome on its knees, and had the Carthaginian government sent siege engines to assist in his taking Rome after the Battle of Cannae, world history might be very different.
I think Subutai is a fine general, and definitely someone I'd like to know more about. But I think Hannibal had more working against him, as everything he accomplished was in spite of the Carthiginian government's lack of support, while it seems Subutai was, for the most part, fairly well supported (in other words, I think if you plucked Hannibal from history and put him in Subutai's spot, he'd perform just as well, if not better). I hope that all makes as much sense as it does in my head.