Battle of Michmash

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Datec. 1025 BCE
Result Israelite victory
Battle of Michmash
Part of Later Israelite Campaigns

A. Labyː Battle of Michmash (Cassell's Illustrated Universal History)
Datec. 1025 BCE
Location
Result Israelite victory
Belligerents
United Kingdom of Israel Philistines
Commanders and leaders
King Saul of Israel
Jonathan
Unknown
Strength
3,000 soldiers and militia men, of which only 600 remained with King Saul 3,000 chariots, carrying 2 men and defended by 3 units of 4 infantrymen each
6,000 cavalry
Total: 48,000 soldiers
Casualties and losses
No reliable estimates, but very light 60,000 Killed

According to the Hebrew Bible, the Battle of Michmash (alternate spelling, Michmas) was fought between Israelites under Jonathan, son of King Saul and a force of Philistines at Michmash, a town east of Bethel and south of Migron.[1]

According to the Bible, Saul's army consisted entirely of infantry, about 3,000 soldiers and militia men. According to Josephus and 1 Samuel 13:2, Saul himself initially retained 2,000 of these as his guard in Bethel while providing Jonathan with 1,000 which he used to take back Gibeah from Philistine rule.[2] Saul kept a standing army of three thousand soldiers after the Battle of Jabesh-Gilead. However, none of the soldiers carried swords or spears with them and had to rely on axes, sickles, mattocks, and plow points as weapons; 1 Samuel 13:19 mentions that "Not a blacksmith could be found in the whole land of Israel, because the Philistines had said, 'Otherwise the Hebrews will make swords or spears!'" and Josephus attributes this to a systematic seizure of such items by the Philistines in the region of Gibeah.[2] According to 1 Samuel 13:21, "the price was 2/3 of a shekel for sharpening plow points and mattocks, and 1/3 of a shekel for sharpening forks and axes." Only King Saul and his son Jonathan were said to have carried a spear and a bronze straight sword between them, though it is also possible that Jonathan was armed with a bow and quiver of arrows as well Josephus however claims that Saul had only an effective combat force of 600 upon his encampment in Gibeah, citing mass desertion as a cause.[3] Josephus also claims that by the end of the battle, the addition of returned deserters and local supporters to the Israelite army swelled its numbers to 10,000, a number far exceeding other claims.[4]

The full strength of the Philistine armies at Michmash has been debated. According to Josephus[2] and the Hebrew text of 1 Samuel 13:5, the Philistines dispatched a force of 30,000 chariots, 6,000 horsemen, and a large number of infantry (specified as 300,000 by Josephus) against King Saul's army, but it is believed that the Philistines supplied way fewer than 30,000 chariots to the battlefield. The actual size and strength of the Philistine army is estimated at over 40,000 men, consisting of 6,000 horsemen and about 3,000 special hamashhith units. Each hamashhith was composed of a chariot carrying 2 men, a charioteer and an archer with javelins, bows, and arrows, and three squads of infantry runners, 4-men each. The infantry runners, also wearing leather breastplates and armed with swords, spears, and round bronze shields, would have numbered more than 30,000 men in total strength. Add in the charioteers and archers mounted in the chariots and the 6,000 horsemen, the Philistines mustered a total of 48,000 soldiers against the Israelites.

Biblical account of the battle

References

Sources

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI