Antiochus Reaches Tambrax
Thus Antiochus effected this ascent without loss, but
note
slowly and painfully, for it was not until the
eighth day that his army made the summit of
Labus. The barbarians being mustered there,
and resolved to dispute his passage, a severe engagement took
place, in which the barbarians were eventually dislodged, and
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by the following manœuvre. As long as they were engaged
face to face with the phalanx, they kept well together and
fought desperately; but before daybreak the light-armed troops
had made a wide circuit, and seized some high ground on the
rear of the enemy, and as soon as the barbarians perceived this
they fled in a panic. King Antiochus exerted himself actively
to prevent a pursuit, and caused a recall to be sounded,
because he wished his men to make the descent into Hyrcania,
without scattering, and in close order. note He
accomplished his object: reached Tambrax, an
unwalled city of great size and containing a
royal palace, and there encamped. note Most of the natives fled
from the battle-field, and its immediate neighbourhood, into a city called Sirynx, which was
not far from Tambrax, and from its secure and
convenient situation was considered as the capital of Hyrcania.
Antiochus therefore determined to carry this town by assault;
and having accordingly advanced thither, and pitched his
camp under its walls, he commenced the assault. The
operation consisted chiefly of mining under pent-houses. For
the city was defended by three trenches, thirty cubits broad
and fifteen deep, with a double vallum on the edge of each;
and behind these there was a strong wall. Frequent struggles
took place at the works, in which neither side were strong
enough to carry off their killed and wounded: for these hand-to-hand battles took place,
not above ground only, but underground also in the mines. However, owing to the numbers
employed and the activity of the king, it was not long before
the trenches were choked up and the walls were undermined
and fell. Upon this the barbarians, giving up all as lost, put to
death such Greeks as were in the town; and having plundered
all that was most worth taking, made off under cover of night.
When the king saw this, he despatched Hyperbasus with the
mercenaries; upon whose approach the barbarians threw down
their booty and fled back again into the city; and when they
found the peltasts pouring in energetically through the breach
in the walls they gave up in despair and surrendered.
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