Battle of Calama
Part of the Vandal conquest of Roman Africa

Roman Theatre in Calama
Location
Result Vandal victory
Belligerents
Roman Empire Vandals
Commanders and leaders
Bonifatius Geiseric
Strength
5,000-7,000[1]/15,000-20,000 [2] 15,000-20,000
Casualties and losses
unknown, big unknown

The Battle of Calama was fought between the West Roman Empire and the Vandals in the war known as the Vandalian conquest of North-Africa. The battle took place in May 430 near the city Calama. [3] The Roman army under command by comes Africae Bonifatius tried to stumble here the advance of the Vandals who crossed before the strait of Gibraltar under the leadership of King Geiseric. [4]

The march of the Vandals

The Vandals marched without much opposition to the area where the main cities were located, the grain barn of Africa: Africae Zeugitana. According to Possidius, bishop of Calama and eyewitness, the Vandals along the way destroy everything they encountered:

«Fusing with cruelty and barbarity, crossing to our provinces and territories, they destroyed everything they could through their looting, murder and all kinds of torture, arson and other innumerable and unspeakable crimes, without regard to gender or age, nor did they spare the priests and men of God, nor the ornaments or vessels of the churches and the buildings..« Posssidius, Vita S. Augustini, chapter 28

The Roman defense

In early 430, Bonifatius arrived in Africa to lead the war against the Vandal raiders. He put the regular field army into position supplemented with the expeditionary force of General Sigisvult who had been left behind after the civil war of 427-429. His own Gothic bucellari formed the core of this army. How large this army was is unknown, but must have been equivalent to that of Geiseric, otherwise Bonifatius would not have dared to fight. [2]However, according to Wijnendaele Bonifatius' army was a lot smaller.[5]Geiseric' force consisted of Vandals and Alans, supplemented by a Gothic tribe and warriors of different origins [6] and amounted to 15,000-20,000 fighters. [2]

the battle

According to Procopius, Bonifatius led the army of the Romans in the battle against the Vandals, but was defeated and forced to flee to the safety of the walls of Hippo.[7] In the primary source material, Calama is not mentioned as the location where there was fought. However, there are strong suspicions that it was near Calama, because Possidius fled from here to Hippo as an eyewitness.

Bonifatius was overrun by Geiseric in the battle because he was a better strategist. In all his battles with the Romans, Geiserik ended up victorious, which was exceptional, because the Roman army always ended up as the parent party until well into the fifth century. On the other hand, troops of Bonifatius, with the ext of his own bucellari, were not of the same quality as Geiserik's warriors. The Vandals were hardened in battle, while the army of the Romans was composed diverse and not used to acting as a unit. The Romans were eventually cornered and had to retreat to the fortified cities. Bonifatius entrenched himself with his bucellari in Hippo Regius which was then besieged by the Vandals. The nearby Camala was taken by the Vandals and partly destroyed.

After the battle

According to Ian Hughes,[8] the government of Ravenna must have sent urgent calls for help to Constantinople shortly afterwards, so that East Roman aid arrived in 431. The situation was critical. Boniface was besieged at Hippo and the Vandals were therefore in fact in possession of the grain barn of Western Rome, and it is very likely that the city of Rome again faced famine.

Primary sources

Bibliography

  • Heather, Peter (2005). The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History. Macmillan.
  • Raven, Suzan (2012). Rome in Africa. Routledge.
  • Hughes, Ian (2012). Aetius: Attila's Nemesis. Barnsley: Pen and Sword Books.
  • Wijnendaele, Jeroen P. (2015). The Last of the Romans: Bonifatius - Warlord and comes Africae. Bloomsbury.
  • Syvänne, Ilkka (2020). Military History of Late Rome 425–457. Pen and Sword Books.

References

  1. Wijnendaele 2015, p. 91.
  2. 1 2 3 Heather 2005, p. 197–198.
  3. Sophrone Pétridès, "Calama" in Catholic Encyclopedia (New York 1908)
  4. Hydatius, Chronicles V (429)
  5. Unlike Heather, Wijnendaele is critical of Procopius' reading and wonders whether there was really a fight in the form of a battle. Other sources that these battles confirm are missing. According to him, Boniface was in the face of the Vandals in the minority of one state to three, given the loss of men incurred in the previously ended civil war (Wijnendaele (2015), p.91
  6. Possidius, Vita S. Augustini 28
  7. Procopius, book 8, 29-36
  8. Syvänne 2020, p. 24.
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