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PYRRHUS OF EPIRUS chapter XXXII
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52. The Battle of Larisa
Pyrrhus had been watching out for his rival's moves in Thessaly. Antigonus Gonatas had assembled at least two large armies, one under his own command in the city and the other under a captain named Agesilaos just outside the walls. Their disposition made it almost impossible to conquer the enemy. But then one day a trireme captain brought the news that Agesilaos had been replaced by Nicanor the Elephant, and that his army had been significantly reduced in number.
Pyrrhus thought that this was his occasion to strike against Larisa. He quickly hired more Barbarian mercenaries and then embarked his army in Pydna to sail south where he landed in Magnesia on the Thessalian coast, where found and attacked the enemy.
At first he moved against Nicanor the Elephant, but since the experienced mercenary had taken a strong position on the Phtiothian hills, Pyrrhus quickly desisted and changed direction to face Antigonus Gonatas in the Thessalian plains.
The Antigonid king had left the shelter of his walls, hoping to reunite with his general in Phtiothia, but Pyrrhus had taken the middle position with a battle line almost twice as long as each of his opponents.
Starting the battle, Pyrrhus first sent forward his light cavalry to harass the enemy with their javelins, but Gonatas reacted sending two units of light lancers against them. Pyrrhus destroyed one of the two with his bodyguards, but the other one chased the Epirote militia cavalry to the edge of the battlefield. Realising the impossibility to follow suit, Pyrrhus filed over the enemy line to find a weak link, when he suddenly spotted Antigonus Gonatas with his bodyguards.

Seeing a chance to end the war, the Epirote king rode around the flank of the Macedonian phalanx to engage his rival in a personal combat. The Antigonid fought bravely, but always out of Pyrrhus' reach. Only when all his bodyguards were slain he turned to flight and rushed for shelter behind the walls of Larisa.
Being harassed by the enemy's peasants, Pyrrhus thought it wiser to get back to his battle line which had by now engaged the Macedonian phalanx. Due to the superiority in number and quality, the Epirotes finished off the Macedonians, before Nicanor the Elephant was able to bring any support.
Coming down from his hills, the Macedonian general realised that Gonatas' army was gone and the battle lost without remedy. He made a timid approach sending his peltasts in advance, but when these were annihilated, he decided that further bloodshed was useless and retreated into the Phtiothian hills.
Pyrrhus tried to follow him with his victorious army, but the astute general was able to elude him, using some hidden road to reach his king in Larisa.
The battle ended with a clear victory. The Macedonians had lost 650 men. The Epirotes had 220 casualties, but 40 men were saved by the surgeons.
53. An Uncomfortable Siege
At this point Pyrrhus had no choice but to start a siege of Larisa. Thanks to Nicanor's able move, Antigonus Gonatas could still count on a garrison of over 1200 men, while Pyrrhus had little more than 1.000 at his command.
After the victorious battle it was quite natural that the king was still confident. But when his spies reported that another Macedonian army of 2.000 men was waiting on the Boiotian border, he started to realise how uncomfortable his position in Thessaly was.
Unfortunately there was nothing he could do and so he asked his son Alexander in Ambracia to send at least some reinforcements and ordered his men to guard their back while preparing the siege works for the walls of Larisa.
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