The Assyrians have long been known as a ruthless and barbaric people of the ancient civilizations. While this may be true in some instances, it is not an entirely accurate view of the Empire of Assyria. The Assyrians took their warfare seriously; in fact they studied war techniques like a science. The Assyrians even had special schools set up to teach sapping (military demolition of walls etc.) and mining city walls. The Assyrians were the innovators of war in their time.
The Assyrian army was feared for many reasons one including the use of iron in their weapons. The Assyrians were the first to use iron in spears, swords, shields and armor. They even tipped their battering rams for extra effectiveness. When the Assyrians first attacked their enemies with these awesome novelties of war, it caused almost as profound a reaction as the atom bomb has in our time. Against iron spears and swords, bronze shields were useless. The Assyrians had the most advanced weapons of their time. Their arrows were tipped in iron, the strongest metal of the time. Their bowmen were also among the worlds finest. They had heavy chariots drawn by two horses and had a crew of two, the driver and an archer. Later, a third man was added to protect the rear and a spare horse was hitched at the rear. They introduced cavalry and an accurate sling and developed siege craft with siege towers, battering rams and hand propelled vehicles with armor protection (Za Khan). The primary weapon of the infantry was the bow. It was used in groups or individually; a shield bearer protected the bowman. The bow had a range of over two hundred and fifty meters. A quiver held fifty arrows and a captain had one hundred shield bowmen and shield bearers under his command, which produced formidable firepower. Other weapons used by the infantry wear the spear, the javelin, slings and swords.
The cavalry employed horses ridden bareback by two horsemen. One rider held the reins while the other rider, with a shield on his back, used a bow or a lance. Because cavalry could be used on uneven ground, it started replacing the chariot around six hundred B.C.
The army also had special technical units. They accompanied the army and had chariots for the battle field and wagons for transporting necessary equipment which would include not only the obvious items of rations and tents but also such specialists types of equipment such as siege engines and rams. When roads had to be cut, a task force of men equipped with bronze, iron or copper picks and axes would hack a path for the army to pass through. Not even a river could stop the well-equipped Assyrians. If the river could not be crossed on foot, they would construct boats or bridges to cross the river with. The bridges were most commonly boat bridges, bridges formed by tying a number of boats together across the river with planks on top to make a footway or even a road for the chariots to pass over. Other specialists in lesser numbers included scribes for recording booty and other details of the armies campaign.
With the Assyrian iron weapons, their army became a fighting machine. the cavalry and charioteers attacked, they wore iron helmets and breast plates, they carried iron spears and swords. they battered down gates with thick iron-tipped tree trunks sometimes they tunneled under the walls or climbed over with ladders!
The hitties and Assyrians used iron weapons and chariots in battle.
The hitties and Assyrians used iron weapons and chariots in battle.
Art
Wooden spears
The Hittites were successful for their use of iron weapons and chariots. The Assyrians, later, used these same tools.
SURROUNDING THEM ! they came from every direction so there was no escaping .
Allied with the Medes, they defeated the Assyrians at the battle of Nineveh.
It maintained control by having governor or native king from that land
The Chaldeans rebelled against the Assyrians.
assyrian caravans were in 1600 B.C. and they were used by Assyrians
The Chaldeans rebelled against the Assyrians.
No he was never captured by the Assyrians