The phalanx, a body of infantry fighting in close order with pikes or thrusting spears, is one of the oldest formations in warfare. The word is Greek, meaning "roller", and the phalanx is associated closely with the Armies of Classical Greece and Alexander the Great. However, phalanxes were used 2000 years before, in the armies of the city-states of southern Mesopotamia, established around 3000 BC.
The "Vulture Stele" - named because it depicts the bodies of the vanquished being eaten by vultures, a common motif of the time - records a victory of King Eannatum of Lagesh between 2500 and 2400 BC. It depicts two types of infantry, the first clearly being a Phalanx. We cannot see whether the troops in this phalanx are wearing armour because they are hidden behind large, oblong shields stretching from shoulder to ankle, but they wear bronze helmets covering the head down to the neck, with noseguards, similar to the Corinthian style worn by Greek hoplites 2000 years later. The shields overlap into a wall, and with spears couched underarm, they present a dense thicket of bronze spearpoints, suggesting a reliance on mass and forward momentum. The sound-box of a lyre from Ur, dating from around the same time, depicts phalanx troops wearing helmets similar to those on the Vulture Stele, as well as what appear to be ankle-length, leather cloaks reinforced with bronze studs. They also carry two-handed pikes, possibly foreshortened for artistic license. The other type of infantry depicted on the Vulture Stele are unarmoured, except for helmets similar to the phalangites', and carry spears and round-bladed axes.
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