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| Battle of Karkar | |
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| Location: | Northern Syria |
| Date: | 853 BC |
| First Combatant | Assyria |
| Led by | Shalmaneser III |
| Forces | Assyrian records claim 100,000 troops; modern scholars believe Assyrian forces were smaller |
| Second Combatant | An alliance of 12 kings |
| Led by | Hadadezer, king of Damascus |
| Forces | 60,000 men, 2450 chariots, 1900 horsemen, and 10,000 camel riders |
The Battle of Karkar (or Qarqar) was fought in 853 BC when the army of Assyria, led by king Shalmaneser III, encountered an allied army of 12 kings led by Hadadezer of Damascus. This battle is noteable for having the largst number of combatants to that time.
According to the inscription of Shalmaneser which he later erected, he had started his annual campaign, leaving Nineveh on the 14th day of Aiaru. He crossed both the Tigris and Euphrates without incident, receiving the submission and tribute of several cities along the way, including that of Aleppo. Once past Aleppo, he encountered his first resistence from troops of Iruleni, king of Hamath, whom he defeated; in retribution, he plundered both the palaces and the cities of Iruleni's kingdom. Continuing his march after having sacked Karkar, he encountered the allied forces near the Orontes River.
Shalmaneser's inscription describes the forces of his opponent Hadadezer in considerable detail as follows:
Shalmaneser boasts that his troops inflicted 14,000 casualties upon the allied army, capturing countless chariots and horses, describing the damage he inflicted on his opponents in savage detail. However, the inscriptions of kings from this period never acknowledge defeats, and sometimes claim victories those won by ancestors or predecessors. If Shalmaneser had won a clear victory at Karkar, it did not immediately enable further Assyrian conquests in Syria. Assyrian records make it clear that he campaigned in the region several more times in the following decade, engaging Hadad-ezer six times, who was supported by Iruleni of Hamath at least twice. Shalmaneser's opponents held on to their thrones after this battle: Hadad-ezer was king of Damascus until at least 841 BC, while Ahab was king of Israel until around 850 BC.