The inconclusive Battle of Singara (Sinjar, in …

Years: 340 - 351

The inconclusive Battle of Singara (Sinjar, in Iraq) in which the Roman emperor Constantius II is at first successful, capturing the Persian camp, only to be driven out by a surprise night attack after Shapur II had rallied his troops (344-or 348?), is the most renowned of the nine major battles that are apparently fought during this period between the Sassanid and Roman Empires.

Gibbon asserts that Shapur II invariably defeated Constantius, but there is reason to believe that the honors were fairly evenly shared between the two capable commanders. (Since Singara is on the Persian side of the Mesopotamian frontier, this alone may suggest that the Romans had not seriously lost ground in the war up to that time.)

The most notable feature of this war is the consistently successful defense of the Roman fortress of Nisibis in Mesopotamia.

Shapur besieges the fortress three times (337, 344? and 349) and is repulsed each time by Roman general Lucilianus.

Although often victorious in battles, Shapur has made scarcely any progress.

He is attacked at the same time in the East by Scythian Massagetae and other Central Asian tribes.

In order to pay attention to the East, he has to break off the war with the Romans in 350 and arrange a hasty truce.

Related Events

Filter results