(303–309 CE) of the
Sasanian Empire, shown hunting a lion using the Parthian shot The
Parthians used the tactic to great effect in their victory over the
Roman general
Crassus in the
Battle of Carrhae (53 BCE). After them and their successors, the
Sasanians, the Parthian shot was characteristic of
most nomads of the
Eurasian Steppe, such as the
Scythians,
Xiongnu,
Huns,
Turks,
Magyars (Hungarians),
Koreans, and
Mongols, but was not limited to them, having also been used by the
Urartians and the
Comanche. A tactic similar to the Parthian shot was attributed to the
Phoenicians from
Sidon by
Silius Italicus. In the
medieval period, the Parthian shot was used by the Hungarians in their victory in
Battle of Lechfeld (910 CE) against the combined forces of
East Francia and
Swabia; by the
Seljuk Turks under
Alp Arslan at the
Battle of Manzikert (1071 CE) against the
Byzantine Empire; by the
Ghurid Empire under
Muhammad of Ghor at the
Second Battle of Tarain (1192 CE) against
war elephants, heavy cavalry, and infantry from the
Rajput confederacy; by the Mongolian general
Subutai at the
Battle of Legnica (1241 CE) against the
Polish; and later by the
Afsharid Empire at the
Battle of Karnal (1739 CE) against the
Mughal Empire. battle scene painting ==As metaphor==