Markle wrote:The accounts of the campaigns of Alexander suggest that he and his soldiers were trained in the use of various weapons and that the arms which they deployed depended solely on the occasion. The principal question asked by Alexander when he considered how his troops should be armed was what weapons and armor would be most effective in winning the particular military objective.
Yes but there were clearly specialists in different skills -- wielding a sarissa and archery, for instance, are completely different and the way to become most skilled at one or the other would be to concentrate on it for a significant amount of one's training and career. So we have units designated by what arms they bear: the phalanx with its sarissas, the archers, the light-armed units, the hypaspists, etc.
I'm sure what happened was a happy medium between total specialization, i.e. every man had only one weapons skill -- and total generalization i.e. every man trained in all weapons equally. So each man had some versatility -- enough to allow Alexander to change their roles for tactical reasons, as you're saying -- but not total versatility. (And sometimes they
all wielded shovels and wheelbarrows... e.g. Tyre.) I'm speculating here but I'm going to posit that every man trained in how to use a sword, shield and 7-8 foot spear, because these were the standard weapons. Only some (and I think only the bigger) men would train to wield the sarissa, only some (those whose families could afford horses) would learn cavalry fighting, and so on.
Amyntoros wrote:Interesting concept, but one which brings up the issue of 'honor" and positions in the battle array and front line being afforded according to bravery and achievement, something very important to the Macedonians. We see evidence of this after the trial of Philotas when, as J.E. Lendon;
Soldiers and Ghosts (Page 125)explains: "A penal unit of discontented Macedonians that Alexander formed was called the atakton, the 'out-of-the-line' unit, their punishment being to be taken out of their place in the Macedonian array and so to lose the status that place implied. The tradition is that, inflamed by the insult, they fought with exceptional bravery." To me the evidence also suggests that those in the very front of the line were the most brave and experienced (as opposed to the Roman way) and it's hard to imagine them armed chiefly for defensive purposes. Once the two armies were engaged, wouldn't this mean they would be sandwiched between the front lines with only a sword as a weapon? I suspect we could end up with a whole separate debate on this subject.
Probably, and it would be an interesting one, though possibly not to be settled without taking up arms... ahhh, I mean, actually trying it out with a huge bunch of people. I'm thinking of what Robin Lane Fox said about Gaugamela and how the phalanx got out of the way of the chariots, after he participated in the re-enactment for the movie: "That must be how they did it!"
Anyway, both forms of phalanx were armed both for offense and defense, simultaneously. The big difference would be that the sarissa phalanx used its sarissas for defense as well as offence -- just by holding off enemies on those five rows of points -- whereas the classical hoplites used spear for offense and shield for defense. And, to be fair, a shield can be used offensively, in a limited way, as well... especially if the objective is to take ground by forcing the enemy line back.
When I think about this idea of sandwiching you're talking about, that would be why the best warriors would be in the front line -- they were the best able to carve their way into the enemy unit, breaking it up, rather than end up as sardines, unable to move
Markle wrote:I would also maintain that sarissae would not have been carried by the foot companions on expeditions involving fast and long marches during which skirmishes and battles might occur in unexpected places, often on rugged terrain. Arrian (2.5.6) reports that Alexander took three brigades of the Macedonian infantry, all the archers, and the Agrianes and marched against the Cilicians who were occupying the mountains. If these three brigades of foot soldiers had been armed with sarissae, they might have been able to fight with advantage in the valleys between mountains. On the other hand, if they had carried swords, spears, and javelins, they would have been serviceable throughout the mission. Alexander would not have wanted so many infantry merely to sit down and wait while the Agrianes and archers fought on the slopes. Moreover, armed with sarissae they would have had difficulty in defending themselves if attacked on rugged ground.
He makes a lot of sense here... perchance does he think as I do, that everyone got the training in sword, spear and shield, but then specialized as preferred, or suitable for their build or wealth?
Amyntoros wrote:Ah, but any cavalryman had to be able to afford at least one horse, along with its /their upkeep, so I think an extra sword would be a comparatively minor expense. The foot soldiers may have had little money to begin with, but they were allowed to loot which would have enabled them to purchase what they needed, plus I believe they could have taken arms captured from the enemy. All those dead Persians must have afforded the Macedonians plenty of opportunity to acquire weapons! If, on the other hand, all captured weapons were surrendered to Alexander he would have been able to equip his forces with what they needed. There was that "armory" in his tent, after all.
I'd never argue that Alexander couldn't have afforded as many swords as he pleased... but I think you're playing down the importance of preference. I'm basing this on what I know of sword ownership throughout history... generally warriors have settled on a favourite one. Enough that they even sometimes got names, most famous of which would be Arthur's Excalibur. A warrior could form a kind of a bond with a sword... as the samurai when they talk about the sword being their soul. You don't hear that about spears, relatively disposable as they were. Yes, there is something not quite rational here, but warriors are humans. What if Makedonian soldiers weren't interested in picking up weapons from the Persian dead because they were different from what they were used to? (There would have been a tradition of having a single sword dating from a less prosperous time, not all that far back in Makedonian history.)
I'd also still argue that when a sword breaking could mean the difference between life and death, a warrior was better off spending his
drachmai on one sword of max quality he could afford rather than two swords of half-max quality. The really rich, of course, could afford multiple swords of the best quality.
Found it...! Thanks to someone on the Roman Army Talk thread referenced in the "Hey Philip fans" thread here. That accounting of what Alexander donned before Gaugamela... it's in Plutarch.
When he had said this, he put on his helmet, having the rest of his arms on before he came out of his tent, which were a coat of the Sicilian make, girt close about him, and over that a breast-piece of thickly quilted linen, which was taken among other booty at the battle of Issus. The helmet, which was made by Theophilus, though of iron, was so well wrought and polished that it was as bright as the most refined silver. To this was fitted a gorget of the same metal, set with precious stones. His sword, which was the weapon he most used in fight, was given him by the King of the Citieans, and was of an admirable temper and lightness. The belt which he also wore in all engagements was of much richer workmanship than the rest of his armour. It was a work of the ancient Helicon, and had been presented to him by the Rhodians, as a mark of their respect to him.
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Let's see if my Greek is good enough to find the line about the sword in Greek... thanks for that website, it's terrific -- my friend who's studying Greek likes it too -- and that's where I got this.
τὸ δὲ κράνος ἦν μὲν σιδηροῦν, ἔστιλβε δ’ ὥσπερ ἄργυρος καθαρός, ἔργον Θεοφίλου· συνήρμοστο δ’ αὐτῷ περιτραχήλιον ὁμοίως σιδηροῦν, λιθοκόλλητον· ***μάχαιραν*** δὲ θαυμαστὴν βαφῇ καὶ κουφότητι, δωρησαμένου τοῦ Κιτιέων βασιλέως, {ἣν} εἶχεν, ἠσκημένος τὰ πολλὰ χρῆσθαι μαχαίρᾳ παρὰ τὰς μάχας.
It took some doing because my Greek isn't great, but it's the word between the asterisks -- in English variously spelled as machaira, makhaira, machaera.
Wiki:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Makhaira
I'll quote in full because it answers even more questions than I thought it would.
Makhaira (μάχαιρα, also transliterated machaira or machaera; an Ancient Greek word, <PIE *magh-, "to fight") is a term used by modern scholars to describe a type of ancient bladed weapon, generally a large knife with a slight backwards curve. In period texts, μάχαιρα has a variety of meanings, and can refer to virtually any knife or sword, even a surgeon's scalpel, but in a martial context it frequently does seem to refer to a type of one-edged, curved sword.[1] Modern scholars distinguish the makhaira from the kopis (an ancient term of similar meaning) based on the direction of the blade curvature.[2]
These weapons were of various sizes and shapes, being regional, and not exclusively Greek. Greek art shows the Lacedaemonian and Persian armies employing curved weapons, but Persian records show that their primary infantry sword was straight, similar to the Greek xiphos (cf. acinaces).
While Xenophon states that xiphos was more conventional among Greek armies of his time, he recommended the makhaira for cavalry, "μάχαιράν μεν μάλλον ἡ ξίφος ἐπαίνουμεν" (Xenophon, 12:11). His reasoning concurs with the general practice of arming cavalry with curved swords through the ages. Greek art along with Xenophon's further commentary suggests that the sword he intended for the cavalry was wider than the more modern sabre; more akin to the falchion.
The Koine of the New Testament uses the word makhaira to refer to a sword generically, not making any particular distinction between native blades and the gladius of the Roman soldier. This ambiguity appears to have contributed to the apocryphal malchus, a supposedly short curved sword used by Peter to cut off the ear of a slave named Malchus during the arrest of Jesus. While such a weapon clearly is a makhaira by ancient definition, the imprecise nature of the word as used in the New Testament cannot provide any conclusive answer.
Makhaira entered classical Latin as machaera, "a sword". In modern Greek, μαχαιρι means "knife."
So here Alexander's carrying a curved sword but not a
kopis... whereas Arrian I believe had him carrying a
xiphos at every mention... which would suggest he did indeed use two swords... unless Plutarch was using the word generically. (Or -- usual caution -- one or both authors were wrong.)
And we know where the idea of ancient Greek cavalry carrying a curved blade --
machaira if not
kopis -- comes from: Xenophon's recommending it. Alexander would have read him, surely... perhaps he was following his advice. This was Gaugamela, for him a cavalry engagement.
But that doesn't mean everyone did... if a cavalryman preferred a straight sword, and had only one, that'd probably be what he used, which would explain the artwork showing straight-bladed cavalrymen.
So much uncertainty. But it's all interesting...
Hope you've straightened out your computer troubles (as I seem finally to have straightened out mine)!
Warmly,
Karen