marcus wrote:Well, Athenas Owl is making my case for me. Once Philip had built up his big, professional army, they needed to be kept in trim, and loyal. The thing about an army is that, if it isn't used, it goes off the boil; and as a large part of ancient armies' upkeep was spoils, they needed campaigns to produce spoils. Irrespective of whether Philip was rich, if he didn't keep the army up to scratch and happy, they could easily turn on him ... or just melt away, leaving Macedonia as weak as it had been at the start of his reign. Philip was too clever *not* to have understood this.
So…Philip II was “too clever” not to agree with
you? I’m happy to see, then, that my clarification can not have done any permanent damage to your self-confidence.
(For the record: I don't use smileys myself. But if I did, I'd insert one here).
Myself, I think you underestimate the fact that there was always great risk involved in campaigning, and that defeat was always a very realistic possibility. I don’t believe that Philip II would ever have risked everything he’d fought for, for decades, for the sole purpose of keeping his soldier in shape and "contented".
If you already have a wealthy and flourishing empire,
and personally don’t desire/need any more conquests, then the gain “contented soldiers” does not outweigh the risk of losing everything. Defeated soldiers, as Philip II found out, aren’t very contented either.
So what would Philip II’s soldiers have done, had he finally been satisfied with what he had? Well…what did Antipater’s soldiers do for ten years? Go mad? Run amok through Pella? Or was it, rather, practice, guard duty, training new recruits and, when needed (as when Sparta attacked) defend Macedonia and Macedonian interests?
On this topic, Marcus, you and I are just going to have to agree to disagree.
marcus wrote:I see that your reference to my previous answer being a historian's was not intended as a compliment. That's fine - I have a thick enough skin; but I also think that it's a bit much to say that "arguing like a historian" is being "artificial".
Don’t read too much into that, though. To me you seem like a reasonable, rational person. I just happen to disagree with you on this particular issue.
Phoebus wrote:I have to say I agree with Marcus on this matter. Historians and readers can sometimes apply hindsight 20/20 on a situation a bit too much, using context and knowledge unknown to the people of that time, but I don't feel this is the case here. Philip had to have known what the consequence of not paying his soldiers would be.
I think you must have misunderstood me. It was
I who said, in this thread, that money indeed must have been Philip II's top priority, being that he was broke. That this was a problem that could not have been put on hold. This is not where Marcus and I disagree.
What I don't believe is that Philip II, in a theoretical situation, where he no longer neither wanted nor needed further conquests,
still would have campaigned, and thus put everything he had at risk, for the sole purpose of keeping his soldiers in shape and “contented”.
Phoebus wrote:Even today's professional armies, of what we would term free states, which aren't ostensibly working for profit, let alone loot and spoils, would eventually break down without pay. I'm not talking about emergency measures, of course, but situations wherein life went on "as normal" for the rest of the citizenry, but not the soldiers themselves.
Indeed they would break down without pay. No disagreement there from me at all.