what do you think the average spartan could do in terms of killing (the historical warrior not the space one)
seriously lighten up if some people want to believe that Spartans were Uber warriors let them. this is obviously not an accurate historical poll.Realitycrash said:That Spartans are some incredibly killingmachines are just fiction and myth. They were highly disciplined and had a working army. They were not much better than the average greek warrior.
Edit: And oh, since they fought in the Phalanx-formation, when facing another Phalanx, casualties inflicted on both sides were minimal. It was a stamina and moral thing. You broke your enemy and they ran, you didn't slaughter them en masse.
I let people believe whatever they want, after they have been provided with the facts.warhammerfrog said:seriously lighten up if some people want to believe that Spartans were Uber warriors let them. this is obviously not an accurate historical poll.Realitycrash said:That Spartans are some incredibly killingmachines are just fiction and myth. They were highly disciplined and had a working army. They were not much better than the average greek warrior.
Edit: And oh, since they fought in the Phalanx-formation, when facing another Phalanx, casualties inflicted on both sides were minimal. It was a stamina and moral thing. You broke your enemy and they ran, you didn't slaughter them en masse.
Correct, which is why Hetairoi were so damn effective. Hoplite phalanxes just hold people in one place, when Greek commanders found out you could use cavalry charges to ridiculous effectiveness on the flanks of an already occupied enemy force, it revolutionized Greek warfare.Realitycrash said:Edit: And oh, since they fought in the Phalanx-formation, when facing another Phalanx, casualties inflicted on both sides were minimal. It was a stamina and moral thing. You broke your enemy and they ran, you didn't slaughter them en masse.
Thebans, yes. Athenians as well.this isnt my name said:Didnt some other Greeks kick thier ass, began with a T or something.
So yeah depends who they fight.
True, and size that up against the words of a famous Greek poet (Archilochus) on the matter of shields.darth.pixie said:They couldn't lose their shields in combat as that would have been considered cowardly (tossed shield at enemy and ran).
And yet, it's sad that things like "valor" and "glory" are still alive and kicking in modern day warfare.Vryyk said:True, and size that up against the words of a famous Greek poet (Archilochus) on the matter of shields.darth.pixie said:They couldn't lose their shields in combat as that would have been considered cowardly (tossed shield at enemy and ran).
"And by a prudent flight and cunning save A life which valour could not, from the grave. A better buckler I can soon regain, But who can get another life again?"
Actually I'd say valor and glory are pretty important concepts, it gets people to fill the ranks and die for their country. We'll always need people to do that, and if they don't have some greater virtue to aspire to, you'll have a terrible army on your hands. Which is why levies don't work very well.Realitycrash said:And yet, it's sad that things like "valor" and "glory" are still alive and kicking in modern day warfare.Vryyk said:True, and size that up against the words of a famous Greek poet (Archilochus) on the matter of shields.darth.pixie said:They couldn't lose their shields in combat as that would have been considered cowardly (tossed shield at enemy and ran).
"And by a prudent flight and cunning save A life which valour could not, from the grave. A better buckler I can soon regain, But who can get another life again?"
Actually, in Sparta, the upper-class WERE the soldiers.Casimir_Effect said:Sometimes they would be the elite, other times the army would be infested by nobles and the upper classes who wanted to play at being soldier.
You can inspire people to die for your country by appealing to different emotions and concepts. I'm talking about the "I'm big, manly, killing is awesome and I take shit from noone" part of valor. Sorry, guess I should have made that clear.Vryyk said:Actually I'd say valor and glory are pretty important concepts, it gets people to fill the ranks and die for their country. We'll always need people to do that, and if they don't have some greater virtue to aspire to, you'll have a terrible army on your hands. Which is why levies don't work very well.Realitycrash said:And yet, it's sad that things like "valor" and "glory" are still alive and kicking in modern day warfare.Vryyk said:True, and size that up against the words of a famous Greek poet (Archilochus) on the matter of shields.darth.pixie said:They couldn't lose their shields in combat as that would have been considered cowardly (tossed shield at enemy and ran).
"And by a prudent flight and cunning save A life which valour could not, from the grave. A better buckler I can soon regain, But who can get another life again?"