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Joseph French wrote:In period movies and in books, the concept of calvary charges or infantry charges clashing, sometimes under cover of arrow and artillery barrages can often be seen. However, the unit formations, if they existed to begin with, quickly degrade into individuals fighting individuals instead of units fighting units. I cannot accept this as the truth.
Moreover, is essentially defeated all calvary and chariot charges to the front because horses are unwilling to charge into a wall of sharp sticks.
What I have not read, or read perhaps only in vague description, is Medieval and Renaissance period unit formations. The above summary of a phalanx is a more detailed unit formation discussion than any I have read of the Middle Ages and Renaissance.
Thus, the questions I pose are what were some of the standard unit formations used in battle throughout the Middle Ages and into the Renaissance, why were those strategies effective for the period (versus what came before and after),
and are their any modern scholars actively seeking to incorporate the practice of unit based warfare in their studies and research of Medieval and Renaissance martial arts?
s_taillebois wrote:Basically the mobility of these armies was not dictated by the cavalry (which had its own equipage) but more by such as the foot soldiers, siege engines and etc. Fast mobility was often limited to chevelches or such as the Viking operations with the longboats.
Joseph French wrote:What great insight and information thus far. I had read of the pike wall utilized by units employing matchlock firearms. It seems to me, based on the information posted, this pike wall was a descendant of the older battlefield formations of infantry protecting their ranged weapons from cavalry and infantry assaults. Am I to understand that in these time periods the missile weapons were relied upon for producing the most casualties (not unlike their modern equivalents)?
I suppose it only makes sense with the range and power available with long bows and cross bows.
In Classical period warfare, armies could not could not rely as heavily on missiles to do the majority of the killing
as the powerful bows for the single archer had not yet been developed,
and cavalry did not have stirrups by which to steady themselves thus negating the widespread use of mounted archers.
So it also appears by the posted information that a form of the shield walls of the Greeks and Romans continued on into the Medieval and Renaissance periods.
What characterized the techniques of close combat within the shields walls of these time periods?
Any further information on unit sizes among the infantry? That is, did they fight as smaller more mobile units like the Roman centuries or as a larger army like the Greek phalanx?
Joseph French wrote:In the Classical period, one obvious example of unit formations would be the phalanx. As many know, the phalanx was essentially a wall of men armed with shield and spear several rows deep that would engage the enemy with spear thrusts as a moving wall by interlocking their shields. This was particularly effective because it enabled individual soldiers to multiply their effectiveness against an enemy by fighting as a unit. Moreover, is essentially defeated all calvary and chariot charges to the front because horses are unwilling to charge into a wall of sharp sticks.
Benjamin Parker wrote:Chariots are not used for charging (egyptian ones anyway) because
A: The horses were tiny
B: The shock of a charge would damage the chariot to badly
A chariot was used to provide mobile missile support and in greece they were used to ferry officers around not fighting
And Keegan states that horses wont charge spear formation bacause they didn't at Waterloo so therefore horses of earlier times didn't either
And What about about Ceresole, Ravenna, Maragnio, Seminaria and Dreux where the gendarmes charged pike squares frontally and went right through (And the pikes wern't shaken before impact)
also take a look at Kilchusny where the Husaria charged through a fence and the pikemen multiple times and heres a list of
6 battles (Kircholm 1605, Kłuszyn 1610, Smoleńsk 1633, Mohylew 1655, Połonka 1660, Basia 1660), where hussars defeated pikemen.
As for formations the gendarmes charged in an En Haye (Line) it was usually two ranks deep or one (although three ranks was common as well) the bring to bear the maximium amount of lances of the enemy
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