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Tim Ingersoll wrote:I have to ask, if they did not wear their Armor how did it get to the field of Battle?
Tim
s_taillebois wrote:Well Mike Loades (the BBC presenter) seemed to indicate the longbow archers who could afford (or steal, capture) riding stock served as a form of scouts, vedettes or flankers. Some archers may have been high status (having a horse) but it seems their kit was quite minimal. Bow, quiver, maul or a war hammer, dagger or falchion, food and some manner of flexible armour.
Tom Reynolds wrote:Lately I've been reading Stephen Dando Collins' book on Julius Caesar's 10th legion. The specific place names escape me at the moment (I can find them if anyone is interested), but I remember reading that Caesar's normal order of marching was to have each legion immediately followed by it's own baggage train. He changed that on one particular march, putting all the legions together, because he got information on a potential ambush. Which did in fact happen, and he was able to achieve a great victory because his legions were not separated by baggage trains. If I remember correctly, the book said an individual legion on the march took up something like two miles of road.
Interesting question. Thanks!
Keith Culbertson wrote:great thread everyone, thank you for reminding me of some interesting facts I have seen, but may have let slip away over the years---
back to stacy's hiking experience and the soreness after, it shows a need to balance between intense, explosive training and endurance training; one way I get extra miles in is to read while walking for hours at a time, or more likely nowadays, walking and lifting things alternately at work
no doubt, mass movement was a very strategic and also tactical skill, just as individual movement is key to actual fighting as we have seen stressed in recent articles
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