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Are you saying they would employ Roman tactics? To me your German example could support the theory that they wouldn't; why use a formation that had proved to be less effective than one from your own culture (ie sub-Roman, it was pretty much the same all over Europe)?
I don't think its the "chaos" I think it is part of the Martial Arts Traditon that is missed in the books on the interpretation of fighting styles 1380-1500/1500. Looking at Tolbers stuff he acknowledges the basic priciples of footwork and then uses them as the basic method (IMHO conforming to a more familiar post renaissance tradition).
According to an English guy called Oz, and (I think) Steve Hicks, the timing put forward for Silver would not only allow but suggest a half step with the lead leg before moving the rear. Oz used to teach in Bradford and this intrepretation brought attacks to the back of the head, its was what got me interested when I started looking at the Towton stuff.
However, to use this in a battlefield environment would require more space, and therfore I feel the lines were not the formation we see in medieval re-enactment in the UK.
Have you tried standing behind a man and hitting him on the occipital bone (where a pony tail is tied in the hair)?
If they were running away when hit I think you'd probably find a lot of skeletons with a foot missing.
... whether arrows will go through armour on footsoldiers, certainly the Brigandine at the royal armouries has what looks like minor damage from an arrow that has not completely penetrated.
... the COMBINED ARMS concept works!
The smallest tactical unit, the tagma, derived its striking power from its combined use of fire (from horse archers) and shock (from lancers), an innovation that no Byzantine adversary could match, being proficient in one or the other, but seldom both together. Well in advance of the rest of the medieval world, as the Strategikon reveals, the East Romans discovered that fire prepares the way for shock more through suppression than attrition and that the effectiveness of suppressive fire depends less on accuracy than on sheer volume and high trajectory. For when the enemy has to worry about avoiding the missiles raining down on him, his attention is diverted from what is happening directly ahead, and he becomes vulnerable to the shock of a charge.
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