RayMcCullough wrote:but does this mean that the ones that focused on group cohesion didn't train for and have individual skills. Folks seem to imply they didn't. I don't see how anyone in group combat can be very helpful if they have not develped personal skills 1st.
There is a variety of skills involved that can be separated in three categories:
- Useful just for group combat (e.g. hold a formation)
- Useful just for one-on-one combat (I don't have a clear example in mind, but I guess some of the most refined skills of timing, distance management, tactile feeling belong to that one. Prolonged ground combat could be another example)
- Useful for both (general fitness, basic weapon use)
It makes sense to me that in a culture that values victory as individual (the Japanese did that for example in the early periods, perhaps Celts also), you'd train in the last two categories, but not much in the first one. In a culture that values victory as a group (Greeks and Roman soldiers for example) you could neglect point 2. Of course as Stacy points out it's never complete negligence but more a matter of emphasis...
It's not easy to make analogies with the military today, because skills in the second category are probably more limited. But they don't train everyone to be a sniper either...
Does anyone know of Roman sources that talk about indivual skills of the soldiers?
For starters you could look at
Vegetius (see a
translation here).
Regards,