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View Full Version : What do you think Pyrrhos would have done if he won the battle at Argos?



Unintended BM
04-16-2010, 01:53
This may be a stupid question, but if Pyrrhos had beaten everyone at Argos and went on to take over Greece and Macedon, what would he have gone for next? Would he have gone back to Taras and Italy, back to Sicily, or would he have done something else? Eperios is one of my favorite campaigns to play, so I'm just kind of wondering if people knew what Pyrrhos was planning to do next. If I get some interesting answers, it would probably influence my current game with Eperios.

satalexton
04-16-2010, 02:46
That would be a bit of a paradox because Pyrrohos was a rather inconsistent person, starting new things but never finishing them. For him to actually finishing something properly and take over Ellas, while possible given his superb abilities, is something he is very unlikely to do.

Perhaps he would, if he survived the roof tiles, have gotten a minor concussion and somehow learn that he must finish wt he started. He may take Barbaropolis, then go teach the Karchedoi a lesson, then emulate Alexandros.......the possibilities are endless with brains like his!

Mediolanicus
04-16-2010, 02:50
You could always read my AAR... :yes:

It is the history of a Pyrrhos that was never near Argos.

Lvcretivs
04-16-2010, 02:51
...the perfectly illustrating quote:
'Pyrrhus was away entertaining one hope after another, and since he made one success but the starting point for a new one, while he was determined to make good each disaster by a fresh undertaking, he suffered neither defeat nor victory to put a limit to his troubling himself and troubling others.' Plutarch, Life of Pyrrhus 30,2 (http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Plutarch/Lives/Pyrrhus*.html)

Seriously, any of satalexon's scenarios would be reasonably possible - but I strongly doubt that Pyrrhos - by 272BC historically without a really solid base of operations in the Magna Graecia (reduced to weakly garrisoned Taras) and real political legitimation/pretext ('military assistance against the romans'...), would have set out to attempt a second 'Italian adventure' that early...

Teucer
04-16-2010, 03:16
Even with more of Hellas behind him, would Pyrrhos have really had the manpower to get as far north in Italy as Rome?

I wonder how long the Samnites and other south Italian peoples would remain on his side once it became clear he intended to stay on the peninsula for good...

Lvcretivs
04-16-2010, 03:41
...most probably not - think of extremely bloody battles with exceedingly high casualty figures (eg. Beneventum ~50%!) quickly reducing the numbers of his irreplaceable veteran native/mercenary phalangitai, forcing Pyrrhos to depend on allied italiote/samnite/lucanian contingents,... while the Romans would have probably raised legion after legion...

satalexton
04-16-2010, 03:55
The amount of 'lings Barbaropolis can pump out isn't unlimited. I'm pretty certain that their manpower, resources and territories were no where near the levels of the 2nd Punic War before Cannae.

Lvcretivs
04-16-2010, 04:05
...if the numbers of these census tables (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_census#Lustrum) are right, available Roman manpower before the Pyrrhic War(280-275) 276BC (271,224)/265 BC (292,234) wasn't much different from 234BC (270,713),...but this thread is rapidly derailing...

satalexton
04-16-2010, 04:38
does that include their Italian slave states?

Cute Wolf
04-16-2010, 10:15
Scenario 1:
1) Survived the brain damage in Argos. Pyrrhos rise from the floor, throw the roof back to that old lady while saying "SHUT THE :daisy: UP!", killing that old lady, and his troopers get another new spirit, and totally exterminate Argos. Leaving pyramid of skulls behind.
2) He immediately go to Pella afterwards, storm the city again, and made himself Basileos of Makedonia, while saying "SHUT THE :daisy: UP YOU IDIOT FYROM! FOR I WAS THE BASILEOS TON BASILEON OF MAKEDONIA!!!" - he actually suffer some minor brain injury...
3) He then giong back to Ambrakia... learning from his previous wrongs, he force every illyrians to grab a mace, and someold armour, and shipping them back to Italia... when the romans see about this and set their troops to intercept them in south italy, he just take another way by sea, and take Arretium Instead... and made them level 4 Govt... so the Italians will be Happy
4) "SHUT THE :daisy: UP YOU ROMAIOI BARBAROI!!!" and he then storm barbaropolis... err... Rome, and exterminate them. leving pile of skulls...
5) He then live happily ever after

Scenario 2
1) he immediatly back to Epeirotes, work for economic growth, and made peace with everyone...
2) and e gives back his makedonian Holdings, and focus on taming Illyrian and Getai tribes instead...
3) he goes as far as Sweboz lands....
4) and he then said.. "oh thanks god... this is enough..."
5) and he lives happily ever after...

:clown:

SwissBarbar
04-16-2010, 10:33
Scenario III: Suffers great brain damage, visits the EB-Forum and names himself Cute Wolf (allegory to the dog on his shield) :tongue3:

Cute Wolf
04-16-2010, 10:40
Scenario III: Suffers great brain damage, visits the EB-Forum and names himself Cute Wolf (allegory to the dog on his shield) :tongue3:

AArrggghhhh... you blow my cover!!!!! :clown:
now all of you should know, that epeirote's dog logo are actually the cute one!!!

EDIT : I give you a balloon, :balloon: as your joke made my day!!!

SwissBarbar
04-16-2010, 13:00
Thx mate ;-)

Subotan
04-16-2010, 13:46
"What if" questions are bad history.

Bucefalo
04-16-2010, 13:48
As have been said, Pyrrhos is well-known for starting things and not finishing anything. At first it seemed like he wanted to focus on Italy (he rejected the offer of the throne of the macedonians) and his campaigns in Sicily seems to indicate he wanted to emulate Alexander somehow, protecting the greeks of italy agaisnt the "barbarians" of the west. Obviously that meant to carve his own hellenic kingdom there.

After the failure of his campaigns in italy, i don´t think he had any idea of coming back to try again. Pyrrhos then accepted the offer of invading Sparta, and putting there his puppet king. Imho this shows that Pyrrhos had shifted his interests, and was now trying to dominate the other states of greece and expand his dominion in the mainland.

In my opinion, if Pyrrhos had won at Argos he would have probably kept trying to gain control directly or indirectly over the other states in greece, possibly claim the throne of makedonia if that would benefit his cause. Anyhow it is hard to say, because as have been said Pyrrhos is known for not taking well defeats and changing his mind as soon as the plans did not go well. If he had won at Argos, he may have been encouraged to keep campaigning in greece. If he had lost, but survived, he may have been discouraged by his defeats at Sparta and Argos, and decided to do something else, perhaps go back to Italy again? I doubt so, but we will never know.

Imho it is a pity that such a great military mind did not achieve any long-term sucesses, unlike Alexander. But then Alexander did not suffer any defeat, if he did he may have stopped and changed his plans for something different. I think that is what happened to Pyrrhos, his defeats made him unable to stick with his plans and probably abort them too quickly, where it may not have been truly a lost cause and only required more perseverance.



"What if" questions are bad history.

Assuming history had to happen as it did is even worse history.

SwissBarbar
04-16-2010, 14:42
"What if" questions are bad history.

No one's forced to read this thread. Me, I like these "what if" discussions.

Lvcretivs
04-16-2010, 15:03
"What if" questions are bad history.... providing clichéd sensationalist 'alternate history' scenarios without a solid factual backdrop of well-done historical research and an healthy dose of skepticism - that's really 'bad history'. I understand your point - ideologically loaded historical revisionism, ... - but 'alternate history' can be a quite entertaining intellectual exercise, if you keep in mind that
we will never know what would have really happened - that any 'alternate history' scenario is a more or less well informed speculation, which cannot mirror the sheer complexity of real history and should not be taken too seriously.

Subotan
04-16-2010, 23:11
No one's forced to read this thread. Me, I like these "what if" discussions.
Meh. That's just my opinion.

... providing clichéd sensationalist 'alternate history' scenarios without a solid factual backdrop of well-done historical research and an healthy dose of skepticism - that's really 'bad history'. I understand your point - ideologically loaded historical revisionism, ... - but 'alternate history' can be a quite entertaining intellectual exercise, if you keep in mind that what would have really happened - that any 'alternate history' scenario is a more or less well informed speculation, which cannot mirror the sheer complexity of real history and should not be taken too seriously.
Of course, they are important for making computer games and films and the like. I wouldn't play historical Strategy games if I didn't find it entertaining. But it's obviously not proper history.

Apázlinemjó
04-16-2010, 23:35
Pyrrhos had an EPIC FAIL death, why would you ruin that?

Lvcretivs
04-17-2010, 00:35
But it's obviously not proper history....guess why I put 'alternate history' in quotation marks - of course it's not proper history, and should never be mistaken for such. It's a 'speculative fiction' devised to entertain, no serious academic historian would - and should ever - consider to bother with - except for quick laughs - and his own amusement (EB!) ;)

jirisys
04-17-2010, 01:15
He goes to taras again and moves to rhegion, tries to capture it, but he is thrown of his horse when noticing that the roman army had the idea first (but arrived later) and are behind them, and the rebel army is standing in the front and he gets sandwiched, and dies because a rebel found a tile in his pockets and threw it to his head :clown: and then a principes kills him, the romans take rhegion and negotiate Taras for phyrros' head and then ambrakia for his body, then (the city in dalmatia) for his limbs, then (any other phyrric city) for his fingers and nails:clown:, and the romans start an early blitz and conquer all the peloponesos and thrace:clown:, and by 87 BCE they control the whole world (excluding america... and the land of the Bartix) and no emperor, since there was no need for it, and we live happily ever after:clown:

~Jirisys (so what "bartix" and what faction replaces armenia go then?!!:clown:)

Marcus Darkstar
04-18-2010, 07:58
He goes to taras again and moves to rhegion, tries to capture it, but he is thrown of his horse when noticing that the roman army had the idea first (but arrived later) and are behind them, and the rebel army is standing in the front and he gets sandwiched, and dies because a rebel found a tile in his pockets and threw it to his head :clown: and then a principes kills him, the romans take rhegion and negotiate Taras for phyrros' head and then ambrakia for his body, then (the city in dalmatia) for his limbs, then (any other phyrric city) for his fingers and nails:clown:, and the romans start an early blitz and conquer all the peloponesos and thrace:clown:, and by 87 BCE they control the whole world (excluding america... and the land of the Bartix) and no emperor, since there was no need for it, and we live happily ever after:clown:

~Jirisys (so what "bartix" and what faction replaces armenia go then?!!:clown:)

How Ghoulish of the Romans!

Duguntz
04-18-2010, 16:06
Meh. That's just my opinion.



Opinions are like bacteries, everybody have, but it's better to keep them for ourself

Unintended BM
04-18-2010, 16:20
How does it make any sense to call "What if" questions bad history on an EB board? The whole game is a what if question. When I play as Carthage, I'm not going to expand historically like they did and then stop and wait to be conquered by the Romans, I'm going to play as if Carthage won out against Rome, creating my own alternate history. I just don't understand how making that statement on this forum makes any sense. If I was in some thread where people were researching Pyrrhos and Epirus and I came in and asked "What if Pyrrhos hadn't been killed?", now that would be inappropriate, but I see no problem with discussing the question here. I know when I play as Epirus, I don't immediately send Pyrrhos down to get killed near Argos.

Anyways, thanks for the answers so far. Somehow, in my Epirus game, I got lucky and Rome never attacked me at Taras. I built up some MICs there and made a bunch of troops, then sent a separate army led by Pyrrhos down to Rhegion and Sicily. Then I sent one of the sons, I don't remember which, to Taras. The Romans finally attacked after I wiped out Carthage in Sicily, but I'm easily defending against them with some levy pikemen and peltasts.

Brennus
04-22-2010, 19:04
How does it make any sense to call "What if" questions bad history on an EB board? The whole game is a what if question. When I play as Carthage, I'm not going to expand historically like they did and then stop and wait to be conquered by the Romans, I'm going to play as if Carthage won out against Rome, creating my own alternate history.

Precisely, I have the Aedui in Caledonia at the moment.

I have to agree with satalexton and Bucefalo I think he would simply have taken the next quick route to glory. Possibly in Pyrrhus own mind he could see himself uniting the realms of the Diadochi but if his record in Sicily and Italy are anything to go by my best guess would be he would go wherever he saw a nice opportunity.