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Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Hi guys,
I know this is a bit out of the time line of EB but when I read Persian Fire by Tom Holland (very good I thought with the way Persians, Assyrians + Medians used to execute/torture people, although at times his style of writing did mean you had to read a page 2-3 time to actually figure out what he was talking about at times) he mentioned at the battle of Marathon the Hoplites being "Bronze Clad".
Now of course the helmets, greaves + surface of the aspis were of course bronze. However with other things I had read I was lead to believe by this point (c'490 BC) that the linothorax was in dominant use by hoplites. Of course these were more than likely re-enforced with bronze scales.
So in a sense I've just answered my own question it seems that every part of a hoplites equipment would have had bronze attached to it (even the spear has a bronze butt on the back end).
I think it was that he "may have" (the book is currently back at my house in Manchester, so a couple of weeks before I get my hands on it to check) said that "with their bronze curriass's (sp) gleaming in the sun."
Well something along those lines anyway...
So what was more dominate armour at Marathon for the Athenian hoplites?
1. - The linothorax
or
2. - Bronze curriass's (sp)
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Re: Where the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Linothorax
Full bronze curiasses were WAY too expensive for the average farmer/soldier to get
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Re: Where the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
I think you may have gotten it mixed with the Romans, hoplites were fairly well-to-do so they had a reason to fight to the death like that.
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Re: Where the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
A shaped bronze cuirass was a personally tailored item, made to measure for the wearer.
The ancient equivalent of a Saville Row suit, if you like. (In case you don't know what a Saville Row suit is, look it up - you are talking $5,000-£10,000 worth of suit here!)
So only the very-well off could afford kit like that. For the average soldier, the most important items are spear, shield, sword, helmet, and body armor - in that order. You buy body armor with whatever funds you've got left after buying the rest.
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Re: Where the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Actually, armour was often passed from father to son, and the Saville Rw analogy is a bit faulty, because you can get a tailored suit for £240, with an extra pair of trousers and a matching hankerchief. Not every curiass was a particually pretty thing, and few in this period were muscled. I'm not sure, but from what I know of the period, artistic depictions from the early fifth century show breastplates, not linothrakes.
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Re: Where the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
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Originally Posted by
A Very Super Market
I think you may have gotten it mixed with the Romans, hoplites were fairly well-to-do so they had a reason to fight to the death like that.
Very true. Our word "hoi polloi"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wikipedia
Hoi polloi (Ancient Greek: οἱ πολλοί), an expression meaning "the many" in Greek, is used in English to denote "the masses" or "the people", usually in a derogatory sense. Synonyms for "hoi polloi" include "...commoners, great unwashed, minions, multitude, plebeians, proletariat, rabble, rank and file, riffraff, the common people, the herd, the many, the masses, the peons, the sardines, the working class".[1]
is where the word "hoplite" comes from.
However, as we know, those who formed the ranks of the hoplitai had to provide their own weapons / armor etc, and thus had to be much more well to do than the rabble that comes to mind when we say that word.
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Re: Where the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
As three people with Roman names have just posted in a row, I would like to say that your names are irritatingly long.
*AHEM*
Like people have said before, full bronze armor were probably only worn by elites/rich people. Most other would probably have had less extravagant armor. However, you would see nothing but the bronze shields and helmets of the greeks so that's probably a reasonable answer.
PS: Here's a cool marathon artifact:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:RO...OfMarathon.png
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Re: Where the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
And 'bronze clad' is more poetic than 'carrying a lot of bronze, but actually clothed in layers of linen, glued together to form a highly effective but light armour, except for some who couldn't afford that and one or two show-offs how really are bronze clad.'
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
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Originally Posted by Maeran
And 'bronze clad' is more poetic than 'carrying a lot of bronze, but actually clothed in layers of linen, glued together to form a highly effective but light armour, except for some who couldn't afford that and one or two show-offs how really are bronze clad.'
Don't get all Homeric on us now.
Question: Were the hoplites upper-class, middle-class (if such a thing existed at the time), or a combination of both?
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
That's a question with a different answer in every era, generally the later you go the lower the property requirement, and hence often the quality.
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
As said already the bronze cuirass was to expensive for the average man. So when the book said the greeks were clad in bronze he probably meant the helmets, greaves, and the hoplon shield.
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
That probably could include lino reinforced with bronze scales as well.
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Describing the greek line as clad in bronze also would have been very dramatic description of the enemy.
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
An important tidbit which I feel is slightly overlooked in this thread: These bronze cuirasses would mostly have been of the "bell" design, and not of the typical "muscular" appearance.
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Hey, I said that.
It's worth saying again though, just because armour is bronze doesn't mean it is high quality in this period. From what I know the front-rankers would all have greaves and breastplate, as well as helm, sword, shield and spear. The less well equipped soldiers would be placed in the rear ranks.
We should suppose that the Greeks were well armoured, because by all accounts Persian archery had little dicernable effect.
Herodotus' verdict says a great deal about the ability of the Persian war-machine to deal with the Greeks in this ear,
Roughly, "They wore no armour, they carried no weapons, they did not understand and they did not know hoe to fight."
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Yeah, but you didn't say bell-cuirass :clown:
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
You're just upset because I used my favourite Herodotean quote!:clown:
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
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Originally Posted by
The Persian Cataphract
Yeah, but you didn't say bell-cuirass :clown:
THIS:
http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1131/...a5a51a.jpg?v=0
NOT:
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images...992.180.3a.jpg
Is what you're refering to right?
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Re: Where the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
[QUOTE=Tribunus Tiberius Claudius Marcellus;2117273]Very true. Our word "hoi polloi" is where the word "hoplite" comes from.
thought it came from the word hoplon for a kind of shield or spear used
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Re: Where the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
according to the history channel, the spartans at thermopoly had for the most part lamellar armor which if memory serves is a composite of linen and scale but that is the spartans at thermopolae and not the athenians at marathon
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Re: Where the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
He is saying the Spartans used lamellar at Thermopylae, but that doesn't necessarily mean the Athenians wore it at Marathon. I think...
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
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Originally Posted by john
He is saying the Spartans used lamellar at Thermopylae-
A composition of linen and scale, he said.
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tribunus Tiberius Claudius Marcellus
Very true. Our word "hoi polloi" is where the word "hoplite" comes from.
Actually, Tribunus Tiberius Claudius Marcellus, hoi polloi is not 'our word': οἱ πολλοί (hoi polloi) means 'the many': Pericles used it in his funeral oration to contrast with οἱ ὀλίγοι (hoi oligoi, think oligarchy), 'the few', and although I guess in English it looks like hoipolloi could be mutated into hoplite, in fact ὁπλίτης (hoplite) derives from ὅπλον (hoplon), meaning 'amour' or 'kit' or maybe 'tool'. Hoplite has nothing to do with hoi polloi, at least not in Greek. :wall:
Wikipedia gets this one right, but check out the LSJ online at perseus.
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Spartan hoplites and lamellar?? I am rather doubtfull :inquisitive:
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Since every Hoplite had to supply his own equipment isn't it possible that he choose what he could afford, and thought usefull so not necessary the heaviest bronze curiass but something more light.
He could just aswell think "me and the others use the dory overhand so we always hold the aspis before us and it almost covers us completaly (accept the head but thats the helm for)... so why would I need a heavy and expensive cuirass I can hardly afford which possibly just slows me down as the enemy will never gets past my aspis anyway..."
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
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Originally Posted by
Olaf Blackeyes
Linothorax
Full bronze curiasses were WAY too expensive for the average farmer/soldier to get
I'm afraid I have to prove you wrong here. In the battle of Marathon, the Athenian side numbered 10,000 citizen-hoplites, meaning they were of the highest class of Athenian society. Not only were they able to afford a full bronze armor, but they also had it created according to their height/weight and body analogy in general.
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Originally Posted by
Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
Actually, armour was often passed from father to son, and the Saville Rw analogy is a bit faulty, because you can get a tailored suit for £240, with an extra pair of trousers and a matching hankerchief. Not every curiass was a particually pretty thing, and few in this period were muscled. I'm not sure, but from what I know of the period, artistic depictions from the early fifth century show breastplates, not linothrakes.
Well, while this may be true up to some extent, we are very certain that every citizen hoplite (of at least Athens) had his own armor made by a blacksmith according to his proportions. Which basically defies what you say about equipement heritage, as not all sons are identical to their fathers.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tribunus Tiberius Claudius Marcellus
Very true. Our word "hoi polloi" is where the
word "hoplite" comes from.
I'm afraid you got it wrong here, sir. The word 'Hoplites' (ΟΠΛΙΤΗΣ in Greek) comes from the word 'hoplon' (ΟΠΛΟΝ in Greek) which means 'weapon'. So basically 'hoplites' means 'arms-bearer'.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Megas Methuselah
Question: Were the hoplites upper-class, middle-class (if such a thing existed at the time), or a combination of both?
Upper-class deffinately. There were 10,000 Athenian hoplites that fought at Marathon, which is 1/2 of the total force of voting male citizens of Athens (20,000). When Athens went out to fight, they (as did all other poleis) sent out about 1/3 (when campaigning far from home) to 1/2 (when close to home, as with Marathon) of their total force.
Maion
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Are the marine contingents on their ships counted in that fraction? Also what about expeditions like that one that utterly failed to take Syracuse and cost them like 5000 men? Would those be a % of their standard army or raised in addition to that?
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
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Originally Posted by
antisocialmunky
Are the marine contingents on their ships counted in that fraction? Also what about expeditions like that one that utterly failed to take Syracuse and cost them like 5000 men? Would those be a % of their standard army or raised in addition to that?
Why should they be? I mean, there was no naval battle. It was just 10,000 citizen hoplites. As for the Syracousan Expedition, by that time (Peloponnnesian Wars), the city-states started using more mercenaries and slaves.
Maion
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Re: Were the hoplites at Marathon "Bronze Clad"?
Well you said 1/3 - 1/2 of total citizenry were usually mobilized for war with an implication that that was a generalization for that period. I'm asking whether or not marines are counted in that 1/3rd to 1/2 or if they were in addition to it.