
Originally Posted by
Rastapopoulos
I think you get PWNED by Mein Panzer lol !

And I think you should sod off. If you cannot be mature enough to recognize the beneficial qualities of proper discourse where one may at least derive a factor of learning, then you really should hold your tongue.
To bring some conclusion to the subject, MeinPanzer is correct in the observation of that Urartian findings are not proper to any form of implementation to EB's Armenian units; however at the same time, there is a continuity of a native tradition in crafting armour; in particular the tradition of using single-piece Assyrian-styled helmetry is undeniably profound throughout the entirety of the Achaemenid era, and therefore finds itself used by armoured infantry and cavalry. With the factor of using an Assyrian-style helmet, the matter of evidence becomes needlessly tedious in a situation where it must have been a self-evident element in the native militaria. The other logical candidate scattered throughout the Near East was the Phrygian-styled helmet, and again, we can delve into the esoterics, but the fact is that there is not a terrible lot of findings that are traced to the Orontid era. Therefore, we are driven to these geo-cultural derivations and abstractions. In other words, fill-in-the-blanks work.
As such, the simple helmetry brandished by the Armenian medium horsemen and the Armenian foot-guard is hardly offensive to any sensibilities. In fact the only unit in the entire standardized roster of the Armenian faction which sports a more elaborate helmet is ironically the Persian hoplite-imitation, the Cardaces, and at that it is well-attested through late-Achaemenid and Cilician satrapal coinage. Overall, the range of helmetry is modest at best and could make use of other helmet-types prevalent in the Anatolian parts of the Achaemenid worldly order, which would have included elaborate Hellenic-inspired helmets. I think the problem in this thread is rooted in basic miscommunication. We're not using Urartu-originated equipment, even though there is a resemblance between their style to that of the sommonwealth Assyrian design scattered throughout the Near East.
At the same time, when we see the colossal Armenian Tîghr/Apollon/Hercules sculpture at Nemrut Dagh...


...One can but not help to think that the specifically concave shape of the Urartian specimen, was indeed continued by later Armenian kingdoms. The "Shishak" design of helmetry is an indisputable military element throughout the Near East, and even though modifications of it existed as far as middle-Ottoman times, at its purest form, at heart it was a scull-cap with a slightly pointy apex. And that's all that there is to it.
For a simple reference for what I'm talking about:
1. Elam, 14th cent. B.C.E.
2. Luristan.
3. Marlik.
4-8. Hasanlu.
9. Safidrud.
10. K¨úorvin.
11-12. Luristan. (Nos. 2-12 dated to the first third of the first millennum B.C.E.)
13. Achaemenid helmet, from Egypt.
14. Achaemenid helmet, from Olympia.
15. Oxus Treasure (British Museum).
16-17. Helmets represented on seals.
18. Achaemenid helmet, from Azerbaijan.
19. Achaemenid helmet depicted on a 5th-cent. B.C.E. Greek vase.
20. Achaemenid helmet represented on a rock relief, Lycia.
21. Achaemenid helmet (Glasgow Museum).
22. Scythian helmet, from the Kuban, 7th-6th cent. B.C.E.
23-24. Scythian helmets, Checheno-Ingushetia, 7th-6th cent. B.C.E.
25. Scythian helmet, 7th-6th cent. B.C.E.
26. Scythian helmet (Greek helmet of the Thracian type, refashioned by Scythians), Nymphai, 7th-6th cent. B.C.E.
27. Saka helmet from the Altai region, 7th-6th cent. B.C.E.
28. Saka helmet from the Talas valley, 7th-6th cent. B.C.E.
29. Saka helmet in the museum of Samarkand.
30-31. Saka helmet, from the Talas valley, 7th-6th cent. B.C.E. 32-35 and 37-38. Helmets represented on coins of the Greco-Bactrian kings
32. Eucratides I;
33. Amyntas)
Specimen 13 is especially interesting.
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