
Originally Posted by
geala
Experience was a great factor in the 18th c., a greater factor than in the national wars to come later, where you could recruit from a very large pool of young men, train them shortly and waste them on the field. 18th c. soldiers were very precious and most generals tried to conserve the manpower of their armies. It was a big difference wether a unit would break when the enemy line came near 100 paces (more experienced troops perhaps would broke only at 30 paces or not at all) or even ran away at the first fire. Also the performance in battle field marching and loading procedures under field conditions differed a lot after some experience.
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