I'm not attacking EB in ay way what-so-ever just trying to help out some
Πυρρος in greek means Pyrros not Pyrrhos
I'm not attacking EB in ay way what-so-ever just trying to help out some
Πυρρος in greek means Pyrros not Pyrrhos
So we should have Rodos too, instead of Rhodos?Originally Posted by Marinakis
If EB wants to get the correct native names of everything, why not
Greek doesnt have a H like english, they use E's in their place
Last edited by Marinakis; 01-07-2006 at 05:51.
I think he's underrated in the campaign![]()
The really interesting part is that they did actually.Originally Posted by Marinakis
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http://www.stoa.org/gallery/hauck/horos?full=1
There is very little to no noticeable difference in Pyrros and Pyrrhos in English. Of Rhodos or Rodos. Almost all ancient greek rho's were aspirated, and it's pretty much up to whoever is spelling it out today to determine whether they use an 'h' in there or not. More often than not you'll see it there in English in certain Greek words, but not in others (usually depending upon the following vowel). I hope you'll forgive us for using Pyrrhos and Rhodos and Rhegion, following the most common ways those 'rho's are written in English.
H is an etaOriginally Posted by Teleklos Archelaou
its an e not the english H
But yeah =)
Last edited by Marinakis; 01-07-2006 at 06:29.
Peiface or whatever his name is, pyrsonso, is under-rated. He should have more command stars.
That capital eta actually was used as a pure aspirate and not the letter eta (in that inscription is one example - it's no eta there). But that was not that common and fell out of fashion after a certain point way before our game.Originally Posted by Marinakis
It's also interesting to note another thing about the greek letter we are talking about dropping the english 'h' after using: how is it spelled in english itself? rho. Should we drop it to 'ro' to be correct, or leave it as 'rho'?
Also, from your title, you used "Pyrrhus" instead of "Pyrrus". See how much we all want to keep that 'h'![]()
.
Wasn't Pyrrhus a brilliant loser? I mean what did he acomplish other than sort of win but ultimately lose battles?
I prefer to think of him as more of a tragic figure later in life, or simply meteoric - in much the same way that Demetrios Polierketes was. Neither really achieved much for their own causes in the long run, and both died in a fashion that you'd be hardpressed to call anything but ignamonious, but both were clearly brilliant commanders.
Pyrrhos himself though isn't given enough credit for his 'Pyrrhic victories.' Most every other time the legion fought the phalanx, the latter was trounced, as the Makedonian and overwhelmingly larger Seleukid armies were. Pyrrhos on the other hand, was able to secure several victories over the legion, with a phalanx whose equipment and training was largely poor (though the Molossian, Chaonian, and Trespotian were nothing short of excellent), and fewer and more poorly armored elephants then Antiochos lost with at Magnesia.
"It is an error to divide people into the living and the dead: there are people who are dead-alive, and people who are alive_alive. The dead-alive also write, walk, speak, atc. But they make no mistakes; only machines make no mistakes, and they produce only dead things. The alive-alive are constantly in error, in search, in questions, in torment." - Yevgeny Zamyatin
Not at all...Originally Posted by Chester
All we really hear about Pyrrhus is "pyrrhic victory"...
Think about this...
Pyrrhus inherited the small, not really worth-mentioning Kingdom of Epirus and expanded it in every direction.
He first subdued the Illyrians to his north, and after Cassander died, took Makedonia. Demetrias's army defected to Pyrrhus because they saw him as the next Alexander, and only because Lysachimus was such a brilliant leader well-versed in the subtleties of diplomacy (dealing with the Thrakian tribes) was he able to convince Pyrrhus to share the Kingdom and later take it all by convincing the people and bribing Pyrrhus's generals.
We all know of his campaign in Italy, but remember, Pyrrhus had a turbulent trip there, and the Tarantines were...dissapointing. Also, the rulers of the other Hellenistic kingdoms were willing to give Pyrrhus troops, eager to see him leave...he was feared.
Heraclea was a complete victory, Asculum was the costly one, although had the Celts not been ravaging through the Hellas, perhaps Pyrrhus could have refreshed his army with more troops and the casulties not mattered as much.
And then the abrupt trip to Sicilia, where almost nothing is mentioned about how Pyrrhus crushed the Carthaginains all the way to Lilybaeum, taking Eryx on the way (it was quite difficult for me to find a Carthaginain of note during the Pyrrhic war for QWERTYmidx, lemme tell you, probably because they crucified failed commanders).
Then again, after popularity on the Island began to drop, back to Benvento, after which he withdrew, though perhaps had Mr. Antigonos sent him the troops he wanted, Pyrrhus would have stayed, and Antigonos could have kept his throne.
Remember, this was the guy who didn't have to resources that the other Diadochi Kingdoms had. His first trip to Italy he brought along 10000 core Makedonian/Epirote pikemen and 3000 Thessilian horse and 20 elephants, with a motley selection of hoplites/light infantry to round it out. He replaced his losses with a Tarantine militia and light infantry from various Italic peoples...nuff said. This was the guy who impressed Hannibal, and wrote a book on war that has been lost. The book Soldiers and Ghosts describes Pyrrhus as being best able to command, while in the midst of combat (and this guy was a great soldier).
Still, the man was as capricious as the old gods, and this was his greatest downfall.
Last edited by Reenk Roink; 01-08-2006 at 03:09.
[Double Post]
It doesnt matter how many times you say it, Pyrros will always be remembered for losing, the conquered are always forgotten, not matter how great of a person he or she was.
It's unfortunate people dont actually study the man before they make judgements.
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Technically, he wasn't conquered. He died in a war of conquestOriginally Posted by Marinakis
. You're right though.
The conquored are remembered for losing and forgotten for the same reason? In any case, Pyrrhos was hardly forgotten, nor has being the loser ever meant erasure from history as a rule.It doesnt matter how many times you say it, Pyrros will always be remembered for losing, the conquered are always forgotten, not matter how great of a person he or she was.
Last edited by VandalCarthage; 01-08-2006 at 05:59.
"It is an error to divide people into the living and the dead: there are people who are dead-alive, and people who are alive_alive. The dead-alive also write, walk, speak, atc. But they make no mistakes; only machines make no mistakes, and they produce only dead things. The alive-alive are constantly in error, in search, in questions, in torment." - Yevgeny Zamyatin
rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr its not Pyrrhos its Pyrros![]()
The h is just from the Latin form of the name =(
..... sorry it just annoys me, call him Pyrrhus or Pyrros. Not some made up hybrid name Pyrrhos
that would be like calling Alexandros, Alexanderos
Πυρρος
Πυρρος
Πυρρος
Last edited by Marinakis; 01-08-2006 at 06:24.
The h comes from the transliteration into english, it's just showing the aspiration of the rho, did you not read Teleklos's posts?
History is for the future not the past. The dead don't read.
Operam et vitam do Europae Barbarorum.
History does not repeat itself. The historians repeat one another. - Max Beerbohm
Also a lot of ancient dialects used the h instead of the little brackety thing on the top because it was easier for plain people to read properly. It was in the hellenistic age that the little brackety things became the standard and the h was rid of.
I am personally more offended by the "u" instead of an "o".![]()
We spelled it with an o, in the game it's "Pyrrhos."
History is for the future not the past. The dead don't read.
Operam et vitam do Europae Barbarorum.
History does not repeat itself. The historians repeat one another. - Max Beerbohm
ok, so why not spell Alexandros as alexandrhos then, by that logic
Not every rho is as heavily aspirated, but judging from transliterations into other languages (especially latin) of the name Πυρρος the rho was rather heavily aspirated.
History is for the future not the past. The dead don't read.
Operam et vitam do Europae Barbarorum.
History does not repeat itself. The historians repeat one another. - Max Beerbohm
how do we know this, is there a way to know this from the lettering in greek
I just find it odd, never have i seen a greek name translated with an rhos, its always ros
πυρ - Fire
ρος - common greek ending
Last edited by Marinakis; 01-08-2006 at 07:48.
You've never seen the word "rho"?
History is for the future not the past. The dead don't read.
Operam et vitam do Europae Barbarorum.
History does not repeat itself. The historians repeat one another. - Max Beerbohm
not word, letter.
Anyhow, Hannibal (allegedly) had a friendly discussion with Scipio Africanus in Ephesos. When Scipio asked Hannibal who he thought were the best generals of history, Hannibal stated that the best would be #1 Alexandros, #2 Pyrrhos, #3 Hannibal. He also said that if Scipio had not beaten him at Zama, Hannibal would be #1.![]()
Pyrrhos didn't exactly die a very glorious death. Knocked unconscious by a stray rooftile thrown by an old woman on a rooftop, upon which an Argive soldier was able to kill him..
"Knocked out by a rooftile"
Not the most glorious ending one would think.![]()
"To know a thing well, know its limits. Only when pushed beyond its tolerances will its true nature be seen." -The Amtal Rule, DUNE
Don't trust that fathead LivyAnyhow, Hannibal (allegedly) had a friendly discussion with Scipio Africanus in Ephesos. When Scipio asked Hannibal who he thought were the best generals of history, Hannibal stated that the best would be #1 Alexandros, #2 Pyrrhos, #3 Hannibal. He also said that if Scipio had not beaten him at Zama, Hannibal would be #1![]()
"It is an error to divide people into the living and the dead: there are people who are dead-alive, and people who are alive_alive. The dead-alive also write, walk, speak, atc. But they make no mistakes; only machines make no mistakes, and they produce only dead things. The alive-alive are constantly in error, in search, in questions, in torment." - Yevgeny Zamyatin
I don't trust anyone.![]()
rinse and repeat the word "allegedly" silently inside yourself and you'll get a balloon.
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
Last edited by Shigawire; 01-08-2006 at 15:32.
"To know a thing well, know its limits. Only when pushed beyond its tolerances will its true nature be seen." -The Amtal Rule, DUNE
Interesting comments on Pyrrhus. Funny how time wasn't that kind to him or Scipio. All you hear about is Alexander and Caesar. I guess their tales are not what hollywood movies are made of. :(
I would love to see a film or HBO mini series on that time frame with Scipio, Pyrrhus, and Hannibal. Unfortunately they don't have epic story telling like Caesar's story of conquering hero, love, betrayal, and murder.
Sure they do. They are more than epic enough. In fact they are making a movie about Hannibal starring Vin Diesel. "Hannibal the Conqueror"Originally Posted by Chester
The jury is still out on how that will turn out.![]()
But at least it's better than having Denzel Washington star as Hannibal.
![]()
"To know a thing well, know its limits. Only when pushed beyond its tolerances will its true nature be seen." -The Amtal Rule, DUNE
Originally Posted by Shigawire
Not so sure about that Shiga, I'd rather have a good actor who is the wrong skin color than an idiot.![]()
History is for the future not the past. The dead don't read.
Operam et vitam do Europae Barbarorum.
History does not repeat itself. The historians repeat one another. - Max Beerbohm
Caesar came in with a bang and left on a high note, murder in the form of betrayal. That' s good stuff.
Scipio was brought down in a smear campaign and ended up spending his final days a bitter old man. Hannibal lost, but did not die in a glorious manner (what happened to him?)
Vin Diesel? ROFL, it's over.
Hannibal kills himself to avoid surrendering to Rome while at Libyssa.
Scipio dies, ostracised by Rome.
Ok, I got the above quote from http://www.barca.fsnet.co.uk/
Hannibal died in a good manner!
Last edited by Chester; 01-08-2006 at 17:04.
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