dear all,
how come there are no units with this kind of protection in EB?
all other mods have them !?
best regards
dear all,
how come there are no units with this kind of protection in EB?
all other mods have them !?
best regards
Large scale use of this type of armour started after game end. (EB covers periods from 272BC to 14 AD )
Also, it was mainly worn by Praetorians and the Heavy Legions.Originally Posted by LorDBulA
ok i see !! its a pitty that time is not extended then !! would make the mod more complete !!
Should extend further still because Varangian guards are awesome & EB won't be complete without them![]()
Or sans sarcasm:
The Lorica Segmenta was only starting to come in about the time that the game ends ie its something that was around during Emperial Rome.
EB is about the period which witnessed the rise of Republican Rome & the Parthians, rise & fall of Baktria and Pontus, Germanic expansion and the decline of the Helenistic states Carthage and Celtic societies. (unless you are playing as one of the latter in which case its about the rise of that faction & decline of the others...)
maybe those guys should be doing something more useful...
Is there an historical reason for doing so, or do you just wish to have the iconic and aesthetically pleasing Lorica Segmentata in game? Don't worry about it, Hamata and Squamata are fair better armours (I love scale in particular - yummy, yummy eastern armour!).Originally Posted by maks
Foot
EBII Mod Leader
Hayasdan Faction Co-ordinator
This should be in the FAQ. It certainly is a frequently asked question.
Call me Ruma. Puupertti Ruma.
Lorica Segmentata first comes into use, i.e. first shoulder pieces found, 9BC, it doesn't turn up again until 9AD and all in all it's pretty shoddy armour, though good protection against blunt trauma and arrows.
"If it wears trousers generally I don't pay attention."
[IMG]https://img197.imageshack.us/img197/4917/logoromans23pd.jpg[/IMG]
I agree with Puupertti. Place the answer on the FAQ (first post and in very large letters). Or better yet make a separate sticky on the main forum titled:Originally Posted by Puupertti Ruma
"The reason Lorica Segmentata was, is and will be exluded from EB"
The only question asked more frequently is about the roman military reforms and that has thankfully already been included in the FAQ.
Originally Posted by Puupertti Ruma
Omg!!!!!!!!!!
Plz just put this in the FAQ before the EB team goes Attila on us!!!!!![]()
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Side point/gripe, I find it odd that the Romans have no segmenta but those pesky Eleutheroi generals all seem to have nicked some from somewhere![]()
maybe those guys should be doing something more useful...
I watched a show on the History channel that depicted the toughness of this type of armor. This armor type was typically worn over top of a layer of chain mail and padding. A lot of time was spent on how the armor was fashioned and assembled but at the end they did a bunch of field tests firing a period ballista at the armor from about 50 feet away and although a human would most likely be knocked down and hurt the armor actually prevented a piercing type wound quite effectively. I would guess that they fired approximately 5 bolts of different sizes and point types and none of them actually pierced the padding. It was a real eye opener on the effectiveness of lorica segmentata against a piercing type wound but I wonder how effective it would be against a slashing or crushing type of attack. Any thoughts?
So you`re saying that the Segmentata was worn over a Hamata coat (along with padding)??Originally Posted by Plebian#10
Hummm, interesting...
BTW, it`s a good idea to incluide the Segmentata issue on the F.A.Q. Thus, instead of writing endless posts answering the question, we can just send them to FAQ.![]()
Cheers!!!
Segmentata-type laminate over mail sounds more like something you'd find on a late Parthian or Sassanid cataphract...
That said, armour of overlapping lames is pretty good judging by evidence. That type of Persian limb defense the Greeks called cheir in any case appears to have been regarded as a perfectly sufficient by its lonesome without any shield involved, even in leather-based versions... And this in a region where kopis-type choppers and axes were very popular sidearms. The Romans also used a derivative for their front-rankers during Trajan's Dacian wars to limit amputations from those nasty curvy swords, particularly the big bad falx.
It was also good enough to be included in late Medieval full plate armour around some joints, and the knee and upper leg defenses eventually turned into a single large "sleeve" of lames attached to the lower edge of the breastplate.
That's something like two thousand years of more-or-less continuous use in one place or other, topped by being accepted as part of some of the best body armour ever designed. I'd say that suggests it was a pretty darn solid design principle overall.![]()
"Let us remember that there are multiple theories of Intelligent Design. I and many others around the world are of the strong belief that the universe was created by a Flying Spaghetti Monster. --- Proof of the existence of the FSM, if needed, can be found in the recent uptick of global warming, earthquakes, hurricanes, and other natural disasters. Apparently His Pastaness is to be worshipped in full pirate regalia. The decline in worldwide pirate population over the past 200 years directly corresponds with the increase in global temperature. Here is a graph to illustrate the point."
-Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster
I could see a possibility in EB II of the augustan cohors having a guy in segmentata as part of the unit, but only a very few of them to give some extra unique-ness. Maybe after an armor upgrade or two also.
"urbani, seruate uxores: moechum caluom adducimus. / aurum in Gallia effutuisti, hic sumpsisti mutuum." --Suetonius, Life of Caesar
Surely wearing hamata and segmentata and padding would make movement quite difficult... Discounting the weight, the freedom of movement in the joints would be severely limited.
I think if you were shot by a ballista bolt, you probably wouldnt get up and walk away. Even if it cant pierce through, the force would mimic the effect of a crushing weapon, buckling the armour, breaking bones and damaging organs due to shock. The mail would offer little additional protection to that sort of damage. Not to mention if you dent armour over the torso, you cant breathe until you undent it or get it off. Which you probably cant do easily once its been damaged...
Correction! I incorrectly stated that chain was worn under the lorrica segmentata but after going to the local library and aquiring some books on period armor I could find no reference to hammata being worn in conjunction with lorrica segmentata. Therefore I either misunderstood the what the author of that show was saying or it was wrong. I have tried to find that history channel episode but so far no luck. I apologize to all for making what appears to be an incorrect statement! I will continue to research this information.
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