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Thread: Romans and Swords

  1. #1

    Default Romans and Swords

    From what i understand sword and more expensive, harded to master, and have a short range that spears and especialy short swords favored by the romans would have been a disadvantage agiasnt calvary, so what cause the romans to so wholeheartedly adopt swords

  2. #2

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Pila can be, and were, used as spears




    The order to repel cavalry by Roman army officers brought about a defensive formation, in which the front rank formed a tight wall of shields with their pila protruding to form a line of spearheads ahead of the wall. Undoubtedly it would be very hard to bring a horse to break into that formation. The most likely occurrence would be that it would come to a halt of its own will ahead of the spearheads. It was at that moment that horse and rider would be at their most vulnerable against the ranks behind the first line of infantry which would then hurl their spears at them. Given the short distance and the training legionaries received, it is likely such halted cavalry, frantically trying to turn their horses around to retreat, whilst colliding with horses following in the charge, would prove very easy targets.
    If one further considers the likely possibility of archers being present, as is the case on the photo above, the effect of this formation could indeed be devastating.
    http://www.roman-empire.net/army/tactics.html
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  3. #3
    Voluntary Suspension Voluntary Suspension Philippus Flavius Homovallumus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Pila can be used but in reality the Legions never stopped using the spear. By the time the Roman citizen soldiers were all using swords they also had large numbers of spear-armed auxillaries.
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    fancy assault unit Member blank's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Quote Originally Posted by dbarger58
    From what i understand sword and more expensive, harded to master, and have a short range that spears and especialy short swords favored by the romans would have been a disadvantage agiasnt calvary, so what cause the romans to so wholeheartedly adopt swords
    Roman tactic was to get very close to the enemy in tight formation, where there wasn't much room for spears or even longswords
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    Lover of Toight Vahjoinas Member Bootsiuv's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Plus, the Hispanicus Gladius (or whatever it's called) just looked cool. A Roman has his appearance to think about, after all... :P
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    EB annoying hornet Member bovi's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Since the pilum was designed to bend on impact, I'd guess it wasn't very good in prolonged fighting, but it would scare a horse I'm sure. Hitting a shield would probably render it nearly useless?

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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Quote Originally Posted by bovi
    Since the pilum was designed to bend on impact, I'd guess it wasn't very good in prolonged fighting, but it would scare a horse I'm sure. Hitting a shield would probably render it nearly useless?
    The pila wasn't actually designed to bend on impact, Hispanic and Britainnic ones don't. With that said it's not great as a thrusting weapon, the principle is the same as the later infantry square of the Napolionic wars. Horses don't charge a walls of steal for the same reason men don't. As a thrusting weapon though the narrow iron shank would probably vibrate on impact, going through anything other than flesh in hand-hand combat would be difficult at best.
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  8. #8

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    pila phalanx!


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    Member Member Reno Melitensis's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    It the same tactic Arian, legate of Cappadocia used against the Alani, a Sauromatae people. The first ranks where in a shield wall like that one, while the legionaries behind throw javlins over the heads of their comrades, behind which where archers and horse archers. The stratagem worked because it was a great victory for Arian.

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    EB annoying hornet Member bovi's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Quote Originally Posted by Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
    The pila wasn't actually designed to bend on impact, Hispanic and Britainnic ones don't.
    Shame on me for believing Wikipedia, vanilla RTW, and... EB's Hastati/Principe/Triarii description ? Cohors Imperatoria's description says it can be used as a normal spear though, even though it's not designed for it. As you say.

    Should we change the description for the roman units then?

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    Lover of Toight Vahjoinas Member Bootsiuv's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    So the Romans improved the design of the Pila? I wonder what technique they used to make it bend on impact. A soft iron, I'm sure, but how did they make it softer?

    EDIT: I'm also interested in hearing the answer to Bovi's question of if a shield made them nearly useless. Wouldn't a soft iron be rather useless against a metal shield. Were most of Rome's enemies employing wooden, leather, or wicker shields, so this was seen as not much of a problem? Or did it just slice right through a metal shield, softer iron and all? *waits for a Romani expert to chime in*
    Last edited by Bootsiuv; 09-08-2007 at 16:14.
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Quote Originally Posted by bovi
    Shame on me for believing Wikipedia, vanilla RTW, and... EB's Hastati/Principe/Triarii description ? Cohors Imperatoria's description says it can be used as a normal spear though, even though it's not designed for it. As you say.

    Should we change the description for the roman units then?
    No, don't worry about any descriptions. They did bend on impact but the haft was also designed to shatter. I can't remember exactly, I think Latin and Etruscan ones bend because of the poor iron. Hispanic ones generally don't.

    In any case it's only the shank that bends, the head is hardend steel and diamond shaped. The idea is that is goes through the shield and into the body, that's why the shank is so long.

    Soft is also very much a relative term here, as anyone hit with an iron bar will tell you.
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  13. #13

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Well the pilum MAY funtion as a spear in "Initial concact" with cavarly after that is no good. HOWEVER that is IF the horse doesn't stop before reaching the shield wall (which they usually do).

    Also remember the pilum will NOT be used as a spear against infantry.
    Last edited by NeoSpartan; 09-08-2007 at 17:46.

  14. #14

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    I 've read that pre-Marius pila (sp?) used soft iron shafts and were designed to bend on impact but making soft iron shafts took a lot of time and effort. Marius changed the pilum design to use a wooden pin which would break on impact and render the pilum useless for throwing back. Thus no need for soft iron. That's "my" version, but it seems it is wrong/inaccurate?

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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    That's an excessively complicated version. The iron for the shank was "soft" in that it was unhardened, i.e. it wasn't steel and had a very low carbon content. I've never heard of any process used to actually soften the iron. In fact it has been suggested that pila could be used a cooking spits because the iron was untempered and would not suffer from the heat.
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  16. #16

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    I think the reason the romans used the swords is because in there tight formations it was easier to use than longswords, or spears, hence the conquest of the hellens and celts.
    On the pillia, I belive the idea was that the head went into sheild/body, then the half bent, making it hard to pull out of your sheild (which makes it very unweildly) or unable to pull out of yourself, ethier way, your going to be in trouble when that cohort of legonaries charging and screaming at you get close.

    It was more of a shock weapon, designed to make a enemy unit weaken (by death or routing).

  17. #17
    Megas Alexandros's heir Member Spoofa's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    but dont romans use a looser formation?

  18. #18

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Quote Originally Posted by Spoofa
    but dont romans use a looser formation?
    It depends on the enemy they are facing...
    Last edited by NeoSpartan; 09-09-2007 at 02:32.

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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Well, variation in equipment throughout the empire would sometimes largely depend where you're talking about(since you can't fly out supplies from Rome to Judea in those day). For example, some Pila in Britannia have holes punch in the heads to create a whistling sound.
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  20. #20

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Quote Originally Posted by Spoofa
    but dont romans use a looser formation?
    For cohorts, yes, there is more space between each cohort, but each man is closer together.

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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Quote Originally Posted by alatar
    For cohorts, yes, there is more space between each cohort, but each man is closer together.
    Quite possible not. The idea of the Romans standing "shoulder to shoulder" is based on the length of the Gladius, which its irrelevant, the Greeks and Celts used longer swords for close in tight fighting and did fine. It has been suggested, by Peter Connolly and others, that the Roman manipules were in fact orderded the same way internally as externally. In other words the soldiers moved in a checkerboard formation. Polybius tells us there were about 5 feet between each legionary and Tacitus seems to tell us in the Agricola and elsewhere that the Romans moved through each other when advancing or retiring.

    If this is true then the secret to Roman success may hve been a sort od perpetual advance with the front two ranks constantly passing each other.

    So is goes like this.

    Front rank andances, stabs, goes to guard.

    Second rank advances through front rank, stabs, goes to guard.

    Rather like the fire and movement practiced by musketeers later.
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  22. #22

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Wouldn't it be rather easy for the enemy to move through the front rank?

    EDIT:
    M2TW comes to mind. In city assaults when troops spread out to ungodly lengths and become almost completely ineffective, I find myself charging my infantry several ranks into the enemy, oftentimes killing nearly half of their men at once.
    Last edited by Bellum; 09-10-2007 at 04:54.

  23. #23

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Quote Originally Posted by Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
    Quite possible not. The idea of the Romans standing "shoulder to shoulder" is based on the length of the Gladius, which its irrelevant, the Greeks and Celts used longer swords for close in tight fighting and did fine. It has been suggested, by Peter Connolly and others, that the Roman manipules were in fact orderded the same way internally as externally. In other words the soldiers moved in a checkerboard formation. Polybius tells us there were about 5 feet between each legionary and Tacitus seems to tell us in the Agricola and elsewhere that the Romans moved through each other when advancing or retiring.

    If this is true then the secret to Roman success may hve been a sort od perpetual advance with the front two ranks constantly passing each other.

    So is goes like this.

    Front rank andances, stabs, goes to guard.

    Second rank advances through front rank, stabs, goes to guard.

    Rather like the fire and movement practiced by musketeers later.

    I quite like that theory and it sounds about right too, intresting. Also remember that a Roman "foot" is shorter than that of todays measurement, i think it'd be closer to 3 foot in our terms, which sounds right to me in terms of spacing.



    As for the pila being used as a sort of temporary wall of spears, keep in mind that it was probably just used to stop the horses in their tracks (and thus denying them of their greatest asset) which then could be swamped by the troops who could go back to using their swords or they could just stab the horses with the pila and then kill the rider with whatever means they see fit.

  24. #24
    Member Member geala's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Polybios speaks about a room of 1,80 m/6 feet for the Roman legionaries. That is 4 cubits, a Greek cubit equal to 45 cm. Polybios says that the Roman soldier has two phalangites in front of him, which is totally coherent to the normal attack order (pyknosis) of the sarissai phalanges given by Asklepiodotos, measuring 2 cubits or 90 cm/3 feet per soldier.

    We have no hint wether the Roman legionaries attacked with the two first rows changing. I'm of the opinion that we would have when it were the normal tactic, because it would have been a very remarkable exception to normal fighting and interesting for the Greek reader. But this is only my subjective view.

    The sword is a very good weapon for close combat fighting, esp. in combination with the big Roman scutum. You don't have the reach of the spear but are much more flexible.
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  25. #25

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    I always though spears were more about pushing that bastard off the horse, rather than scaring the horse.
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    If I'm right about how Romans fought then the key would be perpetual movement. The Romans would always be moving fowards so that the enemy would effectively be facing two rather than one fighting line. In the case of a shoving match or prolonged melee the Romans would probably have closed ranks and stood shoulder to shoulder at which point they would basically have become a phalanx.
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    Member Member Roy1991's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    On the pillia, I belive the idea was that the head went into sheild/body, then the half bent, making it hard to pull out of your sheild (which makes it very unweildly) or unable to pull out of yourself, ethier way, your going to be in trouble when that cohort of legonaries charging and screaming at you get close.
    Someone on a forum about the Roman army made serveral reconstructions of pila, as authentically as possibly, and tested them.
    His conclusion was that pila wouldn't bend if they hit a shield - the long thin shank would go right through it, and would be almost impossible to remove.
    If the pilum missed however, and it hit the ground, then it would bend.

  28. #28
    Elephant Master Member Conqueror's Avatar
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    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    That would make a lot of sense, if it's true. If the pilum is so hard to remove from a shield then it doesn't matter whether it's bent or not, while one that ends up sticking on the ground could be picked up and thrown back at you by the enemy... unless it was bent.

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    Default Re: Romans and Swords


  30. #30

    Default Re: Romans and Swords

    Quote Originally Posted by Roy1991
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