Most of your LS finds come from Auxilary headquarters and Limes and not the headquarters of the legions.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auxilia....80.9314_AD.29
Most of your LS finds come from Auxilary headquarters and Limes and not the headquarters of the legions.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auxilia....80.9314_AD.29
Fighting isn't about winning, it's about depriving your enemy of all options except to lose.
"Hi, Billy Mays Here!" 1958-2009
Fighting isn't about winning, it's about depriving your enemy of all options except to lose.
Interesting
Dont mind me people, just trying to get the Post count up.
Last edited by -Stormrage-; 09-04-2011 at 19:09.
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They were of similar quality as the Roman legions themselves, similar equipment, organized similarly but in smaller groups, similar length of service requirements (25 years). The main distinction is that they were not all Roman citizens and instead gained citizenship after their 25 years. Their role was to provide specialized combat services to the Roman heavy infantry and cavalry. After all, pretty much the 2nd best archer in the game is an auxilia unit and the current depiction of the heavy infantry cohorts stat them to be basically Romans except no missiles and spears instead.
http://www.historum.com/war-military...n-auxilia.htmlThe auxilia arms of the Roman Army came to play an important role over the course of the 1st Century, and by the beginning of the 2nd Century they had, in many senses, surpassed even the legions in usefulness. Nonetheless, in the 1st Century AD the reputation of the auxilia was marred by several bloody auxiliary revolts. From the years 6 – 9 AD Illyrian and Dalmatian auxiliaries in modern Yugoslavia sided with only partially conquered, anti-Roman tribal factions, and started a bitterly fought guerilla war that seriously depleted Roman manpower. Only a few months after the Illyrian Revolt was put down, in September of 9 a former native auxiliary commander, the Cheruscan German Arminius, lead three Roman legions and some auxiliary units into a trap in the Teutoberg Forest of Germany. The Romans were slaughtered and panic ensued throughout the Empire, even in Rome herself, at the magnitude of the crisis. The Roman frontier was consolidated and restored along the Rhine by Germanicus half a decade later. In 68, the last year of the reign of Emperor Nero, Batavian auxiliary commander Julius Civilis started a revolt amongst a number of Germanic peoples and this movement was put down only with great bloodshed and human tragedy. There were also a number of isolated instances of rebellion – the tragic adventure of the Usipi at the end of the 1st Century being a famous example.
Many of the auxiliary rebellions occurred because the troops’ local sympathies were stronger than their Roman sympathies. Julius Civilis, a proud citizen of the Batavi people, started his rebellion to avenge the honor of fellow countrymen who felt they had been slighted by the Emperor. Likewise, the Illyrian rebels of the beginning of the Century were stationed amongst their ancestral lands, with their families and villages close at hand, and finally decided that the liberation of that which they loved was more important than their oath to the Empire. In light of this, starting in the late 1st Century we find that Roman emperors and generals consciously attempted to post auxiliary regiments far away from their native lands; thus, we find Britons in Dacia, Syrians in Britain, and Spaniards in Egypt. Though many of these troops ended up marrying local girls and probably learning their languages, their local sympathies would have never come close to the loyalty they felt to the Army and their comrades.
The auxiliary regiments fought gallantly in all the great wars of the 1st and 2nd Centuries AD. Spanish, Celtic, and German auxiliaries participated in the Roman invasion of Britain (43 – 51 AD) and afterwards formed the most active part of Britain’s garrison. The much-vaunted cohorts of Batavian infantry proved more than a match for even the boldest of woad-painted Britons in the invasion. A number of auxiliary units, particularly cavalry, served with distinction in the civil war that erupted with the death of Nero (68 – 69 AD) as well as during the contemporary First Jewish War (68 – 73 AD). Auxiliary infantry of German origin formed the vanguard of Julius Agricola’s army during his invasion of Caledonia in the 80’s, occupying a role that had always previously been filled by legions.
They weren't simply cheap bodies but support units expected to be the best soldiers to provide the best possible services.
Fighting isn't about winning, it's about depriving your enemy of all options except to lose.
"Hi, Billy Mays Here!" 1958-2009
Good points ASM. Auxilia were a professional force. I think their morale was increased as well from last edu. That being said, they aren't much better than, say, Samnite spears or Appea Gaedatos and yet they cost a lot more.
From Frontline for fixing siege towers of death
x30 From mikepettytw for showing how to edit in game text.
From Brennus for wit.
There are some weird anomalies. Eastern Auxilia (clearly Greek?) have a Kopis and a smaller shield while the Western one has a bigger shield. The Kopis has no AP and both cost nearly the same. Are the 400 AP pila between the Legion and the Auxilia worth ~100 mnai?
Last edited by antisocialmunky; 09-05-2011 at 00:16.
Fighting isn't about winning, it's about depriving your enemy of all options except to lose.
"Hi, Billy Mays Here!" 1958-2009
You make good points. How do you know it's a Kopis? It's supposed to be a gladius if I'm not mistaken... I know the Auxilia Archers have a gladius. The western auxilia are simply much like the eastern just without a secondary weapon. I believe their shield looks the same size... It's strange. Other than statting them according to what they're armed and armored with, I supposed the other things we could change to improve them are their spacing/density (I don't know much about this aspect), their morale (is it on part with legions? should it be? should it be lower, or even higher?), and their defensive skill (same as last parenthetical question).
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I do not disagree, but look at this and you will understand why they were much cheaper than the legionary cohorts:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auxilia....28caligati.29
To summarise: (sorry for terrible formatting)
Stipendium (gross salary) 225 188
(food and equip deduction the same for both)
Plus:
Donativa (bonuses)(average: 75 denarii every 3 years) 25 none proven
Praemia (discharge bonus: 3,000 denarii) 120 none proven
I did not say that they were any weaker, in fact, they were just as good as legions. The Batavi were apparently considered the best troops, even better than the legionaries. However, i just proposed that because it would be ahistorical to represent that both cost the same. My proposal for nerfing was to counteract the buffing of legions.
"Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam."
EB Online Founder | Website
Former Projects:
- Vartan's EB Submod Compilation Pack
- Asia ton Barbaron (Armenian linguistics)
- EB:NOM (Armenian linguistics/history)
- Dominion of the Sword (Armenian linguistics/history, videographer)
I'm losing track of all the posts myself. With regards to your specific point, yes, it will hopefully allow them to do that. Remember, the merc count has to be increased upto 10 since the current 2 inf aux types do not reflect the sheer variety of Aux had. Therefore, these "mercs" effectively count as aux.
"Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam."
EB Online Founder | Website
Former Projects:
- Vartan's EB Submod Compilation Pack
- Asia ton Barbaron (Armenian linguistics)
- EB:NOM (Armenian linguistics/history)
- Dominion of the Sword (Armenian linguistics/history, videographer)
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