November 2nd, 2003, 07:02 AM
|
Corporal
|
|
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Sweden
Posts: 50
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
|
Re: Heavy Infantry, Light Infantry, and Mundane AP Weapons
Quote:
Originally posted by Keir Maxwell:
I've also been playing MoM again recently and its works fine on win2000.
re pikes.
As an avid ancients gamer I would have to question the idea that pikes are armour piercing. I have owned and researched Macedonian and Successor armies and the idea that pikes are armour piercing didn't came up. While a spear obviously focuses a lot of impact on one point so does a sword thrust. A spear is really the basic weapon against which most others are judged - thus maces, and other bludgeoning weapons, are armour piercing compared to spears and swords. A pike differs from a spear in length but not necessarily in its ability to penetrate armour.
Pike is often seen as an anti-mounted weapon as mounted have effectively no chance at all frontally against a well trained infantry phalanx with pike and secure flanks - the same was true for a Hopilite phalanx. Long spear and pike should counter the effect of lances but both hopilite and pike phalanxes were actually extremely sophisticated anti-infantry formations.
The Hopilite evolved in an era of foot warfare as the pre-eminient infantry - most Greeks wars were against other Greeks. Greater reach, better armour and shields for close fighting, and the training to put it all together - read Steven Pressfields novel on Thermopylae for excellent details.
Pike was the counter to Hopilites with its extra reach canceling one of the advantages of the Hopilites spear. It also worked well against most other things deployed in the center of a battlefield so it became extremely popular until the rise of Rome.
Just to throw some more confusion I should bring up the battle of Benevento (might be the one before or after in the Sicilian Vespers - fantastic book on it by Runciman - first name Nigel? My copies on loan). At this C13th battle the French knights found themselves overmatched by the German sergeants who wore "coats of plate" and formed up in a dense wedge. The Frenchmens swords provided largely ineffective. Unprepared to accept defeat at the hands of such lesser foes the knights pulled out daggers and wrestled a horse driving the points of the daggers into the vunerable armpits and other nooks and crannies. So daggers should be penertrating?
Cheers
Keir
|
Good points and an interesting read, Keir. As for pikes, I would like to add that during the late medieval period and early renaissance, one of the main roles of the two-handed sword was to counter.. pikes. It proved to be quite useful for chopping off the tips of the pikes and could allow the wielder to hack a path through enemy pike squares.
|