What kind of force would Cyrus have led against the Medes (before the defection of Harpagus and part of the Mede army)?
Persian nobles and their retinue; seperate spear and bow foot units, the odd chariot, a very few light and heavy cavalry? I know this will be informed guesswork in the main...
Read the Cyropaidia for Xenophon's version. Allegedly Cyrus invented Persian heavy infantry... And he reckons the Persians originally had few or no cavalry, but Cyrus organized a cavalry force only after overthrowing the Medes. There seems to be no supporting evidence for any of this, though.
Thanks. Been looking at the Cyropaidia today. Just wondered if there was any new thinking on Cyrus.
Cyropaidia reminds me of the kind of rhetoric I used to write in O level mocks. Still, it's what we have.
Duncan, when do you think a corps like the Immortals emerged? Post the Babylon campaign?
QuoteAccordingly he selected ten thousand lancers (doruphoroi) from among them, to keep guard round the palace, night and day, whenever he was at home, and to march beside him whenever he went abroad. ... This royal guard that he established there ... survive to this day unaltered.
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Cyropaedia VII.5.68-70
So Xenophon thinks after the conquest of Babylon, yes. I don't think we have any non-Greek evidence to check against it.
Thanks. What do you think the bulk of his infantry were for the Lydian Campaign? On the Mede model of seperate bow and spear units or combined?
No idea. Even "the Mede model" is pretty hypothetical.
OK, thanks.
I don't think we've got any non-Greek evidence that the Immortal corps even existed.
Given that mixed formations of spearmen and archers seem to have had a long history in Mesopotamia, I'd be tempted to assume Persian infantry was sparabarah style from very early on. It seems more likely they adopted the style before rather than after the conquest of Babylonia, because conquerors are rarely in much hurry to copy the system they'd just defeated.
(That said, there's a lot of time between the conquest of Babylonia and Herodotus' battle-accounts, so maybe hurry wasn't needed.)
I'm disinclined to put much store in the story about Cyaxares' reform, because mixed formations of spearmen, archers, and cavalry would be decidedly odd. More likely we're seeing a folk memory of Cyaxares as a culture hero bringing order to society in general. And while it's prima facie plausible the early Persians were more influenced by their Median overlords than by their Mesopotamian neighbours, if we assume they used separate units of spearmen and archers under Median influence, we must then also assume a switch (?back) to mixed formations, which isn't terribly parsimonious.
Thanks Andreas
This sums up the Immortal debate nicely: http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/immortals
However, nothing a gamer likes more than a handy classification, however spurious.
I'm very new to this period, hence the questions. Armati lacks a detailed army list 553-526BC and virus isolation offers a perfect excuse.
Your Sparabara idea makes a lot of sense, do you therefore think the Medes followed the same mixed unit organisation?
Quote from: rodge on March 25, 2020, 08:45:03 AM
Your Sparabara idea makes a lot of sense, do you therefore think the Medes followed the same mixed unit organisation?
I'd rather not guess what pre-Achaemenid Median infantry were like!
If I were writing an army list, I might go for a global choice; either all mixed, or all separate units of archers and spearmen. That would allow players to choose whether they believe in Cyaxares' reform, or prefer to project the sparabarah style they used in Persian Wars back to the pre-Achaemenid era.
If your rules happen to have something for mixed mounted and foot units, one might allow it as a third option - presumably with a date-limit to not after the reign of Cyaxares - but I wouldn't suggest coming up with such a classification just to handle early Medes.
Quote from: Andreas Johansson on March 25, 2020, 09:19:03 AM
If I were writing an army list, I might go for a global choice; either all mixed, or all separate units of archers and spearmen. That would allow players to choose whether they believe in Cyaxares' reform, or prefer to project the sparabarah style they used in Persian Wars back to the pre-Achaemenid era.
That is where I'm at.
Is it worth giving some consideration to the Elamites. They are a major military force and have a 'style' that would presumably become incorporated into the Persian army which could be seen as a meld of Persian, Mede and Elamite.
Roy .
7th century Assyrian reliefs show Elamite infantry as unshielded archers, while Herodotus has the Cissians - i.e. the people of lowland Elam around Susa - in Xerxes' army equipped like the Persians with spear, shield, and bow.
The Nigels tell me that Assyrian inscriptions mention shielded archers. While they don't show up on reliefs, one could imagine them being proto-sparabara with pavises.
I have the vaguest of memories of Nigel T saying somewhere that the source is ambiguous and might just mean "archers and shield-bearers".
Here is an article on Elamite bows (https://www.academia.edu/42039061/The_Bow_of_Elam_submitted_2016_), which looks interesting in its own right but may not help much.
Quote from: Duncan Head on March 25, 2020, 12:30:15 PM
I have the vaguest of memories of Nigel T saying somewhere that the source is ambiguous and might just mean "archers and shield-bearers".
I see the DBMM list quotes it as "men of the bow and the shield", which one could easily imagine reflecting an ellipsis for "men of the bow and men of the shield". I guess what we need is more assyriologists in the Society.
Now, archers plus shield-bearers too could mean a sparabarah-like formation.
Quote from: Andreas Johansson on March 25, 2020, 01:54:47 PM
Now, archers plus shield-bearers too could mean a sparabarah-like formation.
Thats what I thought. Any idea how the Elamite foot units were comprised?
Quote from: Andreas Johansson on March 25, 2020, 01:54:47 PMNow, archers plus shield-bearers too could mean a sparabarah-like formation.
Or could, in DBMM terms, mean any of several other things!
"A shield-bearer from Sialk" (https://www.academia.edu/36562776/A_SHIELD-BEARER_FROM_SIALK_RECTANGULAR_SHIELDS_IN_THE_ANCIENT_NEAR_EAST)
This article is about the shielded figure on pottery that I linked to early in this thread, whom Farrokh identified as a Mede. In fact a quick Google suggests that the "Sialk B" site from which he comes is variously dated, and is not universally identified as Median. I think indeed he is the source for Tallis & Stillman's Fig.165, described as Mannaian. So he may not be much use to you after all.
Quote from: rodge on March 25, 2020, 01:56:46 PM
Any idea how the Elamite foot units were comprised?
Not sure what you mean, but my previous posts contain something close to the sum total of my knowledge of Neo-Elamite infantry.
Quote from: Duncan Head on March 25, 2020, 03:12:29 PM
Or could, in DBMM terms, mean any of several other things!
Certainly; I'm not suggesting we run out and emend our Neo-Elamite army lists.
Quote from: Andreas Johansson on March 25, 2020, 03:47:10 PM
Quote from: rodge on March 25, 2020, 01:56:46 PM
Any idea how the Elamite foot units were comprised?
Not sure what you mean, but my previous posts contain something close to the sum total of my knowledge of Neo-Elamite infantry.
Sorry, I meant were they mixed spear and bow units or spear units and bow units.
For the 7C I think our best guess has to be to take Ashurbanipal at face value and assume they were predominantly bow only.
For the 6C, who knows? At some point between the reliefs depicting the battle of the Ulai (655 BC) and Xerxes' invasion they evidently adopt sparabarah tactics, but I'm not aware of any hint as to when.