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The Hoplite Heresy: Why We Don't Know How the Ancient Greeks Waged War
YouTube ^ | February 9, 2023 | The Historian's Craft

Posted on 02/14/2023 10:12:36 AM PST by SunkenCiv

Hoplites are probably one of the first things that come to mind when one thinks of "Ancient Greece". Equipped with a bronze spear and wearing bronze armor or a linothorax, and hefting the aspis—the hoplite’s bronze shield—they fought in phalanxes. The classic mode of fighting in this formation was the "othismos", the push, with the aim being to disrupt the enemy phalanx and break their formation. But, over the past few decades, views on hoplite warfare have been called into question and seriously revised, because there are problems in the source material. So, what are these problems, and how do historians of Ancient Greece understand hoplite warfare?
The Hoplite Heresy: Why We Don't Know How the Ancient Greeks Waged War
The Historian's Craft | 54.5K subscribers | 96,547 views | February 9, 2023
The Hoplite Heresy: Why We Don't Know How the Ancient Greeks Waged War | The Historian's Craft | 54.5K subscribers | 96,547 views | February 9, 2023

(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...


TOPICS: History; Science; Travel
KEYWORDS: adriankgoldsworthy; godsgravesglyphs; greece; hoplites
[snip] ...Whilst a few passages do imply literal shoving withshields (Thuc. 4. 96. 2; Xen, Cyr. 7. 1 334), they do not suggest that therear ranks were pushing those in front of them forward, but that individuals in the front ranks were using their shields to buffet and try to unbalance individual enemies. However, support for the traditional view has continued to be passionate. In a reply to the most recent advocate of the orthodox view, Krentz commented: to the best of my knowledge I have not convinced anyone.

Yet, the advocates of massed shoving have failed to demolish these objections to their theory. The proponents of a series of loose-formation duels have also been unable to prove their case. An alternative model for the nature of hoplite battle is required. One of the most pressing needs is to explain the role of the rear ranks and the reason why deep phalanxes were so often successful. I believe that the key to the problem is to explore two factors, both of which have been largely ignored in the past. The first of these is the practical difficulty of moving large numbers of men as a group across even the flattest battlefield. The second factor is even more vital to understanding any type of battle, namely the morale of the participants. Too often in the past morale has been relegated to a minor role in hoplite battle. Even Hanson, who gives far greater attention to morale than any previous study, often fails to carry arguments to their logical conclusion. This is not a fault unique to those studying Greek warfare, but common to much of military history. By re-examining the primary accounts in the context of these factors I hope to present a more convincing picture of hoplite battle, and to demonstrate that these encounters did not involve massed shoving.

Before moving on to discuss these points, it is worth noting that it cannot be argued that close combat was a matter of massed shoving in any other period of military history, including those when armies were equipped solely with edged weapons. Indeed, when men became closely packed together, it was usually a sign that things had gone badly wrong and resulted in especially high casualties. [/snip]
The Othismos, Myths and Heresies: The Nature of Hoplite Battle | Adrian K. Goldsworthy | 7/27/2019

1 posted on 02/14/2023 10:12:36 AM PST by SunkenCiv
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Transcript
0:07yet the Greeks as I learned do wage war
0:10and they do it senselessly in their
0:12foolishness and stupidity
0:14when they have declared war against each
0:16other they come down to the fairest and
0:18most level ground that they can find and
0:20fight there so that the victors come off
0:22with great harm I will say nothing of
0:25the defeated for they are utterly
0:26destroyed if they must make war upon
0:29each other they should each discover
0:30where they are in the strongest position
0:32and make the attempt there the Greek
0:35custom then is not good so wrote the
0:38historian Herodotus placing the words in
0:41the mouth of a Persian
0:42this is the classic picture of several
0:45centuries of Greek Warfare heavily
0:47armored Soldiers the famous hoplites
0:49arranged in a Phalanx duking it out on
0:52the level playing field somewhere in
0:54Greece but this picture has several
0:56problems in the whole field of Greek
0:58military history revolving around the
1:00subject has been upended over the past
1:03decades
1:04what I want to do in this video then is
1:06explore Greek Warfare in the controversy
1:09currently raging among professional
1:10historians sometimes called the Phalanx
1:13heresy the central question in the study
1:15of Greek Warfare is not only why
1:18considering that Greece is an extremely
1:20Rocky landscape the Greeks develop the
1:22form of War based around organized
1:24groups of heavily armored soldiers
1:26fighting with Spears but also when at
1:29first glance it does not appear to make
1:31much sense the common image of the Greek
1:33hoplet usually looks something like the
1:35following
1:36The Shield used by the hoplites the
1:39aspis measured on average approximately
1:4190 centimeters in diameter and weighed
1:44about seven kilograms and was about 25
1:46to 38 millimeters thick being
1:49constructed of wood faced with bronze
1:51completing the Soldier's Armament would
1:53have been a bronze breastplate although
1:55it was eventually supplanted by the
1:57lenothorax Apparently made of linen
1:59bronze Grieves and a bronze helmet with
2:02the printable weapon being a spear
2:04initially about 2.5 meters in length but
2:07eventually growing to about 4.5 meters
2:10the shields overlapped forming a Phalanx
2:13formation with at least seven rows of
2:15soldiers although sometimes it was as
2:17deep as 40 rows
2:19in short This Is War characterized by
2:22the use of heavy infantry but as we'll
2:25see in this video there are issues
2:26surrounding this picture with about 20
2:29to 30 percent of Grease being flat
2:31ground Farmland was comparatively scarce
2:33and this forms the Crux of the
2:35traditional argument about ancient Greek
2:37Warfare known among professionals as the
2:40Orthodox view in this line of reasoning
2:42the hoplite directly equates to the
2:44Phalanx it is not a standalone type of
2:47soldier and it was developed in the late
2:498th or the early 7th Century BC that is
2:52classical Warfare developed in the early
2:55Archaic Period these were the famous
2:57citizen soldiers of Greece who fought
3:00because they had a stake in the system
3:01in the Orthodox view this is sometimes
3:04referred to as the Greek middle class
3:06because Farmland was scarce phalanxes
3:09had to fight on the planes because the
3:11former soldiers could not risk losing
3:13anything to the enemy they had to stand
3:15and fight
3:16and when the Phalanx is engaged they
3:19fought in a manner characterized by
3:21orphismos shoving the opposing hoplites
3:24charged at a run crashing into the enemy
3:27front rank if one side did not collapse
3:29as a result of this crash then the men
3:31in the ranks behind the first press the
3:33broad Shields against the back of the
3:35man in front and pushed him forward the
3:37combined physical thrust of one densely
3:39packed mass of men was opposed by the
3:41thrust of the enemy phalanx
3:43eventually one side was forced back and
3:46its front collapsed The Hop lights
3:48perhaps being literally knocked over and
3:49trampled there was little or no actual
3:52fighting after the initial very brief
3:54Clash of Spears the shoving was decisive
3:58a hop late battle was literally a
4:00struggle of mass against Mass the
4:03long-term result is that phalan's
4:04Warfare was another aspect of Greek life
4:06characterized by competition with
4:08Unwritten Rules of Engagement based
4:10around honor and mutual respect and
4:13missile troops and Cavalry would not
4:15often employed War became a pre-arranged
4:18affair to the extent that one historian
4:20in particular referred to it as an
4:22absurd conspiracy designed to
4:24concentrate the horrors of War into a
4:26restrictive specially designed manner
4:28what altered this system was the
4:30prolonged conflict of the Peloponnesian
4:32War where Athens refused to face Sparta
4:35in the field the Athenians instead
4:37choosing to hide behind their walls
4:38which forced the system to change and
4:41break down the end result eventually was
4:43the conquest of the Greek city-states by
4:45Philip and Alexander or Macedon whose
4:48reformed Army was beyond anything the
4:50Greeks could possibly stand up to
4:52however among historians a new view has
4:55arisen in recent decades known as The
4:57heretical View
4:59they point out that we actually have
5:01very little evidence for supporting the
5:02Orthodox View and that that particular
5:05understanding of Greek war comes not so
5:07much from cherry-picking sources so much
5:09as it does from over emphasizing certain
5:11points and applying statements from
5:14texts centuries beyond what can actually
5:15be applied to we have very little Source
5:18material for the Archaic Period but we
5:20do know that Greeks fought and Phalanx
5:22is in The Classical period and what
5:25older generations of historians have
5:27done is take the characterization of The
5:29Classical period and push it back onto
5:32the archaic and like in Greek war to
5:35rugby or football no Greek historian for
5:38example emphasizes that of these most
5:40involves all of the troops in the
5:41Phalanx rather it has been assumed to be
5:44the case simply because the Phalanx had
5:45multiple rows of troops and the majority
5:48of the Rose must have been there for
5:49something because they were not in the
5:52front lines
5:53this is actually the case with much of
5:55the dispute over how the Greeks engaged
5:57in war
5:58what did the sources actually mention
6:00what do they leave out how do we
6:03interpret these things and what was the
6:05norm for Greek Warfare and what were the
6:07exceptions all of this then heavily
6:09revolves around the question of
6:11chronology and the actual development of
6:13the Greek phalanx
6:15there were three major views here
6:17the rapid adoption Theory argues that
6:19the Phalanx was developed between about
6:21725 and 675 BC and that the heavily
6:25armed hoplite was restricted by use of
6:27the heavy Shield
6:29which forced soldiers to develop the
6:31formation
6:32and once this was done it proved so
6:35effective that their opponents had to do
6:36the same
6:38essentially the hot plate equates
6:40directly to the Phalanx the gradualist
6:42adoption Theory extends the timeline
6:44slightly between 750 and 650 BC and
6:48seized the creation of the Phalanx as
6:50emerging in a series of small steps but
6:53which ultimately became the dominant
6:54model for Greek Warfare by about 650
6:57because it was so effective the last
6:59idea known as the extended gradualist
7:01Theory places the development of the
7:04Phalanx between about 750 and about 450
7:07BC
7:08the first two are associated with the
7:10Orthodox View and the latter usually
7:12with the heretical view Central to that
7:15question of chronology is a small piece
7:17of pottery from about 640 BC discovered
7:19in Italy only 26 centimeters tall known
7:23as the kiji vase it depicts Greek
7:25warriors in battle wearing bronze armor
7:28equipped with large Shields that overlap
7:30this has been used to bolster the
7:32Orthodox view that the hoplite equates
7:34to the Phalanx that is heavily armored
7:37spearmen were present in at least the
7:39mid-7th century BC and that this type of
7:42War therefore had an early development
7:44this view has been called in the
7:46question by the Heretics however because
7:48while the armor appears to be what the
7:50hoplites would wear in which we do have
7:52surviving material evidence for
7:54the men are not equipped with Spears
7:57these are instead javelins and they
7:59appear to be carrying two or perhaps
8:02javelins alongside Spears
8:05they are raised overhead and it's not
8:07clear if they are intended to be thrown
8:09or thrust and the textual sources from
8:12this period of archaic Greece often
8:14discuss men throwing their weapons not
8:16necessarily stabbing as later sources
8:18directly tell us
8:20the soldiers are also not in a Phalanx
8:22it has been pointed out that the other
8:24soldiers are not directly behind their
8:26allies but are instead running to them
8:28perhaps as reinforcements and thus the
8:31combatants may actually be dueling but
8:34because of the medium it has to be
8:35depicted in two-dimensional form hence
8:38the confusion the point that the
8:39Heretics raised with this is that the
8:41chronology for a rapid adoption of
8:43Phalanx Warfare in the Archaic Period is
8:45not necessarily obvious and Crystal
8:47Clear in fact it's actually fairly murky
8:50the Heretics also point out that
8:52contrary to what the Orthodox Scholars
8:54have argued our texts from the time of
8:57classical Greek Warfare do discuss
8:59fighting on fields but they also discuss
9:02fighting in mountain passes with the
9:04Battle of Thermopylae perhaps being the
9:05most famous
9:07fighting behind strong points and the
9:09pursuing of rounded soldiers and
9:11massacres the Greeks opted for surprise
9:14attacks and selected precarious ground
9:16whether numbers or lack thereof would
9:18give them an edge against opponents
9:20including both the Persians and each
9:23other
9:24the chronology is also incorrect for an
9:26early adoption of the Citizen Soldier
9:28coming into being because if we take the
9:30Orthodox view seriously we should be
9:33looking for what has been called a Greek
9:35middle class which fermented what is
9:37usually known as the hoplite revolution
9:39in the 8th Century BC that does not show
9:42up until the 5th Century BC
9:45this argument is usually extended to
9:48support the idea of a class of Citizen
9:49soldiers being crucial to the
9:51development of Athenian democracy but
9:53the reality appears to be that prior to
9:56the 5th Century Hop Led to a drawn from
9:58a more mixed bag of people from across
10:01Greek society and it tended towards the
10:03wealthy this group of people does
10:05eventually appear but it is
10:07significantly later than what the
10:09Orthodox view requires so what does this
10:11mean for Greek Warfare how did they
10:13actually fight
10:15well the short answer is that this is
10:17still up in the air but current research
10:20is starting to move towards a new
10:21paradigm of fighting sometimes called
10:24the new Orthodoxy
10:25our key text on Greek Warfare such as
10:28thucydides xenophon and polybius among
10:30others reflect Warfare as it stood at
10:33the end of The Classical period and the
10:35early Hellenistic era
10:37this is when we really have completely
10:39unequivocal evidence of Phalanx Warfare
10:41in the manner that we typically conceive
10:43of it it is during the Peloponnesian War
10:46that we see the supposed Rules of
10:48Engagement such as establishing trophies
10:50over battlefields and truces to recover
10:52the dead which apparently dictated Greek
10:55Warfare for three centuries actually
10:57coming into being
10:59this is also when we have evidence of
11:01how large of Phalanx actually is these
11:04texts also reflect ideals of warfare not
11:07necessarily the reality
11:09none of this by itself is overly
11:11controversial what is controversial is
11:14the role of atheismos in the phalanx
11:17the new interpretation is that rather
11:19than being some sort of massive pushing
11:21contest only the first two or three
11:24ranks could really have been engaged in
11:25combat and it cannot have been a
11:28formation that was too tightly packed
11:29because pressure from the rear would
11:31have made the front lines unable to move
11:33and unable to use their Spears instead
11:36the termophysmos refers to pushing or
11:39shoving only in the first few ranks of
11:41the phalanx which might have been
11:43organized in a slightly looser spacing
11:45enabling a unified Shield wall if
11:48required but also limited dueling
11:51with the exception of the Spartans the
11:53majority of the Hop lights were not full
11:55time and thus not fully trained Soldiers
11:57the idea of an ordered well-trained body
12:00of spearmen Marching In lockstep appears
12:02to be an anachronism projected backward
12:04onto the archaic and early classical
12:06periods from the professional armies of
12:09the Hellenistic era
12:11it appears to have been normal for
12:13soldiers when advancing towards the
12:15enemy to break into a run in which case
12:18somehow distance the others causing the
12:20Phalanx to at least temporarily
12:22partially break up
12:23if the first few ranks wavered and broke
12:26then the formation would be in disarray
12:28which is what Lucidity is for example
12:30actually tells us so rather than the
12:33whole formation shoving into each other
12:35the depth of the Phalanx was designed
12:37with the bravest men to be in the front
12:39and the rear with the more timid troops
12:41in the middle and would have helped keep
12:43formation as it moved and lend support
12:45to the front line troops as they fought
12:48more experienced troops appeared to have
12:50formed shallower phalanxes as the
12:52Athenians did in eight ranks against 16
12:54fielded by the syracuseans in 415. no
12:58matter how deep this was though there
13:00was a tendency for hoplites to move
13:02towards the right as they Advanced and
13:04as fighting began in an attempt to
13:06protect themselves with their partner's
13:08Shield although even this has been
13:09questioned recently because it has been
13:11pointed out that soldiers in the Phalanx
13:13fought in a side profile in which case
13:16The Shield would have covered most of
13:17the body battles in The Classical period
13:19Then tended to focus on opening gaps in
13:22the enemy's Phalanx rather than outright
13:24shoving match with the aim being to open
13:27a gap and then pour in the older view
13:30was that Warfare was dominated by the
13:32hot blades but recent work on Greek
13:33Cavalry and archers has demonstrated
13:36that the Greeks were aware that the
13:37Phalanx was not the end-all be-all that
13:40it was vulnerable
13:41it is for that reason that we read of
13:43Phalanx as being formed with their backs
13:45or one flank blocked by a body of water
13:48or some geographical feature or
13:50otherwise supported by calvary or
13:52missile troops far from being the
13:54dominant player on the battlefield
13:56classical Greek war saw the Phalanx as
13:58one piece in Combined arms Warfare
14:02Beyond this pitched battles were a rare
14:04occurrence which is why they stand out
14:06in the source material
14:08skirmishes sieges raiding and the
14:12wholesale Massacre of civilians is a
14:14Mainstay of Greek war in the Classical
14:15period and certainly appears to have
14:18been something of the norm in the
14:20preceding archaea due to the long
14:21development of this style of warfare the
14:24Peloponnesian War rather than
14:25representing the breakdown of the
14:27Phalanx instead represents the
14:29culmination of the Greek way of war and
14:32marked not the decline of the Greek
14:34city-states but the apogee of Greece and
14:37the maturation of the Citizen Soldier in
14:39the form that we have come to know so
14:41well

2 posted on 02/14/2023 10:16:42 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; 2ndDivisionVet; 31R1O; ...
The Hop developed in the 1950s, and oddly, the Hop light developed in the ancient world.

3 posted on 02/14/2023 10:18:20 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Hop along, Cassidy..................


4 posted on 02/14/2023 10:39:53 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: SunkenCiv

People wonder. But we live in an age where we have a few artifacts, sparse records, and ample supplies of people with free time, interest, and theories.

Why not put them to work in conducting exercises. Kit a few thousand able bodies and put the academics’ theories to the test. No killing and no blood drawn (if it can be helped) but formations could be organized and participants can have at it.

Find out what it takes to organize, train, and employ companies of slingers, cavalry, peltasts, and hoplites in field. And let the participants improvise using the tools and weapons we know they had at hand.

Steven Peessfield’s _The Gates of Fire_ would be a great primer to get people in the spirit.


5 posted on 02/14/2023 11:08:03 AM PST by BradyLS (DO NOT FEED THE BEARS!)
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To: BradyLS

Oooh, “if it can be helped”, heh, I think there isn’t much of a reenactor community for Greek hoplite warfare, at least among modern Greeks, but it is studied and tested on a small scale here and there on university campuses in the UK and elsewhere.

Reenactment to test this particular idea (the pushing technique, which would clearly favor the more numerous side) should cover the Battle of Leuctra, which imho finally settled the Peloponnesian War.

https://www.worldhistory.org/Battle_of_Leuctra/

https://www.greece-is.com/day-ancient-greece-battle-leuctra-371-bc/


6 posted on 02/14/2023 11:23:33 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Epaminondas, he's our man...)
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To: SunkenCiv

I don’t know about the particulars of battle tactics, but I do know that Greek warfare was predicated on a relatively low population, which enhanced the value of the individual soldier and/or necessitated a far greater dependency on the individual solder, especially as opposed to larger empires who could conscript mass armies and not care about individual losses.


7 posted on 02/14/2023 1:48:16 PM PST by nicollo ("I said no!")
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