Pyrrhic Greek cavalry

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ochoin
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Pyrrhic Greek cavalry

Post by ochoin »

The creme de la creme: Pyrrhos' agema (bodyguard) cavalry:

Image

Image

Image

Image

This makes 11 units completed & 4 to go to finish the army.

donald
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Re: Pyrrhic Greek cavalry

Post by FreddBloggs »

No shields?
ochoin
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Re: Pyrrhic Greek cavalry

Post by ochoin »

FreddBloggs wrote: Thu May 13, 2021 9:23 amNo shields?
Good question. Maybe....if I can get some hoplite ones. However, the xyston - being a mini-sarissa- may have required two hands to wield so shields may *not* have been used.

BTW I'm a bit bemused that Hellenistic cavalry used hoplite shields. Big? Cumbersome? Made for infantry???

donald
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Re: Pyrrhic Greek cavalry

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So would you describe that as a "Union blue"?
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Re: Pyrrhic Greek cavalry

Post by FreddBloggs »

ochoin wrote: Thu May 13, 2021 9:38 am
FreddBloggs wrote: Thu May 13, 2021 9:23 amNo shields?
Good question. Maybe....if I can get some hoplite ones. However, the xyston - being a mini-sarissa- may have required two hands to wield so shields may *not* have been used.

BTW I'm a bit bemused that Hellenistic cavalry used hoplite shields. Big? Cumbersome? Made for infantry???

donald
I suspect they were hoplon shaped, but smaller, more like a phalangites. But other than having a note he was one of the first greek adopters of native shielded cavalry, rather than hiring them in, I know little more.
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Re: Pyrrhic Greek cavalry

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BaronVonWreckedoften wrote: Thu May 13, 2021 10:57 am So would you describe that as a "Union blue"?
It began as Vallejo's Oxford Blue- almost purple. After washing & highlighting, it does look not unlike Yankee blue.
I call it, "campaign worn".

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Re: Pyrrhic Greek cavalry

Post by ochoin »

FreddBloggs wrote: Thu May 13, 2021 11:15 am
I suspect they were hoplon shaped, but smaller, more like a phalangites. But other than having a note he was one of the first greek adopters of native shielded cavalry, rather than hiring them in, I know little more.
I have to source shields for this & a unit of plastic Greek cavalry (HaT Thessalians). No idea from where.

However, it's something easily glued on after the event & I'm sure something will turn up.

Duncan Head thinks cavalry shields for Greeks may have come after Pyrrhus' Italian adventure. But, as you know, speculation is often all we have for the period.

Re; shield size- I went back & saw "hoplite-style" shields was written. So a smaller version, as you wrote, is correct.

cheers, donald
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Re: Pyrrhic Greek cavalry

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BaronVonWreckedoften wrote: Thu May 13, 2021 10:57 am So would you describe that as a "Union blue"?
Noy in Andy's hearing
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