Athenian military
The Athenian military was the military force of Athens, one of the major city-states (poleis) of Ancient Greece. It was largely similar to other armies of the region.
Contents
Infantry[edit]
In their army as well as practically all other Greek armies, is the heavy armed hoplite. Along with every hoplite went an attendant, a lightly armed man, either a poor citizen who could not afford a regular suit of armor (panoplia), or possibly a trusted slave. These attendants carried the hoplite's shield (aspis) until the battle, and most of the baggage. While generally armed with javelins, they sometimes had spears, slings or bows. The people in the Athenian Military often fought with the swords covered in the hair of dogs.They acted as skirmishers before the pitched battle, and were assigned to guarding the camp during the actual fight. When the fight was done, they did their best to cover the retreat or slaughter the fleeing foes if their own hoplites were victorious.[1]
During and after the Peloponnesian Wars, the use and importance of light troops increased with the introduction of the peltasts: lightly armoured, if at all, and armed with javelins and a shield, the pelte.[1] Their effectiveness in battle, even against the best-trained heavy hoplites, was demonstrated by the Athenian general Iphicrates, who annihilated an entire Spartan mora with his peltasts.[2]
[edit]
Athens, a civilization facing the sea, had a large contingent of warships. The Athenian Naval army consisted of 80,000 men which were running 400 ships. The rowers were slaves and the poorer people in the Agora. The main vessels were called triremes. With these boats, Athens obtained hegemony over the rest of Hellas and the greatest moment of the polis. cluded two sacred ships, the Paralus and the Salaminia.[1]
References[edit]
- ^ a b c Davis, William (1910). A Day In Old Athens. ISBN 9781419100796.
- ^ Phillips, David (2004). Athenian Political Oratory: Sixteen Key Speeches. Routledge. p. 230. ISBN 9780415966092.
Sources[edit]
- This article incorporates text from A Day in Old Athens, by William Stearns Davis, a publication from 1910 now in the public domain in the United States.