frekk
Scourge of St. Lawrence
Commander Bello said:Maybe... but is there any major battle in which they were reported to have been used in a significant manner? I mean, in a field battle.
Although not being a specialist in ancient times battles I don't remember ANY such reporting.
Yes. It's written about, as well as depicted in relief carvings, from Roman times. Organic artillery support was a very regular feature of Roman armies. Vegetius Renatus describes each legion being assigned field artillery, each century in a legion being typically equipped with 1 carroballista. Carroballista are, of course, suitable for no other purpose than in the field - but this would be nothing like what was seen in Gladiator, of course, but judging from other writings, from about the 3rd century BC onwards they were standard fare in field battles for the Romans.
There may have been onagers used to fire showers of small debris or flammable substances in the field, but as far as I know it's not really clear if this would occur or not. However, each legion was always equipped with a substantial number of onagers - one for every cohort. Roman writers divide tormenta (artillery) into three general types, whose role more or less corresponds to siege artillery, field artillery, and heavy weapons (such as the heavy machineguns of WW1). Onagers seem to have formed part of the first class, carroballista the second, and scorpio the third.
They were used in ancient and medieval times against fortifications, though. So, making them a field improvement to be built on enemy soil would be more historically correct that having some kind of highly manouverable light field artillery, as it was the case in Civ3.
True. IMO, to be really accurate though, artillery simply shouldn't be represented at all in the game - it should just be assumed as part of the standard equipment for various units.