Jeff Yu said:
If the Huns are a mellowed down version of Mongols, then Romans are simply Greeks on steroids. The conquest of Greece and the Punic Wars were done with what amounted to Greek-style Hoplites, long before the Marian reforms created the professional legionary army. The difference being in tactics and organization, of course. Shall I form all my arguments on the basis they would have fought like Greeks, then?
well, first your going to have to back up that statment- as even in the time of the punic wars, the Romans were no longer using phalanx formations, and were relyting on a combination of light/medium infantry armed with swords and javlins, backed up by rather scanti numbers of real, hardcore spearmen- totally different from the greek style of fighting, as you should well recall
By the way, much of the Huns were on foot, too. Atilla was a few generation after their migration into Europe, and the Hungarian plain was nowhere enough to support the kind of horse armies the Mongols fielded. By the time they fought against Rome, the Huns were a sedentary people. The "Hunnic" army was a loose confederation of many Eastern Europian barbarian tribes that were tributary states, allies, or vassals of Atilla. The Mongol armies, on the other hand would be almost all cavalry, and all directly controlled by the general himself, with a tight and organized chain of command where maneuvers would be coordinated with banners and horns, unlike the Hun armies where local groups were led by tribal chiefs of doubtful quality.
A)the Huns still had a huge warrior ethos, and by the time fo attilla, were still more the cabalble fo defeating various othe rpeople who had been giving the late Romans quite a bit of trouble, though in turn, weres till defeated by the last scrap of the roman army, which was a huge infantry contigent for the most part, and didnt even make up a full half or perhaps even a third of the total allied troops to fight the huns.
however, it its cavalry armies you want, you need look no further then the various SKythia, bosporand, and sub brreds of the two wars, as well as the wars with Parthia and the neo-persian empire to see that Rome could make itself a very capable warrior agiast even bow weilding mounted opponents.
Any Roman auxilia would have been cannon fodder for the Mongols. We're talking about Mongols armed with bows that outranged and outpowered even English longbows (~130-150 lb draw weight vs 70-90 lb draw weight). The Roman cavalry came before the introduction of the stirrup to Europe, which the Mongols had. Without a stirrup, the Roman auxillia aren't going to be able to put effective weight onto their charge, and would be at a disadvantage while fighting on horseback.
individual equipment dosent matter, that simple- even formatiopnal equipment only modifies soem thing but not all of it- a bow twice that distance isnt goign to help when you being flanked on two sides by two roman cavalry alas- that said, the though that stirrups do anything is complete bull****- i dotn ride horses, but I know people who do, and ive read the testimonies, and people honestlly say that stirrups dont go for anything when making for a 'firmer" charge- its just easyer yo learn how to ride with them.
The Romans were never known for the quality of their cavalry, and the Mongols went up against nations fielding far superior cavalry of numerous types. Among these were the Knights of Poland, Teutonic Order, and Hungary, the cataphracts of Anatolia and central Asia and probably Persia, other steppe peoples, including Turks, Tartars, and other Mongols, horse based cultures like the Jurchens (precursors to the Manchus and efficient empire builders in their own right), and the Arab/Mameluke cavalries in Iraq and Syria. Now, many of these empires were known and reknown for the quality of their cavalry, while Rome wasn't. Roman cavalry was usually light, and morale wasn't great, either. Roman cavalry fleeing contibuted to decisive losses like Cannae and Adrianople. The Roman record against forces were superior cavalry isn't that great, either. Every time the Romans came up against armies equipped with superior cavalry, they loss. See: Gothic knights, battle of Cannae, Persians, Parthians, Sarmations, Seljuk Turks, Arab and Islamic invasion, Ottoman Empire.
A)firstlly, you shoudl change your opeing to
that YOU have never know the Romans for thier quality of cavalry- I can assure you that I have known of its quality, and its very evident, particuler when you go over the reconqoest of the west by belisarius who was using late Roman cataphracts
B)" Roman cavalry was usually light, and morale wasn't great, either." if you want to liit your armies to thos ebefore the marian reforms, youd be right- but I'm no tonoly talkign post marian reforms, i'm talkign post Augustian as well, when Rome had formmed a fully equipped, well trianed fightign force of cavalry, that was able to root all other cavalry oppoentns whil;e it was fiedled- every culture that used horses as either the sole point, or the lynch pin of its tacts was routed by post augustan, pre-diocletian reform armies
C)
Roman cavalry fleeing contibuted to decisive losses like Cannae and Adrianople. The Roman record against forces were superior cavalry isn't that great, either. Every time the Romans came up against armies equipped with superior cavalry, they loss. See: Gothic knights, battle of Cannae, Persians, Parthians, Sarmations, Seljuk Turks, Arab and Islamic invasion, Ottoman Empire.
obviouslly, canna happens far before the augustian reforms, adn adrianople happens well the diocletian reforms- and neither fo which cover the actual era of armies of saying that Rome coudl win with- you need to find actual expamples of a high or mid imperial army beign trashed by cavalry to have a point- but then you not going to find an example of that, but at that time Rome wielded a well balenced, well equipped, well drilled, and professional army, that crushed everythign in its path, includign itself on more then one occasion
In short, the Mongols wouldn't even sneeze at Roman cavalry. Once the cavalry was taken care of, the infantry would be toast. Heavy infantry on foot isn't going to be able to catch up to light cavalry on horse, and light cavalry will easily surround it and shower the Romans with arrows. Testudo formation, you say? Very well, but we're talking about a bow with greater draw weight than the English longbow, which itself had the ability to penetrate the armor worn by European knights. FURTHERMORE, the testudo basically can't do anything but sit there, as they'll never catch up to Mongols on horse. The testudo defence basically means a day of standing in the sun in metal armor, holding up a 10-ld shield, carrying 60 lbs of equipment and armor, and having to stay in a tight formation which makes for an impossible-to-miss target constantly being showered by arrows. That's basically what happened to Crassus's armies versus the Parthians at the Battle of Carrhae.
A)once agian, the imeprial army istn the army that was trashed at carrhae, and it wasnt the army that was trashed at adrianople
B)the romans didnt "rely" on infantry, just liek they didnt "rely" on cavarly in the era I'm tlakign about- thewy tended to get lavish off battlefeild attention, but on the battlefeild, the Commanders utlized both however they were needed to ensure victory- the simple materilization of the cataphract, and heavy horsement that in its day could multi -role, and on many occasion in th ebelisarian camapign, amoung others, were the the only troops involved ina battle agiasnt superior numbers of the oppoent, and still won;you can possibley say the the Roman had no cavalry, or crappy cavalry- ti dosetn cut it.
C)If you think that the Romans fough tliek european knights, then you have no buisness int he thread, if you think that equipment is the soel factor of war, then you have no buisness in this thread- it equipment was the sole factor in war, then iraq qould be won by now, but rathe robviouslly it istn.
D)your also forgettign the other important faros of a well balenced and happy Roman army, the light cavalry, rangerd troops, and feild artillery peices.
Manuever-wise, the Mongols also have the advantage. Should the Romans choose to simply fortify and encamp, the Mongols can simply pin them down with some force, and use their speed in advantage to attack their logistics. As formidable as any army can be, they can't fight without food. The speed of the Mongols mean they have freedom of maneuever, allowing them to fight on terms only advantageous to them, bypass armies and fortifications as they please, and loot and rape Roman towns. Remember, the Mongol modus operandi was "wipe them out, all of them", leaving alive only skilled craftsmen and potential human shields. The Mongols themselves had no logistics line to attack, since they carried everything on their horses, including their dismantled siege engines, and they feed off their horses when necessary, drinking mare's milk and horse blood.
A)where talkign not about the armies of Rome I;ve choosen here, and your forgettign a keen fac to Roman histopry for that period- the Romans didnt fight on thier own ground, they met the enemy head on- the mongols would be able to "sack and rape" any Roman town because the Romans themselves wouldnt be in thier own empire.
B)you say freedom to manuver? I say poppy cock- didnt hep the ostrogoths when they attmepted to seige rome when belisarius had retaken it- the biggest bithc to anyone actually tryign to sige a roman army is the fact that they too, carried all thier **** with them, and so could survive for extended periods of time on thier own supplies, untila relife force would come, or they themselves defeated the enemy
C)the Mogol modus operandi could have been "wipe thier ass, all of it" and it wouldnt really matter, as you seem to be forgetting that while the Romans often wer eleient to local populations, they were also not afraid to give into bloodlust, and kill everyobne, potential meat sheilds and workers included- the Romans were troops trianed to kill thier own brothers in arms if they so had too, you should well remember that when thinking of whom had more nerve
D)your point also brings forward another strong point for rome- the fact that they didnt just send one army to tdo the job, as they were firm beliver sint he term "overkill", and often sent
three armies to go out, and do what was needed; okay, so your mongols pin down the intial army- the other two now learn a bastion of Mongol tactics, and prepare for it, and possible even leade a counte rmarch to relive army 1's position
Siege wise, Mongols win. Roman siege engines are irrelevent here, since the Mongols don't have any cities to siege. Any cities they capture would be looted, sacked, and burned down, with its inhabitants killed. The Mongols existed a thousand years after the Romans, and they had everything the Romans had, plus more. They had siege engines and engineers from China, Central Asia, and the Middle East, plus they had cannon, gunpowder, and fireworks, something the Romans didn't have. City walls in Song and later dynasties were designed to stand up against cannon and gunpowder, being thickened and reinforced, while pre-gunpowder era walls weren't and Roman fortifications existed before even the fortification advances of the Middle Ages, meaning they wouldn't stand a chance against Mongol siege expertise. We saw how well Constantinople's famed walls stood up against Mehmet's cannon (which is to say, they didn't) over a thousand years after the Roman legions in their heyday.
A)someone seems to be forgetting that the walls of constantinople. built by late romans, and without the advatages of rome
concrete was still able to hold up agiast guns and gun powder, arnt they
B)obviosully, that just underlines the fact that Roman cities were infact often guarded by a concrete wall, and the reason that in the late empire so many wer epillaged istn because the walls fialed, its because the late ropman army was crap, and defeate din feild battlels, and left no troops for city defense
C)actually, if anything, its the Romans whom have the seige engine advatage- not because th emongol have cities to seige, because the Romans always enjoyed giving thier enemy the tasty surprise of having to deal with such artiller fire on thier own ranks of troops; I ask just how many times did the mongols come under masser artillery fire under thier campaigns, anyway?
The armies the Mongols fought against were hardly utter crap. The Mongols fought armies of millions (Song China even in its fractured state) with forces against consisting of hundreds of thousands. It defeated the Kwarazim empire, 4th largest empire, in a single campaign.
big empires dont mean big armies, and more over big armies dont mean good armies; agian the modern world is a picture perfect case, with N. Korea having the largest army in the world, the US military tiny compared to it; but in regule rmilitary engagements, the US army wins handsdown; the smae applies for all eras mind you- war is often a game of knowldge and tactics, somthign the Romans excelled at- the mongols were no one to cough at with it, but a thousand year empire tends to be fairlly tellign about how good, on average, Roman tacticians were, and what king of wisdom they could draw upon
If you're going to use the "weak and divided" argument against the Mongols, I'm certainly going to use it against the Romans. Guess what? The Gauls, the Germans, the Greeks, the British tribes, the Picts, Ptolemaic Egypt, the Seluecids and even the Carthinians were weak and divided. The Germans very rarely unified, and the only time the Gauls unified was under Vergintorix, who only managed at the last minute, which was too late. The Greeks were divided up into small leagues and city states, while the latter suffered from civil war and/or disunity. The Mongols fought against empires with strong centralized governments and huge standing armies while the Romans fought against fractured tribes and small kingdoms.
the Carthaginains werre harldey devided- the same goes for the macedonians, parthians, persians, select peiods in Iberian history, numdians, nor most steep armies that Rome faced were actually divdided, and yet rome managed to whoop thier asses- amazinglly enough, almost all those armies utilize cavalry that migt be considered 'superior" to what the romans sported as well