I wasn't talking individual battles, I was talking long-term (though it was poor wording on my part, to be sure). You fight the steppe by making it disappear.
Are you talking to me, because that did not answer my questions

I wasn't talking individual battles, I was talking long-term (though it was poor wording on my part, to be sure). You fight the steppe by making it disappear.
Sanotra said:1. Who wrote all that?
Sanotra said:2. Why does it take 6 supply wagons to double the marching length instead of just 2?
Sanotra said:3. Didn't Russian and Chinese forces have supply stations/forts all along their war routes so they could resupply easily without returning all the way back to base?
North King said:I wasn't talking individual battles, I was talking long-term (though it was poor wording on my part, to be sure). You fight the steppe by making it disappear.
In the long term the only means of projecting power into the steppe until the advent of the railway was to adopt, co-opt and adapt pre-existing tactics and more broadly speaking strategy to fight steppe nomads. You make the steppe disappear by reducing their ability to move, by constricting them into smaller geographic pockets where you have an increased chance of meeting and engaging the enemy, you also win by exterminating their homes and families and forcing your static defenses including walled towns, cities and more prosaic defenses forward; proportional to your ability to deny the enemy movement further out. You don't advance to meet them with static defenses, unless you wish to be fighting them at your towns, cities and fields - the squishy insides of an agricultural state - every-time they advance. No, you want depth, warning and the ability to contest their advance prior to them reaching your static lines.
North King said:Steppe nomads are normally fought with numbers, as agricultural societies can raise far more men than they.
I've shown that raw numbers are not a predictor of success. I don't know how many cossacks there were, but I doubt they would have outnumbered their enemies by a large amount at any given time operationally.
North King said:...You populate an enemy out of a landscape. That's why you're able to build enough to constrain and contract around the tribes.
And the Russian steppes were heavily populated? Numbers are not the only way to do it.
North King said:Relatively speaking, the Russian side of the border is much more densely populated than the nomadic side.
North King said:Steppe nomads are normally fought with numbers, as agricultural societies can raise far more men than they.
Sanotra said:1. What is the title of the book?
Sanotra said:2. Why do you have it? >.<
Sanotra said:3. Can you please type more? For whatever reason its a really good read =D
Sanotra said:4. If you start with two supply wagons at the location of the army, and they are marched with the army.. Then couldn't you double the mileage? Or am I off on something? Because along my thinking if they start together you don't have diminishing returns.
I downloaded the English version.Side note: I just installed the gimp image editor, and the program is in russian >.<
I downloaded the English version.
EDIT: plus lines of fortifications, though the Russian ones as I understand them were a lot more flexible than some silly Great Wall.
I wasn't talking individual battles, I was talking long-term (though it was poor wording on my part, to be sure). You fight the steppe by making it disappear.
Relatively speaking, the Russian side of the border is much more densely populated than the nomadic side.
They didn't populate them out of it
but were conclusive in the views of these others who saw the growth of the Mandala (useful word) as an outwards manifestation of strength and prestige.
das said:The colonists did not exactly overwhelm any natives with numbers until much later on; throughout the 17th and first half of the 18th centuries if not further there were sparse small Russian colonies in a sea of sparse but somewhat more numerous small native villages. Hence the high importance of intermarriage, the mixed anthropological types of many culturally pure modern Siberian (and slightly less so, Uralic) Russians, and so on. So it is a very long-term development we are talking about here.
Das said:Just what is meant under growth if it's not territorial expansion, though? Enrichment? Grandeur?
das said:Anyway, arguably mandalas had some shared traits with early Dark Age states and their equivalents elsewhere in Europe (we call them "the barbarian kingdoms", which is as good a term as any).
das said:It's just that the factors that allowed their evolution into more territorial and centralised states were not present in South-East Asia
das said:Our territorial states are yet to form, though; the main national (as opposed to personal) reasons for the conquest of Bisria were plunder and tribute, and (to a lesser extent and mostly only really considered after the conquest was done) exporting ambitious family members to new lands. Ofcourse, the humans are much more European (but: not Modern European) in nature than the godlikes. Still, we are probably going to head that way, at least partly, or so it looks for now.