CmdrWilkens wrote:TC Pilot wrote:So doesn't that mean it's a matter of training and formation, not the actual weapon? Or are the phalanx spears perhaps too long, inflexible, or clumsy for the rapid formation-change/deployment of a pike square?
Honestly its probably more training than the weapon. The gladius/shield combination (actually I would even say the galdius/pilum/shield combination) was an incredibly effective tool and the Roman system lines of offense and defense made the most out of it. However the galdius and shield wall will always be much more vulnerable to cavalry wheras the pike in a proper square is excellent against cavalry and certainly a match for the Roman style sword/shield combo if properly utilized.
I wouldn't go that far. The Roman legions performed excellent against ancient cavalry and were more than a match for any pike formation they encountered. I also wouldn't say that the typical Roman legionnary at the time of Pydna was better trained than the macedonian hoplite.
I further would argue that simply putting one roman cohort vs a pike formation is a somehow unfair comparison, since fighting like that was not the roman way. A more apt combination would be a roman cohort in the center, with skirmishers up front, archers and artillery in the back plus a line of auxillaries, mostly spearman. Note that the romans always performed worst when they were unable to form into combined arms formations.
A somewhat forgotten fact is that in the beginning of the third century the romans started fielding a specialized phalanx corps (for lack of a better word) which used pikes. However this proved unsuccesful in comparison to the usual Roman anti-cavalry tactics and within twenty years the Roman army was back to the original formations.
Finally, we have the final evolution of the combined arms formation in the fourth century, where the romans once again used specialized formations, the lanciarii. However these did not fight in pike formations per se, but were instead used together with the usual legionnairies. By all accounts they were very succesful until they perished at Adrianople.
Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:Weren't there defensive schemes where the Romans used their Pilum for cavalry defence?
Yes, you can read about one example
here.
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