nikgaukroger wrote:PaulByzan wrote:
Oh, I perfectly understand that there maybe little immediate benefit but somehow these things tend to work out if enough people care.
I look forward to reading your stuff then.
Well then let's start of with my favorite problem with the Byzantine army lists, namely the lack of LH in the Maurikian, Thematic and Nikephorian lists. We don't even need to go the sources since Eric McGeer's Sowing the Dragon's Teeth contains all the information needed to justify the option for regular Byzantine LH in at least the Nikephorian list. First, while the lists in Decline and Fall allow for Proukousatores and Outflankers, they are restricted to Cv mode and not allowed the option of being LH. However, as described in McGeer's book in both the translations their function is mainly as skirmishers, a function more akin to LH than Cv. This is especially accurate as some of them are armed as lancers but clearly acted as skirmishers, a role only allowed to lance armed LH in FoG.
Some quotes for backup:
From McGeer's translation of the The Taktika on tactical function of the Prokoursatores: Chap 57, para 5. "If the enemy is advancing toward our units, you, the commander of the army, must send ahead five hundred or three hundred cavalrymen--not heavy kataphraktoi, but
light and elusive--the ones the ancients called proukoursatores. They must be wearing their klibania only, and should set ambushes (a set-up rule in FoG) if they get the chance..." Then: "When our prokoursatores, the cavalrymen, make initial contact with the enemy,
join battle with them, and the alarm goes up...", Para 10 "If though, when our units approach the enemy formations, these enemy formations remain in place, the prokoursatores should
then move forward and begin skirmishing to open the battle."
Can't think of a clearer possiblity that native LH in the form of the prokoursatores were a regular feature of the Byzantine army and that they were not just scouts but active battle participants as skirmishers, not as Cv.
Weapons and armour. Again the Tatika, Chap 61, para 2: Prokoursatores must be set apart, five hundred cavalrymen. There must be proficient archers among them, one hundred or 120 men, and the rest of them must all be lancers." Later in the chapter: "These prokoursatores should not have an assigned station like the cavalry divisions for the reason that they are the ones who begin skirmishing and open the battle."
Again, clearly a function that would have probably 4-12 stands, some division of lancers/archers, Protected, and possibly a case tha they should be allowed superior status at least in the Nikephorian period, judging from their performance against the Rus in the 971AD campaign
Next post, we'll discuss the outflankers. BTW, I knew Eric McGeer personally when he was writing his thesis that led to Sowing the Dragon's Teeth and we had many discussions regarding the Byzantine military. I attended his presentation on the Kataphraktoi at the
Byzantine Studies Conference at JHU in the early nineties. Great guy. Lost track of him since he returned to Canada after a stint teaching at Harvard where we became reaquainted and I took a class of his.
Paul Georgian