My revamped "new model" Ottoman army is doing much better against its historical European rivals now (I have given the Ottoman horse "light lances" and the Janissaries body "armour"), but the second and third medieval Serbian armies (1345-79 and 1380-1459) are still too strong. Actually it is like trying to stop an army of tanks with bows and arrows.
I know that the Serbian army was very powerful in the 14thC and Serbian Empire reached its zenith around 1350, but did they field such a high proportion of heavily armoured mounted knights in their armies? And how could the social structure of even a thriving medieval state sustain such an army?
If you look at the earliest Serbian list in "Eternal Empire", which is for the period 1300-1344 you will find there are no knights on offer at all, but you can choose upto 17 "superior", "armoured" cavalry (with lances).
Then for the middle army (1345-79) the choice suddenly jumps to up to 14 "superior" , "heavily armoured" knights (with lances) plus up to 2 "average", "heavily armoured" western mercenary knights - so a total of 16 knights altogether is possible
The same is true for the later list (1380-1459).
Now I understand that the Serbian horse did become more heavily armoured through the 14th and 15th C's and they ended up wearing full plate armour like their western European counterparts, but were there quite so many of them? Wasn't it more likely that a lot of the mounted Serbians were the equivalent of western sergeants who might be classified in the same way as the Bosnian knights in the lists ("superior", "armoured" knights) or maybe even classified separately as a mixture of "average", armoured" knights and "average", "armoured" cavalry. Otherwise, the Serbs will just be able to steamroller the Ottoman Turks every time by driving off their horse and then encircling their fortifications?
I have found this and the word "cavalry" is used. Not decisive, I know - and the Serbians definitely had plenty of knights in their army, but did they also have ordinary cavalry as well?
“Serbian armies were composed of lance-armed light and heavy cavalry, plus infantry (armed with spears, axes, and above all bows and, later, crossbows) and a baggage-train (komora) manned by shepherds and cattlemen referred to as Vlachs, probably indicating that they were Pindus Vlachs and Albanians, and perhaps Wallachians too.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_Serbian_army
