Swiss
Posted: Sat Dec 22, 2007 12:31 am
In "Storm of arrows" I see there is a Swiss list. Does it have an early option? mostly halberds? MF armored? protected? Heavy weapon?
Hi Michael,mic wrote:anything else I need to paint up for an early swiss option list 650-800 points 15mm? I have 40 odd bases of MF HW 3 to a base and 12 bases LF xbow
thanks regards michael
I don't have the list either. Just working from my general knowledge of the Swiss and from the old DBM books. And points values are from the rules (I'm a beta tester). I'd guess that you can probably have 4 bases of LH crossbows, but it may only be 2 bases as the Swiss really didn't have much mounted. Any mounted crossbows tended to operate as scouts and dismounted to fight, so the list writers may either class them as "poor unprotected LH crossbow" which dismounted as "average unprotected LI crossbow" or may choose to not represent them on the battlefield as mounted at all, so they'd be classed as part of the pool of LI.mic wrote: What else can i take i don t have the list?
Pikes were first used at Arbedo in 1422, where perhaps one third of the MF/HF infantry were pikes. Before that, no pikes.hammy wrote:Depeding on how early you want to be you can have some pike and lots of halberds
Hmm, interesting. The list allows a limited number of pikes (well 8-32) from 1360 ??neilhammond wrote:Pikes were first used at Arbedo in 1422, where perhaps one third of the MF/HF infantry were pikes. Before that, no pikes.hammy wrote:Depeding on how early you want to be you can have some pike and lots of halberds
Pikes were not used in very large quantities until Arbedo, however the earliest contemporary pictorial representations of Swiss pikemen (from Basle) go back at least to 1370. Hence we have allowed a limited number in the earlier period. (32 bases might not seem like a limited number, but the later list allows about 100).hammy wrote:Hmm, interesting. The list allows a limited number of pikes (well 8-32) from 1360 ??neilhammond wrote:Pikes were first used at Arbedo in 1422, where perhaps one third of the MF/HF infantry were pikes. Before that, no pikes.hammy wrote:Depeding on how early you want to be you can have some pike and lots of halberds
I was not involved in the research, perhaps Richard or someone else on the list front could comment?
I'm not convinced. The Basle Levies is dated circa 1390, and shows pikemen. The first recorded use of the pike in any great number is 1425. Certainly at Sempach in 1386 there was no pike used. My view is that it was Sempach that triggered the introduction of the pike. At Sempach the Austrian MAA used their lances/spears to hold the Swiss at bay, rendering the halberds ineffective. The Austrians came close to victory. The Swiss concluded that they needed something to counter the tactics of the Austrians, hence the pike, which out-reached the MAA's lance/spear. Arbedo in 1422 reinforced the lesson, where perhaps one third of the Swiss (certainly no more) had pike.rbodleyscott wrote:Pikes were not used in very large quantities until Arbedo, however the earliest contemporary pictorial representations of Swiss pikemen (from Basle) go back at least to 1370. Hence we have allowed a limited number in the earlier period. (32 bases might not seem like a limited number, but the later list allows about 100).