Welcome to my strange alternative world of wargaming with toy soldiers: a game for boys from twelve years of age to one hundred and fifty and for that more intelligent sort of girl who likes boys' games and books (HG Wells, Little wars)
Tuesday, 7 January 2020
Thureophoroi - Club Paint Challenge
My local wargame club has a painting challenge. I have set my target at painting two units a month for a new MeG 15mm Hellenistic ancients army.
These are Xyston miniatures from Rochester Models.
I haven't bought a 15 mm army for decades and was stunned by the quality of the current models.
Thureophoroi are a type of infantry that were used across the Hellenistic world. They were named after the oval 'Celtic-style' shield presumably adopted after the Galation intrusion into the Greek world; the Thyreos is the shield.
Thureophoroi or thyreophoroi were a kind of jack-of-all-trades infantry type that could operate in all types of terrain. Apart from the shield, they had only a helmet for protection and were armed with javelins and/or a long single-handed thrusting spear thought to be Thracian in origin. Thureophoroi were used to support light infantry and could operate either in loose or order.
They were commonly used by small city states as cheap paramilitary forces. Many Greek mercenary troops in Macedonian or Hellenistic armies were probably Thureophoroi. They would be used to guard the camp or as flank defence for the heavy infantry. Plutarch reports them as ineffective when used as line-of-battle troops against real heavy infantry such as phalangites.
Any Hellenistic army from Alexander onwards should include Thureophoroi.
Eventually some seem to have been up-armoured with mail shirts to produce Thorakitae that were presumably better drilled for close-order combat. Thorakitae may be the 'ersatz Roman' troops reported in late Hellenistic armies although their equipment is pure Galatian/Thracian
Great looking units John, hope you meet your targets
ReplyDeleteDear John,
ReplyDeleteWere those the troops that Conon deveoped as a mercenary following the Peleponnesian war?
Dave
They do look a bit like the new lightened hoplites from after the Peloponnesian War but the shield comes from the Galatian invasion. Whatever, they are not a response to contact with Rome.
Deletedear John,
ReplyDeleteI got out my xenophon and found it was Iphicrates I was thinking of, not Conon (his commander). He was the man who reformed the peltasts into the form which became the Macedonian phalanx when they got the sarissa.
Nice painting!
Dave
Hi Dave. Yes, I think Iphicrates got the blame but it clearly was a trend all over the Greek world to lighten the armour and lengthen the spear. One direction was the phalangite so I guess the thureophoroi were part of this.
DeleteIphicrates was son-in-law of Cotys of Thrace.
ReplyDeleteDave