Did Ancient Battlefield Maps Really Exist? (Fact or Fiction)

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  • Опубліковано 13 чер 2019
  • Movies, TV shows, and games love depicting commanders huddled around a battle map planning their strategy. But did this really happen? In this video we discuss ancient cartography and how generals in the past would have commanded their armies.
    Research: Roel Konijnindijk
    Script: Invicta
    Narration: Invicta
    Artwork: Gabriel Cassata
    Editing: Invicta
    #History
    #FactOrFiction

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @InvictaHistory
    @InvictaHistory  5 років тому +790

    As a longtime fan of military history I have spent countless hours analyzing or creating my own battle maps. However, until now, I never really stopped to dig in to the history of the maps themselves. I really love doing this sort of analysis. Do you have any other sorts of questions we could look in to?

    • @SuperQuebecois
      @SuperQuebecois 5 років тому +53

      How long did battle actually last ? Did numbers really change that ? Average Roman Empire battle lenght vs Average battle time in China of the same time of history or something like that

    • @aggressivefish3028
      @aggressivefish3028 5 років тому +18

      What about naval battles did they happen often are they as chaotic as movies say they are and how many could fit on a ship

    • @raresdumitras3291
      @raresdumitras3291 5 років тому +21

      I was wondering how soldiers from ancient times could go on campaigns for many years and cope with the absence of their wives. Army soldiers have other needs besides being fed and hydrated.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz 5 років тому +6

      I'd think that, even if those grandiose and heavily detailed war maps were not real, some sort of map-like schematics was indeed used when planning, including some sort of representation of the units, could just be ad-hoc pebbles on a drawing on the ground. This kind of mapping activity is very important when planning and even Austronesian navigators used it to some extent. You don't need an accurate map but you do need often enough some sort of scheme so various officers can more easily put in common their knowledge of the situation and ideas. The existance of war games of sorts in the Ancient world (poleis, latrunculi, game of Ur, senet), while a pass time, clearly indicates that kind of mindset, and IMHO you may be unadvertedly discounting not reported information about how the generals and commanders studied the situation and took decisions when not in the heat of battle.

    • @SonsOfLorgar
      @SonsOfLorgar 5 років тому +5

      @@LuisAldamiz in essence, a terrain sketch, probably drawn with a stick/foot or placed with sticks, pebbles and availiable materials from the ground on site was probably used then just as it is now, but not the permanent style of maps used today to draw up marching orders or tactical situation maps for larger than company sized formations using mission tactics in combined arms operations.

  • @austinhaynes6420
    @austinhaynes6420 5 років тому +2436

    One of the main characters: *stabs map with a knife to signal where to attack*
    Guy who spent 30 weeks making the map: -.-

    • @spectrumaevum7476
      @spectrumaevum7476 5 років тому +214

      I knew I should have used marble...

    • @Drebolaskan
      @Drebolaskan 5 років тому +289

      "Im charging extra for your next map, buddy"

    • @520lun
      @520lun 5 років тому +113

      Beauty and harmony, governed by one eternal law, all that begin must end , the reign of the old shogunate is OVER!!!!! (Proceed to stab the Japan map

    • @zarakdurrani7584
      @zarakdurrani7584 5 років тому +64

      Lin Nakaha cartographer: am i a joke to you?

    • @Drebolaskan
      @Drebolaskan 5 років тому +28

      @@520lun Fellow warlord!
      The Shimazu greet thee

  • @patsfreak
    @patsfreak 5 років тому +2105

    Alexander the great with a GPS would've been something to see

    • @joshuacampbell1625
      @joshuacampbell1625 5 років тому +212

      He would of figured out not to go through the Gedrosian Desert if he had one.

    • @napolien1310
      @napolien1310 5 років тому +42

      He will break it and raise his sword highe and command forward men

    • @romaliop
      @romaliop 5 років тому +120

      ​@@joshuacampbell1625 What kind of a demigod is afraid of some lousy desert? It's his destiny to go through it, so go through it he will.

    • @joshuacampbell1625
      @joshuacampbell1625 5 років тому +128

      @@romaliop I can think of several THOUSAND Macedonian Sarissa Infantry who disagree with that.

    • @solwen
      @solwen 5 років тому +64

      "What ?! We have to walk 20 000 stades to go to India ?! Nah, it's too far., Let's stay home"

  • @Oxtocoatl13
    @Oxtocoatl13 5 років тому +442

    There is a reason why Machiavelli stressed the importance of getting to know your land personally by constantly travelling and hunting in the terrain while imagining possible encounters with the enemy. You couldn't buy an accurate topographic map anywhere.
    Actually, this problem persisted into the beginning of World War One. No maps designed for aerial navigation existed in the early part of the war and British pilots were sometimes forced to rely on things as crude as school geography books. They ended up following railroads and flying low so they could see the signs on the stations just to get an idea of where they were.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 5 років тому +35

      @Common Sense I think it also makes sense to add how during night attacks planes usually just navigated by lights and that's why the sole purpose of some bombers was just to drop flares so the rest of the attack could see the target. This is also why blackout was so important because even with accurate maps and good navigators it's really hard to navigate a plane during night. I mean even with GPS it can be easy to lose your bearing in planes since you're entirely relying on instruments.

    • @histguy101
      @histguy101 4 роки тому +3

      Machiavelli had access to very accurate maps. He didn't live in ancient times. He lived in an era of cartography.

    • @Arselpang
      @Arselpang 4 роки тому +4

      @Common Sense Maybe they had it to.
      But Von Falkenhorst used a tourist-guide mapbook from Baedeker as he only had under 24 hours to come up with an invasion plan to Hitler.

    • @rudolfschrenk6171
      @rudolfschrenk6171 3 роки тому +3

      Even in the Vietnam war, the americans had to use maps provided by the french which they often found badly inaccurate.

  • @SimuLord
    @SimuLord 5 років тому +1225

    Cyrus made the Lydia run in 22 parsecs.

    • @mikedi7850
      @mikedi7850 5 років тому +49

      22?!
      more like 20.. diss guyz nutz

    • @Sakkura1
      @Sakkura1 5 років тому +120

      These aren't the Dorians you're looking for.

    • @siechamontillado
      @siechamontillado 5 років тому +57

      But was he able to outrun the Imperial triremes?! Was he fast enough for Harpagus and his cargo?

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage 5 років тому +37

      Croesus shot first.

    • @pickeljarsforhillary102
      @pickeljarsforhillary102 5 років тому +6

      "No, I am your father"

  • @wailrimouche1171
    @wailrimouche1171 5 років тому +690

    "on a Galactic SCALE" * jumps to a warhammer 40k picture*

    • @ThaRealElTigra
      @ThaRealElTigra 5 років тому +79

      It surprised the heck out of me. "NOW we're talking!"
      Also: Imperium strong

    • @AcZe1188
      @AcZe1188 5 років тому +52

      More like, "der r mor enemiez herz so u go arowndz and gib dem da dakka n u here wil go upz front n giv em mor dakka"

    • @Waspyethan
      @Waspyethan 5 років тому +27

      the emperor protects

    • @ekuahmartreb9082
      @ekuahmartreb9082 5 років тому +23

      @@AcZe1188 You seriously think that orks would use ambush tactics? Think of all the fighting they are missing! Dakka is good but choppa is better.

    • @SophiaAstatine
      @SophiaAstatine 5 років тому +5

      Oh boi. Oh boi. Oh boi.

  • @asfm2
    @asfm2 4 роки тому +208

    General: Just walk forwa-
    Messenger: THE MEN ARE FLEEING THE BATTLEFIELD

    • @mhiggins6307
      @mhiggins6307 4 роки тому +45

      What a shameful display!

    • @bashkillszombies
      @bashkillszombies 4 роки тому +16

      @@mhiggins6307 SHAMEFUR DISRPAY
      Sorry, I got the Wu Flu. :( COOF.

  • @xxAnaconta
    @xxAnaconta 5 років тому +422

    "War is quite simple really , just make sure you win and also not to lose lol"
    Alexander the Great 331 BC

    • @pegjames188
      @pegjames188 5 років тому +21

      War,huh ,good god ,what is it good for, absolutely nothing. Edwin Starr 1970.

    • @justiron2999
      @justiron2999 5 років тому +5

      @@pegjames188 Aside from improving ways to kill each other and then wasys to negate those methods also internet.

    • @monetum1392
      @monetum1392 5 років тому +4

      @@pegjames188 Oh my how deep 🙄

    • @pegjames188
      @pegjames188 5 років тому

      @@monetum1392 you don't do humour then; too nuonced?

    • @benjaminmiddaugh2729
      @benjaminmiddaugh2729 5 років тому +3

      "To win, just get there the fastest with the most."
      Nathan Bedford Forrest (my paraphrase)

  • @VladiSSius
    @VladiSSius 5 років тому +832

    They could've just press M to open up map screen.
    Nubs.

    • @esabellasilvrstre6476
      @esabellasilvrstre6476 5 років тому +52

      Well you have to pay 20 dollars to unlock it.

    • @fpsgod3028
      @fpsgod3028 5 років тому +23

      Esabella Silvrstre nah I just get one from the steam workshop

    • @kerimozdemir4009
      @kerimozdemir4009 5 років тому +16

      heh noobians

    • @roguevector1268
      @roguevector1268 5 років тому +15

      Ancient Greeks and Romans were console players confirmed /s

    • @neurofiedyamato8763
      @neurofiedyamato8763 5 років тому +18

      20 dollars to unlock it? Scheming EA is at it again.

  • @GM_Lemmy
    @GM_Lemmy 5 років тому +313

    I keep seeing the ad for the GoT browser game... At this point it's just sad.

    • @WitherBossEntity
      @WitherBossEntity 5 років тому +16

      I've turned of ads just because UA-cam insists on showing me the same ad every single video :-/

    • @bigplayjayy
      @bigplayjayy 5 років тому +25

      @@WitherBossEntity is it possible to learn this power?

    • @cesargeney5268
      @cesargeney5268 5 років тому +8

      And it is a shitty game

    • @BleachFan2588
      @BleachFan2588 5 років тому +31

      @@bigplayjayy cough cough adblock cough cough

    • @alexanderstrickland9036
      @alexanderstrickland9036 5 років тому +36

      The ones that really piss me off are the Chinese apps that use other games’ gameplay in their ads.
      Some little kid will see Age Of Empires for the first time and it’s on some ad for some shitty mobile game.

  • @goobfilmcast4239
    @goobfilmcast4239 5 років тому +378

    Imagine seeing Titus looking at a map as he plans his SIEGE OF JERUSALEM part 4 !!!!!

    • @rubenheymans1988
      @rubenheymans1988 5 років тому +6

      Lol, he said he is working on it though, or at least soon

    • @Razzy1312
      @Razzy1312 5 років тому +43

      What will come first? Half Life 3 or Siege of Jerusalem Part 4?

    • @chainsaw5302
      @chainsaw5302 5 років тому +11

      @@Razzy1312 Colonization of The Galaxy

    • @jimypiha8
      @jimypiha8 5 років тому +2

      Moshe Dayan leads Israel to retake Jerusalem, while Rome is long long gone:

    • @LOLquendoTV
      @LOLquendoTV 4 роки тому

      @Cheryl heh your comment aged poorly

  • @ernavill3261
    @ernavill3261 5 років тому +70

    I can already imagine future spacewar officers laughing after their instructor said "Commanders of the 21st century used 2d maps to plan their strategy!"

    • @IPFreelly604
      @IPFreelly604 4 роки тому +11

      Imagine needing eyeballs to plan for battle.

    • @jic1
      @jic1 4 роки тому +7

      @@IPFreelly604 Eyeballs? Imagine needing a physical body!

    • @freedomloverusa3030
      @freedomloverusa3030 3 роки тому +1

      Indeed.

    • @a.morphous66
      @a.morphous66 Рік тому +1

      @@jic1 ​ Imagine having to plan for battles and not simply beaming cognitohazards directly into the opponent’s existential shadow.

  • @Cato229
    @Cato229 5 років тому +560

    It's funny the things one never questions. Great topic!

    • @devilhunterred
      @devilhunterred 4 роки тому +1

      His information is false.
      Cartography is ancient China was much more advanced. They found accurate provincial maps drawn on silk dating back Qin dynasty of 4th century BCE. Using abstract maps for battle planning also existed, it eventually evolved into the game of Go, which existed as far back as 2,500 years ago.

    • @arokjuata3365
      @arokjuata3365 3 роки тому +1

      @@devilhunterred now i wonder if chinese, Indo-china, and south east asian kingdoms in the past use tactical map

    • @secario2135
      @secario2135 3 роки тому +1

      @@devilhunterred
      his talking about greek and roman not chinese
      western civilization did use maps but not for battle or war

    • @primetime3422
      @primetime3422 2 роки тому +1

      I am building a game that's gonna be as accurate as possible to medieval and antiquity warfare. I now know I can't use maps.

    • @Cato229
      @Cato229 2 роки тому +1

      @@primetime3422 Cool. You might consider hiring these guys to review your work when it's ready.

  • @ichifish
    @ichifish 5 років тому +121

    To me the real takeaway here is how modern people conceive of their experiences differently. I could tell you how to drive from point A to point Z around the town I grew up in 30 years ago, but probably couldn't draw a realistic map. Now at age 49 I can't even imagine spaces like the city I live in or the university I work at without using a bird's eye view.

    • @corettaha7855
      @corettaha7855 4 роки тому +7

      I’ve read about cultures that use only directions and not left and right to indicate direction. They’re a lot better at spatial tasks generally because they don’t use that relativistic crutch.

    • @BicyclesMayUseFullLane
      @BicyclesMayUseFullLane 4 роки тому

      Eh, a lot of people can't really think in bird eye's view, and giving them a map to navigate is completely counterproductive. However, they can still use landmarks to navigate, which is why Google streetview is amazing. It combines both bird's eye view of a regular map, and with possibility to go down to human eye's level, where people could memorize the significant landmarks on the road.

    • @1224chrisng
      @1224chrisng Рік тому +1

      Vsauce made an episode about video games chamge human perception. He found that most people would use a birds eye view to navigate a maze, whereas gamers would think at ground level

  • @hemantachamveedu7261
    @hemantachamveedu7261 5 років тому +71

    Hats Off , Invicta. Again you have hit solid gold in the quest for historical accuracy.

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  5 років тому +11

      This was a really fun one to dive in to. I really loved all the quotes from Thucydides which the researcher dug up!

    • @NspPrick
      @NspPrick 5 років тому +3

      @@InvictaHistory If you're interested, or have downtime to read. Donald Kagan's THUCYDIDES and The Peloponnesian War are two very good reads.

    • @devilhunterred
      @devilhunterred 4 роки тому

      His information is false.
      Cartography is ancient China was much more advanced. They found accurate provincial maps drawn on silk dating back Qin dynasty of 4th century BCE. Using abstract maps for battle planning also existed, it eventually evolved into the game of Go, which existed as far back as 2,500 years ago.

  • @pca1987
    @pca1987 5 років тому +482

    Short answer: no
    Long answer: watch it, they explain a lot about planning battles.

    • @randysavage1
      @randysavage1 5 років тому

      Lmao. Only a dumbass wouldnt draw up a map of the surrounding terrain after specifically picking the battlefield for tactical advantages. Ya they planned it all in their head based off memory. Even children know to draw their plan in the sand before pulling a prank. Im sure kings are dummber than children.

    • @pca1987
      @pca1987 5 років тому +3

      @@randysavage1 I agree that they probably draw something (at least stupid sketches on sand), but this is not what they're talking about. And if kings were dumber than kids, History would be a lot duller.

    • @devilhunterred
      @devilhunterred 4 роки тому +1

      His information is false.
      Cartography is ancient China was much more advanced. They found accurate provincial maps drawn on silk dating back Qin dynasty of 4th century BCE. Using abstract maps for battle planning also existed, it eventually evolved into the game of Go, which existed as far back as 2,500 years ago.

    • @onetwothreefour7547
      @onetwothreefour7547 4 роки тому

      @@devilhunterred That's for ancient China, this video is on more Western Civ.

    • @devilhunterred
      @devilhunterred 4 роки тому

      @@onetwothreefour7547 That's not what the video claims. The video claims that battle maps were not used in the ancient world, not Western ancient world or Western Antiquity.
      Han China was part of the ancient world, therefore by stating that battle maps were not used in the ancient world, it includes ancient China.

  • @kynandecoster3752
    @kynandecoster3752 5 років тому +435

    can you do a video on soldiers training? Like the Romans and Spartans did. Love your video's.

    • @ECHOFOXTROT289
      @ECHOFOXTROT289 5 років тому +9

      Kynan, great idea!

    • @pca1987
      @pca1987 5 років тому +5

      I support this.

    • @XSobonoX
      @XSobonoX 5 років тому +3

      Go check out the Metatron on UA-cam. He does stuff like that.

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord 5 років тому +2

      Thirded or fourthed or whatever we're up to here. I love that kind of how the groundwork was laid for stuff that's still done today kind of stuff.

    • @Lobster_Lars
      @Lobster_Lars 5 років тому +4

      The Spartans training wasn't that notable

  • @MDP1702
    @MDP1702 5 років тому +54

    So basically they relied on their own knowledge of the battlefield and that of scouts. However, I still think very simple maps could/would be used to showcase an idea, even if it is just as simple as drawing some lines in the ground.

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  5 років тому +24

      Yeah I think its pretty likely that they would have at least done that or had something similar to sand tables. However this is speculation as we don't really have any evidence of this.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz 5 років тому +5

      I'm all for the actual use of some sort of schematic maps, a sandbox as suggested by Invicta is a rather elaborate device, I'd rather think on simpler schematics such as drawings on the ground (or clay or whatever convenient support) with maybe rocks representing mountains and smaller pebbles representing the units, all very ad-hoc but functional enough. The main purpose of this kind of approximative map would be for the commanders (and scouts) to exchange knowledge of the situation and more easily exchange ideas on how to proceed. Said that, Romans are said to have got very poor scouting (because their cavalry was too posh to endure the job of scouting).

    • @Omegaures
      @Omegaures 5 років тому

      @@InvictaHistory It's more convincing speculation than your conjectures. You are making a positive general claim using irrelevant examples. (the fundamental implication of your comment contraddicts the premise of the video and) You showed no evidence that they didn't use maps.

    • @benjaminmiddaugh2729
      @benjaminmiddaugh2729 5 років тому +4

      @@Omegaures His comment does not contradict the premise of the video. The video was about using maps in the modern sense (getting a grand overview of the situation as known, and then laying out a complete strategy). The comment thread is about taking a basic idea for one part of the strategy and illustrating it with a simple (probably ephemeral) sketch. I suspect a middle ground between the two. In a world where you get your information from direct observation and scouting reports, drawing things out probably isn't necessary (just have someone who's learned the terrain act as a guide, and do good scouting). Planning sieges, though, might have had a bit more drawing going on.
      Whatever the case, anything resembling graphical planning is not known to have survived, so we don't know for sure. Speculation is interesting, though. You might enjoy it.

    • @Omegaures
      @Omegaures 5 років тому

      @@benjaminmiddaugh2729 Redefining the premis won't get you out of it.

  • @Peptuck
    @Peptuck 5 років тому +3

    One movie I saw that actually portrayed pre-map planning realistically was a Japanese movie named 13 Assassins. In that movie, the assassins were plotting out the course their target would take between villages. Instead of a map, they had a series of towns on a scroll with lines connecting them, showing which ones could be reached from which town, and they used that to determine his route.

  • @philo9609
    @philo9609 5 років тому +22

    ‘In war everything is simple, but the simplest thing is difficult’ von Clausewitz (roughly)

    • @Mario_Angel_Medina
      @Mario_Angel_Medina 5 років тому

      That quote can be applied to a lot of things in life

  • @carlosrobertson6124
    @carlosrobertson6124 5 років тому +179

    as a recipient of a worthless undergrad in European history degree, this has got to be the coolest shit I never learned about

    • @ernavill3261
      @ernavill3261 5 років тому +20

      They probably leave the cool stuff for the postgrads :P

    • @anuradhakhandeparkar9909
      @anuradhakhandeparkar9909 5 років тому +1

      @@ernavill3261 true that

    • @stunner9005
      @stunner9005 5 років тому +13

      It’s not completely useless, it will be needed once Europe starts to burn history books for “offending” others.

    • @ernavill3261
      @ernavill3261 5 років тому +8

      @@stunner9005 you sound angry about some non-ancester of yours who turned out not to be 100% awesome and you feel 'Europe' is to blame.

    • @trueshockgaming329
      @trueshockgaming329 5 років тому +5

      @@ernavill3261 Do you not understand his comment?

  • @chandlerkilpatrick1260
    @chandlerkilpatrick1260 5 років тому +12

    Amazing how far this channel has come and how much it’s grown.

  • @UM7942
    @UM7942 5 років тому +269

    So you’re telling me they didn’t have dragons back then to design their battle maps?

    • @chainsaw5302
      @chainsaw5302 5 років тому +20

      Nuts!! He gave no Valid reasons for such theory.

    • @Hijfblog
      @Hijfblog 5 років тому +23

      With their dragons and raven wargs the westerosians may have had a much more cartographical society than we had!

    • @monkofdarktimes
      @monkofdarktimes 5 років тому +4

      At least a map has there be dragons

    • @ernavill3261
      @ernavill3261 5 років тому +4

      Why do you think accurate maps were possible in Westeros but not here!

    • @umarabdaziz
      @umarabdaziz 5 років тому

      There is no dragon

  • @Euphoric19
    @Euphoric19 5 років тому +103

    Forget that, instead. Did Generals really put daggers in map instead?

    • @ernavill3261
      @ernavill3261 5 років тому +28

      Lol unfortunately they most likely didn't. Ruining the edge of your blade for no good reason at all is another Hollywood invention. If you spent hours maintaining your equipment you won't ruin it by sticking it in a table or in the ground. (I know you're likely making a joke but couldn't resist giving the answer anyway 😁)

    • @Rynewulf
      @Rynewulf 5 років тому +30

      @@ernavill3261 not to mention ruining a really expensive, rare and useful map

    • @elimalinsky7069
      @elimalinsky7069 5 років тому +18

      @@Rynewulf maps were actually so valuable, I woundn't be surprised if somewhere at some point there was a capital punishment for damaging a map.

    • @ernavill3261
      @ernavill3261 5 років тому +16

      @@elimalinsky7069 yes the vast personal libraries we see in medieval films makes people greatly undervalue the price of a book before the printing press was invented (and how significant that invention was).

    • @elimalinsky7069
      @elimalinsky7069 5 років тому +14

      @@ernavill3261 it's worth mentioning that even high nobility was often illiterate in the middle ages and writing was almost completely restricted to monastetries and the monks who copied the books with intricate detail.
      Book copies were as valuable as jewelery in those days.
      Nearly all political negotiations were conducted orally, as well as decrees, reports, orders, plans and the vast majority of decision making as a whole. Only hereditary laws were written down, and that was by the court scribe who was often the only one in the hall able to read and write.

  • @CatroiOz
    @CatroiOz 4 роки тому +3

    No plan survives first contact with the enemy.
    Napoleon : laughs in Austerlitz

  • @robertmitchell3271
    @robertmitchell3271 5 років тому +16

    It makes sense though, I know my city on foot rather than by map

  • @aysseralwan
    @aysseralwan 5 років тому +153

    "Kriegsspiel" literally translates to war game or game of war

    • @V4ka1
      @V4ka1 5 років тому +8

      Scandinavia also uses the word Krigsspel/Krigspil :)

    • @dogle9258
      @dogle9258 5 років тому

      I’ve never heard of it but if it’s like Risk. I want to play.

    • @cognitivedisability9864
      @cognitivedisability9864 5 років тому +1

      @@dogle9258 its like chess it seems, googled it just now

    • @festethephule7553
      @festethephule7553 5 років тому +1

      @@cognitivedisability9864
      There's a variant of chess that goes by that name, but that's not what is being reffered to here.

    • @sjonnieplayfull5859
      @sjonnieplayfull5859 5 років тому +5

      @@dogle9258 the British used something like it to find the best way for convoy escorts to operate. Fog of war, neutral observers moving the pieces around, timetables, hit/miss ratio's at certain angles and a bit of randomization. Old games like 'panzer general' look a lot like it.

  • @tomorbataar5922
    @tomorbataar5922 5 років тому +10

    The forces of Chaos are allways at work (in combat situations)
    -Invicta, before taken away by the Inqusition.

  • @pontifex1853
    @pontifex1853 5 років тому +19

    I wonder what the greatest ancient generals would be able to do with a modern map against their opponents.

    • @pontifex1853
      @pontifex1853 5 років тому

      @@tl8211 Not sure if Alexander the Great would agree with the "I can't do it" part... :P

    • @rpavangchhia8953
      @rpavangchhia8953 4 роки тому

      they would need a cellphone with the maps,to coordinate their troops.I honestly dont think it would change much.
      It would probably be equivalent to america having 3d holographic maps in the vietnam war or afghanistan war.

  • @Alorand
    @Alorand 5 років тому +64

    14:25 - The Emperor protects! *makes the sign of the aquila*

    • @gamerdude506
      @gamerdude506 5 років тому +2

      DEATH TO THE FALSE EMPEROR!!!!!

    • @NspPrick
      @NspPrick 5 років тому

      Why do you refuse the orgies and murder?

  • @casual96
    @casual96 2 роки тому

    Best informational UA-cam Chanel about ancient time! Keep it up 👍🏼

  • @GuntherRommel
    @GuntherRommel 5 років тому

    GREAT video, Invicta.

  • @theinacircleoftheancientpu492
    @theinacircleoftheancientpu492 5 років тому +8

    This gives me great respect for the spatial imagination of the great generals.

  • @Brazbrah
    @Brazbrah 5 років тому +8

    The battles in Time Commanders ingrained in me the importance of maps for Roman battles.

  • @yungfaas6688
    @yungfaas6688 5 років тому +2

    Love the videos man!

  • @HermesSonofZeus
    @HermesSonofZeus 5 років тому

    Thank you for continuing to make such excellent videos.

  • @brningpyre
    @brningpyre 5 років тому +3

    The art in this video is fantastic!

  • @kaisersouze9515
    @kaisersouze9515 5 років тому +4

    Most of this video is no more than supposition. We have no way to know, with any certainty, how ancient plans were made, there are virtually no records of the processes. They probably didn't use maps as we think of them, but I find hard to believe the planing was made without any visual aid. A mere couple of coins in a table would be so helpful in planing, registering and passing orders, especially in events like sieges where a small gap could mean faliure.

    • @janeappleseed2154
      @janeappleseed2154 5 років тому +1

      I don't even think that the person who made this video has a history degree.

  • @jeremyeichelberger9243
    @jeremyeichelberger9243 5 років тому +2

    Excellent work. Thank you!

  • @scrubJabroni
    @scrubJabroni 5 років тому

    Nice job as always. Very excited for the upcoming episode on kriegsspeil and wargaming!

  • @infantrytactics1233
    @infantrytactics1233 5 років тому +32

    7:39 I see.... A fellow that realizes the greatness of the Imperium of Man.

    • @gamerdude506
      @gamerdude506 5 років тому +1

      DEATH TO THE FALSE EMPEROR!!!!!

    • @infantrytactics1233
      @infantrytactics1233 5 років тому +1

      @@gamerdude506 *Blam!
      Stupid heretic!

    • @UCUCUC27
      @UCUCUC27 5 років тому

      the astra militarum holds!

  • @kolinmartz
    @kolinmartz 5 років тому +7

    Even today we are taught to go on a leader’s reconnaissance when conducting some military movements.

    • @spiritvdc5109
      @spiritvdc5109 3 роки тому +1

      Information really is the greatest weapon

  • @tobago3679
    @tobago3679 5 років тому

    Thank you! great video.
    Very informative, interesting and historically detailed.

  • @trevorcontreras7617
    @trevorcontreras7617 5 років тому +1

    Invicta, your channel has taught me more about history than all of elementary school, high school and college combined. It's all thanks to your ability to illuminate the mindset of the ancients. To put us in the same view point as them is exactly why we study history. Facts, dates, people, and events are what I've expected to learn from studying history, yet I've yearned for something more that I've never been able to put my finger on it. How your channel is able to put me into the shoes of the ancients' is what I've been looking for. Your channel inspires me to dedicate the rest of my life to developing better ways of seeing things from the same perspective as the ancients', or at least as close as possible. Everyone of Invicta, I thank you. All of you are doing a great service for mankind.

  • @MajkaSrajka
    @MajkaSrajka 5 років тому +4

    I love how back in the days maps were more like cookbooks than modern maps.

    • @istvansipos9940
      @istvansipos9940 5 років тому

      time traveller: - Do you have a map?
      a dude: - Sure. Here! (gives a "map")
      time traveller: - Hmmm... Nice! Nice indeed. Now, do you have a map?

  • @thitherword
    @thitherword 5 років тому +71

    You should probably credit your artists... 5:05 Is from Lindybeige's graphic novel. The artist is Christopher Steininger.

    • @KOTOKOARTS
      @KOTOKOARTS 5 років тому +5

      I was hoping someone would point that out, at the very least they should have left the title on the work itself. Lindy and Chris deserve the credit for the years theyve spent working on it. If anyone is wondering the novel is called "In Search of Hannibal."

    • @redMrCrayon
      @redMrCrayon 5 років тому

      I hate lindybeige

    • @kingmane908
      @kingmane908 4 роки тому

      @@redMrCrayon 😂😂 I will never understand the human mind

    • @KageMinowara
      @KageMinowara 4 роки тому

      @@redMrCrayon Your mom gay.

  • @Ivanovic5580
    @Ivanovic5580 5 років тому

    Thank you for awesome videos and making history fun for everyone.

  • @rafaelllaban4115
    @rafaelllaban4115 5 років тому

    Amazing video as always!

  • @jarogniewtheconqueror2804
    @jarogniewtheconqueror2804 5 років тому +21

    Flying beasts in fantasy could make maps work for small battlefields. They would also be great for reconaisance

  • @hantms
    @hantms 5 років тому +4

    Very interesting. I can also comment that use of maps (2D representation of anything) wasn't very common until extremely recently in many parts of the world, especially among the general population. I came to Thailand in the early 1990s and it proved completely impossible to explain anything at all using a map even to people who's job it was to drive around the city, like taxi drivers. The best map was one that had place names in both languages so you could just point at the word.
    Hotels and restaurants often explained their location with a basic map in their newspaper ad or business card but it was so schematic an not to scale it was ridiculous, with North also being in any arbitrary direction. (Maps with North being up also seem recent.) The basic map basically had straight lines for roads so you count the number of roads you pass coming from a landmark like a river. (The schematic map being needed because an address system with numbered buildings that are unique and sequential along a road is ALSO not common everywhere in the world. ;) )
    This is a lot better now, probably just due to smartphones and Google Maps being so ubiquitous; it really hammers home a 2D representation of the world.

  • @stephaniem.matthews5539
    @stephaniem.matthews5539 5 років тому

    This really is one of those things that I never stopped to think about before but it does, of course, make complete sense. Thanks for covering this!

  • @kenc9236
    @kenc9236 3 роки тому

    Great video. Love the artwork + sub.

  • @mivapusa
    @mivapusa 5 років тому +13

    Xenophon made that trip in more than 12 Parsecs

    • @NPC-rq9tp
      @NPC-rq9tp 5 років тому +1

      Han should have been leading them.

  • @AesirUnlimited
    @AesirUnlimited 4 роки тому +3

    I think my ideas of travel are more old school, when it comes to travel I always go by landmarks and a step by step list of how to get somewhere. Maps have always just seemed strange to me, I couldn’t ever wrap my head around the lines and shapes of a map. I prefer real tangible landmarks and distances and travel times.

  • @XDanzel1
    @XDanzel1 5 років тому

    dude your work is so amazing

  • @lambastepirate
    @lambastepirate 5 років тому +2

    I imagine an impromptu map would be done by drawing a few lines in the dirt back then with input from your scouts! Thus no maps would survive.

  • @Dragonboy118
    @Dragonboy118 5 років тому +6

    Wait a minute. This would have worked in Game of Thrones because they made the map based on dragon flight. #Dragonstone has a table that was built after Aegon flew over westeros.

  • @khalidibnalwalled7638
    @khalidibnalwalled7638 4 роки тому +3

    Invicta: battles in the past is so simple and there is no complex in it
    Khalid bin alwaled: hold my beer

  • @LucaHMafra
    @LucaHMafra 5 років тому +2

    Nice video, mate. I really like the use of ancient sources.
    I'm now waiting for the *kriegsspiel* video. =]

  • @vaultscribe4501
    @vaultscribe4501 2 роки тому

    Super thankful for this. Even though my stories tend to be high fantasy, this really helped me ground the language and visuals. I was better able to imaging what might be used in a world where magic would be a substitute for gunpowder, but where aristocracy and fear of the loss of the super weapons wizards would be could create an incomplete transition from one form of battle and another. I think my ideas still need work, but, like many with their magic systems, imaging warfare in a magic world ‘realistically’ is always fun. History videos on all the facets of war in antiquity, like yours, is an awesome help!

  • @HebaruSan
    @HebaruSan 5 років тому +25

    Did Ancient Battlefield Mages Really Exist?

  • @tajrasti
    @tajrasti 5 років тому +24

    Maybe those ancient generals made mental maps in their minds based on information they gathered about the terrain.

    • @Killzoneguy117
      @Killzoneguy117 5 років тому +2

      Generals would definitely understand the geography and general idea of the area they live in. Even you and I can understand our neighborhood with some generality based purely on landmarks. Like I know how to get from home to university without knowing the streets, but purely based on landmarks.
      So I imagine mental maps would be used. But they wouldn't put those maps down. And to be honest, that makes a lot of sense. A lot of military campaigns were hardly preplanned with specific objectives. The objectives were capture as much territory as you can before you either a) encounter unbreakable enemy resistance or b) force the enemy to capitulate. In that situation, you wouldn't know how big the map you need would be. And you don't know where you'd be fighting battles. If you relied on maps, that's a lot of potential maps you'd have to have made. Which would require significant investments in time, money, resources, etc. that you may not have with an army.

  • @historyswhoyesterdaysnatio5197
    @historyswhoyesterdaysnatio5197 5 років тому

    What an interesting topic, I love your level of detail. Excellent video!

  • @LittleMacscorner
    @LittleMacscorner 5 років тому

    Great video and very interesting!

  • @jatzi1526
    @jatzi1526 5 років тому +27

    Obi-wan approves of that flanking maneuver that was described

  • @vinifalleroliveira
    @vinifalleroliveira 5 років тому +4

    It's just like trying to lead troops in Mount and Blade instead of Total War

    • @francoandres3850
      @francoandres3850 5 років тому +3

      Exactly. M&B is, actually, quite accurate.

    • @vinifalleroliveira
      @vinifalleroliveira 5 років тому +3

      @@francoandres3850
      No steady formations, simple commands(move 5 steps forward), no knowledge of terrain(except Visual), can't keep advanced tactics in the middle of the battle.
      Basically, the game is so simple, that it became realistic.

    • @francoandres3850
      @francoandres3850 5 років тому +1

      @@vinifalleroliveira Only problem I see is how small scaled battles are. Bannerlord however is pushing the boundaries, and it's looking great. Sieges are works of art.

    • @vinifalleroliveira
      @vinifalleroliveira 5 років тому +1

      @@francoandres3850
      Ain't it? If it really is improved Warband and every new feature works as promised, it'll very likely gonna be my personnal GOTY. In expectations for world events tho, like the Nord invasion.

  • @GenghisVern
    @GenghisVern 5 років тому

    awesome. looking forward to your Kreiggspiel video too

  • @dylanderouin2888
    @dylanderouin2888 5 років тому +1

    Taking in the information that was available and finding whatever method could instill a general direction; confirmed by relative landmarks and further details acquired by first hand or second hand account. I'll keep this in mind for my fiction!
    Thank you Invicta!

    • @devilhunterred
      @devilhunterred 4 роки тому

      His information is false.
      Cartography is ancient China was much more advanced. They found accurate provincial maps drawn on silk dating back Qin dynasty of 4th century BCE. Using abstract maps for battle planning also existed, it eventually evolved into the game of Go, which existed as far back as 2,500 years ago.

  • @p_heinel4726
    @p_heinel4726 5 років тому +3

    It's like playing videogames in late 90's to early 2000 with text based gamefaqs

  • @m1ndf8ke
    @m1ndf8ke 5 років тому +25

    I see no reason why they wouldn't have used dirt/sand maps in the same way we do today

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  5 років тому +18

      I think for some basic concepts and action on a small scale they likely would have. But this is ultimately quite different from the detailed maps depicted in media.

    • @dogle9258
      @dogle9258 5 років тому

      It is a very good question as to when the first sand table was created to show the soldiers in a unit what was to be done.

  • @1320crusier
    @1320crusier 5 років тому +1

    This such a simple topic which is ironically incredibly fascinating. Thanks :)

  • @ravener96
    @ravener96 5 років тому +2

    to some degree i feel maps must have been part of planning, but mostly during the immediate planning of battles and sieges where your scouts could inform your map. if you have seen a modern briefing for soldiers in the field, they will often build a rudimentary map of the surroundings in a small box so the commander can physically move around and point at positions. this could just as well be done in the past by deploying scouts to check out the surrounding areas and report back

    • @coolwhiprofl
      @coolwhiprofl 5 років тому

      In history there is fact and there is fiction. You feeling like something is true doesn't mean anything

    • @ravener96
      @ravener96 5 років тому

      @@coolwhiprofl sure, this is just a pretty dang obsure fact we dont have much info about either way. im not saying they used proper maps, but physical models of terrain were used by romans routinely (at least i heard they had physical models during triumphs), so it wouldnt be unknown to them. given how usefull a physical model is for even small scale combat today during briefings i would be very suprized if physical aides werent employed.

  • @jochi8874
    @jochi8874 5 років тому +8

    Television:
    *shows scene from total war three kingdoms*

  • @v44n7
    @v44n7 5 років тому +3

    Herodotus map was amazing... I mean was from 430 BC OMG!
    Its incredible how Last night I spend 2-3 hours searching for this stuff on the internet, curious about how the romans saw the empire and where to attack and so forth. just an incredible coincidence. amazing video like always!

    • @coolwhiprofl
      @coolwhiprofl 5 років тому +1

      Just want to let you know that Herodotus actually never made any maps. The maps you see from him are modern and just drawn based on his descriptions.

    • @v44n7
      @v44n7 5 років тому

      @@coolwhiprofl oh I didn't know that, It was too good to be real

  • @cfosburg
    @cfosburg 4 роки тому

    I really enjoyed this subject!!!
    I would love to learn more about this topic.
    - How did ancient generals plan for battle (in more detail and different eras as well as different regions of the world)?
    - What did the evolution of planning look like?
    - When/what were the major breakthroughs in using Maps for Warfare?
    - When did leaders start using Maps as we think of them?
    - Washington was a land surveyor, did this yield to any advantages for him in battle if so what were they?

  • @ErikHare
    @ErikHare 5 років тому

    This video is simply brilliant in so many ways. Thank you so much

  • @moriskurth628
    @moriskurth628 5 років тому +3

    So, if we were to apply this to worldbuilding, maps would be used in military planning if there was a reliable way to produce accurate ones in sufficent quantity (as in, if many people use maps to navigate already, why not the military as well?), and for decisions over the battlefield it depends on how large and complex the units are.
    At least that's how far as I figure it. If you have a fantasy world for instance, having aerial reconissance units like dragons or such would make maps more useful, as the scout could easily explain what they saw on an accurate map. If that isn't the case, however, using the old-fashioned way is more realistic.

    • @CarrotConsumer
      @CarrotConsumer 4 роки тому

      Look into early uses of hot air balloons and air ships for reconnaissance. That might be useful inspiration.

  • @ignacioarellano1834
    @ignacioarellano1834 5 років тому +3

    when exactly they start using them

  • @ricofico
    @ricofico 4 роки тому

    Great video!

  • @ZecaPinto1
    @ZecaPinto1 5 років тому +11

    Short answer: yes
    Long answer: to make it simple travel to a city, go to a place your choice, chose a building an make the sketch of its view from above by walking around it

  • @Armorius2199
    @Armorius2199 5 років тому +16

    Who is up for blindfolded total war. Hehe.

  • @raeitifraosi6247
    @raeitifraosi6247 5 років тому +2

    Ancient Chinese kingdoms, specially before the three kingdoms pre unification period, about 500 years before; were obsessed with maps.. yet I've never seen any mention of a map in their battle preparations. Much as with the west they scouted, survey and interrogated locals if possible beforehand.

  • @yeoman1091
    @yeoman1091 5 років тому +5

    14:25 Blood for the blood God! Skulls for the skull Throne!

    • @d.esanchez3351
      @d.esanchez3351 5 років тому +3

      In the name of the Emperor, let non survive!

    • @ww2killerk
      @ww2killerk 5 років тому +4

      It is better to die for the emperor then live for yourself!

  • @JesusRocksTryPrayin
    @JesusRocksTryPrayin 5 років тому +3

    TRIP. Where I grew up they gave directions like that lol "Turn left at the barn then 3 blocks to the left " hick directions

  • @tristan3947
    @tristan3947 5 років тому +1

    Wow I don’t know how long it has been but I started watching you when you were uploading total war and now you have 500k subscribers I congratulate you on your success!

  • @zandyllatos7473
    @zandyllatos7473 4 роки тому +1

    Great video. As a sidenote though, there are accounts of generals in antiquity drawing up what we in modern armies refer to as a 'sandbox' or 'sandtable'. This is a makeshift 'map' constructed with tools available to the commander on the field (Mainly sand, rocks, twigs, etc..). A commander today, and a general in antiquity, would go about this roughly the same way. Relying on information relayed to them by scouts and constructing a sandbox that represents the AO as accurately as possible (or needed) to give an easier tactical comprehension.

  • @francispicotte6174
    @francispicotte6174 5 років тому +41

    For so many reasons it's obvious that even commanders didn't have access to highly detailed aerial maps of every conceivable battleground, but that is pretty much the only argument I see in this video: their tools were not as Hollywood depicts them. Yet that doesn't exclude any implements and visual aids at all. Any commander would understand the benefits of planning their rough battle tactics, putting them to the test, and communicating them by drawing circles, x's and arrows in the sand or dirt (at the least... paper sure came later and parchment was expensive, but wax tablets were relatively common in the Roman era). The preserved map in the legionary's shield at 2:45 is proof enough that even down to the rank and file soldiers they valued rough visual representations (i.e. maps), if at least to navigate the land. From there, depicting tactical landmarks such as high ground, obstacles and troop movement is barely one logical step away.
    I see a lot of conjectures but very little supporting arguments in favour of a claim that was poorly explained in the first place. Highly detailed aerial (aka modern) maps? No. No cartographic representations at all? Very doubtful. Yet that's still called a map. I'll need to see scholarly publications supporting your claim before taking that video seriously.

    • @sirensmelodyltd6118
      @sirensmelodyltd6118 5 років тому +10

      I picture something like how a basketball coach draws up a play during the timeout.

    • @rpavangchhia8953
      @rpavangchhia8953 4 роки тому +2

      The video explains if they used geographically accurate 2d paper maps or chess pieces like in the hollywood movies.Drawing lines on the ground is common sense,everyone knows they did it.

    • @davidec.4021
      @davidec.4021 4 роки тому +1

      Exactly. Especially because yes of course plans were not as complicated as they would have been 2000 years later (duh?) but were absolutely not as simple as he’s trying to make them. Just look at Caesar in Gaul! Divisions hitting supply lines, securing high-grounds, while other attacked weaker points whilst some others distracted while others again built fortifications. This video starts by saying how important scouts etc were but then proceeds to just downplay the whole war machine of ancient times. Not to mention how well you had to know all the surroundings in order to establish (and keep) a supply line and foraging parties. Not the quality this channel is know for tbh.

    • @jic1
      @jic1 4 роки тому

      "that is pretty much the only argument I see in this video: their tools were not as Hollywood depicts them."
      Well, you're essentially claiming 'the only argument he successfully makes is the one this video is centered around'.

  • @jodofe4879
    @jodofe4879 5 років тому +5

    The video makes a very good point that ancient commanders did not meticulously plan their military operations on detailed maps as is often depicted in movies and games.
    But it is not like ancient people did not use maps at all. They would have used more rudimentary maps to plan campaigns, travels and for administrative purposes. For a commander for example it was important to know the locations of cities and enemy garrisons in relation to rivers, crossings, hills etc. before setting out, and when you are still hundreds of miles away from the area you are marching towards you can't rely yet on natives and scouts to tell you the details that determine which city to attack first, where to cross river X, along what road to get your supplies to place Y etc. Of course, the maps used for such purposes don't have to be anywhere near as detailed or accurate as modern maps. Ancient people where indeed more concerned with distances, landmarks (especially rivers) and rough directions than with knowing the precise lay of the land.
    It is also not true that people in the past did not have cartographic knowledge or that they did not have access to maps. It heavily depends on what time and place you are talking about of course, but places like the Near East and Ancient China produced many highly detailed and accurate (by ancient standards) maps that were used for both administration and war.
    A problem of course is that our knowledge of ancient cartography is extremely limited, because maps tend to be created on organic materials like cloth or wood that only very rarely survive in the archaeological record.

    • @helginator
      @helginator 5 років тому +1

      Alexander the great asked the locals for adivce and guide when he traveld. As places he went to did not have maps.

  • @jameswg13
    @jameswg13 5 років тому

    Very well thought out video would love you to do the naval version of this. While I know the answers in detail and the comparisons it would be interesting for others to get that comparison and information.

  • @Fitzger00
    @Fitzger00 4 роки тому

    Who the hell does the work/art/research for this channel ?! It’s absolutely amazing.

  • @KTChamberlain
    @KTChamberlain 5 років тому +5

    An interesting point but ask yourself this: would you rather have Hollywood stop using this trope or fire arrows in battle?

    • @ernavill3261
      @ernavill3261 5 років тому +1

      As long as they stop giving Vikings horns I'm good with either of those!

    • @KTChamberlain
      @KTChamberlain 5 років тому

      @@ernavill3261 Agreed.

    • @thehumanoddity
      @thehumanoddity 5 років тому

      Fire arrows were used in sieges.

    • @ernavill3261
      @ernavill3261 5 років тому

      @@thehumanoddity sources or it didn't happen

    • @thehumanoddity
      @thehumanoddity 5 років тому

      @@ernavill3261 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_thermal_weapons#Flaming_arrows.2C_bolts.2C_spears_and_rockets
      They were effective considering most roofs were made of wood.

  • @johnmurdoch3083
    @johnmurdoch3083 5 років тому +3

    Id like to know at what point battlefield maps actually became a thing

    • @comradebear9477
      @comradebear9477 5 років тому

      Chess started as a type of battlefield model during the Gupta Empire. In one of the early versions during the 3rd Century, the Rook equivalent depicted fortifications & couldn't be moved during the game, and the players would roll die to model the FoW.

    • @devilhunterred
      @devilhunterred 4 роки тому

      @@comradebear9477 His information is false.
      Cartography is ancient China was much more advanced. They found accurate provincial maps drawn on silk dating back Qin dynasty of 4th century BCE. Using abstract maps for battle planning also existed, it eventually evolved into the game of Go, which existed as far back as 2,500 years ago.

  • @snazzlefrazzel8615
    @snazzlefrazzel8615 5 років тому

    Always enjoy the content

  • @imeize
    @imeize 5 років тому +1

    I know you were partly joking about imagining driving cross-country without GPS but honestly everyone should have an accurate up to date paper roadmap in their vehicles. Any number of things could sabotage the GPS system, and so being able to navigate the roads by just a paper map and reading the highway signs is a good skill to have!

  • @PeklyCZ
    @PeklyCZ 5 років тому +22

    I am really simple man, i see Warhammer 40k reference, i press like :)

  • @mordador2702
    @mordador2702 5 років тому +7

    Invicta: Talks about superior Roman tactics.
    Shows a picture that looks like Teutoburg forest.

    • @CarrotConsumer
      @CarrotConsumer 4 роки тому

      That was from the Show Rome and was in Gaul. I believe it was Alesia but I might be wrong.

    • @mordador2702
      @mordador2702 4 роки тому

      I didn't say it was Teutoburg forest, just that it looks similar enough ^^

  • @socratrash
    @socratrash 5 років тому

    Very good video, thank you

  • @alpenjon
    @alpenjon 5 років тому

    I love your content - so interesting!

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  5 років тому +1

      Thank! I love doing topics like this which cause you to reframe your perspective on things.

  • @TheSumisus
    @TheSumisus 5 років тому +6

    Where's Metro C? ROME has been asking the same question for 2 decades.

  • @jonnybarnes18
    @jonnybarnes18 5 років тому +3

    If only they had Baron Von Steuben to help with the dress right dress.