An introduction to the Macedonian phalanx
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- Опубліковано 28 бер 2022
- This video tries to illustrate the different versions of equipment, structure and combat spacing used by the macedonian phalanx based armies, following the descriptions of various ancient sources, including the tactic manuals written by Asclepiodotus and Polybius.
Music made with Filmstro
Voice over Christian H. Miles ( / christianhmiles )
Syntagma produces some of the best content on this platform.
If you like him so much why don’t you marry him?
@@mack626 I'm planning to do so
This comment section 🤣
Amazingly done
Anyway,will be hard to marry a guy so busy doin'such a great docu.Takes lots of time and..energy.He must have no much time for distractions....😉.He does incredible content.All my respect.
Glad to see you return. Your content is always top quality
I know right he's badass kickass! Lol.
Everyone go and like all his videos. He needs a serious come back
Hearing you say Syntagma is like hearing a character in a movie name drop the movie; it’s so funny for some reason.
Syntagma means constitution in greek.
It means constitution. It , literally means: means,: “many soldiers, coordinated”. Συν + ταξη/τασσωμαι
All battlez only remember effort, effect, Names???😮😎🙏✅💘🙏😇🙏💪💖
It means to put (things or something) straight. recount your marbles or get back to classroom
You do a really good job of illustrating just how large the sarissa spears were. A weapon of that size took a lot of practice to use. But perhaps more interestingly the more experienced and elite soldiers used shorter spears. And many have argued that the ability of being able to be in the 5th row back - and still inflict casualties on an enemy you never have to look in the eye - was a big and important factor in the success of the phalanx.
This is my favorite history channel. Wish he posted more.
It is a joy to see you post! Thank you for these excellent videos! 😃👍
Welcome back! Thoroughly enjoy your videos
I can’t tell you how excited I was to see that you had returned with a new video! The content, information, visuals, video quality, & narration are all of the highest quality. Your videos truly are the gold standard on Youtbe. I enjoyed this one immensely and cannot wait for the next one
I was very happy this came up in my feed. Welcome back. I'm fascinated by the phalanx formation and am glad there's another analysis of their use and tactics.
Easily the best and most interesting in depth look at the Macedonian phalanx I've seen yet. Excellent work! Thank you for sharing!
This channel deserves so many more subscribers.
The graphics are really incredible. Such a vivid picture of the ancient world.
why did you stop
Top quality video from a fantastic channel, and looking forward to more. Keep it up!
Just finished watching this video and I just have to thank you so much this video work and 3d models informative voice that explains everything clearly without pauses and touching on one of my favorite bits of ancient military history is just incredible mark my words this channel is going to the top cant wait !! Keep up the great work man !!
thanks man :)
Currently taking a upper division course on Alexander and the Hellenistic Kingdoms and I'm constantly watching videos on youtube to give visuals to the texts I'm reading. Of everything I've watched in the last 4 months this is without a doubt the highest quality and most accurate video out there. Absolutely adore the city going on in the background and the attention to detail.
thank you :)
missed this channel, superb stuff
great video, you're FINALLY back!
Wow, that was amazing! Love to see your content again.
Loved this video. I'm actually studying greek history and since I love military history i wanted to know more about macedonian phalanx. Very good explanation and analysis, i hope you'll consider also che cavalry in a next video
Really really enjoyed this video and the presentation that went with it. Very nice to have a representation to go with what you were talking about. Subscribed
Absolutely outstanding presentation and animations that perfectly and accurately showcase the subject matter. You're one of the best channels out there. I know the animations take a long time but they allow a level of immersion most other channels fail to achieve, especially when going over battles and formations like these.
Ugh, you make just the best videos. Again, great work
Welcome BACK!!! I love these videos
AMAZING! This deserves millions of viewers, likes and subscribers!
thank you for your come back
Marvelous exposition of the men their arms and their formations and how it all worked
Always happy to see you post a video ^^
So Glad to see your back
A tutorial video on pronouncing ancient greek and Latin names would be an absolute gem!
More than a deserved subscribe! Looking forward for new content, keep it up Syntagma you'r the best!
Glad you are back in action. KnG was giving me headaches man!!
This is the best museum I have ever watched.
brilliant! sublime! so glad of the quality of such an interesting topic!! keep it up
Wow this channel deserves more attention.
Excellent presentation, glad to find this channel 👌
Pretty please keep making stuff like this it's really cool especially showing the formation and stuff
Dude your videos are awesome please make more!!!
Really good video! Never thought this would be so interesting. Well done sir.
Great to see you back Syntagma! An excellent video as per usual.
Something like a video on the naval battle at Salamis in real scale I think would make an amazing video. Meaning to see all the, close to a thousand, ships from the advantage point of the Persian king.
thanks for the kind words :) That's a good image indeed, Salamis is on our list for a video sometime in the future.
@@Syntagma Great video and videos. I don't mind relevant music in the beginning to get people in the mood, but as the video goes on I do feel it's better to have the music get much quieter or not have any music, just to let the listener to better focus on the information being presented. The music was a little bit too loud. Also I'm sure you use a script and thus I suggest uploading close captioning for people who are deaf or hard of hearing. Thanks for making these videos.
Such an excellent presentation. Thank you.
top quality content you made here, keep it up and thanks
Great work, the animations help a lot to visualize what it was a macedonian army.
Much anticipated
Loving these visuals
Glad I found this channel
Impressive video! well done, thanks for making it.
Just found this channel. Excellent quality and top research.
thank you :)
a fantastic video, well done Syntagma!
Top notch as always!
Excellent quality.
Great work guys 👍👍
Excellent video
Appreciated the fact that you did a lot of research and experimented the faisability of various pike length. Well done to you!
thanks man, glad you like it :)
love the videos. would love to see one on the hoplite phalanx
1:17 gorgeous city! Please do more and more often videos ❤
I realy wish you made these more often, and do a series on Scipio Africanus, Hanibal Barca or some otger great general the way you did about G.J. Cesar. You make fantastic content, its a joy to watch.
thanks man :)
hell yeah new material ! high quality content
E' un vero piacere vedere un vostro video. L'attesa viene sempre ripagata
Masterful content and excellent 3D renderings. Very historically accurate. Subscribed!
thank you :)
@@Syntagmawill you be uploading a video soon? Your videos are so good
Yeah your videos are the BEST.
Even better than large documentaries with big budgets@@Syntagma
Really fascinating and interesting video. Thank you.
I Love this video like All off your Videos. Allready followed your Reference to Asklepiodotuses taktica :)
Beautiful video!
Amazing how little difference there is between phalanxes and pike blocks of the late medieval/early modern era, despite the time that passed. Soldiers of each era would have found the other's drill manual very familiar.
That is a misconception, apart from similar weapons they organised and drilled very differently.
@@Rabhadh joe mama
@@Rabhadh As a reenactor who has done the later pike block drills, I can assure you that whatever the different commands, the forming of files and changes of spacing are almost exactly the same. Obviously phalanxes didn't have to integrate with muskets.
It always amazes me that the Scottish schiltrons spear walls and it’s success at Stirling bridge and Bannockburn appears to be new tactics when used against English armies heavy in cavalry resulting in almost suicidal charges by English mounted knights only sharp spears ….obviously the English then changed ta tics and dismounted the knights making heavy infantry and then the longbow on its flanks ….
@@nobbytang A strange thing to ponder about history is we know more ancient history than medieval people did, even if they were educated. Presumably future historians will find new information that radically revises what we in the present already consider ancient. The pike block was a reinvention to solve the same problem, and the first army to fight it knew nothing about ancient phalanxes and reinvented missiles to beat it, namely longbows and then firearms.
Thanks for sharing , good work. 👍
wow. hat was a good video. Hope you will make many more in the future
By far, the best explanation of the Macedonian phalanx I have ever come across. The video is worthy of scholarly publication. Phillip and Alexander would be proud!
thanks man :)
Huh, thought you guys were dead. Glad you're posting again.
wow, seriously amazing job. Cheers from Estonia
Awesome!
Being a historian myself and loving Macedon, I think this video was 1. Very well done and two. I ended up learning a thing or two from this and I will never look at a Macedonian phalanx the same way
then surely you know that the Macedonians were not Greeks, archive.org/details/TheHistoryOfWesternPhilosophy
@@jorgoasparuhov4131 OH wow another Macedonians weren't Greek guy.
The evidence is overwhelming Macedon was a Greek kingdom get over it. I won't bother arguing with the willfully blind, enjoy your delusion.
Why did you rate this video 1, sir?
@@jorgoasparuhov4131 this is a narrative (not even close to a theory) of quite recent inception consisting of gaping holes that is subscribed to by mostly those that the intellectual world refers to as idiots. For example, an analogous theme of slightly less stupidity is that of the flat earth theory. Incidentally, the latter - although outrageous, has a greater degree of influence.
@@ale3hs Yes It is true that there are many open holes in the false Anglo-Saxon history, which is attributed to the fictional Greek nation, which did not exist at all, and who are newcomers as Danajci - Danaos - Δαναοί [Danaoí]) from Egypt, on the Balkan or Macedonian peninsula,there already lived, indigenous Pelasgian, Venetian.. present-day Slavic populations. idiot, what flat earth, hello, here we are talking about the Holes in the false Ango-Saxon history
Absolutely outstanding
By far,the very best historical piece about Falanx,and much more.SIMPLY WONDERFUL.
"Phalanx"
@@grindyoutodust819 right.i know but let me tell yiu.It is from the Katin and in Italian is Falange,I used Falanx on purpose but sure,in Englus,it is as you said..
The,..we cane first..Thx ciao
Pretty nice video; it would be fantastic if you also do an introduction to Persian-style equipment to compare the two different fighting styles.
Awesome graphics!
Wow this was an excellent video 👍
This is a top notch quality video! Very well done and whit the animations as well! Keep this up! Also music: I love it! Can we have it whitout the narrative and voice over? :)
I knew stayin subbed to this channel would pay off
Top quality history channel. They dont even show this stuff on cable TV anymore
Wow, this is amazing
criminally underrated channel
Amazing video, congratulations!
thank you :)
why have you stopped@@Syntagma
This video is fantastic!
Great job, thanks for the video
I'm so glad this video got to my recommendations
That was really cool!
Great story - the graphics really grab me!
Awsome presentation
The most underrated channel
This is cool,how long did the rendering take? What program did you use? I usually use blender for this stuff
Great video!
8:41 The Syntagma was considered the best UA-camr of the 21st century
Welcome back :)
4:52 I have doubts regarding the Leukaspides or White Shields being a phalanx unit simply due to the fact that Polybius (the more reliable source) doesn't mention these troops in the Battle of Sellasia rather puts foreign troops in their place like Illyrians. Plutarch doesn't mention them in the battle of Pydna which is incredibly weird since he says they were present in the battle of Sellasia unlike Polybius. Though like Polybius, in the battle of Pydna he mentions Thracians in place of the Leukaspides with "white and gleaming armour of their shields".
The Royal Guard Infantry of the Argeads and the Antigonids is also a phalanx unit. The 5000-strong Peltast Guard is one example (they were also called Shield-Guards or Shieldbearers in Arrian's Alexander Anabasis, due to the fact that Pelte shield they were using is bigger: 70 to 75 cm [4:13]). However unlike the rest of the phalanx, they were considered lighter and more mobile in such that their deployment in battle is on the flanks.
6:35 Javelins were also a part of the phalanx arsenal. In Arrian's Alexander Anabasis, the phalanx regiments of Alexander during the Battle of the Hydaspes were also armed with javelins:
"but now the phalanx itself of the Macedonians was advancing against the elephants, the men casting darts at the riders and also striking the beasts themselves, standing round them on all sides." ~ Arrian's Anabasis of Alexander, chapter 17, the Defeat of Porus.
In Rufus Curtius' the History of Alexander, he mentions the arms of Macedonian Coragus in his duel with the Athenian Dioxippus as follows:
"The Macedonian was had equipped himself with regular weapons: he held a bronze shield and a spear called a sarissa, in his left hand and a javelin in his right while he also had a sword at his side - as if he were going to fight a number of men simultaneously"
Now is the used of both weapons possible? Sure however that depends on the kind of sarissa used. Like you mention before the sarissa varied in length; with the 4 metre version (roughly 12 to 13 feet) being the possible candidate of such use.
11:17 As for the Synaspismos or locked-shields, I think the formation wasn't purely defensive in nature. Plutarch says the when the phalanx-lines advanced during the Battle of Pydna, their shields were locked in combat suggesting that the formation as whole is just as offensive as it is defensive. Now is the possibility of such formation debatable? I don't think so. There was this article I saw last year that the formation can be done if the sarissas were raised in a "high-guard" position above the pelte, similarly to the way pikes are used in the 16th century. And as such, it creates a wall of pikes and shields.
Link for more information: www.academia.edu/44440024/Synaspismos_and_Its_Possibility_in_the_Macedonian_Styled_Phalanx
wow
5 seconds sound in a loop, nearly 20 minutes. Really nice...
holy cow this is amazing
i just found a new gem!
I love this channel so much. Now I can look at a helmet and be lkke" yo that's not a Corinthian that's a Thracian!"
Amazing stuff 👍
It’s great to see someone create content of such high quality for free.
Kudos to you sir
Great content
FINALLY! A new video after 6 months, HALF A FUCKING YEAR, we all thought this channel was already dead.
Enjoyed this thank you.