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Chapter 13 § 90. The Weapons of a Hoplite.
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A Day in Old Athens, by William Stearns Davis (1910) Professor of Ancient History at the University of Minnesota |
Chapter XIII. The Armed Forces of Athens.
90. The Weapons of a Hoplite.--The hoplites have donned their
armor. Now they assume their offensive weapons. Every man has a
lance and a sword. The LANCE is a stout weapon with a solid wooden
butt, about six feet long in all. It is really too heavy to use
as a javelin. It is most effective as a pike thrust fairly into a
foeman's face, or past his shield into a weak spot in his cuirass.
The sword is usually kept as a reserve weapon in case the lance
gets broken. It is not over 25 inches in length, making rather a
huge double-edged vicious knife than a saber; but it is terrible
for cut and thrust work at very close quarters. Simple as these
weapons are, they are fearful instruments of slaughter in well-trained
hands, and the average Greek has spent a considerable part of his
life in being taught how to use them.
Section 91
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This resource page is copyright © 2002 N.S. Gill.