The Impressive Training of Alexander the Great's Army

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  • Опубликовано: 17 дек 2024

Комментарии • 518

  • @HistoriaMilitum
    @HistoriaMilitum  Год назад +31

    Use tanks.ly/3QuppTh to download World of Tanks for FREE! Click the link to get 7 days premium, 250k Credits, and three rental tanks for 10 battels each! Thanks to World of Tanks for sponsoring the video #wot #worldoftanks #tanks

    • @samym1694
      @samym1694 Год назад

      Can you talk about the Macedonian Phalanx on how do Thin Pikes from a 2nd-3rd row protect men from arrows?
      What was the purpose to use Pelta shield if it requires to use both hands to hold a sarrisa?
      Speaking of Pelta, what's the point for skirmishers to carry shields if they're not engaging in close quarters combat?

    • @arbgostivari5271
      @arbgostivari5271 Год назад

      And he wasn't even greek

    • @MickeyMouse-el5bk
      @MickeyMouse-el5bk Год назад

      Tgis Warriors school is a prof tht a multi ethnical state doesn't work and culture should like religion be one. Then comwsthe topic of race. Noone who isn't a patrot wll do good for his country

    • @tatjanavelkova5814
      @tatjanavelkova5814 4 месяца назад +1

      ALEXANDER THE GREAT IS MACEDONIAN.
      before 25 centuries ALEXANDER TSAR ON MAKEDONIJA ! ! !

    • @nezperce2767
      @nezperce2767 Месяц назад

      ​@@tatjanavelkova5814tatjanavelkova5814 tsars are a russian title found arround 800 AD. Yr time of arrical in the area. No tsars at that time , if one seeks historical soyrses.then wtite down something written by Aristotle a book title for instance even the one with his father's name in it. it's not the first nor the last time you cannot or won't answer that cause 1 you know nothing 2. It's always in greek 3 His father's name as well as all names you have mentioned. Stupidity or ignorance is hever an excuse. You are deliberately lying

  • @Afrologist
    @Afrologist Год назад +547

    After Alexander's death, these dudes, most of whom were in their 30s, would end up ruling over their own slice of the known world. Wish we had more written records from this period, these men lived fascinating, hardcore lives.

    • @oddish2253
      @oddish2253 Год назад +70

      Shout out to Ptolemy's incest dynasty.

    • @Afrologist
      @Afrologist Год назад +16

      @@oddish2253 *hits pipe*

    • @BaileyJPope
      @BaileyJPope Год назад +37

      @@oddish2253 He was only keeping in line with the prior Egyptian tradition lol

    • @herbthompson8937
      @herbthompson8937 Год назад +17

      Eumenes was done dirty

    • @something4179
      @something4179 Год назад

      ​@@herbthompson8937
      Not really, if you consider the position of the Silvershields in Eumene's war. (One of the Diadochi Wars)
      A unit that has served both Philip and Alexander, undeniably the most grizzled and veteran unit in the world with its last wish being to finally retire in peace.
      (These men reached 60s-70s like King Leonidas)
      The unfortunate ransack of their booty along with their families was the last straw.
      How much would you be willing to fight for a leader who is only utilising you to the extreme and postponing your retirement just for his maybe righteous but yet selfish ambitions?
      (No matter his name)
      Especially after your family and earnings get at your enemy's hands. You as a soldier have nothing to fight for anymore, but just for glory in which you have already gained enough throughout your career. I do not blame them, Eumenes was incapable to finish a job, twice he had the chance to destroy Antigonos, twice he reached an indecisive conclusion in his last battles, its not the Silvershields fault. And in contrast he even dared to curse them and indeed Antigonos due to their "treacherous" and dreadful reputation of prowess dispatched them across his Empire to die in the most dangerous/hardest to live areas, (destroys them) guarding random settlements.
      They literally mutinied to Alexander at India and were about to be released off duty after another mutiny of the new recruits at Opis several months later. Until Alexander died and Diadochi Wars broke out...and anyone commanding them like a wild card had the advantage. Since they guarded the huge collective treasury across the conquered lands plus baggages and their families as followers.
      Such a tragic story for the most Elite Warriors this earth has ever seen.

  • @frankgrimm387
    @frankgrimm387 Год назад +152

    Too many think of Alexander as the greatest conqueror in history. He was amazing, he did a lot, but the tools he needed to do such things were already there, provided by his father. History's other great conquerors did not have their path to greatness forged for them. Phillip deserves more credit.

    • @tylerdurden3722
      @tylerdurden3722 Год назад +54

      That's not entirely true.
      1. Phillip is underrated. He was a diplomatic mastermind. But this was a massive weakness for the complicated web of Alliances he created (with Macedonia as hegemon), because the glue holding it together was Phillip's genius. And it would require someone greater than him to prevent that complicated mess he created from collapsing like a house of cards upn his death.
      2. Alexander inherited a hot mess of a situation that was near impossible to salvage.
      The fact that Alexander managed salvage things as he did, with the speed and effectiveness he did, making it look easy, is in itself a testament to Alexander's greatness.
      Just Alexander's initial local campaigns and stuff was enough to cement him as one of the greatest.
      3. Alexander didn't use the Macedonian army to conquer Persia. He used the Corinthian League.
      Most of the Macedonian army stayed with Antipater.
      Only 25%of Alexander's army was Macedonian. And even that Macedonian core wasn't completely Macedonian.
      E.g. Ptolemy, Perdicass, Craterus, Pausanias, Antiochus, etc were all Orestians (a sub tribe of Mollosians...Epirots)
      4. Phillip's kingdom was on the brink of financial disaster. It couldn't afford its own army.
      The reason Alexander seems so desperate for battle, was because he was...for financial reasons. He was always a few months away from everything collapsing the moment he was unable to pay Phillip's professional army.
      It's why the Thebans were sold into slavery. It bought Alexander a few months breathing room.
      It wasn't until the successes in Anatolia that Alexander could breath easy for the first time.
      5. In other words, Alexander wasn't playing on easy mode. He was playing on a ludicrously hard difficulty level.
      It's Alexander's ability to make the impossible seem easy that makes him underated in many was as well.
      Some of his own generals made that same mistake and they learned the hard way. When Perdicass took control of the royal army, he was killed by the army for seeming incompetent compared to Alexander. He wasn't incompetent at all, just compared to Alexander (who made things seem easy) his failures seemed like incompetence.

    • @gabrielpwv
      @gabrielpwv Год назад +5

      True he lost an eye unifying the great Heliade, but Alexander is the greatest because he had the greatest training, he wasn’t the 1st born, he was the most humaine of them all and he conquered his entire world by the Age of 32.

    • @mountainseeker2844
      @mountainseeker2844 Год назад +1

      @@tylerdurden3722 Sounds like you just be narrating this video.

    • @ianwilson4841
      @ianwilson4841 11 месяцев назад +13

      Od say Ghengis Khan was the greatest conquer in History. Alexander inherited his army, he was highly educated by the best scholors, trained since he was young to fight war. Ghengis Khan was a son of an unimportant cheif. He was made a slave at a young age, he managed to escape and took revenge on his captors, then united the mongol tribes into an incredibly well disciplined army that went on to forge the largest land based Empire in history. Three times the size of Alexanders.

    • @frankgrimm387
      @frankgrimm387 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@ianwilson4841 Exactly my opinion. At one point his "empire" consisted of his mother, a few horses and a land full of enemies. Seems like comparing a trust fund baby to a self made millionaire.

  • @theicepickthatkilledtrotsk658
    @theicepickthatkilledtrotsk658 Год назад +680

    ''The Greeks could rule the world, Alexander did. He took a Greek army to the far Indus there was nothing left to conquer. The world was his.''- Total war Rome Greek intro

    • @shichilaofa
      @shichilaofa Год назад +23

      Africa. America. Northen europe. East asia.

    • @shichilaofa
      @shichilaofa Год назад +1

      ?

    • @theicepickthatkilledtrotsk658
      @theicepickthatkilledtrotsk658 Год назад +65

      @@shichilaofa It's hyperbole.

    • @elijahs.2978
      @elijahs.2978 Год назад +88

      @shichilaofa America? WTF are you talking about? America and the rest of the world that you speak of consisted of local tribesmen at that point. He captured the part of the world that actually mattered. No other army at any point in history penetrated as deeply and decisively as Alexander's army.

    • @landonlacy1954
      @landonlacy1954 Год назад +34

      @@shichilaofaI see what you mean. But what Alexander had achieved was and is still truly remarkable. And at the time the Greeks believed the world was far smaller than it actually is. And in the mind of the Greeks at the time. Alexander did conquer the majority of the world.
      But I think it’s also pretty important to point out whenever possible. That Alexander’s army was not made up of just Greeks or Macedonians. But many different peoples from all over the empire. And even though technically these non Greek troops would be considered Greek after Alexander brought their homeland into his Macedonian empire. In reality they weren’t and the fact that Alexander was able to bring all these different troop types together to form what is undoubtedly the greatest fighting force the world had ever seen at the time.
      Sounds like quite the conqueror to me

  • @derek6631
    @derek6631 Год назад +116

    I have read that the elite Macedonian infantry were called the Hypaspists (shield bearers) and seem to have been the "special forces" of the army being used in a variety of ways to support the pike armed Phalanx as well as the cavalry. Very interesting subject matter!

    • @silverchairsg
      @silverchairsg Год назад +20

      Yes they had shorter spears and were armed more akin to the old Greek hoplite fashion, and were used to guard the flanks of the phalanx or in sieges because they were more flexible.

    • @praiza1481
      @praiza1481 Год назад +11

      These guys would basically do anything the king required, at any time. During campaigns, not only would they indeed protect the flanks of the phalanx while in battle, they would also serve as bodyguard to the king by setting up their tents in a ring around the king's quarters back in camp. They would also serve as assault units during sieges, using their superior training and grit to break the ennemy's defences. We have multiple records of Hypaspists climbing first the walls of a forteress, for example the time when Alexander himself climbed the wall of a citadel in India accompanied by his Hypaspists and got stranded there with only two of them, who gave up their lives to defend him until the rest of the army breached the gates in a frenzy to save their king. Another one from later times, during the reign of the last Macedonian king, Perseus, tells how his Peltasts (the equivalent of the Hypaspists of Alexander on the battlefield, as Hypaspist had become a court title by then) stormed a citadel during the Third Macedonian War.
      The Hypaspist would undertook a variety of assignement, including political assassination sometimes, as was shown by the execution of Parmenion, the assassination of Perdiccas, the arrest of Eumenes. No doubt they were given some secret assignements as well, as shown by the way Antigonos Monophtalmos got rid of the old Silver Shields (the name the legendary Hypaspists of Alexander would be called by the time of Alexander's death), he would sent them on various dangerous missions accross his territory until they would all die out.
      They could also fight much like any phalangite. During the battle of Pydna, the Peltasts actually led the charge against the Romans. They wielded a shorter version of the sarissa in order to charge with more impetus. They managed to push back the legions, no one could stop them. And when the battle was decided and the Macedonian army routed, they were the only one to hold their ground. They fought to the last man.

    • @silverchairsg
      @silverchairsg Год назад +3

      @@praiza1481 In short, it sounds like they did pretty much everything except ride the calvary.

    • @LordByron1821
      @LordByron1821 Год назад +1

      Interesting to note that all Macedonian military terminology is purely of Hellenic origin much the same as today's military terminology.

    • @praiza1481
      @praiza1481 Год назад +3

      @@LordByron1821 Well that's not surprising, the ancient Macedonian language is either a dialect of ancient Greek or a separate language but still of the Hellenic family, depending on who you ask.
      As for the terminology, since the Macedonian adopted hoplite warfare since the Classical period at the very least, it's no surprise they would use the same words such as syntagma or lochos. And since Philip was raised in Thebes as a hostage, that's double the reasons for him to adopt such terminology.

  • @HistoriaMilitum
    @HistoriaMilitum  Год назад +68

    We hope you all enjoy this latest instalment to the training series. Let us know what historic athletes/armies we should cover next, we are all ears!

    • @TheChosenx1
      @TheChosenx1 Год назад +2

      Genghis Kahn’s Mongols Training and Recruitment

    • @oddish2253
      @oddish2253 Год назад +1

      Something spicy and usually not being portrayed. Either the Ali'i's armies of Hawaii or the Datu's armies of the Philippines.

    • @warprimeminister
      @warprimeminister Год назад

      More on the Companions training

    • @KrisV385
      @KrisV385 Год назад

      Persians at different times

    • @Sreng444
      @Sreng444 Год назад

      The historic Assassins. To blend seamlessly into any army in any position would take something special.

  • @letsgohotcheeto
    @letsgohotcheeto Год назад +57

    Please cover either the Varangians or the Eastern Romans of Justinians army or the themata of the Macedonian Dynasty 🙏

  • @wilsontheconqueror8101
    @wilsontheconqueror8101 Год назад +24

    Sitting around young Greek Nobles learning from Aristotle with a future Alexander the Great & Future Pharoah of Egypt Ptlomey would be one of those "if u could go back in time moments!"

    • @hyperion3145
      @hyperion3145 Год назад +4

      To think that Alexander, Ptolemy, Phillip, Aristotle, Seleukos and Diogenes could've all been in the same room at the same time

  • @IvanBR10
    @IvanBR10 Год назад +32

    I love this kind of video, especially the Spartan one. So much information, nice pace, and well-edited.
    Greetings from Brazil.

  • @GothPaoki
    @GothPaoki Год назад +9

    Great vid. Very interesting to see aspects of warfare not often seen in RUclips videos.
    Also Macedonians fostering that feeling of companionship to improve their military performance is a 5head move. You won't see many armies encouraging companionship between a rider and his horse.

  • @paulbunyan9436
    @paulbunyan9436 Год назад +117

    Impressive indeed. Over 2000 years later we're still talking about them and holding the Macedonians up as examples of the perfect citizen soldiers so I would have to say they were fairly successful.

    • @gunsconguest7080
      @gunsconguest7080 Год назад +11

      That's why West Bulgarians try to steal this history from us the greeks, its just too impressive and cool

    • @horror11
      @horror11 Год назад +10

      the army of alexander consisted of different greek ppl not only macedonian, except spartans which refused to go.

    • @Thomas.Nikolaidis10
      @Thomas.Nikolaidis10 Год назад +4

      Actually, even though alexander is the best general, the perfect citizen soldier is without a doubt the Spartans. But of course all greeks were super high quality soldiers , and that includes the Macedonians so you are not really wrong.

    • @tatjanavelkova5814
      @tatjanavelkova5814 2 месяца назад +1

      IN ARMY FALANGA --- MACEDONIAN SOLDIERS ! ! !

    • @nezperce2767
      @nezperce2767 Месяц назад

      ​@@tatjanavelkova5814phalanx a word still in use the last 3000 years. Argean Corinthian Athenian Soartan Thesbian Acarnanian Macedonian etc different greek forms, type of armour shape and manouvering. Like it or not

  • @magnushorus5670
    @magnushorus5670 Год назад +8

    This was really good! I could listen to all these new little details that I havent heard before for hours, thank you for making this and sharing it with us all!

  • @christopherthrawn1333
    @christopherthrawn1333 Год назад +8

    Excellent work here Sir and your Team

  • @ΧρήστοςΕυαγγελίδης-φ9σ

    Alexander the great is still viewed as the Greatest Greek of all time amongst the Greeks..

    • @juliancarax4797
      @juliancarax4797 Год назад +14

      greek?

    • @ΧρήστοςΕυαγγελίδης-φ9σ
      @ΧρήστοςΕυαγγελίδης-φ9σ Год назад

      yes sir@@juliancarax4797

    • @carly6279
      @carly6279 Год назад +2

      Gianiss in 4 🥱

    • @LordByron1821
      @LordByron1821 Год назад +20

      ​Hellenic ==>> means Greek!
      DEFINITELY NOT SLAVOBULGARIAN!!

    • @greekpimp77
      @greekpimp77 Год назад +8

      Yes every college professor around the world who has the degree in history where they be from Oxford University or a university in India Japan they're going to say Alexander the Great was Greek there's only a handful like four or five like Peter Green and Eugene Borza that challenge that however even Eugene Borza never believed that the current macedonians or so-called Slavic macedonians the people from the former Yugoslavia had anything to do with the ancient macedonians and before you spew crazyness you can look it up and it will show you that.

  • @obsessedwithcrypto4366
    @obsessedwithcrypto4366 Год назад +4

    I think what made Alexander so special was the fact he wasn’t a bloody ruler like the Romans or other kings. He used sat traps and was liked by the people he conquered

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory Год назад +6

    This is really interesting, you always see this about rome's army but never Alexander's. Thank you for this

  • @RobertRodgers-r5h
    @RobertRodgers-r5h Год назад +6

    Outstanding Presentation! Thank you for making and sharing this.
    I am also commenting to help your channel with the algorithm.

  • @vangelisskia214
    @vangelisskia214 Год назад +58

    ".. do not forget Greece, Alexander ..It was for her sake that you launched your whole expedition, to add Asia to Greece .."
    Arrian [Anabasis of Alexander 4.11.7]
    «.. τῆς Ἑλλάδος μεμνῆσθαί σε ἀξιῶ, ὦ Αλέξανδρε ἧς ἕνεκα ὁ πᾶς στόλος σοι ἐγένετο, προσθεῖναι τὴν Ἀσίαν τῇ Ἑλλάδι ..»
    Ἀρριανός [Ἀλεξάνδρου Ἀνάβασις 4.11.7]

    • @SpartanLeonidas1821
      @SpartanLeonidas1821 Год назад +4

      🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷

    • @juliancarax4797
      @juliancarax4797 Год назад

      i thought Greece didnt really like Macedonians. sus

    • @vangelisskia214
      @vangelisskia214 Год назад +11

      @@juliancarax4797 "The ANCIENT MACEDONIANS WERE GREEKS, THEIR LANGUAGE WAS GREEK to judge by their personal names, and by the names of the months of their calendar."
      George Cawkwell, Emeritus Fellow, University College Oxford
      "That the (ancient) Macedonians WERE GREEKS by race there can no longer be any doubt. They were the northernmost fragments of the Greek race left stranded behind the barriers of mount Olympus. However isolation from the Aegean had withheld them from progress in the arts and civilisation."
      [Benjamin Ide Wheeler, 'Alexander the Great' p. 10]

    • @juliancarax4797
      @juliancarax4797 Год назад

      @@vangelisskia214 not what greeks thought lol, they said macedonians were half barbarians because their culture are only half similar to thr greek one

    • @vangelisskia214
      @vangelisskia214 Год назад +10

      @@juliancarax4797 "Ancient allegations that the Macedonians were non-Greek all had their origin in Athens at the time of the struggle with Philip II. Then as now, political struggle created the prejudice. The orator Aeschines once even found it necessary, to counteract the prejudice vigorously fomented by his opponents, to defend Philip on this issue and describe him at a meeting of the Athenian Popular Assembly as being 'ENTIRELY GREEK'. Demosthenes' allegations were lent an appearance of credibility by the fact, apparent to every observer, that the life-style of the Macedonians, being determined by specific geographical and historical conditions, was different to that of a Greek city-state. This alien way of life was, however, common to western Greeks of Epirus, Akarnania and Aitolia, as well as to the Macedonians, and THEIR FUNDAMENTAL GREEK NATIONALITY WAS NEVER DOUBTED. Only as a consequence of the political disagreement with Macedonia was the issue raised at all."
      Errington 1994, p. 4:Errington, Malcolm (1994). A History of Macedonia. Barnes Noble.

  • @FedericoMalagutti
    @FedericoMalagutti 7 месяцев назад +2

    I love your channel, and I love the fact you go through the topic of training, which no matter the era it's what makes a soldier or a fighter strong and disciplined.

  • @NewsRedial
    @NewsRedial Год назад +6

    Fantastic. Learning the culture of ancient empires is fascinating.

  • @exe.m1dn1ght
    @exe.m1dn1ght Год назад +131

    Wow, these guys at 18 were part of the elite macedonian cavalry and im here at 27 eating McDonalds complaining why life is hard 😂😂

    • @b_ks
      @b_ks Год назад +5

      Wow

    • @andybancroft5391
      @andybancroft5391 Год назад +3

      Hahaha feel you bro

    • @SmilingExecutioner
      @SmilingExecutioner Год назад +7

      all becomes clear in comparison isn't it

    • @silverchairsg
      @silverchairsg Год назад +7

      Well the average lifespan was like 40 and people became parents at like 16 back then, so...

    • @TaRAAASHBAGS
      @TaRAAASHBAGS Год назад +39

      ​@@silverchairsg"Average" counting infant and early childhood mortality. If you made it to puberty, good chance you could hit 60-80 depending on your class and lifestyle.
      And even still I'd say 40 years of thorough education, hunting game, being in nature, appreciating art and literature, marching all over the known world, and forming unbreakable brotherhoods is infinitely better than 85 years of Twitter, Ubereats, and making some sociopathic merchant a dollar for each of your pennies.

  • @alala4290
    @alala4290 7 месяцев назад +2

    This channel is just like a Messiah to me
    What a brilliant and organized video!

  • @jonbaxter2254
    @jonbaxter2254 Год назад +4

    One man held the empire together. Glorious.

  • @borakeskin7872
    @borakeskin7872 Год назад +8

    Impeccable content as usual.

  • @Renwoxing13
    @Renwoxing13 Год назад +2

    This video is so unique in the genre of history RUclips !
    Amazing video ! This is the first time I have heard things broken down to such an extent - especially how Alexander and the nobles grew up ! Their lives sounded truly noble. It may have been birth and not true merit or talent that set them apart in the beginning, but it was apparently strict regimented living, training, etc that made them noble of spirit !

  • @GarfieldRex
    @GarfieldRex Год назад +3

    The video I've been waiting for a while on RUclips. Thank you so much! So much advanced policies and training.

  • @ProbusVerus
    @ProbusVerus Год назад +2

    Thank you brother! Your channel is the best!

  • @ti253799
    @ti253799 10 месяцев назад +5

    The most fascinating military general of all time, my opinion!

  • @gapper3
    @gapper3 Год назад +9

    I have long thought about just how hard these soldiers had to be to march from Greece to India, fighting everyone along the way, never losing, with minimal creature comforts... I bet any ordinary infantryman who made it to India in one piece would be tougher than any Special Forces soldier alive today.

    • @SpartanLeonidas1821
      @SpartanLeonidas1821 Год назад +5

      Big Time Facts!!!! 💯
      300 BC all on Foot & Horse, with no modern Luxuries, not even Stirrups for their Horses! Fighting dozens of Battles & Sieges with Spear, Sword, & Shield!!! Those Dudes were ELITE. Especially the Silver Shields: Argiroaspides !!! ✊🏻

  • @Wild-Siberia
    @Wild-Siberia Год назад +5

    New Alexander the Great content on RUclips? Ok I’ll watch and see if they say something I don’t already know or have heard 10000 times before 🙏🏻🤣

  • @WelcomeToDERPLAND
    @WelcomeToDERPLAND Год назад +81

    That is quite an incredible training regimen, infact I wish we as a modern people would also teach morals like bravery , humility, commitment and respect to our current youths, there is a lot we can learn from the ancients and in many ways their societies were much better than what we have today.

    • @kurremkarmerruk8718
      @kurremkarmerruk8718 Год назад +10

      They had telos. We have survival. Aristotle would have taught the boys to live for a 'chief good' that's an end in itself. We are taught to chase wealth.

    • @WelcomeToDERPLAND
      @WelcomeToDERPLAND Год назад +11

      @@kurremkarmerruk8718 Truly, a shame and due to this focus on greed above most all else in our societies- it is leading to some of the worst exploitation and lack of purpose in human history...
      Ahhhh... If only our academia wasn't founded for the purpose of creating obedient worker drones. Society as a whole would be much better if instead of the current method of teaching we instead used critical thinking, philosophy and the exploration of what it means to be human... To teach the joy of learning and to understand one's own nature and the nature of the world around us...
      Instead of simplistic, dull and eventually meaningless/pointless regimen of learning where we are forced to study under a strict set guidelines of a topic which is usually boiled down to remembering singular answers to pass memory tests.

    • @TaRAAASHBAGS
      @TaRAAASHBAGS Год назад +2

      ​@@WelcomeToDERPLANDThe wars of history have ended, and the merchants won.
      What was once a constant struggle culminating in many junctures of satisfaction and personal growth is now tepid ease and dissociation. All our practical external problems like hunger and safety are guaranteed solved at the expense of the most spiritually and mentally sick century in history.
      The worst part is many people have been deluded into thinking superficial comforts and indulgence are preferable to satisfaction and reaching personal potential. They'll insist we live in the best time in history because the CEOs and the state that own them as cogs told them to think that way... but the sheer scale of antidepressant/anti-anxiety use, drug and alcohol addiction, suicide, and hysteria says otherwise.

    • @badart3204
      @badart3204 Год назад +16

      Sorry but the World Wars ended any possibility of that and gave western civilization ptsd. Also we are ruled by the merchant class not the warrior class so the values that are favored are applied accordingly.

    • @redsimonyt
      @redsimonyt Год назад +12

      ​@@TaRAAASHBAGSIndeed, but most people don't want to say or even hear, who these merchants are.

  • @fmoa2541
    @fmoa2541 Год назад +8

    phalanx vs legion battles, the roman legions never penetrate the phalanx in a frontal assault, actually some battles the phalanx actually hold off the legion and pushed it back until it got outflanked by the romans, thats why historians say the macedonian phalanx with proper flank protection is invincible.

  • @ArthurWright-uv4ww
    @ArthurWright-uv4ww 4 месяца назад +1

    Alexander became a revered military leader for thousands of years, an example for others. A difficult man to assess with modern eyes.

  • @tchikoumahmoud4665
    @tchikoumahmoud4665 Год назад +1

    Thxx for the video man

  • @WulfNSpice
    @WulfNSpice Год назад +10

    the Greeks were Amazing "Liberty and Equality are not associates but rather in complete opposition" ~Solon In todays world our leaders spout liberty and equality all the time while nothing ever gets done if we only learned from the Greeks we would know that what they claim to want is actually impossible to achieve.

    • @dillonfalcomer3107
      @dillonfalcomer3107 6 месяцев назад

      Thats the whole point of their agenda and the NWO, to usher in the new they must tear down the old "ordo ab chaos" they labour for lucifer.

  • @whycantwebefriends1018
    @whycantwebefriends1018 Год назад +3

    could you do a video of gothic, or ostrogothic/visigothic training and equipment?

  • @PanosKapa-
    @PanosKapa- 11 месяцев назад

    Amazing audio visual analysis!!!

  • @abu-bakrkhan5692
    @abu-bakrkhan5692 Год назад

    Your video was very educational and fascinating and also extremely motavitive; it didnt bore me the slightest so thank you for historic video. Please do a video about the Rashidun empire.
    Thank you.

  • @m.j.9318
    @m.j.9318 Год назад +10

    I would like to see how the gallic military was organized, structured and equipped. I know there aren't maybe alot of sources. But there has to be alot to say about the gauls. I love playing them in RTW btw. They were far more civilized than other celtic tribes. Livy tells us that the celts f.e. at Cannae fought naked "from the Navel up". With a long blunt tipped sword.

    • @josephkelly6681
      @josephkelly6681 Год назад

      Read Caesar's Conquest of Gaul to get a sense of how they fought. Though Caesar wrote it its still considered accurate to this day.

    • @jeremybarber6259
      @jeremybarber6259 Год назад

      Cannae is probably the most amazing victory, without the direct help of God involved, that I have ever known.

    • @m.j.9318
      @m.j.9318 Год назад

      @@josephkelly6681 I did. And i still would like to see a video about it. You mean that the fact that i can "look it up" means that there's no reason for an in depth video? And there are more sources than ceasars account. (Which i think is mostly true, because....why would he lie about minor things, and what would he get from changing small facts?).

    • @panagiotis7946
      @panagiotis7946 Год назад

      @@josephkelly6681 read how Alexander conquered Tyre, a heavily fortified sea city far from the coast

  • @mrmarkstv6585
    @mrmarkstv6585 Год назад +5

    Could you do a similar video on Samurai?

  • @mistersandwich0034
    @mistersandwich0034 10 месяцев назад +3

    we need alexander’s workout routine

  • @theromanorder
    @theromanorder Год назад +2

    Can you do a video on persan and a video on veneti (gauls that fought ceaser) can you do a video on there navil ships

  • @idoldissr
    @idoldissr Год назад +1

    Conditioning, conditioning, conditioning... and they did it to perfection.

  • @lennyerdody
    @lennyerdody Год назад

    Thank you for making this

  • @jwkprod9540
    @jwkprod9540 Год назад +1

    This series reminds me of the shows on the History channel that I used to watch many years ago

  • @djionmustard5921
    @djionmustard5921 6 месяцев назад +1

    Someone get this man a better computer so he can run Rome 2 in High Quality he deserves it

  • @Prometheus7272
    @Prometheus7272 Год назад +3

    Humility Respect Commitment

  • @ricardobufo
    @ricardobufo Год назад +3

    By concentrating on the cavalry, you ignore the most important of Philip's innovations. This was Combined Arms; using the cavalry & infantry TOGETHER as hammer & tongs. Not until much later was this re-discovered. The Romans, and even the Greeks after Alexander, never got the knack.
    Also, the Macedonian phalanx with long Sarissas, could have been more unwieldy than the Greek phalanx with shorter spears. But Philip drilled his infantry to such a degree that his formations were more adaptive than any other infantry until the Roman legions turned up.

  • @andrei1637
    @andrei1637 Год назад +4

    Imagine that goofy friend you had in highschool that was like a brother to you and fast forward 20-25 years and now he is the pharaoh of egypt.
    That was a strange thought

  • @arthurlewin4730
    @arthurlewin4730 10 месяцев назад

    Very Good Job. Thank You.

  • @dariogutierrez6716
    @dariogutierrez6716 Год назад +6

    Pretty sure the quote of Alexandros saying that his father Philippos wouldn't "leave him anything" referred to leaving him anything else to conquer. It was pronounced after one of Philippos' many campaings, in a sort of half joking, half complaining way, since from a young age Alex saw it as his duty to surpass him.

    • @wedgeantilles8575
      @wedgeantilles8575 Год назад +1

      Yes, to my knowledge you are correct.
      Robert Fabbri started a series about Alexander (as novels, not as strict historical books) and he gave this famous line of Alexander in the same context as you did.
      Leaving nothing in the meaning of being afraid there would be nothing left to conquer.
      And this seems to be way more in line with Alexanders character. Alexander was interested in conquest and glory - material goods where obviously necessary for achieving fame, glory and conquest. But he wanted glory, not plunder.

    • @dariogutierrez6716
      @dariogutierrez6716 Год назад +1

      @@wedgeantilles8575 The eloquent Peter Green shares the same idea Fabbri has, and Green wrote the most comprehensive biography of Alexander.

  • @franklinfisher497
    @franklinfisher497 Год назад +1

    Awesome video, when will the sources get posted?

  • @DO-gl4rh
    @DO-gl4rh Год назад +3

    Very Good!

  • @BlackCrowNavajo
    @BlackCrowNavajo Год назад +2

    great video, but the example of Cleitus in the middle of the story, afraid, don't qualify. Cleitus was good 20 years older than Alexander, and in no way he could be thought of as his "childhood buddy". the true reasons of the guards being passive during the fatal quarrel in Marakanda were different.

  • @keanuanddoge6328
    @keanuanddoge6328 Год назад +3

    New vid,lets goo

  • @Setofan1
    @Setofan1 9 месяцев назад +1

    Can we get videos on the military units and logistics of Ancient China, please?

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory Год назад +2

    This training was insane, the Macedonians were really not playing around

  • @StrLab
    @StrLab Год назад +5

    You have to have good cavalry when the name of your king means "friend of horse" (Phil + ippos).
    Also, Paris in Iliad is referred as "Alexander"! His humiliated defeat against the duel with Menelaos, and the fact that he fights with bow and arrow (and didn't respond to the sarcastic offer of Diomedes to come and fight in front of him like a brave soldier) I think made Alexander III to not like him, even though they had the same name (Alexander means "protector of men" in ancient greek language).
    Thessalia also had good cavalry, because the Thessalian fields was rich enough to grew strong and big horses.

  • @digitaldaemon74
    @digitaldaemon74 Год назад

    Should do a video on the harsh training from Al's uncle Lykourgos, a very intensive tutelage. Uncle Lyk. lives up to his name's history.

  • @Proud2bGreek1
    @Proud2bGreek1 Год назад +37

    The Thessalians also had a cavalry based military.

    • @oddish2253
      @oddish2253 Год назад +3

      Are privates in today's greek army still called hoplites?

    • @Proud2bGreek1
      @Proud2bGreek1 Год назад +6

      @@oddish2253 Yes they are.

    • @something4179
      @something4179 Год назад +8

      ​@@oddish2253
      The very word "Hoplon" from which the name Hoplite roots from means "Weapon" in Hellenic.
      So yeah, anyone who carries a weapon can be called Hoplite, since its essential and most direct meaning is basically translated to "Weaponbearer" .

    • @kurremkarmerruk8718
      @kurremkarmerruk8718 Год назад

      ​@@something4179 I understood it means something like 'tool' or 'equipment.' So a stone mason would have their hoplon. Even something like a ship would have hoplon, with all its rigging. But yeah, in a military context, that word would be referring to weapons.

    • @TaRAAASHBAGS
      @TaRAAASHBAGS Год назад +4

      ​@@something4179Echoing "gladiator" as a bearer of a gladius, or sword in Latin.

  • @laakademia
    @laakademia Год назад

    Awesome video

  • @jaymcintyre1557
    @jaymcintyre1557 Год назад +3

    Alexander was worried his dad would conquer everything and there would be nothing left to conquer

  • @stephenvivaliste
    @stephenvivaliste Год назад +1

    Hi, how about the training of the frankish soldiers of king Clovis, father of France. Thank you in advance

  • @mattpavey3062
    @mattpavey3062 Год назад

    I love this but in a divergent focused military advancing

  • @Οδυσσεύς_Κ
    @Οδυσσεύς_Κ Год назад +12

    They did not build a brotherhood despite of but because of those harsh rules imposed upon them, it is a tactic used in militaries even today, and whoever has served knows that the best friendships you build are done in the military.

  • @DoctorTartarian-hd6ro
    @DoctorTartarian-hd6ro Год назад +2

    I thought this was going to be some work out training routine for some reason

  • @michelbisson6645
    @michelbisson6645 Год назад +2

    very interesting

  • @PassionateSpirit88
    @PassionateSpirit88 Год назад +2

    What's the source for their physical training? I'd like to read.

    • @HistoriaMilitum
      @HistoriaMilitum  Год назад +2

      The sources were just posted in the description :)

    • @PassionateSpirit88
      @PassionateSpirit88 Год назад +1

      @@HistoriaMilitum Thank you for your creative work!

  • @timkbirchico8542
    @timkbirchico8542 Год назад

    great vid. could we ditch the music please? thanks x

  • @vaimast2825
    @vaimast2825 Год назад +2

    Incredible

  • @garysparks-vc2ij
    @garysparks-vc2ij 10 месяцев назад

    Got a question here there long spears being used in battle say that the army fighting them got passed those how do they defend them selves i know they have a short sword

  • @nijirotakeda7527
    @nijirotakeda7527 Год назад

    Hey can you do a video about legion 5

  • @conchosewing
    @conchosewing 6 месяцев назад

    we need this kind of training, philosophy and moral compass of todays youth. We need to start over by choice or by necessity, i fear it would be the latter

  • @zohebalikhan7404
    @zohebalikhan7404 Год назад +1

    Thanks for making this very insightful video. I will definitely take on board the training regiments and try to apply it to my life. This is the type of training that young men need, especially in this time of crisis of masculinity and radical feminism going apeshit in Western societies.

  • @PPK1992-z4h
    @PPK1992-z4h Год назад +1

    I think there is some kind of curse of a great army.
    At first, the army is so strong and effective, yet it is efficient meaning that it does not take much to build and maintain an army.
    As the time passes, great army become prestigious and is now more expensive to build and maintain and they are now burden of state.

  • @4nhk066
    @4nhk066 Год назад

    3:14 it's not slingshots, it's slings

  • @wilsontheconqueror8101
    @wilsontheconqueror8101 Год назад +2

    One of the greatest militarily campaigns of A King & his army/ mobile court in history! Unfortunately his men were simply wore out after the Battle in India.

  • @asasipogi
    @asasipogi Год назад +2

    This is marvelous!

  • @StarKids2024
    @StarKids2024 Год назад +1

    Some people saying Alexander conquered whole world
    His Dad Indians (indian kings and people) defeated Alexander's Army
    It is told by Western historian's that Alexander defeated Porus (Indian king) ruler of small kingdom
    But no , porus was not defeated by Alexander , Porus defeated Alexander and forced him to go back to his country
    And after got beaten up and badly injured greek ARMY , Some tribals attacked Alexander and he died😂
    No doubt he was good But his Indian dads were the Great , Porus the great , Dhanananda the great , Chandragupta Maurya the great...
    Hindu❤ great people and follwer of original and the oldest religion Hinduism 🇮🇳🚩🕉️

  • @ronyzoramsanga2844
    @ronyzoramsanga2844 Год назад +16

    In a plane field the Macedonian phalanx or any pike formation for that matter was unbeatable head-on, but they couldn't maneuver well and we're slow . It was by exploiting these weaknesses that the Macedonian army was beaten by the Roman. A great commander like philip the second would have make sure not to expose the weaknesses of the phalanx, but the later commanders allowed themselves to be lured into such unfavorable position

    • @georgecristiancripcia4819
      @georgecristiancripcia4819 Год назад +5

      The romans won bc they had better leaders,more rss and men and were better at politics.Macedonian phalanx inflicted a lot of defeats on the romans.

    • @patrik6933
      @patrik6933 Год назад +4

      I swear to god there is not a single video on the macedonian phalanx where you won't find someone in the comments talking about the legions and how they managed to exploit the gaps.

    • @samuelmendoza9356
      @samuelmendoza9356 Год назад +1

      there we're the other gaps, mainly, the more nimble Roman legionary is ideal to raiding Macedonian settlements. Can't stage a pitched battle against the Romans if your economic base is torched left and right while the Macedonian phalangite, has to ditched their pikes just to fight raiding Romans who can bring their huge shield with them.

    • @panagiotis7946
      @panagiotis7946 Год назад +1

      Philip's phalanx was impossible for the Roman army to deal with because it was well trained
      It's just that, 200 years later, the Romans faced a phalanx of loose flattening where again with the help of the Aetolians they defeated
      Pyrrhus, when he faced the Romans, had a small phalanx of infantry where the Romans attacked
      The Roman general Aimilios Pavlos in the battle of Pydna had said that the most terrifying thing was to see the movement of the Macedonian phalanx

    • @dinos9607
      @dinos9607 Год назад

      Υοu will be (but should not be) surprised to learn that in the Roman-Greek battles (not just with Macedonians but also the rest of the Greeks) the Roman legions performed each time very poorly and their victories came invariably due to the independent movements (under their own leadership) of their pro-Roman Greek allies such as the Aetolians and the Pergamians.

  • @randymagnum8178
    @randymagnum8178 8 месяцев назад

    The now famous title “the great” is actually derived from the original translation “Alexander with great hair” as you can easily see in the thumbnail.

  • @TaRAAASHBAGS
    @TaRAAASHBAGS Год назад +29

    What a privilege it must have been to live in an era where masculinity and virture were encouraged over victimhood currency and celebrity narcissism.

    • @redsimonyt
      @redsimonyt Год назад +8

      Only after WWII this was really abandoned, by the people who won the war.

    • @badart3204
      @badart3204 Год назад +2

      @@redsimonytNah the nihilism set in after WW1 because being brave enough to run into machine gun fire is admirable but a bad idea. The dreams were crushed and new ideologies set in. Modern day morality is from the 60’s though but could have evolved into a very different thing

    • @redsimonyt
      @redsimonyt Год назад +5

      @@badart3204 Modern day morality was developed and spread by the Bolsheviks already in the 19th century. Their side won WWII and crushed the last powerful opposition, which is why the world is in the state it is today.

    • @carlodefalco7930
      @carlodefalco7930 Год назад

      .. umm , you mean 🤔🤔. rampaging murder , invasion m rape and slavery of conquered , and any who couldn’t protect themselves.. that’s not .. MASCULINITY..

    • @league_confederate_anton
      @league_confederate_anton Год назад

      @@badart3204 You think people were running into machine gun fire? Lol. I could understand a suicide Banzai charge, but... :D Which dreams were crushed? That's why I always warn people to not to watch WW1 "anti-war" movies, because they paint a very unrealistic picture. People in those time knew what they were fighting for. Axis powers fought for the survival of their own nations, and Allied powers fought for greed because they couldn't allow Germany to prosper especially. It was always France's goal to see a disunified Germany, divided into barronies and kingdoms, without any unification. And England feared that they were slowly losing to German commerce which was cheaper and had better quality. Modern day morality started from late 19th century, thrived and prospered after WW1, which Germany became the sin capital of Europe, and after a short rest, it came back after WW2. First nudity included movies started to publish for the rest of world, in the name of "education".

  • @MickeyMouse-el5bk
    @MickeyMouse-el5bk Год назад

    Sounds like a nearly perfect society. The values sound like Falange in Spain or even Fasci. ❤

  • @Ghostrex101
    @Ghostrex101 Год назад

    Crazy how such a small nation conquered so much.

  • @vangelisskia214
    @vangelisskia214 Год назад +10

    ALEXANDER the Great's speech before the battle of Issus: "...We Macedonians are to fight Medes and Persians, nations long steeped in luxury, while we have long been hardened by warlike toils and dangers; and above it will be a fight among free men and slaves. And so far as GREEK will meet GREEK, WE shall not be fighting for like causes; those mercenaries with Dareius will risk their lives for pay, and poor pay too; WE on the contrary shall fight for GREECE and our hearts will be in it."
    "As for our FOREIGN troops - Thracians, Paeonians, Illyrians, Agrianes - they are the best and stoutest soldiers in Europe, and they will find as their opponents the slackest and softest of the tribes of Asia."
    Arrian, "Anabasis of Alexander" Book II, Ch.7, par.4,5 Cambridge, Massachussets, Harvard University Press

  • @silvermediastudio
    @silvermediastudio 5 месяцев назад

    Lads living their best lives

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Год назад +1

    Well, they did inherit Alexander's empire for sure.

  • @joseangelmonterroza9364
    @joseangelmonterroza9364 Год назад +1

    What you're saying is that when macedonians read about Achiles they tought "I'm literally him"?

  • @Dogmanofthewest
    @Dogmanofthewest 7 месяцев назад

    10:07 am I wrong or does “Macedonian” have an extra “on” over here?

  • @bindakarki8875
    @bindakarki8875 Год назад

    Please do of spartan next

    • @HistoriaMilitum
      @HistoriaMilitum  Год назад

      The training of the Spartans was already made :)

  • @rmagnb6798
    @rmagnb6798 Год назад +1

    We need bzyantine ,Persian and Mongol army version of this

  • @davidchase9424
    @davidchase9424 Год назад +1

    If the Greeks conquered most of the known world, then the Egyptians/Phonecians/Romans could have settled North America.

  • @sudetenrider-pili6637
    @sudetenrider-pili6637 Год назад

    amazing

  • @peterpim6260
    @peterpim6260 9 месяцев назад

    One Detail. Without stirrups ( not yet invented) and on poor saddles, the efficiency of cavaly compared to footsoldiers, was rather limited. That is why the Romans abandoned cavalry altogether and left the task to auxiliaries

  • @sumazdar
    @sumazdar Год назад

    dziękuję

  • @citizen762
    @citizen762 Год назад +10

    America used to train our young men like this based upon the Greek and Roman tradition, and we became a great nation. When we stopped doing this we declined quickly into the international embarrassment we are today. It’s enough to make me want to throw up.

    • @Icarus4002
      @Icarus4002 Год назад +8

      have you been in the military?

    • @chrisdiaz4876
      @chrisdiaz4876 Год назад +2

      What are you talking about?

    • @deathbycognitivedissonance5036
      @deathbycognitivedissonance5036 Год назад

      Agreed

    • @deathbycognitivedissonance5036
      @deathbycognitivedissonance5036 Год назад

      ​@jasonlin2873 have you? It's a shell of its former self.

    • @chrisdiaz4876
      @chrisdiaz4876 Год назад

      @@deathbycognitivedissonance5036 Recruitment ads don't tell you shit about the actual state of our Army, is a psy op. If we had an army that was a "shell of its former self" then we would've been in the shitter ten times over by now. Don't try and critique your own nations army, especially if you've never actually served or have no interest too.
      Couch potatoes having the gall the act like they have any idea of what there talking about.

  • @lonlonlink
    @lonlonlink Год назад

    I like the video so far but I hate background music for stuff like this

  • @Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
    @Bullet-Tooth-Tony- Год назад

    This is why professional armies are better than conscripts.

  • @Sreng444
    @Sreng444 Год назад +2

    Totally get why I was taught so very young to be a hunter and horse rider.. ❤

  • @propheinx2250
    @propheinx2250 Год назад

    RUclips really needs to get its copyright striking issues under control. I put this in my "watch later" and then it was gone by the time it was later.

    • @HistoriaMilitum
      @HistoriaMilitum  Год назад

      The video isn’t under a copyright strike, so that’s strange..