Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Vegetius legion description (from the spatha topic)
#1
Ave Damianus


Sorry for delay, but I’m writing an article for an Italian review and I don’t have much time free.
If I have understand well your thesis you affirm that in Vegetius description the princeps , ferentarii and hastati ,ecc are not maniples lines but singles rows of the same battle line and the triarii are the subsidia line.
The ordinarii command the first rows (rows or rangs?), the principes are the small officers in the frontal rangs.
I have understand well your text? I want to be sure not to interpret badly your thesis first to reply.

PS: Have patience for the response's time.
"Each historical fact needs to be considered, insofar as possible, no with hindsight and following abstract universal principles, but in the context of own proper age and environment" Aldo A. Settia

a.k.a Davide Dall\'Angelo




SISMA- Società Italiana per gli Studi Militari Antichi
Reply
#2
Sorry Mitrhra, my English is very bad but you perfectly understood the contents of my hypotheses.

I do not ignore ancient sources quoted by Vegetius. He names the authors to whom he use himself but a fine analysis of the Roman texts purely late century (IVe-Ve) can only confirm that Végéce adapt his papers to the military rank of his time and not that of the Republic (for exemple). The same report can be made at the level of expression and of the vocabulary employed to define the auxiliary/ foederati in Vegetius and late roman authors corpus.

Sure for the vegetius battle order...
Sure for the comprhénsion of the Principes and the Hastati...
Triari raises problem because if végèce quote them, the function re-appears clearly only in the role that play the reserves without that triari is quoted. Also we do not find any more triari in the texts of the IVth century.
Paulus Claudius Damianus Marcellinus / Damien Deryckère.

<a class="postlink" href="http://monsite.orange.fr/lesherculiani/index.jhtml">http://monsite.orange.fr/lesherculiani/index.jhtml

[Image: bandeau2008miniyi4.jpg]

Nouveau forum de l\'Antiquité Tardive: <a class="postlink" href="http://schnucks0.free.fr/forum/index.php">http://schnucks0.free.fr/forum/index.php
Reply
#3
I re-post my analysis...

Hello Mithras!
Here is an extract of the article that I have co-write on the occasion of the acts of the international colloquium of the western martial arts of Dijon 2006. (Supervised by Bourgogne Unniversity) I quotes some example of the organization chart of the base of the late Roman army and the names of the in order foot soldiers in front battle-line...

As Végèce, we still find at Jean Lydus Ordinarii as being the second of the tribunes in term of command. There is not more doubt, Ordinarii are the centurions superior to the head of Ordines. In first ones rows(ranks), in the first Acia of the order of battle. It is already what said to us Ammien in the battle of Strasbourg:

"Quos cum iam prope densantes semet in cuneos nostrorum conspexere ductores, steterunt uestigiis fixis, antepilanis hastatisque et ordinum primis uelut insolubili muro fundatis et pari cautela hostes stetere cuneati."
LIVRE 16, Chapitre 12, paragraphe 20.

Ordines primi (Ordinum primis) fights with the Antepilani which Antesignani synonymic to Ammianus. It is always the most experimented troops which fight in the first row (Ordo) It is there still mention in the siège of Amida when troops rebels against the superior centurions and we still find this name a little farther during an important battle of Gratien against Alamans Lentiens:

"Proinde quiete reficiendis corporibus data, signoque erecto, quod solet ad pugnam hortari, tubarum minacium accendente clangore, fidentissimo impetu acies motas prompte ante alios praeiere duo iuunes lecti in principiis adeundi discriminis, Saliuius et Lupicinus, Scutarius anus, alter e schola Gentilium, fragore terribili concitantes: hastasque crispando cum ad rupim obiecta uenissent, trudentibusque Alamannis euadere ad celsiora conarentur adwenit omne pondus armorum, isdemque antesignanis per hirta dumis et aspera magno uirium nisu in editas sublimitates erepsit."
Ammien Marcellin, Res Gestae, Livre XXVII, chapitre 10, paragraphe 12

Bit by bit the details of the puzzle can are set up, and in the Vegetius descriptions less dark now. We know for example that the term "Principales" for the early imperial times or "Principiores" (which live "Principia"; in Roman headquarters of camps and barracks) for the Late Empire also indicate all the small-officers of the legion. Vegetius call them Principiores legionis. J. Fountain (Histories, I, on 1968, Paris) points out that the term " Principia " at Ammianus Marcellinus succeeds in the late Latin Primores. Principia also means small-officer, distancing itself from superior officers; Tribuni.

EX:
"legionum principia" (XXII, 3,9; XXV,5,1.).
"numerorum principia" (XXVIII, 6, 17).
"cum tribunes principiisque militum" (XXV, 8, 16).

Ammianus, to indicate them, still speaks about the lawsuit of the "Princes" of Legions Ioviani et Herculiani to Chalcédoine under the presidency of the prefect of Gallic origin Salustius Secondus.

"(…) qui omnes transgressi Chalcedona praesentibus Iovianorum Herculianorumque principiis et tribunis, causas uehementibus aequo boboque spectauerunt praeter paucas, in quibus veritas nocentissimos offerebat."
LIVRE 22, Chapitre 3, paragraphe1.

The term "Princes" also indicate to Ammianus all the small-officers of the legion. The Latin term is "Principiis" or "Principles"… And there, if we resume the battle order of Végèce, the buckle is buckled. Vegetius never made a mistake in the description of his battle order, he has never wanted to describe the manipular legion like some Historian say again (see philip Richardot)

It is simply that his description of its battle order is indeed that of a late legion. When Vegetius says to us that in the front line are the "Principes" then in the second "Hastati" while the Republican descriptions (see Titus Livius, Polybius) whom he did not have to ignore, indicate in the first one les Hastati then the Principles, it is not an error of its part; it is just a shift in meaning which he makes to stick better on his time, victim than he is as scholar of his taste for the étymological previous words. If the Princes are indicated in the front line it is simply because the officers and small-officers of legions are there: The Principes (small-officers; the first ones) primi ordines (the first ones of the row) as Ordinarii (the centurions of the first troop), Antepilani or Antesignani (those who are in the front.) then only comes second there line Hastati …

From then on, the attributions of the centurions at Végèce become understandable:

Ranks formerly current:

" We kept the ancient usage to bring up to the rank of " Primuspilus " the first prince of the legion (it is a prince " princeps ", he makes left the "Principes" and thus the primi ordines). Besides the command of the eagle He had under his orders four centuries of the first line (Antesignani or Antepilani of the first Acia) among four hundred soldiers; placed so to speak in the head of all the legion (idem), he enjoyed advantageous bonuses allocated to this employment. After him, the first one Hastaire (another member of Principiis) named Named today " ducenarius " (his late name), steered in second line two centuries or two hundred men (after Antépilaires comes well " Hastati "). The first one of the first troop (idem) commanded one and a half century, that is hundred and fifty men(people). The first one triaire commanded only hundred men Ten centuries of the first troop thus had for common officers five (Ordinarii; primi ordines). (…) There were still the centurions, today called" centenarius " but made guard polemical at the modern historian's: commander of called barracks centenaria? Commander of cavalry? Commander of a century ( Hypothesis of Zuckerman?) who commanded(ordered) each a century. There was "Decanus"; (leader of late manipulars) equivalent of 11 men which replaces ancient Contubernum), knew at present under the name of leader of squad, put in the head of 10 men (no Latin correspondence but Jean gives us maybe one). The second troop counted five centurions; it was the same of the third, the fourth, until the tenth up to and including. The number of centurions in a legion amounted to fifty five.
" Livre II, Chapter 8.

Let us note to strengthen the comment that Constantin Zuckerman and his team discovered the stele of an officer of the name of Dassianus which was among others named " Centurio primus " in its career(quarry) near 350 AD …

There is another sort of supplementary hierarchical distinction which separates the Common: the said centurions "Augustales" and "Flaviales" whose meaning is not clear …

In the same way St Jèrome, the patriotic crying bishop all the tears of his body in the first bag of Rome in 410, gives us on the occasion of one of his papers " Against Jean of Jerusalem The list of the ranks of the cavalry of his time at the beginning of the end 4e century-5th century. This list with also the parculiarity to be ascending, that is in feel her gradual of the "tour" of promotions.

"(…) Volo quod dico manifestius fieri, finge aliquem tribunitiae potestatis suo uitio retrogradatum, per singula militiae equestris officia, ad tironis uocabulum deuolutum. Numquid ex tribuno statim fit tiro? Non, sed ante primicerius, deinde senator, ducenarius, centenarius, biarchus, circitor, eques, dein tiro; et quamquam tribunus quondam miles gregarius sit, tamen ex tribuno non tiro, sed primicerius factus est (…)"
HIER. C. Ioh. 19 (J. L. Feiertag, CC SL 79 A, 1999, p30-31.)

If we read it in growing orders; we obtain: tiro, eques, circitor, biarchus, centenarius, ducenarius, senator, primicerius, tribunus.

Mithras we have Aurelius Gaius triari optio under Dioclétian, optio ordinatus and optio princeps…Voir Wheeler; la légion en phalange, REMA N°1, édition Picard 2004 ou Th Drew-Bear, "Les voyagent d'Aurélius Gaius, soldat de Dioclétien" dans "La géographie administrative te politique d'Alexandre à Mahomet", Univ. Des Sciences humaines de Strasbourg. Travaux du centre de Recherche sur le Proche-Orient et la Grèce antique, 1981 (Leyde) p93-141. …

no Triari after Diocletien but the Triari fonction is play by the rear "subsidia" in late roman battle order. See the seven Vegetius Battle orders ans the Ammianus and Pacatus (Panégyrics) terminology.

To well complete the Ammianus Marcellinus late battle orders information there are the excellente Oratio I and III by Julian Caesar.

The panegyrics of the unknown person of 313 and that of the 321 by Nazarius abounds in details tactics of the arrangement of the troops.

Among the immense work of libanios there is obviously Julian's Funeral oration which detail a part of the campaigns of the emperor. Less known but fascinating the ground fight and the naval action of Ekphraseis de Libanios. (Sort of descriptive picture of the progress of the battle)

Maurus at Ammianus is said (Chapter 20, paragrahe 4) Draconarius to Hastati. This passage is famous and very interesting! He simply signifi that he is standard barrer in a whole unit of Hastati (cohors?) it supposes a clear tactical positionement of these Hastati (doubtless the second Acia of the order of Battle)
Paulus Claudius Damianus Marcellinus / Damien Deryckère.

<a class="postlink" href="http://monsite.orange.fr/lesherculiani/index.jhtml">http://monsite.orange.fr/lesherculiani/index.jhtml

[Image: bandeau2008miniyi4.jpg]

Nouveau forum de l\'Antiquité Tardive: <a class="postlink" href="http://schnucks0.free.fr/forum/index.php">http://schnucks0.free.fr/forum/index.php
Reply
#4
Quote:Less known but fascinating the ground fight and the naval action of Ekphraseis de Libanios. (Sort of descriptive picture of the progress of the battle)

Hello Damien,
your theories are very interesting. But could u please give the exact reference for the battle description of Libanios Ekphraseis? I thought to know all of his Ekphraseis through Bernhard Hebert: Spätantike Beschreibung von Kunstwerken. Archäologischer Kommentar zu den Ekphraseis des Libanios und Nikolaos. Graz 1983. But there is no description of a battle!!!

Regards,
Jens Wucherpfennig
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Vegetius\' description of a Roman Legion JeffF 19 3,862 11-25-2010, 04:23 PM
Last Post: M. Demetrius

Forum Jump: