Peltast
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A peltast was a type of light infantry in Ancient Greece who often served as skirmishers.
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[edit] Description
Peltasts carried a crescent-shaped wicker shield called pelte (latin: peltarion) as their main protection, hence their name. According to Aristotle the pelte was rimless and covered in goat or sheep skin but in art it is usually crescent shaped. It also appears in Scythian Art and may have been a common type in central Europe. The shield had a cental hand-grip and also a carrying strap. Peltasts' weapons consisted of several javelins, often with throwing straps to increase standoff power.
[edit] Development
In the Archaic period the Greek martial tradition had been focused almost exclusively on the heavy infantry or hoplites.
The style of fighting used by Peltasts originated in Thrace and the first Greek peltasts were recruited from the Greek cities of the Thracian coast. On vases and other images they are generally depicted wearing the costume of Thrace including the distinctive Phrygian cap. This was made of fox-skin and had ear flaps. However, many mercenary peltasts were probably recruited in Greece. Some vases have also been found showing hoplites (men wearing Corinthian helmets, greaves and cuirasses, holding hoplite spears) carrying peltes. Often, the mythological Amazons (women warriors) are shown with peltast equipment.
Peltasts gradually became more important in Greek warfare, in particular during the Peloponnesian War. The Greek mercenary forces at the Battle of Cunaxa included Peltasts. They are described in action against Persian cavalry by Xenophon where they were not equipped with spears as they resist the Persians with their swords. They became the main type of Greek mercenary infantry in the 4th century B.C.E. Their equipment was less expensive than traditional hoplite equipment and would have been more readily available to poorer members of society. The Athenian general Iphicrates destroyed a Spartan phalanx in the Battle of Lechaeum in 390 B.C.E., using mostly peltasts. In the account of Diodoros Siculus Iphicrates is credited with re-arming his men with long spears, perhaps in around 374 B.C.E. This reform may have produced a type of "peltasts" armed with a small shield, a sword, and a spear instead of javelins. Some authorities, such as J.G.P. Best, state that these later "peltasts" were not truly peltasts in the traditional sense, but lightly-armored hoplites carrying the pelte shield in conjunction with longer spears--a combination that has been interpreted as a direct ancestor to the Macedonian phalanx. However thrusting spears are included on some illustrations of peltasts before the time of Iphicrates and some peltasts may have carried them as well as javelins rather than as a replacement for them. As no battle accounts actually describe peltasts using thrusting spears it may be that they were sometimes carried by individuals by choice rather than as part of a policy or reform. 4th century B.C.E. peltasts also seem to have sometimes worn both helmets and linen armour.
Alexander the Great employed peltasts drawn from the Thracian tribes to the north of Macedonia, particularly the Agrianoi.
In the C3rd BC peltasts were gradully replaced with thureophoroi. Later references to peltasts may not in fact refer to their style of equipment as the word peltast became a synonym for mercenary.
[edit] See also
[edit] Books
Head, Duncan (1982). Armies of the Macedonian and Punic Wars. WRG.
Connolly, Peter (1981). Greece and Rome at War. Macdonald. ISBN 0-7841-0109-08.
Best, J. G. P. (1969). Thracian Peltasts and their influence on Greek warfare.