Cetashwayo
Lord of Ten Thousand Years
- Location
- Across the Horizon
So, I have a question, is anyone else concerned by the fact the Hoplite's went from 70% or so of our military to less than half?
This is just falling in line with normal numbers for most of Hellas as Eretria fills out its lands and fewer men hold enough land to be able to fund a panoply. Sparta maintained a force of something like 8,000 Spartiates- on a foundation of 100,000 people, most of whom were not citizens and many of whom were less than human (helots).
The Exoria seem frankly the weakest and most confining choice. Their trajectory is likely to take us inland, to ongoing wars and more resentful barbaroi to be held restless under our yoke. I dislike Eretria trying to be Sparta.
The Demos Exoria option could also open up ways to deal with the barbaroi that does not require being Spartan.
They got their way, no doubt about that. But the cause of that was simply that they were so much more powerful than us, in every way. Us starting with a fleet of 22 triremes instead of 18 doesn't to me seem like it will make a massive difference given they had a fleet of (at least) 60 34 years ago. This isn't me saying that we can ignore our fleet and the Adriatic I just don't believe Demos Drakonia - for all its benefits - provides a naval improvement significant enough that Kerkyra (or anyone of that scale) couldn't still do exactly the same thing to us. Honestly, even the Eretria of now wouldn't have the fleet to challenge Kerkyra of then.
At the Battle of Naupaktos only a few years after the start of the game the Athenian navy defeated a force of 77 ships with 20. Having more triremes gives no significant advantage at the tactical level; the advantage is at the strategic level, because having more ships and more rowers allows you to do more things at once. Most of Greece's "naval warfare" is incredibly rudimentary compared to the Athenian mastery of the craft, and Athens walked all over them until massive influxes of Persian gold and most of the Athenian rowing class dead at the bottom of the Aegean finally did them in. Having trained rowers is more important than simply having more ships; as Eusebios showed when he used the superior strength and ramming ability of Eretria's triremes to defeat a fleet of 50 pentekontors rapidly.
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