The Romans eliminated the Greek phalanx and replaced it with the maniple, which was a looser, more mobile fighting unit.
The Romans eliminated the Greek phalanx and replaced it with the maniple, which was a looser, more mobile fighting unit.
The Romans eliminated the Greek phalanx and replaced it with the maniple, which was a looser, more mobile fighting unit.
The Romans eliminated the Greek phalanx and replaced it with the maniple, which was a looser, more mobile fighting unit.
The Romans eliminated the Greek phalanx and replaced it with the maniple, which was a looser, more mobile fighting unit.
The Romans eliminated the Greek phalanx and replaced it with the maniple, which was a looser, more mobile fighting unit.
The Romans eliminated the Greek phalanx and replaced it with the maniple, which was a looser, more mobile fighting unit.
The Romans eliminated the Greek phalanx and replaced it with the maniple, which was a looser, more mobile fighting unit.
The Romans eliminated the Greek phalanx and replaced it with the maniple, which was a looser, more mobile fighting unit.
I don't know maybe your shoes and oh, one more thing go get a life because now you don't have one.
He mad a diffrence to ancient Greece so when he did the phalanx system it got all more people and made his armoy bigger
The Romans eliminated the Greek phalanx and replaced it with the maniple, which was a looser, more mobile fighting unit.
Philip II
Phillip II True, but Alexander and his father were not the first or the only people to use the phalanx. Most Hellenistic (Greek) civilizations employed the phalanx formation among their troops.
Soliders of Philip's army were equipped with a new innovative longer spear called the sarissa, a double-pointed pike over 6 m (18 ft) in length which had a greater reach than traditional Greek pike. This innovation meant that Philip's army's phalanxes could make the first strike, which transformed them into a deadly force. The phalanx of the Ancient Macedonian kingdom and the later Hellenistic successor states was a development of the hoplite phalanx. The 'phalangites' were armed with the much longer sarissa and less heavily armoured. Since the sarissa was wielded two-handed, phalangites carried much smaller shields that were strapped to their arms. Therefore, although a Macedonian phalanx would have formed up in a similar manner to the hoplite phalanx, it possessed very different tactical properties. With the extra spear length, up to five rows of phalangites could project their weapon beyond the front rank-keeping the enemy troops at a greater distance. The Macedonian phalanx was much less able to form a shield wall, but the lengthened spears would have compensated for this. Such a phalanx formation also reduces the likelihood that battles would degenerate into a pushing match.
Philip II of the Greek kingdom of Macedon introduced the "Sarissa" which was a double-pointed pike over 6 m (18 ft) in length.Soliders of Philip's army were equipped with the sarissa, a double-pointed pike over 6 m (18 ft) in length which had a greater reach than traditional Greek weapons. This innovation meant that Philip's army's phalanxes could make the first strike, which transformed them into a deadly force.The phalanx of the Ancient Macedonian kingdom and the later Hellenistic successor states was a development of the hoplite phalanx. The 'phalangites' were armed with the much longer sarissa and less heavily armoured. Since the sarissa was wielded two-handed, phalangites carried much smaller shields that were strapped to their arms. Therefore, although a Macedonian phalanx would have formed up in a similar manner to the hoplite phalanx, it possessed very different tactical properties. With the extra spear length, up to five rows of phalangites could project their weapon beyond the front rank-keeping the enemy troops at a greater distance. The Macedonian phalanx was much less able to form a shield wall, but the lengthened spears would have compensated for this. Such a phalanx formation also reduces the likelihood that battles would degenerate into a pushing match.In 358 BC, his new army successfully invaded first Paeonia and then Illyria, regaining territory that Macedonia had ceded.
First bribery (he said he could take any city as long as there was a path up which he could drive a donkey loaded with gold). Second, by defeating them on the battlefield with his superior phalanx and cavalry.
Philip II
Phillip II True, but Alexander and his father were not the first or the only people to use the phalanx. Most Hellenistic (Greek) civilizations employed the phalanx formation among their troops.
Soliders of Philip's army were equipped with a new innovative longer spear called the sarissa, a double-pointed pike over 6 m (18 ft) in length which had a greater reach than traditional Greek pike. This innovation meant that Philip's army's phalanxes could make the first strike, which transformed them into a deadly force. The phalanx of the Ancient Macedonian kingdom and the later Hellenistic successor states was a development of the hoplite phalanx. The 'phalangites' were armed with the much longer sarissa and less heavily armoured. Since the sarissa was wielded two-handed, phalangites carried much smaller shields that were strapped to their arms. Therefore, although a Macedonian phalanx would have formed up in a similar manner to the hoplite phalanx, it possessed very different tactical properties. With the extra spear length, up to five rows of phalangites could project their weapon beyond the front rank-keeping the enemy troops at a greater distance. The Macedonian phalanx was much less able to form a shield wall, but the lengthened spears would have compensated for this. Such a phalanx formation also reduces the likelihood that battles would degenerate into a pushing match.
Phalanx is a military formation first written about in Ancient Greece. The first depiction of a phalanx was on a Summerian tablet called the Stele of the Vultures (made around 2600-2350 BCE).The term is still used today to describe this type of military formation.
The phalanx-phalanx joint is a hinge joint.A hinge joint allows extension and retraction of an apendage.
Philip II of the Greek kingdom of Macedon introduced the "Sarissa" which was a double-pointed pike over 6 m (18 ft) in length.Soliders of Philip's army were equipped with the sarissa, a double-pointed pike over 6 m (18 ft) in length which had a greater reach than traditional Greek weapons. This innovation meant that Philip's army's phalanxes could make the first strike, which transformed them into a deadly force.The phalanx of the Ancient Macedonian kingdom and the later Hellenistic successor states was a development of the hoplite phalanx. The 'phalangites' were armed with the much longer sarissa and less heavily armoured. Since the sarissa was wielded two-handed, phalangites carried much smaller shields that were strapped to their arms. Therefore, although a Macedonian phalanx would have formed up in a similar manner to the hoplite phalanx, it possessed very different tactical properties. With the extra spear length, up to five rows of phalangites could project their weapon beyond the front rank-keeping the enemy troops at a greater distance. The Macedonian phalanx was much less able to form a shield wall, but the lengthened spears would have compensated for this. Such a phalanx formation also reduces the likelihood that battles would degenerate into a pushing match.In 358 BC, his new army successfully invaded first Paeonia and then Illyria, regaining territory that Macedonia had ceded.
Inventors first began experimenting with automatic sprinklers around 1860. The first automatic sprinkler system was patented by Philip W. Pratt of Abington, MA, in 1872.
First bribery (he said he could take any city as long as there was a path up which he could drive a donkey loaded with gold). Second, by defeating them on the battlefield with his superior phalanx and cavalry.
Yes there is. The bones in the palm of your hand are known as the metacarpals. The next bone runs from the metacarpals to the first knuckle. This bone is known as th proximal phalanx and is joined to the metacarpals by the metacarpophalangeal joint. The bone between the first knuckle and the second knuckle is known as the middle phalanx, and the bone from the seconf knuckle to the tip of your finger is known as the distal phalanx.
Joint between metacarpal bone and first phalanx.
The phalanx did not morph into the legion - the phalanx was a tactical formation, the legion was a body of around 5000 men who were used in tactical formations which varied over time - early on the phalanx.The Romans switched from the unwieldy phalanx of tightly packed, locked in spearmen to spaced ranks in order to gain flexibility and rely on a more open method of fighting, with differing layers of differently armed troops. This flexibility was supported by adopting the Spanish short sword as basic weapon, and the pilum throwing javelin. The protection of the tight phalanx was replaced by the oblong shield.The open formation which replaced the phalanx gave the individual Roman infantryman room to fight in. It worked. The hitherto unstoppable Greek phalanxes were tactically outmanoeuvred and decisively beaten by the Romans in the first half of the Second Century BCE in Macedonia.This system of different troops having different weapons and the manipular formation it was based on (which the Romans adopted from the Samnites, a people who lived to the south of Rome) was abandoned with the Marian reforms of the army of 107 BC. The legions were reformed again and became organised into cohorts with soldiers who had the same weapons and equipment.
Any pics of Philip Baileys first wife