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Age of Empires II: Age of Kings and The Conquerers
System: PC/Windows
Version: 1.3 (08/11/00)
Email Policy:
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If you are going to email me about this game, please put
AoE II as the subject. Just AoE II. Also please realize
that I am not hiding cheats or any other information,
i.e. everything I know about AoE II is in this guide.
If you see any mistakes, or have anything that you want to add
please email me! I will, of course, give you full credit for
your addition, and be eternally grateful to you.
Before emailing me with a question, be sure to check out the
Frequently Asked Questions section.
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.--------------------========= N O T E S =========-------------------------.
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| This small section is devoted to the Expansion Pack, The Conquerers. This |
| will probably be removed when it is released this Fall. |
| |
| Military |
| |
| * Town centers will be dramatically altered. They will now be "horrible on |
| offence", while still keeping their defensive capabilities. The town |
| center has undergone changes in cost, build time, combat ability, and civ |
| bonuses for the Brits and Teutons. It no longer benefits from the range |
| upgrades, although they still give it more damage. It takes as long to |
| build as a castle. It now costs 100 stone and 275 wood. Most people will |
| only find themselves building three or four for the whole game. |
| |
| * The cav archer will move faster, fire faster, have twice the accuracy and |
| be built faster. There is also new upgrades for cav archers, one of which |
| will give them more armor. |
| |
| * Spearmen do LESS damage to camels. |
| |
| * Camels are now faster. |
| |
| * Monk healing "works better". |
| |
| * Naval units now sail about in formation, but you can’t pick from a menu |
| of formations like you do with land units. |
| |
| * Demoships will be set at the "defencive" attack stance by default. |
| |
| * Handcannoners are being improved. They do more damage now, and they are |
| available as soon as you research chemistry. You no longer need to |
| research the "hand cannoner" upgrade to get them. |
| |
| * Bombard cannons are being improved. They will have more hit points and |
| have bonus vs enemy siege. They also will be available as soon as you get |
| chemistry, you no longer have to research the "bombard cannon" upgrade. |
| |
| * Rams will be able to garrison foot soldiers. Garrisoned rams will move |
| faster and do more damage. Upgraded rams will be able to garrison more |
| units. |
| |
| * When dealing with monks; there will be a reduced “wait time” before |
| conversion takes place. |
| |
| * “smart onagers” that won’t auto-target an enemy if a friendly would also |
| get hit. |
| |
| * Improved scorpions, they are no longer helped by the Archer attack |
| upgrades, but their bolts always penetrate a tile or two past the initial |
| strike point (so you don’t have to micromanage their shots to hit the |
| back rank). Heavy Scorpions will have a longer range. The scorpion AI |
| will also be improved. |
| |
| New Units: |
| |
| * There will be 11 new units (including the new unique units). |
| |
| * 4 new units available starting in the castle age. Three of which will be |
| upgrades to existing units. One will be of a new line and won't be widely |
| available. |
| |
| * Every civ will get at least one of the new units. |
| |
| Halberdiers |
| |
| * Imperial age upgrade to pikemen. |
| |
| * They have more hit points and deal more damage. Their bonus vs. mounted |
| units is also improved but only by a small amount. |
| |
| Hussars |
| |
| * Imperial age upgrade to light cav. |
| |
| * They have more hit points and do more damage then light cav, but will |
| still have the same speed. |
| |
| * Ten civs will have access to them. |
| |
| Stats: |
| |
| Upgrade Cost: 500 food, 600 gold |
| HP: 75 |
| Attack: 10 |
| Armor: Unknown |
| |
| Petards. |
| |
| * They will function like demo ships for land. |
| |
| * Most civs will have access to them. |
| |
| * Will be made at the castle. |
| |
| * Petards are not very good vs units, except for siege, but are excellent |
| vs. walls and some buildings. They are not an effective substitute for |
| all other siege weapons, but in certain situations they are very handy. |
| |
| * They are "very effective" vs. town centers. |
| |
| * They are "reasonably fast" and have some piercing armor. |
| |
| * When they die they blow up, damaging all near by units. |
| |
| Eagle Warrior |
| |
| Stats: |
| |
| Cost: Unknown |
| Upgrade Cost: Unknown |
| HP: 60 |
| Attack: Unknown |
| Armor: 0/2 |
| Special: |
| |
| * Only Aztecs and Mayans can get them. |
| |
| * They are weak against knights. |
| |
| * They have better line of sight then a scout in dark age, equal in feudal, |
| and inferior in imperial. |
| |
| * Infantry have a small bonus vs them. Man at arms does +1 damage, a |
| champion does +3. |
| |
| * They are almost as fast as a scout, but have more hit points and damage. |
| |
| * They can only be built in castle and imperial age. |
| |
| * They have an attack of 4 in dark age. As soon as you hit feudal it is |
| increased to 7. |
| |
| * You can upgrade them to "Elite" status in imperial age. |
| |
| * They have a small bonus vs siege. |
| |
| * They have a small bonus vs cavalry. |
| |
| * They have a bonus against monks. |
| |
|---------------------------------|
| Economic |
| |
| * "Farm Queues" that let you “stack up” a bunch of farms at the mill, and |
| then your farmers automatically replant a farm when it expires, so you |
| don’t have to do it yourself. You can queue up to 15 farms. |
| |
| * You can buy, sell, or tribute resources in lots of 500, or all at once. |
| |
| * Relics generate gold faster. |
| |
| * "Smart Villagers" if the villagers make a lumber camp, mill, etc. they |
| will go right into their jobs. (i.e. the vills make a lumber camp then |
| the vills turn into lumberjacks and start cutting wood). Also if you |
| place a wall-line and instruct two or more vills to construct it one will |
| go to one end and the other to the other end and work their way to the |
| center. |
| |
|---------------------------------|
| New Technologies |
| |
| Thumb Ring |
| |
| * Gives archers 100% hit accuracy and increases their fire rate. |
| |
| Heresy |
| |
| * When one of your units gets converted it will die instead. |
| |
| Herbal Medicine |
| |
| * Quadruples your healing rate when garrisoned. |
| |
| Theocracy |
| |
| * When you have a bunch of monks selected and they convert an enemy unit |
| together, only one of them will lose their faith points. |
| |
| Bloodlines |
| |
| * Gives mounted units +20 hit points. (Includes cavalry, camels, and |
| elephants). |
| |
| * Cost is 150 food, 100 gold. |
| |
| Parthian Tactics |
| |
| * Gives cav archers +1 Normal armor and +2 pierce armor. |
| |
| Caravan |
| |
| * Increases the speed of trade carts/cogs by 50%. It is researched at the |
| market and Cartography is a pre-requisite for it. |
| |
| * All civs will get it. |
| |
|---------------------------------|
| Civ Specific |
|---------------------------------|
| Britons: |
| |
| * TCs only cost 1 /2 wood in Castle & Imperial age. |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Yeomen" and will give their foot archers an |
| additional +1 range. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| * Will NOT get thumb ring. |
| |
| Byzantines: |
| |
| * Their Unique Tech is called "Logistics". It will give their Cataphract |
| trample damage (just like the elite war elephant). |
| |
| * Will NOT get Herbal Medicine. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Bloodlines. |
| |
| * Will get Thumb Ring. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| Celts: |
| |
| * Their unique tech is called "Furor Celtica" and will give their siege |
| more hit points (except trebs). |
| |
| * Woad Raiders have been changed. They now have more pierce armor and are |
| trained faster. |
| |
| * Will get halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get hussars. |
| |
| Chinese: |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Rocketry". It will give their Chu Ko Nu and |
| scorpions more attack. |
| |
| * They will not be as fast anymore. They will start with even less resouces |
| then before. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get Thumb Ring. |
| |
| * Thumb Ring and Rocketry both effect the Chu Ko Nu, but only the first |
| arrow he shoots, all the subsequent arrows are unaffected by these techs. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Hussars. |
| |
| Franks: |
| |
| * Unique Tech is the "Bearded Axe" which will increase the range of the |
| throwing axeman by one. |
| |
| * They will still have the strongest cavalry in the game. |
| |
| * Will get Heresy. |
| |
| * Will get Theocracy. |
| |
| * Will get Herbal Medicine. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Hussars. |
| |
| * Will NOT get bloodlines. |
| |
| * Will NOT get thumb ring. |
| |
| Goths: |
| |
| * The only civ with two unique techs, one is available in castle age. |
| |
| * One unique tech is called "Anarchy". It is available in the Castle age. |
| It will let Huskarals be trained at the barracks. |
| |
| * Their second Unique tech is called "Profusion". It gives them +50% |
| Barracks unit build speed (7 seconds for a champion). |
| |
| * Goth hunters now carry +15 meat. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| Japanese: |
| |
| * Samurai is now as fast as a pikeman, does more damage to unique units |
| then he used to, and has more pierce armor. |
| |
| * Their unique tech is called "Kataparuto". It will let their trebs pack, |
| unpack, and fire faster. |
| |
| * Will get halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Thumb Ring tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Bloodlines tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Parthian Tactics tech. |
| |
| * Will NOT get hussars. |
| |
| Mongols: |
| |
| * Will have access to the Hussar. Their Hussars will benefit from their |
| light cav civ bonus. |
| |
| * Will have access to the thumb ring tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Bloodlines tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Parthian Tactics tech. |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Drill". It will give their siege more speed |
| (except Trebs). |
| |
| Persians: |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Mahouts". It will give their elephants more speed. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Heresy. |
| |
| * Will get Bloodlines. |
| |
| * Will get Thumb Ring. |
| |
| * Will get Parthian Tactics. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| Saracens: |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Zealotry". It will give their camels, and |
| mamelukes 30 more hit points. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Bloodlines tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Thumb Ring tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Parthian Tactics tech. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| * Will NOT get halberdiers. |
| |
| Teutons: |
| |
| * Town Center bonus WILL be changed. They no longer have the +5 range. They |
| still have +5 line of sight however. |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Crenellations". It adds +3 range to castles and |
| permits garrisoned infantry to increase the attack of their buildings as |
| if they were villagers. |
| |
| * The Teutonic Knight will remain the strongest, and slowest, infantry unit |
| in the game. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get Bloodlines. |
| |
| Turks: |
| |
| * Will get the new Hussar upgrade for free. |
| |
| * Their petards benefit from their gunpowder civ bonus. |
| |
| * Janissaries are slightly changed. Their bonus against infantry has been |
| taken away and they have slightly lower hit points (about 10), but now |
| they do more general damage (about 4). |
| |
| * Unique Tech is called "Artillery". It will give bombard cannons, bombard |
| towers and cannon ships +2 range. |
| |
| * Will get Thumb Ring. |
| |
| * Will get Bloodlines. |
| |
| * Will get Parthian Tactics. |
| |
| Vikings: |
| |
| * Berserks now have more pierce armor. |
| |
| * Their unique tech is called "Berserkergang" and will triple the |
| regeneration abilities of the Berserkers. |
| |
| * Will NOT get halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Herbal Medicine. |
| |
| * Will get thumb ring. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
|---------------------------------|
| New civs: |
| |
| Huns |
| |
| Unique Unit: |
| |
| Tarkan. |
| |
| * It is a cavalry unit that has a bonus vs. buildings. |
| |
| Civ bonuses: |
| |
| * Their cav archers are 25% cheaper in castle age, 30% cheaper in imperial. |
| |
| * They do NOT need to build houses, ever. At the start of the game they can |
| support enough units for the pop cap. |
| |
| * They start with 100 less wood then normal. |
| |
| * Their Trebs have a higher hit rate (50% chance of success, as opposed to |
| other civs 30%) |
| |
| Tech Tree: |
| |
| * Will get Paladins. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| * Will get Halbardiers. |
| |
| * Will get seige rams. |
| |
| * Will get Thumb Ring. |
| |
| * Will get Parthian Tactics. |
| |
| * Will get Herbal Medicine. |
| |
| * Will get Bloodlines. |
| |
| * Will get Hearsey. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Champions. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Arbalests. |
| |
| * Will NOT get camels. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Plate Mail. |
| |
| * Will NOT get ring archer armor. |
| |
| * Will NOT get crop rotation. |
| |
| * Will NOT get stone shaft mining. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Theocracy. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Seige Engineers. |
| |
| * They have no tower or wall upgrades. |
| |
| * They have weak monks. |
| |
| * They have a weak navy. |
| |
| Team Bonus: |
| |
| * Stable units train faster. |
| |
| Unique Tech: |
| |
| Atheism. |
| |
| * Makes relic & wonder wins take twice as long to complete. It also halves |
| the price of Spies. |
| |
|==============================================================================|
| Spanish |
| |
| Unique Units: |
| |
| Conquistador |
| |
| * It is a mounted musketeer. It costs 60 food and 70 gold. |
| |
| Missionary |
| |
| * It is a fast moving, mounted monk. They are trained at the monastery |
| after a castle is built. They have less range then a monk and can not |
| pick up relics. It costs 100 gold and has the same hit points as a normal |
| monk. |
| |
| Civ Bonuses: |
| |
| * They build their buildings 30% faster, except when building Wonders. |
| |
| * All upgrades from the Blacksmith require no gold (they still cost food |
| however). |
| |
| * Cannonballs shot from Cannon Galleons travel faster through the air, and |
| benefit from the ballistics tech (after you research it). |
| |
| Tech Tree: |
| |
| * Have access to all cavalry and infantry units and upgrades (except |
| camels). |
| |
| * They have access to all gunpowder units. |
| |
| * Their siege is not particularly spectacular. They don't even get siege |
| engineer. |
| |
| * Will get sappers. |
| |
| * Will NOT get crop rotation. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Crossbow men |
| |
| Unique Tech: |
| |
| Supremacy |
| |
| * It will make their villagers "super-tough". It will give them +3 regular |
| and peircing armor, more attack, and more hitpoints |
| |
| Team Bonus: |
| |
| * +50% Trade profit. |
| |
|==============================================================================|
| Mayans |
| |
| Unique Unit: |
| |
| Plumed Archer |
| |
| Elite Plumed Archer stats: |
| |
| Cost: Unknown |
| Upgrade Cost: Unknown |
| HP: 65 |
| Attack: 5 |
| Armor: 0/2 |
| Range: 5 |
| Special: It is faster then a normal foot archer. Benefits from their cheap |
| foot archer civ bonus. |
| |
| Civ Bonuses: |
| |
| * Their resource sites (except for farms) last 25% longer. It’s as if their |
| boars had 375 food each, for example. Mayan villagers don’t gather any |
| faster. They don’t carry any extra. They can just keep working at a given |
| site for longer than other folks. This is an advantage in the early game |
| because, in effect, they get 25% more sheep, berries, deer, shore fish, |
| and boars than other people. It is an advantage in the late game because |
| their gold & stone takes longer to run out. They are good at turtling |
| because it doesn’t cost them as much in resources. |
| |
| * Archers cost -10% in Feudal age, -20% in Castle age, and -30% in imperial |
| age. |
| |
| * They start with four villagers instead of three. |
| |
| Tech Tree: |
| |
| * They have access to every economic upgrade except gold shaft mining. |
| |
| * They have access to all the farm techs. |
| |
| * Will NOT have access to stables or ANY horse units. |
| |
| * Will NOT get champions. |
| |
| * They have fully-upgraded skirmishers and Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will have a "Eagle Warrior" instead of a scout to start with. He is not |
| as fast as a scout but he is tougher in combat. |
| |
| * Will NOT have access to any gunpowder units. |
| |
| Unique Tech: |
| |
| El Dorado |
| |
| * Increases the hit points of the Eagle Warrior to 100. |
| |
| Team Bonus: |
| |
| * Half price walls and palisades. |
| |
|==============================================================================|
| Aztecs |
| |
| Unique Unit: |
| |
| Jaguar Warrior |
| |
| Elite Jaguar Warrior stats: |
| |
| Cost: 60 Food 30 Gold |
| Upgrade cost: unknown |
| HP: 75 |
| Attack: 12 |
| Armor: 2/0 |
| Special: It has a rather large bonus vs infantry units. |
| |
| Civ Bonuses: |
| |
| * Villagers get +5 carry capacity. |
| |
| * All military units are created 15% faster. |
| |
| * Every time you research a monk tech their monks will gain +5 hit points |
| (85 hit point max). |
| |
| Unique Tech: |
| |
| Garland Wars. |
| |
| * It will give their infantry units +4 normal attack and +6 attack vs |
| cavalry. |
| |
| Tech Tree: |
| |
| * Will get all infantry black smith techs. |
| |
| * Will get an "Eagle Warrior" instead of a scout to start with. |
| |
| * Will get Seige Ram. |
| |
| * Will get all monk techs. |
| |
| * Will NOT have access to stables or ANY horse units. |
| |
| * Will NOT have access to any gunpowder units. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Halbardiers. |
| |
| Team Bonus: |
| |
| * Gold generated by relics is increased by 33%. |
| |
|==============================================================================|
| Koreans |
| |
| Unique Units: |
| |
| Turtle Boat |
| |
| Cost: unknown |
| Upgrade cost: unknown |
| HP: 300 |
| Attack: 50 |
| Armor: unknown |
| Range: 5 |
| Special: It is the only boat that has regular armor. It is very slow and |
| has a low rate of fire. It is best countered by bombard cannons, bombard |
| towers, and multiple fireships or demoships. |
| |
| War Wagon |
| |
| Elite War Wagon stats: |
| Cost: 80 Wood, 60 Gold |
| upgrade cost: unknown |
| HP: 200 |
| Attack: 9 |
| Armor: 0/4 |
| Range: 6 |
| Special: Korean UU, Upgraded by blacksmith range upgrades, seige engineers, |
| mounted unit upgrades. Takes increased damage from pikes, skirmishers, |
| camels, and anti-seige units |
| |
| Civ Bonuses: |
| |
| * They get all tower upgrades for free. After they research chemistry they |
| get the bombard tower upgrade for free as well. |
| |
| * Towers gain +1 range in castle age and an additional +1 range in imperial |
| age. |
| |
| * Villagers mine stone 15% faster. |
| |
| * Villagers have +2 line of sight. |
| |
| Unique Tech: |
| |
| Shinkichon |
| |
| * Gives their Onagers +2 range. |
| |
| Tech Tree: |
| |
| * Have access to all dock upgrades. |
| |
| * Have siege engineers. |
| |
| * Have Halbardiers. |
| |
| * Have Arbolests and all blacksmith archer upgrades. |
| |
| * Have Champions and all blacksmith infantry upgrades. |
| |
| * Have access to all ships except demo ships, and Elite cannon galleys. |
| |
| * Have access to Bombard Towers and Siege Onagers. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Blast Furnace. |
| |
| * Will NOT get plate barding. |
| |
| Team Bonus |
| |
| * Gives Onagers +1 range. |
| |
|---------------------------------|
| Miscellaneous |
| |
| * Outposts will have a greater line of sight and now only cost 25 wood and |
| 10 stone. |
| |
| * The bug that made it so your trebs were unable to inflict damage on enemy |
| buildings when firing from high elevations has been fixed. |
| |
| * Diplomacy in single player will be "way better". |
| |
| * There will be new terrain like snow, ice and rain forests. |
| |
| * They have tweaked the way gold is distributed in a random map, to make it |
| more fair. |
| |
| * The AI will get through the ages much more quickly. (18 min castle times).|
| |
| * You will be able to give your computer allies commands like attack now, |
| attack here, give me X resouce, make ships, etc. |
| |
| * New game type called "king of the hill". Players have to fight for |
| control of a random wonder located in the center of the map. You can't |
| destroy the Wonder, you must take it by force from your enemies. |
| |
| * New game type called "Last man standing". Teams can NOT be locked, and |
| allied victory is disabled. You will be able to win through conquest, |
| building a wonder, or by getting relics. It will be very "shimo-friendly".|
| |
| * New map type called Oasis, which is kind of like a Mediterranean or |
| Baltic, except with trees in the middle instead of water. |
| |
| * New map type called "Nomad". You start with no town center and your |
| villagers scattered around the map. You must decide whether to spend the |
| time to collect your villagers at a good resource location, join your |
| allies, or just build where you begin. There are no wolves or jaguars |
| present on this map. |
| |
| * New map type called "Ghost Lake". The middle is filled with a giant ice |
| lake. Buildings can only be build on the dry ground on the outskirts of |
| the map. |
| |
| * New map type called Mongolia. It is an all-land map with tons of cliffs & |
| elevations. It is a lot like Arabia, except you can wall off. |
| |
| * New map type called "Yucatan". It has tons of food, like berries, |
| turkeys, etc. |
| |
| * New map type called "Scandinavian". It has NO berries, so you have to |
| rely on ice fishing or hunting. It also has lots of frozen lakes, making |
| it hard to wall off. |
| |
| * New map type called "Salt Marsh". It is comprised mostly of shallows. |
| |
| * There will be ten real world maps including: Japan, Spain, France, the |
| British Isles, Byzantium, Texas and the Middle East. You can also select |
| an option that will give you one of the real world maps randomly. |
| |
| * There will be color-coded chat messages. |
| |
| * You will be able to review your most recent chat messages. |
| |
| * You will be able to see the in-game chat when watching recorded games. |
| |
| * You can place bookmarks in a recorded game so you can skip ahead to the |
| "good part". |
| |
| * "Random map" is now truly random. Before it would never choose some |
| specific maps. Now it will choose them all. |
| |
| * There is a new "Random Teams" option in multiplayer. Basically, when |
| you’re clicking on the “team number” box, one of the results is a "?" |
| mark, and if you pick that, then you’re letting the computer pick your |
| team for you. |
| |
| * There will be new wildlife. When playing on a meso-american map, if you |
| click on a boar, it says "peccary" and instead of sheep, you get wild |
| turkeys. Wolves have also been replaced with jaguars. |
| |
| * Four new campaigns will also be included, with one centering on Attila |
| the Hun's invasion of Europe, one on El Cid and his defense of Spain |
| against an attack from the Moors, and one on the Aztecs' defense at the |
| Siege of Tenochtitlan. The fourth will be based on famous battles |
| including Hastings, Agincourt, Manzkert, Lepanto, Noryang Point, Kyoto, |
| Tours, and Vinlandsaga. |
| |
| * The civ colors have all been adjusted so that they are "more sparkly and |
| easier to see". |
| |
| * There will be new cheat codes. |
| |
| -=This info was taken from www.ageofkings.com=- |
'--------------------=================================-------------------------'
This FAQ is Copyright 2000 Jim Chamberlin a.k.a. Red Phoenix. The only sites
allowed to use this FAQ are:
1. GameFAQs (http://www.gamefaqs.com)
2. Game Winners (http://www.gamewinners.com)
3. Video Game Strategies (http://vgstrategies.about.com)
4. Cheat Code Central (http://www.cheatcc.com)
5. Happy Puppy (http://www.happypuppy.com)
6. Game Revolution (http://www.game-revolution.com)
7. Gaming Planet (http://www.gamingplanet.com)
8. PlayStation Pit (http://www.psxpit.com)
9. X Cheater (http://www.xcheater.com)
10. Phat Games (http://www.phatgames.com)
11. The Cheat Empire (http://home.planetinternet.be/~twuyts)
12. http://www.psxcodez.com
13. http://www.hype.se
14. http://www.supercheats.com
15. http://www.psxgamer.com
16. Game Castle (http://gamecastle.virtualave.net/main.html)
If ANY other site has a copy of this FAQ, it is an illegal copy. So, if you
happen to see this at another site, please notify me immediately.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
///, ////
\ /, / >.
\ /, _/ /.
\_ /_/ /.
_____ _____ \__/_ <
/ __ \__________ / __ \___ _ _____ _________ _ ____ __ /<<< \_\_
/ / / / ___/ __ \ / / / / // \/ __ \/ ___/ Y \/__/ \/ / /,)^>>_._ \
/ /_/ / _/_/ /_/ // /_/ / _~ / /_/ / _/_/ \ / /> < (/ \\ /\\\
/__/ \ >____/_____// ____/__//__/\_____/_____/__//__/\_//__/\_\ // ````
======\/============\_/========[red_phoenix_1@hotmail.com]============((`=======
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Version - 1.0 Everything is new, of course.
1.1 Added a few things.
1.2 A minor change.
1.3 A few minor changes.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
If you have anything you would like to submit, please do so. Send it to
red_phoenix_1@hotmail.com. I would appreciate it if you would put "Age of
Empires II: Age of Kings" in the Subject Line. It helps me weed through my
mailbox without deleting something important. I don't consider SPAM and Porn
important, if you know what I mean, although some of you may think otherwise.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Table of Contents
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
1. Introduction History
2. Changes from Age of Empires and Age of Empires: Rise of Rome
3. The Buildings
- Archery Range
- Barracks
- Blacksmith
- Bombard Tower
- Castle
- Dock
- Farm
- Fish Trap
- Fortified Wall
- Gate
- Guard Tower
- House
- Keep
- Lumber Camp
- Market
- Mill
- Mining Camp
- Monastery
- Outpost
- Palisade Wall
- Siege Workshop
- Stable
- Stone Wall
- Town Center
- University
- Watch Tower
- Wonder
4. The Units
A. Miscellaneous
- Monk
- Relic
- Trade Cart
- Villager
B. Infantry
- Berserk & Elite Berserk
- Champion
- Huskarl & Elite Huskarl
- Long Swordsman
- Man- at- Arms
- Militia
- Pikeman
- Samurai & Elite Samurai
- Spearmen
- Teutonic Knight & Elite Teutonic Knight
- Throwing Axemen & Elite Throwing Axemen
- Two- Handed Swordsman
- Woad Raider & Elite Woad Raider
C. Archery
- Arbalest
- Archer
- Cavalry Archer
- Chu Ko Nu & Elite Cho Ko Nu
- Crossbowman
- Elite Skirmisher
- Hand Cannoneer
- Heavy Cavalry Archer
- Janissary & Elite Janissary
- Longbowman & Elite Longbowman
- Mangudai & Elite Mangudai
- Skirmisher
D. Cavalry
- Camel
- Cavalier
- Cataphract & Elite Cataphract
- Heavy Cavalry
- Knight
- Light Cavalry
- Mameluke & Elite Mameluke
- Paladin
- Scout Cavalry
- War Elephant & Elite War Elephant
E. Siege Weapons
- Battering Ram
- Bombard Cannon
- Capped Ram
- Mongonel
- Onager
- Scorpion & Heavy Scorpion
- Siege Onager
- Siege Ram
- Trebuchet
F. Boats
- Cannon Galleon & Elite Cannon Galleon
- Demolition Ship & Heavy Demolition Ship
- Fire Ship & Fast Fire Ship
- Fishing Ship
- Galleon
- Galley
- Longboat & Elite Longboat
- Trade Cog
- Transport Ship
- War Galley
5. The Technologies
A. Blacksmith (Origin)
- Blast Furnace
- Bodkin Arrow
- Bracer
- Chain Barding Armor
- Chain Mail Armor
- Fletching
- Forging
- Iron Casting
- Leather Archer Armor
- Padded Archer Armor
- Plate Barding Armor
- Plate Mail Armor
- Ring Archer Armor
- Scale Barding Armor
- Scale Mail Armor
B. Mill (Origin)
- Crop Rotation
- Heavy Plow
- Horse Collar
C. University (Origin)
- Architecture
- Ballistics
- Chemistry
- Heated Shot
- Masonry
- Murder Holes
- Siege Engineers
- Treadmill Crane
D. Monastery (Origin)
- Atonement
- Block Printing
- Faith
- Fervor
- Illumination
- Redemption
- Sanctity
E. Barracks (Origin)
- Squires
- Tracking
F. Town Center (Origin)
- Hand Cart
- Loom
- Town Patrol
- Town Watch
- Wheelbarrow
G. Castle (Origin)
- Conscription
- Hoardings
- Sappers
- Spies
H. Mining Camp (Origin)
- Gold Mining
- Gold Shaft Mining
- Stone Mining
- Stone Shaft Mining
I. Lumber Camp (Origin)
- Double- Bit Axe
- Bow Saw
- Two- Man Saw
J. Market
- Banking
- Cartography
- Coinage
- Guilds
K. Stable
- Husbandry
L. Dock
- Careening
- Dry Dock
- Shipwright
6. The History
7. Civilization Comparisons
8. Strategies and Tips
9. Appendices
- Cheats
- Building Attributes
- Research Times
- Unit Training Times
- Attack rates
- Movement Rates
10. Credits, Links, and Closing
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
1. Introduction
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Age of Empires 2: Age of Kings is the sequel to the very popular Age of
Empires
title. Age of Empires 2 (AOE2) was delayed for a while because they wanted to
get everything right before they shipped it. That was the reason for Age of
Empires: Rise of Rome. It was supposed to cure our crave for more Age of
Empires,
when they all knew we wanted Age of Empires 2. Well, Rise of Rome did a pretty
good job in serving as an appetizer. Age of Empires II: Age of Kings has done
very, very well in sales so far. An add-on for AoE II is due out this Fall, so
stay tuned, it'll be a good one. I'll post more details about it here as they
become more clear.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
2. Changes from Age of Empires and Age of Empires: Rise of Rome
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
* 13 New Civilizations - Each has a unique unit and a team bonus.
* New Units - Including, Kings, Heroes, female villagers, knights, cannons,
and exploding demolition ships.
* New Buildings - Including impressive castles and gates that automatically
open and close for you and your allies.
* New Technologies - Including Conscription (increases military unit creation
speed) and Town Watch (increases building Line of Sight).
* Formations - Precision control of how your army moves and engages in combat.
* New Multimedia Campaigns - Unique music and more than 300 pieces of original
art enhance your game as you follow a soldier through battles featuring
William Wallace, Joan of Arc, Saladin, Genghis Khan, and Frederick
Barbossa.
* New Ways To Trade - Trade with other players over land and by sea; buy or
sell resources at the Market.
* Learning Campaign - Master the basics by helping William Walace rise from
his
humble beginnings to defeat the British.
* Regicide game - Defend your king to win the game.
* 8 New Map Types - Including the Arabia, Black Forest, Rivers, and Random,
which allows the computer to pick a surprise map type for you.
* Garisoning - Station units inside buildings for protection, healing, and
surprise attacks.
* New Combat Features - Order military units to patrol, guard, or follow and
choose their combat stance.
* Record and replay games - Watch your single- player and multiplayer games
later.
* Find Idle Villagers - Automatically locate villagers not assigned to a task
using the "Idle Villager" button.
* New Online Tech Tree - See what is available to your civilization and which
units and technologies you've researched while in the game.
* Improved Multiplayer Features - Save and restore multiplayer games; lock the
game speed for all players; lock game teams so players can't change alliance
during a game; signal allies.
* Gather Points - New units automatically gather at a location or garrison
inside a building.
* Improved Interface - Units behind buildings and trees are visible; the mini-
map has Normal, Combat, and Economic modes; chat interface is expanded; Help
is integrated into the game.
* User Profiles - Customize options and hotkeys and automatically save them
game to game.
* Online Encyclopedia - Extensive histories of 13 medieval civilizations;
background on the Middle Ages, armies, weapons, and warfare.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
3. The Buildings
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-------------
Archery Range
-------------
The Archery Range is used to create archers. Archery Range units can be
garrisoned inside the Archery Range if you set a gather point there while the
units are being created. They cannot reenter once ungarrisoned. You must have
a Barracks before you can build an Archery Range.
--------
Barracks
--------
The Barracks is used to create and improve infantry. Barracks units can be
garrisoned inside the Barracks if you set a gather point there while the units
are being created. They cannot reenter once ungarrisoned. You must have a
Barracks to build an Archery Range.
----------
Blacksmith
----------
The Blacksmith lets you improve the attack strength and armor of your infantry,
archers, cavalry, and towers. You must have a Blacksmith to build a Siege
Workshop.
-------------
Bombard Tower
-------------
The Bombard Tower has extensive sight to track down enemies. You must research
Chemistry and Bombard Tower (at the University) before you can build Bombard
Towers. Because of the new architecture involved, preexisting towers do not
upgrade to Bombard Towers. Acquiring this technology only allows you to build
Bombard Towers.
------
Castle
------
Costly and time- consuming to construct, the Castle is the strongest defensive
structure. At the Castle you can create and upgrade your civilization's unique
unit and create the powerful Trebuchet siege engine. Several important
military technologies can also be researched at the Castle.
A Castle supports 20 population units and can garrison 20 villagers or military
units (except siege weapons). Units can be garrisoned at any time. You can
garrison unique units by setting a gather point while the units are being
created. Units garrisoned in the Castle heal more quickly than units garrisoned
in other buildings.
----
Dock
----
The Dock is used to build ships, research naval technology, and trade with other
civilizations. It is also where Fishing Ships deposit food. Dock units can be
garrisoned inside the Dock if you set a gather point there while the units are
being created. They cannot renenter once ungarrisoned.
----
Farm
----
Farms provide a renewable source of food. Farms are bult by vilagers, who then
gather food from them. Each farm provides a limited amount of food before it
goes fallow and must be rebuilt. To rebuild a Farm, select a villager, and then
right-click the expired Farm. Before you build Farms, you must build a Mill.
Farms cannot be converted by enemy Monks. You can farm enemy Farms that have
been abandoned.
You can increase the production of your Farms by researching Horse Collar, Heavy
Plow, and Crop Rotation (at the Mill).
---------
Fish Trap
---------
Fish Traps provide a renewable source of food. Fish Traps are available in the
Feudal Age, after you build a Fishing Ship. Fish Traps are built in the water
by Fishing Ships, which then gather food from them. Only one Fishing Ship can
gather from a Fish Trap at a time. Each Fish Trap providesa limited amount of
food before it collapses and must be rebuilt. When a Fish Trap collapses, the
Fishing Ship, and then right- click the expired Fish Trap.
--------------
Fortified Wall
--------------
Fortified Walls are stronger than Stone Walls but expensive to upgrade and slow
to build. In Age of Empires II, fortified Walls do not shoot at enemies.
However, the reinforced stone is difficult to breach without siege weapons.
----
Gate
----
Gates allow your units to pass through walls. You can build Gates over existing
walls, and you can lock or unlock your Gates. You might lock a Gate during an
attack to prevent it from opening accidentally when a friendly unit approaches.
Gates automatically open and close for you and your allies unless they are
locked.
Click on a Gate, and then click the LOCK GATE or UNLOCK GATE button in the
lower-
left corner of the screen.
-----------
Guard Tower
-----------
The Guard Tower is an upgrade of the Watch Tower. It is stronger and has
greater
fighting ability. Units can garrison inside for protection and to add
additional
attack strength to the tower. You can upgrade your Guard Tower to Keeps at the
University.
-----
House
-----
Houses support the population of your civilization. The more Houses you have,
the larger your population can grow. Each House supports 5 population units.
Before you can create new villagers, military units, ships, or Trade Carts, you
must have enough Houses to support them. The population indicator (top of
screen) shows your current/supportable population. It flashes when you need to
build more houses.
----
Keep
----
The Keep is an upgrade of the Guard Tower. It is stronger and has greater
fighting capability. Units can garrison inside for protection and to add
additional attack strength to the tower.
-----------
Lumber Camp
-----------
The Lumber Camp is used to deposit wood and research wood- gathering
improvements. Build Lumber Camps near forests to gather wood faster.
------
Market
------
The Market lets you trade by land with other players, buy and sell resources,
and offer resources to other players as tribute. It is also used to research
technology that improves your communication with allies and decreases the cost
of
commodity trading and tributes. You must have a Mill before you build a Market.
----
Mill
----
The Mill is used to deposit food and research technology that improves the food
production of your Farms. Build Mills near sources of food to gather food
faster. You must have a Mill before you can build Farms or a Market.
-----------
Mining Camp
-----------
The Mining Camp is used to deposit stone and gold and research your stone and
gold mining. Build Mining Camps near stone or gold mines to gather these
resources faster.
---------
Monestary
---------
Monestaries let you create Monks and improve their ability to heal the wounded
and convert the enemy. Monestaries cannot be converted by enemy Monks. Relics
garrisoned inside a Monestary provide a continuous supply of gold for your
stockpile. Monks can be garrisoned inside the Monestary if you set a gather
point there while the Monks are being created. They cannot reenter once
ungarrisoned.
-------
Outpost
-------
Outposts are stationary watch points that give you advance warning of enemy
activity nearby. They have a long line of sight, which can be made longer by
researching technologies at the Town Center. Unlike the other towers, Outposts
do not attack or allow you to garrison units inside.
-------------
Palisade Wall
-------------
Palisade Walls are wooden walls that are cheap and fast to build. You can
construct them on the battlefield as temporary barriers to slow down your
enemies
and warn you of their approach.
--------------
Siege Workshop
--------------
The Siege Workshop is used to build siege weapons. Siege Workshop units can be
garrisoned inside the Siege Workshop if you set a gather point there while the
units are being created. They cannot reenter once ungarrisoned. You must have
a Blacksmith before you can build a Siege Workshop.
------
Stable
------
The Stable is used to create and improve cavalry. Stable units can be
garrisoned inside the Stable if you ste a gather point there while the units are
being created. They cannot reenter once ungarrisoned. You must have a Barracks
before you can build a Stable.
----------
Stone Wall
----------
Stone Walls are stronger than Palisade Walls but more expensive. They slow down
your enemies and give you the chance to fend them off. You can upgrade your
Stone Walls to Fortified Walls at the University.
-----------
Town Center
-----------
The Town Center is the hub of your civilization. Each Town Center supports 5
population units inside for protection and healing. Town Centers with
garrisoned
units also fire arrows at enemy soldiers. After you advance to the Castle Age,
you can build additional Town Centers near remote resources to expand your
civilization. Town Centers cannot be converted by enemy Monks.
You can improve the damage and range of your Town Centers by researching
Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, and Bracer (at the Blacksmith); line of sight by
researching Town Watch and Town Patrol (at the Town Center); and hit points,
armor, and accuracy by researching Masonry, Architecture, and Ballistics (at the
University).
----------
University
----------
The University lets you research technology that improves your buildings,
towers,
walls, and missile weapons.
-----------
Watch Tower
-----------
The Watch Tower is a simple stone tower that automatically attacks enemy units
and buildings within its range. Units can garrison inside for protection and
to add additional attack strength to the tower. You can upgrade your Watch
Towers
to Guard Towers at the University.
------
Wonder
------
Building a Wonder of the World demonstrates the superiority of your
civilization.
A Wonder is expensive and requires a lot of time to build. In most games,
constructing a Wonder that stands for a certain period of time wins the game.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
4. The Units
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-=Miscellaneous=-
----
Monk
----
Slow and weak. Converts enemy unis, ships, and some buildings to your
civilization (player color). Heals wounded villagers, military units (except
siege weapons and ships).
Created At: Monestary
Strong Vs: Teutonic Knights, War Elephants
Weak Vs: Archers, Knights, Light Cavalry, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: (all at monestary)
Convert some buildings siege units - Redemption
Movement Speed - Fervor
HP - Sanctity
Convert other Monks - Atonement
Greater conversion range - Block Printing
Less Rejuvenation Time - Illumination
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith
-----
Relic
-----
Special objects placed randomly on the map. Can only be moved by Monks. When
garrisoned in a Monestary, generate gold for your civilization. Cannot be
destroyed.
----------
Trade Cart
----------
Carries goods to foreign Markets and brings back gold as profit. Distant
Markets
are the most profitable.
Built at: Market
Upgrades: Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
To use a Trade Cart:
Click on the Trade Cart, and then right- click a foreign Market.
--------
Villager
--------
Gathers wood, food, gold, and stone. Builds and repairs buildings, ships, and
siege weapons.
Created at: Town Center
Upgrades: HP, armor, efficiency - Loom, Wheelbarrow, Hand Cart (Town Center)
Attack - Sappers (Castle)
Resource Gathering - Double- Bit Axe, Bow Saw, Two- Man Saw; Stone
Mining, Gold Mining, Stone Shaft Mining, Gold Shaft Mining (Lumber
Camp, Mining Camp); Heavy Plow (Town Center)
Build Speed - Treadmill Crane (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
Villagers perform the economic work for your civilization. They chop wood, mine
stone and gold, hunt, forage, fish, herd sheep, and farm. They also construct
buildings and repair damaged buildings, ships, and siege weapons. If necessary,
they can also engage in combat. Villager gender is randomly determined when you
create a new villager. They perform the same tasks regardless of their gender.
-=Infantry=-
-----------------------
Berserk & Elite Berserk
-----------------------
Viking unique unit created in Castle Age. Infantry unit that slowly heals
itself. (The Vikings are the only civilization with two unique units. The
Vikings also receive a Longboat, which may be built at the Dock once a Viking
Castle has been built.)
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Skirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit Creation Speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------
Champion
--------
Strongest infantry unit (aside from sme civilizations' unique units); cheap and
quick to create.
Create at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Skirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit Creation Speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-----------------------
Huskarl & Elite Huskarl
-----------------------
Gothic unique unit created in Castle Age. Infantry with substantial pierce
armor, virtually immune to archer fire.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Archers
Weak Vs: Swordsmen
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------------
Long Swordsman
--------------
Stronger than Man- at- Arms; cheap and quick to create.
Created at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Skirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Arrow
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------
Man- at- Arms
-------------
Stronger than Militia; cheap and quick to create.
Created at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Skirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------
Militia
-------
Most basic infantry unit; cheap and quick to create. Only soldier created in
Dark Age.
Created at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Skirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mongonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit Creation Speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------
Pikeman
-------
-----------------------
Samurai & Elite Samurai
-----------------------
Japanese unique unit created in Castle Age. Infantry with fast attack.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Infantry, unique units
Weak Vs: Archers
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit Creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------
Spearman
--------
Medium infantry unit. Exceptional vs. cavalry.
Created at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Shirmishers, Stable Units
Weak Vs: Swordsmen, Archers, Scorpions, Mangonels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail, Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------------------------
Teutonic Knight & Elite Teutonic Knight
---------------------------------------
Teutonic unique unit created in Castle Age. Powerful armor; slow but difficult
to destroy. Receives benefits of infantry armor.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Swordsmen, Skirmishers, Stable Units
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Monks
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------------------------
Throwing Axemen & Elite Throwing Axemen
---------------------------------------
Frank unit created in Castle Age. Ranged attack.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Barracks units, Shirmishers
Weak Vs: Archers
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------
Two- Handed Swordsman
---------------------
Stronger than Long Swordsman; cheap and quick to create.
Created at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Shirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------------------------
Woad Raider & Elite Woad Raider
-------------------------------
Celtic unique unit created in Castle Age. Exceptionally quick infantry unit.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Shirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-=Archery=-
--------
Arbalest
--------
Quick and light. Weak at close range; excels at battle from a distance.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Cavalry Archers, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War
Elephants
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Knights, Mangonels, Woad Raiders, Huskarls
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
------
Archer
------
Quick and light. Weak at close range; excels at battle from a distance.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Cavalry Archers, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War
Elephants
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Knights, Mangonels, Woad Raiders, Huskarls
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------------
Cavalry Archer
--------------
Fast, with ranged attack. Ideal for hit- and- run attacks.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Swordsmen, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War Elephants
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Archers, Light Cavalry
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------------
Chu Ko Nu & Elite Chu Ko Nu
---------------------------
Chinese unique unit created in Castle Age. Archer with mediocre range with
causes great damage. Can fire arrows very quickly.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War Elephants, Cavalry
Archers
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Knights, Light Cavalry, Mangonels, Woad Raiders, Huskarls
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-----------
Crossbowman
-----------
Quick and light. Weak at close range; excels at battle from a distance.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Cavalry Archers, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War
Elephants
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Knights, Mangonels, Woad Raiders, Huskarls
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
----------------
Elite Skirmisher
----------------
Ranged unit equipped with armor vs archer attacks. Exceptional Vs. archers.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Archers, Monks, Cavalry Archers
Weak Vs: Mangonels, Barracks units
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------------
Hand Cannoneer
--------------
Powerful close range; innacurate at range. Keeps non-ranged units from closing
on other units. Requires Chemistry.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Monks, Teutonic Knights
Weak Vs: Archers, Mangonels
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------------------
Heavy Cavalry Archer
--------------------
Fast, with ranged attack. Ideal for hit- and- run attacks.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Swordsmen, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War Elephants
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Archers, Light Cavalry
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------------
Janissary & Elite Janissary
---------------------------
Turk unique unit created in Castle Age. Hand Cannoneer with lower and no
minimum
range. Powerful close attack; inaccurate at range. Keeps non-ranged units from
closing on other units.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Monks, Teutonic Knights
Weak Vs: Archers, Mangonels
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-----------------------------
Longbowman & Elite Longbowman
-----------------------------
Briton unique unit created in Castle Age. Powerful with long range.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War Elephants, Cavalry
Archers
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Knights, Mangonels, Woad Raiders, Huskarls
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------------------
Mangudai & Elite Mangudai
-------------------------
Mongol unique unit created in Castle Age. Cavalry archer with attack bonus vs.
siege weapons.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Swordsmen, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War Elephants, Siege Weapons
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Archers, Light Cavalry
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
----------
Skirmisher
----------
Ranged unit equipped with armor vs. archer attacks. Exceptional vs Archers.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Archers, Monks, Cavalry Archers
Weak Vs: Mangonels, Barracks units
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-=Cavalry=-
-----
Camel
-----
Excels at killing other mounted units
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Knights, Cataphracts
Weak Vs: Infantry, Archers
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------
Cavalier
--------
Heavy and quick.
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Archers
Weak Vs: Pikemen, Knights, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-----------------------------
Cataphract & Elite Cataphract
-----------------------------
Byzantine unique unit created in Castle Age. Heavily armored. Attack bonus vs.
infantry.
Created: Castle
Strong Vs: Archers, Swordsmen
Weak Vs: Knights, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------
Heavy Cavalry
-------------
Excels at killing other mounted units
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Knights, Cataphracts
Weak Vs: Infantry, Archers
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
------
Knight
------
Heavy and quick.
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Archers
Weak Vs: Pikemen, mamelukes, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------
Light Cavalry
-------------
Fast with greater line of sight than Scout Cavalry; resistant to conversion.
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Archers, Mangonels, Cavalry Archers, Bombard Cannons, Monks
Weak Vs: Pikemen, Knights, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------------------
Mameluke & Elite Mameluke
-------------------------
Saracen unique unit created in Castle Age. Camel with ranged attack. Excels
vs.
other mounted units.
Created: Castle
Strong Vs: Monks, Barracks Units, Teutonic Knights
Weak Vs: Archers, Mangonels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------
Paladin
-------
Heavy and quick.
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Archers
Weak Vs: Pikemen, Knights, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------
Scout Cavalry
-------------
Fast with extensive sight; resistant to conversion.
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Archers, Mangonels, Cavalry Archers, Bombard Cannons, Monks
Weak Vs: Pikemen, Knights, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------------------
War Elephant & Elite War Elephant
---------------------------------
Persian unique unit created in Castle Age. Slow, powerful, well armored, and
difficult to destroy. Elite War Elephant causes area off effect damage, can
hit several adjacent targets automatically.
Created: Castle
Strong Vs: Archers, Swordsmen
Weak Vs: Pikemen, Camels, Monks, Mamelukes
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-=Siege Weapons=-
-------------
Battering Ram
-------------
Slow, lumbering; reduces enemy town to ruins.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Archers, Cavalry Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Barrack Units
Upgrades: Attack - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastary)
--------------
Bombard Cannon
--------------
Powerful mobile anti- building siege weapon. Requires Chemistry.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Archers, Monks, Skirmishers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack Range - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastary)
----------
Capped Ram
----------
Slow, lumbering; reduces enemy towns to ruins.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Archers, Cavalry Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Stable Units
Upgrades: Attack - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastary)
--------
Mongonel
--------
Wheeled siege weapon used to attack a small mass of units. Area of effect
attack.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
------
Onager
------
Wheeled siege weapon used to attack a small mass of units. Area of effect
attack.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
-------------------------
Scorpion & Heavy Scorpion
-------------------------
Fires large arrow- like bolts. Effective vs. large masses of units; shots hit
multiple units causing damage to all units they touch.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Archers, Monks
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Bracer (Blacksmith)
Tracking - Ballistics (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastary)
------------
Siege Onager
------------
Wheeled siege weapon used to attack a small mass of units. Area of effect
attack. Siege Onagers can cut paths through forests.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
---------
Siege Ram
---------
Slow, lumbering; reduces enemy towns to ruins.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Archers, Cavalry Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Stable Units
Upgrades: Attack - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastary)
---------
Trebuchet
---------
Powerful; destroys buildings, walls from a distance. Canot fire on close units.
Must be packed to move, unpacked to attack. Can cut paths through forests.
Built at: Castle
Strong Vs: Archers, Skirmishers
Weak Vs: Swordsmen, Stable Units, Mangudai, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Siege Engineers (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
To pack/unpack a Trebuchet: Click the Trebuchet, and then click the PACK or
UNPACK button.
To attack with a packed Trebuchet: Click the Trebuchet, and then right- click an
enemy target. The Trebuchet moves within range of the enemy target, unpacks,
and begins attacking.
-=Boats=-
-------------------------------------
Cannon Galleon & Elite Cannon Galleon
-------------------------------------
Long- range warship used to attack targets on shore to establish a beachhead.
Fires slowly, with minimum range. Requires Chemistry.
Built at: Dock
Weak Vs: Galleys, Fire Ships, Demolition Ships
Upgrades: Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
---------------------------------------
Demolition Ship & Heavy Demolition Ship
---------------------------------------
Filled with explosives. Pilot near enemy ships and detonate to wrest control of
the sea from an entrenched opponent.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Fire Ships
Weak Vs: Galleys, Longboats, Bombard Cannons
Upgrades: Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
--------------------------
Fire Ship & Fast Fire Ship
--------------------------
Spew fire at other ships.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Galleys, Longboats
Weak Vs: Demolition Ships
Upgrades: Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
------------
Fishing Ship
------------
Gathers food from jumping fish and Fist Traps; automatically returns fish to
Dock. Can build Fish Traps.
Built at: Dock
Upgrades: Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
-------
Galleon
-------
Improved combat ship.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Demolition Ships, Cannon Galleons
Weak Vs: Fire Ships, Bombard Cannons
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Bracer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
------
Galley
------
Small, basic, fast ship with weak attack. Scouts water for early attacks and
enemy fishing fleets.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Demolition Ships, Cannon Galleons
Weak Vs: Fire Ships, Bombard Cannons
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Bracer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
-------------------------
Longboat & Elite Longboat
-------------------------
Viking unique unit created in Castle Age. Vikings are the only civilization to
possess two unique units. The Viking Longboat may be built at a Dock once a
Viking Castle has been built.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Demolition Ships, Cannon Galleons
Weak Vs: Fire Ships, Bombard Cannons
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Bracer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
---------
Trade Cog
---------
Trades by sea; takes goods from your Dock to a foreign Dock and brings back
gold.
The farther the Dock, the higher your profit.
Built at: Dock
Upgrades: Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
To trade using a Trade Cog: Click the Trade Cog, and then right- click a foreign
Dock.
--------------
Transport Ship
--------------
Moves units across water.
Built at: Dock
Upgrades: Armor and Capacity - Careening (Dock)
Speed and Capacity - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
----------
War Galley
----------
Medium combat ship.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Demolition Ships, Cannon Galleons
Weak Vs: Fire Ships, Bombard Cannons
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Bracer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
5. The Technologies
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-=Blacksmith=-
-------------
Blast Furnace
-------------
Blast Furnace increases the attach strength of your infantry and cavalry units
even more than Iron Casting
------------
Bodkin Arrow
------------
Bodkin Arrow increases the attack strength and range of scorpions, Archery
Range units, towers, Town Center, Castle, and ships (except those using
gunpowder weapons).
------
Bracer
------
Bracer increases the attack strength and range of scorpions, Archery Range
units, towers, Town Center, Castle, and ships (except those using gunpowder
weapons).
-------------------
Chain Barding Armor
-------------------
Chain Barding Armor increases the armor of your cavalry unite even more than
Scale Barding Armor.
----------------
Chain Mail Armor
----------------
Chain Mail Armor increases the armor of your infantry units even more than Scale
Mail Armor.
---------
Fletching
---------
Fletching increases the attack strength and range of scorpions, Archery Range
units, towers, Town Center, Castle, and ships (except those using gunpowder
weapons).
------------
Iron Casting
------------
Iron Casting increases the attack strength of your infantry and cavalry units
even more than Forging.
--------------------
Leather Archer Armor
--------------------
Leather Archer Armor increases the armor of your archers even more than Padded
Archer Armor.
-------------------
Padded Archer Armor
-------------------
Padded Archer Armor increases the armor of your archers.
-------------------
Plate Barding Armor
-------------------
Plate Barding Armor increases the armor of your cavalry units even more than
Chain Barding Armor.
----------------
Plate Mail Armor
----------------
Plate Mail Armor increases the armor of your infantry units even more than
Chain Mail Armor.
-----------------
Ring Archer Armor
-----------------
Ring Archer Armor increases the armor of your archers even more than Leather
Archer Armor.
-------------------
Scale Barding Armor
-------------------
Scale Barding Armor increases the armor of your cavalry units, including Cavalry
Archers, Mangudai, and War Elephants.
----------------
Scale Mail Armor
----------------
Scale Mail Armor increases the armor of your infantry units.
-=Mill=-
-------------
Crop Rotation
-------------
Crop Rotation increases the amount of food your Farms produce even more than the
Heavy Plow.
----------
Heavy Plow
----------
Heavy Plow increases the amount of food your Farms produce even more than Horse
Collar.
------------
Horse Collar
------------
Horse Collar increases the amount of food your Farms produce before they go
fallow and must be rebuilt.
-=University=-
------------
Architecture
------------
Architecture makes your buildings even stronger than Masonry.
----------
Ballistics
----------
Ballistics improves how accurate scorpions, archers, galleys, and towers are in
hitting moving targets.
---------
Chemistry
---------
Chemistry increases the attack strength of all non- gunpowder missile weapons.
You must research Chemistry to build gunpowder units (Bombard Tower, Bombard
Cannon, Hand Cannoneer, and Cannon Galleon). After researching Chemistry,
missile weapons fire flaming arrows.
-----------
Heated Shot
-----------
Heated Shot increases the damage towers cause to ships.
-------
Masonry
-------
Masonry makes your buildings stronger so they can take more damage in combat.
------------
Murder Holes
------------
Murder Holes eliminates the minimum range of towers (except Bombard Towers) and
Castles so they can fire at soldiers attacking their base.
---------------
Siege Engineers
---------------
Siege Engineers increases the damage siege weapons cause to buildings as well
as range.
---------------
Treadmill Crane
---------------
Treadmill Crane makes villagers construct buildings faster.
-=Monestary=-
---------
Atonement
---------
Atonement lets your Monks convert enemy Monks.
---------------
Block Lettering
---------------
Block Printing lets your Monks convert enemy units from farther away.
-----
Faith
-----
Faith makes your units harder for enemy Monks to convert.
------
Fervor
------
Fervor makes your Monks move faster.
------------
Illumination
------------
Illumination decreases the time your Monks need to rest before attempting
another conversion.
----------
Redemption
----------
Redemption lets your Monks convert enemy buildings (except Town Centers,
Castles,
Monestaries, Farms, Fish Traps, walls, towers, Gates, and Wonders) and siege
weapons. Monks can convert most enemy units from a distance; however, they must
stand adjacent to buildings, rams, and Trebuchets.
--------
Sanctity
--------
Sanctity increases the hit points of your Monks.
-=Barracks=-
-------
Squires
-------
Squires make your infantry units move faster.
--------
Tracking
--------
Tracking lets your infantry units see farther away.
-=Town Center=-
---------
Hand Cart
---------
Hand Cart makes villagers move faster and carry more resources.
----
Loom
----
Loom makes your villagers harder to kill.
-----------
Town Patrol
-----------
Town Patrol lets your buildings see enemies from even farther away than Town
Watch.
----------
Town Watch
----------
Town Watch lets your buildings see enemies farther away so you have more warning
of their approach.
-----------
Wheelbarrow
-----------
Wheelbarrow makes your villagers move faster and carry more resources so they
work more efficiently.
-=Castle=-
------------
Conscription
------------
Conscription decreases the time required to create units at the Barracks,
Stable,
Archery Range, and Castle.
---------
Hoardings
---------
Hoardings make your Castles stronger.
-------
Sappers
-------
Sappers increases the damage villagers cause when they attack buildings.
-----
Spies
-----
Spies lets you see what your enemies have explored and share their unit line of
sight. You can purchase the Spies technology for gold. By paying a fee
dependent on the number of enemy villagers in existence, you can learn the exact
location of each unit and building still in play.
-=Mining Camp=-
-----------
Gold Mining
-----------
Gold Mining makes villagers mine gold faster.
-----------------
Gold Shaft Mining
-----------------
Gold Shaft Mining makes villagers mine gold even faster than Gold Mining.
------------
Stone Mining
------------
Stone Mining makes villagers mine stone faster.
------------------
Stone Shaft Mining
------------------
Stone Shaft Mining makes villagers mine stone even faster than Stone Mining.
-=Lumber Camps=-
---------------
Double- Bit Axe
---------------
Double- Bit Axe makes villagers chop wood faster.
-------
Bow Saw
-------
Bow Saw makes villagers chop wood even faster than Double- Bit Axe.
------------
Two- Man Saw
------------
Two- Man Saw makes villagers chop wood even faster than the Bow Saw.
-=Market=-
-------
Banking
-------
Banking eliminates the cost of sending a tribute to resources to another player.
-----------
Cartography
-----------
Cartography lets you share exploration and unit line of sight with your allies
so you see what they have explored. (Before your allies see what you've
explored,
they must research Cartography, too.)
-------
Coinage
-------
Coinage decreases the cost of sending a tribute of resources to another player.
------
Guilds
------
Guilds reduces the cost of buying and selling resources at the Market.
-=Stable=-
---------
Husbandry
---------
Husbandry increases spped of all cavalry units.
-=Dock=-
---------
Careening
---------
Careening increases the pierce armor of ships and the number of units Transport
Ships can carry.
--------
Dry Dock
--------
Dry Dock makes your ships faster and increases the number of units Transport
Ships can carry.
----------
Shipwright
----------
Shipwright decreases the amount of wood required to build ships.
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6. The History
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Britons
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Following the withdrawal of the Roman legions to Gaul (modern France) around
400, the British Isles fell into a very dark period of several centuries from
which almost no written records survive. The Romano-British culture that had
existed under 400 years of Roman rule disappeared under relentless invasion and
migration by barbarians. Celts came over from Ireland (a tribe called the Scotti
gave their name to the northern part of the main island, Scotland). Saxons and
Angles came from Germany, Frisians from modern Holland, and Jutes from modern
Denmark. By 600, the Angles and Saxons controlled most of modern England. By
800, only modern Wales, Scotland, and West Cornwall remained in largely Celtic
hands.
The new inhabitants were called Anglo-Saxons (from the Angles and Saxons). The
Angles gave their name to the new culture (England from Angle-land), and the
Germanic language they brought with them, English, replaced the native Celtic
and previously imported Latin. Despite further invasions and even a complete
military conquest at a later date, the southern and eastern parts of the largest
British Isle have been called England (and its people and language English) ever
since.
In 865 the relative peace of England was shattered by a new invasion. Danish
Vikings who had been raiding France and Germany formed a great army and turned
their attention on the English. Within 10 years, most of the Anglo-Saxon
kingdoms had fallen or surrendered. Only the West Saxons (modern Wessex) held
out under Alfred, the only English ruler to be called "the Great."
England was divided among the Vikings, the West Saxons, and a few other English
kingdoms for nearly 200 years. The Viking half was called the Danelaw ("under
Danish law"). The Vikings collected a large payment, called the Danegeld ("the
Dane's gold"), to be peaceful. The Danes became Christians and gradually became
more settled. In time the English turned on the Danes, and in 954 the last
Viking king of York was killed. England was united for the first time under an
English king from Wessex.
In 1066 the Witan ("king's council") offered the crown to Harold, son of the
Earl of Wessex. Two others claimed the throne: Harald Hardrada (meaning "the
hard ruler"), King of Norway, and Duke William of Normandy. The Norwegian landed
first, near York, but was defeated by Harold at the battle of Stamford Bridge.
Immediately after the victory, Harold force-marched his army south to meet
William at Hastings. The battle seesawed back and forth all day, but near dusk
Harold was mortally wounded by an arrow in the eye. Over the next two years,
William, now "the Conqueror," solidified his conquest of England.
During the remainder of the Middle Ages, the successors of William largely
exhausted themselves and their country in a series of confrontations and wars
attempting to expand or defend land holdings in France. The Hundred Years War
between England and France was an on-and-off conflict that stretched from 1337
to 1453. It was triggered by an English king's claim to the throne of France,
thanks to family intermarriages. The war was also fought over control of the
lucrative wool trade and French support for Scotland's independence. The early
part of the war featured a string of improbable, yet complete, English
victories, thanks usually to English longbowmen mowing down hordes of ornately
armored French knights from long range.
The English could not bring the war to closure, however, and the French rallied.
Inspired by Joan of Arc, a peasant girl who professed divine guidance, the
French fought back, ending the war with the capture of Bordeaux in 1453. The
English were left holding only Calais on the mainland (and not for long).
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Byzantines
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The Byzantines took their name from Byzantium, an ancient city on the Bosphorus,
the strategic waterway linking the Black Sea to the Aegean Sea. The Roman
Emperor Constantine had renamed this city Constantinople in the fourth century
and made it a sister capital of his empire. This eastern partition of the Roman
Empire outlived its western counterpart by a thousand years, defending Europe
against invasions from the east by Persians, Arabs, and Turks. The Byzantines
persevered because Constantinople was well defended by walls and the city could
be supplied by sea. At their zenith in the sixth century, the Byzantines covered
much of the territories of the original Roman Empire, lacking only the Iberian
Peninsula (modern Spain and Portugal), Gaul (modern France), and Britain. The
Byzantines also held Syria, Egypt, and Palestine, but by the middle of the
seventh century they had lost them to the Arabs. From then on their empire
consisted mainly of the Balkans and modern Turkey.
The first great Byzantine emperor was Justinian I (482 to 565). His ambition was
to restore the old Roman Empire and he nearly succeeded. His instrument was the
greatest general of the age, Belisarius, who crisscrossed the empire defeating
Persians to the East, Vandals in North Africa, Ostrogoths in Italy, and Bulgars
and Slavs in the Balkans. In addition to military campaigns, Justinian laid the
foundation for the future by establishing a strong legal and administrative
system and by defending the Christian Church.
The Byzantine economy was the richest in Europe for many centuries because
Constantinople was ideally sited on trade routes between Asia, Europe, the Black
Sea, and the Aegean Sea. It was an important destination point for the Silk Road
from China. The nomisma, the principal Byzantine gold coin, was the standard for
money throughout the Mediterranean for 800 years. Constantinople's strategic
position eventually attracted the envy and animosity of the Italian city-states.
A key strength of the Byzantine Empire was its generally superior army that drew
on the best elements of the Roman, Greek, Gothic, and Middle Eastern experience
in war. The core of the army was a shock force of heavy cavalry supported by
both light infantry (archers) and heavy infantry (armored swordsmen). The army
was organized into units and drilled in tactics and maneuvers. Officers received
an education in military history and theory. Although outnumbered usually by
masses of untrained warriors, it prevailed thanks to intelligent tactics and
good discipline. The army was backed by a network of spies and secret agents
that provided information about enemy plans and could be used to bribe or
otherwise deflect aggressors.
The Byzantine navy kept the sea-lanes open for trade and kept supply lines free
so the city could not be starved into submission when besieged. In the eighth
century, a land and sea attack by Arabs was defeated largely by a secret weapon,
Greek fire. This chemical weapon, its composition now unknown, was a sort of
liquid napalm that could be sprayed from a hose. The Arab navy was devastated at
sea by Greek fire.
In the seventh and eighth centuries, the Arabs overran Egypt, the Middle East,
North Africa, and Spain, removing these areas permanently from Byzantine
control. A Turkish victory at Manzikert in 1071 led to the devastation of Asia
Minor, the empire's most important source of grain, cattle, horses, and
soldiers. In 1204 Crusaders led by the Doge of Venice used treachery to sack and
occupy Constantinople.
In the fourteenth century, the Turks invaded Europe, capturing Adrianople and
bypassing Constantinople. They settled the Balkans in large numbers and defeated
a large crusader army at Nicopolis in 1396. In May 1453, Turkish sultan Mehmet
II captured a weakly defended Constantinople with the aid of heavy cannon. The
fall of the city brought the Byzantine Empire to an end.
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Celts
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The Celts (pronounced "kelts") were the ancient inhabitants of Northern Europe
and the builders of Stonehenge 5000 years ago. Julius Caesar had battled them
during his conquest of Gaul. The Romans eventually took most of Britain and the
Iberian Peninsula from them as well. At the end of the ancient Roman Empire, the
Celts occupied only parts of northwestern France, Ireland, Wales, and parts of
Scotland. During the course of the Middle Ages, they strengthened their hold on
Scotland and made several attempts to take more of England.
The Irish remained in small bands during the early Middle Ages. By 800 the four
provinces of Leinster, Munster, Connaught, and Ulster had risen to power under
"high kings." Viking raids began in 795 and then Viking settlements were
established in the middle ninth century. The most important of these was at
Dublin. Brian Boru became the first high king of all Ireland around 1000. In
1014 the Irish defeated the Danes of Dublin at Clontarf, although Brian Boru was
killed.
An Irish tribe called the Scotti invaded what is now southern Scotland during
the early Middle Ages, settling permanently and giving the land its name. They
pushed back and absorbed the native Picts who had harassed the Romans to the
south. The Scottish kingdom took its present shape during the eleventh century
but attracted English interference. The Scots responded with the "auld (old)
alliance" with France, which became the foundation of their diplomacy for
centuries to come. Edward I of England (Longshanks, or "hammer of the Scots")
annexed Scotland in 1296.
William Wallace (Braveheart) led a revolt of Scotland, winning virtual
independence at the Battle of Stirling Bridge in 1297. Defeated the next year at
Falkirk, Wallace waged a guerrilla war until he was betrayed, captured, and
executed in 1305. Robert the Bruce declared himself king of Scotland after
murdering his main rival. He drove out the English, winning the battle of
Bannockburn in 1314. Edward III of England recognized Scotland's independence in
1328, but war between the Scots and English carried on for several centuries.
The crowns of the two countries were united in 1603, long after the Middle Ages
were over.
No prince in Wales proved strong enough to unite the country. In the late
thirteenth century, Edward I took over the government of Gwynedd, one of the
strongest Welsh principalities in Wales. He proceeded to build five great
castles in Wales, effectively placing the country under English rule.
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Chinese
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China was reunited in 581 AD after a long period of internal war by the founders
of the Sui dynasty. For most of the 1000 years that followed, China was one of
the largest and most advanced civilization in the world. Because of its
geographic isolation from the West, it was able to develop and maintain a unique
culture that spread its influence over much of Asia.
An emperor generally held supreme power as the son of heaven. Natural disasters
or other calamities were taken as proof that the mandate of heaven had been
withdrawn, however, and could justify revolt. Mandarins were conservative civil
servants who operated most of the government at the local, province, and
imperial level. Mandarins earned their positions by passing detailed civil
service examinations based mainly on the works of Confucius.
The T'ang dynasty ruled China from 618 to 907. China under the T'ang was large,
wealthy, and powerful. There was extensive foreign trade and interest in the
arts among the upper class. Printing and gunpowder were invented. The last 100
years of T'ang rule witnessed tumultuous peasant revolts, however, and wars
between local military rulers that the imperial court could not end. The years
from 907 to 960 were known as the Five Dynasties period. Northern China was held
by barbarians, and southern China split into 10 rival states. From one of these,
an army general named Zhao Kuang-ying seized power and unified the southern
states, founding the Song dynasty. His descendants reunited China within 20
years.
The Song dynasty ruled at least part of China until 1279. This was another
period of cultural brilliance, and it was considered the great age of Chinese
landscape painting. There was a dramatic improvement in economic activity,
including a large overseas trade. Population and cities grew, food production
grew faster than population, a money economy developed, and industrial output
increased. No city in Europe could approach the populations of Chang An,
Beijing, and Guang Zhou, all with more than 2 million inhabitants.
The wealth of China attracted enemies, however, and the Mongols began attacks in
1206. By 1279 they had completed the conquest of Song China and moved the
capital to Beijing. The dramatic economic improvement of the Song dynasty ended
with the Mongol conquests and the estimated 30 million deaths that they caused.
The Mongol Yuan dynasty reunited China and reestablished it as a great military
and world power. Chinese influence was spread into Asia. Hanoi was captured
three times and tribute was extracted from Burma. Trade with India, Arabia, and
the Persian Gulf was developed. Marco Polo visited China during this period.
Natural disasters and higher taxes in the fourteenth century caused rural
rebellions. A Buddhist monk rose to be one of the leaders of the Red Turbans, a
secret society opposed to the emperor in Beijing. The rebels seized Nanjing in
1356 and drove the Mongols from Beijing 12 years later, establishing the Ming
dynasty. The Ming presided over another cultural flowering and established a
political unity that outlasted the Ming and continued into the twentieth
century. The Ming clamped down a strict conservatism and isolation, however,
discouraging change and innovation, banning foreign travel, and closing the Silk
Road.
Some of the most noteworthy aspects of medieval China are the technologies that
were invented there, usually many centuries before a similar technology was
invented in, or transmitted to, the West. Important Chinese inventions included
the compass, the wheelbarrow, the abacus, the horse harness, the stirrup, the
clock, iron-casting, steel, paper, moveable type (printing), paper money,
gunpowder, and the stern-post rudder.
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Franks
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The Franks were one of the Germanic barbarian tribes known to the Romans. In the
early part of the fifth century, they began expanding south from their homeland
along the Rhine River into Roman-controlled Gaul (modern France). Unlike other
Germanic tribes, however, they did not move out of their homelands but, rather,
added to them. Clovis, a Frankish chieftan, defeated the last Roman armies in
Gaul and united the Franks by 509, becoming the ruler of much of western Europe.
During the next 1000 years, this Frankish kingdom gradually became the modern
nation of France.
The kingdom of Clovis was divided after his death among his four sons, according
to custom. This led to several centuries of civil warfare and struggle between
successive claimants to the throne. By the end of the seventh century, the
Merovingian kings (descendants of Clovis) were rulers in name only. In the early
eighth century, Charles Martel became mayor of the palace, the ruler behind the
throne. He converted the Franks into a cavalry force and fought so well that his
enemies gave him the name of Charles the Hammer. In 732 the Frankish cavalry
defeated Muslim invaders moving north from Spain at the Battle of Poitiers,
stopping forever the advance of Islam from the southwest.
Charles Martel's son, Pepin, was made king of the Franks by the pope in return
for helping to defend Italy from the Lombards. Pepin founded the dynasty of the
Carolingians, and the greatest of these rulers was Charles the Great, or
Charlemagne, who ruled from 768 to 814. He expanded the Frankish kingdom into an
empire and was responsible for a rebirth of culture and learning in the West.
Charlemagne's empire was divided among his grandsons and thereafter coalesced
into two major parts. The western part became the kingdom of France. Later kings
gradually lost political control of France, however. Central authority broke
down under the pressure of civil wars, border clashes, and Viking raids. Money
and soldiers could be raised only by making concessions to landholders. Fiefs
became hereditary and fief holders became feudal lords over their own vassals.
By the tenth century, France had been broken into feudal domains that acted as
independent states.
In 987 the French nobility elected Hugh Capet their king, mainly because his
fief centered on Paris was weak and he was thought to pose no threat. He founded
the Capetian line of kings, who worked slowly for two centuries regaining the
power by making royal roads safe, adding land to their domain, encouraging
trade, and granting royal charters for new towns and fiefs in vacant lands. By
allying themselves with the church, the Capetians took a strong moral position
and benefited from the church's cultural, political, and social influence. Royal
administrators were made loyal to the king and more efficient by eliminating the
inheritance of government offices.
Beginning with Philip II in 1180, three superior rulers established France as
one of the most important nations in Europe. They improved the working of the
government, encouraged a booming trade, collected fees efficiently, and
strengthened their position atop the feudal hierarchy. Although a national
assembly called the Estates General was established, it held no real power and
was successfully ignored.
From 1337 to 1453 France and England fought the long conflict called the Hundred
Years War to decide ownership of lands in France that had been inherited by
English kings. The eventual French victory confirmed the king as the most
powerful political force in France.
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Goths
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The Goths were a Germanic tribe on the Danube River frontier known to the Romans
from the first century AD. Pressured and then displaced when the Huns moved west
out of Central Asia, the Goths moved west into Europe and over the Danube River
to escape the oncoming hordes. After taking part in the fall of Rome, they vied
with other barbarians for the leavings of the Western Roman Empire during the
Early Middle Ages.
The Goths originated on the island of Gotland in the Baltic, to the best of our
knowledge, and split into two groups as they migrated south across Central
Europe. The Visigoths, or West Goths, settled in modern Romania during the
second century. The Ostrogoths, or East Goths, settled farther to the east on
the northwest coast of the Black Sea. In 376 AD the Visigoths were driven from
modern Romania by the Huns and moved south across the Danube. Their strength was
estimated at 60,000 men, women, and children. They defeated a Roman army from
Constantinople, settled briefly south of the Danube, and then pushed into Italy.
In 409 they sacked Rome under their king Alaric and then moved north into Gaul.
The Romans gave them southwestern Gaul. From there they eventually extended
their rule into all of modern Spain and Portugal.
The Ostrogoths broke away from Hunnish rule and followed their cousins into
Italy late in the fifth century. They were encouraged to invade by the Eastern
emperor, who wanted deposed the barbarian then ruling as viceroy. Under
Theodric, king of modern Switzerland and the Balkans already, the Goths entered
Italy in 488, completing its conquest in 493.
Theodric's kingdom did not last long following his death in 526. Using a
struggle for succession as an excuse, the Byzantines sent an army to Italy in
536 led by their great general Belisarius. The Byzantines hoped to regain Italy
and restore the old Roman Empire in the West. The war dragged on, devastating
the countryside in conjunction with plague and famine. In 552 the Ostrogoths
were finally defeated in Italy. They ceased to exist as a separate group by the
late sixth century when northern Italy was invaded by a new group of barbarians
called the Lombards.
The Visigoth kingdom lasted somewhat longer. In the late fifth century Clovis of
the Franks pushed the Visigoths out of France and over the Pyrenees Mountains.
Following the death of Clovis his kingdom fragmented and the Visigoths were
temporarily left alone. In 711 a new threat appeared from the south. Islamic
armies crossed over from North Africa and destroyed the last Gothic kingdom in
four years.
The Goths are remembered for being the first to sack Rome and thereby beginning
the final collapse of the ancient world order in Europe. Their admiration for
Rome and attempts to preserve it, however, allowed much of the Roman culture to
survive. For example, the modern languages of Italy, France, Spain, Portugal,
and Romania are derived from Latin influenced by later settlers. They are not
variations of German, as was the case in England.
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Japanese
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Located 100 miles off the mainland of Asia, at its closest point, Japan was a
land of mystery at the edge of civilization. Isolated at first by geography and
later by choice, the Japanese developed a distinctive culture that drew very
little from the outside world. At the beginning of what were the Middle Ages in
Europe, the advanced culture of Japan was centered at the north end of the
Inland Sea on the main island of Honshu. Across the Hakone Mountains to the east
lay the Kanto, an alluvial plain that was the single largest rice-growing area
on the islands. To the north and east of the Kanto was the frontier, beyond
which lived aboriginal Japanese who had occupied the islands since Neolithic
times.
Some believe that by the fifth century AD the Yamato court had become largely
ceremonial. Independent clans, known as uji, held the real power behind
the throne. Clan leaders formed a sort of aristocracy and vied with each other
for effective control of land and the throne.
In 536 the Soga clan became predominant and produced the first great historical
statesman, Prince Shotoku, who instituted reforms that laid the foundation of
Japanese culture for generations to come. In 645, power shifted from the Soga
clan to the Fujiwara clan. The Fujiwara presided over most of the Heian period
(794 to 1185). The new leadership imposed the Taika Reform of 645, which
attempted to redistribute the rice-growing land, establish a tax on agricultural
production, and divide the country into provinces. Too much of the country
remained outside imperial influence and control, however. Real power shifted to
great families that rose to prominence in the rice-growing lands. Conflict among
these families led to civil war and the rise of the warrior class.
Similar to the experience of medieval western Europe, the breakdown of central
authority in Japan, the rise of powerful local nobles, and conflict with
barbarians at the frontier combined to create a culture dominated by a warrior
elite. These warriors became known as Samurai, ("those who serve"), who were
roughly equivalent to the European knight. A military government replaced the
nobility as the power behind the throne at the end of the twelfth century. The
head of the military government was the Shogun.
Samurai lived by a code of the warrior, something like the European code of
chivalry. The foundation of the warrior code was loyalty to the lord. The
warrior expected leadership and protection. In return he obeyed his lord's
commands without question and stood ready to die on his lord's behalf. A Samurai
placed great emphasis on his ancestry and strove to carry on family traditions.
He behaved so as to earn praise. He was to be firm and show no cowardice.
Warriors went into battle expecting and looking to die. It was felt that a
warrior hoping to live would fight poorly.
The Kamakura period (1185 to 1333) was named after a region of Japan dominated
by a new ruling clan that took power after civil war. The Mongols attempted to
invade Japan twice, in 1274 and 1281, but were repulsed both times. A fortuitous
storm caused great loss to the second Mongol invasion fleet.
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Mongols
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The Mongols were nomads from the steppes of Central Asia. They were fierce
warriors who fought each other over pasturelands and raided developed
civilizations to the east and south. At the beginning of the thirteenth century,
the Mongol clans united and began a campaign of foreign conquest. Following in
the hoofprints of the Huns, their predecessors by a thousand years, they carved
out one of the largest empires the world has yet seen.
The Mongols inhabited the plains south of Lake Baikal in modern Mongolia. At its
maximum, their empire stretched from Korea, across Asia, and into European
Russia to the Baltic Sea coast. They held most of Asia Minor, modern Iraq,
modern Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tibet, parts of India, parts of Burma, all
of China, and parts of Vietnam.
The Mongol clans were united by Temuchin, called Genghis Khan ("mighty ruler"),
in the early thirteenth century. His ambition was to rule all lands between the
oceans (Pacific and Atlantic) and he nearly did so. Beginning with only an
estimated 25,000 warriors, he added strength by subjugating other nomads and
attacked northern China in 1211. He took Beijing in 1215 after a campaign that
may have cost 30 million Chinese lives. The Mongols then turned west, capturing
the great trading city Bukhara on the Silk Road in 1220. The city was burned to
the ground and the inhabitants murdered.
Following Genghis Khan's death in 1227, his son Ogedei completed the conquest of
northern China and advanced into Europe. He destroyed Kiev in 1240 and advanced
into Hungary. When Ogedei died on campaign in 1241, the entire army fell back to
settle the question of succession. Europe was spared as Mongol rulers
concentrated their efforts against the Middle East and southern China. Hulagu, a
grandson of Genghis, exterminated the Muslim "Assassins" and then took the
Muslim capital of Baghdad in 1258. Most of the city's 100,000 inhabitants were
murdered. In 1260 a Muslim army of Egyptian Mamelukes (warrior slaves of high
status) defeated the Mongols in present-day Israel, ending the Mongol threat to
Islam and its holy cities.
Kublai Khan, another grandson of Genghis, completed the conquest of China in
1279, establishing the Yuan dynasty. Attempted invasions of Japan were thrown
back with heavy loss in 1274 and 1281. In 1294 Kublai Khan died in China, and
Mongol power began to decline in Asia and elsewhere. In 1368 the Yuan dynasty in
China was overthrown in favor of the Ming.
In the 1370's a Turkish-Mongol warrior claiming descent from Genghis Khan fought
his way to leadership of the Mongol states of Central Asia and set out to
restore the Mongol Empire. His name was Timur Leng (Timur, "the Lame," or
Tamerlane to Europeans and the Prince of Destruction to Asians). With another
army of 100,000 or so horsemen, he swept into Russia and Persia, fighting mainly
other Muslims. In 1398 he sacked Delhi, murdering 100,000 inhabitants. He rushed
west defeating an Egyptian Mameluke army in Syria. In 1402 he defeated a large
Ottoman Turk army near modern Ankara. On the verge of destroying the Ottoman
Empire, he turned again suddenly. He died in 1405 while marching for China. He
preferred capturing wealth and engaged in wholesale slaughter, without pausing
to install stable governments in his wake. Because of this, the huge realm
inherited by his sons fell apart quickly after his death.
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Persians
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The Persian Empire had existed for many centuries when the Middle Ages began. It
had been reassembled following the conquest by Alexander in the fourth century
BC and the subsequent breakup of his empire in later centuries. The Persians had
been fighting the Romans since the third century AD.
The Persian Empire stretched from Mesopotamia to India and from the Caspian Sea
to the Persian Gulf, encompassing the modern nations of Iraq, Iran, and
Afghanistan. They fought the Romans, and later the Byzantines, for control of
modern Syria, Turkey, Palestine, Israel, Egypt, and Arabia. The capital of the
Persian Empire was Ctesiphon, called Baghdad today.
During the third and fourth centuries, the Romans made several attempts to
subdue the Persians. In 364 a peace treaty was signed between the two that
allowed the Persians to consolidate their power to the east and north. Beginning
with the sixth century, the Persians began attacking the Byzantine Empire in
Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and modern Turkey. The war between the two powers went
back and forth. In 626 the Persians besieged Byzantium itself without success,
and the Byzantines were able to invade Persia the following year. Peace was made
between the two exhausted empires in 628.
The Persians were unprepared for the fury of the Islamic Arabs in the seventh
century. The Sassanid dynasty of Persia ended in battle in 636. The Persians did
not have a capital with defenses comparable to those of Constantinople. Muslim
conquest of Persia was complete by 651.
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Saracens
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The name Saracen applied originally to nomadic desert peoples from the area
stretching from modern Syria to Saudi Arabia. In broader usage the name applied
to all Arabs of the Middle Ages. These desert nomads erupted suddenly in the
seventh century and established a far-reaching empire within a century and a
half. Their conquest was fueled by faith and high morale. Following the
teachings of the prophet Mohammed, their intent was to change the religious and
political landscape of the entire planet.
By 613 the prophet Mohammed was preaching a new religion he called Islam.
Largely ignored in his home city of Mecca, he withdrew to Medina, built up a
strong following there, and returned to attack and capture Mecca. Following his
death in 632, his teachings were collected to form the Koran, the Islamic holy
book. In 634 his followers began their jihad, or holy war. Within five years
they had overrun Egypt, Palestine, and Syria. Their tolerance of Jews and
Christians eased their conquest because these people had been suffering some
persecution under the Byzantines.
In the next 60 years, both North Africa to the west and Persia to the east fell
to Islam. In the early eighth century, Saracens from Tangiers invaded the
Iberian Peninsula and conquered the Visigoth kingdom established there after the
fall of Rome. In Asia they took Asia Minor from the Byzantines and attempted to
capture Constantinople with a combined attack from land and sea. The great walls
of the city frustrated the land attack and the Saracen fleet was defeated at
sea. In the west, Charles Martel of the Franks stopped a Saracen invasion of
modern France in 732 at Poitiers.
Frustrated in the west, the forces of Islam turned east. By 750 they had
conquered to the Indus River and north over India into Central Asia to the
borders of China.
In 656 the Muslim world fell into civil war between two factions, the Sunnites
and the Shiites. They differed on several points, including who should be caliph
and interpretation of the Koran. The result of the 60-year war was that the
Islamic state broke into pieces, some governed by Sunnites (the Iberian
Peninsula) and others by Shiites (Egypt and modern Iraq). The new Islamic states
acted independently, thereafter.
Muslim Spain developed into one of the great states of Europe during the early
Middle Ages. Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived together in relative harmony,
and a rich culture rose out of these multiple influences. There was a flowering
of the arts, architecture, and learning. By 1000, however, Muslim Spain had
divided into warring factions. This civil war facilitated the slow reconquest of
the peninsula (the Reconquista) by the emerging states of Castile and Aragon,
completed finally in 1492.
Asia Minor and the Middle East were conquered by Muslim Turks in the early
eleventh century. In response to a call for aid from the Byzantines, a series of
Crusades was launched from Europe to regain Palestine from the Turks. The
independent Muslim states in the area lost Palestine and the Eastern
Mediterranean coast to the First Crusade. In the last part of the twelfth
century, the great Saracen leader Saladin succeeded in uniting Egypt, Syria, and
smaller states, and he retook Jerusalem.
The Muslim states remained independent long after the Middle Ages and eventually
developed into the modern Arab nations of the Middle East and North Africa. They
went into economic decline, however, when the European nations opened trade
routes of their own to Asia in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
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Teutons
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The origin of Germany traces back to the crowning of Charlemagne as Holy Roman
Emperor in 800. Upon his death the empire was split into three parts that
gradually coalesced into two: the western Frankish kingdom that became France
and the eastern kingdom that became Germany. The title of Holy Roman Emperor
remained in Charlemagne's family until the tenth century when they died out. In
919 Henry, Duke of Saxony, was elected king of Germany by his fellow dukes. His
son Otto became emperor in 962.
The Holy Roman Empire that Otto I controlled extended over the German plain
north to the Baltic, eastward into parts of modern Poland, and southward through
modern Switzerland, modern Austria, and northern Italy. From the outset, the
emperors had a difficult problem keeping control of two disparate regions-
Germany and Italy-that were separated by the Alps.
The Holy Roman Empire was successful at first because it benefited the principal
members, Germany and Italy. The Germans were not far removed from the barbarian
condition. They had been conquered by Charlemagne only a century earlier. They
benefited greatly from Italian culture, technology, and trade. The Italians
welcomed the relative peace and stability the empire ensured. Italy had been
invaded time and again for the previous 500 years. The protection of the empire
defended the papacy and allowed the city-states of Italy to begin their growth.
The imperial armies were manned partially by tenants of church lands who owed
service to the emperor. A second important contingent were the ministriales, a
corps of serfs who received the best training and equipment as knights but who
were not free men. These armies were used to put down revolts or interference by
local nobles and peasants or to defend against raids by Vikings from the north
and Magyars from the east.
Because Germany remained a collection of independent principalities in
competition, German warriors became very skilled. The most renowned German
soldiers were the Teutonic Knights, a religious order of warriors inspired by
the Crusades. The Teutonic Knights spread Christianity into the Baltic region by
conquest but were eventually halted by Alexander Nevsky at the battle on frozen
Lake Peipus.
A confrontation between the emperors and the church over investiture of bishops
weakened the emperors in both Germany and Italy. During periods of temporary
excommunication of the emperor and outright war against Rome, imperial authority
lapsed. The local German princes solidified their holdings or fought off the
Vikings with no interference or help from the emperor. In Italy, the rising
city-states combined to form the Lombard League and refused to recognize the
emperor.
Political power in both Germany and Italy shifted from the emperor to the local
princes and cities. The ministriales rebelled, taking control of the cities and
castles they garrisoned and declaring themselves free. During desperate attempts
to regain Italy, more concessions were given to the local princes in Germany. By
the middle of the thirteenth century, the Holy Roman Empire existed in name
only. The throne remained empty for 20 years. The German princes cared only
about their own holdings. The Italian city-states did not want a German ruler
and were strong enough to defend themselves.
Future emperors in the Middle Ages were elected by the German princes but they
ruled in name only, controlling little more than their own family estates.
Germany remained a minor power in Europe for centuries to come.
-----------------------------------
Turks
-----------------------------------
The name Turk refers to two different Muslim groups of the Middle East-first the
Seljuks and then the Ottomans. The Seljuks, nomads from the steppes near the
Caspian Sea, converted to Islam around the tenth century. Approximately 70,000
Seljuks started as mercenaries to fill the ranks of the Islamic army of the
caliph of Baghdad. These mercenaries converted to the Sunni branch of Islam. In
1055 they became the real power behind the caliph in Baghdad and began extending
their rule. Their leaders took the title sultan, meaning "holders of power." By
1100 they controlled most of Anatolia (taken from the Byzantines), Palestine,
the lands surrounding the Persian Gulf, the holy cities of Arabia, and as far
east as Samarkand.
In 1071 the Seljuks achieved a stunning victory over a Byzantine army at
Malazgirt in modern Turkey, which led to Turkish occupation of most of Anatolia.
At nearly the same time, they successfully captured Jerusalem from its Egyptian
Muslim rulers. These two events shocked the Byzantines, the papacy, and the
Christian Europeans. The result was the Crusades, which carried on for the next
200 years.
The Seljuk Turks were worn down by the recurring wars with the Crusaders, even
though they were successful ultimately in regaining control of Palestine. They
were threatened simultaneously by the activities of the Assassins, a heretical
sect of Islam. Internally, Islam entered a period of introspection because of
the popularity of Sufi mysticism. During this period of exhaustion and weakness,
they were attacked suddenly by the Mongols and collapsed. Baghdad fell to the
invaders in 1258 and the Seljuk Empire disappeared.
Islamic peoples from Anatolia (modern Turkey in Asia Minor) were unified in the
early fourteenth century under Sultan Osman I and took the name Osmanli, or
Ottomans, in his honor. The Ottomans swore a jihad against the crumbling
Byzantine Empire and took their campaign around Constantinople into the Balkans.
In 1389 the Serbs were defeated. In 1396 a "crusader" army from Hungary was
defeated. Ottoman successes were temporarily halted by the Mongols under
Tamerlane, but he moved on with his army and the Ottomans recovered.
Sultan Mehmed II ("the Conqueror") at last captured Constantinople on May 29,
1453. The great walls of Constantinople were battered by 70 guns for eight weeks
and then 15,000 Janissaries led the successful assault.
The Ottomans pushed on into Europe following the capture of Constantinople and
threatened a sort of reverse Crusade. They were stopped by a Hungarian army at
Belgrade in 1456, however. Attacks on Vienna were repulsed in 1529 and again in
1683. At its peak in the sixteenth century, the Ottoman Empire reached up into
Europe to Budapest and Odessa and included all of Greece and the Balkans, the
lands surrounding the Black Sea, Asia Minor, the Levant, Arabia, Egypt, and most
of North Africa. The Ottoman Empire remained a significant world power until
World War I in the twentieth century.
-----------------------------------
Vikings
-----------------------------------
The Vikings (meaning "northmen") were the last of the barbarian tribes called
Germans by the Romans to terrorize Europe. Spreading out from their homelands in
Scandinavia, they struck suddenly across the seas from their dragon boats
(called such because of the dragon heads carved on the bow and stern). They
began by raiding, pillaging, and withdrawing before any serious armed resistance
could be mounted, but they gradually grew more bold. Eventually they occupied
and settled significant parts of Europe.
Being pagan, they did not hesitate to kill churchmen and loot church holdings,
and they were feared for their ruthlessness and ferocity. At the same time, they
were remarkable craftsmen, sailors, explorers, and traders.
The Viking homelands were Norway, Sweden, and Denmark. They and their
descendants controlled, at least temporarily, most of the Baltic Coast, much of
inland Russia, Normandy in France, England, Sicily, southern Italy, and parts of
Palestine. They discovered Iceland in 825 (Irish monks were there already) and
settled there in 875. They colonized Greenland in 985. Some people think that
the Vikings reached Newfoundland and explored part of North America 500 years
before the voyage of Columbus.
Vikings began raiding and then settling along the eastern Baltic Sea in the
sixth and seventh centuries. At the end of the eighth century, they were making
long raids down the rivers of modern Russia and setting up forts along the way
for defense. In the ninth century, they were ruling Kiev and in 907 a force of
2000 ships and 80,000 men attacked Constantinople. They were bought off by the
emperor of Byzantium with very favorable terms of trade.
Vikings struck first in the West in the late eighth century. Danes attacked and
looted the famous island monastery at Lindisfarne on the northeast coast of
England, beginning a trend. The size and frequency of raids against England,
France, and Germany increased to the point of becoming invasions. Settlements
were established as bases for further raids. Viking settlements in northwestern
France came to be known as Normandy ("from the northmen"), and the residents
were called Normans.
In 865 a large Danish army invaded England, and they went on to hold much of
England for the next two centuries. One of the last kings of all England before
1066 was Canute, who ruled Denmark and Norway simultaneously. In 871 another
large fleet sailed up the Seine River to attack Paris. They besieged the city
for two years before being bought off with a large cash payment and permission
to loot part of western France unimpeded.
In 911 the French king made the Viking chief of Normandy a duke in return for
converting to Christianity and ceasing to raid. From the Duchy of Normandy came
a remarkable series of warriors, including William I, who conquered England in
1066, Robert Guiscard and his family, who took Sicily from the Arabs between
1060 and 1091, and Baldwin I, king of the crusader kingdom of Jerusalem.
Viking raids stopped at the end of the tenth century. Denmark, Sweden, and
Norway had become kingdoms, and much of their king's energy was devoted to
running their lands. The spread of Christianity weakened the old pagan warrior
values, which died out. The Norse were also absorbed by the cultures into which
they had intruded. The occupiers and conquerors of England became English, the
Normans became French, and the Rus became Russians.
-----------------------------------
Medieval Weapons
-----------------------------------
The traditional and popular understanding of European warfare in the Middle Ages
held that mounted knights dominated European battlefields during the years 800
to 1400. Knights were encased in plate armor and charged with lances,
scattering, skewering, and riding down any foot troops in the way as they closed
with each other to decide the battle. The era of the knight came to an end when
infantry reestablished a prominent battlefield role with new weapons (firearms)
and revived skills (formations of massed pikeman). This view was fostered by the
art and limited accounts of the era that featured the mounted nobility while
ignoring the commoners and peasants who fought on foot. The perception that
knights dominated and that warfare consisted mainly of cavalry charges is false.
Foot troops were an important component of all armies in the Middle Ages. They
fought in hand-to-hand mкlйes and as missile troops (bows of various types and
later handguns). Foot soldiers were critical for both sides in sieges against
castles and fortified towns.
Warfare in the Middle Ages was dominated actually by sieges of one sort or
another. Battles on open ground between armies were infrequent. Armies played a
sort of chess match, maneuvering to take important castles and towns, while
avoiding engagements where a large and expensive force might be lost.
On those occasions where pitched battles did occur, knights could be
devastating. A determined charge by armored knights was a powerful force. It was
more likely, however, that victory went to the side making best use of the three
major army components together-mкlйe infantry, missile troops, and cavalry. Also
important were the factors that have always influenced battle, such as
intelligent use of terrain, troop morale, leadership, discipline, and tactics.
-----------------------------------
Dark Age Armies
-----------------------------------
The Germanic tribes that overran the Roman Empire at the start of the Middle
Ages fought primarily on foot with axes and swords, while wearing little armor
other than perhaps helmets and shields. They were organized into war bands under
the leadership of a chief. They were fierce warriors but fought in undisciplined
mobs. The disciplined Roman legions had great success against the Germanic
tribes for centuries, in part because emotional armies are usually very fragile.
When the Roman legions declined in quality at the empire's end, however, the
Germanic tribes were able to push across the frontier.
Not all Germanic tribes fought on foot. Exceptions were the Goths, who had
adapted to horses when they settled previously north of the Black Sea. Both the
Visigoths and Ostrogoths learned about cavalry by being in contact with the
Eastern Roman Empire south of the Danube and barbarian horsemen from Asia. The
Eastern Roman armies put a greater emphasis on cavalry because of their
conflicts with mounted barbarians, the Parthians, and the Persians.
Following the fall of Rome, most fighting in Europe for the next few centuries
involved clashes of foot soldiers. One exception might have been the battles of
Britain's Arthur against the invading Saxons, although we have no evidence that
his success was due to using cavalry. Arthur may have halted Saxon progress in
Britain for 50 years, perhaps because of cavalry or the use of disciplined
troops. Another exception was the Byzantine army that recaptured North Africa
from the Vandals and almost restored Italy to Eastern Roman control in the sixth
century. The strength of the Byzantine army of this period was cavalry. The
Byzantines benefited also from both superior leadership and an understanding of
tactics that the barbarians lacked.
Fighting in these first centuries rarely involved groups that could be described
as armies. They were the same war bands as before, small by Byzantine or Asian
standards and employing limited tactics or strategy. The main military
activities were raids to obtain loot in the form of food, livestock, weapons,
and slaves. Aggressive tribes expanded by devastating the food production of
enemies, starving them out, and enslaving the survivors. Battles were mainly
clashes of war bands, fighting hand to hand with axes and swords. They fought as
mobs, not the disciplined formations typical of the Romans. They used shields
and helmets and wore some armor. Leather armor was common; only chieftains and
elites wore chain mail.
In the early eighth century, Visgothic Spain fell to the warriors of Islam, many
of whom fought as light cavalry. At the same time, nomadic Magyars from the
Hungarian plains increased their mounted raids on western Europe. In 732 a
Frankish infantry army was able to defeat a Muslim cavalry raid near Poitiers,
ending Muslim northward expansion. Charles Martel, warlord of the Franks, was
impressed by the Moorish cavalry and began mounting part of his army. This
conversion continued later in the century under the great king of the Franks,
Charlemagne. Frankish heavy cavalry was the genesis of the mounted knight that
came to typify medieval warfare.
Annually for 30 years, Charlemagne conducted military campaigns that extended
the size of his empire. The Frankish army consisted of both infantry and armored
cavalry, but the cavalry was his most valuable force and the part that got the
most notice. It could move quickly and strike hard against foes fighting mainly
on foot. Charlemagne's campaigns were economic raids, burning, looting, and
devastating enemies into submission. He fought very few battles against
organized opposition.
The Vikings fought exclusively on foot, except that it was their habit to gather
horses upon landing and use them to raid farther inland. Their raids began in
the late eighth century and ended in the eleventh century. The descendants of
Viking raiders that became the Normans of northwestern France adapted quickly to
the use of horses and became some of the most successful warriors of the late
Middle Ages.
In the early tenth century, the Germans began developing the use of cavalry
under Otto I, both as a rapid response force against Viking raids and to repel
mounted barbarian raids from the East.
By the end of the tenth century, heavy cavalry was an important component of
most European armies except in Anglo-Saxon England, Celtic lands (Ireland,
Wales, and Scotland), and Scandinavia.
-----------------------------------
Knights
-----------------------------------
By the time of Charlemagne, mounted warriors had become the elite military units
of the Franks and this innovation spread across Europe. Fighting from a horse
was most glorious because the mounted man rode into battle, moved quickly, and
trampled down lower-class enemies on foot. When cavalry faced cavalry, the
charge at speed and resulting violent contact was exhilarating. Fighting while
mounted was most prestigious because of the high cost of horses, weapons, and
armor. Only wealthy individuals, or the retainers of the wealthy, could fight
mounted.
Kings of the late Dark Ages had little money with which to pay for large
contingents of expensive cavalry. Warriors were made vassals and given fiefs of
land. They were expected to use their profits from the land to pay for horses
and equipment. In most cases, vassals also supported groups of professional
soldiers. At a time when central authority was weak and communications poor, the
vassal, aided by his retainers, was responsible for law and order within the
fief. In return for his fief, the vassal agreed to provide military service to
his lord. In this way, high lords and kings were able to raise armies when
desired. The elites of these armies were the mounted vassals.
As the Middle Ages progressed, the elite mounted warriors of western Europe
became known as knights. A code of behavior evolved, called chivalry, which
detailed how they should conduct themselves. They were obsessed with honor, both
at war and at peace, although mainly when dealing with their peers, not the
commoners and peasants who constituted the bulk of the population. Knights
became the ruling class, controlling the land from which all wealth derived. The
aristocrats were noble originally because of their status and prestige as the
supreme warriors in a violent world. Later their status and prestige were based
mainly on heredity, and the importance of being a warrior declined.
Chivalry
When first used, the term "chivalry" meant horsemanship. The warrior elite of
the Middle Ages distinguished themselves from the peasants and clergy and each
other by their skill as horsemen and warriors. Fast and strong horses, beautiful
and efficient weapons, and well-made armor were the status symbols of the day.
By the twelfth century, chivalry had come to mean an entire way of life. The
basic rules of the chivalric code were the following:
* Protect women and the weak.
* Champion justice against injustice and evil.
* Love the homeland.
* Defend the Church, even at the risk of death.
In practice, knights and aristocrats ignored the code of chivalry when it suited
them. Feuds between nobles and fights over land took precedent over any code.
The Germanic tribal custom that called for a chieftain's property to be split
among his sons, rather than pass to the eldest, often triggered wars among
brothers for the spoils. An example of this was the conflict between
Charlemagne's grandsons. The Middle Ages were plagued with such civil wars in
which the big losers were usually the peasants.
In the late Middle Ages, kings created orders of chivalry, which were exclusive
organizations of high-ranking knights that swore allegiance to their king and
each other. Becoming a member of chivalric order was extremely prestigious,
marking a man as one of the most important of the realm. In 1347 during the
Hundred Years War, Edward III of England founded the Order of the Garter, still
in existence today. This order consisted of the 25 highest-ranking knights of
England and was founded to ensure their loyalty to the king and dedication to
victory in the war.
The Order of the Golden Fleece was established by Philip the Good of Burgundy in
1430 and became the richest and most powerful order in Europe. Louis XI of
France established the Order of St. Michael to control his most important
nobles. The Orders of Calatrava, Santiago, and Alcantara were founded to drive
the Moors out of Spain. They were united under Ferdinand of Aragon, whose
marriage to Isabella of Castile set the foundation for a single Spanish kingdom.
He eventually became master of the three orders, although they remained
separate.
Becoming a Knight
At the age of 7 or 8, boys of the noble class were sent to live with a great
lord as a page. Pages learned basic social skills from the women of the lord's
household and began basic training in the use of weapons and horsemanship.
Around the age of 14 the youth became a squire, a knight in training. Squires
were assigned to a knight who continued the youth's education. The squire was a
general companion and servant to the knight. The duties of the squire included
polishing armor and weapons (prone to rust), helping his knight dress and
undress, looking after his belongings, and even sleeping across his doorway as a
guard.
At tournaments and in battle, the squire assisted his knight as needed. He
brought up replacement weapons and horses, treated wounds, brought a wounded
knight out of danger, or made sure of a decent burial if needed. In many cases
the squire went into battle with his knight and fought at his side. A knight
avoided fighting a squire on the other side, if possible, seeking instead a
knight of rank similar to or higher than his own. Squires, on the other hand,
sought to engage enemy knights, seeking to gain glory by killing or capturing an
enemy knight of high rank.
In addition to martial training, squires built up their strength through games,
learned to at least read, if not write, and studied music, dancing, and singing.
By the age of 21, a squire was eligible to become a knight. Suitable candidates
were "knighted" by a lord or other knight of high standing. The ceremony for
becoming a knight was simple at first, usually being "dubbed" on the shoulder
with a sword and then buckling on a sword belt. The ceremony grew more elaborate
and the Church added to the rite. Candidates bathed, cut their hair close, and
stayed up all night in a vigil of prayer. In the morning the candidate received
the sword and spurs of a knight.
Knighthood was usually attainable only for those who possessed the land or
income necessary to meet the responsibilities of the rank. Important lords and
bishops could support a sizable contingent of knights, however, and many found
employment in these circumstances. Squires who fought particularly well might
also gain the recognition of a great lord during battle and be knighted on the
field.
Tournaments
Mock battles between knights, called tournaments, began in the tenth century and
were immediately condemned by the second Council of Letrбn, under Pope
Innocentius II, and the kings of Europe who objected to the injuries and deaths
of knights in what they considered frivolous activity. Tournaments flourished,
however, and became an integral part of a knight's life.
Tournaments began as simple contests between individual knights but grew more
elaborate through the centuries. They became important social events that would
attract patrons and contestants from great distances. Special lists (tournament
grounds) were erected with stands for spectators and pavilions for combatants.
Knights continued to compete as individuals but also in teams. They dueled
against each other using a variety of weapons and held mock mкlйe battles with
many knights on a side. Jousts, or tilts, involving two charging knights
fighting with lances, became the premier event. Knights competed like modern-day
athletes for prizes, prestige, and the eyes of the ladies who filled the stands.
So many men were being killed in tournaments by the thirteenth century, that
leaders, including the pope, became alarmed. Sixty knights died in a 1240
tournament held in Cologne, for example. The pope wanted as many knights as
possible to fight on the Crusades in the Holy Land, rather than be killed in
tournaments. Weapons were blunted and rules attempted to reduce the incidence of
injury, but serious and fatal injuries occurred. Henry II of France was mortally
wounded, for example, in a joust at a tournament held to celebrate his
daughter's wedding.
Challenges were usually issued for a friendly contest, but grudges between two
enemies might be settled in a fight to the death. Tournament losers were
captured and paid a ransom to the victors in horses, weapons, and armor to
obtain their release. Heralds kept track of tournament records, like modern
baseball box scores. A low-ranking knight could amass wealth through prizes and
attract a wealthy wife.
Military Orders
During the Crusades military orders of knights were created to support the
Christian goals of the movement. They became the fiercest of the Crusaders and
the most hated enemies of the Arabs. These orders carried on after the Crusades
in Palestine ended in failure.
The first of these orders were the Knights of the Temple, or the Templars,
founded in 1108 to protect the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem. The Templars wore a
white surcoat supplanted with a red cross and took the same vows as a
Benedictine monk-poverty, chastity, and obedience. The Templars were among the
bravest defenders of the Holy Land. They were the last Crusaders to leave the
Holy Land. In the following years they grew wealthy from donations and by
lending money at interest, attracting the envy and distrust of kings. In 1307
King Philip IV of France accused them of many crimes, including heresy, arrested
them, and confiscated their lands. Other European leaders followed his lead and
the Templars were destroyed.
The Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, or the Hospitallers, were set up
originally to tend to sick and poor pilgrims visiting the Holy Sepulcher. They
converted shortly into a military order. They wore a red surcoat with a white
cross and also took the vows of St. Benedict. The Hospitallers set a high
standard and did not allow their order to become rich and indolent. When forced
out of the Holy Land following the surrender of their great castle, the Krak des
Chevaliers, they retreated to the island of Rhodes, which they defended for many
years. Driven from Rhodes by the Turks they took up residence on Malta.
The third great military order was the Teutonic Knights, founded in 1190 to
protect German pilgrims traveling to the Holy Land. Before the end of the
Crusades they had turned their efforts toward converting the heathens in Prussia
and in the Baltic States.
Heraldry
To distinguish knights on the battlefield, a system of badges called heraldry
was developed. A special badge was designed for each nobleman to be shown on his
shield, surcoat, flags, and seal. A surcoat decorated with a knight's badge
became known as a coat-of-arms and this term came to describe the badges
themselves. An independent organization known as the College of Heralds designed
the individual badges and ensured that each was unique. Badges were recorded by
the heralds in special books under their care.
Coats-of-arms were handed down from one generation to the next and would be
modified by marriage. Certain designs were reserved for royalty in different
countries. By the late Middle Ages towns, guilds, and even prominent nonnoble
townsmen were granted coats-of-arms.
On the battlefield, combatants used coats-of-arms to distinguish friend and foe
and to choose a worthy opponent in a mкlйe. Heralds made lists of knights about
to fight based on their badges. Heralds were also considered neutrals and would
act as intermediaries between two armies. In this manner they might pass
messages between the defenders of a castle or town and its besiegers. After a
battle, heralds identified the dead by their coats-of-arms.
-----------------------------------
Medieval Weapons
-----------------------------------
For most of the Middle Ages, the technology of weapons was little changed from
that of the ancient world, remaining primarily variants of the club, knife,
spear, axe, and arrow. An important innovation was the heavy mounted horseman
using the lance. The mounted knight was significantly more potent than any
cavalry of the ancient world. The closest ancient equivalent may have been the
Companion cavalry of Alexander the Great.
By the tenth century Europe had bypassed the ancients in most areas, including
weaponry. The evolution of the heavy horseman triggered corresponding innovation
to defend against him. This resulted in new pole arms to ward off or engage
knights.
The longbow and crossbow were innovations in the West. The crossbow was known to
the ancient Chinese, however.
The revolutionary technology of the Middle Ages was the development of gunpowder
weapons, both cannons and hand weapons, discussed later.
.-----------------.
| Cavalry Weapons |
'-----------------'
Since the first appearance of cavalry around 1000 BC, mounted troops have
fulfilled several important roles in battle. They acted as scouts, skirmishers,
a shock force for mкlйe combat, a rear guard, and the pursuit of a retreating
enemy. Cavalry were divided into several different categories depending on
equipment and training, and some categories were better suited for certain roles
than others. Light cavalry wore little or no armor and was best suited for
scouting, skirmishing, and acting as a rear guard. Heavy cavalry wore armor and
was better suited for use as a shock force that charged the enemy. All types of
cavalry excelled at pursuit.
Knights of the Middle Ages were heavy cavalry, and the code of chivalry
emphasized their role as shock troops charging enemy cavalry and infantry. From
the thirteenth century on, the term man-at-arms was used to describe armored
warriors fighting on horse and on foot. The new term applied to knights as well
as squires, gentry, and professional soldiers.
The advantages of knights in battle were speed, intimidation, power, and height.
As the Middle Ages progressed, the equipment of knights improved to enhance
these advantages.
Weapons
The spear, and later the larger lance, was the weapon with which cavalry opened
a battle. It was ideal for stabbing opponents on foot, especially those in
flight. The presentation of the spear in front of a mounted horseman added
greatly to the intimidation caused by an approaching charge. Much of the force
of the horse could be transmitted through the spear point at the moment of
impact. The charging knight became a thundering missile.
Historians disagree on the importance of the stirrup to the rise of knights. The
stirrup first appeared in Asia and reached Europe in the eighth century. Some
believe that it was critical to the rise of knights because it allowed the rider
to brace himself and his lance, thereby transmitting the entire force of the
charging horse through the lance point. No one argues with the advantage of this
force multiplication, but others suggest that the high saddle developed in Roman
times allowed riders to transmit this power before the stirrup appeared. The
Bayeux Tapestry, which depicts William's conquest of England in 1066, shows the
highly regarded Norman knights using their spears mainly as overhand stabbing or
throwing spears, not as couched lances. By this time the stirrup had been known
in Europe for at least two centuries. For the remainder of the Middle Ages, the
mounted charge by knights holding couched lances was the epitome of combats for
knights. It was not always the correct tactic, however.
The initial charge by knights often resulted in the loss of spears or lances, or
the charge ended in a general mкlйe. In either case, knights switched to another
weapon. This was usually their sword. The cavalry sword evolved into the saber,
a wide, heavy blade that a man standing in his stirrups could swing down with
tremendous force on the head and upper body of opponents. Swords were the
weapons that knights prized most highly because they could be carried on the
person, prominently displayed, and personalized. They were the most common
weapons for hand-to-hand combat between knights. Good swords were also
expensive, so ownership was another distinction of the nobility.
Other choices of mкlйe weapon included the hammer and mace (evolutions of the
club), the axe, and the flail. Hammers and maces were popular with fighting
churchmen and warrior monks trying to obey the letter of the Bible's admonition
about shedding blood, which edged weapons were prone to do.
Under no circumstances did knights use missile weapons of any kind. Killing an
opponent at range with an arrow, bolt, or bullet was considered dishonorable.
Knights fought worthy foes of the same rank when possible and killed face to
face or not at all.
Armor
Chain mail armor was worn by the late Romans and by some of the invading
Germanic tribes, including the Goths. Chain mail remained popular with the
nobility of medieval Europe until more protective plate armor came into use in
the thirteenth century. The change was made in part because an arrow or sharp
sword point could pierce chain mail. A cloth tunic, called a surcoat, was worn
over the chain mail, especially during the Crusades to reflect the sun.
Helmets also evolved from simple conical designs, to large metal buckets, to
large sculpted pieces designed to deflect arrows. Later, helmets could be bolted
to the armor worn on the body.
Full suits of armor weighing up to 60 pounds appeared in the fourteenth century.
Plate armor was well designed and knights retained a surprising amount of
agility. An armored knight on the ground was not helpless and could easily stand
up. There are accounts and depictions of armored men doing handstands and other
gymnastics in lighter moments. Later suits put increased emphasis on deflecting
missiles and reinforced areas most exposed to blows. Elaborate full suits of
engraved plate armor appeared late during the age and were more ceremonial and
prestigious than practical.
Armor was a large expense for a knight who equipped himself and a squire. An
important lord had to provide armor for many knights. The making of armor was an
important business, and a large market in used armor developed during the Middle
Ages. Common soldiers on the victorious side of a battle could make a
substantial sum by stripping dead knights of their armor and selling it.
Horses
Knights took special pride in their horses, which were bred for speed and
strength. They required extensive training, as well, to be manageable during a
charge and mкlйe. Horses were trained to charge with minimal guidance, freeing
the knight to hold his shield and lance. Historians disagree as to whether the
horses of knights were the heavy horse thought necessary to carry the weight of
a fully equipped knight or a smaller horse valued for its speed and agility.
Horsemanship was another characteristic by which the elite knights distinguished
themselves from the commoners. It was practiced while hunting, a popular leisure
activity of the nobles that carries on today in the traditional foxhunt.
.-----------------.
| Missile Weapons |
'-----------------'
Bows of one type or another played an important role in battle throughout the
Middle Ages. They were used as direct fire weapons against individual targets on
battlefields and during sieges. In some cases they were used as area fire
weapons.
Missile fire allowed men to cause casualties at range. Archers were used as
light troops to cause casualties and weaken enemy morale due to losses before
mкlйe combat. If the enemy force could be weakened or shaken, the chances of
winning the mкlйe were enhanced.
Bows
Bows used during the Middle Ages were of various types, including the short bow,
the composite bow, and the longbow. The short bow was 3 to 4 feet long and
rather easy to make and use. It was employed widely and the most common bow
encountered. It had medium range, power, and accuracy and required substantial
experience and training for effective use.
The composite bow was of Asiatic origin. It was made from a composite of wood or
bone strips bonded together. The lamination created a more powerful bow, but one
that required more strength and training than the common bow. This relatively
short bow was the preferred weapon of horse archers, especially the Mongols and
other horse peoples from Asia. A variant of the composite bow was curved forward
at the tips during manufacture (by steaming and bending the laminate). This
recurved bow generated more power and required a high degree of strength and
skill.
The longbow originated in Wales and spread to England. It was a 6-foot bow made
from a single piece of wood, usually from the yew tree. The longbow shot a 3-
foot arrow (cloth yard). These were fitted with broad tips for use against
infantry (for piercing leather armor and causing lacerations) and narrow tips
for use against armored men (to pierce mail or plate armor). Shooting the
longbow required extensive training and practice; men experienced with the
weapon could get off six well-aimed shots in a minute. Longbows had a long range
and were quite powerful. Large contingents of experienced longbowmen were a
devastating force on many battlefields of the Middle Ages. They could fire
individually aimed shots or rain down a barrage of arrows into an area.
The English encouraged the use of the longbow by sponsoring archery tournaments
throughout the land. All other sports were banned on Sundays. This created a
large pool of experienced bowmen from which they could recruit. Each English
shire was required by law to provide a number of bowmen each year. There was
usually no shortage of applicants because the pay of soldiers was so good
relative to other work.
Crossbows
The crossbow was known in ancient China but seems to have been reinvented in
Europe around 900. It had good range and was more powerful than most bows, but
it took much more time to load. An average crossbowman fired 2 shots per minute.
The bow of the crossbow was held horizontally and fired with a trigger that
released the taut bowstring. To load, the front of the weapon was pointed to the
ground and held in place by foot. The bowstring was pulled up and back with both
hands or with the help of cranks. The crossbow fired a quarrel, or bolt, which
was much shorter than a typical arrow. The quarrel did have flights (feathers)
for stabilization in flight and had a sharpened metal point.
Crossbowmen often carried a pavise shield into battle to provide cover while
they loaded. This was a tall shield with wooden braces attached. A force of
crossbowmen set up a wall of such shields and bent down behind the wall to load.
When they shot, only the crossbows and their helmeted heads appeared over the
wall of shields. If forced to fight in the open against a comparable force of
longbowmen, they were usually forced to withdraw.
The crossbow was a deadly weapon and was very popular for the simple reason that
it took little training to operate. Relatively raw soldiers could become
proficient with a crossbow very quickly, and a well-aimed shot could kill a
knight in armor who had spent a lifetime in combat training. The crossbow was
considered unfair in some circles (those of the knights, primarily) because it
took so little skill. Richard I of England, the Lionheart, was wounded twice by
crossbow bolts. The second proved fatal. The idea of such great men being killed
easily by common soldiers or worse was appalling to the nobility. In the twelfth
century a pope tried to get the crossbow banned for being inhumane.
.--------------.
| Hand Weapons |
'--------------'
Foot soldiers armed with hand weapons were the third principal component of
medieval armies, along with cavalry and missile troops. Mкlйe infantry fought
hand to hand and were important both in pitched battles and during sieges.
Infantry consisted of peasants, common soldiers, and dismounted knights.
Hand Weapons
The Franks of the Dark Ages fought with a throwing axe called the francisca,
from which their tribe took its name. Their neighbors, the Saxons, fought with a
large, one-sided knife called a scramasax, from which they took their name.
With the development of the heavy cavalryman came the heavy sword, which was
used in hand-to-hand fighting on foot as well. Variants of the sword included a
two-handed version that required a lot of space to wield. Men-at-arms employed a
variety of weapons on foot, including axes (both one-handed and two-handed),
maces, flails, and hammers. A variant of the mace was a spiked ball fastened to
a shaft by a chain. As armor improved to reduce the effect of sword blows,
crushing and puncturing weapons became more favored.
Pole Arms
The basic spear was a useful weapon throughout the Middle Ages because it was
cheap to make and simple to use. Common foot soldiers and peasants could be
armed with it and pressed into battle service. In most cases such an expedient
was of little use, but with experience and some training large bodies of
spearmen could be effective.
Pole arms evolved through the medieval period and eventually reached a point
where formations of foot troops skilled in their use were extremely effective.
Advanced pole arms consisted of a spear point with one or more weapon faces
below the point. This additional weapon might be a large long blade, an axe, a
billhook, a hammer, or a spike.
Long pole arms evolved in response to the mounted knight and resulted in a
revival of a formation something like the ancient Greek phalanx. Horses would
not charge a disciplined formation of men that bristled with extended pole
weapons. A dense formation of pole arms held high also served as some protection
from arrows.
Foot soldiers first learned to stand behind wooden stakes set in the ground to
ward off cavalry. They then learned to deploy spears, pikes, and other pole arms
to ward off cavalry. This allowed the formation to move and take its anti-
cavalry stakes with it, in effect. In a mкlйe, the various attachments at the
end of the pole were used to pull horsemen off their mounts, push them off, or
cause wounds to the rider or horse. Although armored men were not helpless when
prone on the ground, as some have thought, they were at a disadvantage, at least
temporarily, to men wearing little or no armor before they could rise.
As the towns grew in the second half of the Middle Ages, they built up their own
militias of troops for defense and for feudal military service. Pole arms were
popular weapons with the town militias because they were relatively cheap to
provide and effective for the cost. Town militias trained with these weapons and
developed useful battlefield tactics. In time, formations of pole-armed men
learned to be aggressive, not simply defensive. Massed formations of pikeman
could physically attack other infantry and even cavalry. The Swiss lacked the
pastureland to support horse armies but became famous as pikemen. They often
served as mercenaries in other continental armies. The lowland cities of
Flanders and the highlands of Scotland also fielded pike units that were highly
regarded.
-----------------------------------
Medieval Armies
-----------------------------------
The first medieval armies were tribal war bands carried over from ancient times.
These evolved into feudal armies made up of a lord's vassals and their
respective retainers. Fief holders were required to provide a period of military
service each year. This began as weeks or months of service by the vassal
accompanied by professional soldiers he retained personally. The armies of later
kings and wealthy lords consisted of a higher proportion of professionals and
mercenaries. Late in the period, vassals sent money instead of actually serving
in armies, and this "martial tax" helped kings to support armies year-round.
Service in feudal armies was a matter of duty and honor for the knights. In a
warrior society, knights lived for the opportunity to fight. Success in battle
was the main path to recognition and wealth. For professional soldiers, often
the sons of the aristocracy left with little when the eldest began inheriting
everything, fighting was a job. It was duty for peasants also, when they were
called up, but certainly not an honor.
By the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, many commoners joined the ranks for
pay that was often much better than that for more peaceful employment. A strong
attraction for a commoner to become a soldier was the prospect of loot. Tribal
warriors stayed loyal to their warrior chief and fought for him so long as he
provided them with a living and loot. These ideals of the war band carried over
into the feudal age. Low-ranking knights and professional foot soldiers longed
for the opportunity to take part in the assault against a rich town or castle
because strongholds that resisted were traditionally looted. A soldier could
gather up many times his year's pay during the sack of a city. Pitched battles
also offered opportunities for gain. The armor and weapons of the dead could be
sold and captured knights could be ransomed.
.--------------.
| Organization |
'--------------'
The organization of feudal armies was kept simple in comparison to the large
national armies of more modern time. There were no permanent regiments,
divisions, or corps until the very end of the age. When a feudal army was
summoned, each vassal traveled to the meeting point with any knights, archers,
and footmen that he was required to bring. At the meeting point, the contingents
would be reassembled by role. The knights and their squires kept and marched
together, as did the archers and footmen.
Special units, such as engineers and the operators of siege artillery, were
usually professionals hired for the campaign. Christian mercenaries, for
example, operated the artillery employed by the Turks against Constantinople.
Being a mercenary soldier was a respected profession in the late Middle Ages.
Warrior entrepreneurs formed mercenary companies that allowed a rich lord or
city to hire a ready-made competent fighting force. Mercenary companies existed
that were all of one skill. For example, 2000 Genoese crossbowmen served in the
French army at the Battle of Crйcy in 1346. Other mercenary companies were mixed
forces of all arms. These were often described in terms of the number of lances
they contained. Each lance represented a mounted man-at-arms plus additional
mounted, foot, and missile troops. A company of 100 lances represented several
hundred fighting men. This system was the origin of the word "freelance."
Command hierarchy within a feudal army was flat. Not much maneuvering was
anticipated so there was little provision of large staffs to support the
commander and pass orders.
In 1439 Charles VII of France raised Royal Ordinance Companies. These companies
were filled with either knights or infantry and were paid from tax revenues.
Each company had a fixed complement of men; their armor and weapons were chosen
by the king rather than left to personal choice. This was the beginning of
modern standing armies in the West.
Supply
There was little provision for food and medical supplies. Medieval armies lived
off the land, to the detriment of everyone residing in an area they occupied or
passed through. Having a friendly army march through was no better than having
the enemy pass. Medieval armies did not linger in one area for long because
local supplies of food and forage were quickly exhausted. This was a particular
problem during sieges. If an army laying siege did not make arrangements to have
food and supplies brought in, it might have to lift its siege to avoid
starvation long before the defenders had to surrender.
Sanitation was also a problem when an army stayed in one place. A medieval army
brought along many animals, in addition to the horses of the knights, and sewage
problems led to dysentery. Feudal armies tended to waste away to disease and
desertion. During his campaign in France, Henry V of England lost an estimated
15 percent of his army to disease at the siege of Harfleur and more on the march
leading up to Agincourt. At the battle itself, he lost only 5 percent. Henry V
died of disease related to poor sanitation at another siege.
Deployment for Battle
Most battles were set-piece affairs where the two sides arranged themselves
before the fighting began. Campaigns of maneuver and meeting engagements were
rare.
Prior to battle, commanders divided their forces into contingents with specific
tasks in mind for each. The first separation might be into foot soldiers,
archers, and cavalry. These groups might be divided further into groups to be
given individual missions or to be held in reserve. A commander might arrange
several "battles" or "divisions" of knights, for example. These could be
launched individually as desired or held in reserve. Archers might be deployed
in front of the army with blocks of infantry in support. Once the army had been
arranged, the only major decisions were when to send in the prearranged pieces.
There was little provision for pulling back, reforming, or rearranging once the
fighting started. A force of knights, for example, could rarely be used more
than once. After they had been committed to action, they were usually reinforced
or withdrawn. A full charge by heavy cavalry caused such disruption, lost
equipment, and loss of horses that the force was essentially spent. The Norman
knights at Hastings were reformed for further attacks, but they did not launch a
full charge because they could not penetrate the Saxon shield-wall.
Superior commanders made use of the terrain to their advantage and conducted
reconnaissance to evaluate the enemy's strength and weaknesses.
Ransom
The ultimate rewards from successful battle included honors and grants of fiefs.
The proximate rewards included booty from looting bodies, ransacking captured
towns and castles, selling the armor and weapons of the dead, and ransoming
high-ranking prisoners. Knights were expected to pay ransoms to save their
lives. One of the highest recorded ransoms was more than US $20 million paid to
a German prince for the release of Richard I of England, captured during his
return from the Crusades.
At Agincourt the English were holding a large group of French knights at the
rear for ransom. During the battle, a French contingent raided toward the rear
of the English and briefly panicked Henry V. He ordered the execution of the
held French knights to prevent their release, thereby forgoing a fortune in
ransoms.
The capture of knights was recorded by heralds who kept a tally of which
soldiers were responsible and thereby due the bulk of the ransom. The heralds
then notified the prisoner's family, arranged the ransom payment, and obtained
the prisoner's release.
The popularity of ransoms seems remarkably civil but masks a darker story. Low-
ranking prisoners of no value might be killed out-of-hand to eliminate the
problem of guarding and feeding them.
.----------.
| Strategy |
'----------'
Medieval military strategy was concerned with control of the economic basis for
wealth and, thus, the ability to put armies in the field. At the start of the
era this meant primarily ravaging or defending the countryside because all
wealth originated in the fields and pastures. As the age progressed, towns
became important control points as centers of wealth from trade and
manufacturing.
Holding and taking castles was a key element of war because they defended the
farmland. The warrior occupants of the castle controlled the neighborhood. As
towns grew they were fortified also. Defending and taking them gradually became
more important than fighting for castles.
Field armies maneuvered to take the key fortified points and ravage the
countryside, or to prevent the enemy from conducting such a campaign. Pitched
battles were fought to end the destruction of enemy invasions. The Battle of
Hastings in 1066, for example, was fought by the Anglo-Saxons to stop an
invasion by the Normans. The Anglo-Saxons lost and the Normans under William
spent the next several years establishing control of England in a campaign of
conquest. The Battle of Lechfield in 955 was fought between the Germans and
Magyar raiders from the East. The decisive victory of the Germans under Otto I
brought an end to further Magyar invasions. The defeat of the Moors in 732 by
Charles Martel ended Muslim raids and expansion out of Spain.
The battles of Crйcy, Poitiers, and Agincourt, all fought during the Hundred
Years War between the English and French, were all attempts by the French to
stop English incursions. The French lost all three battles and the English raids
carried on. In this case, however, the raids did not establish permanent control
for the English and the French eventually won the war.
The Crusades were attempts to take and hold key strong points in the Holy Land
from which control of the area could be maintained. Battles in the Crusades were
fought to break the control of one side or the other. The victory at Hattin in
1187 by the Saracens under Saladin made possible the recapture of Jerusalem.
.----------------.
| Battle Tactics |
'----------------'
Medieval battles evolved slowly from clashes of poorly organized war bands into
battles where tactics and maneuvers were employed. Part of this evolution was in
response to the development of different types of soldiers and weapons and
learning how to use these. The early armies of the Dark Ages were mobs of foot
soldiers. With the rise of heavy cavalry, the best armies became mobs of
knights. Foot soldiers were brought along to devastate farmlands and do the
heavy work in sieges. In battle, however, foot soldiers were at risk from both
sides as the knights sought to engage their enemies in single combat. This was
mainly true of foot soldiers early in the period who were feudal levies and
untrained peasants. Archers were useful in sieges as well, but also at risk of
being rundown on the battlefield.
By the late 1400's commanders were making better progress in disciplining their
knights and getting their armies to work as a team. In the English army, knights
gave their grudging respect to the longbowmen after the archers demonstrated
their value on so many battlefields. Discipline improved also as more and more
knights fought for pay and less for honor and glory. Mercenary soldiers in Italy
became well known for long campaigns during which no appreciable blood was
spilt. By that time soldiers of all ranks were assets not to be discarded
lightly. Feudal armies seeking glory evolved into professional armies more
interested in living to spend their pay.
Cavalry Tactics
Cavalry was divided typically into three groups, or divisions, to be sent into
battle one after another. The first wave would either break through or disrupt
the enemy so that the second or third wave could break through. Once the enemy
was running, the real killing and capturing could take place.
In practice, knights followed personal agendas to the detriment of any
commander's plan. The knights were interested primarily in honor and glory and
jockeyed for positions in the first rank of the first division. Overall victory
on the field was a secondary concern to personal glory. In battle after battle,
the knights charged as soon as they saw the enemy, dissolving any plan.
Commanders dismounted their knights on occasion as a way to better control them.
This was a popular option with the smaller army that had little hope in a
contest of charges. Dismounted knights bolstered the fighting power and morale
of common foot troops. The dismounted knights and other foot soldiers fought
from behind stakes or other battlefield constructions designed to minimize the
impact of cavalry charges.
An example of undisciplined behavior by knights was the Battle of Crйcy in 1346.
The French army greatly outnumbered the English (40,000 to 10,000), having many
more mounted knights. The English divided into three groups of longbowmen
protected by stakes driven into the ground. Between the three groups were two
groups of dismounted knights. A third group of dismounted knights was held in
reserve. Genoese mercenary crossbowmen were sent out by the French king to shoot
into the dismounted English army while he tried to organize his knights into
three divisions. The crossbows had gotten wet, however, and were ineffective.
The French knights ignored their king's efforts at organization as soon as they
saw the enemy and worked themselves into a frenzy, shouting, "Kill! Kill!" over
and over. Impatient with the Genoese, the French king ordered his knights
forward and they trampled down the crossbowmen in their way. Although the
fighting went on all day, the dismounted English knights and longbowmen (who had
kept their bowstrings dry) defeated the mounted French who fought as an
undisciplined mob.
By the end of the Middle Ages, heavy cavalry had been reduced to roughly equal
value on the battlefield in comparison to missile and foot troops. By this time,
the futility of charging well-emplaced and disciplined infantry was well
understood. The rules had changed. Stakes, horse traps, and trenches were
routinely employed by armies to protect against cavalry charges. Charges against
massed ranks of pikemen and archers/gunners left only a pile of broken horses
and men. Knights were forced to fight on foot or wait for the right opportunity
to charge. Devastating charges were still possible, but only when the enemy was
in flight, disorganized, or out from behind his temporary battlefield defenses.
Missile Troop Tactics
For most of this era missile troops were archers using one of several types of
bow. At first this was the short bow, then the crossbow and longbow. Archers had
the advantage of being able to kill and wound enemies at range without joining
in hand-to-hand combat. The value of these troops was well known in ancient
times, but the lessons were temporarily lost in the Dark Ages. The land-
controlling warrior knights were supreme in the early Middle Ages and their code
demanded hand-to-hand combat with a worthy enemy. Killing with arrows at a
distance was dishonorable to the knights so the ruling class did little to
develop this weapon and use it effectively.
It became apparent gradually, however, that archers were effective and very
useful, both in sieges and in battle. More and more armies made room for them,
if grudgingly. The decisive victory of William I at Hastings in 1066 may have
been won by archery, although his knights traditionally get the most credit. The
Anglo-Saxons held a hillside and were so packed into their shield-wall that the
Norman knights had great difficulty penetrating. The fighting flowed back and
forth all day. The Anglo-Saxons ventured out of their shield-wall, partly to get
at the Norman archers. When the Anglo-Saxons came out, they were easily run
down. For some time it seemed that the Normans must fail, but many believe that
Norman archery was winning the battle. A lucky shot mortally wounded Harold, the
Anglo-Saxon king, and the battle ended soon thereafter.
Foot archers fought in massed formations of hundreds or even thousands of men.
When within a hundred yards of the enemy, both crossbow and longbow shots could
penetrate armor. At this range, archers shot at individual targets. It was
maddening for the enemy to take this damage, especially if they could not
respond. In the ideal situation, the archers disrupted the enemy formation by
shooting into it for some time. The enemy might be safe from cavalry behind
stakes, but it could not block all the arrows or bolts coming in. If the enemy
left its protection and charged the archers, friendly heavy cavalry would
respond, hopefully in time to save the archers. If the enemy formation just
stood its ground, it might waver eventually to the point that cavalry could
charge effectively.
Archers were actively encouraged and subsidized in England because the English
were at a population disadvantage when waging war on the mainland. When the
English learned how to use large contingents of bowmen, they began winning
battles, even though they were usually outnumbered. The English developed the
arrow barrage, taking advantage of the range of the longbow. Instead of firing
at individual targets, the longbowmen fired into the area occupied by the enemy.
Firing up to 6 shots a minute, 3000 longbowmen could put 18,000 arrows into a
massed enemy formation. The effect of this barrage upon horses and men was
devastating. French knights in the Hundred Years War spoke of the sky being
black with arrows and of the noise of these missiles in flight.
Crossbowmen became prominent in mainland armies, especially in the militia and
professional forces raised by towns. With a minimum of training, a crossbowmen
became an effective soldier.
By the fourteenth century the first primitive handguns were appearing on the
battlefield. When these worked, they were even more powerful than bows.
The difficulty in using archers was protecting them while they shot. To be
effective they had to be fairly close to the enemy. English longbowmen carried
stakes onto the battlefield that they pounded into the ground with mallets in
front of the spot from which they wished to shoot. These stakes gave them some
protection from enemy cavalry. They relied on their firepower to fight off enemy
archers. They were at a disadvantage if attacked by enemy foot soldiers.
Crossbowmen carried a large pavise shield into battle. This came with supports
and could be set up in walls, from behind which the men could shoot.
By the end of the era, crossbowmen and pikemen were working together in combined
formations. The pikes kept enemy hand-to-hand troops away while the missile
troops (crossbowmen or handgunners) fired into the enemy formations. These mixed
formations learned how to move and actually attack. Enemy cavalry had to
withdraw in the face of a disciplined mixed force of pikemen and
crossbowmen/gunners. If the enemy could not respond with missiles and pikes of
their own, the battle was probably lost.
Infantry Tactics
The tactic of foot soldiers in the Dark Ages was simply to close with the enemy
and start chopping. The Franks threw their axes just before closing to disrupt
the enemy. Warriors relied on strength and ferocity to win.
The rise of knights put infantry into a temporary eclipse on the battlefield,
mainly because disciplined and well-trained infantry did not exist. The foot
soldiers of early medieval armies were mainly peasants who were poorly armed and
trained.
The Saxons and Vikings developed a defensive posture called the shield-wall. The
men stood adjacent and held their long shields together to form a barrier. This
helped to protect them from archers and cavalry, both of which their armies
lacked.
Infantry underwent a revival in those areas that did not have the resources to
field armies of heavy cavalry-hilly countries like Scotland and Switzerland and
in the rising towns. Out of necessity, these two sectors found ways to field
effective armies that contained little or no cavalry. Both groups discovered
that horses would not charge into a barrier of bristling stakes or spear points.
A disciplined force of spearmen could stop the elite heavy cavalry of the richer
nations and lords, for a fraction of the cost of a heavy cavalry force.
The schiltron formation was a circle of spearmen that the Scots began using
during their wars for independence around the end of the thirteenth century
(featured in the motion picture Braveheart). They learned that the
schiltron was an effective defensive formation. Robert Bruce offered battle to
the English knights only in swampy terrain that greatly impeded the heavy
cavalry charge.
The Swiss became renowned for fighting with pikes. They essentially revived the
Greek phalanx and became very proficient at fighting with the long pole arms.
They formed a square of pikemen. The outer four ranks held their pikes nearly
level, pointing slightly down. This was an effective barrier against cavalry.
The rear ranks used bladed pole arms to attack enemies that closed with the
formation. The Swiss drilled to the point that they could move in formation
relatively quickly. They turned a defensive formation into an effective
attacking formation also.
The response to massed pikemen was artillery that plowed through the ranks of
dense formations. The Spanish appear to have first done this effectively. The
Spanish also fought the pikemen effectively with sword and buckler men. These
were lightly armed men who could get in among the pikes and fight effectively
with short swords. Their buckler was a small and handy shield. At the end of the
Middle Ages, the Spanish also first experimented with the combination of
pikemen, swordsmen, and handgunners in the same formation. This was an effective
force that could take on all arms in varying terrain, on both defense and
attack. At the end of this era the Spanish were the most effective fighting
force in Europe.
.-------------.
| The Mongols |
'-------------'
The nomadic horse peoples of Mongolia assembled the world's largest land empire
in a series of military conquests spread over a few generations, beginning in
the twelfth century. In the course of their conquests, the Mongols fought most
of the other world powers of medieval Asia and Europe, winning in almost every
case. Their empire was built entirely on military conquest, thanks to an army
that was unlike any other in the world. They were thought invincible by most of
their opponents. Their campaign into Europe turned back only after a death in
the ruling family. The possible claimants to the throne headed home with their
forces and never returned.
The Mongol Army
The Mongols were nomadic herders and hunters who spent their lives in the
saddles of their steppe ponies. They learned to ride and use weapons, especially
the composite bow, at an early age. For hunting and war, every able-bodied male
under the age of 60 years was expected to take part. The armies of the united
Mongol tribes consisted of the entire adult male population.
They fought under a strict code of discipline. Booty was held collectively. The
penalty was death for abandoning a comrade in battle. This discipline, together
with leadership, intelligence-gathering, and organization, raised the Mongol
force from a cavalry swarm into a true army.
The Mongol army was organized according to a decimal system, with units of 10,
100, 1000, and 10,000 men. These numbers for units were probably rarely
approached due to casualties and attrition. The 10,000-man unit was the major
fighting unit, like a modern division, capable of sustained fighting on its own.
Individual soldiers identified most with the 1000-man unit of which they were a
part, the equivalent of a modern regiment. Original Mongol tribes fielded their
own 1000-man units. Conquered peoples, such as the Tatars and Merkits, were
broken up and distributed among other units so that they could pose no organized
threat to the ruling family.
Genghis Khan created a personal guard unit of 10,000 men. This unit was
recruited across tribal boundaries and selection was a high honor. In its early
stages it served as a form of honorable hostage-holding. It grew into the family
household and the source of the growing empire's ruling class.
Mongol soldiers at first received no pay other than booty. Advancement was based
on merit. Once the rapid conquests slowed, a new system of pay was put in place.
Officers were later able to pass on their posts to heirs.
Each soldier went on campaign with approximately five horses, allowing quick
changes and rapid movements. No comparable armies moved as rapidly as the
Mongols until the mechanized armies of the twentieth century.
The Mongols fought mainly as light cavalry archers (unarmored), using the
compound bow. This was a compact weapon of impressive range and penetration
power. They employed Chinese and Middle Easterners as siege engineers. Infantry,
garrison troops, and heavy cavalry (wearing armor) that used lances came from
the armies of subjected peoples.
Mongol Tactics
The Mongol armies relied on firepower, the ability to move quickly, and a
reputation for ruthlessness that came to precede them. All of their opponents
moved much more slowly and deliberately. The Mongols looked for opportunities to
divide an enemy force and overwhelm the pieces with rapid bowshots. They sought
to surround or encircle enemies and achieve local superiority of numbers. Horses
of mounted enemies were wounded, dismounting the riders and making them more
vulnerable.
The Mongol light cavalry could not stand against a heavy cavalry charge, so they
feigned flight to draw the knights into exhaustive charges that left them
vulnerable. The fleeing Mongols turned rapidly and became the hunter. They
excelled in setting ambushes and surprise attacks. Mongol army leaders made
great use of scouts and synchronized force movements to catch the enemy at a
disadvantage.
The Mongols made extensive use of terror. If the population of one city was
massacred after capture, the next city was more likely to surrender without a
fight. This proved the case, as city after city surrendered upon the approach of
Mongol armies.
-----------------------------------
Castles
-----------------------------------
Fortifications and earthworks had been employed for defense since the Stone Age.
True castles did not appear in Europe until the ninth century, however, partly
in response to Viking raids and partly as a manifestation of decentralized
feudal political power. From the ninth through the fifteenth century, thousands
of castles were constructed throughout Europe. A 1905 census in France counted
more than 10,000 castle remains in that nation alone.
During the feudal period, local nobles provided law and order, as well as
protection from marauders like the Vikings. Castles were built by the nobles for
protection and to provide a secure base from which local military forces could
operate. The obvious defensive value of a castle obscures the fact that it was
primarily an offensive instrument. It functioned as a base for professional
soldiers, mainly cavalry, which controlled the nearby countryside. At a time
when the centralized authority of kings was weak for a number of reasons, a
network of castles and the military forces they supported provided relative
political stability.
.------------------.
| Castle Evolution |
'------------------'
Beginning in the ninth century, local strongmen began dotting the landscape of
Europe with castles. These were first of simple design and construction but
evolved into stone strongholds. Many of these belonged to kings or the vassals
of kings, but the majority appear to have been built out of self-interest by
local nobles. They were justified by barbarian threats, but the nobles employed
them to establish local control. This was possible because Europe had no
strategic defenses and no strong central authorities at the time.
An example of the castellation of Europe was the Poitou region of France. There
were three castles there before Viking raids began in the ninth century and 39
by the eleventh century. This pattern was repeated across Europe. Castles could
be built quickly. Until the appearance of cannon, castle defenders had a great
advantage over any attackers.
Widespread castle construction and the maintenance of large bodies of soldiers
for their defense resulted not in peace and mutual defense against invaders but
incessant warfare.
The Evolution of the Castle
The earliest castles were of a type called the "motte and bailey." The motte was
a broad, leveled mound of earth, typically 50 feet high. A large wooden tower
was built atop the motte. Below the motte was an enclosure within a wooden
palisade called the bailey. Here were placed storehouses, stock pens, and huts.
Both the motte and bailey were small islands surrounded by a water-filled ditch,
excavated to construct the motte. A bridge and steep narrow path connected the
two parts of the castle. At a time of danger, the defensive forces withdrew into
the tower if the bailey could not be held.
In the eleventh century, stone began replacing earth and wood in castle
construction. The wooden tower atop the motte was replaced with a round stone
fortification called a shell keep. This grew into a tower or keep. A curtain
wall of stone enclosed the old bailey and the keep, and was in turn surrounded
by a ditch or moat. A single fortified gate protected by a drawbridge and
portcullis led into the castle. The best-known example of a basic keep-type
castle is the original Tower of London, built by William the Conqueror. This
large square structure stood by itself at first and was whitewashed to draw
attention. Later kings improved this castle with the curtain walls and other
improvements seen today.
Castle design advanced when crusaders to the East returned with news of the
fortifications and siege engines they had encountered in their travels.
Concentric castles were designed that enclosed a central keep within two or more
rings of walls. Walls were strengthened first with square towers and then with
round towers. The angled corners on square towers were easy to shear off, making
the whole tower very vulnerable. Round towers were more resistant to attack.
Embattlements were added at the top of walls and towers to make fighting from
above more effective.
Cannon appeared in Europe in the early fourteenth century, but effective siege
artillery was not used until the middle fifteenth century. Castle designs
changed in response to the power of cannon. High perpendicular walls were
replaced by low sloping walls. By the middle of the fifteenth century castles
were in decline because of the rising power of kings. In the eleventh century
William the Conqueror claimed ownership of all castles in England to get them
out of the hands of nobles. By the thirteenth century it was necessary to ask a
king's permission to build a castle or strengthen an existing one. Kings worked
to demilitarize castles to minimize their usefulness to potential rebels.
Castles were abandoned as living quarters for nobles and fell into ruin.
Fortified towns were increasingly important because the wealth of the land had
shifted to the cities.
Castle Construction
Construction of a castle might take less than a year or up to 20 years to
complete. For several centuries castle-building was an important industry.
Renowned master masons were in high demand and gangs of castle builders moved
from site to site. Towns wishing to build cathedrals had to compete for skilled
workers with lords wishing to build castles.
Construction of Beaumaris Castle in North Wales began in 1295. The design was
symmetrical, with no weak points. At the height of its building, it required the
effort of 30 blacksmiths, 400 masons, and 2000 laborers. Laborers did most of
the excavation, carrying, lifting, well-digging, and stone-breaking. This
particular castle was never completed. The massive castle at Conway, built in
Wales by Edward I of England, took 40 months to build.
Castle walls were masonry shells filled with stone rubble and flint mixed with
mortar. Wall width ranged from 6 to 16 feet.
.----------------.
| Castle Defense |
'----------------'
The basic principal of castle defense was to maximize the danger and exposure of
any attackers while minimizing the same for defenders. A well-designed castle
could be defended effectively by a small force and hold out for a long period. A
stout defense allowed well-supplied defenders to hold out until the besiegers
could be driven away by a relief force or until the attacker was forced to fall
back by lack of supplies, disease, or losses.
Keep
The keep was a small castle often found within a large castle complex. This was
a fortified building that often served as the castle lord's residence. If the
outer walls fell, the defenders could withdraw into the keep for a final
defense. In the case of many castles, the complex began with the keep, which was
the original fortification on the site. Over time, the complex might have been
expanded to include an outer wall and towers as a first line of defense for the
keep.
Walls
Stone walls were fireproof and protection against arrows and other missiles. An
enemy could not climb sheer walls without equipment such as ladders or siege
towers. Defenders on top of the walls could shoot down or throw objects down
against attackers. Attackers wholly exposed in the open and shooting up were at
a great disadvantage against defenders largely protected and shooting down. The
strength and protection value of castle walls was increased where possible by
building on cliffs or other elevations. Gates and doors in castle walls were
minimized and given heavy protection.
Towers
At the corners of and perhaps at intervals along a long wall, towers were placed
as strong points. Towers extended out beyond the vertical plane of the wall
face, allowing defenders in a tower to shoot along the face. From a corner
tower, defenders could shoot along two different wall faces. A gate might be
protected by towers on each side. Some castles began as simple towers and
evolved into a greater complex of walls, an inner keep, and additional towers.
Battlements
Walls and towers were often improved to provide greater protection for
defenders. A platform behind the top of the wall allowed defenders to stand and
fight. Gaps were built into the upper wall so defenders could shoot out or fight
while partially covered. These gaps might have wooden shutters for additional
protection. Thin firing slits might be placed in the upper walls from which
archers could shoot while almost completely protected.
During an assault, covered wooden platforms (called hourds) were extended out
from the top of the walls or from towers. These allowed defenders to shoot
directly down on enemies below the walls, or drop stones or boiling liquids on
them, while being protected. Hides on top of the hourds were kept wet to prevent
fire. Stone versions of hourds, called machicolations, might be built over gates
or other key points.
Ditches, Moats, and Drawbridges
To accentuate the height advantage of the walls, a ditch might be dug at their
base, completely around the castle. Where possible, this ditch was filled with
water to form a moat. Both ditches and moats made direct assaults against walls
more difficult. Armored men risked drowning if they fell into even relatively
shallow water. Moats made undermining a castle's walls difficult because of the
risk of the mine collapsing during construction and drowning the miners. In some
cases, attackers had to first drain the moat before moving forward with an
assault. Then the ditch had to be filled in places to allow siege towers or
ladders to go up against the wall.
Drawbridges across a moat or ditch allowed the castle occupants to come and go
when necessary. In time of danger, the drawbridge was raised, reestablishing the
ditch and sealing the walls. Bridges were raised by a mechanism within the
castle that was protected from the attackers.
Portcullis
A portcullis was a strong grating that slid down the walls of the castle gate
passageway to block the entrance. The gate of a castle was inside a gatehouse,
which was a strong point in the castle defense. The passageway of the gate might
be through a tunnel in the gatehouse. The tunnel was blocked by one or more
portcullises, in the middle or at the ends. The winding mechanism that raised
the portcullis was in the top of the gatehouse and heavily guarded. The
portcullis itself was usually a grating of heavy timbers or iron. Defenders and
attackers could both shoot or stab through the grating.
Barbican
A strong castle had both an outer gate and inner gate. Between the two was an
open area called the barbican. This was surrounded by walls and designed to be a
trap for any attackers who got through the outside gate. Once inside the
barbican, attackers could only go back out the outer gate or fight their way
through the inner gate. In the meantime they would be targets for arrows and
other missiles in the open.
Defenders
A relatively small number of men could guard a castle in peacetime. At night any
drawbridge was raised and the portcullis was lowered, effectively locking the
door. Under threat of an assault, a much larger force was needed to defend a
castle.
Competent archers and crossbowmen were needed to shoot from the walls and towers
at attackers making an assault or just preparing for one by attempting to drain
the moat or fill the ditch. Each attacking casualty lowered the morale and
fighting power of the attackers. Heavy losses from missile fire could cause the
attackers to break off.
If the attackers managed to actually close for hand-to-hand fighting, a strong
fighting force of swordsmen was needed to hold them off. Men were needed to
throw down rocks or pour hot liquids from the hourds. Men were needed to make
repairs to damaged wall sections or put out fires started by flaming missiles.
An aggressive defense looked for opportunities to sortie out from the castle and
raid the besieging army. A quick raid that burned a siege tower or trebuchet
under construction delayed an assault and lowered the morale of the attackers.
In times of emergency, local peasants were enlisted to help with the defense.
Although untrained as soldiers and not skilled usually with the bow or sword,
they could help with many of the other tasks.
.--------------.
| Castle Siege |
'--------------'
Capturing or defending strongholds was a common military activity during the
late Middle Ages because of the proliferation of castles and fortified towns and
their strategic importance. Although a small force could hold a castle, it took
a large force to take one. The attacker had to have a sufficiently large army to
control the countryside around a castle, fight off any relieving force, and
assault the stronghold directly or at least hold the siege tight. This was an
expensive proposition.
As an army approached the castle, the locals usually withdrew inside, taking
anything of value with them, especially food and weapons. If the siege was
expected to be a long one, however, peasants not capable of fighting might be
refused entrance to conserve food. There were many recorded instances of people
being thrown out of towns under siege to preserve food. When English king Henry
V besieged the city of Rouen, the defenders expelled the weak and the poor to
conserve food. The English refused to allow these unfortunates through their
lines. Old men, women, and children huddled between the city and the English
army for months, scrabbling for scraps and dying of starvation, until surrender
was negotiated.
As an army approached, the possibility of surrender and terms might be
negotiated immediately, especially if the castle or town was undermanned. The
attackers weighed carefully the chance of assaulting the stronghold if
negotiations failed. If a quick assault was thrown back or was judged too risky,
the attackers sealed off the castle and began a siege. Once siege artillery had
fired at the city, the siege was officially underway. To withdraw without good
reason was dishonorable and unacceptable in most cases.
A large siege was something like a social event. The fifteenth-century siege of
Neuss lasted only a few months, but the attackers built up a large camp that
included taverns and tennis courts. Nobles taking part in sieges made themselves
comfortable, often bringing along wives and their households. Merchants and
craftsmen from neighboring towns rushed forward to set up shop and provide
services.
Siege Formalities
The reality of warfare during this period was that castles and towns were very
rarely captured by assault. Assaults were usually an act of desperation or made
much easier by acts of treachery or stealth. Unless the garrison was greatly
under strength, it was just too costly in lives to assault. It was much more
typical to orchestrate a siege according to the prevailing rules of warfare and
honor and take the castle with relatively little loss. It would be treason for
the defenders to surrender without a fight so the siege was maintained and the
castle walls were battered. If the castle's owner was not inside, his deputy in
charge, called a castellan or constable, could surrender the castle with honor
after so many days if no relief force had appeared. Castellans often requested a
contract that specified exactly what were their obligations and under what
circumstances they would not be punished for surrendering.
In those rare instances where surrender was not an option or an option
disdained, it was the accepted policy that little mercy was shown after a
successful assault. Common soldiers and even civilians inside might be massacred
and the castle or town was looted. Captured knights were kept alive, usually,
and held for ransom. All attackers received a share of the spoils. Practical
application of this policy was a further inducement for defenders to negotiate
surrender after a reasonable period of siege. King Henry V of England took the
city of Caen after a long siege in 1417. He then allowed his army to sack the
city from one end to the other in payment for the defender's stout resistance.
Every man in the city who was not a priest was killed. At his next stop, the
castle of Bonneville, the defenders agreed to surrender the keys after seven
days with no relief, even though both sides understood there was no prospect for
relief.
The Krak des Chevaliers was the most famous of the Crusader castles in the
Middle East and still stands impressively in modern Syria. It was defended by
the Knights Hospitaller during the era of the Crusades and withstood over a
dozen sieges and attacks over 130 years before falling finally to Egyptian Arabs
in 1271. The story of its capture was unusual but typical in the sense that the
defenders did not fight to the death.
The Arabs disdained an attack on the main gate of the Krak des Chevaliers
because breaking through there led into a series of deadly narrow passages and
on to a second, even stronger gate. They attacked the south wall instead by
undermining the great tower at the southwest corner. This got them inside the
outer curtain wall. Before attacking the even stronger central keep, however,
they tried a ruse. A carrier pigeon was sent into the castle with a message from
the Hospitaller's grand master, ordering the garrison to surrender. Outnumbered
and with no hope of relief, the defenders accepted the command of the message,
understanding it was a fake, and surrendered the great castle with honor.
Mines
The key problem to taking a castle or fortified town was overcoming the walls
that prevented entry and protected the defenders. One solution to this problem
was undermining a section of the wall so that it collapsed. This was only
possible before castles had moats or after the moat had been drained. It was not
possible to undermine when the wall was built on solid stone.
The miners dug a tunnel up to the wall and then along it under its foundation.
The tunnel was supported by timber supports that gradually took on the load of
the wall overhead from the earth that was dug out and removed. At a prearranged
time, the timbers in the tunnel were set on fire. As the timbers burned the
support for the wall overhead disappeared gradually and a section of the wall
collapsed, if all went as planned. The collapsed wall created an opening for a
direct assault by soldiers into the castle.
Mines were laborious and time-consuming. Defenders who became aware of the
tunneling reinforced the threatened wall with a secondary wall so that the
collapse did not completely open the defenses. Defenders were also known to
countermine, digging their own tunnels under the walls trying to intercept the
enemy tunnel. When the tunnels encountered each other, actual fighting broke out
underground.
Siege
The besieging army set up positions around the castle to prevent escape or
sorties by the soldiers inside. The nearby farms and villages were taken over by
the besiegers. Patrols were set to bring notice of any relieving army
approaching and to forage for food. The leaders of the attackers examined the
situation and decided whether to simply besiege the castle or to actively
prepare to attack it. If the castle was to be simply starved into surrender, the
attackers concentrated on keeping the defenders caged in and preventing any
relief force from lifting the siege. Choosing how best to attack a castle might
involve any of the following options:
* Undermining a part of the wall.
* Selecting a wall section to breach by battering it
with hurled stones (or with cannons, although
these were not effective until around 1450,
near the end of this period).
* Selecting a part of the ditch (and moat, if
present) to fill.
* Building siege towers and ladders to scale the
walls.
* Choosing a gate or other section to batter with
a ram.
The speed of work on assault preparations was in proportion to the urgency for
taking the castle, the prospects of surrender, and the manpower available. If
the attackers had ample supplies of food, no relief was expected, and the
defenders were likely to surrender after their honor had been satisfied, work on
assault preparations might be little more than a show. If the attacker's
supplies were short, relief was expected any day, or the defenders were
obstinate, preparations might go forward day and night.
When preparations were complete, the defenders were given one last chance to
surrender before the assault.
Siege Equipment
Siege equipment was used to get past the walls and other defenses of the castle
so that the superior strength of the attacking army could be brought to bear
against the defenders at a minimum disadvantage. Most equipment was designed to
knock down or breach the walls. In addition to the simple scaling ladder, siege
equipment most commonly used during the Middle Ages included the trebuchet, the
mangonel, the siege tower, the battering ram, and the pavise.
Once a breach was made or a siege tower put in place, a volunteer force of
soldiers led the assault. This force came to be known as the "forlorn hope,"
because of the casualties they were expected to take. But the successful
survivors of this force were usually the most highly rewarded with promotion,
titles, and loot.
The trebuchet was a large catapult powered by a heavy counterweight, usually a
large box of rocks. The long throwing arm was pulled down against the mass of
the counterweight and a large stone was loaded. When the arm was released, the
heavy weight dropped down, pulling the throwing arm up, and flinging the large
stone missile in a high arcing trajectory. Missiles thrown by this weapon
plunged downward and were best used to smash the tops of towers, embattlements,
and hourds. It was difficult to damage sheer vertical walls with the trebuchet
unless the missiles came down right on top of the wall. The trebuchet was
assembled out of bow shot and defended against a possible sortie by the
defenders seeking to burn the weapon. The trebuchet was useful for smashing
wooden roofs and then setting the rubble on fire with incendiary missiles.
The mangonel was a different type of catapult powered by twisted ropes or strips
of hide. A ratchet gear twisted the ropes, building up tension. When released,
the ropes spun, flinging the throwing arm forward. When the arm hit a heavy
restraining bar, any missile in the basket at the end of the arm was thrown
forward. The restraining bar could be adjusted to change the trajectory of the
missile. Mangonels had a flat trajectory, in comparison to the trebuchet, but
could generate the same power. It could take a large number of mangonel shots to
do any appreciable damage to a wall. The thrown missiles and pieces of the
broken wall helped to fill in the ditch, however, creating rubble pile which
attackers could climb.
Siege towers were moved close to the walls and then a gangplank was dropped from
the tower to the top of the wall. Soldiers in the tower could then advance
across the gangplank and engage the defenders in hand-to-hand combat. Such a
tower was often huge. It had to be protected with wet hides to prevent being
burned. It was ponderous to move because of its weight. It had to be either
pushed forward or pulled forward against pulleys previously mounted on stakes
near the base of the castle wall. The ground had to be prepared ahead of time,
usually with a roadway of flat wooden planking on heavily packed earth to ease
the tower's movement. A fighting area on top of the tower let archers shoot down
into the castle as the tower approached. Soldiers mounted the stairs inside the
tower once it was close. Assaults from a siege tower were never a surprise to
the defender because so much preparation had to be done. The defenders took
steps to build up the threatened part of the wall or prevent the gangplank from
dropping. They attempted to grapple the tower as it approached and pull it onto
its side. Up to the last moment of the assault, siege engines would fire on the
target section of wall to disrupt the defender's preparations to receive the
assault. If the first group of attackers from the tower got over, a steady
stream of men would follow over the gangplank to complete the capture of the
castle.
A battering ram had a large pole with an iron head that was slung inside a
moveable housing and rolled up to a wall section or gate. Once up to the wall,
the pole was swung back and forth against the wall. The force of the blows broke
through the wooden planking of the door or stone wall, creating an opening for
attack. The roof of the ram was covered with wet hides to prevent burning.
Operating battering was dangerous work. Enemies above dropped large rocks,
boiling water, or burning fat on the ram, attempting to destroy it or kill the
men operating it. Even when a gate or drawbridge was smashed, there were usually
several portcullises and the gatehouse to be fought through. At the siege of
Tyre during the winter of 1111-1112, the defending Arabs came up with an
ingenious defense against the ram. They threw down gappling hooks, grabbed the
ram, and pulled it away from the wall. Time after time they were able to disrupt
the use of the ram.
Attacking archers and crossbowmen took shelter on the ground behind large wooden
shields called pavises. A narrow firing slit at the top of the pavise allowed
the man behind to shoot up at the defenders. England's King Richard I, the
Lionheart, received a mortal shoulder wound from a crossbow bolt when looking
around the side of a pavise.
-----------------------------------
Gunpowder
-----------------------------------
The Chinese had gunpowder by the eleventh century and made some military use of
it to propel rockets. These were more weapons of terror than useful missile
weapons, however. The Chinese also experimented with fireworks. They did not
realize the potential of gunpowder as an explosive or propellant for missile
weapons.
Gunpowder gradually worked its way to the west where Europeans found much more
destructive uses for it. The oldest surviving artwork from Europe that portrays
a gunpowder weapon appeared in 1326. This primitive cannon was loaded with a
spear of some sort, not a cannonball. Europeans had been experimenting with
gunpowder for the previous half-century. The oldest surviving description of the
formula for gunpowder appeared in 1260 and was attributed to an English friar
named Roger Bacon. By 1340 cannonballs of lead, iron, and stone were being used.
The English had cannons on the battlefield at Crйcy in 1346, but there is no
mention in the battle accounts of their usefulness.
Cannons
It took several centuries of experimentation before gunpowder weapons became
truly useful. One difficulty was developing gunpowder that ignited quickly,
uniformly, and powerfully. Another was designing suitable cannons that would not
burst. Poor manufacturing techniques plagued early cannons, and it was almost as
dangerous to serve them as to be shot at by them. King James II of Scotland, for
example, was killed by an exploding cannon in 1460.
Cannon and gunpowder technologies were sufficiently advanced by the middle of
the fifteenth century that they were recognized as important weapons. This was
made clear in 1453 when huge siege bombards firing massive stone cannonballs
battered the walls of Constantinople. Although the proximate cause of the fall
of Constantinople was a small gate being left open, the bombardment would have
eventually made a direct assault possible.
Cannons of the Middle Ages were used in sieges to batter walls and on
battlefields to fire into massed ranks of the enemy. Their ability to batter
sheer vertical walls led to refinements in castle-building. Low sloping walls
replaced high vertical walls. The usefulness of cannon on the battlefield was
limited during this period because the cannons were so ponderous. It was
difficult to move them into new positions during the action.
Handguns
Illustrations of various types of handguns appeared around 1350. These were
primitive weapons consisting of a hollow tube blocked at one end and a hole in
the side near the blocked end for igniting the powder. A slow match (a slow-
burning cord) was placed in the hole to ignite the powder and fire the ball
previously loaded down the barrel. There was little use in attempting to aim the
early handguns. They were effective only when fired in volleys by many men at
massed targets. By 1450 handguns were being used by most of the advanced
European armies. Bows and crossbows continued in use as infantry missile weapons
through the sixteenth century, however, because they were still inexpensive and
effective.
-----------------------------------
Naval Warfare
-----------------------------------
The need for warships in the Mediterranean Sea largely faded after the Romans
gained complete control of the surrounding lands. There was no other empire with
a navy to offer competition, and piracy was all but eliminated. Following the
collapse of the Western Roman Empire, new civilizations sprang up from the ruins
of the empire and piracy reappeared. Warships were needed again to defend
against invasion, project military power, and protect sea trade routes.
Byzantine Ships
The Byzantines were the great Mediterranean naval power of the early Middle
Ages. Naval power was critical to their survival and to their extended empire.
The land defenses of Constantinople were excellent and made outright assault of
the city very difficult, but the city had to keep its sea supply open to prevent
a successful siege. So long as the navy could bring in supplies, the city was
assured of survival.
The main Byzantine warship of the early Middle Ages was the dromen, an evolution
of the ancient oared warships, such as the trireme. A typical dromen was long
and narrow for speed. Power was supplied by 50 to 200 rowers and lateen sails. A
mast was placed in the middle of the front half and rear half of the ship. The
dromen carried a beak at the bow for pinning enemy vessels prior to boarding.
Rams were rarely seen. Platforms were built in the center, bow, and stern. From
these platforms archers and catapults could fire at enemy ships and crews. A
typical battle involved attempts to ram or disable enemy ships, then grappling
and boarding by marines.
The Byzantines effectively used a secret weapon called Greek fire. This was a
mixture of chemicals that burned fiercely upon contact with air. It was pumped
out of hoses against enemy ships or thrown in bombs. It was a devastating weapon
against wooden ships and decisive for the Byzantines in their naval battles
against the Arabs. The secret of Greek fire was so important and so closely
guarded that it was eventually lost and we do not know today exactly what it
was.
Mediterranean Ships
Oar-powered warships, called galleys, remained the principal warships of the
Mediterranean beyond the end of the Middle Ages because the waters were
relatively protected from fierce gales. At the same time, the Italian city-
states of Genoa and Venice gradually became naval powers in proportion to the
increasing importance of their trade with the Levant. The Arabs also built
navies to influence trade and support their conflict with the Byzantines and
other Christians for control of the Mediterranean. The beginning of the Crusades
in the eleventh century brought ships from Northern Europe that had evolved very
different designs.
European Ships
The Germanic tribes that occupied Northern Europe around 500 developed several
new ship types. The typical trading ship was wide-bodied and of deep draft. It
mounted a single mast at first and later more as it grew in size. The Norse
called this type of ship a knarr. We know a lot about this ship today because
one was recovered from the bottom of a harbor in Denmark in the 1960s. Much of
the trade and exploration of the Anglo-Saxons and Vikings was carried on in this
type of ship. It evolved into the cog, the principal merchant ship of the later
Middle Ages. This deep-draft ship was designed for easy sailing and high cargo
capacity.
Ship fighting in northern Europe was mainly an extension of land combat. Towers
were built on the bow and stern of the cog for protection and as firing
platforms for archers. Crews fired at each other with arrows as they closed, but
the intent was only to disable enemy crewmen and soldiers. Ships came together
and attempted to capture each other in hand-to-hand combat. Sailing ships in
these waters had no ability to ram. There was no weapon with which to do great
structural damage to another ship or sink it until cannon appeared in the
fourteenth century. Some 400 English and French cog-type warships carrying large
contingents of archers and foot soldiers engaged in a naval battle at Sluys in
1340 typical of the later Middle Ages. They simply jammed together for archery
fire and close combat.
The first cannon were mounted in the bow or stern of ships. Small cannon mounted
on the side rails were used against enemy crews. The English ship Christopher of
the Tower of 1406 was the first built purposely to carry guns. Ships began to
mount broadsides of cannon with the ability to puncture enemy hulls only at the
very end of the Middle Ages.
The Viking longship was more of a transport than a warship. Vikings rarely
fought from their longships. When they did, there are reports of boats being
lashed together to provide a platform for hand-to-hand fighting. The longship
was powered by oars until the eighth or ninth century when sails appear to have
been added. Although they looked fragile and unlikely vessels for ocean travel,
modern replicas proved to be very seaworthy. The additional range provided by
sails explains partially why the Vikings began reaching out to raid in the ninth
century.
The Irish curragh was a small boat used mainly for coastal trading and travel
but capable of deep ocean sailing also. This boat was built of animal hides
stretched over a wooden frame. The hide skin was sealed with pitch for
waterproofing. These incredibly light boats were powered with a small sail or
could be rowed. In rough weather the hide covering could be closed to make the
boat watertight and relatively unsinkable. Irish monks explored the North
Atlantic in these boats and reached Iceland long before the Vikings. There are
unsubstantiated tales that monks sailed to the New World as well.
The Crusades brought northern ships into the Mediterranean and contact between
the sailors and shipbuilders of north and south. The southerners began adopting
features of the cog, including its big hull and square sail. The northerners
learned about the compass, stern rudder, and lateen sail.
Chinese Ships
The greatest shipbuilders of the Middle Ages were probably the Chinese. The
familiar Chinese junk was a better ship than anything available in the West for
many centuries. It was an excellent combination of cargo space, sailing ability,
and seaworthiness. In 1405, Chinese Admiral Cheng Ho built a huge navy manned by
25,000 men and explored much of the Southwest Pacific and Indian Oceans. The
rulers of China disdained this feat and its discoveries. The greatest ships in
the world at the time were beached and allowed to rot.
-----------------------------------
The Middle Ages
-----------------------------------
The expression "Middle Ages" has been employed by Western civilization to define
the 1000 years that span European history from roughly 500 to 1500 AD. The
beginning of the Middle Ages is marked by the fall of the Western Roman Empire,
the generally accepted end of classical ancient history. The end of the Middle
Ages is noted by the beginning of the Renaissance (the "rebirth" of Europe).
Events marking the end of the period include the fall of Constantinople in 1453,
the first use of the printing press in 1456, the European discovery of the
Americas in 1492, the Protestant Reformation, triggered by Martin Luther in
1517, and the flowering of the arts in Italy. The Middle Ages thus fall in the
middle between ancient and modern history.
Historic periods in Asia and the Middle East do not fit easily into the concept
of a European Middle Age. China evolved gradually from prehistoric times up to
the advent of Western modern history without the great disruptions that befell
Europe. China passed under the control of several dynasties and suffered from
invasion, but the basic culture progressed steadily. Japan progressed steadily,
as well, and was left largely alone. The history of the Middle East fits
together more closely with the European Middle Ages because these two regions
were adjacent and shared many interactions.
.------------------.
| The Fall of Rome |
'------------------'
The Roman Empire of the fourth century AD extended entirely around the basin of
the Mediterranean Sea, including modern Turkey, Israel, Egypt, and North Africa.
Modern France (called Gaul) and modern Spain and Portugal (Iberia) were entirely
Roman. Modern England was Roman, but modern Scotland and Ireland were barbarian
(non-Roman, or noncivilized). The northern borders of the empire were the Rhine
and Danube Rivers. The lands north of these rivers were occupied by a variety of
tribes of Scandinavian origin that the Romans called the Germans.
Rome was engaged in border skirmishes with the tribes north of the great
European rivers. Strong emperors occasionally extended the empire over the
rivers while weak emperors tended to lose those lands. The largest organized
rival of the Romans was the Persian Empire to the east, occupying modern Syria,
Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan. The Persians were the political descendants of the
Parthians who had revolted away from Greek rule following Alexander's conquests
and thereafter resisted successfully Roman invasions.
The Romans had existed as an important power for over 1000 years. They had
brought stability, prosperity, and order to the civilized West. Excellent roads
connected the far reaches of the empire with the capital at Rome. These were
built originally for military purposes but improved all communications and
trade. Roman law kept the internal peace and 20 to 30 Roman legions defended the
frontiers.
All was not perfect, however. Emperors held absolute authority. This worked well
with good emperors, but incompetent ones could do great harm. The rules for
succession to the throne were never clear, and debilitating civil wars often
resulted. The bureaucracy that managed the empire on a daily basis grew more
corrupt, increasing the dissatisfaction of the common citizen. The wealth of the
empire gradually concentrated in the hands of a minority while a large slave
population did most of the work. The borders of the empire were immense and put
a strain on military resources (500,000 soldiers defended a frontier that
required 3 million or more to be secure). Roman conquests had ceased in the
second century AD, bringing an end to massive inflows of plunder and slaves.
Taxes increased and production fell as the workforce declined. A plague may have
killed 20 percent of the empire's population in the third and fourth centuries,
further reducing trade and production.
In the late third century, the Roman Empire was split into eastern and western
halves in an attempt to make for easier rule and better control. In 323
Constantine became emperor after a civil war and established his eastern capital
at Byzantium, which he renamed Constantinople. During the next century the
eastern and western parts of the empire gradually established separate
identities, although nominally the same empire. These identities were partially
due to the different pressures brought to bear on them from the outside and the
local culture. The Western Empire was predominately Latin; the Eastern Empire
was predominately Greek (although they referred to themselves as Romans). The
Eastern Empire survived the cataclysm of the third and fourth centuries because
it had a larger population (70 percent of the empire's total), better emperors,
more money, and a far better army and navy.
.--------------------.
| Barbarian Invaders |
'--------------------'
Around the year 200 AD, nomadic tribes on the great grass steppes of Central
Asia began migrating toward China, India, Persia, and Europe. The reasons for
this migration are not fully understood. The largest group of nomads was the
Huns. Their small stature and small ponies belied a fierce and determined
ruthlessness. They terrified other tribes they encountered in their migrations,
causing something like a domino effect. Moving west, the Huns displaced the
Goths living northwest of the Black Sea, for example, who pushed south over the
Danube into the Balkans lands ruled by the Eastern Roman Empire. More Huns moved
toward the German plains, encouraging other Germanic tribes to cross the Rhine.
The Western Roman Empire was already weakened by this time from sporadic raids
and invasions across the Rhine and Danube. Germanic tribes with growing
populations coveted the sparsely occupied lands in Gaul and the benefits of
being within the Roman Empire. By 400 the Roman army was already 30 to 50
percent German mercenaries. In desperation, some barbarian groups were enlisted
into the Roman army as entire units to help defend against other groups. This
was especially popular during civil wars of the fourth century, when pretenders
to the throne in Rome needed to raise armies quickly. These barbarian units did
not have the loyalty and discipline of the legions and kept their own leaders.
This stopgap measure backfired when whole barbarian armies revolted. The Rhine
and Danube frontiers dissolved and Germanic tribes moved into Gaul, the Balkans,
and even Italy itself. The fighting was nearly incessant along the shrinking
frontier and the number of loyal Roman troops continually diminished.
The last legions in Britain were withdrawn for service in Gaul in 410,
abandoning that province forever. Saxon raids increased and became actual
invasions. The Jutes, Frisians, and Angles, other Germanic tribes from the north
German coast, joined the Saxons. Together they overwhelmed the Romano-British
culture and took possession of what is today England (Angle-land).
The Eastern Roman Empire suffered through the loss of most of the Balkans but
was able to deflect or bribe the barbarians before they could attack
Constantinople. The invaders in this area were the Goths, who had become much
more civilized through their contact with the Eastern Empire than had the
Germanic tribes along the Rhine. The Goths came as settlers primarily, not
conquerors.
During the fifth century Rome was sacked several times and the Western Empire
ceased to exist effectively. Italy was repeatedly invaded and ravaged. In 476
the last recognized Roman emperor was killed. Italy and the old Roman Empire
were now occupied by Germanic tribes. Despite a general wish by the barbarians
to preserve the stability and order of the past Roman civilization, only
vestiges of it survived the turmoil and devastation that followed the invasions.
Most of Europe fell back into a much more primitive and barbaric period.
-----------------------------------
The Dark Ages
-----------------------------------
Following the fall of Rome, western Europe entered what has been called the Dark
Ages. This name was applied partially because so much of the Roman civilization
was destroyed and replaced by a more barbaric culture. The name was used also
because so little written history survived from the period that shed light on
the events that took place.
.----------.
| Politics |
'----------'
The Roman government and courts were swept away with most of the Roman culture.
Tribal war bands were the new government. A strong leader surrounded himself
with loyal warriors that were paid with booty from raiding. Tribal law, based on
trial by combat or by the swearing of oaths, replaced Roman law. Small kingdoms
arose gradually based on tribal loyalties, but governing was difficult because
literate civil servants were scarce, communications were poor, trade was at a
standstill, and there was little or no money in circulation. The people survived
on a subsistence agriculture. Life at this time was described as nasty, brutish,
and short. The average life expectancy was 30 years, skewed by a very low
survival rate for children and a high mortality of women in childbirth.
At the start of the Dark Ages, the list of European powers read as follows:
* Franks: much of modern France and parts of
Germany along the Rhine.
* Ostrogoths: northern Italy, Switzerland, and
the Balkans.
* Visigoths: Spain and Portugal.
* Vandals: Western North Africa, Sicily, and
southern Italy.
* Various Germanic tribes, including Saxons and
Lombards: Germany.
* Anglo-Saxons: England.
* Celts: Wales, Ireland, Scotland, and Brittany.
* Magyars: Hungary.
* Slavs: Poland and western Russia.
* Byzantines: Turkey, Palestine, Egypt, Syria, and
much of the Balkans, including Greece.
In succeeding centuries, the list saw the following changes:
* Vandals: destroyed and replaced by the
Byzantines.
* Visigoths: destroyed and replaced by Franks
in France and Muslims in Spain and Portugal.
* Ostrogoths: attacked and eventually absorbed by
the Lombards (Italy) and Byzantines
(Balkans).
The Dark Ages are considered to cover the years from 500 to 1000. The three most
important forces that shaped this period and brought the relative darkness to an
end were the spread of new religions, the rise of the Frankish Empire, and the
predations of the Vikings.
.-------------------.
| Dark Age Religion |
'-------------------'
Christianity had become the official religion of the Roman Empire in the fourth
century and had begun spreading among the Germanic tribes before the fall of
Rome. The split of the Roman Empire into eastern and western halves also
resulted in a split within the Christian Church. The western part, centered in
Rome, became Catholic. The eastern part, centered in Constantinople, became
Orthodox. In the seventh century, one of the last of the world's great
religions, Islam, was founded in Arabia.
Christianity
The spread of Christianity among the barbarians was a powerful civilizing force
and helped to ensure that some vestiges of Roman law and the Latin language
carried on in France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. Only in England was Roman
Christianity subsumed by pagan beliefs. The Franks became Catholic under Clovis
and thereafter spread Christianity to the Germans across the Rhine. The
Byzantines spread Orthodox Christianity among the Bulgars and Slavs.
Christianity was brought to Ireland by St. Patrick in the early fifth century
and spread from there into Scotland and back into England from the north. In the
late sixth century, Pope Gregory the Great sent missionaries into England from
the south. Within a century, England was Christian once again.
Monasteries
During the turmoil of the Dark Ages, a few strongly committed Christians
withdrew from society to live as hermits, usually on the wild and forbidding
edge of civilization. Hermits in turn inspired more conventional priests to
pledge vows of poverty and service, harkening back to the teachings of Jesus
Christ.
Many of these priests formed new communities of like believers called
monasteries. Pope Gregory encouraged the building of monasteries throughout
Christian Europe. In parts of Europe they became the only remaining centers of
learning. Irish monks, for example, are credited by some with preserving
civilization in their monasteries. Irish monks went out into other parts of
Europe to teach and revive an interest in learning. Monasteries were the main
source of educated men who could help administer government, and many became
important assistants to kings.
In time monasteries grew wealthy with donations of land, as did the Roman
church. Different monastic orders were founded with different goals. Some kept
entirely to themselves, some trained missionaries to be sent into the wild, some
advised the popes on church doctrine, and others provided important community
service such as care for the elderly, health care, and emergency relief.
Islam
Islam was founded in Arabia in the seventh century by the prophet Mohammed. It
spread rapidly and inspired a great movement of conquest. The political map of
North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia changed almost overnight. All of
North Africa, the Iberian Peninsula, the Middle East, Asia Minor, Iraq, Iran,
Afghanistan, parts of India, Pakistan, and part of Russia became Muslim. During
the brief period that the Islamic Empire remained united, it threatened to
accomplish its goal of converting the entire world to its beliefs. The stability
and economic growth within the new Muslim world brought peace and prosperity far
in advance of that in western Europe of the time. The Muslim culture surpassed
even the Byzantines in art, science, medicine, geography, trade, and philosophy.
Conflicts between the Muslims and Christians resulted in the Crusades, a series
of attempts by western Christians to regain the Holy Lands in Palestine.
.-------------.
| Charlemagne |
'-------------'
The Franks consolidated their kingdom in modern France under a series of strong
kings and warlords during the seventh and eighth centuries. In 732 they defeated
a Muslim army invading France from the Iberian Peninsula. Around 750, the Franks
pushed into Italy to rescue Rome and the pope, who were under attack by the
Lombards. In 768 Charles the Great, or Charlemagne, became king of the Franks
and began his remarkable reign.
Charlemagne returned to Italy across the Alps in 774 and rescued the Pope once
again. He became king of both the Franks and Lombards and effective ruler of
Rome. He continued his conquests, simultaneously converting his enemies to
Christianity. He took southern France and northern parts of Spain. He moved into
western Germany, converting the Saxons and fighting off the Magyars of Hungary.
He established "marches" on his frontier, which were buffer states between the
Frankish Empire and barbarian tribes to the east. On Christmas Day in 800,
Charlemagne was crowned Holy Roman Emperor by the pope (the title was a surprise
and one he had not sought).
The importance of Charlemagne transcends the size and creation of the Holy Roman
Empire, which fell apart soon after his death anyway. He was a great supporter
and defender of the Catholic Church and used it to encourage learning and the
arts. He set up schools in association with cathedrals to educate civil servants
and nobles to improve government. He collected and codified the laws, improving
the system of justice. He invented feudalism as a way of providing local order
while retaining central authority.
The great promise of European revival radiating from the Frankish Empire was
stopped short, however. Following the death of Charlemagne's son, the empire was
split three ways among his grandsons. The western part evolved later into modern
France. The eastern part became Germany much later. The central part was
contested by the other two through succeeding generations into the twentieth
century. A more immediate problem was the sudden appearance of Viking raiders
from Scandinavia, who greatly disrupted northern Europe for the next two
centuries.
.-------------.
| The Vikings |
'-------------'
The inhabitants of Scandinavia had made their living by herding, farming, and
fishing for centuries. In the sixth and seventh centuries, they began trading
along the Baltic Sea and deep into Russia along its great rivers. For reasons
unknown, they began aggressively raiding the coasts of Europe suddenly in the
late eighth century. Perhaps they were amazed at the relative riches they had
encountered as traders, or they perceived a weakness among the civilizations to
the south, or new sailing and boat technologies gave them the power to travel
farther and more quickly. In 793 the pagan Vikings struck the great monastery at
Lindisfarne, established by the Irish off the northeast coast of England.
Fast, low-draft longboats allowed the Vikings to strike quickly from the sea and
up rivers. Because roads were so poor in the ninth century, the Vikings could
concentrate against a rich village or monastery, land quickly, drive off any
resistance, and carry off slaves and plunder before any organized response could
be mounted. People living along the coasts and rivers of Germany, France, and
Britain lived in fear of the raiders. The central authorities of these lands
fell into disfavor because they could do little to defend against these hit-and-
run attacks. The people turned to local nobles who built castles for defense.
This shift of power strengthened the local nobles and weakened the kings.
The Vikings became bolder as the ninth century progressed. Larger Viking groups
combined to make actual invasions, not just raids. They sacked major cities
including Hamburg, Utrecht, and Rouen. They settled on islands off Britain, in
parts of Ireland (founding Dublin), Iceland, and Greenland. The Danes captured
and ruled the eastern half of England for a century. Another force sailed up the
Seine River and besieged Paris for two years before being bought off with money
and plunder. Another group ruled part of Russia from Kiev and assaulted
Constantinople from the Black Sea. They raided the Muslim Iberian Peninsula and
deep into the Mediterranean.
In the tenth century, the king of France bought peace with the Vikings by ceding
them part of his country (Normandy, "from the northmen," or Normans) and making
their ruler a French duke. As part of this agreement, the Normans converted to
Christianity. The Normans became one of the most remarkable groups in the Middle
Ages. Later they conquered England, establishing the first great European
kingdom. Other Normans conquered Sicily, half of Italy, and established Crusader
kingdoms in Palestine.
Viking raids stopped at the end of the tenth century, partly because they had
become Christians and no longer followed the warrior values of their past pagan
beliefs. Scandinavia divided into kingdoms, and the new rulers concentrated on
ruling what they owned. The Viking settlers in Russia, France, and Britain were
absorbed by the cultures that surrounded them. The warrior cultures in Europe
that had evolved in response to the Viking threat soon had a new outlet for
their aggression, however, in the Holy Land of the Eastern Mediterranean.
-----------------------------------
The Crusades
-----------------------------------
Making pilgrimages to holy sites had been a popular activity for European
Christians for centuries. There were important religious centers in Europe but
the most important site was the Holy Land in Palestine. The rise of the Seljuk
Turks made travel to Jerusalem and other Middle Eastern locales suddenly much
more dangerous. The Turks had little use for non-Muslims and ended the
relatively peaceful relations between the Arabs and Christians. At the same
time, the Turks put tremendous pressure on the Byzantines by capturing the
valuable lands in Asia Minor. As a result, Pope Urban called for a Crusade by
Christian warriors to recapture Palestine from the Muslims.
The call for a Crusade electrified the knights of Europe. They were strong
believers, and the pope promised a heavenly reward for those who died in the
cause. Of equal or greater importance was the opportunity to grab land and
wealth abroad, rather than continuing to squabble with relatives and neighbors
at home.
By 1097, an army of 30,000, including many pilgrims and camp followers, had
crossed into Asia Minor from Constantinople. Despite feuding among the leaders
and broken promises between the Crusaders and their Byzantine supporters, the
Crusade stumbled forward. The Turks were just as disorganized, or more so. The
Frankish heavy knights and infantry had no experience fighting the Arab light
cavalry and archers, and vice versa. The endurance and strength of the knights
won the campaign over a series of often very close victories. Antioch was
captured through treachery in 1098 and Jerusalem in 1099 by assault against a
weak garrison. The Christians debased themselves after both victories by
slaughtering many of the residents regardless of age, faith, or gender. Many of
the Crusaders returned home, but a hardy band remained to set up feudal kingdoms
similar to those in Europe.
The Crusader rulers of Palestine were greatly outnumbered by the Muslim
population they attempted to control, so they built castles and hired mercenary
troops to hold them. The culture and religion of the Franks was too alien to win
over the residents of the area, however. From their secure castle bases, the
Crusaders struck out to intercept raiding Arabs. For about a century the two
sides engaged in a classic guerrilla war. The Frankish knights were powerful but
slow. The Arabs could not stand up to charges by the heavy cavalry but could
ride circles around them, hoping to disable their units and catch them in
ambushes in the desert. The Crusader kingdoms kept mainly to the coast, from
which they could get supplies and reinforcements, but the constant raids and
unhappy populace meant they were not an economic success.
Orders of Christian warrior monks were formed to fight for the Holy Lands. The
Knights Templar and Hospitillar were mainly Frankish. The Teutonic Knights were
German. These were the fiercest and most determined of the Crusaders, but there
were never enough of them to make the region secure.
The Crusader kingdoms survived for a while in part because they learned to
negotiate, compromise, and play the different Arab groups off against each
other. A great Arab leader appeared, however, who united the various Islamic
groups. Saladin became Sultan of Egypt and Syria in 1174. In 1187 he won a great
victory over the Crusaders in the desert and recaptured Jerusalem.
For another century the Europeans made several attempts to reassert control over
the Holy Land and Jerusalem, with only a rare temporary success. Eight more
Crusades followed and most failed to do more than get ashore and make some
progress inland before being pushed back. The Fourth Crusade did not even reach
Palestine. Under the guidance of the Doge of Venice, they sacked Constantinople
instead, a blow from which the Byzantines never recovered. One of the worst
Crusades was a Children's Crusade launched in 1212. Several thousand European
children got as far as Alexandria in Egypt, where they were sold into slavery.
The legacy of the Crusades included a new hostility between Christians and
Muslims, a deterioration of the feudal system, and exposure to new cultures.
Feudalism declined because many lords went bankrupt, leaving their lands to
their kings. Many serfs became Crusaders and never returned. New words entered
the European languages, such as cotton, muslin, divan, and bazaar. Europeans
brought back new textiles, foods, and spices. Demand back home for these new
goods increased trade and contributed to the growth of the Italian trading city-
states, especially Genoa and Venice. This demand was also the impetus for the
great age of discovery that began in fourteenth century. Treasure brought home
increased the local money supplies, aiding economic growth.
-----------------------------------
Feudalism
-----------------------------------
The predominant economic and political structure of the Middle Ages was
feudalism. This system evolved in response to a breakdown in central authority
and a rise in social chaos following the end of Roman rule. A hierarchy of
strongmen in allegiance replaced the Roman system of emperor, senate, province,
city, and town.
.-----------------.
| Feudal Contract |
'-----------------'
Feudalism was an agreement between two nobles, one the lord and one the vassal.
The vassal pledged an oath of fealty (faithfulness) to the lord and agreed to
carry out duties in his behalf. The most important duties were usually military
service (normally limited to 40 days per year), providing soldiers to the lord's
army, and providing revenue to the lord. The lord agreed to protect the vassal
with the army at his command and to provide the vassal with the means of making
a living. The vassal was given control of a fief that was usually a large
holding of land, but he could also be assigned the job of tax collector, coiner,
customs agent, or some other responsibility that created revenue. A lord with
many vassals thus had steady sources of revenue and an army. A feudal contract
was made for life. A lord could take back a fief if the vassal failed in his
duties. It was much harder for a vassal to leave a lord. During the early Middle
Ages fiefs were not inherited, which was to the advantage of the lord. The more
fiefs he had to give out, the harder his vassals would work to earn them. As the
Middle Ages progressed, vassals found opportunities to make their fiefs
inheritable, leaving the lords fewer fiefs to pass out as rewards.
Only nobles and knights were allowed to take the oath of fealty. In practice
most nobles were both vassals and lords, fitting in somewhere between the king
and the lowest knight of rank. Feudalism was never neatly organized, however.
Vassals might be more powerful than lords. The dukes of Normandy, controlling
much of France and all of England, were more powerful than the kings of France
who were their lords. Vassals might have several lords, causing problems when
different lords wanted the vassal to provide a service. The senior lord, or
liege lord, was usually given preference. Nobles also discovered that if they
were strong enough they could ignore the rules of feudalism and attack neighbors
to get what they wanted. Such private wars were endemic throughout the late
Middle Ages.
.-----------.
| The Manor |
'-----------'
The most common fief was a land holding called a manor. During the Middle Ages
nine families worked on a manor producing food to feed themselves and provide
food for a tenth family to do something else. (In the modern United States, the
relationship is perhaps 100 to 1 in the other direction.)
A typical manor was a great house or castle, surrounded by fields, cottages,
pastures, and woodlands. The manor was largely self-sufficient. Surpluses of a
few commodities were traded with other manors for commodities in shortage. As
the Middle Ages continued and the markets of towns grew, manors became more
specialized because they were more efficient at producing only a few
commodities. Some manors specialized in cheese, pigs, wine, grain, or
vegetables, for example.
The lord of the manor (landlord) occupied the manor house or castle with his
family, servants, and retainers. Retainers were usually knights and professional
soldiers on hand to provide defense and be ready to fulfill any feudal military
obligations to a senior lord. The larger the manor, the greater the number of
retainers.
The population of a manor consisted mainly of peasants (nonnoble and
nonprofessional). The farmhands were mostly serfs who spent up to half of their
week working the lord's lands in return for his protection. Each serf family
owned several rows in each of the manor's fields from which it obtained a
living. Serfs were not slaves, but they were not free either. They could not
marry, change jobs, or leave the manor without the lord's permission. But a serf
had some rights, unlike a slave. His position was hereditary and passed down in
his family. His land could not be taken so long as he fulfilled his obligations.
While the relationship between vassal and lord seems comparable to serf and
landlord, a clear distinction was made in the Middle Ages between an honorable
contract to provide military service versus mere manual labor.
Farming technology gradually changed the lives of serfs as the Middle Ages
progressed. Food production increased and surpluses were sold, providing serfs
with the money to buy their freedom. By the end of the period, there were few
serfs in western Europe.
-----------------------------------
The Late Middle Ages
-----------------------------------
The Dark Ages witnessed widespread disruption throughout Europe and the
replacement of the previously predominant Roman culture with Germanic tribal
culture. For 500 years Europe had suffered repeatedly from invasion and war. The
life of the average peasant was rarely affected, however, and social stability
and culture gradually recovered, although in new formats. By roughly the year
1000, Europeans were creating a new medieval civilization that surpassed the
ancients in almost every way.
.---------.
| Economy |
'---------'
At the start of the Dark Ages, Northern Europe was deeply forested. By 1000 AD,
much of the forest was gone and most of the rest was going, replaced by farmland
and pasture. The soil was generally excellent, a loess of finely ground rock
deposited during the last receding Ice Age. Two key inventions accelerated the
deforestation of Europe and led to increasing food production. The first was the
horse collar that originated in China and gradually came west. The improved
collar fit across a horse's breast, rather than its windpipe, allowing it to
pull much heavier loads without choking. The second invention was the heavy
wheeled plow, which was needed to cut into the deep soils and extensive root
systems of the old forests. Dramatic increases in food production were the
foundation of population growth and economic revitalization in Europe.
Increasing population, no longer needed on the manors, migrated to the towns
that were already growing in response to the needs for larger markets. Food
surpluses and the products of new industries (cloth-making, shipbuilding, and
tool-making, for example) traded in the new markets and trade fairs. Kings
encouraged the growth of towns because residents were usually allied with the
central authority rather than local feudal lords. Citizens of towns paid taxes,
not feudal service. Within towns there appeared a new middle class that
supported itself by trade, industrial production, and lending money. Merchants
came to dominate the town governments, growing both rich and powerful.
Craftsmen and merchants organized themselves into associations that were called
guilds. These associations controlled prices and production, ensured a high
standard of service or manufacturing, and organized the training of crafts
through apprenticeships. These controls ensured both a high-quality product and
a high-quality of life for guild members. Guild members often concentrated in
one part of town, such as Threadneedle Street and Ironmongers Lane in London.
Guilds formed an important power block within the political structure of the
towns.
Increased trade led to a new boom in manufacturing. Both led to the rise of
banking, centered mostly in northern Italy in the thirteenth century. Fledgling
businesses needed money to get started and to function efficiently. Money acted
as a medium of exchange and standard of value and was necessary for moving
beyond an inefficient barter economy. Italy had cash surpluses from its
lucrative Mediterranean trade, especially with the Levant. The gold florin of
Florence became the most popular coin of the late Middle Ages.
.----------.
| Religion |
'----------'
Pilgrims
Christians proved their faith by going on pilgrimages to Rome, Santiago de
Compostela, and even Jerusalem. Pilgrims who had visited Santiago de Compostela
wore cloth cockleshells on their clothing as a badge of distinction.
Cathedrals
The prosperity of the twelfth century and later was increasingly expressed in
the arts, especially architecture. The enduring symbol of Middle Ages
architecture was the cathedral. Magnificent church buildings were erected in
thanks to God for the blessings bestowed on the people. Towns competed to build
the most glorious cathedral and the loftiest spire reaching toward heaven.
Cathedrals were the largest capital investments of the period, taking as much as
a century to build and costing a fortune.
The predominant building material for cathedrals was stone, which minimized the
hazard of fire. There was little steel at the time, and iron was too soft to
hold up the immense buildings of unprecedented height. Architects evolved new
solutions to old problems, devising the pointed arch and flying buttress to
spread the weight load from vaulted ceilings onto massive stone supports. The
new building technologies made possible great open cathedrals, large windows
(often of beautifully stained glass), and high spires. The French pioneered the
new cathedrals. Notre Dame of Paris was begun in 1163 and finished 72 years
later. The cathedral at Chartres was begun in 1120 and completed in 1224 after
burning twice during construction.
Cathedrals were a great source of civic pride and prestige. Pilgrims and new
churchgoers brought increased revenues to the cathedral town.
.------------.
| Technology |
'------------'
By the late Middle Ages, science in Europe had caught up with the ancients and
passed them by. The technology that interested the people was practical, not
theoretical. They sought better ways to do things, both to make life more
comfortable and to improve business. They were interested in understanding the
natural world because they had increasingly more leisure time for contemplation.
The rudiments of mathematics and science were acquired from the Muslims of the
Iberian Peninsula and Sicily when Christians retook those areas. The Muslims had
been actively studying the ancients and new ideas from Asia since the early
Middle Ages. The Muslims passed on the Arabic numerals used today and the
concept of the zero, invented in India.
Practical research began challenging logic in the quest to understand the laws
of nature. The value of observation, experimentation, and empirical (countable)
evidence as support and proof of theory was recognized. This led to the
scientific method of the later Renaissance, which is the basis for all modern
scientific research. Ancient Greeks had suggested the scientific method, but it
fell out of favor and had been forgotten.
.---------------------.
| Feudalism's Decline |
'---------------------'
Political Changes
By the beginning of the late Middle Ages, western Europe had been divided into
feudal holdings of various sizes. Kings atop feudal hierarchies did not exercise
a strong central authority and nations existed as cultural groups, not political
entities. By the end of the late Middle Ages, strong central authority
controlled England, Spain, Portugal, and France. Political power in those areas
had been wrested away from the local feudal lords.
William the Conqueror established the first of the strong European monarchies
after winning the throne of England in 1066. Following his victory at Hastings
and five more years of fighting to break remaining resistance, he began taking
steps to consolidate his power. He kept one-sixth of England as royal land. Half
of the rest was given as fiefs to Norman barons who were his direct vassals. He
gave one-quarter of the land to the Church and the remainder was divided among
the Anglo-Saxons. The entire feudal hierarchy was forced to swear fealty to him
as liege lord. He claimed ownership of all castles, prohibited wars between
lords, and made royal coinage the only legal money. These were important first
steps in the decline of feudalism, although they could not always be enforced,
especially by later kings of lesser ability than William.
In the twelfth century, England's King Henry II created the chancery and
exchequer, the beginnings of a civil service. The chancery kept records of laws
and royal transactions; the exchequer was the treasury. Both offices were not
hereditary, making it easy to remove unwanted officials. The staffs of the new
civil service were paid a salary rather than given a fief, making them dependent
only on the king.
In 1215 the unpopular King John of England was forced to sign the Magna Carta, a
feudal document that made the king subject to the laws of the land and required
that the barons have a voice in the king's decision through a Great Council.
Wording of the Magna Carta led to important interpretations in later centuries,
including the concept of "no taxation without representation." When a later
English king ignored the Magna Carta, the barons seized power in 1264 and ruled
temporarily through an expanded Great Council called the Parliament. The new
Parliament included not only the barons and high-ranking churchmen but also
representatives from the large towns.
Although this parliamentary government was short-lived (15 months), Parliament
itself could not be suppressed or ignored. From this period on, only Parliament
could repeal laws it had passed. No taxes could be imposed without its approval.
When kings needed money in the short term (during the Hundred Years War, for
example) they were often forced by Parliament to concede more power in exchange.
Parliament and the civil service continued to grow in importance, and they
proved capable of running the country, regardless of the current king's ability
or any temporary rebellion by the nobility.
While the king, civil service, and Parliament were pushing down on the power of
barons from above, pressure was also rising from the bottom of the feudal
hierarchy. Several factors worked toward freeing the serfs from their contracts
with the lords, including increasing town populations, cessation of barbarian
raids, and a fearful plague that struck Europe in the fourteenth century.
The Black Death
The plague that became known as the Black Death struck Europe suddenly and with
devastating effect in the middle fourteenth century. It moved west from Central
Asia, appearing in the Black Sea area in 1346. It spread southwest into the
Mediterranean and then up and around the North Atlantic Coast and into the
Baltic. By 1348 it was in Spain and Portugal, by 1349 in England and Ireland, by
1351 in Sweden, and by 1353 in the Baltic States and Russia. Only remote and
sparsely populated areas were spared. Between a third and a half of the
population of Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, and India died, based on
modern estimates of the loss.
The Black Plague was probably a variety of the bubonic plague, a bacterial
infection still encountered today and still dangerous. The bacteria were carried
in the saliva of fleas that had sucked the blood of infected rats. The fleas
jumped to human hosts when infected rats died and the bacteria spread rapidly in
the human blood stream. The plague took its name from its most hideous symptom-
large black and painful swellings that oozed blood and pus. Victims developed a
high fever and became delirious. Most died within 48 hours, but a small minority
were able to fight off the infection and survive.
Entire towns were depopulated and the social relation between serf and lord fell
apart. People who could farm or make things were valuable. The move to cities
accelerated once the plague had passed.
-----------------------------------
The Renaissance
-----------------------------------
Beginning in fourteenth-century Italy, Europe went through a transition over 400
years from medieval to modern times known today as the Renaissance, meaning a
"rebirth" or "revival." The Renaissance is a nebulous concept for which there is
no clear beginning or end. It does, however, usefully mark the complete recovery
from the barbarism of the Dark Ages to the new advancement in all fields that
transcended the achievements of the great ancient civilizations.
Many different factors at work in the Middle Ages contributed to this revival
and new advancement. One was the renewed interest in learning. The first college
at Oxford University was founded in 1264. By 1400 there were more than 50
universities in Europe. Education and debate were stimulated by access to
ancient texts preserved by the Arabs and freshly translated into Latin.
Europeans had made contact with the Arabs in the Holy Land, in Sicily, and in
Spain. The rediscovered works of the ancient Greek mathematician Euclid, for
example, became the standard for teaching mathematics into the nineteenth
century. The Arabs also transmitted a new system for numbers, the concept of the
decimal point, and the concept of zero, all invented in India. The spread of
learning accelerated rapidly following the invention of the printing press
around 1450.
A second factor was the rising standard of living, especially in the great
commercial cities of Italy. The Crusades had opened European eyes to the wealth
of the East, especially silks, spices, and cotton. The merchants of Venice,
Genoa, Florence, and other cities came to dominate the trade between Europe and
the Eastern Mediterranean. With the excess wealth they accumulated in business,
these merchants began embellishing their homes and cities with art. Sculpture,
painting, architecture, music, poetry, and literature found new expression,
exhibiting an interest in subjects beyond the religious themes that dominated
previously in the Middle Ages. Popular depictions of everyday life, romance, and
adventure revealed that European culture was becoming more humanistic and less
focused on religion.
The revival was also due to technological progress that led to more efficient
production of goods and services. Manufacturing, farming, and trade all improved
past the abilities of the ancients. The drive for profits encouraged
inventiveness and exploration. A middle class of merchants and craftsmen began
grasping political power commensurate with their economic power, at the expense
of a declining nobility.
By roughly 1500 the nations of Europe were leading the world in many important
technologies. Energies unleashed by the exploration of the world, the search for
trade routes, the Protestant Reformation, and continued political competition in
Europe itself would make Europe the dominant region of the world within a few
centuries.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
7. Civilization Comparisons
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|
| Civilization | Attributes |
|--------------------------|------|
| Britons | o Town Centers cost -50% |
| | o Foot archers +1 range Castle Age, +1 Imperial |
| | Age (for +2 total) |
| | o Shepherds work 25% faster |
|--------------------------|------|
| Byzantines | o Advance to Imperial Age costs -33% |
| | o Fire ships +20% attack |
| | o Camels, skirmishers, Pikemen cost -25% |
| | o Buildings +10% HPs Dark Age, +20% Feudal Age, |
| | +30% Castle Age, +40% Imperial Age |
|--------------------------|------|
| Celts | o Infantry move 15% faster |
| | o Lumberjacks work 15% faster |
| | o Siege weapons fire 20% faster |
| | o Sheep not converted if in 1 Celt unit's LOS |
|--------------------------|------|
| Chinese | o Demolition ships +50% HPs |
| | o Town Centers support 10 population |
| | o Technologies cost -10% Feudal Age, -15% Castle |
| | Age, -20% Imperial Age |
| | o Start +3 villagers but -150 food |
|--------------------------|------|
| Franks | o Castles cost -25% |
| | o Knights +20% HPs |
| | o Farm upgrades free (require Mill) |
|--------------------------|------|
| Goths | o +10 Population Imperial Age |
| | o Villagers +5 attack vs. wild boar |
| | o Infantry +1 attack vs buildings |
| | o Infantry cost -10% Feudal Age, -15% Castle Age, |
| | -25% Imperial Age |
|--------------------------|------|
| Japanese | o Fishing Ships 2X HPs; +2P armor; work rate +5% |
| | Dark Age, +10% Feudal Age, +15% Castle Age, |
| | +20% Imperial Age |
| | o Mill, Lumber Camp, Mining Camp cost -50% |
| | o Infantry attack 10% faster Feudal Age, 15% |
| | Castle Age, 25% Imperial Age |
|--------------------------|------|
| Mongols | o Cavalry archers fire 20% faster |
| | o Light Cavalry +30% HPs |
| | o Hunters work 50% faster |
|--------------------------|------|
| Persians | o Start +50% wood, food |
| | o Town Center, Dock 2X HPs; work rate +10% Feudal |
| | Age, +15% Castle Age, +20% Imperial Age |
|--------------------------|------|
| Saracens | o Market trade cost only 5% |
| | o Transport Ships 2X HPs, 2X carry capacity |
| | o Galleys attack 20% faster |
| | o Cavalry archers +3 attack vs. buildings |
|--------------------------|------|
| Teutons | o Monks heal from 2X as far |
| | o Towers garrison 2X units, fire 2X normal |
| | garrison arrows |
| | o Murder Holes Free |
| | o Farms cost -33% |
| | o Town Center +2 attack/+5 range |
|--------------------------|------|
| Turks | o Gunpowder units +50% HPs, researching gunpowder |
| | technologies costs -50% |
| | o Gold miners work 15% faster |
| | o Chemistry free |
| | o Light Cavalry upgrade free |
|--------------------------|------|
| Vikings | o Infantry +10% HPs Feudal Age, +15% Castle Age, |
| | +20% Imperial Age |
| | o Wheelbarrow, Hand Cart free |
| | o War ships cost -20% |
|__________________________|___________________________________________________|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
8. Strategies and Tips
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
If you have any tips or strategies, send them to me at red_phoenix_1@hotmail.com
I don't really have any strategies or tips I'd like to give out. If you run a
search for Age of Kings, you will be able to find plenty.
Check out:
http://www.throughtheages.com
http://www.ageofkings.com
http://www.planetageofempires.com
http://www.aoe2.com
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
9. Appendices
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-----------------------------------
Cheats [This section was taken from Cheat Code Central]
-----------------------------------
-=These are for Age of Empires II: Age of Kings=-
While playing a game, press [Enter] to display the chat window and type one of
following codes to activate the corresponding cheat function:
RESULT CHEAT CODE
1000 gold robin hood
1000 wood lumberjack
1000 stone rock on
1000 food cheese steak jimmy's
Instant victory i r winner
Instant loss resign
Fast building aegis
Full map marco
Kill indicated opponent torpedo[number]
Kill all opponents black death
No shadows polo
Control animals natural wonders
VDML i love the monkey head
Cobra car how do you turn this on
Saboteur to smithereens
Commit suicide wimpywimpywimpy
Cheat Codes (alternate)
While playing a game, enter one of the following codes to activate the
corresponding cheat function:
RESULT CHEAT CODE
Fast construction [Ctrl] + Q
Build immutable structure [Ctrl] + P
Alternate resource menu [Ctrl] + T
View ending sequence [Ctrl] + C
Cheat Codes (command line)
Start the game with one of the following command line parameters to activate
the corresponding cheat function:
RESULT COMMAND LINE PARAMETER
800 x 600 screen resolution 800
1024 x 768 screen resolution 1024
1280 x 1024 screen resolution 1280
Auto save game autompsave
Standard mouse pointer NormalMouse
Fix display problems with some video cards Mfill
Fix SoundBlaster AWE freezes Msync
Disable all terrain sounds NoTerrainSound
Disable all music NoMusic
Disable all sounds except during FMV sequences NoSound
No pre-game FMV sequences NoStartup
-=These are for Age of Empires II: The Conquerers=-
I will add them when the game is released.
-----------------------------------
Building Attributes
-----------------------------------
|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|
| Building Name | Age | Cost | Hit Points | Attack | Garrison | Range |
|------------------|------|-------|-------------|---------|-----------|--------|
| Archery Range | II | 175 W | 1500 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Barracks | I | 175 W | 1200 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Blacksmith | II | 150 W | 2100 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Bombard Tower | IV | 125 S | 2220 | 120 | 5 | 8 |
| | | 100 G | | | | |
| Castle | III | 650 S | 4800 | 11 | 20 | 8 |
| Dock | I | 150 W | 1800 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Farm | I | 150 W | 480 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Fish Trap | II | 100 W | 50 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Fortified Wall | III | 5 S | 3000 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Gate | II | 30 S | 2750 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Guard Tower | III | 125 S | 1500 | 6 | 5 | 8 |
| House | I | 30 W | 900 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Keep | IV | 125 S | 2250 | 7 | 5 | 8 |
| | | 25 W | | | | |
| Lumber Camp | I | 100 W | 1000 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Market | II | 175 W | 2100 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Mill | I | 100 W | 1000 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Mining Camp | I | 100 W | 1000 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Monestary | III | 175 W | 2100 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Outpost | I | 25 W | 500 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | | 25 S | | | | |
| Palisade Wall | I | 2 W | 250 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Siege Workshop | III | 200 W | 2100 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Stable | II | 175 W | 1500 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Stone Wall | II | 5 S | 1800 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Town Center | III | 275 W | 2400 | 5 | 15 | 6 |
| University | III | 200 W | 2100 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Watch Tower | II | 125 S | 1020 | 5 | 5 | 8 |
| Wonder | IV | 1000 W| 4800 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | | 1000 S| | | | |
| | | 1000 G| | | | |
| |
| * Units can be garrisoned here only if a gather point is set on the |
| building while units are being created. They cannot reenter once |
| ungarrisoned. Units garrisoned in towers, Town Centers, and Castles |
| add attach and range. |
|______________________________________________________________________________|
-----------------------------------
Research Times
-----------------------------------
Ever wondered how long that wheelbarrow tech takes or the imperial upgrade?
Archery Range
Crossbow (Castle) – 35 seconds
Arbalest (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Hand Cannoneer (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Heavy Cavalry Archer (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite Skirmisher (Castle) – 50 seconds
Barracks
Tracking (Feudal) – 35 seconds
Squires (Castle) – 40 seconds
Man-at-arms (Feudal) – 40 seconds
Longsword (Castle) – 45 seconds
Pikeman (Castle) – 45 seconds
Two-Handed-Sword (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Champion (Imperial) – 100 seconds
Blacksmith
Fletching (Feudal) - 30 seconds
Bodkin Arrow (Castle) - 35 seconds
Scale Mail (Feudal) - 40 seconds
Bracer (Castle) - 40 seconds
Padded Archer Armor (Feudal) - 40 seconds
Scale Barding (Feudal) - 45 seconds
Forging (Feudal) - 50 seconds
Chain Mail (Castle) - 55 seconds
Leather Archer Armor (Castle) - 55 seconds
Chain Barding (Castle) - 60 seconds
Plate Mail (Imperial) - 70 seconds
Ring Archer Armor (Imperial) - 70 seconds
Iron Casting (Castle) - 75 seconds
Plate Barding (Castle) - 75 seconds
Blast Furnace (Imperial) - 100 seconds
Castle
Spy (Imperial) – 1 second
Sappers (Imperial) – 10 seconds
Elite Huskarl (Imperial) – 40 seconds
Elite Woad raider (Imperial) – 45 seconds
Elite Throwing Axe (Imperial) – 45 seconds
Elite Berserk (Imperial) – 45 seconds
Elite Cataphract (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite Chu-Ko-Nu (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite Mangudai (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite Mameluke (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite TK (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite Janissary (Imperial) – 55 seconds
Conscription (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Elite Longbow (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Elite Samurai (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Elite Longboat (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Elite War Elephant (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Hoardings (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Dock
Elite Cannon Galley (Imperial) - 25 seconds
Careening (Castle) - 50 seconds
War Galley (Castle) - 50 seconds
Fast Fire Ship (Imperial) - 50 seconds
Heavy Demo Ship (Imperial) - 50 seconds
Cannon Galleon (Imperial) - 50 seconds
Dry Dock (Imperial) - 60 seconds
Shipwright (Imperial) - 60 seconds
Galleon (Imperial) - 65 seconds
Lumber Camp
Double Bit Axe (Feudal) - 25 seconds
Bow Saw (Castle) - 50 seconds
Two-man Saw (Imperial) - 100 seconds
Market
Guilds (Imperial) - 50 seconds
Coinage (Feudal) - 50 seconds
Banking (Castle) - 50 seconds
Cartography (Feudal) - 65 seconds
Mill
Horse Collar (Feudal) - 20 seconds
Heavy Plow (Castle) - 40 seconds
Crop Rotation (Imperial) - 70 seconds
Mining Camp
Gold Mining (Feudal) - 30 seconds
Stone Mining (Feudal) - 30 seconds
Gold Shaft Mining (Castle) - 75 seconds
Stone Shaft Mining (Castle) - 75 seconds
Monastery
Atonement (Castle) – 40 seconds
Redemption (Castle) – 50 seconds
Fervor (Castle) – 50 seconds
Block Printing (Imperial) – 55 seconds
Faith (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Sanctity (Castle) – 60 seconds
Illumination (Imperial) – 65 seconds
Siege Workshop
Heavy Scorpion (Imperial)– 50 seconds
Capped Ram (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Siege ram (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Onager (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Bombard Cannon (Imperial) – 100 seconds
Siege Onager (Imperial) – 150 seconds
Stable
Light cavalry (Castle) – 45 seconds
Husbandry (Feudal) – 50 seconds
Cavalier (Imperial) – 100 seconds
Heavy Camel (Imperial) – 125 seconds
Paladin (Imperial) – 170 seconds
Towncenter
Loom (Dark) - 25 seconds
Town Watch (Feudal) - 25 seconds
Town Patrol (Castle) - 40 seconds
Hand Cart (Castle) - 55 seconds
Wheelbarrow (Feudal) - 75 seconds
Feudal Age Upgrade - 130 seconds
Castle Age Upgrade - 160 seconds
Imperial Age Upgrade - 190 seconds
University
Heated Shot (Castle) – 30 seconds
Guard Tower (Castle) – 30 seconds
Siege Engineers (Imperial) – 45 seconds
Treadmill Crane (Castle) – 50 seconds
Masonry (Castle) – 50 seconds
Fortified Wall (Castle) – 50 seconds
Murder Holes (Castle) – 60 seconds
Ballistics (Castle) – 60 seconds
Bombard Tower (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Architecture (Imperial) – 70 seconds
Keep (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Chemistry (Imperial) – 100 seconds
-----------------------------------
Unit Training Time
-----------------------------------
The numbers below represent how long it takes to produce a particular unit.
This is measured in seconds and thus a lower time would be more beneficial.
Archery Range Units
Archer to Arbalest - 27 seconds
Cavalry Archer to Heavy Cavalry Archer - 34 seconds
Skirmisher to Elite Skirmisher - 22 seconds
Hand Cannoneer - 34 seconds
Barracks Units
Militia to Champion - 21 seconds
Spearman to Pikeman - 22 seconds
Castle Units
Berserk - 16 seconds
Huskarl - 26 seconds
Samurai - 16 seconds
Throwing Axeman - 17 seconds
Teutonic Knight - 19 seconds
Woad Raider - 16 seconds
Cataphract - 23 seconds
Mameluke - 23 seconds
War Elephant - 31 seconds
Cho Ko Nu - 19 seconds
Janissary - 21 seconds
Longbow man - 19 seconds
Mangudai - 21 seconds
Dock Units
Galley to Galleon - 36 seconds
Fire Ship - 36 seconds
Fast Fire Ship - 36 seconds
Demolition Ship to Heavy Demolition Ship - 31
Cannon Galley to Heavy Cannon Galley - 46 seconds
Longboat to Elite Longboat - 41 seconds
Siege Units
Battering Ram to Capped Ram - 36 seconds
Siege Ram - 36 seconds
Mangonel to Siege Onager - 46 seconds
Scorpion to Heavy Scorpion - 30 seconds
Bombard Cannon - 56 seconds
Stable Units
Scout Cavalry - 30 seconds
Light Cavalry - 30 seconds
Knights to Cavalier - 30 seconds
Paladin - 30 seconds
Camel to Heavy Camel - 29 seconds
-----------------------------------
Attack Rates
-----------------------------------
The numbers below represent how quickly a unit attacks. This is determined by
how many seconds are in between each attack. Thus a lower number here would be
better.
Archery Range Units
Archer to Arbalest - 2 seconds
Cavalry Archer to Heavy Cavalry Archer - 2 seconds
Skirmisher to Elite Skirmisher - 3 seconds
Hand Cannoneer - 3.45 seconds
Barracks Units
Militia to Champion - 2 seconds
Spearman to Pikeman - 3 seconds
Castle Units
Berserk - 2 seconds
Huskarl - 2 seconds
Samurai - 2 seconds
Throwing Axeman - 2 seconds
Teutonic Knight - 2 seconds
Woad Raider - 2 seconds
Cataphract - 2 seconds
Mameluke - 2 seconds
War Elephant - 2 seconds
Cho Ko Nu - 3 seconds
Janissary - 3.45 seconds
Longbowman - 2 seconds
Mangudai - 2 seconds
Dock Units
Galley to Galleon - 3 seconds
Fire Ship - 0.25 seconds
Fast Fire Ship - 0.25 seconds
Demolition Ship to Heavy Demolition Ship - n/a
Cannon Galley to Heavy Cannon Galley - 10 seconds
Longboat to Elite Longboat - 3 seconds
Siege Units
Battering Ram to Capped Ram - 5 seconds
Siege Ram - 5 seconds
Mangonel to Siege Onager - 6 seconds
Scorpion to Heavy Scorpion - 3.6 seconds
Bombard Cannon - 6.5 seconds
Stable Units
Scout Cavalry - 2 seconds
Light Cavalry - 2 seconds
Knights to Cavalier - 1.8 seconds
Paladin - 1.9 seconds
Camel to Heavy Camel - 2 seconds
-----------------------------------
Movement Rates
-----------------------------------
The numbers below represent how fast a unit moves, measured in tiles per
second. Therefore, the higher the number, the faster the unit moves and more
ground it covers.
Archery Range Units
Archer to Arbalest - 0.96 tiles/second
Cavalry Archer to Heavy Cavalry Archer - 1.43 tiles/second
Skirmisher to Elite Skirmisher - 0.96 tiles/second
Hand Cannoneer - 0.96 tiles/second
Barracks Units
Militia to Champion - 0.9 tiles/second
Spearman to Pikeman - 1.0 tiles/second
Castle Units
Berserk - 0.9 tiles/second
Huskarl - 0.9 tiles/second
Samurai - 0.9 tiles/second
Throwing Axeman - 0.9 tiles/second
Teutonic Knight - 0.65 tiles/second
Woad Raider - 1.03 tiles/second
Cataphract - 1.35 tiles/second
Mameluke - 1.41 tiles/second
War Elephant - 0.6 tiles/second
Cho Ko Nu - 0.96 tiles/second
Janissary - 0.96 tiles/second
Longbowman - 0.96 tiles/second
Mangudai - 1.43 tiles/second
Dock Units
Galley to Galleon - 1.43 tiles/second
Fire Ship - 1.35 tiles/second
Fast Fire Ship - 1.43 tiles/second
Demolition Ship to Heavy Demolition Ship - 1.6 tiles/second
Cannon Galley to Heavy Cannon Galley - 1.1 tiles/second
Longboat to Elite Longboat - 1.54 tiles/second
Siege Units
Battering Ram to Capped Ram - 0.5 tiles/second
Siege Ram - 0.6 tiles/second
Mangonel to Siege Onager - 0.5 tiles/second
Scorpion to Heavy Scorpion - 0.65 tiles/second
Bombard Cannon - 0.7 tiles/second
Stable Units
Scout Cavalry - 1.2 tiles/second
Light Cavalry - 1.5 tiles/second
Knights to Cavalier - 1.35 tiles/second
Paladin - 1.35 tiles/second
Camel to Heavy Camel - 1.4 tiles/second
System: PC/Windows
Version: 1.3 (08/11/00)
Email Policy:
ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ
If you are going to email me about this game, please put
AoE II as the subject. Just AoE II. Also please realize
that I am not hiding cheats or any other information,
i.e. everything I know about AoE II is in this guide.
If you see any mistakes, or have anything that you want to add
please email me! I will, of course, give you full credit for
your addition, and be eternally grateful to you.
Before emailing me with a question, be sure to check out the
Frequently Asked Questions section.
_______________
.--------------------========= N O T E S =========-------------------------.
| ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ |
| This small section is devoted to the Expansion Pack, The Conquerers. This |
| will probably be removed when it is released this Fall. |
| |
| Military |
| |
| * Town centers will be dramatically altered. They will now be "horrible on |
| offence", while still keeping their defensive capabilities. The town |
| center has undergone changes in cost, build time, combat ability, and civ |
| bonuses for the Brits and Teutons. It no longer benefits from the range |
| upgrades, although they still give it more damage. It takes as long to |
| build as a castle. It now costs 100 stone and 275 wood. Most people will |
| only find themselves building three or four for the whole game. |
| |
| * The cav archer will move faster, fire faster, have twice the accuracy and |
| be built faster. There is also new upgrades for cav archers, one of which |
| will give them more armor. |
| |
| * Spearmen do LESS damage to camels. |
| |
| * Camels are now faster. |
| |
| * Monk healing "works better". |
| |
| * Naval units now sail about in formation, but you can’t pick from a menu |
| of formations like you do with land units. |
| |
| * Demoships will be set at the "defencive" attack stance by default. |
| |
| * Handcannoners are being improved. They do more damage now, and they are |
| available as soon as you research chemistry. You no longer need to |
| research the "hand cannoner" upgrade to get them. |
| |
| * Bombard cannons are being improved. They will have more hit points and |
| have bonus vs enemy siege. They also will be available as soon as you get |
| chemistry, you no longer have to research the "bombard cannon" upgrade. |
| |
| * Rams will be able to garrison foot soldiers. Garrisoned rams will move |
| faster and do more damage. Upgraded rams will be able to garrison more |
| units. |
| |
| * When dealing with monks; there will be a reduced “wait time” before |
| conversion takes place. |
| |
| * “smart onagers” that won’t auto-target an enemy if a friendly would also |
| get hit. |
| |
| * Improved scorpions, they are no longer helped by the Archer attack |
| upgrades, but their bolts always penetrate a tile or two past the initial |
| strike point (so you don’t have to micromanage their shots to hit the |
| back rank). Heavy Scorpions will have a longer range. The scorpion AI |
| will also be improved. |
| |
| New Units: |
| |
| * There will be 11 new units (including the new unique units). |
| |
| * 4 new units available starting in the castle age. Three of which will be |
| upgrades to existing units. One will be of a new line and won't be widely |
| available. |
| |
| * Every civ will get at least one of the new units. |
| |
| Halberdiers |
| |
| * Imperial age upgrade to pikemen. |
| |
| * They have more hit points and deal more damage. Their bonus vs. mounted |
| units is also improved but only by a small amount. |
| |
| Hussars |
| |
| * Imperial age upgrade to light cav. |
| |
| * They have more hit points and do more damage then light cav, but will |
| still have the same speed. |
| |
| * Ten civs will have access to them. |
| |
| Stats: |
| |
| Upgrade Cost: 500 food, 600 gold |
| HP: 75 |
| Attack: 10 |
| Armor: Unknown |
| |
| Petards. |
| |
| * They will function like demo ships for land. |
| |
| * Most civs will have access to them. |
| |
| * Will be made at the castle. |
| |
| * Petards are not very good vs units, except for siege, but are excellent |
| vs. walls and some buildings. They are not an effective substitute for |
| all other siege weapons, but in certain situations they are very handy. |
| |
| * They are "very effective" vs. town centers. |
| |
| * They are "reasonably fast" and have some piercing armor. |
| |
| * When they die they blow up, damaging all near by units. |
| |
| Eagle Warrior |
| |
| Stats: |
| |
| Cost: Unknown |
| Upgrade Cost: Unknown |
| HP: 60 |
| Attack: Unknown |
| Armor: 0/2 |
| Special: |
| |
| * Only Aztecs and Mayans can get them. |
| |
| * They are weak against knights. |
| |
| * They have better line of sight then a scout in dark age, equal in feudal, |
| and inferior in imperial. |
| |
| * Infantry have a small bonus vs them. Man at arms does +1 damage, a |
| champion does +3. |
| |
| * They are almost as fast as a scout, but have more hit points and damage. |
| |
| * They can only be built in castle and imperial age. |
| |
| * They have an attack of 4 in dark age. As soon as you hit feudal it is |
| increased to 7. |
| |
| * You can upgrade them to "Elite" status in imperial age. |
| |
| * They have a small bonus vs siege. |
| |
| * They have a small bonus vs cavalry. |
| |
| * They have a bonus against monks. |
| |
|---------------------------------|
| Economic |
| |
| * "Farm Queues" that let you “stack up” a bunch of farms at the mill, and |
| then your farmers automatically replant a farm when it expires, so you |
| don’t have to do it yourself. You can queue up to 15 farms. |
| |
| * You can buy, sell, or tribute resources in lots of 500, or all at once. |
| |
| * Relics generate gold faster. |
| |
| * "Smart Villagers" if the villagers make a lumber camp, mill, etc. they |
| will go right into their jobs. (i.e. the vills make a lumber camp then |
| the vills turn into lumberjacks and start cutting wood). Also if you |
| place a wall-line and instruct two or more vills to construct it one will |
| go to one end and the other to the other end and work their way to the |
| center. |
| |
|---------------------------------|
| New Technologies |
| |
| Thumb Ring |
| |
| * Gives archers 100% hit accuracy and increases their fire rate. |
| |
| Heresy |
| |
| * When one of your units gets converted it will die instead. |
| |
| Herbal Medicine |
| |
| * Quadruples your healing rate when garrisoned. |
| |
| Theocracy |
| |
| * When you have a bunch of monks selected and they convert an enemy unit |
| together, only one of them will lose their faith points. |
| |
| Bloodlines |
| |
| * Gives mounted units +20 hit points. (Includes cavalry, camels, and |
| elephants). |
| |
| * Cost is 150 food, 100 gold. |
| |
| Parthian Tactics |
| |
| * Gives cav archers +1 Normal armor and +2 pierce armor. |
| |
| Caravan |
| |
| * Increases the speed of trade carts/cogs by 50%. It is researched at the |
| market and Cartography is a pre-requisite for it. |
| |
| * All civs will get it. |
| |
|---------------------------------|
| Civ Specific |
|---------------------------------|
| Britons: |
| |
| * TCs only cost 1 /2 wood in Castle & Imperial age. |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Yeomen" and will give their foot archers an |
| additional +1 range. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| * Will NOT get thumb ring. |
| |
| Byzantines: |
| |
| * Their Unique Tech is called "Logistics". It will give their Cataphract |
| trample damage (just like the elite war elephant). |
| |
| * Will NOT get Herbal Medicine. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Bloodlines. |
| |
| * Will get Thumb Ring. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| Celts: |
| |
| * Their unique tech is called "Furor Celtica" and will give their siege |
| more hit points (except trebs). |
| |
| * Woad Raiders have been changed. They now have more pierce armor and are |
| trained faster. |
| |
| * Will get halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get hussars. |
| |
| Chinese: |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Rocketry". It will give their Chu Ko Nu and |
| scorpions more attack. |
| |
| * They will not be as fast anymore. They will start with even less resouces |
| then before. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get Thumb Ring. |
| |
| * Thumb Ring and Rocketry both effect the Chu Ko Nu, but only the first |
| arrow he shoots, all the subsequent arrows are unaffected by these techs. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Hussars. |
| |
| Franks: |
| |
| * Unique Tech is the "Bearded Axe" which will increase the range of the |
| throwing axeman by one. |
| |
| * They will still have the strongest cavalry in the game. |
| |
| * Will get Heresy. |
| |
| * Will get Theocracy. |
| |
| * Will get Herbal Medicine. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Hussars. |
| |
| * Will NOT get bloodlines. |
| |
| * Will NOT get thumb ring. |
| |
| Goths: |
| |
| * The only civ with two unique techs, one is available in castle age. |
| |
| * One unique tech is called "Anarchy". It is available in the Castle age. |
| It will let Huskarals be trained at the barracks. |
| |
| * Their second Unique tech is called "Profusion". It gives them +50% |
| Barracks unit build speed (7 seconds for a champion). |
| |
| * Goth hunters now carry +15 meat. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| Japanese: |
| |
| * Samurai is now as fast as a pikeman, does more damage to unique units |
| then he used to, and has more pierce armor. |
| |
| * Their unique tech is called "Kataparuto". It will let their trebs pack, |
| unpack, and fire faster. |
| |
| * Will get halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Thumb Ring tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Bloodlines tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Parthian Tactics tech. |
| |
| * Will NOT get hussars. |
| |
| Mongols: |
| |
| * Will have access to the Hussar. Their Hussars will benefit from their |
| light cav civ bonus. |
| |
| * Will have access to the thumb ring tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Bloodlines tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Parthian Tactics tech. |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Drill". It will give their siege more speed |
| (except Trebs). |
| |
| Persians: |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Mahouts". It will give their elephants more speed. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Heresy. |
| |
| * Will get Bloodlines. |
| |
| * Will get Thumb Ring. |
| |
| * Will get Parthian Tactics. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| Saracens: |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Zealotry". It will give their camels, and |
| mamelukes 30 more hit points. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Bloodlines tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Thumb Ring tech. |
| |
| * Will have access to the Parthian Tactics tech. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| * Will NOT get halberdiers. |
| |
| Teutons: |
| |
| * Town Center bonus WILL be changed. They no longer have the +5 range. They |
| still have +5 line of sight however. |
| |
| * Unique tech is called "Crenellations". It adds +3 range to castles and |
| permits garrisoned infantry to increase the attack of their buildings as |
| if they were villagers. |
| |
| * The Teutonic Knight will remain the strongest, and slowest, infantry unit |
| in the game. |
| |
| * Will get Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will get Bloodlines. |
| |
| Turks: |
| |
| * Will get the new Hussar upgrade for free. |
| |
| * Their petards benefit from their gunpowder civ bonus. |
| |
| * Janissaries are slightly changed. Their bonus against infantry has been |
| taken away and they have slightly lower hit points (about 10), but now |
| they do more general damage (about 4). |
| |
| * Unique Tech is called "Artillery". It will give bombard cannons, bombard |
| towers and cannon ships +2 range. |
| |
| * Will get Thumb Ring. |
| |
| * Will get Bloodlines. |
| |
| * Will get Parthian Tactics. |
| |
| Vikings: |
| |
| * Berserks now have more pierce armor. |
| |
| * Their unique tech is called "Berserkergang" and will triple the |
| regeneration abilities of the Berserkers. |
| |
| * Will NOT get halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Herbal Medicine. |
| |
| * Will get thumb ring. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
|---------------------------------|
| New civs: |
| |
| Huns |
| |
| Unique Unit: |
| |
| Tarkan. |
| |
| * It is a cavalry unit that has a bonus vs. buildings. |
| |
| Civ bonuses: |
| |
| * Their cav archers are 25% cheaper in castle age, 30% cheaper in imperial. |
| |
| * They do NOT need to build houses, ever. At the start of the game they can |
| support enough units for the pop cap. |
| |
| * They start with 100 less wood then normal. |
| |
| * Their Trebs have a higher hit rate (50% chance of success, as opposed to |
| other civs 30%) |
| |
| Tech Tree: |
| |
| * Will get Paladins. |
| |
| * Will get Hussars. |
| |
| * Will get Halbardiers. |
| |
| * Will get seige rams. |
| |
| * Will get Thumb Ring. |
| |
| * Will get Parthian Tactics. |
| |
| * Will get Herbal Medicine. |
| |
| * Will get Bloodlines. |
| |
| * Will get Hearsey. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Champions. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Arbalests. |
| |
| * Will NOT get camels. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Plate Mail. |
| |
| * Will NOT get ring archer armor. |
| |
| * Will NOT get crop rotation. |
| |
| * Will NOT get stone shaft mining. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Theocracy. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Seige Engineers. |
| |
| * They have no tower or wall upgrades. |
| |
| * They have weak monks. |
| |
| * They have a weak navy. |
| |
| Team Bonus: |
| |
| * Stable units train faster. |
| |
| Unique Tech: |
| |
| Atheism. |
| |
| * Makes relic & wonder wins take twice as long to complete. It also halves |
| the price of Spies. |
| |
|==============================================================================|
| Spanish |
| |
| Unique Units: |
| |
| Conquistador |
| |
| * It is a mounted musketeer. It costs 60 food and 70 gold. |
| |
| Missionary |
| |
| * It is a fast moving, mounted monk. They are trained at the monastery |
| after a castle is built. They have less range then a monk and can not |
| pick up relics. It costs 100 gold and has the same hit points as a normal |
| monk. |
| |
| Civ Bonuses: |
| |
| * They build their buildings 30% faster, except when building Wonders. |
| |
| * All upgrades from the Blacksmith require no gold (they still cost food |
| however). |
| |
| * Cannonballs shot from Cannon Galleons travel faster through the air, and |
| benefit from the ballistics tech (after you research it). |
| |
| Tech Tree: |
| |
| * Have access to all cavalry and infantry units and upgrades (except |
| camels). |
| |
| * They have access to all gunpowder units. |
| |
| * Their siege is not particularly spectacular. They don't even get siege |
| engineer. |
| |
| * Will get sappers. |
| |
| * Will NOT get crop rotation. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Crossbow men |
| |
| Unique Tech: |
| |
| Supremacy |
| |
| * It will make their villagers "super-tough". It will give them +3 regular |
| and peircing armor, more attack, and more hitpoints |
| |
| Team Bonus: |
| |
| * +50% Trade profit. |
| |
|==============================================================================|
| Mayans |
| |
| Unique Unit: |
| |
| Plumed Archer |
| |
| Elite Plumed Archer stats: |
| |
| Cost: Unknown |
| Upgrade Cost: Unknown |
| HP: 65 |
| Attack: 5 |
| Armor: 0/2 |
| Range: 5 |
| Special: It is faster then a normal foot archer. Benefits from their cheap |
| foot archer civ bonus. |
| |
| Civ Bonuses: |
| |
| * Their resource sites (except for farms) last 25% longer. It’s as if their |
| boars had 375 food each, for example. Mayan villagers don’t gather any |
| faster. They don’t carry any extra. They can just keep working at a given |
| site for longer than other folks. This is an advantage in the early game |
| because, in effect, they get 25% more sheep, berries, deer, shore fish, |
| and boars than other people. It is an advantage in the late game because |
| their gold & stone takes longer to run out. They are good at turtling |
| because it doesn’t cost them as much in resources. |
| |
| * Archers cost -10% in Feudal age, -20% in Castle age, and -30% in imperial |
| age. |
| |
| * They start with four villagers instead of three. |
| |
| Tech Tree: |
| |
| * They have access to every economic upgrade except gold shaft mining. |
| |
| * They have access to all the farm techs. |
| |
| * Will NOT have access to stables or ANY horse units. |
| |
| * Will NOT get champions. |
| |
| * They have fully-upgraded skirmishers and Halberdiers. |
| |
| * Will have a "Eagle Warrior" instead of a scout to start with. He is not |
| as fast as a scout but he is tougher in combat. |
| |
| * Will NOT have access to any gunpowder units. |
| |
| Unique Tech: |
| |
| El Dorado |
| |
| * Increases the hit points of the Eagle Warrior to 100. |
| |
| Team Bonus: |
| |
| * Half price walls and palisades. |
| |
|==============================================================================|
| Aztecs |
| |
| Unique Unit: |
| |
| Jaguar Warrior |
| |
| Elite Jaguar Warrior stats: |
| |
| Cost: 60 Food 30 Gold |
| Upgrade cost: unknown |
| HP: 75 |
| Attack: 12 |
| Armor: 2/0 |
| Special: It has a rather large bonus vs infantry units. |
| |
| Civ Bonuses: |
| |
| * Villagers get +5 carry capacity. |
| |
| * All military units are created 15% faster. |
| |
| * Every time you research a monk tech their monks will gain +5 hit points |
| (85 hit point max). |
| |
| Unique Tech: |
| |
| Garland Wars. |
| |
| * It will give their infantry units +4 normal attack and +6 attack vs |
| cavalry. |
| |
| Tech Tree: |
| |
| * Will get all infantry black smith techs. |
| |
| * Will get an "Eagle Warrior" instead of a scout to start with. |
| |
| * Will get Seige Ram. |
| |
| * Will get all monk techs. |
| |
| * Will NOT have access to stables or ANY horse units. |
| |
| * Will NOT have access to any gunpowder units. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Halbardiers. |
| |
| Team Bonus: |
| |
| * Gold generated by relics is increased by 33%. |
| |
|==============================================================================|
| Koreans |
| |
| Unique Units: |
| |
| Turtle Boat |
| |
| Cost: unknown |
| Upgrade cost: unknown |
| HP: 300 |
| Attack: 50 |
| Armor: unknown |
| Range: 5 |
| Special: It is the only boat that has regular armor. It is very slow and |
| has a low rate of fire. It is best countered by bombard cannons, bombard |
| towers, and multiple fireships or demoships. |
| |
| War Wagon |
| |
| Elite War Wagon stats: |
| Cost: 80 Wood, 60 Gold |
| upgrade cost: unknown |
| HP: 200 |
| Attack: 9 |
| Armor: 0/4 |
| Range: 6 |
| Special: Korean UU, Upgraded by blacksmith range upgrades, seige engineers, |
| mounted unit upgrades. Takes increased damage from pikes, skirmishers, |
| camels, and anti-seige units |
| |
| Civ Bonuses: |
| |
| * They get all tower upgrades for free. After they research chemistry they |
| get the bombard tower upgrade for free as well. |
| |
| * Towers gain +1 range in castle age and an additional +1 range in imperial |
| age. |
| |
| * Villagers mine stone 15% faster. |
| |
| * Villagers have +2 line of sight. |
| |
| Unique Tech: |
| |
| Shinkichon |
| |
| * Gives their Onagers +2 range. |
| |
| Tech Tree: |
| |
| * Have access to all dock upgrades. |
| |
| * Have siege engineers. |
| |
| * Have Halbardiers. |
| |
| * Have Arbolests and all blacksmith archer upgrades. |
| |
| * Have Champions and all blacksmith infantry upgrades. |
| |
| * Have access to all ships except demo ships, and Elite cannon galleys. |
| |
| * Have access to Bombard Towers and Siege Onagers. |
| |
| * Will NOT get Blast Furnace. |
| |
| * Will NOT get plate barding. |
| |
| Team Bonus |
| |
| * Gives Onagers +1 range. |
| |
|---------------------------------|
| Miscellaneous |
| |
| * Outposts will have a greater line of sight and now only cost 25 wood and |
| 10 stone. |
| |
| * The bug that made it so your trebs were unable to inflict damage on enemy |
| buildings when firing from high elevations has been fixed. |
| |
| * Diplomacy in single player will be "way better". |
| |
| * There will be new terrain like snow, ice and rain forests. |
| |
| * They have tweaked the way gold is distributed in a random map, to make it |
| more fair. |
| |
| * The AI will get through the ages much more quickly. (18 min castle times).|
| |
| * You will be able to give your computer allies commands like attack now, |
| attack here, give me X resouce, make ships, etc. |
| |
| * New game type called "king of the hill". Players have to fight for |
| control of a random wonder located in the center of the map. You can't |
| destroy the Wonder, you must take it by force from your enemies. |
| |
| * New game type called "Last man standing". Teams can NOT be locked, and |
| allied victory is disabled. You will be able to win through conquest, |
| building a wonder, or by getting relics. It will be very "shimo-friendly".|
| |
| * New map type called Oasis, which is kind of like a Mediterranean or |
| Baltic, except with trees in the middle instead of water. |
| |
| * New map type called "Nomad". You start with no town center and your |
| villagers scattered around the map. You must decide whether to spend the |
| time to collect your villagers at a good resource location, join your |
| allies, or just build where you begin. There are no wolves or jaguars |
| present on this map. |
| |
| * New map type called "Ghost Lake". The middle is filled with a giant ice |
| lake. Buildings can only be build on the dry ground on the outskirts of |
| the map. |
| |
| * New map type called Mongolia. It is an all-land map with tons of cliffs & |
| elevations. It is a lot like Arabia, except you can wall off. |
| |
| * New map type called "Yucatan". It has tons of food, like berries, |
| turkeys, etc. |
| |
| * New map type called "Scandinavian". It has NO berries, so you have to |
| rely on ice fishing or hunting. It also has lots of frozen lakes, making |
| it hard to wall off. |
| |
| * New map type called "Salt Marsh". It is comprised mostly of shallows. |
| |
| * There will be ten real world maps including: Japan, Spain, France, the |
| British Isles, Byzantium, Texas and the Middle East. You can also select |
| an option that will give you one of the real world maps randomly. |
| |
| * There will be color-coded chat messages. |
| |
| * You will be able to review your most recent chat messages. |
| |
| * You will be able to see the in-game chat when watching recorded games. |
| |
| * You can place bookmarks in a recorded game so you can skip ahead to the |
| "good part". |
| |
| * "Random map" is now truly random. Before it would never choose some |
| specific maps. Now it will choose them all. |
| |
| * There is a new "Random Teams" option in multiplayer. Basically, when |
| you’re clicking on the “team number” box, one of the results is a "?" |
| mark, and if you pick that, then you’re letting the computer pick your |
| team for you. |
| |
| * There will be new wildlife. When playing on a meso-american map, if you |
| click on a boar, it says "peccary" and instead of sheep, you get wild |
| turkeys. Wolves have also been replaced with jaguars. |
| |
| * Four new campaigns will also be included, with one centering on Attila |
| the Hun's invasion of Europe, one on El Cid and his defense of Spain |
| against an attack from the Moors, and one on the Aztecs' defense at the |
| Siege of Tenochtitlan. The fourth will be based on famous battles |
| including Hastings, Agincourt, Manzkert, Lepanto, Noryang Point, Kyoto, |
| Tours, and Vinlandsaga. |
| |
| * The civ colors have all been adjusted so that they are "more sparkly and |
| easier to see". |
| |
| * There will be new cheat codes. |
| |
| -=This info was taken from www.ageofkings.com=- |
'--------------------=================================-------------------------'
This FAQ is Copyright 2000 Jim Chamberlin a.k.a. Red Phoenix. The only sites
allowed to use this FAQ are:
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2. Game Winners (http://www.gamewinners.com)
3. Video Game Strategies (http://vgstrategies.about.com)
4. Cheat Code Central (http://www.cheatcc.com)
5. Happy Puppy (http://www.happypuppy.com)
6. Game Revolution (http://www.game-revolution.com)
7. Gaming Planet (http://www.gamingplanet.com)
8. PlayStation Pit (http://www.psxpit.com)
9. X Cheater (http://www.xcheater.com)
10. Phat Games (http://www.phatgames.com)
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If ANY other site has a copy of this FAQ, it is an illegal copy. So, if you
happen to see this at another site, please notify me immediately.
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\_ /_/ /.
_____ _____ \__/_ <
/ __ \__________ / __ \___ _ _____ _________ _ ____ __ /<<< \_\_
/ / / / ___/ __ \ / / / / // \/ __ \/ ___/ Y \/__/ \/ / /,)^>>_._ \
/ /_/ / _/_/ /_/ // /_/ / _~ / /_/ / _/_/ \ / /> < (/ \\ /\\\
/__/ \ >____/_____// ____/__//__/\_____/_____/__//__/\_//__/\_\ // ````
======\/============\_/========[red_phoenix_1@hotmail.com]============((`=======
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Version - 1.0 Everything is new, of course.
1.1 Added a few things.
1.2 A minor change.
1.3 A few minor changes.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
If you have anything you would like to submit, please do so. Send it to
red_phoenix_1@hotmail.com. I would appreciate it if you would put "Age of
Empires II: Age of Kings" in the Subject Line. It helps me weed through my
mailbox without deleting something important. I don't consider SPAM and Porn
important, if you know what I mean, although some of you may think otherwise.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Table of Contents
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
1. Introduction History
2. Changes from Age of Empires and Age of Empires: Rise of Rome
3. The Buildings
- Archery Range
- Barracks
- Blacksmith
- Bombard Tower
- Castle
- Dock
- Farm
- Fish Trap
- Fortified Wall
- Gate
- Guard Tower
- House
- Keep
- Lumber Camp
- Market
- Mill
- Mining Camp
- Monastery
- Outpost
- Palisade Wall
- Siege Workshop
- Stable
- Stone Wall
- Town Center
- University
- Watch Tower
- Wonder
4. The Units
A. Miscellaneous
- Monk
- Relic
- Trade Cart
- Villager
B. Infantry
- Berserk & Elite Berserk
- Champion
- Huskarl & Elite Huskarl
- Long Swordsman
- Man- at- Arms
- Militia
- Pikeman
- Samurai & Elite Samurai
- Spearmen
- Teutonic Knight & Elite Teutonic Knight
- Throwing Axemen & Elite Throwing Axemen
- Two- Handed Swordsman
- Woad Raider & Elite Woad Raider
C. Archery
- Arbalest
- Archer
- Cavalry Archer
- Chu Ko Nu & Elite Cho Ko Nu
- Crossbowman
- Elite Skirmisher
- Hand Cannoneer
- Heavy Cavalry Archer
- Janissary & Elite Janissary
- Longbowman & Elite Longbowman
- Mangudai & Elite Mangudai
- Skirmisher
D. Cavalry
- Camel
- Cavalier
- Cataphract & Elite Cataphract
- Heavy Cavalry
- Knight
- Light Cavalry
- Mameluke & Elite Mameluke
- Paladin
- Scout Cavalry
- War Elephant & Elite War Elephant
E. Siege Weapons
- Battering Ram
- Bombard Cannon
- Capped Ram
- Mongonel
- Onager
- Scorpion & Heavy Scorpion
- Siege Onager
- Siege Ram
- Trebuchet
F. Boats
- Cannon Galleon & Elite Cannon Galleon
- Demolition Ship & Heavy Demolition Ship
- Fire Ship & Fast Fire Ship
- Fishing Ship
- Galleon
- Galley
- Longboat & Elite Longboat
- Trade Cog
- Transport Ship
- War Galley
5. The Technologies
A. Blacksmith (Origin)
- Blast Furnace
- Bodkin Arrow
- Bracer
- Chain Barding Armor
- Chain Mail Armor
- Fletching
- Forging
- Iron Casting
- Leather Archer Armor
- Padded Archer Armor
- Plate Barding Armor
- Plate Mail Armor
- Ring Archer Armor
- Scale Barding Armor
- Scale Mail Armor
B. Mill (Origin)
- Crop Rotation
- Heavy Plow
- Horse Collar
C. University (Origin)
- Architecture
- Ballistics
- Chemistry
- Heated Shot
- Masonry
- Murder Holes
- Siege Engineers
- Treadmill Crane
D. Monastery (Origin)
- Atonement
- Block Printing
- Faith
- Fervor
- Illumination
- Redemption
- Sanctity
E. Barracks (Origin)
- Squires
- Tracking
F. Town Center (Origin)
- Hand Cart
- Loom
- Town Patrol
- Town Watch
- Wheelbarrow
G. Castle (Origin)
- Conscription
- Hoardings
- Sappers
- Spies
H. Mining Camp (Origin)
- Gold Mining
- Gold Shaft Mining
- Stone Mining
- Stone Shaft Mining
I. Lumber Camp (Origin)
- Double- Bit Axe
- Bow Saw
- Two- Man Saw
J. Market
- Banking
- Cartography
- Coinage
- Guilds
K. Stable
- Husbandry
L. Dock
- Careening
- Dry Dock
- Shipwright
6. The History
7. Civilization Comparisons
8. Strategies and Tips
9. Appendices
- Cheats
- Building Attributes
- Research Times
- Unit Training Times
- Attack rates
- Movement Rates
10. Credits, Links, and Closing
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
1. Introduction
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Age of Empires 2: Age of Kings is the sequel to the very popular Age of
Empires
title. Age of Empires 2 (AOE2) was delayed for a while because they wanted to
get everything right before they shipped it. That was the reason for Age of
Empires: Rise of Rome. It was supposed to cure our crave for more Age of
Empires,
when they all knew we wanted Age of Empires 2. Well, Rise of Rome did a pretty
good job in serving as an appetizer. Age of Empires II: Age of Kings has done
very, very well in sales so far. An add-on for AoE II is due out this Fall, so
stay tuned, it'll be a good one. I'll post more details about it here as they
become more clear.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
2. Changes from Age of Empires and Age of Empires: Rise of Rome
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
* 13 New Civilizations - Each has a unique unit and a team bonus.
* New Units - Including, Kings, Heroes, female villagers, knights, cannons,
and exploding demolition ships.
* New Buildings - Including impressive castles and gates that automatically
open and close for you and your allies.
* New Technologies - Including Conscription (increases military unit creation
speed) and Town Watch (increases building Line of Sight).
* Formations - Precision control of how your army moves and engages in combat.
* New Multimedia Campaigns - Unique music and more than 300 pieces of original
art enhance your game as you follow a soldier through battles featuring
William Wallace, Joan of Arc, Saladin, Genghis Khan, and Frederick
Barbossa.
* New Ways To Trade - Trade with other players over land and by sea; buy or
sell resources at the Market.
* Learning Campaign - Master the basics by helping William Walace rise from
his
humble beginnings to defeat the British.
* Regicide game - Defend your king to win the game.
* 8 New Map Types - Including the Arabia, Black Forest, Rivers, and Random,
which allows the computer to pick a surprise map type for you.
* Garisoning - Station units inside buildings for protection, healing, and
surprise attacks.
* New Combat Features - Order military units to patrol, guard, or follow and
choose their combat stance.
* Record and replay games - Watch your single- player and multiplayer games
later.
* Find Idle Villagers - Automatically locate villagers not assigned to a task
using the "Idle Villager" button.
* New Online Tech Tree - See what is available to your civilization and which
units and technologies you've researched while in the game.
* Improved Multiplayer Features - Save and restore multiplayer games; lock the
game speed for all players; lock game teams so players can't change alliance
during a game; signal allies.
* Gather Points - New units automatically gather at a location or garrison
inside a building.
* Improved Interface - Units behind buildings and trees are visible; the mini-
map has Normal, Combat, and Economic modes; chat interface is expanded; Help
is integrated into the game.
* User Profiles - Customize options and hotkeys and automatically save them
game to game.
* Online Encyclopedia - Extensive histories of 13 medieval civilizations;
background on the Middle Ages, armies, weapons, and warfare.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
3. The Buildings
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-------------
Archery Range
-------------
The Archery Range is used to create archers. Archery Range units can be
garrisoned inside the Archery Range if you set a gather point there while the
units are being created. They cannot reenter once ungarrisoned. You must have
a Barracks before you can build an Archery Range.
--------
Barracks
--------
The Barracks is used to create and improve infantry. Barracks units can be
garrisoned inside the Barracks if you set a gather point there while the units
are being created. They cannot reenter once ungarrisoned. You must have a
Barracks to build an Archery Range.
----------
Blacksmith
----------
The Blacksmith lets you improve the attack strength and armor of your infantry,
archers, cavalry, and towers. You must have a Blacksmith to build a Siege
Workshop.
-------------
Bombard Tower
-------------
The Bombard Tower has extensive sight to track down enemies. You must research
Chemistry and Bombard Tower (at the University) before you can build Bombard
Towers. Because of the new architecture involved, preexisting towers do not
upgrade to Bombard Towers. Acquiring this technology only allows you to build
Bombard Towers.
------
Castle
------
Costly and time- consuming to construct, the Castle is the strongest defensive
structure. At the Castle you can create and upgrade your civilization's unique
unit and create the powerful Trebuchet siege engine. Several important
military technologies can also be researched at the Castle.
A Castle supports 20 population units and can garrison 20 villagers or military
units (except siege weapons). Units can be garrisoned at any time. You can
garrison unique units by setting a gather point while the units are being
created. Units garrisoned in the Castle heal more quickly than units garrisoned
in other buildings.
----
Dock
----
The Dock is used to build ships, research naval technology, and trade with other
civilizations. It is also where Fishing Ships deposit food. Dock units can be
garrisoned inside the Dock if you set a gather point there while the units are
being created. They cannot renenter once ungarrisoned.
----
Farm
----
Farms provide a renewable source of food. Farms are bult by vilagers, who then
gather food from them. Each farm provides a limited amount of food before it
goes fallow and must be rebuilt. To rebuild a Farm, select a villager, and then
right-click the expired Farm. Before you build Farms, you must build a Mill.
Farms cannot be converted by enemy Monks. You can farm enemy Farms that have
been abandoned.
You can increase the production of your Farms by researching Horse Collar, Heavy
Plow, and Crop Rotation (at the Mill).
---------
Fish Trap
---------
Fish Traps provide a renewable source of food. Fish Traps are available in the
Feudal Age, after you build a Fishing Ship. Fish Traps are built in the water
by Fishing Ships, which then gather food from them. Only one Fishing Ship can
gather from a Fish Trap at a time. Each Fish Trap providesa limited amount of
food before it collapses and must be rebuilt. When a Fish Trap collapses, the
Fishing Ship, and then right- click the expired Fish Trap.
--------------
Fortified Wall
--------------
Fortified Walls are stronger than Stone Walls but expensive to upgrade and slow
to build. In Age of Empires II, fortified Walls do not shoot at enemies.
However, the reinforced stone is difficult to breach without siege weapons.
----
Gate
----
Gates allow your units to pass through walls. You can build Gates over existing
walls, and you can lock or unlock your Gates. You might lock a Gate during an
attack to prevent it from opening accidentally when a friendly unit approaches.
Gates automatically open and close for you and your allies unless they are
locked.
Click on a Gate, and then click the LOCK GATE or UNLOCK GATE button in the
lower-
left corner of the screen.
-----------
Guard Tower
-----------
The Guard Tower is an upgrade of the Watch Tower. It is stronger and has
greater
fighting ability. Units can garrison inside for protection and to add
additional
attack strength to the tower. You can upgrade your Guard Tower to Keeps at the
University.
-----
House
-----
Houses support the population of your civilization. The more Houses you have,
the larger your population can grow. Each House supports 5 population units.
Before you can create new villagers, military units, ships, or Trade Carts, you
must have enough Houses to support them. The population indicator (top of
screen) shows your current/supportable population. It flashes when you need to
build more houses.
----
Keep
----
The Keep is an upgrade of the Guard Tower. It is stronger and has greater
fighting capability. Units can garrison inside for protection and to add
additional attack strength to the tower.
-----------
Lumber Camp
-----------
The Lumber Camp is used to deposit wood and research wood- gathering
improvements. Build Lumber Camps near forests to gather wood faster.
------
Market
------
The Market lets you trade by land with other players, buy and sell resources,
and offer resources to other players as tribute. It is also used to research
technology that improves your communication with allies and decreases the cost
of
commodity trading and tributes. You must have a Mill before you build a Market.
----
Mill
----
The Mill is used to deposit food and research technology that improves the food
production of your Farms. Build Mills near sources of food to gather food
faster. You must have a Mill before you can build Farms or a Market.
-----------
Mining Camp
-----------
The Mining Camp is used to deposit stone and gold and research your stone and
gold mining. Build Mining Camps near stone or gold mines to gather these
resources faster.
---------
Monestary
---------
Monestaries let you create Monks and improve their ability to heal the wounded
and convert the enemy. Monestaries cannot be converted by enemy Monks. Relics
garrisoned inside a Monestary provide a continuous supply of gold for your
stockpile. Monks can be garrisoned inside the Monestary if you set a gather
point there while the Monks are being created. They cannot reenter once
ungarrisoned.
-------
Outpost
-------
Outposts are stationary watch points that give you advance warning of enemy
activity nearby. They have a long line of sight, which can be made longer by
researching technologies at the Town Center. Unlike the other towers, Outposts
do not attack or allow you to garrison units inside.
-------------
Palisade Wall
-------------
Palisade Walls are wooden walls that are cheap and fast to build. You can
construct them on the battlefield as temporary barriers to slow down your
enemies
and warn you of their approach.
--------------
Siege Workshop
--------------
The Siege Workshop is used to build siege weapons. Siege Workshop units can be
garrisoned inside the Siege Workshop if you set a gather point there while the
units are being created. They cannot reenter once ungarrisoned. You must have
a Blacksmith before you can build a Siege Workshop.
------
Stable
------
The Stable is used to create and improve cavalry. Stable units can be
garrisoned inside the Stable if you ste a gather point there while the units are
being created. They cannot reenter once ungarrisoned. You must have a Barracks
before you can build a Stable.
----------
Stone Wall
----------
Stone Walls are stronger than Palisade Walls but more expensive. They slow down
your enemies and give you the chance to fend them off. You can upgrade your
Stone Walls to Fortified Walls at the University.
-----------
Town Center
-----------
The Town Center is the hub of your civilization. Each Town Center supports 5
population units inside for protection and healing. Town Centers with
garrisoned
units also fire arrows at enemy soldiers. After you advance to the Castle Age,
you can build additional Town Centers near remote resources to expand your
civilization. Town Centers cannot be converted by enemy Monks.
You can improve the damage and range of your Town Centers by researching
Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, and Bracer (at the Blacksmith); line of sight by
researching Town Watch and Town Patrol (at the Town Center); and hit points,
armor, and accuracy by researching Masonry, Architecture, and Ballistics (at the
University).
----------
University
----------
The University lets you research technology that improves your buildings,
towers,
walls, and missile weapons.
-----------
Watch Tower
-----------
The Watch Tower is a simple stone tower that automatically attacks enemy units
and buildings within its range. Units can garrison inside for protection and
to add additional attack strength to the tower. You can upgrade your Watch
Towers
to Guard Towers at the University.
------
Wonder
------
Building a Wonder of the World demonstrates the superiority of your
civilization.
A Wonder is expensive and requires a lot of time to build. In most games,
constructing a Wonder that stands for a certain period of time wins the game.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
4. The Units
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-=Miscellaneous=-
----
Monk
----
Slow and weak. Converts enemy unis, ships, and some buildings to your
civilization (player color). Heals wounded villagers, military units (except
siege weapons and ships).
Created At: Monestary
Strong Vs: Teutonic Knights, War Elephants
Weak Vs: Archers, Knights, Light Cavalry, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: (all at monestary)
Convert some buildings siege units - Redemption
Movement Speed - Fervor
HP - Sanctity
Convert other Monks - Atonement
Greater conversion range - Block Printing
Less Rejuvenation Time - Illumination
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith
-----
Relic
-----
Special objects placed randomly on the map. Can only be moved by Monks. When
garrisoned in a Monestary, generate gold for your civilization. Cannot be
destroyed.
----------
Trade Cart
----------
Carries goods to foreign Markets and brings back gold as profit. Distant
Markets
are the most profitable.
Built at: Market
Upgrades: Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
To use a Trade Cart:
Click on the Trade Cart, and then right- click a foreign Market.
--------
Villager
--------
Gathers wood, food, gold, and stone. Builds and repairs buildings, ships, and
siege weapons.
Created at: Town Center
Upgrades: HP, armor, efficiency - Loom, Wheelbarrow, Hand Cart (Town Center)
Attack - Sappers (Castle)
Resource Gathering - Double- Bit Axe, Bow Saw, Two- Man Saw; Stone
Mining, Gold Mining, Stone Shaft Mining, Gold Shaft Mining (Lumber
Camp, Mining Camp); Heavy Plow (Town Center)
Build Speed - Treadmill Crane (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
Villagers perform the economic work for your civilization. They chop wood, mine
stone and gold, hunt, forage, fish, herd sheep, and farm. They also construct
buildings and repair damaged buildings, ships, and siege weapons. If necessary,
they can also engage in combat. Villager gender is randomly determined when you
create a new villager. They perform the same tasks regardless of their gender.
-=Infantry=-
-----------------------
Berserk & Elite Berserk
-----------------------
Viking unique unit created in Castle Age. Infantry unit that slowly heals
itself. (The Vikings are the only civilization with two unique units. The
Vikings also receive a Longboat, which may be built at the Dock once a Viking
Castle has been built.)
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Skirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit Creation Speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------
Champion
--------
Strongest infantry unit (aside from sme civilizations' unique units); cheap and
quick to create.
Create at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Skirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit Creation Speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-----------------------
Huskarl & Elite Huskarl
-----------------------
Gothic unique unit created in Castle Age. Infantry with substantial pierce
armor, virtually immune to archer fire.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Archers
Weak Vs: Swordsmen
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------------
Long Swordsman
--------------
Stronger than Man- at- Arms; cheap and quick to create.
Created at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Skirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Arrow
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------
Man- at- Arms
-------------
Stronger than Militia; cheap and quick to create.
Created at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Skirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------
Militia
-------
Most basic infantry unit; cheap and quick to create. Only soldier created in
Dark Age.
Created at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Skirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mongonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit Creation Speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------
Pikeman
-------
-----------------------
Samurai & Elite Samurai
-----------------------
Japanese unique unit created in Castle Age. Infantry with fast attack.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Infantry, unique units
Weak Vs: Archers
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit Creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------
Spearman
--------
Medium infantry unit. Exceptional vs. cavalry.
Created at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Shirmishers, Stable Units
Weak Vs: Swordsmen, Archers, Scorpions, Mangonels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail, Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------------------------
Teutonic Knight & Elite Teutonic Knight
---------------------------------------
Teutonic unique unit created in Castle Age. Powerful armor; slow but difficult
to destroy. Receives benefits of infantry armor.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Swordsmen, Skirmishers, Stable Units
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Monks
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------------------------
Throwing Axemen & Elite Throwing Axemen
---------------------------------------
Frank unit created in Castle Age. Ranged attack.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Barracks units, Shirmishers
Weak Vs: Archers
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------
Two- Handed Swordsman
---------------------
Stronger than Long Swordsman; cheap and quick to create.
Created at: Barracks
Strong Vs: Shirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------------------------
Woad Raider & Elite Woad Raider
-------------------------------
Celtic unique unit created in Castle Age. Exceptionally quick infantry unit.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Shirmishers, Camels, Light Cavalry
Weak Vs: Archers, Scorpions, Cavalry Archers, Mangonels, Cataphracts
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Blast Furnace (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Mail Armor, Chain Mail Armor, Plate Mail Armor
(Blacksmith)
Sight - Tracking (Barracks)
Speed - Squires (Barracks)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-=Archery=-
--------
Arbalest
--------
Quick and light. Weak at close range; excels at battle from a distance.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Cavalry Archers, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War
Elephants
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Knights, Mangonels, Woad Raiders, Huskarls
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
------
Archer
------
Quick and light. Weak at close range; excels at battle from a distance.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Cavalry Archers, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War
Elephants
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Knights, Mangonels, Woad Raiders, Huskarls
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------------
Cavalry Archer
--------------
Fast, with ranged attack. Ideal for hit- and- run attacks.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Swordsmen, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War Elephants
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Archers, Light Cavalry
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------------
Chu Ko Nu & Elite Chu Ko Nu
---------------------------
Chinese unique unit created in Castle Age. Archer with mediocre range with
causes great damage. Can fire arrows very quickly.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War Elephants, Cavalry
Archers
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Knights, Light Cavalry, Mangonels, Woad Raiders, Huskarls
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-----------
Crossbowman
-----------
Quick and light. Weak at close range; excels at battle from a distance.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Cavalry Archers, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War
Elephants
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Knights, Mangonels, Woad Raiders, Huskarls
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
----------------
Elite Skirmisher
----------------
Ranged unit equipped with armor vs archer attacks. Exceptional Vs. archers.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Archers, Monks, Cavalry Archers
Weak Vs: Mangonels, Barracks units
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------------
Hand Cannoneer
--------------
Powerful close range; innacurate at range. Keeps non-ranged units from closing
on other units. Requires Chemistry.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Monks, Teutonic Knights
Weak Vs: Archers, Mangonels
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------------------
Heavy Cavalry Archer
--------------------
Fast, with ranged attack. Ideal for hit- and- run attacks.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Swordsmen, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War Elephants
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Archers, Light Cavalry
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------------
Janissary & Elite Janissary
---------------------------
Turk unique unit created in Castle Age. Hand Cannoneer with lower and no
minimum
range. Powerful close attack; inaccurate at range. Keeps non-ranged units from
closing on other units.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Monks, Teutonic Knights
Weak Vs: Archers, Mangonels
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-----------------------------
Longbowman & Elite Longbowman
-----------------------------
Briton unique unit created in Castle Age. Powerful with long range.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War Elephants, Cavalry
Archers
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Knights, Mangonels, Woad Raiders, Huskarls
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------------------
Mangudai & Elite Mangudai
-------------------------
Mongol unique unit created in Castle Age. Cavalry archer with attack bonus vs.
siege weapons.
Created at: Castle
Strong Vs: Swordsmen, Monks, Teutonic Knights, War Elephants, Siege Weapons
Weak Vs: Shirmishers, Archers, Light Cavalry
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
----------
Skirmisher
----------
Ranged unit equipped with armor vs. archer attacks. Exceptional vs Archers.
Created at: Archery Range
Strong Vs: Archers, Monks, Cavalry Archers
Weak Vs: Mangonels, Barracks units
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Braer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Padded Archer Armor, Leather Archer Armor, Ring Archer Armor
(Blacksmith)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-=Cavalry=-
-----
Camel
-----
Excels at killing other mounted units
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Knights, Cataphracts
Weak Vs: Infantry, Archers
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
--------
Cavalier
--------
Heavy and quick.
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Archers
Weak Vs: Pikemen, Knights, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-----------------------------
Cataphract & Elite Cataphract
-----------------------------
Byzantine unique unit created in Castle Age. Heavily armored. Attack bonus vs.
infantry.
Created: Castle
Strong Vs: Archers, Swordsmen
Weak Vs: Knights, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------
Heavy Cavalry
-------------
Excels at killing other mounted units
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Knights, Cataphracts
Weak Vs: Infantry, Archers
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
------
Knight
------
Heavy and quick.
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Archers
Weak Vs: Pikemen, mamelukes, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------
Light Cavalry
-------------
Fast with greater line of sight than Scout Cavalry; resistant to conversion.
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Archers, Mangonels, Cavalry Archers, Bombard Cannons, Monks
Weak Vs: Pikemen, Knights, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------------------
Mameluke & Elite Mameluke
-------------------------
Saracen unique unit created in Castle Age. Camel with ranged attack. Excels
vs.
other mounted units.
Created: Castle
Strong Vs: Monks, Barracks Units, Teutonic Knights
Weak Vs: Archers, Mangonels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------
Paladin
-------
Heavy and quick.
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Archers
Weak Vs: Pikemen, Knights, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-------------
Scout Cavalry
-------------
Fast with extensive sight; resistant to conversion.
Created: Stable
Strong Vs: Archers, Mangonels, Cavalry Archers, Bombard Cannons, Monks
Weak Vs: Pikemen, Knights, Camels
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
---------------------------------
War Elephant & Elite War Elephant
---------------------------------
Persian unique unit created in Castle Age. Slow, powerful, well armored, and
difficult to destroy. Elite War Elephant causes area off effect damage, can
hit several adjacent targets automatically.
Created: Castle
Strong Vs: Archers, Swordsmen
Weak Vs: Pikemen, Camels, Monks, Mamelukes
Upgrades: Attack - Forging, Iron Casting, Metallurgy (Blacksmith)
Armor - Scale Barding Armor, Chain Barding Armor, Plate Barding Armor
(Blacksmith)
Speed - Husbandry (Stable)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monestary)
-=Siege Weapons=-
-------------
Battering Ram
-------------
Slow, lumbering; reduces enemy town to ruins.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Archers, Cavalry Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Barrack Units
Upgrades: Attack - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastary)
--------------
Bombard Cannon
--------------
Powerful mobile anti- building siege weapon. Requires Chemistry.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Archers, Monks, Skirmishers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack Range - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastary)
----------
Capped Ram
----------
Slow, lumbering; reduces enemy towns to ruins.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Archers, Cavalry Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Stable Units
Upgrades: Attack - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastary)
--------
Mongonel
--------
Wheeled siege weapon used to attack a small mass of units. Area of effect
attack.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
------
Onager
------
Wheeled siege weapon used to attack a small mass of units. Area of effect
attack.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
-------------------------
Scorpion & Heavy Scorpion
-------------------------
Fires large arrow- like bolts. Effective vs. large masses of units; shots hit
multiple units causing damage to all units they touch.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Archers, Monks
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Bracer (Blacksmith)
Tracking - Ballistics (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastary)
------------
Siege Onager
------------
Wheeled siege weapon used to attack a small mass of units. Area of effect
attack. Siege Onagers can cut paths through forests.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Barracks Units, Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
---------
Siege Ram
---------
Slow, lumbering; reduces enemy towns to ruins.
Built at: Siege Workshop
Strong Vs: Archers, Cavalry Archers
Weak Vs: Stable Units, Stable Units
Upgrades: Attack - Siege Engineers (University)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastary)
---------
Trebuchet
---------
Powerful; destroys buildings, walls from a distance. Canot fire on close units.
Must be packed to move, unpacked to attack. Can cut paths through forests.
Built at: Castle
Strong Vs: Archers, Skirmishers
Weak Vs: Swordsmen, Stable Units, Mangudai, Woad Raiders
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Siege Engineers (University)
Unit creation speed - Conscription (Castle)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
To pack/unpack a Trebuchet: Click the Trebuchet, and then click the PACK or
UNPACK button.
To attack with a packed Trebuchet: Click the Trebuchet, and then right- click an
enemy target. The Trebuchet moves within range of the enemy target, unpacks,
and begins attacking.
-=Boats=-
-------------------------------------
Cannon Galleon & Elite Cannon Galleon
-------------------------------------
Long- range warship used to attack targets on shore to establish a beachhead.
Fires slowly, with minimum range. Requires Chemistry.
Built at: Dock
Weak Vs: Galleys, Fire Ships, Demolition Ships
Upgrades: Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
---------------------------------------
Demolition Ship & Heavy Demolition Ship
---------------------------------------
Filled with explosives. Pilot near enemy ships and detonate to wrest control of
the sea from an entrenched opponent.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Fire Ships
Weak Vs: Galleys, Longboats, Bombard Cannons
Upgrades: Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
--------------------------
Fire Ship & Fast Fire Ship
--------------------------
Spew fire at other ships.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Galleys, Longboats
Weak Vs: Demolition Ships
Upgrades: Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
------------
Fishing Ship
------------
Gathers food from jumping fish and Fist Traps; automatically returns fish to
Dock. Can build Fish Traps.
Built at: Dock
Upgrades: Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
-------
Galleon
-------
Improved combat ship.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Demolition Ships, Cannon Galleons
Weak Vs: Fire Ships, Bombard Cannons
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Bracer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
------
Galley
------
Small, basic, fast ship with weak attack. Scouts water for early attacks and
enemy fishing fleets.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Demolition Ships, Cannon Galleons
Weak Vs: Fire Ships, Bombard Cannons
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Bracer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
-------------------------
Longboat & Elite Longboat
-------------------------
Viking unique unit created in Castle Age. Vikings are the only civilization to
possess two unique units. The Viking Longboat may be built at a Dock once a
Viking Castle has been built.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Demolition Ships, Cannon Galleons
Weak Vs: Fire Ships, Bombard Cannons
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Bracer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
---------
Trade Cog
---------
Trades by sea; takes goods from your Dock to a foreign Dock and brings back
gold.
The farther the Dock, the higher your profit.
Built at: Dock
Upgrades: Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
To trade using a Trade Cog: Click the Trade Cog, and then right- click a foreign
Dock.
--------------
Transport Ship
--------------
Moves units across water.
Built at: Dock
Upgrades: Armor and Capacity - Careening (Dock)
Speed and Capacity - Dry Dock (Dock)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
----------
War Galley
----------
Medium combat ship.
Built at: Dock
Strong Vs: Demolition Ships, Cannon Galleons
Weak Vs: Fire Ships, Bombard Cannons
Upgrades: Attack - Chemistry (University)
Attack Range - Fletching, Bodkin Arrow, Bracer (Blacksmith)
Armor - Careening (Dock)
Speed - Dry Dock (Dock)
Targeting - Ballistics (University)
Lower Cost - Shipwright (Dock)
Your units resistant to other Monks - Faith (Monastery)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
5. The Technologies
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-=Blacksmith=-
-------------
Blast Furnace
-------------
Blast Furnace increases the attach strength of your infantry and cavalry units
even more than Iron Casting
------------
Bodkin Arrow
------------
Bodkin Arrow increases the attack strength and range of scorpions, Archery
Range units, towers, Town Center, Castle, and ships (except those using
gunpowder weapons).
------
Bracer
------
Bracer increases the attack strength and range of scorpions, Archery Range
units, towers, Town Center, Castle, and ships (except those using gunpowder
weapons).
-------------------
Chain Barding Armor
-------------------
Chain Barding Armor increases the armor of your cavalry unite even more than
Scale Barding Armor.
----------------
Chain Mail Armor
----------------
Chain Mail Armor increases the armor of your infantry units even more than Scale
Mail Armor.
---------
Fletching
---------
Fletching increases the attack strength and range of scorpions, Archery Range
units, towers, Town Center, Castle, and ships (except those using gunpowder
weapons).
------------
Iron Casting
------------
Iron Casting increases the attack strength of your infantry and cavalry units
even more than Forging.
--------------------
Leather Archer Armor
--------------------
Leather Archer Armor increases the armor of your archers even more than Padded
Archer Armor.
-------------------
Padded Archer Armor
-------------------
Padded Archer Armor increases the armor of your archers.
-------------------
Plate Barding Armor
-------------------
Plate Barding Armor increases the armor of your cavalry units even more than
Chain Barding Armor.
----------------
Plate Mail Armor
----------------
Plate Mail Armor increases the armor of your infantry units even more than
Chain Mail Armor.
-----------------
Ring Archer Armor
-----------------
Ring Archer Armor increases the armor of your archers even more than Leather
Archer Armor.
-------------------
Scale Barding Armor
-------------------
Scale Barding Armor increases the armor of your cavalry units, including Cavalry
Archers, Mangudai, and War Elephants.
----------------
Scale Mail Armor
----------------
Scale Mail Armor increases the armor of your infantry units.
-=Mill=-
-------------
Crop Rotation
-------------
Crop Rotation increases the amount of food your Farms produce even more than the
Heavy Plow.
----------
Heavy Plow
----------
Heavy Plow increases the amount of food your Farms produce even more than Horse
Collar.
------------
Horse Collar
------------
Horse Collar increases the amount of food your Farms produce before they go
fallow and must be rebuilt.
-=University=-
------------
Architecture
------------
Architecture makes your buildings even stronger than Masonry.
----------
Ballistics
----------
Ballistics improves how accurate scorpions, archers, galleys, and towers are in
hitting moving targets.
---------
Chemistry
---------
Chemistry increases the attack strength of all non- gunpowder missile weapons.
You must research Chemistry to build gunpowder units (Bombard Tower, Bombard
Cannon, Hand Cannoneer, and Cannon Galleon). After researching Chemistry,
missile weapons fire flaming arrows.
-----------
Heated Shot
-----------
Heated Shot increases the damage towers cause to ships.
-------
Masonry
-------
Masonry makes your buildings stronger so they can take more damage in combat.
------------
Murder Holes
------------
Murder Holes eliminates the minimum range of towers (except Bombard Towers) and
Castles so they can fire at soldiers attacking their base.
---------------
Siege Engineers
---------------
Siege Engineers increases the damage siege weapons cause to buildings as well
as range.
---------------
Treadmill Crane
---------------
Treadmill Crane makes villagers construct buildings faster.
-=Monestary=-
---------
Atonement
---------
Atonement lets your Monks convert enemy Monks.
---------------
Block Lettering
---------------
Block Printing lets your Monks convert enemy units from farther away.
-----
Faith
-----
Faith makes your units harder for enemy Monks to convert.
------
Fervor
------
Fervor makes your Monks move faster.
------------
Illumination
------------
Illumination decreases the time your Monks need to rest before attempting
another conversion.
----------
Redemption
----------
Redemption lets your Monks convert enemy buildings (except Town Centers,
Castles,
Monestaries, Farms, Fish Traps, walls, towers, Gates, and Wonders) and siege
weapons. Monks can convert most enemy units from a distance; however, they must
stand adjacent to buildings, rams, and Trebuchets.
--------
Sanctity
--------
Sanctity increases the hit points of your Monks.
-=Barracks=-
-------
Squires
-------
Squires make your infantry units move faster.
--------
Tracking
--------
Tracking lets your infantry units see farther away.
-=Town Center=-
---------
Hand Cart
---------
Hand Cart makes villagers move faster and carry more resources.
----
Loom
----
Loom makes your villagers harder to kill.
-----------
Town Patrol
-----------
Town Patrol lets your buildings see enemies from even farther away than Town
Watch.
----------
Town Watch
----------
Town Watch lets your buildings see enemies farther away so you have more warning
of their approach.
-----------
Wheelbarrow
-----------
Wheelbarrow makes your villagers move faster and carry more resources so they
work more efficiently.
-=Castle=-
------------
Conscription
------------
Conscription decreases the time required to create units at the Barracks,
Stable,
Archery Range, and Castle.
---------
Hoardings
---------
Hoardings make your Castles stronger.
-------
Sappers
-------
Sappers increases the damage villagers cause when they attack buildings.
-----
Spies
-----
Spies lets you see what your enemies have explored and share their unit line of
sight. You can purchase the Spies technology for gold. By paying a fee
dependent on the number of enemy villagers in existence, you can learn the exact
location of each unit and building still in play.
-=Mining Camp=-
-----------
Gold Mining
-----------
Gold Mining makes villagers mine gold faster.
-----------------
Gold Shaft Mining
-----------------
Gold Shaft Mining makes villagers mine gold even faster than Gold Mining.
------------
Stone Mining
------------
Stone Mining makes villagers mine stone faster.
------------------
Stone Shaft Mining
------------------
Stone Shaft Mining makes villagers mine stone even faster than Stone Mining.
-=Lumber Camps=-
---------------
Double- Bit Axe
---------------
Double- Bit Axe makes villagers chop wood faster.
-------
Bow Saw
-------
Bow Saw makes villagers chop wood even faster than Double- Bit Axe.
------------
Two- Man Saw
------------
Two- Man Saw makes villagers chop wood even faster than the Bow Saw.
-=Market=-
-------
Banking
-------
Banking eliminates the cost of sending a tribute to resources to another player.
-----------
Cartography
-----------
Cartography lets you share exploration and unit line of sight with your allies
so you see what they have explored. (Before your allies see what you've
explored,
they must research Cartography, too.)
-------
Coinage
-------
Coinage decreases the cost of sending a tribute of resources to another player.
------
Guilds
------
Guilds reduces the cost of buying and selling resources at the Market.
-=Stable=-
---------
Husbandry
---------
Husbandry increases spped of all cavalry units.
-=Dock=-
---------
Careening
---------
Careening increases the pierce armor of ships and the number of units Transport
Ships can carry.
--------
Dry Dock
--------
Dry Dock makes your ships faster and increases the number of units Transport
Ships can carry.
----------
Shipwright
----------
Shipwright decreases the amount of wood required to build ships.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
6. The History
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-----------------------------------
Britons
-----------------------------------
Following the withdrawal of the Roman legions to Gaul (modern France) around
400, the British Isles fell into a very dark period of several centuries from
which almost no written records survive. The Romano-British culture that had
existed under 400 years of Roman rule disappeared under relentless invasion and
migration by barbarians. Celts came over from Ireland (a tribe called the Scotti
gave their name to the northern part of the main island, Scotland). Saxons and
Angles came from Germany, Frisians from modern Holland, and Jutes from modern
Denmark. By 600, the Angles and Saxons controlled most of modern England. By
800, only modern Wales, Scotland, and West Cornwall remained in largely Celtic
hands.
The new inhabitants were called Anglo-Saxons (from the Angles and Saxons). The
Angles gave their name to the new culture (England from Angle-land), and the
Germanic language they brought with them, English, replaced the native Celtic
and previously imported Latin. Despite further invasions and even a complete
military conquest at a later date, the southern and eastern parts of the largest
British Isle have been called England (and its people and language English) ever
since.
In 865 the relative peace of England was shattered by a new invasion. Danish
Vikings who had been raiding France and Germany formed a great army and turned
their attention on the English. Within 10 years, most of the Anglo-Saxon
kingdoms had fallen or surrendered. Only the West Saxons (modern Wessex) held
out under Alfred, the only English ruler to be called "the Great."
England was divided among the Vikings, the West Saxons, and a few other English
kingdoms for nearly 200 years. The Viking half was called the Danelaw ("under
Danish law"). The Vikings collected a large payment, called the Danegeld ("the
Dane's gold"), to be peaceful. The Danes became Christians and gradually became
more settled. In time the English turned on the Danes, and in 954 the last
Viking king of York was killed. England was united for the first time under an
English king from Wessex.
In 1066 the Witan ("king's council") offered the crown to Harold, son of the
Earl of Wessex. Two others claimed the throne: Harald Hardrada (meaning "the
hard ruler"), King of Norway, and Duke William of Normandy. The Norwegian landed
first, near York, but was defeated by Harold at the battle of Stamford Bridge.
Immediately after the victory, Harold force-marched his army south to meet
William at Hastings. The battle seesawed back and forth all day, but near dusk
Harold was mortally wounded by an arrow in the eye. Over the next two years,
William, now "the Conqueror," solidified his conquest of England.
During the remainder of the Middle Ages, the successors of William largely
exhausted themselves and their country in a series of confrontations and wars
attempting to expand or defend land holdings in France. The Hundred Years War
between England and France was an on-and-off conflict that stretched from 1337
to 1453. It was triggered by an English king's claim to the throne of France,
thanks to family intermarriages. The war was also fought over control of the
lucrative wool trade and French support for Scotland's independence. The early
part of the war featured a string of improbable, yet complete, English
victories, thanks usually to English longbowmen mowing down hordes of ornately
armored French knights from long range.
The English could not bring the war to closure, however, and the French rallied.
Inspired by Joan of Arc, a peasant girl who professed divine guidance, the
French fought back, ending the war with the capture of Bordeaux in 1453. The
English were left holding only Calais on the mainland (and not for long).
-----------------------------------
Byzantines
-----------------------------------
The Byzantines took their name from Byzantium, an ancient city on the Bosphorus,
the strategic waterway linking the Black Sea to the Aegean Sea. The Roman
Emperor Constantine had renamed this city Constantinople in the fourth century
and made it a sister capital of his empire. This eastern partition of the Roman
Empire outlived its western counterpart by a thousand years, defending Europe
against invasions from the east by Persians, Arabs, and Turks. The Byzantines
persevered because Constantinople was well defended by walls and the city could
be supplied by sea. At their zenith in the sixth century, the Byzantines covered
much of the territories of the original Roman Empire, lacking only the Iberian
Peninsula (modern Spain and Portugal), Gaul (modern France), and Britain. The
Byzantines also held Syria, Egypt, and Palestine, but by the middle of the
seventh century they had lost them to the Arabs. From then on their empire
consisted mainly of the Balkans and modern Turkey.
The first great Byzantine emperor was Justinian I (482 to 565). His ambition was
to restore the old Roman Empire and he nearly succeeded. His instrument was the
greatest general of the age, Belisarius, who crisscrossed the empire defeating
Persians to the East, Vandals in North Africa, Ostrogoths in Italy, and Bulgars
and Slavs in the Balkans. In addition to military campaigns, Justinian laid the
foundation for the future by establishing a strong legal and administrative
system and by defending the Christian Church.
The Byzantine economy was the richest in Europe for many centuries because
Constantinople was ideally sited on trade routes between Asia, Europe, the Black
Sea, and the Aegean Sea. It was an important destination point for the Silk Road
from China. The nomisma, the principal Byzantine gold coin, was the standard for
money throughout the Mediterranean for 800 years. Constantinople's strategic
position eventually attracted the envy and animosity of the Italian city-states.
A key strength of the Byzantine Empire was its generally superior army that drew
on the best elements of the Roman, Greek, Gothic, and Middle Eastern experience
in war. The core of the army was a shock force of heavy cavalry supported by
both light infantry (archers) and heavy infantry (armored swordsmen). The army
was organized into units and drilled in tactics and maneuvers. Officers received
an education in military history and theory. Although outnumbered usually by
masses of untrained warriors, it prevailed thanks to intelligent tactics and
good discipline. The army was backed by a network of spies and secret agents
that provided information about enemy plans and could be used to bribe or
otherwise deflect aggressors.
The Byzantine navy kept the sea-lanes open for trade and kept supply lines free
so the city could not be starved into submission when besieged. In the eighth
century, a land and sea attack by Arabs was defeated largely by a secret weapon,
Greek fire. This chemical weapon, its composition now unknown, was a sort of
liquid napalm that could be sprayed from a hose. The Arab navy was devastated at
sea by Greek fire.
In the seventh and eighth centuries, the Arabs overran Egypt, the Middle East,
North Africa, and Spain, removing these areas permanently from Byzantine
control. A Turkish victory at Manzikert in 1071 led to the devastation of Asia
Minor, the empire's most important source of grain, cattle, horses, and
soldiers. In 1204 Crusaders led by the Doge of Venice used treachery to sack and
occupy Constantinople.
In the fourteenth century, the Turks invaded Europe, capturing Adrianople and
bypassing Constantinople. They settled the Balkans in large numbers and defeated
a large crusader army at Nicopolis in 1396. In May 1453, Turkish sultan Mehmet
II captured a weakly defended Constantinople with the aid of heavy cannon. The
fall of the city brought the Byzantine Empire to an end.
-----------------------------------
Celts
-----------------------------------
The Celts (pronounced "kelts") were the ancient inhabitants of Northern Europe
and the builders of Stonehenge 5000 years ago. Julius Caesar had battled them
during his conquest of Gaul. The Romans eventually took most of Britain and the
Iberian Peninsula from them as well. At the end of the ancient Roman Empire, the
Celts occupied only parts of northwestern France, Ireland, Wales, and parts of
Scotland. During the course of the Middle Ages, they strengthened their hold on
Scotland and made several attempts to take more of England.
The Irish remained in small bands during the early Middle Ages. By 800 the four
provinces of Leinster, Munster, Connaught, and Ulster had risen to power under
"high kings." Viking raids began in 795 and then Viking settlements were
established in the middle ninth century. The most important of these was at
Dublin. Brian Boru became the first high king of all Ireland around 1000. In
1014 the Irish defeated the Danes of Dublin at Clontarf, although Brian Boru was
killed.
An Irish tribe called the Scotti invaded what is now southern Scotland during
the early Middle Ages, settling permanently and giving the land its name. They
pushed back and absorbed the native Picts who had harassed the Romans to the
south. The Scottish kingdom took its present shape during the eleventh century
but attracted English interference. The Scots responded with the "auld (old)
alliance" with France, which became the foundation of their diplomacy for
centuries to come. Edward I of England (Longshanks, or "hammer of the Scots")
annexed Scotland in 1296.
William Wallace (Braveheart) led a revolt of Scotland, winning virtual
independence at the Battle of Stirling Bridge in 1297. Defeated the next year at
Falkirk, Wallace waged a guerrilla war until he was betrayed, captured, and
executed in 1305. Robert the Bruce declared himself king of Scotland after
murdering his main rival. He drove out the English, winning the battle of
Bannockburn in 1314. Edward III of England recognized Scotland's independence in
1328, but war between the Scots and English carried on for several centuries.
The crowns of the two countries were united in 1603, long after the Middle Ages
were over.
No prince in Wales proved strong enough to unite the country. In the late
thirteenth century, Edward I took over the government of Gwynedd, one of the
strongest Welsh principalities in Wales. He proceeded to build five great
castles in Wales, effectively placing the country under English rule.
-----------------------------------
Chinese
-----------------------------------
China was reunited in 581 AD after a long period of internal war by the founders
of the Sui dynasty. For most of the 1000 years that followed, China was one of
the largest and most advanced civilization in the world. Because of its
geographic isolation from the West, it was able to develop and maintain a unique
culture that spread its influence over much of Asia.
An emperor generally held supreme power as the son of heaven. Natural disasters
or other calamities were taken as proof that the mandate of heaven had been
withdrawn, however, and could justify revolt. Mandarins were conservative civil
servants who operated most of the government at the local, province, and
imperial level. Mandarins earned their positions by passing detailed civil
service examinations based mainly on the works of Confucius.
The T'ang dynasty ruled China from 618 to 907. China under the T'ang was large,
wealthy, and powerful. There was extensive foreign trade and interest in the
arts among the upper class. Printing and gunpowder were invented. The last 100
years of T'ang rule witnessed tumultuous peasant revolts, however, and wars
between local military rulers that the imperial court could not end. The years
from 907 to 960 were known as the Five Dynasties period. Northern China was held
by barbarians, and southern China split into 10 rival states. From one of these,
an army general named Zhao Kuang-ying seized power and unified the southern
states, founding the Song dynasty. His descendants reunited China within 20
years.
The Song dynasty ruled at least part of China until 1279. This was another
period of cultural brilliance, and it was considered the great age of Chinese
landscape painting. There was a dramatic improvement in economic activity,
including a large overseas trade. Population and cities grew, food production
grew faster than population, a money economy developed, and industrial output
increased. No city in Europe could approach the populations of Chang An,
Beijing, and Guang Zhou, all with more than 2 million inhabitants.
The wealth of China attracted enemies, however, and the Mongols began attacks in
1206. By 1279 they had completed the conquest of Song China and moved the
capital to Beijing. The dramatic economic improvement of the Song dynasty ended
with the Mongol conquests and the estimated 30 million deaths that they caused.
The Mongol Yuan dynasty reunited China and reestablished it as a great military
and world power. Chinese influence was spread into Asia. Hanoi was captured
three times and tribute was extracted from Burma. Trade with India, Arabia, and
the Persian Gulf was developed. Marco Polo visited China during this period.
Natural disasters and higher taxes in the fourteenth century caused rural
rebellions. A Buddhist monk rose to be one of the leaders of the Red Turbans, a
secret society opposed to the emperor in Beijing. The rebels seized Nanjing in
1356 and drove the Mongols from Beijing 12 years later, establishing the Ming
dynasty. The Ming presided over another cultural flowering and established a
political unity that outlasted the Ming and continued into the twentieth
century. The Ming clamped down a strict conservatism and isolation, however,
discouraging change and innovation, banning foreign travel, and closing the Silk
Road.
Some of the most noteworthy aspects of medieval China are the technologies that
were invented there, usually many centuries before a similar technology was
invented in, or transmitted to, the West. Important Chinese inventions included
the compass, the wheelbarrow, the abacus, the horse harness, the stirrup, the
clock, iron-casting, steel, paper, moveable type (printing), paper money,
gunpowder, and the stern-post rudder.
-----------------------------------
Franks
-----------------------------------
The Franks were one of the Germanic barbarian tribes known to the Romans. In the
early part of the fifth century, they began expanding south from their homeland
along the Rhine River into Roman-controlled Gaul (modern France). Unlike other
Germanic tribes, however, they did not move out of their homelands but, rather,
added to them. Clovis, a Frankish chieftan, defeated the last Roman armies in
Gaul and united the Franks by 509, becoming the ruler of much of western Europe.
During the next 1000 years, this Frankish kingdom gradually became the modern
nation of France.
The kingdom of Clovis was divided after his death among his four sons, according
to custom. This led to several centuries of civil warfare and struggle between
successive claimants to the throne. By the end of the seventh century, the
Merovingian kings (descendants of Clovis) were rulers in name only. In the early
eighth century, Charles Martel became mayor of the palace, the ruler behind the
throne. He converted the Franks into a cavalry force and fought so well that his
enemies gave him the name of Charles the Hammer. In 732 the Frankish cavalry
defeated Muslim invaders moving north from Spain at the Battle of Poitiers,
stopping forever the advance of Islam from the southwest.
Charles Martel's son, Pepin, was made king of the Franks by the pope in return
for helping to defend Italy from the Lombards. Pepin founded the dynasty of the
Carolingians, and the greatest of these rulers was Charles the Great, or
Charlemagne, who ruled from 768 to 814. He expanded the Frankish kingdom into an
empire and was responsible for a rebirth of culture and learning in the West.
Charlemagne's empire was divided among his grandsons and thereafter coalesced
into two major parts. The western part became the kingdom of France. Later kings
gradually lost political control of France, however. Central authority broke
down under the pressure of civil wars, border clashes, and Viking raids. Money
and soldiers could be raised only by making concessions to landholders. Fiefs
became hereditary and fief holders became feudal lords over their own vassals.
By the tenth century, France had been broken into feudal domains that acted as
independent states.
In 987 the French nobility elected Hugh Capet their king, mainly because his
fief centered on Paris was weak and he was thought to pose no threat. He founded
the Capetian line of kings, who worked slowly for two centuries regaining the
power by making royal roads safe, adding land to their domain, encouraging
trade, and granting royal charters for new towns and fiefs in vacant lands. By
allying themselves with the church, the Capetians took a strong moral position
and benefited from the church's cultural, political, and social influence. Royal
administrators were made loyal to the king and more efficient by eliminating the
inheritance of government offices.
Beginning with Philip II in 1180, three superior rulers established France as
one of the most important nations in Europe. They improved the working of the
government, encouraged a booming trade, collected fees efficiently, and
strengthened their position atop the feudal hierarchy. Although a national
assembly called the Estates General was established, it held no real power and
was successfully ignored.
From 1337 to 1453 France and England fought the long conflict called the Hundred
Years War to decide ownership of lands in France that had been inherited by
English kings. The eventual French victory confirmed the king as the most
powerful political force in France.
-----------------------------------
Goths
-----------------------------------
The Goths were a Germanic tribe on the Danube River frontier known to the Romans
from the first century AD. Pressured and then displaced when the Huns moved west
out of Central Asia, the Goths moved west into Europe and over the Danube River
to escape the oncoming hordes. After taking part in the fall of Rome, they vied
with other barbarians for the leavings of the Western Roman Empire during the
Early Middle Ages.
The Goths originated on the island of Gotland in the Baltic, to the best of our
knowledge, and split into two groups as they migrated south across Central
Europe. The Visigoths, or West Goths, settled in modern Romania during the
second century. The Ostrogoths, or East Goths, settled farther to the east on
the northwest coast of the Black Sea. In 376 AD the Visigoths were driven from
modern Romania by the Huns and moved south across the Danube. Their strength was
estimated at 60,000 men, women, and children. They defeated a Roman army from
Constantinople, settled briefly south of the Danube, and then pushed into Italy.
In 409 they sacked Rome under their king Alaric and then moved north into Gaul.
The Romans gave them southwestern Gaul. From there they eventually extended
their rule into all of modern Spain and Portugal.
The Ostrogoths broke away from Hunnish rule and followed their cousins into
Italy late in the fifth century. They were encouraged to invade by the Eastern
emperor, who wanted deposed the barbarian then ruling as viceroy. Under
Theodric, king of modern Switzerland and the Balkans already, the Goths entered
Italy in 488, completing its conquest in 493.
Theodric's kingdom did not last long following his death in 526. Using a
struggle for succession as an excuse, the Byzantines sent an army to Italy in
536 led by their great general Belisarius. The Byzantines hoped to regain Italy
and restore the old Roman Empire in the West. The war dragged on, devastating
the countryside in conjunction with plague and famine. In 552 the Ostrogoths
were finally defeated in Italy. They ceased to exist as a separate group by the
late sixth century when northern Italy was invaded by a new group of barbarians
called the Lombards.
The Visigoth kingdom lasted somewhat longer. In the late fifth century Clovis of
the Franks pushed the Visigoths out of France and over the Pyrenees Mountains.
Following the death of Clovis his kingdom fragmented and the Visigoths were
temporarily left alone. In 711 a new threat appeared from the south. Islamic
armies crossed over from North Africa and destroyed the last Gothic kingdom in
four years.
The Goths are remembered for being the first to sack Rome and thereby beginning
the final collapse of the ancient world order in Europe. Their admiration for
Rome and attempts to preserve it, however, allowed much of the Roman culture to
survive. For example, the modern languages of Italy, France, Spain, Portugal,
and Romania are derived from Latin influenced by later settlers. They are not
variations of German, as was the case in England.
-----------------------------------
Japanese
-----------------------------------
Located 100 miles off the mainland of Asia, at its closest point, Japan was a
land of mystery at the edge of civilization. Isolated at first by geography and
later by choice, the Japanese developed a distinctive culture that drew very
little from the outside world. At the beginning of what were the Middle Ages in
Europe, the advanced culture of Japan was centered at the north end of the
Inland Sea on the main island of Honshu. Across the Hakone Mountains to the east
lay the Kanto, an alluvial plain that was the single largest rice-growing area
on the islands. To the north and east of the Kanto was the frontier, beyond
which lived aboriginal Japanese who had occupied the islands since Neolithic
times.
Some believe that by the fifth century AD the Yamato court had become largely
ceremonial. Independent clans, known as uji, held the real power behind
the throne. Clan leaders formed a sort of aristocracy and vied with each other
for effective control of land and the throne.
In 536 the Soga clan became predominant and produced the first great historical
statesman, Prince Shotoku, who instituted reforms that laid the foundation of
Japanese culture for generations to come. In 645, power shifted from the Soga
clan to the Fujiwara clan. The Fujiwara presided over most of the Heian period
(794 to 1185). The new leadership imposed the Taika Reform of 645, which
attempted to redistribute the rice-growing land, establish a tax on agricultural
production, and divide the country into provinces. Too much of the country
remained outside imperial influence and control, however. Real power shifted to
great families that rose to prominence in the rice-growing lands. Conflict among
these families led to civil war and the rise of the warrior class.
Similar to the experience of medieval western Europe, the breakdown of central
authority in Japan, the rise of powerful local nobles, and conflict with
barbarians at the frontier combined to create a culture dominated by a warrior
elite. These warriors became known as Samurai, ("those who serve"), who were
roughly equivalent to the European knight. A military government replaced the
nobility as the power behind the throne at the end of the twelfth century. The
head of the military government was the Shogun.
Samurai lived by a code of the warrior, something like the European code of
chivalry. The foundation of the warrior code was loyalty to the lord. The
warrior expected leadership and protection. In return he obeyed his lord's
commands without question and stood ready to die on his lord's behalf. A Samurai
placed great emphasis on his ancestry and strove to carry on family traditions.
He behaved so as to earn praise. He was to be firm and show no cowardice.
Warriors went into battle expecting and looking to die. It was felt that a
warrior hoping to live would fight poorly.
The Kamakura period (1185 to 1333) was named after a region of Japan dominated
by a new ruling clan that took power after civil war. The Mongols attempted to
invade Japan twice, in 1274 and 1281, but were repulsed both times. A fortuitous
storm caused great loss to the second Mongol invasion fleet.
-----------------------------------
Mongols
-----------------------------------
The Mongols were nomads from the steppes of Central Asia. They were fierce
warriors who fought each other over pasturelands and raided developed
civilizations to the east and south. At the beginning of the thirteenth century,
the Mongol clans united and began a campaign of foreign conquest. Following in
the hoofprints of the Huns, their predecessors by a thousand years, they carved
out one of the largest empires the world has yet seen.
The Mongols inhabited the plains south of Lake Baikal in modern Mongolia. At its
maximum, their empire stretched from Korea, across Asia, and into European
Russia to the Baltic Sea coast. They held most of Asia Minor, modern Iraq,
modern Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tibet, parts of India, parts of Burma, all
of China, and parts of Vietnam.
The Mongol clans were united by Temuchin, called Genghis Khan ("mighty ruler"),
in the early thirteenth century. His ambition was to rule all lands between the
oceans (Pacific and Atlantic) and he nearly did so. Beginning with only an
estimated 25,000 warriors, he added strength by subjugating other nomads and
attacked northern China in 1211. He took Beijing in 1215 after a campaign that
may have cost 30 million Chinese lives. The Mongols then turned west, capturing
the great trading city Bukhara on the Silk Road in 1220. The city was burned to
the ground and the inhabitants murdered.
Following Genghis Khan's death in 1227, his son Ogedei completed the conquest of
northern China and advanced into Europe. He destroyed Kiev in 1240 and advanced
into Hungary. When Ogedei died on campaign in 1241, the entire army fell back to
settle the question of succession. Europe was spared as Mongol rulers
concentrated their efforts against the Middle East and southern China. Hulagu, a
grandson of Genghis, exterminated the Muslim "Assassins" and then took the
Muslim capital of Baghdad in 1258. Most of the city's 100,000 inhabitants were
murdered. In 1260 a Muslim army of Egyptian Mamelukes (warrior slaves of high
status) defeated the Mongols in present-day Israel, ending the Mongol threat to
Islam and its holy cities.
Kublai Khan, another grandson of Genghis, completed the conquest of China in
1279, establishing the Yuan dynasty. Attempted invasions of Japan were thrown
back with heavy loss in 1274 and 1281. In 1294 Kublai Khan died in China, and
Mongol power began to decline in Asia and elsewhere. In 1368 the Yuan dynasty in
China was overthrown in favor of the Ming.
In the 1370's a Turkish-Mongol warrior claiming descent from Genghis Khan fought
his way to leadership of the Mongol states of Central Asia and set out to
restore the Mongol Empire. His name was Timur Leng (Timur, "the Lame," or
Tamerlane to Europeans and the Prince of Destruction to Asians). With another
army of 100,000 or so horsemen, he swept into Russia and Persia, fighting mainly
other Muslims. In 1398 he sacked Delhi, murdering 100,000 inhabitants. He rushed
west defeating an Egyptian Mameluke army in Syria. In 1402 he defeated a large
Ottoman Turk army near modern Ankara. On the verge of destroying the Ottoman
Empire, he turned again suddenly. He died in 1405 while marching for China. He
preferred capturing wealth and engaged in wholesale slaughter, without pausing
to install stable governments in his wake. Because of this, the huge realm
inherited by his sons fell apart quickly after his death.
-----------------------------------
Persians
-----------------------------------
The Persian Empire had existed for many centuries when the Middle Ages began. It
had been reassembled following the conquest by Alexander in the fourth century
BC and the subsequent breakup of his empire in later centuries. The Persians had
been fighting the Romans since the third century AD.
The Persian Empire stretched from Mesopotamia to India and from the Caspian Sea
to the Persian Gulf, encompassing the modern nations of Iraq, Iran, and
Afghanistan. They fought the Romans, and later the Byzantines, for control of
modern Syria, Turkey, Palestine, Israel, Egypt, and Arabia. The capital of the
Persian Empire was Ctesiphon, called Baghdad today.
During the third and fourth centuries, the Romans made several attempts to
subdue the Persians. In 364 a peace treaty was signed between the two that
allowed the Persians to consolidate their power to the east and north. Beginning
with the sixth century, the Persians began attacking the Byzantine Empire in
Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and modern Turkey. The war between the two powers went
back and forth. In 626 the Persians besieged Byzantium itself without success,
and the Byzantines were able to invade Persia the following year. Peace was made
between the two exhausted empires in 628.
The Persians were unprepared for the fury of the Islamic Arabs in the seventh
century. The Sassanid dynasty of Persia ended in battle in 636. The Persians did
not have a capital with defenses comparable to those of Constantinople. Muslim
conquest of Persia was complete by 651.
-----------------------------------
Saracens
-----------------------------------
The name Saracen applied originally to nomadic desert peoples from the area
stretching from modern Syria to Saudi Arabia. In broader usage the name applied
to all Arabs of the Middle Ages. These desert nomads erupted suddenly in the
seventh century and established a far-reaching empire within a century and a
half. Their conquest was fueled by faith and high morale. Following the
teachings of the prophet Mohammed, their intent was to change the religious and
political landscape of the entire planet.
By 613 the prophet Mohammed was preaching a new religion he called Islam.
Largely ignored in his home city of Mecca, he withdrew to Medina, built up a
strong following there, and returned to attack and capture Mecca. Following his
death in 632, his teachings were collected to form the Koran, the Islamic holy
book. In 634 his followers began their jihad, or holy war. Within five years
they had overrun Egypt, Palestine, and Syria. Their tolerance of Jews and
Christians eased their conquest because these people had been suffering some
persecution under the Byzantines.
In the next 60 years, both North Africa to the west and Persia to the east fell
to Islam. In the early eighth century, Saracens from Tangiers invaded the
Iberian Peninsula and conquered the Visigoth kingdom established there after the
fall of Rome. In Asia they took Asia Minor from the Byzantines and attempted to
capture Constantinople with a combined attack from land and sea. The great walls
of the city frustrated the land attack and the Saracen fleet was defeated at
sea. In the west, Charles Martel of the Franks stopped a Saracen invasion of
modern France in 732 at Poitiers.
Frustrated in the west, the forces of Islam turned east. By 750 they had
conquered to the Indus River and north over India into Central Asia to the
borders of China.
In 656 the Muslim world fell into civil war between two factions, the Sunnites
and the Shiites. They differed on several points, including who should be caliph
and interpretation of the Koran. The result of the 60-year war was that the
Islamic state broke into pieces, some governed by Sunnites (the Iberian
Peninsula) and others by Shiites (Egypt and modern Iraq). The new Islamic states
acted independently, thereafter.
Muslim Spain developed into one of the great states of Europe during the early
Middle Ages. Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived together in relative harmony,
and a rich culture rose out of these multiple influences. There was a flowering
of the arts, architecture, and learning. By 1000, however, Muslim Spain had
divided into warring factions. This civil war facilitated the slow reconquest of
the peninsula (the Reconquista) by the emerging states of Castile and Aragon,
completed finally in 1492.
Asia Minor and the Middle East were conquered by Muslim Turks in the early
eleventh century. In response to a call for aid from the Byzantines, a series of
Crusades was launched from Europe to regain Palestine from the Turks. The
independent Muslim states in the area lost Palestine and the Eastern
Mediterranean coast to the First Crusade. In the last part of the twelfth
century, the great Saracen leader Saladin succeeded in uniting Egypt, Syria, and
smaller states, and he retook Jerusalem.
The Muslim states remained independent long after the Middle Ages and eventually
developed into the modern Arab nations of the Middle East and North Africa. They
went into economic decline, however, when the European nations opened trade
routes of their own to Asia in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
-----------------------------------
Teutons
-----------------------------------
The origin of Germany traces back to the crowning of Charlemagne as Holy Roman
Emperor in 800. Upon his death the empire was split into three parts that
gradually coalesced into two: the western Frankish kingdom that became France
and the eastern kingdom that became Germany. The title of Holy Roman Emperor
remained in Charlemagne's family until the tenth century when they died out. In
919 Henry, Duke of Saxony, was elected king of Germany by his fellow dukes. His
son Otto became emperor in 962.
The Holy Roman Empire that Otto I controlled extended over the German plain
north to the Baltic, eastward into parts of modern Poland, and southward through
modern Switzerland, modern Austria, and northern Italy. From the outset, the
emperors had a difficult problem keeping control of two disparate regions-
Germany and Italy-that were separated by the Alps.
The Holy Roman Empire was successful at first because it benefited the principal
members, Germany and Italy. The Germans were not far removed from the barbarian
condition. They had been conquered by Charlemagne only a century earlier. They
benefited greatly from Italian culture, technology, and trade. The Italians
welcomed the relative peace and stability the empire ensured. Italy had been
invaded time and again for the previous 500 years. The protection of the empire
defended the papacy and allowed the city-states of Italy to begin their growth.
The imperial armies were manned partially by tenants of church lands who owed
service to the emperor. A second important contingent were the ministriales, a
corps of serfs who received the best training and equipment as knights but who
were not free men. These armies were used to put down revolts or interference by
local nobles and peasants or to defend against raids by Vikings from the north
and Magyars from the east.
Because Germany remained a collection of independent principalities in
competition, German warriors became very skilled. The most renowned German
soldiers were the Teutonic Knights, a religious order of warriors inspired by
the Crusades. The Teutonic Knights spread Christianity into the Baltic region by
conquest but were eventually halted by Alexander Nevsky at the battle on frozen
Lake Peipus.
A confrontation between the emperors and the church over investiture of bishops
weakened the emperors in both Germany and Italy. During periods of temporary
excommunication of the emperor and outright war against Rome, imperial authority
lapsed. The local German princes solidified their holdings or fought off the
Vikings with no interference or help from the emperor. In Italy, the rising
city-states combined to form the Lombard League and refused to recognize the
emperor.
Political power in both Germany and Italy shifted from the emperor to the local
princes and cities. The ministriales rebelled, taking control of the cities and
castles they garrisoned and declaring themselves free. During desperate attempts
to regain Italy, more concessions were given to the local princes in Germany. By
the middle of the thirteenth century, the Holy Roman Empire existed in name
only. The throne remained empty for 20 years. The German princes cared only
about their own holdings. The Italian city-states did not want a German ruler
and were strong enough to defend themselves.
Future emperors in the Middle Ages were elected by the German princes but they
ruled in name only, controlling little more than their own family estates.
Germany remained a minor power in Europe for centuries to come.
-----------------------------------
Turks
-----------------------------------
The name Turk refers to two different Muslim groups of the Middle East-first the
Seljuks and then the Ottomans. The Seljuks, nomads from the steppes near the
Caspian Sea, converted to Islam around the tenth century. Approximately 70,000
Seljuks started as mercenaries to fill the ranks of the Islamic army of the
caliph of Baghdad. These mercenaries converted to the Sunni branch of Islam. In
1055 they became the real power behind the caliph in Baghdad and began extending
their rule. Their leaders took the title sultan, meaning "holders of power." By
1100 they controlled most of Anatolia (taken from the Byzantines), Palestine,
the lands surrounding the Persian Gulf, the holy cities of Arabia, and as far
east as Samarkand.
In 1071 the Seljuks achieved a stunning victory over a Byzantine army at
Malazgirt in modern Turkey, which led to Turkish occupation of most of Anatolia.
At nearly the same time, they successfully captured Jerusalem from its Egyptian
Muslim rulers. These two events shocked the Byzantines, the papacy, and the
Christian Europeans. The result was the Crusades, which carried on for the next
200 years.
The Seljuk Turks were worn down by the recurring wars with the Crusaders, even
though they were successful ultimately in regaining control of Palestine. They
were threatened simultaneously by the activities of the Assassins, a heretical
sect of Islam. Internally, Islam entered a period of introspection because of
the popularity of Sufi mysticism. During this period of exhaustion and weakness,
they were attacked suddenly by the Mongols and collapsed. Baghdad fell to the
invaders in 1258 and the Seljuk Empire disappeared.
Islamic peoples from Anatolia (modern Turkey in Asia Minor) were unified in the
early fourteenth century under Sultan Osman I and took the name Osmanli, or
Ottomans, in his honor. The Ottomans swore a jihad against the crumbling
Byzantine Empire and took their campaign around Constantinople into the Balkans.
In 1389 the Serbs were defeated. In 1396 a "crusader" army from Hungary was
defeated. Ottoman successes were temporarily halted by the Mongols under
Tamerlane, but he moved on with his army and the Ottomans recovered.
Sultan Mehmed II ("the Conqueror") at last captured Constantinople on May 29,
1453. The great walls of Constantinople were battered by 70 guns for eight weeks
and then 15,000 Janissaries led the successful assault.
The Ottomans pushed on into Europe following the capture of Constantinople and
threatened a sort of reverse Crusade. They were stopped by a Hungarian army at
Belgrade in 1456, however. Attacks on Vienna were repulsed in 1529 and again in
1683. At its peak in the sixteenth century, the Ottoman Empire reached up into
Europe to Budapest and Odessa and included all of Greece and the Balkans, the
lands surrounding the Black Sea, Asia Minor, the Levant, Arabia, Egypt, and most
of North Africa. The Ottoman Empire remained a significant world power until
World War I in the twentieth century.
-----------------------------------
Vikings
-----------------------------------
The Vikings (meaning "northmen") were the last of the barbarian tribes called
Germans by the Romans to terrorize Europe. Spreading out from their homelands in
Scandinavia, they struck suddenly across the seas from their dragon boats
(called such because of the dragon heads carved on the bow and stern). They
began by raiding, pillaging, and withdrawing before any serious armed resistance
could be mounted, but they gradually grew more bold. Eventually they occupied
and settled significant parts of Europe.
Being pagan, they did not hesitate to kill churchmen and loot church holdings,
and they were feared for their ruthlessness and ferocity. At the same time, they
were remarkable craftsmen, sailors, explorers, and traders.
The Viking homelands were Norway, Sweden, and Denmark. They and their
descendants controlled, at least temporarily, most of the Baltic Coast, much of
inland Russia, Normandy in France, England, Sicily, southern Italy, and parts of
Palestine. They discovered Iceland in 825 (Irish monks were there already) and
settled there in 875. They colonized Greenland in 985. Some people think that
the Vikings reached Newfoundland and explored part of North America 500 years
before the voyage of Columbus.
Vikings began raiding and then settling along the eastern Baltic Sea in the
sixth and seventh centuries. At the end of the eighth century, they were making
long raids down the rivers of modern Russia and setting up forts along the way
for defense. In the ninth century, they were ruling Kiev and in 907 a force of
2000 ships and 80,000 men attacked Constantinople. They were bought off by the
emperor of Byzantium with very favorable terms of trade.
Vikings struck first in the West in the late eighth century. Danes attacked and
looted the famous island monastery at Lindisfarne on the northeast coast of
England, beginning a trend. The size and frequency of raids against England,
France, and Germany increased to the point of becoming invasions. Settlements
were established as bases for further raids. Viking settlements in northwestern
France came to be known as Normandy ("from the northmen"), and the residents
were called Normans.
In 865 a large Danish army invaded England, and they went on to hold much of
England for the next two centuries. One of the last kings of all England before
1066 was Canute, who ruled Denmark and Norway simultaneously. In 871 another
large fleet sailed up the Seine River to attack Paris. They besieged the city
for two years before being bought off with a large cash payment and permission
to loot part of western France unimpeded.
In 911 the French king made the Viking chief of Normandy a duke in return for
converting to Christianity and ceasing to raid. From the Duchy of Normandy came
a remarkable series of warriors, including William I, who conquered England in
1066, Robert Guiscard and his family, who took Sicily from the Arabs between
1060 and 1091, and Baldwin I, king of the crusader kingdom of Jerusalem.
Viking raids stopped at the end of the tenth century. Denmark, Sweden, and
Norway had become kingdoms, and much of their king's energy was devoted to
running their lands. The spread of Christianity weakened the old pagan warrior
values, which died out. The Norse were also absorbed by the cultures into which
they had intruded. The occupiers and conquerors of England became English, the
Normans became French, and the Rus became Russians.
-----------------------------------
Medieval Weapons
-----------------------------------
The traditional and popular understanding of European warfare in the Middle Ages
held that mounted knights dominated European battlefields during the years 800
to 1400. Knights were encased in plate armor and charged with lances,
scattering, skewering, and riding down any foot troops in the way as they closed
with each other to decide the battle. The era of the knight came to an end when
infantry reestablished a prominent battlefield role with new weapons (firearms)
and revived skills (formations of massed pikeman). This view was fostered by the
art and limited accounts of the era that featured the mounted nobility while
ignoring the commoners and peasants who fought on foot. The perception that
knights dominated and that warfare consisted mainly of cavalry charges is false.
Foot troops were an important component of all armies in the Middle Ages. They
fought in hand-to-hand mкlйes and as missile troops (bows of various types and
later handguns). Foot soldiers were critical for both sides in sieges against
castles and fortified towns.
Warfare in the Middle Ages was dominated actually by sieges of one sort or
another. Battles on open ground between armies were infrequent. Armies played a
sort of chess match, maneuvering to take important castles and towns, while
avoiding engagements where a large and expensive force might be lost.
On those occasions where pitched battles did occur, knights could be
devastating. A determined charge by armored knights was a powerful force. It was
more likely, however, that victory went to the side making best use of the three
major army components together-mкlйe infantry, missile troops, and cavalry. Also
important were the factors that have always influenced battle, such as
intelligent use of terrain, troop morale, leadership, discipline, and tactics.
-----------------------------------
Dark Age Armies
-----------------------------------
The Germanic tribes that overran the Roman Empire at the start of the Middle
Ages fought primarily on foot with axes and swords, while wearing little armor
other than perhaps helmets and shields. They were organized into war bands under
the leadership of a chief. They were fierce warriors but fought in undisciplined
mobs. The disciplined Roman legions had great success against the Germanic
tribes for centuries, in part because emotional armies are usually very fragile.
When the Roman legions declined in quality at the empire's end, however, the
Germanic tribes were able to push across the frontier.
Not all Germanic tribes fought on foot. Exceptions were the Goths, who had
adapted to horses when they settled previously north of the Black Sea. Both the
Visigoths and Ostrogoths learned about cavalry by being in contact with the
Eastern Roman Empire south of the Danube and barbarian horsemen from Asia. The
Eastern Roman armies put a greater emphasis on cavalry because of their
conflicts with mounted barbarians, the Parthians, and the Persians.
Following the fall of Rome, most fighting in Europe for the next few centuries
involved clashes of foot soldiers. One exception might have been the battles of
Britain's Arthur against the invading Saxons, although we have no evidence that
his success was due to using cavalry. Arthur may have halted Saxon progress in
Britain for 50 years, perhaps because of cavalry or the use of disciplined
troops. Another exception was the Byzantine army that recaptured North Africa
from the Vandals and almost restored Italy to Eastern Roman control in the sixth
century. The strength of the Byzantine army of this period was cavalry. The
Byzantines benefited also from both superior leadership and an understanding of
tactics that the barbarians lacked.
Fighting in these first centuries rarely involved groups that could be described
as armies. They were the same war bands as before, small by Byzantine or Asian
standards and employing limited tactics or strategy. The main military
activities were raids to obtain loot in the form of food, livestock, weapons,
and slaves. Aggressive tribes expanded by devastating the food production of
enemies, starving them out, and enslaving the survivors. Battles were mainly
clashes of war bands, fighting hand to hand with axes and swords. They fought as
mobs, not the disciplined formations typical of the Romans. They used shields
and helmets and wore some armor. Leather armor was common; only chieftains and
elites wore chain mail.
In the early eighth century, Visgothic Spain fell to the warriors of Islam, many
of whom fought as light cavalry. At the same time, nomadic Magyars from the
Hungarian plains increased their mounted raids on western Europe. In 732 a
Frankish infantry army was able to defeat a Muslim cavalry raid near Poitiers,
ending Muslim northward expansion. Charles Martel, warlord of the Franks, was
impressed by the Moorish cavalry and began mounting part of his army. This
conversion continued later in the century under the great king of the Franks,
Charlemagne. Frankish heavy cavalry was the genesis of the mounted knight that
came to typify medieval warfare.
Annually for 30 years, Charlemagne conducted military campaigns that extended
the size of his empire. The Frankish army consisted of both infantry and armored
cavalry, but the cavalry was his most valuable force and the part that got the
most notice. It could move quickly and strike hard against foes fighting mainly
on foot. Charlemagne's campaigns were economic raids, burning, looting, and
devastating enemies into submission. He fought very few battles against
organized opposition.
The Vikings fought exclusively on foot, except that it was their habit to gather
horses upon landing and use them to raid farther inland. Their raids began in
the late eighth century and ended in the eleventh century. The descendants of
Viking raiders that became the Normans of northwestern France adapted quickly to
the use of horses and became some of the most successful warriors of the late
Middle Ages.
In the early tenth century, the Germans began developing the use of cavalry
under Otto I, both as a rapid response force against Viking raids and to repel
mounted barbarian raids from the East.
By the end of the tenth century, heavy cavalry was an important component of
most European armies except in Anglo-Saxon England, Celtic lands (Ireland,
Wales, and Scotland), and Scandinavia.
-----------------------------------
Knights
-----------------------------------
By the time of Charlemagne, mounted warriors had become the elite military units
of the Franks and this innovation spread across Europe. Fighting from a horse
was most glorious because the mounted man rode into battle, moved quickly, and
trampled down lower-class enemies on foot. When cavalry faced cavalry, the
charge at speed and resulting violent contact was exhilarating. Fighting while
mounted was most prestigious because of the high cost of horses, weapons, and
armor. Only wealthy individuals, or the retainers of the wealthy, could fight
mounted.
Kings of the late Dark Ages had little money with which to pay for large
contingents of expensive cavalry. Warriors were made vassals and given fiefs of
land. They were expected to use their profits from the land to pay for horses
and equipment. In most cases, vassals also supported groups of professional
soldiers. At a time when central authority was weak and communications poor, the
vassal, aided by his retainers, was responsible for law and order within the
fief. In return for his fief, the vassal agreed to provide military service to
his lord. In this way, high lords and kings were able to raise armies when
desired. The elites of these armies were the mounted vassals.
As the Middle Ages progressed, the elite mounted warriors of western Europe
became known as knights. A code of behavior evolved, called chivalry, which
detailed how they should conduct themselves. They were obsessed with honor, both
at war and at peace, although mainly when dealing with their peers, not the
commoners and peasants who constituted the bulk of the population. Knights
became the ruling class, controlling the land from which all wealth derived. The
aristocrats were noble originally because of their status and prestige as the
supreme warriors in a violent world. Later their status and prestige were based
mainly on heredity, and the importance of being a warrior declined.
Chivalry
When first used, the term "chivalry" meant horsemanship. The warrior elite of
the Middle Ages distinguished themselves from the peasants and clergy and each
other by their skill as horsemen and warriors. Fast and strong horses, beautiful
and efficient weapons, and well-made armor were the status symbols of the day.
By the twelfth century, chivalry had come to mean an entire way of life. The
basic rules of the chivalric code were the following:
* Protect women and the weak.
* Champion justice against injustice and evil.
* Love the homeland.
* Defend the Church, even at the risk of death.
In practice, knights and aristocrats ignored the code of chivalry when it suited
them. Feuds between nobles and fights over land took precedent over any code.
The Germanic tribal custom that called for a chieftain's property to be split
among his sons, rather than pass to the eldest, often triggered wars among
brothers for the spoils. An example of this was the conflict between
Charlemagne's grandsons. The Middle Ages were plagued with such civil wars in
which the big losers were usually the peasants.
In the late Middle Ages, kings created orders of chivalry, which were exclusive
organizations of high-ranking knights that swore allegiance to their king and
each other. Becoming a member of chivalric order was extremely prestigious,
marking a man as one of the most important of the realm. In 1347 during the
Hundred Years War, Edward III of England founded the Order of the Garter, still
in existence today. This order consisted of the 25 highest-ranking knights of
England and was founded to ensure their loyalty to the king and dedication to
victory in the war.
The Order of the Golden Fleece was established by Philip the Good of Burgundy in
1430 and became the richest and most powerful order in Europe. Louis XI of
France established the Order of St. Michael to control his most important
nobles. The Orders of Calatrava, Santiago, and Alcantara were founded to drive
the Moors out of Spain. They were united under Ferdinand of Aragon, whose
marriage to Isabella of Castile set the foundation for a single Spanish kingdom.
He eventually became master of the three orders, although they remained
separate.
Becoming a Knight
At the age of 7 or 8, boys of the noble class were sent to live with a great
lord as a page. Pages learned basic social skills from the women of the lord's
household and began basic training in the use of weapons and horsemanship.
Around the age of 14 the youth became a squire, a knight in training. Squires
were assigned to a knight who continued the youth's education. The squire was a
general companion and servant to the knight. The duties of the squire included
polishing armor and weapons (prone to rust), helping his knight dress and
undress, looking after his belongings, and even sleeping across his doorway as a
guard.
At tournaments and in battle, the squire assisted his knight as needed. He
brought up replacement weapons and horses, treated wounds, brought a wounded
knight out of danger, or made sure of a decent burial if needed. In many cases
the squire went into battle with his knight and fought at his side. A knight
avoided fighting a squire on the other side, if possible, seeking instead a
knight of rank similar to or higher than his own. Squires, on the other hand,
sought to engage enemy knights, seeking to gain glory by killing or capturing an
enemy knight of high rank.
In addition to martial training, squires built up their strength through games,
learned to at least read, if not write, and studied music, dancing, and singing.
By the age of 21, a squire was eligible to become a knight. Suitable candidates
were "knighted" by a lord or other knight of high standing. The ceremony for
becoming a knight was simple at first, usually being "dubbed" on the shoulder
with a sword and then buckling on a sword belt. The ceremony grew more elaborate
and the Church added to the rite. Candidates bathed, cut their hair close, and
stayed up all night in a vigil of prayer. In the morning the candidate received
the sword and spurs of a knight.
Knighthood was usually attainable only for those who possessed the land or
income necessary to meet the responsibilities of the rank. Important lords and
bishops could support a sizable contingent of knights, however, and many found
employment in these circumstances. Squires who fought particularly well might
also gain the recognition of a great lord during battle and be knighted on the
field.
Tournaments
Mock battles between knights, called tournaments, began in the tenth century and
were immediately condemned by the second Council of Letrбn, under Pope
Innocentius II, and the kings of Europe who objected to the injuries and deaths
of knights in what they considered frivolous activity. Tournaments flourished,
however, and became an integral part of a knight's life.
Tournaments began as simple contests between individual knights but grew more
elaborate through the centuries. They became important social events that would
attract patrons and contestants from great distances. Special lists (tournament
grounds) were erected with stands for spectators and pavilions for combatants.
Knights continued to compete as individuals but also in teams. They dueled
against each other using a variety of weapons and held mock mкlйe battles with
many knights on a side. Jousts, or tilts, involving two charging knights
fighting with lances, became the premier event. Knights competed like modern-day
athletes for prizes, prestige, and the eyes of the ladies who filled the stands.
So many men were being killed in tournaments by the thirteenth century, that
leaders, including the pope, became alarmed. Sixty knights died in a 1240
tournament held in Cologne, for example. The pope wanted as many knights as
possible to fight on the Crusades in the Holy Land, rather than be killed in
tournaments. Weapons were blunted and rules attempted to reduce the incidence of
injury, but serious and fatal injuries occurred. Henry II of France was mortally
wounded, for example, in a joust at a tournament held to celebrate his
daughter's wedding.
Challenges were usually issued for a friendly contest, but grudges between two
enemies might be settled in a fight to the death. Tournament losers were
captured and paid a ransom to the victors in horses, weapons, and armor to
obtain their release. Heralds kept track of tournament records, like modern
baseball box scores. A low-ranking knight could amass wealth through prizes and
attract a wealthy wife.
Military Orders
During the Crusades military orders of knights were created to support the
Christian goals of the movement. They became the fiercest of the Crusaders and
the most hated enemies of the Arabs. These orders carried on after the Crusades
in Palestine ended in failure.
The first of these orders were the Knights of the Temple, or the Templars,
founded in 1108 to protect the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem. The Templars wore a
white surcoat supplanted with a red cross and took the same vows as a
Benedictine monk-poverty, chastity, and obedience. The Templars were among the
bravest defenders of the Holy Land. They were the last Crusaders to leave the
Holy Land. In the following years they grew wealthy from donations and by
lending money at interest, attracting the envy and distrust of kings. In 1307
King Philip IV of France accused them of many crimes, including heresy, arrested
them, and confiscated their lands. Other European leaders followed his lead and
the Templars were destroyed.
The Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, or the Hospitallers, were set up
originally to tend to sick and poor pilgrims visiting the Holy Sepulcher. They
converted shortly into a military order. They wore a red surcoat with a white
cross and also took the vows of St. Benedict. The Hospitallers set a high
standard and did not allow their order to become rich and indolent. When forced
out of the Holy Land following the surrender of their great castle, the Krak des
Chevaliers, they retreated to the island of Rhodes, which they defended for many
years. Driven from Rhodes by the Turks they took up residence on Malta.
The third great military order was the Teutonic Knights, founded in 1190 to
protect German pilgrims traveling to the Holy Land. Before the end of the
Crusades they had turned their efforts toward converting the heathens in Prussia
and in the Baltic States.
Heraldry
To distinguish knights on the battlefield, a system of badges called heraldry
was developed. A special badge was designed for each nobleman to be shown on his
shield, surcoat, flags, and seal. A surcoat decorated with a knight's badge
became known as a coat-of-arms and this term came to describe the badges
themselves. An independent organization known as the College of Heralds designed
the individual badges and ensured that each was unique. Badges were recorded by
the heralds in special books under their care.
Coats-of-arms were handed down from one generation to the next and would be
modified by marriage. Certain designs were reserved for royalty in different
countries. By the late Middle Ages towns, guilds, and even prominent nonnoble
townsmen were granted coats-of-arms.
On the battlefield, combatants used coats-of-arms to distinguish friend and foe
and to choose a worthy opponent in a mкlйe. Heralds made lists of knights about
to fight based on their badges. Heralds were also considered neutrals and would
act as intermediaries between two armies. In this manner they might pass
messages between the defenders of a castle or town and its besiegers. After a
battle, heralds identified the dead by their coats-of-arms.
-----------------------------------
Medieval Weapons
-----------------------------------
For most of the Middle Ages, the technology of weapons was little changed from
that of the ancient world, remaining primarily variants of the club, knife,
spear, axe, and arrow. An important innovation was the heavy mounted horseman
using the lance. The mounted knight was significantly more potent than any
cavalry of the ancient world. The closest ancient equivalent may have been the
Companion cavalry of Alexander the Great.
By the tenth century Europe had bypassed the ancients in most areas, including
weaponry. The evolution of the heavy horseman triggered corresponding innovation
to defend against him. This resulted in new pole arms to ward off or engage
knights.
The longbow and crossbow were innovations in the West. The crossbow was known to
the ancient Chinese, however.
The revolutionary technology of the Middle Ages was the development of gunpowder
weapons, both cannons and hand weapons, discussed later.
.-----------------.
| Cavalry Weapons |
'-----------------'
Since the first appearance of cavalry around 1000 BC, mounted troops have
fulfilled several important roles in battle. They acted as scouts, skirmishers,
a shock force for mкlйe combat, a rear guard, and the pursuit of a retreating
enemy. Cavalry were divided into several different categories depending on
equipment and training, and some categories were better suited for certain roles
than others. Light cavalry wore little or no armor and was best suited for
scouting, skirmishing, and acting as a rear guard. Heavy cavalry wore armor and
was better suited for use as a shock force that charged the enemy. All types of
cavalry excelled at pursuit.
Knights of the Middle Ages were heavy cavalry, and the code of chivalry
emphasized their role as shock troops charging enemy cavalry and infantry. From
the thirteenth century on, the term man-at-arms was used to describe armored
warriors fighting on horse and on foot. The new term applied to knights as well
as squires, gentry, and professional soldiers.
The advantages of knights in battle were speed, intimidation, power, and height.
As the Middle Ages progressed, the equipment of knights improved to enhance
these advantages.
Weapons
The spear, and later the larger lance, was the weapon with which cavalry opened
a battle. It was ideal for stabbing opponents on foot, especially those in
flight. The presentation of the spear in front of a mounted horseman added
greatly to the intimidation caused by an approaching charge. Much of the force
of the horse could be transmitted through the spear point at the moment of
impact. The charging knight became a thundering missile.
Historians disagree on the importance of the stirrup to the rise of knights. The
stirrup first appeared in Asia and reached Europe in the eighth century. Some
believe that it was critical to the rise of knights because it allowed the rider
to brace himself and his lance, thereby transmitting the entire force of the
charging horse through the lance point. No one argues with the advantage of this
force multiplication, but others suggest that the high saddle developed in Roman
times allowed riders to transmit this power before the stirrup appeared. The
Bayeux Tapestry, which depicts William's conquest of England in 1066, shows the
highly regarded Norman knights using their spears mainly as overhand stabbing or
throwing spears, not as couched lances. By this time the stirrup had been known
in Europe for at least two centuries. For the remainder of the Middle Ages, the
mounted charge by knights holding couched lances was the epitome of combats for
knights. It was not always the correct tactic, however.
The initial charge by knights often resulted in the loss of spears or lances, or
the charge ended in a general mкlйe. In either case, knights switched to another
weapon. This was usually their sword. The cavalry sword evolved into the saber,
a wide, heavy blade that a man standing in his stirrups could swing down with
tremendous force on the head and upper body of opponents. Swords were the
weapons that knights prized most highly because they could be carried on the
person, prominently displayed, and personalized. They were the most common
weapons for hand-to-hand combat between knights. Good swords were also
expensive, so ownership was another distinction of the nobility.
Other choices of mкlйe weapon included the hammer and mace (evolutions of the
club), the axe, and the flail. Hammers and maces were popular with fighting
churchmen and warrior monks trying to obey the letter of the Bible's admonition
about shedding blood, which edged weapons were prone to do.
Under no circumstances did knights use missile weapons of any kind. Killing an
opponent at range with an arrow, bolt, or bullet was considered dishonorable.
Knights fought worthy foes of the same rank when possible and killed face to
face or not at all.
Armor
Chain mail armor was worn by the late Romans and by some of the invading
Germanic tribes, including the Goths. Chain mail remained popular with the
nobility of medieval Europe until more protective plate armor came into use in
the thirteenth century. The change was made in part because an arrow or sharp
sword point could pierce chain mail. A cloth tunic, called a surcoat, was worn
over the chain mail, especially during the Crusades to reflect the sun.
Helmets also evolved from simple conical designs, to large metal buckets, to
large sculpted pieces designed to deflect arrows. Later, helmets could be bolted
to the armor worn on the body.
Full suits of armor weighing up to 60 pounds appeared in the fourteenth century.
Plate armor was well designed and knights retained a surprising amount of
agility. An armored knight on the ground was not helpless and could easily stand
up. There are accounts and depictions of armored men doing handstands and other
gymnastics in lighter moments. Later suits put increased emphasis on deflecting
missiles and reinforced areas most exposed to blows. Elaborate full suits of
engraved plate armor appeared late during the age and were more ceremonial and
prestigious than practical.
Armor was a large expense for a knight who equipped himself and a squire. An
important lord had to provide armor for many knights. The making of armor was an
important business, and a large market in used armor developed during the Middle
Ages. Common soldiers on the victorious side of a battle could make a
substantial sum by stripping dead knights of their armor and selling it.
Horses
Knights took special pride in their horses, which were bred for speed and
strength. They required extensive training, as well, to be manageable during a
charge and mкlйe. Horses were trained to charge with minimal guidance, freeing
the knight to hold his shield and lance. Historians disagree as to whether the
horses of knights were the heavy horse thought necessary to carry the weight of
a fully equipped knight or a smaller horse valued for its speed and agility.
Horsemanship was another characteristic by which the elite knights distinguished
themselves from the commoners. It was practiced while hunting, a popular leisure
activity of the nobles that carries on today in the traditional foxhunt.
.-----------------.
| Missile Weapons |
'-----------------'
Bows of one type or another played an important role in battle throughout the
Middle Ages. They were used as direct fire weapons against individual targets on
battlefields and during sieges. In some cases they were used as area fire
weapons.
Missile fire allowed men to cause casualties at range. Archers were used as
light troops to cause casualties and weaken enemy morale due to losses before
mкlйe combat. If the enemy force could be weakened or shaken, the chances of
winning the mкlйe were enhanced.
Bows
Bows used during the Middle Ages were of various types, including the short bow,
the composite bow, and the longbow. The short bow was 3 to 4 feet long and
rather easy to make and use. It was employed widely and the most common bow
encountered. It had medium range, power, and accuracy and required substantial
experience and training for effective use.
The composite bow was of Asiatic origin. It was made from a composite of wood or
bone strips bonded together. The lamination created a more powerful bow, but one
that required more strength and training than the common bow. This relatively
short bow was the preferred weapon of horse archers, especially the Mongols and
other horse peoples from Asia. A variant of the composite bow was curved forward
at the tips during manufacture (by steaming and bending the laminate). This
recurved bow generated more power and required a high degree of strength and
skill.
The longbow originated in Wales and spread to England. It was a 6-foot bow made
from a single piece of wood, usually from the yew tree. The longbow shot a 3-
foot arrow (cloth yard). These were fitted with broad tips for use against
infantry (for piercing leather armor and causing lacerations) and narrow tips
for use against armored men (to pierce mail or plate armor). Shooting the
longbow required extensive training and practice; men experienced with the
weapon could get off six well-aimed shots in a minute. Longbows had a long range
and were quite powerful. Large contingents of experienced longbowmen were a
devastating force on many battlefields of the Middle Ages. They could fire
individually aimed shots or rain down a barrage of arrows into an area.
The English encouraged the use of the longbow by sponsoring archery tournaments
throughout the land. All other sports were banned on Sundays. This created a
large pool of experienced bowmen from which they could recruit. Each English
shire was required by law to provide a number of bowmen each year. There was
usually no shortage of applicants because the pay of soldiers was so good
relative to other work.
Crossbows
The crossbow was known in ancient China but seems to have been reinvented in
Europe around 900. It had good range and was more powerful than most bows, but
it took much more time to load. An average crossbowman fired 2 shots per minute.
The bow of the crossbow was held horizontally and fired with a trigger that
released the taut bowstring. To load, the front of the weapon was pointed to the
ground and held in place by foot. The bowstring was pulled up and back with both
hands or with the help of cranks. The crossbow fired a quarrel, or bolt, which
was much shorter than a typical arrow. The quarrel did have flights (feathers)
for stabilization in flight and had a sharpened metal point.
Crossbowmen often carried a pavise shield into battle to provide cover while
they loaded. This was a tall shield with wooden braces attached. A force of
crossbowmen set up a wall of such shields and bent down behind the wall to load.
When they shot, only the crossbows and their helmeted heads appeared over the
wall of shields. If forced to fight in the open against a comparable force of
longbowmen, they were usually forced to withdraw.
The crossbow was a deadly weapon and was very popular for the simple reason that
it took little training to operate. Relatively raw soldiers could become
proficient with a crossbow very quickly, and a well-aimed shot could kill a
knight in armor who had spent a lifetime in combat training. The crossbow was
considered unfair in some circles (those of the knights, primarily) because it
took so little skill. Richard I of England, the Lionheart, was wounded twice by
crossbow bolts. The second proved fatal. The idea of such great men being killed
easily by common soldiers or worse was appalling to the nobility. In the twelfth
century a pope tried to get the crossbow banned for being inhumane.
.--------------.
| Hand Weapons |
'--------------'
Foot soldiers armed with hand weapons were the third principal component of
medieval armies, along with cavalry and missile troops. Mкlйe infantry fought
hand to hand and were important both in pitched battles and during sieges.
Infantry consisted of peasants, common soldiers, and dismounted knights.
Hand Weapons
The Franks of the Dark Ages fought with a throwing axe called the francisca,
from which their tribe took its name. Their neighbors, the Saxons, fought with a
large, one-sided knife called a scramasax, from which they took their name.
With the development of the heavy cavalryman came the heavy sword, which was
used in hand-to-hand fighting on foot as well. Variants of the sword included a
two-handed version that required a lot of space to wield. Men-at-arms employed a
variety of weapons on foot, including axes (both one-handed and two-handed),
maces, flails, and hammers. A variant of the mace was a spiked ball fastened to
a shaft by a chain. As armor improved to reduce the effect of sword blows,
crushing and puncturing weapons became more favored.
Pole Arms
The basic spear was a useful weapon throughout the Middle Ages because it was
cheap to make and simple to use. Common foot soldiers and peasants could be
armed with it and pressed into battle service. In most cases such an expedient
was of little use, but with experience and some training large bodies of
spearmen could be effective.
Pole arms evolved through the medieval period and eventually reached a point
where formations of foot troops skilled in their use were extremely effective.
Advanced pole arms consisted of a spear point with one or more weapon faces
below the point. This additional weapon might be a large long blade, an axe, a
billhook, a hammer, or a spike.
Long pole arms evolved in response to the mounted knight and resulted in a
revival of a formation something like the ancient Greek phalanx. Horses would
not charge a disciplined formation of men that bristled with extended pole
weapons. A dense formation of pole arms held high also served as some protection
from arrows.
Foot soldiers first learned to stand behind wooden stakes set in the ground to
ward off cavalry. They then learned to deploy spears, pikes, and other pole arms
to ward off cavalry. This allowed the formation to move and take its anti-
cavalry stakes with it, in effect. In a mкlйe, the various attachments at the
end of the pole were used to pull horsemen off their mounts, push them off, or
cause wounds to the rider or horse. Although armored men were not helpless when
prone on the ground, as some have thought, they were at a disadvantage, at least
temporarily, to men wearing little or no armor before they could rise.
As the towns grew in the second half of the Middle Ages, they built up their own
militias of troops for defense and for feudal military service. Pole arms were
popular weapons with the town militias because they were relatively cheap to
provide and effective for the cost. Town militias trained with these weapons and
developed useful battlefield tactics. In time, formations of pole-armed men
learned to be aggressive, not simply defensive. Massed formations of pikeman
could physically attack other infantry and even cavalry. The Swiss lacked the
pastureland to support horse armies but became famous as pikemen. They often
served as mercenaries in other continental armies. The lowland cities of
Flanders and the highlands of Scotland also fielded pike units that were highly
regarded.
-----------------------------------
Medieval Armies
-----------------------------------
The first medieval armies were tribal war bands carried over from ancient times.
These evolved into feudal armies made up of a lord's vassals and their
respective retainers. Fief holders were required to provide a period of military
service each year. This began as weeks or months of service by the vassal
accompanied by professional soldiers he retained personally. The armies of later
kings and wealthy lords consisted of a higher proportion of professionals and
mercenaries. Late in the period, vassals sent money instead of actually serving
in armies, and this "martial tax" helped kings to support armies year-round.
Service in feudal armies was a matter of duty and honor for the knights. In a
warrior society, knights lived for the opportunity to fight. Success in battle
was the main path to recognition and wealth. For professional soldiers, often
the sons of the aristocracy left with little when the eldest began inheriting
everything, fighting was a job. It was duty for peasants also, when they were
called up, but certainly not an honor.
By the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, many commoners joined the ranks for
pay that was often much better than that for more peaceful employment. A strong
attraction for a commoner to become a soldier was the prospect of loot. Tribal
warriors stayed loyal to their warrior chief and fought for him so long as he
provided them with a living and loot. These ideals of the war band carried over
into the feudal age. Low-ranking knights and professional foot soldiers longed
for the opportunity to take part in the assault against a rich town or castle
because strongholds that resisted were traditionally looted. A soldier could
gather up many times his year's pay during the sack of a city. Pitched battles
also offered opportunities for gain. The armor and weapons of the dead could be
sold and captured knights could be ransomed.
.--------------.
| Organization |
'--------------'
The organization of feudal armies was kept simple in comparison to the large
national armies of more modern time. There were no permanent regiments,
divisions, or corps until the very end of the age. When a feudal army was
summoned, each vassal traveled to the meeting point with any knights, archers,
and footmen that he was required to bring. At the meeting point, the contingents
would be reassembled by role. The knights and their squires kept and marched
together, as did the archers and footmen.
Special units, such as engineers and the operators of siege artillery, were
usually professionals hired for the campaign. Christian mercenaries, for
example, operated the artillery employed by the Turks against Constantinople.
Being a mercenary soldier was a respected profession in the late Middle Ages.
Warrior entrepreneurs formed mercenary companies that allowed a rich lord or
city to hire a ready-made competent fighting force. Mercenary companies existed
that were all of one skill. For example, 2000 Genoese crossbowmen served in the
French army at the Battle of Crйcy in 1346. Other mercenary companies were mixed
forces of all arms. These were often described in terms of the number of lances
they contained. Each lance represented a mounted man-at-arms plus additional
mounted, foot, and missile troops. A company of 100 lances represented several
hundred fighting men. This system was the origin of the word "freelance."
Command hierarchy within a feudal army was flat. Not much maneuvering was
anticipated so there was little provision of large staffs to support the
commander and pass orders.
In 1439 Charles VII of France raised Royal Ordinance Companies. These companies
were filled with either knights or infantry and were paid from tax revenues.
Each company had a fixed complement of men; their armor and weapons were chosen
by the king rather than left to personal choice. This was the beginning of
modern standing armies in the West.
Supply
There was little provision for food and medical supplies. Medieval armies lived
off the land, to the detriment of everyone residing in an area they occupied or
passed through. Having a friendly army march through was no better than having
the enemy pass. Medieval armies did not linger in one area for long because
local supplies of food and forage were quickly exhausted. This was a particular
problem during sieges. If an army laying siege did not make arrangements to have
food and supplies brought in, it might have to lift its siege to avoid
starvation long before the defenders had to surrender.
Sanitation was also a problem when an army stayed in one place. A medieval army
brought along many animals, in addition to the horses of the knights, and sewage
problems led to dysentery. Feudal armies tended to waste away to disease and
desertion. During his campaign in France, Henry V of England lost an estimated
15 percent of his army to disease at the siege of Harfleur and more on the march
leading up to Agincourt. At the battle itself, he lost only 5 percent. Henry V
died of disease related to poor sanitation at another siege.
Deployment for Battle
Most battles were set-piece affairs where the two sides arranged themselves
before the fighting began. Campaigns of maneuver and meeting engagements were
rare.
Prior to battle, commanders divided their forces into contingents with specific
tasks in mind for each. The first separation might be into foot soldiers,
archers, and cavalry. These groups might be divided further into groups to be
given individual missions or to be held in reserve. A commander might arrange
several "battles" or "divisions" of knights, for example. These could be
launched individually as desired or held in reserve. Archers might be deployed
in front of the army with blocks of infantry in support. Once the army had been
arranged, the only major decisions were when to send in the prearranged pieces.
There was little provision for pulling back, reforming, or rearranging once the
fighting started. A force of knights, for example, could rarely be used more
than once. After they had been committed to action, they were usually reinforced
or withdrawn. A full charge by heavy cavalry caused such disruption, lost
equipment, and loss of horses that the force was essentially spent. The Norman
knights at Hastings were reformed for further attacks, but they did not launch a
full charge because they could not penetrate the Saxon shield-wall.
Superior commanders made use of the terrain to their advantage and conducted
reconnaissance to evaluate the enemy's strength and weaknesses.
Ransom
The ultimate rewards from successful battle included honors and grants of fiefs.
The proximate rewards included booty from looting bodies, ransacking captured
towns and castles, selling the armor and weapons of the dead, and ransoming
high-ranking prisoners. Knights were expected to pay ransoms to save their
lives. One of the highest recorded ransoms was more than US $20 million paid to
a German prince for the release of Richard I of England, captured during his
return from the Crusades.
At Agincourt the English were holding a large group of French knights at the
rear for ransom. During the battle, a French contingent raided toward the rear
of the English and briefly panicked Henry V. He ordered the execution of the
held French knights to prevent their release, thereby forgoing a fortune in
ransoms.
The capture of knights was recorded by heralds who kept a tally of which
soldiers were responsible and thereby due the bulk of the ransom. The heralds
then notified the prisoner's family, arranged the ransom payment, and obtained
the prisoner's release.
The popularity of ransoms seems remarkably civil but masks a darker story. Low-
ranking prisoners of no value might be killed out-of-hand to eliminate the
problem of guarding and feeding them.
.----------.
| Strategy |
'----------'
Medieval military strategy was concerned with control of the economic basis for
wealth and, thus, the ability to put armies in the field. At the start of the
era this meant primarily ravaging or defending the countryside because all
wealth originated in the fields and pastures. As the age progressed, towns
became important control points as centers of wealth from trade and
manufacturing.
Holding and taking castles was a key element of war because they defended the
farmland. The warrior occupants of the castle controlled the neighborhood. As
towns grew they were fortified also. Defending and taking them gradually became
more important than fighting for castles.
Field armies maneuvered to take the key fortified points and ravage the
countryside, or to prevent the enemy from conducting such a campaign. Pitched
battles were fought to end the destruction of enemy invasions. The Battle of
Hastings in 1066, for example, was fought by the Anglo-Saxons to stop an
invasion by the Normans. The Anglo-Saxons lost and the Normans under William
spent the next several years establishing control of England in a campaign of
conquest. The Battle of Lechfield in 955 was fought between the Germans and
Magyar raiders from the East. The decisive victory of the Germans under Otto I
brought an end to further Magyar invasions. The defeat of the Moors in 732 by
Charles Martel ended Muslim raids and expansion out of Spain.
The battles of Crйcy, Poitiers, and Agincourt, all fought during the Hundred
Years War between the English and French, were all attempts by the French to
stop English incursions. The French lost all three battles and the English raids
carried on. In this case, however, the raids did not establish permanent control
for the English and the French eventually won the war.
The Crusades were attempts to take and hold key strong points in the Holy Land
from which control of the area could be maintained. Battles in the Crusades were
fought to break the control of one side or the other. The victory at Hattin in
1187 by the Saracens under Saladin made possible the recapture of Jerusalem.
.----------------.
| Battle Tactics |
'----------------'
Medieval battles evolved slowly from clashes of poorly organized war bands into
battles where tactics and maneuvers were employed. Part of this evolution was in
response to the development of different types of soldiers and weapons and
learning how to use these. The early armies of the Dark Ages were mobs of foot
soldiers. With the rise of heavy cavalry, the best armies became mobs of
knights. Foot soldiers were brought along to devastate farmlands and do the
heavy work in sieges. In battle, however, foot soldiers were at risk from both
sides as the knights sought to engage their enemies in single combat. This was
mainly true of foot soldiers early in the period who were feudal levies and
untrained peasants. Archers were useful in sieges as well, but also at risk of
being rundown on the battlefield.
By the late 1400's commanders were making better progress in disciplining their
knights and getting their armies to work as a team. In the English army, knights
gave their grudging respect to the longbowmen after the archers demonstrated
their value on so many battlefields. Discipline improved also as more and more
knights fought for pay and less for honor and glory. Mercenary soldiers in Italy
became well known for long campaigns during which no appreciable blood was
spilt. By that time soldiers of all ranks were assets not to be discarded
lightly. Feudal armies seeking glory evolved into professional armies more
interested in living to spend their pay.
Cavalry Tactics
Cavalry was divided typically into three groups, or divisions, to be sent into
battle one after another. The first wave would either break through or disrupt
the enemy so that the second or third wave could break through. Once the enemy
was running, the real killing and capturing could take place.
In practice, knights followed personal agendas to the detriment of any
commander's plan. The knights were interested primarily in honor and glory and
jockeyed for positions in the first rank of the first division. Overall victory
on the field was a secondary concern to personal glory. In battle after battle,
the knights charged as soon as they saw the enemy, dissolving any plan.
Commanders dismounted their knights on occasion as a way to better control them.
This was a popular option with the smaller army that had little hope in a
contest of charges. Dismounted knights bolstered the fighting power and morale
of common foot troops. The dismounted knights and other foot soldiers fought
from behind stakes or other battlefield constructions designed to minimize the
impact of cavalry charges.
An example of undisciplined behavior by knights was the Battle of Crйcy in 1346.
The French army greatly outnumbered the English (40,000 to 10,000), having many
more mounted knights. The English divided into three groups of longbowmen
protected by stakes driven into the ground. Between the three groups were two
groups of dismounted knights. A third group of dismounted knights was held in
reserve. Genoese mercenary crossbowmen were sent out by the French king to shoot
into the dismounted English army while he tried to organize his knights into
three divisions. The crossbows had gotten wet, however, and were ineffective.
The French knights ignored their king's efforts at organization as soon as they
saw the enemy and worked themselves into a frenzy, shouting, "Kill! Kill!" over
and over. Impatient with the Genoese, the French king ordered his knights
forward and they trampled down the crossbowmen in their way. Although the
fighting went on all day, the dismounted English knights and longbowmen (who had
kept their bowstrings dry) defeated the mounted French who fought as an
undisciplined mob.
By the end of the Middle Ages, heavy cavalry had been reduced to roughly equal
value on the battlefield in comparison to missile and foot troops. By this time,
the futility of charging well-emplaced and disciplined infantry was well
understood. The rules had changed. Stakes, horse traps, and trenches were
routinely employed by armies to protect against cavalry charges. Charges against
massed ranks of pikemen and archers/gunners left only a pile of broken horses
and men. Knights were forced to fight on foot or wait for the right opportunity
to charge. Devastating charges were still possible, but only when the enemy was
in flight, disorganized, or out from behind his temporary battlefield defenses.
Missile Troop Tactics
For most of this era missile troops were archers using one of several types of
bow. At first this was the short bow, then the crossbow and longbow. Archers had
the advantage of being able to kill and wound enemies at range without joining
in hand-to-hand combat. The value of these troops was well known in ancient
times, but the lessons were temporarily lost in the Dark Ages. The land-
controlling warrior knights were supreme in the early Middle Ages and their code
demanded hand-to-hand combat with a worthy enemy. Killing with arrows at a
distance was dishonorable to the knights so the ruling class did little to
develop this weapon and use it effectively.
It became apparent gradually, however, that archers were effective and very
useful, both in sieges and in battle. More and more armies made room for them,
if grudgingly. The decisive victory of William I at Hastings in 1066 may have
been won by archery, although his knights traditionally get the most credit. The
Anglo-Saxons held a hillside and were so packed into their shield-wall that the
Norman knights had great difficulty penetrating. The fighting flowed back and
forth all day. The Anglo-Saxons ventured out of their shield-wall, partly to get
at the Norman archers. When the Anglo-Saxons came out, they were easily run
down. For some time it seemed that the Normans must fail, but many believe that
Norman archery was winning the battle. A lucky shot mortally wounded Harold, the
Anglo-Saxon king, and the battle ended soon thereafter.
Foot archers fought in massed formations of hundreds or even thousands of men.
When within a hundred yards of the enemy, both crossbow and longbow shots could
penetrate armor. At this range, archers shot at individual targets. It was
maddening for the enemy to take this damage, especially if they could not
respond. In the ideal situation, the archers disrupted the enemy formation by
shooting into it for some time. The enemy might be safe from cavalry behind
stakes, but it could not block all the arrows or bolts coming in. If the enemy
left its protection and charged the archers, friendly heavy cavalry would
respond, hopefully in time to save the archers. If the enemy formation just
stood its ground, it might waver eventually to the point that cavalry could
charge effectively.
Archers were actively encouraged and subsidized in England because the English
were at a population disadvantage when waging war on the mainland. When the
English learned how to use large contingents of bowmen, they began winning
battles, even though they were usually outnumbered. The English developed the
arrow barrage, taking advantage of the range of the longbow. Instead of firing
at individual targets, the longbowmen fired into the area occupied by the enemy.
Firing up to 6 shots a minute, 3000 longbowmen could put 18,000 arrows into a
massed enemy formation. The effect of this barrage upon horses and men was
devastating. French knights in the Hundred Years War spoke of the sky being
black with arrows and of the noise of these missiles in flight.
Crossbowmen became prominent in mainland armies, especially in the militia and
professional forces raised by towns. With a minimum of training, a crossbowmen
became an effective soldier.
By the fourteenth century the first primitive handguns were appearing on the
battlefield. When these worked, they were even more powerful than bows.
The difficulty in using archers was protecting them while they shot. To be
effective they had to be fairly close to the enemy. English longbowmen carried
stakes onto the battlefield that they pounded into the ground with mallets in
front of the spot from which they wished to shoot. These stakes gave them some
protection from enemy cavalry. They relied on their firepower to fight off enemy
archers. They were at a disadvantage if attacked by enemy foot soldiers.
Crossbowmen carried a large pavise shield into battle. This came with supports
and could be set up in walls, from behind which the men could shoot.
By the end of the era, crossbowmen and pikemen were working together in combined
formations. The pikes kept enemy hand-to-hand troops away while the missile
troops (crossbowmen or handgunners) fired into the enemy formations. These mixed
formations learned how to move and actually attack. Enemy cavalry had to
withdraw in the face of a disciplined mixed force of pikemen and
crossbowmen/gunners. If the enemy could not respond with missiles and pikes of
their own, the battle was probably lost.
Infantry Tactics
The tactic of foot soldiers in the Dark Ages was simply to close with the enemy
and start chopping. The Franks threw their axes just before closing to disrupt
the enemy. Warriors relied on strength and ferocity to win.
The rise of knights put infantry into a temporary eclipse on the battlefield,
mainly because disciplined and well-trained infantry did not exist. The foot
soldiers of early medieval armies were mainly peasants who were poorly armed and
trained.
The Saxons and Vikings developed a defensive posture called the shield-wall. The
men stood adjacent and held their long shields together to form a barrier. This
helped to protect them from archers and cavalry, both of which their armies
lacked.
Infantry underwent a revival in those areas that did not have the resources to
field armies of heavy cavalry-hilly countries like Scotland and Switzerland and
in the rising towns. Out of necessity, these two sectors found ways to field
effective armies that contained little or no cavalry. Both groups discovered
that horses would not charge into a barrier of bristling stakes or spear points.
A disciplined force of spearmen could stop the elite heavy cavalry of the richer
nations and lords, for a fraction of the cost of a heavy cavalry force.
The schiltron formation was a circle of spearmen that the Scots began using
during their wars for independence around the end of the thirteenth century
(featured in the motion picture Braveheart). They learned that the
schiltron was an effective defensive formation. Robert Bruce offered battle to
the English knights only in swampy terrain that greatly impeded the heavy
cavalry charge.
The Swiss became renowned for fighting with pikes. They essentially revived the
Greek phalanx and became very proficient at fighting with the long pole arms.
They formed a square of pikemen. The outer four ranks held their pikes nearly
level, pointing slightly down. This was an effective barrier against cavalry.
The rear ranks used bladed pole arms to attack enemies that closed with the
formation. The Swiss drilled to the point that they could move in formation
relatively quickly. They turned a defensive formation into an effective
attacking formation also.
The response to massed pikemen was artillery that plowed through the ranks of
dense formations. The Spanish appear to have first done this effectively. The
Spanish also fought the pikemen effectively with sword and buckler men. These
were lightly armed men who could get in among the pikes and fight effectively
with short swords. Their buckler was a small and handy shield. At the end of the
Middle Ages, the Spanish also first experimented with the combination of
pikemen, swordsmen, and handgunners in the same formation. This was an effective
force that could take on all arms in varying terrain, on both defense and
attack. At the end of this era the Spanish were the most effective fighting
force in Europe.
.-------------.
| The Mongols |
'-------------'
The nomadic horse peoples of Mongolia assembled the world's largest land empire
in a series of military conquests spread over a few generations, beginning in
the twelfth century. In the course of their conquests, the Mongols fought most
of the other world powers of medieval Asia and Europe, winning in almost every
case. Their empire was built entirely on military conquest, thanks to an army
that was unlike any other in the world. They were thought invincible by most of
their opponents. Their campaign into Europe turned back only after a death in
the ruling family. The possible claimants to the throne headed home with their
forces and never returned.
The Mongol Army
The Mongols were nomadic herders and hunters who spent their lives in the
saddles of their steppe ponies. They learned to ride and use weapons, especially
the composite bow, at an early age. For hunting and war, every able-bodied male
under the age of 60 years was expected to take part. The armies of the united
Mongol tribes consisted of the entire adult male population.
They fought under a strict code of discipline. Booty was held collectively. The
penalty was death for abandoning a comrade in battle. This discipline, together
with leadership, intelligence-gathering, and organization, raised the Mongol
force from a cavalry swarm into a true army.
The Mongol army was organized according to a decimal system, with units of 10,
100, 1000, and 10,000 men. These numbers for units were probably rarely
approached due to casualties and attrition. The 10,000-man unit was the major
fighting unit, like a modern division, capable of sustained fighting on its own.
Individual soldiers identified most with the 1000-man unit of which they were a
part, the equivalent of a modern regiment. Original Mongol tribes fielded their
own 1000-man units. Conquered peoples, such as the Tatars and Merkits, were
broken up and distributed among other units so that they could pose no organized
threat to the ruling family.
Genghis Khan created a personal guard unit of 10,000 men. This unit was
recruited across tribal boundaries and selection was a high honor. In its early
stages it served as a form of honorable hostage-holding. It grew into the family
household and the source of the growing empire's ruling class.
Mongol soldiers at first received no pay other than booty. Advancement was based
on merit. Once the rapid conquests slowed, a new system of pay was put in place.
Officers were later able to pass on their posts to heirs.
Each soldier went on campaign with approximately five horses, allowing quick
changes and rapid movements. No comparable armies moved as rapidly as the
Mongols until the mechanized armies of the twentieth century.
The Mongols fought mainly as light cavalry archers (unarmored), using the
compound bow. This was a compact weapon of impressive range and penetration
power. They employed Chinese and Middle Easterners as siege engineers. Infantry,
garrison troops, and heavy cavalry (wearing armor) that used lances came from
the armies of subjected peoples.
Mongol Tactics
The Mongol armies relied on firepower, the ability to move quickly, and a
reputation for ruthlessness that came to precede them. All of their opponents
moved much more slowly and deliberately. The Mongols looked for opportunities to
divide an enemy force and overwhelm the pieces with rapid bowshots. They sought
to surround or encircle enemies and achieve local superiority of numbers. Horses
of mounted enemies were wounded, dismounting the riders and making them more
vulnerable.
The Mongol light cavalry could not stand against a heavy cavalry charge, so they
feigned flight to draw the knights into exhaustive charges that left them
vulnerable. The fleeing Mongols turned rapidly and became the hunter. They
excelled in setting ambushes and surprise attacks. Mongol army leaders made
great use of scouts and synchronized force movements to catch the enemy at a
disadvantage.
The Mongols made extensive use of terror. If the population of one city was
massacred after capture, the next city was more likely to surrender without a
fight. This proved the case, as city after city surrendered upon the approach of
Mongol armies.
-----------------------------------
Castles
-----------------------------------
Fortifications and earthworks had been employed for defense since the Stone Age.
True castles did not appear in Europe until the ninth century, however, partly
in response to Viking raids and partly as a manifestation of decentralized
feudal political power. From the ninth through the fifteenth century, thousands
of castles were constructed throughout Europe. A 1905 census in France counted
more than 10,000 castle remains in that nation alone.
During the feudal period, local nobles provided law and order, as well as
protection from marauders like the Vikings. Castles were built by the nobles for
protection and to provide a secure base from which local military forces could
operate. The obvious defensive value of a castle obscures the fact that it was
primarily an offensive instrument. It functioned as a base for professional
soldiers, mainly cavalry, which controlled the nearby countryside. At a time
when the centralized authority of kings was weak for a number of reasons, a
network of castles and the military forces they supported provided relative
political stability.
.------------------.
| Castle Evolution |
'------------------'
Beginning in the ninth century, local strongmen began dotting the landscape of
Europe with castles. These were first of simple design and construction but
evolved into stone strongholds. Many of these belonged to kings or the vassals
of kings, but the majority appear to have been built out of self-interest by
local nobles. They were justified by barbarian threats, but the nobles employed
them to establish local control. This was possible because Europe had no
strategic defenses and no strong central authorities at the time.
An example of the castellation of Europe was the Poitou region of France. There
were three castles there before Viking raids began in the ninth century and 39
by the eleventh century. This pattern was repeated across Europe. Castles could
be built quickly. Until the appearance of cannon, castle defenders had a great
advantage over any attackers.
Widespread castle construction and the maintenance of large bodies of soldiers
for their defense resulted not in peace and mutual defense against invaders but
incessant warfare.
The Evolution of the Castle
The earliest castles were of a type called the "motte and bailey." The motte was
a broad, leveled mound of earth, typically 50 feet high. A large wooden tower
was built atop the motte. Below the motte was an enclosure within a wooden
palisade called the bailey. Here were placed storehouses, stock pens, and huts.
Both the motte and bailey were small islands surrounded by a water-filled ditch,
excavated to construct the motte. A bridge and steep narrow path connected the
two parts of the castle. At a time of danger, the defensive forces withdrew into
the tower if the bailey could not be held.
In the eleventh century, stone began replacing earth and wood in castle
construction. The wooden tower atop the motte was replaced with a round stone
fortification called a shell keep. This grew into a tower or keep. A curtain
wall of stone enclosed the old bailey and the keep, and was in turn surrounded
by a ditch or moat. A single fortified gate protected by a drawbridge and
portcullis led into the castle. The best-known example of a basic keep-type
castle is the original Tower of London, built by William the Conqueror. This
large square structure stood by itself at first and was whitewashed to draw
attention. Later kings improved this castle with the curtain walls and other
improvements seen today.
Castle design advanced when crusaders to the East returned with news of the
fortifications and siege engines they had encountered in their travels.
Concentric castles were designed that enclosed a central keep within two or more
rings of walls. Walls were strengthened first with square towers and then with
round towers. The angled corners on square towers were easy to shear off, making
the whole tower very vulnerable. Round towers were more resistant to attack.
Embattlements were added at the top of walls and towers to make fighting from
above more effective.
Cannon appeared in Europe in the early fourteenth century, but effective siege
artillery was not used until the middle fifteenth century. Castle designs
changed in response to the power of cannon. High perpendicular walls were
replaced by low sloping walls. By the middle of the fifteenth century castles
were in decline because of the rising power of kings. In the eleventh century
William the Conqueror claimed ownership of all castles in England to get them
out of the hands of nobles. By the thirteenth century it was necessary to ask a
king's permission to build a castle or strengthen an existing one. Kings worked
to demilitarize castles to minimize their usefulness to potential rebels.
Castles were abandoned as living quarters for nobles and fell into ruin.
Fortified towns were increasingly important because the wealth of the land had
shifted to the cities.
Castle Construction
Construction of a castle might take less than a year or up to 20 years to
complete. For several centuries castle-building was an important industry.
Renowned master masons were in high demand and gangs of castle builders moved
from site to site. Towns wishing to build cathedrals had to compete for skilled
workers with lords wishing to build castles.
Construction of Beaumaris Castle in North Wales began in 1295. The design was
symmetrical, with no weak points. At the height of its building, it required the
effort of 30 blacksmiths, 400 masons, and 2000 laborers. Laborers did most of
the excavation, carrying, lifting, well-digging, and stone-breaking. This
particular castle was never completed. The massive castle at Conway, built in
Wales by Edward I of England, took 40 months to build.
Castle walls were masonry shells filled with stone rubble and flint mixed with
mortar. Wall width ranged from 6 to 16 feet.
.----------------.
| Castle Defense |
'----------------'
The basic principal of castle defense was to maximize the danger and exposure of
any attackers while minimizing the same for defenders. A well-designed castle
could be defended effectively by a small force and hold out for a long period. A
stout defense allowed well-supplied defenders to hold out until the besiegers
could be driven away by a relief force or until the attacker was forced to fall
back by lack of supplies, disease, or losses.
Keep
The keep was a small castle often found within a large castle complex. This was
a fortified building that often served as the castle lord's residence. If the
outer walls fell, the defenders could withdraw into the keep for a final
defense. In the case of many castles, the complex began with the keep, which was
the original fortification on the site. Over time, the complex might have been
expanded to include an outer wall and towers as a first line of defense for the
keep.
Walls
Stone walls were fireproof and protection against arrows and other missiles. An
enemy could not climb sheer walls without equipment such as ladders or siege
towers. Defenders on top of the walls could shoot down or throw objects down
against attackers. Attackers wholly exposed in the open and shooting up were at
a great disadvantage against defenders largely protected and shooting down. The
strength and protection value of castle walls was increased where possible by
building on cliffs or other elevations. Gates and doors in castle walls were
minimized and given heavy protection.
Towers
At the corners of and perhaps at intervals along a long wall, towers were placed
as strong points. Towers extended out beyond the vertical plane of the wall
face, allowing defenders in a tower to shoot along the face. From a corner
tower, defenders could shoot along two different wall faces. A gate might be
protected by towers on each side. Some castles began as simple towers and
evolved into a greater complex of walls, an inner keep, and additional towers.
Battlements
Walls and towers were often improved to provide greater protection for
defenders. A platform behind the top of the wall allowed defenders to stand and
fight. Gaps were built into the upper wall so defenders could shoot out or fight
while partially covered. These gaps might have wooden shutters for additional
protection. Thin firing slits might be placed in the upper walls from which
archers could shoot while almost completely protected.
During an assault, covered wooden platforms (called hourds) were extended out
from the top of the walls or from towers. These allowed defenders to shoot
directly down on enemies below the walls, or drop stones or boiling liquids on
them, while being protected. Hides on top of the hourds were kept wet to prevent
fire. Stone versions of hourds, called machicolations, might be built over gates
or other key points.
Ditches, Moats, and Drawbridges
To accentuate the height advantage of the walls, a ditch might be dug at their
base, completely around the castle. Where possible, this ditch was filled with
water to form a moat. Both ditches and moats made direct assaults against walls
more difficult. Armored men risked drowning if they fell into even relatively
shallow water. Moats made undermining a castle's walls difficult because of the
risk of the mine collapsing during construction and drowning the miners. In some
cases, attackers had to first drain the moat before moving forward with an
assault. Then the ditch had to be filled in places to allow siege towers or
ladders to go up against the wall.
Drawbridges across a moat or ditch allowed the castle occupants to come and go
when necessary. In time of danger, the drawbridge was raised, reestablishing the
ditch and sealing the walls. Bridges were raised by a mechanism within the
castle that was protected from the attackers.
Portcullis
A portcullis was a strong grating that slid down the walls of the castle gate
passageway to block the entrance. The gate of a castle was inside a gatehouse,
which was a strong point in the castle defense. The passageway of the gate might
be through a tunnel in the gatehouse. The tunnel was blocked by one or more
portcullises, in the middle or at the ends. The winding mechanism that raised
the portcullis was in the top of the gatehouse and heavily guarded. The
portcullis itself was usually a grating of heavy timbers or iron. Defenders and
attackers could both shoot or stab through the grating.
Barbican
A strong castle had both an outer gate and inner gate. Between the two was an
open area called the barbican. This was surrounded by walls and designed to be a
trap for any attackers who got through the outside gate. Once inside the
barbican, attackers could only go back out the outer gate or fight their way
through the inner gate. In the meantime they would be targets for arrows and
other missiles in the open.
Defenders
A relatively small number of men could guard a castle in peacetime. At night any
drawbridge was raised and the portcullis was lowered, effectively locking the
door. Under threat of an assault, a much larger force was needed to defend a
castle.
Competent archers and crossbowmen were needed to shoot from the walls and towers
at attackers making an assault or just preparing for one by attempting to drain
the moat or fill the ditch. Each attacking casualty lowered the morale and
fighting power of the attackers. Heavy losses from missile fire could cause the
attackers to break off.
If the attackers managed to actually close for hand-to-hand fighting, a strong
fighting force of swordsmen was needed to hold them off. Men were needed to
throw down rocks or pour hot liquids from the hourds. Men were needed to make
repairs to damaged wall sections or put out fires started by flaming missiles.
An aggressive defense looked for opportunities to sortie out from the castle and
raid the besieging army. A quick raid that burned a siege tower or trebuchet
under construction delayed an assault and lowered the morale of the attackers.
In times of emergency, local peasants were enlisted to help with the defense.
Although untrained as soldiers and not skilled usually with the bow or sword,
they could help with many of the other tasks.
.--------------.
| Castle Siege |
'--------------'
Capturing or defending strongholds was a common military activity during the
late Middle Ages because of the proliferation of castles and fortified towns and
their strategic importance. Although a small force could hold a castle, it took
a large force to take one. The attacker had to have a sufficiently large army to
control the countryside around a castle, fight off any relieving force, and
assault the stronghold directly or at least hold the siege tight. This was an
expensive proposition.
As an army approached the castle, the locals usually withdrew inside, taking
anything of value with them, especially food and weapons. If the siege was
expected to be a long one, however, peasants not capable of fighting might be
refused entrance to conserve food. There were many recorded instances of people
being thrown out of towns under siege to preserve food. When English king Henry
V besieged the city of Rouen, the defenders expelled the weak and the poor to
conserve food. The English refused to allow these unfortunates through their
lines. Old men, women, and children huddled between the city and the English
army for months, scrabbling for scraps and dying of starvation, until surrender
was negotiated.
As an army approached, the possibility of surrender and terms might be
negotiated immediately, especially if the castle or town was undermanned. The
attackers weighed carefully the chance of assaulting the stronghold if
negotiations failed. If a quick assault was thrown back or was judged too risky,
the attackers sealed off the castle and began a siege. Once siege artillery had
fired at the city, the siege was officially underway. To withdraw without good
reason was dishonorable and unacceptable in most cases.
A large siege was something like a social event. The fifteenth-century siege of
Neuss lasted only a few months, but the attackers built up a large camp that
included taverns and tennis courts. Nobles taking part in sieges made themselves
comfortable, often bringing along wives and their households. Merchants and
craftsmen from neighboring towns rushed forward to set up shop and provide
services.
Siege Formalities
The reality of warfare during this period was that castles and towns were very
rarely captured by assault. Assaults were usually an act of desperation or made
much easier by acts of treachery or stealth. Unless the garrison was greatly
under strength, it was just too costly in lives to assault. It was much more
typical to orchestrate a siege according to the prevailing rules of warfare and
honor and take the castle with relatively little loss. It would be treason for
the defenders to surrender without a fight so the siege was maintained and the
castle walls were battered. If the castle's owner was not inside, his deputy in
charge, called a castellan or constable, could surrender the castle with honor
after so many days if no relief force had appeared. Castellans often requested a
contract that specified exactly what were their obligations and under what
circumstances they would not be punished for surrendering.
In those rare instances where surrender was not an option or an option
disdained, it was the accepted policy that little mercy was shown after a
successful assault. Common soldiers and even civilians inside might be massacred
and the castle or town was looted. Captured knights were kept alive, usually,
and held for ransom. All attackers received a share of the spoils. Practical
application of this policy was a further inducement for defenders to negotiate
surrender after a reasonable period of siege. King Henry V of England took the
city of Caen after a long siege in 1417. He then allowed his army to sack the
city from one end to the other in payment for the defender's stout resistance.
Every man in the city who was not a priest was killed. At his next stop, the
castle of Bonneville, the defenders agreed to surrender the keys after seven
days with no relief, even though both sides understood there was no prospect for
relief.
The Krak des Chevaliers was the most famous of the Crusader castles in the
Middle East and still stands impressively in modern Syria. It was defended by
the Knights Hospitaller during the era of the Crusades and withstood over a
dozen sieges and attacks over 130 years before falling finally to Egyptian Arabs
in 1271. The story of its capture was unusual but typical in the sense that the
defenders did not fight to the death.
The Arabs disdained an attack on the main gate of the Krak des Chevaliers
because breaking through there led into a series of deadly narrow passages and
on to a second, even stronger gate. They attacked the south wall instead by
undermining the great tower at the southwest corner. This got them inside the
outer curtain wall. Before attacking the even stronger central keep, however,
they tried a ruse. A carrier pigeon was sent into the castle with a message from
the Hospitaller's grand master, ordering the garrison to surrender. Outnumbered
and with no hope of relief, the defenders accepted the command of the message,
understanding it was a fake, and surrendered the great castle with honor.
Mines
The key problem to taking a castle or fortified town was overcoming the walls
that prevented entry and protected the defenders. One solution to this problem
was undermining a section of the wall so that it collapsed. This was only
possible before castles had moats or after the moat had been drained. It was not
possible to undermine when the wall was built on solid stone.
The miners dug a tunnel up to the wall and then along it under its foundation.
The tunnel was supported by timber supports that gradually took on the load of
the wall overhead from the earth that was dug out and removed. At a prearranged
time, the timbers in the tunnel were set on fire. As the timbers burned the
support for the wall overhead disappeared gradually and a section of the wall
collapsed, if all went as planned. The collapsed wall created an opening for a
direct assault by soldiers into the castle.
Mines were laborious and time-consuming. Defenders who became aware of the
tunneling reinforced the threatened wall with a secondary wall so that the
collapse did not completely open the defenses. Defenders were also known to
countermine, digging their own tunnels under the walls trying to intercept the
enemy tunnel. When the tunnels encountered each other, actual fighting broke out
underground.
Siege
The besieging army set up positions around the castle to prevent escape or
sorties by the soldiers inside. The nearby farms and villages were taken over by
the besiegers. Patrols were set to bring notice of any relieving army
approaching and to forage for food. The leaders of the attackers examined the
situation and decided whether to simply besiege the castle or to actively
prepare to attack it. If the castle was to be simply starved into surrender, the
attackers concentrated on keeping the defenders caged in and preventing any
relief force from lifting the siege. Choosing how best to attack a castle might
involve any of the following options:
* Undermining a part of the wall.
* Selecting a wall section to breach by battering it
with hurled stones (or with cannons, although
these were not effective until around 1450,
near the end of this period).
* Selecting a part of the ditch (and moat, if
present) to fill.
* Building siege towers and ladders to scale the
walls.
* Choosing a gate or other section to batter with
a ram.
The speed of work on assault preparations was in proportion to the urgency for
taking the castle, the prospects of surrender, and the manpower available. If
the attackers had ample supplies of food, no relief was expected, and the
defenders were likely to surrender after their honor had been satisfied, work on
assault preparations might be little more than a show. If the attacker's
supplies were short, relief was expected any day, or the defenders were
obstinate, preparations might go forward day and night.
When preparations were complete, the defenders were given one last chance to
surrender before the assault.
Siege Equipment
Siege equipment was used to get past the walls and other defenses of the castle
so that the superior strength of the attacking army could be brought to bear
against the defenders at a minimum disadvantage. Most equipment was designed to
knock down or breach the walls. In addition to the simple scaling ladder, siege
equipment most commonly used during the Middle Ages included the trebuchet, the
mangonel, the siege tower, the battering ram, and the pavise.
Once a breach was made or a siege tower put in place, a volunteer force of
soldiers led the assault. This force came to be known as the "forlorn hope,"
because of the casualties they were expected to take. But the successful
survivors of this force were usually the most highly rewarded with promotion,
titles, and loot.
The trebuchet was a large catapult powered by a heavy counterweight, usually a
large box of rocks. The long throwing arm was pulled down against the mass of
the counterweight and a large stone was loaded. When the arm was released, the
heavy weight dropped down, pulling the throwing arm up, and flinging the large
stone missile in a high arcing trajectory. Missiles thrown by this weapon
plunged downward and were best used to smash the tops of towers, embattlements,
and hourds. It was difficult to damage sheer vertical walls with the trebuchet
unless the missiles came down right on top of the wall. The trebuchet was
assembled out of bow shot and defended against a possible sortie by the
defenders seeking to burn the weapon. The trebuchet was useful for smashing
wooden roofs and then setting the rubble on fire with incendiary missiles.
The mangonel was a different type of catapult powered by twisted ropes or strips
of hide. A ratchet gear twisted the ropes, building up tension. When released,
the ropes spun, flinging the throwing arm forward. When the arm hit a heavy
restraining bar, any missile in the basket at the end of the arm was thrown
forward. The restraining bar could be adjusted to change the trajectory of the
missile. Mangonels had a flat trajectory, in comparison to the trebuchet, but
could generate the same power. It could take a large number of mangonel shots to
do any appreciable damage to a wall. The thrown missiles and pieces of the
broken wall helped to fill in the ditch, however, creating rubble pile which
attackers could climb.
Siege towers were moved close to the walls and then a gangplank was dropped from
the tower to the top of the wall. Soldiers in the tower could then advance
across the gangplank and engage the defenders in hand-to-hand combat. Such a
tower was often huge. It had to be protected with wet hides to prevent being
burned. It was ponderous to move because of its weight. It had to be either
pushed forward or pulled forward against pulleys previously mounted on stakes
near the base of the castle wall. The ground had to be prepared ahead of time,
usually with a roadway of flat wooden planking on heavily packed earth to ease
the tower's movement. A fighting area on top of the tower let archers shoot down
into the castle as the tower approached. Soldiers mounted the stairs inside the
tower once it was close. Assaults from a siege tower were never a surprise to
the defender because so much preparation had to be done. The defenders took
steps to build up the threatened part of the wall or prevent the gangplank from
dropping. They attempted to grapple the tower as it approached and pull it onto
its side. Up to the last moment of the assault, siege engines would fire on the
target section of wall to disrupt the defender's preparations to receive the
assault. If the first group of attackers from the tower got over, a steady
stream of men would follow over the gangplank to complete the capture of the
castle.
A battering ram had a large pole with an iron head that was slung inside a
moveable housing and rolled up to a wall section or gate. Once up to the wall,
the pole was swung back and forth against the wall. The force of the blows broke
through the wooden planking of the door or stone wall, creating an opening for
attack. The roof of the ram was covered with wet hides to prevent burning.
Operating battering was dangerous work. Enemies above dropped large rocks,
boiling water, or burning fat on the ram, attempting to destroy it or kill the
men operating it. Even when a gate or drawbridge was smashed, there were usually
several portcullises and the gatehouse to be fought through. At the siege of
Tyre during the winter of 1111-1112, the defending Arabs came up with an
ingenious defense against the ram. They threw down gappling hooks, grabbed the
ram, and pulled it away from the wall. Time after time they were able to disrupt
the use of the ram.
Attacking archers and crossbowmen took shelter on the ground behind large wooden
shields called pavises. A narrow firing slit at the top of the pavise allowed
the man behind to shoot up at the defenders. England's King Richard I, the
Lionheart, received a mortal shoulder wound from a crossbow bolt when looking
around the side of a pavise.
-----------------------------------
Gunpowder
-----------------------------------
The Chinese had gunpowder by the eleventh century and made some military use of
it to propel rockets. These were more weapons of terror than useful missile
weapons, however. The Chinese also experimented with fireworks. They did not
realize the potential of gunpowder as an explosive or propellant for missile
weapons.
Gunpowder gradually worked its way to the west where Europeans found much more
destructive uses for it. The oldest surviving artwork from Europe that portrays
a gunpowder weapon appeared in 1326. This primitive cannon was loaded with a
spear of some sort, not a cannonball. Europeans had been experimenting with
gunpowder for the previous half-century. The oldest surviving description of the
formula for gunpowder appeared in 1260 and was attributed to an English friar
named Roger Bacon. By 1340 cannonballs of lead, iron, and stone were being used.
The English had cannons on the battlefield at Crйcy in 1346, but there is no
mention in the battle accounts of their usefulness.
Cannons
It took several centuries of experimentation before gunpowder weapons became
truly useful. One difficulty was developing gunpowder that ignited quickly,
uniformly, and powerfully. Another was designing suitable cannons that would not
burst. Poor manufacturing techniques plagued early cannons, and it was almost as
dangerous to serve them as to be shot at by them. King James II of Scotland, for
example, was killed by an exploding cannon in 1460.
Cannon and gunpowder technologies were sufficiently advanced by the middle of
the fifteenth century that they were recognized as important weapons. This was
made clear in 1453 when huge siege bombards firing massive stone cannonballs
battered the walls of Constantinople. Although the proximate cause of the fall
of Constantinople was a small gate being left open, the bombardment would have
eventually made a direct assault possible.
Cannons of the Middle Ages were used in sieges to batter walls and on
battlefields to fire into massed ranks of the enemy. Their ability to batter
sheer vertical walls led to refinements in castle-building. Low sloping walls
replaced high vertical walls. The usefulness of cannon on the battlefield was
limited during this period because the cannons were so ponderous. It was
difficult to move them into new positions during the action.
Handguns
Illustrations of various types of handguns appeared around 1350. These were
primitive weapons consisting of a hollow tube blocked at one end and a hole in
the side near the blocked end for igniting the powder. A slow match (a slow-
burning cord) was placed in the hole to ignite the powder and fire the ball
previously loaded down the barrel. There was little use in attempting to aim the
early handguns. They were effective only when fired in volleys by many men at
massed targets. By 1450 handguns were being used by most of the advanced
European armies. Bows and crossbows continued in use as infantry missile weapons
through the sixteenth century, however, because they were still inexpensive and
effective.
-----------------------------------
Naval Warfare
-----------------------------------
The need for warships in the Mediterranean Sea largely faded after the Romans
gained complete control of the surrounding lands. There was no other empire with
a navy to offer competition, and piracy was all but eliminated. Following the
collapse of the Western Roman Empire, new civilizations sprang up from the ruins
of the empire and piracy reappeared. Warships were needed again to defend
against invasion, project military power, and protect sea trade routes.
Byzantine Ships
The Byzantines were the great Mediterranean naval power of the early Middle
Ages. Naval power was critical to their survival and to their extended empire.
The land defenses of Constantinople were excellent and made outright assault of
the city very difficult, but the city had to keep its sea supply open to prevent
a successful siege. So long as the navy could bring in supplies, the city was
assured of survival.
The main Byzantine warship of the early Middle Ages was the dromen, an evolution
of the ancient oared warships, such as the trireme. A typical dromen was long
and narrow for speed. Power was supplied by 50 to 200 rowers and lateen sails. A
mast was placed in the middle of the front half and rear half of the ship. The
dromen carried a beak at the bow for pinning enemy vessels prior to boarding.
Rams were rarely seen. Platforms were built in the center, bow, and stern. From
these platforms archers and catapults could fire at enemy ships and crews. A
typical battle involved attempts to ram or disable enemy ships, then grappling
and boarding by marines.
The Byzantines effectively used a secret weapon called Greek fire. This was a
mixture of chemicals that burned fiercely upon contact with air. It was pumped
out of hoses against enemy ships or thrown in bombs. It was a devastating weapon
against wooden ships and decisive for the Byzantines in their naval battles
against the Arabs. The secret of Greek fire was so important and so closely
guarded that it was eventually lost and we do not know today exactly what it
was.
Mediterranean Ships
Oar-powered warships, called galleys, remained the principal warships of the
Mediterranean beyond the end of the Middle Ages because the waters were
relatively protected from fierce gales. At the same time, the Italian city-
states of Genoa and Venice gradually became naval powers in proportion to the
increasing importance of their trade with the Levant. The Arabs also built
navies to influence trade and support their conflict with the Byzantines and
other Christians for control of the Mediterranean. The beginning of the Crusades
in the eleventh century brought ships from Northern Europe that had evolved very
different designs.
European Ships
The Germanic tribes that occupied Northern Europe around 500 developed several
new ship types. The typical trading ship was wide-bodied and of deep draft. It
mounted a single mast at first and later more as it grew in size. The Norse
called this type of ship a knarr. We know a lot about this ship today because
one was recovered from the bottom of a harbor in Denmark in the 1960s. Much of
the trade and exploration of the Anglo-Saxons and Vikings was carried on in this
type of ship. It evolved into the cog, the principal merchant ship of the later
Middle Ages. This deep-draft ship was designed for easy sailing and high cargo
capacity.
Ship fighting in northern Europe was mainly an extension of land combat. Towers
were built on the bow and stern of the cog for protection and as firing
platforms for archers. Crews fired at each other with arrows as they closed, but
the intent was only to disable enemy crewmen and soldiers. Ships came together
and attempted to capture each other in hand-to-hand combat. Sailing ships in
these waters had no ability to ram. There was no weapon with which to do great
structural damage to another ship or sink it until cannon appeared in the
fourteenth century. Some 400 English and French cog-type warships carrying large
contingents of archers and foot soldiers engaged in a naval battle at Sluys in
1340 typical of the later Middle Ages. They simply jammed together for archery
fire and close combat.
The first cannon were mounted in the bow or stern of ships. Small cannon mounted
on the side rails were used against enemy crews. The English ship Christopher of
the Tower of 1406 was the first built purposely to carry guns. Ships began to
mount broadsides of cannon with the ability to puncture enemy hulls only at the
very end of the Middle Ages.
The Viking longship was more of a transport than a warship. Vikings rarely
fought from their longships. When they did, there are reports of boats being
lashed together to provide a platform for hand-to-hand fighting. The longship
was powered by oars until the eighth or ninth century when sails appear to have
been added. Although they looked fragile and unlikely vessels for ocean travel,
modern replicas proved to be very seaworthy. The additional range provided by
sails explains partially why the Vikings began reaching out to raid in the ninth
century.
The Irish curragh was a small boat used mainly for coastal trading and travel
but capable of deep ocean sailing also. This boat was built of animal hides
stretched over a wooden frame. The hide skin was sealed with pitch for
waterproofing. These incredibly light boats were powered with a small sail or
could be rowed. In rough weather the hide covering could be closed to make the
boat watertight and relatively unsinkable. Irish monks explored the North
Atlantic in these boats and reached Iceland long before the Vikings. There are
unsubstantiated tales that monks sailed to the New World as well.
The Crusades brought northern ships into the Mediterranean and contact between
the sailors and shipbuilders of north and south. The southerners began adopting
features of the cog, including its big hull and square sail. The northerners
learned about the compass, stern rudder, and lateen sail.
Chinese Ships
The greatest shipbuilders of the Middle Ages were probably the Chinese. The
familiar Chinese junk was a better ship than anything available in the West for
many centuries. It was an excellent combination of cargo space, sailing ability,
and seaworthiness. In 1405, Chinese Admiral Cheng Ho built a huge navy manned by
25,000 men and explored much of the Southwest Pacific and Indian Oceans. The
rulers of China disdained this feat and its discoveries. The greatest ships in
the world at the time were beached and allowed to rot.
-----------------------------------
The Middle Ages
-----------------------------------
The expression "Middle Ages" has been employed by Western civilization to define
the 1000 years that span European history from roughly 500 to 1500 AD. The
beginning of the Middle Ages is marked by the fall of the Western Roman Empire,
the generally accepted end of classical ancient history. The end of the Middle
Ages is noted by the beginning of the Renaissance (the "rebirth" of Europe).
Events marking the end of the period include the fall of Constantinople in 1453,
the first use of the printing press in 1456, the European discovery of the
Americas in 1492, the Protestant Reformation, triggered by Martin Luther in
1517, and the flowering of the arts in Italy. The Middle Ages thus fall in the
middle between ancient and modern history.
Historic periods in Asia and the Middle East do not fit easily into the concept
of a European Middle Age. China evolved gradually from prehistoric times up to
the advent of Western modern history without the great disruptions that befell
Europe. China passed under the control of several dynasties and suffered from
invasion, but the basic culture progressed steadily. Japan progressed steadily,
as well, and was left largely alone. The history of the Middle East fits
together more closely with the European Middle Ages because these two regions
were adjacent and shared many interactions.
.------------------.
| The Fall of Rome |
'------------------'
The Roman Empire of the fourth century AD extended entirely around the basin of
the Mediterranean Sea, including modern Turkey, Israel, Egypt, and North Africa.
Modern France (called Gaul) and modern Spain and Portugal (Iberia) were entirely
Roman. Modern England was Roman, but modern Scotland and Ireland were barbarian
(non-Roman, or noncivilized). The northern borders of the empire were the Rhine
and Danube Rivers. The lands north of these rivers were occupied by a variety of
tribes of Scandinavian origin that the Romans called the Germans.
Rome was engaged in border skirmishes with the tribes north of the great
European rivers. Strong emperors occasionally extended the empire over the
rivers while weak emperors tended to lose those lands. The largest organized
rival of the Romans was the Persian Empire to the east, occupying modern Syria,
Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan. The Persians were the political descendants of the
Parthians who had revolted away from Greek rule following Alexander's conquests
and thereafter resisted successfully Roman invasions.
The Romans had existed as an important power for over 1000 years. They had
brought stability, prosperity, and order to the civilized West. Excellent roads
connected the far reaches of the empire with the capital at Rome. These were
built originally for military purposes but improved all communications and
trade. Roman law kept the internal peace and 20 to 30 Roman legions defended the
frontiers.
All was not perfect, however. Emperors held absolute authority. This worked well
with good emperors, but incompetent ones could do great harm. The rules for
succession to the throne were never clear, and debilitating civil wars often
resulted. The bureaucracy that managed the empire on a daily basis grew more
corrupt, increasing the dissatisfaction of the common citizen. The wealth of the
empire gradually concentrated in the hands of a minority while a large slave
population did most of the work. The borders of the empire were immense and put
a strain on military resources (500,000 soldiers defended a frontier that
required 3 million or more to be secure). Roman conquests had ceased in the
second century AD, bringing an end to massive inflows of plunder and slaves.
Taxes increased and production fell as the workforce declined. A plague may have
killed 20 percent of the empire's population in the third and fourth centuries,
further reducing trade and production.
In the late third century, the Roman Empire was split into eastern and western
halves in an attempt to make for easier rule and better control. In 323
Constantine became emperor after a civil war and established his eastern capital
at Byzantium, which he renamed Constantinople. During the next century the
eastern and western parts of the empire gradually established separate
identities, although nominally the same empire. These identities were partially
due to the different pressures brought to bear on them from the outside and the
local culture. The Western Empire was predominately Latin; the Eastern Empire
was predominately Greek (although they referred to themselves as Romans). The
Eastern Empire survived the cataclysm of the third and fourth centuries because
it had a larger population (70 percent of the empire's total), better emperors,
more money, and a far better army and navy.
.--------------------.
| Barbarian Invaders |
'--------------------'
Around the year 200 AD, nomadic tribes on the great grass steppes of Central
Asia began migrating toward China, India, Persia, and Europe. The reasons for
this migration are not fully understood. The largest group of nomads was the
Huns. Their small stature and small ponies belied a fierce and determined
ruthlessness. They terrified other tribes they encountered in their migrations,
causing something like a domino effect. Moving west, the Huns displaced the
Goths living northwest of the Black Sea, for example, who pushed south over the
Danube into the Balkans lands ruled by the Eastern Roman Empire. More Huns moved
toward the German plains, encouraging other Germanic tribes to cross the Rhine.
The Western Roman Empire was already weakened by this time from sporadic raids
and invasions across the Rhine and Danube. Germanic tribes with growing
populations coveted the sparsely occupied lands in Gaul and the benefits of
being within the Roman Empire. By 400 the Roman army was already 30 to 50
percent German mercenaries. In desperation, some barbarian groups were enlisted
into the Roman army as entire units to help defend against other groups. This
was especially popular during civil wars of the fourth century, when pretenders
to the throne in Rome needed to raise armies quickly. These barbarian units did
not have the loyalty and discipline of the legions and kept their own leaders.
This stopgap measure backfired when whole barbarian armies revolted. The Rhine
and Danube frontiers dissolved and Germanic tribes moved into Gaul, the Balkans,
and even Italy itself. The fighting was nearly incessant along the shrinking
frontier and the number of loyal Roman troops continually diminished.
The last legions in Britain were withdrawn for service in Gaul in 410,
abandoning that province forever. Saxon raids increased and became actual
invasions. The Jutes, Frisians, and Angles, other Germanic tribes from the north
German coast, joined the Saxons. Together they overwhelmed the Romano-British
culture and took possession of what is today England (Angle-land).
The Eastern Roman Empire suffered through the loss of most of the Balkans but
was able to deflect or bribe the barbarians before they could attack
Constantinople. The invaders in this area were the Goths, who had become much
more civilized through their contact with the Eastern Empire than had the
Germanic tribes along the Rhine. The Goths came as settlers primarily, not
conquerors.
During the fifth century Rome was sacked several times and the Western Empire
ceased to exist effectively. Italy was repeatedly invaded and ravaged. In 476
the last recognized Roman emperor was killed. Italy and the old Roman Empire
were now occupied by Germanic tribes. Despite a general wish by the barbarians
to preserve the stability and order of the past Roman civilization, only
vestiges of it survived the turmoil and devastation that followed the invasions.
Most of Europe fell back into a much more primitive and barbaric period.
-----------------------------------
The Dark Ages
-----------------------------------
Following the fall of Rome, western Europe entered what has been called the Dark
Ages. This name was applied partially because so much of the Roman civilization
was destroyed and replaced by a more barbaric culture. The name was used also
because so little written history survived from the period that shed light on
the events that took place.
.----------.
| Politics |
'----------'
The Roman government and courts were swept away with most of the Roman culture.
Tribal war bands were the new government. A strong leader surrounded himself
with loyal warriors that were paid with booty from raiding. Tribal law, based on
trial by combat or by the swearing of oaths, replaced Roman law. Small kingdoms
arose gradually based on tribal loyalties, but governing was difficult because
literate civil servants were scarce, communications were poor, trade was at a
standstill, and there was little or no money in circulation. The people survived
on a subsistence agriculture. Life at this time was described as nasty, brutish,
and short. The average life expectancy was 30 years, skewed by a very low
survival rate for children and a high mortality of women in childbirth.
At the start of the Dark Ages, the list of European powers read as follows:
* Franks: much of modern France and parts of
Germany along the Rhine.
* Ostrogoths: northern Italy, Switzerland, and
the Balkans.
* Visigoths: Spain and Portugal.
* Vandals: Western North Africa, Sicily, and
southern Italy.
* Various Germanic tribes, including Saxons and
Lombards: Germany.
* Anglo-Saxons: England.
* Celts: Wales, Ireland, Scotland, and Brittany.
* Magyars: Hungary.
* Slavs: Poland and western Russia.
* Byzantines: Turkey, Palestine, Egypt, Syria, and
much of the Balkans, including Greece.
In succeeding centuries, the list saw the following changes:
* Vandals: destroyed and replaced by the
Byzantines.
* Visigoths: destroyed and replaced by Franks
in France and Muslims in Spain and Portugal.
* Ostrogoths: attacked and eventually absorbed by
the Lombards (Italy) and Byzantines
(Balkans).
The Dark Ages are considered to cover the years from 500 to 1000. The three most
important forces that shaped this period and brought the relative darkness to an
end were the spread of new religions, the rise of the Frankish Empire, and the
predations of the Vikings.
.-------------------.
| Dark Age Religion |
'-------------------'
Christianity had become the official religion of the Roman Empire in the fourth
century and had begun spreading among the Germanic tribes before the fall of
Rome. The split of the Roman Empire into eastern and western halves also
resulted in a split within the Christian Church. The western part, centered in
Rome, became Catholic. The eastern part, centered in Constantinople, became
Orthodox. In the seventh century, one of the last of the world's great
religions, Islam, was founded in Arabia.
Christianity
The spread of Christianity among the barbarians was a powerful civilizing force
and helped to ensure that some vestiges of Roman law and the Latin language
carried on in France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. Only in England was Roman
Christianity subsumed by pagan beliefs. The Franks became Catholic under Clovis
and thereafter spread Christianity to the Germans across the Rhine. The
Byzantines spread Orthodox Christianity among the Bulgars and Slavs.
Christianity was brought to Ireland by St. Patrick in the early fifth century
and spread from there into Scotland and back into England from the north. In the
late sixth century, Pope Gregory the Great sent missionaries into England from
the south. Within a century, England was Christian once again.
Monasteries
During the turmoil of the Dark Ages, a few strongly committed Christians
withdrew from society to live as hermits, usually on the wild and forbidding
edge of civilization. Hermits in turn inspired more conventional priests to
pledge vows of poverty and service, harkening back to the teachings of Jesus
Christ.
Many of these priests formed new communities of like believers called
monasteries. Pope Gregory encouraged the building of monasteries throughout
Christian Europe. In parts of Europe they became the only remaining centers of
learning. Irish monks, for example, are credited by some with preserving
civilization in their monasteries. Irish monks went out into other parts of
Europe to teach and revive an interest in learning. Monasteries were the main
source of educated men who could help administer government, and many became
important assistants to kings.
In time monasteries grew wealthy with donations of land, as did the Roman
church. Different monastic orders were founded with different goals. Some kept
entirely to themselves, some trained missionaries to be sent into the wild, some
advised the popes on church doctrine, and others provided important community
service such as care for the elderly, health care, and emergency relief.
Islam
Islam was founded in Arabia in the seventh century by the prophet Mohammed. It
spread rapidly and inspired a great movement of conquest. The political map of
North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia changed almost overnight. All of
North Africa, the Iberian Peninsula, the Middle East, Asia Minor, Iraq, Iran,
Afghanistan, parts of India, Pakistan, and part of Russia became Muslim. During
the brief period that the Islamic Empire remained united, it threatened to
accomplish its goal of converting the entire world to its beliefs. The stability
and economic growth within the new Muslim world brought peace and prosperity far
in advance of that in western Europe of the time. The Muslim culture surpassed
even the Byzantines in art, science, medicine, geography, trade, and philosophy.
Conflicts between the Muslims and Christians resulted in the Crusades, a series
of attempts by western Christians to regain the Holy Lands in Palestine.
.-------------.
| Charlemagne |
'-------------'
The Franks consolidated their kingdom in modern France under a series of strong
kings and warlords during the seventh and eighth centuries. In 732 they defeated
a Muslim army invading France from the Iberian Peninsula. Around 750, the Franks
pushed into Italy to rescue Rome and the pope, who were under attack by the
Lombards. In 768 Charles the Great, or Charlemagne, became king of the Franks
and began his remarkable reign.
Charlemagne returned to Italy across the Alps in 774 and rescued the Pope once
again. He became king of both the Franks and Lombards and effective ruler of
Rome. He continued his conquests, simultaneously converting his enemies to
Christianity. He took southern France and northern parts of Spain. He moved into
western Germany, converting the Saxons and fighting off the Magyars of Hungary.
He established "marches" on his frontier, which were buffer states between the
Frankish Empire and barbarian tribes to the east. On Christmas Day in 800,
Charlemagne was crowned Holy Roman Emperor by the pope (the title was a surprise
and one he had not sought).
The importance of Charlemagne transcends the size and creation of the Holy Roman
Empire, which fell apart soon after his death anyway. He was a great supporter
and defender of the Catholic Church and used it to encourage learning and the
arts. He set up schools in association with cathedrals to educate civil servants
and nobles to improve government. He collected and codified the laws, improving
the system of justice. He invented feudalism as a way of providing local order
while retaining central authority.
The great promise of European revival radiating from the Frankish Empire was
stopped short, however. Following the death of Charlemagne's son, the empire was
split three ways among his grandsons. The western part evolved later into modern
France. The eastern part became Germany much later. The central part was
contested by the other two through succeeding generations into the twentieth
century. A more immediate problem was the sudden appearance of Viking raiders
from Scandinavia, who greatly disrupted northern Europe for the next two
centuries.
.-------------.
| The Vikings |
'-------------'
The inhabitants of Scandinavia had made their living by herding, farming, and
fishing for centuries. In the sixth and seventh centuries, they began trading
along the Baltic Sea and deep into Russia along its great rivers. For reasons
unknown, they began aggressively raiding the coasts of Europe suddenly in the
late eighth century. Perhaps they were amazed at the relative riches they had
encountered as traders, or they perceived a weakness among the civilizations to
the south, or new sailing and boat technologies gave them the power to travel
farther and more quickly. In 793 the pagan Vikings struck the great monastery at
Lindisfarne, established by the Irish off the northeast coast of England.
Fast, low-draft longboats allowed the Vikings to strike quickly from the sea and
up rivers. Because roads were so poor in the ninth century, the Vikings could
concentrate against a rich village or monastery, land quickly, drive off any
resistance, and carry off slaves and plunder before any organized response could
be mounted. People living along the coasts and rivers of Germany, France, and
Britain lived in fear of the raiders. The central authorities of these lands
fell into disfavor because they could do little to defend against these hit-and-
run attacks. The people turned to local nobles who built castles for defense.
This shift of power strengthened the local nobles and weakened the kings.
The Vikings became bolder as the ninth century progressed. Larger Viking groups
combined to make actual invasions, not just raids. They sacked major cities
including Hamburg, Utrecht, and Rouen. They settled on islands off Britain, in
parts of Ireland (founding Dublin), Iceland, and Greenland. The Danes captured
and ruled the eastern half of England for a century. Another force sailed up the
Seine River and besieged Paris for two years before being bought off with money
and plunder. Another group ruled part of Russia from Kiev and assaulted
Constantinople from the Black Sea. They raided the Muslim Iberian Peninsula and
deep into the Mediterranean.
In the tenth century, the king of France bought peace with the Vikings by ceding
them part of his country (Normandy, "from the northmen," or Normans) and making
their ruler a French duke. As part of this agreement, the Normans converted to
Christianity. The Normans became one of the most remarkable groups in the Middle
Ages. Later they conquered England, establishing the first great European
kingdom. Other Normans conquered Sicily, half of Italy, and established Crusader
kingdoms in Palestine.
Viking raids stopped at the end of the tenth century, partly because they had
become Christians and no longer followed the warrior values of their past pagan
beliefs. Scandinavia divided into kingdoms, and the new rulers concentrated on
ruling what they owned. The Viking settlers in Russia, France, and Britain were
absorbed by the cultures that surrounded them. The warrior cultures in Europe
that had evolved in response to the Viking threat soon had a new outlet for
their aggression, however, in the Holy Land of the Eastern Mediterranean.
-----------------------------------
The Crusades
-----------------------------------
Making pilgrimages to holy sites had been a popular activity for European
Christians for centuries. There were important religious centers in Europe but
the most important site was the Holy Land in Palestine. The rise of the Seljuk
Turks made travel to Jerusalem and other Middle Eastern locales suddenly much
more dangerous. The Turks had little use for non-Muslims and ended the
relatively peaceful relations between the Arabs and Christians. At the same
time, the Turks put tremendous pressure on the Byzantines by capturing the
valuable lands in Asia Minor. As a result, Pope Urban called for a Crusade by
Christian warriors to recapture Palestine from the Muslims.
The call for a Crusade electrified the knights of Europe. They were strong
believers, and the pope promised a heavenly reward for those who died in the
cause. Of equal or greater importance was the opportunity to grab land and
wealth abroad, rather than continuing to squabble with relatives and neighbors
at home.
By 1097, an army of 30,000, including many pilgrims and camp followers, had
crossed into Asia Minor from Constantinople. Despite feuding among the leaders
and broken promises between the Crusaders and their Byzantine supporters, the
Crusade stumbled forward. The Turks were just as disorganized, or more so. The
Frankish heavy knights and infantry had no experience fighting the Arab light
cavalry and archers, and vice versa. The endurance and strength of the knights
won the campaign over a series of often very close victories. Antioch was
captured through treachery in 1098 and Jerusalem in 1099 by assault against a
weak garrison. The Christians debased themselves after both victories by
slaughtering many of the residents regardless of age, faith, or gender. Many of
the Crusaders returned home, but a hardy band remained to set up feudal kingdoms
similar to those in Europe.
The Crusader rulers of Palestine were greatly outnumbered by the Muslim
population they attempted to control, so they built castles and hired mercenary
troops to hold them. The culture and religion of the Franks was too alien to win
over the residents of the area, however. From their secure castle bases, the
Crusaders struck out to intercept raiding Arabs. For about a century the two
sides engaged in a classic guerrilla war. The Frankish knights were powerful but
slow. The Arabs could not stand up to charges by the heavy cavalry but could
ride circles around them, hoping to disable their units and catch them in
ambushes in the desert. The Crusader kingdoms kept mainly to the coast, from
which they could get supplies and reinforcements, but the constant raids and
unhappy populace meant they were not an economic success.
Orders of Christian warrior monks were formed to fight for the Holy Lands. The
Knights Templar and Hospitillar were mainly Frankish. The Teutonic Knights were
German. These were the fiercest and most determined of the Crusaders, but there
were never enough of them to make the region secure.
The Crusader kingdoms survived for a while in part because they learned to
negotiate, compromise, and play the different Arab groups off against each
other. A great Arab leader appeared, however, who united the various Islamic
groups. Saladin became Sultan of Egypt and Syria in 1174. In 1187 he won a great
victory over the Crusaders in the desert and recaptured Jerusalem.
For another century the Europeans made several attempts to reassert control over
the Holy Land and Jerusalem, with only a rare temporary success. Eight more
Crusades followed and most failed to do more than get ashore and make some
progress inland before being pushed back. The Fourth Crusade did not even reach
Palestine. Under the guidance of the Doge of Venice, they sacked Constantinople
instead, a blow from which the Byzantines never recovered. One of the worst
Crusades was a Children's Crusade launched in 1212. Several thousand European
children got as far as Alexandria in Egypt, where they were sold into slavery.
The legacy of the Crusades included a new hostility between Christians and
Muslims, a deterioration of the feudal system, and exposure to new cultures.
Feudalism declined because many lords went bankrupt, leaving their lands to
their kings. Many serfs became Crusaders and never returned. New words entered
the European languages, such as cotton, muslin, divan, and bazaar. Europeans
brought back new textiles, foods, and spices. Demand back home for these new
goods increased trade and contributed to the growth of the Italian trading city-
states, especially Genoa and Venice. This demand was also the impetus for the
great age of discovery that began in fourteenth century. Treasure brought home
increased the local money supplies, aiding economic growth.
-----------------------------------
Feudalism
-----------------------------------
The predominant economic and political structure of the Middle Ages was
feudalism. This system evolved in response to a breakdown in central authority
and a rise in social chaos following the end of Roman rule. A hierarchy of
strongmen in allegiance replaced the Roman system of emperor, senate, province,
city, and town.
.-----------------.
| Feudal Contract |
'-----------------'
Feudalism was an agreement between two nobles, one the lord and one the vassal.
The vassal pledged an oath of fealty (faithfulness) to the lord and agreed to
carry out duties in his behalf. The most important duties were usually military
service (normally limited to 40 days per year), providing soldiers to the lord's
army, and providing revenue to the lord. The lord agreed to protect the vassal
with the army at his command and to provide the vassal with the means of making
a living. The vassal was given control of a fief that was usually a large
holding of land, but he could also be assigned the job of tax collector, coiner,
customs agent, or some other responsibility that created revenue. A lord with
many vassals thus had steady sources of revenue and an army. A feudal contract
was made for life. A lord could take back a fief if the vassal failed in his
duties. It was much harder for a vassal to leave a lord. During the early Middle
Ages fiefs were not inherited, which was to the advantage of the lord. The more
fiefs he had to give out, the harder his vassals would work to earn them. As the
Middle Ages progressed, vassals found opportunities to make their fiefs
inheritable, leaving the lords fewer fiefs to pass out as rewards.
Only nobles and knights were allowed to take the oath of fealty. In practice
most nobles were both vassals and lords, fitting in somewhere between the king
and the lowest knight of rank. Feudalism was never neatly organized, however.
Vassals might be more powerful than lords. The dukes of Normandy, controlling
much of France and all of England, were more powerful than the kings of France
who were their lords. Vassals might have several lords, causing problems when
different lords wanted the vassal to provide a service. The senior lord, or
liege lord, was usually given preference. Nobles also discovered that if they
were strong enough they could ignore the rules of feudalism and attack neighbors
to get what they wanted. Such private wars were endemic throughout the late
Middle Ages.
.-----------.
| The Manor |
'-----------'
The most common fief was a land holding called a manor. During the Middle Ages
nine families worked on a manor producing food to feed themselves and provide
food for a tenth family to do something else. (In the modern United States, the
relationship is perhaps 100 to 1 in the other direction.)
A typical manor was a great house or castle, surrounded by fields, cottages,
pastures, and woodlands. The manor was largely self-sufficient. Surpluses of a
few commodities were traded with other manors for commodities in shortage. As
the Middle Ages continued and the markets of towns grew, manors became more
specialized because they were more efficient at producing only a few
commodities. Some manors specialized in cheese, pigs, wine, grain, or
vegetables, for example.
The lord of the manor (landlord) occupied the manor house or castle with his
family, servants, and retainers. Retainers were usually knights and professional
soldiers on hand to provide defense and be ready to fulfill any feudal military
obligations to a senior lord. The larger the manor, the greater the number of
retainers.
The population of a manor consisted mainly of peasants (nonnoble and
nonprofessional). The farmhands were mostly serfs who spent up to half of their
week working the lord's lands in return for his protection. Each serf family
owned several rows in each of the manor's fields from which it obtained a
living. Serfs were not slaves, but they were not free either. They could not
marry, change jobs, or leave the manor without the lord's permission. But a serf
had some rights, unlike a slave. His position was hereditary and passed down in
his family. His land could not be taken so long as he fulfilled his obligations.
While the relationship between vassal and lord seems comparable to serf and
landlord, a clear distinction was made in the Middle Ages between an honorable
contract to provide military service versus mere manual labor.
Farming technology gradually changed the lives of serfs as the Middle Ages
progressed. Food production increased and surpluses were sold, providing serfs
with the money to buy their freedom. By the end of the period, there were few
serfs in western Europe.
-----------------------------------
The Late Middle Ages
-----------------------------------
The Dark Ages witnessed widespread disruption throughout Europe and the
replacement of the previously predominant Roman culture with Germanic tribal
culture. For 500 years Europe had suffered repeatedly from invasion and war. The
life of the average peasant was rarely affected, however, and social stability
and culture gradually recovered, although in new formats. By roughly the year
1000, Europeans were creating a new medieval civilization that surpassed the
ancients in almost every way.
.---------.
| Economy |
'---------'
At the start of the Dark Ages, Northern Europe was deeply forested. By 1000 AD,
much of the forest was gone and most of the rest was going, replaced by farmland
and pasture. The soil was generally excellent, a loess of finely ground rock
deposited during the last receding Ice Age. Two key inventions accelerated the
deforestation of Europe and led to increasing food production. The first was the
horse collar that originated in China and gradually came west. The improved
collar fit across a horse's breast, rather than its windpipe, allowing it to
pull much heavier loads without choking. The second invention was the heavy
wheeled plow, which was needed to cut into the deep soils and extensive root
systems of the old forests. Dramatic increases in food production were the
foundation of population growth and economic revitalization in Europe.
Increasing population, no longer needed on the manors, migrated to the towns
that were already growing in response to the needs for larger markets. Food
surpluses and the products of new industries (cloth-making, shipbuilding, and
tool-making, for example) traded in the new markets and trade fairs. Kings
encouraged the growth of towns because residents were usually allied with the
central authority rather than local feudal lords. Citizens of towns paid taxes,
not feudal service. Within towns there appeared a new middle class that
supported itself by trade, industrial production, and lending money. Merchants
came to dominate the town governments, growing both rich and powerful.
Craftsmen and merchants organized themselves into associations that were called
guilds. These associations controlled prices and production, ensured a high
standard of service or manufacturing, and organized the training of crafts
through apprenticeships. These controls ensured both a high-quality product and
a high-quality of life for guild members. Guild members often concentrated in
one part of town, such as Threadneedle Street and Ironmongers Lane in London.
Guilds formed an important power block within the political structure of the
towns.
Increased trade led to a new boom in manufacturing. Both led to the rise of
banking, centered mostly in northern Italy in the thirteenth century. Fledgling
businesses needed money to get started and to function efficiently. Money acted
as a medium of exchange and standard of value and was necessary for moving
beyond an inefficient barter economy. Italy had cash surpluses from its
lucrative Mediterranean trade, especially with the Levant. The gold florin of
Florence became the most popular coin of the late Middle Ages.
.----------.
| Religion |
'----------'
Pilgrims
Christians proved their faith by going on pilgrimages to Rome, Santiago de
Compostela, and even Jerusalem. Pilgrims who had visited Santiago de Compostela
wore cloth cockleshells on their clothing as a badge of distinction.
Cathedrals
The prosperity of the twelfth century and later was increasingly expressed in
the arts, especially architecture. The enduring symbol of Middle Ages
architecture was the cathedral. Magnificent church buildings were erected in
thanks to God for the blessings bestowed on the people. Towns competed to build
the most glorious cathedral and the loftiest spire reaching toward heaven.
Cathedrals were the largest capital investments of the period, taking as much as
a century to build and costing a fortune.
The predominant building material for cathedrals was stone, which minimized the
hazard of fire. There was little steel at the time, and iron was too soft to
hold up the immense buildings of unprecedented height. Architects evolved new
solutions to old problems, devising the pointed arch and flying buttress to
spread the weight load from vaulted ceilings onto massive stone supports. The
new building technologies made possible great open cathedrals, large windows
(often of beautifully stained glass), and high spires. The French pioneered the
new cathedrals. Notre Dame of Paris was begun in 1163 and finished 72 years
later. The cathedral at Chartres was begun in 1120 and completed in 1224 after
burning twice during construction.
Cathedrals were a great source of civic pride and prestige. Pilgrims and new
churchgoers brought increased revenues to the cathedral town.
.------------.
| Technology |
'------------'
By the late Middle Ages, science in Europe had caught up with the ancients and
passed them by. The technology that interested the people was practical, not
theoretical. They sought better ways to do things, both to make life more
comfortable and to improve business. They were interested in understanding the
natural world because they had increasingly more leisure time for contemplation.
The rudiments of mathematics and science were acquired from the Muslims of the
Iberian Peninsula and Sicily when Christians retook those areas. The Muslims had
been actively studying the ancients and new ideas from Asia since the early
Middle Ages. The Muslims passed on the Arabic numerals used today and the
concept of the zero, invented in India.
Practical research began challenging logic in the quest to understand the laws
of nature. The value of observation, experimentation, and empirical (countable)
evidence as support and proof of theory was recognized. This led to the
scientific method of the later Renaissance, which is the basis for all modern
scientific research. Ancient Greeks had suggested the scientific method, but it
fell out of favor and had been forgotten.
.---------------------.
| Feudalism's Decline |
'---------------------'
Political Changes
By the beginning of the late Middle Ages, western Europe had been divided into
feudal holdings of various sizes. Kings atop feudal hierarchies did not exercise
a strong central authority and nations existed as cultural groups, not political
entities. By the end of the late Middle Ages, strong central authority
controlled England, Spain, Portugal, and France. Political power in those areas
had been wrested away from the local feudal lords.
William the Conqueror established the first of the strong European monarchies
after winning the throne of England in 1066. Following his victory at Hastings
and five more years of fighting to break remaining resistance, he began taking
steps to consolidate his power. He kept one-sixth of England as royal land. Half
of the rest was given as fiefs to Norman barons who were his direct vassals. He
gave one-quarter of the land to the Church and the remainder was divided among
the Anglo-Saxons. The entire feudal hierarchy was forced to swear fealty to him
as liege lord. He claimed ownership of all castles, prohibited wars between
lords, and made royal coinage the only legal money. These were important first
steps in the decline of feudalism, although they could not always be enforced,
especially by later kings of lesser ability than William.
In the twelfth century, England's King Henry II created the chancery and
exchequer, the beginnings of a civil service. The chancery kept records of laws
and royal transactions; the exchequer was the treasury. Both offices were not
hereditary, making it easy to remove unwanted officials. The staffs of the new
civil service were paid a salary rather than given a fief, making them dependent
only on the king.
In 1215 the unpopular King John of England was forced to sign the Magna Carta, a
feudal document that made the king subject to the laws of the land and required
that the barons have a voice in the king's decision through a Great Council.
Wording of the Magna Carta led to important interpretations in later centuries,
including the concept of "no taxation without representation." When a later
English king ignored the Magna Carta, the barons seized power in 1264 and ruled
temporarily through an expanded Great Council called the Parliament. The new
Parliament included not only the barons and high-ranking churchmen but also
representatives from the large towns.
Although this parliamentary government was short-lived (15 months), Parliament
itself could not be suppressed or ignored. From this period on, only Parliament
could repeal laws it had passed. No taxes could be imposed without its approval.
When kings needed money in the short term (during the Hundred Years War, for
example) they were often forced by Parliament to concede more power in exchange.
Parliament and the civil service continued to grow in importance, and they
proved capable of running the country, regardless of the current king's ability
or any temporary rebellion by the nobility.
While the king, civil service, and Parliament were pushing down on the power of
barons from above, pressure was also rising from the bottom of the feudal
hierarchy. Several factors worked toward freeing the serfs from their contracts
with the lords, including increasing town populations, cessation of barbarian
raids, and a fearful plague that struck Europe in the fourteenth century.
The Black Death
The plague that became known as the Black Death struck Europe suddenly and with
devastating effect in the middle fourteenth century. It moved west from Central
Asia, appearing in the Black Sea area in 1346. It spread southwest into the
Mediterranean and then up and around the North Atlantic Coast and into the
Baltic. By 1348 it was in Spain and Portugal, by 1349 in England and Ireland, by
1351 in Sweden, and by 1353 in the Baltic States and Russia. Only remote and
sparsely populated areas were spared. Between a third and a half of the
population of Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, and India died, based on
modern estimates of the loss.
The Black Plague was probably a variety of the bubonic plague, a bacterial
infection still encountered today and still dangerous. The bacteria were carried
in the saliva of fleas that had sucked the blood of infected rats. The fleas
jumped to human hosts when infected rats died and the bacteria spread rapidly in
the human blood stream. The plague took its name from its most hideous symptom-
large black and painful swellings that oozed blood and pus. Victims developed a
high fever and became delirious. Most died within 48 hours, but a small minority
were able to fight off the infection and survive.
Entire towns were depopulated and the social relation between serf and lord fell
apart. People who could farm or make things were valuable. The move to cities
accelerated once the plague had passed.
-----------------------------------
The Renaissance
-----------------------------------
Beginning in fourteenth-century Italy, Europe went through a transition over 400
years from medieval to modern times known today as the Renaissance, meaning a
"rebirth" or "revival." The Renaissance is a nebulous concept for which there is
no clear beginning or end. It does, however, usefully mark the complete recovery
from the barbarism of the Dark Ages to the new advancement in all fields that
transcended the achievements of the great ancient civilizations.
Many different factors at work in the Middle Ages contributed to this revival
and new advancement. One was the renewed interest in learning. The first college
at Oxford University was founded in 1264. By 1400 there were more than 50
universities in Europe. Education and debate were stimulated by access to
ancient texts preserved by the Arabs and freshly translated into Latin.
Europeans had made contact with the Arabs in the Holy Land, in Sicily, and in
Spain. The rediscovered works of the ancient Greek mathematician Euclid, for
example, became the standard for teaching mathematics into the nineteenth
century. The Arabs also transmitted a new system for numbers, the concept of the
decimal point, and the concept of zero, all invented in India. The spread of
learning accelerated rapidly following the invention of the printing press
around 1450.
A second factor was the rising standard of living, especially in the great
commercial cities of Italy. The Crusades had opened European eyes to the wealth
of the East, especially silks, spices, and cotton. The merchants of Venice,
Genoa, Florence, and other cities came to dominate the trade between Europe and
the Eastern Mediterranean. With the excess wealth they accumulated in business,
these merchants began embellishing their homes and cities with art. Sculpture,
painting, architecture, music, poetry, and literature found new expression,
exhibiting an interest in subjects beyond the religious themes that dominated
previously in the Middle Ages. Popular depictions of everyday life, romance, and
adventure revealed that European culture was becoming more humanistic and less
focused on religion.
The revival was also due to technological progress that led to more efficient
production of goods and services. Manufacturing, farming, and trade all improved
past the abilities of the ancients. The drive for profits encouraged
inventiveness and exploration. A middle class of merchants and craftsmen began
grasping political power commensurate with their economic power, at the expense
of a declining nobility.
By roughly 1500 the nations of Europe were leading the world in many important
technologies. Energies unleashed by the exploration of the world, the search for
trade routes, the Protestant Reformation, and continued political competition in
Europe itself would make Europe the dominant region of the world within a few
centuries.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
7. Civilization Comparisons
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|
| Civilization | Attributes |
|--------------------------|------|
| Britons | o Town Centers cost -50% |
| | o Foot archers +1 range Castle Age, +1 Imperial |
| | Age (for +2 total) |
| | o Shepherds work 25% faster |
|--------------------------|------|
| Byzantines | o Advance to Imperial Age costs -33% |
| | o Fire ships +20% attack |
| | o Camels, skirmishers, Pikemen cost -25% |
| | o Buildings +10% HPs Dark Age, +20% Feudal Age, |
| | +30% Castle Age, +40% Imperial Age |
|--------------------------|------|
| Celts | o Infantry move 15% faster |
| | o Lumberjacks work 15% faster |
| | o Siege weapons fire 20% faster |
| | o Sheep not converted if in 1 Celt unit's LOS |
|--------------------------|------|
| Chinese | o Demolition ships +50% HPs |
| | o Town Centers support 10 population |
| | o Technologies cost -10% Feudal Age, -15% Castle |
| | Age, -20% Imperial Age |
| | o Start +3 villagers but -150 food |
|--------------------------|------|
| Franks | o Castles cost -25% |
| | o Knights +20% HPs |
| | o Farm upgrades free (require Mill) |
|--------------------------|------|
| Goths | o +10 Population Imperial Age |
| | o Villagers +5 attack vs. wild boar |
| | o Infantry +1 attack vs buildings |
| | o Infantry cost -10% Feudal Age, -15% Castle Age, |
| | -25% Imperial Age |
|--------------------------|------|
| Japanese | o Fishing Ships 2X HPs; +2P armor; work rate +5% |
| | Dark Age, +10% Feudal Age, +15% Castle Age, |
| | +20% Imperial Age |
| | o Mill, Lumber Camp, Mining Camp cost -50% |
| | o Infantry attack 10% faster Feudal Age, 15% |
| | Castle Age, 25% Imperial Age |
|--------------------------|------|
| Mongols | o Cavalry archers fire 20% faster |
| | o Light Cavalry +30% HPs |
| | o Hunters work 50% faster |
|--------------------------|------|
| Persians | o Start +50% wood, food |
| | o Town Center, Dock 2X HPs; work rate +10% Feudal |
| | Age, +15% Castle Age, +20% Imperial Age |
|--------------------------|------|
| Saracens | o Market trade cost only 5% |
| | o Transport Ships 2X HPs, 2X carry capacity |
| | o Galleys attack 20% faster |
| | o Cavalry archers +3 attack vs. buildings |
|--------------------------|------|
| Teutons | o Monks heal from 2X as far |
| | o Towers garrison 2X units, fire 2X normal |
| | garrison arrows |
| | o Murder Holes Free |
| | o Farms cost -33% |
| | o Town Center +2 attack/+5 range |
|--------------------------|------|
| Turks | o Gunpowder units +50% HPs, researching gunpowder |
| | technologies costs -50% |
| | o Gold miners work 15% faster |
| | o Chemistry free |
| | o Light Cavalry upgrade free |
|--------------------------|------|
| Vikings | o Infantry +10% HPs Feudal Age, +15% Castle Age, |
| | +20% Imperial Age |
| | o Wheelbarrow, Hand Cart free |
| | o War ships cost -20% |
|__________________________|___________________________________________________|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
8. Strategies and Tips
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
If you have any tips or strategies, send them to me at red_phoenix_1@hotmail.com
I don't really have any strategies or tips I'd like to give out. If you run a
search for Age of Kings, you will be able to find plenty.
Check out:
http://www.throughtheages.com
http://www.ageofkings.com
http://www.planetageofempires.com
http://www.aoe2.com
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
9. Appendices
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-----------------------------------
Cheats [This section was taken from Cheat Code Central]
-----------------------------------
-=These are for Age of Empires II: Age of Kings=-
While playing a game, press [Enter] to display the chat window and type one of
following codes to activate the corresponding cheat function:
RESULT CHEAT CODE
1000 gold robin hood
1000 wood lumberjack
1000 stone rock on
1000 food cheese steak jimmy's
Instant victory i r winner
Instant loss resign
Fast building aegis
Full map marco
Kill indicated opponent torpedo[number]
Kill all opponents black death
No shadows polo
Control animals natural wonders
VDML i love the monkey head
Cobra car how do you turn this on
Saboteur to smithereens
Commit suicide wimpywimpywimpy
Cheat Codes (alternate)
While playing a game, enter one of the following codes to activate the
corresponding cheat function:
RESULT CHEAT CODE
Fast construction [Ctrl] + Q
Build immutable structure [Ctrl] + P
Alternate resource menu [Ctrl] + T
View ending sequence [Ctrl] + C
Cheat Codes (command line)
Start the game with one of the following command line parameters to activate
the corresponding cheat function:
RESULT COMMAND LINE PARAMETER
800 x 600 screen resolution 800
1024 x 768 screen resolution 1024
1280 x 1024 screen resolution 1280
Auto save game autompsave
Standard mouse pointer NormalMouse
Fix display problems with some video cards Mfill
Fix SoundBlaster AWE freezes Msync
Disable all terrain sounds NoTerrainSound
Disable all music NoMusic
Disable all sounds except during FMV sequences NoSound
No pre-game FMV sequences NoStartup
-=These are for Age of Empires II: The Conquerers=-
I will add them when the game is released.
-----------------------------------
Building Attributes
-----------------------------------
|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|ЇЇЇЇЇЇЇЇ|
| Building Name | Age | Cost | Hit Points | Attack | Garrison | Range |
|------------------|------|-------|-------------|---------|-----------|--------|
| Archery Range | II | 175 W | 1500 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Barracks | I | 175 W | 1200 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Blacksmith | II | 150 W | 2100 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Bombard Tower | IV | 125 S | 2220 | 120 | 5 | 8 |
| | | 100 G | | | | |
| Castle | III | 650 S | 4800 | 11 | 20 | 8 |
| Dock | I | 150 W | 1800 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Farm | I | 150 W | 480 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Fish Trap | II | 100 W | 50 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Fortified Wall | III | 5 S | 3000 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Gate | II | 30 S | 2750 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Guard Tower | III | 125 S | 1500 | 6 | 5 | 8 |
| House | I | 30 W | 900 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Keep | IV | 125 S | 2250 | 7 | 5 | 8 |
| | | 25 W | | | | |
| Lumber Camp | I | 100 W | 1000 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Market | II | 175 W | 2100 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Mill | I | 100 W | 1000 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Mining Camp | I | 100 W | 1000 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Monestary | III | 175 W | 2100 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Outpost | I | 25 W | 500 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | | 25 S | | | | |
| Palisade Wall | I | 2 W | 250 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Siege Workshop | III | 200 W | 2100 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Stable | II | 175 W | 1500 | 0 | 10* | 0 |
| Stone Wall | II | 5 S | 1800 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Town Center | III | 275 W | 2400 | 5 | 15 | 6 |
| University | III | 200 W | 2100 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Watch Tower | II | 125 S | 1020 | 5 | 5 | 8 |
| Wonder | IV | 1000 W| 4800 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | | 1000 S| | | | |
| | | 1000 G| | | | |
| |
| * Units can be garrisoned here only if a gather point is set on the |
| building while units are being created. They cannot reenter once |
| ungarrisoned. Units garrisoned in towers, Town Centers, and Castles |
| add attach and range. |
|______________________________________________________________________________|
-----------------------------------
Research Times
-----------------------------------
Ever wondered how long that wheelbarrow tech takes or the imperial upgrade?
Archery Range
Crossbow (Castle) – 35 seconds
Arbalest (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Hand Cannoneer (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Heavy Cavalry Archer (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite Skirmisher (Castle) – 50 seconds
Barracks
Tracking (Feudal) – 35 seconds
Squires (Castle) – 40 seconds
Man-at-arms (Feudal) – 40 seconds
Longsword (Castle) – 45 seconds
Pikeman (Castle) – 45 seconds
Two-Handed-Sword (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Champion (Imperial) – 100 seconds
Blacksmith
Fletching (Feudal) - 30 seconds
Bodkin Arrow (Castle) - 35 seconds
Scale Mail (Feudal) - 40 seconds
Bracer (Castle) - 40 seconds
Padded Archer Armor (Feudal) - 40 seconds
Scale Barding (Feudal) - 45 seconds
Forging (Feudal) - 50 seconds
Chain Mail (Castle) - 55 seconds
Leather Archer Armor (Castle) - 55 seconds
Chain Barding (Castle) - 60 seconds
Plate Mail (Imperial) - 70 seconds
Ring Archer Armor (Imperial) - 70 seconds
Iron Casting (Castle) - 75 seconds
Plate Barding (Castle) - 75 seconds
Blast Furnace (Imperial) - 100 seconds
Castle
Spy (Imperial) – 1 second
Sappers (Imperial) – 10 seconds
Elite Huskarl (Imperial) – 40 seconds
Elite Woad raider (Imperial) – 45 seconds
Elite Throwing Axe (Imperial) – 45 seconds
Elite Berserk (Imperial) – 45 seconds
Elite Cataphract (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite Chu-Ko-Nu (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite Mangudai (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite Mameluke (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite TK (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Elite Janissary (Imperial) – 55 seconds
Conscription (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Elite Longbow (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Elite Samurai (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Elite Longboat (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Elite War Elephant (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Hoardings (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Dock
Elite Cannon Galley (Imperial) - 25 seconds
Careening (Castle) - 50 seconds
War Galley (Castle) - 50 seconds
Fast Fire Ship (Imperial) - 50 seconds
Heavy Demo Ship (Imperial) - 50 seconds
Cannon Galleon (Imperial) - 50 seconds
Dry Dock (Imperial) - 60 seconds
Shipwright (Imperial) - 60 seconds
Galleon (Imperial) - 65 seconds
Lumber Camp
Double Bit Axe (Feudal) - 25 seconds
Bow Saw (Castle) - 50 seconds
Two-man Saw (Imperial) - 100 seconds
Market
Guilds (Imperial) - 50 seconds
Coinage (Feudal) - 50 seconds
Banking (Castle) - 50 seconds
Cartography (Feudal) - 65 seconds
Mill
Horse Collar (Feudal) - 20 seconds
Heavy Plow (Castle) - 40 seconds
Crop Rotation (Imperial) - 70 seconds
Mining Camp
Gold Mining (Feudal) - 30 seconds
Stone Mining (Feudal) - 30 seconds
Gold Shaft Mining (Castle) - 75 seconds
Stone Shaft Mining (Castle) - 75 seconds
Monastery
Atonement (Castle) – 40 seconds
Redemption (Castle) – 50 seconds
Fervor (Castle) – 50 seconds
Block Printing (Imperial) – 55 seconds
Faith (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Sanctity (Castle) – 60 seconds
Illumination (Imperial) – 65 seconds
Siege Workshop
Heavy Scorpion (Imperial)– 50 seconds
Capped Ram (Imperial) – 50 seconds
Siege ram (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Onager (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Bombard Cannon (Imperial) – 100 seconds
Siege Onager (Imperial) – 150 seconds
Stable
Light cavalry (Castle) – 45 seconds
Husbandry (Feudal) – 50 seconds
Cavalier (Imperial) – 100 seconds
Heavy Camel (Imperial) – 125 seconds
Paladin (Imperial) – 170 seconds
Towncenter
Loom (Dark) - 25 seconds
Town Watch (Feudal) - 25 seconds
Town Patrol (Castle) - 40 seconds
Hand Cart (Castle) - 55 seconds
Wheelbarrow (Feudal) - 75 seconds
Feudal Age Upgrade - 130 seconds
Castle Age Upgrade - 160 seconds
Imperial Age Upgrade - 190 seconds
University
Heated Shot (Castle) – 30 seconds
Guard Tower (Castle) – 30 seconds
Siege Engineers (Imperial) – 45 seconds
Treadmill Crane (Castle) – 50 seconds
Masonry (Castle) – 50 seconds
Fortified Wall (Castle) – 50 seconds
Murder Holes (Castle) – 60 seconds
Ballistics (Castle) – 60 seconds
Bombard Tower (Imperial) – 60 seconds
Architecture (Imperial) – 70 seconds
Keep (Imperial) – 75 seconds
Chemistry (Imperial) – 100 seconds
-----------------------------------
Unit Training Time
-----------------------------------
The numbers below represent how long it takes to produce a particular unit.
This is measured in seconds and thus a lower time would be more beneficial.
Archery Range Units
Archer to Arbalest - 27 seconds
Cavalry Archer to Heavy Cavalry Archer - 34 seconds
Skirmisher to Elite Skirmisher - 22 seconds
Hand Cannoneer - 34 seconds
Barracks Units
Militia to Champion - 21 seconds
Spearman to Pikeman - 22 seconds
Castle Units
Berserk - 16 seconds
Huskarl - 26 seconds
Samurai - 16 seconds
Throwing Axeman - 17 seconds
Teutonic Knight - 19 seconds
Woad Raider - 16 seconds
Cataphract - 23 seconds
Mameluke - 23 seconds
War Elephant - 31 seconds
Cho Ko Nu - 19 seconds
Janissary - 21 seconds
Longbow man - 19 seconds
Mangudai - 21 seconds
Dock Units
Galley to Galleon - 36 seconds
Fire Ship - 36 seconds
Fast Fire Ship - 36 seconds
Demolition Ship to Heavy Demolition Ship - 31
Cannon Galley to Heavy Cannon Galley - 46 seconds
Longboat to Elite Longboat - 41 seconds
Siege Units
Battering Ram to Capped Ram - 36 seconds
Siege Ram - 36 seconds
Mangonel to Siege Onager - 46 seconds
Scorpion to Heavy Scorpion - 30 seconds
Bombard Cannon - 56 seconds
Stable Units
Scout Cavalry - 30 seconds
Light Cavalry - 30 seconds
Knights to Cavalier - 30 seconds
Paladin - 30 seconds
Camel to Heavy Camel - 29 seconds
-----------------------------------
Attack Rates
-----------------------------------
The numbers below represent how quickly a unit attacks. This is determined by
how many seconds are in between each attack. Thus a lower number here would be
better.
Archery Range Units
Archer to Arbalest - 2 seconds
Cavalry Archer to Heavy Cavalry Archer - 2 seconds
Skirmisher to Elite Skirmisher - 3 seconds
Hand Cannoneer - 3.45 seconds
Barracks Units
Militia to Champion - 2 seconds
Spearman to Pikeman - 3 seconds
Castle Units
Berserk - 2 seconds
Huskarl - 2 seconds
Samurai - 2 seconds
Throwing Axeman - 2 seconds
Teutonic Knight - 2 seconds
Woad Raider - 2 seconds
Cataphract - 2 seconds
Mameluke - 2 seconds
War Elephant - 2 seconds
Cho Ko Nu - 3 seconds
Janissary - 3.45 seconds
Longbowman - 2 seconds
Mangudai - 2 seconds
Dock Units
Galley to Galleon - 3 seconds
Fire Ship - 0.25 seconds
Fast Fire Ship - 0.25 seconds
Demolition Ship to Heavy Demolition Ship - n/a
Cannon Galley to Heavy Cannon Galley - 10 seconds
Longboat to Elite Longboat - 3 seconds
Siege Units
Battering Ram to Capped Ram - 5 seconds
Siege Ram - 5 seconds
Mangonel to Siege Onager - 6 seconds
Scorpion to Heavy Scorpion - 3.6 seconds
Bombard Cannon - 6.5 seconds
Stable Units
Scout Cavalry - 2 seconds
Light Cavalry - 2 seconds
Knights to Cavalier - 1.8 seconds
Paladin - 1.9 seconds
Camel to Heavy Camel - 2 seconds
-----------------------------------
Movement Rates
-----------------------------------
The numbers below represent how fast a unit moves, measured in tiles per
second. Therefore, the higher the number, the faster the unit moves and more
ground it covers.
Archery Range Units
Archer to Arbalest - 0.96 tiles/second
Cavalry Archer to Heavy Cavalry Archer - 1.43 tiles/second
Skirmisher to Elite Skirmisher - 0.96 tiles/second
Hand Cannoneer - 0.96 tiles/second
Barracks Units
Militia to Champion - 0.9 tiles/second
Spearman to Pikeman - 1.0 tiles/second
Castle Units
Berserk - 0.9 tiles/second
Huskarl - 0.9 tiles/second
Samurai - 0.9 tiles/second
Throwing Axeman - 0.9 tiles/second
Teutonic Knight - 0.65 tiles/second
Woad Raider - 1.03 tiles/second
Cataphract - 1.35 tiles/second
Mameluke - 1.41 tiles/second
War Elephant - 0.6 tiles/second
Cho Ko Nu - 0.96 tiles/second
Janissary - 0.96 tiles/second
Longbowman - 0.96 tiles/second
Mangudai - 1.43 tiles/second
Dock Units
Galley to Galleon - 1.43 tiles/second
Fire Ship - 1.35 tiles/second
Fast Fire Ship - 1.43 tiles/second
Demolition Ship to Heavy Demolition Ship - 1.6 tiles/second
Cannon Galley to Heavy Cannon Galley - 1.1 tiles/second
Longboat to Elite Longboat - 1.54 tiles/second
Siege Units
Battering Ram to Capped Ram - 0.5 tiles/second
Siege Ram - 0.6 tiles/second
Mangonel to Siege Onager - 0.5 tiles/second
Scorpion to Heavy Scorpion - 0.65 tiles/second
Bombard Cannon - 0.7 tiles/second
Stable Units
Scout Cavalry - 1.2 tiles/second
Light Cavalry - 1.5 tiles/second
Knights to Cavalier - 1.35 tiles/second
Paladin - 1.35 tiles/second
Camel to Heavy Camel - 1.4 tiles/second