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Life in the Phalanx


Article # : 15225 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 8 / 1989  3,221 Words
Author : Byron Farwell
Byron Farwell is the author of nine books dealing in whole or part with Africa, including The Great Anglo-Boer War, Queen Victoria's Little Wars, and his latest, The Great War in Africa, 1914-1918.

       THE WESTERN WAY OF WAR
       Infantry Battle in Classical Greece
       Victor Davis; introduction by John Keegan
       New York: Alfred Knopf, 1989
       244 pp., $19.95
       
       What was it like to be an armored Greek infantryman (hoplite) standing in a phalanx, armed with a spear and sword, facing a similar phalanx on a hot summer's day in Greece? Inspired by John Keegan's Face of Battle, Victor Hanson has, with impeccable scholarship and a clear prose style, brought us as close as we are ever likely to get to the nitty-gritty reality of hoplite battle in ancient Greece.
       
        He begins by telling us about the Greek way of war in the period 650-338 B.C. As he did in an earlier book, Warfare and Agriculture in Classical Greece, Hanson explains that invading armies posed little threat to the livelihood of the Greeks (whose economy was based upon agriculture), as they caused minimal lasting damage. Fields of grain could be set on fire and were, but they could be sown again; and if the invaders came at the best time for destroying grain, they had to leave their own fields with inadequate harvest labor. Destroying vineyards and fruit trees with hand tools takes time and is an arduous task: Olive trees, with which Greece abounds, are tough indeed. There was never time for a thorough job of destruction.
       
        The Greeks developed a method for waging war that was, as John Keegan points out in his introduction, "different in kind from the warfare that preceded it." It was, he says,
       
        different not merely in technique but in ethos; and… its
        ethos pervaded Greeks life, culture and politics--and thus
        our own, too. What Hanson suggests … is that the Greeks
        of the city-states were the first people on earth to
        contract between themselves, as equals to fight the enemy
        shoulder to shoulder, without flinching from wounds, and
        not to yield the ground on which they fought until either
        the enemy had broken or they themselves lay dead where
        they
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