mercenaries-msg - 10/4/99 Mercenaries in period. NOTE: See also the files: occupations-msg, p-armor-msg, Normans-msg, Landsknechts-msg, commerce-msg, pirates-msg, SwissGuard-msg, prostitution-msg, p-prices-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ From: jliedl at nickel.laurentian.ca Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: mercenaries in period question Date: 11 Nov 93 12:52:02 -0500 Organization: Laurentian University Greetings all from Ancarett Nankivellis! tracker at wpi.WPI.EDU (The Renegade Ranger) writes: > v276m8gv at ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu (Eric Frohnapple) writes: >> I was wondering if anyone has any documentation about mercenaries in >>period. How big were mercenary companies? How skilled were they? How often >>were they used? Was it their full time job? What weapons did they use? >>(The list goes on...) >> >> It seemed to me that mercenaries would have been very common throughout >>history, but I've never heard any answers to questions like these. Thanks, > > I don't have any books on them with me at the moment, but try looking > for information on the German Landshneckts (That spelling is probably > wrong.. there are one or two possibles..). They were, from what I > gather, mercenary companies of high repute. Landsknechts are good for the end of period, but this seems to be a broader question. I suggest you begin with the excellent general source: Philippe Contamine's _War in the Middle Ages_ (Oxford: Blackwel, 1984) ISBN 0-631-13142-6 "Nor can one call every soldier a mercenary from the moment he received payment in one form or another. It is better to adapt to medieval circumstances a definition recently proposed by the classicist Y. Garland, who writes: 'The mercenary is a professional soldier whose conduct is dictated not by his membership of a political community but above all by his desire for gain.' In short, the mercenary is defined by three qualities: being a specialist, stateless and paid." [99] Later, describing one of the mercenary companies, Contamine state: "In the fourteenth century, the 'Great Company' was a societas societatum, in other words the collection of a body of freebooters who accepted a supreme chief whom they recognized by a sort of election." [160] Lots of juicy good stuff in the book! Read on! Ancarett Nankivellis Janice Liedl Laurentian University, Canada JLIEDL at NICKEL.LAURENTIAN.CA Newsgroups: rec.org.sca From: ua923 at freenet.Victoria.BC.CA (Mark Shier) Subject: Re: mercenaries in period question Organization: Camosun College, Victoria, B.C. Date: Sun, 14 Nov 1993 05:27:49 GMT If you are interested in period mercenaries,I suggest you read "chaucer's knight- portrait of a medieval mercenary" by Terry Jones. It has a pretty good bibliography. Also check out Contamine's history of medieval warfare. Both are available in paperback, but any good library should have them. Mercenaries used the common weapons of there place and time.(I wish I had a different text editor, so I could correct my spelling) Some of them were full time soldiers, especially in such groups as the fourteenth century Companies.See Froissart for some good stories about them - especially the bio of the Bascot de Meolean (sp?) The most sucsessful mercenary company was the Catalan Company, which wound up owning its own country. For more on them, read Muntaner's chronicle. Mark der Gaukler From: DDF2 at cornell.edu (David Friedman) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: mercenaries in period question Date: 14 Nov 1993 13:35:34 GMT Organization: Cornell Law School In article , ua923 at freenet.Victoria.BC.CA (Mark Shier) wrote: > The most sucsessful mercenary company > was the Catalan Company, which wound up owning its own country. On the other hand, the most successful mercenaries were two Norman brothers (Guiscard d'Hauteville?), who ended up owning their own kingdom--and whose descendants kept it for quite a lot longer than the Catalans kept Athens. David/Cariadoc (whose library is still in Chicago) DDF2 at Cornell.Edu From: bloodthorn at sloth.equinox.gen.nz (Jennifer Geard) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: mercenaries in period question Date: Mon, 15 Nov 93 23:04:02 GMT Organization: Lethargy Inc. Cariadoc writes: > On the other hand, the most successful mercenaries were two Norman brothers > (Guiscard d'Hauteville?), who ended up owning their own kingdom--and whose > descendants kept it for quite a lot longer than the Catalans kept Athens. Robert Guiscard and his brother Roger, sons of the prolific Tancred de Hautville, brought Norman rule to Calabria, Apulia, and Sicily. They were a rowdy family, but when they stopped fighting each other and ganged up on the rest of the world they were a force to be reckoned with. Robert was based on the mainland, while Roger took Sicily. The Norman conquest of southern Italy is a lesson in the dangers of reliance upon mercenaries: gung-ho bands of young Normans, having worked out that life on the family farm was dull and constrained, had gone adventuring in search of money and a fight, and had been employed by many of the factions in the south of Italy. The people in the various factions thought this was a great idea, since it allowed them to continue their squabbles for as long as their money and promises of land lasted, rather than until-they'd-all-killed-each- other. Eventually, the decisive matter in any battle was whether your side's Normans were better than their side's Normans. In this way the Normans got a toehold in the area. A couple of them with more foresight than most -- like Robert -- looked around and realised that the most effective fighting troops in the lower half of the Italian peninsula were all Norman, and that if they fought for *themselves* rather than their employers, and maybe even fought *together*... All this from memory, because the books I want are currently at my leman's place. Pagan ________________________________________________________________________ Jennifer Geard bloodthorn at sloth.equinox.gen.nz Christchurch, New Zealand From: wja1 at engr.uark.EDU (WILLIAM J ADAMS) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Mercenaries in Period Date: 11 Nov 1993 17:52:32 -0500 Organization: The Internet v276m8gv at ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu (Eric Frohnapple) writes: > I was wondering if anyone has any documentation about mercenaries in >period. How big were mercenary companies? How skilled were they? How often >were they used? Was it their full time job? What weapons did they use? >(The list goes on...) > > It seemed to me that mercenaries would have been very common throughout >history, but I've never heard any answers to questions like these. Thanks, The Heretic says: Try Contamine's _Warfare_in_the_Middle_Ages_. It has a complete section on mercenaries and 'free companies.' Another search path might take you to looking for material on the Italian communes of the 14th to 16th centuries. Sir John Hawkwood being one of the most famous mercenary commanders. If you`re in the mood for a movie, watch "Flesh and Blood" with Rutger Hauer. It's all about mercenaries in Northern Italy around 15xx. Hope this helps. William the Heretic Newsgroups: rec.org.sca From: maclure at eos.arc.nasa.gov (IanMaclure) Subject: Re: Mercenaries in Period Organization: NASA Ames Research Center Date: Fri, 12 Nov 1993 16:41:07 GMT wja1 at engr.uark.EDU (WILLIAM J ADAMS) writes: >v276m8gv at ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu (Eric Frohnapple) writes: [Yada yada yada] >The Heretic says: [snip] >Sir John Hawkwood being one of the most famous mercenary commanders. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If you can't find Sir John De Hawkewood under his own name try "Giovanni Agutta" [ "Acutta" ] the Italianised spelling. He was English "but nay so bad for aw that". IBM -- ################ No Times Like The Maritimes, Eh! ###################### # IBM aka # ian_maclure at QMGATE.arc.nasa.gov (desk) # # Ian B MacLure # maclure at (remulac/eos).arc.nasa.gov (currently) # ########## Opinions expressed here are mine, mine, mine. ############### From: bull at vaxc.cc.monash.edu.au Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Ya want mercenaries? Ya get mercenaries! Date: 14 Nov 93 15:26:07 +1100 Organization: Computer Centre, Monash University, Australia v081lu33 at ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu (Ken Mondschein) writes: > Dear Gentles (especially Akryn) My persona is a Landsknecht, so I'll jump into this conversation. > I don't know if you could consider a house carl (huscarl) a merc, but > I *do* know a little about mercenaries from my period. In fact, my Nice Jewish > Persona learned to fight from them (hey, it's *possible*). Of course, I could > just tell Akryn this stuff in person, but then I wouldn't have all of you > checking my facts to make sure I'm accurate... > The Italian city-states of the Renaissance employed condoterri (sp?) > to fight their wars for them. "Condoterri," I believe, was a generic term for > mercenary. The reasons for this are probably that they were rich enough and > smart enough to get someone else to fight their wars for them (not that the > Italains didn't participate, of course). The condoterri were, for a large > part, foreigners. > Two of the larger mercenary groups were the German Landskenechts (the > spelling varies) and the Swiss Pikes. Artillery men were also often highly > paid specialists. These groups were active in the late 15th-16th centuries, as > far as I know (though condoterri were used back to the 1300s, I believe). > The Landskenechts (there's one on the Rialto-- hi!) were typically > brash, flamboyant, and romantic. They wore beautiful fluted armor made in > Milan and got all the babes. Or at least the officers did. The regular soldiers > were kept under guard and couldn't leave camp, so they didn't run away from > the Army life. (Remember, the reasons crossbows and guns became so popular is > because a malnourished archer is an archer who can't shoot straight). I have > a feeling that the Landskenechts were a capitalistic venture... The Landsknechts were established by Emperor Maximillian 1 of the Holy Roman Empire (this is *NOT* the Roman Empire of Julius Caesar, the Circus Maximus, feeding Christians to the lions, etc. The "Holy Roman Empire" was a confederation of Germanic Principalities) in the late 15th C. For political reasons, Maximillian was unable to finance a large full time army of professional soldiers. He created the Landsknecht companies and established regulations as to their structure, rates of pay, chain of command, rules of conduct, etc. His reasoning was that at times of war, he would recruit companies of mercinaries to reinforce his small full time army. A regiment of Landsknechts would be recruited in the following manner. The Emperor would grant a commission to someone to establish a regiment. This person was typically a high ranking noble within the Empire and was granted the military rank of Colonel. The Colonel would then pick his officers who would go to towns and call for volunteers to enlist. The volunteers had to provide their own armour and weapons, and had to pass a physical test. Once the correct number of volunteers had been raised, they were allowed to elect their own corporals and sargeants amongst themselves. They would be mustered according to what weapons they had and previous military experience. The rules of the commission would be read aloud to the men, including warnings of the types of punishments they could face if they broke those rules. They then swore an oath of loyalty to the Emperor and to the Colonel. Artillery soldiers were a seperate group. They were recruited by Artillery officers and had their own chain of command. They were not directly answerable to the Landsknecht officers, and recieved higher rates of pay than Landsnechts who held comparable rank. One interesting tradition was that if a Landsknecht broke one of the rules of conduct and he was able to reach one of the cannons before the regimental police caught him, he was considered to be under the protection of the Artillery group for 3 days, as long as he stayed within a given distence of that cannon (12 paces was common). If the Shuldtheis (sp? the head of the police group within the regiment) broke that protection within the 3 days, the commander of the Artillery group had the right to withdraw all of his men and cannons from the regiment. I haven't heard or read what happened to the Landsknecht after those 3 days had past. That is how Maximillian wanted the recruiting to work. In practice, the rulers of the principalities were able to raise their own Landsknecht regiments and hire them out to foreign powers. The French and the Spanish were the most common employers (apart from the Empire itself) of the Landsknechts. King Henry VIII of England also hired Landsknechts. The Landsknechts most common foe were Swiss mercinaries who are consdidered to have been the finest fighting men in Europe in the 15th and 16th C's. One particular Landsknecht regiment known as the Black Band fought for the French, and their commander refused to return his regiment to the Empire when ordered by Maximillian. They eventually fought with the French against other Landsknechts and were slaughtered to the last man for refusing to obey the Emperor's order to return. > Landskenechts typically used pikes and wore little or no armor (too > expensive, plus it allows more freedom of movement). The famed "doppelsoldniers" > ("double-soldiers") used the flamberge to break enemy pikes and defend their > standard (and probably whack any pikemen who ran away). And I learned all that > from the Museum Replicas catalogue... When going into battle, the first row of Landsknechts was called the "folorn hope". This was made up of men who had committed a serious crime and were given the option of facing immediate punishment (typically execution) or joining the folorn hope to "redeem" themselves. The chances of surviving a battle in the folorn hope were slim (hence the name folorn hope). Dopplesoldnier were experienced fighting men who recieved a higher rate of pay than normal and had 2 tasks, to cut the polearms of the other side and to stop members of their own side from running away from the battle. One feature that the Landsknechts were particularly noted for was their outrageous clothing. One practice of dress was to wear large codpieces that were decorated in ways that drew the observer's attention to the codpiece. Some cities made this sort of behaviour an offence and regularly jailed Landsknechts for this sort of thing until Maximillian passed a decree giving Landsknechts the right to dress as they pleased. According to one source I have, some Landsknechts went so far as to dress with "thong" style pants that left the buttocks completely bare. [ I would suggest you check the "public indecency" laws in your area before wearing "thong" style garb in public. I have not been able to find a second source to verify this last particular garb tid-bit, so *I* would not attempt to try it and say it definately was period. If I do find a verification, I might do it. Also, other SCA-dians may object, regardless of it (possibly) being period ] > The Swiss Pikes were just that: Pikes. They were mostly footmen and > seemed to be a bit more egalitarian than the Landskenechts. They also had > crossbowmen, of course. All I know of them is that they were very good and > active up to the 30 Years War, when they got PO'ed, began following a > chaplain named Zwingli, became Protestant, and moved back to Switzerland, > where they spent the rest of their lives becoming Calvinists and making cheese. > (Zwingli was the guy who gave Calvin many of his ideas). I really don't know that much about the Swiss, Italian or Spanish mercinaries (some Spanish men joined the Landsknechts, and the Spanish had a very strong influence on Landsknecht clothing in the 16th C). Wolfgang Langenmantel Convent of St Monica, Barrony of Stormhold, Principality of Lochac, Kingdom of the West. From: v081lu33 at ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu (TRISTAN CLAIR DE LUNE/KEN MONDSCHEIN) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Condotterie Date: 28 Mar 1995 04:38:46 GMT Organization: University at Buffalo In article <1995Mar27.211742.2481 at news.vanderbilt.edu>, turrimj at vuse.vanderbilt.edu (mike) writes: > Please tell me anything you can about it and how prevalent > is this persona type in the sca. > > -Batista Sforza I did about three days ago... *sigh* here we go again. First off, I dunno if the College of Arms would like your name so much, because it's saying you're a member of one of the most prominent families in Italy. It is, for instance, if I were to be Tristan D'Medici, or, worse, Tristan of Hapsburg. As for the prevalance of condottiere in the SCA, I guess I could say that I'm one, as part of the ongoing series of tales I (Ken) am writing about Tristan concerns serving under Cesare Borgia, then going over to save Italy from him. Besides that, we do find a number of 15th century Italians around, though many people signed up for the clothes and fence or don't fight, or just don't have the resources to do the armor was well as can be done. Anyway, condottieri were, simply put, Italian mercenaries of the 14th and 15th centuries. For a brief view, I suggest Osprey's _Italian_Medieval_ Armies. For a longer treatment anda history, check out Guiccardini's _History_ of_Italy, and look up the matter in your local library. --Tristan From: eherring at mindspring.com (Evan L. Herring) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Condotterie Date: Wed, 29 Mar 1995 11:18:47 -0400 Organization: MindSpring Enterprises, Inc. In article <3l83sm$884 at azure.acsu.buffalo.edu> v081lu33 at ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu (TRISTAN CLAIR DE LUNE/KEN MONDSCHEIN) writes: >From: v081lu33 at ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu (TRISTAN CLAIR DE LUNE/KEN MONDSCHEIN) >Subject: Re: Condotterie >Date: 28 Mar 1995 04:38:46 GMT >In article <1995Mar27.211742.2481 at news.vanderbilt.edu>, turrimj at vuse.vanderbilt.edu (mike) writes: >> Please tell me anything you can about it and how prevalent >> is this persona type in the sca. >> >> -Batista Sforza > I did about three days ago... *sigh* here we go again. > First off, I dunno if the College of Arms would like your name so >much, because it's saying you're a member of one of the most prominent >families in Italy. It is, for instance, if I were to be Tristan D'Medici, or, >worse, Tristan of Hapsburg. > As for the prevalance of condottiere in the SCA, I guess I could say >that I'm one, as part of the ongoing series of tales I (Ken) am writing >about Tristan concerns serving under Cesare Borgia, then going over to save >Italy from him. Besides that, we do find a number of 15th century Italians >around, though many people signed up for the clothes and fence or don't >fight, or just don't have the resources to do the armor was well as can be >done. > Anyway, condottieri were, simply put, Italian mercenaries of the 14th >and 15th centuries. For a brief view, I suggest Osprey's _Italian_Medieval_ >Armies. For a longer treatment anda history, check out Guiccardini's _History_ >of_Italy, and look up the matter in your local library. > --Tristan Tristan, Condottieri refers to any mercenary companies active in Italy in the fourteenth and fifteenth century, doesn't it? For example, the Englishman Sir John Hawkwood took his White Company into the Italian wars and ended up a major player in the history of Northern Italy (fighting primarily for Florence, I seem to remember, or was it Milan? Anyway, he's buried in one or the other of the cities he fought for in the late fourteenth century). Many French free companies went south after the close of major hostilities in France after the death of the Black Prince and Edward III, when the French crown finally found the breathing space to get their house, and kingdom, in order. As turmoil increased in Italy in the Quintecento (Sp?), many mercenaries of many nationalities enlisted in the various city armies that were formed...or such was my understanding, anyway. I believe that's when the Popes Swiss Guards first came into being, for example. Martin From: kellogg at rohan.sdsu.edu (C. Kevin Kellogg) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Mercenary Persona Date: 9 Oct 1995 17:50:46 GMT Organization: San Diego State University Computing Services Craig Levin (clevin at ripco.com) wrote: : Normans were found fighting as mercenaries as far away from home : as Italy, Spain, and for the Eastern Roman Empire, which had : hired soldiers for years, usually from Scandinavia (the fabled : Varangian Guard). Not just Scandinavia. There were other specialized ethnic units, like the Bucelariaii (sp?) or "Biscuit-eaters", primarily of slavic descent. They also hired various steppes horsemen, like the Petchenegs. Avenel Kellough From: afn01747 at afn.org (Steven W. Brooks) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Mercenary Persona Date: 11 Oct 1995 19:59:45 GMT Just a little note on Norman mercenaries: In 1084, Pope Gregory VII sought out the aid of Robert Guiscard to break a siege of Rome by Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV. The Norman army of 36,000, mostly Muslims recruited by the Normans, managed to break the siege, but then turned around and sacked the city themselves. They burned, pillaged, massacred thousands, and took thousands more as slaves. Ooooh, those wacky Normans! Syr Terrell (a Norman knight) Subject: ANST - Mercenaries Inn Mailing List Date: Wed, 17 Feb 99 14:40:38 MST From: "Duncan Macathal" To: Greetings unto all from Donnchad "Duncan" Macathal and the House of the Ishee! Lords and Ladies, have you ever needed a good mercenary, but had trouble locating them? Well now I, Duncan, have provided you with a means to do so. The Mercenaries Inn is a mailing list provided to you by myself and the House of the Ishee to establish contact or discussions with others of the mercenary nature. Interested parties can find out more by contacting myself, or visiting http://www.geocities.com/Soho/Nook/4825/mercinn.html Remember that the content of the list is provided by the list, so it will be slightly slow going in the first few days. Spread the message to the far reaches of your companions and join us at the Inn! Yours In Service (for a price), Donnchad "Duncan" Macathal House of the Ishee Seargent-at-Arms/WebMinister http://www.geocities.com/Soho/Nook/4825 Edited by Mark S. Harris mercenaries-msg Page 10 of 10