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#1 | |
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Wielder of Smart Pants
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Ventura CA
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#2 |
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Shoreline, WA (north of Seattle)
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It's not the far end of the Med, it's on the other side of the Aegean - which is to say, well within usual raiding and trading range. That said, it seems a loose blockade and alliance-building phase is more likely than the classic siege, and would also make an excellent RP campaign. PCs could be envoys/heroes for either side, and alternate between blockade running/enforcing and trying to woo allies to their side, plus the usual business of propitiating gods, killing monsters, and continuing petty feuds with their nominal friends.
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#3 | |
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: On the road again...
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That said, I expect there was some exaggeration of timelines involved in order to fit the "ten years of war" established by Homer. Realistically, I can see maybe three years of declared war, with much of that time being ships blockading the Trojan port on the Aegean but unable to prevent overland travel from Anatolia or farther up the Dardenalles. I could expect there to be a constant shifting of forces in the region until the final push. Mythologically, the war was basically a stalemate until Odysseus came up with the Horse ploy anyway. From a historical point of view, the war was probably over Trojan taxation of ships entering and leaving the Dardenalles/Hellespont in order to pass through to the Black Sea for the amber that was mined there. If we assume a grain of truth to the "Prince of Troy absconds with the Queen of Sparta" part of the story, we either have a woman running from an abusive husband into the arms of a charming visiting prince, or an arrogant prince thinking he can get away with it because he's the prince of Troy and he's claiming a "royal privilege" from a "subject" city-state - quite possibly both! - and the King of Sparta and his brother using that as an excuse to feed their own ambition. If there is a historical grain of truth to the myth that Helen's half-brother Heracles sacked Troy a generation and a half before, instilling Priam as king there, the Trojan War of The Iliad was not the first time the Mycenaeans and Ionians bashed heads over the route.
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"Life ... is an Oreo cookie." - J'onn J'onzz, 1991 "But mom, I don't wanna go back in the dungeon!" The GURPS Marvel Universe Reboot Project A-G, H-R, and S-Z, and its not-a-wiki-really web adaptation. Ranoc, a Muskets-and-Magery Renaissance Fantasy Setting Last edited by Phantasm; 07-13-2017 at 01:17 PM. |
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#4 |
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Wielder of Smart Pants
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Ventura CA
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Sure, but "some period of unpleasantness between a constantly shifting network of Mycenaean and Ioian city-states" describes a war that is nothing like the Iliad, except metaphorically. It certainly isn't "the Iliad but atheist" the way Troy was supposed to be.
Last edited by sir_pudding; 07-13-2017 at 01:57 PM. |
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#5 | |
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: On the road again...
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I think the issue is that we're discussing both the historical Trojan War and the legendary one detailed by Homer and others at the same time and signals are getting crossed. I quite admit that it's unlikely (though not impossible) for the Trojan War to last ten years; however, everyone in classical times who wrote their plays and poems about it felt compelled to keep it "ten years" and filled in the blanks, not realizing or ignoring how unlikely some of the stuff really was. As I said before, I can see the actual war lasting three years tops, with the events of The Iliad and Odysseus's Trojan Horse ploy and subsequent Sacking of Troy happening in the spring of the third year before the harvest. (Planting season in the Aegean is in the fall, due to mild winters and roasting summers. The original myths in the Classical Greek recorded Persephone spending the summers, not the winters, with Hades due to it being way too hot to grow crops in the summers there. It's only translations by those used to Northern European climate that didn't understand the Aegean climate being that warm that translated the myth to her spending winters.... but I digress big time.) And most of that three year time period would be spent blockading the port with a rotation of Achaean ships from the various factions in order to put pressure on Troy. Think of how it tends to work in real life: before the ground war starts, there are attempts to pressure capitulation through blockades preventing reinforcements/trade and projection of air power to smash the anti-air defenses. Given that there are no dragons or giant eagles to ride, even in The Iliad, we can ignore the smashing of anti-air defenses. :)
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"Life ... is an Oreo cookie." - J'onn J'onzz, 1991 "But mom, I don't wanna go back in the dungeon!" The GURPS Marvel Universe Reboot Project A-G, H-R, and S-Z, and its not-a-wiki-really web adaptation. Ranoc, a Muskets-and-Magery Renaissance Fantasy Setting Last edited by Phantasm; 08-12-2021 at 01:04 AM. |
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#6 | |
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Join Date: May 2007
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IIRC Homer (or the Homeroi -- some scholars now think that "Homer" was a name given to the fictitious single author of a batch of poets) wrote about five hundred years after the events of the Iliad/Odyssey. So they may well have not known how Myceanean warfare worked. I could see a period of years in which groups of Greeks would be home in the spring to get the planting in, raid the shores of Troy's region in the summer, and return home in time for the harvest. "Homer" may simply not have known that the Greeks didn't actually camp outside the walls for the years of warfare. |
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#7 | |
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Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Portland, Oregon
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In any event that was the majority of warfare for most of history. A war might be just directing your animus against a specific polity as opposed to anyone who was not your neighbor. Ratcheting it up to an actual campaign was an intermittent event and peace was even less common but raiding was the norm. As late as the 1500's the Mediterranean tended to work more or less like that.
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"The navy could probably win a war without coffee but would prefer not to try"-Samuel Eliot Morrison Last edited by jason taylor; 07-13-2017 at 10:44 PM. |
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#8 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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HMS Overflow-For conversations off topic here. Last edited by Johnny1A.2; 07-13-2017 at 10:42 PM. |
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#9 |
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Lawrence, KS
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I was told exactly that by a friend (actually she's my wife's oldest friend, whom I met much later) who is a professor of classics at a university in Texas. And it does kind of make sense.
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Bill Stoddard I don't think we're in Oz any more. |
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| Tags |
| artifact, mythology |
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