Legionnaire vs Gaul with a spear

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  • čas přidán 24. 08. 2024
  • Adrian from Boston Armizare, and Jake from Resurgam HEMA reenact a classical battle of the Romans vs the Gauls.

Komentáře • 329

  • @Adniwhack
    @Adniwhack Před 3 lety +690

    man, this is wrong. there should be either a small gaul or a large obese gaul, with a tiny dog.

    • @Jompo92
      @Jompo92 Před 3 lety +72

      Obelix is not obese, he is big boned.

    • @justmonez
      @justmonez Před 3 lety +6

      @@Jompo92 yes!

    • @matchboxlover9797
      @matchboxlover9797 Před 3 lety

      @@Jompo92 big bones are a myth

    • @Jompo92
      @Jompo92 Před 3 lety +16

      @@matchboxlover9797 That is simply not true. I have read the comics and seen the truth.

    • @avpradhan
      @avpradhan Před 3 lety +6

      Obelix is not obese, he is just well covered 😉😉

  • @badfoody
    @badfoody Před 4 lety +624

    Usual logic: Spear and shield is superior
    The Roman Legion: CLOSING THE GAP

    • @duartemonteiro9459
      @duartemonteiro9459 Před 3 lety +12

      Normally spear without shield is superior

    • @darkjill2007
      @darkjill2007 Před 3 lety +34

      @@duartemonteiro9459 It depends on the situation. If your a skilled fighter dueling another fighter sure. But if your being fired at by archers or standing in a line I think the spear and shield would be superior. There's just not enough room to maneuver in formation. On top of that there's no way to tell were the attack is coming from its just a wall of sharp pointy bits poking at you. Another point is moral. Most of the humans throughout history who fought with spear and shield were levy troops, conscripted farmers. I bet it's way easier talking a group of farmers to stand against a charge if they have a shield. You ever watch that lyndbeige video over the topic. Sounds like a awful way to fight. On par with standing in a musket firing line.

    • @jeimmyguizargongorajeinsgo7079
      @jeimmyguizargongorajeinsgo7079 Před 3 lety

      En el caso de que la lanza, es mas de 3.5 mtrs, pero pierde fortaleza y flexibilidad a los flancos.

    • @darkjill2007
      @darkjill2007 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jeimmyguizargongorajeinsgo7079 I don't think you'd throw the spears used in formation. That's more of a stand and stab meekly sort of thing.

    • @jeimmyguizargongorajeinsgo7079
      @jeimmyguizargongorajeinsgo7079 Před 3 lety

      ​@@darkjill2007 si como los casos de falanges macedonias, es estilo barrido.
      Mas tiene buena fortaleza frontal, trente a testudos, escuderos, etc, su debilidad es no tener escudos mas grandes, y pierde maniobrabilidad a los flancos.

  • @armorvestrus6882
    @armorvestrus6882 Před 5 lety +548

    The guy with the spear should have had an advantage but the Roman shield is hard to beat. Cheers.

    • @adriangunn
      @adriangunn Před 5 lety +50

      Fighting sword vs spear is always a tough prospect in nearly any situation. The trick for the swordsman to get past the spear point, then the spearman is in trouble. This is especially true if the spearman doesn't have a shield.

    • @dorian-stefanmarciuc9939
      @dorian-stefanmarciuc9939 Před 4 lety +6

      he should have dropped the shield to manouver that spear with two hands to be faster and more effective

    • @shadowdeslaar
      @shadowdeslaar Před 4 lety

      Ahmed Mustafa he would’ve been stabbed by the spear
      And also shield less

    • @dorian-stefanmarciuc9939
      @dorian-stefanmarciuc9939 Před 4 lety +1

      @@shadowdeslaar by what spear

    • @shadowdeslaar
      @shadowdeslaar Před 4 lety +16

      Ahmed Mustafa the Gaul had a spear
      From my experience
      Spears are relatively easy to counter when not tired
      To drop your shield is to get stabbed by a spear
      Never drop your shield
      Ever!

  • @TheGiacomo12345
    @TheGiacomo12345 Před 3 lety +335

    A roman general of Julius Cesar says "Roman's legion owes more to picks and shovels than shields and spears".

    • @samgott8689
      @samgott8689 Před 3 lety +75

      It’s true, and you miss an extremely important component to the success of the legions if you miss it. Field engineering, logistics, organization on the strategic level, and a commander that knows how to maximize all of those things, consistently prove to be the unsexy things that give Rome the edge. Incidentally, all of those things largely come from organizational memory: a standing, professional army is able to keep and pass on what it has learned in a way that a conscripted army has to primarily gain by its own experience, if it survives the process. It’s no joke belonging to an army that has hundreds of years of practical experience across all kinds of situations. Or fighting against one, for that matter; and here’s you, some petty Gaulic chieftain who’s only ever fought other Celts...maybe once you got called up into a larger confederation to repulse the Germans. Caesar played coy in his Gaulic War for the readers back home: “Well, it was touch and go for a minute there... and then we massacred all of them.” His war in Gaul was a slaughter; they stood no chance against that kind of an army.
      That’s a lot of rambling: if you’re still with me, my point is that the quote is accurate. Individual discipline, training, and equipment, and tactical flexibility count for a lot, but were hardly unique to Rome. The lessons learned and maintained throughout centuries as the Roman army became an institution - how to prepare fortifications every night, how dig in to lay or repel a siege, how to how to build bridges, roads, and walls, how to keep tens of thousands of men in fighting shape in the field indefinitely and prevent the enemy from doing the same, how to properly organize, making soldiering a career instead of a seasonal civic duty - those were what made it special and successful.

    • @reportx9633
      @reportx9633 Před 3 lety +8

      Wow. You guys know what you are talking about. That is some in-depth knowledge about the topic

    • @samgott8689
      @samgott8689 Před 3 lety +8

      Yeah, Rome is a fascinating case study on the topic of military and political development; especially since it’s not always clear which is driving which, the two were inseparably linked.
      But nothing teaches you about logistics better than chasing the Carthaginians into Sicily, Spain, or North Africa. No better place to learn about sieges than a tour of Macaedonia and Greece (just don’t ask how Syracuse went...). You wanna know the value of not just throwing away fresh recruits, you’ll learn it losing multiple legions under the command of inexperienced generals to the Teutones or Hannibal while they stomp around Italy with impunity.

    • @shoretrooper74
      @shoretrooper74 Před 3 lety

      @@reportx9633 you can be like them you know. All it takes is research. I read a whole 300 page book about roman history. It was very interesting and informing

    • @samgott8689
      @samgott8689 Před 3 lety +4

      You already hinted at part of it: the legions of the 4th century were NOT the same as the 1st BC, nor was Rome itself - especially in the West, which would fall, while the East would go on until 1465. There’s a ton of factors as to how and why things got so bad in the West, but I suspect the real issue is that when you think of the Germanic tribes at this time you’re thinking of Conan the Barbarian and his buddies. They had been in contact with Rome and influenced by fighting them for 4 centuries, consistently getting stomped and pacified at first, except for one notable ambush, but growing to be a bigger problem every time. By the time they started migrating west they were fairly sophisticated societies with armies sufficient to beat what Rome was fielding at the time. They weren’t as complex as the Rome of the late Republic/Early Empire, but neither was Rome itself. The west was in a state of serious decline all around, and would stay that way until the First Crusade reestablished regular contact and trade with the East (although Charlemagne has a little renaissance of his own).

  • @ganjalfdergrune4279
    @ganjalfdergrune4279 Před 3 lety +122

    01:18 that little exhausting idle animation got me 😂💚

    • @XavierZazi
      @XavierZazi Před 3 lety +2

      Animation?

    • @ganjalfdergrune4279
      @ganjalfdergrune4279 Před 3 lety +12

      @@XavierZazi Because it looked like animation from video games when u out of stamina 😅✌🏼

  • @brendanvecchio5449
    @brendanvecchio5449 Před 3 lety +280

    PULLO! BACK IN FORMATION!!

    • @munkor1
      @munkor1 Před 3 lety +3

      Great show

    • @redsol3629
      @redsol3629 Před 3 lety +3

      Justice knows every mans number!

    • @LoLFilmStudios
      @LoLFilmStudios Před 3 lety +1

      Good comment :)

    • @gbendicion7052
      @gbendicion7052 Před 3 lety +3

      Man of culture i see lol

    • @jota357
      @jota357 Před 3 lety +1

      Loved the series. For those who don't know what we are talking about, the series is called Rome. 10/10 would watch again.

  • @pastorofmuppets9346
    @pastorofmuppets9346 Před 3 lety +26

    proof that adidas made the best sport shoes even back in antiquity

  • @TreiberSeptim
    @TreiberSeptim Před 3 lety +140

    Now remember. There were no gaps, no dancing around. There was just a wall of legionaries, relentless, drilled and switching to keep up stamina. A hacksaw of shields and swords, slowly advancing and grinding whatever was under its heels.

    • @OutnBacker
      @OutnBacker Před 2 lety +9

      Pretty much so. If a Roman was caught out of formation with a short sword like the gladius, he was likely not long for this world. I'm not sure there is nay evidence for swordsmanship traing for legionaires outside of cloes-in thrust and short slash movements. Any Romans soldier who was forced back by an individual enemy would have been stopped by the rank behind, and would likely have had another trooper thrust out to help, or grab the spear possibly. They had fantastic armor protection and might have been well prepared for any one handed sprear thrust, by simply turning the torso to slip the blow if the point got past the shield, and still have been able to stand in place. Just my 2 cents. I wasn't there....

    • @MB-oc1nw
      @MB-oc1nw Před 2 lety +1

      @@OutnBacker until they started using the longer spatha instead of the gladius

    • @AmiableLion
      @AmiableLion Před rokem +3

      Just my two cents but it's kinda hard to beat the Roman combination. A well armored Roman soldier with short sword in a tight formation. Versus a lightly armored (if any) Gaul with a spear and shield. And that is if they still had a shield after a pilum was thrown honestly the Romans were hard to beat In their time. I find it interesting though that spear and shield was used so long, I think armor plays a role in which weapons were used.

    • @MrAlepedroza
      @MrAlepedroza Před rokem +7

      @@AmiableLion Except that "roman combination" is a myth: the romans did not just block and thrust like a meat grinder, they also threw short slashes and cuts, the gladius being feared by its ability to amputate limbs. The romans did train in individual combat with gladiator instructors and were known for being good individual fighters...and that requires a decent amount of space, at least meter between each legionnary. That's not super tight, indeed spearmen stood closer to each other than that and could do something the romans couldn't: use those gaps between the legionaries to stab diagonnaly from outside the range of the gladius.
      The gauls were not that lightly armoured either, they were well known for their metallurgy, so much the romans copied their armor,lol.
      As for why spear and shield prevailed over sword and shield: sword and shield is weak against cavalry and often is bad when fighting in retreat. Spears are much better at that, since they can keep enemies at a longer range.

    • @alessandrom7181
      @alessandrom7181 Před rokem +1

      John Tyler
      It's also a myth that the Roman armor was copied from Gauls if by coping you mean the Lorica segmentata. LOL
      The only thing Romans could have copied from Gauls is a kind of chainmail, but chainmail was already used in Italy by many italic tribes as well who had nothing to do with Gauls.

  • @user-yh4tc5vh5f
    @user-yh4tc5vh5f Před 5 lety +294

    Well the scutum was designed to be used in formation. It's very different to be fighting a wall of guys all lined up with those scutums, which were in real life narrower, suggesting the formation was quite tight so each soldier would mostly swing from above and in the sides, and rarely have to make big maneuvers.

    • @adriangunn
      @adriangunn Před 5 lety +36

      Becuase Romans of the period the scutum was in use were primarily swordsmen rather than spearmen (as in the Greek Phalanx or the Saxon sheild wall) it is now generally believed the Roman formations were fairly open to allow the gladius to be used effectively. The comparative openess and thus flexibilty of the Roman style formations gave them an advanatge on rough or broken ground over the tighter and less flexible Greek and Macedonian style phalanx which in part helps explain Roman victories in battles like the Battle of Cynoscephalae. Legionaries could close ranks and tighten up when necessary (vs. cavalry or missiles), but retained the tacitcal flexibility to fight in a more open array - this also in theory at least - facilited line relief where the second rank could pass forward easily through the first rank and so on.

    • @user-yh4tc5vh5f
      @user-yh4tc5vh5f Před 5 lety +4

      @@adriangunn Well I was mainly talking about the rectangular scutum of the post principate period

    • @nicko978
      @nicko978 Před 3 lety +10

      @@adriangunn Roman overall field formations were loose "blocks" which enabled the referenced maneuverability described vs the Hellenistic phalanx formations. Roman front lines were tight.

    • @Toujeo
      @Toujeo Před 3 lety

      buhuhu

    • @jothegreek
      @jothegreek Před 3 lety

      That's not true

  • @Lil_Smelly
    @Lil_Smelly Před 3 lety +20

    Now line up 10 roman guys and let 10 gauls charge at them, that will be a more realistic depiction of how the fight would have gone

  • @michaloewenstein9566
    @michaloewenstein9566 Před 3 lety +113

    I cant be the only one to realise that the strength of the romans was in their formations. To accurately portray thus you have to have atleast a few guys fighting each other

    • @1helluvaguy738
      @1helluvaguy738 Před 3 lety +5

      Be a pretty entertaining scrap too, no?

    • @gipsymelody1268
      @gipsymelody1268 Před 3 lety +2

      yeah formations too it is the reason why they used these type of weapons even armors mostly protect their upper body but aslo they had power with alone but if they do duel then mostly used round shields or not used shields because they was very quick and mobile fightning style

    • @VirtualVictoryTM
      @VirtualVictoryTM Před 3 lety

      Not just the romans.... Literally every army... Or have you not heard of a phalanx... 🙄

    • @lucaswinsor4469
      @lucaswinsor4469 Před 3 lety +3

      @@VirtualVictoryTM the romans (and Alexander Before them) took the Phalanx from being an immobile, inflexible formation that required proper terrain and specialized almost exclusively in defense, and improved it so vastly that it was almost unrecognizable by the time the roman empire fell. The Phalanx was little more than a starting point, And this video and comment were about the Romans, NOT formations in general. Which makes your comment pointless and off topic.

    • @VirtualVictoryTM
      @VirtualVictoryTM Před 3 lety

      @@lucaswinsor4469 @Lucas Winsor Alexander didn't improve the phalanx formation.. yes the hoplites differed from the Greek Hoplite shield size changed. But it was still slow. No what Alexander did is compensate the phalanx hopilites weaknesses by placing hypaspists on the flanks of the the formation. Alexander knew how to use the phalanx hopilite and was well aware of it's downsides... Unlike others after him like Philip V.

  • @koookeee
    @koookeee Před 3 lety +26

    Whoa, that Gaul is not wielding his spear the Lindybeige-way!

  • @jakobatredies1114
    @jakobatredies1114 Před 3 lety +32

    I feel like the dude using the Roman shield was using it wrong.
    You don't need to raise to deflect blows. Tuck behind it and push forward. Spear blows would Glance off of it allowing you to thrust with the sword.

    • @zoramaitken3449
      @zoramaitken3449 Před 3 lety +2

      There is no greater weapon than using the one in your hand correctly

    • @jacklaurentius6130
      @jacklaurentius6130 Před 3 lety +5

      He’s using the shield as if it were small and light

    • @unlimited6884
      @unlimited6884 Před 3 lety

      @@jacklaurentius6130 i think since he was more accustomed in usibg a buckler instead

    • @TheGreenTaco999
      @TheGreenTaco999 Před 3 lety +2

      also he needs to point his foot to the side to better protect his lower weak points,
      source: 'Roman fencing - Protection and attack technique'
      but yeah, the Scutum is not for parrying, it's for blocking.

  • @zionistcat1807
    @zionistcat1807 Před 3 lety +13

    Awesome. They even brought a Numidian auxiliary.

    • @MAACH02
      @MAACH02 Před 3 lety

      Yo why i laughed at this?

  • @KruTerry
    @KruTerry Před 3 lety +51

    I've watched this video over and over and over again over the course of a few years and always wished I could join in the fun, I love history and Rome and swords and HEMA and.... NEVER noticed that this is BOSTON Armizare!!!! From Framingham: I love you all and are you still practicing during COVID? Can I join?

    • @ro4486
      @ro4486 Před 3 lety +11

      Somebody help this mans

    • @hyperceptional
      @hyperceptional Před 3 lety

      @@ro4486 lol

    • @niklashrast8122
      @niklashrast8122 Před 3 lety

      Same here man, there isn't anything like this in austria, especially not since covid.
      And if there is its just shows, like who tf cares I want to fight myself!

    • @edwardrichard2561
      @edwardrichard2561 Před 3 lety +1

      Hema the sport of trying to bring back European combat styles with out actual combat. More like point fighting.

    • @anthonysoprano9353
      @anthonysoprano9353 Před 3 lety

      @@niklashrast8122 they had showers with strange air for sports

  • @dominiccoscarelli305
    @dominiccoscarelli305 Před 3 lety +10

    The roman shield is op. It's like the guy wearing it their almost no openings.

    • @michaelgallacher4800
      @michaelgallacher4800 Před 3 lety

      Yehh also super heavy tho that's a 1:40 fight and he's struggling to bring it up towards the end. Great as part of a wall. Not so great in a 1v1. All anyone would havto do is bait the head over n over and get him to tire out and slow down then slash at the legs from range then bait the legs and switch high and the spod wouldn't be there when tired to go for a low block then be able to switch it a up and block high. It's the down side of big shields. Movement wins 9 times out of 10.

    • @ignotumperignotius630
      @ignotumperignotius630 Před 3 lety

      @@michaelgallacher4800 all you do is keep advancing, of course. If the gaul had buddies blocking the way back, that's the end of it.

  • @butsmash
    @butsmash Před 6 lety +24

    Pretty cool. I think the Gaul eventually realized that the roman would raise his shield to block higher and so was continuously baiting it. I'm not an expert but from my point of view, I don't think the shield should or needs to be raised as such to block higher. Leaving yourself very open down low to a fast spear point looks pretty dangerous. I think that when he sticks his spear towards your face you should punch forward with it rather than lift the scutum face up. Catching the shaft of the spear, in essence disabling/distracting it, and then stabbing around his shield like you do in the end. Again, really cool vids guys!

    • @armorvestrus6882
      @armorvestrus6882 Před 5 lety +4

      Nice comment I agree the swordsman should make every effort to press pass the spear and get on the inside leaving the other in an undefended situation.

    • @SteveSmith-ty8ko
      @SteveSmith-ty8ko Před 3 lety +2

      @@armorvestrus6882 It’s important to be aggressive especially when you’re carrying around such a large and protective shield like the scutum.

  • @drngzm1974
    @drngzm1974 Před 3 lety +7

    they fight like total war AI

  • @Bloodycupcake54
    @Bloodycupcake54 Před 3 lety +8

    I'm looking forward to the celtic one magic blue paint is hard to beat

  • @joshm3484
    @joshm3484 Před 3 lety +1

    So much advice in the comments, from so many people, who have never done anything even close to this.

  • @commanderbeepo8066
    @commanderbeepo8066 Před 3 lety +2

    The polearm, the king of the battlefield!

  • @thevanillatoast
    @thevanillatoast Před 3 lety +2

    spear: i am yin
    legionnaire's shield: then i must be yang.

  • @shadowdeslaar
    @shadowdeslaar Před 4 lety +31

    Your helmet would’ve helped you From the weak impact of spearsmen
    You be fought liek this. Theirs no real power up close with spears. It’s gotta be at the spears tip
    Not sides

    • @yolfio3873
      @yolfio3873 Před 3 lety +2

      Even with no helmet he wouldn’t even be hurt

    • @shadowdeslaar
      @shadowdeslaar Před 3 lety

      @@yolfio3873 he would feel his helmet get hit. Witch is important.
      1- you know your alive and still in the fight .
      2- you know just how close you are to the enemy.
      3- just how lousy trained spearsmen really are terrible against any trained force. Including the infamous legionary.

  • @KyoSamourai
    @KyoSamourai Před 3 lety +2

    As someone who's been practicing gallic sparing in a HEMA club for 5 years, this is painful to watch.
    That's not a gallic shield, that's not how you hold a spear, that's not even how you're supposed to fight as a scandinavian (since this is more of a medieval scandinavian equipment than a gallic one).

  • @safeysmith6720
    @safeysmith6720 Před 3 lety +2

    Against the spear, close the gap and get past the shield.
    The Romans played with these variations with the different types of gladiators... but really, the shield and short sword was most effective when in numbers and locked together.

  • @ytuberrRolid397
    @ytuberrRolid397 Před 4 lety +3

    ARE YOU NOT ENTERTAINED?!

  • @azimus1776
    @azimus1776 Před 3 lety +1

    It would be interesting to do this in some kind of simulated close order. The spearman can count on help from the ranks behind him, but the swordsman is on his own. All the manuevering is interesting but a bit of a farce, no one had that kind of room to move around and work to your weapon's best advantage.

  • @joshc1394
    @joshc1394 Před 3 lety +8

    How do I get into this? Where can I buy stuff and get training material? Are there competitions?

    • @jackcarter2712
      @jackcarter2712 Před 3 lety +4

      I think it's called HEMA (Historical European martial arts)

  • @linming5610
    @linming5610 Před 2 lety

    Gauls also uses similar long rectangular or oblong shields. It's the nobles who uses round shields because they are cavalry.

  • @jj987987987
    @jj987987987 Před 3 lety +1

    spear and shield is more of a formation weapon, it's really hard to be effective in 1v1 situation.

  • @mofogie
    @mofogie Před 3 lety

    Legionnaires were meant to fight in formation. What would most likely happen is the gaul would have nowhere to manuever, and his shield might be busted from a pilum. Then the Roman would be in minimum range of the spear, where the Gaul would not be able to fight effectively

  • @vitezu
    @vitezu Před 3 lety +1

    Not to take anything away from these guys but I'm pretty sure the gladius is supposed to be kept behind the shield

  • @cenktuneygok8986
    @cenktuneygok8986 Před 3 lety

    Sword for duel, spear for fighting as a unit.

  • @binxbolling
    @binxbolling Před 7 měsíci

    With shields, size matters. Romans figured this out before anyone else did. Except the Mycenaeans perhaps.

  • @TWSummary
    @TWSummary Před rokem

    Yes in reality the spearmen couldnt really back up to give himself reach. Cause the rank behind him would prevent him from doing so.
    Also the gladius is always hidden behind the shield so as to conceal where the attack came from.

  • @alexkingkaiju94
    @alexkingkaiju94 Před 6 lety +21

    where did you get the scutum?

    • @adriangunn
      @adriangunn Před 5 lety +1

      Its a Depeeka Scutum bought from Soul of the Warrior.

    • @sacramentum1988
      @sacramentum1988 Před 4 lety +1

      @@adriangunn Yeah, Deepeeka. They're overly heavy, with a very poor boss. You can also get them off of Kult of Athena.

  • @Allinone27
    @Allinone27 Před 3 lety

    i think the spearguy holds the advantage in an open battle. simply cause the roman equipement was designed to fight in formation rather than this example here. you just dont get enough space to whield a longsword in formation battle.first pilum is thrown, not necessarly to kill the enemy but to make his shield unusable. secondly he'll be confronted with a wall of shields, each one protecting the shoulders of the legionaire next to him. in such close combats its where the gladius shines. its a thrusting weapon, not meant to be slice. its all about close combat formation fights with this equipement. in the late stages of the roman empire they actually abandoned the gladius and equiped the legionaires with the longer roman cavalry sword cause fights tended to become more guerilla like, more 1v1 fights since big open field battles became rarer and rarer.

  • @shashankdeepak879
    @shashankdeepak879 Před 3 lety +1

    And that is how Gergovia happened

  • @godking
    @godking Před 3 lety

    The scutum is the ultimate shield for one on one close quarter combat on foot.

  • @no-gracias9863
    @no-gracias9863 Před 3 lety

    If someone is using a spear you should absolutely close the gap

  • @DJUwU
    @DJUwU Před 3 lety +4

    *Actually the other guy is wrong - the sword and shield should have an advantage in an 1v1 situation.* The spear and shield is better used in large formations....yet in 1v1 combat...the sword can just rush the guy with the spear using the large shield as protection....and going for cutting off the legs/foot....which is a common tactic used which the re-enacter did not capitalize on. Spears are better than duel wielding swords....but sword/axe and shield is king. (if you take plate armored halberd guys out of the equation...which those guys get trumped by longbowmen....its like rock paper scissors really)

  • @f4ptr989
    @f4ptr989 Před 3 lety

    And then theres me with a gun in my pocket.

  • @sushiromifune7096
    @sushiromifune7096 Před 3 lety

    I did Kendo at a high school in Japan. We haven't had a hand shield for a long time. I wanna do this!

  • @Ledavidiado
    @Ledavidiado Před 3 lety +1

    Gaul obviously did not take his magic potion

  • @hoop6988
    @hoop6988 Před 3 lety

    A large shield is cancer to deal with if you’re a spearman.

  • @jackforester8456
    @jackforester8456 Před 3 lety

    Judging solely from what I see and so not from an expert point of view I feel like the scutum could have been used to push and unbalance more. My compliments to both though, particularly in showing how agile a spear and shield combination can be even if not in formation

  • @Rageknight901
    @Rageknight901 Před 3 lety

    It’s a good fight and good show of combat trials between chiefs and centurions however in a pitched battle the point was when you can’t go backwards cause there’s a thousand guys behind you pushing forward and you can’t go forward cause a Roman line is in the way the spear becomes useless and the short Roman gladius was designed to stab forward and they couldn’t pull away

  • @ustujnin
    @ustujnin Před 3 lety

    The spear lacks reach-around - the 'roman' should press forward, bridge the gap and try to attack whilst the distance between him and the base of the enemy's spear is minimal. The shield up while sword cuts/slashes horizontally underneath it would be a start.

  • @arsen2506
    @arsen2506 Před 3 lety

    Damn, these Romans are crazy

  • @evantaylor2938
    @evantaylor2938 Před 3 lety

    This looks like loads of fun

  • @mr.tomatohead3709
    @mr.tomatohead3709 Před 3 lety

    When the German and Italian have beef

  • @Noah-rc3ip
    @Noah-rc3ip Před 2 lety

    pretty cool. If I were the roman I would probably not keep my distance like that. I would just fully commit and stay inside

  • @OldScratch81
    @OldScratch81 Před 9 měsíci

    Roman shield was keeping him alive 😕otherwise it looked like it would’ve been over for him

  • @wildghost1978
    @wildghost1978 Před 3 lety

    A lone Legionnaire is nothing, He only works within a centurion and with a pilum. If you want a great lone warrior you have to look for a Berserker, a Samurai, a Shaolin Monk. If your are looking for an army a Legionnaire or a Spartan is your best choice.

    • @willrobinson5350
      @willrobinson5350 Před 2 lety

      Samurai? If the Romans had gotten to Japan Japanese would have become just another Romance language.

  • @JoshCarpetano
    @JoshCarpetano Před 3 lety

    The spear is not always the best option against swords. If the opponent gets too close the lenght of the spear is a problem because the spearman can only strike with the shield and try to gain distance between him and the opponent. In this case, the roman equipment os better than spear and shield in a 1vs1 combat.

  • @Borthax
    @Borthax Před 3 lety

    Not much of a reenactment but more of a demonstration of how the scutum protects the legionary.

  • @justintyme8542
    @justintyme8542 Před 3 lety

    Goddamn imagine how tiring this was back then

  • @siraethelwulf8914
    @siraethelwulf8914 Před 3 lety +2

    Yes, we know, the Romans fought in formation. Let 2 guys have fun jesus

    • @amplified1288
      @amplified1288 Před 3 lety

      Did you know that the Romans normally fought in formation?

  • @canas1531
    @canas1531 Před 3 lety

    Well now im' remembering the weapon triangle of fire emblem.

  • @mikha007
    @mikha007 Před 3 lety

    gaul needs to find a way to hold spear with 2 hands while retaining shield.

  • @user-hy1db7bb1x
    @user-hy1db7bb1x Před 3 lety

    Do you dare to fight with my two-handed swords?

  • @colinmccarthy7921
    @colinmccarthy7921 Před 3 lety +1

    The Legionnaire could off used his sword to wound his opponent many times on the legs.That would be game other.

    • @Dasel22
      @Dasel22 Před 3 lety

      I watched a documentary and it said they only used it to stab since battles lasted for hours sometimes and they would be exausted from swinging the sword around.There was also the risk they would hit another legionare because they fought in tight formations

  • @brunogagne459
    @brunogagne459 Před 3 lety +1

    sundenly more roman join and you hear TESTUDO!

  • @baptistev6659
    @baptistev6659 Před 3 lety

    It make no sense, first Gauls use rarely those type of shield, secondly this shield is designed to be used with the sword to hide the blade behind and what is doing the guy with the Roman shield ? Why is he throwing it in the air ?

  • @strategos5222
    @strategos5222 Před 3 lety

    Until you factor in that these two men would be crushed together by the mass of men behind them. Having 6 feet of range is irrelevant when fighting from 6 inches.

  • @wynterratkowiak2705
    @wynterratkowiak2705 Před 3 lety +1

    I want to do this sooooo bad looks like fun

  • @DarkVoidRanker
    @DarkVoidRanker Před 3 lety

    When you accidentally swap weapons(or shields)

  • @dudemcradguy
    @dudemcradguy Před 3 lety

    This place looks so fun

  • @Porcelainbowl
    @Porcelainbowl Před 3 lety

    First of all.. it's a spear. Not a lightsaber. Second. Legionaries dont dance around waving their scutum around. They move in. Get close. Stay close and stab

  • @yavehsuarez9392
    @yavehsuarez9392 Před 3 lety

    Isn't the roman suppose to tuck his sword behind the shield

  • @DimanArtworks
    @DimanArtworks Před rokem

    Sometimes i wonder how much these guys would get destroyed by an actual ancient experienced fighters.
    They look like the grown up children playing.

  • @ballsflying
    @ballsflying Před 10 měsíci

    Scutum rests on the knee and the foot under it should be turned inward, otherwise your foot was a nice target.

  • @badfoody
    @badfoody Před 3 lety

    Is it inconvenient to fight with a longsword and a scutum?

  • @Astraben
    @Astraben Před 3 lety

    Gauls used rectangular shields.

  • @TheGreenTaco999
    @TheGreenTaco999 Před 3 lety

    you're meant to keep the scutum further out than your toe and keep your foot angled to the side, so you can slam it down to protect your feet if the spearman attacks there, without destroying your foot yourself, this guy with the scutum is not doing that and at 1:18 it gets really bad, sourcing from youtube video 'Roman fencing - Protection and attack technique'

  • @davidquezada50
    @davidquezada50 Před 3 lety

    Spears beat swords also they need to keep their shields to their chest

  • @edouardlorge4059
    @edouardlorge4059 Před 3 lety

    the roman scutum was taken from celts.

  • @NapoleonBonaparde
    @NapoleonBonaparde Před 3 lety

    The Roman would be in a disciplined line, but anyways that wouldn't help him cuz the Gaul would have a potion of strength

  • @robertfogelberg7538
    @robertfogelberg7538 Před 3 lety

    Very good one of the best but two suggestion use a arming sword maybe Fabris armour he has a bit shorter I believe the guy with a spear that is a German franc goth will do bather only with a spear hope to meet you soon great work

  • @phoenixrivera6715
    @phoenixrivera6715 Před 8 měsíci

    Where is that synthetic Gladius from?

  • @benjamingarrett9960
    @benjamingarrett9960 Před 5 lety +5

    I wish the greek Spartan shield in THIS video was like their actual shields. Being double strapped.

    • @dublinerscraic7946
      @dublinerscraic7946 Před 5 lety +20

      The round shield used in the video is not Greek at all, but a type of Northern European shield known as a Gokstad

  • @jobwork604
    @jobwork604 Před 3 lety +2

    I did not know that both Legionnaires and Gauls were wearing ADIDAS shoes at that time :-)

  • @LoLFilmStudios
    @LoLFilmStudios Před 3 lety

    Most of the time though romans would be fighting in a formation y?

  • @ripclcze8845
    @ripclcze8845 Před 2 lety +1

    Epic lol

  • @1helluvaguy738
    @1helluvaguy738 Před 3 lety

    Gauls didn’t have round shields, did they?
    Armed more like a Greek I’d say.

  • @edgysquire1662
    @edgysquire1662 Před 3 lety

    Las batallas no eran tan simples como las pintan las peliculas

  • @jonatandavidvalenciazabala9652

    porque no hay de esto en Colombia :,(

  • @ryanfurey5465
    @ryanfurey5465 Před 3 lety

    Held the scotum to close to his body no room to block headshots

  • @EmperorMatticusII
    @EmperorMatticusII Před 3 lety

    MAXIMUS! NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!

  • @henryc7548
    @henryc7548 Před 3 lety

    my biggest problem with hema is that touch the back of an opponents neck after a failed thrust coutns as a kill. I see this especially is sword vs spear duels.

    • @heresjonny666
      @heresjonny666 Před 3 lety +1

      It depends on the ruleset you're playing to. Sometimes you'll have 'insufficient contact' rules. Sometimes you treat a small touch with good structure as a kill shot. It's about learning, not about simulating a real fight. You might want to train for an ideal outcome - IE not getting hit at all, in which case counting a touch as a point against you makes more sense. You might want to practice a more realistic level of force, or continuing to fight under damage / poressure, then you bring in insufficient contact rules.

    • @henryc7548
      @henryc7548 Před 3 lety +1

      @@heresjonny666 awesome makes sense, and thanks for filling me in. I still think the butter spreading attacks to the backs of shielded opponents teaches the wrong lesson, at least to the attacker.

  • @johngallagher9151
    @johngallagher9151 Před 3 lety

    Well a Roman legion would only break formation to fight the enemy if it was necessary, so this isn't that far fetched

  • @paulolucero9864
    @paulolucero9864 Před 3 lety +2

    *_ROMA_* > Everybody else
    Sorry kiddo but should've thought about it before being born not Roman

  • @pauleugenio5914
    @pauleugenio5914 Před 3 lety

    Gotta work on being more aggressive. Both fighters slow down midway through contact. You open yourself up to being plowed through by a more dangerous fighter. Take advantage of the opponents retreat to go on the offensive.
    If you can't do that, then you need to build up endurance 💪🤺⚔️
    Armor is no excuse. Use your extra inertia to keep moving or bounce off your opponent.

  • @user-ig3cy4uf3s
    @user-ig3cy4uf3s Před rokem

    The spear guy backs up A LOT. not possible in a real battle it would be very dense

  • @Patriotgang
    @Patriotgang Před 3 lety

    You can't put a Roman on a 1 vs 1 the whole point of that shield and dagger was all about the Unit. Roman fought as a unit that's why they were so effective.

  • @joyogggKids
    @joyogggKids Před 3 lety

    Roman never go out without mate , well they always closing formation , enemy with spear didnt have chance.

  • @yalilnunez1325
    @yalilnunez1325 Před 3 lety

    Swords always win spears guys. Its the counter, and the axes win the blades.

  • @mikemouss3327
    @mikemouss3327 Před 3 lety

    Wrong shield for gaul

  • @polishqciape
    @polishqciape Před 3 lety

    cool

  • @TexasViking_INFP-t_5w4

    You forgot to say roma invicta after you defeated the gaul