Greek City-States Arms & Weapons
The Greek city-states developed the hoplite phalanx — the dominant infantry formation of the ancient Mediterranean — built around the dory spear, hoplon shield, and xiphos sword, and later refined by Macedon into a world-conquering military system.
Greek City-States Arms & Weapons
Overview
The Greek city-states of the classical period (c. 800–323 BCE) developed one of the ancient world's most effective military systems — the hoplite phalanx — that dominated Mediterranean warfare for three centuries. Greek weapons were heavily influenced by bronze technology and later iron, and were refined through constant interstate warfare (the Persian Wars, Peloponnesian War, and the campaigns of Alexander the Great).
The Hoplite's Equipment (Panoply)
Dory (Spear)
The primary hoplite weapon — an ash-shafted spear 2–2.5 meters long with an iron leaf-shaped head. The butt spike (sauroter, "lizard-killer") counterbalanced the head and could be used as a secondary weapon if the head broke. In a phalanx, hoplites in the first three ranks could bring their spears to bear simultaneously.
Hoplon (Aspis) — Shield
The defining piece of hoplite equipment — a round shield approximately 90 cm in diameter, made from wood covered with bronze. The distinctive double grip (porpax arm band + antilabe handgrip) left the right arm free while securely anchoring the shield. Crucially, the right half of each hoplite's shield protected the left side of the man to his right — requiring mutual trust and unit cohesion.
Xiphos (Sword)
A short, double-edged sword 45–60 cm long; used as a backup weapon when the spear broke or fighting became too close for spears. The leaf-shaped blade was effective for both cut and thrust. Some hoplites carried the kopis (a forward-curved slashing sword) instead.
Armor
- Corinthian helmet — Full-face bronze helmet with cheek guards and nasal bar; iconic Greek helmet form
- Linothorax — Laminated linen corselet; lighter than bronze but surprisingly effective
- Bronze cuirass (muscle armor) — Shaped bronze breastplate and backplate
- Greaves — Bronze shin guards
The Macedonian Sarissa Phalanx
Philip II of Macedon (r. 359–336 BCE) replaced the standard hoplite spear with the sarissa — a pike up to 6 meters long. In the Macedonian phalanx, the sarissas of the first five ranks could all project beyond the front rank, creating a wall of overlapping spear points that was nearly impossible to approach frontally. Alexander the Great used this formation combined with heavy cavalry (the Companion cavalry) to conquer from Greece to India.
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