View Poll Results: Who would be victorious?

Voters
179. You may not vote on this poll
  • Mongol Empire

    102 56.98%
  • Roman Empire

    77 43.02%
+ Reply to Thread
Page 4 of 49 FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 ... LastLast
Results 46 to 60 of 730

Thread: Mongol Empire vs. Roman Empire

  1. #46
    Patron scotsboyuk's Avatar
    Join Date
    17 Feb 05
    Location
    Blighty
    Posts
    285
    Quote Originally Posted by sparten
    And Roman empire was larger in Asia, then it ever was in Europe.
    As far as I am aware the European part of the Roman Empire was larger than the Asian part.
    "I may be drunk my dear woman, but in the morning I will be sober, and you will still be ugly." WSC

  2. #47
    Actus Reus Senior Contributor sparten's Avatar
    Join Date
    10 Apr 04
    Location
    You would like to know would'nt you?
    Posts
    1,497
    Country: Pakistan
    IIRC, the European Part is larger if you7 include Turkey in it. It is smaller if you don't. Also the exact extent of Arabia Petra is not known.
    "Any relations in a social order will endure if there is infused into them some of that spirit of human sympathy, which qualifies life for immortality." ~ George William Russell

  3. #48
    Senior Contributor kNikS's Avatar
    Join Date
    17 Sep 05
    Location
    Belgrade, Serbia
    Posts
    762
    Country: Serbia
    Quote Originally Posted by sparten
    China influenced the world greatly. But after the battle of Talas in 751 AD, the Chinese never again seriously (the Mongols are not Chinese despite the CCP attempts) threatened to expand beyond its borders.

    And many Chinese influences came through intermedietries to the West, Silk came via the Parthians, paper and Gunpowder via the Arabs.
    Of course, I never denied that.
    For King and Fatherland ~ Freedom or Death

  4. #49
    Patron scotsboyuk's Avatar
    Join Date
    17 Feb 05
    Location
    Blighty
    Posts
    285
    Quote Originally Posted by sparten
    IIRC, the European Part is larger if you7 include Turkey in it. It is smaller if you don't. Also the exact extent of Arabia Petra is not known.
    The European part is larger based solely on European territories. If you look at the territory Rome is commonly said to have held the largest single part is European. It should also be noted that the European part of the Roman Empire remained relatively static once territory had been acquired. The Asian part of the Roman Empire was subject to territorial changes over the centuries, which means that the Asian part of the Roman Empire was probably never bigger than the European part at any single given point.
    "I may be drunk my dear woman, but in the morning I will be sober, and you will still be ugly." WSC

  5. #50
    Actus Reus Senior Contributor sparten's Avatar
    Join Date
    10 Apr 04
    Location
    You would like to know would'nt you?
    Posts
    1,497
    Country: Pakistan
    Quote Originally Posted by scotsboyuk
    The European part is larger based solely on European territories. If you look at the territory Rome is commonly said to have held the largest single part is European. It should also be noted that the European part of the Roman Empire remained relatively static once territory had been acquired. The Asian part of the Roman Empire was subject to territorial changes over the centuries, which means that the Asian part of the Roman Empire was probably never bigger than the European part at any single given point.
    True to a certain extent, but that was mainly in what is now Iraq.
    The Gallic Empire also caused the European territories to reduce.
    "Any relations in a social order will endure if there is infused into them some of that spirit of human sympathy, which qualifies life for immortality." ~ George William Russell

  6. #51
    Patron scotsboyuk's Avatar
    Join Date
    17 Feb 05
    Location
    Blighty
    Posts
    285
    The Western Roman Empire's European territories were largely the same from the 1st century A.D. until the 5th century A.D. After that then one is looking at the Eastern Roman Empire and certainly over time it's Asian and African territories did encompass more than its European territories.
    "I may be drunk my dear woman, but in the morning I will be sober, and you will still be ugly." WSC

  7. #52
    Official Thread Jacker Senior Contributor gunnut's Avatar
    Join Date
    27 Jan 06
    Location
    DPRK, Demokratik People's Republik of Kalifornia
    Posts
    21,348
    Country: United States
    Quote Originally Posted by sparten
    And oh BTW, Gunnut, there was no "proper" Roman Empire. It was Imperium Romanum period.
    Ah...please excuse my poor expression My knowledge of that period is fuzzy at best, ignorant at worst.

  8. #53
    Patron
    Join Date
    13 Jun 06
    Posts
    223
    You guys are getting way off topic.

    But in terms of military system, a Rome vs Parthia is very interesting and worth discussing.

    Rome (infantry based army) vs Parthia (a Cavalry based army)

    The Parthian armies included two types of cavalry: the heavily-armed and armoured cataphracts and light brigades of mounted archers. For the Romans, who relied on heavy infantry, the Parthians were hard to defeat, as the cavalry was much faster and more mobile. On the other hand, the Parthians found it difficult to occupy conquered areas as they were unskilled in siege warfare. Because of these weaknesses, neither the Romans nor the Parthians were able to completely defeat each other

  9. #54
    Senior Contributor Triple C's Avatar
    Join Date
    11 Apr 06
    Location
    Chicago IL
    Posts
    1,719
    Country: United States
    I agree with everything about the Mongol's tactical prowess except for their individual weapons' superiority. The composite bow had been used in the stepp for centuries, yet no other nomad remotely approached the magnititude of Mongol suscess. Futhermore few if any primary or secondary resources suggest that their bows penetrated armor well. Instead the accounts that I have read suggest hand to hand fighting still account for the majority of the casualties and arrors were used in a fire superiority role.

    The success of the Mongol bow is not my object of dispute; it is the precise detail that it could penetrate armor that is. Projectile weapons don't need to penetrate armor in order to be successful; even the heavy infantry is very exposed to dense arrow fire because a large part of his body is uncovered. For example, his face, arms and legs. The Roman account during the Battle of Carhae in my opinion actually proves that arrows don't need to penetrate armor to be effective, since it focused on how arrows could wound the unarmored part of the legionaire's body. While a heavy cavalry soldier is extremely well protected in his person, futhermore, the arrow could kill his horse, which means he both loses his mobility takes a fall from a height.

    BTW I can almost recall a source about the battle between the Teutonic Knights and the Mongols, in which it states that the Mongols shot up the knights by focuses fire on their horses. Surely if the arrows could penetrate armor as advertised the other more lethal target could've been choosed.

  10. #55
    Senior Contributor Triple C's Avatar
    Join Date
    11 Apr 06
    Location
    Chicago IL
    Posts
    1,719
    Country: United States
    It is also a myth that the Mongols were a pure light cavalry force. Latter Mongols deployed heavy infantry in massive numbers when the terrain favors the foot over the horse, evident in their campaigns against Korea, Japan and Vietnam. They also always have a heavy cavalry contigent composed of their elite kept at hand as a tactical reserve, deployed in the final charge at a critical time against oppsition properly prepared and softened.

    A frighteningly effective force the Mongols were.

  11. #56
    Patron
    Join Date
    13 Jun 06
    Posts
    223
    The world before the Mongol conquest

    Count the contries that they conquered.



    At Genghis Khan's death



    At its height



    Division


  12. #57
    Actus Reus Senior Contributor sparten's Avatar
    Join Date
    10 Apr 04
    Location
    You would like to know would'nt you?
    Posts
    1,497
    Country: Pakistan
    Why don't you go and ask the people who ruled those places how the Mongols were?

    Quote Originally Posted by Triple C
    It is also a myth that the Mongols were a pure light cavalry force. Latter Mongols deployed heavy infantry in massive numbers when the terrain favors the foot over the horse, evident in their campaigns against Korea, Japan and Vietnam. They also always have a heavy cavalry contigent composed of their elite kept at hand as a tactical reserve, deployed in the final charge at a critical time against oppsition properly prepared and softened.
    Cavalry was their forte. Sure they developed Heavy Infantry, but it was not that suceesful was it. At Ayn Jalut (granted that was still mostly Cav) Homs, or at Kyushu, wher they proved to be no match for a little known military organization calling itself the Samurai.
    "Any relations in a social order will endure if there is infused into them some of that spirit of human sympathy, which qualifies life for immortality." ~ George William Russell

  13. #58
    Senior Contributor Triple C's Avatar
    Join Date
    11 Apr 06
    Location
    Chicago IL
    Posts
    1,719
    Country: United States
    Quote Originally Posted by sparten
    Why don't you go and ask the people who ruled those places how the Mongols were?


    Cavalry was their forte. Sure they developed Heavy Infantry, but it was not that suceesful was it. At Ayn Jalut (granted that was still mostly Cav) Homs, or at Kyushu, wher they proved to be no match for a little known military organization calling itself the Samurai.
    Sure, the Mongols were much better at cavalry fighting then infantry battles, but both of the Japanese campaigns were opposed amphibious landings. The Mongols also ran into Taiphoons, but it never ceases to amaze me as to why no one warned them of the Taiphoon season, since they deployed a large number of Chinese and Korean sailors.

  14. #59
    Actus Reus Senior Contributor sparten's Avatar
    Join Date
    10 Apr 04
    Location
    You would like to know would'nt you?
    Posts
    1,497
    Country: Pakistan
    THe reason IIRC was surprise. The Japanese did not expect a landing until later, only the Samurai expected one. And lets remember when the "Divine Wind" showed up they had already failed in their attemptd to land.
    "Any relations in a social order will endure if there is infused into them some of that spirit of human sympathy, which qualifies life for immortality." ~ George William Russell

  15. #60
    Staff Emeritus
    Join Date
    06 Aug 03
    Posts
    21,965
    Country: Canada
    Sparten,

    Your info is wrong. The Mongols bested the Samurai. In the 1st attempt, the Mongols landed an army that simply ignored the Samurai's dueling warfare and used mass warfare. In the 2nd attempt, the Japanese prevented the landing by using small boats to harrass the Mongols before they could land and then the Divine Wind took them.
    Chimo

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

     

Similar Threads

  1. Geographic Catalysts for Secularization in Western Europe
    By Ironduke in forum The Staff College
    Replies: 36
    Last Post: 07 May 07,, 08:57
  2. The Greatest Empire
    By scotsboyuk in forum Ancient, Medieval & Early Modern Ages
    Replies: 188
    Last Post: 07 Feb 07,, 20:16
  3. The Fall Of Rome?
    By Ironside in forum Ancient, Medieval & Early Modern Ages
    Replies: 61
    Last Post: 26 May 06,, 02:47
  4. Destroying Baghdad
    By sparten in forum Warfare in the Modern Age
    Replies: 9
    Last Post: 20 Feb 06,, 20:22
  5. Are our Soldiers incompetent?
    By giggs88 in forum Europe and Russia
    Replies: 104
    Last Post: 29 Dec 05,, 03:31

Share this thread with friends:

Share this thread with friends:

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts