Free Companies: The Age of Mercenary Companies

  Рет қаралды 167,237

SandRhoman History

SandRhoman History

Ай бұрын

Renaissance Italy was marked by both continuous warfare and economic growth. Against this backdrop arose the Condotta, the contract system of hiring mercenaries, which was arguably the most distinct characteristic of the period. Initially, soldiers hired themselves out to the highest bidder as “free lances,” the lance being the smallest unit of army organization at the time. This is the origin of the modern term “freelancer.” However, these soldiers soon formed entire mercenary companies led by elected leaders, such as John Hawkwood, who were seen as first among equals. The powerful and wealthy Italian cities, enriched by their monopoly on maritime trade with the East, could easily hire these companies, but they soon learned that doing so often brought more problems than they had bargained for. Known as Free Companies or Great Companies, these mercenary groups saw themselves as independent, self-governing adventurers always on the lookout for the most lucrative offer. A rich Italian city, they soon realized, was a worthwhile target to plunder. It was not long until they would become the bane of Italy. In this video, we investigate the phenomenon of Free Companies and how they were eventually replaced by the arguably more famous mercenary captains, the condottieri.
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"The White Company" by Arthur Conan Doyle: amzn.to/445P89t
"Mercenaries and Their Masters" by Michael Mallett amzn.to/3vR5XZ1
"The Great Companies" by Kenneth Fowler: amzn.to/3JhbZFl
Some must read mlitary history books:
Ambrose, S. E., Band of Brothers: E Company, 2001. amzn.to/438ltvZ
Baime, A. J., The Accidental President: Harry S. Truman, 2017. amzn.to/3TcDGUj
Beard, M., Emperor of Rome: Ruling the Ancient Roman World, 2023. amzn.to/49L2olR
Bevoor, A., Stalingrad: The Fateful Siege: 1942-1943, 1999. amzn.to/4a4rqwe
Beevor, A., The Second World War, 2013. amzn.to/3wNFITu
Brennan, P+D., Gettysburg in Color, 2022. amzn.to/48LGldG
Clausewitz, C., On War, 2010. amzn.to/3Vblf5
Kaushik, R., A Global History of Pre-Modern Warfare: 10,000 BCE-1500 CE, 2021. amzn.to/49Mtqt7
McPherson, J., Battle Cry of Freedom, The Civil War Era, 2021. amzn.to/3TseYAW
Tsu, S., The Art of War, 2007, amzn.to/3TuknHA
Sledge. E. B., With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa, 2008. amzn.to/439olIK
Pomerantsev, P., How to Win an Information War, 2024. amzn.to/3Ts0YqQ
Bibliography:
Caferro, W., Articles, Warfare and Economy in Renaissance Italy, 1350-1450, In: The Journal of Interdisciplinary History vol. 39 (2008) p. 167-210.
Caferro, William P., Hawkwood: Florentine Hero and Faithful Englishman, in: The Hundred Years War. Different vistas p. 295-328.
Caferro, William P., "The fox and the lion": the White Company and the Hundred Years War in Italy, In: The Hundred Years War. A wider focus, 2005 p. 179-210.
Caferro, William P., Slaying the hydra-headed beast: Italy and the companies of adventure in the fourteenth century, In: Crusaders, condottieri and cannon, 2003, p. 285-304.
Fowler, K., Medieval Mercenaries, 2001.
Mallet, M., Mercenaries and their Master. Warfare in Renaissance Italy, 1974.
Mallet, M. s. v. Mercenaries in: Maurice Keen, Medieval Warfare. A history, 1999, pp. 209-229.
Savy, N. s. v. Great Company, in Clifford J. Rogers, The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology, 2010.
Knödler, J., s. v. Brabancons in Clifford J. Rogers, The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology, 2010.
#history #documentary #education

Пікірлер: 384
@SandRhomanHistory
@SandRhomanHistory Ай бұрын
The Novel "The White Company" by Arthur Conan Doyle: amzn.to/445P89t The best overview of the topic: "Mercenaries and Their Masters" by Michael Mallett: amzn.to/3vR5XZ1 A good start if you want to investigate the topic more in depth: "The Great Companies" by Kenneth Fowler: amzn.to/3JhbZFl If you want to check out our patreon page, click here: www.patreon.com/sandrhomanhistory
@Ace-cr9qt
@Ace-cr9qt Ай бұрын
I love your videos. Can you do a video on the Varangian guard?
@Cahirable
@Cahirable Ай бұрын
The second volume of Sumption's series on the Hundred Years' War also has some great bits of information about the routiers before and after they formed into the Great Companies, including a couple of sketches of the ordinary routier, drawn from legal cases prior to their execution.
@diegotapia2830
@diegotapia2830 Ай бұрын
dude in 2012 i did my university thesis about the same theme, "how the XV century italian states regulated their mercenaries" or something like that; and, well we pretty much used the same sources, hell, i was able to get an scan of an actual condotta from the library of milan. also if you can check this book "Renaissance Characters" by eugenio garin, in that book michael mallet wrote a great essay about the topic.
@planescaped
@planescaped Ай бұрын
Hiring an army to protect you only for them to realize you're completely defenseless without them, and them basically taking over, is such a pro gamer move.
@genericpersonx333
@genericpersonx333 Ай бұрын
Basically What happened to Rome's Republic. They replaced the legions of citizens who paid for themselves with state-financed armies whose generals slowly came to realize they could own the State with judicious use of those armies through their voting and fighting power.
@flarvin8945
@flarvin8945 Ай бұрын
@@genericpersonx333i believe those armies weren't state-financed, but mostly financed by the generals themselves. Which is why the legions were loyal to their general over Rome.
@flazzorb
@flazzorb Ай бұрын
​@@flarvin8945_Sorta,_ to my understanding legions were afforded by taxes, however these taxes were paid to the general who was charged with maintaining the legion.
@xo-1320
@xo-1320 Ай бұрын
Funny enough this also happened to the Muslim World. Turns out having Slave Armies is a terrible idea when the slaves realize "wait a minute we are the fucking army".
@flarvin8945
@flarvin8945 Ай бұрын
@@flazzorb yes, for the most part soldiers received a base pay from taxes, throughout Rome's republic. But it was usually barely enough to cover expenses. So Roman generals would promise bonuses to secure loyal. The bonuses could be from the generals' personal wealth or from the state, like land. Either way, it was the general that was responsible for securing these bonuses, not the state. And the general who the troops were loyal to. The legions became just another way for the elites of Rome's republic to obtain power, through personal wealth and influence.
@robertusaugustus2003
@robertusaugustus2003 Ай бұрын
The age of the condottieri is criminally underused in fiction, imagine a band of brothers style miniseries following these multinational companies in the late-14th/early-15th century
@Cahirable
@Cahirable Ай бұрын
Hard to pitch a series about guys as cruel and awful as the condottieri, unless they're Italians fighting the English/Germans/French, and then you lose the non-Italian audiences. Seriously, you have no idea how fucked they were. Even the Italians, used to pretty nasty warfare, were horrified by the actions of the Great Companies who came over the Alps in the 1360s.
@stephensedlon8414
@stephensedlon8414 Ай бұрын
I'd definitely watch it!
@robbypodobinski824
@robbypodobinski824 Ай бұрын
100000% ​@@Cahirable
@RickJaeger
@RickJaeger Ай бұрын
If they can make movies about pirates, they can make them about condottieri. It will probably involve a lot of typical Hollywood changes, though. Still, people will watch cruel and awful people doing cruel and awful things on TV, as long as you can pitch it as "salacious" or "gritty."
@SeverusFelix
@SeverusFelix Ай бұрын
For some reason a whole bunch of Free Companies got hired in 1444
@Mold-E
@Mold-E Ай бұрын
It has been historically documented that it was due to preparations of 'The great Decing' on the 12 of December of the same year. Which many nations across Europe declared various wars against neighbouring countries.
@LarsOfTheMohicans
@LarsOfTheMohicans Ай бұрын
The Golden Age Arc, explained via history.
@reichtanglevictor1694
@reichtanglevictor1694 Ай бұрын
Best company, even with the -5% army professionalism
@GAarcher
@GAarcher Ай бұрын
*the great Basileus Ludius Guideos has been know for his extensive employement of such tatics and precise resource allocation, such as the founding of the Commandeos Codex and the thesis of Combateo Widthus*
@michaelmcnally9737
@michaelmcnally9737 Ай бұрын
- These cool dudes need their own videos - aww man - and that's why we're going to make them - HELL YEAH!
@2serveand2protect
@2serveand2protect Ай бұрын
Strange phenomenon that some of these "condottieri" who were (in general) often despised, thought as "foreign barbarians" and feared in Italy, at the end became sentimentally attached to the very same city-states they were fighting sometimes against and sometimes for. John Hawkwood for instance wasn't always a soldier - he was also Richard the 2nd's official envoy to the Papal Court. By serving the Italian cities he became a multi-millionaire - Hawkwood however went further. He had a big political influence in the Italian Peninsula, would arbitrate many treaties, and was given many riches, lands and titles - especially from the State of Florence. He was entombed in Santa Maria del Fiore (the biggest & most famous florentine church). There's still a very famous "fresco" depicting him in the very same Church, although his body was sent back to England upon the request of Richard the IInd. What's WEIRD is that him and men like him DEVASTATED the whole countryside and were famous for their ruthlessnes and cruelty - and yet ! - they were welcomed and even revered.
@memesforcomrade7666
@memesforcomrade7666 Ай бұрын
as an EU4 player I owe many successful campaigns to the free company
@GAarcher
@GAarcher Ай бұрын
*You did not mention but the great Basileus Ludius Guideos has been know for his extensive employement of such tatics and precise resource allocation, such as the founding of the Commandeos Codex and the thesis of Combateo Widthus*
@bonzotheclown1612
@bonzotheclown1612 3 күн бұрын
"Mercenaries will see you lay down your life for king and country and say" "HAH!, He lacketh the skill to freeboot!"
@lordInquisitor
@lordInquisitor Ай бұрын
The art has gotten particularly GORGEOUS
@cemilkerimli5530
@cemilkerimli5530 Ай бұрын
Okay then, we learned about free company. But how about grand company and independent army? How much development we need to get them?
@user-gt2yf5tr8j
@user-gt2yf5tr8j Ай бұрын
Did you not see the video. He covers that in the second half
@kekwsrequiem2517
@kekwsrequiem2517 Ай бұрын
​@@user-gt2yf5tr8jhes talking about eu4 mechanics my guy
@winzyl9546
@winzyl9546 Ай бұрын
Watch the full vid
@Avent00
@Avent00 Ай бұрын
But what about Free city Company?
@uelibinde
@uelibinde Ай бұрын
what abou real companies?
@redlightg27
@redlightg27 5 күн бұрын
I LOVE the illustrations of the armors seen here.
@darkmasterchief227
@darkmasterchief227 Ай бұрын
I love learning about mercenaries, especially these medieval to late/post Renaissance bands of warriors of fortune.
@Barwasser
@Barwasser Ай бұрын
Ah yes... the Free Companies. 4000 men strong and hired by almost every nation on 11th of November 1444 and thrown into combat after only one month until they ran out of manpower.
@WanderingCoyoteXVII
@WanderingCoyoteXVII Ай бұрын
Used primarily to manage sieges so the state doesnt waste its own precious manpower.
@nathanirick7806
@nathanirick7806 Ай бұрын
I want to see you, and the horse you rode in on, again!
@AHappyCub
@AHappyCub Ай бұрын
or higher than 4000 men depending on the size of the state
@mastrey
@mastrey Ай бұрын
This is a Euiv reference
@c.andrew3944
@c.andrew3944 Ай бұрын
Smoothbrains discuss tactics. Bigbrains discuss logistics. I appreciate your attention to describing the pages and 'backup horses' in cavalry, especially!
@RIlianP
@RIlianP Ай бұрын
Some of the later mercenary corps like the Black Army of Hungary show how mercenary work evolved in the early modern period, from "free companies" to "great companies" to "state sponsored mercenary companies" as more and more rulers preferred to hire mercenaries initially as a supplement and later entirely incorporate them as a state armies. It was one of the greatest, if not the greatest mercenary force to ever existed, and one of the largest, as it grew to around 28 000 people. The early modern period, is not the most famous periods in history, however it was the golden age of the mercenaries, even more so than the late medieval and the period, the Swiss mercenaries, Landsknechts, Stratioti, Gallowglass, and others flourished during that period, especially during the Thirty Year war. Other notable mercenary leaders, besides the aforementioned were Gottfried "Götz" von Berlichingen aka Götz of the Iron Hand, Peter Hagendorf, Georg von Frundsberg, Giuseppe Garibaldi and many more, hell even René Descartes served as mercenary at one point.
@onri_
@onri_ 24 күн бұрын
I would Imagine Hannibal barca mercenary army had one of the Preeminent mercenary armies.
@Denasgurman
@Denasgurman Ай бұрын
Routier in french, means Roadman, it comes from Route = Road We still use those words today, a "routier" is a truck driver nowaday.
@kmystak
@kmystak Ай бұрын
Your art is getting better and better! Excellent!
@SandRhomanHistory
@SandRhomanHistory Ай бұрын
Thank you! Cheers!
@krimzonkamikaze8524
@krimzonkamikaze8524 Ай бұрын
​@@SandRhomanHistory you draw all this?
@CyborgNinjaNinja
@CyborgNinjaNinja 3 күн бұрын
Sounds like a paraphrase of a chapter in one of my favorite books.
@horizenwalker705
@horizenwalker705 2 күн бұрын
Which book?
@samsonsoturian6013
@samsonsoturian6013 Ай бұрын
The "Great Companies" reminds me of the second Norse Siege of Paris. Unlike the previous attack many decades before, these men had no leader and the mob formed around a small company of Norse intending on a quick punitive raid on Paris. The mayor of Paris came out to negotiate and asked "Who is your King." The reply was "We are all Kings." Same behavior, different era.
@jobe5514
@jobe5514 Ай бұрын
Tsardoms: Total War mod for Medieval 2 Total War. Download it, install it, play one of the Italian City-States and enjoy.
@maguimnobbao1433
@maguimnobbao1433 29 күн бұрын
Florença um dos melhores rolê plays com a família Médice
@Goblinsharkhundredsofthem
@Goblinsharkhundredsofthem Ай бұрын
Did y'all commission some new art? Looks rad.
@mueezadam8438
@mueezadam8438 Ай бұрын
I love your animated characters, it’s what caught my eye initially to your siege series
@rubinolas6998
@rubinolas6998 7 күн бұрын
Why do you need to pay them if they're called "Free" Companies?
@debbiegilmour6171
@debbiegilmour6171 7 күн бұрын
Mercenary companies hate this one trick.
@RyseTV
@RyseTV 5 күн бұрын
Because if you don't, they'll free your head from your body.
@kylecole7068
@kylecole7068 3 күн бұрын
Free of the bonds of loyalty lol
@Jawshuah
@Jawshuah 29 күн бұрын
free company = the backbone of my EU4 campaigns.
@AndreaFasani
@AndreaFasani Ай бұрын
I don't know if there's an english version of "Knights, mercenaries and cannons" by Marco Scardigli, but if you like to know more about most of the wars and military changes in Italy from 1300 to 1527 it's a great book!
@WoutBr
@WoutBr 27 күн бұрын
Fun fact: the Belgian national anthem is called "de Brabançonne" Brabançonne is also another name for the region (and modern provinces) Brabant in Belgium en Netherlands
@clintmoor422
@clintmoor422 Ай бұрын
really cool video. It's refreshing to see you cover topics that have not been done to death! maybe think about covering things about the 18th and 19th centuries too?
@yegorkhorushko479
@yegorkhorushko479 Ай бұрын
Yeeeess, more videos on proto-Rennaissance and Renaissance, please! ❤ I'll be waiting for stories about great companies and condottieros, too. Thank you very much 😊
@humanitysdownfall3225
@humanitysdownfall3225 22 күн бұрын
Just discovers this channel and omg the content looks promising! I’m a huge history nerd/fan for anything before the 1800s so these videos will definitely be watched multiple times over. Amazing artwork and storytelling 10/10 :)
@v4enthusiast541
@v4enthusiast541 19 күн бұрын
Enjoy the siege videos
@townazier
@townazier Ай бұрын
Looking forward to the three companies' videos!
Ай бұрын
Great video, thank you kindly! Looking forward to the next installments of the serie :D
@akedus44
@akedus44 Ай бұрын
By god, I was doing research on Mercenary Free Companies for a project I was working on an hour ago and then this video drops. Get out of my mind, Rhoman.
@JohnDoe-ug3su
@JohnDoe-ug3su 24 күн бұрын
Thank you. I have been asking this theme to many historical channels
@pabloandres-uu9jm
@pabloandres-uu9jm 22 күн бұрын
Swiss Guard from Switzerland. Almogavars from Spain. Landsknechter from Deutschland.
@HungryLoki
@HungryLoki 18 күн бұрын
It would be more appropriate to say "Ryslaifer from Switzerland" (german Reisläufer, literally "rice marcher"). The Swiss guard were mercenaries from Switzerland, true, but they exclusively served the papacy, so they weren't truly for hire like other mercenary groups that would just follow the highest bidder.
@thatswissdude5949
@thatswissdude5949 13 күн бұрын
@@HungryLoki The reis in Reisläufer is a version of the word Reise, and does in this context not mean rice but rather travelling this is future proven by the other name these swiss mercenaries had which was Reisige.
@iseeyou5061
@iseeyou5061 Ай бұрын
2:00 The crossbow guy move his head! I see the animation is getting updated.
@memofromessex
@memofromessex Ай бұрын
That was perhaps your best video yet. You were clear amd I learnt more than I thought I would
@TRLHistory
@TRLHistory Ай бұрын
Not as famous as the English or Germans, but people from the Balkans also served frequently in the Italian mercenary companies. After Louis the Great briefly conquered Naples in the 1340s, Hungarian mercenaries were to serve in Italy in the next century. Folk hero Toldi Miklos and the famous general John Hunyadi were two most well known figures who spent at least a few years campaigning in Italy.
@r.anthony8685
@r.anthony8685 Ай бұрын
Also the stradioti (Albanians, Greeks)
@lolliedeman
@lolliedeman Ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this videa! Quite uniwue material you got here, instead of hearing and seeing the same things over and over again. Great Job!~looking forward to the next video's about the indiividual companies!
@SandRhomanHistory
@SandRhomanHistory Ай бұрын
Awesome, thank you!
@guycalabrese4040
@guycalabrese4040 Ай бұрын
Yes!!! You made my sunday!!!
Ай бұрын
Free Companies, spreading the "goodness" (sarcasm) of the Hundred Years' War throughout Europe, as if it were a religion (the best example of mercenarianism in the Middle Ages, for me). XD It was an excellent topic, and it makes for more videos (as you mentioned when listing the best-known examples of Free Companies); but for me, in the case of the Catalans, what really deserves more attention is not so much the Company of Robert de Flor, but the history of the unity that made up the majority of his company and that was fundamental for the Kingdom of Aragon expanded into the Mediterranean (even conquering the city of Athens, as you mentioned), I am referring to the Almogávares. Their history is very interesting and the campaigns they carried out in the Iberian Peninsula, Sardinia, Sicily and Southern Italy were also impressive; They were able to defeat cavalry only using javelins, short swords and crossbows, and their war cry was "Desperta Ferro!" (Awaken iron) while they caused sparks by striking flints with their weapons. His most famous battle was the one that ended in the conquest of the Duchy of Athens, the Battle of the Cephisus River on March 16, 1311, and his passage through Greece is known to this day as "The Catalan Fury."
@christianweibrecht6555
@christianweibrecht6555 Ай бұрын
mercenaries, a great way to ensure rich people have total power
@petrapetrakoliou8979
@petrapetrakoliou8979 Ай бұрын
No. Route means road in French and in Latin. Even today. Hence "Routiers", those who stand on the road.
@thibs2837
@thibs2837 Ай бұрын
Absolutely, btw in France we still call "routiers" the truckers who work daily on the route (road)
@mitch7235
@mitch7235 Ай бұрын
I really like the new art style you’re using for this video!😁❤️!
@SandRhomanHistory
@SandRhomanHistory Ай бұрын
I'm glad you like it!
@justonethrowaway
@justonethrowaway 27 күн бұрын
just wanted to say thank you guys so much for making these truly incredible videos. you really do make my days better, and help me calm down when i can’t even get out of bed from my anxiety of the everyday. once im in a better place financially i will be making a donation, lord knows this channel has been invaluable to me
@vertigq5126
@vertigq5126 Ай бұрын
This was great, I never knew Arthur Conan Doyle wrote about the mercenaries! Thanks for discussing the size and infantry-cavalry tactics, too. Awesome video
@Sharnoy1
@Sharnoy1 Ай бұрын
Notably this video is NOT sponsored by Manor Lords.
@Arcadius-ss3zp
@Arcadius-ss3zp Ай бұрын
Love your work. Keep going. Just curious, what will the next video's topic be about?
@SmolFly
@SmolFly 11 күн бұрын
Children are cruel Sir Jack, and thee is very in touch with thy inner squire!
@lonewanderer4207
@lonewanderer4207 Ай бұрын
Shout out to Battle Brothers and Wartales
@wiktorberski9272
@wiktorberski9272 Ай бұрын
Really well presented story from the past
@vinz4066
@vinz4066 Ай бұрын
I was just watching your medival Videos and all of a sudden there is a new one. Nice.
@The88Cheat
@The88Cheat Ай бұрын
I can’t wait for the videos of the different great companies!!!
@WissHH-
@WissHH- Ай бұрын
Less than 1 min uploaded and aready made my day.
@piggypoo
@piggypoo Ай бұрын
Band of the Hawk
@christopheryoung2874
@christopheryoung2874 Ай бұрын
Great video!
@PurpleWarlock
@PurpleWarlock Ай бұрын
Yay! Merc talk!
@mancroft
@mancroft Ай бұрын
Excellent. Thank you. Lovely artwork.
@SandRhomanHistory
@SandRhomanHistory Ай бұрын
Thank you! Cheers!
@medievalist8441
@medievalist8441 Ай бұрын
I hope you make a series on those mercenary companies cause they sure do have complex histories
@someoneunknown9947
@someoneunknown9947 Ай бұрын
I really admire your content.
@pendantblade6361
@pendantblade6361 Ай бұрын
I too play Battle Brothers.
@ArkhonXIX
@ArkhonXIX Ай бұрын
What a great game and a sleeper for most
@davewilisner
@davewilisner Ай бұрын
Hammervideo!!! Wie immer...mach wiiter so👍🏻
@TantheTaxman
@TantheTaxman Ай бұрын
great video!
@MBP1918
@MBP1918 Ай бұрын
The Condotterei were rather distinguished as one of the most interesting mercenary groups in the Renaissance
@welcometonebalia
@welcometonebalia Ай бұрын
Thank you.
@openclassusa3534
@openclassusa3534 Ай бұрын
EXCELLENT VIDEO!!
@sagashistoriquesafricaines140
@sagashistoriquesafricaines140 Ай бұрын
You quoted Nicolas Savy. I love his work :)
@dubbyx8490
@dubbyx8490 Ай бұрын
Hurrah for Mercenaries!
@not-a-theist8251
@not-a-theist8251 Ай бұрын
Interesting topic!
@sebastienhardinger4149
@sebastienhardinger4149 Ай бұрын
Awesome video
@huantruonginh2946
@huantruonginh2946 Ай бұрын
I smell Manor Lords…
@bigsarge2085
@bigsarge2085 Ай бұрын
Fascinating!
@owenbunny4023
@owenbunny4023 29 күн бұрын
Battle brothers
@Mrkabrat
@Mrkabrat Ай бұрын
I do hope the Navarrese Company gets its own video, however small it may be
@dembro27
@dembro27 Ай бұрын
Free company: *not free, you gotta pay* 😡
@crazyviking24
@crazyviking24 Ай бұрын
Free Companies seldom come cheap.
@silentone11111111
@silentone11111111 Ай бұрын
Interesting vid 😀
@80xlulz
@80xlulz 28 күн бұрын
They did the usual PR stunt: renaming their brand
@nicholasmaximus3412
@nicholasmaximus3412 Ай бұрын
Henry's come to visit
@Fawnkay
@Fawnkay Ай бұрын
The illuatrative art is gorgeous in this episode. Congratulations! Thank you very much for your work.
@philjohnson1744
@philjohnson1744 Ай бұрын
Fantastic
@CollegeHistorian
@CollegeHistorian Ай бұрын
The story telling, the animations in this channel are amazing. A true inspiration to small history youtubers like myself
@Cataphract1236
@Cataphract1236 Ай бұрын
Wow, i'm loving the new art.
@aciduzzo
@aciduzzo 5 күн бұрын
I often feel like SandRhoman's videos are fantastic ads for Crusader Kings 2 (and sometimes Europa Universalis 4). Ok, maybe also KCD.
@MM22966
@MM22966 Ай бұрын
Another factor probably at work toward the gradual regularization of the whole business is that when soldiers get older, they start looking for a place to retire and settle down. Whether that is a gift a land and a regular commission from a kingdom or city-state, or the coupe of an employer and the enthroning of a mercenary captain (i.e. the Sfrorza dukes of Milan). A modern example is "Mad Mike" Hoare and Bob Denard of the African brushfire wars. Both attempted or succeed in taking over small countries in their later years.
@54032Zepol
@54032Zepol 26 күн бұрын
More content!
@megalonoobiacinc4863
@megalonoobiacinc4863 Ай бұрын
11:12 Hawkwood!! Btw the intro music reminds me of Xenosaga, Abel's Ark :d
@Fatherofheroesandheroines
@Fatherofheroesandheroines Ай бұрын
Mercenaries have been around for centuries. However the Free Companies were far and away different.
@robbypodobinski824
@robbypodobinski824 Ай бұрын
God what a time to b alive
@Widsith83
@Widsith83 Ай бұрын
Thanks⚔️👍
@oversipelio983
@oversipelio983 Ай бұрын
great!
@jeremiahsafford1389
@jeremiahsafford1389 Ай бұрын
4:07 What is that heraldry?
@sarahsidney1988
@sarahsidney1988 Ай бұрын
Cool video
@GAarcher
@GAarcher Ай бұрын
*You did not mention but the great Basileus Ludius Guideos has been know for his extensive employement of such tatics and precise resource allocation, such as the founding of the Commandeos Codex and the thesis of Combateo Widthus*
@benm5913
@benm5913 Ай бұрын
Commenting for algorithm because you deserve it.
@GBERTS
@GBERTS Ай бұрын
awesome
@Walgriff
@Walgriff 24 күн бұрын
Yes
@staraskolamedvea9173
@staraskolamedvea9173 Ай бұрын
what was a pay per lance? how much money was needed to hire 100 mercenaries?
@houtenhekje8375
@houtenhekje8375 Ай бұрын
I think this depends on alot of factor but i'd guess anywhere from 0.5 shilling to 2 shillings could be "average"
@mydogbullwinkle
@mydogbullwinkle Ай бұрын
​@houtenhekje8375 😂 yea, but it better be a short battle.
@christianmorris5292
@christianmorris5292 Ай бұрын
Lmao, are you looking to hire?
@roelantverhoeven371
@roelantverhoeven371 Ай бұрын
brabanconnes reffered to the duchy of Brabant in modern day belgium and netherlands (capital brussels, largest city antwerp in the middle ages)
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