ryuutaurus
Just wanted to get the stories out of my mind.
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Of course it is dangerous, however, this was a legitimate Ottoman siege tactic and was used in combination with minning.
I just stopped using it all together nowadays
I added the sentences that was supposed the come there. You see, I sometimes delete or change parts of the text while writing it, and since I am busy with my normal work I sometimes have to just leave the deleted parts as it is and leave for work. Then I forget about those parts. I’d appreciate it if you could point out those absurd stops when you see them.
Not necessarily. Such occurances were extremely rare. What would actually happen was pillaging and looting, because the momentum of an army was nigh unstoppable. You have more room to negortiate during sieges, but again, not necessary if you have the strength to overwhelm the enemy.
Meaningless as in he couldn’t truly fix the root problem. It is like cutting the branches off a death tree and calling it a day instead of removing it. How much did it help in the grand scheme of things?
This is extremely inaccurate historically, otherwise, armies would've equipped themselves with swords as primary weapons and not spears. Spear has a better reach, which is the sole reason why you can't "get close" in the first place. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=afqhBODc_8U here you can pretty much see why spear has historically reigned supreme and why the idea of swords superiority and dominance as the primary weapon is flawed and inaccurate.
Euboea is on the right and Thermopylae is somewhere near the red line under "Epicnemidian Locris".
New World will be the second and the final part. I imagined New World to be heavier in clasicial fantasy elements. PvE won’t happen as the magic circulation technique helps the body to protect itself from outside threats, plus rats and bugs don’t come near human settlements of Alta as there are magic wards that keep them out.
Really? He was supposed to be the Volkmar the Grim of the novel.
Even the most powerful tyrant would need to keep his loyal followers happy. That’s how adminastrive systems work, because you can’t control everything on your own without either an efficiant buricrucial system or peerage. Pre-Muslim Vandalic Spain had laws that put the King way above the nobility, but in practice they had less power than the later feudal Spanish Kings, because they didn’t have an efficiant way to control and benefit from the larger population.
Reader’s POV
I didn’t have the time to do that :/ I still don’t, but I’ll try my best to implement a better visual representation