07-25-2019, 02:20 AM
I know of the names of the specific units that made up the royal guards in the Hellenistic period, but was there a general name for the entire group of infantry and cavalry?
aka T*O*N*G*A*R
A general name for the royal guards formations?
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07-25-2019, 02:20 AM
I know of the names of the specific units that made up the royal guards in the Hellenistic period, but was there a general name for the entire group of infantry and cavalry?
aka T*O*N*G*A*R
07-27-2019, 12:57 AM
The terminology varied widely in the Hellenistic world, but περὶ τὴν αὐλήν, "of the court" was sometimes used as a signifier of what we might call a royal guard, although off the top of my head Polybius only uses it for cavalry. The most routinely privileged units in the Hellenistic world were the agema, a subset of both peltasts and cavalry who also enjoyed a special connection with the king.
07-30-2019, 12:59 AM
(07-27-2019, 12:57 AM)Michael J. Taylor Wrote: The terminology varied widely in the Hellenistic world, but περὶ τὴν αὐλήν, "of the court" was sometimes used as a signifier of what we might call a royal guard, although off the top of my head Polybius only uses it for cavalry. The most routinely privileged units in the Hellenistic world were the agema, a subset of both peltasts and cavalry who also enjoyed a special connection with the king. While the agema could vary in size and composition, it's a"vanguard" unit, not a general term, in contrast with the use of praetorian in the republican and imperial eras. Would hetairoi be apt, as it could mean anything from a select few to a formation of infantry and cavalry, IIRC? The Byzantines hetaireia was derived from hetairoi, IIRC.
aka T*O*N*G*A*R
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