Yup, carthaginian spelling for Cagliari was Karalis ( Greek also ); Caralis was the latin form. And since you've placed it under carthaginian rule...
PS Two graphic tips:
a) Sacred Theban elitè Battallion was supposed by some historicians to carry a spear longer than usual greek ones, so this way they were able to tap better their more compact ranks' force. And they used the beotic shield, a little smaller than usual...
b) The "machaira" ( the short greek sword ) was a little curved and one-edged sword, like some butcher's knives or nepalese kukri, so it was more easy for hoplites to use them in a "whirlwind" skirmishing to cover their withdraw while returning into phalanx ranks. You can made one side a little darker to represent this; the way you painted it, it seems a two-edged bronze age minoan-micenaean sword ( lazy perfectionism, huh ? )...
[This message has been edited by Prometeus (edited November 26, 2000).]
PS Two graphic tips:
a) Sacred Theban elitè Battallion was supposed by some historicians to carry a spear longer than usual greek ones, so this way they were able to tap better their more compact ranks' force. And they used the beotic shield, a little smaller than usual...
b) The "machaira" ( the short greek sword ) was a little curved and one-edged sword, like some butcher's knives or nepalese kukri, so it was more easy for hoplites to use them in a "whirlwind" skirmishing to cover their withdraw while returning into phalanx ranks. You can made one side a little darker to represent this; the way you painted it, it seems a two-edged bronze age minoan-micenaean sword ( lazy perfectionism, huh ? )...
[This message has been edited by Prometeus (edited November 26, 2000).]
Comment