HOPLITES invade Holborn in the heart of London! We love this photo of historical men in full Hoplite gear on their way to a historical reenactment event. They form a phalanx which commuters can't get through.
The "phalanx" of Ancient Greece was a formation in which the "hoplites" (warriors) would line up in ranks in close order.
The
hoplites would lock their shields together, and the first few ranks of
soldiers would project their spears out over the first rank of shields.
The
phalanx therefore presented a shield wall and a mass of spear points to
the enemy, making frontal assaults against it very difficult.
It
also allowed a higher proportion of the soldiers to be actively engaged
in combat at a given time (rather than just those in the front rank).
This image is from the Chigi Vase, found in an Etruscan tomb. This famous frieze shows Greek hoplites marching into battle.
Note
the brave bugler boy just behind the front row, channeling all his
terror into his pipes, creating a banshee wail which amplifies all the
fear.
Wielding
his pipes like a sonic weapon, he sends the sound into the ranks of the
enemy ... penetrating their skulls and deep, deep into their hearts and
souls.
The
bugler boy wields the sound of his horn as a powerful weapon ...
blaring his own fear through the trumpet ... into the heart of the
enemy.
This is one of the great mystery teachings of the SACRED BAND OF THEBES ... the "Army of Gay Lovers"
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