What was the name for a Greek soldier?

What was the name for a Greek soldier?

A hoplite (from ta hopla meaning tool or equipment) was the most common type of heavily armed foot-soldier in ancient Greece from the 7th to 4th centuries BCE, and most ordinary citizens of Greek city-states with sufficient means were expected to equip and make themselves available for the role when necessary.

Athens had a system of compulsory military service for 18-20-year-olds, but during a war, all male citizens up to the age of 60 could be called up to the armed forces. Other cities across ancient Greece followed a similar policy which meant that hoplites were not professional soldiers and often lacked sufficient military training, although some states did maintain a small elite professional unit, the epilektoi. The most famous of these was the Sacred Band of Thebes, a unit composed of 150 pairs of male lovers who swore to defend their partner to the death. Sparta, where all male citizens over 20 were members of a permanent professional army, was the notable exception to this approach of only calling up an army when absolutely needed and, consequently, their hoplites were famed for their military prowess.

The principal weapons of Greek hoplites were a long ash wood spear (doru) & a short sword (xiphos).

Weapons & Armour

The principal weapons of a hoplite infantryman were a long ash wood spear (doru) and a short sword (xiphos). The spear measured on average 2.5 metres (8 ft.) in length and was fitted with a bronze or iron blade and a four-sided end spike (sauroter). The sword was also of iron with a straight or sometimes curved blade (machaira or kopis) no more than 60 cm in length. No doubt many hoplites also carried a dagger (encheiridion) as extra insurance. Protection was provided by a leather-lined bronze helmet which could vary in design, was often crested, and protected the head, neck, and face. A corselet or breastplate (thorax) of bronze or leather (later reduced to a laminated linen vest to save weight - a linothorax), bronze greaves (knemides) to protect the shins, and sometimes arm-guards were also worn. The hoplite carried a large circular shield (hoplon or aspis) some 80 cm (30 in.) in diameter and weighing as much as 8 kg. This was made of wood or stiff leather, faced with bronze, and was held with the left arm placed through a central band (porpax) and gripped via a strap (antilabe) attached to the shield rim. Shields often carried particular designs - the most famous being the inverted V-shape of Spartan hoplites - and emblems - particularly popular was the gorgon from Greek mythology with its association with changing the onlooker into stone. Surviving examples of breastplates and helmets also display engraved decoration. Fully armoured then, the hoplite was required to carry some 20 kg of equipment and so good physical training must have given one side a strong advantage (e.g. the well-trained and professional Spartans). Precisely because all of this equipment amounted to quite an investment, being a hoplite also indicated that the individual had a certain status in wider Greek society. In addition, the bronze cuirass and shield of the hoplite - taken, for example, as booty after a military campaign - were often dedicated at sacred sites across ancient Greece from Delphi to Delos.

What was the name for a Greek soldier?

Kylix with Black-Figure Hoplites

Hoplite Phalanx

Hoplites were organised into regiments or lokhoi (several hundred men strong), and they fought in ranks eight or more men deep (known as a phalanx), and standing close together, half of the shield of one man protected his neighbour on his left side. This, interestingly, meant that the phalanx often moved forward at a slight angle to the right as men sought to keep behind the shield of their neighbour. This resulted in the left flank usually breaking formation first, and so this was the flank a competent commander would attack with priority, and he would, therefore, ensure he had his best troops on his own right flank. The Greek phalanx advanced at a walk or faster, often accompanied by rhythmic music from aulos players, and shouting a tremendous war-cry (paean). On engaging the enemy the hoplites first thrust their spears, usually overarm. After that initial contact, the opposing lines usually went through a series of pushing and shoving (othismos) and close-quarter fighting with swords which only ended when one side broke ranks. The pursuit of retreating hoplites was usually only over a short distance in order to maintain the protective close formation.

What was the name for a Greek soldier?

Hoplites were instrumental in Greek warfare and the victories of Greek armies over Persia at the battle of Marathon (490 BCE) and the battle of Plataea (479 BCE) during the Greco-Persian Wars. The weaknesses of the phalanx formation - attack from the flanks, rear by light cavalry, or when on rough terrain - were sometimes exploited by more wily commanders; however, the formation, albeit with lighter-armed infantry, was still in use through Hellenistic and early Roman times.

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This article has been reviewed for accuracy, reliability and adherence to academic standards prior to publication.

  • Boys-Stones et al. The Oxford Handbook of Hellenic Studies. Oxford University Press, USA, 2009.
  • Fields, N. Thermopylae 480 BC. Osprey Publishing, 2007.
  • Hornblower, S. The Oxford Classical Dictionary. Oxford University Press, USA, 2012.
  • Kinzl, K.H. (ed). A Companion to the Classical Greek World. Wiley-Blackwell, 2010.
  • Xenophon. The Landmark Xenophon's Hellenika. Anchor, 2010.

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Add Event Visual Timeline

  • Hoplites are the major protagonists in Greek land warfare.
  • The hoplitodromos (a foot-race in hoplite armour is added to the schedule of the Olympic Games.
  • A combined force of Greek hoplites defeat the Persians at Marathon.
  • Battle of Thermopylae. 300 Spartans under King Leonidas and other Greek allies hold back the Persians led by Xerxes I for three days but are defeated.
  • Xerxes' Persian forces are defeated by Greek forces at Plataea effectively ending Persia's imperial ambitions in Greece.
  • Sparta wins the battle of Tanagra during the 1st Peloponnesian War with Athens.
  • Hoplites become increasingly lighter-armoured, as new battle tactics required more mobility.
  • Athenian and Corinthian hoplites fight a street battle in the suburbs of Solygeia.
  • A force of Athenian peltasts defeat Spartan hoplites on Sphaktria in the Peloponnese.
  • Spartan general Brasidas employs Myrkinian and Chalkidian peltasts to defeat a force of Athenian hoplites at Amphipolis.
  • Athenian leader Iphikrates employs peltasts to defeat Spartan hoplites at Lechaion near Corinth.