I've been rereading a bit about how the Athenian triremes were
officered and manned. Rowers and helmsmen were the skilled
individuals - the actual trireme commander was usually the wealthy man
who paid for the ship.
> Being a fisherman, familiar with boats, does not qualify a person to be
> an officer of a warship.
> Anyone can learn to row as a team. I learned to do it as a rebellious,
> recalcitrant boy scout. Motivated free men, whose lives depend on their
> rowing skill, would do better.
Yep. And to actually row as a team in choppy waters with people trying to kill you and with the ultimate goal being to crash your ship into another ship - that takes skill.
> > This being the Holy Country, I imagine that each Sixth was assessed a
> > number of triremes to build and maintain.
> Perhaps. But let us recall the hostility of the air towards the water,
> and remember to subtract that sixth from the total. And the God Forgot
> guys, well, they are pretty specialized and not suitable for rowing.
And
> uz triremes? Hmmm....
That assessment could be just an amount of money. Although I think the port cities of Heortland (which admittedly are probably mostly Esvularing) have some shipbuilding ability. The Orlanthi, on the other hand, are probably only useful as an offensive weapon - a good storm can easily wipe out a fleet. But most sea people probably consider the Orlanthi bad luck and want little to do with them - "they anger the seas".
> I 'd suggest that that the populous Esrolians provided most of the
> ships, if not all of them; and that the others provided specialists to
> assist with their magic.
I agree. Actually I suspect the other Sixths provided mainly money.
> I think it's a better opportunity for the peasants of Esrolia to try to
> get ahead. Ten years at the oar, and be promoted!
Jeff Received on Fri 07 Sep 2007 - 00:04:15 EEST
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