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A04863 The theorike and practike of moderne vvarres discoursed in dialogue vvise. VVherein is declared the neglect of martiall discipline: the inconuenience thereof: the imperfections of manie training captaines: a redresse by due regard had: the fittest weapons for our moderne vvarre: the vse of the same: the parts of a perfect souldier in generall and in particular: the officers in degrees, with their seuerall duties: the imbattailing of men in formes now most in vse: with figures and tables to the same: with sundrie other martiall points. VVritten by Robert Barret. Comprehended in sixe bookes. Barret, Robert, fl. 1600. 1598 (1598) STC 1500; ESTC S106853 258,264 244

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and fore finger of his right hand and with his middle finger to measure at what length to cocke the same to fall with a proportioned length into the pan The which being done let him retire his right foote somwhat backe and stand firme vpon the same and holding fast both the musket and rest with his left hand to raise the but end of his musket from his thigh vnto his breast and to fasten the same firme and close vnto his right shoulder and brest holding fast the sayd hinder part of the stocke betwixt his right thombe and fore finger drawing downe the serre with the other three fingers and so taking due leuell to discharge Hauing performed the which let him vncocke his match clap his musket vpon his shoulder with a halfe turne and so retire trailing his rest or forke by the stringe and giuing place to others go charge again finally for other armes a reasonable short sword a meane dagger with no morion but a faire hat and feather Gent. Thus I perceiue your fiery shot haue many busie skils without knowledge of all the which it is hard to become a perfect shot Capt. True and therefore often to be practised But here let the muster-maister and trayning Captaine be well aduised not to suffer their shot to cary any bullet about them in time of their trainings and fained skirmishes for feare of danger that might thereby ensue among themselues But now and then after their training to take euery shot single and to see him charge his peece orderly with pouder and bullet as aforesaid and hauing a great but erected to that purpose the which ought to be in euery hundred or Baily-wicke to cause them to leuell and discharge at the blancke thereof orderly one after another encouraging those which do make the fairest shot Now for the Pike which the Spaniards do tearme Sen̄ora y Reyna de las armas the Queene and mistresse of weapons The souldier which carieth the same is to bee well armed with a good corslet furnished with his gorget Morion tasses pouldrons vambraces and gauntlets also to be armed as he ought to be whatsoeuer opinion other men may hold to the contrary supposing a bare payre of Cuyrasses onely sufficient but I am of opinion that the armed Picquier ought to bee armed in all points as I haue said for defence and then to offend to be weaponed with a good Pike of ground Ashe of seuenteen or eighteen foote long at the least well and strongly headed with the cheekes three foote long or there about and for other weapon to weare a good short sword and dagger for the dagger is a weapon of great aduantage in Pell mell And if it be replied that the souldier so heauie armed is not for any great march or speedy execution I say that among well ordered Regiments there are also yet some vnarmed pikes that is without any corslet or at the most the bare cuyrats onely and morion the which the Italians do call Picche secche Now these are reserued imployed in such peeces of light seruice And the Picquier either armed or vnarmed is to be shewed and taught the carriage and vse of his pike as first to tertiar or carry the same orderly vpon his shoulder holding the same with his foure fingers vpon the vpper part of the staffe his thombe vnder the staffe neare vnto his shoulder basing downe the blunt end thereof to aduaunce the point and poizing the pike with an equall poize vpon his thombe and shoulder alwayes in march keeping the lower end of his pike on the one side of his foremans legge still aduertising that in march the pike is to be carried vpon the right shoulder of euery souldier throughout euery file sauing the vtmost file on the left side of the arrayes or ordinances which are to carry their pikes vpon their left shoulders onely alwayes regarding how those of the foremost rankes doe carry their weapon the rest to do the same throughout euery ranke and file following for order and forme do require the same Next hee is to be taught how to plant his pike on the ground at any stand or Alto then how to arbolare or aduaunce his pike that is to reare his pike vpright against his right shoulder and with his right hand stretched downe vnto his thigh to hold the same neare vnto the but-end betwixt his foure fingers and his thombe stretching his forefinger downeward vnto the but-end of his pike and so aduaunce the same vpright high against his right shoulder resting and staying the same with his right hand against his right thigh and knee as before is sayd Now this is to be done at such times as being brought into a Ring and serreyng close shoulder to shoulder then to aduaunce their piks in this sort at the enclosing thereof so to continue vntill they fall out of the ring againe into a larger march Also the same is vsed by some at their arriuing vnto the corps de guard at the setting of the watch before their chief Commander or officer euen as the first ranke shall arriue into the corps de guard some ten or twelue pases from the place of their stand to arbolare their pikes and so rancke after ranck carrying them in the same order vntill they come vnto their place of station there to make Alto and to plant their pikes vpon the ground as the squadron is formed But principally the souldiers marching in squadron and vpon point to come to the push of the pike with their foote enemy then are they first to aduaunce their pikes as is said bearing the same orderly with the right hand against the right thigh and the left hand aboue neare about the shoulder and so to charge vpon the left hand and push standing firme and sure vpon the left foote But if the squadron be charged with any troupes of the enemies horse then must the Picquiers cowch their pikes fast vnder the right foote holding the same 〈…〉 the left hand and bow downe the point thereof against the breast of the hor●e hauing his right hand ready to draw his sword if occasion shall be offered Now how necessary and auayleable this continuall vse and practise is may easily be gathered from the sundry victories of the auncient Romanes Who both in their Campes and Garrisons had their Tesserarios which were as our Sergeant Maiors to ensigne and teach their people of warre the vse and managing of their armes at all idle and vacant times The old souldier sometimes once in a day and the Tirones which we terme Bisognios or new souldiers twise in the day or as occasion serued so were their people alwayes ready and perfect And againe they did not onely practise them in the knowledge of their weapons but many times also did conduct their Companies for their recreation
into the field there causing them to run to leape to iumpe to wrastle to throw the sledge to pitch the barre and such like exercises and sometimes also to learne to swim as a qualitie very befitting a souldier Moreouer they did many times cause their souldiers as well foote as horse to march armed at all points euen as it were to serue against their enemie once or twise in a moneth euery man carrying his owne prouision and victuals and giuing and receiuing the charge euen as in hostile fight and this did they for the space of ten miles fiue out and fiue home Thus with these exercises they brought their people to be able quicke and ready to serue vpon all occasions and did more good seruice with twentie thousand of such so trained and practised then with thirtie or fortie thousand of raw and vntrained men But to haue a souldier to be very perfect and a good executioner indeede it is needfull to haue bin in some good peeces of seruice to haue seene men to fall on both sides which doth flesh harden a souldier very much Finally the good Picquier ought to learne to tosse his pike well with the due handling of the same and to be skilfull therein sith it is the weapon he professeth for 100 of ready pikemen are better then 200 that know not the vse of the weapon Now the halbarders ought to be fully armed with a corslet as is the Picquier but in marching he is alwayes to beare the same on the right shoulder holding the lower end thereof with his right hand almost close to his right thigh and knee Gent. You haue well discoursed touching the caryage and handling of the calliuer musket pike and halbard But now I pray what meane you by doubling your ranke and file Capt. By ranke I meane euery row or order of men standing shoulder by shoulder either in march or squadron reaching a long from the one side of the squadron vnto the other And by file I vnderstand all the line order or row of all the souldiers standing consequently one after another from front to the traine either in march or squadron Now the doubling of ranke or file is thus First suppose your company to be of 100 pikes as for the shot we will speake of hereafter and you would bring them into a iust square of men first search out the Cubike roote of your number and it is 10 then after the first order you shall cause them by the sound of the drum to embattell to march vp in single files at 10 men in euery file the head man of euery 10 to be a Caporal or Cabo de Camera and as the first 10 is come vp vnto the place where you meane to frame your squadrō cause them to make Alto then cal vp the second file at 10 per file causing them to march vp close pouldron to pouldron of the first tē and there to firme stand then the third file then the fourth and so consequently the rest vntill your squadron be formed your ensigne marching vp in the middle file as in this figure may appeare Here you see them drawne vp in single files at 10 men in euery file and so your squadron is framed 10 files and 10 rankes or 10 in flanke and 10 in front An other order is thus you may march them vp in 2 3 4 or 5 files at once and 10 rankes for the number euen or od importeth nothing if at 2 files at once then are they marched vp and framed at fiue commings vp if at 3 files at once then at three marchings vp at 3 files per Maniple which make 9 files and 1 single file at 10 men per file which maketh your iust square of men Now if you will march them vp by 4 files at once they are 2 marchings or Maniples at 4 files 10 rankes and one Maniple at 2 files per Maniple and so againe is your squadron formed And againe if you would march them vp by 5 files at once and 10 rankes they come vp in 2 Maniples and so is your squadron iustly framed Your squadron being thus framed set at 10 rankes 10 files thē to double the rankes you shall cause vpon an other sound of the drum those of the second ranke to step in betwixt them of the first ranke beginning either vpon the left or right hand first as you will and the 4 ranke to double the 3 and againe the 6 ranke to double the 5 and the 8 ranke to double the 7 and finally the 10 to double the 9 so shall your battell or squadron come to be 20 in breadth and 5 in length or depth or 20 files and 5 rankes which is in forme of a battell of double front as by these figures appeareth Here you see the rankes doubled into 20 files and 5 rankes Then cause them vpon another sound of the drumme to fall of or backe againe into their former places and so to double againe vpon the other hand and fall off againe Now to double the file cause the second file to double the first either vpon the left or right hand as it shall please you to begin and the fourth file to double the third and the sixt the fift and the eight the seuenth and the tenth file to double the ninth as in these figures following may appeare And here you may see the file doubled reduced into fiue files at 20 men per file vpon the right hand the like you shal cause them to do vpon the left hand hauing first caused them to fall off from their file bringing them into their former square againe Then shall you go vnto the traine of your battell or squadron and vpon another sound of the drumme you shall command all your souldiers to turne their faces vpon a sudden towards you then causing them to double both ranke file that way as you did the other way before thus with a litle paines taking and practise you shall soone bring your souldiers to be ready and skilfull in these alterations of formes and many more The like may be done with any other greater numbers either in battels or battallion or by making the front of any flanke Gent. But to what end serueth all this Capt. Marie to many good purposes For the first order of doubling the ranks besides the readinesse it breedeth in the souldiers doth serue to alter vpon a sudden your grand square of men into a square of ground or into a battell of double front and to many other purposes in framing of many small battallions one grand square And againe the second order in doubling of the files doth serue to many such other purposes as if vpon a sudden your foot enemy shall come to charge you vpon the flanke then by doubling their files and suddenly turning their faces vpon the enemie they shall make of flanke
vpon our ioyning with the enemie quite altered and chaunged and so changing dayly as occasions were offered And in land seruice more occurrantes do befall hourely which hereafter we will speake of But now partly to answere your demaund First the enemie discouered approching and engaging vs to fight happely some skirmishes may be begun by the hargoletiers and light horse but the battels approching and comming within shot the field ordinance on both sides if there be any begin to go off at which artillerie the first puzzelling doth commonly begin each part attempting to surprise the others ordinance then the loose shot in the forelorne hope on both sides begin to disband and fall to flat skirmish their office performed hauing bene well bearded they retire to the flankes and reareward of the battell from whence they are supplied and continually seconded with other fresh troupes so still maintaining fight till the horse do offer to charge the which are commonly encountred with horse againe if not then the shot retire behind their stand of pikes and are then also aided with their halberdes and short weapon and some halfe pikes mingled among them vpon whose charging the Muskets of impaling and the squadrons at the angles doe roundly bestow their vollie in the face of the enemie then the pikes are couched fast vnder the right foote guarding the girdling shot vnder their succour the which girdling shot are to kneele vpon their right knee vnder the couched pikes closing close together do stād with resolute hart hand and body holding the pike at a reasonable distance in the left hand their swordes ready drawen in their right hand of the first 3 or 4 rankes being sure to stand firme and couching their pikes point to the breast of the horse for that is the place of most aduantage A squadron of pikes thus couched and handled by resolute and honest men I cannot see how any troupe of horse dare venture vpon them and if they do yet not able to breake farre in if men stand resolute so of force must they retire with losse and disaduantage But if they be encountred with equall numbers proportions and force of pikemen then if they will they aduance their pikes vntill they come to the push then with charging ouer hand to thrust and push couragious and valiantly at which time valour and skill is shewed as second meanes of victorie but God the first cause and giuer of all Gent. In few wordes you haue finished a battell But your leaders and Commanders how are they this while employed Capt. Euery one according to his office place to encourage animate the souldiers to redresse with speed any disorders happening in their own troupes to espie the disorders or negligence of the enemy taking aduantage vpō such occasion with sundry other points which in their seuerall duties shall be declared The second Dialogue wherein is declared the order of many ancient formes of imbattailing Gentleman YOu spake of more sortes of battels I pray therefore declare vnto vs their orders how many in what formes and to what vses Capt. Although I haue before somwhat touched the same not minding to medle farther then with our fights now most accustomed yet neuerthelesse drawen on by your good and curious demaundes I will the best I can particularly describe them Therefore as I haue before declared of all formes of battels now in our age most in vse best approued and best allowed of is the iust square of men as equally strong on euery side and most fit and best assured for the open field and out of which quadrate all other formes may easily be reduced Next vnto that and most aduantagious indeede to fight is the quadrate of ground by good regard had wherein many hands are brought at one time to fight Of both the which formes I haue before largely discoursed as well the manner how to frame them as their due sortement with weapons and shot to the same I will now speake somewhat of the rest of the which there are many sorts seruing in old time vnto many purposes but now with vs quite out of vse as the Diamant battell the VVedge battell or Triangle the Sheers battell the Saw battell the Moone battell the SDG battels and the Crosse battell with such like and chiefly the battell compounded of sundrie battallions the which last recited of all others I thinke to be the most strong and aduantagious were men expert skilfull and ready but raw as in our dayes they be very difficult and dangerous to be handled The nearest therefore vnto the square of men is the Diamant battell vnto the framing whereof out of the said square there needeth no more but whereas the leader stood before on the square of the battell let him appoint another to go to the next corner or angle thereof and willing the pikes to turne their faces vpon him and they shall straight out of the square march into a Diamant proportion which forme when you are disposed to alter do no more but appoint the leader to the square where he first stood commaunding the pikes to turne their faces vpon him and they shall forthwith march into a square battell againe The facilitie is great both herein and in all others and that without any confusion as by their seuerall figures following shall appeare the which I haue framed of 25 letters the better to giue you to vnderstand And againe out of the Diamant forme may be reduced two triangles by cutting or diuiding the same in the middest at the two flat angles as in this figure of a Diamant forme may appeare by the prickes running along of 2 triangles may be framed a Sheeres battell and of 3 or 4 triangles may in like sort be framed the Saw battell by ioyning the angles together as in their figures following shall appeare Here you see the square reduced into a Diamant forme with onely turning their faces vnto the right angle E as aboue appeareth so marching on do fall into a perfect Diamant forme with two sharpe angles and two flat But in their march they will stretch ouer-long each man from his leadesman so will it be of no force to fight by reason of their raritie thin standing as in the former figure may appeare by F.B. by L.G.C. by G.M.H.D. by VV. R.N.N.E the two sharp angles and so of the rest To reforme the which fault First commaund your men to stand in the forme they are then causing the two sides of the first angle E to stand yet firme and commaund euery one of the rest except the said two sides to march on one after another vntill he come to finde himselfe in a due distance each after his leadsman thus F. shall march vp towardes B. vntill he finde A. to be his left-side fellow thē there to rest thē againe G. shall proceede towards C. vntill B. be his side
some most conuenient place together then and there to be instructed in the orders how to march how to encampe and how to fight deuiding them into so many parts or battaillions as vnto their chiefe Officer shall seeme good Gent. What course would you wish the Captaine of a single companie to obserue in the trayning of his souldiers Capt. First hauing his companie leauied and chosen of the better sort of people as is said let your rawe Captaine for so I terme those which neuer were in action prouide himselfe if possible he may of a good Lieutenant and a sufficient Sergeant and a skilfull Drummer Then let his people be suted with such sort of weapon as is appointed The which I would wish to be as I haue said before to euery hundred of men 25. muskets 25. Calliuers and 40. or more of pikes and corslets and the rest short weapon as halberds swordes and targets and such like Now hauing suted euery man with a conuenient weapon I would wish your Muster-maister if your Captaine haue not the skil for your Muster-master ought to be a man of experience first to declare vnto them the partes that ought to be in a souldier in generall as before is declared then to ensigne them the right carriage of their armes and weapon then to knowe the seuerall soundes of the Drumme next to learne to keepe his ranke and file orderly and so to march eyther swift or slowe step by step with the sound of the Drumme then how to keep their array being cast into a ring or any other forme with the comming out againe and returning into a counter-ring and out of the same into a march and counter-march then how to make their Alto or stand and how to double their rankes vntill they bring themselues into a iust square of men if their numbers will permit it and how to double their ●●les eyther vpon the left or right hand and so to fall off againe both from file and ranke and being in squadron how to turne their faces on either or any part making front on any flank or traine as occasion shall be offered Then the perfect vse and managing of euerie weapon in his due nature and kind and so by a continuall vse they may by good instructers become soone to be ready souldiers Gent. Here be manie good parts vnder a few words but they are too briefe for me to vnderstand wherefore I pray dilate more at large thereof and first what meane you by the cariage of his weapon Cap. To discourse vpō al these points particularly it wold be ouer long might better be shewed in act thē in words yet to satisfie you somewhat herein I will speak of the particulars here there as I shal be occasioned shal cal thē to memory First therfore the soldier that is appointed to cary a calliuer is first to be ensigned how to cary his peece vpon his left shoulder with his flaske at his girdle or hāging by at Port-flask or Flask-leather vpō the right thigh vpō the left side of his girdle to haue his touchboxe fastened by the string hanging downe somwhat long by the strings sufficient to be taken and to prime his peece with touch-powder and on his right side a Bullet bagge or purse of canuas or leather for bullets Also some three or foure yards of match in seuerall peeces hanging at his girdle with one peece of match of a yard long in his left hand holden fast by the third finger of the same hand hauing the one or both the endes of the same lighted or fired Also to be prouided of a priming iron or wyer of a steele and flint stone to strike fire vpon any suddaine occasion either to spare the burning of match or to fire their matches if the same do chance to go out Then how to charge his peece either with his flask or bandelier thē to let slip the bullet down into the barrell after the powder and to ramme the same with paper tow or such like thrusting the same downe with the scouring stick if time will permit or else a more readier way thus After that the bullet is slipped downe vnto the powder to put after the same some two or three cornes of powder which will wedge fast the bullet This being done let him hold his Calliuer with his left hand as in his charging hee ought to do the like griping the same by the stocke somewhat neare vnder the cock betwixt his thombe and foure fingers then holding the nose of his peece somwhat vpward for not to endāger his fellows to take the one end of his lighted match with his forefinger midle finger thōbe of his right hād so to cock the same hauing a regard that it may fall due within the pan finally if it be a crooked stock peece to set the same vnto the left side of his breast retiring his right foot some halfe step behind the left or aduancing the left foot some halfe pace before the right and so to take his due leuel holding the hindermost part of the stocke betwixt the thombe and fore-finger of his right hand with the other three fingers to draw to the serre so to discharge his peece with agility hauing done the which to retire souldier-like and charge againe giuing place to his next fellow or seconder But being a straight stocked peece the which I hold for the better he is to place the same vpon the right side of his breast fast against his shoulder leuelling and discharging as aforesaid And for other armes he is to be fitted with a short sword and meane dagger and a Spanish morion Now the musketier is to cary his musket vpon his left or right shoulder for it importeth not much on whether so they obserue the order of the first rancke with his Forke or rest in his left hand fastned about his hand wrest or little finger by a string hauing his flask and touchbox fitted as before is sayd or hauing a bandalier the same to be ouer the left shoulder and vnder the right arme Now to charge the same he must hold his musket with his left hand hauing his rest trayling by the string and put the but end of the stocke vpon the ground then with his flaske or bandalier to charge his peece with powder slipping downe the bullet into the barrell after the same and to fasten it with two or three cornes of powder as is aforesayd then to clappe the musket into his forke planting the lower end or pike of the rest into the ground neare vnto his left foote and resting the but ende of the stocke vpon his left thigh then to prime his pan with touch powder And hauing his match ready as before is sayd to take the peece of match that hangeth by the midle or third finger of his left hand betwixt the thombe
one halfe of the armed pikes in the foreward and the other halfe in the reareward of the vnarmed pikes Now in the body of this battell I vnderstand no short weapon but reserue them to another place and vnto another purpose as before I haue sayd and will heareafter speake more thereof but all pikes for the battell thereby wold be more readily framed more brauer in sight and more stronger to fight in mine opinion 2 The second fashion is when the army marcheth company by company with their armed pikes in the foreward and reareward of euerie particular companie 3 The third order is when an armie marcheth Maniple by Maniple with the armed pikes in the Front and traine of euery particular Maniple And besides this when the armed pikes which do serue to arme the two flankes do march the one part before the other part behind and these also are called Maniples for a Maniple is here called so many rankes throughout the battell as the battell is in length at so many per ranke as they march in ordinance or array And although the armed pikes which doe march at the head or taile of the arrayes of Maniples to arme the two sides if it happen at any time that they march not to the full length of the battell yet neuerthelesse when they be put vnto their office to arme the two sides although they be not in length to the length of the battell at so many in rank as is appointed to arme the two flankes yet are they called Maniples also And againe any part of shot or pikes that be drawne a part to be set to defend any straight or to scarmush may also bee called a Maniple but being shot are fitter called troupes after the french word Now of these sundry sorts of imbattailling of men as well of proportions of equality as of inequality and of battallions of the same nature as well euen as odde battallions seruing to the framing of crosse battels with such other like I will frame certaine calculations or tables the which shall serue to sundry numbers of men orders according to the iudgement of the skilfull souldier which shall be in the last booke of these discourses Gent. But me thinkes you are not much affected to haue any halberdes or billes in your battell which is contrary to our opinion and custome for we call them the gard of the ensignes and slaughter of the field Capt. Truly I would not wish any such weapon in the body of a standing battell if we might be prouided otherwise of pikes my reasons are these For the pikes being Terciard or charged ouer hand to encounter a battell of footmen or couched vnder the foote to receiue any troupes of horse do one of them fall so proportionally within or after another euen as their rankes of men are distant in their seuerall stations the second following the first the third the second and the fourth following the third and so consequently euery ranke seconding one another that it seemeth it were as good for a man to come vpon a brasen wall if they stand resolute as vpon such a battell of pikes except they should be marched or encountred with the like weapons and proportions Now if this be the best course to receiue or charge footmen then no doubt not being thus mingled with short weapons it must needes be the best battell to receiue a charge of horse Gent. Although you disalow and disproue to haue your battell of pikes mingled with short weapon yet would you not alow them about the ensignes in the center of the battell Capt For what purpose in the center of the battell Gent. To defend the ensignes with hand blowes Cap. I suppose it an error For who doth not know that if the enemy be like to be victor the armed pikes will yeeld backward as they feele themselues distressed so as when the pikes are in such maner crashed and clustred together that they can no longer charge and push with their pikes then will the throng or presse in the center be so great that the halberds and bils shall haue little roome to strike nay short swords will hardly haue rome at that instant either to thrust or to strike I would thinke daggers would do more execution at that time and in that presse vntill one side fall to flight so I see no reason at all for halberds or bills to haue place in a battell or stand of pikes Besides the vnseemely shew they make either by themselues in the center or mingled among pikes Gent. So I perceiue you would quight exclude all halberds and bils out of your battell and so not at all to be vsed Capt. Conclude not so short vpon me because I giue them no place within the body of the battell For if you remember in our former discourses at the equall sortment of weapons I allowed to euery hundred of men 8 or 10 halberds The which bils and halberds with other short weapons as swords and targets and long swords and such like shall serue as in a place of best seruice for them to mingle with your naked troupes of shot and also placed with some pikes for the gard of the cariage and munition and ordinance or for execution if the enemy begin to breake and slye with sundry such seruices not contained in the body of the battell Gent. Well you haue satisfied vs herein but what thinke you of sundry other opinions touching the lining of battels with shot or bowes Capt. Touching such lining I will shew you mine opinion against them Now first for that kind of lining which is vsed in placing a pike and a shot I am sure that the shot cannot be so hurtfull to the enemy as they will weaken the battell my reason is this No army I am certaine shall be so ordered that the battell shall be left bare without his troupes of shot before to keepe the enemy doing in skirmish vntill the battels be ready to ioyne and charge or couch their pikes at that instant haue the shot that line the battell their time to serue euen as the pikes are couched and not before Now let men of consideration and experience iudge whether it be possible for them to discharge aboue one shot a peece and that not aboue three rankes of them and thereupon whether those shot can at that time of seruice be such a strength to the battel as if an armed pike were in the roome I do suppose the battell would be much stronger if the shot were rid from thence and pikes in their places Then it falleth out that this kind of lining is not good Now touching another kind of lining with shot which is 3 4 5 6 or 7 rankes of pikes and then 3 4 or 5 rankes of shot and then pikes and then shot againe In deede this kind of lining is the most tollerable and yet not without his discommodities for if such
out of a wall bulwarke or fort Srerée a French word and is when the souldiers in squadron do ioyne and locke close together thereby to become the more strong Serracenesca a Spanish word and is the percluis or grate of a gate Skance a Dutch word and is a small fortresse built of turffe and earth commonly vsed in the low countries Scalada a Spanish word is a skaling of a wall with ladders Spontone an Italian word is a small long instrument of iron sharpe at the ende to thrust thorough anie loade of haie straw or such like to proue if any souldiers lie hidden within the same Squadra a Spanish word and is a certaine part of a company of some 20 or 25 souldiers whose chiefe is the Caporall Squadron a Spanish word and is a great number of souldiers pikemen reduced in arraies to march and also is a certaine companie of musketiers framed in order to march of fight and is also a certaine number of men aranged in order to march or charge T Taladro a Spanish word and is an instrument or engine to mount any peece of ordinance vp into Cariage Taisses a French vvord and is the arming of the thighes annexed vnto the forepart of the Corslet Terraplene an Italian vvord and is the earth that is rampired and filled vp vnto the inside of any vvall or bulwarke Tertio a Spanish vvord and is a Regiment of souldiers Tertiare a Spanish vvord and is to third the pike either to beare the same vpon his shoulder or to charge the same euer hand Trauessa a Spanish vvord and is a flanker of a wall Tragon is the reareward of the squadron or battell Trench a French vvord is the ditch about the vvall Tenaza a Spanish vvord is a little hold or Keepe made of one Curtine or Bulwarke V Vanbraces a French vvord and is the armings for the arme from the pouldrons downeward to the hand vvrest Vanguard a French vvord and signifieth the forepart of the battell Vollie a French vvord and is vvhen any kind of shot do discharge altogether W The Word vvhich vve call the vvatch Word and is by the French called Mot de guet and by the Spaniard En nombre vvich is a vvord or name deliuered by the Generall or other high Commander to be giuen vnto other officers and souldiers standing Sentinell at their postes vvhereby their vvatches are nightly gouerned c. Toute Puissance honneur glorie louange so it à nostre bon Dieu eternel FINIS BARRET Nella φ. δ. φ. ν. ρ. la ζ. Nella fidelta finiro la vita The cause of the beginning of these Discourses The Spaniard as well by his owne imperious inclination as by the Pope Clergies suggestion instigation of English and Irish Papistes hath these thirty years imagined Englands subuersion Example in Anno 1588. The Spaniard to be suspected for many reasons Yet many men hardly to be perswaded Peace breedes securitie securitie carelesse mindes carelesse mindes contempt of war contempt of war vnmartial minds Men hauing liued long in peace seldome suspect warre Securitas parit periculum By neglect of martiall disciplin many kingdomes subuerted Examples Good to shake off securitie and be carefull for our safetie Inueterat● opiniō not easie to be altered touching blacke bils and bowes Time altereth the order of warre with new inuentions daily The fiery weapons Canon musket The reputation of Archerie much blemished since the inuention of fierie weapons Bowes farre inferiour vnto Calliuer or Musket The readinesse of the one and the other with their different executions Archers may shoot in v●llie The execution of the bow not comparable to the musket The weapon not of deadly execution little to be feared Bow men haue most vse in open field and in set battels shot are vsed in all seruices The fierie weapō without practise dangerous to the handler To accommodate our selues to the now vsed weapons ord●r and times Not many short weapon in the field When to be vsed Target of Proof Pikes most honorable weapon in the field Short weapon about the Ensigne not so a●ailable as the Pike The Reasons The armed Pike the strēgth of the battaile The equall sortment of weapons offensiue and defensiue Countrey people loth to bee at charge Our daungerous time to be regarded Men liuing long in securitie amazed in alterations Want of good guides Actions not effected with words but with conduction order men with sutable weapons Selected bandes Companies well trayned to great good purpose The daunger of ignorant leaders and trayners Trayning Captaines very skilfull ought to prouide good officers Bookes of warre Three sorts of warre writers 1 2 3 The last ●●st approued Comparison● Reading Captains three sorts 1 2 3 The best wa●●ing experience farre from a worthy Captains Example of the first sort Example of the second sort Example of the third sort Daungerous for vnexperimented Captains to bring men to fight Many points to be in a souldier and more in a Captaine not attained by reading but by experience and that de veras Orderly trayning by good Trainers to good purpose Points wherein a souldier is to be fully instructed Questions demands do draw out semblable answers Carefull diligent men to be commended Men of sundry constitutions fit for sundry purposes Natural instinct doth worke wonderfull effects in all kind of professions To be often in action breedeth knowledge Comparison Litle reputation of Souldiers in our age with vs. The reasons Experience coupled with naturall instinct most perfect The bad reputation of Souldiers springeth much from their owne disorders The disorders of men of warre proceeding from two causes 1. The bad electiō 2. The litle discipline Fauorite electiōs Faults cōmitted by the Iustices of peace in leuying of Souldiers Litle amendment groweth where lewd liberty beareth sway All warres are either offensiue or defensiue Maintained managed and conducted by money men and armes by policie order and by good Chiefs The English for valour and courage comparable to anie It is the nature of euerie nation to thinke best of themselues Vegetius opiniōs reasons what climate breeds the best souldiers Men born vnder any climate may proue good souldiers by experiēce and discipline Sundry opinions what statured mē be most fit for warres The meane best allowed To bee serued with our owne nation is best for vs. The parts of a Souldier in general his valorous determination grounded 1. Vpon defense of true religion 2. For the honour of his Prince 3. For the safetie of his country 4 To learne diligently the Arte he professeth which is warre Many men of base birth by valour and vertue attained high degree Maximinus He ought to be diligent careful vigilant and obedient and aboue all to feare God To chuse honest Camaradas No blasphemer No idle gamesters Not curious in fare To eschue drunkennesse Gluttons drūkard bre●de many disorders Examples of punishment Decimare Aufidius Temperance and Abstinence Chaste honest
the battell in the angles flankes of the sayd battell as by their seuerall figures may be seene yet notwithstanding the aforesayd examples they may be placed where most neede and occasion shall serue to strengthen the battell either in front in traine or in any flanke So may you also as occasion shall require set more armed pikes vpon any part for the more strength and securitie of the battell And this much may suffice touching the body of a formed battell Next ensueth the fierie weapons Muskets and Caliuers how they should be placed Gent. I pray let vs vnderstand the order of them also Capt. As the armed pike is the strēgth of the battell so without question is the shot the furie of the field but the one without the other is weakened the better halfe of their strength Therefore of necessitie according to the course of warres in these dayes the one is to be coupled matched with the other in such conuenient proportion that the aduantage of the one may helpe the disauantage of the other For a stand of pikes though neuer so well armed being charged assailed with the like or a lesse number of shot by euery mans iudgement would haue the worse not able to abide the field vnlesse they had shot to answer their enemies shot In like sort any troupe of shot though neuer so braue expert being in open field hauing no stand of pikes or such other weapō nor hedge ditch trench or rampier to relieue and succour them could not long endure the force of horse especially Launciers Now the due sortement and matching of these weapons to offend and defend and to aide one another as aboue is sayd of the best experimented is accounted thus Vnto euery 100 men to haue one third pikes with some few short weapon and two thirds Calliuers But were the one halfe or more of your shot Muskets as the Spanyardes most commonly now vse and so to be wished with vs also then lesse number of shot would serue and more of pikes as I sayd at the beginning of our discourses For euery Musket considering the wonderfull execution of that weapon may be valued for two Caliuers Touching the placing of these fierie weapons about the body of the battell there hath bene and yet is sundry opinions Of some of them I haue already spoken in these discourses namely of lyning of battels with shot or short weapon by me disliked hauing there declared my reasons for the same But before I come to the placing and ordering of shot for being a weapon not skilfully and warily vsed is of more daunger to our selues then to the enemy sometimes I will put you in minde of one notable ouersight in our shot especially of the crooked stockt Calliuer For many souldiers ouer-curiously carrying and conueying their peece with the nose downeward and striuing to be seene nymble and quicke in discharging not considering that one shot well bestowed auayleth many vnaduisedly spent haue let slipt the bullet out of their peeces barrell vpon the ground before the discharging thereof Whereby it commeth to passe many times that an hundred shot hauing in skirmish discharged their peece three or foure times a peece against two hundred of the enemies and scarce slaine two of them A great indiscretion to be better regarded and amended the which may easily be done thus either after hauing charged and slipt the bullet out of his mouth into the barrell of the peece by mounting the nose thereof somewhat vpward holding his peece firmely with his left hand or else by stopping after the bullet which is easily done onely by putting two or three cornes of powder into the peece after the bullet In placing the shot about the battell some do vse to flanke the two sides of the battell with sleeues of shot by 11 13 15 or 17 in a ranke or more or lesse as they shall thinke good and place the sayd sleeues of shot 10 or 12 foote distant from the armed pikes and the rest of their shot in 4 great troupes at the angles of the battell without the sayd sleeues seruing for hornes or wings vnto the battell and the horsemen to be placed without them againe as in these figures following appeareth But in mine opinion this order is not so good as if the shot were deuided into sundry small troupes trouping round about the battell the one to second the other placed in forme as hereafter shall follow thus First your graund square or more battailions if you will being set then impale or girdle the same round about with shot by 3 5 or 7 or more in a rank according to the proportiō of the battell neare adioyning vnto the armed pikes to be by them guarded from the horse if neede were The rest of the shot deuide into many small troupes by 30 40 or 50 in a troupe to troupe round about the battell with some reasonable distance from the same to maintaine skirmish or fight which way soeuer the enemie approch Prouided that the same troupes be still maintained one to second another that the battell may be by them shadowed to the end that the skirmishes or troupes of the enemies may not haue that aduantage to play with their shot vpon your battell for hee is but a foolish shot that shooteth at or among light skirmishers where he may discharge vpon the body of his enemies battell which standes thick together and is a fayre marke to shoot at for the armed pikes once ouerthrowen which is the strength of the field the victorie by all likelyhood is like to ensue The empalement especially in the front I would wish to be Muskets some 3 or 5 in a ranke according to the greatnesse of the battell and those not to discharge vntill the battels approch within 20 pases distant and then throughly to discharge in vollie vpon the face of the enemy the which cannot chuse but must slay many and wound a number in the enemies front the effect whereof shall breede great encouragement vnto you and disencouragement and weakening to the enemy You may also if you please place at euery corner of your battel a squadron of Muskets neare vnto the girdling shot at 50 Muskets in each squadron or as occasion shall require who vpon the enemies battell approching wheeling a litle about in forme of a halfe Moone shall discharge their volly all at once vpon the body of the enemies battell What execution the Musket performeth such as haue bene in good actions doe know very well and scarcely to be beleeued of those which neuer saw any seruice The figure of this battell empaled with shot cornered with Muskets and trouped round about with the rest of their shot winged with horse as men at armes if they haue any and Launciers and light horse with the place of the field ordinance and forlorne skirmishers shall hereafter ensue on the other side
Excesse of lechery breeds cowards minds and diseased bodies Examples Decent in apparel Ouer curious in attire is signe of a Carpet knight a humour vnfit for warre Yet places and times vnmeete to be respected Louing and obedient vnto his Captaine Iustice loyaltie constan●●● patience silence and obedience Not subiect vnto passions Disobediēce breedeth many mischiefes Not to attempt any thing without his Captaines consent Example of rigorous punishment for disobedience The souldier is bound to obey his Prince without examining the cause of the war Patiētly to suffer the aduersities of warre Carefull execution ere he fall to the spoile An vnsouldierly part to be scraping and spoiling To pursue the victorie throughly Not cruell vpon cold bloud Fauourable and mercifull to the humble vanquished To chuse the weapon wherein be most d●lighteth The pike and corslet most honora●le weapon for the footman The musk●t of most execution of any fury manuall weapon To practise all weapons The sword and target important to many effects To learne the seuer●ll sound of the drumme To be skilfull in swimming Couragious and resolute in encoūters Vigilant and carefull at sentinell Not to dis●rme himselfe vntill he see his ensigne vnarmed in corps de gard Loyall to his Prince No shifter from Company to Company Not curious of houres for eating but to preuent time To practise warlike exercises in vacant time To delight in reading of histories The profits proceeding thereof Carefull to marke the courses kept by his superior officers The profession of armes foundation of Nobilitie So many good parts hardly to be found in one 〈◊〉 Euery honourable souldier ought to endeuour himselfe to attain● wha● he can Some better then few few better then none at all Many good parts 〈◊〉 a souldier gotten by experience and perfected with learning Most famous Commaunders were learned All Campes formed of men weapons munition and good Chiefes The Cōmaunders of a campe in degrees Armie is deuided into sundry Regiments The Regimēt into sundry bandes The officers of a Regiment The number of a Band. The Captaine and his officers of a Companie The parts to be in a Caporall To be with his souldiers as a father with his children To cause them to keepe their armes neat and cleane and to shew them the vse thereof The glittering shew of armors is the reioycing of a campe He shal perswade them to all cleanlinesse and honestie disswade them from vice To be obedient vnto his superior officers Being at any peace of seruice with his Squadra alone his care and authoritie great His care at the Corps de guard His care office duty in ward watch and Sentinell The care order and regard in placing watch and Sentinell In places of suspition and danger to place men of best importance To visite and reuisite often the watch To repart the victuall with equitie and right The word not to be trusted vnto raw souldiers bisognios The order how the Sentinell is to receiue the word of such as come neare him Camarada what Capo de Camara In the Sergeant of a Band there ought to be militarie discipline Skilfull valiant quicke Requisite that ●e be somewhat learned and seene in Arithmetike to know how to sort his weapons and to frame his squadron the sooner To draw each sort of weapon by themselues The best armed in front flankes and rereward To instruct the drumme the seuerall sounds The manner to ranke a seuerall Band. To deuide the squadron for seuerall seruices To appoint them to their seuerall seruice To set remoue the watches To giue the word with all secrecy circumspectiō To be careful for the souldiers prouision The proper arming of a Serg●āt His care is to prouide and call for victuals f●r the souldiers In absence of the Captaine to be obedient to the Lieutenant By diligēce pains industry to climbe to higher degree The parts required to be in an Ensigne-bearer The Ensign is the foundatiō of the company and in whom consisteth the honour and reputatiō of Captaine soldiers The Ensign-bearer to die in defence of his Ensigne The Ensigne for the field the smaller for garrison then the bigger Wherfore called Ensignes Why called Banners why called Colours The Ensignes deliuered to the Ensigne-bearer by the Captaine with great solemnity and oath After any singular peece of seruice it is the Ensigne bearers due yet by gift of the Captaine The Ensigne bearer to go gallantly armed To shew himself terrible to the Enemie The times and cases when the Ensigne-bearer is to fight Examples The Ensigne broken or torne in fight no dishonor to the Ensigne bearer if he retaine the truncke in his hand In march how he is to behaue himselfe In fights in encounter in musters and in his Generals presence how he is to behaue himselfe In presence of the Prince how The Ensignes place in a squadron or battell the right ●and is the place of preheminence The Abanderados Not lawfull for the Ensigne-bearer to enter into fight but with the Ensigne in his hand The Ensigne to be accompanied with a Corps d●garde in his lodging The veneration and respect of the Ensigne The souldiers not to disarme themselues vntill the Ensigne-bearer be first vnarmed and Ensigne placed vp When the Ensign-bearer is to disarme The parts that ●ught to be in a Lieutenant Not to arrogate ouer much authoritie to himselfe To pacifie and determine the souldiers brables with grauity and good speeches To cause offenders to bee apprehended To see the company furnished with all necessaries To counsell ayde assist the Sergeant in his office To passe with the company to the Corps de gard To visite and reuisite the watch To see the souldiers appointed to their lodgings His place of march Captaines chosen by the counsell of warre state or by Vize-royes of prouinces Litle consideration vsed many times in bestowing their charges Inconueniences arising from fauorite elections The expert souldier loth to obey the vnexpert Captaine Good order for reformation Captaines to be chosen out of the best approued Lieutenants None to be captaines except first a Lieutenant None Lieutenant but first an Ensigne None Ensigne but first a Sergeant Hope of preferment makes men obedient diligent Many haue spent their patrimony in wars but few enriched therby Fauorite election is a crosse to olde souldiers A fond conceit of some seruitours A worse mind of some common souldiers The first to be disliked as men inconsiderate The second as mē n●ither fit for peace nor warre The more honest minds lesse apt to beg or craue The wars ended the Princes purse not to maintaine all idle Men hauing long followed the warres of good proof in the same most fit to bee chosen for Captaines Muster-maisters what they ought to be In stead of bow●● and bills good pikes muskets A caneat for Captaines and Muster-maisters What order for conuerting billes and bowes into pikes muskets A good consideration A bad sort of people
the front and so bee ready with double hands either to receiue or giue the charge For those battels of square of ground or battels of double fronts do bring many hands to fight at once being verie aduantagious for footmen against footmen as reason and experience proueth and sheweth And againe if you draw or diuide your battell or battallions into maniples to march through straights or narrow passages this order of doubling the files is verie ready and auaileable as thus If your battel or squadron be of 5184 pikes whose square roote is 72 now your passage will permit but 8 men to march in front then must you diuide your square root 72 by 8 so commeth it to be 9 maniples of 8 men in rank or breadth And say yet againe that the straight or passage doth fall yet more narrow or straighten lesse then to containe 8 men in front thē cause euery maniple at the verie entring of the straight to double their files and so of 8 you shall make 4 files per maniple the which being shouldred vp close together will containe no more roome in breadth then the 8 did before And hauing passed the straight cause them to fall into their former proportion and so maniple after maniple in passing the straight Gen. But if the squadron or maniple were of od nūbers it wold not so fal out Capt. That importeth not for the od file or rank which resteth vndoubled may in passing of the straight close vp shoulder to shoulder vnto the rest obseruing their proper stations in files and if the passage will not permit that then to fall backe after the traine of their maniple hauing passed the straight to sleeue vp in file pouldron to pouldron of their fellowes and so to fall into their former proportion The like of any other od numbers may be done with very great facility Now for as much as I entend to frame both figures and tables of sundry sorts of battels and battallions in our discourse following I will at this instant bee the more briefe supposing this at this present to suffice For he which conceiueth and vnderstandeth this well may do the like with any other numbers great or small Gent. And what course do you appoint the shot belonging to those numbers of pikes to obserue in these alterations of proportion Capt. The shot appertaining vnto euerie such number may be practised in the like or semblable sort either alone by themselues or placed in two grand sleeues along by the flanks of their squadron or battallions As for example If vnto the former number of 100 pikes there were proportioned suted 100 shot calliuer and musket these would I draw out into 5 per rank which would make 20 ranks Those 20 ranks would I cut off or deuide in the middest so should I haue 10 ranks for to sleeue the one flanke of the battallion and 10 ranks for the other flanke at 5 men per ranke or 5 files in euery ranke which is all one These 2 sleeues being placed may be doubled with the pikes by ranke or file for practise sake only But if you were engaged to fight with the enemie I would wish all great sleeues of shot to be deuided into many small troupes the one still to second another as hereafter shall be declared shewed And lo here another order the 2 grand sleeues being al musketiers as the battell or battalliō doth aduance march on toward the enemy comming once within reach of the musket then the first ranks of these sleeues of muskets many discharge in marching in this sort The first ranks stepping some two or three paces forward there those of the right sleeue to step one halfe pace toward the right hād those of the left sleeue one half pase toward the left hand hauing in the meane space made themselues ready and cocked their matches then with readinesse expedition all those of thē first ranks their muskets being vpon their rests or forks to discharge at once and keep their station charge againe permitting other rankes to proceed before them Then presently those of the second ranke to step vp iust before the first rank as the battell or battallion marcheth and so to discharge as their former fellowes had done before then the 3. rank before the 2. the 4. before the 3. and so all the other ranks consequently with this kind of double march and at the traine of the last rank those of the first to follow vp againe and so consequently the rest But if it chance their squadron of pikes to be distressed forced to retire they are to discharge at the enemy retiring backe vpon a countermarch as these figures following shal plainlie denote vnto you the maner and order The First Figure The second Figure with the Muskets discharging in marchings The third Figure vpon the retrait the shot discharging vpon a Counter-march There is yet another order of discharging of troupes of Muskets in vollie the which I haue seene vsed by the Italian and Spaniard thus Your Musketiers being deuided into sundrie troupes of 30 40 or 50 in a troupe the one to second the other then the two first troupes standing vpon the two angles of your squadron or battell may bee drawne vp by two officers by three foure or fiue at the most in a ranke and the said officers being at a sufficient distance to discharge shall cause the Musketiers to close somewhat neere shoulder to shoulder and so wheeling them about in figure of a halfe Moone shall at their due semi-circle or halfe compasse cause the Musketiers to make Alto and clapping their muskets on their rests close one by an others shoulder and each one hauing a care to his forefellowes they shall at one instant discharge altogether at one vollie vpon the enemy and so retire giuing place to other troupes the maner and forme whereof shall by these figures following appeare Troupes or squadras of muskets at 50. per troupe 5. in ranke Gent. Your calliuers or small shot would you haue them to discharge in these maners and orders before spoken of and figured Capt. No but I would with the calliuers or small shot to be deuided into sundry small troupes of 20 30 40 or 50 in a troupe and by their seuerall officers to be led vp and to skirmish in single file discharging readily one after another in file and so wheeling about vpon the left hand to retire giuing place vnto others to second them and to fall into their forme of troupe againe and then recharging aduisedly to be ready to come vp to second others as their turne commeth of which maner of small troupes shall often in our discourses following be denoted and shewed Now to conclude these orders of training I will set downe one point more to be obserued by one single company or two or three companies ioyntly comming into the Corps de