DBA Resource PageMedieval ArmiesMedieval Spanish (1350-1485 AD)
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| 3x3Kn | Knights |
| 4x2LH | Ginetes |
| 1x4Cb | |
| 1x3Aux | Almughavars, Mudejars or Portuguese peasant hordes |
| 1x2Ps | Slingers, Archers, Crossbowmen or hand gunners |
| 2x4Sp | |
| 2Kn/4Bd or 1x4Bd + 1x4Lb |
Dismounting Knights are French mercenaries. Blades and Longbow option are English mercenaries. |
The four Light Horse in this list make this my favourite western European medieval army this however this is far to many. As I began to do the reading for these army notes I soon realised that the above list was wrong. Looking at Bernd Lehnhoff's translations of the DBM lists and G. Branco's Medieval Portuguese army variant (both in the Army variant section of this site) confirmed what I had already discovered. I would like to suggest the following as a replacement general army list. For specific lists use the above variants.
| 3x3Kn | Knights |
| 2x2LH | Ginetes |
| 3x2Ps or 3Bw | Crossbowmen and Archers |
| 1x4Sp | |
| 1x2Ps | Slingers |
| 2x3Aux or 2Kn/4Bd or (1x4Bd + 1x4Lb) | Aux are Almughavars, Mudejars or Portuguese peasant hordes. Others are French or English mercenaries. |
French and English should only be used up to the end of the fourteenth century, though G. Branco says the English were helping the Portuguese until 1411. During the fifteenth century the slingers would be replaced by hand gunners. The Aux may also have been like similar Italian troops as there was a strong Italian influence on Spanish Equipment during the fifteenth century.
At the start of the period covered by this list the Spanish would have had a distinctive appearance. Some of the distinctly Spanish themes would have remained throughout. The following should give a basic idea of what the various types should look like.
Knights: The long years fighting fast moving Moslem troops meant that the Spanish equipment was lighter than most of their European counterparts. Their plate armour was less complete, with the arms and hands being covered by chain mail. This changed after the French and English became involved in Spain their more complete plate armour was soon copied. As previously mentioned Italy played an important part in the way the Spaniards looked (presumably due to Aragon's connections with Italy) and Italian armour was popular in the 15th century. One other thing sets the Spanish Knight apart from his European contemporaries, their habit of riding mules instead of horses.
Another group of Knights that featured in Spanish armies are those from the military orders. Your DBA army should include one element of these you should try painting each figure in the colours of a different order for effect. They probably didn't wear habits in battle and brethren may have worn their own arms. However, most would probably have worn a version of the official dress, perhaps as a cassock or tabard. The following are the details of each orders official garb.
| Santiago | White habit until early 15c then black has red espada* |
| Calatrava | White habit until the end of 14c then grey or black with red fleury cross** |
| Alcantara | White habit green fleury cross until end of 14c then civvies |
| Avis | White habit green fleury cross |
| Sao Thiago | White habit red espada* |
| Montesa | White habit black cross until 1400 there after red |
| Knights of Christ | White habit red cross with white twist in middle |
*An Espada is a device shaped like a sword with fleur-de-lis at the end of the crosspieces and as a pommel Sao Thiago also add a fleur-de-lis at the tip of the sword.
**A Fleury cross is a cross with arms of an equal length that terminate in fleur-de-lis.
Ginetes: At the start of the period covered by this list they would have been lightly equipped wearing an aketon carrying shield javelins and sword. After the Anglo-French intervention this rapidly grew much heavier. It would then comprise a hauberk, aketon, helmet and shield with the possible addition of plate arm and/or leg harness.
Almughavars: Peasant dress with fur waistcoat. Carried a selection of javelins and spears.
Mudejars: These are Moslem troops dressed in typical Moslem style with long flowing robe and turban.
Slingers: These are peasants so will wear typical peasant clothing. Note slings may in fact be staff slings.
Other infantry: The amount of armour worn could vary from none to a hauberk, aketon and arm harness but never leg armour. Various styles of helmet were used, cabacetes, bascinets, barbutes as well as caps or hats. The amount and style of armour would vary with the role of the troops and the time. Spearmen were likely to be more heavily armoured than archers and more armour would be in use at the end of the period than at the beginning. The most distinctive Spanish item of equipment would be the shield. This could be a convex kite shape, oval or the distinctly Spanish adarge. During the fifteenth century the infantry also adopted Italian style equipment and could look almost identical to their Italian counterparts.
The usual medieval bright multicoloured clothes would be in order. Remember even the poorest peasant was likely to wear colourful clothing during this period. The only notably Spanish trait was a fondness for red.
Historically the Spanish drew their armies up in three ranks. The first according to Ian Heath (Armies of the Middle Ages Vol 1, WRG) was made up of infantry, however with the exception of the Portuguese who were influenced by their English allies this doesn't seem to be the case.
After reading several descriptions of battles I would say the front rank was made up of knights, although one account does mention slingers as well. The second rank was itself split into three parts, a centre and two wings. The centre would be knights including the army's commander. The wings would be made up of crossbow men and/or Ginetes. The third rank would be made up of the remaining infantry.
Turning now to the tactics individual parts of the army. The Knight's main tactic was to charge straight at the enemy however unlike his contemporary's in the rest of Europe if this failed the Spanish knights would start to skirmish with the enemy instead. Perhaps Spanish knights should be classed as Cavalry rather than knights in DBA?
The tactics of the Ginetes were what you would expect from light cavalry, hover round the flanks trying to get behind their opponents, pick off any stragglers, etc. They were also useful for pinning down enemy infantry.
Crossbowmen seem to have been used to soften up the enemy before the second rank charged in.
Slingers as pointed out above are mentioned as being in the front rank on at least one occasion but no mention was made of what they were doing. However, I would hazard a guess that they were covering the Knight's advance and/or providing supporting fire.
As for the other infantry they are ignored by all the sources I have seen and their position indicates they were playing a supporting role. Sir Charles Oman's description of the infantry at the battle of Navarette may give an indication of the infantry's role "Little confidence was evidently placed in them and they did no more than had been expected of them when they fled from the field."
Turning this into a DBA deployment I would suggest putting two elements of knights in your front rank (French if you have them) supported by slingers if you wish. The second rank centre should be any remaining Knights including your general flanked by crossbow men who are in turn flanked by Ginetes. Note the crossbow men and Ginetes could be slightly ahead of the knights. The third rank is made up of the left overs.
Under English influence the Portuguese deployment would be somewhat different their front rank should be a mixture of dismounted knights and archers including any longbow men they have. They will fight defensively in the English manner.
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My thanks to Stephen Montague for providing this essay. Comments, questions or suggested additions to this page can be sent to Chris Brantley, brant@erols.com.
Last Updated: Dec. 11, 2000