Trimarcisia
Trimarcisia (
According to Pausanias:
When the Gallic horsemen were engaged, the servants remained behind the ranks and proved useful in the following way. Should a horseman or his horse fall, the slave brought him a horse to mount; if the rider was killed, the slave mounted the horse in his master's place; if both rider and horse were killed, there was a mounted man ready. When a rider was wounded, one slave brought back to camp the wounded man, while the other took his vacant place in the ranks.
Pausanias' view was that the Gauls had adopted this method of fighting by copying the Persian
Etymology
According to Pausanias, marka was the Celtic name for a horse.[3] This corresponds to the root *mark-os of words for "saddle horse" attested in Celtic and Germanic but not in other Indo-European languages, a root that is of uncertain etymology.[6]
References
- ISBN 9780851159232.
- Perseus Project.
- ^ Perseus Project.
- ISBN 9780521200561.
- ISBN 9781135632434.
- ISBN 9783940793072.