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Bnei Shevet 'Arabim (Arabian Light Infantry)

Not Available Weapons
Defence
Mental
Primary Secondary Armour: 2 Morale: 11
Type: spear spear Shield: 2 Discipline: normal
Attack: 5 14 Skill: 11 Training: untrained
Charge: 2 2 Recruitment Other
Lethality: 1 0.13 Soldiers: 50 Hit Points: 1
Range: 57.8 0 Cost: 1298 Mass: 0.95
Ammo: 6 0 Upkeep: 325
Turns: 1
Primary Weapon Attributes: Thrown missile
Secondary Weapon Attributes: Light spear
Attributes: Can board ships, Improved hiding in forest, Very Hardy, Can hide in long grass
Formation: Square Side/Back spacing: 1.4 / 1.6
Mount effects: elephant +2, chariot +4, horse -2
Ownership: Aedui, Arche Seleukeia, Arverni, As'Sab'yn wal'Jau, Baktria, Casse, Epeiros, Getai, Hayasdan, Iberia, Koinon Hellenon, Makedonia, Pahlav, Pontos, Ptolemaioi, Safot Softim biKarthadast, Saka, Sauromatae, Senatvs Popvlvsqve Romanvs, Swebozez, Eleutheroi
N.A.

The Bnei Shevet Aravim are not much to look at, clad in simple attire and armed with the most rudimentary of weapons, a spear and shield, but they are far more capable soldiers than first glance would indicate.

Hardy

These lightly armed men are not much to look at, clad in simple attire and armed with the most rudimentary of weapons, a spear and shield, but they are far more capable soldiers than first glance would indicate. Exceedingly loyal to their Sabaean overlords they are much more reliable than their eastern levy counterparts and their experience in years of both tribal skirmishing and warfare on behalf of their Sabaean rulers has made them into warriors of surprising merit and skill.

Historically, the bulk of the Sabaean medium infantry line was levied from the Arab and Bedouin peoples under their direct or nominal rule, many of them serving as regulars, though most were recruited sporadically by agents of the Sabaean King. Their minor tribes and settlements had a history of loyalty to the Sabaeans, having fought alongside them and been under their rule to various extents for centuries, most of them coming to accept their religious practices ages ago. They were hardy veterans of numerous conflicts, with relatives who could in all likelihood say the same, generally invested in their ruler's cause and sympathetic to their often easy government.