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Bydirag Baexdzhyntae (Steppe Riders)

Not Available Weapons
Defence
Mental
Primary Secondary Armour: 0 Morale: 9
Type: none spear Shield: 1 Discipline: normal
Attack: 5 2 Skill: 9 Training: untrained
Charge: 27 27 Recruitment Other
Lethality: 1 0.33 Soldiers: 25 Hit Points: 1
Range: 187 0 Cost: 1590 Mass: 1
Ammo: 40 0 Upkeep: 396
Turns: 1
Secondary Weapon Attributes: Armour Piercing
Attributes: Can board ships, Improved hiding in forest, Very Hardy, Can form cantabrian circle, Mercenary
Formation: Square Side/Back spacing: 3 / 4
Mount effects: chariot +3
Ownership: Hayasdan, Pontos, Eleutheroi
N.A.

The Bydirag Baedxzhyntae are expert horse archers, and fight well in the traditional tactics used by steppe cavalry: killing from a distance with arrows, while remaining out of reach, but they can mount a respectable charge against weakened foes.

Very Hardy
Can Form Cantabrian Circle

The Bydirag Baedxzhyntae (Steppe Riders) are light horsemen and are often found in the employ of settled nations. Light cavalry such as this is designed for scouting, screening your army, disrupting an enemy’s formation, wearing his morale and numbers through archery and, eventually, pursuit. The weapons that they use are the bow and arrow, but they also carry spears and small shields. In a pinch, they can be used for shock action, but this will yield poor results against unbroken infantry. They are trained in archery from childhood and ride with ease and grace atop their small, but trusty steppe pony.

Historically, mounted archers came from the steppes north and east of the Black Sea. They formed the bulk of the armies of different groups of what are broadly called “Iranian nomads”, but, as they expanded, their paticular methods of warfare, together with other aspects of their culture, were transmitted to other peoples. Thus horse archer like the Bydirag Baedxzhyntae were also present among, for example, the diverse peoples that dwelled on the European Caucausus and its neighboring areas. The settled powers to the south, such as Pontos and Armenia, valued greatly these mounted warriors and, caring little for their precise ethnic adscription, included then in their armies as either mercenaries, subjects or allies whenever they had the chance.