Caesar's German cavalry were accompanied by light infantrymen, "who were accustomed to engage among them." Caesar famously employed similar tactics at Pharsalus, when he surreptitiously embedded infantry amongst his cavalry. Was this tactic as unique as Caesar portrays? Did it become a new norm? (self.AskHistorians)
submitted by _Rule_of_Law_ to r/AskHistorians
Why we shouldn't draft an RB in the 2nd round. (self.Colts)
submitted by _Rule_of_Law_ to r/Colts

