5 things âGame of Thronesâ got wrong, according to a medieval warfare expert
Sure, there were dragons in the air and an army of the dead on the ground, but âGame of Thronesâ managed to nail it Sunday night on a few factual points of medieval warfare. It also got a few things flat-out wrong. Blame it on the entertainment needs of a TV audience.
Setting aside our very willing suspension of disbelief, we talked to a history professor Monday to get the straight scoop.
âThe most realistic thing was the idea of the âlast man standing,â and what does the last man standing feel,â said Kelly DeVries, a specialist in medieval warfare at Loyola University Maryland. âThe desperation of living, of continuing to stay alive while others are falling around you. That I thought was done tremendously.â
âWhen thereâs a foe willing to destroy you down to the last man, woman and child,â he said, âbeing the last man standing has got to be pretty terrifying.â
Also on historic target was the level of destruction.
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âThe destruction, obviously weâre dealing with otherworldly causes of destruction in this case âŚ,â DeVries said. âIf you were under attack, especially in the later days when gunpowder [was being used] to bring down a castle, the amount of destruction at the end would probably be very similar to what weâre seeing there. Just everything burned, everything in pieces.â
And the Unsullied got a compliment for their snappy tactics.
âThe way they were able to protect the retreat and then to fold back into the retreat themselves, that was very nicely done and might be very close to the way a Roman legion would behave,â DeVries said.
But from there, accuracy went downhill in favor of good old-fashioned entertainment value. Here are a few places âGame of Thronesâ went historically astray â not that anyoneâs complaining.
You can leave your hat on
âNobody in their right mind would have gone into that battle without a helmet, but weâve got to be able to see Brienne and Jaime and Gendry and all these others that are fighting without helmets,â DeVries said.
That said, we award bonus points to Grey Worm, who would never take on an enemy without his nifty helmet in place.
Itâs always darkest before the dawn
The battle started in the wee hours before dawn, a reality we knew was coming back in Episode 2. And it was dark. Pitch dark. So dark even some viewers complained they couldnât see.
âI guess itâs appropriate to fight the battle against the Night King in darkness, because it wouldnât affect him, but it did make it a little more dark than was easy to see,â DeVries said, allowing for a bit of fantasy in the scenario.
But real life would have been a lot different.
âNobody ever fought in the Middle Ages in the dark, because you couldnât see, and there wasnât enough distinction in armor that you could tell who was on what side by that. Youâd have to be able to see what heraldry was being worn, or some identifying marks,â he said. âYou canât do that in the dark.â
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A wall is a very big weapon
DeVries said nobody in the Middle Ages would have fought outside a castleâs walls.
âWhy would you? Because the walls were the most important defensive structure,â he said. âAny medieval fortification was there because of these very expensive walls, and they were hugely expensive.â He would have kept everyone inside, manning those expensive walls.
âYes, it would have been very crowded, but nobody cares at that point.â
It might have been hard, however, to keep in a crowd like the Dothraki, because, like the Mongols they appear to be based on, âthey wouldnât cower behind walls,â he said.
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âBut that was a huge waste. They looked pretty across there,â he said, with their flaming swords contrasting against the darkness, âbut you just lost tens of thousands of your men by sending them across against an enemy they couldnât see. Nobody would ever go against an enemy like that.â
Big names, early expiration dates
âWhen some of the major leaders like George Custer in Custerâs Last Stand go down, they go down actually pretty quickly,â DeVries said. The troops are then left behind to fight for their lost leaderâs cause, or maybe they just canât get out of the place alive.
âOf course, itâs a TV thing that everyone whoâs important is still alive,â he said. âThe only major characters we lose are Jorah and Theon, but they both get to go out in heroic fashion. ⌠You wouldnât see that happen.â
Thanos has got nothing on the Night King
A lot, lot, lot of people died in the episode Sunday night. And that doesnât bode well for Daenerys and Jonâs plans to battle Cersei for the throne.
âThe last thing you want to do is take 10,000 Dothraki and make them no more,â DeVries said. âThe same thing with your elite troops, the Unsullied. They completely removed their light horsemen.â
What youâve got left, he pointed out, is only a few knights and some fighting men.
âThereâs no way in the world that an army that has been devastated like that one has could now turn and go fight another campaign,â he said.
But where thereâs a will, thereâs a way â at least for this ragged crew â especially when there are three more episodes left in the series.
âIn one way you could say all those moves worked, because they won. But do you label it victory if you really are now on the verge of defeat because you destroyed your army in doing it?â DeVries wondered. âThis is the real question.â
Good thing âGame of Thronesâ is anything but real.
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