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TheDoctor Lieutenant Commander
Joined: 27 Dec 2007 Posts: 150 Location: San Francisco
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Posted: Fri Mar 18, 2011 3:47 pm Post subject: Discrepancy in the Imperial Sourcebook? |
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In the Imperial Sourcebook 2nd ed., on page 61, an Imperial Star Destroyer is said to carry a "full stormtrooper division". The page also lists the capacity as being 9,700 troops.
However on page 83 which details the Order of Battle, a "division" is not listed as one of the military units utilized by the Empire.
Additionally, Stormtroopers are organized by squads, platoons, companies, batallions ("820 men, just like any other batallion), regiments and finally legions. Given that regiments are "generally" 4 batallions, and that a legion is assumed to be 4 regiments (as a battlegroup would be), a full legion would be 13,120 troopers!
So does anyone have an explanation or theory to explain the discrepancies?
I realize I should find better things to do with my time... _________________ "We attack under cover of daylight. Yes it's the last thing they'll be expecting, a daylight charge over the minefield." - Arnold Judas Rimmer, BSC SSC |
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CRMcNeill Director of Engineering
Joined: 05 Apr 2010 Posts: 16281 Location: Redding System, California Sector, on the I-5 Hyperspace Route.
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Posted: Fri Mar 18, 2011 4:09 pm Post subject: Re: Discrepancy in the Imperial Sourcebook? |
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TheDoctor wrote: | In the Imperial Sourcebook 2nd ed., on page 61, an Imperial Star Destroyer is said to carry a "full stormtrooper division". The page also lists the capacity as being 9,700 troops.
However on page 83 which details the Order of Battle, a "division" is not listed as one of the military units utilized by the Empire. |
The problem with the Imperial Sourcebook is that it was essentially written by committee. Dig into detail in the Sector Group Organization chapter, and you'll find that little of the equipment described in the ships and ground vehicles chapters actually fit well into the listed TO&E.
In the TO&E, the division is replaced by the battlegroup at the organizational level, but stormtroopers have their own unit designation for a division sized unit: a legion.
Quote: | Additionally, Stormtroopers are organized by squads, platoons, companies, batallions ("820 men, just like any other batallion), regiments and finally legions. Given that regiments are "generally" 4 batallions, and that a legion is assumed to be 4 regiments (as a battlegroup would be), a full legion would be 13,120 troopers!
So does anyone have an explanation or theory to explain the discrepancies? |
There is a side-bar on page 83 of the handbook that explains this number discrepancy by completely removing the support elements found in other units, so that a stormtrooper unit lacks medical, technical and logistics support units, and all assigned personnel are combat troops. If you look at the personnel totals for standard Imperial Army units, you'll see that they all have a listing for "# combat troops out of a total of #", because support troops are not counted as combat troops for Imperial Army accounting purposes.
Personally, I think the whole idea of stormtroopers not having support units is ridiculous. I think it would be more appropriate for the stormtrooper unit aboard a star destroyer to be a reinforced regiment; 4 line battalions, supported by additional units of walker armor, repulsorlift vehicles, artillery, combat engineers, etc. I don't care how elite a military unit is; an army travels on its stomach, and any vehicle-equipped army has to float into combat on a lake of fuel. The combat units may be the sharp end of the spear and get all the glamor and glory, but they would be worse than useless without their support units.
Quote: | I realize I should find better things to do with my time... |
Where's the fun in that? _________________ "No set of rules can cover every situation. It's expected that you will make up new rules to suit the needs of your game." - The Star Wars Roleplaying Game, 2R&E, pg. 69, WEG, 1996.
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Dustflier Lieutenant Commander
Joined: 21 Feb 2011 Posts: 140 Location: Upstate New York
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Posted: Fri Mar 18, 2011 4:11 pm Post subject: |
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It looks like they took the standard legion (13,120 stormtroopers) and divided it by an arbitrary 1.35257732 to get the full amount of troopers on the Death Star. I bet the original term they were going to use was "a full stormtrooper grouping number that is composed of a legion, then undergoing arbitrary mathematical functions including division," but decided to shorten it.
So they ended up with a "full stormtrooper division," with 9,700 troops.
What, am I missing something? _________________ Also known as Kiss My Wookiee on Discord and Reddit. |
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TheDoctor Lieutenant Commander
Joined: 27 Dec 2007 Posts: 150 Location: San Francisco
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Posted: Fri Mar 18, 2011 7:11 pm Post subject: Re: Discrepancy in the Imperial Sourcebook? |
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crmcneill wrote: | TheDoctor wrote: | Additionally, Stormtroopers are organized by squads, platoons, companies, batallions ("820 men, just like any other batallion)... |
There is a side-bar on page 83 of the handbook that explains this number discrepancy by completely removing the support elements found in other units, so that a stormtrooper unit lacks medical, technical and logistics support units, and all assigned personnel are combat troops. |
True, but that sidebar states that a Stormtrooper batallion is still 820 men, all of which presumably are combat troops.
I agree however that lacking support personnel of any kind does not seem to make sense. It seems indicative that no one at that time (probably Lucas including), had made up their minds as to what the backstory with stormtroopers was supposed to be.
If 9700 constitutes a full division or legion, that would equate to 11.829... batallions. Perhaps a "full" legion includes special combat units that would not necessarily equate to 13,000+?
Dustflier wrote: | ...I bet the original term they were going to use was "a full stormtrooper grouping number that is composed of a legion, then undergoing arbitrary mathematical functions including division," but decided to shorten it.
So they ended up with a "full stormtrooper division," with 9,700 troops.
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Yeah, that must be it. _________________ "We attack under cover of daylight. Yes it's the last thing they'll be expecting, a daylight charge over the minefield." - Arnold Judas Rimmer, BSC SSC |
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Dustflier Lieutenant Commander
Joined: 21 Feb 2011 Posts: 140 Location: Upstate New York
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Posted: Fri Mar 18, 2011 8:36 pm Post subject: Re: Discrepancy in the Imperial Sourcebook? |
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TheDoctor wrote: | Yeah, that must be it. |
Though my answer was sarcastic and inane, it had a kernel of truth in it. Most likely, the number was either arbitrarily chosen, or taken from some sort of real world military statistic.
As for the real world military connection, the US military version of a divisional unit is generally between 17,000 and 21,000 soldiers (not including support staff). So... not really the same. Maybe the Nazis had groups of ~9k? _________________ Also known as Kiss My Wookiee on Discord and Reddit. |
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CRMcNeill Director of Engineering
Joined: 05 Apr 2010 Posts: 16281 Location: Redding System, California Sector, on the I-5 Hyperspace Route.
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Posted: Fri Mar 18, 2011 8:40 pm Post subject: |
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Like I said, the Imperial Handbook was designed by committee. If you look at the starship stats, none of the troop totals match unit sizes described in the Sector Group Organization chapter. A VSD I has capacity for a little over 2,000 troops, yet none of the standard Imperial Army units match to that size. When I look at ships like the ISD and the VSD I, I modify their troop contingents so that they are something along the lines of US Marine Corps MEU-SOCs or MEBs, so that, rather than carrying a full division or regiment, the ships carry a reinforced unit of the next organizational step down (i.e. regiment instead of battlegroup, battalion instead of regiment), then fill the extra space with Walker units, scouts, armored repulsorlifts, artillery, combat engineers and the like. They may reduce numbers of combat troops, but a smaller combat unit reinforced with the right kinds of troops is far more versatile and effective.
I figure an ISD carries 4 line battalions of stormtroopers, and deploys three of them in a full combat landing. One battalion deploys aboard an AT-AT company on landing barges, one battalion deploys on a mixed group of repulsorlift combat vehicles (tanks, IFVs, APCs, repulsorscouts and the like), and the third would deploy aboard Sentinel Landing Craft, like air assault troops. The final battalion would be held in reserve aboard the ISD, and could be deployed where needed by a second wave of Sentinels or dropships. _________________ "No set of rules can cover every situation. It's expected that you will make up new rules to suit the needs of your game." - The Star Wars Roleplaying Game, 2R&E, pg. 69, WEG, 1996.
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Kemper Boyd Sub-Lieutenant
Joined: 28 Jun 2008 Posts: 68
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Posted: Thu May 12, 2011 2:45 am Post subject: Re: Discrepancy in the Imperial Sourcebook? |
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crmcneill wrote: | [Personally, I think the whole idea of stormtroopers not having support units is ridiculous. I think it would be more appropriate for the stormtrooper unit aboard a star destroyer to be a reinforced regiment; 4 line battalions, supported by additional units of walker armor, repulsorlift vehicles, artillery, combat engineers, etc. I don't care how elite a military unit is; an army travels on its stomach, and any vehicle-equipped army has to float into combat on a lake of fuel. The combat units may be the sharp end of the spear and get all the glamor and glory, but they would be worse than useless without their support units. |
In my campaign, the stormtrooper-equivalent marine units have very lean support sections, due to the fact that practically all of them are ship-based units that receive their support from the ships they operate on, and ground-side operations get ad hoc support from the Army.
Maybe the stormtroopers have a similar arrangement. It's not very practical, but could be one of those strange doctrinal things of the Empire. |
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vanir Jedi
Joined: 11 May 2011 Posts: 793
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Posted: Thu May 12, 2011 8:36 am Post subject: |
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Okay talking real world conventions here, regiments and larger formations are ad hoc and very interpretive, often they represent nothing more than a strategic expression, not actual troop numbers.
army group
army
regiment
division
battalion
company
platoon
squad
but it doesn't quite go that way in terms of battlefield representation. Often a division with attachments is an army, a regiment is a couple of divisions plus attachments designed for a specific objective, an army group is often an army plus attachments or maybe several combined armies, an army can have almost any number of divisions but roughly 8 plus attachments is popular...the only true static measures are divisions and battalions plus support companies and for this reason most military historians compare battlefield formations in terms of divisions fielded and not regiments, armies or army groups.
For stormtrooper formations I used a simplified measure with the base rule that Stormtrooper Battalions are specified as opposed to all other military formations as every individual being a front line combatant, without exception. This doesn't mean they have no support formations, it just means the cook will cut you like a pig and look just like a rifleman.
Second point is my personal rule that Star Destroyers do not carry 9000+ Stormtroopers, they carry one Legion (1000 troops with a Stormtrooper Colonel) plus CompForce Assault and CompForce Troop forces making up the difference, with equipment and vehicles, if an Imperial II or regular Imperial Army Troops if Imperial I.
I have adjudicated that part of the standard crew compliment includes Imperial Navy security Troops at the regimental level.
This is in addition to the normal cargo stowage of modular bases with all personnel and equipment.
An extremely high level character party I once GM'd which had an entire planetary fleet and a heavily armoured mercinary company thought it was a nice idea to board an Imperial Star Destroyer once, it was approximately the dumbest thing they ever did and a small handful were lucky to escape with their lives despite being capable of probably giving Darth Vader a whatfor in a round or two of combat. Needless to say they lost everything.
Back to the real world, a regiment is typically organised as an army attachment for specific strategic capabilities. For example you might have an army with one tank and two infantry divisions, and you don't have the forces to put three together for a major strategic battle that you need more tanks to accomplish so you put together an attachment with a tank division and say two infantry battalions instead, for similar effect with fewer reserves. It is still called an army but the attachment is an armoured regiment and the whole shebang is still commanded by a colonel-general just like an army group. It just cost you less troops and won't last as long in extended conflict. On the books it's written as an army but it has the combat capability of an army group.
so when the Imperial Sourcebook says "stormtrooper battalion, then regiment and finally legion" they mean a legion is a battalion with support personnel (eg. AT-AT drivers, TIE pilots, security troops, technicians but everybody is variously armed and armoured), whilst a regiment is any number of stormtroopers exceeding a full legion assigned to an objective, for example a legion plus two companies is a regiment. This makes sense especially because environment specific stormtrooper types exist.
When the Imperial Army says a battalion they mean more like 620 troops and 240 non-combatants, meaning they hardly know what to do with a blaster if you put in their hands but can whip up a great omlette.
Stormtrooper divisions I consider a misnomer. The next rank beyond Colonel is Imperial Guardsmen which are independent of the formations, whilst Colonels answer to Imperial Army Generals, Navy Captains, Admirals and Emissaries of the Emperor. Nobody else. Also Stormtrooper Colonels are fully authorised to commit mutiny aboard any starship or base assignment at their personal discretion, in reality they answer to nobody but the Emperor himself.
Stormtrooper Colonels are in charge of battalions, add the support personnel to fill the numbers to 1000 and you have a legion. This is what is on a Star Destroyer. You don't need anything more, but take away specialised environment companies and you have 600 regular Stormtroopers, just like an Army Battalion.
That was where I landed with them anyway. |
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CRMcNeill Director of Engineering
Joined: 05 Apr 2010 Posts: 16281 Location: Redding System, California Sector, on the I-5 Hyperspace Route.
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Posted: Thu May 12, 2011 3:57 pm Post subject: |
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vanir wrote: | Okay talking real world conventions here, regiments and larger formations are ad hoc and very interpretive, often they represent nothing more than a strategic expression, not actual troop numbers.
army group
army
regiment
division
battalion
company
platoon
squad
but it doesn't quite go that way in terms of battlefield representation. Often a division with attachments is an army, a regiment is a couple of divisions plus attachments designed for a specific objective, an army group is often an army plus attachments or maybe several combined armies, an army can have almost any number of divisions but roughly 8 plus attachments is popular...the only true static measures are divisions and battalions plus support companies and for this reason most military historians compare battlefield formations in terms of divisions fielded and not regiments, armies or army groups. |
Actually, a more accurate list would be:
Army Group = 2-4 Armies
Army = 2-4 Corps
Corps = 2-4 Divisions
Division = 2-4 Regiments / Brigades
Regiment / Brigade = 2-4 Battalions
Battalion = 2-4 Companies
Company = 2-4 Platoons
Platoon = 2-4 Squads
Squad = 8-12 soldiers
You are making a lot of assumptions about the organization here that do not match up with anything I have seen or heard. While individual units may vary in size even before one factors in attached units, the individual names provide a useful rule of thumb to estimate size. While I have heard of Armies being used in place of Corps, the use of Regiment is pretty standardized, in that it is below the Division level, but above Battalion.
Quote: | For stormtrooper formations I used a simplified measure with the base rule that Stormtrooper Battalions are specified as opposed to all other military formations as every individual being a front line combatant, without exception. This doesn't mean they have no support formations, it just means the cook will cut you like a pig and look just like a rifleman. |
That makes sense, but IMO, there would still be some skill difference, as the combat trooper will spend most of his time practicing his combat skills, while the cook or the medic has to split time between his non-combat duties and his training. A good compromise would be to treat stormtrooper support units as special missions battalion support units (as described on pg. 93 of the Imp SB).
Quote: | Second point is my personal rule that Star Destroyers do not carry 9000+ Stormtroopers, they carry one Legion (1000 troops with a Stormtrooper Colonel) plus CompForce Assault and CompForce Troop forces making up the difference, with equipment and vehicles, if an Imperial II or regular Imperial Army Troops if Imperial I. |
Some points for consideration:
Per the Imperial Sourcebook, all CompForce combat units are part of Assault. All other members of CompForce are part of Observation, which is dispersed amongst the existing military, so there are no actual CompForce Troop Units.
Also per the Imperial Sourcebook, the Imperial Army already has dedicated transport vessels, each capable of transporting a reinforced corps, and each Sector Group has 16 of these behemoths, not counting other, smaller transports.
I see ISDs as more like an Imperial rapid reaction force, in that the one ship combines the features of a battleship, aircraft carrier and amphibious transport. The stormtroopers, meanwhile, are the Imperial equivalent of the Marine Corps, providing both on-board security and ground assault options. I haven't written up details for it yet, but I picture a unit based on the concept of USMC MEU(SOC)s or MAGTF's, with infantry units supported by integrated vehicle transport, such as assault shuttles, walkers and repulsorcraft, mirroring the USMC's helicopters, AAV-7's, M1 Tanks and LAV-25's
Quote: | I have adjudicated that part of the standard crew compliment includes Imperial Navy security Troops at the regimental level.
This is in addition to the normal cargo stowage of modular bases with all personnel and equipment. |
This is actually covered in the ImpSB as well. Under the stats for Naval Troopers, it states that naval troopers fill in in a variety of support roles aboard starships when not needed for combat.
Quote: | Back to the real world, a regiment is typically organised as an army attachment for specific strategic capabilities. For example you might have an army with one tank and two infantry divisions, and you don't have the forces to put three together for a major strategic battle that you need more tanks to accomplish so you put together an attachment with a tank division and say two infantry battalions instead, for similar effect with fewer reserves. It is still called an army but the attachment is an armoured regiment and the whole shebang is still commanded by a colonel-general just like an army group. It just cost you less troops and won't last as long in extended conflict. On the books it's written as an army but it has the combat capability of an army group. |
Wait, what?
As far as the US and NATO military goes, an independent regiment or brigade is generally a corps-level attachment. I have heard that some other militaries switch out terminology at the higher levels, but when you say "Army", I immediately think of a unit composed of multiple Corps, composed of over 100,000 men.
Generally, a regiment is a homogenous unit, composed of a single troop type (infantry, cavalry, armor, artillery, etc.), while a Brigade is a composite of multiple unit types. Both units are generally trained to operate as a unit prior to deployment, but you seem to be describing ad-hoc organizations that are deployed in the field to meet immediate tactical needs.
I'm used to thinking in terms of US Military terminology and nomenclature, but you are really throwing me for a loop when you talk about a tank division and two infantry battalions. US Army Armored Divisions already have mechanized infantry battalions assigned as part of their TO&E; they are simply weighted more heavily in favor of tanks, generally about a 2-to-1 ratio of tanks to mechanized infantry.
It might be simpler for future discourse if we use the common framework of Star Wars ranks and unit classification to avoid confusion.
Quote: | so when the Imperial Sourcebook says "stormtrooper battalion, then regiment and finally legion" they mean a legion is a battalion with support personnel (eg. AT-AT drivers, TIE pilots, security troops, technicians but everybody is variously armed and armoured), whilst a regiment is any number of stormtroopers exceeding a full legion assigned to an objective, for example a legion plus two companies is a regiment. This makes sense especially because environment specific stormtrooper types exist. |
You are over-reaching here. The ImpSB is quite clear that a Stormtrooper Legion is the equivalent of an Imperial Army Battlegroup, in that it is composed of 4 regiments, each of which is composed of 4 battalions. As such, a Stormtrooper Battalion is one of 16 combat units that make up a full Stormtrooper Legion. The numbers don't match up when you do the math; an ISD can transport 9700 troops, but a full-strength Stormtrooper Legion of 16 Battalions (820 troopers each) comes to a minimum of 13,120 troopers, and that's without factoring in the regimental and legion-level support units. Just another WEG SNAFU.
Quote: | When the Imperial Army says a battalion they mean more like 620 troops and 240 non-combatants, meaning they hardly know what to do with a blaster if you put in their hands but can whip up a great omlette. |
I think there are more than a few rear echelon troopers who would take issue with your description of their combat skills. AFAIK, everybody in the military has to pass some form of basic physical fitness and combat training.
There is an old saying about the military: "Amateurs discuss tactics. Professionals discuss logistics." The guys out in front are the ones who get all the glory in combat, but it is the medics and techs and supply clerks operating behind the front lines that give the combat units the support they need to fight at 100% effectiveness. If the combat troops are the arms, the officers are the head, and the recon units are the eyes and ears, the supply units are the body and the legs. They are the base of support that allows the unit to function as a whole in combat.
Quote: | Stormtrooper divisions I consider a misnomer. The next rank beyond Colonel is Imperial Guardsmen which are independent of the formations, whilst Colonels answer to Imperial Army Generals, Navy Captains, Admirals and Emissaries of the Emperor. Nobody else. Also Stormtrooper Colonels are fully authorised to commit mutiny aboard any starship or base assignment at their personal discretion, in reality they answer to nobody but the Emperor himself.
Stormtrooper Colonels are in charge of battalions, add the support personnel to fill the numbers to 1000 and you have a legion. This is what is on a Star Destroyer. You don't need anything more, but take away specialised environment companies and you have 600 regular Stormtroopers, just like an Army Battalion. |
Stormtrooper Colonel? I have never seen that title anywhere. The ImpSB lists the following for officer ranks in the Imperial Army:
Lieutenant
Captain
Major
Lieutenant Colonel
High Colonel
Major General
General
High General
Surface Marshall
The ImpSB reads as follows:
"Special missions HQ is an exception to the rule - they are expected to be directly involved in the combat operations. In place of the standard support personnel are (combat) engineers who double as support when things calm down; the security platoon is made up of the absolutely finest troopers the Army can find, and the major and his staff are hardened combat veterans."
IMO, this is probably a more realistic approach to take with stormtrooper organization, as opposed to WEG' vague statement of "Uh, we don't know how they support themselves. They just do..." _________________ "No set of rules can cover every situation. It's expected that you will make up new rules to suit the needs of your game." - The Star Wars Roleplaying Game, 2R&E, pg. 69, WEG, 1996.
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vanir Jedi
Joined: 11 May 2011 Posts: 793
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Posted: Fri May 13, 2011 12:51 am Post subject: |
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Ah, corps is what I was missing, I was confusing regiments with corps up there in some statements. However what I was referencing in this instance was Soviet formations during WW2.
Tank brigades were the equivalent of an armoured division in every respect except that soviet doctrine was that artillery was never assigned until the SPG appeared after 1943, it stayed with the rifle divisions but was used in support. This is command structure nomenclature rather than reflecting fielded units, a Soviet tank brigade was every bit the same thing as a Wehrmacht panzer division in most respects in the field, it would just never penetrate as far from the infantry divisions as german armour would because of the need for artillery support, or more to the point the Soviet doctrine of massed artillery which stayed with the rifle divisions.
Stormtrooper colonels appear in the Death Star sourcebook. Back when we started gaming there weren't many sourcebooks available so we used this and the Imperial Sourcebook in conjunction, actually when we first started out there was only two books published by WEG, the players handbook and one sourcebook (the rebel one I think, long time ago hard to remember...edit, no actually I think it was just called the Star Wars Sourcebook).
But let's have a look at famous wehrmacht formation, modern military conventions were pretty much invented by the Prussians. In the infamous Stalingrad 6th Army The VIII Korps had 2 infantry divisions. The LI Korps had 5 infantry, 1 antitank plus regimental attachment and 2 tank divisions for a total of 8 divisions plus attachments. XXIV Panzerkorps had 1 tank, 2 motorised and 1 infantry division. XI Korps had 3 infantry divisions.
Static convention simply isn't working here, they're organised by strategic need, command structure designed for logistical support rather than any description of actual formations.
The Soviet 62nd Army had 12 rifle divisions, 3 tank brigades (independent but divisional when attached), 1 marine infantry brigade (divisional), 5 special brigades (shock troops, regimental and independent), and a special rifle division assigned by the NKVD from Moscow.
The 1st SS Panzergrenadier Battalion in late 1941 was in fact listed as Brigade despite the name, and it had 4 battalions plus 2 attachments (assault guns and motorised light infantry), 1 Scout company (battalion strength), a full Artillery Regiment (no kidding), 1 Combat-engineer Battalion, and 2 support companies (battalion strength each).
Total company strength is 43.
In 1943 the same formation was renamed the 1st SS Panzer Division, it contained no less than 7 full regiments plus attachments and was listed as Brigade strength.
In 1944 the same formation again was finally listed at full Divisional strength, has about 30% more combatants listed but looks pretty much identical on paper at the regimental, battalion and company level.
When it comes to boots in the dirt, nomenclature is wholly strategic expression, it has nothing to do with what is being fielded. Hell in the field entire tank divisions occasionally had no more than 50 tanks serviceable. Other times it's more like 600.
Oh, the specific reason truth be told why I reassigned Legion to be 1000 stormtroopers (led by a Stormtrooper-Colonel) is because the word means 1000 (and Stormtrooper-Colonel is the highest ranked feller in Stormtrooper armour as depicted in the Death Star supplement). |
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vanir Jedi
Joined: 11 May 2011 Posts: 793
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Posted: Fri May 13, 2011 1:16 am Post subject: |
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Also, I do apolegise if I seem to have just come roaming into this site acting like a know it all, it is by no means my assumption. |
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CRMcNeill Director of Engineering
Joined: 05 Apr 2010 Posts: 16281 Location: Redding System, California Sector, on the I-5 Hyperspace Route.
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Posted: Fri May 13, 2011 1:35 am Post subject: |
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vanir wrote: | Also, I do apolegise if I seem to have just come roaming into this site acting like a know it all, it is by no means my assumption. |
Don't worry. There are plenty of know-it-all's on this site. You'll fit right in. :wink: _________________ "No set of rules can cover every situation. It's expected that you will make up new rules to suit the needs of your game." - The Star Wars Roleplaying Game, 2R&E, pg. 69, WEG, 1996.
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CRMcNeill Director of Engineering
Joined: 05 Apr 2010 Posts: 16281 Location: Redding System, California Sector, on the I-5 Hyperspace Route.
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Posted: Fri May 13, 2011 2:06 am Post subject: |
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vanir wrote: | Ah, corps is what I was missing, I was confusing regiments with corps up there in some statements. However what I was referencing in this instance was Soviet formations during WW2.
Tank brigades were the equivalent of an armoured division in every respect except that soviet doctrine was that artillery was never assigned until the SPG appeared after 1943, it stayed with the rifle divisions but was used in support. This is command structure nomenclature rather than reflecting fielded units, a Soviet tank brigade was every bit the same thing as a Wehrmacht panzer division in most respects in the field, it would just never penetrate as far from the infantry divisions as german armour would because of the need for artillery support, or more to the point the Soviet doctrine of massed artillery which stayed with the rifle divisions. |
The US Army is doing something similar now, with the Brigade Combat Team concept, moving away from divisional sized deployments and to more mobile and versatile brigade units, broken up into Armored, Stryker (Motorized Infantry) and Infantry units. In Desert Storm in 1991, the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiments was deployed with mass numbers of aviation, artillery and support attachments to the point where it more closely resembled a small division in size.
Something worth considering in the ImpSB is on page 109, where it describes the Assault Fleet's Army Support objectives in what is called the 1/4/16/64 plan. The fleet is expected to simultaneously support four different types of objectives:
-1 corps-level continuous mission on the surface
-4 battlegroup-level continuous operations (occasionally shifting troops from other theaters to temporarily reinforce one mission to corps level)
-16 regimental-level continuous operations (occasionally shifting troops from other theaters to temporarily reinforce one mission to battlegroup level)
-64 missions of irregular level at battalion level or lower
What I thought of doing in my SWU is use different nomenclature depending on whether a unit is operating independently or as part of a larger unit, so that a regiment-sized unit is called a regiment if it is operating as part of a battlegroup, but is called a brigade when it is deployed independently.
Quote: | Stormtrooper colonels appear in the Death Star sourcebook. Back when we started gaming there weren't many sourcebooks available so we used this and the Imperial Sourcebook in conjunction, actually when we first started out there was only two books published by WEG, the players handbook and one sourcebook (the rebel one I think, long time ago hard to remember...edit, no actually I think it was just called the Star Wars Sourcebook). |
You were almost right the first time. The Stormtrooper Colonel is in the Death Star Technical Manual.
Quote: | Oh, the specific reason truth be told why I reassigned Legion to be 1000 stormtroopers (led by a Stormtrooper-Colonel) is because the word means 1000 (and Stormtrooper-Colonel is the highest ranked feller in Stormtrooper armour as depicted in the Death Star supplement). |
Actually, Legion is derived from the Latin legio, meaning "military levy or conscription", derived from legere: "to choose". While the strength of a Roman Legion varied, the average was around 6,000, organized into ten cohorts, which were divided in turn into around 6 centuries. Considering that in the ImpSB, an Imperial regiment is composed of between 3500 and 4000 troopers, this might be a more appropriate unit size, with additional 2,000 trooper slots taken up by vehicle crew and specialized stormtrooper units. _________________ "No set of rules can cover every situation. It's expected that you will make up new rules to suit the needs of your game." - The Star Wars Roleplaying Game, 2R&E, pg. 69, WEG, 1996.
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vanir Jedi
Joined: 11 May 2011 Posts: 793
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Posted: Fri May 13, 2011 9:37 am Post subject: |
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Ah cool, I should probably shutup now so I don't sound like a bigger idiot
Thanks for the clarification. Was sure legion was just latin for a thousand so I didn't even bother looking it up (normally I would).
Really got to get a handle on my drunk posting
oh and death star technical manual, that's what it was (been a few years, my friend has the book collection but I don't anymore, we'll be using his in our gaming). |
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Bren Vice Admiral
Joined: 19 Aug 2010 Posts: 3868 Location: Maryland, USA
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Posted: Fri May 13, 2011 11:39 am Post subject: |
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Roman legions in the Imperial period had a nominal, not an average, strength of 6000. They were almost invariably under strength. Legions had smaller nominal strengths in the earlier Republican periods.
If you want to know more about legions, wiki has a general over view http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_legion
And yes the forum has it's share of know-it-alls. Welcome to the club. |
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