MavrickWeirdo
First Post
Elder-Basilisk said:And peasants would at least attempt to defend their ancestral rights and ways of life against their lords in periodic peasant revolts.
It's certainly true that there were professional mercenaries. However, when it came to defending their village from marauders or defending their city from an invading army, every male of age was expected (and able) to bear arms in defense of their home.
I would expect this tendency to be even more pronounced in elven and dwarven cultures given their traditional presentation in D&D.
Even in human cultures, however, I would expect commoners to use at least one of their two simple weapon proficiencies for a weapon used by the local militia. In frontier cultures, I wouldn't be surprised if all the human commoners had proficiency in longspear and light crossbow and took combat reflexes as a feat. While a force of 40 Com 1-4s with longspears (and combat reflexes) and crossbows led by their mayor (Exp 5 with a heavy mace (a sign of office) and light crossbow), part time captain of the militia (Ftr 3/Com 2 middle aged retired mercenary) and priest (Com 2/Clr 1 or something) might not be a significant threat to PCs past level 4 or so, it might well be sufficient to fend off a typical orc raiding party or to hold a palisade for a few days against an orc tribe on the warpath. (Hopefully, it would be long enough for the cavalry to arrive). Historically, in defending the palisade, they would probably also have help from the women and girls as well--either in carrying up millstones, etc to drop on the heads of the orcs manning the ram or scaling the walls or in carrying ammunition and reloading crossbows, etc. In fact, even in the wealthy, advanced FR nations like Cormyr, I would expect the merchants and commoners to have one or two combat feats or proficiencies to reflect militia training and duty.
You actually give commoners more credit than I do. I agree that commoners would have some "basic training", I don't think the would be as militant as you describe.
While I am not sure about 3.5, in 3E Longspears are not a simple weapon. In the example above I would have men armed each with one of: Cudgle, Dagger, Quarterstaff, Sickle, & Spear.
Technically crossbows are a simple weapon (in game terms). I have no problem with commoners being "proficient" with them, but most would not "Own" crossbows. In the community you described, I would guess that the Captain would keep 5 crossbows for the men to use. They would form a small squad of 5 primary(the best), and 5 backup crossbowmen. In some ways it is a result of "peasant revolts" that commoner militias were given only limited weapon training.
As far as Feats go, I would give 1 combat feat to a 3rd or 4th level commoner, but rarely to 1st or 2nd level commoners.