The Bronze Age and Ancient Cultures
The first metal weapons were made from copper. It was easy to mine and easy to
work, but proved to be very soft. By adding tin to copper, a much stronger
alloy known as bronze was created. The early civilizations of Egypt and
Mesopotamia were manufacturing bronze weapons more than 4,000 years ago.
Unlike Stone Age or savage cultures, Bronze Age cultures are almost never
found as contemporaries of more advanced civilizations. Once a nation or tribe
masters the working of iron, bronze rapidly falls out of favor. This category is
good for campaigns set in ancient times, or for equipping warriors who are
somehow displaced in time.
At the beginning of this era, a battle consisted of two mobs of armed men
meeting in a brutal melee. By the end of the Bronze Age, sophisticated phalanxes of
spearmen and a firm grasp of tactics enabled the Greek city-states to dominate
the ancient world. The chariot ruled the battlefield for a while, only to be
replaced by more maneuverable cavalry.
Spears, bows, and slings are the most common weapons of this time period. Axes
and swords are rarer. Swords evolved from primitive, sickle-shaped chopping
weapons into the Greek xiphos, a well-made short sword used for thrusting and slashing.
Armor runs the gamut from none at all to sturdy coats of metal lamellar or
scales and bronze breastplates and greaves. The armor type known as bronze plate
mail has no real historical model, but is included as a logical extension of
bronze plates worn over more of the body.
Bronze Age, Ancient Cultures
| Adze
| 3 sp
|
| Battle axe
| 5 gp
|
| Bow
|
|
| Arrow, flight
| 3 sp/12
|
| Composite short bow
| 75 gp
|
| Long bow
| 75 gp
|
| Short bow
| 30 gp
|
| Cestus
| 1 gp
|
| Dagger
| 2 gp
|
| Dart
| 5 sp
|
| Hand/throwing axe
| 1 gp
|
| Javelin
| 5 sp
|
| Lance, light
| 6 gp
|
| Mace, footman’s
| 8 gp
|
| Mace, horseman’s
| 5 gp
|
| Mace-axe
| 12 gp
|
| Pike
| 5 gp
|
| Quarterstaff
| —
|
| Spear
| 8 sp
|
| One-handed
| —
|
| Two-handed
| —
|
| Spear, long
| 5 gp
|
| Staff sling
| 2 sp
|
| Stinkpot
| 1 sp
|
| Stone
| —
|
| Sword
|
|
| Broadsword
| 30 gp
|
| Khopesh
| 15 gp
|
| Sapara
| 10 gp
|
| Short
| 15 gp
|
| Sword-axe
| 20 gp
|
| Trident
| 15 gp
|
| Two-handed axe
| 15 gp
|
| Warhammer
| 2 gp
|
| War club
| 2 gp
|
During this period, iron weapons began to appear. If an iron weapon is used
against armor made of bronze, horn, wood, or any weaker material, the attacker
gains a +1 bonus to hit. Similarly, if a bronze weapon is used against iron
armor, the attacker suffers a –1 penalty to hit. Bronze-on-bronze or iron-on-iron
match-ups provide no special bonuses or penalties.
Iron weapons and armor may be considered to be nonexistent, rare, or common in
this setting. If the DM decides they’re nonexistent, no character can obtain
them. If iron is rare, any weapon or armor made of iron can be purchased for
triple the listed cost. If iron is common, iron arms can be purchased at the
listed cost. Of course, if iron is common, just about everyone else will have it,
too.
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