France The term
lances fournies itself appeared much the same way as the ''
compagnies d'ordonnance "Les lances fournies pour les compagnies d'ordenance du Roi.
" or The lances furnished for the companies ordered by the King. Upon the original establishment of the French compagnies d'ordonnance, the lances fournies
were formed around a man-at-arms (a fully armored man on an armored horse) with a retinue of a page or squire, two or three archers, and a (slightly) lighter horseman known as the serjeant-at-arms or coutilier (literally "dagger man," a contemporary term for mounted bandits and brigands). All members in a lance were mounted for travel but only the man-at-arms and the coutilier were regularly expected to fight on horseback, though of course both members were also trained and equipped for dismounted action. Lances would be further organized as companies, each company numbering about 100 lances'', effectively 400 plus fighting men and servants. These companies were sustained even in peace, and became the first standing army in modern Europe.
Burgundy The last
Duke of Burgundy,
Charles the Bold, made a number of ordinances prescribing the organisation of his forces in the 1460s and 1470s. In the first ordinance of 1468, the army is clearly organised in three man lances; a man-at-arms, a
coustillier and a
valet. In the
Abbeville Ordinance of 1471, the army is re-organised into 1250 lances of nine men each : a man-at-arms, a
coustillier, a non-combatant page, three mounted archers and three foot soldiers, namely a crossbowman, handgunner, and pikeman. This organisation is repeated in the 1472 ordinance (substituting the crossbowman for an archer on foot and adding a mounted crossbowman) and 1473 ordinance (keeping the 1472 composition, although the infantry is not described).
Brittany The Duchy of Brittany also ordered the equivalent of the lance in an ordinance of 1450. While the basic lance was the familiar three man structure of man-at-arms, coutilier and page, dependent on the wealth of the man-at-arms, additional archers or
juzarmiers (that is, men equipped with a
guisarme) were added. At the highest income band specified (600–700
livres), either four archers, or three archers and a juzarmier, were added to the basic unit.
Italy In Italy in the 14th and 15th centuries, mercenary soldiers were recruited in units known variously as , lance, or , consisting of two to six men. Although it is traditionally thought that the three man lance was introduced to Italy by the mercenaries of the
White Company in the 1360s, in fact they had evolved somewhat earlier. Occasionally, a mounted archer could be substituted for the squire. The three-man gleve may have existed in the early 14th century, with a knight supported by two
sergeants. Later the sergeants were replaced by mercenaries. The equivalent of the lance of two combatants with page is seen in Germany in the later 14th century, when the second combatant can be a spearman or an archer. However, in various regions, other sizes of gleven existed of up to ten men, including up to three mounted archers (who would dismount to fight) and armed servants who acted as infantry.
Poland Kopia (Polish for
lance) was the basic military formation in medieval
Poland, identical to the lance-unit employed elsewhere in Western Europe. A
Kopia was composed of a knight and his
retinue (of 3–12 soldiers). On campaign, several kopias were combined to form a larger unit, the
chorągiew (pl: banner). From the 15th century the term kopia was replaced by
Poczet. ==References==