Hunting is one of the most controversial activities in current times but in the past, it was a method of feeding one's entire people. Ancient hunters would have to go up against dangerous carnivores like big cats and bears with spears and bows but before that, they had to track the things and figure out where they went. The best hunters were often some of the best warriors in their areas and these two claimed the Arctic and East Africa as their territories. In my first collaboration with Kazanshin, it's time to make an idea of his a reality and help out the DHRI.
The Inuit Raiders, the Arctic hunters who took down polar bears and fought many wars against the Cree!
The Maasai Warriors, the African hunters who became famous for killing lions and dominate other tribes!
Who is Deadliest?
Inuit Raider[]
Maasai Warrior[]
X-Factors[]
Training:Little is known about the training of the Inuit in particular, but the related Chukchi, who aften warred against the Inuit, were infamous for their harsh training: youth were trained as warriors by dragging heavy logs, and training with weapons. What is known about the Inuit themselves is that, because of their hunter gatherer lifestyle, members of the community had to learn how to hunt and fish at a young age. Children would follow their fathers, observe them hunt and quickly learn to do the same. They would also compete in wrestling, high-kicking and ear-pulling, which built up strength, agility and pain tolerance respectively. Once they were adults, training came mostly in the form of raiding and hunting experience.
Maasai warriors also similarly trained by hunting and raiding instead of formal combat training. Youth were trained as hunters from a young age, and every man had to go through the rite of passage of killing a lion on his own before he was accepted as an adult. Hunting gave a man the necessary strength, speed and accuracy to use in battle, as well as courage. As adults, they would take part in cattle raiding against enemy tribes because of their belief that their god, Ngai, had created all cattle in the world.
Experience:The Inuit fought against many different people throughout the Arctic and sub-arctic. Opponents included the Innu, the Cree, the Chukchi, the Kutchin and the Dorset who they are thought to have wiped out, as well as other Inuit tribes. It is said that “between these Netsilingmiut and other Eskimo groups in former times there was continual war”. Cree oral history tells us that the Inuit came down from the arctic frequently to attack villages and take slaves.
The Maasai were also feared as warriors, having fought the Chagga, the Taveta, the Nandi and the Taita. Their warlike mentality allowed them to dominate many rival Bantu-speaking people despite their relatively low numbers and be feared by all their neighbors except the equally warlike Nandi. This forced many people, even more numerous ones such as the Kikuyu, to hide away in secluded places like mountains and forests, where the natural protections defended them against the Maasai. They are also recorded to have fought as mercenaries for powerful Chagga chieftains.
Physique: The Inuit are relatively short compared to other people, with an average height of 162cm. However, they are heavier than most comparatively to their height, mainly because of a very stocky build granted to them by the harsh environment. They could wait for hours above seal holes, walk many kilometers through the thick snow, and fought prey like polar bears and wolves. Their diet was heavily meat based because of the environment, but they had a good supply of vitamins thanks to their fermenting techniques and consumption of whale blubber.
The Maasai, on the opposite end of the spectrum, are very tall and lean, usually being above 180 cm tall. They are, however, quite slim for their size and are lighter than other people of the same height. This did not impede their stamina, however, and they could run after prey like antelopes, jump and dance for hours during rituals and fight against lions and hyenas. Their diet also mostly consisted of meat, but also of goat and cattle milk, vitamin-rich acacia soup and blood.
Ruthlessness: Contrarily to a common myth that Inuit were peaceful, the Arctic people were very warlike, with tales of their savagery being told to this day by their Cree rivals, who recount the story of them having cut the breasts of women and thrown the glands into a river, killing so many that the water turned white. Other stories include them drinking their enemies’ blood and making their children drink it so they acquire a taste for it. These stories are obviously exaggerated, but it goes to show how feared the Inuit were by their enemies.
The Maasai were also feared and ruthless raiders, infamous for their cattle raids against other Bantu-speaking people. The Chagga to this day tell the stories of their war against the Maasai, in which the Maasai would abduct cattle and women away without mercy. They dominated much of East Africa and drove many people towards the safer but less hospitable mountains.
Tactics: The Inuit preferred night attacks over open battles, attacking when all enemy warriors were gathered for a meeting in the chieftain’s tent, of which they would block the exits and set ablaze. Then, they would wait near the exits of the underground tunnels and kill the escaping men, blinded and suffocated by the smoke. If this was impossible, they would form battle lines and fire arrows or throw harpoons and spears at each other, with elite “Strong Men” wielding large clubs to bat projectiles away and large mantlet-like shields of rawhide protecting the warriors.
Maasai warriors fought in hit and run tactics common throughout Africa. They would attack a settlement in an ambush, taking the warriors by surprise and quickly cause as much damage to the locals as possible before darting off with cattle. This was helped by their large, broad-bladed spears, which were deadlier than the thinner, smaller spears of their rivals. Their warriors were classed by age and organized into war groups. When European colonialism threatened them, they relied on guerilla warfare against the invaders.
Tracking:The Inuit's most impressive quarry when hunting is the polar bear which they can tell the carnivore's age, sex, and height just from their tracks. They would look for Arctic fox urine or tracks to lead them to buried or recently dead Caribou meat or make traps like urine filled snow pits to lure them towards certain death once they became stuck. The Raiders were able to track and trap various creatures with equal effectiveness and this was a common attribute for their society.
The Maasai are well-known for killing lions but developed impressive tracking skills to hunt them down. They can look at signs like the big cat's paw prints or listening for calls of carnivorous birds and then figure out what happened several hours before he arrived and where it was going to find the beast. This was a skill that the best warriors either mastered or used to get to the top of the ranks and it was a common secondary method of acquiring that status in their society.
Notes[]
Voting ends on February 11th. Votes need edges or two paragraphs and decent grammar to count. The fight takes place in a temperate deciduous forest (thanks to Leolab for the idea) between two groups of five men who start off in different locations and must hunt each other down. Special thanks to User:Kazanshin for helping me make this blog.
The Battle[]
Forest in the Middle of Nowhere
The Inuit Raiders had been out hunting for whales in the Arctic ocean when a polar bear capsized their boat but afterwards, a bright light blinded them and faded to reveal an environment that was clearly not their home land. The Maasai Warriors had been guarding their cattle farms when a pride of lions charged at them but afterwards, again, a bright light blinded them and they were transported to a forest that wasn't in Africa. The two groups of warrior-hunters began exploring the new area before splitting off into groups of two and three to cover more ground but they would soon discover each other.
A Maasai accidentally stepped on a branch and alerted the nearby Inuit pair, one of which pulled out an Unak Harpoon and hurled it into the man's chest before he could raise his shield, leaving his partner to deal with two enemies after his corpse fell over with thepoint poking through his back. The Arctic inhabitants had two different strategies as the harpoon thrower went for rushing in with his War Club and wooden shield while his fellow waited with his Harpoon as he saw the African native thrust forward with the infamous Lion Spear, the long point penetrating through the shield with ease and then the man who was wielding it. After pushing the dead Raider off his weapon and noticing the other foe staring in shock that he had punched through ivory lamellar, the Warrior leapt at that enemy and stabbed downwards which resulted in his foe dodging the blow and trapping his spear shaft between his body and the Unak shaft.
The struggle soon ended with the Maasai letting go and making the Inuit stumble backwards with a kick before he pulled out a Rungu Club and his buffalo hide shield before his foe drew his close range weapon and shield combo as well for an even fight that started out with both circling each other before taking a swing at the shields. The whalebone tore a gash in the buffalo hide while the hardwood only made a dent in the wood and bounced off the sealskin, leaving the African native open to another swing that completely knocked the shield out of his hands and enabled the Arctic inhabitant to knock him over with a shield bash. The Warrior recovered fast enough to avoid a Club swing to the head and whacked the Rungu against his opponent's side but it merely bounced off the armor again before the Raider smashed his arm and broke it, his foe let out a yell of pain before being silenced as his head was split open with a single blow and then whacked again for good measure.
The Inuit turned to leave but was immediately shoved to the ground and held there as another Maasai raised his Rungu Club and brought it down repeatedly onto his face, breaking several bones and spraying blood everywhere until he'd hit him at leaat eight times which left his foe with a pile of gore where his head used to be. In another part of the forest, the three remaining Arctic inhabitants were walking past a bush when a poisoned arrow came out and hit the leader in the neck, leaving him to fall over and suffer a painful death but the African natives wouldn't get another easy kill. The Raiders quickly drew their shields and one took aim with his Pititsik before firing it, a death cry ringing out as another Warrior's shield failed to protect him and he ended up toppling over with an arrow in his heart but another charged out of the bushes.
The Maasai was too quick to get another arrow shot off so one of the Inuit instead held him back so his fellow could switch weapons, not noticing that had a Seme Knife with his shield until it was plunged into his wrist and his wooden shield was yanked away by the Rungu before the blade was then shoved into his throat. The African native didn't get to celebrate his victory as a Savitsuk Snow Knife was stabbed into his spinal cord from behind by the last Arctic inhabitant who then twisted it for good measure before yanking it out of the dead body. The Raider heard whistling behind him and moved around in the nick of time to block the arrow with his shield before sheathing the Savitsuk and approaching the Warrior who moved backwards while preparing another arrow shot which he got off.
The Inuit smashed the projectile out of the air as soon as it came towards him however and continued it with the next before he got close enough to destroy the Maasai's Bow with his Club, breaking it in half with a single swing and then going for a head strike only for his opponent to geab his arm and throw him to the ground. The African native retrieved his Lion Spear that was leaning against a tree and noticed that the Arctic inhabitant had his Unak Harpoon in his hands, he had landed right next to it, and took a quick feint jab at him which made his foe take two steps backward. The Warrior laughed as he pressed the advantage against the Raider who was being backed up into a tree before he took a stab of his own that only resulted in the Spear point smashing into the Harpoon and breaking it in two before it got through his lamellar.
The Maasai let the Inuit suffer for a couple seconds before delivering the killing blow as both warriors yelled at the same time but only one coughed up blood as his leather garments didn't save him from the Harpoon point while the other had suffered a flesh wound from the previous attack. Rather than leave his foe to bleed out, the Arctic inhabitant yanked the Unak out and got behind the African native before wrapping the rope on the shattered end around his neck before tightening it and slowly squeezed what little life was in his dying opponent out of him. The Maasai Warrior didn't even get a last breath before his corpse started falling over and the Inuit Raider let go, only to stab his back next, and finally walked off to figure out where exactly he was after killing a man.
Winner:Inuit Raider
Expert's Opinion[]
The Inuit Raider had the overall superior equipment in this fight with a better close range club, more versatile mid range spear, deadlier long range bow, and far tougher armor but the Maasai Warrior had the more lethal knife. The X-Factors were closer as rge Inuit had superior Training and Physique while the Maasai took Experience and Ruthlessness while Tactics was arguably equal. In the end however, it was the Raiders' sheer overwhelming armament advantage that enabled them to triumph against the Warriors.