Editor
John Powell
Oklahoma Baptist University
Salem Press
Pasadena, California
Hackensack, New Jersey
printed in canada
Contents
Ancient and Medieval Weapons and Warfare to c. 1500
Europe and the Mediterranean
Greek Warfare to Alexander . . . . .
Greek and Hellenistic Warfare from
Alexander to Rome . . . . . . . .
Carthaginian Warfare. . . . . . . . .
Roman Warfare
During the Republic . . . . . . . .
Roman Warfare During the Empire .
Celtic Warfare . . . . . . . . . . . .
Berber Warfare . . . . . . . . . . . .
Tribal Warfare in Central
and Eastern Europe . . . . . . . .
. . . . . 129
. . . . . 140
. . . . . 149
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157
165
174
179
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221
231
240
245
248
253
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. . . 272
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281
288
293
298
304
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311
321
328
336
344
The Americas
The Maya and Aztecs . . . . . . . . . . . . . 351
The Incas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 359
North American Indigenous Nations . . . . . . 364
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393
398
403
408
418
427
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451
467
473
479
484
490
499
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577
587
599
611
623
632
640
652
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. . . . . 670
. . . . . 685
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692
703
710
720
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China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The Cold War: The United States,
NATO, and the Right . . . . . . . .
The Cold War: The Soviet Union,
the Warsaw Pact, and the Left . . .
Israeli Warfare . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The Cold War: The Nonaligned States .
Colonial Wars of Independence . . . .
Warfare in Vietnam . . . . . . . . . .
Warfare in Afghanistan: The SovietAfghan Conflict . . . . . . . . . . .
Western Warfare in
the Age of Maneuver
European Wars of Religion. . .
The Era of Gustavus Adolphus.
The Era of Frederick the Great .
The Era of Napoleon Bonaparte
The Crimean War. . . . . . . .
The American Civil War . . . .
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519
525
532
539
548
559
vii
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. . . . 741
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750
759
765
771
781
. . . . 791
viii
Uncontrollable Forces
Geography, Weather, and Warfare . . . . . . . 837
. . . . . 965
. . . . . 969
. . . . . 976
. . . . . 981
. . . . . 989
. . . . . 994
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851
856
861
868
873
878
883
889
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897
901
905
911
915
921
929
933
938
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. . . . . . . . . . . 1001
. . . . . . . . . . . 1008
. . . . . . . . . . . 1013
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1018
1024
1029
1033
1037
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1043
1063
1091
1120
1135
1169
1192
Research Tools
War Films . . . . .
War Literature. . .
Lexicon . . . . . .
Military Theorists .
Time Line . . . . .
Bibliography. . . .
Web Sites . . . . .
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Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1199
ix
Publishers Note
Originally published in 2002 in two volumes, the
three-volume Weapons and Warfare: Revised Edition is designed to meet the needs of students seeking
information about weaponry, tactics, and models of
warfare from ancient times to the present, worldwide. Written with the needs of both students and
nonspecialists in mind, the articles contained in this
set present clear discussions of the topics, explaining
any terms or references that may be unfamiliar. The
focus on the technical and strategic development of
weapons and tactics, more than on a narrative chronological history of events, allows students of history, political science, and technology to gain a broad
understanding of both the scientific and the strategic
advances made over time and geography. The new
third volume adds the essential dimension of placing
these topics in broad cultural, sociopolitical, and ethical contexts.
The expanded edition covers all topics included in
the original two-volume edition and adds 58 new essays and appendixes, along with 22 heavily revised
and expanded essays and appendixes. In addition to
the new and revised text, all previous entries have
been fully updated: Bibliographies have been expanded to add recent scholarship, and Films and
Other Media sections have been expanded or added
where they were missing before. The new third volume adds a fresh dimension, offering social, cultural,
ethical, and political perspectives on warfare and
weaponry.
Special Features
Volume 3 ends with a set of valuable research tools,
beginning with two new appendixes: an annotated
list of War Films and an annotated list of War Literature. These are arranged chronologically by war,
for use in teaching. The annotations guide students
and teachers with regard to the novels or films usefulness in historical study (and where they may fall
short, as well). Other research tools in this section include a Lexicon of military terms (expanded), an annotated list of Military Theorists (expanded), a Time
Line (expanded), a Bibliography (expanded), and an
updated list of Web Sites. A comprehensive and fully
cross-referenced Subject Index rounds out the set.
The essays are accompanied by more than 70 time
lines, lists of Turning Points that bring to readers
attention the key battles, inventions, and other events
bearing on the technology or civilization covered.
These are joined by 251 photographs and artists renderings depicting the weapons discussed, as well as
maps that direct readers to the geographic areas inhabited or conquered by the empires, civilizations,
and cultures discussed.
Usage Notes
The names of wars and battles and the names of military leaders and other personages vary from resource
to resource and from country to country, depending
on variables such as political perspective, the different methods of transcribing non-Roman languages,
and customary usage over the years. In these volumes, the names that are used in the essays, along
with dates of events and for persons life spans, are
those that, over time, have proved to be the appellations, spellings, and renderings most familiar to the
general English-speaking audience. Chinese names
have generally been given in their Pinyin form, with
Wade-Giles transliterations cross-referenced in the
index.
Sources consulted to confirm these data are recognized as authoritative and hinge on a consensus of the
most trusted available. Birth and death years follow
the first mentions of key personages names where
appropriate, and titles of works are introduced using
their original dates of appearance (or publication in
the modern world), along with original-language tixii
Publishers Note
tles where available. Key foreign terms are introduced in italics where they are defined, and all wars
and battles are accompanied by their years (or date
spans) of occurrence upon first mention in each
essay.
Acknowledgments
This revised edition of Weapons and Warfare owes a
debt to many participating consultants and contributors. Chief among these is John Powell, Professor of
History at Oklahoma Baptist University, who conceived of the first edition and continued his role as the
chief creative force for this revised edition, including
coverage, arrangement, and design of the essays and
all supplemental features of the set. Both as a respected historian with specializations in modern
Britain and as a longtime classroom teacher, he provided invaluable input on what works best for teach-
xiii
Contributors
Donna Alvah
Frederick B. Chary
Stephen J. Andrews
Michael Coker
K. Fred Gillum
Independent Scholar
Justin Corfield
Robert F. Gorman
James A. Arieti
Hampden-Sydney College
John H. Barnhill
Thomas I. Crimando
State University of New York,
College at Brockport
Oliver Griffin
Houston, Texas
Frederic J. Baumgartner
Kenneth P. Czech
Gavin R. G. Hambly
Everett Dague
Christopher Howell
Alvin K. Benson
Benedictine College
John Daley
Charles F. Howlett
Molloy College
Steven L. Danver
George Hoynacki
Pepperdine University
Merrimack College
Steven Isaac
Yale University
Northwestern College
Touraj Daryaee
Robert Jacobs
Central Washington University
Bryan Buschner
Benedict E. DeDominicis
Cameron University
Joseph P. Byrne
Bruce J. DeHart
Belmont University
J. E. Kaufmann
Wayne H. Bowen
Ouachita Baptist University
Denvy A. Bowman
Coastal Carolina University
Stefan M. Brooks
Lindsey Wilson College
Dino E. Buenviaje
Laura M. Calkins
Independent Scholar
Douglas Campbell
Independent Scholar
J. Nathan Campbell
Episcopal School of Dallas
John Casey
Columbia College Chicago
Jeffrey Dippmann
Central Washington University
Paul W. Doerr
Acadia University
Richard D. Fitzgerald
Onondaga Community College
xv
Lance Janda
Phyllis G. Jestice
Jerry Keenan
Longmont, Colorado
Martin Kich
Wright State University
Lake Campus
John Morello
Charles Rosenberg
University of Kansas
DeVry University
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Mark S. Lacy
Walter Nelson
Alison Rowley
RAND Corporation
Duke University
John W. I. Lee
Caryn E. Neumann
Scott M. Rusch
University of California,
Santa Barbara
University of Pennsylvania
Elizabeth D. Schafer
Keith A. Leitich
Mobile, Alabama
Loachapoka, Alabama
Oladele A. Ogunseitan
Honolulu, Hawaii
R. K. L. Panjabi
James P. Sickinger
Memorial University of
Newfoundland
Robert J. Paradowski
Bowdoin College
Independent Scholar
Joseph M. McCarthy
Suffolk University
Michael J. McGrath
Georgia Southern University
James R. McIntyre
Moraine Valley Community College
Thomas C. Maroukis
Capital University
Jennifer P. Mathews
Trinity University
Brian A. Pavlac
David Silbey
Michael J. Siler
Kings College
Alan P. Peterson
Andrew C. Skinner
Gordon College
Aaron Plamondon
Roger Smith
University of Calgary
Portland, Oregon
Mark Polelle
Larry Smolucha
University of Findlay
Aurora University
John Powell
Sonia Sorrell
Pepperdine University
Steven J. Ramold
James Stanlaw
Timothy May
Eugene L. Rasor
Arthur K. Steinberg
Kevin B. Reid
Geoff Stewart
Burnam W. Reynolds
Cameron Sutt
Asbury College
Edward J. Rielly
Ghada Talhami
R. Scott Moore
Charles W. Rogers
James N. Tallon
Lewis University
Ruben G. Mendoza
California State University,
Monterey Bay
Elizabeth L. Meyers
Independent Scholar
Gregory Moore
xvi
Contributors
Jachin W. Thacker
William T. Walker
David Westwood
MLRS Books
Chris Thomas
Kathy Warnes
John D. Windhausen
Allendale, Michigan
Louis P. Towles
Andrew J. Waskey
Michael Witkoski
Nicolas G. Virtue
Thomas Weiler
Helen M. York
University of Bonn
University of Maine
xvii
xxi
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792
441
562
560
565
485
420
395
608
521
492
468
733
641
734
642
767
752
743
552
549
475
532
564
664
800
406
528
653
634
632
600
603
541
508
499
589
xxiii
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590
588
399
455
627
480
578
410
686
654
687
393
814
526
593
822
782
785
680
671
672
712
721
722
696
706
704
693
Diplomacy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1008
Education, Textbooks, and War .
The Egyptians (c. 3000-30 b.c.e.)
The Era of Frederick the Great
(1712-1786) . . . . . . . . . .
The Era of Gustavus Adolphus
(1609-1697) . . . . . . . . . .
The Era of Napoleon Bonaparte
(1789-1815) . . . . . . . . . .
Ethiopia (c. 300-1543 c.e.) . . . .
European Wars of Religion
(c. 1517-1618) . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . 905
. . . . . . . 111
. . . . . . . 532
. . . . . . . 525
. . . . . . . 539
. . . . . . . 304
. . . . . . . 519
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386
969
837
828
Mercenaries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 976
Military Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1029
Modern Fortifications (since c. 1500) . . . . . 473
The Mongols (c. 600-1450 c.e.) . . . . . . . . 328
The Mughal Empire (1526-1858) . . . . . . . 599
Music and Warfare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 878
. . . . 670
. . . . 140
. . . . 129
. . . . 403
Handarms to Firearms
(c. 1130-1700 c.e.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375
The Hebrews (c. 1400 b.c.e.-73 c.e.) . . . . . 105
The Hittites (c. 1620-1190 b.c.e.) . . . . . . . . 89
. . . . . 508
. . . . . 499
. . . . . 202
. . . . . 364
xxiv
. . . 883
. . . 929
. . . 451
. . . 165
. . . 157
xxvii
African Warfare . . . . . . . . . . . .
Berber Warfare . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Carthaginian Warfare. . . . . . . . . .
The Cold War: The Nonaligned States .
Colonial Wars of Independence . . . .
The Egyptians . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ethiopia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Geography, Weather, and Warfare . . .
Imperial Warfare . . . . . . . . . . . .
Roman Warfare During the Republic .
The War on Terror . . . . . . . . . . .
Warfare and the United Nations . . . .
West African Empires . . . . . . . . .
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.
611
179
149
765
771
111
304
837
652
157
813
821
298
Ancient Fortifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Armies and Infantry: Ancient
and Medieval . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
The Assyrians . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
Berber Warfare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179
Bows and Arrows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Byzantium . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221
Carthaginian Warfare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
Cavalry: Ancient and Medieval . . . . . . . . . 65
The Chaldeans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Chariots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
China: Ancient . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191
City-States and Empires Through
Old Babylon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
Clubs, Maces, and Slings . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Crossbows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
The Egyptians . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
Ethiopia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 304
Geography, Weather, and Warfare . . . . . . . 837
Greek and Hellenistic Warfare from
Alexander to Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140
Greek Warfare to Alexander . . . . . . . . . . 129
The Hebrews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
The Hittites . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
India and South Asia: Ancient . . . . . . . . . 209
Knives, Swords, and Daggers . . . . . . . . . . 21
The Maya and Aztecs . . . . . . . . . . . . . 351
Nomadic Warriors of the Steppe . . . . . . . . 202
North American Indigenous
Nations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
The Persians . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118
Picks, Axes, and War Hammers . . . . . . . . . 8
Roman Warfare During the Empire . . . . . . 165
Roman Warfare During the Republic . . . . . 157
Sieges and Siegecraft: Ancient
and Medieval . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Spears and Pole Arms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Violence in the Precivilized World . . . . . . . 77
Warships and Naval Warfare . . . . . . . . . . 70
Air Forces
Aircraft, Bombs, and Guidance Systems . . . . 435
Military Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1029
Rockets, Missiles, and Nuclear Weapons . . . 451
Americas
The American Civil War . . . . . . .
The Cold War: The United States,
NATO, and the Right . . . . . . .
Colonial Warfare . . . . . . . . . . .
Colonial Wars of Independence . . .
Geography, Weather, and Warfare . .
Imperial Warfare . . . . . . . . . . .
The Incas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The Maya and Aztecs . . . . . . . .
Naval Development: The Age of Sail
North American Indigenous Nations .
The War on Terror . . . . . . . . . .
Warfare and the United Nations . . .
World War II: United States, Britain,
and France . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . 559
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741
577
771
837
652
359
351
499
364
813
821
. . . . . 692
xxix
. . . . 765
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.
.
750
771
837
652
328
202
813
821
Asia: Southeastern
The Cold War: The Nonaligned States .
Colonial Wars of Independence . . . .
Geography, Weather, and Warfare . . .
Imperial Warfare . . . . . . . . . . . .
The War on Terror . . . . . . . . . . .
Warfare and the United Nations . . . .
Warfare in Vietnam . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . 791
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765
771
837
652
813
821
781
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.
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.
.
.
.
.
.
897
965
952
976
. . . . 806
. . . . 703
Auxiliary Forces
Civilian Labor and Warfare
Collaboration in War . . . .
Medicine on the Battlefield.
Mercenaries. . . . . . . . .
Asia: Eastern
China: Ancient . . . . . . . . . . .
China: Medieval . . . . . . . . . .
China: Modern Warfare . . . . . .
China: The Qing Empire . . . . . .
Colonial Wars of Independence . .
Geography, Weather, and Warfare .
Imperial Warfare . . . . . . . . . .
Japan: Medieval . . . . . . . . . .
Japan: Modern . . . . . . . . . . .
The Mongols . . . . . . . . . . . .
Southeast Asia . . . . . . . . . . .
The War on Terror . . . . . . . . .
Warfare and the United Nations . .
World War II: Japan . . . . . . . .
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.
.
191
311
731
640
771
837
652
321
632
328
344
813
821
720
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.
765
771
837
652
209
336
599
.
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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Biochemical Weapons
Biology, Chemistry, and War . . . . . . . . . 947
Chemical and Biological Weapons. . . . . . . 467
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.
.
771
901
969
652
911
929
781
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.
.
861
868
873
878
921
883
889
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.
.
.
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.
.
.
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.
.
.
508
499
587
398
479
408
393
427
Cutting Weapons
Knives, Swords, and Daggers . . . . . . . . . . 21
Picks, Axes, and War Hammers . . . . . . . . . 8
Swords, Daggers, and Bayonets . . . . . . . . 393
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.
.
.
.
611
663
559
484
418
490
467
640
577
548
532
539
837
403
652
623
632
473
599
xxxi
. . . 663
. . . 240
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.
.
.
260
221
149
174
765
. . . 750
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.
.
.
741
771
548
272
532
525
539
519
231
386
837
670
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.
.
140
129
652
380
245
248
293
587
165
. . . . . 157
. . . . . 685
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.
.
.
.
Handarms
Firearms and Cannon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Handarms to Firearms . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375
Small Arms and Machine Guns . . . . . . . . 408
183
253
813
821
710
703
. . . . . 692
Explosive Weapons
International Relations
Diplomacy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1008
Prisoners and War . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 989
War Crimes and Military Justice . . . . . . . . 994
Land Forces
Armies and Infantry: Ancient
and Medieval . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
Armies and Infantry: Modern . . . . . . . . . 484
Cavalry: Ancient and Medieval . . . . . . . . . 65
Cavalry: Modern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 490
Knights to Cavalry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 380
Military Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1029
Global Issues
Chemical and Biological Weapons. . .
The Cold War: The Nonaligned States .
The Cold War: The United States,
NATO, and the Right . . . . . . . .
Colonial Wars of Independence . . . .
Geography, Weather, and Warfare . . .
Global Military Capabilities . . . . . .
The Great War: World War I . . . .
Imperial Warfare . . . . . . . . . . . .
Rockets, Missiles, and Nuclear
Weapons. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The War on Terror . . . . . . . . . . .
Warfare and the United Nations . . . .
World War II: United States, Britain,
and France . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . 467
. . . . 765
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.
.
741
771
837
828
670
652
. . . . 451
. . . . 813
. . . . 821
. . . . 692
Military Theory
Collaboration in War . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 965
Counterinsurgency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 901
Cryptography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1001
Intelligence and Counterintelligence . . . . . 1018
Military Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1029
Revolt, Rebellion, and Insurgency . . . . . . . 929
Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1033
Tactics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1037
Collaboration in War . . . . . . . . .
Genocide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ideology and War. . . . . . . . . . .
Mercenaries. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Peace Movements and Conscientious
Objection to War . . . . . . . . .
Prisoners and War . . . . . . . . . .
Religion and Warfare. . . . . . . . .
War Crimes and Military Justice . . .
xxxiii
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.
965
969
868
976
.
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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
981
989
883
994
Naval Forces
Galleys to Galleons. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 386
Military Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1029
Naval Development: The Age
of Propulsion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 508
Naval Development: The Age of Sail . . . . . 499
Warships and Naval Warfare . . . . . . . . . . 70
Shock Weapons
Clubs, Maces, and Slings . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Picks, Axes, and War Hammers . . . . . . . . . 8
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403
623
632
473
599
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.
.
499
587
398
479
408
393
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.
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.
.
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.
.
.
897
901
905
969
911
.
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.
981
915
989
921
957
994
933
938
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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
611
484
418
490
467
640
577
525
519
837
Thrusting Weapons
Knives, Swords, and Daggers . . . . . . . . . . 21
Pole Arms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 398
Spears and Pole Arms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Swords, Daggers, and Bayonets . . . . . . . . 393
xxxiv
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.
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.
.
611
435
484
418
490
467
731
640
765
. . . 750
.
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.
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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
741
771
837
828
670
403
652
623
759
632
473
. . . 508
. . . 587
. . . 451
.
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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
479
408
685
427
813
821
. . . . 791
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.
806
799
781
710
720
703
. . . . 692
Vehicles of War
Aircraft, Bombs, and Guidance Systems . . . . 435
Chariots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Galleys to Galleons. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 386
Naval Development: The Age
of Propulsion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 508
Naval Development: The Age of Sail . . . . . 499
Rockets, Missiles, and Nuclear Weapons . . . 451
Tanks and Armored Vehicles . . . . . . . . . 427
Warships and Naval Warfare . . . . . . . . . . 70
xxxv
Library of Congress
c. 2500 b.c.e.
c. 1000 b.c.e.
401 b.c.e.
c. 31 b.c.e.
Development
The clubs developmental history is largely lost, because of the perishability of wood. By approximately
50,000 b.c.e., humans had developed the creativity
and skill to produce any of the many club designs
found among modern tribal peoples. In combat, prehistoric hunter-gatherers and small groups of farmers
and herders probably preferred, whenever possible,
to ambush or raid their enemies, thereby avoiding
the hazards of close combat made
more dangerous by their lack of armor, numbers, and strong leadership.
Clubs would have been used mainly
The sling makes its first known appearance.
to finish off wounded or trapped
The stone-head mace makes its first known
foes. In direct confrontations hunterappearance.
gatherers would have hurled misMetal armor is developed in Mesopotamia, making the
siles, including throwing sticks or
stone-headed mace obsolete.
slingstones, at one another from a
Metal-headed maces become common in Europe.
safe distance, contenting themselves
Slings are used to great effect against the Persians at
with low casualties.
the Battle of Cunaxa, outranging Persian bows and
As populations expanded in Neoarrows.
lithic Europe and in the Near East,
Specialist corps of slingers largely disappear from
more complex societies arose in
ancient armies.
which powerful chiefs led their war-
Turning Points
9th millen. b.c.e.
7th millen. b.c.e.
Skilled slingers could hurl heavy stones to damage armor out to 15 yards, strike small targets with
stones out to 30 yards, shatter skulls out to 50 yards,
hit man-sized targets out to 180 yards, and throw
light lead shot over 360 yards. In battle, slingers were
employed to harass enemy formations before handto-hand combat began, to pursue routed foes, to ward
off enemy cavalry and elephants, and to protect
ones own troops from missile attacks. During sieges
slingers provided covering fire, harassed working
parties, and hurled incendiaries into buildings or
siegeworks.
Another type of sling was the staff sling, apparently invented in the Roman Empire and used at
sieges in medieval Europe. It was essentially a hand
sling attached to a 4-foot staff. The user held the staff
horizontally in both hands, then swung it upright,
flinging the missile from the sling attached to the end
of the staff.
From left to right, an Iroquois club from eastern North America; an aboriginal throwing stick from northwestern
Australia; a spiked Swiss morning star mace; and a braided sling from the Pacific Islands.
riors into close combat. This explains the appearance of the stone-headed mace and of new sling projectiles that were added to the usual water-worn
stone. Worked spherical stone projectiles appeared by
about 6000 b.c.e., kiln- or sun-hardened clay balls
by about 5000 b.c.e., and biconical-shaped missiles
by about 4000 b.c.e. Such aerodynamic shapes and
regularized sizes allowed slingers to shoot farther
and with more accuracy.
In open combat, warriors probably exchanged fire
with slings and bows for some time before advancing
to fight with spears, maces, and clubs, hurling throw-
6
showering enemy formations with missiles, hoping
to disrupt them. The heavy infantry then charged,
fought the enemy infantrymen, and put them to flight,
whereupon the light troops pursued. Slingers served
as light troops in Bronze Age Mesopotamia, the
Indus Valley, and Greece.
Throwing sticks were used in Mesopotamia until
about 2000 b.c.e. and for another millennium in
Egypt. Stone-headed maces played an important role
in infantry combat in Old and Middle Kingdom
Egypt (c. 3100 to 1674 b.c.e.), in Canaan during the
same era, and in the Indus Valleys Harappan civilization (c. 2500 to 1750 b.c.e.). In the Americas, the
Incas (c. 1200 to 1572 c.e.) used a combination of
slingers, spearmen, and macemen, the maces having
circular bronze heads with six points. The Aztecs of
that era employed slingers and club bearers, some
of whom utilized the maquahuitl, a powerful twohanded, obsidian-edged sword-club.
The stone-headed mace had virtually disappeared
in Mesopotamia by approximately 2500 b.c.e., probably because the areas fierce military competition
spurred the development of metal arms and armor.
Bronze could be turned into sickle swords, socket
axes, and other new weapons, while copper helmets
backed with leather spread the impact of a club or
stone macehead blow enough to prevent their wearers from being stunned or killed. By the time of the
New Kingdom (c. 1570 to 1085 b.c.e.), Egypt had
adopted armor as well. As armor and metal weapons
became common, clubs and stone-headed maces disappeared. Maces with metal heads were used in the
Incan Empire, and mace-like bronze weapons continued in use in Egypt. Bronze maceheads similar to
medieval weapons have been discovered in Armenian tombs of the second half of the second millennium b.c.e. Maces had long been associated with authority: Narmer, one of the first Egyptian Pharaohs
(c. 3100 b.c.e.), is depicted wielding a mace. Other
evidence suggests that mace use was restricted to officers, such as those of the Neo-Assyrian Empire
(911 to 612 b.c.e.), and kings, such as the Scythian
monarchs (seventh to fourth centuries b.c.e.) for
some two millennia.
It was not until the early Middle Ages that metalheaded maces became popular. Steppe nomads and
7
The staff sling, easier to use than a hand sling, is a
likely response to this situation. Although the sling
never attained the popularity in medieval times that it
enjoyed in antiquity, it remained in use in militias and
peasant revolts. Monarchs such as King Frederick I
Barbarossa of Germany (r. 1152-1190), King Edward I of England (r. 1272-1307), and Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II (r. 1451-1481) also recruited slingers
to engage in siege warfare. In Spain the sling remained especially important: At the Battle of Njera
in 1367 c.e., for instance, English longbowmen suffered heavily from Spanish slingers before finally defeating them. Spaniards in turn suffered at the hands
of Mesoamerican and Andean slingers. In various regions the weapon is still used by shepherds, sportsmen, hunters, and rioters.
10
Development
By about 1.5 million years before the present, the
first small hand axes were being produced as part of
the Acheulean tool tradition of the Lower Paleolithic
era, the earliest part of the Old Stone Age. Probably
first used as tools, these axes, or bifaces, were about
4 to 6 inches in length and were made by flaking both
sides of a stone to form an edge. The affixation of this
biface to a handle was an innovation of the Upper
Paleolithic era (35,000 to 10,000 years ago), as was
the development of hammers, an evolution of the
simple club. The use of obsidian or flint, which could
be chipped into a much sharper edge than could other
types of rock, began during the Mesolithic, or Middle
Stone Age, period in Europe (10,000 to 8,000 years
ago). Likewise, picks probably began as simple
sticks with pointed ends more or less perpendicular
to the handle and evolved in tandem with the ax, as
pointed rocks or horns were attached to handles.
Picks, axes, and battle-hammers appear to have been
employed as weapons generally throughout the prehistoric world during the Mesolithic period, depending only on the availability of suitable materials to
make them. Isolated, preliterate cultures continued
to use such weapons, in some cases, well into the
twentieth century. Indeed, highly developed nonWestern armies used such weaponsfor example
the Zulu knobkerrie, a short, heavy, wooden club that
could be swung or thrownto telling effect against
Western forces with firearms through the nineteenth
century.
The addition of the haft, or handle, to a shaped
head was the key technological step in producing
shock weapons. Three common methods of attachment developed: lashing the head into a wooden
sleeve, as in the vee formed by two branches of
a limb; binding the head into split wood; and inserting the head into a bone socket. Rawhide or
animal tendons served as lashings. During the Neolithic period (8,000 to about 4,000 years ago), stoneworkers learned to drill holes into flint by applying
alternately heat and water. This process allowed
them to insert a haft through the head and wedge
it in firmly with shims, improving the strength of
the ax.
11
arms, and by the beginning of the sixteenth century,
European armies were unlikely to carry them into
battle.
Turning Points
12
13
A simple bow, the joints bound with animal sinew, shown in both strung and unstrung positions. Also shown are
barbed and leaf-shaped arrowheads.
the shaft was inserted, or by means of a tang, a flat projection that fit into a notch in the shaft itself. Feathers
were frequently affixed to the opposite end of the shaft
to maintain an arrows speed and accuracy in flight.
Virtually all ancient civilizations, from China and
the Near East to Greece and Rome, employed bows
and arrows in some capacity. Archers were common
in siege warfare, in which both attackers and defenders routinely harassed their opponents with volleys of
arrows. Their use in battle, however, varied, seemingly along geographical lines. In Europe archers
tended to be stationed on the wings, in front of, or behind a battle line of infantry or cavalry, and they
tended to provide cover as these other forces prepared to engage the enemy at closer range. In the ancient Near East and Central Asia, however, bowmen
on foot or horseback played a more decisive role in
warfare; they made up the bulk of many armies and
often determined the outcome of battle itself.
Development
As noted above, bows and arrows appear as weapons
in cave paintings of the late Neolithic period (8,000
to 4,000 years ago), although their use in combat may
be much older. Surprisingly, however, evidence for
archers in the warfare of early civilizations is sparse.
The Sumerian hero Gilgamesh carried, along with
several other weapons, a bow in the Gilgamesh epic
(c. 2000 b.c.e.; English translation, 1917), and the socalled Stele of Naram-Sin (c. 2250 b.c.e.) shows the
Akkadian king Naram-Sin (c. 2254-c. 2218) carrying
what appears to be a composite bow. The Egyptians
may have been the first to employ archers on a large
scale. By 2000 b.c.e. their armies included a corps of
Nubian archers, who presumably supported native
Egyptian infantry armed with spears and daggers.
The bow and arrow acquired more importance
when they were combined with the war chariot.
14
Chariots had been used as transport vehicles in Mesopotamia in the third millennium b.c.e., but by the
sixteenth century b.c.e. they had become the preeminent weapon of war throughout the Near East and
Egypt. The chariot functioned as a mobile firing platform, carrying a driver and archer armed with a composite bow. As the driver brought the chariot within
range of opposing forces, the archer released his arrows, seeking to create confusion and disorder in
the enemy line. In some armies archer-bearing chariots numbered in the thousands, and the union of bow,
arrow, and chariot figured prominently at the Battles
of Megiddo (1469 b.c.e.), between the Egyptians
and a coalition of forces from the Levant, and Kadesh
15
steppes produced several cultures whose movements
threatened and sometimes overthrew the more sedentary civilizations of Europe, the Near East, and
China. These peoples included the Scythians, Huns,
Avars, and Turks, who shared with one another a life
seemingly lived on horseback and a reliance on the
composite bow. They wore little armor and were extremely mobile, and with their large numbers they
could inflict heavy damage on an opposing force
while avoiding direct contact against a more heavily
armed foe. The most formidable of these horse archers were probably the Mongols, who emerged
from Mongolia in the twelfth century c.e. Fighting
on horseback and carrying one or more composite
bows and sixty arrows, Mongol warriors were highly
disciplined, and they used both mobility and deception to overwhelm their opponents. Under Mongol
leader Genghis Khan (between 1155 and 1162-1227),
Mongol armies swept across Asia and the Near East
and into Europe. They established their own dynasty
in China early in the thirteenth century, and by 1250
their empire stretched from Asia to Eastern Europe.
While Mongol horse archers were terrorizing Asia
and Eastern Europe, the English were experimenting with the longbow, a development that changed
the nature of Western warfare. Longbows had been
known in Europe for centuries and had played no
small role in the victory of William the Conqueror
(c. 1028-1087) over the English at Hastings in 1066,
but their role in battle was marginal until the English
adopted the Welsh longbow in the twelfth century.
Made from the wood of the yew tree, the Welsh longbow reached almost 6 feet in length and required
considerable strength and skill to wield. It was also
inexpensive, and, with training, common soldiers
could learn to shoot with enough distance, speed, and
power to penetrate even the thickest suits of knightly
armor. Edward I (1239-1307) was the first English
king to enlist large numbers of longbowmen (mostly
Welshmen) in his armies, with whom he defeated
the Scottish pikemen at Falkirk in 1298. During
the fourteenth century, however, native English archers took up the longbow in greater numbers and
proved their worth against heavily armored knights,
especially during the Hundred Years War against
France (1337-1453). At Crcy (1346) the English
16
Crossbows
Dates: To c. 1500 c.e.
system was awkward and time consuming to reload.
There is evidence, however, that types of magazinefed crossbows were still in use during the First SinoJapanese War (1894-1895).
Crossbows spread from Asia to Europe at some
unspecified date. The Romans used large, complex
versions of the crossbow as siege engines capable
of firing heavy missiles against walled cities. In
terms of infantry use, however, fragments of tombstone carvings from Le Puy and Polignac-sur-Loire
in France dating roughly from the fourth century c.e.
indicate that Roman legions may also have had crossbowmen using a basic model of laminated wood with
a manual cocking arrangement. There is no evidence
to show that the Romans employed the weapon on a
broad scale.
Development
Although there have been allusions to the crossbows
use in fifth and sixth century England, the first Western written record of its use appears in a manuscript
from 985 c.e. Derived from the Latin arc, or bow,
and ballista, or missile thrower, the weapon became
known as an arcuballista, or arbalest. Several eleventh century references note that William the Conqueror (c. 1028-1087) included crossbowmen in his
Norman army, which invaded England in 1066. By
the time of the Crusades of the eleventh through thirteenth centuries, crossbows had become a standard
and valued part of European armies. Anna Comnena
of Byzantium (1083-c. 1148) provided one of the
most complete descriptions of Crusader crossbows,
noting that soldiers had to strain with both arms to
cock, or span, the bow.
Among the most proficient soldiers using crossbows were the Italians, particularly the Genoese.
Hired as mercenaries by a variety of European
17
18
Turning Points
c. 1384-1122 b.c.e.
10th-11th cent. b.c.e.
c. 206-220 b.c.e.
1139 c.e.
1191
1415
c. 16th-17th cent.
Crossbows
19
(b)
(c)
(a)
(d)
(e)
Kimberly L. Dawson Kurnizki
A crossbow shown with two quarrels, or bolts (a), which are fitted into the groove (b), with their butt ends against
the nut (c) after the bowstring (d) has been drawn back and held by the nut. When ready to fire, the operator aims
from the shoulder and presses the trigger (e) to release the bolt.
20
ropean armies into the sixteenth century. At the Battle of Marignano (1515), a bodyguard of two hundred
mounted crossbowmen helped Francis I (1494-1547)
of France defeat the duke of Milan. When Spanish
adventurer Hernn Corts (1485-1547) trekked into
Mexico (1521), he brought with him a company of
arbalesters, as did Francisco Pizarro (c. 1478-1541)
in his invasion of Peru (1524). As late as 1570, Spanish marines stationed aboard galleons were still armed
with crossbows.
Development
The earliest humans made the first knives and daggers from stone, such as flint or obsidian. They
shaped blades through pressure flaking, banging
pieces of stone against one another so that chips of
stone broken off would leave a blade form behind. By
the time of the agricultural cultures of the New Stone
Age (Neolithic times), a grip made of wood or bone
was then formed and attached with lime or binding to
the tang. The peoples of the Americas and the Pacific
rarely progressed beyond stone technology, and so
did not develop significant swords. The Aztecs, how21
22
23
Turning Points
24
Library of Congress
Etruscan warriors in uniform, armed with short swords and carrying shields for protection.
25
weapons. Knives had various uses: as a replacement
for chopsticks, for throwing at an enemy, for committing ritual suicide, or for giving the coup de grce
to an opponent.
Development
Early humans created the first spears by sharpening
and later hardening in fire the ends of long, straight,
26
27
From left to right, a pilum, with a leaf-shaped tip and an iron neck weakened to break on impact; a corseque,
with a triangular blade and wings; a halberd, displaying a characteristically complex combination of thrusting
points, blades, and hooks for unseating horsemen; a glaive, with a spike and a long, gently curving blade, like
that of a knife or single-edged sword; and a bill, with a broad outward-curving blade for cutting or grabbing
horsemen.
28
largely replaced the pilum in the second century c.e.
The falarica, or Saguntine spear, was a javelin with a
foot-long head of triangular section; balls of fiber
soaked in pitch could be attached and ignited to make
an incendiary missile.
In Asia, Tibetans wielded the dung, a spear 7 to 10
feet in length with a long, narrow, two-edged head on
a socket. The shaft was often wrapped with iron
bands, tipped at the butt end with an iron cap, and was
used by cavalrymen for vaulting into the saddle. Japanese armies carried several types of pole weapons,
beginning with the take-yari or take-hoko a 6.5- to
8-foot bamboo pole tipped with a simple jagged
edge. The traditional yari usually had long tangs
that attached either triangular or diamond-sectioned
tips with pegs and metal collars, called habaki. Some
heads were as long as short swords, and spearfencing emerged as a respected martial art. Wings,
hooks, and curved blades eventually were added, as
in the forked or crescent-headed sasumata or the
cross-shaped maga-yari. Other Japanese pole arms
included the ono, a poleax with a hammer or peen opposite the blade, and the kama-yari, with a picklike
head. Hafts were usually of wood, lacquered or plain,
and sometimes wrapped in silk thread.
In Africa, native and Arab warriors hurled the 4foot-long assagai or zaghaya, with a long, barbed
lancet head whose tang was lashed to a wood or
bamboo shaft. At lengths of up to 36 inches, the
shorter javelin known as the jarid, or djerid, with
its square-sectioned steel head was used in most
Islamic-dominated areas.
In medieval Europe the use of the spear continued
while other pole arms were developed. Frankish warriors borrowed the Roman pilum (angon), barbing
the tip and sheathing nearly the entire shaft in iron.
Frankish thrusting spears had leaf-shaped tips with
short lugs or wings at the base. Scandinavians used a
variety of spears, including those designed for slashing (hoggspjot), hurling (gaflak), and flinging with
an amentum (snoeris-spjot). They also employed
thrusting weapons with long spikes. Hundreds of
iron heads with bronze or gold inlay and ashwood
shafts of 6.5 to 11 feet have been found in Danish
graves. Norse warriors often named their weapons,
usually incorporating serpent imagery. European in-
29
and were surmounted by long, straight, or curved
Danish ax-heads, perhaps with rear-projecting flukes.
When a thrusting point was added, in approximately
1300, a proper halberd was born. Swiss halberdiers
slaughtered Austrian troops at Hildisrieden and at
Sempach in 1386 and at Nfels in 1388, and later became the Popes bodyguards. Various combinations
of flukes, points, and blades often make differentiating between bills and halberds difficult, but the halberd is generally distinguishable by its salient convex
ax-blade. The glaive, or broadsword, evolved during
the fifteenth century from the long-hafted scythe,
with its long, gently curving blade. The concave edge
was inverted to convex, like that of a knife or singleedged sword, and spikes or flukes were added to the
back of the blade. The fauchard, with its distinctive
crescent fluke, derives from the glaive. The practical
value of these weapons declined after the late fifteenth century, and bills, halberds, and glaives became highly decorated ceremonial weapons.
Other farm implements, including hammers, flails,
and forks, were also mounted on poles for military use. Pole hammers might also sport hooked
flukes or long spikes, whereas military forks with
two tines were sometimes supplied with blades or
hooks. Spiked maces with long hafts and even spiked
balls with one long spike extending as a thrusting
point also appeared on late medieval battlefields.
30
Chariots
Dates: To c. 400 b.c.e.
form of attack forced military leaders to adopt new
battle tactics. When integrated into the battlefield,
the maneuverability of the chariot allowed the
chariot-warrior to perform an outflanking maneuver.
In early use, archers were able to use the chariot as a
mobile platform from which to shoot. The mobility
increased the damage inflicted on enemy troops and
enabled chariot soldiers to chase down fleeing enemy
soldiers.
In the Near East, the chariot became an effective
offensive weapon. Often more disruptive than destructive, aggressively mobile chariot forces could
gain control over the east-west and north-south trade
routes to the sea, as well as inland access to natural
resources, eliminating the need to mount an expensive army campaign.
Treaties formed with opposing enemies combining a large kingdom and vassal-states within one area
of influence illustrate the important role chariots
played in the history of the Near East. Even the show
of force by aggressive chariot tactics helped to dissuade confederations in opposition.
Egyptian tomb paintings (c. 1700 b.c.e.) depicting
the design and manufacture of early chariots show a
vehicle with four-spoked wheels and a single axle
centered under a single platform, on which the chariot driver stood directly over the axle. The light
weight of wooden chariots provided Egyptians with
needed mobility in battle. At approximately 1300
b.c.e., two changes in chariot design were made. The
first innovation was an increase in the number of
spokes, from four to six, in order to sustain a heavier
weight on the wheels. The second was the relocation
of the axle from the center of the chassis to the edge
of the platform, which was open at the end of the
chassis.
Early chariot tactics were immediate and intrusive; the charioteers would rapidly advance and encircle the enemy at a distance of approximately 100
32
Turning Points
Chariots
Roman designs introduced a gear-like set of rods
made of wood to form channels inside the hub or to
turn between the hub and axles.
The harness remained unimproved beyond the
yoke until the twelfth century introduction of the
traction harness. In Han Dynasty China (207 b.c.e.222 c.e.) and in third century c.e. Persia, girth bands
were developed to harness horses without choking
them. The leather breast band fell horizontally to respond to the horizontal pull of the horse.
During the second millennium b.c.e., the horsedrawn light chariot provided armies with new mobility and speed. In early battles, chariots were used
to create confusion in enemy ranks in preparation
for coordinated chariot and cavalry charges. In China
(c. 1400 b.c.e.) the chariot was a mobile command
post. Chariots and cavalry were used on flanks or
sometimes in front with the objective of outflanking
the enemy and gaining rear access to the enemys
33
vulnerable infantry. At the Battle of Thymbra (546
b.c.e.), Persian king Cyrus the Great used the chariot
to take advantage of gaps in the Lydian chariot
wings.
Once coordinated teams of chariots and cavalry
organized, the role of the chariot diminished, especially in difficult terrain. Charioteers formed elite
corps in Near Eastern and Egyptian armies for nearly
a thousand years. In Greece, however, where the terrain varied, cavalry replaced the chariot. The Hellenic army consisted of a line of infantry, known as
hoplites, in a formation of eight-deep units. The hoplites advanced with the object of smashing through
the enemys front line. Flanking the hoplites were
armed spearmen with javelins and shields. The success of the Greek system depended on the hoplites
ability to penetrate the enemys front line so that in
retreat the enemy would be vulnerable to Greek missile weapons. Apart from the two classes of Greek
A two-wheeled, four-spoked Bronze Age chariot constructed with bent wood, showing the Y-shaped forms that
fitted the pair of horses to the yoke.
34
The first precise recipe for gunpowder, a Chinese invention dating to before 1000 c.e., is found in a work
from 1044. Long before it gained any military significance, gunpowder was used for holiday displays of
colored smoke and fireworks. The earliest evidence
of gunpowder weapons is a set of figurines dating
from 1128 found in a cave. One figure holds a device
that appears to be a potbellied vase with a blast of fire
coming out, within which is a disk that probably was
intended to portray a ball. Further evidence from Chinese records and art indicates that gunpowder weapons were in widespread use by 1280.
These weapons seem to have included the three essential elements
of true gunpowder weapons: a metal
barrel, an explosive powder similar
in chemical makeup to that of black
powder, and a projectile that filled
the barrel in order to take full advantage of the propellant blast.
The consensus among historians
is that the Mongols carried gunpowder westward from China in the
thirteenth century, but there is no
agreement on whether gunpowder
weapons were brought to Europe
with the powder. The first European
mention of gunpowder was by thirteenth century scientist and educator Roger Bacon (1220-1292), who
recorded a recipe in 1267. His term,
fire for burning up the enemy,
Kimberly L. Dawson Kurnizki
suggests that Bacon regarded gunpowder as an incendiary, not a proFrom top to bottom, a harquebus, the first effective matchlock firepellant. Late thirteenth century gunarm, dating from around 1470; a more evolved matchlock musket,
powder recipes called for saltpeter,
dating from around 1600; a muzzle-loading bombard, known as
sulfur, and charcoal in the proporMons Meg, dating from around 1440.
35
36
with a large bolt projecting from its mouth, which is
aimed at the gate of a walled place. Behind the device
stands an armored man with a heated poker, which he
is about to put to its touch hole. Such a device became
known as pot de fer (iron pot). As that illustration reveals, these early gunpowder weapons were largely
associated with sieges. The first definitive mention
of them in action came from a siege of Tournai
(1340). Whether the English deployed cannon in the
Battle of Crcy (1346), the first decisive battle in the
Hundred Years War, is disputed, but they did use
them at the Siege of Calais (1346-1347).
In field warfare, early gunpowder weaponsboth
firearms and artillerylacked the technical quality to
compete effectively with longbows and crossbows.
Their weight, unreliability, inaccuracy, and slow rate
of fire made them inferior in most respects to traditional combat weapons for more than a century after
1327. In sieges, however, these defects were less
problematic. The cannonballs flat trajectory assured
that the ball would strike low against the high walls of
medieval fortifications and be more likely to open a
breach than would mechanical artillery, which had a
high trajectory. The first known instance of gunpowder artillery bringing a siege to a successful end occurred in 1377 at Odruik, the Netherlands.
By the late fourteenth century, the size of gunpowder artillery had increased greatly. Huge bombardsso called because their hewn stone cannonballs buzzed like bumblebees when firedreached
twenty tons in weight. Balls weighed as much as one
Development
It is difficult to date the development of effective firearms because most of the people who created and used
the new weapons were illiterate and
did not leave written records. A chronology of firearm technology depends on a few surviving examples,
1044 b.c.e. The first precise recipe for gunpowder is given, in a Chinese
as well as drawings and sketches
work.
that are not detailed enough to show
1340 c.e.
The first definitive use of gunpowder weapons is made at the
the changes involved. Corned powSiege of Tournai.
der, which provided greater explo1346-1347 Cannons are deployed by the English at the Siege of Calais.
sive power than did earlier serpen1377
The first siege won by cannon is ended at Odruik, the
tine powder, appeared around 1420.
Netherlands.
Corned powder produced higher
c. 1420
Corned powder and matches are developed.
muzzle velocities and could fire balls
1503
The first effective use of the combination of firearms and
capable of penetrating the plate arpikes, a formation called the Spanish Square, is made at
mor worn by the knights who were
the Battle of Cerignola.
the mainstay of most fifteenth cen-
Turning Points
37
on the battlefield was slow to appear. As a smoothbore weapon, it was inherently inaccurate: The spin
of a ball tumbling down a smoothbore barrel is determined by the last point on the barrel the ball touches
as it leaves the muzzle. The user has no idea what direction the spin will cause the ball to take; balls fired
from smoothbore weapons never have the same trajectories. Consequently, the harquebus was reasonably accurate for only a short distance, before the un-
38
39
ish trenches. Over the next twenty years, the Spanish
rapidly increased the number of handgunners in their
forces and developed the infantry formation called
the Spanish Square, in which pikemen and harquebusiers provided mutual support for each other. It remained the dominant infantry system until the beginning of the Thirty Years War in 1618.
Ancient Fortifications
Dates: To c. 500 c.e.
Nature and Use
Development
In Neolithic times, small villages were located either
on high ground or in barely accessible areas reached
only with considerable difficulty. Where nature did
not provide a barrier to intruders, human ingenuity placed trenches, palisades, or moats over which
bridges could be placed or removed. These three
types of defenses, when intended to protect against
other humans, were the first military fortifications.
It seems likely that permanent fortifications
evolved in response to the settling of agricultural
communities. Early fortifications did not require
much sophistication, because threats came mainly
from weak and desperate nomadic individuals or
from small raiding parties. Jerichoan agricultural
community in the Jordan Valley north of the Dead
Sea, settled in part because of its celebrated spring,
40
Ancient Fortifications
41
Turning Points
Africa
Egypt is a land blessed with natural
defenses. To the west of the Nile Valley lies the immense Libyan Desert,
to the east, the Arabian Desert. To
the south are the high rocky ledges of
the Nile River cataracts and, to the
north, the Mediterranean Sea. Beyond the cataracts to the south was
Nubia, a land inhospitable to agriculture but valuable for its copper, gold,
semiprecious stones, and exotic animals. Here, during the Middle Kingdom (c. 2000 b.c.e.), Egypt set up a
system of forts to protect its conquests of Nubia. These fortifications
stretched for 250 miles between the
first and fourth cataracts and gave
protection to the settled areas of both
c. 5000 b.c.e.
1204-1194 b.c.e.
850 b.c.e.
4th-3d cent. b.c.e.
214 b.c.e.
c. 122-136 c.e.
370
42
The Great Wall of China, which traverses a distance of 4,160 kilometers and is the largest defensive barrier in
the history of humankind, was built to defend China against Mongol invaders.
Ancient Fortifications
43
44
Modern Cities
Colchester
Dover
York
Caerleon, Wales
Lincoln
London
St. Albans
North Sea
Hadrians
Wall
Eburacum
Ireland
Irish
Sea
Lindum
Camulodunum
Isca
Verulamium
Silurum
Londinium
Deva
English Channel
Ancient Fortifications
did triumphs over seemingly insurmountable fortifications.
In Roman mythology, Romulus and Remus, the
twin sons of Mars, the Roman god of war, founded
the city of Rome. After a quarrel, Romulus supposedly killed Remus and built walls around the city.
However, whatever walls Rome may have had in its
early period were insufficient to keep out the Celts,
who sacked the city in 390 b.c.e. Although this attack
may have had a psychological impact on the city of
Rome, it seems to have had no major political results.
A few years later, the Romans built a massive wall,
parts of which still stand. As Rome grew, however, it
gave up its walls, so proud of its might and its policy
of offensive preemptive strikes against enemies that
it felt no need to fortify the city. During the Empire,
Rome rarely faced enemies capable of organizing the
siegecraft and supplies that would allow them to undertake long sieges against the well-stocked Roman
garrisons. The would-be challengers functioned at
little more than a tribal level and could not afford fortifications that would have been able to withstand the
imperial army.
Toward the end of the third century c.e., Emperor
Aurelian (c. 215-275) fortified Rome with a wall
12 miles around and 40 feet high, a structure that no
doubt protected the citizens against the increasingly
frequent barbarian forays into Roman territory, but
the perceived need of which foreshadowed the precarious state of the Roman Empire. Cities in Gaul and
Spain were also fortified with walls from this time,
though at a fairly slow pace. Rome accelerated its
building of chains of forts along the North Sea and
Atlantic coasts, but when these frontier defenses
were overcome by the Huns, the empire lay vulnerable.
To maintain their empire, the Romans built a system of forts, first in open territory, for the purpose of
controlling the surrounding countryside, and later on
hilltops where there were extensive views for keeping watch. It is likely that a coherent imperial policy
dictated a standard form of forts and their distances
from one another. In general, Rome used a cordon
system of forts and watchtowers without running
barriers.
It is believed that a Roman army on the march
45
erected a temporary camp every night. As part of
their individual equipment, soldiers carried stakes
with which to construct a palisade on top of a bank of
earth, which was made by digging a ditch around
the camp and piling the earth on the inside perimeter.
Although Flavius Vegetius Renatus, a late fourth
century c.e. Roman military theorist, lamented in
his time the fact that soldiers no longer carried the
tools or were trained to construct such camps, by
Vegetiuss time, Romes military was used primarily
for defense and its system of permanent forts was
already in place.
The Americas
The principal weapons used in the Mayan lowlands,
which were populated as early as 1000 b.c.e., seem to
have been spears, though clubs and knives were also
used. Because these weapons did not pose the same
dangers as did arrows or other projectiles, Mesoamerican fortifications did not need overlapping
fields of vision. Thus, walls projecting outward from
the main fortressan identifying characteristic of
forts in Europe and Asiawere unnecessary. As a result, it is at times difficult to identify certain archaeological sites as fortifications. What appear from the
bottom of a mountain looking upward to be walled
fortifications may appear from above to be terraced
retaining walls. One might wonder whether the appearance as a fortification was designed to discourage would-be attackers or merely was a result of
construction methods and topology. Although these
questions cannot be answered, freestanding walls
with moats in front of them do suggest strongly that
these structures were fortifications. The fighting
among early American peoples was intense and continuous, and its aim seems to have been, not the
death, but the capture of the enemy for sacrificial purposes.
Before 600 b.c.e., there do not seem to have been
major permanent fortifications, but, from 600 to 300
b.c.e., as dispersed settlements were replaced by
larger societies, more hilltop sites were constructed.
Lowland fortifications, generally embankments surrounded by ditches, seem not to have been very intimidating structures, but perhaps were adequate to
the military requirements of those early periods. In-
46
and a width at its greatest of 60 feet. A large reservoir was also built that could hold enough water to
sustain a siege of several years. In short, it was a
structure that was as well suited for its purposes as
some of the contemporaneous fortresses elsewhere
in the world.
Medieval Fortifications
Dates: c. 500-1500 c.e.
Nature and Use
Development
By 500 c.e., each type of fortification had appeared
numerous times in human conflicts. A stronghold
differs from a refuge in that it is a place that hosts an
active defense; from its walls, defenders may launch
Time Line
c. 757-796
880s
990s
1066
1196-1198
1277-1297
1494
Offas Dyke is built in the kingdom of Mercia to protect the kingdoms Welsh border.
King Alfred the Great begins constructing a series of burhs, or garrisons, to defend Wessex from Vikings.
The first stone keeps appear in northwestern Europe.
Rapid proliferation of motte-and-bailey castles follows the Norman Conquest of England.
King Richard I of England builds Chteau Gaillard with three baileys, which had to be captured before
the castle could be taken, serving as multiple lines of defense.
King Edward I of England builds a series of ten Welsh castles, with an implicitly offensive function as
continuances of the kings campaigns.
Charles VIIIs invasion of Italy confirms the obsolescence of high medieval defenses.
47
48
Fortified Lines
Despite the remaining fortifications that surrounded
them, the Europeans of the Germanic West had difficulty reaching the level of defensive sophistication
of the Roman Empire. Even with the extant physical
reminders of the Roman fortified lines, especially
Hadrians Wall in Britain, they declined to maintain
such lines and delayed a long time building their
own. Perhaps they saw little point to such defenses,
which had failed to keep them out of the Roman
heartlands. The permeability of such zones has raised
a number of debates as to their real purpose, and
whether they were meant to prevent invasion, to slow
invaders, or to keep internal populations within limits. The Saxons, who invaded Britain after the 450s,
found the defenses of the Saxon Shore did little to
slow their conquest. To the north Hadrians Wall
likewise hindered the Picts little in their raids.
Hadrians Wall stretched for 117 kilometers across
northern England, ranging in thickness from 2.3 to
3 meters and averaging a height of from 5 to 6 meters.
The wall was part of the Roman strategy of defense in
depth. In the absence of manned watchtowers and
fortified camps to the rear, the Saxons were hardly set
to use the wall to its best advantage. Even so, the wall
did form, in its less than pristine state, something of a
hindrance to the return of raiders northward. Northumbrian pursuers could count on it slowing marauders if those raiders tried to get their spoils through or
over the fortifications.
It would appear that Offas Dyke, built during the
reign (757-796) of that Mercian king, was meant to
achieve an effect along the Welsh border similar to
that of Hadrians Wall. An earthen rampart 18 meters
wide formed in part by the ditches that bracket it,
Offas Dyke meandered for 192 kilometers through
regions that had little in the way of leftover Roman defenses or roads. There was little hope of keeping out
Medieval Fortifications
49
50
to forage or pillage, Alfred simply made his kingdom
an uninviting prospect to Viking plunderers.
These fortifications did not have to be terribly
complex, because the Vikings had little in the way of
siege weaponry. Nonetheless, Alfreds administration prepared the burhs well, as is known from a
document called the Burghal Hidage (c. 920), which
lists them. By dividing the resources of the kingdom
into units called hides, each of which was sufficient
to provide one man for burh garrisons, the AngloSaxons assigned enough hides to each burh to assure that its walls were defended by one man for
every 1.3 meters. Because some burhs had circumferences of over one mile, this meant that Viking invaders had to sense the sizable numbers of uncowed
foes they left in their wake as they bypassed the
burhs. The burhs themselves were formidable: The
first barrier was an exterior ditch perhaps more than
30 meters wide and sometimes as deep as 8 meters;
an earthen bank came next, reaching up to 3 meters
in height; timber defenses surmounted this ringwork
in most cases, but stone walls were put in place at
major sites, especially those that housed the royal
mints. Many burhs took advantage of natural defenses, such as swamps and rivers, whereas others
were built upon the remains of previous Roman fortifications.
The advantages offered by burhs or even the most
simple defenses naturally drew people to those fortified locales. This rationale appears to explain the
growth of the stone enclosures at Great Zimbabwe
centuries later. The original impetus for the southern African plateaus settlement remains debated,
but the availability of iron doubtless held part of the
appeal. At all three parts of the site, the most restricted sites are those where archaeology has found
iron stores or iron-working tools. Between 1100 and
1500, the Great Enclosure was built, with walls of
quarried granite about 10 meters and without any
mortar, encompassing first a hilltop and later a site
across a small valley. Early in the twentieth century, the archaeological record at Great Zimbabwe
was greatly altered or nearly destroyed, and the reason for the sites abandonment by 1700 is unknown.
However, no one has supposed a victory by besiegers.
Strongholds
The transition in Europe from simple refuges to castles came with the motte-and-bailey structure, whose
origins lie in the tenth and eleventh centuries. The
heart of this fortification was the motte, a steeply
conical mound surrounded by a ditch and crowned by
a timber palisade. Within this enclosure, a wooden
tower originally rose, most often on stilts. The bailey
was a secondary enclosure at the base of the motte,
somewhat kidney-shaped as it fit alongside the motte.
Separated from the motte by ditches and protected by
its own palisade and ditches, the bailey formed a living area and an extra line of defense. From the bailey,
a bridge either spanned the ditch on a more convenient gradient to the mottes gate or reached only to
steps cut into the mottes steep slope. If the bailey became lost to attackers, the bridge was easily disposable. The quick proliferation of the motte-and-bailey
lay in its most basic advantage: It provided a maximum amount of defense at the lowest cost of construction. Moreover, it was possible to build one
within days.
In addition to its defensive capabilities, the motteand-bailey had an offensive potential. As an easily
built, forward base for troops, mottes were useful in
subduing hostile regions. One of the earliest builders
of mottes, Fulk III (c. 970-1040), the count of Anjou,
used castles to push his borders farther toward Normandy. In turn, the Normans learned from this tactic and applied it most dramatically in the conquest
of England. William the Conqueror (c. 1027-1087)
built motte-style fortifications immediately upon his
arrival in England, a fact graphically illustrated in the
Bayeux tapestry. After his victory at the Battle of
Hastings (1066), William and his chief followers
brought the whole of England under control by establishing motte castles at crucial points throughout the
kingdom. After the transition to stone castles became
widespread in the twelfth century, many mottes did
not have the stability to support massive keeps as replacements for the wooden towers. Instead, the palisade was rebuilt as a shell keep, so that the weight
of the new masonry was dispersed over the mound.
Although the use of timber castles continued into
the thirteenth century, the transition to stone appears
Medieval Fortifications
to have begun in the late tenth or early eleventh century, owing in part to the innovations of Fulk III.
Some scholars have convincingly argued that the
bulky, rectangular towers at Langeais and Montbazon, reaching to 16 and 30 meters high respectively, were Fulks constructions and that Fulk may
well have been responsible for a number of other
stone castles in the region. Not surprisingly, many of
the stone castles surrounding Anjou date from soon
after this period, as Fulks rivals and successors imitated his new building program. These new keeps, or
donjons, were massive, multistoried edifices that
could house many troops. Fulks two towers had
walls between 1.5 and 3 meters thick and up to
30 meters high. The White Tower in London, begun
by William the Conqueror, had walls as thick as
4.5 meters and as tall as 27 meters, with the corner
turrets reaching above that height. It comprised
30 square meters, and the keep at Colchester was
even larger.
The new preference for such expensive and mammoth constructions physically reflected the increasing wealth of the feudal nobility as principalities such
as Anjou, Normandy, and of course, England, stabilized. The ability of these lords to command greater
resources also meant they could put better-equipped
armies into the field. Thus the siege weapons of antiquity, which had never completely been forgotten,
began reappearing: battering rams, ballistae, onagers, and later, the trebuchet, as well as the old
standby, fire. Successful defense against these weapons required the use of stone. The spread of castles
was dramatic: The French province of Poitou had
only three castles before the Viking incursions, but at
least thirty-nine castles dotted the province by 1100.
No archaeological evidence has been found of castles
in the northwestern region of Maine before 900; two
centuries later there were sixty-two. Other regions
saw similar levels of castle-building. Such numbers
do not take into account fortified residences, which
lacked the defensive power of castles.
The intensified wealth and warfare of Europe did
not account alone for the spread of more sophisticated defenses; inspiration came also from Constantinople and the Muslim fortresses taken only with the
greatest effort during the First Crusade (1095-1099).
51
The earliest castles that the Crusaders built were the
rectangular keeps to which they had been accustomed in Europe, but the needs of these exposed
states and sites soon mandated a change. Larger complexes became the rule in order to house both greater
garrisons and the supplies necessary so that such a
force could hold out, possibly for years, until relief
could arrive from other allies or from Europe. Saphet
had a garrison of between 1,650 and 2,000 men,
while Margats 1,000 defenders were supposed to be
able to hold out for five years; the cisterns at Sahyun
held ten million liters of water. These fortresses reflected Byzantine reliance on high, massive walls
studded with towers to provide enfilading fire. These
walls could actually be built more quickly than one
of the rectangular keeps; moreover, they provided
space for vitally necessary cisterns and reservoirs.
Some castles still had keeps, but these were a final
defensive point rather than the primary one.
The most famous of the Crusader castles is Krak
des Chevaliers, which remains impressive even in its
ruined state. Occupying a hilltop in Syria that had
formerly been a Muslim stronghold, it began with the
advantage of difficult access. Its outer wall was
added in the 1200s even as the inner defenses were
strengthened. This wall encompassed an area of 210
by 140 meters and had both semicircular towers and
machicolations, or openings in the overhanging battlements that protected defenders who fired missiles,
rolled stones, or dropped combustibles upon attackers at the walls base. In forested Europe machicolations were only slowly adopted, because wooden
overhangs, or hoardings, were so easily built for the
same purpose. The higher inner circuit of walls could
complement the outer defense with missile fire. Two
towers flanked the small gate, which gave access either to the forecourt or to a series of gateways that
protected the entrance into the fortress proper. The
inner wall, or enceinte, was anchored by five large
towers. In addition to these defenses, a massive talus,
or sloped base, made the walls on the southern and
eastern sides virtually impervious to mining and scaling ladders. Apart from its defensive function, the
castles increased lower bulk also protected Krak des
Chevalier from the earthquakes that had damaged it
in the mid-twelfth century. In later centuries, Japa-
52
nese castles would also contend with natural catastrophe. Below the talus was an artificial reservoir,
and granaries and armories lined the walls. Little
wonder, then, that the Mamlnk armies that took Krak
in 1271 opted to trick the defenders into surrendering
rather than risk an unsuccessful siege.
The lessons learned in the Middle East soon
wrought changes in the structure of castles in Europe.
Circular towers came to predominate, as castle builders realized that square angles gave attackers extra
blind spots to exploit; more important, curved surfaces resisted the projectiles of pregunpowder artillery better than flat ones. King Richard I (1157-1199)
of England, also known as Richard the Lion-Heart,
would apply this principle liberally at his saucy cas-
Library of Congress
Krak des Chevaliers, in modern Syria, the most famous of the Crusader castles.
Medieval Fortifications
tles were Edward Is (1239-1307) Welsh castles, ten
fortresses built between 1277 and 1297. Like their
motte-and-bailey predecessors and the Crusader outposts, they had an implicitly offensive function, as
their dominating presence and garrisons were meant
as continuances of the English kings campaigns. Edward turned primarily to Master James of St. George,
a Savoyard architect, to oversee the project. The
show of strength may have been as much in the swift
construction of the expensive castles as in the high
curtain walls pierced with arrow slits, protective
drum towers at each angle, and heavily defended
gateways. Only one of these castles had a keep, so the
emphasis was on the concentric walls. The inner
walls loomed high over the outer walls, so that defenders could fire missiles from both. At Harlech and
Beaumaris, the successive gates were sandwiched
between flanking towers, whereas the entry itself
went through a passage. Attackers within the passage
would find themselves at the mercy of archers firing
through meurtrires, or murder-holes.
Although castles would appear during Japans
Sengoku, or Warring States, period (1477-1601),
they differed markedly from European models in
both geographical and cultural considerations. A typical hirojiro, or lowland fortress, had a broad stone
base with a curving face which, it was hoped, would
offset the threats of earthquake or rain-sodden soil
giving way. The towering superstructures above this
foundation were actually lightweight wood and plaster, again so built as to survive repeated tremors.
Despite the immensity and complexity of Japanese
castles, they were rarely the focus of battle, because
samurai preferred to display their prowess in the field
against individual foes. Such battles also had the
advantage of leaving intact buildings to the victor.
The Japanese reluctance to adopt Western styles
of warfare also meant that artillery had a minimal
impact on Japanese castles until the 1800s.
In very different circumstances, the Maoris of
New Zealand likewise showed a predilection for ritual combat and the preservation of defenses. The
Maori pa, the first evidences of which date to 900,
seem similar to the motte-and-bailey. At their height,
such strongholds often occupied hilltops with difficult access; a wooden palisade surrounded the sum-
53
mit, with ditches in front and embankments within
that allowed defenders to hurl weapons upon attackers. The wall was regularly pierced with openings, so
defenders could jab spears at those trying to scale the
palisade. Close by was a less fortified village whose
residents would retreat into the pa when warned by
alarms. Long sieges, however, were rare. Attackers
would challenge defenders to come out before the pa
and engage in single or group combat. If the defenders declined, then a frontal assault might ensue, with
the intent of capturing without destroying the fortification and its supplies.
Walled Cities
The defensive importance of cities marked both the
beginning and the end of the medieval period. The
Romans left a legacy of urban fortification: In Gaul
alone, nearly 90 of the 115 cities received new walls,
smaller in circumference but imposing still with their
10-meter height, 4-meter width, and foundations
reaching from 4 to 5 meters underground. These
defenses usually withstood Germanic assaults with
ease but were rendered irrelevant if the walls were
breached by trickery or treachery. Although rare, a
long siege likewise could succeed by starving towns
into submission. These conditions held true throughout the Merovingian period also, and one is reminded
that the Crusaders only gained Antioch through bribery. During the Carolingian period, defenses were often neglected or even quarried for other projects, but
repairs began anew with the Viking invasions. As
towns grew in wealth and population from the 1100s
onward, they had to erect new defenses to safeguard
both. This would occur all over Europe, but the most
striking example may well be the double curtain at
Carcassonne, in southern France, which incorporated lessons learned from the cities of the eastern
Mediterranean.
The techniques adopted by European cities may
be highlighted by comparison with contemporary
settlements in Mesoamerica. Maya centers show remarkable stonework, but it appears that these sites
functioned more as royal residences and religious
sites than as economic centers. Thus, the majority re-
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56
with space between in which to quarter troops. It took
two and a half months to build. Battlements and towers strengthened the wall, and the digging of clay for
the bricks left a moat on both sides. Plataea was thoroughly isolated but it held out for two and one-half
years, revealing the weakness of passive sieges.
To shorten sieges, more aggressive methods were
necessary. Escalade, or scaling, was perhaps the earliest means of overcoming fortified walls. A twentyseventh century b.c.e. Egyptian wall painting at
Dehashe shows soldiers trying to pry the gate open
with poles while assault teams attack the wall with
scaling ladders and archers attempt to drive the defenders from the wall. Escalade was not effective,
however, against walls higher than 10 meters. The
long ladders needed to scale greater heights were unwieldy and collapsed under the weight of too many
soldiers climbing them.
Because walls in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia
rose as high as 20 meters, means other than escalade
were necessary to assault them, and battering rams
soon came into use. An Egyptian palette dating from
around 3000 b.c.e. shows creatures that may be symbolic of battering rams attacking a wall. More clearly,
a twentieth century b.c.e. Egyptian wall painting depicting a siege shows three men protected by a mobile hut using a long beam to pry stones from the
wall. By the eighteenth century b.c.e. the Assyrians
were deploying battering rams in integrated assault
tactics that included the use of not only rams but also
siege towers, siege ramps, and sapping, a method of
undermining walls. Lack of remaining evidence precludes a clear picture of the earliest Assyrian rams,
which were probably prying devices used to dislodge
bricks from walls. It is not until the Neo-Assyrian
Empire in the ninth century b.c.e. that Assyrian rams
are seen in palace wall paintings. Assyrian emperor
Ashurnasirpal II (r. 883-859 b.c.e.) deployed huge
rams that required six wheels for support. A domed
turret from which archers could fire protected the
front of the ram, and wicker shields also covered the
sides and front. The machine was about 5 meters long
and from 2 to 3 meters high. The battering pole hung
like a pendulum from a rope attached to the roof. It
had a metal blade at the end, which the crew could
jam between bricks to pry them loose from the wall.
57
Development
The most important development in siege warfare
was the invention of the catapult. The first catapult
was probably invented by an unknown craftsman under the employ of the Greek tyrant Dionysius I of
Syracuse (r. 405-367 b.c.e.). Dionysius had brought
a large number of craftsmen from Sicily, Italy, and
Greece to Syracuse to manufacture arms for his war
against the Carthaginians in Sicily. One of them devised the gastraphetes, or belly bow, which is considered the first catapult. The archer could, by bracing the bow against his stomach, use both hands to
pull back a slider with more strength than he could
muster with one arm. A trigger, when pulled, then released the arrow. These catapults helped Dionysius
take the city of Motya, a formidable Carthaginian
stronghold on the west coast of Sicily, in 397 b.c.e. It
is probable that winches were added to the gastraphetes early on to pull back the slider with mechanical power.
The next step in the development of catapults
was the application of torsion power in which ropes
were wound tightly with a windlass.
The sudden release of the tension released a powerful burst of energy.
Little is known about the origins of
c. 7000 b.c.e.
the torsion catapult. The Macedonian king Philip II (382-336 b.c.e.)
c. 1900 b.c.e.
used arrow-shooting torsion catapults that may have been invented
c. 1700 b.c.e.
by his engineers. Philips son Alexander the Great (356-323 b.c.e.) dec. 429-427 b.c.e.
ployed stone-throwing torsion catapults in the Siege of Halicarnassus
in 334 b.c.e. Catapults more often
c. 399 b.c.e.
strengthened the defense than the
offense. For example, in the Roman
334 b.c.e.
Siege of Syracuse in 213 b.c.e. the
Syracusans used catapults of vari305-304 b.c.e.
ous sizes to keep Roman ships away
from their walls.
70 c.e.
In Hellenistic times, siege warfare became more technical and the
1304
equipment more complicated. The
Macedonian commander Demetrius
Turning Points
The inhabitants of Jericho construct massive
fortifications around their city.
Primitive battering rams are depicted in Egyptian wall
paintings.
Assyrians employ integrated siege tactics with rams,
towers, ramps, and sapping.
A wall of circumvallation is used in the Siege of
Plataea by Sparta and Thebes at the beginning of
the Peloponnesian War.
The catapult is invented at Syracuse under Dionysius I,
significantly advancing the art of siege warfare.
Alexander the Great uses stone-throwing torsion
catapults at the Siege of Halicarnassus.
Macedonians employ a huge siege tower known as a
helepolis during the Siege of Rhodes.
Romans employ catapults during their Siege of
Jerusalem.
English king Edward I employs thirteen trebuchets at
the Siege of Stirling
58
59
b.c.e.). Once in the city, Zopyrus opened the gate to
the Persians.
Sieges placed cities under great stress, and siege
commanders attempted to exploit any social or political fault lines in the hope that traitors would betray
the city. This ploy was especially useful in Greek
siege warfare. During the Peloponnesian War (431404 b.c.e.), more cities fell by betrayal than by any
other means.
The introduction of gunpowder in the fourteenth
century brought an end to a long epoch in siege warfare, which had changed little since ancient times. By
the fifteenth century cannon were a regular part of
siege warfare for which stone walls were no match.
Thus the ancient art of fortification was revolutionized and, with it, the art of siegecraft.
Development
Written records of battles from ancient Egypt and the
kingdoms of the Middle East frequently mention infantry, but it is difficult to determine what role foot
soldiers played and how important they were in combat. The Sumerian Stela of the Vultures, dating from
about 2500 b.c.e., depicts spearmen in a phalanx-like
formation, but during the second millennium b.c.e.
infantry may have fought primarily as skirmishers in
support of chariots. One theory holds that the foot
soldiers rose in prominence only around 1200 b.c.e.,
when barbarian tribes, fighting on foot and armed
with javelins and long swords, overran many of the
60
61
Turning Points
The prominence of infantry battle in Greek warfare declined somewhat during the Peloponnesian
Wars (431-404 b.c.e.), which pitted the naval strength
of Athens against the land-based power of Sparta.
Few infantry battles were fought, and the war was ultimately decided at sea. Decisive hoplite battles did
take place during the fourth century b.c.e., but new
developments changed the face of Greek warfare. At
Lechaeum (390 b.c.e.), on the Gulf of Corinth, a
force of peltasts, light infantry armed with javelins,
decimated a Spartan regiment and illustrated the vulnerability of heavy infantry to light-armed troops. At
Leuctra (371 b.c.e.) the Theban commander Epaminondas (c. 410-362 b.c.e.) employed novel tactics to
defeat the Spartan phalanx. Epaminondas strengthened the left wing of the Theban phalanx to a depth of
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63
Strasbourg, then called Argentoratum. Even the defeat of the Roman army at Adrianople (378 c.e.) was
due largely to the flight of the Roman cavalry, not to
the weakness of its infantry. After that point, however, foot soldiers became increasingly dependent on
mounted soldiers, and cavalry gradually assumed a
more decisive role.
The millennium following the fall of the Roman
Empire is sometimes labeled an age of cavalry. Although cavalry charges often determined the outcome of battle, it would be a mistake to discount altogether the importance of foot soldiers in this period.
Frankish armies fought on foot well into the time of
Charlemagne (742-814 c.e.), and Anglo-Saxon armies in England relied on foot soldiers up until the
Battle of Hastings (1066 c.e.). Well-disciplined infantry could also withstand a charge of mounted
knights, as did the Milanese at Legnano (1176 c.e.).
Something of an infantry revolution, however, took
place in the fourteenth century, spurred in part by the
greater use of the pike and bow. At Courtrai (1302
c.e.) Flemish infantry, armed with pikes, withstood a
charge of French cavalry and then slaughtered the
knights who had fallen from their mounts. In 1314
English cavalry suffered a similar fate against the
Scottish pikemen at Bannockburn. Use of the crossbow, capable of piercing the armor of a mounted
knight, had also begun to challenge the supremacy
of cavalry during the twelfth century, but the longbow proved more effective in terms of cost, rate
of fire, range, and accuracy. By the late thirteenth
century a majority of English foot soldiers carried
the longbow, and their large numbers proved decisive against the Scots at Falkirk (1298), and later
in the Hundred Years War (1337-1453) against the
French at Crcy (1346), Poitiers (1356), and Agincourt (1415).
The most significant infantry innovation was the
development of the Swiss phalanx. Swiss infantrymen wore little armor and carried no shields, but they
carried either a pike 18 feet in length or a halberd,
both of which were wielded with deadly effect. After
infantrymen in the outer ranks of the phalanx delivered the initial blows with their pikes, soldiers armed
with halberds emerged from the phalanx and engaged enemy cavalry and foot soldiers at close quar-
64
Cavalry
Ancient and Medieval
Dates: To c. 1500 c.e.
forces. Finally, cavalry and mounted infantry used
the horses high march rate to perform raids. After
short-range raids, the raiders quickly returned to the
safety of their border forts. In long-distance raids,
traversing hundreds of miles of enemy territory, the
raiders used speed and unexpected movements to
avoid interception.
The first known cavalry appeared in the Near
East, around 1200 b.c.e., after the collapse of the
Bronze Age civilizations there. Armies dominated
by cavalry were fielded by Eurasian steppe nomad
groups, such as the Cimmerians, Scythians, Sarmatians, Huns, Avars, Turks, and Mongols. Combined
forces of cavalry and infantry were fielded by the
agricultural peoples of Europe, Asia, and North Africa, notably the Assyrians, Achaemenid Persians,
Greeks, Macedonians, Celts, Spaniards, Numidians,
Carthaginians, Romans, Chinese, and Indians. Cavalry enjoyed a dominant position in the armies of
many peoples, beginning with the Parthians and
S3s3nian Persians and continuing with the Byzantines, Arabs, Russians, and medieval Europeans.
Development
The horse was first domesticated and ridden six thousand years ago by the Sredni Stog culture of the North
Pontic region in the modern Ukraine. The development of horseback riding and, several centuries later,
the wheeled cart allowed nomads to exploit the resources of the prairie steppe that runs from Hungary
past the Ural and Altai Shan Mountains of Central
Asia to Mongolia and Manchuria in the east. Because
chariotry preceded cavalry everywhere in the Bronze
Age, the first mounted warriors probably fought dismounted, adopting the chariot because it allowed
65
66
Turning Points
c. 4000 b.c.e.
c. 900 b.c.e.
c. 4th cent. b.c.e.
c. 3d cent. b.c.e.
333 b.c.e.
53 b.c.e.
50 b.c.e.-50 c.e.
400
1100
1260
Cavalry Accoutrements
Like most cultures in and after the
ninth century b.c.e., the Sredni Stog
culture managed its horses by directly controlling their heads, using reins connected to bits held in
place in the horses mouths by antler cheekpieces attached to bridles.
Even this was not always necessary;
the Numidians, raised on horseback,
controlled their small, swift, and
obedient Libyan steeds with only
a stick or cord around the neck.
Throughout the first millennium
b.c.e., most horsemen rode either bareback or seated
upon a saddle cloth. The first saddles, consisting of a
pad with two cushions resting on either side of the
horses spine and held on by a girth, appeared around
400 b.c.e., used by nomads in the Altai Shan Mountains of central Asia. It took five centuries for saddles
to become commonplace. Whips or goads were favored by Asian horsemen, but spurs were used in
Greece during the fifth century b.c.e. and in Celtic
lands soon afterward.
To protect horses hooves from the wet conditions of the northwestern European climate, the Celts
began making horseshoes. The earliest horseshoes
were made in Gaul between 50 b.c.e. and 50 c.e., and
horseshoes also enjoyed some popularity in Roman
Britain. Elsewhere in the Roman Empire, temporary
hipposandals of woven grass or leather and metal
predominated. Horseshoes did not come into general
use until after 400 c.e.
The earliest known stirrups, made of leather straps
Cavalry
or wood, or featuring metal hooks, appear in Scythian
contexts in the fourth century b.c.e. and in India
around the end of the first millennium b.c.e. Although stirrups may have been a necessity for the
heaviest cavalry forces, they were rarely depicted in
art of the period, perhaps because men reared in the
saddle found the use of stirrups embarrassing. Only
in fourth century c.e. China was the full metal stirrup
adopted; by the seventh century c.e. it had made its
way west with the Avars. Although none of the aforementioned inventions can be demonstrated clearly to
have had a decisive impact upon cavalry operations
during the first millennium c.e., they must have
made the creation of mounted forces easier for peoples unaccustomed to riding, such as the Chinese and
the Franks.
By around 1100 c.e., Western European knights
had discovered the use of the couched lance. Held
67
onto the horse by a high saddle and stirrups, the
knight could hold the lance firmly under his arm,
adding far more force to the blow than any thrust by
hand could do. However, because the massed charge
of Western European knights had long been considered irresistible by their Byzantine and Arab foes, the
couched lance would seem to be only a tactical refinement, not a decisive advance.
Cavalry Development in Civilized Nations
There were two general lines of development in cavalry: that of the civilized nations of the Mediterranean and that of the steppe nomads and those who imitated them. For the first group, the problem was in
integrating cavalry into armies that were composed
predominantly of infantry. The Achaemenid Persians, who reigned from 560 to 330 b.c.e., followed
the Assyrians example and used light foot archers
A Parthian horse archer of the third century B.C.E. practicing the Parthian shot, a maneuver in which the rider
turns in his saddle and fires while withdrawing.
68
and spearmen with missile-armed cavalry that did
not try to charge massed infantry forces. This combination worked well in the Near East but failed in offensives against the Greeks and the steppe nomads.
The Greeks themselves came to realize by the
fourth century b.c.e. the value in the coordinated use
of heavy and light infantry and cavalry together.
Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great (356323 b.c.e.) used this strategy in the eventual defeat of
the Achaemenid Persians. Alexanders heavy, pikearmed infantry provided a solid base, and the lightinfantry provided missile fire wherever needed. Thessalian light cavalry, armed with javelins, guarded his
left flank, and other light cavalry were positioned on
the far right flank. The elite Companion heavy lancers and supporting hypaspist infantry massed farther
in on the right. At both Issus (333 b.c.e.) and Gaugamela (331 b.c.e.), after the other units had drawn out
the enemy, the Companions charged into the Persian
left flank cavalry, ruptured the enemy line, and then
rallied and charged into the enemy flanks and rear,
achieving the victory in both battles.
Alexanders combined arms approach was
adopted by the Carthaginians and, eventually, by the
Romans as well, after the Carthaginian general Hannibal (247-182 b.c.e.) had demonstrated its effectiveness. Although the Romans experimented with heavy
cavalry, they generally preferred light cavalry, relying upon their superb legion infantry for shock action.
Cavalry Development Among
Steppe Nomads
The second main line of cavalry development occurred among the steppe nomad peoples, who enjoyed far more pasturage than did the peoples of
Western Europe, the Mediterranean region, and
China. Because the steppe nomads spent so much
time on horseback, their armies were dominated by
cavalry, a tactical development imitated by Iranian
monarchies and Chinese dynasties. The Cimmerians,
a people who inhabited southern Russia and were
driven to Turkey by the Scythians in the eighth
century b.c.e., were the earliest known steppe nomad
horse archers. As evidenced by later steppe nomad
tactics, these people probably stressed hit-and-run
Cavalry
distance chevauches of the Hundred Years War
(1337-1453 c.e.), offensive operations necessarily
tied cavalry to an infantry pace. The Mongols under
Genghis Khan (died 1227 c.e.) solved this problem:
Their armies of highly trained, fast-moving horse archers and cataphract lancers simply rounded up local
peasants by the thousands and forced them to perform siege warfare duties. The epitome of steppe nomad armies, the Mongols were hindered only by
environmental factors and internal political prob-
69
lems until they suffered their first defeat in 1260 c.e.
at Ain Jalut, Israel, at the hands of the Mamlnks,
Egyptian slave cavalry, trained to steppe nomad levels. Toward 1500 c.e., infantrymen began to return
to prominence in Europe; notable examples are the
English longbowmen, Swiss pikemen, and Hussite
Wagenburg soldiers. The development of gunpowder artillery and firearms ultimately spelled the end
of cavalry dominance in Europe and, eventually,
everywhere that European armies marched.
A Greek trireme, which employed three banks of rowers to achieve the superior speed, handling, and power
that enabled Athenss growth as an imperial power in the mid-fifth century B.C.E.
70
71
angular, sails. The carrack was a very efficient sailing vessel that became popular in both the Atlantic
and the Mediterranean. After cannons were added to
the carrack, many Western European countries utilized the vessel to become worldwide naval powers.
Development
The Greek civilization was one of the first to develop
naval power. The first Greek warships, consisting of
a single level of oarsmen with one rower per oar,
were called triacontors and pentecontors (thirty- and
fifty-oared ships). By the end of the eighth century
b.c.e., a second level of rowers was added, in an effort to improve the vessels speed and to increase the
force of the collision between the vessels ram and
the opposing ship. After the addition of a third row of
oarsmen in the late seventh century b.c.e., the resulting vessel was known as a trireme. According to the
Greek historian Thucydides (c. 459-c. 402 b.c.e.),
the trireme was invented by a Corinthian named
Ameinocles. However, other ancient sources credit
72
Turning Points
c. late 7th cent. b.c.e.
c. mid-5th cent. b.c.e.
c. 4th cent. b.c.e.
c. 3d cent. b.c.e.
674-678 c.e.
mid-13th cent.
mid-14th cent.
73
weapon of the Byzantine fleet was Greek fire, invented by a Syrian, Callinicus, in Constantinople and
used in 674-678 c.e. during the first Arab siege of
Constantinople. Greek fire was a flammable liquid
that would supposedly burn even in water. It was shot
through a metal tube, or siphon, onto enemy ships,
causing them to catch fire. Most Byzantine ships had
a siphon, protected by the forecastle, mounted at the
bow. Larger vessels sometimes had siphons mounted
on each side of the ship, as well as small siphons
that could be used for boarding actions or for repelling boarders. Although the Byzantines zealously
guarded the secret makeup of Greek fire, the Arabs
eventually produced a similar flammable liquid in
the ninth century c.e.
Dromons also carried other offensive weapons,
for both long-distance attacks and close ship-to-ship
action. They had large crossbows, known as toxoballistrai, mounted on deck. Small catapults capable
of launching stones or pots containing vipers, scorpions, quicklime, or Greek fire were also used. Deck
crews were armed with bows and crossbows. For
close work, cranes were used to drop heavy stones
onto and hopefully through the decks of opposing
ships.
Byzantine naval supremacy remained unchallenged until the seventh century reign of the Byzan-
74
Violence in the
Precivilized World
Dates: To c. 4000 b.c.e.
Overview
fare, which views ancient peoples as engaging in individual violence and small blood feuds, with complex warfare emerging only after states developed
larger populations and more sophisticated war technologies.
Scholarship
Turney-Highs work Primitive War, first published
in 1949, relied on anthropological studies of modern
tribes such as the Zulus and Apaches, which were
heavily affected by colonialism and technology. In
the 1960s, anthropologists such as Margaret Mead
(1901-1978) challenged the earlier model, noting the
difficulties of applying data from the ethnographic
present of modern cultures to a far different ancient
world. Mead even claimed to have found Pacific island tribes that did not know of war. This fueled the
academic nature-versus-nurture debate on the origins of war: Were early peoples inherently warlike,
or is warlike behavior a learned trait?
Cultures such as the Maya and the Pueblo peoples of the American Southwest were put forth as
peaceful examples, whereas the Spartans and Aztecs
were cited as warlike. Some researchers claimed that
war was common in the distant past, whereas others
argued that war is a relatively recent phenomenon.
The debate continues as archaeologists uncover increasing evidence of group violence in the precivilized world. When did war begin? Have human
beings always been violent? How should violence
and war be defined? The answers to such questions
have much to do with the interpretive worldviews
of the scholars and researchers who explore these
topics.
Significance
The lack of technological advancement in the precivilized world led to the view that warfare of the time
was also relatively undeveloped. In 1949, Harry
Holbert Turney-High developed the influential concept of a military horizon for what he termed the
primitive warfare of the precivilized world. This
view led military historians to focus on state-level
warfare after 4000 b.c.e., while anthropologists focused on modern tribal conflict. Present-day archaeologists have accumulated enough data on the period
that scholars now believe that warfare episodes did
occur in the precivilized world, sometimes with more
deadly results than are seen in modern wars. This
challenges the traditional evolutionary model of war77
78
Evidence
Evidence of the ancient presence of violence and war
in human life comes primarily from skeletal remains
and human-made artifacts, geographical features, architecture, and iconography created before 4000 b.c.e.
Some of the best evidence is provided by groups of
skeletons with ellipsoid cranial fractures, embedded
projectiles, and decapitation marks found along with
associated artifacts such as maces, spears, sling balls,
and arrowheads in the context of defensively built or
located architecture. Such forms of evidence are
rarely found all together at sites dating to before 4000
b.c.e., perhaps indicating how rare actual battle was
at that time.
The various kinds of evidence tend to be found in
differing combinations. Evidence exists of mass death
by violence in Egypt by 7000 b.c.e.; of the building
of walls, towers, and other defensive locations as
well as the use of maces and slings in the Levant and
Turkey by 6000 b.c.e.; and of the construction of elevated forts with moats, baffled gates, and palisades in
China by 5000 b.c.e. All of the mentioned forms
of evidenceincluding battle scenes on cylinder
sealscan be found in Sumer by 4000 b.c.e., indicating that by that time warfare was clearly under way.
The existing evidence concerning human violence has spawned debate among researchers such as
Lawrence H. Keeley, R. Brian Ferguson, and Steven
A. LeBlanc concerning the best ways in which to define, identify, and interpret the relationship between
group violence and war. When is group violence a
battle? Does the definition of warfare need to include
79
Keeley, Lawrence H. War Before Civilization: The Myth of the Peaceful Savage. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1996.
Kelly, Raymond. Warless Societies and the Origins of War. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2000.
LeBlanc, Steven A., with Katherine E. Register. Constant Battles: The Myth of the Peaceful,
Noble Savage. New York: St. Martins Press, 2003.
OConnell, Robert. Ride of the Second Horseman: The Birth and Death of War. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995.
Otterbein, Keith. How War Began. College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2004.
Peterson, Dale, and Richard Wrangham. Demonic Males: Apes and the Origins of Human Violence. Boston: Mariner Books, 1997.
Turney-High, Harry Holbert. Primitive War: Its Practices and Concepts. 2d ed. Columbia:
University of South Carolina Press, 1971.
Christopher Howell
zation eventually succumbed to an invasion of barbarous mountain dwellers from the east called the
Gutians, who were victorious not because of their superior technology but because of their intensity in
combat. Some time after 2100 b.c.e., the Sumerians
reasserted their supremacy over southern Mesopotamia, which precipitated a renaissance of Sumerian
culture and control in the area that lasted for approximately two hundred years.
After the beginning of the second millennium
b.c.e. a new Semitic race of people, the Babylonians,
perhaps from the area of modern Syria, rose to prominence in Mesopotamia. With its capital established
at the city-state of Babylon, the whole region once
again became unified under the rule of the powerful
Babylonian leader Hammurabi (c. 1810-1750 b.c.e.),
the famous lawgiver, warrior, and strategist.
Hammurabis death was followed by a number of
revolts that led to the rapid disintegration of his king-
Turning Points
The Bronze Age is inaugurated in Mesopotamia as new
metal technology allows more lethal weapons and
more effective armor.
The Sumerian phalanx is first employed.
After the composite bow is introduced by Sargon the
Great, the use of the Sumerian phalanx declines.
The Sumerians reassert their supremacy over southern
Mesopotamia, precipitating a renaissance of Sumerian
culture and control that lasts for approximately 200
years.
Neo-Babylonian leader Hammurabi unifies
Mesopotamian region under his rule and establishes
capital at the city-state of Babylon.
Mesopotamian Empire falls to the Kassites.
83
mi
a
Assyria
Babylon
Agade
Sippar
River
= Ancient coastline
= Course of river in 3d millennium B.C.E.
Tell Jokha
Ri
ve
r
a
ot
Syrian Desert
Euphrat
es
op
Mari
Ashur
Nineveh
Eshnunna
Kish
Akkad
Der
Eridu
Tell al-Ubaid
Uruk
Ur
Lagash
Sumer
Adab
Umma
Shuruppak
Nippur
Tell Agrab
Nuzi
Riv
er
al a
M
es
D iy
is
Tigr
Awan
Susa
Elam
Pe r s i a n G u l f
Zagros Mountains
85
86
Mesopotamia. This limestone victory monument depicts King Eannatum of Lagash leading his troops
into battle. The warrior-hero stands at the head of his
advancing army, which is composed of a cadre of infantrymen packed shoulder to shoulder behind a barrier of interlocking, handheld rectangular shields,
wearing matching helmets and presenting a hedgehog formation of protruding spears. In other words,
the infantry forms a genuine, full-fledged phalanx.
This depiction is significant because it constitutes
evidence that the phalanx was used two thousand
years before it was implemented by the Greeks, and it
emphasizes the importance of Sumerian military developments, which are often overlooked in the history of weapons and warfare. The Sumerian phalanx
seems to have been a full-blown innovation rather
than a product of an evolutionary technological process.
Additionally, the Stela of the Vultures depicts all
of the phalangite infantrymen as outfitted and pro-
Doctrine, Strategy,
and Tactics
Very little is known about the roles
played by individual kings or commanders. The first organized battles in Mesopotamia occurred before
3500 b.c.e., when smaller groups
armed only with crude stone weapons and without protective armor
clashed with one another for control
of food sources and land. Although
cultures coalesced and armies increased in size, any cogent doctrine
of warfare or sophisticated strategies seem to have been lacking. The
key to effective combat was to find
and kill the enemys leader. If the
king and his retainers were destroyed, so would be their armys
chances for victory. With the development of city-states and walled
towns in early Mesopotamia, siege
warfare became increasingly important. The subjugation of all citystates and towns became the common goal of every competing army
87
Because chariots in early Mesopotamia were not
very mobile, they probably were not used in the same
tactical way as were later two-man chariots. Later
chariots could be deployed in quick shock attacks
against an enemys flank and in fighting against other
chariots. However, the early four-man chariots had to
be drawn by asses because they were so cumbersome
and, consequently, had to be maneuvered very close
to enemy fortifications and forces in order to deliver
any kind of effective firepower. Sources seem to
agree that the early Mesopotamian chariots had little
effective use as tools of destruction. They did, however, serve as instruments of intimidation, or for
bringing a leader to a battlefield.
Ancient Sources
The Sumerians kept records on clay tablets inscribed in cuneiform. One of the most famous
stories from this culture, the Gilgamesh epic (c. 2000 b.c.e.; English translation, 1917), describes the life of Gilgamesh of Uruk, an actual person around whom legends formed and who
may be regarded as the first military hero in Near Eastern literature, serving as a model for warriors who followed. Gilgamesh was armed with a battle-ax bearing an actual name, Might of
Heroism, the first in a long line of titled weapons in the ancient world. The Gilgamesh epic also
indicates that before the Mesopotamian warrior-leader decided to go into battle, he put the
question before an assembly of the warrior class.
For the most part, however, information on warfare during the Sumerian period has come
from images recovered by archaeologists. The Standard of Ur, found in the Royal Cemetery at
Ur and now in the British Museum, has clear images of a variety of soldiers, demonstrating their
armor and weaponry, as well as of five chariots. Indeed it is from this one find that much knowledge of warfare involving Ur comes. Some old weapons have also been recovered, and there are
also surviving stelae.
Various artifacts, including the Stela of the Vultures, uncovered by the work of archaeologists, present visual images of ancient weapons and methods of war. Although physical evidence from the Akkadian period is slim, two cuneiform fragments depict the use of the composite bow, which scholars have hypothesized was made by carefully laminating bone, sinew, and
keratin to a wooden core to create a weapon with tremendously magnified power.
Books and Articles
Crawford, Harriet. Sumer and the Sumerians. New York: Cambridge University Press,
2004.
Ferrill, Arthur. The Origins of War: From the Stone Age to Alexander the Great. New York:
Thames and Hudson, 1986.
Gabriel, Richard A., and Karen S. Metz. From Sumer to Rome: the Military Capabilities of Ancient Armies. New York: Greenwood Press, 1991.
Humble, Richard. Warfare in the Ancient World. London: Weidenfield and Nicolson,
1980.
88
The Hittites
Dates: c. 1620-1190 b.c.e.
(r. c. 1345-c. 1320 b.c.e.) the heir to Suppiluliumass
expansionist policy, passed the Hittite Empire to his
son, Muwatallis (r. c. 1320-c. 1294 b.c.e.). Over
time, a growing internal unrest, stimulated partly by
allied Mitanni and Assyrian forces, caused uprisings
but received little response from the Hittite leader.
Consequently, the Assyrians reconquered the region
in a unified and formal manner. The Hittites, harassed
by requests for defensive assistance from their allies,
but irritated by the sporadic raids made by their nominal vassal states, set out to reestablish Suppiluliumass
imperial holdings. The Hittites, rather than fight with
their allies, the Assyrians, elected to engage the
Egyptians in battle at Kadesh in Syria.
After about 1190 b.c.e., the Hittites faded as a major political and military power in the Near East. As
the Assyrian Empire continued to expand systematically, the Hittite Empire eventually collapsed.
Military Achievement
The Hittites ruled a powerful empire in Asia Minor
and northern Syria during the seventeenth to twelfth
centuries b.c.e. One of their primary military achievements was in establishing a sphere of political influence in the Near East. Another was their creation of a
professional army, in conjunction with refinements
in siege warfare and the training of horses for use
with the lightweight, single-axle chariot.
Weakened by royal family infighting, the Hittite
Empire militarily secured by Mursilis I (r. c. 1620c. 1590 b.c.e.) was in disarray two hundred years later
when Suppiluliumas I (r. c. 1380-1346 b.c.e.) ascended to the throne. Hittite domination of central
Anatolia, Syria, and territory stretching as far as the
Amorite capital of Babylon was no longer assured.
Toward the mid-fourteenth century b.c.e., the
Hittite capital of Hattusas (modern Bogazk) was
threatened, apparently with the assistance of the
Hurrians of the Mitanni kingdom and of the Syrians
at Aleppo. Around 1370 b.c.e., the Hittites under the
leadership of Suppiluliumas I set out to reestablish
their hold on Syria. The initial campaign against the
Mitanni kingdom, a 300-mile march and attack on
the Syrian kingdoms northwest corner, was unsuccessful. A second campaign (c. 1367 b.c.e.) took the
Mitanni Nuhasse neighbor. A third (c. 1365 b.c.e.) resulted in Hittite control of Isuwa in northeast Anatolia.
The fourth campaign advanced to threaten the southern Mitanni capital of Wassukkani. In 1366 b.c.e.,
Suppiluliumas captured Kadesh (Qadesh) in western
Syria. Finally, in c. 1350 b.c.e., he succeeded in taking Carchemish, an important and strategic trade
route on the west bank of the Euphrates River.
Suppiluliumass military success reunited the
Hittite Empire but introduced a third military power
into the balance of the two dominant military forces in
the Near East, Mesopotamia, and Egypt. Mursilis II
90
Library of Congress
A depiction of a relief on a wall at Giaur-Kala in modern Turkmenistan, showing two Hittite soldiers.
The Hittites
tle is not recorded visually in the Luxor relief. Although Ramses II made claim that the Hittites were
unable to use either their bows or their javelins because his chariots charged through their lines, thereby
preventing a frontal assault, it is questionable whether
such a tactic was actually used. The statement suggests that the throwers may have been not in the chariots but rather on foot, in retreat, or unable to immobilize the Egyptian chariots. Such a thesis implies that
the throwers either were separated from their chariot
crew or were in disarray.
Although the physical evidence indicates that
bows and arrows tipped in bronze were used as a major weapon in conjunction with the Hittite chariotry,
there is little evidence that archers were used with
chariots. Evidence for Hittite bowmen in action is
scarce. Only Muwatallis, the king of the Hittites, is
depicted in the Luxor reliefs in a chariot with an archer and bowcase. These reliefs show the Hittites
with a defensive force and the Egyptian army with
offensive weapons. Ironically, the intended purpose
of this work was to show the heroic and invincible
Egyptian Pharaoh in the face of Hittite aggression.
Contradictory information is contained in the Abydos
inscriptions, where the Egyptian king records killing horses, capturing chariots, bows, swords, all
weapons of warfare.
The simple but sturdy Hittite chariot provided the
army with an effective battlefield vehicle. The chariot design enabled the Hittites to retain flexibility and
mobility in battle and to carry a three-man crew, consisting of driver, archer, and spear bearer.
The typical offensive use of the chariot by the Hittites was to taunt and encircle the enemy at a distance.
After the chariots forward advance toward the enemy, the infantry might advance using lances to
inflict damage. The Hittite strategy suggests an emphasis on a defensive use of the chariot against an offensive line. Once the enemy line was broken by the
chariotry, the Hittite infantry could strike effectively.
Military Organization
Upon his ascension to the Hittite throne in about
1380, Suppiluliumas I inherited an empire frayed by
91
Hittite vassal-states. To restore the Hittite kingdom,
he reinforced and restored the decaying fortifications
of the Hittite capital, Hattusas, constructing a massive wall to encircle the citys vulnerable perimeter.
Suppiluliumas also reorganized the professional
Hittite army, which recruited and enlisted infantrymen. The infantry provided the Hittites with a regular
standing army that could be increased as needed by
vassal treaty. The infantry did not contain the protectorate citizens or native Hittite populations. Supposedly, the use of vassal-state infantry eliminated the
need for mercenaries, although Egyptian sources
suggest otherwise, listing a great number of mercenaries in the Hittite ranks.
Instructional specifics about the training of Hittite
soldiers are scarce. It is thought that special locales or
training camps existed and that training consisted of
drill practice. A Hittite king might bring several army
divisions with him on a campaign, depending on the
conflict. Hittite strategy originally focused on fastattack troops but quickly shifted to siege warfare, in
which support troops and supply lines for men and
horses were more crucial than battlefield encounters
to the success of the siege.
For strategic purposes, the basic military unit was
a platoon of fifty infantrymen under the command of
the king. These infantry units were reinforced with
elite troops or chariot warriors. Decision making
about battlefield tactics seems to have been left to the
king alone. Acknowledged credit for battle success
would lie respectively with the gods, the king, and
then the kings generals. The different locations of
unit types within the camp demonstrate a similar hierarchical arrangement.
Two principles defined the organization of the
kings troops: chariotry and infantry. Within the
reign of Suppiluliumas the leaders of each learned to
work with the ten vassal-states. Although military
professionals were incorporated into the Hittite army,
they nonetheless remained identified with their individual vassal-states.
The Hittites had four types of troops: infantry,
chariotry, outpost garrison, and elite guard. The sizes
of the units are difficult to establish from existing
descriptions, but evidence suggests that a division
might have equaled about 5,000 men, a company
92
The Hittites
In the Egyptian records, the Egyptians claim victory but it is possible that the Egyptians were prevented from recovering sufficient strength to oust
the Hittites from Kadesh. The cunning strategy used
93
by the Hittites demonstrates a keen understanding of
the chariots potential for subterfuge, coupled with
speed and mobility.
Ancient Sources
Although many cuneiform tables survive from the Hittites, most of these are to do with the
administration of their empire, and few have any bearing on their military strengths. Some archaeological work at Boghazky has unearthed statuettes and bas-reliefs, but the vast majority
of our information on the Hittite soldiers comes from bas-reliefs and carvings in Egypt, where
they are shown battling the Egyptians. The best known of these is at Abu Simbel, and there are
also others at Luxor, Abydos, and the Ramesseum, the funerary temple of Ramses II in western
Thebes, which all record strategic details of the Battle of Kadesh.
The reliefs reveal the strategy of Ramses: to penetrate as far as possible into enemy territory
and to set up his offensive position before the city. The reliefs at Luxor illustrate Ramses arrival
and camp, and the Hittite ruse and subsequent surprise attack through the camp shield barriers.
Ramses counterattack, depicted on the walls of the Ramesseum, illustrates his second strategy:
to make a full-force, frontal attack into the enemy lines. The Hittite charioteers were more intent
on plundering the Egyptian camp than on fighting, and the Hittite forces fell into disarray. They
were then chased by the Egyptians into retreat.
None of the Egyptian reliefs, however, shows the capture of Kadesh or Hittite surrender.
Ramses claimed victory less for Egypt than for himself. There is some validity to his claim. After his army had fled, it was Ramses leadership that sustained the Egyptian forces on the battlefield. Traditionally, historians interpret the outcome of the battle as a draw.
These ancient sources are significant in that they provide the names of ally groups, terminology for weapons, the organization and identification of types of soldier units and chariot warriors, and insight into strategies. The Hittites use of subterfuge reveals an awareness of the tactical offensive role of the chariot in warfare.
Books and Articles
Gurney, O. R. The Hittites. Rev. ed. London: Penguin, 1990.
Healy, Mark. Qadesh 1300 B.C. New York: Osprey, 1993.
Kitchen, K. A. Pharaoh Triumphant: The Life and Times of Ramesses II, King of Egypt.
Warminster, England: Aris and Phillips, 1982.
Murname, W. The Road to Kadesh: A Historical Interpretation of the Battle Reliefs of King
Sety I at Karnak. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985.
Nossov, Konstantin. Hittite Fortifications c. 1659-700 B.C. New York: Osprey, 2008.
Wise, Terence. Ancient Armies of the Middle East. New York: Osprey, 1981.
Yadin, Y. The Art of Warfare in Biblical Lands. 2 vols. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1963.
Films and Other Media
Empire of the Hittites. Parts 5/6 of In Search of the Trojan War. Documentary. British Broadcasting Corporation, 1985.
The Hittites: A Civilization That Changed the World. Docudrama. Cinema Epoch, 2004.
Elizabeth L. Meyers
The Assyrians
Dates: c. 1950-612 b.c.e.
Political Considerations
Military Achievement
The Assyrians
95
Library of Congress
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The Assyrians
97
The bow and arrow and the lance were the most
common weapons among infantry units, but slings,
knives, and swords were also utilized. In the late imperial period, archers were deployed in pairs, with
one man serving as a shieldbearer. Shields made
from plaited reeds were often taller than a man and
curved at the top to deflect incoming arrows. Both
simple and compound bows were used, with ranges
of between 250 and 650 meters. The bow used by
particular units was often linked to the ethnicity of
the unit. Records indicate, for instance, that there
were distinctive Akkadian, Assyrian, and Cimmerian bows. Tiglath-pileser III introduced both the
lance-spear, for close-order thrusting, and lamellar
armor, known among elite infantry units as the zuku
sa sheppe. Ordinary units and native levies had only a
helmet and shield for their personal protection.
In an age during which the art of fortification was
highly developed, the Assyrians were innovators in
siegecraft and siege organization. They built movable wooden towers covered by dampened leather
hides, which enabled expert archers to clear the parapets above while troops below worked to undermine
the walls. They sometimes used a swinging ram to
batter the walls and sometimes a ram with a wide,
iron blade that would be inserted between stones and
rocked in order to pry the stones
apart.
that could be controlled by relatively short campaigns and raids. In keeping with the agricultural basis of society, campaigning was seasonal, with conscripts called to arms by July, shortly after harvest.
Despite successes, more extensive campaigns, attrition, and battle losses made campaigning under the
old system difficult. Tiglath-pileser III initiated important military reforms that created the most efficient army of the ancient world until the rise of
Rome, enabling emperors to vastly increase the size
of the empire. Instead of calling up agricultural workers during the summer, he introduced a standing
army and personal bodyguard that was augmented as
necessary by contingents raised in the provinces and
levies drawn from vassal states. The Assyrian army
may have been the first in which ethnic units were integrated largely on a basis of equality, though they
frequently performed functions for which they were
already expertly prepared.
On campaign, the Assyrian king frequently led the
army, but sometimes he delegated authority to senior
field marshals, known as turtans. Below these wing
commanders, rank designations indicated control of
1,000, 500, or 100 troops. Although much remains
unknown about Assyrian military organization, it is
clear that it enabled the Assyrians to create the first
Turning Points
Military Organization
Assyrian military success owed
much to superior preparation, which
allowed large armies to be quickly
assembled. Shalmaneser III, for instance, reportedly invaded Syria in
845 b.c.e. with 120,000 troops. Marshaling cities were kept in readiness
to receive corn, oil, battle equipment, and troops in preparation for a
new campaign, thus enabling forces
to be quickly organized and provisioned. This led to the creation of
Ashurnasirpals Greater Assyria, a
large area of northern Mesopotamia
1950-1500 b.c.e.
c. 1500-900 b.c.e.
c. 1000 b.c.e.
900-600 b.c.e.
745-727 b.c.e.
721 b.c.e.
612 b.c.e.
98
army capable of sustained, long-distance campaigning. An efficient system of supply depots, transport
columns, and bridging trains enabled the Assyrian
army to advance as rapidly as any army before the
modern industrial age, fighting effectively at distances of up to 300 miles from their base of operations.
Assyrias unmatched striking capability was based
upon its chariot force, which enabled it to wage lightning attacks across the plains of Mesopotamia and
Syria, shocking enemy troops and paving the way for
the lancers and archers of the infantry. From the ninth
century onward, the cavalry became increasingly important, sometimes operating in units of 1,000 or
more and eventually replacing the charioteers as the
mobile arm of the military. This dependence upon
cavalry forced the Assyrians to remain militarily aggressive in order to provide a continuous stream of
remounts that could come only from capture, tribute
payments, or taxation.
Although all the Assyrian commanders were undoubtedly ferocious, some were recorded as being
far more so than others. Tiglath-pileser III, in 744
b.c.e., for instance, was involved in the deporting of
65,000 people from Iran. Two years later, he resettled
30,000 Syrians in the Zagros Mountains of Persia.
The use of deportation, torture, and other forms of
terror was designed both to convince enemies to surrender and to deter future rebellious activity among
conquered peoples. Tributary (vassal) states were
allowed to maintain considerable autonomy, especially in the area of religion, whereas annexed territories, with imported foreign populations, were forced
to worship Ashur and treated in every way as Assyrians.
As the power of the state grew, Assyrian strategy
involved building a series of fortresses in annexed
territories, and these would ensure control of trade
routes. Control of roads enhanced trade and brought
valuable commodities to a land that was not rich in
natural resources, whereas fortresses were used as
bases from which tribute raids could be launched into
surrounding areas.
In terms of tactics, Assyria deployed infantry,
cavalry, and charioteers in combined operations.
Skirmishers, archers, and slingshot specialists harassed and demoralized opponents in the opening
rounds of conflict. Infantry, armed with their lances,
swords, and daggers, followed with a frontal assault
against enemy lines. Cavalry and chariots would ideally provide the decisive thrust from the flanks or
from the center of the Assyrian army toward a weak
point in the enemy line. After the horses and chariots charged, a rout of the enemy could often be expected. However, if the forces were evenly matched,
the cavalry and chariot charges might well be indecisive and yield a chaotic melee rather than a decisive
victory.
Ancient Sources
There are extensive written records on campaigns of the late imperial period. The most important Assyrian sources include the annals of the Assyrian kings, which provide campaigning
records; and many inscribed carvings and palace reliefs uncovered principally in Nineveh,
Lachish, and other cities of the Assyrian homeland. Outside Assyria, victorious kings erected
stelae, or carved stone pillars, on which they recorded their victories and reminded subjugated
The Assyrians
99
peoples of their tributary status. Hayim Tadmor has edited The Inscriptions of Tiglath-pileser
III (2007), which contains much of military interest.
One of the most accessible sources of ancient information regarding the Assyrians is from
the Old Testament of the Bible, principally in the books of 2 Kings, 2 Chronicles, Isaiah, and
Hosea. There are also scattered references to Assyrian warfare in Sumerian and Greek sources,
including those of Herodotus (c. 484-c. 424 b.c.e.) and Flavius Josephus (c. 37-c. 100 c.e.).
However, the most important sources on the Assyrian armies are not written, but bas-reliefs
from Nineveh, many of which are held at the British Museum, London. These depict warriors,
chariots, and even entire battle scenes such as that showing the siege of the city of Lachish by
Sennacherib in 701 b.c.e.
Books and Articles
Bradley, James Parker. The Mechanics of Empire: The Northern Frontier of Assyria as a Case
Study in Imperial Dynamics. Helsinki: Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, 2001.
Chapman, Cynthia R. The Gendered Language of Warfare in the Israelite-Assyrian Encounter.
Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2004.
Gallagher, William R. Sennacheribs Campaign in Judah. Leiden, Netherlands: E. J. Brill,
1999.
Gwaltney, William C., Jr. Assyrians. In Peoples of the Old Testament World, edited by Alfred J. Hoerth et al. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Books, 1994.
Healy, Mark. The Ancient Assyrians. New York: Osprey, 1991.
Postgate, Nicholas. The Land of Assur and the Yoke of Assur: Studies on Assyria, 1971-2005.
Oxford: Oxbow, 2007.
Saggs, Harry W. F. The Might That Was Assyria. London: Sidgwick and Jackson, 1984.
Yamada, Shigeo. The Construction of the Assyrian Empire: A Historical Study of the Inscriptions of Shalmaneser II Relating to the Campaigns in the West. Leiden, Netherlands: E. J.
Brill, 2000.
Films and Other Media
Iraq: Stairway to the Gods. Documentary. Coronet Films and Video, 1973.
Mark Polelle and John Powell
The Chaldeans
Dates: 626-539 b.c.e.
and one year later captured the important city of
Ashur. Significant emphasis was given by the Chaldeans to what might be termed coalition warfare in
its early stages of development, and an alliance between the Chaldeans and the Medes was forged when
Nabopolassar Nebuchadnezzar and the Median ruler
Cyaxares (r. 625-585 b.c.e.) met under the walls of
Ashur after the Median victory.
In 612 b.c.e. Nabopolassar Nebuchadnezzar led a
final assault against Assyrias main city, Nineveh.
Although it was strongly fortified, the city fell after a
two-month siege, and, for all intents and purposes,
the empire fell with it. In 610 b.c.e. the Medes and
the Neo-Babylonians marched against Harran to the
north and took it. The last of the Assyrian pretenders
to the throne disappeared. The Medes did not lay
claim to any part of the empire they helped to overthrow. Apparently content with their share of the
booty, they withdrew to the east and turned their attention toward Armenia and Asia Minor. The NeoBabylonians built their empire on the ruins of the Assyrian Empire, though they did not repair much of the
damage they had inflicted.
After his final victory over the Assyrians, the aging Nabopolassar Nebuchadnezzar relied increasingly on his son, Nebuchadnezzar II (c. 630-562
b.c.e.) for the conduct of military operations. In 607
b.c.e. the crown prince attacked the Egyptian stronghold of Carchemish on the northern Euphrates River,
routed the Egyptian army under Pharaoh Necho II
(r. 610-595 b.c.e.), and gained military and economic
control over areas to the west of Mesopotamia. However, just as all of Syria-Palestine now lay open to the
Chaldeans, Nabopolassar Nebuchadnezzar died and
Nebuchadnezzar II had to return to Babylon. He was
crowned king in 605 b.c.e. For the next seven years
he found himself quelling rebellion after rebellion in
both Mesopotamia and Syria-Palestine. During the
winter of 598 b.c.e. the king of Judah refused to pay
Military Achievement
The Chaldeans, or Neo-Babylonians, are credited
with destroying the Assyrian Empire and establishing a new one in the Near East that was responsible
for sacking Jerusalem, razing the Jewish temple located there, and destroying and deporting the kingdom of Judah in 586 b.c.e. The Chaldean culture was
known not for military innovation but rather for honing previously used policies, weapons, and tactics in
campaigns and battles that were fought over most of
the ancient Near East.
During the period of Assyrian domination in the
Near East (1300-700 b.c.e.), a new group of Semitic
desert dwellers infiltrated southern Mesopotamia and
established a culture that came to be known as Chaldean, named after the dominant tribe, the Kaldu. Discontent within the Assyrian Empire grew steadily
during the reign of Ashurbanipal (r. 668-627 b.c.e.),
the last great king of ancient Assyria. After his death,
an imperial governor named Nabopolassar Nebuchadnezzar (r. 626-605 b.c.e.), a member of the
Kaldu tribe, became leader of the insurrection. In 626
b.c.e., after a year of guerrilla war, Nabopolassar
Nebuchadnezzar ascended the throne of the city-state
of Babylon, inaugurated the Eleventh Babylonian
dynasty, and established the Chaldean or Neo-Babylonian kingdom, to distinguish it from the Old Babylonian Empire of Hammurabis (c. 1810-1750 b.c.e.)
day.
For twelve years, from 626 to 614 b.c.e., war between the Chaldean, or Neo-Babylonian, kingdom
and the remnants of the Assyrian Empire consisted of
a series of battles over control of a network of fortified cities and towns in southern Mesopotamia, in
modern-day Iraq. The Assyrians made an alliance
with the Egyptians, who had become alarmed at the
successes of the Chaldeans and of the Medes in what
is now Iran. In 615 b.c.e. the Medes invaded Assyria
100
The Chaldeans
101
F. R. Niglutsch
Chaldean king Nebuchadnezzar II directs operations against rebellious Jews in 586 B.C.E., capturing and looting the capital of Jerusalem, destroying the Jewish temple, and rounding up and deporting thousands of Jews to
Babylon.
102
Military Organization
Neo-Babylonian armies pursued their grand strategy
by organizing together troops with different kinds of
weapons and different tactical objectives: infantry
units armed with spears and clubs, cavalry warriors
on horseback, charioteers, and siege units that also
included scaling parties composed of archers. Their
strategy was to overwhelm the enemy. Although
the Greek historian Herodotus (c. 484-424 b.c.e.)
later indicated that the greatest of the Median kings,
Cyaxares, was the first ruler who divided his troops
into companies and distinct bodies of spearmen, archers, and others, all evidence indicates that Nabopolassar Nebuchadnezzar would have known of this
well-coordinated, systematic arrangement of troops
long before he formed his alliance with the Median
ruler.
The Chaldeans undoubtedly followed the example of their predecessors, the Assyrians, in collecting
horses for their cavalry troops from the many villages
specifically cultivated for that purpose in Mesopotamia. Characteristic chariots of the period were largewheeled, maneuverable, high-platformed vehicles
accommodating three or four persons: a driver, an archer, and one or two shield bearers to protect them.
Late seventh century b.c.e. reliefs show chariots being preceded by two archers mounted on horseback,
with slingers ahead of them.
Doctrine, Strategy,
and Tactics
Turning Points
1300-700 b.c.e.
626 b.c.e.
587-586 b.c.e.
539 b.c.e.
The Chaldeans
and their symbolic value. These cities were usually of
religious importance, because they were the home of
either a regions patron deity or priestly class, or
both. The capital city of a kingdom or group of people was often reserved for the final siege, because it
was the most strongly fortified of the cities, and also
because it could be greatly weakened in both supply
and morale by the loss of its network of supporting
towns.
A specific purpose of the siege was the attempt to
starve the holdouts into submission, as in the Siege of
Jerusalem (586 b.c.e.). Information about an opponents troop strength, tactical weaknesses, fortifications, and other areas of possible exploitation was obtained either by spies who infiltrated the enemy camp
or by internal informers. Once a city was captured,
further resistance was often preempted by razing its
walls. The rebuilding of a citys walls was usually
regarded as a symbol of renewed revolt. The NeoBabylonians also applied the policy of torching conquered cities. Modern archaeological excavations in
Jerusalem attest to a great conflagration that swept
over the whole city but that was especially prominent
103
in the residential district, data which harmonizes well
with the report presented in the Bibles Book of 2
Kings (25:9).
Campaign plans of the Neo-Babylonian military
machine were often based on tradition and longestablished patterns of warfare. The Neo-Babylonian
conquest of Syria-Palestine followed much the same
strategy and order employed by the Assyrians more
than a century earlier. Like the Assyrians before
them, the Neo-Babylonians also used the policy of
deportation of vanquished foes with great effectiveness, especially as a tool of psychological warfare to
break the will and ability of opponents to recombine
against their oppressors.
Alliance warfare was an important strategy to the
Chaldeans, or Neo-Babylonians, in their conquest of
Assyria and the establishment of their own empire.
Royal marriages during war sometimes sealed coalition agreements, as when Nabopolassar Nebuchadnezzars son, Nebuchadnezzar II, was wed to Amytis,
the daughter of the Median ruler, Cyaxares. From
that point on, the Chaldeans and the Medes fought
side by side and the fate of the Assyrians was sealed.
Ancient Sources
Perhaps the most valuable resource regarding Neo-Babylonian warfare is a series of ancient
texts collectively translated and known in English as The Babylonian Chronicle (1887). Begun
in 626 b.c.e., the same year Nabopolassar Nebuchadnezzar ascended the throne of Babylon,
this record describes the many wars and campaigns of the Chaldeans and allows military historians to follow, almost day by day, the history of the Neo-Babylonian Empire. It includes invaluable accounts of the fall of Nineveh and other Assyrian cities.
The Hebrew Bible, or Old Testament, also provides important commentary on the strategy
and tactics used by the Neo-Babylonians and reports on their destruction of various cities both
in Syria-Palestine and Mesopotamia. For example, Nahum (3:1-7) preserves not only the sense
of vengeance unleashed during the destruction of Nineveh but also the tools of war in use:
Cursed be the city of blood, full of lies, full of violence. . . . The sound of the whip is heard, the gallop
of horses, the rolling of chariots. An infinity of dead, the dead are everywhere! My anger is on thee,
Nineveh, saith Jehovah. . . . I will show thy nakedness to the nations and thy shame to the kingdoms.
And then it will be said: Nineveh is destroyed! Who will mourn her?
104
The Hebrews
Dates: c. 1400 b.c.e.-73 c.e.
Political Considerations
Mediterranean
Sea
Ph
Tyre
oe
nic
ia
Sidon
Acre
Sea of
Galilee
Military Achievement
The first military engagements of the
Hebrew people of the late Bronze
Age were wars of conquest. These
included, in Transjordan, the defeat
of Sihon, king of Heshbon, and Og,
king of Bashan, and the campaign
against Midian, both of which are
described in the biblical Book of
Numbers. Later, Joshua ben Nun accomplished the occupation of Canaan, the Hebrew promised land
west of the Jordan, through three
strategic military actions, all of
which are described in the biblical
Book of Joshua. First, the Hebrews
crossed the Jordan River opposite
Jericho into the heart of the land,
Samaria
Ammon
Bethel
Jericho
il
Ph
Kingdom of Judah
Sea
Heshbon
Dead
Bethlehem
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Jerusalem
Moab
Beersheba
Kir
105
106
northern Galilee, and their cities were taken by the Israelites (Joshua 11). These achievements were accomplished with a unified militia of Israelite tribes.
Although the unified strategy of Joshua ben Nun
succeeded in defeating the coalition of forces capable
of threatening Israels position in Canaan, the task
of mopping up fell to individual tribes at the beginning of the Iron Age (1200-1000 b.c.e.). The lack of
tribal unity within the Israelite confederacy during
this period allowed a resurgence of Canaanite power
and the emergence along the Mediterranean coast of
the Philistines, one group from among the earlier invading Sea Peoples that had been repulsed from
Egypt by Ramses III (r. 1184-1153 b.c.e.) around
1168 b.c.e. According to extrabiblical records, the
Philistines held a well-deserved reputation for martial skill and organization. In addition, they controlled a monopoly on iron metallurgy. Owing to
these factors, the Israelite leaders, the judges Samuel
and Saul, found themselves fighting defensive engagements. The lack of tribal unity also contributed
to a period of civil war, described in the biblical Book
of Judges.
After consolidating his reign in Judah and Israel,
The Hebrews
107
Turning Points
108
The Hebrews
109
Military Organization
Ancient Sources
A fair knowledge of the military achievements of the nations of the ancient Near East is revealed by the numerous paintings, drawings, reliefs, and inscriptions left behind. Even peace
treaties describe the titles and functions of individuals in the army. The famous Assyrian basrelief of the siege of Lachish was at Nineveh and is now held at the British Museum. It has a detailed depiction of Hebrew soldiers. However, information about the military organization of
Israel from 1400 b.c.e. to the first century c.e. is not so complete.
The Hebrew Bible, or Old Testament, remains the primary resource for understanding the
military achievements of the Hebrew people. Although there are extensive references to battles,
the Bible is not a military history. Flavius Josephus, in his Bellum Judaicum (75-79 c.e.; History of the Jewish War, 1773), wrote about the Revolt of 66-70 c.e., in which he participated,
later supporting the Romans. He later wrote Antiquitates Judaicae (93 c.e.; The Antiquities of
the Jews, 1773). However, these books must be supplemented with archaeological and
epigraphic discoveries from elsewhere in Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Palestine. Many of these
are included in J. B. Pritchards edited collection, Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the
Old Testament (1969).
Books and Articles
Aharoni, Yohanan, and Michael Avi-Yonah. The Macmillan Bible Atlas. 3d ed. New York:
Macmillan, 1993.
Bright, John. A History of Israel. 4th ed. Louisville, Ky.: Westminster John Knox Press, 2000.
110
The Egyptians
Dates: c. 3000-30 b.c.e.
Military Achievement
112
Nubian troops preferred the self bow. New Kingdom
Egyptian chariots served as mobile archery platforms.
Pointed, and sometimes barbed, Egyptian arrows
caused deep wounds. Broad, and sometimes flattipped, Egyptian arrows caused stunning injuries. Arrow tips were made from flint, horn, wood, and bone;
copper tips had appeared by the time of the Middle
Kingdom (c. 2055-1650 b.c.e.), and bronze tips by
the time of the New Kingdom. There is slight evidence for the use of poisoned arrows. Arrows were
carried in quivers; primarily during the Middle Kingdom bows and arrows together were at times held
within a sleevelike quiver, open at each end.
Slings are attested, and surviving images have
slingers appearing in the crows nests of Egyptian
warships. Late Coptic sources portray Egyptian
women as adept at the use of the sling. The Egyptians
also employed throw sticks in combat.
Spears appeared early in the Egyptian arsenal,
both long, thrusting spears and short, stabbing spears.
By the time of the Nineteenth Dynasty (1295-1186
b.c.e.) two spears had appeared in the arsenal of
Egyptian chariot soldiers, to be used if the chariot became disabled. Throwing spears are also attested.
New Kingdom troops at times carried both spear and
battle-ax, possibly throwing spears prior to closing
with axes.
Battle-axes, with blades of stone, copper, or bronze
as technology evolved, were the preferred closecombat weapons. Early metal battle-axes had rounded
blades. From the time of the Second Intermediate
Period the standard shape was a long, roughly rectangular blade, convex on the cutting edge, with slightly
concave sides. New Kingdom Libyan auxiliaries carried battle-axes with archaic, rounded blades.
The mace administered the coup de grce to the
heads of the mortally wounded, the origin of the
pharaonic image of the ruler smiting the enemies
of Egypt. Apparently common in earlier Egyptian
forces as actual weapons with pear- and disc-shaped
heads, the mace is rarely depicted outside smiting
scenes and royal regalia. The mace becomes more
visible in later New Kingdom scenes, in which it is
larger, with a curved blade attached, beginning at the
base of the mace head and coming to a point beyond
The Egyptians
Sea
Heliopolis
Lower Egypt
Memphis
Giza
Saqqara
Ri
ver
Fayum
Nile
113
Sinai
Eastern
Desert
Abydos
Thebes
Western Desert
Red Sea
Elephantine
First Cataract
Asw3n
Berenike
Upper Egypt
Buhen
Second Cataract
Nubian
Desert
Third Cataract
Kush
Fourth Cataract
Napata
Fifth Cataract
Mero
114
Sea
Egypt
Hierakonpolis
Elephantine
N ile R i ve r
First Cataract
Allaqi
Ikuyta
Aniba
Wadi Allaqi
Faras
Buhen
Second Cataract
Semna
Wadi Gabgaba
Wawat
Ibhet
Nubian Desert
Karoy
Ni
le
Kush
Ri
ve
Third Cataract
Fourth Cataract
Fifth Cataract
Gebel Barkal
Bayuda Desert
Irem
The Egyptians
however, it is unclear to what extent native troops
adopted such armor.
Nubian auxiliaries wore leather sporrans, or
pouches, during both the First Intermediate Period
and Middle Kingdom. Large, heart-shaped, quilted
sporrans appeared during the New Kingdom. These
elements of clothing appear to have functioned as
protection for the groin area. Soldiers often wore a
leather overkilt, cut to have the appearance of a
leather net with a seat patch.
Middle Kingdom soldiers, as revealed by mummified remains at Deir el-Bahri, a temple site on
the west bank of the Nile near Thebes, wore their
hair thick and greased, forming a natural protection
against blows to the head and neck. Textile head
coverings are well attested, and there is sporadic evidence for helmets during the New Kingdom.
Military Organization
Early Egyptian forces were divided between infantry
and archers; during the New Kingdom the chief divisions were between chariotry and foot soldiers. The
smallest independently operating units appear to have
been of ten men, with a squad leader; during the New
Kingdom the smallest units appear to have been fifty
men. The New Kingdom saw the emergence of a
complex military hierarchy. Armies were equipped
by various temples, institutions that fulfilled many
important economic functions in Egypt. The four armies of Ramses II (r. 1279-1213 b.c.e.) at Kadesh
were named for four deities. Mercenaries were important, and there were early units of Nubian troops,
usually archers. Libyans and Mediterranean mercenaries and pirates were also important. Each independently operating unit had at least one scribe. During the Ptolemaic (332-30 b.c.e.) and Roman (30
b.c.e.-395 c.e.) periods, Hellenistic and Roman military practices supplanted earlier Egyptian practices.
115
nastic Period. During the Middle Kingdom, a series
of fortresses, watch posts, and patrol roads created an
elaborate system of defense in depth at the Second
Cataract of the Nile in Nubia, the southern boundary
of direct Egyptian control and influence in the south.
The complexity and extent of this system presaged
later Roman achievements. Roman border defenses,
and their Egyptian precursors, consisted of three
types: defense by client states, with lightly defended
legionary camps; perimeter defense; and defense in
depth. Perimeter defense involved main fortresses
behind outer defenses, with patrol roads and watchtowers stretching back to the fortresses. In defense in
depth, larger and more heavily fortified fortresses
were intended to stand alone in areas periodically
overrun by foes.
Middle Kingdom Egyptian forts in Nubia developed in almost the opposite way. Initially they were
well-fortified outposts in a perimeter defense, part of
an elaborate system of patrol roads and watch posts,
befitting their location in the low desert plain. Later
Middle Kingdom forts on the southern end of the
Second Cataract were, like later Roman fortresses,
heavily fortified, with spur walls for enfilading fire,
atop granite outcroppings, a response to the rise of
the powerful Kerman state in Nubia. The Middle
Kingdom fortresses in Nubia were supply depots and
strongholds allowing the extension of Egyptian patrols into the far south.
By the time of Thutmose II (r. 1492-1479 b.c.e.)
there were client states in Nubia, and the New Kingdom fortress of Buhen was less heavily defended,
like the later Roman fortresses of the perimeter defense system. During the New Kingdom Egypt had
a foederati-like arrangement with more developed
Nubian client states. Nubia was important to Egypt as
a source of military manpower, and the point of origin or transshipment of many goods, including gold
and incense.
A network of patrol roads, camps, and watch posts
stretched through the Western Desert during the
Middle Kingdom, and the Theban Seventeenth Dynasty (c. 1580-1550 b.c.e.) maintained and elaborated upon certain elements of this system. Fortresses
also guarded the eastern Nile Delta; a Middle Kingdom fortress in the Wadi an-Nazrnn implies a similar
116
Ancient Sources
The considerable accomplishments of the ancient Egyptians in the realm of tactics must be
reconstructed from much disparate and indirect evidence, and the lack of any true military treatise from ancient Egypt means that much information has been lost. Military scribes kept daybook accounts of expeditions, excerpts of which appeared occasionally in inscriptions, such as
those of Thutmose III at Karnak. The ancient Egyptians stressed the timeless importance of
events and of history as festival, an emphasis leading to a lack of what might be considered truly
historical accounts of military activities.
However, although these manuscripts have not survived, there are numerous scenes and inscriptions recounting military activity which do survive, the earliest from the late Gerzean Period (c. 3500-3200 b.c.e.). Some actually show the recording of military events, and there are
many bas-reliefs showing chariots, soldiers and ships.
In addition, many actual weapons, and even some chariots, have survived. Some of those,
such as the throwing sticks in the tomb of Tutankhamen of the Eighteenth Dynasty, were clearly
decorative, but there are also swords, knives, and bows that do survive, from the tomb of
Tutankhamen, and from archaeological sites both much older and more recent than the Eigh-
The Egyptians
117
teenth Dynasty. Other information comes from bodies and skeletons, some of which show the
effects of Egyptian weaponry.
Some contemporary written accounts exist from non-Egyptian sources. These include the
Bible, which mentions the Egyptians in the Book of Exodus and other parts. Herodotus, in his
Historiai Herodotou (c. 424 b.c.e.; The History, 1709), provides some descriptions of the Egyptians in battle. There are far more extensive written sources from the Hellenistic period from the
works of Arrian, the Anabasis Alexandri (early second century c.e.; The Campaigns of Alexander, 1893), and also from the writings of Plutarch (c. 100 c.e.).
Books and Articles
Drews, Robert. The End of the Bronze Age. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1993.
Fields, Nic. Bronze Age War Chariots. New York: Osprey, 2006.
Healy, Mark. Armies of the Pharaohs. New York: Osprey, 1992.
_______. New Kingdom Egypt. New York: Osprey, 1992.
_______. Qadesh, 1300 B.C. New York: Osprey, 1993.
Shaw, Ian. Egyptian Warfare and Weapons. Princes Risborough, England: Shire, 1991.
Spalinger, Anthony John. Aspects of the Military Documents of the Ancient Egyptians. New
Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1982.
Wachsmann, Shelley. Seagoing Ships and Seamanship in the Bronze Age Levant. College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1998.
Yadin, Yigael. The Art of Warfare in Biblical Lands in the Light of Archaeological Study. New
York: McGraw-Hill, 1963.
Films and Other Media
Antony and Cleopatra. Film. Transac, 1972.
Cleopatra. Film. Twentieth Century-Fox, 1963.
Egypt Golden Empire. Documentary. Lion Television, 2001.
The Egyptian. Film. Twentieth Century-Fox, 1954.
Ramses: Favorite of the Gods. Documentary. Time-Life Video, 1997.
John Coleman Darnell
The Persians
Dates: To 651 c.e.
Military Achievement
The Persians were an Iranian-speaking, Indo-European people. As described in both the Rigveda and
the Avesta, the sacred texts of Hinduism and Zoroastrianism respectively, warriors played an important
part in Persian society. The warrior class, from which
chiefs and kings were chosen, was second in status
only to that of the priests. However, these religious
texts, written by priests, may overemphasize the importance of the priest class within Persian society.
Horses were important to the Persians, who used
them effectively against both the native inhabitants
of the Iranian plateau and their Mesopotamian neighbors, especially the Assyrians, whose military technology was the most advanced in the world in the first
millennium b.c.e. Ancient Persian history can be divided into three periods: the Achaemenid Persian
period (550-330 b.c.e.), the Hellenic and Parthian
period (330 b.c.e.-224 c.e.), and the S3s3nian period
(224-651 c.e.).
The Persians
119
Library of Congress
The Persian forces of Darius I the Great employ elephants in battle against the forces of Alexander the Great at
Gaugamela (331 C.E.).
tle against their enemies. Prayers were usually accompanied with sacrifices and ritual acts.
Greek and Iranian sources indicate that the elite
Persian forces wore long, draped robes with trousers,
as well as coats of mail covering their chests. The
Greek historian Xenophon (430-354 b.c.e.) states
that Persian cavalry forces carried javelins and wore
breastplates, armor, and helmets. Xenophon also mentions various standards, or banners carried in battle,
specifically the royal standard, a spread-winged eagle
on a shield.
The Persian infantry wore loose tunics with
corselets of metal scales underneath for protection
from spear thrusts. They wore felt hoods and helmets
Libya
Cyrene
erra
nea
Sidon
Tyre
Jerusalem
Memphis
Egypt
n S
ea
Ecbatana
Aral
Sea
Merv
Margiana
rs
ia
Shiraz
Gu
lf
Persepolis
Persis
Pergana
Indus
Kabul
Taxila
Gandhara
Sea of Oman
Gedrosia
Bactria
Bactria
Maracanda (Samarqand)
Sogdiana
Parthia
Rai (Tehran)
Aria
Media
Damascus Babylonia
Babylon Susa
Nippur Elam
Gaugamela
Medit
Se
Armenia
Gordium
Lydia
Cappadocia
Phrygia
Greece
Sardis
Ephesus
Ionia
Nineveh
Assyria
Nisibis
Euxinu
p
Thrace
ntus
as
Po
C
n
ia
d
Re
Sea
The Persians
for head protection and carried short swords, lances
with wooden shafts and metal points, quivers full of
arrows with bronze or iron points, bows with ends
shaped like animals heads, and wicker shields of different shapes.
Greek sources tend to exaggerate the numbers
of Persian forces, with estimates ranging from 900
thousand to 5 million. The main reason for such exaggeration was to boast the Greeks ability to repel
Achaemenid aggression during the Greco-Persian
Wars (499-448 b.c.e.). The Persian navy, stationed at
Cilicia on the Mediterranean coast, was composed
mainly of foreigners, such as the Phoenicians, Greeks,
and Egyptians. The mercenary status of the Persian
navy was a reason for its defeat against the Greek
navy; when the war became difficult or its outcome
unsure, the Persian naval commanders either retreated or left altogether. The lack of a competent naval force would be a major reason that the Achaemenid Persians were ultimately unsuccessful against the
Greek city-states.
Military Organization
The success of the Persian military was based on
the capability of its military leaders and its army.
Greek sources provide ample information on the
composition of the Persian army, especially during
the Greco-Persian Wars. The Persian nomadic forces
that conquered the Medes were turned into organized
standing forces composed of both Persians and Medians. These forces consisted of both cavalry, which
included chariots, horses, and camels, and infantry,
which included lance bearers and bowmen. As more
people, including Greeks, Lydians, and Mesopotamians, were incorporated into the Persian Empire,
they were also brought into the army. Greek mercenaries were used from the time of Cambyses in the
sixth century b.c.e.
The Persian armys sophisticated training regiment of elite forces was drawn from the ranks of the
nobility. In a system resembling that of the Spartans,
who trained soldiers from youth, the Persians selectively trained certain youths, who passed required
tests, to be warriors. According to Greek sources, the
121
youths who were accepted into warrior society were
taught various athletic, farming, and craft skills. As
they matured, they were trained in the military arts,
such as archery, spear and javelin throwing, and
marching. In addition to these elite warrior forces,
there were special forces composed of hardened warriors who acted as a sort of secret service.
The Persian army was divided according to the
decimal system, in units of tens, hundreds, and thousands. Greek sources mention an elite Persian force
known as the Immortals, composed of ten thousand
men and so called because previously selected men
waited to fill the places of casualties in battle. The
Immortals reportedly included spearmen of Persian
nobility: one thousand in the cavalry and ten thousand in the infantry. Of these ten thousand infantrymen, one thousand had golden pomegranates instead of spikes on the butt-ends of their spears. They
marched in two sections, one ahead of and the other
behind the remaining nine thousand Immortals, whose
spears had silver pomegranates.
After 238 b.c.e. when the Parthians came to dominate the Persian Empire, the heavily armored cavalry, known as cataphracts, became the elite forces
of the army. The extremely accurate mounted bowmen of the Parthian cavalry repeatedly defeated the
Romans with their famed maneuvering techniques.
The most famous of these techniques, riding a horse
while shooting arrows backward, came to be known
as the Parthian shot. Parthian horses were covered
with mail to protect them from attacks by Roman
infantrymen. Another unit of lighter, more mobile
cavalry also carried bows and arrows. At the Battle
of Carrhae in 53 b.c.e., Roman troops under the general Crassus were destroyed by the Parthian cavalry,
which harassed the Roman infantry until it broke
ranks, at which point the Parthian cavalry pursued
and cut the Roman foot soldiers to pieces. People
from other regions were also used in the Parthian
forces as either light cavalry or infantry. The infantry
was the second group of the army and it was usually
considered to be weak and untrained and less reliable
in wars.
In the fourth century c.e. Roman soldier and historian Ammianus Marcellinus (c. 330-395) described
the Persian cavalry as clad in body armor, mailed
Se
a
Armenia
Z
r
ag
op
am
ot
os
ia
in
er
si
an
G
Farah
Herat
Arabian Sea
Makuran
Turan
Qandahar
Kabul
Bactria
Taxila
Kashgar
Gandhara
Tashkent
Bactra
Sogdiana
Bukhara
Sakastan
Gulf of
Oman
Istakhr Karmania
Yazd
Parthia
Nishapur
Nisa
Hecatompylos
Kazerun
Persia
Firuzabad
ul
s
Bishapur
t
P
Uruk
Ctesiphon
Susa
Babylon Nippur
Nehavend
Hamadan
o
u
Seleucia
an
a
Mediterranean Sea
pi
es
Tigranocerta
Anatolia
Nisibis
Mosul Nineveh
Hatra
Ashur
Antioch
Bla
Byzantium
ck
(Constantinople,
after 330 c.e.)
s
Ca
Se
The Persians
coats, breastplates, leg armor plates, and helmets
with holes only for the eyes. The Persian cavalry
horses were also covered with armor. The grotto of
King Xusrf II (590-628 c.e.) at T3q-i Bust3n in
northern Persia represents the culmination of the
advancement in armor. The Persian weapons, based
on the descriptions of Muslim historians, included
swords, lances, shields, maces, battle-axes, clubs,
bow cases containing two bows with their strings,
thirty arrows, and two plaited cords. By the sixth century the chancery of warriors set a stable stipend for
cavalry. It was from among these soldiers that the the
Immortals, the elite corps of the Achaemenid Persians, were chosen. Their leader was probably the
putigb3n-s3l3r, or commander of the royal guard.
There was also a light cavalry composed of mercenaries or tribespeople in the empire, including the
Dailamites, Gtl3nts, Georgians, Armenians, Turks,
Arabs, Kush3ns, Khazars, and Hephthalites. The other
form of cavalry used in wars were the elephant corps,
or ptl-b3n3n. Ammianus Marcellinus described the
elephants as having awful figures and savage, gaping
mouths. They looked like walking towers and scarcely
could be endured by the faint-hearted. According to
Muslim historians, elephants were used as early as
the third century c.e. by the S3s3nians, who used
them to raze such cities as Hatra. S3s3nian king
Ptrfz I (r. 457/459-484 c.e.) used fifty elephants in
his campaign against the Ephthalites in the fifth century. Elephants were again used against the Arabs in
the seventh century.
The infantry, or payg3n, was headed by the
payg3n-s3l3r, or commander of the infantry. Infantrymen were fitted with shields and lances. Behind
them in formation were the archers, who actually
started the war with volleys of shots into the enemy
camp before the cavalry charged. The Strategikon
(c. 580 c.e.; English translation, 1984) of Flavius
Tiberius Mauricius (c. 539-602 c.e.), a Byzantine
emperor who reigned from 582 to 602 c.e., gives detailed information on the differences in strategies
between the Persian and the Roman soldiers, as well
as the intricacies and differences in their weapons
and their uses. Naturally the cavalry and infantry
forces required a huge logistical apparatus that was
sustained by conscripts from the general popula-
123
tion. These forces prepared food, repaired weapons,
tended to the wounded, and established camps, among
other tasks. The S3s3nians also utilized Roman techniques in the use of siege weapons including ballistae, battering rams, moving towers, and catapults.
The S3s3nian navy had been instrumental from the
beginning of the S3s3nian period, when the founder
of the S3s3nian Persian dynasty, Ardahtr I (r. 224241), conquered the Arab side of the Persian Gulf.
The control of the Persian Gulf was necessary both
militarily and economically, to make it safe from
piracy and Roman encroachment. Based on the accounts of Muslim historians, it appears that the Persian ships held one hundred men but were not very
important to the military.
Other Persian titles and classifications are from
later sources that describe several other military positions, including commander of the forts, warden of
marches, the hereditary title of the general of Tus, in
northeastern Persia, and the army general. The warrior estate also had a designated Zoroastrian fire temple known as Adur Guhnasp. This fire temple was
at htz, in northwestern Persia, where the king and
the warriors went to worship. Rulers such as the
S3s3nian king Bahr3m V, or Bahr3m Gnr (fl. fifth
century c.e.), sent the booty of jewelry to be hung in
the Zoroastrian fire temple after defeating the Turks
in his campaign against them. Ardashtr I also made
offeringsthe heads of rebelsto the fire temple of
An3htd.
During the S3s3nian period the warrior class
formed the second tier of the social structure; the
function of the warrior was to protect the empire and
its subjects. There were several divisions within the
military, and within the cavalry and infantry. As
clergy attended seminaries, the soldiers attended
academies where they were trained in the military
sciences. The alliance between the priests and the
warriors was of paramount importance; the idea of
Tr3n-sahr, which had manifested itself under the
S3s3nian as that of a set territory ruled by the warrior
aristocracy, had been developed and revived by Zoroastrian priests. Under the Zoroastrian religion,
which was made the official state religion during the
S3s3nian period, church and state were considered
inseparable from each other. In reality, however,
124
Ancient Sources
Sources for the earliest history of the Persians come from the sacred book of the Zoroastrians, the Avesta, in which references to combat and weapons are made. The Old Persian sources
of the Achaemenid period also give some terminology on weapons, but the Greek sources furnish much more. Herodotus (c. 484-424 b.c.e.), Xenophon, and Strabo (64 or 63-after 23 b.c.e.)
are the chief Greek sources, providing many details of the Persian army and their tactics. For the
Hellenic and the Parthian period classical authors such as Herodian (third century c.e.), Pliny
(23-79 c.e.), and Plutarch (c. 46-after 120) are the major sources. For the S3s3nian period, there
are a variety of sources not limited to the classical authors. Among the Greek and Latin sources,
Ammianus Marcellinus is quite informative on Persian siege tactics, armor, and military.
S3s3nian sources such as the Dtnkart are primary sources, whereas the Arabic and Persian
sources after the seventh century c.e. give much information; the best of these is Abn Ja4far Mu wammad ibn Jartr al-Zabarts Ta$rtkh al-rusul wa al-mulnk (872-973; The History of al-Zabart,
1985-1999, 39 volumes).
Books and Articles
Briant, P. The Achaemenid Empire. In War and Society in the Ancient and Medieval Worlds,
edited by K. Raaflabu and N. Rosenstein. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
1999.
The Persians
125
Campbell, Duncan B. Ancient Siege Warfare: Persians, Greeks, Cathaginians, and Romans,
546-146 B.C. Illustrated by Adam Hook. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2004.
De Souza, Philip. The Greek and Persian Wars, 499-386 B.C. New York: Routledge, 2003.
Farrokh, Kaveh. Sassanian Elite Cavalry, A.D. 224-642. Illustrated by Angus McBride.
Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2005.
_______. Shadows in the Desert: Ancient Persia at War. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey,
2007.
Ferrill, Arther. Assyria and Persia: The Age of Iron. In The Origins of War: From the Stone
Age to Alexander the Great. Rev. ed. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1997.
Gabriel, Richard A. Persia and the Art of Logistics, 546-330 b.c.e. In The Great Armies of Antiquity. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2002.
Rung, Eduard. War, Peace, and Diplomacy in Graeco-Persian Relations from the Sixth to the
Fourth Century b.c. In War and Peace in Ancient and Medieval History, edited by Philip de
Souza and John France. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2008.
Santosuosso, Antonio. Soldiers, Citizens, and the Symbols of War: From Classical Greece to
Republican Rome, 500-167 B.C. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1997.
Sekunda, Nicholas. The Persian Army, 560-330 B.C. Illustrated by Simon Chew. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 1992.
Shahbazi, A. Army in Pre-Islamic Iran. In Encyclopaedia Iranica, edited by Ehsan
Yarshater. Vol. 2. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1985.
Wiesehfer, J. Ancient Persia. London: I. B. Taurus, 1996.
Films and Other Media
Decisive Battles: Thermopylae. Documentary. History Channel, 2005.
Greek and Persian Wars. Documentary. Cromwell Productions, 2009.
Iran: The Forgotten Glory. Documentary. Mystic Films, 2009.
Touraj Daryaee
Military Achievement
The period from 1600 to 336 b.c.e. saw the emergence in Greece of four distinct ways of war. The first
of these, Mycenaean chariot warfare, did not survive
past about 1100 b.c.e. It was succeeded by an infantry-based system of individual combat, often called
heroic because of its prominence in Homers Iliad
(c. 750 b.c.e.; English translation, 1611) and Odyssey
(c. 725 b.c.e.; English translation, 1614). This system in turn gave way to the close-order infantry warfare of classical Greece. A fourth way of war, the
combined arms system developed by the Macedonians in the mid-fourth century b.c.e., ultimately
overcame the classical Greeks and provided the basis
for the conquests of Alexander the Great.
Mycenaean civilization, named after the citadel of
Mycenae in southern Greece, emerged about 1600
b.c.e. and reached its height between 1400 and 1200
b.c.e. Mycenaean monarchs ruled from fortified royal
palaces, which were economic as well as political
and religious centers. Palaces flourished at Mycenae,
Pylos, Tiryns, Thebes, and elsewhere on mainland
Greece, as well as at Knossos on the island of Crete.
These citadels shared a common culture but were not
politically unified. Mycenaean society was hierarchical and bureaucratic; professional scribes used
clay tablets and a script called Linear B to track everything that entered or left the palaces. Although
little conclusive evidence survives, it appears that
Mycenaean armies relied heavily on chariots, perhaps supported by infantry. As in the contemporary
Egyptian and Hittite military systems, these chariots
probably served as mobile fighting platforms for
aristocratic archers and spearmen.
For uncertain reasons, Mycenaean civilization began to collapse around 1250 b.c.e. Indeed, there were
upheavals throughout the Mediterranean at this time;
the fictional story of the Trojan War reflects later po129
130
Abdera
Amphipolis
ON
ED
Thasos
ont
llesp
He
Potidaea
Troy
Sigeum
Corcyra
AEOLIS
H
E
Lesbos
S
S
Ambracia
Aegean
L
Y
Leucas
Sea
Mytilene
LY D I A
Phocaea
Delphi
Thebes
PE
Zacynthos
Delos
NE
Sparta
Miletus
Naxos
SE
Sea
Corinth
Mycenae
PO
Argos
Ionian
LO
IONIA
Marathon
Athens
Melos
131
off perhaps 70,000 Persians for several days, represented in some sense a victory for the hoplite system.
To the Greeks, Thermopylae showed that only treachery and vastly superior numbers could overwhelm
free citizens fighting in a hoplite phalanx.
In the last half of the fifth century b.c.e. the hoplite
way of war confronted several challenges. In particular, during the Greco-Persian Wars several city-states
had developed fleets of oared galleys called triremes.
Athens took the lead in naval warfare and by 450
b.c.e. had a skilled professional fleet numbering two
hundred ships, the best and largest in the Greek
world. Navies added strategic mobility to the military equation. No longer were battles confined to
the borderlands between neighboring poleis. Fleets
could now launch amphibious assaults hundreds of
miles away from their home cities.
To take advantage of this mobility, a new type of
soldier began to appear: the peltast. The original
peltasts were Thracian mercenaries equipped with
a small shield, or peltT, in Greek; later the term
peltast denoted a wide variety of lightly armored
foot soldiers equipped primarily with javelins. Peltasts
fought in loose skirmishing formation. Although they
could not confront a phalanx head-on, they were
more mobile than heavily armored hoplites and so
excelled at quick attacks in difficult terrain. Other
light infantry, including slingers and archers, also became more common.
The long and agonizing Peloponnesian War (431404 b.c.e.), fought between opposing coalitions led
by Athens and Sparta, clearly demonstrated the effects of these military innovations. Near Pylos in 425
b.c.e., for instance, an amphibious assault by Athenian peltasts and other light infantry overwhelmed
Spartiate hoplites stationed on the rocky island of
Sphakteria. The next year, at Amphipolis in northern
Greece, the Spartan general Brasidas used a surprise
attack combining hoplites, peltasts, and cavalry to
rout a superior Athenian force. In this period, battle
lost its limited and ritual character, and fighting occurred instead in both summer and winter, in both
rain and snow, at night, on mountains, and even inside cities. The growing importance of fleets and
light troops, in sum, was bringing an end to the agrarian monopoly on organized violence.
132
133
Weapons, Uniforms,
and Armor
The earliest Mycenaean weapons,
dating from the sixteenth century
b.c.e., include long rapiers, daggers,
large spearheads, and arrows of
bronze, flint, or obsidian. Bows were
of the simple, noncomposite type.
Slings were certainly deployed in
this period and in all following ones.
Little evidence for armor exists, although small metal discs found in
early graves at Mycenae may be the
remnants of otherwise perishable
leather or fabric armor. The famous
boars tusk helmet, known from
Homers Iliad as well as from Mycenaean art, was also in use during
this period. Artistic representations
show two kinds of large shield: an
Turning Points
1400-1200 b.c.e.
1200-1100 b.c.e.
1100-750 b.c.e.
c. 900 b.c.e.
750-650 b.c.e.
499-448 b.c.e.
431-404 b.c.e.
371 b.c.e.
338 b.c.e.
134
CA
LA
BR
MACEDONIA
IA
Aegospotami
EPIRUS
Aegean Sea
LESBOS
TIU
THESSALY
UT
Mytilene
BOEOTIA
BR
Leuctra
Corinth
Ionian
SICILY
Byzantium
THRACE
Amphipolis
Sea
Thebes
Athens
IONIA
PELOPONNESE
Olympia
MESSENIA Argos
Sparta
Syracuse
CYCLADES
Miletus
LACONIA MELOS
Sphacteria
RHODES
Athens and its allies
Mediterranean
Sea
CRETE
135
Military Organization
Virtually nothing is known about Mycenaean military organization. Linear B tablets from Pylos suggest an army divided into ten units with attached officers. The tablets also mention an official called the
lawagetas (people-leader), who might have been
the kingdoms wartime commander. Dark Age military structure remains similarly obscure. Chieftains
together with clansmen and retainers probably fought
as loose warrior bands.
F. R. Niglutsch
136
137
F. R. Niglutsch
Use of the Macedonian phalanx during the Battle of the Carts (mid-fourth century B.C.E.).
of strategy. The hoplite system gave little consideration to the requirements of extended campaigning.
Traditional phalanx clashes, after all, occurred close
to home. Furthermore, classical hoplites went to battle followed by slave servants bearing rations and
equipment. When hoplites deployed far afield, as in
the Peloponnesian War, they could usually depend
on a fleet to carry supplies. The Macedonians, on the
other hand, learned to conduct extended land campaigns without naval supply. Philip eliminated slave
porters and made his troops travel light. He successfully employed coercion to ensure that food supplies
would be ready and waiting when his troops entered
new territory. Just as he trained Alexanders army,
Philip developed the logistical and strategic thought
that made feasible his sons conquests.
138
Ancient Sources
For all periods of Greek warfare from 1600 to 336 b.c.e., archaeological excavation provides
the basic evidence for Greek arms and armor. A. M. Snodgrass, in Arms and Armor of the
Greeks (1999), collects this evidence in a format accessible to nonspecialists. For the late
Bronze Age, excavated Linear B tablets from Mycenae, Pylos, and elsewhere furnish information about the military organization and equipment of the Mycenaean kingdoms.
The Iliad (c. 750 b.c.e.; English translation, 1611) and Odyssey (c. 725 b.c.e.; English translation, 1614), epic poems ascribed to Homer, are among the earliest literary sources for information about Greek warfare. Scholars continue to debate the veracity of Homeric descriptions
of warfare; most would agree that the poems reflect the battle conditions of the Greek Dark Age
rather than those of the Mycenaean period.
In his Historiai Herodotou (c. 424 b.c.e.; The History, 1709), Herodotus (c. 484-424) recounts the major land and naval battles of the Persian Wars. Likewise, Thucydides (c. 459-402
b.c.e.) narrates the course of the long and agonizing Peloponnesian Wars. Both Herodotus and
Thucydides provide useful information on Greek strategies, tactics, and military organization
during the fifth century b.c.e.
The works of the Athenian author Xenophon (431-354 b.c.e.) are essential for any understanding of Greek warfare. In addition to a memoir of his experiences as a mercenary commander during 401-399, Kurou anabasis (Anabasis, 1623; also known as Expedition of Cyrus
and March Up Country), Xenophon composed a history of Greece, Elltnika, also known as
Helenica (History of the Affairs of Greece, 1685), and technical treatises on the cavalry, horsemanship, and hunting. His Lakedaimonifn politeia (Polity of the Lacedaemonians, 1832; also
known as Constitution of Sparta) describes Spartan army organization and training in the fourth
century b.c.e.
Finally, the Roman magistrate and writer known as Arrian (c. 89-155 c.e.), produced several
texts that furnish important evidence for the organization, equipment, and tactics of the Macedonian army. These texts include a history of the campaigns of Alexander as well as a tactical
manual.
Books and Articles
Anderson, J. K. Military Theory and Practice in the Age of Xenophon. Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1970.
De Souza, Philip, and Waldemar Heckel. The Greeks at War: From Athens to Alexander.
Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2004.
Ducrey, Pierre. Warfare in Ancient Greece. Translated by Janet Lloyd. New York: Schocken
Books, 1986.
Everson, Tim. Warfare in Ancient Greece: Arms and Armour from the Heroes of Homer to Alexander the Great. Stroud, Gloucestershire, England: Sutton, 2004.
Ferrill, Arther. The Origins of War. Rev. ed. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1997.
Hanson, Victor Davis. The Western Way of War: Infantry Battle in Classical Greece. 2d ed.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000.
Hanson, Victor Davis, and John Keegan, eds. The Wars of the Ancient Greeks: And Their Invention of Western Military Culture. London: Cassell, 1999.
Kern, Paul Bentley. The Greeks in Ancient Siege Warfare. Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 1999.
139
Lendon, J. E. Soldiers and Ghosts: A History of Battle in Classical Antiquity. New Haven,
Conn.: Yale University Press, 2005.
Montagu, John Drogo. Greek and Roman Warfare: Battles, Tactics, and Trickery. St. Paul,
Minn.: MBI, 2006
Raaflaub, Kurt A., ed. War and Peace in the Ancient World. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2007.
Rawlings, Louis. The Ancient Greeks at War. Manchester, England: Manchester University
Press, 2007.
Sage, Michael M. Warfare in Ancient Greece: A Sourcebook. New York: Routledge, 1996.
Santosuosso, Antonio. Soldiers, Citizens, and the Symbols of War: From Classical Greece to
Republican Rome, 500-167 B.C. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1997.
Films and Other Media
Decisive Battles: Gaugamela. Documentary. History Channel, 2005.
Greek and Persian Wars. Documentary. Cromwell Productions, 2009.
In Search of the Trojan War. Documentary. British Broadcasting Corporation, 1985.
Troy. Feature film. Warner Bros., 2005.
John W. I. Lee
Political Considerations
In the early fourth century b.c.e., Greece did not exist
as a unified nation but as a number of separate, often
hostile, city-states struggling among themselves for
power. Although the major cities of Sparta, Thebes,
and Athens had warred against each other for control
of the Hellenic peninsula, none had been able to establish permanent dominance. Despite their mutual
antagonism, all of these separate political entities
still identified themselves as Greek, based on their
shared history, traditions, and customs. To the ancient Greeks, other cultures or nationalities were, of
necessity, barbarian and inferior. This categorization
extended not only to the Celts, the Gauls, other aggressive tribes to the north, and radically different
cultures to the east but also to other kingdoms, such
as Macedonia, that shared much of their culture with
Greece. It is ironic, therefore, that the greatest Greek
empire of all time arose from the marginally barbarian region of Macedonia.
Claiming Greek status through alleged descent
from the legendary Greek hero Heracles, Philip II of
Macedonia began his rise to dominance in 352 b.c.e.
and by 348 b.c.e. ruled all of Greece north of Thermopylae. Using a combination of wealth and political savvy backed by military strength, Philip eventually defeated the combined armies of the Greeks at
Chaeronea in 338 b.c.e., ending the era of the independent Greek city-state. Despite his victory and his
obvious leadership qualities, Philip was never entirely accepted as an authentic Greek. In an attempt to
win favor with Athenians and other Greek elites, he
announced an invasion of Persia to liberate the Greek
cities seized by the Persians during the previous
century. Philips plans were cut short by his assassination in 336 b.c.e. Philips son, Alexander, only
Military Achievement
Military empires never last forever. Like human beings, empires come into being, grow, mature, falter,
and eventually perish. In little more than a decade,
from 332 to 323 b.c.e., the empire of Alexander the
Great of Macedonia grew to encompass most of the
known world. After Alexanders death this vast empire splintered, fracturing into smaller kingdoms that
struggled for power among themselves, eventually to
be defeated one after another by the legions of the expanding Roman Empire.
Inspired by the idealized heroes of Homers epic
poems, Alexander utilized both strategy and charismatic personal leadership to effect an unbroken string
of major victories. The Battle of the Granicus River
in 334 b.c.e., fought near the ancient ruins of Troy,
was the first of three major battles between Alexander the Great and the Persian Empire. After Alexander defeated the Persians and a large force of Greek
mercenaries led by Memnon of Rhodes, city after
city opened to him. In 333 b.c.e., Alexanders army
and the Persian forces of Darius met at Issus, in what
is now coastal Turkey. The Persians left wing collapsed under an assault from Alexanders cavalry,
the Persian line was flanked, and the Persian emperor, Darius the Great, fled.
After being crowned Pharaoh in Egypt, Alexander
returned to the Persian campaign. In 331 b.c.e., Darius positioned his scythed chariots on flat ground
near Gaugamela. As the Macedonians seized reins
140
141
Turning Points
Dionysius I of Syracuse sponsors catapult research.
Philip II of Macedon defeats united Greek army at
Chaeronea.
Alexander defeats main army of Darius III at Issus.
Alexander the Great begins Siege of Tyre.
Alexander defeats main army of Darius III at Gaugamela.
Romans defeat main army of Philip V at Cynoscephalae.
Ionian
Sea
Epirus
Boeotia
Mende
Euboea
Apollonia
Amphipolis
Pylos
Messenia
Laconia
Sparta
Ios
Knossos
Gortyn
Minoa
Naxos
Mykonos
Ikaria
Smyrna
Ionia
Propontis
Caria
Karpathos
Rhodes
Halicarnassus
Miletus
Cos
Chalcedon
Byzantium
Colophon
Ephesus
Magnesia
Samos
Teos
Mytilene
Lesbos
Chios
Thera
Paros
Sea
Aegean
Antissa
Thasos
Samothrace
Thrace
Lemnos
Crete
Melos
Thebes Chalcis
Delphi
Eretria
Chaeronea
Plataea
Attica
Elis
Sicyon Megara
Athens
Arcadia Mycenae Corinth
Olympia
Ceos
Mantinea Argos
Aetolia
Pharsalus
Thessaly
Methone
Pydna
Therma
Macedonia
143
144
145
Battle of Granicus
334 B.C.E.
spi
an
Po n t u s
Euxinus
Sea
Battle of Gaugamela
331 B.C.E.
M AC E D O N I A
Pella
Battle of Issus
333 B.C.E.
Tig
s
ri
Sea
hr
at
es
Babylon
iv
Mediterranean
er
Riv
tion likened to a hammer hitting an anvil. The intensity of this initial charge was intended to break the
spirit of the enemy. Victory often depended in large
part on undermining the morale of an opponent, and
toward this end, Alexander often employed unexpected maneuvers to surprise opposing forces. Generally ignoring the idea that favorable terrain was
necessary to ensure victory, Alexander often chose
apparently unsuitable ground from which to attack, a
deceptive tactic intended to keep the enemy off balance. Another common tactic he used was to engage
the enemy when his troops were fatigued by long
marches or lack of reinforcements.
The Greek concept of metis, cunning intelligence
or deception, was traditionally controversial in warfare, as it seemed to conflict with the ideal of forth-
er
terr
ane
an
Sea
Sparta
Egypt
Seleucia
Antioch
Edessa
Cappadocia
Susa
Empire
Seleucid
MediaAtropatenia
Artaxata
Seleucia
on the
Tigris
Armenia
Trapezus
Ptolemaic
Alexandria
Lycia
Karasi
Pontus
Sinope
Galatia
Bithynia
Pergamum
Byzantium
Po n t u s E u x i n u s
pi
Macedonia
Greece
Athens
Pella
Illyra
as
Se
Medi
Rome
an
Persepolis
Parthia
Hecatompylos
Aral
Sea
Indian
Pura
Ocea n
Gedrosia
Greco-Bactria
Bactria
Maracanda
(Samarqand)
147
and children were sold into slavery. In the later Hellenistic period larger, more complicated siege engines
were invented, and yet most sieges were broken in
traditional ways, through reliance on human attacks,
surprise, and the use of traitors rather than sustained
mechanical assaults.
Use of the Macedonian-style phalanx persisted
into the Hellenistic wars against Rome, but failure to
defend exposed flanks (as at the Battle of Cynoscephalae) and rash decisions leading to breaks in formation (as at Pydna) allowed the Roman troops to
prevail at critical points in history. While the phalanx
remained on battlefields throughout the Hellenistic
period, wars had evolved into more complex operations, involving naval combat and siegecraft, cataphracts and elephant corps. Eventually, the limited
availability of Greek conscripts in the east led to dependence on untrustworthy mercenary forces, while
western Hellenistic armies were continuously weakened by internecine or barbarian wars. Local manpower and generalship decreased, paving the way for
Roman supremacy.
That being said, the Romans were excellent absorbers of the best of other cultures. They adopted
many elements of the Greek and Hellenistic world,
ensuring that the techniques and tactics of the Alexandrian and Hellenistic armies would survive, at
least in part, within the legions of the Roman Empire.
Ancient Sources
Because no one can go back in time to witness historic events, scholars of history in the present must rely on accounts recorded by eyewitnesses of the original events. Lacking such accounts, any sources originating close to the time of the events in question become the next best
thing. Most contemporary accounts from the time of Alexander the Great have been lost. Only a
handful of original fragments and the works of later, but still ancient, writers who based their
histories on primary sources still exist.
Among the best ancient sources on Alexander are Plutarchs Life of Alexander from his series Bioi paralleloi (c. 105-115; Parallel Lives, 1579) and works by Arrian (c. 89-155 c.e.), including the Anabasis Alexandri (early second century c.e.; The Campaigns of Alexander,
1893). Although he wrote nearly four centuries after Alexanders death, Arrian is an important
historian because he based his work on the writings of several of Alexanders contemporaries,
including Ptolemy, Callisthenes, and Aristobulusworks now all lost to time. Arrians writings also contain the most complete account of military rather than biographical aspects of Alexander, in contrast to Roman historian Quintus Curtius Rufus, who wrote his ten-volume biog-
148
Carthaginian Warfare
Dates: 814-202 b.c.e.
Carthage suffered major defeats in the Battles of
Mylae (260 b.c.e.), Ecnomus (256 b.c.e.), Adys (256
b.c.e.), and Panormus (250 b.c.e.). Carthage won a
major battle at Tunis in 255 b.c.e., led by the Spartan
general Xanthippus, who defeated the Roman consul
Regulus and forced the latters retreat from Africa.
At the Battle of Drepana (249 b.c.e.), the Punic naval
commanders Adherbal, Carthalo, and Himilico defeated a large Roman fleet under admiral Claudius
toward the end of the First Punic War. Despite this
victory, Carthages surrender at the Aegates Islands
(241 b.c.e.) ended the First Punic War. The defeat resulted in a severe loss of Carthaginian territory, including Sicily, Corsica, and Sardinia. Carthage also
suffered large reparations, a vastly reduced battle
fleet, and a weakened land army.
Rome, a weaker naval power, owed much of its
success in the First Punic War to its acquisition of a
new naval technology: the corvus, a nautical grappling hook. This device was simply a long, spiked
gangplank mounted on the bow of a Roman warship
and dropped onto the deck of a Carthaginian ship, securing the two ships together and allowing a Roman
contingent to board and capture the opposing vessel.
The corvus effectively ended Carthages naval supremacy and had a long-term negative impact on
Carthages national security and overseas military
operations.
The second phase of Carthaginian expansionism
occurred from 237 to 202 b.c.e. The military achievements and the very survival of the Carthaginian Empire during this time rested on the strategic leadership
and tactical genius of its talented military commanders, the Barcid family. The commandersHamilcar
Barca (c. 270-228 b.c.e.), Hannibal (247-182 b.c.e.),
Mago (died c. 203 b.c.e.), Hasdrubal (died 221 b.c.e.),
Hanno (fl. third century b.c.e.), and Maharbal (fl. c.
216 b.c.e.)would train the physically tough and
hard-fighting indigenous and mercenary troops
Military Achievement
Carthage, a historic city on the north coast of Africa,
traditionally was founded in 814 b.c.e. by Phoenicians. Historically, the military achievements of Carthage, a maritime trading power, have been measured
by its naval and land conflicts with Rome, the emerging power on land. This deadly hegemonic contest,
however, was not the only formal measure of Carthages military achievements. Long before its fateful clashes with Rome in the Punic Wars (264-146
b.c.e.), Carthage had made its military presence
forcefully known throughout the western Mediterranean, Southern European, North African, and West
African regions from the eighth to the third centuries
b.c.e. This strategic presence was based on a powerful professional navy with a significant trooptransport capacity that sustained land forces that
protected Carthages home and overseas territories,
important trade routes, and wide-ranging commercial fleets. Carthages strategic ability to move significant military forces throughout the western Mediterranean region would, for a period of time, deter
Rome both politically and militarily from challenging Punic control of Sardinia and Sicily.
The land and naval expeditionary forces of Carthage ranged widely in the Atlantic and the Mediterranean, resulting in the occupation of Corsica, Spain,
Sardinia, Sicily, and territories of North Africa.
This first phase of Carthages expansionism (264237 b.c.e.) was characterized by a strict civilian control by the Council of Elders of senior army and navy
commanders and their mercenary troops. During this
period of civilian supremacy over political and military policy, Punic generals and admirals who were
successful in battle were rewarded, and those who
were not were either exiled or killed.
During the twenty-three years of the First Punic
War, Rome had 400,000 casualties. At the same time,
149
150
Turning Points
247 b.c.e.
237 b.c.e.
221 b.c.e.
218 b.c.e.
216 b.c.e.
202 b.c.e.
146 b.c.e.
Weapons, Uniforms,
and Armor
There is little historical evidence relating to the weapons, uniforms, and
armor used by the Carthaginian army
and navy. The polyglot army that
Hannibal fielded in the Second Punic
Carthaginian Warfare
151
Carthaginian victories
Battle of Lake
Trasimeno
217 B.C.E.
Roman victory
Battle of Cannae
216 B.C.E.
Rome
CORSICA
SARDINIA
Croton
S e a
SICILY
Utica
Syracuse
Hippo
Regius
RN
i t e r r a n e a n
M e d
Carthage
Battle of Zama
202 B.C.E.
HANNIB
S
L
diers. The famous African heavy infantry were formidable, tenacious, and highly trained fighters from
northern and western Africa. They wore a variety of
colorful uniforms and clothing and were heavily
armed with long and short battle swords, bows and
arrows, and lances, as well as an assortment of other
exotic weapons, which they used with deadly efficiency in battle. The African heavy infantry, which
proved itself at the Battle of Cannae (216 b.c.e.),
wore chain mail and carried shields for protection.
Hannibal recruited the courageous and toughfighting Spanish infantry, heavy and light, from the
152
Military Organization
The military organization of the Carthaginian army
stands unique in the history of the ancient world. Carthaginian leaders had decided early on that a standing
professional army recruited from the general population of eligible men would ensure neither national security nor the worldwide advancement of Carthages
foreign economic policy interests. After enduring a
period during which Punic generals and admirals
sought to control the states political policy, Carthages Council of Elders ruled that the recruitment
of trained mercenaries from the western Mediterranean region and elsewhere would be sufficient to
meet military requirements in case of war.
The traditional military organization of the Carthaginian army was the Greek hoplite phalanx. Carthage inherited this military tactical system from the
Phoenician cities of Tyre and Sidon, and it was a
prominent tactical system in most ancient militaries,
including that of Rome. However, Hannibal fundamentally altered the hoplite system to gain flexibility
and tactical maneuverability in battle. His changes
were designed to ensure maximum coordination and
communication between the main strike force, the
cavalry, and the main maneuver force, the infantry.
The importance of decisive battlefield communications, rapid logistical support, accurate military intelligence, and sound battlefield leadership was constantly communicated to officers and soldiers. As the
historical record indicates, Hannibal tried to maximize surprise and shock against the enemy, attacking
the enemy in difficult geographical areas, making the
enemy fight up hilly terrain, or driving the enemy
cavalry from the field of battle in order to launch attacks against the remaining enemy on his front or
rear. In this context, Hannibal developed and trained
Carthaginian Warfare
an effective corps of officers, known for their toughness, wisdom, bravado, and discipline.
153
reasoned that Carthaginian military land forces executing a major land war against Rome and contiguous
territories could not expect military reinforcements
from the sea while facing overwhelming Roman land
armies. In this specific context, the Carthaginian
forces would need to inflict serious manpower losses
on the Roman army while minimizing their own
losses until military reinforcements could arrive from
either Carthage or Spain.
At a deeper level, Romes increasing land and naval power operations in the western Mediterranean
154
Close of battle
Start of battle
Aufid
Aufid
us R.
us R.
ROMANS
(Varro)
Roman
camp
CARTHAGINIANS
(Hannibal)
Roman
camp
Hannibals camp
Roman
camp
Hannibals camp
Roman
camp
lowing principles: to win battlefield victories and encourage the defection or the neutrality of Romes allies and, if militarily decisive in battle, to force Rome
to negotiate a compromise peace on Carthaginian
terms.
On the battlefield, Hannibals operational doctrine was to execute the war against Rome using
Romes own material resources, instead of those of
Carthage. Hannibals decision to engage Rome in its
own territory and use its resources was consistent
with Punic strategic military doctrine against fighting wars of attrition. The objective was to fight a war
for victory in Italy and, at the very least, to achieve a
negotiated settlement, which would leave Carthage
and its territories free of Rome. The implementation
of this tactical doctrine required Hannibal to utilize a
variety of military factors to engage, fight, and defeat
the much larger and better-equipped Roman army in
Carthaginian Warfare
Italy for more than fifteen years. Among the tactics
he employed were successful battlefield maneuvers,
strategic and tactical surprise, psychological warfare, mastery of the geographical terrain, and military
intelligence.
However, Hannibals war strategy was ultimately
155
unsuccessful. Romes military manpower and preponderance of material resources, combined with its
improved military generalship, very powerful battle
fleets, and large land forces, proved strategically
overwhelming. The direct result was the inevitable
dissolution of the Carthaginian Empire.
Ancient Sources
Ab urbe condita libri (c. 26 b.c.e.-15 c.e.; The History of Rome, 1600), by the ancient Roman
historian Livy (59 b.c.e.-17 c.e.), is one of the primary reference sources that classical and
modern scholars have used to reconstruct the great political, economic, and military struggle
between the mature African power, Carthage, and the rising Italian power, Rome. Livys critical analysis of the Punic Wars was based in the prevailing Roman worldview, and in his writings Livy painted both Hannibal and Carthage in less than friendly terms. He provides the student of Carthaginian warfare, however, with some insights into the character, intensity, and
implications of Hannibals military engagements with Rome from a Roman point of view.
Polybius (c. 200-c. 118 b.c.e.), a Greek historian taken as a prisoner to Rome in 168 b.c.e.,
wrote a series of histories of Rome and nearby countries from 220 to 146 b.c.e. (The General
History of Polybius: In Five Books, 1773). His work contributed to the development of historiography as a significant area of inquiry away from previous leanings toward didacticism.
Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus (25 or 26-101 c.e.), a Latin epic poet and politician,
authored a seventeen-volume epic on the Second Punic War, entitled Punica (Punica, with an
English Translation, 1934). Appianos, also known as Appian, a second century c.e. Greek historian, authored Romaica (Appians Roman History, 1912-1913), a history of Rome and its
conquests, including that of Carthage.
A more modern work that provides an interesting analysis of the origins of the First and Second Punic Wars using ancient sources exclusively is B. D. Hoyoss Unplanned Wars: The Origins of the First and Second Punic Wars (1997). Hoyos uses Roman historical writers such as
Polybius, among others, to look deeply into the origins of the conflict between Carthage and
Rome. The tightly argued historical analysis reexamines both ancient evidence and recent findings about the origins of the Punic Wars and the major personalities and events of the great
struggle.
Books and Articles
Bagnall, Nigel. The Punic Wars. London: Hutchinson, 1990.
Bradford, Ernle. Hannibal. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1981.
Campbell, Duncan B. Ancient Siege Warfare: Persians, Greeks, Carthaginians, and Romans,
546-146 B.C. Illustrated by Adam Hook. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2004.
Cornell, Tim, Boris Rankov, and Philip Sabin, eds. The Second Punic War: A Reappraisal.
London: Institute of Classical Studies, University of London, 1996.
De Beer, Sir Gavin. Hannibal: Challenging Romes Supremacy. New York: Viking, 1970.
_______. Hannibal: The Struggle for Power in the Mediterranean. London: Thames and Hudson, 1969.
Gabriel Richard. Carthage, 814-146 b.c.e. In The Ancient World. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2007.
156
Roman Warfare
During the Republic
Dates: 753-27 b.c.e.
and stirred reform. No longer fighting as a single
compact body, the Romans came to employ a looser
formation, composed of small units, or maniples. After abandoning the thrusting spear, Romes soldiers
also came to adopt a throwing spear.
Eventually Romes influence managed to spread
beyond the neighboring communities of Latium and
into southern Italy. Greek cities, established there
centuries earlier, called on Pyrrhus of Epirus (r. 297272 b.c.e.) to stop the advance. With his war elephants, Pyrrhus defeated Romes forces at Heraclea
(280 b.c.e.) and Ausculum (279 b.c.e.) but also suffered enormous casualties. He exclaimed that another victory such as his last would be the ruin of his
army. After Beneventum in 275 b.c.e. he withdrew
from Italy, never to return. By 264 b.c.e Rome controlled all of the Italian peninsula except the Po valley in the north.
Rome then turned to Sicily, vying for control of
the island with Carthage, a powerful city on the North
African coast. During the First Punic War (264-241
b.c.e.), Rome mobilized large fleets for the first
time. Although Romans were inexperienced at sea,
Romes invention of a grappling hook and boarding
bridge allowed soldiers to cross over to enemy ships
and fight on their decks like infantry. With a final
naval victory in 241 b.c.e., Rome expelled the Carthaginians from Sicily.
A generation later, the Second Punic War (218201 b.c.e.) revived old grudges. With an eternal hatred of Rome, the Carthaginian general Hannibal
(247-182 b.c.e.) planned to win the war through a
bold surprise invasion of the Italian peninsula. Hannibal made a winter crossing of the Alps to enter Italy
and gain victories at Trebbia (218-217 b.c.e.), Trasimeno Lake (217 b.c.e.), and Cannae (216 b.c.e.).
However, Rome sent forces against his base in Spain
Military Achievement
According to tradition, the city of Rome was founded
on the banks of the Tiber River in 753 b.c.e by
Romulus, one of the twin sons of Mars, the Roman
god of war. At the time of its founding, Romes proud
future still lay far in the distance. A dynasty of foreign kings from neighboring Etruria eventually settled at Rome and dominated the institutions of the
city. Although this early history is uncertain, Romes
levy seems to have relied on the wealthy, because
they could afford their own equipment for battle.
Armed like Greek hoplites, Roman soldiers fought
with thrusting spears, and, using a Greek formation
the phalanxthey stood shoulder to shoulder, with
shields locked together.
After expelling the last of the Etruscan monarchs
in 510 b.c.e, the Romans installed a Republican government, dominated by the Senate, and kept the
Greek style of fighting. About a century later, however, some changes were introduced during a long
war with Veii, an Etruscan stronghold north of Rome.
In need of more soldiers, the Romans began recruiting more broadly. These new recruits, unable to afford full protective armor, adopted the scutum, a long
Italic shield, in place of the hoplites round buckler.
Moreover, the Romans introduced pay for military
service and, for the first time, provided at public expense a horse for every new member of the cavalry.
The Roman victory over Veii was followed by defeat on the Allia, a stream about 11 miles north of
Rome. There, in around 390 b.c.e., Gallic warriors
overwhelmed the Republics forces, capturing and
plundering the city before moving on. The conquering Gallic chieftain Brennus uttered the harsh words
Vae victis, meaning Woe to the vanquished!
This disaster revealed Romes military weaknesses
157
158
and eventually confined him to the toe, or southWeapons, Uniforms, and Armor
ernmost tip, of Italy. After sixteen years in enemy
territory, Hannibal finally withdrew to Africa, where
The ancient sources present a reasonably clear piche was crushed at Zama (202 b.c.e.) by Scipio
ture of the Republics military affairs as it emerged
Africanus (236-184 or 183 b.c.e.). Hannibal escaped
from the struggle with Hannibal. All Roman citizens
the battlefield and urged his countrymen to surrenbetween the ages of seventeen and thirty-six were liader. Carthage lost some of its African territory to
ble for service. The maximum length of service was
Romes allies, and Spain was eventually organized
likely sixteen years for infantry and ten for cavalry,
as Roman territory.
but in normal circumstances a soldier would probaHannibals alliance with Philip V (238-179 b.c.e.)
bly serve for up to six years and then be released.
of Macedonia led to two Macedonian Wars, in which
The number of the main infantry division, the leRoman troops crossed the Adriatic Sea and at last segion, is given as 4,200 soldiers, but in emergencies it
cured victory at Cynoscephalae in 197 b.c.e. Although
could be higher. The legion was drawn up in three
Macedonia survived and Greece was declared free,
lines of hastati, principes, and triarii, with the younRomes influence came to dominate the whole area.
gest and poorest forming the velites. As lightly armed
Once involved in the eastern Mediterranean, Romes
skirmishers, the velites carried a sword, javelin, and
forces also accepted the challenge of Syrias Antiosmall circular shield. The hastati and principes, in
chus III (242-187 b.c.e.), also known as Antiochus
contrast, were heavily armed. Protected by the long
the Great. After victory at Magnesia in 190 b.c.e., the
Italic shield, they relied upon a short Spanish sword,
Republic refused to annex any new territory, but it
or gladius, and two throwing spears, or pila. Like the
now arranged the affairs of Hellenistic Asia as it wished.
At Pydna (168 b.c.e.) the Republic defeated Philips son, Perseus
(c. 212-c. 165 b.c.e.). Macedonia
was eventually organized as a Roman province, and its governor
was made responsible for Greece.
Moreover, Egypt was treated like
a dependency. When Antiochus IV
(c. 215-164 b.c.e.) invaded the Nile
Delta, a Roman ambassador is said
to have drawn a circle around the
Syrian king and commanded him to
order a retreat before stepping out of
it. The Third Punic War (149-146
b.c.e.) resulted in the complete destruction of Carthage in 146 b.c.e,
and the citys remaining territory became the province of Africa. Thus
with the defeat of Carthage and
Hannibals allies, the Republic had
North Wind Picture Archives via AP Images
destroyed its greatest enemies. Although more wars lay in the future,
Soldiers of the Roman Republic, bearing spears, swords, shields, and
Romes long-term dominion was
standards with the initials SPQR, for Senatus Populusque Romanus,
ensured.
or, the Senate and People of Rome.
Military Organization
The supreme magistrates of the state, the two consuls, usually served also as generals of the army.
Elected to serve for one year, each consul traditionally commanded two legions. His authority, called
imperium, was absolute beyond the walls of the city.
The fasces, a bundle of rods and axes bound together
by red thongs, symbolized the consuls power of life
and death. After victory, the consul was decked with
laurel and borne before the general by twelve attendants, or lictors, proceeding in single file.
The generals senior officers included the military
tribunes. With six in each legion, all tribunes were required to have significant military experience and to
meet stringent property qualifications. Usually most,
if not all, were elected. They had some important military responsibilities. As elective officers, they more
often tended to the welfare of the soldiers. By the
early second century, it was also customary for the
general to be accompanied by legates. Appointed by
the Senate on the generals advice, these were often
ambitious young men from prominent families, who
had little military experience.
The real strength of Romes military was the centurions, career officers who, as one contemporary observed, held their ground when bested and stood
ready to die at their posts. There were sixty centurions in each legion, with two in each of thirty maniples.
Selected by the tribunes, the centurions were organized into a hierarchy with a well-defined order of
promotion. Every centurions ambition was to serve
as primus pilus, senior officer of the first maniple, because the holder of that title was recognized as the
159
best soldier of the legion and given a seat on the generals war council.
In addition to infantry, the legion had three hundred cavalrymen. They wore linen corselets and relied on strong circular shields and long spears. They
were divided into ten units, or turmae. Each of these
had three decurions, and the most senior of the three
always exercised command. Allied contingents, recruited from throughout Italy, also campaigned with
Romes citizen army. In fact, there was at least one
legion of allies, if not more, for every legion of citizens. Known as socii, they were organized and
equipped like Romans. They were also commanded
by Roman citizens called praefecti. An elite corps,
the extraordinarii, was selected from the best of the
allies, horse and foot. The rest were divided into alae,
right and left wings, reflecting their positions on the
armys flanks. The great numbers of the socii especially contributed to the might and effectiveness of
Romes forces.
160
Turning Points
161
by some with the conversion of Romes citizen militia into a standing professional force. Marius undoubtedly played an important role in the evolution
of Romes military.
As in past crises of state, Marius opened the ranks
to the capite censi, citizens who failed to meet prescribed property qualifications for military service.
He likely viewed this measure as a temporary emergency action, but later generations followed his example. Immersed in wars both foreign and domestic,
Mariuss successors abandoned all restrictions on liability for service and recruited more troops than
ever before. Because most of these soldiers came
from poor families, the State equipped them at public
expense. So variations in arms and armor soon disappeared.
Marius also made fundamental changes in tactical
organization, preferring the cohort to the maniple as
the basic unit within the legion. Mariuss new cohort
consisted of three maniples, one drawn from each
line: hastati, principes, and triarii. As a result, his cohort was a microcosm of the old legion. The First Cohort consisted of the three maniples situated on the
extreme right of the old lines. The last cohort, the
Tenth, moving from right to left, consisted of the
three maniples on the extreme left.
Mariuss new legion drew up for battle in three
lines. There were four cohorts in the first line, three in
the second line, and three in the third. The cohorts
likely had a standard size, which under the Empire
was 480 men. Thus the new legion seems to have had
a strength of 4,800 men, organized into ten cohorts
and thirty maniples. The velites were apparently
abolished. Eventually the Roman army incorporated
contingents raised outside Italy. These new contingents carried their national weapons and were called
auxilia. Some came from independent allies, others
came from forced levies, and still others were paid as
mercenaries.
In the press of battle, standards, banners on long
poles, served as a rallying point. Marius gave preeminence to the aquila, or eagle, as the legions chief
standard. The legion had previously used a variety of
standards, including the eagle, wolf, minotaur, horse,
and boar, among others. Yet by the Republics close,
the eagle shared importance only with the standards
162
of the hastati and principes, which consisted of slender poles decorated with circular bosses. The primus
pilus, the best soldier in the legion, acted as aquilifer,
or eaglebearer. To lose or surrender the aquila was, of
course, a great disgrace for the entire legion.
Along with these changes, Marius modified the
pilum. The iron tip of Romes heavy spear was joined
to its wooden shaft by two iron rivets. Marius replaced one of these with a wooden pin, and on striking a target the shaft now snapped off. The spear
could no longer be picked up and thrown back at its
owner. Moreover, Marius wished to reduce the great
numbers of pack animals, because they slowed the
armys march, so he required his troops to carry
equipment and rations on forked poles flung over
their shoulders. As the generals beasts of burden, the
legionaries came to be called Mariuss Mules.
Wars of the Late Republic
In Mariuss later years, violence spread across the
Italian peninsula, with serious repercussions for the
Republic. Weary of Romes stern ascendancy, the
Italian allies rose in revolt. Fearful but wise, Rome
promised citizenship to all who laid down their arms.
Although the Social War (91-88 b.c.e.), as it was
called, soon ended, the riot of its daily warfare created an angry generation whose sons found lodging
in Romes legions, filling them with a spirit of apathy
and callousness. These soldiers cared little for the
Republic and were loyal only to the general who paid
them.
Almost inevitably, civil war followed the Social
War. As one of its leaders, Marius died in 86, before
destroying all of his opponents. His archenemy,
Lucius Cornelius Sulla (138-78 b.c.e.), survived to
conduct a great bloodbath and hold untrammeled authority until his own death. Under these chaotic conditions, only small military gains were made abroad.
Yet when Mithridates VI of Pontus seized Asia Minor and invaded Greece, he was defeated by Pompey the Great (106-48 b.c.e.), who annexed Syria
and Palestine, thereby enlarging Romes Asiatic dominion.
Only a few years later, bold adventures began to
unfold in Gaul. Julius Caesar (100-44 b.c.e.) embarked on a war of conquest against warrior Celts and
163
In conclusion, the military institutions of the Republic proved extremely durable and successful. With
great adaptability, the Romans learned from their
opponents, borrowing weaponry and improving tactical structure. Romes forces were also guided in a
few critical moments by generals of genius. Yet the
most fundamental reason for the Republics success
lay in its manpower, fueled by the populations of Italy, which allowed the Romans to ignore defeats.
Thus Romes military evolved from obscurity into a
remarkable institution, which eventually dominated
the ancient Mediterranean and shaped one of historys longest-lived empires.
Ancient Sources
Most historians contemporary with the Republic discussed military affairs, yet few of these
scholars were actually eyewitnesses to councils of war and victories on the battlefield. However, there are two notable exceptions. First, the Greek author Polybius (c. 200-c. 118 b.c.e.)
saw the Roman army in action against fellow Greeks, and later he seems to have accompanied a
Roman general on military campaign. In his Histories (first appearing in English as The General History of Polybius: In Five Books, 1773), Polybius gives an important description of the
Roman army as it emerged from the struggle against Hannibal. Second, Julius Caesar provides
a valuable narrative of the Roman army at war. He recounts his own activities as general in
Gaul, Germany, and Britain throughout a period of almost ten years. Caesars Comentarii de
Bello Gallico (51-52 b.c.e.; Commentaries, 1609) explores a wide range of the Republics military institutions and activities as they existed in the first century b.c.e.
Books and Articles
Bishop, M. C., and J. C. N. Coulston. Roman Military Equipment: From the Punic Wars to the
Fall of Rome. London: Batsford, 1993.
Campbell, Duncan B. Siege Warfare in the Roman World, 146 B.C.-A.D. 378. Illustrated by
Adam Hook. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2005.
Chrissanthos, Stefan G. Warfare in the Ancient World: From the Bronze Age to the Fall of
Rome. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2008.
Dando-Collins, Stephen. Caesars Legion: The Epic Saga of Julius Caesers Elite Tenth Legion and the Armies of Rome. New York: Wiley, 2002.
Erdkamp, Paul, ed. A Companion to the Roman Army. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2007.
Fields, Nic. The Roman Army of the Punic Wars, 264-146 B.C. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2007.
Gabriel, Richard A. Republican Rome, 500-28 b.c.e. In The Ancient World. Westport, Conn.:
Greenwood Press, 2007.
Gilliver, Kate, Michael Whitby, and Adrian Goldsworthy. Rome at War: Caesar and His Legacy. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2005.
Keppie, Lawrence. The Making of the Roman Army from Republic to Empire. Totowa, N.J.:
Barnes and Noble Books, 1984.
164
166
Military Organization
During most of its history, the basic unit of the Roman army was the legion, which consisted only of
Roman citizens and during the time of the early Empire numbered about 5,000 men. Each legion was
organized into ten infantry cohorts, one of which
consisted of five centuries of 160 men each, while
the remaining nine cohorts were each composed of
six centuries of 80 men each. The centuries were
grouped into maniples, each consisting of two centuries. During the first to third centuries c.e., each legion also included a cavalry detachment of 120 men.
The command structure of the legion consisted of the
fifty-nine centurions, who commanded the centuries;
five tribunes, each of whom commanded two cohorts; a prefect of the camp; a tribune of senatorial
rank; and the legions commanders, the legates.
The legions were supported by units known as
auxilia, which consisted of troops recruited from
subject peoples. These included infantry cohorts of
480 men divided into six centuries, and cavalry detachments (alae) consisting of sixteen troops (turmae) of thirty-two riders each. In the late first century
c.e. these were enlarged to cohorts of ten centuries
and alae composed of twenty-four turmae; the new
167
North Sea
BRITAIN
GERMANIA
Bath
London
BELGICA
GAUL
AQUITAINE
Black Sea
Byzantium
ea
MACEDONIA
PONTUS
Thebes
SICILY
Cdiz
Syracuse
Athens
Sparta
Carthage
Tangier
MAURITANIA
THRACE
S
an
CORSICA Naples
Rome
SARDINIA Pompeii
DACIA
spi
Ca
Valencia
Cordova
L
GAU
INE
P
L
A
CIS Genoa
Ravenna
Pisa
M
ES
RHODES
CRETE
Mediterranean Sea
OP
Palmyra
CYPRUS
Damascus
Tyre
Jerusalem
NUMIDIA
OT
AM
IA
Ctesiphon
Alexandria
n
ia
rs
Pe
lf
Gu
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Re
EGYPT
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emperor Augustus (63-14 b.c.e.) and originally consisted of nine cohorts. It supervised public life in the
capital, escorted the emperor, and eventually came to
play a major political role by occasionally helping to
determine the succession to the imperial throne. The
emperor was also protected by an elite personal cavalry unit known as the equites singulares Augusti.
In the fourth century, the emperor Constantine the
Great (c. 275 to 285-337 c.e.) disbanded both of
these units because they had supported his rival
Maxentius (died 312), and replaced them with a new
bodyguard of German cavalry, the scholae Palatinae.
168
In the late second and third centuries c.e., the imperial army underwent some notable changes. The
emperor Lucius Septimius Severus (146-211 c.e.) increased both the pay and the size of the army, adding
new auxilia units as well as three new legions. One of
these was stationed near Rome, serving as a reserve
unit and ensuring that Severus remained in power. In
212 c.e. Severuss son, the emperor Caracalla (188217 c.e.), extended Roman citizenship to most of the
Empires population; this action essentially ended
the distinction between legions and auxilia. At the
start of the third century crisis (235-284 c.e.), the
Empire lacked reserve forces that could deal with invasions by German tribes. As a result, the emperors
of this period formed reserve field armies that could
readily respond to such invaders. The cavalry of the
early imperial army were essentially light cavalry,
but by the fourth century the army included two types
of heavily armored cavalry, known as cataphractarii
and clibanarii, which were modeled after Sarmatian
and Persian cavalry respectively.
In the fourth century, Constantine the Great established a single large mobile field army known as the
comitatus. This was led by two newly created officers, the magister peditum, who commanded the infantry, and the magister equitum, the commander of
the cavalry. Constantine thus established a clear division between the field army and the frontier troops,
the limitanei, who during this period were organized
into legions of 1,000 men. However, due to the inability of this single field army to respond to simultaneous attacks on various parts of the frontier, Con-
9 c.e.
73
122
c. 400
476
During the early imperial period Roman leaders believed that it was Romes destiny to rule the entire
world, a view that is reflected in book 6 of Virgils
(70-19 b.c.e.) Aeneid (c. 29-19 b.c.e.; English translation, 1553). However, during this same period they
came to recognize major factors that limited further
territorial expansion. One of these was the sometimes formidable resistance by enemies such as the
Caledonians, the Germanic tribes, and the Parthians
and S3s3nians. Moreover, some territories open to
conquest, such as the Arabian deserts to the far southeast, were of little economic or strategic value. Finally,
the empire simply did not possess
the military manpower or resources
to expand indefinitely. Augustus stationed most of the legions on the
The Romans besiege Jerusalem, taking the citys population
frontiers and recommended to his
captive and leveling its buildings to the ground.
successors the basic strategy of deRoman legions are defeated by the Germans at the Battle of
fending Romes existing frontiers
Teutoburg Forest.
rather than conquering additional
The Romans employ ramps and siege towers in the Siege of
territory.
Masada.
Despite Augustuss recommenConstruction of Hadrians Wall begins in Britain.
dation,
emperors of the first to third
Cavalry replaces infantry as the most important element in
centuries c.e. did not completely
Roman armies.
abandon the policy of expansion.
The weakened western Roman Empire finally falls.
Notable examples of this policy can
Turning Points
70 b.c.e.
169
tiers were considered the most dangerous in the Empire. However, as these frontiers were stabilized,
their garrisons were reduced, and those on the Danube and eastern frontiers were gradually increased
during the first to third centuries.
During the third century crisis, frontier defenses
collapsed and emperors consequently developed a
new strategy of imperial defense. During this period
Germanic tribes and S3s3nian armies frequently penetrated the limes and sometimes moved virtually at
will within Roman territory. They sometimes posed a
threat to cities located in interior areas away from the
frontiers. The inhabitants of such cities consequently
began to build defensive walls around them; in the
late third century the emperor Aurelian (c. 215-275
c.e.) began construction of a wall around Rome itself. Moreover, third century emperors began to develop a strategy of defense in depth, which featured less emphasis on frontier forces and greater use
of mobile field armies that centered on heavy cavalry
units. Such armies were stationed in cities away from
the frontier and then sent to intercept and defeat invaders. Moreover, in an attempt to deal with a shortage of manpower, some barbarians (laeti) were allowed to settle in Roman territory and entrusted with
defense of part of the frontier; they were also required to provide recruits for the army.
In the fourth century, Constantine the Great and
his successors made increased use of mobile field armies. During this period, some emperors also attempted to strengthen the frontier defenses. Under
Diocletian, frontier defenses were rebuilt, and new
forts were built along the Danube and eastern frontiers and in North Africa. Valentinian I (321-375 c.e.)
strengthened defenses on the Rhine and the Danube
and directed preemptive attacks against barbarians
along both frontiers. However, by the late fourth
century the Empire was confronted with mounting
manpower shortages as well as growing barbarian
pressure on the frontiers. The manpower shortage resulted in understrength garrisons on the Rhine frontier being grouped together at a few vital points. In
the fifth century c.e. Germanic invaders simply bypassed such strongpoints, which led to a complete
collapse of the Rhine frontiers and, ultimately, to the
end of the western Roman Empire.
Ocean
Atlantic
Cadz
Cartagena
Africa
Sardinia
Valencia
Merida
Spain
Da
Egypt
Memphis
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Riv
Dacia
dr
Black Sea
Nicopolis
ia
tic
Thrace
Constantinople
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Adrianople
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Rome Rome
Heraclea
Taranto Dyrrhacium
Nicomedia
Macedonia
Naples
Nicaea
Aegean
Cosenza
Pergamum Pontus
Armenia
Sea
Palermo
Smyrna
Caesarea
Reggio
Asia
Carthage
Athens
Syracuse
Edessa
Sicily
S#s#nian
Antioch
Rhodes
Empire
Emesa
Mediterranean Sea
Crete
Cyprus
The East
Tyre
Tripoli
Cyrene
Damascus
Caesarea
Berenice
Alexandria
Jerusalem
Salzburg
Italy
Aquileia
Danube Riv
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Bologna
Genoa
Ravenna A
Milan
Narbonne
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Gaul
Chalns
Mainz
Cologne
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Paris
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Britain
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171
ever, if the Roman army made the initial move, it
directed its attack against the weakest point in the
enemy position. Auxilia units carried out the initial
assault. They were followed by the legions, who advanced in a tortoise, or testudo, formation, with
their shields locked together in the front, at the sides,
and overhead in order to protect the legionaries from
enemy javelins or arrows. After the enemy position
was broken, hand-to-hand combat followed until the
enemy either surrendered or fled. If the enemy did
flee, Roman troops first searched the immediate surroundings to avoid falling into an ambush, and then
the cavalry was sent in pursuit of the enemy.
When conducting sieges of enemy fortresses or
cities, Roman armies first set out to confine the enemy within their defenses by means of a series of fortified positions. The defenders were surrounded by a
ditch and earthen rampart as well as a system of forts.
Once this was constructed, the Romans set out to
penetrate the enemys defenses and force them to
surrender. In some cases, as in the Siege of Masada
(73 c.e.), the Romans built a high approach platform
or ramp, which they would use to move a large siege
tower close to the enemy wall. Archers positioned at
the top of the tower could then fire on the defenders
below; sometimes siege towers also were equipped
with battering rams that were used to break through
the enemy wall. Another method was to approach the
enemy position under cover of a movable protective
structure and then attempt to undermine the wall. If
these methods did not work, the Romans would
launch a frontal assault on the weakest point in the
enemy defenses. This was preceded by a major artillery bombardment. The legionaries would then approach under cover of a testudo and scale the walls.
After the top of the walls was secured, enemy cities
were then sacked.
During the late imperial period, Roman warfare
changed considerably. By the fourth century, most
military action consisted of small-scale skirmishes
involving small detachments of troops. However, in
large-scale battles Roman commanders still sought
to defeat barbarians such as the Goths by means of a
decisive infantry clash in which the Roman infantry
was deployed in a phalanx formation. When the enemy approached, they came under fire from archers
172
During the fifth century c.e., cavalry replaced infantry as the most important element in Roman armies. They generally used one of two different attack
formations: a wedge, or rhomboid, formation, which
was effective when carrying out elaborate maneuvers
or seeking to pierce enemy formations, and a square,
or oblong, formation, which was used when carrying
out a full-scale charge. During the late imperial period,
Roman cavalry used both skirmishing and shock tactics. In the former, the cavalry rode up to an enemy
formation and fired their arrows; if the enemy held
firm, they would fall back and attack again. If the
enemy broke ranks, they then charged and engaged in
close combat. Foederati and other German cavalry
in the late Roman army used shock tactics in which
they simply charged, sometimes with the support of
mounted archers, and attempted to defeat the enemy
in close combat.
Ancient Sources
The noted Roman historian Cornelius Tacitus (c. 56-120 c.e.) wrote a number of works that
offer valuable insights into early imperial warfare. These include a biography of his father-inlaw, a governor of Britain, that describes Romes military campaigns in that province. Tacitus
also wrote Ab Excessu Divi Augusti, also known as Annales (c. 116 c.e.; Annals, 1598), an account of events in the Empire in the period from 14 to 68 c.e., and the Historiae (c. 109; Histories, 1731) on the period from 68 to 96 c.e., of which only the portions on the period from 69
to 70 c.e. have survived. The Jewish historian Flavius Josephus (c. 37-c. 100 c.e.) wrote a history of the Jewish revolt of 66-70, which includes descriptions of the Roman army in action.
Arrian (c. 89-155 c.e.), a governor of Cappadocia under the emperor Hadrian, wrote a firsthand account of a campaign that he conducted against the Alani in 134. He also wrote the Ars
Tactica, a manual on the training of cavalry. Pseudo-Hyginus, an obscure figure who probably
lived during the second century c.e., wrote De Munitionibus Castrorum (second century c.e.;
Fortifications of the Camp, 1993), a discussion of the planning and construction of Roman military camps. The fifth century Roman military theorist Flavius Vegetius Renatus wrote De Re
Militari (383-450 c.e.; The Fovre Bookes of Flauius Vegetius Renatus: Briefelye Contayninge
a Plaine Forme and Perfect Knowledge of Martiall Policye, Feates of Chiualrie, and
Vvhatsoeuver Pertayneth to Warre, 1572; also translated as Military Institutions of Vegetius,
1767), a treatise in which he called for a restoration of traditional military drill and training, and
in doing so discussed various aspects of the Roman army in earlier periods.
Ammianus Marcellinus (c. 330-395 c.e.), an officer who served in the Roman army in the
350s and 360s, wrote a history of the Roman Empire that continued Tacituss account from 96
to 378 c.e. However, only the books on the period from 353 to 378 c.e. have survived; these are
a major source for political and military events of this period. The Notitia Dignitatum (c. 395
c.e.) is an illustrated manuscript that lists the officers of the late fourth century army, as well as
their units and where each was stationed.
173
Celtic Warfare
Dates: c. 500 b.c.e.-900 c.e.
Political Considerations
Celtic Warfare
175
Cimbri
Jastorf
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Britons
Slavs
Belgae
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Mediterranean
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Military Achievement
Although the Celts expansion was a necessity for the
acquisition of more farmland, it also led them into
conflict with growing powers. Their military expansion allowed them to build a massive breadth of empire. Early victories staved off encroachment on
Celtic lands by Mediterranean civilizations. However, the Celts were almost victims of their own suc-
n
m a
ri
at
ic
E m
Se
p i
a
r
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Rome
176
Military Organization
The Celtic culture was centered on the military. Indeed, the Greek geographer Strabo described the
whole Celtic nation as war-mad and quick for battle. He went on to state that the Celts tend to rush to
war all together, without concealment or forward
planning, and They are willing to risk everything
they have with nothing to rely on other than their
sheer physical strength and courage. War was necessary, for the Celts maintained a social structure
based on the warrior elite; during boastful feasts, the
warriors would regale one another with their exploits, seeking increased social position.
Celtic warfare had its own unique aspectsheadhunting, for example, and a reliance on the reckless
headlong charge to break an enemy line. Warriors
fought for personal glory. In this quest for glory for
the individual warrior, formal discipline was nonexistent, but the tactic worked often enough to justify
the Celts faith in it. Indeed, one last item that set the
Celts apart was the willingness of their women to engage in battle. Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus wrote the following in the fourth century c.e.,
on observations of the Celts during 63 b.c.e.-14 c.e.:
A whole troupe of foreigners would not be able to
withstand a single Gaul if he called his wife to his
assistance who is usually very strong . . . and . . . she
begins to strike blows mingled with kicks, as if they
were so many missiles sent from the string of a catapult.
Celtic Warfare
177
Much of the strategy used by the Celts in battle centered on psychological warfare. Before fighting began, the Celts would cry out their victory and prowess in battle while demeaning those who stood against
them. The naked warriors, sometimes covered in war
paint, would all shout at once, creating a cacophony
that unsettled enemies who were used to noises having some type of significant purpose in battle.
The Celts most common tactic in battle, a ferocious headlong assault that was almost blind in its
fury, unnerved many a foe. Although the emphasis
on the individual in the Celtic army prevented coordinated action, the unpredictability of the Celts
seemingly deranged attacks prevented a strong defense. This form of frontal assault, combined with the
armaments of sword and shield, was able to deal effectively with Mediterranean armies organized on
the model of the Macedonian phalanx. The Celts also
used cavalry, and they gained notoriety for their skill
with horses. By the second century b.c.e., however,
their use of the war chariot dropped off in continental
Europe.
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Battle of Avaricum
(Bourges)
52 B.C.E.
Cenabum
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Battle of Alesia
52 B.C.E.
A t l a n t i c
Siege of Gergovia
52 B.C.E.
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ay
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178
Ancient Sources
A difficulty arises when one consults ancient sources for information on the Celts. Because
the Celts did not develop a written language of their own, all writing concerning them was left
by those who fought against them, and readers should thus be aware of possible bias in these accounts. Of all the authors to address the Celts, perhaps the most famous and readable ancient
source is Julius Caesar. His work on the conquest of Gaul, Comentarii de bello Gallico (52-51
b.c.e.; The Gallic Wars, in his Commentaries, 1609), is a document written by an ambitious
general to build his own personal power and esteem. Of the various other authors who wrote
about the Celts, from Greek to Roman, their actual exposure to the Celts was limited. Authors
ranging from Athenaeus (fl. c. 200 c.e.) to Diodorus Siculus (c. 80-c. 20 b.c.e.) and Strabo (64
or 63 b.c.e.-after 23 c.e.) relied on sensational and fantastic stories to build the mystery of a culture that was completely foreign to them, a culture that had threatened and struck fear into both
civilizations.
Books and Articles
Cunliffe, Barry. The Ancient Celts. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.
_______. The Celts: A Very Short Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Haywood, John. Atlas of the Celtic World. New York: Thames and Hudson, 2001.
Kruta, Venceslas. Celts. London: Hachette, 2005.
Lang, Lloyd. Celtic Britain. New York: Charles Scribners Sons, 1979.
Litton, Helen. The Celts: An Illustrated History. Dublin: Wolfhound Press, 1997.
Sullivan, Karen. Glorious Treasures: The Celts. London: Brockhampton Press, 1997.
Films and Other Media
Boudica. Feature film. Independent Television, 2003.
Caesar: Conqueror of Gaul. Documentary. History Channel, 2005.
The Celts. Documentary. History Channel, 1997.
Decisive Battles: Boudicca, Warrior Queen. Documentary. History Channel, 2004.
Druids. Feature film. Lolistar, 2001.
Andrew Reynolds Galloway
Berber Warfare
Dates: c. 1000 b.c.e.-1000 c.e.
Political Considerations
The term Berber was first coined by foreign conquerors in an attempt to classify a large population
who resided in the Maghreb region of North Africa.
Some scholars believe that Imazighen was the selfreferential term. The exact identification of who constituted the Berber people during this period becomes
difficult to determine given the wide use of this
appellation and the complicated ancestry of those it
attempts to describe. In the words of one of the foremost modern Berber scholars, Elizabeth Fentress, at
best we can define Berbers as Mediterranean. The
term Berber is also used to refer to the Afro-Asiatic
language group, with its many variants and dialects.
At one point this language group constituted one of
the major forms of verbal communication in North
Africa.
The Berber population was not contained in one
nation and was embroiled in numerous intertribal and
international conflicts. Throughout the period from
1000 b.c.e. to 1000 c.e., Berber tribes, kingdoms,
and mercenaries were both allies and enemies of Carthage and Rome, the Muslim invaders, and each
other. To confuse the situation further, this duality
was common during the major military conflicts.
Sorting through this tangle can be daunting, but the
task is made easier if it is understood that the term
Berber, when applied in a historical context, may
refer to just a single kingdom, tribe, or mercenary
band rather than to an entire population. The varied
political situations that erupted into warfare led directly to the Berbers identity as warriors.
Military Achievement
The Berbers actions on hundreds of battlefields
across the ancient world, from the coasts of North Af179
180
Military Organization
Berber gatherings began at the level of the ikhs, a
group of extended family headed by the eldest male
member. The population of a Berber village often included several of these groups, and a Berber tribe
Berber Warfare
comprised a dozen or more villages in a defined geographic area. The smaller of the tribes remained under the familiar system of elder rule, whereas the
larger tribes spawned monarchs, some of which were
led by kings with dynastic ambitions.
In times of need, warring Berber tribes would put
aside their differences and muster into a coalition
called a leff or soff. Such coalitions had political considerations; members pledged offensive assistance to
other members or promised aid in defense against rival leffs.
The two most significant early Berber kingdoms
were Numidia (present-day Algeria and part of Tunisia) and Mauritania (near present-day Algeria and
Morocco). The kings of Numidia and Mauritania
raised armies of slaves, freemen, and mercenaries
through the time-proven system of taxation. Also
in these kingdoms, an aristocratic class developed.
Similar to medieval knights, the men of this highborn
class became the elite cavalry. The kings could call
their tribal subjects to their banners, but the subjects
availability to serve was hindered by agricultural
considerations, such as harvesting and sowing. Ultimately, the kingdoms of Numidia and Mauritania
were both destroyed by Roman imperial designs.
During the third century, under Emperor Diocletians reforms, the Romans made a concerted effort
to assimilate Berber forces into the Roman military
machine. Large numbers of Berbers served with
the Romans as foederati, semiautonomous allies.
The Berber cavalrymen were arranged into relatively
vaguely defined squadrons rather than into precise
unit designations. These squadrons were led by the
Berbers own leaders, who were then overseen by the
Roman generals, who commanded them on the field
and on the march. This seems to have been the system
181
typically used when large groups of Berbers were
employed as mercenaries.
Ancient Sources
Strabo, the Greek geographer and historian, wrote of the Berber society in his seventeenvolume Gefgraphica (c. 7 b.c.e.; Geography, 1917-1933). Book 5 of Pliny the Elders
Naturalis historia (77 c.e.; The Historie of the World, 1601; better known as Natural History)
contains a valuable cache of information about North Africa and Carthage. Sallust, one of the
most shameless pillagers of North Africa, wrote the monographs I bellum catilinae (c. 42 b.c.e.;
The Conspiracy of Catilline, 1608) and Bellum iugurthinum (c. 40 b.c.e.; The Jugurtha War,
1608), which shed light on this little-known historical event. Appians Romaica (second cen-
182
Military Achievement
The Germanic tribes, as well as the Goths and Huns,
transformed warfare during the first five centuries
c.e., managing to defeat significant strong and wellequipped Roman armies by using their superior mobility in traveling to and also on the battlefield. This
allowed a number of tribes to overwhelm and defeat
Roman forces many times, the first major occasion
being at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in 9 c.e.,
when a Germanic force wiped out three Roman legions. This defeat ended any serious attempt by the
183
184
185
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186
with their horses. Caesar praised the use of the cavalry by the Germans and went as far as recruiting
many of them to complement his forces; these soldiers were armed with lances or javelins and also
two-edged slashing swords.
For most of the tribes, the horses themselves were
generally unprotected, even though they served very
much as part of the attack, the horses being flung
against the tight formations of Roman infantry. Like
the infantry, as the emphasis was very much on suddenness of attack and the advantage of mobility, the
cavalry of the Germanic and Gothic tribes tended not
to be heavily armored. In later battles against the
Byzantines, howeverespecially after the Byzantines themselves started deploying heavy cavalry
the Germanic tribes began using horse armor.
Military Organization
187
forces of the opponentsusually the Romansand
cause panic. The Goths and the Huns later developed
this tactic further with cavalry attacks, feigned retreats, and the like. The German leaders had to develop their battle plans carefully beforehand, as their
armies were not as well disciplined as those of the
Romans and could easily be outmaneuvered by clever
Roman commanders. This meant that the charging of
the troops at the start of a battle had to be sufficiently
fierce to push the battle in their favor quickly. In longer battles, when the sides were evenly balanced, the
victories would tend to go to the Romanswhich explains why most of the Germanic tribes chose either
to attack when they had a vast numerical advantage
or to ambush their opponents.
In those instances when large Germanic or other
tribal armies fought the Romans, the tribes drew up
careful plans, usually with the aim of enticing the Romans further into their territory and setting up an ambush. The destruction of three Roman legions at the
Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in 9 c.e. is the most famous example of the success of such tactics. Even
when extensive planning had taken place, however,
speed was a crucial element for the Germanic tribes
in battle.
Thus the most important part of the strategy of the
Germanic tribes remained the soldiers who would
form a wedge into the opponents battle lines. The
Romans labeled these the cunei, following from the
Latin term cuneus, which, it is believed, came from
the term caput porcunum (head of a hog). The term
stems from the tribes use of a standard in the shape of
the head of a hog or boar that would he held aloft to
indicate the direction of any attack. Imbued with
some religious significance, this would serve as a
battle standard, the capture of which was similar to
the capture of Roman standards.
Ancient Sources
The ancient sources of information on the Germanic tribesthe Goths, Visigoths, Vandals,
Lombards, and Hunsare invariably Roman accounts. These vary tremendously in their coverage and analysis. The earliest significant account is Comentarii de bello Gallico (52-51
b.c.e.; The Gallic Wars, in his Commentaries, 1609), Julius Caesars work on the Gallic Wars,
in which the great Roman general relates how he succeeded in capturing Gaul. Caesar achieved
his success after he managed to win over some Germans to his side with money and other in-
188
China
Ancient
Dates: c. 1523 b.c.e.-588 c.e.
Chi) annals, the Zhou were vastly outnumbered,
confronting a Shang army of 700,000 with a lilliputian force of 300 chariots, 3,000 Tiger Guards,
and 45,000 foot soldiers. Despite the Shangs overwhelming numbers, the Zhou routed them in a matter
of hours. Following an initial charge of one hundred
infantry, the chariots were deployed to the astonishment of the Shang troops, who reportedly had never
encountered such a mass attack. After their king fled,
the Shang forces inverted their weapons and gave
up the fight. After the death of King Wu, his brother,
the duke of Zhou, acted as regent for his young
nephew. During his regency, the Zhou domain expanded eastward and purportedly brought fifty states
under Zhou control.
The Zhou policy of decentralized rule in its peripheral territories eventually led to its decline in 722
b.c.e., when an alliance of disgruntled vassals and
a nomadic tribe killed the Zhou king. Despite moving the capital farther east to avoid further incursions, the Zhou never fully recovered, inaugurating
nearly five hundred years of unremitting violence
and warfare.
The remaining half of the Zhou dynastic age is
subdivided into two sections: the Chunqiu (Chun
Chiu) or Spring and Autumn period (c. 770-476
b.c.e.) and the Warring States period (c. 475-221
b.c.e.). This was an age characterized by the growth
of powerful independent states, shifting alliances,
and open warfare. Beside a dozen major states, innumerable smaller states existed, some no more than a
town surrounded by a thick earthen wall and a few
square miles of marginal territory. As Zhou power
declined, the major states asserted increasing independence, until, by the Warring States period, their
rulers had assumed the title of king. New technologies, including the long sword, crossbow, and iron
Military Achievement
Chinese tradition holds that throughout most of its
history, China has relegated warfare and military
matters to a secondary role within society. From the
earliest dynastic records onward, the Chinese have
deliberately differentiated wen (cultural or civil) and
wu (martial) matters. The perfectly ordered society is
one in which literate culture triumphs over mere
force, and military matters are disdained. Civilized
Chinese need not use brute force to maintain internal
peace or repulse external aggression. Instead, cultural superiority and demonstrated moral virtue suffice in the pursuit of peace.
Despite these ideals, Chinas early history revolved around conquest and the centralization of the
state. Every major dynasty was founded through
warfare, and once unified, China guarded its frontiers
with military force and sought to expand its territory
at the expense of southern and western neighbors. Inevitably, each dynasty in turn fell as a result of warfare.
The Shang (Chang) are the first historically identifiable ancestors of the Chinese. Chengtang (Cheng
Tang) is credited with founding the dynasty, following his decisive victory over Emperor Jie (Chieh) of
the Xia (Hsia) Dynasty in 1523 b.c.e. at the Battle of
Ming Jiao (Ming Chiao). In a recurring pattern of
Chinese historiography, the victorious commanders
success is attributed to his moral superiority and his
opponents wretchedness.
Accordingly, the Shang fell as a result of Emperor
Zhou Xins (Chou Hsin) overall bad character and
practice of mutilating pregnant women and murdering innocents with abandon. King Wu (the Martial
King) led the Zhou into a decisive battle at Muye
(Mu-yeh) in 1027 b.c.e. According to the Shiji (Shih
191
192
Turning Points
1600-1066 b.c.e.
1200 b.c.e.
1066-256 b.c.e.
5th cent. b.c.e.
307 b.c.e.
221-206 b.c.e.
206 b.c.e.-220 c.e.
220-280
265-316
4th cent.
317-420
386-588
China
emerged victorious in the ensuing civil war. Upon his
death, however, the southern states refused to recognize the central authority of the upstart Cao Cao family, and the Han Empire was quickly divided into
three major regions, inaugurating yet another 400year period of almost-constant warfare.
Following the breakup of the Han, three kingdoms
emerged. The Wei (220-265) dominated the north
and moved into Korea, Shu-Han (221-263) in the
southwest subdued several indigenous tribes, and the
southern Wu (222-280) expanded as far as Vietnam.
In 265, following the conquest of the Shu-Han and
the Wu, a Wei general announced the creation of a
new dynasty, the Jin (Chin), which would survive until 420. Southern China would then experience a succession of four southern dynasties, lasting into the
sixth century. Meanwhile, a series of northern tribes
ruled Northern China until 386, when the northern
Wei successfully defeated the last kingdom and secured rule until 533.
193
sisted of three men: the driver in the center, a warrior
armed with a ge-halberd on the right, and an archer
to the left. Each would be accompanied by a platoon
of foot soldiers armed with spears. Whereas Shang
chariots were used primarily as elevated, mobile
command posts for royalty, their Zhou counterparts
were employed extensively in battle. States were
judged by the number of chariots they could field,
and battle records routinely reported the numbers
captured. The Zuo Zhuan (Tso chuan, c. 475-221
b.c.e.; Tso chuan, 1872) attributes 4,900 chariots to
the large Jin state, whereas the much smaller Zhu
(Chu) boasted 600 chariots.
As the Warring States period progressed, the chariot was adapted to the emergence of armored infantry
and new siege warfare tactics. To ward off infantry,
knife blades were added to wheel hubs. Furthermore,
whereas previous armies had routinely avoided fortified cities rather than expending manpower on their
capture, the newly significant role of cities as economic and political centers now warranted aggressive assaults. Accordingly, chariots were outfitted
with large shields, towers, battering rams, movable
ladders, and multiarrow crossbows. In defense, towns
employed a bewildering array of iron and wooden
caltrops, collapsible fences, sharp iron stakes, mined
moats, and a variety of long axes, halberds, firelances, and hammers. Vessels containing water, iron,
sand, and human excrement were also available to
hurl upon the heads of besiegers.
Swords do not appear until the middle of the
Chunqiu, or Spring and Autumn, period, when they
were probably adopted from steppe nomads. The earliest were fashioned from bronze, with iron swords
becoming widespread during the Qin Dynasty. Although long, double-edged swords are mentioned
as early as the seventh century b.c.e., most would
appear to have been relatively short and used principally for thrusting rather than slashing. By the
Warring States period, they had become standardized as the jien (chien), a double-edged sword with a
blade measuring approximately 2 feet, eventually
reaching a length of 3 feet during the Han Dynasty.
Clearly the most important innovation in early
Chinese warfare was the crossbow. Developed in
China sometime in the fifth century b.c.e., the new
194
Robin Chen
Much that has been learned about Qin armor of the third century B.C.E. is known from the life-size terra-cotta
figures unearthed near the first emperors tomb.
China
195
lar pieces strung into rows and fastened with leather thongs, a process
known as lamellar construction. Individual pieces and the rows themselves were then lacquered and colored.
A great deal about Qin armor is
known from the life-size terra-cotta
figures unearthed near the first emperors tomb. Several styles of armor are noted, including short mail
jackets of lamellar construction designed to cover the entire upper body;
lamellar chest protectors; lamellar
armor for charioteers, which includes both neck guards and armor
extending to the wrists with plates to
protect the hands; and that of the
cavalry, shorter than the others and
missing shoulder guards. Under the
armor, each warrior wears a longsleeved robe reaching to the knees,
along with a heavy cloth bundle at
the neck. Short trousers are also discernible.
Not until the time of the Han Dynasty was iron used for certain types
of armor. Most armor consisted of
plates arranged in the lamellar construction, designed to protect the
neck, front, back, and thighs. One
Robin Chen
such suit contained 500 plates and
weighed nearly 22 pounds. By the
Close-up of a Qin soldier and horse from the terra-cotta excavations.
late Han Dynasty, authors begin referring to brilliant dark armor, which
with a high collar and flared bottom, and a chaplike
may suggest a suit made of decarburized steel, alprotector for the front of the leg.
though none have been recovered as yet.
Horse armor, or barding, appears in some of the
Infantry typically appeared without armor and
earliest histories, but no evidence exists for its use
were generally equipped with little more than a shield
until the end of the Han Dynasty. By that time, the
and helmet. Most infantrymen wore a simple tunic,
cavalry had become an integral part of warfare, and
trousers, and leather shin guards. Helmets varied
as the cavalrymans armor improved, measures were
from the simple head-covering tied under the chin to
also taken to ensure the safety of the horse. Early
heavier versions with straight earflaps. Iron helmets
barding was of a single piece, protecting the top and
began to appear during the Warring States period but
underside of the horses neck down to the chest, with
did not become prevalent until the Han Dynasty.
some also covering the underside of the belly. As it
Cavalry were furnished with a helmet, a mail jacket
196
Military Organization
Shang Dynasty military organization is open to a
great deal of speculation. Given the paucity of reliable literary sources, scholars are dependent on archaeological evidence and speculation concerning
the actual role of chariots in early warfare. It is clear
that Shang social structure centered on clan units designated as zu (tsu). Most scholars believe that the zu
represent military units assigned to protect the walled
towns in which they resided. The zu chief functioned
as the local military leader; the same arrangement applied to the royal capital, with the king acting as military leader for the kingdom. Each zu may have numbered one hundred members of the nobility, all under
the command of the chief or king. A standing army
consisting of selected zu members maintained order
during peacetime, and all members were subject to
mobilization when necessary. In such cases, ten zu
were combined to form an army of 10,000. Oracle
records suggest that infantry and archers alike were
organized into companies of one hundred warriors.
Three such companies constituted a regiment, deployed as left, middle, and right companies.
Under the Zhou Dynasty, the chariot emerged as
the most important factor in organizing the military.
Later tradition holds that each three-man chariot
China
with an elaborate system of differentiated pay relative
to ones seniority and rank. Officers were assigned as
a particular need arose. Titles and roles related specifically to the campaign, with several generals assigned to each to avoid possible coups.
The Han military was organized into three principal units: a standing garrison at the capital, a task
force on the march, and a permanent frontier defense.
Once mobilized in an emergency, the military was
organized into divisions led by the generals, regiments led by colonels, companies led by captains,
and platoons led by commanders. Although local
variations would appear in the chaos that followed
upon the collapse of the Han, this basic organizational structure as established by the Qin and Han
continued to prevail.
The size of Chinese armies has been notoriously
difficult to calculate, particularly for the earliest Shang
and Western Zhou periods. As noted above, the war
between the Zhou and Shang was said to have been
fought by a Shang army of 700,000 and a Zhou force
of 300 chariots, 3,000 Tiger Guards, and 45,000 foot
soldiers. By the Spring and Autumn period, when
warfare had become highly ritualized and was dominated by aristocratic charioteers, field armies typically numbered in the thousands but would appear to
have rarely exceeded 10,000. As the scale of war increased in the Warring States period, the size of armies grew dramatically. In order to lay siege to fortified cities and to conduct wars that often took years
to complete, hundreds of thousands of men were required. According to one contemporary account, the
typical army consisted of one thousand chariots, ten
thousands of cavalry, and several hundred thousand
armored warriors. The smallest of the warring states
fielded armies of more than 300,000; the largest,
such as Qin, commanded more than 1,000,000. Likewise, Han expeditions numbering from 50,000 to
300,000 were routinely sent out to quell rebellions
and punish nomadic invaders.
197
Chariots served as transport or observational platforms, and warriors fought with spears, axes, and
composite bows. If the military classic the Taigong
(Tai Kung, c. third century b.c.e.; Tai Kungs Six Secret Teachings, 1993) is to be trusted in its account of
the Zhou triumph over the Shang, total warfare was
to be fought by utilizing every conceivable method
and resource necessary to achieve victory. The states
resources and all customary means of production
Xiangping
Wuyuan
Yuezhi
Ji
Pingcheng
Zhao
Jinyang
Changye
Koguryo
Yan
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Linzi
Wei
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Sianyang
Qin
Changan
Shu
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Zichuan
Ye l l o w
Zhou
Shangqiu
Luoyang
Song
Sea
Han Daliang
Gaixia
Shouchun
Xinzheng
Guangling
Nanjing
Danyang
Chu v e
Wu
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Red
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Guiyang
Tai
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Nan
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Luolang
Yellow River
Dunhuang
Datong
Min
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China
were to be employed in the campaigns execution.
Strategically, the capable general would analyze the
entire situation before engaging the enemy, gauging
such factors as terrain, methods of attack and counterattack, escape routes, and techniques for psychological warfare. The Taigong advocates employing
subterfuge and deception as the most effective means
of securing victory. Among other tactics, the successful campaign would utilize feints, false attacks,
and limited encounters to confuse and disorient the
enemy before the main attack. In prosecuting the
war, the best strategies would promote confusion
within the enemys ranks through aggression, misinformation, and speed. The humane treatment of prisoners would encourage others to surrender.
A new era of warfare began in the Spring and Autumn period. This was the great age of chivalry, in
which honor and virtue dictated both strategy and
the conduct of warfare. Fighting was ideally a game
played between members of the nobility, mounted
in chariots and accompanied by platoons of foot soldiers. During the heyday of chariot warfare, gentlemen studied the arts of charioteering, archery, and
virtuous conduct. Actual combat followed an excessively strict code of conduct calling for bravery,
valor, and honor. War was to be pursued with moderation and respect for the opponent. For instance,
the duke of Song (Sung) waited for his enemy to
cross a river and arrange his battle forces before
launching his attack. Following his humiliating defeat, the duke justified his action by referring to the
sage, who does not crush the feeble nor order the attack until his enemy has formed his ranks. In another instance, Yen Hsi shot a man in the eyebrow
and retired, saying I have no valor. I was aiming at
his eye.
Such sentiments were forgotten during the Warring States period. However, even as the violence escalated, strategists continued to advocate deception
and speed as the primary means of securing victory.
Siege warfare introduced new strategies and tactics,
as massive armies sought to wrest control of fortified
cities from their occupants, who in turn deployed
new technologies designed to repulse the aggressors.
In this regard, the Mohists became the undisputed
masters of defensive warfare in ancient China.
199
Bingfa (c. 510 b.c.e.; The Art of War, 1910), by
Sunzi (Sun Tzu; fl. c. 500 b.c.e.), is certainly the most
famous text from this period. A general in the service
of Wu, Sunzi had the primary objective of obtaining
victory without combat. He argued that a more comprehensive victory could be forged by using diplomatic means, breaking up alliances, and thwarting
the enemys own strategy. In general, one should
gain victory at the least cost possible, for both oneself
and the enemy. Thus attaining one hundred victories in one hundred battles is not the height of excellence. Subjugating the enemys army without fighting is the true height of excellence. Failing that, he
emphasized the manipulation of the enemy through
the use of terrain, psychology, and the employment
of both unorthodox and orthodox methods. Sunzi believed that warfare is the way [dao/tao] of deception, advancing where least expected and attacking
where the enemy is least prepared. Although he advocated unorthodox methods such as flanking movements and circular thrusts, Sunzi also insisted that orthodox measures could be effective, if they were
employed in an unorthodox manner.
While specific tactics and strategies evolved and
adapted to new technologies and the changing face of
war, the fundamental principles espoused by Sunzi
and other classical theoreticians continued to hold
sway. From the Warring States period to the chaos
following the fall of the Han, Chinese warfare emphasized the doctrine of maneuverability. Beginning
with the fundamental organization of armies into
flexible, self-reliant units of five, military maneuvers
sought to exploit enemy weaknesses through speed,
deception, and misdirection. Every strategist sought
to manipulate the enemy into disadvantageous positions by using surprise, by exploiting climatic and
topographical factors, and by psychologically and
physically destabilizing the enemy to gain temporary, context-specific advantages.
Thus, even as the Han adapted the cavalry, they
devised new strategies to defeat it. In 99 b.c.e., Li
Ling defeated a cavalry of 30,000 using only 5,000
infantrymen. Behind a line of infantry armed with
shields and pikes, Li Ling positioned archers with
powerful multiple-firing crossbows. The nomadic
horsemen continually charged unsuccessfully. Zhuge
200
Liang (Chu-ko Liang, 181-234), who served as adviser to the founder of the Shu-Han Dynasty (221263), was a brilliant mathematician, mechanical engineer, and military strategist who both used and
wrote a commentary on Sunzis The Art of War. Said
to have never fallen in battle, Zhuge became one of
Chinas most celebrated heroes, was named a Con-
Ancient Sources
The most important primary sources fall into two basic categories. The first are the numerous histories compiled throughout this period. These include the Shujing (Shu ching), or Book
of History (1918), which purports to cover the years 2357-627 b.c.e.; the Chunqiu (Chun
chiu), translated as Chun tsew in 1872 and also known as the Spring and Autumn Annals,
chronicling the period from 722 to 481 b.c.e.; the Zuo Zhuan (Tso chuan), or Tradition of Zuo, a
commentary that carries Zhou history down to 468 b.c.e.; and the first official Chinese history,
the Shiji (Shih-chi, 104 b.c.e.; Records of the Grand Historian of China, 1961), compiled by
Sima Qian (Ssu-ma Chien, c. 145-90 b.c.e.).
The second principal resource consists of several military texts brought together during the
Song (Sung) Dynasty (960-1126 c.e.) and placed in a collection known as the Seven Military
Classics. Each provides varying degrees of detail concerning the art of warfare, military strategy, and organization, along with references to the types of weapons used. As traditionally arranged, the Seven Military Classics consist of Sunzis Bingfa, the Wuzi (Wu-tzu, c. 400 b.c.e.;
Wu-tzu, 1993), Sima Fa (Ssu-ma Fa, c. fourth century b.c.e.; The Methods of the Ssu-ma, 1993),
Lei Weigong Wen Dui (Lei Wei-kung Wen Tui, c. 600 c.e.; Questions and Replies Between
Tang Tai-tsung and Li Wei-kung, 1993), the Wei Liaozi (Wei Liao Tzu, c. fourth century
b.c.e.; Wei Liao-tzu, 1993), the Huang Shigong San Le (Huang Shi-kung San Leh, c. first century c.e.; Three Strategies of Huang Shih-kung, 1993), and the Taigong.
Books and Articles
Gabriel, Richard A. China, 1750-256 b.c.e. In The Ancient World. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2007.
_______. Chinese Armies: The Shang and Zhou Periods, 1750-256 b.c.e. In The Great
Armies of Antiquity. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2002.
Gabriel, Richard A., and Donald W. Boose, Jr. The Chinese Way of War: Chengpu, Guiling,
Jingxing. In The Great Battles of Antiquity: A Strategic and Tactical Guide to Great Battles
That Shaped the Development of War. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1994.
Graff, David A. Chin Shih-huang-ti. In The Readers Companion to Military History, edited
by Robert Cowley and Geoffrey Parker. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
Kierman, Frank A., Jr., and John K. Fairbank, eds. Chinese Ways in Warfare. Cambridge,
Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1974.
Lewis, Mark Edward. The Early Chinese Empires: Qin and Han. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap
Press of Harvard University Press, 2007.
Needham, Joseph. Military Technology: Missiles and Sieges. Vol. 5 in Science and Civilisation
in China. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1994.
Peers, C. J. Ancient Chinese Armies, 1500-200 B.C. Illustrated by Angus McBride. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 1990.
China
201
_______. Imperial Chinese Armies, 200 B.C.-A.D. 589. Illustrated by Michael Perry. Botley,
Oxford, England: Osprey, 1995.
Sawyer, Ralph D., trans. and comp. The Seven Military Classics of Ancient China. Boulder,
Colo.: Westview Press, 1993.
Twitchett, Denis, and John K. Fairbank, eds. The Chin and Han Empires, 221 B.C.-A.D. 220.
Vol. 1 in The Cambridge History of China. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University
Press, 1986.
Yates, Robin D. S. Making War and Making Peace in Early China. In War and Peace in the
Ancient World, edited by Kurt A. Raaflaub. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2007.
Films and Other Media
First Emperor of China. Documentary. Razor Digital Entertainment, 2006.
Red Cliff. Feature film. Beijeng Film Studio, 2008.
Jeffrey Dippmann
Military Achievement
The most significant of the steppe warrior societies
included the Scythian, Xiongnu (Hsiung-nu), Yuezhi
(Yeh-chih), Kaka, Sarmatian, Avar, Hun, and White
Hun. Some, such as the Yuezhi, were Indo-European
peoples, and others, such as the Huns, were TurkoMongolian peoples. Population growth was marked
by competition for pasture lands in the north and by
irrigation networks to the south. Nomadic societies
looked to towns for trade but at other times were
tempted to raid their accumulated produce and crafts.
Until the emergence of cannons and muskets, the settled communities were easy prey for the mounted nomad warriors.
Scyths spread their nomadic influences across the
Eurasian continent from Mongolia in the east to the
Russian grasslands in the west. Believed to be Iranians from Turkistan who had refused to succumb to
the settled existence of the Persian state to the south,
some of the Scyths moved into the plains north of the
Black Sea, displacing the Cimmerians in the Russian
steppes after 750 b.c.e. From that base they attacked
the fleeing Cimmerians, who penetrated the Assyrian
lands to the south. Under a leader named Madyas, the
Scyths subjugated the Medes about 628 b.c.e. Although the Medes rebelled and turned the Scyths
northward, the Scyths were the first of the mounted
nomad warriors to threaten the classical cultures
south of the Black Sea. With iron implements forged
by craftsmen from the Urals, the Scyths created the
first recognized northern Eurasian empire, with territory extending from the Danube to Mongolia. Although divisions within their ranks were common,
their federations remained threats to all the nearby
communities for centuries. Although the Scyths who
remained in Turkestan when the others moved across
the Volga were called Kakas by the Persians, they
were of the same Iranian nomad stock.
202
203
Turning Points
204
205
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Sea
Bengal
206
Military Organization
Library of Congress
207
As early as the fourth millennium b.c.e. the skill
of horse riding may have existed in the region of
modern Kazakhstan. The horse culture became so
pervasive among the steppe peoples that the warriors, men and women, spent a great portion of their
lives on horseback, eating, fighting, negotiating, and
even sleeping. Such traits were common throughout
the long history of nomadic peoples, whether Turk,
Mongol, or Indo-European. Early steppe horsemen
wore neither metal stirrups nor spurs, and they directed their horses with whips. Surely, however, the
Avars used the stirrup with great success in their attacks on Eastern Europe. The early warriors used few
saddles, though pillow saddles stuffed with deer hair
were discovered in graves at Pazyryk. At the same
site was evidence of earmarks to discern ownership
of horses, and by the second century c.e., the Sarmatians were branding horses. From the era of the
Scyths, steppe peoples castrated their male horses to
better manage their herds.
Grave sites and burial mounds also reveal the use
of chariots for carrying war booty from battle, as well
as for fighting. Such practice was true of the Scyths
(Kaka), Sarmatians, Xiongnu, Alans, and Huns from
the sixth century b.c.e. Two-wheeled chariots drawn
by steppe horses provided formidable fighting forces.
The custom of burying chariots in the graves of rulers
was common in Mesopotamia, the steppe cultures of
Eurasia, and China. By 900 b.c.e. steppe warriors
had mastered the art of attacking with bows and
arrows while on horseback. When on march the warriors consumed fermented horse milk, horse blood,
and sometimes a mixture of the two, as well as horse
meat and cheese. It is said they even tenderized the
meat by pounding it under their saddles.
Ancient Sources
Ancient sources on the earliest history of steppe warfare depend more on the findings of
modern archaeologists than upon the ancient writers. Nevertheless, valuable information still
rests upon classic works such as Sunzis (Sun Tzu) Bingfa (c. 510 b.c.e.; The Art of War, 1910),
which deals in part with the Chinese wars with the Xiongnu nomads. The military exploits of
the Scyths, Massagetae, Cimmerians, and even the Amazons are fully described by the Greek
historian Herodotus (c. 484-424 b.c.e.), especially in chapter 4 of his Historiai Herodotou
(c. 424 b.c.e.; The History, 1709).
208
repudiate war, as well as most Buddhist kings, accepted the use of warfare as necessary to achieve the
cultural unit of Bh3ratavar;a, the ancient name of
Indiaa dream constantly challenged by invaders of
Indian soil.
Turning Points
209
In
-G
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ns
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211
the Scythians, Parthians, and Yuezhi, with ensuing
warfare and chaos. Dynasties rose and fell, with the
Scythians, or Kakas, establishing a foothold in North
India between 80 and 40 b.c.e. that was held by the
efforts of the Andhra king. At the dawn of the Christian era the Andhra Dynasty controlled central India,
and the Kakas the Indus Valley. South India, although
independent, was engulfed in constant warfare between the Cfla, Pandya, and ChTras kingdoms.
The first two hundred years of the Christian era
continued as a period of confusion throughout Hindu
India with no significant developments in design or
employment of weaponry. Between l and 50 c.e. an
offshoot of the Kaka, the Kush3n, entered the Punjab
and carved out a vast empire under Kani;ka (fl. c. 78103) between 78 and 103 c.e. It was a short-lived attempt at empire building. Upon Kani;kas death,
Kaka authority was usurped by satraps and feudal
lords who maintained a state of confusion for ninetyseven years. During this period wars in South India
were marked by copious bloodshed, violence, ferocity, and treachery, while in the north warfare was a
sport of the monarchs, rarely a struggle for existence.
Northern wars usually had limited objectives and
were less savage than wars elsewhere in the world.
During the third and fourth centuries, kingdoms
continued to rise and fall with no major power appearing on the scene. The Kush3n Dynasty lingered
into the mid-third century, and the Andhra Dynasty
in the south collapsed and was replaced by the
Pallava Dynasty of warrior kings, who dreamed of
expansion. In 300 c.e. another Chandragupta, claiming descent from the founder of the Maurya Dynasty,
consolidated the central Ganges, crowned himself
Chandragupta I (r. 320-c. 330), or King of Kings,
and established the glorious Gupta Empire in 320
c.e. He conquered territory almost equal to that governed by Akoka, but he employed a feudal decentralized authority. The golden age of the Gupta Empire
was reached by the third emperor, Chandragupta II
(r. c. 380-415), who added Vikramaditya to his name.
With the approach of the Middle Ages, Ephthalite, or
White Hun, invasions from the north challenged the
now-weakened Guptas, who proved helpless against
them. The Ephthalites established a kingdom in the
Punjab and Rajputana between 500 and 530 c.e. but
212
held sway for only twenty years. Apatchwork of warring Hindu states ensued, with violent wars waged
for territorial control.
The first five hundred years of the Christian era,
then, were characterized by partially successful attempts at reestablishing Mauryan and Gupta glory,
but ancient militarism did not result in a permanent
empire. Only the Mauryans and Guptas exhibited the
genius of empire building. The remainder of Indian
history is a maelstrom of invasions and petty struggles toward creating a recognized cultural unit of
Bh3ratavar;a.
213
214
215
Armies met each other face to face, approaching
in parallel lines, infantry in the center, with chariots
and cavalry on the flanks. Swarms of archers and
slingers approached in the foreground, raining harassing fire with shouts and clashing of arms. The
usual objective was to outflank an enemy, because
the ten to thirty ranks of infantry were deemed vulnerable. Until 700 b.c.e. chariots provided the striking force, and the infantry provided a solid base
around which more important groups could operate.
Little organization was present, because the primary
objective was to reach a suitable battle site and overwhelm the enemy. When charioteers struck terror in
the enemy, the battle resulted in a rout. Usually each
side converged and fought for an hour or more until
one side would sense defeat. After 1000 b.c.e. more
order, discipline, and organization entered the military system.
India generally lagged behind other civilized cultures in military theory, strategy, and tactics up to the
dawn of the common era. Although training and discipline were well known to the Hindus, they found it
difficult to impose military fundamentals upon the
troops. The Arthak3stra of Kauzilya became the primary guide for military organization, tactics, ethics,
and doctrine well into the medieval period.
Ancient Sources
Early Indian literary sources such as the Rigveda; the Mah3bh3rata (c. 400 b.c.e.-200 c.e.;
The Mahabharata, 1834), including the Bhagavadgtt3 (c. fifth century b.c.e.); and the
Manusmjti (compiled 200 b.c.e.; The Laws of Manu, 1886) describe the power of weaponry,
the religious duty of war, the importance of strong leadership, and the ethical aspects of waging
war. The comprehensive Mauryan Arthak3stra of Kauzilya, composed between 300 b.c.e. and
300 c.e., looked upon war as a continuation of polity by other means, as a legitimate last resort for achieving the aims of government and not to be embarked upon lightly. Although earlier literature had stressed a warriors dharma, or duty, the motive of the Arthak3stra was the establishment of a great empire. Around 500 c.e. the Kiva Dhanur Veda, of unknown authorship,
stressed the skills of archery and military science in general. Its importance is seen in the application of the term Dhanur Veda to all writings on the art of war. There are also many battles, albeit largely men and monkeys against demons, in the R3m3ya]a, but it still contains some important military concepts. The major non-Indian source is Arrian, the Anabasis Alexandri (early
second century c.e.; The Campaigns of Alexander, 1893), which contains detailed descriptions
of the Indian commander Porus at Hydaspes.
216
Byzantium
Dates: 312-1453 c.e.
Political Considerations
In 312 c.e. Constantine the Great (c. 272 to 285-337)
won a key battle at the Milvian bridge outside Rome
that ensured his domination over rivals in the Roman
Empire. The victory relied on Roman divisions who
counted numerous Christians among them, and Constantine announced that his victory had been blessed
by heaven when he saw a cross in the sky with the
words, By this sign you shall conquer. Constantine
built a new eastern capital, in addition to the one in
Rome. This city, Constantinople (modern Istanbul),
was built on the old Greek colony of Byzantium, and
historians regard its establishment as a capital in 324
as the beginning of the Byzantine Empire. At this
time Constantine also legalized Christianity and ordered its organization, although the pagan religion
was not outlawed until 385.
The early Byzantine Empire still regarded itself as
part of the Roman Empire, and its legions were formed
in the Roman way. In its early centuries the Empire
concerned itself with the increasing
Germanic, Slavic, and Hunnic invasions into the Danubian region
and the western portions of the Em324
pire, where a co-emperor remained
in Rome until 476. From the east the
527-565
Byzantines also faced incursions of
the Persian Empire. Unlike Rome,
Constantinople was able to resist the
German invasions mainly due to its
610-641
fabulous defense system, created by
its early emperors. In contrast to the
modern city of Istanbul, which spans
1096-1204
two continents, Europe and Asia,
old Constantinople was confined to
the southwestern tip of a peninsula
1453
on the European side of the Bosporus Strait linking the Black Sea
Turning Points
Roman emperor Constantine builds a new eastern capital at
Constantinople.
Emperor Justinian reigns, definitively codifying Roman law,
waging war against the Germans and Persians, and
changing the nature of the Empire from that of a
constitutional to that of an absolute monarchy.
Heraclius reigns, Hellenizing the Byzantine Empire and
introducing the theme system of Byzantine provinces
ruled by military governors.
The First through Fourth Crusades are waged by Christians
seeking to protect the Byzantine Empire and to recapture
the Holy Land from Muslims.
Constantinople is captured by the Ottoman Turks, ending the
Byzantine Empire.
221
222
the religious wars had died down, but the emperor
himself had almost lost his throne in the Nika Uprising of 532, which began after a fight between fans of
competing chariot teams. The steadfastness of Justinians wife, Theodora (c. 497-548), a commoner,
saved the throne. Justinian continued with a glorious
career, building the magnificent church of Santa
Sophia, definitively codifying Roman law, and waging war against the Germans and Persians. In the last,
however, he ultimately failed. Although his commander-in-chief Belisarius (c. 505-565), one of the
four great generals of antiquity, regained much land
in North Africa and Spain and won significant battles
against the Persians, he did not restore the old Roman
Empire, and those lands gained were lost just a few
years after Justinian was succeeded by his nephew,
Justin II (r. 565-578).
Justinian changed the nature of the Empire from
that of a constitutional to that of an absolute monarchy. The emperor now bore the title autocrat. In
the early seventh century, under Heraclius (c. 575641), the Byzantine Empire became Hellenized, with
Greek replacing Latin as the official language. Although citizens of the Byzantine Empire still called
themselves Romans, they were now really Greek.
Heraclius also fought against the Persians in the field,
winning victories that exhausted the empires resources. In the years from 632 to 670 the Muslim
Arabs, storming out of the Arabian desert and filled
with religious zeal inspired by the recently deceased
prophet Muwammad (c. 570-632), easily conquered
the Near Eastern and North African lands even while
they fought among themselves for leadership of the
faithful. The resentment of the Christian dissidents
who still lived in those regions and who were tolerated by the Muslims played an important part in these
defeats.
From the north the Byzantine Empire contended
with the Slavic invasions of the sixth and seventh
centuries that culminated in the creation of the first
Bulgarian empire on both sides of the Danube. The
next four centuries witnessed periods of peace and alliance alternating with wars between the Greeks and
Bulgarians. During this period the Byzantine emperors established the theme system of Byzantine
provinces ruled by military governors. During times
Byzantium
223
Library of Congress
The Roman emperor Constantine, who in 312 B.C.E. established a new, eastern Roman capital at Constantinople,
which became the seat of the Byzantine Empire.
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Byzantium
to the diversion, invaded Constantinople, expelled
the blind emperors brother, and put Isaac back on the
throne with his son as co-ruler. Alexius IV, however,
was unable to honor his commitment to supplying the
Crusaders. Furthermore, a popular uprising in the
city turned against Isaac and Alexius in favor of another member of the family. After realizing that Constantinople was an even better and easier prize than
Jerusalem, the Crusaders and their Venetian allies
seized the city and established themselves as rulers of
the empire. Baldwin of Flanders (1172-1205), sponsored by the Venetian doge, became Baldwin I of
Constantinople, and he distributed the themes among
his followers as vassal fiefs.
This Latin Empire (1204-1261) continued for only
fifty-seven years, but the damage it did continued until the end of the Byzantine state in 1453. While
Western rulers established a dozen new states in the
themes of the empire, other rulers established independent realms as well. The great medieval Slavic
empiresSerbia, Bulgaria, and Croatiaflourished
in this age. There were several independent merchant
cities, such as the Italian and Hungarian enclaves of
Venice and Dubrovnik, as well as the Ottoman sultanate, which appeared in the thirteenth century and
within two hundred years had steadily engulfed all of
the Christian states, culminating in the conquest of
Constantinople in 1453.
Military Achievement
The key to Byzantine endurance was its magnificent
defense system, beginning with the walls of Constantinople and the boom at the entrance of the Golden
Horn. Added to this was the best navy in the region,
which was used primarily as a defensive force. The
Greeks also effectively employed both peasant infantry and noble cavalry. However, throughout its history the empire alternated between periods of military victory and defeat. It reached its heights during
the reigns of Justinian and Heraclius and later during
the Macedonian Dynasty, but constant civil and religious wars, popular uprisings, and internal rivalries
and intrigues revealed its weaknesses and flaws. The
Greeks suffered at various times major defeats at the
225
hands of the Slavs, Arabs, Turks, Normans, Crusaders, pagan Patzinaks, and other adversaries.
226
Military Organization
The first Byzantine army was Constantines Roman
army, which followed the organization of the late
third and early fourth centuries. These were divided
into the border divisions, or limitanei, composed
of the peasants of the region; the mobile units, or
comitatensis, who fought in the field; and the guards,
or palatini, the best troops. Under the emperor the
highest ranks were prefects and two commanders-inchief, or magistri militum, the senior for the cavalry
and the junior for the infantry. However, when on independent campaign, either commander led mixed
cavalry and infantry. At the end of the fourth century
Emperor Theodosius the Great (346 or 347-395) settled the original commanders in Constantinople and
added three more in the provinces. The commanders
then operated independently, subject only to the emperor. Justinian added one more. The generals, or
dux, of the provincial armies served under the commanders and had administrative and supervised judicial bureaus headed by chiefs, princips, from the imperial bureaucracy.
In principle the state subjected all Byzantine males
to conscription. In practice landowners could pay to
keep their peasants out of military service, and the
draft affected mostly the urban population. The sons
of soldiers were also regularly recruited. In fact most
of the military was filled with volunteers, including
foreigners and mercenaries called allies or foederati.
Generals also maintained, at their own expense, troops
called bucellarii, who took an oath to their leaders
as well as to the emperor, thus presenting a danger
to the throne. Nevertheless by Justinians time the
bucellarii had increased so much that they formed a
major part of the army. The Roman army continued,
with divisions composed of soldiers from regions
such as Asia Minor, Thrace, and Armenia, and was
held in special esteem. In the sixth century the cavalry replaced the infantry as the main force, and the
financial difficulties caused by Justinians ambitious
wars and projects, together with a threat from the
Russian steppe in the form of the pagan Avars, reduced the mercenary forces and increased conscription.
Heraclius introduced the theme system as a mili-
Byzantium
227
Arabs, Turks, Mongols, Latins, Germans, and Caucasians. The elite Varangian corps of the Comnenus
Dynasty was composed of Anglo-Saxons. The fortunes of the empire became more precarious. In a
1204 battle with Crusaders, the mercenary army,
which had not been paid, refused to fight. By the last
years of the Byzantine Empire, under the Paleologus
Dynasty (1261-1453), the regular organization had
dissolved and the army was a patchwork of troops,
mainly mercenary soldiers.
Although the Byzantine army had evolved from
that of the Romans, the Byzantine navy was created
afresh. The Roman fleet was hardly more than a coast
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228
guard, and even up until the time of Justinian, the
navy had played only a supplementary role. However, during the height of the empire the navy was a
key part of the Byzantine military, especially in the
empires defense. The threat of the Arabs forced the
Greeks to increase the size of the navy and to integrate it into the theme system. The fleet commanderin-chief was the strategos of the carabisiani, named
after the carabos, a type of ship. Under him were one
or two drungarii, with the responsibility of admirals
although the equivalent rank in the army is similar to
a modern colonela discrepancy stemming from the
higher position of the army in the empire. Sailors
came from the coastal regions and islands, the best
being the Cibyhrrhaeots, from the Pamphylian city of
Cibyra in southern Asia Minor. In the eighth century
the Muslim caliphate moved inland to Persia and
lessened the threat from the sea, after which the imperial navy declined. Because of a renewed Muslim
threat in the Mediterranean in the following century,
the Macedonian Dynasty paid more attention to the
naval fleet. They added a third theme of the sea and
established naval stations in the European themes.
After the crisis of the eleventh century, the navy, as
did the army, suffered a steady and eventually irreparable decline.
Byzantium
Medieval Sources
There exists a large body of primary sources for the Byzantine Empire, many of which have
been translated into English and published. Among the best known are the sixth century Byzantine historian Procopiuss Anekdota, e, Apokryphos Historia (c. 550; Secret History, 1674),
an account of the reign of Justinian I and Theodora; Michael Pselluss (1018-c. 1078)
Chronographia (English translation, 1953) on the eleventh century; and princess Anna
Comnenas (1083-c. 1148) Alexiad (English translation, 1928), an account of reign of her father, Alexius I, which includes Comnenas impressions of the Crusaders and the war with
Patzinaks. Although these are general histories, they contain valuable information on the Byzantine military. Procopius, who was secretary to the general Belisarius, also wrote the official
court histories of Justinian, which included accounts of his wars. Information about the military
hierarchy of the early centuries is found in the Notitia Dignitatum of the fifth century and John
of Lydias (fl. sixth century) De Magistratibus (after 554; On the Magistracies of the Roman
Constitution, 1971) of the sixth. Descriptions of the wars of Heraclius are found in the poetry of
George Pisides (fl. seventh century).
There are a number of seventh and eighth century chronicles of the Byzantine Empire. Those
of the monk Theophanes the Confessor (c. 752-c. 818) and the patriarch Nicephorus are valuable. The tenth century historian Joseph Genisius wrote about the end of the Iconoclast struggle
and the first years of the Macedonian dynasty. Leo Diaconus (fl. tenth century) recounted in his
history the military achievements of the emperors Nicephoras II Phocas (r. 963-969) and John I
Tzimisces (r. 969-976). The chronicle of Byzantine historian John Scylitzes (fl. eleventh century) covers the years 811 to 1057. Some non-Byzantine sources important to this period include Provest Vremennykh Let (twelfth century; Russian Primary Chronicle, 1930), partly attributed to Nestor (c. 1056-1113), and the Latin Antapodosis (tenth century; Antapodosis, 1930)
of Liutprand of Cremona (c. 922-c. 972). The emperor Constantine VII (905-959) wrote on a
number of subjects, including the themes. Two military manuals of this period are the Taktika
of Leo VI and the Sylloge Tacticorum (compiled tenth century; Sylloge Tacticorum, 1938). For
the eleventh century, in addition to Psellus and Comnena, there is also the Strategicon of
Cacaumenus, a Byzantine general. John Cinnamus and Nicetas Choniates wrote on the twelfth
century. For the crusades there are many Western works with tangential reference to Byzantine
military affairs. Important historians of the last years of the Byzantine Empire include George
Pachymeres (1242-c. 1310), Nicephorus II Phocas, and the emperor John VI Cantacuzenus
(1292-1354), all of whom wrote before the fall of the empire in 1453. Those who wrote after the
fall include Laonicus Chalcocondyles (c. 1423-c. 1490), Ducas (fl. mid-fifteenth century),
Critobulos of Imbros (fl. fifteenth century), and George Sphrantes (fl. fifteenth century), whose
description of the fall of Constantinople is a standard account.
Books and Articles
Bartusis, Mark C. The Late Byzantine Army: Arms and Society, 1204-1453. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1997.
Bradbury, Jim. The Byzantine Empire and Eastern Europe, 400-1453. In The Routledge
Companion to Medieval Warfare. New York: Routledge, 2004.
Dawson, Timothy. Byzantine Cavalryman, c. 900-1204. Illustrated by Giuseppe Rava. Botley,
Oxford, England: Osprey, 2009.
_______. Byzantine Infantryman: Eastern Roman Empire, c. 900-1204. Illustrated by Angus
McBride. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2007.
229
230
Political Considerations
During the last days of the Roman Empire, the Western European landscape was divided among various
Germanic tribes, remaining bastions of Roman administrative rule, and surviving Roman military settlements, or laeti. The Franks alone were divided into
at least four subgroups that competed for control with
various Gallo-Roman magnates whose cities and
surrounding territories comprised lands sufficient for
them to be called sub reguli, or sub-kings, in the
sources. It is little wonder that any military commander with enough drive and power to stitch together an identifiable fabric from this crazy quilt of
disarray would be hailed as more than just another
king. Such a man was Clovis I (c. 466-511), a king of
the Sicambrian Franks who created something approaching a unified Gaul at the point of his lance. Although this first Francia would be a heterogeneous
kingdom, it would suffer from two major flaws that
were principally Frankish in origin: the practice of
partible inheritance among royal sons, which divided
lands and encouraged disunion and often outright
civil war, and the eventual usurpation of royal power
by the chief executive officer of the king, the major
domo, or mayor of the palace. The former flaw
acted as a check on Frankish expansion and the latter
eventually led to a change of dynasty from the ruling
house of the Merovingians to that of the House of
Charles, or Carolingians.
Although Clovis was named consul by the eastern
emperor Anastasius (c. 430-518) after gaining control of most of Gaul, this title was imperiled upon his
death in 511. Cloviss four sons each received an
equal portion of his holdings and spent the next fifty
years battling for his inheritance. No sooner had it all
fallen into the hands of the surviving son, Chlotar I
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Charles the Great. During this period the Franks reassembled a large portion of the old Roman Empire
Gaul, Italy, and extreme northern Spainand conquered most of Germany as well. In 800 Pope Leo III
crowned Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor, reviving the concept of a Roman Empire and solidify-
Carolingian Empire
Carolingian Empire 768
Charlemagnes acquisitions by 814
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Military Achievement
The Frankish legacy is one of military conquest.
Cloviss accession to the Frankish throne in 482
came at a time in which there was no one overarching
military presence in northern Gaul. Therefore, with
a fairly small contingent of troops, Clovis was able,
in 486, to conquer the Kingdom of Soissons, a subRoman territorial remnant under the command of the
patrician Syagrius (c. 430-486), the last Roman governor in Gaul. By 491 Clovis had absorbed Paris and
campaigned victoriously against Thuringian settlements in eastern Gaul. The incursion of the Alemanni
into Frankish lands in 496 provided Clovis with
opportunities for leadership over all the northern
Franks. He used this leverage to good effect with a
decisive victory that same year over the Alemanni at
Tolbiac, southwest of Cologne. Although Cloviss
subsequent conversion to Christianity somewhat
eroded his Frankish coalition, he was still able to intervene in Burgundy, come to terms with the Alan
laeti in Armorica, in present-day Brittany, and finally
secure his Rhineland borders. In 507 he moved on the
biggest prize: the Visigothic kingdom of southern
Gaul under Alaric II (r. 484-507). In the late spring
and early summer of 507, Cloviss forces crushed the
Visigoths at Vouill, killing Alaric II and opening the
way for the conquest of the south. Clovis took most
of the key cities in the south and the Visigothic royal
treasury but could not take the province of Septimania. He finished his career of expansion from 508
to 511 by incorporating holdout Frankish subgroups
in the north, notably at Cambrai and Cologne.
The sons of Clovis were mostly concerned with
one anothers patrimony, but they did cooperate long
enough to effect the conquest of Burgundy in 534, at
the prompting of the queen mother, Clotilde, herself
a Burgundian princess. After the old queen died in
544, the remaining brothers gave themselves over to
internecine strife. Matters only worsened with the
succession of the four sons of Chlotar in 561. Only an
233
occasional raiding campaign into Lombard, Italy,
broke the monotony of civil war.
After unity was restored under Chlotar II in 613,
two major developments occupied the Frankish military: the extension of control into Austrasia, the territories east of the Rhine, and the growth of the positions of the major domos, or mayors of the palace. By
the 660s, the mayors of Neustria (central France)
and Austrasia were openly influencing the choice of
Frankish kings. In 687 Ppin of Herstal, the Austrasian mayor, was able to defeat his Neustrian rival
and proclaim one king with one mayor for all of
Francia. As he passed this on to his son, Charles
Martel, the Franks found themselves governed by
the mayor much more than the king. This was the situation when the Saracens, under leader 4Abd alRawm3n (died 732), encountered the Franks near
Poitiers on October 25, 732. Charles Martel, the
mayor, formed his men into a defensive infantry position, and the Muslim forces, mostly foot soldiers
with some cavalry, broke on the Frankish shield wall.
In the ensuing years, as the Carolingians made
their rule officially royal, Ppin the Short conquered
central Italy for the Pope, the so-called Donation of
Ppin of 756. Charlemagne subdued northern Italy
in 774 and ultimately Saxony, at the end of a bitter
decades-long campaign. Frankish military power
had won a realm extending from the Spanish March
to the Elbe River and from the plains of Hungary well
into central Italy.
Throughout this period the Franks evolved from a
fragmented Germanic tribe to become the single
strongest military force in Europe. By incorporating
into their fighting forces the strengths of the various
peoples they conquered, the Franks became so powerful that the Pope, when threatened in the 750s with
Lombard invasion and Byzantine control, intentionally sought an alliance with them. By the end of Charlemagnes reign in 814, the Franks were supreme on
the continent. Only the old malaise of a divided empire and the new threat of recurrent Viking raids,
which challenged even the most formidable military
of the era, brought an end to Frankish power. After
918 the local military agreements collectively known
as feudalism would fragment both the land and the
military might of Francia, as it did most of Europe.
234
Turning Points
235
Military Organization
Despite the general impression of early medieval
warfare as undertaken by ignorant armies, the military organization of this period in Francia was quite
complex. When Clovis began his career of conquest
he assembled warbands of Frankish sub-kings, the
armed retainers of Gallo-Roman magnates, descendants of Roman garrisons, armed colonists, or laeti,
from late Imperial days, and barbarian allies. Each
of these components could be expected to contribute their distinctive abilities. For example, the Alan
laeti of Armorica were noted for their cavalry, the
Gallo-Romans for their siegecraft, and the erstwhile
Roman garrison personnel for their archery and missile weapons expertise. The end result would be
an army capable of a combined-arms approach to
war, as well as one that conceivably could be avail-
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238
Medieval Sources
Although sources are not lacking for the period from 482 to 918, many are flawed as reliable
sources of information. A common problem is brevity; for example, the Viking invasions are
frequently dismissed with a terse this year the heathen ravaged. There is also a fundamental
problem of worldview. The sources of the early medieval period more frequently recount facts
than convey causation. They describe what happened, but not why. Despite an abundance of detail about an event, the lack of analysis often hinders a holistic understanding of the event. Information about weapons, tactics, and military matters must be gleaned from chance comments
offhandedly dropped into narratives. It is revealed, for example, that as Count Leudast strode
into church, he wore a mail shirt, had a bow and arrow, a javelin, and a cuirass, but his sword is
mentioned only when, much later in the story, he is called to defend himself. When descriptions
are offered, they can be maddeningly vague.
Nevertheless, the sources available for interpretation do include some gems of Western historiography. They begin with Gregory of Tours (539-594) Historia Francorum (c. 594; The
History of the Franks, 1927), which covers the history of the Franks to 591. A work that provides an overlapping but slightly different view is the Liber Historiae Francorum (1973), translated by Bernard S. Bachrach from an earlier Latin text, as well as The Fourth Book of the
Chronicle of Fredegar (1960), translated by J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, both of which take the
Frankish saga up to the time of the Carolingians. A Lombard viewpoint covering many of the
same events is offered by Paul the Deacons (c. 720-c. 799) Historia Langobardorum (c. 786;
History of the Lombards). Eastern views on Frankish warfare are available in small doses in the
works of the Byzantine historians Agathias (c. 536-c. 582), whose work is contained in Averil
Camerons Agathias (1970), and Procopius of Caesareas (between 490 and 507 and after 562)
Polemon (c. 551; History of the Wars, 1960).
A Byzantine view on the Carolingian military is found in the Tactica of the emperor Leo VI
(866-912), once again not translated into English. The greatest of the Carolingian personalities,
the Holy Roman Emperor Charlemagne, is described in Einhards Life of Charlemagne, translated by Sidney Painter. Because Einhard served in Charlemagnes court, he presumably had
firsthand knowledge of his subjects governance.
A vast and disparate field of supplemental study is that of the lives of the various saints from
239
the period. Once again, it is the accidental rather than the intentional inclusion of material that
repays the search.
Books and Articles
Bachrach, Bernard S. Armies and Politics in the Early Medieval West. Brookfield, Vt.:
Ashgate, 1993.
_______. Merovingian Military Organization, 481-751. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota
Press, 1972.
Bradbury, Jim. The Routledge Companion to Medieval Warfare. New York: Routledge, 2004.
Contamine, Philippe. War in the Middle Ages. Translated by Michael Jones. Oxford, England:
Basil Blackwell, 1984.
Elton, Hugh. Warfare in Roman Europe, A.D. 350-425. Oxford, England: Oxford University
Press, 1996.
Nicolle, David. The Age of Charlemagne. Illustrated by Angus McBride. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 1984.
_______. Carolingian Cavalryman, A.D. 768-987. Illustrated by Wayne Reynolds. Botley,
Oxford, England: Osprey, 2005.
_______. Poitiers, A.D. 732: Charles Martel Turns the Islamic Tide. Illustrated by Graham
Turner. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2008.
Reuter, Timothy. Carolingian and Ottonian Warfare. In Medieval Warfare: A History, edited
by Maurice Keen. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999.
Schoenfeld, Edward J. Charlemagne. In The Readers Companion to Military History, edited
by Robert Cowley and Geoffrey Parker. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
_______. Otto I (the Great). In The Readers Companion to Military History, edited by Robert Cowley and Geoffrey Parker. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
Wood, Ian. The Merovingian Kingdoms, 450-751. New York: Longman, 1994.
Films and Other Media
Charlemagne. Television Miniseries. Acorn Media, 1994.
The Dark Ages. Documentary. History Channel, 2007.
Burnam W. Reynolds
The Anglo-Saxons
Dates: c. 500-1100 c.e.
basic fact of political life, however, was that one freemans power grew through his gaining the fealty of
less powerful freemen. Successful thegns could expand their influence by alliances with other vassals,
through conquest of other thegns, and through intermarriage. This extended to kingship as well. During
the sixth and seventh centuries, a kings claim to his
throne was usually based as much on the patronage
he had built as on patrilineal descent and succession.
In fact, patronage could lead to a more secure claim
in the long run, as fictitious claimants to the throne
were often numerous and having the backing of ones
vassals was a good way to ensure a long reign. It was
not until Alfred the Greats reign over Wessex and
Kent during the tenth century, just a century before
the Norman Conquest, that a monarchy, with the
backing of the Church and the military, brought
about a more unified state.
The sheriff coordinated the links between political divisions known as the kingdom, shire, and hundred. He was responsible for justice and collected
fees and fines for the crown. The shire had its own
system, functioning under inflexible legal procedures. A smaller subdivision, the hundred (a term of
Germanic origin), had military implications: It supported one hundred warriors and their families. King
Canute I the Great (r. 1016-1035), a Viking, reinstated the laws of Edgar (962-963), Anglo-Saxon
laws designed to ease common grievances. Canute
said that non-noble freemen, or peasants (ceorles),
were the basis of Anglo-Saxon society and referred
to them as trustworthy. Even serfs, the lowest element of society, had a wergeld (a monetary value, literally, man worth). Although a serf was totally dependent on his lord, the lord could not, theoretically,
abuse him. The serf could marry, could not be sold,
and had to pay for the land he held subject to his producing food for the nobility.
Political Considerations
With the end of Roman rule over the British Isles occurring with the withdrawal of the remaining legions by order of Emperor Constantine in 410 c.e.,
the local populations of Britain were left to govern themselves until the Angles and Saxons arrived
forty years later. The indigenous people of Britain
were left without recourse to Rome for assistance.
As a result of their successful invasion, the AngloSaxon peoples filled the political and social vacuum left by the implosion of the Roman Empire.
Through their many kingdoms, the Anglo-Saxons
established the political, social, and economic systems referred to collectively as the feudal system.
Rather than being governed by the familiar system
of oligarchy that would develop later, with its single
king and numerous lords, dukes, and earls, AngloSaxon England had a complicated set of sometimes
conflicting allegiances between local manor lords,
known as princips; regional powers, or kings; and
seven overlords (kings of East Anglia, Kent, Lindsey, Mercia, Northumbria, Sussex, and Wessex),
who held the allegiance of the regional kings in
their area.
A freeman, a person who owned land and slaves,
ruled over a small village and could move up in a
number of ways. If freemen gained wealth, they
could become thegns. Thegns could attain higher status through birth (with the laws of primogeniture
passing down the possession of large amounts of
land) but also through service to the regional king.
The companions (gesiths) obtained their wealth and
status by service to the king. In time, this latter group
of royalty became manor lords and other vassals.
These vassals became the landed aristocracy; their
interests were primarily local. They evolved into
magistrates and interpreters of the kings law. The
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The Anglo-Saxons
Military Achievement
Warfare was a constant part of life in Anglo-Saxon
England. Whether it was, as during the fifth through
eighth centuries, warfare between vassals in quests for
greater power, or, as during the ninth through eleventh centuries, warfare against an ever-increasing
threat from the Vikings, in many important ways
warfare defined the parameters of Anglo-Saxon life.
That said, characterizing the military arrangements
of the entire Anglo-Saxon era is impossible, because
it was constantly changing and took different forms
in different shires, vassalages, and kingdoms. Early
vassalage relationships revolved around warriors
seeking out leaders who gave them the greatest chance
for advancement.
Although the Venerable Bede puts the AngloSaxon conquest in 449 c.e., it was actually a process
that began prior to Bedes date and took more than
sixty years before it was completely successful. As
late as 516, Britons defeated the Anglo-Saxons at
Mount Badon, but by that time the Anglo-Saxons
controlled much of the southeastern section of the
island. The changes taking place were not just military, though; in 597, the Anglo-Saxon king of Kent,
thelbert, invited Augustine to establish a monastery at Canterbury, beginning a very quick conversion of the island to the newly introduced religion. It
did not take long for the new religion to impact warfare. In 642, Oswald, the king of Northumbria, fought
Penda, the king of Mercia, in battle at Oswestry,
dying in battle and gaining martyrdom in the eyes
of the Church. However, religion was not always
the cause of conflict. The desire for military power
was always present among the Anglo-Saxon kings.
In 685, Ecgfrith, the king of Northumbria, invaded
Scotland, only to be defeated by an army of Picts under the leadership of his cousin. Henceforth, AngloSaxon power would remain confined to England.
In 789, a Viking attack in Dorset marked the beginning of nearly three hundred years of continual
raids and warfare between the Vikings and AngloSaxons. However, the Anglo-Saxon kings did not
present a united front. In 829, Egbert, king of Wessex, already the most powerful king in southern England, conquered Mercia and forced Northumbria
241
into submission. It would be Egberts grandson, Alfred, who consolidated the monarchy into a single institution over all of England. However, Anglo-Saxon
hegemony was anything but sure. By the late 860s,
the Vikings had stepped up the level of the conflict,
going from small raiding parties to a large invading
army, taking York in Northumbria, and killing both
the kings of Northumbria and East Anglia. By 871,
the Viking army had engaged the armies of Wessex,
under the leadership of their king thelred (or
Ethelred) and his brother Alfred. thelred was killed,
and Alfred became king. In 878, the Vikings took
Wessex, forcing Alfred into hiding for eight years.
By 886, Alfred had signed a treaty with the Vikings
to divide England into two kingdoms, one AngloSaxon and one Viking. Peace between the two groups
lasted until 937, when King thelstan of Wessex retook York from the Vikings. Ten years later, the Vikings attacked Wessex once again. At the mammoth
Battle of Brunanburh, thelstan of Wessex won a
crushing defeat against the invading army.
In 1013, another Viking invasion army landed,
under the command of the Danish leader Sweyn Forkbeard. Taking London, he forced the Anglo-Saxon
king, thelred, to flee. Sweyn died the following
year, seemingly opening the door for thelred to return, but he died two years later. The successor to the
Anglo-Saxon throne, Edmund Ironside, made a truce
with Canute, resulting in a divided kingdom again.
However, Edmund died shortly thereafter, leaving
Canute as king of all England. In 1042, Edward the
Confessor became king of England, beginning a period of increasing Norman influence.
When Edward died in January, 1066, the succession was in question. Harold Godwinson Harold,
earl of Wessex, became king (Harold II) but faced
claims from William, duke of Normandy, and Harold
Hardrada, king of Norway. In September, 1066, Harold Hardrada invaded England, defeating Harold IIs
forces at the Battle of Fulford Gate, taking York, but
later that month Harold II killed Harold Hardrada at
the Battle of Stamford Bridge, sending his army back
to Norway. While Harold II was dealing with Harold
Hardrada in the north, William of Normandy landed
on the southern coast of the country, setting the stage
for the cataclysmic Battle of Hastings. On October
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Military Organization
After the beginning of the ninth century, the threat of invasion by the
Vikings was an increasing reality
for Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Military service had always been a part
The Anglo-Saxons
of the vassalage arrangement, but its particular forms
varied greatly. By the beginning of the Viking raids,
the forms of military service became more standard.
Although there were still professional soldiers in service of the king and a good number of mercenaries,
the basic military unit became the fyrd, or army,
which was constituted by drawing one man for each
small-to-medium-sized unit of land. The particular
arrangements were set out in the land-grant agreements that a thegn would have with his sponsoring
lord, but normally each thegn was required to provide
one fyrdsman.
Later, naval service was introduced on a similar
basis. Larger areas, called ship-sokes, were required
to provide sixty sokesmen, or warrior seamen, and to
pay for the construction and maintenance of a warship. During peacetime, fyrdsmen had to serve four
months out of the year in order to keep a sizable military force on hand in case of raids and to act as a police force. By the early eleventh century, Canute I
had created a small, elite band of soldiers called
huscarls. Although their relationship was still based
on the feudal obligation, these professional soldiers
lived at the kings court and received pay for their
services. Huscarls were well armed and heavily armored. As they constituted a small standing army,
huscarls continued in service during peacetime, performing nonmilitary duties such as collecting taxes
and witnessing royal charters.
243
Ancient Sources
There are a large number of primary sources on Anglo-Saxon England, most prominently
the Venerable Bedes widely published Ecclesiastical History of the English People (731; English translation, 1723).
In addition, the Kntlinga saga details Canutes invasion of England in 1015-1016. Assers
Vita lfredi regis Angul Saxonum (893; Assers Life of King Alfred, 1906) and Annales
Cambriae (c. 1200; Annales Cambriae (The Annals of Wales) in The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle,
1912) cover wide swaths of life in Anglo-Saxon England, which largely revolved around warfare. The seventy-three-line poem The Battle of Brunanburh, which details the 937 English
victory under King thelstan over a Norse-Celtic army, is contained in the Anglo-Saxon
Chronicle, held at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.
Books and Articles
Campbell, James. The Anglo-Saxon. New York: Penguin Press, 1991.
Giles, J. A. Bedes Ecclesiastical History of England. Whitefish, Mont.: Kessinger, 2007.
244
The Lombards
Dates: c. 500-1100 c.e.
Political Considerations
Taking their name from the Latin, Langobardi, the
Lombards included a series of Germanic tribes that
originated in northern Europe and moved south, invading Italy in 568 and establishing the kingdom of
Italy from 568 until 774, when they were overwhelmed by the Franks. The name subsequently became associated with the region of Lombardy in
modern-day northern Italy.
The origins of the Lombards are described in the
seventh century book Origo gentis Langobardorum
(seventh century; origin of the Lombard people),
which was used by the eighth century writer known
as Paul the Deacon for his Historia gentis Langobardorum (after 796; History of the Langobards,
1907). These books state that the Lombards originated in parts of southern Scandinaviaas is seen in
the nature of their godsbut owing to the pressure of
the population on scarce land, they moved south into
modern-day Germany. The Greek geographer Strabo
(64 or 63 b.c.e.-after 23 c.e.) noted that they were living near the mouth of the Albis River (River Elbe),
which is borne out by archaeological evidence.
Military Achievement
246
with a spike (umbo) on itwas used to take blows
from the opponent and was good for combat in which
the numbers were evenly matched or the Lombards
were more numerous than their enemy. In close combat, or when the Lombards were outnumbered, their
shields were not as good as the Roman shields, which
protected more of those who bore them.
The use of horses by the Lombards is an issue debated by historians, with the Lombard law issued by
King Aistulf stating that all wealthy Lombard warriors should have a horse, and those who were unable
to afford a horse should be able to use a bow and arrow. The Ostrogoths were known to deploy dismounted archers, and this was probably the case with
the Lombards as well.
As to horses, certainly the royal bodyguards and
retainers had their own horses, and when fighting the
Franks the Lombards used horses more often in battles. In May, 2008, archaeologists working on a sixth
century site at Testona, near Turin, uncovered the
grave of a twenty-five-year-old Lombard warrior
who had been buried with his horse. The skeleton of a
hunting dog was also found nearby. Although there
was heavy reliance on horses, it seems that, like
the Anglo-Saxons, the Lombards used their horses
largely for getting to battlefields and around battlefields, with much of the fighting taking place on foot,
although some fighting on horseback was inevitable.
Certainly a surviving letter from Lupus of Ferrires to
Bishop Pardulus of Lyon in 849 noted that the writer
was unable to carry out his duties as an infantryman
and cavalryman, suggesting that Lombard fighters
were trained in fighting both on foot and on horseback.
Although chiefs wore some armor (often only
breastplates), for much of their period in Italy the
Lombards, who relied heavily on their speed and mobility on the battlefield, did not do so. However, a
gilded copper repouss helmet plaque from the late
sixth century depicting King Agilulf does show
guards to a king wearing armor in platespossibly
iron or leather, and with helmets that have plumes on
their tops. Some carvings of Lombard civilians show
them wearing tunics with belts, in the Roman fashion, but it appears that warriors wore much heavier
tunics, sometimes protected by leather pads, and also
trousers that were tied up with leggings.
Military Organization
Regarding the military organization of the Lombards, it is known that certain families owed their
position in society to their being related to the bodyguards of the king; these bodyguards were well trained
and fought as a cohesive unit in small engagements.
By the eleventh century, the men in this unit were
often dressed in chain mail and were influenced in
their military planning by their battles with the Normans.
In larger battles the Lombards relied on numbers
of less well-armed men drawn from villages, either as
volunteers or as conscripts. In the periods of the barbarian invasions, these warriors were involved in
regular fighting and could form themselves into effective fighting units with ease. As time progressed,
however, and the Lombards came to control much of
Italy, their military organization became more relaxed; this is what allowed them to be overwhelmed
so easily by the Franks.
The Lombards
247
Medieval Sources
There are a number of sources on the Lombards, the most well known being that by Paul the
Deacon, Historia gentis Langobardorum, which in turn drew heavily on the Origo gentis
Langobardorum from the seventh century. Other information comes from a range of contemporary accounts, such as that in the Codex Gothanus, which dates from about 830. Further descriptions come from Frankish, Norman, and other accounts by the Lombards adversaries.
Books and Articles
Christie, Neil. The Lombards: The Ancient Longobards. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 1995.
Halsall, Guy. Warfare and Society in the Barbarian West, 450-900. London: Taylor and Francis, 2003.
Nicolle, David. Italian Medieval Armies, 1000-1300. New York: Osprey, 2002.
Pohl, Walter, ed. Kingdoms of the Empire: The Integration of Barbarians in Late Antiquity.
Leiden, Netherlands: E. J. Brill, 1997.
Films and Other Media
Barbarians 2: Lombards. Documentary. History Channel, 2007.
Justin Corfield
The Magyars
Dates: c. 500-1100 c.e.
Political Considerations
Military Achievement
The Magyars established themselves within the Carpathian basin during the Conquest, and from there
they staged raids across western and southeastern
Europe. After the civil wars, the rpds under Stephen gained supremacy over the other tribes and created a Western-oriented kingdom. Stephens victory
over the other Magyar tribes fashioned a viable state
that eventually became fully integrated into Europe.
The Magyars conducted raids against Bavaria,
Moravia, and Bulgaria while they still lived east of
the Danube in the 880s and 890s. The Carpathian
basin was, therefore, not unknown to them. In 895896, the Magyars came under attack by a neighboring
nomadic group called the Pechenegs. By 899, the
Magyars began the first of the great raids on western
Europe when Arnulf of Carinthia paid them to conduct raids on his enemies in northern Italy. With each
year, the Magyars raided farther into western Europe,
crossing the Rhine for the first time in 911 and raiding Burgundy in 913. Almost yearly raids sent the
Magyars as far as the Iberian Peninsula, where in 942
they attacked both Andalusia and Galicia. The period
of raids came to an end, in part, because of two significant defeats inflicted on the Hungarians. In 955, a
Magyar army crossing Bavaria was destroyed by
Otto I at Augsburg, and in 970, a Magyar army suffered an equally significant loss to the combined Bulgarian and Byzantine army at Arcadiopolis.
Following these defeats came a series of civil wars
in which the descendants of rpds established primacy over the other Magyar tribes. The main actors
in the rise of the rpds were Prince Gza (died 997)
and his son Stephen, or Istvn, who was crowned
king of Hungary in 1001. Stephen had married
Gisella, the daughter of the duke of Bavaria, and sev248
The Magyars
eral German knights in her entourage lent their service to the rising Stephen. After Stephen Is death in
1038, the new kingdom underwent a series of wars
for the throne. During the course of these wars, the
German emperor invaded three separate times in attempts to put his protg on the throne. The kingdom
withstood the crisis, but German intervention was a
continuing threat until 1077, when Lszl I (r. 10771095) came to power. A stabilization of the kingdom
occurred under Lszl, who fended off an invasion
from the east by the nomadic Cumans. Lszl also
added Croatia to the crown through conquest in 1091.
249
recurved bow had maximum effective ranges of 500600 feet (150-200 meters).
Though by far the most important, the bow and arrow were not the only weapons used by the Magyars.
For close combat, a short lance appears to have been
common, and there is some evidence of the use of
mace and ax. The Magyars also used the slightly
curved single-edged saber, though its presence seems
to have been limited to the more prominent members
of society. In the tenth century the saber was replaced
among the Magyar elite by the double-edged sword.
As for defensive armor, most warriors wore only
leather armor, although aristocrats covered the leather
with either bone or iron plate.
Military Organization
The organization of the Magyar military experienced
significant transformation during the time period in
question. These changes were directly the results of
the transition of Hungarian society to one based on
landownership and the development of a Westernstyle monarchy. Before the rise of the rpd Dynasty, the Hungarians were organized into a tribal alliance of seven tribes. Some historians have held that
the army consisted of the retinues of the tribal and
clan leaders and that the common freeman would
therefore not have participated in warfare. However,
consensus now generally holds that the population
was divided between free and servile, and all free
males (the overwhelming majority) would take part
in war. The Hungarian army during the era of the
tribal alliance was divided into units of tens, hundreds, thousands, and tens of thousands. It is difficult
to determine how many fighters there were among
the Magyar tribes, but scholars have estimated their
numbers to be approximately twenty thousand at the
time of the Conquest.
The tenth and eleventh centuries saw a great transformation in the military system of the Hungarians.
First Gza, then his son, Stephen, used foreign immigrant knights as their retinue. These German and Italian knights formed the elite units in the army and
were completely separate from the native, Magyar
units, which were still essentially mounted archers.
250
Vi k i n g s
Novgorod
Scotland
Lindisfarne
Ireland
England
Russia
Saxony
Atlantic
Rouen
Normandy
Ocean
Bavaria
Magyars
Burgundy
Bordeaux
Lo m
Provence
rdy
ba
Bla
Iberian
Peninsula
Rome
ck S e a
Constantinople
Monte
Cassino
Crdoba
Muslims
= Vikings
= Muslims
= Magyars (Hungarians)
Me
dite
rrane
an
Sea
The Magyars
this way they became subjects of their new lords and
excluded from the army. Some of the warriors, however, were settled on the castle lands and continued to
serve in the army under the command of their ispn.
251
ple of the use of the feigned retreat by the Magyars.
After a failed invasion of Hungary, the Bavarians
sought refuge behind defensive earthworks. The Magyars drew them from behind their defenses by simulating a retreat, and the Bavarians soon found themselves surrounded by other Hungarian forces that had
been well hidden and were quickly destroyed. Similarly, the Magyars defeated a Bulgarian-Byzantine
coalition in 934 when a feigned retreat allowed the
Hungarians to surround and destroy the Byzantine
heavy cavalry. However, the feigned retreat was successful only if the enemy forces lost battle discipline
while pursuing the apparently retreating Magyars. At
the Battle of Merseburg (933), neither volleys of arrows nor feigned retreat was successful in breaking
the ranks of the Bavarian forces, and the Magyars
quickly withdrew from the battlefield rather than risk
combat with the still-closed ranks of the Bavarians.
The military reforms of Stephen took time to complete, and the Hungarian military was not fully Westernized until the thirteenth century. As a result, Hungarian tactics frequently relied on the mounted archer
and feigned retreat through the eleventh century. For
example, it seems likely that the Magyar tribal leader
Ajtony and his army fell victim to the tactics of
feigned retreat and encirclement by Stephens forces
at Nagysz in 1008.
Medieval Sources
The main literary sources regarding the pre-Conquest Magyar life and military affairs come
from Muslim geographers or from Byzantine authors commenting on the steppe peoples. Unfortunately, several of the key works regarding the Magyars still await translation into English.
The earliest Muslim source is the work of the Persian geographer Ahmad al-Jayh3ni, who
served in the Saminid court in the tenth century. Jayh3nis work is no longer extant, but portions
of it can be found in Ibn-Rustahs Kit3b al-al3q al-nafisah (c. 903-913; French translation, Ibn
Rusteh: Les Atours prcieux, 1955). Portions of Jayh3nis work are also found in that of the later
Persian geographer Gardizi. The relevant portions of Gardizis Zayn al-akhb3r (c. 1050-1053)
have been translated by Arsenio P. Martinez in Gardizis Two Chapters on the Turks, which appeared in the journal Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi in 1982. Gardizi described the Magyars as
conducting frequent raids against neighbors primarily to obtain slaves to sell to the Byzantines.
Byzantine authors provide the most detailed descriptions of Magyar warfare. Unfortunately,
the relevant portions of the most important work, Leo VI the Wises Tactica (c. 895-908;
tactics), has yet to be translated into English. Constantine VII Porphyrogenituss De
administrando imperio (c. 948-952; On the Administration of the Empire, 1967) described the
political associations of the Magyars, whom Constantine termed Turkos.
252
The Vikings
Dates: c. 700-1066 c.e.
Denmark, the lands surrounding the Baltic Sea that
provided entry to the waterways that led to Europe
and Arab lands. In 1066 the Norwegian king Harold III Hardrada was defeated at Stamford Bridge,
leading to the Norwegian consolidation of their gains
and the end of Viking expansion.
Vikings extorted and stole and became Normans
and Irish and English and Byzantines. In the North
Atlantic they extended the European frontier. They
influenced languages, cultures, and political institutions. They revitalized towns and commerce, making
commercial centers of York, Kiev, and other towns.
Political Considerations
The Vikings were Swedish and Danish/Norwegian.
Viking homelands were made up of kingdoms divided into districts. Farmers, merchants, the rich, and
the king all theoretically had equal voices in the
thing, a political assembly, and in the hearing of land
disputes and criminal cases. In reality, wealth and
power led to greater influence in gatherings with few
formal procedures. Sometimes the only justice was
the feud or trial by ordeal. When justice seemed impossible, slighted merchants could take matters into
their own hands.
Viken was an area located near Oslofjord, and the
Vikingar were merchants disgruntled by tariffs levied by their rulers on goods passing across Danish
waters. Rather than acknowledge their subordinate
status, they went to sea as traders. Swedes sailed to
Russia, the Islamic Caliphate, and Byzantium. Danes
and Norwegians sailed to Iceland, Greenland, North
America, and Europe.
Despite Charlemagnes establishment of the Carolingian Empire, European kingdoms were weak and
disunited by feuds and rivalriesand ripe for exploitation. The modern nation-state was centuries away,
and a kingdom often consisted of a town and however much of the hinterland the sovereign could hold.
Besieged at Paris, Frankish king Charles III (the Simple) gave Normandy to the Viking Rollo on condition
that Rollo become Christian. The Scandinavians were
absorbed by the dominant French culture.
Danish Vikings ruled half of England from late in
the ninth century into the eleventh century. In the
Danelaw, Scandinavian lords governed under Danish law. By 1014 England was virtually under Danish
rule. Knud (also Knut or Canute), known as Canute
the Great, became English king in 1016, marrying
Ethelred IIs widow as well. By 1033 Vikings controlled England, Normandy, southern Sweden, and
Military Achievement
The first Viking raid in Britain was at Lindisfarne in
793. Within five years thereafter, the Vikings had
raided in Northumbria, Wales, Ireland, the Isle of
Man, the Isle of Iona, and islands off Frances
Aquitaine. Thus began a 250-year reign that terrorized Europeans, ending the period between the sixth
and eighth centuries when Europeans experienced
little external invasion and leaving Europe at the conclusion a more cohesive area with a broader awareness of a larger world.
Vikings had been for the most part farmers and
traders. When they began trading in Europe they noticed that many European locations were wealthy and
poorly defended, and by the eighth century trade was
secondary for the Vikings, done only if the Europeans were too well armed for the Vikings to plunder
with impunity. The eighth century was also a time of
European disarray, a consequence of the Fall of
Rome in the fifth century, and the Carolingian Empire was powerful in France and Germany but not in
the rest of Europe, where Charlemagne lacked the
numbers to resist the Vikings. Between 790 and 840
the Vikings used the advantage of the shallow draft
253
254
SCOTLAND
North
JUTLAND
Sea
DENMARK
IA
BR
M
HU
RT
NO
IRELAND
Dublin
Limerick
York
Hamburg
MERCIA
EAST
ANGLIA
London
WESSEX
Winchester
English Channel
Utrecht
FLANDERS
Boulogne
Paris
NORMANDY
BRITTANY
Atlantic
Ocean
F
of their longships to strike coastal towns and monasteries quickly, looting and departing before the locals
could react. They hit coastal England and France
first, moving along the rivers on later forays.
Between 841 and 875 the raids became more frequent, faster, larger, and more intense. From initial
forays of three ships they grew to forays of more than
three hundred ships at a time, and the Vikings plundered, killed, enslaved, and burned before departing.
In 843 they wintered on foreign soil for the first time,
settling in Aquitaine and never leaving it. The Danish
Great Army in East Anglia established winter quarters in 873-874.
I S
I R
The Vikings
255
Wealthy Viking warriors wore expensive chainmail hauberks or byrnies, tunics reaching below the
waist; these were worn over heavy cloth padding.
Average fighters wore leather armor, metal plates attached to leather or cloth backing, or padded leather
shirts topped by iron breastplates. Reindeer hide was
more effective than mail as armor.
The helmets Vikings wore were made of iron,
some of a solid piece hammered into a cone or bowl
shape, others of various pieces of iron riveted or tied
together with leather. The nosepieces were of iron or
leather, and some face guards protected the eyes.
Cheek guards were uncommon. Helmets were most
likely worn only by the leaders, because they were
extremely hard to make; average fighters wore hide
caps. Horned helmets were not part of the Viking armory because such headgear would be unbalanced
and heavy in battle while offering no protection.
Horned helmets probably were used ceremonially by
pre-Viking chieftains.
The typical Viking shield was circular, about three
feet across. It was wooden, with a central hole for an
iron handgrip riveted to the back of the shield boards.
An iron boss over the hole protected the hand. Leather
covered the shield, and the rim was bound with either
leather or metal. Some shields were painted in simple
patterns or with scenes of heroes and moments from
Turning Points
Vikings sack Lindisfarne Abbey in northern England.
Vikings sack Dorestadt and Utrecht.
Charles the Bald, king of the Franks, pays Vikings money to
retreat.
Last Viking siege of Paris.
The Vikings suffer a rare defeat at Louvain.
Rollo receives county of Normandy from the French king.
Vikings settle Iceland.
English expel the last Viking king from York.
Danish king Sweyn I Forkbeard defeats English king
Ethelred I, forcing him into exile.
Sweyns son Canute rules both England and Denmark.
Norwegian king Harold Hardrada is defeated at Stamford
Bridge in England; William of Normandy defeats English
at Hastings.
256
Military Organization
The early Viking formation was the hird (a medieval
term for hearth), the lords retinue or household or
court, which consisted of the men who lived in the
lords domicile and had sworn loyalty to himin effect, his knights. They were often countrymen attracted by the reputation of the lord for generosity or
bravery, but some were more mercenary, professionals in search of the best opportunity for gain. By the
thirteenth century the hird developed ranks comparable to the continental squire, man-at-arms, and
knight. The hird in time of war served as the core of
the army.
The country was divided into units called hafna,
each of which had to provide a mark of gold toward
the arming and manning of a ship. The ship would
have a crew of forty to sixty lithsmen, each supplied
with a spear, a helmet, and a shield. Each ship had a
single mail shirt, and bows with arrows were provided at one per six benches. There may have been a
rotation in service similar to that of the Saxon fyrd,
because full-time duty would have been onerous on
the estates, even with the professionals in the retinue.
During the eleventh century, the Viking military
became more professional. In 1012, during the attack
of Sweyn I and Canute against England, forty-five
ships separated from Sweyns fleet and promised to
The Vikings
257
An artists depiction of a tenth century Viking raid carried out in Norse longboats.
258
Medieval Sources
Medieval Scandinavia lacked the literary tradition of the Islamic and Christian areas. Contemporary sources on the Vikings are mostly Anglo-Saxon or Frankish cautionary tales written
between the thirteenth and fifteenth centuries. They include chronicles, sagas, skaldic epics,
laws, and runic inscriptions. Runic inscriptions are the exception, being written at the time of
events they describe. They are normally only a few lines long, and they are scattered both geographically and chronologically. Runic sticks are few, but rune stones are more common, with
140 in Denmark.
The other types of source are all foreign. Most of them are written in Latin in the context of a
military or religious conflict with the Vikings. Annals are the chronological yearbooks written
by a countrys clerics about internal and foreign policy. Among them are the Annals of the
Frankish Empire, which reports that in 808 Godfred, king of the Danes, fortified his southern
border in defense against Emperor Charlemagne of the Frankish Empire. The Annla Uladh
(entries from 431 to 1540; Annals of Ulster, 1895) of January, 840, mention the first foray by the
Vikings: They plundered and took bishops, priests, and scholars captive, putting others to
death. These annals date from the fifteenth century, but scholars regard them as reliable reports
of the Viking activity in the Christian world during their era.
Also important is the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, a collection of documents on Anglo-Saxon
England to 1154. Some are secondary sources based on legend, but there are also firsthand accounts of Viking conquest and plundering not covered elsewhere. Povest vremennykh let (The
Russian Primary Chronicle, 1930) dates from the eleventh century to the twelfth century.
Travelogues and biographies usually mention the Vikings only in passing. Chronicon
Roskildense (c. 1138-1140; Roskilde chronicle) and Gesta Danorum (1514; The History of the
Danes, 1894, 1980-1981), the latter by Saxo Grammaticus, are the two oldest histories of Denmark. Both are modeled on the work of Adam of Bremen, whose Gesta Hammaburgensis
ecclesiae pontificum (c. 1075; History of the Archbishops of Hamburg-Bremen, 1959) contains,
in its fourth book, Description of the Islands in the North, an account from Danish king Sweyn
II, making it an important source for the period from 870 to 1080. The biography of Saint
Ansgar deals with his missionary work in Denmark and Sweden in the ninth century. Arab travelogues include that of Ahmad ibn Fadlan, who met the Vikings on the Volga River in the tenth
century. The Spanish Arab Ibn-Rustah recorded a tenth century visit to Hedeby in Kit3b alal3q al-nafisah (c. 903-913; French translation, Ibn Rusteh: Les Atours prcieux, 1955). Other
travelers who wrote about the Vikings include Ohtere and Wulfstan.
Sagas are high medieval Icelandic tales about Norse notables. They provide information
about ships, fleet sizes, and other elements of Viking society. Snorri Sturlusons Heimskringla
(c. 1230-1235; English translation, 1844) is the progenitor of the Scandinavian skaldic (bardic)
epics.
Occasional medieval legal texts have laws traceable back to the Viking era. Among them is
The Vikings
259
the Gulatinglov, the model for Icelandic law. It dates from before 930 but was written in the
twelfth or thirteenth century.
Books and Articles
Durham, Keith. Viking Longship. New York: Osprey, 2002.
Durham, Keith, Mark Harrison, and Magnus Magnusson. The Vikings: Voyagers of Discovery
and Plunder. New York: Osprey, 2008.
Heath, Ian. The Vikings. New York: Osprey, 1985.
Santosuosso, Antonio. Barbarians, Marauders, and Infidels: The Ways of Medieval Warfare.
Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 2004.
Siddom, J. K. Viking Weapons and Warfare. Stroud, Gloucestershire, England: Tempus, 2003.
Sprague, Martina. Norse Warfare: The Unconventional Battle Strategies of the Ancient Vikings.
Films and Other Media
Erik the Viking. Feature film. KB Erik the Viking, 1989.
Ivanhoe. Feature film. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1952.
The Long Ships. Feature film. Avala Film, 1964.
The Norseman. Feature film. Charles B. Pierce Film Productions, 1978.
Prince Valiant. Feature film. Constantin Film Produktion, 1997.
Prince Valiant. Feature film. Twentieth Century-Fox, 1954.
The Thirteenth Warrior. Feature film. Touchstone, 1999.
The Vikings. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service/WGBH, 2000.
The Vikings. Feature film. Brynaprod, 1958.
The War Lord. Feature film. Court Productions, 1965.
Warrior Challenge: Vikings. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service/Thirteen/WNET New
York, 2003.
John H. Barnhill
Armies of Christendom
and the Age of Chivalry
Dates: c. 918-1500 c.e.
approach someone (a lord) capable of protecting
them because of his already collected followers. In
officially entering this lords entourage, the vassals
would swear faithfulness or fealty to that lord. The
price of protection for the vassal was his own service
in the lords retinue, or mesne, as it was later called.
Other obligations later became standard, but military
service was the original and fundamental one. These
early vassals depended on the lord for upkeep, and in
the absence of a money economy, the institution of
the fief evolved. Usually in the form of land, the fief
provided the economic component of feudal relationships; with it, the vassal had the wherewithal to
report with all the panoply of war: horse, armor,
weapons, and supplies for campaign.
Military historians have recognized for some time
that feudalism did not accurately describe all the
means whereby medieval armies came together. The
idea of the nation-at-arms still compelled many to
answer a summons. This was as true of the AngloSaxon fyrd before 1066 as it would be 150 years later
when King John (1166-1216) of England summoned
even the most recently liberated serfs to repel French
invaders. On the continent, King Louis VI (10811137) in 1124 gathered more of his vassals together
to face a German attack than he had ever commanded
as a feudal lord. In addition, money was never truly
absent; its role in recruiting and maintaining armies
continued throughout the High Middle Ages. Thus,
military historians see less incongruity than do legal
historians in the use and prevalence of contracts to
engage soldiers in the late medieval period.
It would be difficult to overstate the reciprocal influences on each other of the Church and medieval
warfare. At first, though, the Church saw little success in its efforts to curtail the violence of its members. Before the year 1000, it had already proposed
Political Considerations
Most historians agree that warfare in the Middle
Ages cannot be studied in isolation. By its very definition, warorganized violence by groups against
other groupsreflects the societies involved and,
in turn, shapes them. This dynamic was especially
true in the high medieval period, when military needs
fueled administrative developments in finance, organization, recruitment, supply, and the tools of government itself. Before then, however, the very deterioration of such structures would limit the forms that
warfare could take. Larger cultural issues would likewise play off of, and be played upon, by war. The
Christian Church spent centuries trying to restrain or
redirect the violence of its newest converts, the Germanic peoples. In time, however, the Church would
find itself inextricably entangled in violent endeavors. On the secular side, the cult of chivalry developed first as the expression of a new, knightly identity; once in place, this new ethos sometimes had its
own power to shape the contours of battle.
Although scholarly ideas about its dominance and
character are undergoing continual revision, the network of feudal relations that lay across most of Europe in this period was the hallmark of medieval politics and war. In summary, these arrangements were
coming into being even during the reign of Charlemagne (r. 768-814), but their evolution was speeded
by the breakup of his empire and of effective central government, coupled with foreign invasions by
Vikings and Magyars. By the end of the first millennium, the Western European populations overwhelming need for protection had caused feudalism
to be cobbled together in varying ways across the former Carolingian lands. The typical model of feudalism appeared thus: Men in need (vassals) would
(Continued p. 262)
260
Holstein
Fr
Brandenburg
xo
Meissen
Thuringia
Bohemia
nc o
Als
ace
ra
a
ni
nube River
a
av
Dan
a
Styria
Carinthia
Carniola
Verona
dy
Hungary
Milan
Pavia
Po R i v e r Venice
Lombardy
Parma
Genoa
Bologna
Corsica
Florence
Pisa
Tuscany
l
pa e s
Pa at
St
Rome
Serbia
Apulia
Naples
Sardinia
M e d i t e r r a
n e a n
Salerno
Kingdom
of the
Two Sicilies
S e a
Palermo
By
z
E m anti
p i r ne
e
un
Burg
ri
Austria
Vienna
ube Ri ver
Da
Swabia
France
Moravia
Ratisbon
i
ra
Cologne
Lor
Poland
ny
ne
Riv
ish
el
ine
gl
nn
Sa
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En
a
Ch
P o m e r a ni a
a
isi
262
the idea of the Truce of God. The Truce endeavored
to set certain days aside as inappropriate for any violence: Days of religious significance obviously dominated this agenda, thereby officially making large
parts of the yearly calendar off-limits for warfare.
The Peace of God quickly followed, which insisted
that certain groups, primarily the unarmed populace
such as clergy, women, children, and peasants, were
also off-limits. Although both movements had limited success, constant appeals indicate how often
they were violated by combatants. Such calls on the
conscience of medieval warriors went unheard for
the most part, but the many gifts to the church by soldiers testify to the soldiers uneasiness about their
profession.
When Pope Urban II (c. 1042-1099) preached in
1095 that Europes knights could actually earn redemption instead of condemnation by going on armed
pilgrimage to Jerusalem, he struck a more responsive
chord than he had anticipated. The success of the
First Crusade (1095-1099) guaranteed that generations of Europes knights would take up the cross
both as penance for their violent misdeeds and as a
novel continuance of their profession. The Church
would rail against Christians who killed Christians in
wars, including even those simulations of war, tournaments, which were condemned in numerous councils. Against infidels and heretics, however, warfare
was deemed more than licit; it was divinely approved. As the later Crusades not only failed to
achieve similar success but also went terribly awry,
as did the Fourth Crusade (1198-1204) at Constantinople, the Church found its military involvement
more problematic. The Church got further involved
in the development of the knightly caste, as it sanctioned some of the trappings of chivalry. The vigils
that preceded formal dubbing ceremonies as well as
the oaths taken by new knights seemed to confirm
that the Church had indeed domesticated its most
troublesome sons. Such an appearance was deceptive, though, because chivalry always remained more
a secular creation than an ecclesiastical one.
In fact it ought to be remembered that chivalry
was the province not only of a secular group but also
of a knightly caste that was not alone on Christendoms battlefields. In the early 1100s writers such as
Military Achievement
The conviction that the Middle Ages was above all
the Age of Cavalry is primarily a legacy of the great
military historians of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. For them, this was the military contribution, and a questionable one at that, of the Middle
Ages to history. The British historian Sir Charles
Oman (1860-1946) wrote of the complete superiority of heavy cavalry and drew a compelling picture
of the massed charge of horsemen with their couched
lances. Although this image continues to be propagated in film and general histories, even very good
ones, military historians have revised their view of
the role of heavy cavalry to one of more limited importance. Some suggested that the end of cavalrys
dominance originally seemed to lie in the successes
of the Swiss pikemen of the 1300s. Others focused
on the Hundred Years War (1337-1453), in which
the longbow supposedly played the more decisive
role. This interpretation, however, has since evolved
to place more emphasis on the combined use of
forces by the English to cripple the French charge.
Other historians credit the Flemish infantry, who
withstood the French in the opening years of the
1300s. The motion picture Braveheart (1995), even
though it transposed the actions of Bannockburn
(1314) and Stirling Bridge (1297), validated, with
some dramatic license, those who credit the Scots
with teaching the English the value of foot soldiers.
263
state was replacing the feudal system, permanent
armies appeared by the 1470s, and Charles VIIIs
(r. 1483-1498) invasion of Italy in 1494 showed that
old styles of warfare no longer applied against national armies wielding powerful gunpowder weapons.
264
Sea
Ri
se
eu
Arras (1435)
R
Channel
se
in
Mo
Se
ll
Crcy (1346)
Paris
Brtigny (1360)
Riv
er
Troyes (1420)
Orlans
(1428-1429)
Loire
River
Poitiers (1356)
Bay
of
Biscay
Ga
ro
nn
English victories
French victories
iv
er
r
ve
iv
English
in
Sluys (1340)
Calais (1347)
Agincourt (1415)
Rh
ver
London
er
265
began utilizing pikes in regular formations that
achieved repeated victories against cavalry. Other alterations of the spear resulted from combinations:
spear and ax became the halberd; the billhook had a
curved blade on the side of a lance.
There was no shortage of other handheld weapons. The Vikings often used axes in battle, as did the
Anglo-Saxons. The Bayeux tapestry may show one
of the earliest representations of a mace, which had
by the twelfth century become a popular weapon
in tournament melees and on the battlefield. The
dagger, like the sword, evolved in form to whatever
shape was most effective at penetrating the weak
points of armor.
Armies of the High Middle Ages understood the
value of missile weapons and relied upon a variety of
them. Slings were still used as late as the thirteenth
century, especially in the form of staff slings, which
propelled the missile more forcefully. For the early
part of the period, short bows and composite, or Turkish, bows predominated. The latter were adopted by
Christians from their Muslim foes, particularly in
Spain, where the Christians even went so far as to
emulate Muslims in the use of horse archers. In the
Crusader kingdoms, warriors turned to native horse
archers willing to fight for their new masters. The
composite bow was less popular to the northwest,
perhaps because the wetter climate affected the glue
that held the bows together. Short bows were used
by the Normans, including William the Conqueror
(c. 1027-1087), who saw no dishonor in personally
using the weapon. William took a great many archers
with him to England, where they proved their worth
by the attrition they caused in the formations of Harold II (c. 1022-1066).
The best-known bow of the Middle Ages is the
Welsh longbow. Averaging 1.8 meter in length, with
an exterior strip of sapwood and an interior strip of
heartwood to increase its spring, the longbow was
able to propel cloth-yard shafts from 365 to 400
meters. At 200 meters, the longbows arrows could
penetrate chain mail. After facing this formidable
weapon in the thirteenth century, the English reacted
by recruiting large numbers of Welshmen proficient
with the bow to serve in their continental armies.
The longbow had its heyday during the Hundred
266
Years War, playing a large role in British victories at
the Battles of Crcy (1346), Poitiers (1356), and
Agincourt (1415). However, the longbow was one
weapon among several that the English used wisely
in conjunction with others to assure victory. The
longbows use continued with English armies until
the fifteenth century, when the government simply
found itself unable to ensure that there were enough
bows, arrows, and archers to fill the usual complements.
The counterpart of the longbow was the crossbow,
which was known throughout the period but grew in
usage as siege warfare became a larger component
of campaigning. From that function, it developed
also into a weapon of field armies. Its potential for
lethality resulted in official bans of its use by the
Church in the late eleventh century and 1139. The repeated bans also testify to the fact that medieval soldiers did not give up such a weapon easily. After
1200, the Church finally approved the crossbows
use against non-Christians. Nonetheless, Christians
often used it against other Christians. English king
Richard I (1157-1199) was so fond of using crossbows that he was erroneously credited with introducing the weapons to the French. Experimenters improved the bow across the Middle Ages, constantly
increasing its power and range while attempting to
decrease the time necessary for reloading. The original wooden bow and stock became a composite bow
by the 1200s and would be made entirely of steel by
the 1400s. Stirrups, ratchets, and levers were all
added to ease the task of drawing the bows string
back to the trigger. Load times varied between 12 and
35 seconds, but the tremendous power was sufficient
to puncture even the plate armor of the later Middle
Ages. The advantages of the crossbow, power combined with a low level of training necessary for accuracy, would be the same ingredients that in the later
fifteenth century would enable the gun to displace the
crossbow on the battlefield.
Apart from personal weapons, successful armies
also employed a siege train, a collection of raw materials, prefabricated weapons, and personnel who could
build and operate such pregunpowder artillery. The
importance of such weapons is reflected in the complaint that the so-called artists of war, knights, had
267
tinent in the mid-1300s. As revenues increased,
princes also began to outfit notable units within their
forces; thus, French kings Charles VII (1403-1461)
and Louis XI (1423-1483) contributed to the distinctiveness of their Scots Archers in the fifteenth century. The dukes of Burgundy would do likewise before their finances and power failed.
A turning point in medieval warfare came with the
widespread adoption of gunpowder weapons. The
first known recipe in Europe for gunpowder comes
from 1267 in the works of Roger Bacon (c. 1220c. 1292), more than two centuries after its first mention in Chinese texts. Within sixty years the first evidence for cannons appears in the illustrated margins
of medieval texts, followed by their confirmed use at
Puy-Guillaume (1338) and then against Lille (1341).
Within twenty years, evidence of gunpowder artillery spread from Italy to Scandinavia and from Russia to England. The most dramatic example of the
new technology was the bombard. With a weight of
around 16,000 kilograms and firing balls of 380 kilograms, the largest of these giants could breach almost
any wall with only several well-placed shots. On the
battlefield, however, the effect of early cannons was
more limited. They may have been used at Crcy in
1346 merely for the shock effect of the noise they
made. The adoption by the early 1400s of smaller
calibers made cannons more accurate, and a roll call
of distinguished victims began.
Even though the overall battlefield effect of cannons remained negligible, the sudden vulnerability
of elite warriors, the quick obsolescence of old defenses, and the new demands on military budgets
spelled the end of chivalric warfare.
Military Organization
Medieval warfare, at its most proficient practice, was
a sophisticated affair, marked by careful preparations, skillful analysis of risk and reward, and the use
of multiple branches of service. This thesis, however,
has been only recently accepted by a wide audience
holding a more traditional image of feudal armies as
violent mobs. The historian Oman claimed in 1885
268
Library of Congress
A fourteenth century English knight. In the late Middle Ages the cult of chivalry developed as the expression of a new, knightly identity, an ethos that sometimes shaped the contours of battle.
269
medieval science of war. Far more than daredevil
heroes or wanton destroyers of countryside, good
commanders such as William the Conqueror and
Richard I conducted strategic raids that had the cumulative effect of enfeebling the opponent at the
least risk to ones own army. Richards case is all the
more dramatic; in nearly thirty years of campaigning,
he fought only one pitched battle by his own choice.
There were, of course, times to seek battle, as
evidenced by William the Conqueror at Hastings
(1066), Frederick II (1194-1250) at Cortenuova
(1237), and the French in the great battles of the Hundred Years War. Each demonstrates a different aspect of strategy. The French doubtless felt they had
met Vegetiuss criteria for offering battle; they had
superiority of numbers, and the foe was in pitiful condition. Their defeats at Crcy, Poitiers, and Agincourt served to reinforce the lesson of fickle fortune.
Frederick II gambled in 1237 by dividing his forces,
but he did so as a ruse; by convincing the Milanese
that he was retiring for the winter, he engineered a
devastating ambush. Under different conditions William worked to provoke Harold to battle in 1066,
primarily because he could not hope to hold his invasion force together indefinitely. Many other battles,
however, occurred in more accidental fashion; even
though a clash was intended, Bouvines took place on
a Sunday in 1214 because Otto IVs forces overtook
those of Philip II more quickly than was expected.
Although anything might transpire when battle
did occur, a few themes appear amid the varied actualities. Although many other elements of medieval
warfare are often emphasized, knights and their potential charge remained the central concern in battles.
The actual, successful delivery of such a charge as
both initiation and conclusion of a battle seems to
have been a rare occurrence. Of more concern were
the reserve or flanking units of cavalry, which many
commanders kept ready. This very disposition belies
the contention of some scholars that once battle was
joined, the possibility of giving orders disappeared in
the chaos. The prebattle arrangement of forces varied
over the years. From the eleventh through early thirteenth centuries, commanders formed several long
shallow lines composed mostly of infantry but often
augmented by dismounted knights. Its primary role
270
ter. Where the defending force was not wholly composed of infantry, the concern was to break the foes
charge or at least engage it until a counterattack came
from reserve or flanking units. Once a formation
broke, the pursuit naturally involved the mounted
units; even here, the pursuers had to take care they
were not being drawn out of their formation and into
an ambush by a feigned retreat. In all cases, the
charging knights constituted a minority on the battlefield but remained uppermost in the minds of leaders
and combatants.
Medieval Sources
In the area of military affairs, and most especially combat, medieval sources present a number of intersecting problems. The authoritative writers of the age were churchmen, men unlikely to have witnessed combat, particularly if they were monks. Some, such as William of
Tyre or Ordericus Vitalis, are noteworthy for having obviously sifted through their informants
accounts to give posterity as full and accurate a narrative as possible. However, the details of
battle often did not concern such writers; they were more interested in the miraculous than the
human aspects of battle. Thus they told more of the saints who appeared in the melee than of the
actual tactics employed. Moreover, because the lesson to be drawn from a military event was far
more important, ecclesiastical writers tended to treat numbers with some license. Mediumsized hosts numbered 300 so often as to defy belief, whereas truly large armies appear in multiples of 100,000, numbers quite beyond the administrative capabilities of any medieval government. Further complications arose when clerics adapted terms from antiquity to refer to
peculiarly medieval items.
Such problems can be occasionally resolved, however, by relying also on secular, typically
vernacular sources. The documents written for the military elite help us by using more precise
language. Even the fanciful world of the chansons de geste can be instructive if carefully culled.
Such songs had a practiced, knightly audience in mind who would have little appreciated an inaccurate picture of the realities of battle, apart from the superhuman accomplishments of the
heroes. The Histoire de Guillaume le Marchal (c. 1225; the story of Guillaume le Marchal)
often reads like the chansons but rather is a biography that has been found correct in many questionable details. Many of the poems events were clearly witnessed in person. Firsthand accounts include those of Ambroise dvreux (fl. c. 1190), who was at Arsuf with Richard I; Jean
(or John) de Joinville (c. 1224-1317), who was at Mansurah; and Jean le Bel (c. 1224-1317),
who was in Scotland. These sources provide details on tactics, strategy, and weaponry, as well
as a picture of the actual experience of the medieval warrior in combat. There were moments of
both fear and courage.
Finally, there is the pictorial record. The Bayeux tapestry is a uniquely rich source. Numerous medieval manuscripts, even many that do not deal specifically with military topics, abound
with decorated letter forms and illustrations of combat in the margins. Awareness of the dates of
such manuscripts allows scholars to refine theories on the use of certain weapons and armor.
Similarly, the carvings in churches and monasteries reveal much about medieval armaments.
The seals of many feudal lords are also instructive, although only for the weapons of the elite.
271
Where details of armaments can be discerned in these smaller figures, though, the dating is
quite precise.
Books and Articles
Abels, Richard P., and Bernard S. Bachrach, eds. The Normans and Their Adversaries at War:
Essays in Memory of C. Warren Hollister. Rochester, N.Y.: Boydell Press, 2001.
Bowlus, Charles R. The Battle of Lechfeld and Its Aftermath, August 955: The End of the Age of
Migrations in the Latin West. Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate, 2006.
Bradbury, Jim. The Routledge Companion to Medieval Warfare. New York: Routledge, 2004.
Contamine, Philippe. War in the Middle Ages. Translated by Michael Jones. Oxford, England:
Basil Blackwell, 1984.
DeVries, Kelly. Guns and Men in Medieval Europe, 1200-1500: Studies in Military History and
Technology. Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate/Variorum, 2002.
_______. Medieval Military Technology. Lewiston, N.Y.: Broadview Press, 1992.
France, John. Western Warfare in the Age of the Crusades, 1000-1300. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell
University Press, 1999.
Funcken, Liliane, and Fred Funcken. The Age of Chivalry. 3 vols. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.:
Prentice-Hall, 1983.
Harari, Yuval N. Special Operations in the Age of Chivalry, 1100-1550. Rochester, N.Y.:
Boydell Press, 2007.
Nicholson, Helen J., and David Nicolle. Gods Warriors: Crusaders, Saracens, and the Battle
for Jerusalem. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2005.
_______. Medieval Warfare: Theory and Practice of War in Europe, 300-1500. Basingstoke,
England: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
Nicolle, David. Arms and Armour of the Crusading Era, 1050-1350. London: Greenhill Books,
1999.
_______. Fighting for the Faith: The Many Fronts of Medieval Crusade and Jihad, 1000-1500
A.D. Barnsley, England: Pen and Sword Military, 2007.
Strickland, Matthew, ed. Anglo-Norman Warfare. Woodbridge, England: Boydell Press, 1992.
Verbruggen, J. F. The Art of Warfare in Western Europe During the Middle Ages. Woodbridge,
England: Boydell Press, 1997.
Walsh, Michael J. Warriors of the Lord: The Military Orders of Christendom. Alresford,
England: John Hunt, 2003.
Films and Other Media
Braveheart. Feature film. Icon Entertainment, 1995.
Charlemagne. Television miniseries. Acorn Media, 1994.
The Dark Ages. Documentary. History Channel, 2007.
Henry V. Feature film. BBC/Curzon/Renaissance, 1989.
In Search of History: The Knights Templar. Documentary. History Channel, 2005.
Knights and Armor. Documentary. History Channel, 2002.
Steven Isaac
Military Achievement
Library of Congress
Crusaders under English king Richard I reach the holy city of Jerusalem.
272
273
The fact that it could be loaded with arrows prior
to the battle rather than during the heat of combat
made it especially useful. Small daggers were useful as secondary weapons but were not especially effective. The Knights Templar were well known for
their effective use of the lance. The weapon that
knights were probably best known for, however,
was the sword. (The stereotypical long sword, however, did not appear until almost the end of the Crusade era.)
The swords and knives used by the Muslims had
many different types of blades, most of them curved,
giving them greater speed in their use. Scimitars, sabers, and tulwars were three typical types of blades
used by Muslim defenders, but, like the weapons of
the Crusaders, the variety of the Muslims weapons
was nearly infinite.
Large-scale weapons were used to lay siege to cities. Many of them were too large to transport over
long distances and thus were often built of local materials very close to the cities they were used to attack. A ballista was a large, arrow-shooting machine
that could hurl heavy arrows several hundred yards.
Different catapults, such as the mangonel and the
trebuchet, hurled rocks at city walls. Siege towers
were built and then pushed against city walls, allowing soldiers to climb stairs within the towers interior,
protecting them from city defenders. More crudely
built, battering rams were used to break through city
gates. In defense, garrisons poured boiling liquids
oil being the most effective, if the most expensive
from the tops of the walls, inflicting immense pain on
those trying to scale the walls.
Only wealthy soldiers would have been able to afford any type of armor. Commoners used makeshift
shields and other rudimentary methods to protect
themselves as best they could. True armor was one
way in which knights were identified. Chain mail,
one of the earliest forms of armor, was used in conjunction with a shield and a helmet. However, with
the development of better weaponry, such as the
crossbow, mail armor became increasingly ineffective, and plate armor appeared near the end of the
Crusades. Though cumbersome, it could protect the
knight against most weapons and made other types of
protection, such as shields, unnecessary.
274
Turning Points
275
the largest army in the east, and maintained castles
and fortifications. Although their existence survived
the end of the Crusades, they soon fell out of favor
both with European royalty and with the pope, because of their great wealth. The pope would eventually, in 1314, abolish the Knights Templar for fear
that they were acquiring too much wealth and power.
Other orders appeared, but their contributions were
smaller than those of the Knights Hospitaller and the
Knights Templar. The Brethren of the Sword, the
Knights of Calatrava, the Knights of Santiago, the
Brethren of Santa Maria, and the Knights of Our
Lady of Montjoie all made contributions, but to differing degrees. They demonstrate, however, the universal attraction of joining the Crusades, coming
from as far away as Spain. Such orders, with small
contingents, generally left the region after collecting
their booty.
Despite the tenuous relations between Rome and
of noble birth and those who had taken vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience to the Churchwere
founded in 1080 as a hospital in Jerusalem. After the
Crusaders were finally able to take Jerusalem in
1099, they were transformed into a military-religious
order, and their experience in the region helped the
Crusaders. They maintained medical and hospital facilities for the pilgrims and had military obligations,
as the Church charged them with the defense of pilgrims in the Holy Land. They received donations of
castles and other significant properties in the Holy
Land and in time had to fight in their defense. The
Knights of the Temple, or Knights Templar, were another military crusading order. They were chaste,
subject to rigid discipline, and imbued with feudalism. They actively participated in the seizure of Jerusalem. After their formation in 1119, they bore the
major burden of retaining Jerusalem for Christianity.
They protected pilgrims, had small empires, formed
Paris
HOLY
ROMAN
EMPIRE
FRANCE
Venice
Clermont
Toulouse
Black Sea
Genoa
Pisa
Zara
Marseilles
IBERIA
Lisbon
CORSICA
Rome
Naples
BYZANTINE
EMPIRE
Constantinople
Nicaea
Dorylaeum
SARDINIA
Manzikert
Edessa
Antioch
Aleppo
CYPRUS
CRETE
Mediterranean Sea
Arsuf
Mansura
EGYPT
Cairo
Tyre
Acre
Hattin
Jerusalem
276
Constantinople, the Byzantines had shared a common enemy with the European Crusaders: the expansionist forces of Islam. Providing a safe route to Jerusalem led to constant warfare with the Seljuk Turks
and others. Specialized units of Byzantine cavalry
aided the Crusaders. They captured Antioch in 1137,
forcing the Christians to pay homage to the Byzantine emperor. A year later, a combined force of
Franks and Byzantines compelled the emir of Shaizar
to yield. Shortly afterward, Byzantine forces accompanied the Franks in their struggle against the Saracens. In 1163-1164, the Byzantine navy transported
the Franks on their Egyptian venture, but as competition between the Franks and the Byzantines became
more obvious, this was the last engagement of a combined force against Islam.
277
Eventually a Kurd, Saladin, became the commander of Islamic forces after the fall of the F3zimids, and he established a new dynasty, the Ayynbids. He had military talent and was appointed
commander of all Muslim forces. He united the Muslims in Egypt and, in 1187, recaptured Jerusalem in
the Battle of Hattin. Under Muslim rule, Jewish and
Christian populations were respected. After Saladin,
the Crusaders lost their initiative and did not mount
another credible campaign against the Muslims. By
the thirteenth century, the few remaining principalities in Crusader control had fallen to the Egyptian
Mamlnks. With the fall of Constantinople to the
Ottoman Turks in 1453, Christendom gave up its religious and political influence in the region.
Medieval Sources
As interest in the Crusades has been nearly constant over the centuries, there is no dearth of
published sources written by the Crusaders themselves. Mostly written by those of nobility,
among the most accessible are those of William, archbishop of Tyre (c. 1130-c. 1190), who
wrote Historia rerum in partibus transmarinis gestarum (History of Deeds Done Beyond the
Sea, New York: Da Capo Press, 1973). Philippe de Mezires (c. 1327-1405) wrote Le Songe du
vieil Pelerin (the dream of old Pelerin; London: Cambridge University Press, 1969). John M.
Sharp edited and Frances Hernandez translated The Catalan Chronicle of Francisco de
Moncada (El Paso: Texas Western University Press, 1975). The nine thousand lines of verse
that constitute The Chronicle of Morea tell the tale of Frankish Crusaders during the Fourth
Crusade. Edited collections include Elizabeth Hallams Chronicles of the Crusades: EyeWitness Accounts of the Wars Between Christianity and Islam (London: Weidenfeld and
Nicolson, 1989) and D. C. Munros 1902 Letters of the Crusaders. Primary sources looking at
the Crusades from the Muslim side include Ibn Kalanisis The Damascus Chronicle of the Crusades and Amin Maaloufs The Crusades Through Arab Eyes (London: Al Saqi Books, 1984).
Books and Articles
Cowdrey, Herbert E. J. Popes, Monks, and Crusaders. London: Hambledon Press, 1984.
Kedar, B. Z. Crusade and Mission: European Approaches Toward the Muslims. Princeton,
N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1984.
Nicholson, Helen, and David Nicolle. Crusaders, Saracens, and the Battle for Jerusalem. New
York: Osprey, 2005.
Nicolle, David. The Crusades. New York: Osprey, 2001.
_______. Knights of Jerusalem: The Crusading Order of Hospitallers, 1100-1565. New York:
Osprey, 2008.
_______. Teutonic Knight: 1190-1561. New York: Osprey, 2007.
Riley-Smith, Jonathan. The Oxford Illustrated History of the Crusades. New York: Oxford
University Press, 2001.
Wise, Terence. Armies of the Crusades. New York: Osprey, 1978.
278
Armies of MuWammad
and the Caliphate
Dates: 622-1060 c.e.
was followed in 656 by Muwammads cousin and
son-in-law, Alt ibn Abt Taltb.
4Alts caliphate was challenged by Mu$3wiyah ibn
4Abt Sufyn3, a son of Meccas Bann Umayya clan,
wealthiest of the Quraysh (Arabic Qura). Muwammads Bann H3shim clan were Quraysh, although
lower on the social scale. Years of fitna, wars between Muslims, ended in 661, when Mu$3wiyah established the caliphates first hereditary dynasty, with
its capital in Damascus. Adherents of 4Alt, who had
been pushed into what is now central and southern
Iraq, became the nucleus of the Shia branch of Islam.
4Abb3sid caliphs (claiming descent from Muwammads uncle, al-4Abb3s) took power in 750 after
another fitna, nearly exterminating the Umayyads,
and established a new capital, which became Baghdad. One Umayyad prince, 4Abd al-Rawm3n ibn
Mu$3wiyah ibn Hish3m, established himself in 756 as
emir in fractious al-Andalus (southern Spain), where
his descendants would claim the title of caliph in 929.
Little effort was made to convert the inhabitants of
conquered territory. Arabs, like Jews, considered
themselves the chosen people of Gods revelation. In
the second sura (chapter), the Qur$3n enjoins believers to fight against unbelievers until idolatry is no
more and al-Lahs religion reigns supreme but also
asserts, There shall be no compulsion in religion.
The first caliphs had little experience and less interest
in the details of administration, which was left to
clerks, judges, and administrators among the conquered peoples. Umayyad caliphs made sharp distinctions between Arabs, mawali (non-Arab converts
to Islam), and dhimmi (non-Muslim subjects). The finances of the Umayyad caliphate depended heavily
on the jizya, a tax paid by nonbelievers.
Social and political distinctions between different
Arab identities persisted for centuries in military ri-
Political Considerations
The armies inspired by Islam unified the fractious
Arabian Peninsula in the Riddah Wars (Wars of
Apostasy) during the eight years before Muwammads death in 632 and the subsequent rule of his
father-in-law, Abn Bakr, the first khaltfat rasul alLah (successor to the messenger of God, often rendered as caliph). From 636 to 714, relatively small
but disciplined armies conquered a large portion of
the Byzantine Empire and the entire S3s3nian Persian
Empire, both exhausted by twenty-seven years of
continuous mutual warfare. The Arabic language,
which previously had no written grammar, became
the language of religion, scholarship, law, and commerce over wide areas of western and southern Asia
and northern Africa. Islam, a revealed faith centered
in the isolated cities of Mecca and Medina (the latter
formerly called Yathrib), became one of the worlds
largest religions.
Three distinct caliphates ruled a more or less
united, and expanding, Dar-al-Islam (literally home
or abode, a division of the Islamic world) from 632
until about 909. Abn Bakr, the consensus choice
to lead the fledgling Muslim community, oversaw
collection of notes from Muwammads revelations,
which would become the Holy Qur$3n, and organized
the command structure of a disciplined army. Three
more rashidun (rightly guided) caliphs, from Muwammads inner circle, were chosen by consensus of
the shnr3, elders of the Muslim community. The second caliph, 4Umar ibn al-Khazz3b, adopted the title
amtr al-mu$minin, commander of the faithful. The
two titles were used interchangeably, but over time,
caliph was commonly the title of the highest ruler,
while emir (or amir) was sometimes a subordinate office. 4Uthm3n ibn 4Aff3n followed 4Umar, who
281
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FRANKISH
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Cas
Black Sea
Alexandria
Samarkand
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Mediterranean Sea
BERBERS
pian
Constantinople
SPAIN
Aral
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SYRIA
PERSIA
Baghdad
Jerusalem
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EGYPT
ARABIA
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dS
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AFRICA
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Arabian Sea
valry in newly acquired territories on three continents. Yemenis and southern Arabs competed with
northern Arabs, while Arabs long settled in Syria (alShamiyyun) were resented by those remaining in the
Hijaz of the Arabian Peninsula. Berbers in western
North Africa, once converted to Islam, became rival
claimants to power. One result of rapid conquest
is that Arabia itself lapsed into tribal disunity as an
isolated backwater of the growing empire. As early
as 813, Iranians and Turks from beyond the Amu
Darya (Oxus River) dominated the armies of the
4Abb3sid caliphs.
The Dar-al-Islam ceased to be a single caliphate,
even formally, by 909. The F3zimid Dynasty of
Ifriqiya (modern Tunisia) formally established the
first Shia caliphate, eventually extending from Tunisia to Egypt and Palestine. The Umayyad caliphate of
Crdoba, established in 929, broke up into competing taifa states after 1031. By the 1080s, successive
Berber religious revivals known as al-Murabitun
(Almoravids) and fifty years later al-Muwawwidnn
(Almohads) built their own empires in the Maghreb
of North Africa and al-Andalus. In Baghdad, Seljuk
Turks intervened between 1055 and 1060 on behalf
of the weakened 4Abb3sid caliphs, against the efforts
of Buyid princes to establish Shia rule and ally with
the F3zimids. In 1058, the authority of the caliph was
delegated to the Turkish general Tughril (or Tog rl)
under the title of sultan. By the early 1100s, political
disintegration into a series of autonomous feudal es-
Military Achievement
Muwammads first accomplishment was to survive
military confrontation with the future generals of
Islamic conquest, his Meccan adversaries of the
Quraysh clan. These battles began as traditional
razzia, or raids against caravans. A successful ambush by a few hundred Muslims in March of 624 at
Badr was followed in March, 625, by Meccan revenge in a battle at Uhud. In March, 627, an army of
ten thousand Quraysh marched on Medina and was
repulsed at the Battle of the Trench. Acombination of
tribal diplomacy, domination of trade routes, growing wealth, and the allegiance of Bedouin warriors
allowed Muwammad to secure the capitulation of
Mecca in January, 630, without battle.
Significant conquests outside the Arabian Peninsula began in 636, four years after the Prophets
death, under the second caliph, 4Umar I. After defeating a Roman and Armenian force
of thirty thousand at the Battle of
Jabiya-Yarmnk on August 20, 636,
the armies of Islam dominated Syria
622
and Palestine. Jerusalem was surrendered after a seven-month siege
in 638. Generous terms, allowing
632-661
non-Muslims to pay the jizya (a tax
on non-Muslims) and practic their
680
own religion and laws, left little motive to die fighting Islam. Alexandria, with impregnable walls and a
mid-8th cent.
garrison of as many as fifty thousand Roman soldiers, was surrendered by its patriarch in 641, following a five-month siege, to Muslim
1095
commander 4Amr ibn al-4#s. The
Eastern Roman Empire lost close to
1187
80 percent of its territory in five
1260
years.
1453
In 637, the Iranian capital of Ctesiphon fell after a battle with thirty
thousand S3s3nian soldiers near al-
283
Q3disiyya, on the west bank of the Euphrates River,
near the present location of Baghdad. The S3s3nian
Empire ended after the Battle of Nihawand in 642.
Muslim influence reached and passed the Oxus River
(Amu Darya) into central Asia.
The first Umayyad caliph made a determined effort in 672-679 to take Constantinople, sending a
fleet of as many as one thousand ships into the Sea of
Marmara, after seizing a number of Aegean islands.
Extensive use of the incendiary weapon Greek fire
to destroy the caliphs ships, together with the walls
built by Emperor Theodosius II, defeated the siege.
The Theodosian walls were 5 yards thick, rose 12
yards high, and were constructed of brick and granite. In 717, Caliph Sleyman (or Sulaym3n) ibn 4Abd
al-Malik tried again, with an army of eighty thousand, including the elite ahl al-Sham of Syria;
Khor3s3ni from northern Iran; cavalry from Persia,
Iraq, Arabia, and Egypt; and infantry from as far
away as the Oxus River and Ifriqiya. In addition to a
fleet in the Sea of Marmara, Sleymans brother
Maslama brought an army to the plains west of Constantinople, against the walls built by Anastasius I.
Turning Points
In a journey known as the Hegira, the Islamic prophet
Muwammad (c. 570-632) flees from Mecca to Medina
to avoid persecution.
Muwammad is succeeded after his death in 632 by the
four legitimate successors of the R3shidnn caliphate.
The forces of Muwammads grandson Wusayn are
ambushed and massacred at the Battle of Karbal3,
marking the beginning of Shia as a branch of Islam.
Islam becomes the dominant religio-political power
structure of the Middle East, from the Atlantic to the
Indian frontier, including the Mediterranean coast and
Spain.
The Crusades are launched by Christian warriors seeking
to reclaim the Holy Land for Christianity.
Jerusalem is captured by Saladin from the Crusaders.
Baybars I, the Mamlnk sultan of Egypt, defeats the
Mongol hordes at Nabnlus.
Muslim Turks besiege and capture Constantinople,
extinguishing the Byzantine Empire.
284
The siege ended after eleven months, the caliphal
army decimated by cold weather, shortage of food,
disease, and a surprise attack by Bulgarians.
Mu$awiya sent an army commanded by 4Uqbah
ibn N3fi4 into the Maghreb of western North Africa
in 670. After initial success, 4Uqbah died in 682 in
Ifriqiya fighting a Berber chieftain named Kusayla,
supported by remaining Greco-Roman soldiers and a
substantial Jewish population. The Muslim fortification of Qayrawan (Kairouan or Kirwan) fell in 684;
for the next twenty years, forty thousand troops under
Has3n ibn an-Nu$m3n al-Ghass3nt fought to retake
the Maghreb. A Jewish woman known as Kahina of
the Aurs led resistance after the death of Kusayla.
Emir Has3ns soldiers captured Carthage in 690, but
resistance was not fully ended until 704. A new vizier
of Barqa and Ifriqiya, Mnsa ibn Nu;ayr, had employed diplomacy and Muslim 4ulama to secure Berber allegiance. By then, the caliphate had been
through another fitna. After the death of Mu$awiyas
son Yaztd and his son Mu$awiya II, another branch of
the Umayya, the Marwanids, fought Arabs from the
Hijaz region (including Mecca and Medina) in 684,
ending with the Umayyad caliphate still ruling.
A convert from one of the Berber tribes, T3riq ibn
Ziy3d, was given command in 708 of Tangier, and in
711 he launched the invasion of the Iberian Peninsula, where a Visigothic aristocracy ruled a disarmed
population of Iberians, Romans, and Jews. A single
battle in July near the Guadalete River and the town
of Sidonia (Shaduna) eliminated King Roderick and
a good part of the Visigothic nobility; T3riq lost at
least three thousand men. Eight hundred men under
Mughith al-Rumi, apparently a Roman convert, took
the undermanned fortifications of Crdoba, while
T3riq found Toledo nearly deserted. T3riq was joined
in 712 by Mnsa ibn Nu;ayr, with an additional eighteen thousand Yemeni soldiers. Sevilla resisted for
three months in late 712; Merida was defended for
more than five months in 713, including a charge by
Visigothic cavalry and infantry, which badly damaged the besieging forces. At the end of 714, the entire land south of the Pyrenees, called al-Andalus by
the new conquerors, was nominally subject to the caliph in Damascus. However, independent w3lis resisted rule from emirs in Crdoba, even indulging in
285
as
Black Sea
an
pir
a
Damascus
Za
gr
Baghdad
Ri
ver
Jerusalem
Sea
s R
i ver
Her3t
Isfahan
os
Khor#s#n
Al-Fust3t
(Cairo)
xu
Samarqand
Transoxiana
rranean
hr
Nishapur
r
Ri v e s
te
dite
is
Ti g r
Eup
Bukhara
Sea
Em
Me
Khw#rizm
pi
Byzantine
Constantinople
ts
.
Pe
ile
Re
Riv
er
Medina
A r a b i a
Mecca
I nd
rs
ia
n G
ulf
Ri
us
ver
India
Se
a
Arabian
Sea
caliphate, were predominantly cavalry, featuring armored archers shooting from horseback. Horses were
protected by bards of felt, and riders were equipped
with lamellar cuirasses, hauberks, arm covers, lances,
and leather shields of Tibetan origin. Maces, battleaxes, and single-edged short swords were also used,
and full-size swords were slightly curved.
Military Organization
Muwammad and Abn Bakr organized the Muslim armies into disciplined formations, contrary to previous Arab custom. Troops were drawn up in lines of
battle with a center (qalb, literally heart), right wing
(maymana), and left wing (maysara). Many fought in
tribal units, with their own banners. As in Byzantine
armies, archers were deployed primarily to protect
infantry flanks from enemy cavalry attacks.
286
sand names but was thereafter closed, enrollment becoming a privilege rather than a routine record of enlistment.
Regional armies were organized or designated in
territories that became part of the Dar-al-Islam, both
the region and the army known as a jund. The soldiers
were Arab settlers, supported by tax revenue from
their area. Junds were assigned for Damascus, Jordan
(with the capital at Tiberias), Palestine (capital at Jerusalem), Ascalon, and Homs. Later junds were designated for Qunnasrin (including Antioch, Manbij,
and Aleppo). The original jund established in Egypt
included south Arabian or Yemeni tribes, principally
the Azd, Himyar, Kinda, and Lakhm. Junds were also
designated in al-Andalus. The original leadership
were ahl al-Raya, or people of the standard, drawn
from the Quraysh and the ansar, companions of the
Prophet. Parcels of land known as khittas were allotted to each tribal group. Soldiers in the jund were enrolled in the diwan, and received monthly pay called
ata. Inevitably, the junds became power centers on
which caliphs, rebels, or challengers relied to uphold
the current ruler or overturn him, to sustain the unity
O
xu
Ghazna
Ghaznavids
r
Isfahan
Transoxiana
Samarqand
iv e
r
sR
Khor#s#n
Baghdad
iv e
Riv er
si
an
Medina
Re
River
G ulf
I n d us
r
Pe
le
Mecca
d
Se
= Byzantine-Seljuk conflict
Sea
es
Ni
= Seljuks
Nishapur
r
Rive
at
hr
up
Antioch
Tripoli
E
Mediterranean Sea
Syria
Acre
Alexandria
Damascus
Jerusalem
Al-Q3hirah
(Cairo)
Egypt
= Fatamids
an
Manzikert
Edessa Tig
ris
Tunisia
Algeria
Khw#rizm
pi
e
ir
Sicily
as
Cau
casu
sM
ts.
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Black Sea
ntin
e E Constantinople
mp
Arabian
Sea
287
elephants crashing back into the S3s3nian line, Persian discipline broke down. With limited room to maneuver, the defenders were driven into the Euphrates
River.
Medieval Sources
Prior to the emergence of Islam from the Arabian Peninsula, there was little tradition of either scholarship or written literature in the Arabic language. Perhaps the most comprehensive
Muslim scholarship roughly contemporary to the history of Muwammad and the Caliphate is
Abn Ja4far Muwammad ibn Jartr al-Zabarts Ta$rtkh al-rusul wa al-mulnk (872-973; The History of al-Zabart, 1985-1999, 39 volumes). Individual volumes include Muwammad at Mecca
(volume 6) and The Conquest of Iraq, Southwestern Persia, and Egypt (volume 13). Al-Zabart
was already well known for an exhaustive multivolume commentary on the Holy Qur$3n, completed about 903 c.e. A later reference is Ibn Khaldnns Muqaddimah (1375-1379; The
Muqaddimah, 1958; also translated as An Introduction to History, 1967). While much of the
material is secondary, it offers the most detailed primary material on the history of the Mahgreb.
Offering a rare glimpse from the nearly illiterate lands north of the Pyrenees is the Annales
regni Francorum (741-829; Royal Frankish Annals in Carolingian Chronicles, 1970), which
includes reference to the Spanish March. While most Byzantine manuscripts from this period
have not been preserved, Theophanes Chronographia (815; The Chronicle of Theophanes,
1982) draws on many lost sources, and it along with Nikephoross Breviarium historicum (787;
Short History, 1990) are both available in English translation.
Books and Articles
Donner, Fred McGraw. The Early Islamic Conquests. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University
Press, 1981.
Kaegi, Walter Emil. Byzantium and the Early Islamic Conquests. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
Kennedy, Hugh N. The Armies of the Caliphs: Military and Society in the Early Islamic State.
New York: Routledge, 2001.
Lewis, Bernard. Islam and the Arab World: Faith, People, Culture. New York: Knopf, 1976.
Lewis, David Levering. Gods Crucible: Islam and the Making of Europe, 570-1215. New
York: W. W. Norton, 2008.
Nicolle, David. Armies of the Muslim Conquest. New York: Osprey, 1993.
_______. Poitiers, A.D. 732. New York: Osprey, 2008.
Nicolle, David, and Angus McBride. The Armies of Islam, 7th-11th Centuries. New York: Osprey, 1982.
Films and Other Media
Islam: Empire of Faith. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service, 2000.
Muwammad: Messenger of God (in North America as The Messenger). Documentary. Moustapha Akkad, 1976.
The Story of Islam. Documentary. ABC News, 1983.
Charles Rosenberg
which they led to victory over the Ghaznavid Dynasty (which spanned eastern Iran, central Afghanistan, and modern-day Pakistan) at the Battle of
In 750 the 4Abb3sid Dynasty had succeeded the
Dandanqan. This decisive victory signaled the end of
Umayyad Dynasty as rulers of the Muslim world.
the Ghaznavid Dynasty and heralded the rise of the
However, by 1050 4Abb3sid authority was greatly reSeljuk Turks.
duced; this decline further splintered the followers of
In 1055 the Seljuk Turks seized Baghdad in a
Islam. Into this leadership void stepped the Seljuk
bloodless coup. An 4Abb3sid caliph was left to rule as
Turks, and for nearly a century and a half they were
titular ruler, but the Seljuks were the true political
the dominant Muslim dynasty ruling abroad in Arforce for the next three generations. In 1067 they
menia, Persia, Iraq, and Syria.
were raiding lands claimed by their Christian rivals,
Close to a century earlier, a tribal leader named
the Byzantine Empire. Toghrl Begs nephew, Alp
Seljuq (also known as Selchuk or Seljuk) had moved
Arslan, led the Seljuks to a decisive victory at the
and settled this nomadic band from the region north
Battle of Manzikert in 1071. This one-sided win
of the Aral Sea into Central Asia. Around 1040 this
opened the way for mass Turkish migration into
tribe, which had been previously identified as part of
Anatolia. In this same year, Seljuk forces occupied
the larger group of Oghuz Turks, became known as
the holy city of Jerusalem.
the Seljuqs or Seljuks. Two brothers, Toghrl Beg
Alp Arslan was killed the following year in a biand Chaghr Beg, grandsons of the Seljuq namesake,
zarre duel with an enemy commander, often called an
successfully united various tribes into a Seljuk army,
assassination. His son Malik Sh3h I,
along with the grand vizier Ni,3m alMulk, brought a short-lived period
of stability, organization, and cultural
flourishing to what had come
Caspian
xu
s
to be called the Empire of the Great
Sea
River
Seljuks. In theory the Great Seljuks were to be masters of all the
Khor#s#n
Kashmir
Ghazna
Seljuk sultan lines, but this was selPeshawar
dom the case. Sultanates operated in
(Afghanistan)
Isfahan
Lahore
territories in Persia and Syria, and
Punjab
Th3nesar
a fiercely independent Seljuk state
Shiraz
was founded by Sleyman after his
Delhi
Sind
capture of the Byzantine city of NiMathura
Kanauj
G
caea in 1078. This became the sulan
Rajasthan
ges
River
tanate of Rumthe Arabic word for
t
a
r
Rome was Rum, and this was a fita
iver
Arabian
uj
R
a
d
m
a
r
a
= Ghaznavids
N
ting designation as the region had
Sea
once been in Roman/Byzantine possession.
288
289
sR
Baghdad
xu
ija
iv e
Riv er
si
an
Medina
Re
River
G ulf
I n d us
r
Pe
le
Mecca
Arabian
Sea
Se
a
= Region of
Byzantine-Seljuk
conflict
Khw#rizm
Qarakhanids
Transoxiana
Samarqand
Merv
iv e
r
h
Nishapur
u Kus
nd
i
Tehran
Her3t
H
Ghazna
Kho
r#s#
n
Isfahan
Ghaznavids
Sea
r
Rive
es
Ni
= Seljuks
an
ris
at
hr
up
M e d i t e r r a n e a n S e a Tripoli Syria E
Acre Damascus
Jerusalem
Al-Q3hirah
(Cairo)
F#Zimids
pi
a
Aze r b
e
ir
Tig
a
ici
Cil
as
Cau
casu
sM
Georg ts.
ia
Armenia
Byza
Black Sea
ntin
e E Constantinople
mp
Religious differences between sects brewed dissent among the nations of Islam. These theological
disputes sparked the creation of the Assassins, a militant Islamic sect that was responsible for the death of
Ni,3m al-Mulk in 1092.
Political infighting also hastened the dissolution
of the empire. It was common practice to carve up
a deceased rulers property and dole out separate
kingdoms to the surviving sons in grants called iqt34.
This ever-increasing collection of disparate emirs
and lesser sultans continuously undermined Seljuk
central authority. The weakness in this system was
especially apparent upon Malik Sh3hs death in 1092,
when his brother and four sons began to squabble
over the inheritance.
In 1095 the First Crusade began, and several key
Seljuk cities, including Nicaea and Jerusalem, were
lost in 1099. Throughout the rest of the Crusades, divisions between the kingdoms led to some Seljuks
supporting the Crusaders. By 1200, Seljuk influence
had been checked in all but the Anatolia region. The
loss at the Battle of Kse Dag in 1243 to the Mongols
Military Achievement
At the Battle of Dandanqan in 1040 the Seljuks triumphed over the Ghaznavid Dynasty. This gained
them a wide swath of land in Iran and central Asia
that laid the foundation for their future empire. In
1050, without a battle, the Seljuks gained the important political and military post of Baghdad. Although
they were technically subservient to the 4Abb3sid
Dynasty, they were the power behind the scenes.
Five years later, at the Battle of Pasinler, the Seljuks
won their first significant victory over the Byzantines
and their Georgian allies. In the aftermath the Byzan-
290
Military Organization
The Seljuks relied mainly on the military organization of their predecessors, with a few notable differences. Under their rule a more feudal system was established, each province raising and absorbing the
cost of a contingent. A ruler (usually someone with a
hereditary claim), called the amtr al-mu$mintn (the
English word emir is derived from this title), was
given the revenue for a particular province. A portion
of this revenue was expected to be gifted back to the
local sultan as a tribute. In times of war the emir was
to bring to the fold a certain number of fighters. Some
of these would be askars, the forces of regular professional soldiers who served as the bodyguards of the
emirs; the men who made up the askars were referred
to as askaris. The sizes of askars varied by province
or district; an account from the First Crusade lists two
thousand askaris hailing from one particular wealthy
region.
291
It was like an earthquake with howling, sweat, a
swift rush of fear, clouds of dust and not least hordes
of Turks riding all around us. Depending on his
speed, resolution and strength, each man sought
safety in flight. The enemy chased them, killing
some, capturing some and trampling others under
the horses hooves. It was a terribly sad sight, beyond any lamenting or mourning.
Medieval Sources
The Itinerarium peregrinorum et gesta regis Ricardi contains an invaluable primary account
of the Third Crusade (1187-1192) and provides a very good descriptive account of the Crusaders clash with the Seljuks in 1191. William of Tyre, an archbishop and chronicler of the
Crusades and the Middle Ages, left behind several works of interest to those studying this period and looking for a firsthand account of Seljuk Turk warfare. His account of the Crusades is
bundled into the Recueil des historiens des Croisades, a large collection of period documents.
292
Political Considerations
tending Ottoman princes and former Ottoman vassals fought to fill the power vacuum as Tamerlanes
empire quickly evaporated.
Slowly the Ottomans were able to reestablish rule
over their old territories and solidify their state again.
During the reigns of Murad II (r. 1421-1451) and
Mehmed II (r. 1451-1481), the Ottoman Empire reconsolidated and began to expand. Those former
vassals who had asserted their independence were
brought to heel, and the empire was stronger than
ever before. With the defeat of the Byzantines and the
capture of Constantinople in 1453, the Ottomans established a position as the preeminent power in the
eastern Mediterranean.
Military Achievement
The Ottomans were able to establish an empire centered on the Aegean, controlling western Anatolia
and southeastern Europe in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. They unified a host of disunited
states into a strong political entity. Despite defeat at
the hands of Tamerlane and brief vassalage thereafter, the Ottomans became the dominant power in
Anatolia, the Balkans, and the Aegean.
The Ottoman armies in this period consolidated
power in most of Anatolia by defeating their principal Turkish rivals: the emirates of Aydin, Menteshe,
Karesi, Saruhan, Hamit, Germiyan, Teke, and Karaman. While accomplishing this, they inflicted a series of defeats upon the Byzantines at Bursa (1326),
Iznik (1331), and Edirne (1361), culminating with
the capture of Constantinople (1453). While the Ottoman armies were establishing dominance over
Anatolia, they also took the opportunity to become
the premier power in the Balkans. After the fall of the
293
294
Serbian Empire in 1355, the Ottomans slowly established suzerainty over the Serbian and Bulgarian successor states with major victories at Maritza (1371)
and Kosovo (1389), thereby becoming the dominant
Balkan power of the period. Ottoman forces were
also successful against various Crusader armies sent
against them, winning the day at Nicopolis (1396),
Varna (1444), and Kosovo (1448). The Ottomans
also had substantial success against the Venetians at
Thessalonica (1430). The definitive military success
The Ottoman army was initially reliant upon a cavalry force that was used to engage in plundering
raids. These forces were typically lightly armed and
armored, with an emphasis on speed. They frequently
armed themselves with war hammers, maces, short
swords, sabers, javelins, and spears. Early Ottoman
armies often wore leather lamellar armor into battle.
Later, as the Ottomans came into contact with the
Byzantine, Crusader, and Serbian armies, they began
to adopt more substantial armor and heavier weapons. Heavy mail and plate armor was utilized frequently, which differentiated the Ottomans from most
of the early Islamic armies. In addition to carrying on
the Turko-Mongolic tradition of armaments, the Ottomans borrowed from the Byzantines and other European powers.
The Ottomans were known to use heavy guns during sieges as well as on the battlefield. Despite conflicting accounts of the use of artillery against the
Karamans (1388), at Kosovo (1389), and at Nicopolis (1396), definitive evidence shows artillery in the
Ottoman armies by 1420 and widespread use by
1440. For sieges, the heavy guns were frequently
used, and these were often cast on the spot. Some of
the cannons were enormous; according to certain
sources, some of the cannonballs shot at the walls of
Constantinople in 1453 weighed in excess of 1,900
pounds.
Ottoman armies also gradually began to utilize
handheld firearms in the form of the harquebus
(tufenk). The janissaries were massed among the
araba, a series of linked wagons similar to the
Wagenburg (a Bohemian defensive line of wagons)
and used large volleys to suppress cavalry charges.
These weapons were confined mainly to the janissaries and became prevalent only at the end of the fifteenth century.
Military Organization
The earliest organization of Ottoman forces was a
predatory confederation drawn from nearby tribes,
allies, and renegades; however, as Ottoman territorial control expanded, organizational principles were
enforced. Two organizational systems were in place
during this period. The first represents the initial attempt by the Ottomans to organize their army into
something other than a raiding band. The second is
the beginning of the form that the Ottoman army
would assume in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Some of the first regular troops employed by the
Ottomans were known as the msellem (tax-free),
which were the earliest organized
cavalry units, and the yayas, the earliest infantry forces. These groups
were given land grants in return for
their service. They were organized
using a decimal system. This was
the first structure given to the Ottoman army. However, the loyalty of
these freedmen raised concerns for
the Ottoman sultans and encouraged
the creation of a new structure.
With the effective establishment
of an Ottoman state, the principle
of military slavery was enforced in
the form of the Kapeulu corps. This
force was made up of military slaves
who were theoretically the property
of the Ottoman sultan. The two principal branches of the Kapeulu were
the janissaries and the sipahis, a cavalry force.
As the army grew, a specialized
infantry force was utilized. The yenieri (the janissaries) were first drawn
from prisoners of war and later from
a special levy (devshirme) on the
Christian subjects of the empire.
The janissaries adopted gunpowder
weapons early in the fifteenth century, particularly the harquebus,
which was used with great effect in
295
this period. This force was organized into ortas, or
regiments, typically containing between one hundred
and three thousand troops.
The azab corps were established in the early fifteenth century and were drawn from rural Anatolia.
Utilized principally as an infantry force, they also
performed a naval function later. The azabs continued as a second-line infantry force in the Ottoman
army until some time in the sixteenth century.
The sipahis (sometimes rendered spahis in English) were cavalry forces drawn from the notables of
Anatolia. Many of these forces received nontransferable land grants, timars, from which they drew their
income and gathered their own forces in times of war.
These forces were armored and generally heavily
F. R. Niglutsch
296
Contemporary Sources
Sources for the earliest years of the Ottoman army are scant. The Ottoman army began as a
raiding confederacy and kept no real records. Of the extant sources from this period, the majority are from the perspective of the Ottomans adversaries. The Ottoman sources of the period
are also problematic, because they are laced with legends and figures from previous periods; as
a result, contemporary events are difficult to disentangleand even these sources were often
written after the events they relate. Another issue is that few of these sources have been translated into English.
By the end of the fourteenth century, there were better accounts of the Ottoman military.
Those available in English include Konstantin Mihailovi6s Pamitniki janczara (fifteenth
century; Memoirs of a Janissary, 1975), which offers a unique look into the Ottoman army from
297
the perspective of one of the janissaries. It provides great detail about the rigors and the lifestyle
of the janissaries. The Crusade of Varna (2006; part of the Crusade Texts in Translation series)
gives extensive information about the Crusade of Varna (1444) from the perspectives of all parties involved, including the Ottomans, the Hungarians, the French, and others. A section in this
work, the anonymous The Holy Wars of Sultan Murad Son of Mehmed Khan, provides an Ottoman perspective on this conflict. The Siege of Constantinople: Seven Contemporary Accounts (1972) gives great detail on the 1453 siege from the Byzantine and Genoese perspectives.
Books and Articles
Bartusis, Mark C. The Late Byzantine Army: Arms and Society 1204-1453. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1997.
Chalkokondyles, Laonikos. Laonikos Chalkokondyles: A Translation and Commentary of the
Demonstrations of Histories. Translated by Nikolaos Nikoloudis. Athens: Historical Publications St. D. Basilopoulos, 1996.
Doukas. Decline and Fall of Byzantium to the Ottoman Turks. Prepared by Harry J. Magoulias.
Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1975.
Imber, Colin. The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650. New York: Palgrave, 2002.
_______, ed. The Crusade of Varna. London: Ashgate, 2006.
Inalcik, Halil. Osman Ghazis Siege of Nicea and the Battle of Bapheus. In The Ottoman
Emirate, 1300-1389, edited by Elizabeth Zachariadou. Heraklion: Crete University Press,
1993.
_______. The Ottoman Empire: The Classical Age, 1300-1600. Translated by Norman
Itzkowitz and Colin Imber. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1973.
Kaldy-Nagy, Gyor. The First Centuries of Ottoman Military Organization. Acta Orientalia
(Budapest) 31 (1977): 147-183.
Melville-Jones, J. R., trans. The Siege of Constantinople: Seven Contemporary Accounts. Amsterdam: Hakkert, 1972.
Mihalovi6, Konstantin. Memoirs of a Janissary. Translated by Benjamin Stoltz. Historical
commentary and notes by Svat Soucek. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Joint Committee on Eastern Europe, American Council of Learned Societies, by the Department of Slavic Languages and
Literatures, University of Michigan, 1975.
Nicolle, David. Armies of the Ottoman Turks, 1300-1774. New York: Osprey, 2001.
_______. Crusade of Nicopolis, 1396. New York: Osprey, 1999.
Robinson, H. R. Oriental Armour. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1967.
Films and Other Media
Ottoman Empire. Documentary (Eastern Traditions Series). Wolf Productions, 2005.
The Ottoman Empire. Documentary. Films Media Groups, 1996.
Ottoman Empire: The War Machine. Documentary. A&E Home Video, 2006.
James N. Tallon
lice protections afforded foreign travelers and merchants on the trans-Saharan trade corridor. With the
advent and spread of the Islamic faith out of North
Africa in the eighth century, new forms of commercial, religious, social, cultural, and military interaction transformed the social and political landscape of
West Africa. In some instances, as with the reign of
Mansa Mns3 I of Mali (1312-1337 c.e.), Islamic influence transformed the organizational structure of
the empire and the administration of justice and
launched the religious wars of the Islamic jihad. Subsequent kings and kingdoms either waged war under
the doctrines of the Islamic tradition or sought to
eradicate the Muslim tradition altogether, setting the
stage for much of the military history of the kingdoms of Mali and Songhai until the emergence of the
European slave trade and the introduction of firearms. These latter developments in turn fueled a
long-standing pattern of internecine warfare that ultimately depopulated entire towns and regions subject
to West Africas colonial-era encounter with European merchants, militarists, and slave traders.
Military Achievement
Turning Points
700-1000
1230
1450
1468
1591
298
Africa, c. 1000-1500
Tunis (Carthage)
Sanhaja Berbers
tain
Med
Tripoli
iterranean
Sea
Alexandria
Cairo
A l m o r av i d
Arabs
N
ile
Arabia
R.
Arabs
Tuareg
Lake
Chad
Alwa
Funj
Darfur
Njimi
Lalibela
R
.
Somali
Oyu
Akan
uba Ife Igbo
r
o
Y
States
Benin
Oromo
Nilotes
ongo
Congo C
R.
Basin
go
e Ta
L ak
R.
Duala
Vili n
Co
Ocean
Ba
nt
u
Ovimbundu
Sofala
Mw
Zimbabwe
L i m Great
p
op
u
nt
Ba
en
Khami
Torwa
em
ut
ap
a
Shona
Zambezi
Sa
n
K a l a h a r i Mapungubwe
Desert
Khoisan
alawi R .
Lake M
Ndongo
Tonga
Indian
Mombasa
yika
Ocean
Mogadishu
n
nga
Congo
Atlantic
Rift
Va l l e y
Kilwa
Malagasy
M
ke
in
al
M
Ethiopia
Agaw
scar
Hausa
City
States
Ak
su
m
er
Mali
Mossi
States
Gao
ig
Soninke
Kumbi Jenne
Saleh
Fulani
a
Se
Takrur
Makkura
Nubia
KanemBornu
Songhai
Ghana Timbuktu
d
Re
E m i r at e
aga
At
as
un
Mo
ad
Ceuta
R.
300
fessional armies for the maintenance of law and order
over a vast territory, the medieval kingdom of Mali in
turn contributed to the formal development and mobilization of cavalry forces in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries in order to command the battlefields
of the savanna and sahel regions of West Africa. Both
within and beyond the context of indigenous warfare,
the kingdoms of Songhai and Benin, among others,
further advanced indigenous armaments, protective
armor, fortifications, tactical mobilizations, and, ultimately, the adoption of firearms.
The combined impact of the Islamic faith and the
deployment of cavalry forces on the military culture
of the era were most forcefully felt during the reign of
the Malian king Mansa Mns3 I. Mansa Mns3 undertook the military expansion of Mali and the concomitant control and taxation of the trans-Saharan trade in
salt, gold, ivory, ebony, pepper, and kola nuts. His
primary contribution was the military incorporation
of the Middle Niger River region into the kingdom of
Mali through the use of cavalry forces and professional armies. In addition, his conquests ultimately
led to the control and incorporation of the important
mercantile centers and cities of Timbuktu and Gao,
the trans-Saharan trading town of Walata, and the salt
mines of Taghaza to the north. During Mansa Mns3s
reign the territory of Mali was doubled in size, and
the capture and control of the primary salt- and goldproducing areas of the region secured the empires
wealth and stability. So famous were the cavalry exploits of Mansa Mns3s day that one of the more notable art forms of this time consisted of relatively large
terra-cotta figures of mounted cavalry troops replete
with padded body armor, backpacks, elaborate helmets with chin straps, and a variety of weapons including swords and javelins. Ultimately, Mansa
Mns3s conquests and his organization of an imperial
form of government transformed Mali from a regional to an international presence, with Malian ambassadors posted in Morocco and Egypt.
The kingdom of Songhai provides another prominent body of documented achievements in the use of
light cavalry for the purposes of territorial gain and
empire building. Malian and Songhai battle formations, or mandekalu, entailed the use of light cavalry
forces bearing padded armor, spears or javelins, and
301
fleet, and the tara-farma was the full-time commander of the cavalry forces of the empire. Each of
these commanders and his respective subordinates
was identified by his uniform, clothing, and insignia.
West African kings typically rose to power through
either inheritance or demonstrated success as a military leader, conqueror, or facilitator of a coup. All
military organization and support in West African
kingdoms was directly subject to the order and mandate of the ruling king in his capacity as commander
in chief. The organizational culture of each kingdoms armies varied according to the nature of the
military mobilization. Slaves or other captives often served a critical support function during major
military operations. Although professional armies
were often renowned for their cavalry corps, they
often included tens, if not hundreds of thousands, of
infantrymen, backed by slaves who facilitated the
Military Organization
According to one Muslim history of
West Africa, the Songhai military,
known as the Tarikh al-Fattash, was
organized under the aegis of three
full-time commanders or generals.
The dyini-koy or balama was the
commander of the army, the hi-koy
was the admiral of the war-canoe
302
West Africa,
15th-16th Centuries
ig
er
Gu
in
303
geographic region and brought about a new era of
prosperity. On the other hand, the scorched-earth
policy of empire building and the role of the jihad ultimately fed the decline of the kingdom of Mali and,
subsequently, that of Songhai.
Medieval Sources
Early Arab and Muslim accounts of the culture, society, technology, militarism, and urban
settings of the West African kingdoms are among the most authoritative and complete. Such accounts include those of the eleventh century Arab geographer al-Bakri (died c. 1094), who describes ancient Ghana in The Book of Routes and Kingdoms; and Mahmud al-Kati, a Muslim
scholar who authored the Tarikh al-Fattash, or History of the Sudan, which was largely incorporated into the accounts of Ibn Mukhtar in his publication of the Tarikh al-Fattash. Among the
most important historians of later periods of the kingdoms of Mali and Songhai are Ibn
Bazznzah, a fourteenth century Muslim traveler, and al-Wasan ibn Muwammad al-Wazz3n alZaiy3tt (c. 1485-c. 1554), also known as Leo Africanus, who wrote about his travels in History
and Description of Africa and the Notable Things Contained Therein (1526).
Books and Articles
Brooks, George E. Landlords and Strangers: Ecology, Society, and Trade in Western Africa,
1000-1630. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1993.
Connah, Graham. African Civilizations: Precolonial Cities and States in Tropical Africa, an
Archaeological Perspective. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1987.
Conrad, David C. Empires of Medieval West Africa: Ghana, Mali, and Songhay. Rev. ed. New
York: Chelsea House, 2009.
Davidson, Basil. African Kingdoms. New York: Time-Life Books, 1971.
_______. West Africa Before the Colonial Era: A History to 1850. London: Longman, 1998.
McKissack, Patricia, and Fredrick McKissack. The Royal Kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, and
Songhay: Life in Medieval Africa. New York: Henry Holt, 1994.
Martin, Phyllis M., and Patrick OMeara, eds. Africa. 3d ed. Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 1995.
Mays, Terry M. At Tondibi in 1591, Firearms and Stampeding Cattle Heralded the Fall of a
Once-Great Empire. Military History 18, no. 3 (August, 2001): 18.
Mendonsa, Eugene L. West Africa: An Introduction to Its History, Civilization, and Contemporary Situation. Durham, N.C.: Carolina Academic Press, 2002.
Oliver, Roland, and Anthony Atmore. Medieval Africa, 1250-1800. New York: Cambridge
University Press, 2001.
Phillipson, David W. African Archaeology. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press,
1985.
Films and Other Media
The Forts and Castles of Ghana. Documentary. Image Entertainment, 2003.
Ruben G. Mendoza
Ethiopia
Dates: c. 300-1543 c.e.
Political Considerations
Turning Points
304
Ethiopia
305
Somali coasts. The Aksumite Empire, deprived of its links to the Mediterranean
and to lucrative trade, could no longer
Ottoman Empire
maintain large armies, nor rely on seabased or caravan trade. In growing isolaAdal
tion from the rest of the world, the Aksumites moved south into the mountainous
Ethiopia
Cairo
interior of the Abyssinian highlands, where
they dominated Agau-speaking agriculturalists, assimilating much of the local
.
population through intermarriage, cultural
transplantation, and religious conversion.
Still, Agau-speaking peoples fought back
Arabia
Sahara
Mecca
in peripheral areas that the centralized but
Desert
by now weakened Aksumite state could not
control during the tenth and eleventh centuries.
The cross-fertilization of Aksum with the
Agau produced a new dynasty, the Zagwe,
whose most celebrated figure was the emAden
peror Lalibela (r. c. 1185-1225), who was
Lalibela
Agau by bloodline but thoroughly assimilated into the Aksumite Christian culture.
Harer
Lalibela was unable to hold the fractious
Dakar
and feudal empire together, however, and
was eventually defeated by the Shewan
rebel and Christian leader Yekuno Amlak
(fl. thirteenth century) after a series of batMogadishu
tles that culminated with Lalibelas death.
Yekuno Amlak declared himself emperor
and, to bolster his legitimacy, claimed to be
a descendant from the line of King Soloarea that had earlier provided tribute. When troubles
mon and Queen of Sheba of the Old Testament. He
in the empire called his attention elsewhere, howquickly consolidated the existing empire and subever, the Ifat Muslims responded by declaring a holy
dued neighboring Muslim areas. In the early thirwar in 1332. Amda Tseyon responded vigorously
teenth century, Emperor Amda Tseyon (r. 1314and with great military brilliance. Against the highly
c. 1344) expanded and solidified the Solomonid
mobile Muslim units, he used his army effectively to
Dynasty over the divided feudal system. He estabisolate and attack the weakest Muslim units, fielding
lished military garrisons throughout the highlands,
decoy columns to keep the Muslim-federated troops
areas difficult to govern even in the best of times,
off-balance and always on the defensive. Eventually
given their remoteness and inaccessibility. He also
he thoroughly routed the Muslim forces and substanencouraged Christian evangelization. The order intially expanded the extent of his empire. Subsequent
stituted by Amda Tseyon increased both the ecoEthiopian kings built on his success by fostering
nomic activity and wealth of the area, as he extracted
Christianity as a unifying force in an otherwise feutribute from his locally appointed administrators and
dal economic system. However, not all Muslims in
feudal lords. Amda Tseyon attacked Ifat, a Muslim
Ethiopia, c. 1500
Nil
Re
Se
Wh
ite
Ni l e
R.
306
Military Achievement
Ethiopia
Appeals by contending forces to external assistance
and to the latest weaponry were hallmarks of warfare
in the region during the sixteenth century, as each
side sought to increase its firepower.
Military Organization
Military organization varied significantly throughout Ethiopian history. Feudal and clan warfare marked
by temporary and shifting alliances of small militialike forces were perhaps the most common and persistent manifestations of warfare during most of the
period from the fourth to the sixteenth centuries. During periods of expansion of the central state such as
those of the Aksum Dynasty from 300 to 500 and the
Solomonid Dynasty of the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries, larger armies were maintained. During periods of central governmental weakness, the various
isolated areas broke down along lines of feudal lordship, as did the armies. Under stronger emperors,
greater unity of command and control over the military forces were in evidence.
307
308
Ancient Sources
The history of East Africa is based in several different types of sources: African oral tradition; African, Arabic, and European writings; archaeological artifacts such as the stelae at
Aksum and the inscription of King Ezana of Aksum (c. 325 c.e.); and local histories such as a
collection of writings in Kiswahili on the history of the East African coast, including the Kilwa
Chronicle and the History of Pate. For the ancient period, oral tradition forms an important
source of informationif one that must be approached carefully to filter out bias and in combination with other sources to fill gaps. Local historians transcribed some of these oral histories
and offered their own contemporary observations.
Classical accounts of ancient Ethiopia can be found in the third book of Herodotuss
Historiai Herodotou (c. 424 b.c.e.; The History, 1709); De bello Africo (49-45 b.c.e.; Commentaries of the African War, 1753), attributed to Julius Caesar but possibly by a Roman soldier;
various passages of Strabos Gefgraphica (c. 7 b.c.e.; Geography, 1917-1933); book 5 of Pliny
the Elders Naturalis historia (77 c.e.; The Historie of the World, 1601; better known as Natural
History); the Periplus maris erythraei (first-third centuries c.e.; The Periplus of the Erythraean
Sea, 1912); and book 1 of Polemon (c. 551 c.e.; History of the Wars, 1960), by Byzantine historian Procopius of Caesarea.
A sense of what East Africa and the region that came to be known as Ethiopia were like during the fourteenth century can be gained from reading book 4 of Tuwfat al-nu,,3r fi ghara4ib alamsar wa-4aja4ib al-asfar (1357-1358; Travels of Ibn Battuta, 1958-2000, best known as the
Riwlah).
Books and Articles
Abir, Mordechai. Ethiopia: The Era of the Princes: The Challenge of Islam and the Reunification of the Christian Empire. New York: Praeger, 1968.
Adejumobi, Saheed A. The History of Ethiopia. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2007.
Greenfield, Richard. Ethiopia: A New Political History. New York: Praeger, 1965.
Henze, Paul B. Layers of Time: A History of Ethiopia. New York: St. Martins Press, 2000.
Keys, David. Medieval Houses of God, or Ancient Fortresses? Archaeology 57, no. 6
(November/December, 2004): 10.
Levine, Donald. Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 2000.
Marcus, Harold G. A History of Ethiopia. Updated ed. Berkeley: University of California Press,
2002.
Nicolle, David. Armies of the Caliphates, 862-1098. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 1998.
Pankhurst, Richard. The Ethiopians: A History. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2001.
Phillipson, David W. Ancient Ethiopia: AksumIts Antecedents and Successors. London: British Museum Press, 1998.
Films and Other Media
Ethiopia: The Kingdom of Judas Lion. Documentary. Ambrose Video, 1998.
Explore Ethiopia: Land of Sheba/Sanctuaries of Stone. Documentary. Esicma, 1995.
Robert F. Gorman
China
Medieval
Dates: 581-1644 c.e.
scholar gentry as the foundation of the government
bureaucracy, returning the intellectual class to the
study of Confucian philosophy and reinstating the
national examination system as the entry into government positions. These actions produced a class of
neo-Confucian scholars that would have a profound
ethical impact upon Chinas civil and military services. Most important, this new intellectual class believed the major function of Confucian philosophy
was to develop an individual moral code. This new
philosophical system would impact Chinese society
in important ways. The scholar gentry became very
xenophobic and rejected all alternative worldviews
as inferior. This narrow focus on a strict social structure stressed tradition and fought any political, economic, scientific, or technological innovation. The
gentrys emphasis on individual moral growth clashed
with the harsh realities of the martial arts and resulted
in an antimilitary bias among the Chinese intellectual
class.
Under both the Tang and Song (Sung) Dynasties
(960-1279), China experienced widespread economic
growth, which in turn gave birth to a Chinese golden
age. This success was based upon the development of
the agricultural potential of southern China, most significantly in the production of rice in the Yangtze
(pinyin, Chang) River Valley. The future of China
would now be determined by the link between the
bureaucratic north and the agricultural south. To
solidify this crucial relationship, the government constructed the Grand Canal, a magnificent civil engineering project that was, in its time, the largest humanmade waterway in the world. The canal increased
transportation throughout the country, both accelerating trade and creating a sense of unity. The maintenance and protection of the Grand Canal became a
major focus of the Chinese military. In times of con-
Political Considerations
After the collapse of the Han Dynasty in 220 c.e.,
China drifted into a period of political chaos during
which it was controlled by a number of rival regional
kingdoms. However, by the sixth century, Yang Jian
(Yang Chien), also known as Wendi (Wen-ti; 541604), a successful military commander, had won the
support of the majority of the regional leaders in the
north to reestablish a central authority that eventually
brought most of traditional China under his control.
By 589 the Sui (Sui) Dynasty (581-618) had set in
motion a number of reforms that increased and stabilized the Chinese standard of living. Yang Jian instituted a new system of taxation that brought needed
financial relief to most of the peasantry. He also constructed a series of regional granaries, which both
lowered prices and ensured the equal distribution
of food. This newfound prosperity was short-lived,
however, because the emperor was assassinated by
his eldest son, Yangdi (Yangti; 569-618). As emperor, Yangdi began a series of extensive civil engineering projects in an attempt to improve transportation and tie the vast empire together. He also started a
series of military campaigns to gain control of the
northern portion of the Korean Peninsula. Both actions greatly disrupted the economy and were especially hard on the peasant population. Violent political uprisings broke out in every corner of the empire,
and Yangdi was finally assassinated by a group of his
ministers in an attempt to quell the fighting and reestablish political order.
This internal dissent severely weakened the Sui
Dynasty, and in 618 Li Yuan (Li yuan; 565-635),
the duke of Tang, took advantage of the situation to
establish the Tang (Tang) Dynasty (618-907). Li
Yuans first action was to restore the traditional
311
312
flict, this waterway allowed the emperor to move
troops swiftly to any trouble spot.
With Chinas great economic success came a softening of Chinese society, widespread political corruption, and a series of weak and incompetent emperors who eventually sapped the energy of the empire.
In particular, the effectiveness of both the bureaucracy and the military was decreased, helping to create the conditions for the Mongol conquests at the beginning of the thirteenth century. These nomadic
warriors first entered China at the invitation of the
declining Song Dynasty. The emperor hoped that
they would engage and destroy the Jrcheds and the
Jin (Chin), two northern nomadic tribes that threatened to invade China. In 1234 the Jin were defeated
by a Sino-Mongolian military alliance, but then, in
direct violation of that agreement, the Song attempted to occupy the newly conquered land and extend their empire into the northern territories. This
action shattered the alliance and set in motion the
Mongol conquest of China and the establishment of
the Yuan Dynasty (1279-1368).
The Mongols would have a significant impact
upon Chinese history. They established their capital
at Beijing and abolished the bureaucracy based upon
Confucianism and the examination system. These
actions were taken specifically to negate the influence of the scholar gentry. The Mongols eventually
adopted many aspects of Chinese culture and aggressively promoted its literature and art. Despite this
openness, the Mongols were never able to find a solution to the Sino-Mongolian ethnic rivalry. Most of
the intellectuals from the gentry class considered the
Mongols to be uncouth barbarians. This ethnocentricity was exacerbated by the gentrys resentment of
the abolition of the state examination system, which
blocked the gentry from gaining access to the highest
levels of political power.
After the death of Kublai Khan (1215-1294), the
Yuan Dynasty fell into a period of decline. There
were essentially four reasons that this took place.
First, the southern region was occupied by a large
number of activists who had remained loyal to the
Song Dynasty. As the Yuan declined, many of these
disenchanted groups were emboldened to take political action that eventually resulted in an empire-wide
China
313
Lake
Balkhash
Talas
Po-hai
Bas
in
Ya n g t z
im
ala
Silla
w Riv
Ye l l o
Loyang
Changan
Tibet
Japan
er
Ta
rim
(Beijing)
ya
Heian
Yellow
Sea
Nara
China
v
e
Ri
Hangzhou
er
Kashgar
Mts.
Pa c i f i c
Nanzhao
India
South
China Sea
Ocean
314
Military Achievement
Military events also played an important role in Chinese affairs during the era between the rise of the Sui
Dynasty and the fall of the Ming Dynasty. Yang Jian,
the founder of the Sui Dynasty, used his prestige as a
great military leader to bring all of China under his
control. Despite his military success, however, he
was unable to establish a lasting peace. His new government was beset by revolts, and he reacted to this
chaos by implementing an authoritarian style of government. His greatest threat came from the disaffected population in the south, where he sent his two
most trusted generals to crush any resistance to imperial authority. The emperor then instituted a policy of
forced labor, which concentrated on the construction
of the Grand Canal and the restoration of more than
1,000 miles of defensive walls on the empires northern borders.
Yang Jians two major military problems were the
constant threat of invasion from the northern steppe
and the fear of rebellion. In an attempt to control the
military, he issued a series of decrees that placed all
army units throughout the empire under the direct
control of local civilian officials. These loyal bureaucrats were also directed to confiscate all privately
owned weapons and store them for possible military
use.
Yang Jian also began an expansionist policy, and
his primary goal was to return Vietnam to Chinese
control. In 602 he sent an expeditionary force to Vietnam, where his army was devastated by both stiff resistance on the part of the Vietnamese and a deadly
virus that killed hundreds of soldiers.
The emperors son Yangdi used this disaster to
organize and execute an assassination plot, which
brought him to the throne in 604. The young emperor
also had plans for extending the borders of the empire, and in 607 he led an army that marched westward against the Tu-y-hun, a band of nomadic warriors that had recently negotiated a military alliance
with the Koguryo, the most powerful dynasty in the
northern Korean Peninsula. Fear that such an agreement would prove a threat to China, Yangdi initiated
a military campaign against this potential rival. The
Koguryo took advantage of the mountainous landscape of northern Korea, fortifying their towns and
implementing a defensive strategy against the invading Chinese. Stifled by this tactical policy, the emperors army fought a long, difficult, and unsuccessful campaign, and Yangdi returned home to find his
empire in open rebellion.
Li Yuan, the duke of Tang, took advantage of this
military disaster to increase his power in the area. In
617 he successfully negotiated an alliance with the
Turks, who agreed to supply men and horses to the
dukes army. Secure in this new military arrangement, Li Yuan moved against the Sui. After a disastrous military campaign in which his forces were
soundly defeated, Yangdi died. The duke of Tang,
upon hearing of these events, declared himself the
new emperor of China.
Li Yuan adopted a military policy that proved to
be very successful. The Tang Dynasty used the mountains in the west as a natural fortification against invasion from the central Asian steppe. The new emperor was also very generous to the Sui army, and he
implemented the enlightened policy of granting both
the enlisted men and officers from defeated armies
positions in his armed forces. This policy not only increased the effectiveness of his military but also
ended any possibility of a future military uprising by
the Sui forces.
Li Shimin (Li Shih-min; 600-649), the dukes son,
was also a major factor in the military success of the
Tang. He was a great tactician and was famous for his
China
use of cavalry. Concerned about his fathers advancing age and emboldened by an important victory
against peasant rebels in the Yellow River Valley, Li
Shimin forced his fathers abdication and assumed
the Tang throne. He governed China for twenty-three
years and became one of the most successful military
leaders in Chinese history. He launched an ambitious
plan to enlarge the territory of the empire, beginning
this quest with an important victory over the Turks in
629, during the Sino-Turkic War (629-630). The success of this campaign so enhanced his international
reputation that both the Persian and Byzantine Empires sent representatives to his court. Li Shimin continued to expand his empire, and by the time of his
death in 649, the borders of China stretched from Tibet in the south to Lake Balkhash in the west. Tang
military power continued into the next century. From
663 to 668 the Chinese fought and defeated the Japanese in the War of Kokuryo, uniting all of Korea under one rule, subject to China.
After he had secured the eastern border, the Tang
emperor returned his attention toward the west. From
736 to 755 a series of successful campaigns extended
the borders of the empire to the Pamir range, bringing
the Tang to the frontier of Islamic civilization and
placing these two great eighth century powers on a
collision course. This Sino-Islamic crisis reached a
flash point at the Battle of Talas River (751), a bloody
confrontation that lasted for five days. The armies of
Islam ultimately defeated the Chinese forces, ending
Tang westward expansion.
This defeat marked the beginning of the Tang Dynastys decline. Decades of military campaigns had
taken a toll on Chinese society, and the losses in both
revenue and productivity were significant. These
problems led to widespread civil unrest, which devastated Chinese society. For more than one hundred
years, the emperors and their bureaucracies had
failed to return the empire to a state of normalcy, and
by 884 the Tang Dynasty was shattered.
With the final collapse of the Tang Empire in 907,
China fell into a chaotic intermediate period referred
to as the time of the Five Dynasties (907-960). None
of the dynasties was able to unify China, and order
was finally restored in 960, with the establishment of
the Song. Most historians refer to the Song as the
315
worlds first modern state, and its emperors were traditionally antimilitary. The government, in constant
fear of an armed takeover, made strong efforts to
limit the armys power. The Song created a military
model that placed their generals under the control of
the civilian bureaucracy, resulting in the militarys
lowered prestige and appeal for the aristocratic class.
In time, the military came to be dominated by the
lower echelons of Song society, and by the middle of
the eleventh century enlisted men were receiving
one-tenth of their former wages. This lowered pay
caused great economic hardship, and mutinies became commonplace.
The Song government was faced with significant
financial difficulties. The population of China had
reached 140 million, and vast amounts of money had
been set aside for the construction of large-scale irrigation projects. The empire had to import the vast
majority of its cavalry horses, which also cost a considerable amount of money. Chinas underfinanced
military was grossly ill-equipped to meet the security
challenges of the nomadic horsemen of central Asia.
The Song bureaucracy responded to this problem by
adopting a military philosophy based upon the concept of strategic defense. Money was allocated for
the construction of massive fortifications that would
frustrate the light horse cavalry tactics of the nomadic armies. The military theory that all defensive
structures are eventually neutralized by an opposition force came to pass in the last years of the Song
Dynasty. When the Song-Mongol military alliance
broke down, the aggressive Mongol warriors quickly
defeated the demoralized forces of the emperor and
established the Yuan Dynasty. Between 1200 and
1405 the Mongols conquered Tibet, Russia, Iraq,
Asia Minor, and southern and eastern Europe.
By the middle of the fourteenth century, the Yuan
Dynasty began to decline. Years of famine gave rise
to peasant unrest, and a secret religious sect known as
the White Lotus spread anti-Yuan propaganda concerning the reestablishment of the Song Dynasty. In
turn, the White Lotus also supported a peasant rebel
organization known as the Red Turban movement.
Fighting broke out between the Yuan forces in the
south and the rebel armies. The success of these armies was primarily due to the fact that the Yuan had
316
Liao
River
= Southern
Song Empire
Hsi-Hsia
Yen-ching Liao
River (Beijing)
Wei
River
Kaifeng
ng
Ya
Kaifeng
Ri
tze ver
Chengdu
Hangzhou
Northern Song
S e
a
Chengdu
ze River
gt
n
Hangzhou
Ya
Southern Song
Quanzhou
Nanzhao
Annam
in
ryo
Ko
Wei
Yen-ching Liao
River (Beijing)
ryo
Ko
Hsi-Hsia
(Tibetan)
Yellow
= Northern
Song Empire
= Jin Empire
S e
a
= Liao Empire
uria
M a nc h
Liao River
c. 1150 c.e.
Yellow
c. 1050 c.e.
Quanzhou
a
failed to keep the system of defensive walls under repair. The Yuans nomadic heritage and military success were based upon swift cavalry movements, and
a defensive mindset was totally alien to them. Eventually, the Mongols were able to defeat the rebel armies, but they were never able to regain complete political control of southern China.
From 1351 to 1368 the Mongols were involved in
a series of military campaigns against Chinese forces
in the south, in which they suffered a series of disastrous setbacks. The Mongols decided to abandon
much of their territory and returned to their ancient
homelands in the north. This strategic withdrawal
marked the beginning of the Ming Dynasty (13681644).
The new Ming emperor and his intellectual elite
modeled themselves after the Song Dynasty. Like the
Song the Ming adopted an isolationist policy that kept
the governments focus on protecting the homeland.
Nanzhao
Annam
in
China
used to destroy permanent fortifications. The Arabs
also introduced the Chinese to the use of naphtha, an
oil-based chemical mixture that burned on contact
with water. This weapon was oriented toward naval
warfare and proved devastating when wind conditions allowed its use.
The defensive, infantry-oriented philosophy of
the Song changed with the onset of the Yuan Dynasty. The nomadic heritage of the Mongols emphasized constant movement. The most important
weapon in the Yuan arsenal was the horse, a small,
sturdy, and highly maneuverable Asian breed. A
Mongol cavalryman was taught to ride by his mother
at the age of three, and by the time he was ready for
military service, he could both eat and sleep in the
saddle. These mounted warriors were armed with a
compound bow that had a force of 166 pounds and a
killing range of 300 yards. Each warrior carried two
bows and two to three quivers of arrows, some with
small heads for distance and larger ones for close-in
fighting. Both the rider and horse were protected by
armor that consisted of a series of leather or iron
strips and was quite effective against swords and
spears.
The Ming made improvements to traditional
weapons, such as the crossbow and catapults, and initiated significant progress in the use of gunpowder
and explosive devices. Small handheld grenadelike
projectiles became commonplace in Ming infantry
units, and the shrapnel produced in the explosion of
these bombs was quite deadly. The Ming also developed accurate rockets that were used to bring down
wooden fortifications. These projectiles were usually
launched from wheelbarrows, and their maneuverability made them a valuable addition to the Ming arsenal. The most significant development in weaponry during the Ming Dynasty was the construction
of the Great Wall. China, because of its emphasis on
defense, had a long history of using defensive walls
as part of their arsenal. This strategy extends back to
the Qin (Chin) Dynasty (221-206 b.c.e.) in the third
century before the common era. As the result of both
internal problems and foreign invasion, most of these
walls became inoperable. Soon after the Ming came
to power they began to construct a series of defensive
walls to protect China from invasion from the north.
317
By the mid-sixteenth century China once again found
itself threatened by a new Mongol army. To counteract this threat the Ming government began the construction of the Great Wall, actually a series of fortifications linked by a defensive wall. Ironically,
Chinas main danger did not come from the central
Asian steppe but from the sea. The European armies
that entered China all possessed the technology to
overcome this Great Wall.
Military Organization
The Sui based their military organization upon a military and social philosophy that emphasized the obligation of the social elite to provide service to the
state. The military leadership of the Sui came from
old, established, aristocratic families, and their traditional social values formed the foundation of the Sui
military organization.
This orientation toward service continued during
the Tang Dynasty but was tempered by the impact of
Confucian philosophy. The Tang armed forces consisted of six hundred militia units that ranged in size
from eight hundred to twelve hundred men. Control
of the army was transferred from the old aristocratic
families under the Sui to the scholar gentry that now
ran the newly formed Ministry of the Army. The
armed forces were divided into two basic groups,
the infantry and cavalry, with sections divided into
smaller units consisting of two hundred, fifty, and ten
men. The Tang also developed a permanent cadre of
professional officers, and the enlisted ranks consisted of men who rotated to duty for a specific number of months. This system was established so that
soldiers could support themselves through agriculture, thus reducing the government expense of supplying the army. In times of great military danger, the
Tang would also employ mercenaries to increase the
size of its armed forces.
By the early eighth century, the cost of sending a
large expeditionary force to a particular trouble spot
became too expensive. The ministry created nine
frontier commands and adopted the philosophy of a
defensive army. By 737 the militia was replaced by a
totally professional armed force, and these units were
318
placed in the region of a powerful provincial official
who would make decisions about their deployment.
Each group constructed a fortified base of operations
that served as a regional sanctuary in times of trouble.
The military strength of China began to decline
under the Song Dynasty. The emperors were so fearful of a military uprising that they dissolved the successful organizational model that had evolved during
the Sui and Tang Dynasties. They took control of
the military decision-making process away from the
generals and placed it under the tight control of the civilian government. Most important, the Song emperors used the enlisted ranks of the army as a social welfare program, providing employment for the poorest
sectors of society. This system lowered the status of
the military, and by the middle of the eleventh century the average enlisted man was receiving about
one-tenth of his formerly allotted wages. This great
inequity decreased the operational effectiveness of
the army and eventually caused numerous mutinies.
The military organization under the Yuan Dynasty reflected the aggressive, loyal heritage of nomadic warriors, and was based upon the decimal system, with the smallest and largest units consisting of
ten and one thousand men, respectively. Within the
Mongol organization, each individual soldier occupied a unique position in the unit and was responsible
to perform a specific task. The Mongol army was always divided into three operational units that controlled the left, right, and center of any military operation. All individuals within the Yuan armed forces
were expected to carry out the necessary functions of
a successful soldier. Both generals and enlisted men
stood guard duty, and every member of the unit
strictly obeyed the orders of his superior. Promotion
was based upon skill, and it was quite common for a
commoner to rise to the level of a great general. The
martial qualities of bravery, discipline, and strength
made the Mongols a very successful military organization.
The Ming military organization mirrored that of
the Song. Its focus was directed primarily toward the
defense of China and the control of the military. The
government implemented a system that divided the
country into military districts under the control of
the civilian leadership. The logistics, supply, and
China
319
velopment of a strong personal ethical code would always be in conflict with the aggressive nature of the
martial arts. This would be the basis for placing the
military under the control of the gentry-dominated
bureaucracy. The Mohist stand against offensive war
would lead to the development of a Grand Defensive Strategy that would greatly influence the development of training, tactics, and weaponry.
The philosophical foundation for tactical operations can be found in the writings of the Daoist military philosopher Sunzi (Sun Tzu; fl. c. fifth century
b.c.e.). In keeping with the philosophical premise
that the laws of nature were the ultimate reality,
Sunzi developed a tactical doctrine that synthesized
Confucian, Mohist, and Daoist beliefs. Sunzi, incorporating the Daoist concept of natural order, wrote
that war is governed by five eternal elements. The
correct application of all five by the military commander was necessary in order to carry out a successful campaign. Every military commander had to
develop a plan of action that would take into consideration the moral law, weather, geography, the commander and his rules, and finally the military organization he was commanding. The success or failure of
any military campaign depended upon all five of
these factors operating in harmony with one another.
Finally the implementation of these theories under battlefield conditions was influenced by the philosophy of Legalism, which emphasized order and
strength. Every successful leader, before he engaged
the enemy, had to be assured that his orders would be
executed without question and that his forces were always operating from a position of superior strength.
Medieval Sources
The vast majority of Chinese sources have yet to be translated into English, although some
have been translated into French, German, and Russian. The most important medieval sources
are three military manuals that were used by the Tang, Song, and Ming Dynasties. The earliest
of these is Li Quans (Li Chan; fl. 759), Shen chi chih ti Tai-pai yin ching, a manual that was
utilized by the armies of the Tang Dynasty. The most respected source is the Wujing (Wuching), or Five Classics, a collection of treatises written during the Song Dynasty giving detailed accounts of medieval Chinese military strategy.
Sunzi, the military theorist who wrote Bingfa (c. 510 b.c.e.; The Art of War, 1910), was active in military affairs during the Zhou (Chou) Dynasty and had a profound influence on later
Asian military thought. He was largely unknown in the West until the eighteenth century and
received widespread appreciation only in the twentieth.
The primary chronicle of the Yuan Dynasty is the Yuan Shih (1370), originally composed in
ten volumes by Song Lian and Wang Wei, and revised and rewritten in 1934 by Ke Shaobin in
257 volumes as Xin Yuanshi. It contains not only the history of the conquests and the military in
general but also includes biographies of most of the commanders throughout the Mongol Empire.
Books and Articles
Graff, David A. Medieval Chinese Warfare, 300-900. New York: Routledge, 2002.
_______. Yeh Fei. In The Readers Companion to Military History, edited by Robert Cowley and Geoffrey Parker. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
Huang, Ray. Chi Chi-kuang: The Lonely General. In 1587, a Year of No Significance: The
Ming Dynasty in Decline. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1981.
Lorge, Peter. War and Warfare in China, 1450-1815. In War in the Early Modern World, edited by Jeremy Black. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1999.
320
Japan
Medieval
Dates: c. 600-1600 c.e.
Political Considerations
Two outstanding political institutions dominate most
of Japanese history until 1867: the samurai warrior
class and the shogun military dictators. It is not exactly clear when the first Japanese state appeared, but
Chinese and Korean chronicles speak of a recognizable kingdom at least by the fourth century c.e. In the
fifth and six centuries, powerful families and clans residing in the area of present-day Kyoto and Osaka became united into the Yamato Court, the first real political entity in Japanese history. These hereditary clans,
known as uji, controlled the majority of the population: the peasants, or be, who were grouped in castelike fashion by occupation, residence, and family.
The uji-be system was modified in 645, but a characteristic feature of Japanese government at this time
was the use of outpost soldiers, or sakimori, who
guarded the borders. Sakimori protected strategic locations, such as outlying islands in the south and
mountain passes in the north. An incipient standing
army, these frontier guards were also
sent on expeditions of various kinds,
such as fighting the indigenous Ainu
people in the northern territories.
c. 750
Although troops were initially pro1192
vided by only the most powerful
clans, by the eighth century each
provincial governor was expected to
1477-1601
provide a certain number (sometimes
up to one-third of the male popula1543
tion aged sixteen to fifty-nine) of
1575
peasant-soldiers for three-year commitments. This policy was intended
1600
to break up the monopoly on military power held by the influential
families.
Turning Points
Carbon-steel swords first appear in Japan.
The samurai Minamoto Yoritomo establishes the first
shogunate at Kamakura, bringing order to Japan after four
centuries of feudal chaos and political vacuum.
Perpetual civil war is waged throughout the Sengoku, or
Warring States, period.
Firearms are first used in Japan.
Three thousand musketeers help General Oda Nobunaga win
control of central Japan.
After the Battle of Sekigahara, Japan is unified as Tokugawa
Ieyasu establishes the Tokugawa shogunate, with its
capital at Edo (present-day Tokyo).
321
322
relationship between these noble warlords, eventually termed daimyo, or great names, and their
vassals became one of intense loyalty. The samurai
themselves grew into a class of military elite, with
leaders drawn from descendants from the imperial
family.
Although it was nominally a monarchy, medieval
Japan actually was not ruled by the reigning emperor.
Since the mid-700s, true power had lain in the hands
of the shogun, a military dictator who theoretically
protected the emperor from revolutionaries or barbarous indigenous border tribes. Although emperors inherited their titles, shoguns were ambitious leaders
who rose to power on the basis of individual military
skill and political guile. These shogun warrior governments ruled Japan until the mid-nineteenth century.
Under the shogunate system, power was divided
between court and regent, allowing social or political
instability as each disputed matters of jurisdiction.
Because the shogun ostensibly governed on behalf of
the emperor, his control was never absolute. Often
disgruntled daimyo warlords would have their own
ambitions and might rebel. Some samurai were never
even vassals of the shogunate to begin with and were
reluctant to obey its commands. Occasionally emperors themselves would try to assert direct authority
and start revolutions of their own. Of course, too,
there were many disputes over shogunal succession, both from within the ruling families and from
outsiders.
Military Achievement
Much of Japanese history centers on the struggles of
the various shogunates and the resulting countrywide
conflicts. Civil war was rampant, brutal, and endemic.
The Sengoku, or Warring States, period was a particularly cruel time. Perpetual fighting went on for
more than a century, from 1477 to 1601. By the
1580s two generals, Oda Nobunaga (1534-1582)
and Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598), had succeeded in unifying Japan after fighting numerous
battles against various clans and eliminating the last
Japan
323
dress. By the mid-sixteenth century, battles had become colorful. Samurai wore small flags, or sashimono, on the backs of their armor to indicate their affiliations, and the foot soldiers and conscripts of a
particular daimyo began to wear similar kinds of
dress.
Military Organization
Even as late as the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600 the
Japanese system of military organization differed
from the regimental models found in Europe. The
main operational unit was the individual daimyos
army. Forces were placed in the field according to
324
Doctrine, Strategy,
and Tactics
The famous battles of the Gempei
Wars (1180-1185) and the Japanese
Civil Wars (1331-1392) established
the strategies and tactics of Japanese
warfare that would last for more than
two hundred years. Typical military
formations employed samurai armed
with swords or bows and arrows,
peasant foot soldiers armed with
pikes, and the occasional mounted
samurai cavalry charge. It has been
said by some military historians that
these battles, for the most part, were
little more than mass confusion. Although elaborate and colorful formations were often staged before
North Wind Picture Archives via AP Images
the battle, no strict patterns were followed in fighting. Struggles often
A group of samurai warriors, a class that served as Japans military
degenerated into numerous one-onelite throughout the medieval period.
one fights pitting individual soldiers
against one another, each man simfamily or warlord, and orders were given to each
ply trying to stay alive and attempting to decapitate
units individual leader, often without close coordithe nearest foe.
nation with the other field units. This lack of orgaThis form of battle owed much to the samurai
nized communication often caused severe logistical
ethos of personal bravery and honor. For example,
problems.
Daidoji Yuzan (1639-1730), in his book Budo shoUnit specialization in the Japanese army was not
shinshu, translated as The Code of the Samurai, recparticularly pronounced. Japanese armies generally
ommended that a true warrior never neglects the ofconsisted of foot soldiers and archers. Japanese horses
fensive spirit and that he should follow the proverb
tended to be small, making Japanese mounted attacks
When you leave your gate, act as though the enemy
less effective than those of the European knights.
was in sight. According to the way of the samurai,
Samurai often rode to battle but dismounted to fight;
the public demonstration of ones personal individorganized cavalry units, then, were not especially
ual honor on the battlefield was more important than
popular. Artillery units were also unusual. After Japlarge-scale military or geographic objectives. In fact,
anese daimyo learned that stone castles were necessome samurai even discouraged the study of military
Japan
325
manship. Nobunaga, for example, realized the imstrategy altogether. In another famous treatise on
portance of uniforms and unit insignias for his troops,
the samurai way of life, the Hagakure, which transboth to make identification during battle easier and to
lates literally as in the shadows of leaves, and is ofinstill a sense of unit cohesion and identity.
ten known as The Way of the Samurai, Yamamoto
Another major sixteenth century development was
Tsunetomo (1659-1719) argues that Learning such
the introduction of firearms in 1543. The first guns
things as military tactics is useless. If one does not
brought to the country were Portuguese harquebuses,
strike out by simply closing his eyes and rushing into
matchlocks, and muskets. Japanese daimyo immedithe enemy, even if it is only one step, he will be of no
ately ordered their swordsmiths to start making copuse. Indeed, it could be argued from the perspective
ies. Within a few decades Japanese gunsmiths, workof a millenniums distance that these individual priing with high-quality Japanese copper, were some of
vate battles were as much the real reason for fighting
the best in the world. Firearms became relatively inas anything else.
expensive to produce and reliable to use. As early as
Japanese warfare before 1570, then, was a highly
1549 Nobunaga bought five hundred matchlocks
unstructured affair; troops underwent little training
from a local daimyo and established the first musket
and few drills. Samurai leaders, too, paid little attenbrigade in a Japanese army. By the 1570s more than
tion to a campaigns supposed military goals. In
a third of all daimyos armies had muskets, which bethe mid-sixteenth century, however, all this changed.
came the most important weapon in the Japanese
A century of protracted civil war had altered the poarsenal.
litical climate and power dynamics in Japan. The
These new weapons forced major changes in taccentral government and the shogunate were now
tics, as Nobunaga was quick to realize. Nobunaga pivastly weakened, and the daimyo sought to enlarge
oneered the use of harquebus volley fire as a major
their individual domains by force of arms. War came
to be defined as warlord against warlord, clan against clan. To maintain
this constant state of siege and countersiege, larger armies were needed.
As there were not enough samurai
(never more than 5 or 10 percent
of the population), more and more
peasant troops had to be used. These
ashigaru, or foot soldiers, made up
increasing portions of each of the
daimyos forces.
By the 1580s Nobunaga had realized the need for major changes,
and his initial successes were due
at least in part to his new ways of
military thinking. Previously, a general in command of a smaller army
had been able personally to inspire
his troops with his own charisma,
persuasion, and bravery. Now, with
20,000- to 50,000-man armies often
Library of Congress
commonplace, a leaders method of
training, tactics, and command conTokugawa Ieyasu defeated a coalition of generals and warlords at the
trol were as important as his swordsBattle of Sekigahara in 1600, unifying Japan.
326
tion and eventually was abolished altogether. The decision to eliminate firearms had several possible motivations. First, there was a generally negative feeling
at this time toward all things Western, including
guns. Second, according to samurai ethics, it was
considered cowardly to kill someone from a great
distance without meeting him face-to-face on the battlefield. Third, swords and the art of their use held
special symbolic and aesthetic meaning in the minds
of the samurai, who apparently felt almost naked
without them. Finally and most simply, the country
did not seem to need firearms. After stabilization by
the Tokugawa family, Japan effectively cut itself off
from the rest of the world for the next two and onehalf centuries. Ironically, it was American gunboats
in the 1850s that reopened the door.
Medieval Sources
There are many surviving documents, books, images, and artifacts from medieval Japanese
times that tell a great deal about the lives of the samurai, daimyo, shoguns, and emperors. For
example, illustrated training manuals of the era include guides to musket marksmanship, fencing, hand-to-hand combat, and even ninja assassination techniques. Also, the extensive writings of individual warriors tell much about their personal lives and philosophies. For instance,
the loneliness of the sakimori frontier guards is reflected in the Manyf-shn, an anthology of
sakimori poems collected around 800 c.e. and translated into English as Collection of Ten
Thousand Leaves in 1967 by H. H. Fonda. The famous Gorin no sho (c. 1643; The Book of Five
Rings, 1974), written by master swordsman and artist Miyamoto Mushashi (1584-1645), is still
read for its timeless insights on the philosophy of martial arts. The intrigues of the court and the
shoguns are documented in the genre of war tales writings, the most famous of which is the
Heike monogatari (c. 1240; The Tale of Heike, 1988). This collection of traditional tales of the
five-year Gempei Wars (1180-1185) is probably the best existing expression of the samurai
code of bushidf, the virtue of martial loyalty.
Books and Articles
Farris, William Wayne. Heavenly Warriors: The Evolution of Japans Military, 500-1300.
Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1992.
Friday, Karl F. Oda Nobunaga. In The Readers Companion to Military History, edited by
Robert Cowley and Geoffrey Parker. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
_______. Samurai, Warfare, and the State in Early Medieval Japan. New York: Routledge,
2004.
Kure, Mitsuo. Samurai: An Illustrated History. Boston: Tuttle, 2002.
Miller, David. Samurai Warriors. New York: St. Martins Press, 2000.
Ratti, Oscar, and Adele Westbrook. Secrets of the Samurai: The Martial Arts of Feudal Japan.
Edison, N.J.: Castle Books, 1999.
Sugawara, Mokoto. The Ancient Samurai. Tokyo: The East Publications, 1986.
_______. Battles of the Samurai. London: Arms and Armour Press, 1992.
Japan
327
Turnbull, Stephen. The Samurai Invasion of Korea, 1592-98. Illustrated by Peter Dennis.
Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2008.
_______. Samurai Warlords: The Book of the Daimyo. London: Blandford Press, 1992.
_______. Strongholds of the Samurai: Japanese Castles, 250-1877. Botley, Oxford, England:
Osprey, 2009.
_______. Warriors of Medieval Japan. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2005.
Varley, Paul. Warfare in Japan, 1467-1600. In War in the Early Modern World, edited by
Jeremy Black. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1999.
Varley, Paul, with Ivan Morris and Nobuko Morris. Samurai. New York: Dell, 1970.
Films and Other Media
Samurai Japan. Documentary. Cromwell Productions, 1997.
The Seven Samurai. Feature film. Toho, 1954.
Shogun. Television miniseries. NBC, 1980.
James Stanlaw
The Mongols
Dates: c. 600-1450 c.e.
he conquered, to create an army that surpassed contemporary foes not only in fighting ability but also
in strategy, tactics, and organization. The innovations he introduced continued throughout the Mongol Empire and were adopted by later leaders such
as the Turkish conqueror Tamerlane (1336-1405),
whose talents for military and administrative leadership allowed him to become the first central Asian
leader to overthrow the Mongols. Although modifications of Mongol formations and equipment continued throughout the period following the Mongol Empire, it was not until the late fifteenth century that
sedentary armies could match the achievements of
the steppe nomads.
Political Considerations
Numerous steppe nomad empires existed in Eurasia
throughout the medieval period. Prior to 1200 the
Mongols had been merely one of many tribes in the
steppes of Mongolia. Mongolia had long been a training ground for the horse archers that formed the cores
of steppe nomad armies. Between 600 and 1206 c.e.
several empires rose in Mongolia. The first was the
early Turkic Tu-cheh Empire of the early 600s.
The Uighurs, who formed an empire from 744 to 840,
were driven south by the Kirghiz of the Yenisei
River, who held Mongolia until 920, when the Khitans
established an empire over part of Mongolia and
northern China that lasted until 1125.
Most of the information concerning these empires
indicates that their armies consisted primarily not of
infantry but of horse archers who relied on mobility
and barrages of arrows to defeat their enemies, rather
than on the shock tactics of European cavalry. Indeed, the most difficult battles for the nomads usually
were those fought against other armies of horse archers, and not those fought against their sedentary
opponents in China, central Asia, Europe, or Iran.
Despite the long existence of these armies, it was not
until the establishment of the Khitan Empire, also
known as the Liao Dynasty (907-1125) of China, in
southern Mongolia and northern China, that a true
standardized military organization took cohesive
form. After the fall of the Liao, the nomads of Mongolia still maintained their military predominance,
yet not until the ascendance of Genghis Khan (who
lived from between 1155 and 1162 to 1227) did they
become the premier military power of the medieval
period.
Genghis Khan drew upon the military formations
of the Khitans and the Jrcheds (1115-1234), a Manchurian people who defeated the Khitans, as well
as nomadic traditions and technology from the lands
Military Achievement
The Mongols military achievements were impressive: The Mongols built, through mobility, superior
discipline, and advanced strategies, the largest contiguous land empire of its time. Although the empire
remained unified for roughly only seventy years after
the death of Genghis Khan, its heritage was maintained by his successors, who included his grandson,
Kublai Khan (1215-1294), and later successors such
as Tamerlane.
Perhaps the most difficult achievement for Genghis Khan was the unification of the tribes of Mongolia. Once these tribes were united, Genghis Khan
forged them into an army of unprecedented size and
force. Although tribal confederations had appeared
throughout history, none of them possessed the martial potency, discipline, and organization of the Mongols. Furthermore, the Mongols quickly learned to
adapt those military methods of their opponents that
they deemed effective, particularly siege warfare and
the mobilization of resources.
The Mongol Empire at its height stretched from
328
The Mongols
329
Turning Points
330
roughly the size of a pony, yet durable, with incredible stamina. Each warrior possessed a string of horses,
ranging from three to six, although some records
report higher figures. The large number of horses
allowed the warrior to remain mounted for the entire campaign; if one horse was killed, he had a
replacement. More important, this arrangement allowed the Mongols to maintain their superior mobility: As one horse tired, a warrior could switch to
another.
For the most part, Mongol warriors were unencumbered by heavy armor. They wore little armor,
apart from hardened leather, or leather reinforced
with lamellar plates, considerably lighter than even
the finest chain mail. Chain mail was worn occasionally, but because the art of Mongol warfare depended
on mobility, the extra weight of the mail was considered a hindrance. Heavy cavalry units armored their
horses with lamellar cuirasses, which covered the
horses upper bodies. In the Il-Khanate of Persia, a
Mongol dynasty that ruled in Iran (1256-1353), the
Mongols switched from a light cavalry to a heavier
force that naturally required more armor.
Although the Mongols did not have a specific uniform, they did cut their hair in a certain manner to
Military Organization
The Mongols drew upon the Khitan military system
to base the organization of their armies on the decimal system. The largest unit was the tumen, a division of ten thousand men. Contained within each
tumen were ten minggans, or one-thousand-man units.
These in turn were divided into ten jaghuns, or onehundred-man units. The jaghun was the basic tactical
unit. The smallest unit consisted of ten men and was
known as the arban.
During larger campaigns, the Mongols often instituted a tamna force, in which a certain number of
men from every unit, approximately two out of ten,
were mustered to form an army. Once the campaign
ended, these troops were allowed to return to their
units. The conquered were also included in conscription, but they were usually required to serve in for-
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The Mongols
eign lands, in order to prevent rebellion. The most
common method of preventing mutiny at a critical
moment was simply to divide the new recruits into
existing units. This arrangement prevented the new
recruits from forming a cohesive and potentially disrupting force, and it helped to maintain the unit integrity of existing formations. Tamerlane, like Genghis
Khan, divided members of recalcitrant tribes among
various units in order to prevent mutiny.
331
harass the enemy lines, showering them with arrows
at close range until the enemy finally broke ranks and
charged. The Mongols would then flee, still firing
their arrows by turning backward in their saddles, a
technique known as the Parthian shot, perfected and
made famous by Parthian warriors of ancient Persia.
After the pursuing forces became strung out and disorganized, the majority of Mongol forces would then
charge. Often these forces had been waiting in ambush along the flanks, or were in fact the mangutai
troops, who had mounted fresh horses. The pursuing
forces would be unable to withstand the cohesive
force of the Mongol charge. This maneuverthe
feigned routwas an old steppe trick, one that the
Mongols raised to perfection. In the encircling maneuver the Mongols often left a gap between their
lines. Eventually, the encircled foe would detect the
gap and attempt to escape through it, inevitably leading to a rout, during which the Mongols would pursue
and cut down the fleeing soldiers.
The Mongols conducted the majority of their battles at a distance. They possessed a great advantage in
the power of their bows and believed in the principle
of massed firepower, coordinating their fire arcs
through the use of banners, torches, and whistling arrows. Much like that of modern directed artillery fire,
the effect of massed Mongol firepower could be devastating.
Mongol use of massed firepower also applied to
sieges. At Aleppo in 1400, the Mongols arranged
twenty catapults against one gate. The Mongol use of
massed firepowerdecades before the English use
of massed longbow archersreduced enemy armies,
and with catapults and ballistae, demolished city defenses.
Other Mongol tactics included psychological maneuvers. The Mongols often lighted more campfires
than normal to make their camps appear to be larger
than they were. At times they also mounted dummies
on their spare horses, so that their armies would appear from a distance to be larger than they were.
Tamerlane contributed the trick of tying branches to
the tails of his horses, so that enormous clouds of dust
could be seen from a distance, deceiving his enemies.
Merchants who served as spies spread rumors far in
advance of the army. Furthermore, Mongols treated
332
The Mongols
By concentrating on the dispersion and movement
of field armies, the Mongols delayed assault on enemy strongholds. Of course, the Mongols took smaller
or more easily surprised fortresses as they encountered them. The destruction of the field armies also
allowed the Mongols to pasture their horses and
other livestock without the threat of raids. One of
the best examples occurred during Genghis Khans
Khw3rizm campaign (c. 1220). The Mongols took
the surrounding smaller cities and fortresses before
capturing the principal city of Samarqand, in modern
Uzbekistan. This strategy had two effects. First, it cut
off the principal city from communications with
other cities that might provide aid. Second, refugees
from these smaller cities fled to Samarqand, the last
stronghold. The sight of this streaming horde of refugees, as well as their reports, reduced the morale of
the inhabitants and garrison of the principal city and
also strained its resources. Food and water reserves
were taxed by the sudden influx of refugees. Soon,
what once had seemed a formidable undertaking became an easy task.
After conquering the surrounding territory, the
Mongols were free to lay siege to the principal city
without interference of a field army. Smaller forts
and cities could not harry the Mongols, who either
foraged or pursued other missions during the siege.
Most important, the many Mongol columns and raiding forces had prevented the main city from effectively assisting its smaller neighbors without leaving
itself open to attack. Finally, the capture of the outer
strongholds and towns provided the Mongols more
siege experience as well as raw materials in the form
of labor either to man the siege engines or to act as
human shields for the Mongols.
The Mongols also strove to destroy any hopes
their opponents had to rally by harrying enemy lead-
333
ers until they dropped. Genghis Khan first did this
during his unification of Mongolia. In his first few
encounters, the enemy leaders had escaped, which
continually haunted him. After this lesson, the Mongols habitually hunted down opposing leaders. In
Khw3rizm Sultan 4Al3 al-Din Muwammad (r. 12001220) died alone on an island in the Caspian Sea after being hounded by Jebe and Sabutai. Mongol
units relentlessly pursued Jal3l ad-Dtn Mingburnu
(r. 1220-1231), Muwammads son. Bla IV (12061270), king of Hungary, barely escaped the Mongols,
led by Batu Khan (died 1255), in 1241, as his boat
pushed off of the Dalmatian coast into the Adriatic
Sea.
Constantly on the move to avoid the Mongol
forces, an enemy leader was unable to serve as a rallying point for his armies, who were also required to
keep moving in order to find him. In many reports,
the enemy leaders were only a few steps ahead of
the Mongols. This strategy also allowed the Mongols
opportunities to acquire new intelligence on other
lands, because fleeing leaders ran in the opposite direction of the Mongols. The pursuing Mongol forces
could then wreak havoc in new territories. Local
powers would keep their forces at home, instead
of sending them to help their overlords. In many
instances the Mongols would defeat local armies
they encountered along the way while avoiding the
strongholds, another example of the Mongol method
of destroying field armies before laying siege. The
most important aspect of these pursuit columns was
their capacity for destruction and intimidation, which
created a buffer between the currently occupied territories and those that recently had been subdued.
Thus, the main army could finish its mission of subjugation while the surrounding environs were devastated and rendered harmless.
Medieval Sources
Medieval sources of information about the Mongol military are fairly rich, due to the fact
that the Mongols covered a large territory. Most accounts were written by the conquered, or by
individuals hostile to the Mongols. The one surviving Mongol source, The Secret History of the
Mongols (c. 1240), is extremely important for the study of the Mongol military. It is the primary
source for the unification of Mongolia under Genghis Khan, revealing his initial defeats and the
lessons he learned from them. It also describes the organization and tactics of the Mongol army.
334
The Mongols
335
May, Timothy. The Mongol Art of War: Chinggis Khan and the Mongol Military System.
Barnsley, England: Pen and Sword Military, 2007.
Morgan, David. The Mongols. 2d ed. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2007.
Prawdin, Michael. The Mongol Empire: Its Rise and Legacy. London: Allen and Unwin, 1940.
Reprint. New Brunswick, N.J. AldineTransaction, 2006.
Saunders, J. J. The History of the Mongol Conquests. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul,
1971. Reprint. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001.
Turnbull, Stephen. Genghis Khan and the Mongol Conquests, 1190-1400. New York: Routledge, 2004.
_______. Mongol Warrior, 1200-1350. Illustrated by Wayne Reynolds. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2003.
Films and Other Media
Genghis Khan: To the Ends of the Earth and Sea. Feature film. Funimation Productions, 2007.
Mongol: The Rise of Genghis Khan. Feature film. New Line Cinema, 2008.
The Storm from the East. Documentary. Films for the Humanities and Sciences, 1994.
Timothy May
Political Considerations
Indias long history, with the exception of Akokas
(c. 302-c. 232 b.c.e.) Mauryan rule between 269 and
232 b.c.e., has been one of constant internal strife and
defensive warfare. Early Hindu literature considered
war and duplicity as serious activities, extolling them
as honorable duties of king and subject alike. A warrior caste, the k;atriya, was dedicated to warfare, and
the concepts of glory and honor were punctuated in
works such as the Mah3bh3rata (c. 400 b.c.e.-200
c.e.; The Mahabharata, 1834); the Manusmjti (compiled 200 b.c.e.-200 c.e.; The Laws of Manu, 1886);
and the Arthak3stra (300 b.c.e.-300 c.e.; Treatise on
the Political Good, 1961). Prior to the Mauryan Empire and Akokas rule, war had been brutal and merciless. After the second century b.c.e., however, war
was fought in a more humane manner.
Around 500 c.e., with the appearance in India of
numerous invaders from Central Asia, where armies
and fighting techniques were superior, Hindu warfare underwent a profound modification. War elephants, concentrated use of cavalry, and emphasis
upon horses were integrated with Indian techniques
to give the highly mobile invaders a distinct advantage over rigid Indian methods. Horses, which had
not flourished in India, were hearty, strong, and durable in battle. The invaders concentration upon cavalry with superior horses increased their mobility.
With their entrance into the Punjab and their operation around trade routes, the invaders opened a new
era in Indian warfare. Hindu principalities, for the
most part, continued to engage in petty intertribal disputes.
The one thousand years between 500 and 1526
c.e. witnessed four critical periods characterized by
internecine warfare and destruction. The sixth cen-
Military Achievement
Petty squabbles and interprincipality rivalries for territorial control characterized the approximately onethousand-year period from 500 to 1526 c.e. Attempts
were made at creating unified empires, but these
were short-lived. During the first half of the seventh
century two figures emerged who vied for supremacy. North India was conquered by Har;a (c. 590c. 647) who, in attempting a southward expansion,
was repulsed by Pulakekin II (r. 609-642), the greatest of the C3lukyan monarchs. After the death of
Har;a, constant endemic warfare erupted between
numerous rival dynasties and local kingdoms amid
frequent foreign invasions by steppe nomad warriors
and by Arabs whose militant religious zeal left an indelible mark on Indian history.
During the ninth century North India witnessed a
fierce three-way struggle between three dynasties
the Pr3tihara of Rajputana, the P3la of Bengal, and
the R3;zraknza of the Deccanthat left general chaos
336
337
Th3nesar
ver
Indu
Ri
r
se
Indraprastra
(Delhi)
H i
m a
l a y a
Kanauj
M t s .
ve
Ga
Pataliputra n g e s R i
Gujarat
Sea
da
Narma
Riv
er
Malwa
Arabian
ahamadi
Mumbai
(Bombay)
P l
a t
e
G o dav a r i R
a
ive
Ri
er
D e c c a n
Nalanda
v
Kri s hna Ri
er
Bay
of
Bengal
Indian
Ocean
338
Turning Points
339
During the ancient period in India battles were closeformation skirmishes fought by the k;atriya warrior
caste utilizing thrusting and throwing instruments.
During the medieval age, from 500 to 1500 c.e., battles were dominated by heavy cavalry. The primary
weapon of choice was the bow and arrow. The growing reliance upon cavalry and archers was due to
technological advancements in archery and the introduction of the saddle and stirrup between 300 and
800 c.e., which provided stability for the rider and
support for his sword, spear, and lance.
Weapons during the medieval age were generally
the same as those used in ancient warfare. These
included quivers (bhastr3) slung from a shoulder,
broad-bladed swords (khadga), heavy broadswords
(ni;zrimka), spears (kakti), javelins (knla), reversecurved swords, ancient slings (gopha]a), curved
throwing sticks (v3l3ri k3mbi), and sharpened throwing discs (jah) thrown horizontally or
dropped vertically upon attackers.
Head and body protection in#
cluded shields of leather, the preferred material, scale or lamellar helmets, and a coat of a thousand nails
scale-lined and fabric-covered or
padded about the torso. Heavier lamellar armor of thin plates, common
in premedieval times, was rarely
at
worn, especially in the humid, tropijar
u
G
cal south. For climatic reasons soft
cotton quilted armor was preferred,
and its use eventually spread to the
Middle East and even to Europe.
Asbestos cloth appeared in an assortment of fireproof clothing by
the twelfth century. Some protective
Arabian
armor for arms and legs was also
Sea
used.
Horse harnesses were primitive
at best. A leather toe-stirrup had
been known in India since the first
century b.c.e. and continued to be
used well into the eighth century
c.e. Horse armor seems rarely to
have been used in Indian warfare.
Years of civil strife left Indian ar-
mies poorly equipped. The infantry, made up of peasants, farmers, Jats, Gujratis, and various robbers,
used bamboo staffs and, at best, rusty swords. The
bow and arrow, much relied upon as a primary
weapon, could not pierce the armor worn by Central
Asian Turkic forces. The Hindu rajas relied heavily
on herds of war elephants to demoralize enemy ranks
and disperse cavalry. Turkic forces, however, used
steel-clad warriors mounted on superb, agile horses.
These were kept in reserve in the center of battle, behind the front line of attack, and were used to decide
the final outcome.
Hindus generally expended their energy pursuing
Turkic horsemen who harassed them with firepower,
counterattacked, and forced them into hopeless flight
and slaughter. The Turkic nomadic invaders used a
composite two-piece bow considered the most fearful weapon on the battlefield. Hindus possessed noth-
ala
ya
Mt
Ganges River
Madhya
Malwa
er Pradesh
v
i
R
ada
Narm
Mahanadi
Godavari Rive
Kalyani
Western
C#lukyas
P#las
R iv
er
Bay of
Eastern
C#lukyas
Kanchipuram
Cblas
Tanjore
Madurai
Sri
Lanka
Indian Ocean
s.
Bengal
= Cflas
= Eastern C3lukyas
= Western C3lukyas
340
Lahore
m
a
Kaithal
Delhi
Agra
a s
Jaunpur
Benares
Gan
g e s Riv
Bengal
Ratanpur
Rajpur
is
M a lwa
er
a Riv
Na rmad
Or
Guj
ar
er
at
sa
ga
na
G o n d wa n a
Ba hma n
S u l t a n at e
Bidar
Warangal
Golconda
n
li
Te
Sindabur
Vijayanagar
(Goa)
= Delhi Sultanate in 1236
Vijayanagar
Manjarur
= Areas acquired by 1335
(Mangalore) Jurfattan
(Calicut)
= Non-Muslim areas
Sarandip
341
and archers. However, after Ephthalite leaders caused
the collapse of the Gupta state early in the sixth century, Hindu armies again reverted to traditional use of
inferior cavalry, war elephants, and less mobility in
battle. Warriors continued to use quivers attached to
the rear of a saddle. Chariot warfare declined, and
shock-value use of war elephants increased. In the
south, the Deccan army of the Vijayanagar kingdom
used camel troops as mounted infantry. Certain troops
long abandoned in most of Asia, such as slingers,
were still maintained and used by Hindu rajas. Archers also remained a critical component of the army,
guided by the Dhanur Veda,science of archery,
military manual.
Military tactics were heavily governed by the
Artharva Veda (1500-1200 b.c.e.), one of the sacred
writings of Hinduism. Archers shot from a kneeling position supported by spear, javelin, and shieldwielding infantry. Such immobility opened the army
to ravaging attacks by extremely mobile Muslim
and Mongol troops skilled in fighting on horseback.
Elephants generally carried a driver, or mahout, and
three to four warriors. In response, the use of large
caltrops, iron-pointed triangular devices set in the
ground to impede elephant and cavalry advances, was
developed. Such Indian tactics were old-fashioned
by the tenth century, but they continued into the thirteenth. Hindu pride prevented leaders from learning
from their foreign adversaries. Hindus valued strength
in numbers over speed and mobility, a doctrine that
rapidly caused their defeat.
Pre-Islamic India was, however, well fortified,
with walls built of stone, brick, or wood, and protected by slopes and bastions. Towers projected a
short distance from the wall. Towns and villages of
the seventh century had inner gates, wide walls of
brick or tiles, and bamboo or wood towers. Six hundred years later the military architecture of Muslim
and Hindu added the chatri, a ceremonial kiosk
above the main gate to allow a monarch an observation post. Countersiege was highly developed, utilizing scaling ladders secured to mud-brick walls and
iron plates to breach them. Elephants with iron plates
on their foreheads were used as battering rams. A
p3shttb, or raised platform of sandbags, filled ditches
between walls, and a gargaj, or movable wooden
342
tower, reigned down firepower upon the enemy. Attacks were impeded by use of fire, smoke, and heated
iron grills.
Turk, Muslim, and Mongol strategy revolved
around hit-and-run tactics, the defeat and humbling
of a raja into vassalship, the utilization of his kingdom as a base for further advances into India, and the
eventual annexation of the territory. The strategy of
nibbling away at border provinces allowed a deeper
penetration of the subcontinent. Success was directly
dependent upon a well-established line of communications with Central Asia, which provided fresh
reinforcements and supplies to accomplish deeper
penetration. Together with social solidarity, a broth-
Medieval Sources
The Manusmjti (compiled 200 b.c.e.-200 c.e.; The Laws of Manu, 1886), which stressed
glory and power, and the Arthak3stra (300 b.c.e.-300 c.e.; Treatise on the Political Good,
1961), the primary treatise on Indian polity, laid the standards for war and peace well into the
medieval period. The latter established principles of warfare, military organization, strategy,
tactics, the role of king, military leaders, and warriors, as well as weaponry of war. In a theory of
concentric circles, the core state was seen as surrounded by enemy states, and the aim of policy
was to achieve a series of mutual alliances. Its emphasis was upon the reality of war rather than
glory. The critical arm of the army, the archers, was governed and guided by the Dhanur Veda,
written in approximately 500 c.e., an important manual on the science of archery.
Muslim military science and government of the thirteenth century was guided by the #d3bul-Mulnk wa-kif3yat al-mamlnk (c. thirteenth century; translated in part in Fresh Light on the
Ghaznavids, 1938), written by Fakhir-i Mudabbir (fl. twelfth-thirteenth centuries) for Sultan
Shams al-Dtn Iltutmish. It covered governmental policies and served as a war manual, laying
out guidelines for camping sites, battle formations, subterfuge, spying and scouting, night warfare, equipment and arms, and the care of man and horse alike.
343
From the East India Company to the Nuclear Era. Foreword by Stephen P. Cohen. Westport, Conn.: Praeger Security International, 2007.
Naravane, M. S. Battles of Medieval India, A.D. 1295-1850. New Delhi: APH, 1996.
Nicolle, David. Medieval Siege Weapons: Byzantium, the Islamic World, and India. Illustrated
by Sam Thompson. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2002.
Nosov, Konstantin S. Indian Castles, 1206-1526: The Rise and Fall of the Delhi Sultanate. Illustrated by Brian Delf. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2006.
Oman, Charles. A History of the Art of War in the Middle Ages. London: Greenhill Press, 1991.
Sandhu, Gurcharn Singh. A Military History of Medieval India. New Delhi: Vision Books,
2003.
Sarkar, Jadunath. Military History of India. Calcutta, India: M. C. Sarkar and Sons, 1960.
Wise, Terence. Medieval Warfare. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 1976.
Films and Other Media
Ancient India: A Journey Back in Time. Documentary. Cromwell Productions, 2006.
Story of India. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service, 2007.
George Hoynacki
Southeast Asia
Dates: c. 500-1500 c.e.
dom, was accompanied, once again, by a rise in trade
and also a period during which members of ruling
families of one state would marry somebody from
another, leading to a series of alliances and reducing
the numbers of wars, although these still took place.
Political Considerations
Although little is known about the early history of the
Southeast Asian region and the origins of its peoples
are unclear, the neighboring civilizations of both
China and India had major influences upon Southeast
Asian history. As a result of the permeation of Indian
culture in the fifth century, the Indian warrior class
and methods of waging war were adopted by the
new Southeast Asian empires. The migration of the
Guptas led to the founding of the Funan Empire. The
Pallava wave was the impetus for the empires of
Angkor (Cambodia) and Krivijaya; and the P3la Dynasty of Bengal profoundly influenced the Javan culture. The desire for aggressive imperial expansion
was also subsequently embraced in Southeast Asia,
and constant raids and sieges among Southeast Asian
empires mark the early history of the region.
Some of the kingdoms of the region were controlling empires based on agriculture rather than foreign
trade. Others were ports where trade with other states
was of prime importance. Certainly Funan has its origins in trade, but the shift of the Khmer people toward Angkor shows a move either toward greater
self-reliance or away from places that were also
clearly vulnerable to foreign attack.
The main aim of rulers throughout the region was
to maintain their dynasties. Much of the region was
dominated by Hinduism, and the Hindu rulers of
Angkor, and also the kingdoms in Java, wished to extend the boundaries of their lands by conquest. Gradually, with the advent of Buddhism, rulers began to see
themselves as working in a compact with their people,
with the goal of bettering the lives of their subjects. If
this could be achieved through military aggression,
then war would result. If, instead, it could be done by
major building projects, those would take priority.
The gradual conversion to Islam in island Southeast Asia, the Malay states, and for the Champa king-
Military Achievement
The earliest information that exists on the warfare in
the region comes from the small Indianized states on
the Malay Peninsula, many of which were within the
Funan Empire to the north, in the area of present-day
Cambodia, and southern Vietnam. As the power of
Funan faded, the Kingdom (or kingdoms) of Chenla
arose. This was probably a federation of states that
came together under a king at times of external invasion, but with constituent parts having much regional
autonomy, a pattern that was followed elsewhere in
the region at this time.
Militarily, this federal system was no match for
unified states, and under Jayavarman II, the Kingdom of Angkor emerged in the 800s, taking over. A
similar process took place in Champa (modern-day
central Vietnam) and also later in modern-day Thailand. The first two were at this time Hindu monarchies, as were many of those in Java. In these societies, the rulers were warriors who served to represent
the power of the state and defend its dignity against
attack. Militarily they were successful at exerting
their will over weaker neighbors, with clear evidence
from surviving chronicles of many wars of aggression and also of depredations from their neighbors.
The growth and expansion of the Krivijayan and
Javanese Empires are strong examples of the common aggressive desire to expand, and the constant
conflict between the two empires eventually led to
the absorption of Krivijaya within the dominion of
the Majapahit kingdom, which controlled most of
344
Southeast Asia
Sumatra, the coastal regions of Borneo and Celebes,
and the Lesser Sunda Islands.
By contrast, in mainland Southeast Asia, there
was a balance of power for much of this period between the Burmans, Thais (or Tais), and the peoples
from Angkor and Champa.
345
The elephants tusks might also be sharpened or
lengthened with sword blades, and it might pick up
enemy soldiers with its trunk or trample them underfoot. The standard battlefield role of war elephants
was in the assault, to break up the enemy ranks, but
elephants were also used in sieges, to push over gates
and palisades or to serve as living bridges.
After the formation of the Majapahit Dynasty,
however, weapons and warfare underwent significant changes in island Southeast Asia. The military
dress completely evolved from the Indian to the East
Javanese fashion. Weapons, notably axes, clubs,
swords, and daggers, seem to have been Indian in design, though the curved swords are of a later type than
those on the Central Javanese reliefs. The reappearance of the spear in these reliefs, while the use of the
bow is confined to human heroes, suggests an increasing pressure to resume use of local types of
weapons. Both swords and daggers have definitively
Indian-type hilts, and the kris seems still to be absent
from use. The kris may not have become popular until the fifteenth century, when Majapahit krises appear to be represented on a relief of a Javanese forge.
A Javanese inscription of 1323 speaks of magically forged weapons, indicative of the belief that
magic and proper worship and sacrifice to the gods
would bring victory on the battlefield. Much importance was placed on the art of procuring talismans,
incantations, or drugs, the knowledge of which was
the education of every hero. Another piece of evidence concerning the character of Majapahit warfare
is the reproduction through drawings of a battle array, a crayfish-type military formation in which the
forces were distributed in order in preparation for an
attack. The Javanese often gave up any idea of preserving their own lives in battle and would rush the
enemy, committing indiscriminate slaughter and refusing to surrender alive.
As well as fighting on land, the Khmers and the
Chams also fought at sea. They used galleys to attack
each other, and the Chinese also launched a seaborne
invasion of Champa. This was notable because the
Chinese introduced artillery to overcome the Cham
elephant attacks. After the Chinese had landed, they
directed all their arrow fire against the Cham elephants and subsequently obtained victory. The bal-
346
Burma
Thailand
Bengal
Pa c i f i c
m
na
et
Vi
Bay of
Ocean
Champa
l ip
hi
Khmers
p i ne
Funan
of
Krivijaya
c
la
ia
ys
la
ca
M
a
Ma
Str
a it
Su
Borneo
tr
ma
Sulawesi
Indian
Palembang
Ocean
tr
Sunda S
ait
Borobu8ur
Java
(Mataram/Sailendras)
lista, first used by the Chams, also became incorporated into the Khmer equipment.
Military Organization
During its Angkor period (802-1431), the Khmer
Empire, by force of arms, extended its commonwealth to encompass vast areas of Southeast Asia.
The first attempts, in about 813, by a Cham general
named Sen3pati Par to test the united Khmer state
were never more than raids, for Jayavarman II
(c. 770-850) kept the empire firmly in his grasp. The
strategies of the Chams, however, had been sharpened by their constant quarrelling with the Chinese
on their northern frontier. As the Khmers and Chams
Southeast Asia
for war. The officers were distinguished by the red
parasols that they carried into battle. Moreover, as in
Java, in the Khmer and Champa empires, the use of
horses and elephants was confined to officers. Unlike
the Indian custom, there was only one rider per elephant with a shield on his left arm. The number of
horses was limited, as they were difficult to procure
from China; therefore, there probably did not exist a
cavalry division in either army. An accurate number
of soldiers for either side is also difficult to ascertain.
It seems that there were roughly 50,000 soldiers assembled on one side in the fourth century, a number
that increased with time. By the eighth century, the
royal guards alone numbered 5,000. On both sides,
the infantry formed the greatest part of the militaries
strength.
According to Chinese texts, Cham weapons consisted of shields, spears, halberds, bows, and crossbows. The arrows of bamboo, however, were not
feathered, but the points were poisoned. Cham sculptures also show swords and daggers. The lance, or
spear, was the most common of the Khmer weapons,
and cases of them were attached to the sides of the
elephant platforms. By the twelfth century, the lance
had largely replaced the sword to become the most
distinctive of Khmer arms. The club, which was the
weapon of the Khmer gate guardian, was relatively
rare in the hands of warriors. Bows and arrows were
also used for distance fighting. For protection the
Chams had cuirasses made of plaited cane in addition
to their shields. The Khmers used this armor as well,
but in a more limited capacity; it seems it was used
more for parades and than for actual fighting. The
Khmers also fought bareheaded, though the Chams
are shown in sculptured relief wearing a reversed
flower headdress.
It is known that during the thirteenth century, the
commanders of the Javanese army received an annual
salary of twenty taels of gold, and the soldiers, 30,000
in number, also received fixed annual pay in varying
amounts in gold. The reliefs of the temples of this
time reveal little. An inscription of 1294, alongside
reports in Chinese annals, tells much about the results
of the fighting that took place in repelling the Mongol
invaders and in establishing the Majapahit Dynasty,
but almost nothing about the nature of the warfare.
347
348
the history of modern Siam is commonly traced. Although Siam ascended consistently in power and frequently kept its warlike neighbors of Japan, China,
and India at bay, its history is plagued by centuries of
quarrels between tribes, as the prominent provinces
of Chiangmai, Ayudhya, and Sukhothai battled tirelessly for the semblance of a united kingdom under
Medieval Sources
Few written sources exist regarding warfare in Southeast Asia during this period, and many
of these are questionable. The earliest knowledge, extremely limited, comes from various Chinese sources beginning in the third century. This is often found in the form of accounts drawn
from Chinese missions as well as pilgrims heading to India, especially the seventh century account of Xuanzang (Hsan-tsang), the Yijing (I-Ching). These often relate to economic vitality.
Much knowledge comes from temple inscriptions in Cambodia and Myanmar, as well as monuments devoted to various kings, particularly in the Khmer and Pagan empires. Statues and basreliefs throughout the region indicate the nature of weapons and battle dress. There are also a
number of annals that provide basic royal genealogies, especially from Cambodia, though these
are often confused or incomplete. The dependencies of the Majapahit kingdom, for instance,
are enumerated in Mpu Prapa has Nagarakrtagama (1365). Marco Polo recounts his twelfth
century experiences in Southeast Asia in The Travels of Marco Polo (first transcribed in French
in the fourteenth century as Divisament dou monde, or description of the world, and translated into English in 1579). Some information has also been gleaned from sixteenth century
Portuguese accounts of their early voyages in the region.
Books and Articles
Charney, Michael W. Southeast Asian Warfare, 1300-1900. Leiden, Netherlands: E. J. Brill,
2004.
Codes, Georges. The Indianized States of Southeast Asia. Edited by Walter F. Vella. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1968.
Hall, D. G. E. A History of South-East Asia. 4th ed. New York: St. Martins Press, 1981.
Jacques, Claude. The Khmer Empire: Cities and Sanctuaries. Bangkok, Thailand: River Books,
2007.
Quaritch Wales, H. G. Ancient South-East Asian Warfare. London: Bernard Quaritch, 1952.
Tarling, Nicholas. The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia. 2 vols. New York: Cambridge
University Press, 1992.
Wolters, O. W. Early Southeast Asia: Selected Essays. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Southeast Asia Program, 2008.
Films and Other Media
Children of the Seven-Headed Snake. Documentary. FIP-Odysse-Ampersand, 1999.
Mekong: The Three Ancient Kingdoms of Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam. Documentary.
Global Edu-tainment, 2008.
Aaron Plamondon
The Aztecs
The Aztecs, wandering barbarians, arrived late in
Mesoamerica, settling at the site of Tenochtitln in
1345 c.e. Over the next century, they assembled inexhaustible armies that marched hundreds of miles from
the Valley of Mexico to confront and defeat rival cultures. Although they were a dominant power for only
slightly more than one hundred years (1400-1521
c.e.), they were able to create an empire, maintain extensive economic trade routes, and appropriate the
military organization, arts, and cultures of their subjects, incorporating them into their own civilization.
Religious fervor drove the Aztecs into constant
war to capture political prisoners for sacrifice to their
gods. Gory images of war captives with their hearts
gouged out have been inextricably tied to the Aztecs.
Military Achievement
The Maya
The greatest military achievement for the ancient
Maya was the successful capture and sacrifice of a
351
El Tajn
Ocean
Zapotec
Area
Monte Albn
Olmec Area
San Lorenzo
Cholula
Teotihuacn
Aztec Area
Pa c i f i c
Tenochtitln
Tula
Ancient Mesoamerica
Tikal
Izapa
Altar de Sacrificios
Palenque
Uxmal
Chichn Itz
Copn
Tulum
Cob
Dzibilchaltn
Gulf of Mexico
ay
a
n
Ar
ea
353
The Aztecs
Military achievement for the ancient Aztecs was
measured by the expansion of territory through intimidation of enemies in battle or simply the threat of
battle. After the Aztecs had successfully moved into
a new area, they became reliant on local leaders to
successfully maintain their domains. Rather than install their own leaders in newly conquered areas, at
the expense of their own human resources, the Aztecs
would allow local leaders to remain in their positions
under Aztec power. The Aztecs allowed the vanquished to maintain their traditional systems of trade
and markets, while at the same time extracting some
of the local resources as tribute. This system of loose
military alliances allowed the Aztecs to spread their
forces across a much broader region. The Spanish
noted at the time of contact that the Aztecs were a
fierce people, with a skilled military that lacked a fear
of battle. Although there are few monuments dedicated to the successful military achievements of individuals, extensive records of tribute were documented, indicating the territory that was maintained
and the resources that were extracted. Successful soldiers were highly valued and were rewarded for their
valor with the special recognition of promotions and
distinctive uniforms.
354
Projectile weapons, used at a distance to strike at
an enemy, include the bow and arrow, the sling,
the dart, and the all-important atlatl. The atlatl, or
spear-thrower, allowed the user to launch darts at
greater distances than hand-thrown darts could be
thrown. Depictions of the atlatl indicate that it had
been used since the Classic period (250-900 c.e.).
Atlatls were often ornately decorated with low-relief
carving and even gold. The few existing examples
are about 2 feet long, with a hook at one end where
the barbed darts were attached. In some cases, loops
were affixed to the other end of the weapon and
used as finger grips. Many of the more extravagant
atlatls were probably used only in ceremonies but
were nonetheless extremely effective weapons in
war. Spanish accounts attest to this potency, asserting that the darts could penetrate any armor and deliver a fatal wound. Experimental archaeology has
confirmed that an experienced atlatl thrower could
hurl a dart up to a distance of 243 feet and that atlatls
allowed up to 60 percent more accuracy than did an
unaided spear.
The bow and arrow was another commonly used
weapon in Mesoamerica. Bows measured up to 5 feet
in length, and bowstrings were often made of animal
sinew or deerskin. Arrows used in war had heads
made of obsidian or fishbone and included barbed,
blunt, and pointed styles. There is no indication that
either the Maya or the Aztecs put poison on their arrow tips, but apparently both used fire-arrows to
shoot at buildings. Experiments indicate that traditional arrows could be shot to ranges between 300
and 600 feet and that skilled archers could easily penetrate quilted cotton armor.
Slings made of maguey fibers, from agave plants,
were used to catapult rounded, hand-shaped stones
at adversaries. Stones were often collected in advance and apparently could be thrown more than
1,300 feet. Slings were often used with bows and arrows and could be extremely effective for penetrating the heavy Spanish armor.
Weapons used in close combat included the
thrusting spear, which was actually most productive
for slashing and parrying. Depictions from contact-
Military Organization
The Maya
The Mayas military organization appears to have
been much less formalized than that of the Aztecs.
However, those involved in conquest appear to have
been afforded high status in society. Warriors, with
their ability to seize captives, played a critical role in
bringing power to a king and his city. Considered
members of the elite class, they wore elaborate regalia and participated in rich ceremonies when they
brought captives back to their king. Warriors also
participated as ballplayers in the ball game that reenacted the ritual capture and eventual sacrifice of important rulers and elites from other sites. Although
ballplayers and warriors were frequently depicted on
portable art, they are almost never identified as individuals in texts. Kings, however, were recognized
and regularly depicted as warriors, and the military
prowess of their warriors was broadcast as their own
success. Battles were generally short, limited in geographic scope, and usually timed around significant
historical events. This system of warfare, unlike that
of the Aztecs, afforded the Maya the luxury of not
needing to maintain a huge standing army.
The Aztecs
Aztec society was highly stratified, and military ranking was intimately tied to this overall social organization. The ruling nobles were placed in positions of
higher rank, based on their birthright and social
status, whereas the commoners often earned their
military status through their skills in warfare. Most
commoners paid their dues to society through the
production of goods for tribute and labor, and many
of them served in the Aztec military. All those who
assisted the military were given extensive training in
the use of weapons and the taking of captives, although those of higher status were provided with
more thorough instruction. Soldiers who successfully took multiple captives were rewarded with promotions and uniforms signifying their accomplishments. Appropriate jewelry, hairstyles, body paint,
and other insignia were also indicative of a soldiers
status, and higher-ranking individuals were given
355
privileges such as the rights to consume human flesh
in public, to have mistresses, and to feast in the royal
palaces.
356
Hernn Corts and his troops ended an indigenous rebellion in Cholulu just prior to the Spaniards sacking of
Tenochtitln and the fall of the Aztec Empire.
The Aztecs
The Aztecs instituted a system in which local rulers
of conquered areas were allowed to remain as heads
of these areas, which were then required to produce
and transport goods as a form of tribute to their conquerors. The Aztecs decided that, rather than leave
behind their own garrisons to maintain controlled areas and extract large amounts of resources, they
would instead lower the costs of administration and
leave the control of conquered areas in the hands of
local officials. Although this policy meant that Aztecs could not extract the maximum amount of goods
from these conquered areas, it freed up soldiers and
officials to continue their expansion into more distant
areas. Campaigns were often scheduled around practical factors, including agricultural and seasonal cycles, such as the rainy season. This schedule often
limited the ability of the Aztecs to run year-round
crusades, and they had to depend on the local politicians to maintain their power.
The rulers of the Aztec Empire kept the local rulers of their loose alliance in line by continually intimidating them and engaging in warfare. Those who did
not comply were harshly punished, and members of
neighboring cities were often used to aid in these
raids. Aztecs often pitted traditional adversaries
against one another, and the threat of impending attack often allowed them to coerce loyalties without
357
cations and preparations but were often caught or
turned against their own. Although the overall military strategy of the Aztecs was fraught with problems, their system allowed them to maintain the largest political domain in all of Mesoamerica.
Contemporary Sources
Maya
Although the Maya codices do not deal with the topic of Mayan warfare and the contactperiod documents deal with a culture in severe decline, some recent volumes have begun using
the Mayas own texts and documents to look at aspects of elite society, including war and conquest. In Linda Schele and Peter Mathewss The Code of Kings: The Language of Seven Sacred
Maya Temples and Tombs (1998), the authors decipher the ancient hieroglyphs on the monuments and buildings of seven Classic-period sites to reveal what the ancient Maya had to say
about themselves. In it, there are numerous discussions of warfare between major cities, including war tactics, sacrifice, the ballgame, and war imagery. Matthew Restalls Maya Conquistador (1998) retells the Spanish encounter with the Maya from the Maya point of view. Using
documents written by the Maya at the contact period, Restall allows the Maya to retell what the
conquest was like. This book allows the reader to see that these brutal interactions with the
Spanish fit into the Mayas cyclical worldview, and that they continued to deal with outsiders
the way they had for hundreds of years. Both of the volumes offer an innovative and inside view
of the native perspective of warfare and conquest. For a more traditional look at the contact period, a classic document is the 1941 translation by Alfred M. Tozzer of the original Relacin de
las cosas de Yucatn (1566; English translation, 1941); also known as Yucatan Before and After
the Conquest (1937) by Bishop Diego de Landa, available in the papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University. This significant document provides great insight into the contact period from the perspective of a Spanish bishop
attempting to save the souls of the Mayan natives. In it, he describes the expeditions of the
conquistadores in Yucatn, as well as Mayan culture and warfare, with information obtained
from native informants and his own observations.
Aztecs
When the Spanish encountered the Aztecs in 1519, they discovered an empire that covered
much of Mexico. Numerous contact-period documents describe the process of the Spanish conquest: the individual battles and the eventual taking over of Aztec society and its empires tribute. Various chronicles, including Historia de las Indias de Nueva-Espaa y Islas de Tierra
Firme: Mexico (1579-1581; The Aztecs: The History of the Indies of New Spain, 1964), by
Diego Durn; Obras Historicas (1891-1892), by Fernando de Alva Ixtlilxchitl; Crnica
Mexicana (1598), by Fernando Alvarado Tezozmoc; and Relacines Originales de Chalco
Amequemecn (c. 1620), by Domingo Chimanlpahn, describe Aztec military campaigns, dynastic relationships, and political and military strategies of assassination, bribery, and manipulation. These documents also reveal that Aztecs were more concerned in warfare with acquiring
goods and services from a region than with occupying the territory themselves. Histora
Verdadera de la Conquista de la Nueva Espaa (1568; The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico,
1517-1521, 1844), considered the classic volume on the Spanish conquest, was written by
358
The Incas
Dates: c. 1200-1500 c.e.
Political Considerations
Military Achievement
Under the leadership of the Incan warrior Pachacuti
(c. 1391-1471), the Incas defeated the Chanca tribes
in a battle at Cuzco in 1438. According to legend, the
boulders on the battlefield became warriors who
fought for the Incas. After this victory, Pachacuti became emperor, and the Incas began to expand their
territory by conquering other tribes. Under Pachacuti
the Incas emerged as the strongest military power in
the southern highlands, and their territory stretched
as far south as the Maule River in modern southcentral Chile. Unlike other peoples, however, the
360
Library of Congress
An Inca-style battle scene in which warriors wear helmets and quilted tunics and wield swords, axes, and spears
in hand-to-hand combat.
Military Organization
The Incan military was highly organized and consisted of nearly 200,000 soldiers. The military served
as a public service organization that brought food and
materials from one region of the country to another
and trained specialists who contributed to the growth
of the empire. In order to prepare future soldiers, military training took place on a bimonthly basis and began with boys as young as ten years old, who took
part in physical activities such as wrestling, weight
lifting, and sling shooting. This training enabled
the Incan commanders to determine which soldiers
could be used as specialists, such as builders, stonemasons, bridge experts, and assault leaders. Village
elders reported on the progress of the boys, whom the
military drafted as either warriors, carriers, or craftsmen. Short-term service drafting ensured an ample
supply of young men in each district. The periods of
service depended upon climatic conditions, and not
all men returned to civilian life. The commanders ordered the most outstanding soldiers, those who were
the bravest, the most disciplined, and the most adept
at fighting, to remain permanently in the military.
The Incas
before advancing. Because the idea behind the creation of Tahuantinsuyu was to spread universal peace,
the Incas often showed mercy to the vanquished
tribes and pursued peaceful resolutions whenever
possible.
The principal strategy utilized by the Incas to defeat their enemies was to destroy harvests and inflict
famine. War, however, was often the only option.
The slingers, due to their accuracy, began the attack
on a fortress. Their sling bolts easily pierced the Peruvian helmets worn by their enemies. Feints were
Quito
Cajamarca
Chan Chan
d
An
361
Machu Picchu
Cuzco
L. Titicaca
Tiwanaku
Pa c i fi c
Ocean
Mountains
362
Medieval Sources
El Inca Garcilaso de la Vega (1539-1616), the son of an Incan princess and a Spanish explorer, provides a detailed account of the Incan civilization both before and after the arrival of
the Spaniards in his Los Comentarios Reales de Los Incas (1609-1617; The Royal Commentaries of the Incas, 1688), which remains one of the most complete and accurate available
sources of information about the Incas. In the first part of this book, completed in 1609,
Garcilaso de la Vega chronicles the development of the Inca Empire and discusses the political
and social status of the Incas, as well as their legends, traditions, customs, and methods of warfare. The second part, written in 1617, describes the wars of the Spanish conquest, in which
Garcilaso de la Vegass father was a primary figure. El Inca bases the second part of his history on the stories told to him by soldiers and conquerors who fought alongside his father.
Books and Articles
Burland, C. A. Peru Under the Incas. London: Evans Brothers, 1967.
DAltroy, Terence N. Militarism. In The Incas. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2002.
Davies, Nigel. The Incas. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 1995.
The Incas
363
Guilmartin, John F. Incas. In The Readers Companion to Military History, edited by Robert
Cowley and Geoffrey Parker. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
Julie, Catherine. War and Peace in the Inca Heartland. In War and Peace in the Ancient
World, edited by Kurt A. Raaflaub. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2007.
Kaufmann, H. W., and J. E. Kaufmann. Fortifications of the Incas, 1200-1531. Illustrated by
Adam Hook. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2006.
Lanning, Edward P. Peru Before the Incas. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1967.
McEwan, Gordon F. The Incas: New Perspectives. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO, 2005.
MacQuarrie, Kim. The Last Days of the Incas. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2007.
Stern, Steven J. Perus Indian Peoples and the Challenge of Spanish Conquest. 2d ed. Madison:
University of Wisconsin Press, 1993.
Films and Other Media
Great Inca Rebellion. Documentary. National Geographic, 2007.
The Incas. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service, 1980.
The Incas Remembered. Documentary. Monterey Home Video, 1986.
NOVA: Secrets of Lost EmpiresInca. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service, 1997.
The Royal Hunt of the Sun. Feature film. National General Pictures, 1969.
Michael J. McGrath
North American
Indigenous Nations
Dates: c. 12,000 b.c.e.-1600 c.e.
standards, extremely small. Some distance had to be
maintained between chiefdoms to prevent encroachment upon one anothers territories. These buffer
zones also served as hunting territory.
Other politically advanced chiefdoms were groups
later known to the Europeans as the Chickasaw,
Choctaw, Seminole, Timucua, Quapaw, Catawba,
Tunica, Caddo, Shawnee, Chitimacha, Calusa, Tuscarora, Pamlico, and Powhatan. This Mississippian,
or temple mound, group of cultures extended from
Virginia to Oklahoma and from the Ohio River to the
Gulf and Atlantic coasts. The Mississippian peoples
also extended some distance up the Mississippi River
into Wisconsin. At the peak of their development in
the late fifteenth century, they probably included no
more than one-half million people. They, like most
of the Native American groups, periodically fought
small battles with each other, but the fighting was
mainly precipitated by encroachments into hunting
territories, or misunderstandings stemming from language differences. For instance, the Chickasaw often
drove the Kickapoo out of their hunting grounds in
present Tennessee and Kentucky, east of the Tennessee River. The Cherokee and the various Muskogean
peoplesthe Chickasaw, Choctaw, those who later
made up the Creek Confederation, and the Seminolewere generally hostile to each other because
the Cherokee, who had arrived in the Southeast in the
twelfth or thirteenth century, spoke an Iroquoian language. The Muskogeans all spoke closely related dialects of the Muskogean language.
One of the most politically advanced groups in the
East and Northeast was the Iroquois Confederacy,
a United Nations-type alliance that had been organized by the sixteenth century. An increase in separate tribal identities had begun in the fourteenth century, perhaps as a male response to the increasing
Political Considerations
Among the southeastern and southern North American chiefdoms of the Mississippian period (9001540 c.e.), there were cities designated as peace
towns and war towns, which were occupied alternately during times of peace and war. There were
also chieftains who bore the same designations and
alternately led their people during these times. The
Red Chief led in times of war, and the White
Chief in times of peace. This system continued
through to the early eighteenth century, when the
Chickasaw of northern Mississippi, who were in periodic conflict with the Choctaw and their English allies, would turn leadership over to their Red Chief
and remove their people to the red towns when hostilities loomed. It is assumed that this elaborate tradition of response to war and peace was in place long
before the European contact.
Apparently, there was no effort on the part of Native American groups in the South and Southeast to
develop what could be called empires. The chiefdoms controlled large areas that included many towns,
but distance was an important factor in the amount of
control a small group of native nobles and priests
could have over a large territory. The Natchez of
western Mississippi, near the city now bearing that
name, along the Mississippi River, were probably the
best and most advanced example of centralized control over people. The Great Sun was the absolute
ruler, presiding over a tightly controlled class system
that included four distinct classes: the Great Sun and
his immediate family, the Nobility, the Honored
Ones, and the Stinkards, or agricultural peasants. It is
unlikely, however, that the total Natchez population
ever exceeded 5,000 or 6,000, and the territory controlled by the central government was, by modern
364
Chippewa
Passamaquoddy
Algonquin
Penobscot
Ottawa
IROQUOIS
CONFEDERACY
Abnaki
Mohawk
Oneida
Onondaga Massachusett
Cayuga
Narragansett
Seneca
Mohican
Wampanoag
Pequot
Menominee
Sauk
Fox
Huron
Winnebago
Pottawatomi
Erie
Kickapoo
Miami
Montauk
Susquehannock
Honiason
Illinois
Delaware
Monacan
Moneton
Pamunkey
Shawnee
Tutelo
Tuscarora
Yuchi
Pamlico
Cherokee
Catawba
Chickasaw
CREEK
CONFEDERACY
Santee
Choctaw
Alabama
Yamasee
Biloxi
Natchez
Apalachee
Timucua
Seminole
Powhatan
366
West Indian natives and Spanish explorers clash at Columbuss settlement at La Navidad.
367
ritorial conquest, but rather in response to encroachNorth America during what was called the Little Ice
ments into hunting territory, over misunderstandings
Age. During this time, crops failed and the courses
due to language differences, for theft of prestige
of rivers changed. The successors to the Anasazi,
items, or in raids to obtain slaves or wives.
known as the Pueblo peoples, an amalgam of the
raiding groups, occupied, and continue to occupy,
villages consisting of great adobe apartment complexes. These peoples were not, however, part of any
Military Achievement
large confederation, but rather were more like bands
who often fought with one another for a variety of
Because no written historical record exists for North
reasons, many trivial.
America north of the Valley of Mexico before 1500
Along the coast of British Columbia, reaching
c.e., warfare between groups of Native Americans
into southern Alaska and Washington state, lived
cannot be documented with any precision. There are
tribes such as the Tlingit, who were highly developed
some oral sources but most information derives from
both socially and politically. These tribes maintained
archaeological evidence, which does point to violent
some degree of peace by engaging in the periodic
conflicts. Many towns were fortified with palisades,
practice of the potlatch, the ceremonial act of giving a
bastions, and defensive trenches that would have
great deal of a groups material possessions to anbeen unnecessary had there not been real or potential
other group, which was expected to reciprocate apenemy incursions.
propriately within a reasonable time. Northwestern
tribes did, however, engage in frequent combat with
their neighbors over hunting and gathering territory
Weapons, Uniforms, and Armor
and perhaps in response to raids for obtaining
women.
The weapons of prehistoric Native American warfare
The archaeological record reveals that during the
would have been essentially, if not exactly, the same
early fourteenth century there were hostilities beweapons as those used in hunting. These would have
tween Native Americans who lived along the river
included the throwing and thrusting spear, dart, bow
valleys of the Dakotas and those who occupied the
and arrow, hand ax, war club, hand pick or tomariver valleys of Kansas and Nebraska. The southern
hawk, knife, accoutrements such as the atlatl (speargroup, probably responding to drought conditions,
thrower), detachable projectile points, body armor,
moved northward, forcibly encroaching upon the
shields, quivers, and knife sheaths.
Dakota group. At the Crow Creek site on the MisThe spear was probably one of the earliest Native
souri River in South Dakota, more than five hundred
American weapons, arriving with the earliest immiscalped and mutilated bodies were
unearthed from a shallow mass grave
at one end of a defensive trench. Evidence indicates that this massacre
c. 400
The bow and arrow is introduced in eastern North America.
occurred around 1325. Many other
c. 700
Triangular projectile points are developed.
such occurrences have been docuc. 1200 Destruction of southwestern Anasazi culture, possibly by
mented by archaeologists.
raiding Ute, Apache, Navajo, and Comanche tribes.
It is certain that warfare did exc. 1300 An increase in separate tribal identities develops in response to
ist between Native American groups
increasing importance of agriculture and clearer definition of
during the prehistoric period, though
gender roles.
it was almost always on the small
c. 1500 The Iroquois Confederacy, an alliance of separate tribes formed
scale of war parties, perhaps the size
to fight hostile western and southern neighbors, is established
of squads or platoons. Battles were
in the Northeast.
seldom fought for the purpose of ter-
Turning Points
368
369
der sinew of the large male bison or elk. The sinew
was separated into strands, soaked in water and a glue
probably made from reduced vegetable and hoof materials, and finally twisted into a heavy cord. One end
of the cord was always attached to one end of the
bow, whereas the other end was attached to a notch
on the other end only when the warrior was ready to
string the bow for use. This allowed the bow to maintain its elasticity and tensile strength. The bowman
often carried a spare string.
Arrows were made from essentially the same
wood material as were bows. The length of arrows
varied throughout North America. The Omaha, for
instance, traditionally made arrows the length of the
distance from the pit of the left elbow to the tip of the
middle finger and back over the hand to the wrist
bone, an average of 63 to 64 centimeters. Arrows
were fletched with feathersusually threeand
some of the feather fletching extended a full onethird of the shaft length. The feathers had to be large
enough to split, so the feathers of turkeys, prairie
chickens, owls, chicken hawks, eagles, and vultures
were preferred. The feathers, after splitting, were often tied to the shaft at both ends with sinew, allowing
the middle section to be free from the shaft. The
shafts were grooved from the fletching to the tip, and
the design of the grooving varied from tribe to tribe.
The purpose of this grooving has been lost through
time, but some Native Americans of seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries claimed that the grooves made
the arrow fly a straighter course; some claimed they
were bleeding channels, others claimed they kept the
arrow from warping, and still others claimed they
were occult symbols that ensured accuracy.
The notch on the arrow that fit on the bowstring
was at the feather end of the arrow. This end was
made a bit bulbous to facilitate a better grip with the
thumb and index finger. The string was pulled with
the other three fingers.
The arrowheads of war arrows were perpendicular to the bowstring, so that the arrows would easily
pass between the ribs of the enemy. Hunting arrowheads were parallel to the string, so that they would
pass through the ribs of game. Some reports claim
that there was essentially no difference between
hunting and war arrows, except that the arrowhead on
370
the war arrow was longer for more effective penetration. Arrows were often distinctly decorated among
the tribes and among individuals. This decoration facilitated retrieval by the owner and also emphasized
tribal distinctiveness.
Arrowheads took many forms even in the early
periods of bow and arrow usage. By the late Woodland period, points were side notched and corner
notched on the hafting, or attaching, end and these
were of varying lengths to suit various purposes, such
as hunting and warfare. The war arrowhead was the
longest and most slender. Toward the end of the
Woodland period and the beginning of the Mississippian, or temple mound, period, the triangular-shaped
point became increasingly prominent.
These points were crafted by chipping and flaking
any of several substances. Chert, flint, and obsidian
were the most common materials; all are varieties of
quartz. Chert, a poor-quality flint, was used when
better qualities of raw materials were not available.
Most arrowheads were made of good-quality flint.
Flint, composed of extremely fine-grained sediment,
has a concoidal fracture that easily lends itself to accurate chipping or pressure-flaking. Obsidian, or natural glass, is a volcanic rock and was available only
in parts of the Rocky Mountains and the CascadeSierra Nevada ranges of the far West. Obsidian produced a super-sharp edge and could be easily sharpened when it became dull.
The arrowhead was hafted to the tip of the arrow
shaft with sinew and glue. A notch was cut in the tip
of the shaft, and the head was wedged into the notch.
In the case of the war arrow, the head was sometimes
detachable. It was loosely hafted to the shaft, and no
sinew or glue was used. The head was simply wedged
into the notch. If the arrows victim attempted to pull
the arrow out, the arrowhead would remain and increase the severity of the wound.
The bow and arrow was a very effective weapon
of war. An arrow could be projected up to 500 meters
and, in the hands of a skilled marksman, was extremely accurate at distances of 100 meters or more.
The penetrating power of an arrow shot from a bow
with a 40-pound pull had more penetrating potential
than did a bullet shot from a Colt .45, and it was more
accurate at long distances.
Military Organization
It does not appear that any Native American group in
prehistoric times had a standing army or even a warrior class. Warriors were able-bodied young men
who, when called upon to engage in violence, left
their normal duties as farmers, hunters, and craftsmen and assumed the role of warrior.
371
Most violent encounters between groups seem to
have been conducted by small bands of warriors
numbering no more than twenty or thirty. Oral tradition indicates that battles started with an ambush and
concluded with hand-to-hand combat. It is true that
some groups displaced others from their traditional
territories. The traditions of the Shawnee tell of their
former home somewhere in central Tennessee, and it
is believed that they were displaced to the north of the
Ohio River by pressures from some of the Southern
tribes during the fifteenth or sixteenth century. Choctaw and Chickasaw migration legends claim that these
peoples originally came from somewhere to the west
of the Mississippi River. These removals, though,
could have resulted just as easily from environmental
conditions as from warfare. It would not have taken a
vast army to cause the removal of small groups from
their traditional homes. Persistent attacks by small
raiding parties, which could not be successfully rebuffed or answered by counterraids, would have been
enough pressure to force migrations. There is no record until after European contact of large military
assemblages descending upon an enemy.
Medieval Sources
Native Americans north of Mexico, prior to European contact, had no written languages;
therefore, no information except the archaeological record remains. Apart from some Viking
and Welsh legends, which may or may not have any historical foundation, there is little in the
Native American legends to provide details on the military history of the region before 1500.
372
Handarms to Firearms
Dates: c. 1130-1700 c.e.
Nature and Use
strongest early advocate of gunpowder weapons, encouraging experimentation with different sizes, gunpowder mixtures, and metals. Soon bombards weighing twenty tons and firing 1,000-pound balls were
bringing sieges to quick conclusions across Europe.
Firearms are a Chinese invention for which the earliest evidence dates to 1130. By that time the Chinese
were using gunpowder in primitive flamethrowers
made of bamboo, wood, or metal tubes. Within another century they had developed gunpowder projectile weapons that fired lances, arrows, and probably
Development
balls. Beyond these early weapons, however, development of firearms did not proceed much further in
Fifteenth Century
China. Although most historians agree that thirteenth
By 1410 gunpowder weaponry had captured the atcentury Mongols brought gunpowder to Europe,
tention of an unlikely commentator on military afwhere its first definitive mention is dated to 1267,
fairs, Christine de Pizan (c. 1365-c. 1430), a native of
there is no consensus on whether the Mongols also
Italy who lived most of her life at the French court.
brought Chinese gunpowder weaponry to the West.
Her Le Livre des fais darmes et de chevalerie (1410;
An English illustration from 1326 shows the earliThe
Book of Fayttes of Arms and of Chivalry, 1489)
est known gunpowder weapon in Europe during a
discusses at length the use of the cannon as a siege
siege. The first certain use of gunpowder weaponry
weapon, recommending that the defenders of a fortiin Europe occurred in 1331 during a siege of Friuli in
fication use twelve cannons using stone balls and ten
northeastern Italy. A French source for the Battle of
pieces of mechanical artillery. Christine estimated
Crcy (1346) states that the English fired three canthe need for 1,500 pounds of gunpowder along with
nons at crossbowmen in the French army as they
200 stone balls and argued that attackers would need
advanced toward the English lines, but many historia much larger arsenal: forty-two cannon shooting
ans do not accept the reports accuracy. At the English siege of Calais following their
victory at Crcy, there is good documentation for the use of small cannons called ribaulds, but these can1331 First known use of gunpowder weaponry occurs at the Siege of
nons had only a small role in the
Friuli in Italy.
siege. Over the next twenty years
1377 Cannon are first used successfully to breach a wall at the Siege of
cannons increased greatly in size.
Odruik, the Netherlands.
During his 1377 siege of Odruik
1420 Hussite leader Jan Mimka makes innovative and effective use of
in the Netherlands, Philip II, duke
firearms, with the Wagenburg, a defensive line of wagons and
of Burgundy (1342-1404), used
cannons.
cannons called bombards, which
1525 Spanish Square formation of pikemen and harquebusiers is
were capable of firing 200-pound
perfected at the Battle of Pavia.
stone balls. This occasion was the
1631 Gustavus II Adolphuss military reforms prove their value at the
first known instance of cannon fire
Battle of Breitenfeld.
breaching walls. Philip was the
Turning Points
375
376
200-pound balls, along with many mechanical artillery pieces and smaller firearms. Attackers would
also need 30,000 pounds of powder, 1,100 stone
balls, and 500 pounds of lead for the smaller pieces,
because working stone into balls small enough for
these weapons was difficult and time-consuming.
Christine also advocated mounting cannon on ships
for war at sea.
The fact that Christines work makes little mention of gunpowder weapons in battle suggests that, at
least in France, they were not yet being widely used.
In Flanders, ribaulds were placed on carts and used as
field artillery. The first battle in which they had an
impact was Beverhoudsveld (1382) in the Netherlands. The militiamen of the city of Ghent had some
two hundred carts with several ribaulds apiece in the
Handarms to Firearms
377
378
The Battle of Pavia (1525) between forces of French king Francis I and Holy Roman Emperor Charles V.
played a significant role in reducing English-held locations in Normandy and Gascony. In the wars last
major battles, Formigny (1450) and Castillon (1453),
the French placed their guns all along the line of battle, routing the English. The king also promoted experimentation to improve the gun carriage, leading to
the creation of the carriage with high wheels and long
tail that defined gun carriages until the nineteenth
century. Using an artillery train of around eighty
bronze cannon on mobile carriages, Charles VIII
(1470-1498) had great success in reducing Italian
fortifications during the initial phase of the Italian Wars of 1494-1559. In the Battle of Fornovo
(1495) the French artillery also played a role as a field
weapon.
Sixteenth Century
During the wars in Italy after 1494, field armies
began to include harquebusiers. At the Battle of
Handarms to Firearms
During the Dutch Wars of Independence (15661648), Maurice of Nassau (1567-1625) made his infantry more effective by extensive drilling, which
had special success in improving his handgunners
firepower. He broke down the process of loading and
firing a matchlock firearm into forty-two steps; each
step had a word of command shouted by the sergeant.
Drill books showing the steps and providing the
words of command spread across Europe. Gustavus
II Adolphus (1594-1632) of Sweden built upon the
Dutch system, emphasizing drills and increasing the
rate of fire from firearms by providing a cartridge
379
with a ball and a measured amount of powder. Intent
on increasing firepower for his forces, he also introduced a light piece firing a 3-pound ball that could be
moved with the infantry on the battlefield, thereby
providing support fire for the infantry in a way that
heavier cannon could not do. For Gustavus II Adolphus, the purpose of firepower was to create opportunities for shock forces to carry the attack into the
ranks of the enemy. Pikemen continued to be a significant part of the European infantry until the development of the bayonet by 1700 combined shock and
firepower in each soldier.
Knights to Cavalry
Dates: c. 1000-1600 c.e.
Knights
Turning Points
380
Knights to Cavalry
381
Library of Congress
Medieval knights face a massed infantry pike formation, against which, in their heavy armor astride their large,
unwieldy horses, they became less and less effective.
drawn up in a defensive line. Mimkas Wagenburg stymied the German knights who were his enemy in the
war, but the tactic did not spread beyond Bohemia.
The new weaponry, including both firearms and
artillery, was too inaccurate, slow to reload, and
clumsy to use on the battlefield to be effective against
men-at-arms, although its ability to pierce plate armor increased knightly casualty rates.
During the Italian Wars of 1494-1559, which began in 1494 when French king Charles VIII (r. 14831498) led an army of 8,500 horsemen across the
Alps, the men-at-arms continued to have a significant place in battle. At Seminara (1495) the French
men-at-arms crushed the Spanish and Italian horsemen and then routed the enemy infantry by attacking its flank and rear. Faced with the need to reform
his army after its crushing defeat, Ferdinand II of
Aragon (1452-1516) decided to concentrate on the
infantry, introducing the combination of firearms
and pike that became known as the Spanish Square.
This formation demonstrated its potential against the
French men-at-arms at Cerignola (1503), when well-
382
entrenched infantrymen using harquebuses and pikes
held off their charge and killed the French commander with a harquebus ball as he rode toward their
line. The men-at-arms had their victorious moments,
most notably at Marignano (1515), where they had a
major role in the French victory over the Swiss. The
last battle in which French men-at-arms using their
traditional fighting style had a significant role in
gaining victory was Cerisolles (1544) in northern
Italy. Their foe, a Spanish and German force serving Holy Roman Emperor Charles V (1500-1558),
placed too much faith in the ability of harquebusiers
to withstand a cavalry charge without support from
pikemen. The harquebusiers could not sustain fire
strong enough to halt the men-at-arms as they
charged through the balls into their ranks.
French king Henry II is mortally wounded in a joust the year of the treaty between France and Spain that ended
decades of war between the two countries.
Knights to Cavalry
1494-1559 was a rapid decline in that system. A city
such as Venice would keep some armored horsemen
under arms until late in the sixteenth century, but this
practice was more for the appeasement of its noble
class than for any practical value the knights had on
the battlefield.
The Pistol
The final challenge to the traditional man-at-arms appeared in Germany. German knights had continued
to appear in war until 1540. Then, within a decade,
the pistoler replaced the knight. The wheel-lock
mechanism for the pistol was developed about 1505
in either Germany or Italy, but it evolved into the pistol first in Germany. By 1518, Holy Roman Emperor
Maximilian I (1459-1519) had banned weapons
small enough to be concealed in ones sleeve. The
production of the wheel lock was a time-consuming
task that required much smaller tolerances than the
matchlock used in the harquebus did. Because the
wheel lock had to be sturdy enough for use in a
weapon, it was very expensive. Cost probably was
the principal reason the pistol did not become a
weapon for foot soldiers, although some wheel-lock
muskets were made.
The nobles, who still insisted on their right to fight
on horseback, found that the pistol could be effective
from horseback, especially if they carried three or
four of them, which could be loaded in advance,
placed in slings or in their boots, and fired in rapid
succession. The wheel-lock pistol was badly inaccurate at any distance beyond a few paces and only
more so when fired from a moving horse. However, a
horseman firing three or four pistols rapidly could
have some hope of hitting a foe. The pistol was a
one-handed weapon, which allowed the rider a free
hand to control his horse. Although there had been
mounted harquebusiers in most European armies
since 1500, the sparking match of the harquebusiers
two-handed weapons frightened their horses, and the
harquebusiers usually dismounted to fire. Pistols offered many benefits: Pistolers could shed much of
their armor, making their mobility the key to what
success they had; their horses could be smaller and
cheaper; and it required less training to use a pistol
than a lance.
383
Mounted pistolers first appeared in the war between Charles V and the Lutheran princes in Germany (1546-1555). When they served in Charless
army that fought the French for control of Lorraine
(1553-1554), the French called them retres. The
French men-at-arms were astonished when a force of
retres little larger than their own band defeated them
at Saint-Vincent in Lorraine (1553). The forces of
Spanish king Philip II (r. 1556-1598) had great numbers of retres at the Battle of Saint Quentin (1557).
Their speed played a major role in the deadly pursuit
of the routed French forces. French king Henry II
(r. 1547-1559) then recruited eight thousand retres
for the French army. In the French Wars of Religion
that followed Henrys accidental death while jousting (a further blow to the traditional style), the
Protestant army had the larger number of retres, because most were Lutherans.
The Caracole
In the Battle of Dreux (1562), between the Protestant
Huguenots and the Catholics, the Protestant pistolers
for the first time executed the tactic known as the
caracole. The retres rode toward their enemys line
in successive ranks, fired their pistols a few yards
from the foe as they wheeled their horses about, and
returned to the rear of their formation to reload and
wait their turn to repeat the maneuver. The caracole
had success against an infantry force armed only with
shock weapons, but it was ineffective against a wellequipped force of harquebusiers, who had greater
range. The caracole was more successful against the
men-at-arms because retres could rely on greater
speed to keep clear of their shock weapons. In 1568
Marshal Gaspard de Tavannes (1509-1573), the royalist Catholic commander, ordered that each company of horsemen would ride together in the formation it would take on the battlefield, so that men
would become accustomed to holding their positions, a clear statement of the change from the knight
to the cavalryman. The pistolers formed up in depth,
while the knights charged in a line one or two ranks
deep. To be effective in their deep formation, retres
required more organization, drill, and training than
did knights. Cohesion in their units was more crucial
to what success they had on the battlefield. Franois
384
The valuesand limitationsof the caracole maneuver were demonstrated in the Battle of Dreux in 1562.
Knights to Cavalry
385
Galleys to Galleons
Dates: To c. 1600 c.e.
neuverability, the medieval galley was ideally suited
for the purpose of war. Medieval variations on the
classical galley were many. The dromon, developed
by the Byzantines, was a large galley that utilized one
or two tiers of oars, a square sail set on a single mast,
and a stern-hung rudder. In times of war, the dromon
could carry troops, weapons, supplies, and cavalry
horses, as well as engage in sea battles when necessary. The beam of the dromon permitted mounted
cannons in the bow of the ship, which could be fired
directly ahead of the vessel. A variation on the
dromon was the Italian galley, which had one level of
oars with two or three oarsmen to each rowing bench,
a total of approximately 120 oarsmen. The Italian
galley was manned by about fifty soldiers and typically had a large catapult mounted on a platform on
the front deck.
The galleas was another variation on the galley.
Developed by the Venetians, the galleas had a gun
deck, oars, and two to three masts. The triangular lateen sails, adopted from those of the Arab dhows, permitted the galleas to sail nearly straight into the wind,
impossible with square sails. Sailors armed with
crossbows and lances could fight on the ships decks.
Turning Points
674-678
mid-13th cent.
mid-14th cent.
1501
1571
1588
Greek fire, a flammable liquid, is used by the Byzantines against Arab ships during the Siege of
Constantinople.
The cog, with high sides that offer protection against other vessels, is developed in Northern Europe.
The carrack, an efficient sailing ship with multiple masts, becomes popular in Atlantic and
Mediterranean waters.
The development of gunports allows a ships heaviest guns to be mounted on its lowest decks,
stabilizing its center of gravity.
The Battle of Lepanto II, fought between the Ottoman Turks and the Christian forces of Don Juan de
Austria, is the last major naval battle to be waged with galleys.
The English employ galleons to individually attack the larger ships of the formidable Spanish
Armada, defeating the Spanish and revolutionizing naval tactics.
386
Galleys to Galleons
387
388
This steering system was a great technological advance, and it remains the basic means of control on
ships.
The principal purpose of the cog was for commerce, but when enemies or pirates threatened, the
cog became a warship. In 1234 and again in 1239, the
Baltic German city of Lbeck, a central member of
the Hanseatic League, sent a fleet of cogs against the
king of Denmark when he threatened to take over the
city. After pirates invaded the Mediterranean in 1304,
The Carrack
F. R. Niglutsch
An engraving of the Christian fleets defeat of the Muslim Ottomans at the Battle of Lepanto, the last major naval battle in
which galleys were employed.
From the fourteenth to the seventeenth century, a larger vessel called the carrack was
the predominant trading vessel in Europe.
The carrack combined the square sails of
the northern ships with the lateen sails of the
Mediterranean ships, along with three masts,
a stern rudder, and very high fore- and aft
castles, producing a vessel noted for its large
cargo capacity and its ability to traverse great
distances. Improvements in maps and charts
greatly improved navigation, especially in
the Mediterranean. Written sailing instructions called portolan charts described coastlines, ports, and dangerous sailing areas,
and also provided information regarding
the availability of supplies for seafarers.
Galleys to Galleons
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390
the English sent in small fireships to attack the anchored Spanish vessels. The Spanish were forced to
cut their lines and sail out into the bay, where they
were met by the combined forces of Howard and
Seymour. The Spanish Armada retreated to Spain
with only 67 of its original 130 ships.
The difference between the Spanish loss and the
English victory lay in the strategy of each. The Spanish relied on the traditional warfare technique, used
since ancient times, of coming alongside and boarding enemy ships to engage in hand-to-hand combat.
The English, however, did not attempt to board the
enemy ships, but rather attacked them downwind at
close range, disabling as many as possible. This was
an important turning point in naval history. The naval
tactics that were first employed by the English
against the Spanish Armada continued in use in naval
warfare from that point forward.
backed blade is clipped along the top edge into a shallow concave curve at the end, thus imparting a double
cutting edge to the point. Equally distinctive is the
Sykes-Fairbairn commando dagger, widely used by
British paratroopers during World War II; its elegant
symmetrical blade was inspired by an ancient Egyptian pattern. Also developed during World War II,
the Ka-Bar combat knife, known also as the Mark II
in the U.S. Navy and as the Mark III in the U.S. Army
and U.S. Marines, employs a variant of the clipped
bowie blade. In hand-to-hand fighting, the Ka-Bar is
gripped like a hammer in the right hand, while the
splayed left hand is held pressed against the chest to
protect the heart.
Distinctive non-Western dagger forms include the
Malay kris, with a long slender blade, often ground to
a wavy edge along its length, that widens to an asymmetrical spur near the handle; the kukri, a generalpurpose long dagger in use by the Gurkas of Nepal
since the nineteenth century with an obtuse bent
blade that is sharpened along its inner edge; and the
East Indian katar, a triangular punching dagger with
a handle that is mounted at right angles to the long
axis of its blade.
Turning Points
393
394
The earliest forms of sword are virtually indistinguishable from long daggers, a case in point being the
ancient Roman gladius, a standard weapon of the
Roman legions, which measured a modest 2 feet in
length.
Development
Blades of great antiquity, such as those from Mesopotamian and Egyptian cultures dating from 3000
b.c.e., are often short in length, a characteristic necessitated by the use of bronze, which lacks the material strength to produce long serviceable blades. Following the development and subsequent refining of
forged steel processes around 1200 c.e., several European cities emerged as respected centers of sword
blade production during the late medieval era. Principal among these were the smiths of Sheffield,
Brussels, Paris, Nuremberg, Augsburg, and, most
respected of all, those of Toledo.
The whitesmith, as the sword maker was known,
created a blade from a mass of smelted wrought iron,
called a bloom, by repeatedly heating it and hammering it flat upon an anvil. Through successive repetitions of this procedure, particles of carbon were
mixed with the iron, turning it into hardened, carburized steel. Early sword blades were steeled only
along their cutting edges, their inner cores composed
of the relatively softer and more flexible iron. A technique called pattern welding was later devised to
combine the advantageous flexibility of the soft iron
core with the harder, but also more brittle, edgetaking quality of hardened steel.
In the pattern-welding process, slender rods of
iron are twisted together, heated, and hammerwelded into flat bars of harder carburized iron, which
are then sharpened to form the cutting edge. The
pattern-welded blade reveals a characteristic serpentine effect upon its surface that persists even in the
polished blade. Pattern welding was known to Roman sword makers of the Pax Romana, or Roman
Peace (c. 27 b.c.e.-180 c.e.), as well as to the later Vikings. The word damascene, literally of Damascus, is often incorrectly used as a synonym for the
pattern-welding technique; more properly the term
395
396
bring his free hand into play to menace or parry the
thrusts of an attacker. A popular variant from around
1600 was the sword breaker, with comblike notches
along one edge that enabled a defender to ensnare
and, with sufficiently developed strength of the wrist,
even break his opponents blade. A rarer form of
sword breaker featured blades designed to spring
open from either side of the daggers blade at the
touch of a button, although oddities such as this were
probably more formidable in appearance than useful
in actual combat.
The seventeenth century dueling sword was a
stiff, straight-edged weapon whose development
owes much to the simplified and widely adopted
French school of fencing. Its narrow blade was designed primarily for thrusting attacks, but it was also
quite capable of delivering cuts to the arms or face.
Imported Spanish, Italian, or German blades, fitted
Library of Congress
The cavalry saber was used decisively as late as the Mexican War (1846-1848) in the Battle of Palo Alto.
397
Samurai swordsmithing techniques, which reached
a peak of sophistication during the late sixteenth century, constitute a variation of the hammer-welding
process. A bar of hardened steel is sandwiched between softer iron, heated, hammered, and folded successively dozens of times to produce a fine cutting
edge with a temper that is regulated by sheathing the
blade in a fine clay slip. Heat treating of the exposed
edge produces a visible pattern along the temper line
that is categorized according to its resemblance to
certain naturalistic forms. Military officers swords
bearing serial numbers on the blade, mass-produced
during World War II, are of considerably less value
than are authentic handmade blades. Blades prized
too highly for use in battle were often kept in an unadorned white wood storage scabbard, called a shira
saya, resembling a simple pinewood cane.
Pole Arms
Dates: c. 1500-1900
trating power and could also be used to drag mounted
combatants from their saddles.
To ensure that the heads were not cut off their
shafts, most of these pole arms featured steel shanks
called langets that extended part way down the shaft.
The langets were usually riveted to the shafts. By
putting cutting heads on the ends of long shafts, infantry gained not only reach over their adversaries
but also weapons capable of penetrating the increasingly common plate armor of the late Middle Ages
and Renaissance. Another common feature of early
pole arms was a small steel roundel mounted at the
base of the blade. This roundel deflected blows sliding down the blade away from the users hands.
These weapons were very popular among infantry
forces throughout the Renaissance. Other pole arms
featured wide-bladed heads in the shape of exaggerated spear points. These weapons probably derived
from civilian boar spears, but the edges on these
heads also allowed slashing attacks. Such weapons
included the partisan and the spontoon.
Development
Spears have been in use as weapons since ancient
times. The dense pike formations favored by the
ancient Greeks and Macedonians were called phalanxes. Phalanxes were very daunting to face but
could seldom maintain formation integrity when
moving across rough ground. More mobile swordarmed foes such as the Romans defeated the pikearmed phalanxes by attacks to the flanks and rear.
During the Middle Ages, battles were usually decided by shock delivered by a cavalry charge. The
best antidote to the cavalry proved to be a steady,
pike-armed infantry. Overlapping ranks of pikes deterred the horses and gave the infantryman a weapon
long enough to strike his mounted foe. The best398
Pole Arms
399
Turning Points
400
An engraving by Hans Holbein the Younger showing Schlechten Krieg, or bad war, the result of tangled pole
arms (here, pikes wielded by Swiss pikemen, or Landsknechte) in an early sixteenth century battle.
Pole Arms
their blades. These weapons were especially evident
at parades and other formal occasions. By the end
of the eighteenth century such weapons had largely
disappeared from battlefield use, but they remain
in ceremonial use to this day. Englands ceremonial guards, the Beefeaters, and the Papacys Swiss
Guard, for example, still serve at their posts with halberds in hand.
As the proportion of pikes in a formation continued to decline, a simple solution to the need for pike
protection for the musketeers was the introduction of
the bayonet. A bayonet was a cutting weapon that
could be affixed to the muzzle of a musket to turn it
into an emergency pike. Bayonets ranged in length
from oversized knives to short swords. The earliest
bayonets were plug bayonets, which were probably
introduced in the early 1600s, though the earliest accounts of their use date from the 1640s. These were
typically double-edged daggers whose handles fit
into the muzzle of a musket or harquebus. The difficulty of a plug bayonet was that while it was being
used, the harquebus could not fire. In 1688 this problem was solved when the French field marshal
Sbastien Le Prestre de Vauban (1633-1707) introduced the socket bayonet, a bayonet mounted on a
socket so that the blade was offset to the side. The
socket fitted over a muskets muzzle and onto a lug
located near the muzzle. This allowed the musket to
be loaded and fired with the bayonet attached. Although it was not as long as a pike, the bayonet offered the soldier a pike-like weapon for close-quarter
fighting. With the bayonet at hand, there was no lon-
401
ger a need for specialized pike troops, and pikes disappeared from use. Since Vaubans introduction of
the socket bayonet, bayonets have been in continuous use throughout the world. Changes in the shape
of the socket or the size of the bayonet have not altered the weapons basic function. Although many
military thinkers praised the bayonet charge as the ultimate moment in battle, statistics show that by the
nineteenth century bayonet combats were very rare.
Indeed, the diaries and accounts of soldiers indicate
that bayonets were used far more often for utilitarian
purposes such as opening cans, cooking food over
a fire, or chopping brush than for battle. In the late
twentieth century bayonets increasingly became more
of a utility tool than a weapon. Many Soviet bayonets, for example, featured a lug on the scabbard and
a matching hole near the bayonets tip to allow the
blade to fit over the lug and be used with the scabbard
as wire-cutter with the bayonets back edge as the
cutter. Although this innovation enhanced the bayonets usefulness, it removed it yet further from its
roots as a pike.
Although pole arms ceased to be realistic weapons of war by the end of the 1600s, their simplicity has made them useful in conditions of extreme
need. For example, while planning for his slave insurrection, the abolitionist John Brown (1800-1859)
forged pikes with which to arm runaway slaves. In
the final days of World War II, Japanese civilians,
including women, trained with bamboo pikes as part
of the planned last-ditch resistance to an American
landing.
402
commonly used and explode through chemical reactions. Mechanical explosives involve physical reactions, such as a containers being overloaded with
compressed air. Nuclear explosives produce a sustained nuclear reaction and are the most powerful explosives.
The first known explosive was black powder, also
known as gunpowder. It was developed in China during the tenth century or possibly earlier. The initial
purpose was for use in fireworks and signals. The
first European mention of gunpowder was by thirteenth century scientist and educator Roger Bacon
(1220-1292), who recorded a recipe in 1267. His
term, fire for burning up the enemy, suggests that
Bacon regarded gunpowder as an incendiary, not a
propellant. The composition he suggested endured
for more than three hundred years and consisted of
75 percent potassium nitrate (saltpeter), 15 percent
charcoal, and 10 percent sulfur. The charcoal and sul-
IMV/Dreamstime.com
A hand grenade.
403
404
fur constitute the fuel of the powdered mixture,
whereas the saltpeter acts as the oxidizer.
Black powder revolutionized warfare and played
a significant role in the development of European
patterns of living up until modern times. The Chinese
first used black powder as a gun propellant as early as
1130, placing it in bamboo tubes that were reinforced
with iron to propel stone projectiles and arrows.
When used in war, gunpowder was often more successful in creating fear in the enemy ranks than in inflicting actual damage. Chinese records indicate that
the Chinese used black powder in bombs for military
purposes. Torches, glowing tinder, or heated iron
rods were used to ignite the powder, and usually, a
trail of the powder led to the main charge in order to
give the firer time to reach safety.
Firearms that use gunpowder are frequently mentioned in fourteenth century manuscripts from many
different countries. By the end of the fourteenth century, many countries were using gunpowder as a military aid to breach the walls of castles and cities. Although black powder remained the standard gun
propellant until the late nineteenth century, it is now
used only in igniters, safety fuses, and fireworks.
Development
In 1425 the mixing process for the ingredients of
black powder was greatly improved when the corning, or granulating, process was developed in England. Heavy wheels ground and pressed the fuel and
oxidizer into a solid mass that was subsequently broken down into smaller grains. The first gunpowder
mill was erected near Nuremberg, Germany, in about
1435. Corned gunpowder was used for small guns
and hand grenades during the fifteenth century.
By 1540 the French had become the first people to
control explosive pressure in wheeled cannons by using relatively large, slow-burning powder grains of
uniform size. In the seventeenth century, the English
and Dutch militaries developed the howitzer, a short
cannon firing explosive shells in a high arc to hit a
distant target. Large muskets were used in America
with some success during the French and Indian War
(1754-1763). Shorter, lighter muskets were the most
405
F. R. Niglutsch
During the Battle of Kniggrtz, Prussian soldiers were able to overwhelm the Austrians by firing six shots from
their high-powered rifles for every shot discharged by the Austrian muzzle-loading rifles.
grtz in the Seven Weeks War (1866), Prussian soldiers were able to overwhelm the Austrians by firing
six shots from their high-powered rifles for every
shot discharged by the Austrian muzzle-loading rifles.
Until the discovery of fulminating gold in the
early 1600s, gunpowder was the only known explosive. Gunpowder remained in wide use until the mid1800s, when the first modern explosives, nitroglycerin and dynamite, were invented. Nitroglycerin was
discovered by an Italian chemist, Ascanio Sobrero
(1812-1888), in 1847. Its value for blasting was later
demonstrated by Swedish inventor Alfred B. Nobel
(1833-1896), who also invented dynamite in 1866.
Stable ammonia dynamites began to appear in the
late 1880s, followed by low-freezing dynamites after 1925.
406
Turning Points
407
United States began using medium-sized howitzers
capable of firing chemical and nuclear explosives.
Grenade launchers saw a great deal of action in Vietnam, and search-and-destroy air explosives razed numerous Vietnamese villages.
During the 1990s advances in onboard computer
systems and self-locating capabilities enabled modern cannons and missile launchers to move independently around the battlefield, stopping to fire explosives and then quickly moving to a new firing
position. Some modern artillery cannons and launchers can deliver smart explosives. These projectiles
and warheads use sophisticated seekers and sensors
to locate and home in on stationary or moving targets.
Development
Black powder, the earliest form of gunpowder, is a
mixture of potassium nitrate, sulfur, and charcoal.
When ignited by a flame, it burns rapidly and generates a great deal of gas. This gas, expanding in a gun
barrel, can drive a bullet or shell at high velocity. Gunpowder is believed to have originated in China, during
the tenth century or possibly earlier. The earliest firearms were extremely cumbersome; they had to be carried in carts or set on wooden trestles and were more
like small cannons. It was not until the mid-fourteenth
century that portable hand firearms loaded from the
muzzle end were introduced. In muzzle-loading
weapons, a powder charge is poured into the barrel
and a projectile is pressed down upon the charge. The
powder is ignited by a lighted match, a cinder, or a
hot wire. Access to the powder charge is through a
small hole drilled in the breech of the gun, and when
the match or hot wire is placed against the touch hole,
the charge is lit. Although such guns had a range of
several hundred yards, they were not very accurate. A
less skilled soldier could be expected to hit a stationary
man-sized target consistently at only 40 or 50 yards.
In the early years of firearms development neither the rates of fire nor the accuracy of handheld
weapons was equal to those of the longbow or crossbow. Consequently the cannon, whose range, striking power, and relative ease of manufacture made
it superior to the catapult, had an earlier impact on
military tactics and strategy. Like the longbow and
408
409
410
Turning Points
411
412
Propellants
Until 1885 the term gunpowder referred exclusively to black powder. Afterward, it came to refer to
both black powder and smokeless powder. The nineteenth century discovery that treating cellulose with
nitric acid and sulfuric acids produces nitrocellulose,
or guncotton, an explosive compound, led to the development of smokeless gunpowder. Combustible
substances such as glycerin, wood pulp, cotton, and
cotton wastes are all used as sources of cellulose. The
strength of the explosive compound depends on the
degree of nitrification; unless the residual acid is
carefully neutralized, these compounds can deteriorate and explode spontaneously. By the 1880s scientists had discovered ways of stabilizing nitrocellulose compounds to slow their combustion. These
propellants are far more powerful than black powder
and also far more efficient, in the sense that 90 percent of their weight becomes gas, leaving fewer solid
particles to become smoke.
Smokeless powders offered immense military
advantages. The effective range of small arms increased from 200 to perhaps 800 yards. The effective
range of the largest cannons increased to more than
20 miles. Indeed, a few guns were deployed that
could actually hurl a shell more than 75 miles. Moreover, there was no longer the immense amount of
smoke that had shrouded battlefields where black
powder weapons were used. Many battlefields, such
as that at Waterloo (1815), were so obscured by the
smoke of musketry that command and control became impossible. Smokeless powder also left far less
residue in the barrel of a gun. The accuracy of a black
powder gun declined quickly as the barrel became
fouled. Modern small arms and machine guns do not
fall off in accuracy with extensive firing. The superiority of smokeless powder was so obvious that nearly
all of the worlds armies abandoned black powder
cartridges within just fifteen years after the first use
of smokeless powder.
Smokeless powders are classified by their content. Single-base powders consist of nitrocellulose
compounds only; double-base powders also contain
nitroglycerin. Although the latter tend to contain
more energy, they also tend to be more erosive in gun
barrels, a significant factor for military weapons, par-
413
414
manufactured by Vickers and Savage, were the
mainstays of Allied armies in World War I. The German MG08 machine gun, known as the Spandau, was
a redevelopment of Maxims design.
Of the different magazine-feed systems developed for machine guns, the belt of cartridges became
the most dominant. In this method, cartridges are tied
together by spring clips in long belts that feed into
the gun during firing and are ejected on the other side.
Modern military machine guns have cyclic rates of
500 to 1,000 rounds per minute.
Sir Hiram Maxim explains to his grandson how his machine gun
works.
415
In most armies submachine guns are issued only
for special operations in which close-range engagements are expected. Moreover, because submachine
guns normally use subsonic pistol cartridges, they
can be effectively silenced for stealth attacks.
Pistols
Pistols have gone through most of the same developmental patterns as heavier weapons. In military use the
pistol was considered especially useful for mounted
cavalry because it could be fired with one hand. A
military flintlock pistol weighed 2 to 3 pounds and
was about 12 inches long. A seventeenth century cavalryman would normally be armed with two or three
loaded pistols as well as a sword or lance.
With the development of percussion caps and
self-contained cartridges, pistol design forged ahead
rapidly. Because pistols are low-powered weapons,
compared with rifles, it is easier to design repeating
mechanisms for them. In the days of black powder
and percussion caps, revolvers were designed with a
cylinder containing multiple chambers. The first successful design was patented by Samuel Colt (18141862) in 1835. With this weapon, the soldier could
shoot six or more shots before reloading. Some designs made it possible to carry several loaded cylinders, thus permitting relatively quick reloading. Percussion revolvers were widely used as short-range
weapons, particularly by officers during the American
Civil War. Revolvers continued in military service
after the development of metallic cartridges; although
the first adopted in the United States was the Smith
and Wesson 1869 .44 American, the most famous
was the .45-caliber Colt single-action Army model of
1873, known as the Peacemaker. With a hiatus or
two, this weapon has been in production since 1873.
Semiautomatic pistols were first built in Germany
and Austria. Design work there culminated in the
adoption of the Luger pistol as the official sidearm of
the German military forces from 1908 to 1932. The
American designer John M. Browning devised a
dropping-barrel, locked-breech design, the bestknown example of which is the .45-caliber Colt 1911
A1. Brownings locking system is used in nearly all
military pistols built around the world.
Modern military pistol designs utilize the double-
416
Library of Congress
417
Otteson, Stuart. The Bolt Action: A Design Analysis. New York: Winchester Press, 1976.
Pauly, Roger. Firearms: The Life Story of a Technology. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press,
2004.
Pegler, Martin. Sniper: A History of the U.S. Marksman. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey,
2007.
Smith, Anthony. Machine Gun: The Story of the Men and the Weapon That Changed the Face
of War. London: Piatkus, 2002.
Walter, John. Guns of the Elite Forces. London: Greenhill, 2005.
_______. The Modern Machine Gun. New York: Greenhill Books/Lionel Leventhal, 2000.
Zhuk, A. B., and John Walter. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Handguns: Pistols and Revolvers of the World, 1870 to the Present. London: Greenhill Books, 1995.
Films and Other Media
Early Machine Guns: Advent of Rapid Firepower. Documentary. History Channel, 1998.
Glory. Feature film. Columbia Tri-Star, 1989.
History of Firearms. Documentary. History Channel, 2000.
Robert Jacobs
Artillery
Dates: Since c. 1500
(when the target is not visible to the firing weapon)
fire against enemy troops, vehicles, or installations.
Artillery may also be used for general bombardment,
the interdiction of supply routes, illumination via
flares and other pyrotechnic devices, the screening of
friendly forces via smoke rounds, the delivery of
atomic warheads, and defense against enemy air attack. At sea or in a coastal defense role, specialized
artillery serves to destroy enemy ships or aircraft and
to bombard land targets. Artillery units use a wide variety of specialized ordnance, including antipersonnel, antiarmor, nuclear, chemical, high-explosive,
and proximity fuse.
Development
Field Artillery
Although modern artillery dates to the Battle of
Crcy (1346), most armies before 1500 used their
guns in sieges rather than on the battlefield. Great
bombards battered down the walls of Constantinople
in 1453, for example, and the French successfully
used artillery to conduct sieges during the Hundred
Years War (1337-1453).
However, the promise of battlefield artillery could
hardly be denied. Cannon already positioned for
sieges proved crucial to French victories over the
English at Formigny (1450) and Castillon (1453).
Hussite leader Jan Mimka (c. 1376-1424) successfully
used artillery carried on wagons during the Hussite
Wars (1419-1434). The most prescient demonstration of field artillery was by French king Charles VIII
(r. 1483-1498), who brilliantly used lightweight
bronze artillery in campaigns against Italy in the
1490s and in a dramatic victory over the Spanish at
Ravenna (1512).
These victories stimulated considerable innova418
Artillery
tion in ordnance, and throughout the 1500s experts
tinkered with a wide variety of ammunition. Most
cannon fired solid cast-iron round shot, or solid iron
balls; bombs, iron shells filled with explosive gunpowder; canisters, cans filled with small projectiles;
and grape shot, a cluster of iron balls. The ordnance
used depended on the target. Solid shot proved effective at long range and against fortifications, bombs
were valuable against troops and horses in the open,
and canister and grape shot were deadly at close
range. Unfortunately, ammunition remained severely
limited in most armies, and explosives were unreliable. Worse, the diverse experimentation of inventors created so many different types of guns and
ammunition that consistent supply in many armies
became almost impossible.
Artillery took a great leap forward in 1537, when
Italian mathematician Niccol Fontana Tartaglia
(1500-1557) published the first scientific treatise on
gunnery. Tartaglias pioneering work discussed the
basic principles of ballistics, proving that guns
reached their greatest range when fired at an angle of
45 degrees and that all trajectories are curved. Tartaglia also developed the first gunners quadrant and
laid the foundation for the systematic scientific study
of artillery. When Spanish scholars built upon Tartaglias work in the 1590s and computed the first firing tables, artillery moved into a new age.
It was an age characterized by arms races between
designers of guns and fortifications and between leaders seeking ways to use field artillery more effectively.
Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I (1459-1519)
classified artillery in the 1490s as either siege or field
and ordered the general use of iron shot by his gunners
to simplify logistics. He also increased the amount of
training his gunners received and placed his artillery
men in a separate branch of the army to enhance their
prestige. These efforts were followed by Holy Roman
Emperor Charles V (1500-1558) and King Henry II
(1519-1559) of France, who also standardized their
artillery. The two rulers instituted, between them,
a system of classification and battlefield use that
lasted in Europe for almost three hundred years.
The system defined three basic types of artillery
pieces: long-barreled, thick-walled pieces designed
for accuracy and long range, called culverin; lighter,
419
shorter-barreled pieces that sacrificed range and accuracy to fire heavier projectiles shorter distances,
called cannon; and short-barreled, thin-walled weapons firing very heavy projectiles at high angles called
pedrero. The names of these weapons varied among
nations, but the fundamental system of organization
endured into the modern era, in which culverin are
known as guns, cannons are known as howitzers, and
the early pedrero are known as mortars. Most armies
followed this system, reducing the number of calibers
and standardizing ammunition and generally abandoning experiments with dangerous breech-loading
artillery that loaded from the rear. Breechloaders had
a tendency to explode when gases leaked from the
breech during firing, a problem known as obturation.
They became commonplace only in the nineteenth
century, after technological advances had allowed
gunners to seal breeches consistently.
Another quantum leap in artillery organization
took place in the early 1600s, when King Gustavus
II Adolphus of Sweden (1594-1632) established the
foundations of modern field artillery. Adolphus ordered the development of a small, truly mobile
leatherbound gun; made all gunners into soldiers
subject to army discipline; and abandoned the widespread practice of hiring unreliable civilian gun
crews. The king organized his new guns into regiments and assigned his artillery specific battlefield
roles based on the weight of the projectile they fired:
24-pounders were for siege work, 12-pounders for
field artillery, and 4-pounders for assignment to individual regiments. Later, Adolphus added 9-pound
guns and organized them into batteries of five to ten
guns behind his infantry. These changes were revolutionary. Adolphus used artillery en masse, rather than
piecemeal, concentrating firepower at the decisive
place on the battlefield. He was the first to allow artillery and infantry to fight together as interdependent
supporting arms. Previously, artillery units had typically been placed in front of infantry, because the
guns were unreliable and could not fire safely over
the heads of friendly forces. Once battle was joined
these guns were usually overrun by the general engagement and could not be fired again. In contrast,
Adolphuss system allowed the guns to be fired continuously and to move from point to point as needed.
420
Adolphuss army also pioneered the use of cartridge
ammunition, which consisted of properly measured
bags of gunpowder bound to different types of projectiles. Cartridge ammunition made loading much
faster and also increased the consistency of shot, because powder loads were measured out in advance
instead of being thrown into guns in the heat of battle.
Adolphus used these innovations to smash the Catholic League at the Battle of Breitenfeld in 1631. Other
nations quickly moved to duplicate his powerful,
mobile artillery.
Louis XIV (1638-1715) of France further advanced the nature and use of artillery when he organized the first permanent artillery regiment in 1671
and established a school of artillery in 1690. At his
direction, French engineers perfected an elevating
screw that simplified the process of raising and lowering barrels and developed a system of ropes, known
as a prolonge, for pulling gun carriages. Most important, they refined the elongated priming tube, which
was filled with powder and inserted into the touchhole of an artillery piece in order to ignite the charge
inside the breech. Priming tubes made the process of
firing both safer and more reliable and allowed gunners to reload faster than ever before.
These advances spurred even more improvements
in artillery. In the 1690s the Dutch fielded the first
true howitzers, and Swiss inventor Jean de Maritz
(1680-1743) revolutionized cannon production in
1740 by casting them as solid pieces and then drilling
out the bore. This proved far more precise than casting cannon around a hollow centerpiece, and it soon
became standard practice throughout Europe. In England, Benjamin Robins (1707-1751) published New
Principles of Gunnery in 1742, proving the value of
elongated projectiles and rifled barrels and refining
ballistic principles.
This explosion of new ideas and technology encouraged battlefield innovation, and Frederick the
Great of Prussia (1712-1786) introduced the first
horse artillery units in 1759. Gunners in these units
rode the horses that pulled their gun carriages, and
Frederick separated them from foot artillery formations, in which the gunners walked alongside their
pieces. Horse artillery proved much faster than foot
artillery and gave gunners the chance to stay abreast
of advancing infantry and cavalry formations. They
proved crucial to Prussian military successes in the
mid-eighteenth century.
In France, Inspector General of Artillery JeanBaptiste Vacquette de Gribeauval (1715-1789) designated artillery as field, siege, garrison, or coastal,
and standardized all cartridges, limbers, ammunition
chests, and tools. He then divided artillery pieces into
battalion, brigade, and army guns; decreased their
weight by as much as 50 percent; and began harnessing horses in pairs to move artillery more quickly.
Gribeauval also introduced a calibrated rear sight and
a graduated tangent sight to improve aiming, and he
refined the manufacture of cannon and ammunition
Turning Points
1346
1420
1759
1873
1904-1905
1978
The first definitive use of gunpowder artillery on a battlefield takes place at the Battle of Crcy.
Hussite leader Jan Mimka makes innovative and effective use of artillery, with the Wagenburg, a defensive
line of wagons and cannons.
Frederick the Great of Prussia introduces the first true horse artillery units, which, because of their
unprecedented mobility and firepower, are quickly adopted by other European nations to become a
staple of most eighteenth and nineteenth century armies.
German arms manufacturer Alfred Krupp invents one of the first practical recoil systems for field
artillery pieces.
The effective use of indirect fire during the Russo-Japanese War spurs American and European leaders to
adopt it for their own armies in order to defend their guns against counterbattery and infantry weapon
fire.
The United States begins production of the first precision-guided artillery munitions.
Artillery
to reduce windage, or the space between ammunition
and the walls of a cannon through which explosive
gases can escape, by one-half. Gribeauvals modifications greatly increased the range and power of
French guns, and when combined with reorganized
gun crews and additional training upon its complete
adoption in 1776, his system made French artillery
the finest in Europe.
Chevalier Jean Du Teil (1738-1820) developed a
theory for the employment of these weapons, which
he articulated in his De lusage de lartillerie nouvelle dans la guerre de campagne connoissance
nccessaire aux officiers destins a commander
toutes les armes (1778). Du Teil argued for the
massed employment of mobile artillery on the battlefield and advocated the use of artillery to open
breaches in enemy lines at close range. He also suggested the avoidance of counterbattery fire, because
it held little hope of disabling enemy guns. These tactics were used with distinction by French emperor
Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821), who massed artillery in grand batteries with great effect over the
course of his career. Perhaps the finest example of
Napoleons use of mobile artillery came at the Battle
of Friedland in 1807, in which aggressive French
gunners pushed to within 60 yards of the Russian
lines to support cavalry and infantry attacks.
Across the Channel, Englishman John Muller
(1699-1784) called for lighter British field pieces in
his A Treatise of Artillery (1757). Sir William Congreve, another Englishman, developed the famous
block trail carriage in 1792. A single piece of wood
with a center of gravity moved forward and a handspike at the rear, Congreves carriage dramatically
improved artillery mobility. Congreve also designed
an accompanying limber and ammunition wagon,
which seated gunners and, when joined with the new
carriage, increased the speed of artillery movement.
Henry Shrapnels (1761-1842) spherical shell filled
with lead bullets and surrounded by explosives increased the effectiveness of artillery systems. Shrapnels invention allowed artillery units to fire antipersonnel rounds at long range against troops in the
open. The charges exploded in the air, showering
troops with lead bullets, or shrapnel, as they came to
be called. All of these changes made the standard
421
smoothbore black powder cannon, with a bronze barrel and a range of between 500 and 1,000 yards, more
important than ever on the nineteenth century battlefield.
That importance was threatened by the growing
prominence of rifled infantry weapons in the early
1800s. Rifling, or spiral grooves cut into the bore of
a weapon, dramatically increased range. Although it
made reloading more difficult, it also allowed infantry units greater range than did artillery and ultimately made smoothbore cannon obsolete. To compete, an Italian developed the first practical rifled,
breech-loading cannon in 1846. Loading at the
breech, or rear, of the cannon took less time than
loading at the muzzle, and rifling allowed artillery to
once again outreach infantry weapons. By the 1860s
modern armies had incorporated rifled artillery with
ranges of up to 4,000 yards, dramatically expanding
the battlefield and making infantry assaults in the
open practically impossible.
Most armies, however, were slow to adopt rifled
artillery and infantry weapons on a large scale, and
smoothbore weapons dominated the inventories of
European and American armies well into the nineteenth century. This resistance to change stemmed
from the fact that rifled weapons took longer to load
and required more training to operate, and from a
stubborn attachment to tradition among officers who
did not understand how the greater range of rifled
weapons demanded fundamental changes in battlefield tactics.
That understanding finally came after the FrancoPrussian War (1870-1871), in which Prussian forces
equipped with rifled steel breech-loading artillery
decisively defeated the French. This new artillery,
manufactured by the legendary arms maker Alfred
Krupp (1812-1887), utilized steel and advanced gun
design to produce weapons with range far greater
than that of any others in the world. Its pivotal role in
the Franco-Prussian War forced other nations to play
catch-up, and by the 1890s Krupps steel breechloaders were the dominant artillery weapons worldwide.
These new guns fired extremely heavy shells, demanding more research into the problem of recoil,
the rearward movement of guns caused by their fir-
422
ing. Scientists experimented with hydraulic cylinders attached to gun barrels to reduce recoil on field
artillery but with mixed results. Trail spades and
brakes were still required on field guns to keep them
from moving too far out of position when fired, until
the French developed the revolutionary M-1897 75millimeter field gun in the 1890s. The French
Seventy-five had a long recoil cylinder capable of
reducing recoil to a fraction of its former strength and
could fire thirty rounds a minute to a maximum range
of 8,000 yards. It represented a quantum leap in artillery technology, driven by the shame of French defeat in the Franco-Prussian War.
Other late nineteenth century improvements in artillery included the development of smokeless powder, high explosive rounds, better fuses, and, by the
1890s, the widespread use of metallic cartridges for
ammunition. Each invention represented an enormous leap forward in destructive power and range for
artillery weapons, and armies struggled to develop
new ways to utilize them. Most organized their big
guns into a separate artillery branch and placed them
at the disposal of division- or corps-level commanders, because the great range of artillery prohibited its
use too close to the battlefield. That distance, however, required gunners to learn how to use artillery in
an indirect role, supporting units by firing at targets
they could not see, and the limited communication
technology of the period made such a role difficult at
best.
Karl G. Guk (1846-1910) of Russia laid the foundation for effective indirect artillery fire in 1882,
calling for forward observers equipped with compasses and utilizing aiming points to direct artillery
fire, and gunners soon abandoned the idea of independent aiming and fired at targets as a battery to
maximize their chances of hitting a target. Ironically,
Guks own army suffered the first effective battlefield use of indirect aiming when Japanese forces
destroyed Russian artillery with counterbattery fire
during the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905).
These events set the stage for World War I (19141918), in which artillery played a decisive role in
almost every theater of operation. Commanders desperate to break the stalemate of trench warfare ordered long, sustained bombardments of enemy posi-
Artillery
423
from enemy tanks and aircraft demanded specialized weapons to defeat them. Antitank artillery units
fired hollow charges or discarding
sabot rounds through tapered barrels
to destroy tanks with high velocity
rounds. Some armies even fielded
self-propelled antitank guns called
tank destroyers or guns as large as
240 millimeters, called assault guns,
for close support of infantry. These
guns were joined by antiaircraft artillery designed to defend against
enemy air attack. A revolutionary
new technology in this field was the
variable time (VT) fuse, which was
fielded by the United States in 1941.
The VT fuse allowed gunners to detonate rounds at a preset range, throwing shrapnel in the path of enemy
aircraft rather than hitting them directly. It was especially important in
defending U.S. ships against Japanese air attack in the Pacific.
After World War II, artillery units
struggled to adjust to the nuclear age.
Tactical nuclear artillery became a
reality in 1953, when the United
States fired an atomic warhead from
Library of Congress
a 280-millimeter gun named Atomic
Annie in Nevada. The United States
The Krupp arms manufacturing companys exhibit of a massive caneventually fielded atomic warheads
non at the 1893 Chicago Worlds Fair.
for 155-millimeter howitzers as well,
and the Soviet Union quickly folThe United States also found a need for lighter
lowed suit.
pieces that could be carried by aircraft to support airWithin conventional artillery, the United States
borne and air mobile forces. In the 1950s it therefore
found that during the Korean War (1950-1953) many
developed a 75-millimeter pack howitzer and 105units were handicapped by guns that could not tramillimeter and 155-millimeter towed howitzers suitverse 360 degrees. By the 1960s the United States
able for air transport. These guns were used with
had developed a new family of self-propelled guns.
great effect during direct American involvement in
These new guns, with fully enclosed crew shelters,
the Vietnam War from 1965 to 1973, when they were
could fully traverse and elevate to 75 degrees. In reoften repositioned with helicopters.
sponse, the Soviet Union also revamped its artillery,
As the Vietnam conflict ended, the 1973 Israelifielding a 203-millimeter field gun with a 31,900Arab October War saw the first widespread use of reyard range, a 152-millimeter field howitzer, and new
motely piloted vehicles (RPVs) for battlefield obserself-propelled guns.
424
A gun crew of the Sixty-fourth Artillery Battalion, Twenty-fifth Infantry Division, fires a 105-millimeter howitzer on North Korean positions in 1950.
Coastal Artillery
From their inception cannons have been used to defend coastal installations against naval attack. The
English, for example, placed guns in Dover as a protection against the French in 1370, and Henry VIII
(1491-1547) ordered fortifications and coastal guns
positioned in all major English coastal towns from
1538 onward. These coastal guns generally evolved
in tandem with field artillery, with the important exception of their size. Because coastal guns were not
required to move, they were designed to be the largest and most technically advanced artillery weapons
in the world. Guns as large as seventeen tons protected the Dardanelles from attack as early as the
1400s, and around the world coastal guns ranged
from standard sizes to leviathans that would be impossible to deploy on land or aboard ship.
By the nineteenth century, most advanced countries boasted coastal fortifications equipped with
these cannons in brick and stone emplacements. The
United States joined in this effort by building twenty-
Artillery
four forts equipped with more than 750 guns along
the Atlantic coast between 1806 and 1811. By the late
1800s, breech-loading guns were dominant, with
guns placed in disappearing barbette carriages and
hidden behind or beneath concrete walls.
World War I prompted yet another burst of coastal
gun emplacements, with guns as large as 12, 14, and
16 inches finding their way into the arsenals of the
worlds armies and navies. These large guns were necessary to defeat heavily armored warships, and designers went to great lengths to find ways to minimize
their great recoil and to develop mountings to support
their enormous weight. Others extended the range of
these large guns by using longer barrels and experimented with rail-mounted guns that moved from one
coastal position to another. In the long run these guns
proved expensive and far less effective than shipmounted artillery, and their vulnerability to air attack
led most nations to abandon them after World War II.
Naval Artillery
At sea cannons had, by the mid-1400s, become vital
weapons in the navies of the world. Like their cousins
in coastal artillery, shipboard cannons developed
roughly in parallel with guns on land. The one exception to this rule was the gun carriage. Early cannons
were attached to the ship itself, but by the 1500s designers introduced wheels to carriages that supported
guns and allowed sailors to move them. These truck
carriages were held in place by breeching ropes that
constrained the cannon but still allowed recoil to
move them backward. They therefore spared the hull
of the ship the full force of recoil and presented gunners with a means to maneuver the gun back into position for firing. This simple technology prevailed
until well into the nineteenth century and helped
smoothbore muzzle-loading cannon to dominate naval warfare for three centuries.
These cannon were arranged along the gun decks
on both sides of sailing ships and fired through ports
in the side of the hull, which could be closed in inclement weather. Naval architects designed several
classes of ships to carry cannon, from small and fast
frigates to enormous ships of the line, which boasted
as many as one hundred or more guns. These ships
generally fired standard artillery rounds and sought
425
to deliver them simultaneously in great broadsides,
when all guns on one side of a ship fired at the same
target. Although ordnance changed relatively little
prior to the 1850s, the Scottish did introduce a specially designed carronade in 1778, which sacrificed
range to fire a large-caliber round from a light gun.
The British Royal Navy adopted the carronade for
close-quarter action in the late 1700s, and many
other nations quickly followed suit.
The relative stasis in naval gun design was shattered in 1858, when the French launched La Gloire,
the worlds first ironclad warship. The British responded by building their own armored warship, the
HMS Warrior. In the 1860s they proved that armorpiercing shells fired at high velocity were far superior
in defeating armor to much heavier solid shot traveling at slower speeds. This discovery induced navies
around the world to adopt spherical shells tipped with
metal, known as armor-piercing rounds, and the days
of round shot were finally over.
Naval designers then had to decide where to place
their armor-piercing guns and how best to protect
them with armor plate. Some chose to place their
guns at either the front or rear of their ships, while
others adopted the sponson, a semicircular platform
that allowed guns a 180-degree traverse both fore and
aft. The ultimate solution came when designers produced revolving turrets that allowed guns to fire in almost any direction. These turrets, first deployed on
the Danish Rolf Kraki in 1861, freed ships from linear
tactics and allowed attacks from a variety of directions. When coupled with steam power, which freed
ships from reliance upon the wind, they completely
revolutionized naval warfare.
By 1874 the English were deploying ships with
12.5-inch muzzle-loaders in turrets weighing as
much as 750 tons, and the growing size of turrets required hydraulic and mechanical power to rotate
them. As breech-loading guns became dominant in
the late 1800s, designers sank turrets down into the
hulls of ships and used compressed air and water to
cleanse gun barrels, interlocking doors to separate
ammunition storage from firing compartments, and
pressurization to reduce the risk of accidental explosion. They also developed machines to take over the
process of loading ammunition, and by World War I
426
battleships carrying guns as large as 15 inches were
recognized as the dominant weapons of their era.
These ships required sophisticated targeting systems to account for the great range of their guns, as
well as for their own movement and the movement of
their targets. Naval designers therefore placed firecontrol centers high up in the masts and control towers of ships to allow a good view of targets and gave
these centers control over the firing of guns in all turrets. During and after World War I these fire-control
centers were aided by observation aircraft and fired
at such great range that they had to account for the
curvature of the earth in their firing computations.
During World War II battleships reached their zenith, when the United States and Japan utilized ships
with guns as large as 16 and 18 inches, respectively.
Rather than playing a primary role in the naval battles
428
increased. The tanks real, or perhaps more famous,
introduction came in November, 1916, at Cambrai,
in northern France. For the first time, a joint tankinfantry operation had been carefully planned to fit
the strengths and limitations of armored vehicles.
The attack was made on a seven-mile front, and the
tanks attacked in three waves; each tank worked with
the tank behind it to cross the three lines of the German defensive system. Smoke shells were fired to
camouflage the tanks arrival, and, when the smoke
cleared, the Germans were greeted by the large metal
vehicles, emerging from the morning fog with guns
blazing. So complete was the surprise that some of
the German units panicked and fled; however, Cambrai was not an absolute victory for armored vehicles.
After the first objective had been achieved, the infantry began to lose contact with the tanks. The tank
units were left alone to face a German artillery battery, and many tanks were destroyed. Even though
the tanks kept breaking through enemy lines, because
there was no infantry there to hold the ground, their
gains were useless. The armored attack on Cambrai
was significant in that, in one day, it opened a large
hole in the German defense system. Only 4,000 British soldiers died at Cambrai, a greater achievement
than the 1917 Passchendaele Offensive, which took
four months and 400,000 casualties. Although the
tank restored mobility to the battlefield and was
touted as the answer to the stalemate caused by the
machine gun, barbed wire, and entrenchments, many
skeptics remained to be convinced of the advantages
of armored warfare.
Development
The first tank prototype was called Mother. The
lozenge-shaped frame was such that the lower run of
the track in contact with the ground approximated the
shape and radius of a wheel with a 60-foot diameter.
It was calculated that this shape would comfortably
cross a 5-foot trench or run up a 4.5-foot vertical parapet. It was in 1916 that the term tank first came
into use to describe what had hitherto been described
as a landship. Mothers success led to the first tank,
known as the Mark I, which was identical to Mother
except that it was constructed with armor plate instead of boiler plate. The Mark I, used at FlersCourcelette, was armed with a 6-pounder (pdr) gun
and three Hotchkiss machine guns. Improvements to
the Mark I followed in subsequent models: Wider
track shoes were fitted at every sixth link, armor was
slightly increased, and a raised manhole hatch was
placed on top to protect the driver. The wheeled cart
that trailed the earlier model was also discarded, because it was ineffective on the muddy battlefield.
Tanks in World War I
The first tanks had crews of eight. In these vehicles,
steering and gear changing were cumbersome and
tiring operations that placed considerable strain on
the vehicles transmission. By the time the Mark V
model had been developed, four-speed gearboxes
were used, and the gears could then be changed by
one man. The Mark Vs engines were much more
powerful, and once they were made to be air-cooled,
they became immune to frost. The extreme weight of
the early Mark models made it impossible to control
the steering and braking by hand power alone; hydraulic lines were introduced to allow control of the
massive vehicles. Its armor was also increased, and a
rear-firing machine gun was added.
When the United States entered World War I, it
jointly produced the Mark VIII with the British. Prior
to this time, however, French Renault light tanks and
British Mark V tanks were used. German tank projects met with the same type of skepticism that had
been prevalent in Britain. Although the tank was used
in army exercises, its value in battle was not appreciated by the German General Staff, who considered
tanks suitable only for secondary tasks, such as frontier patrol work, gun transport, and reconnaissance.
A German infantry force mounted in trucks did execute a lightning strike as part of General Erich von
Falkenhayns (1861-1922) offensive against Romania in 1916, and the lessons were not lost on the German General Staff.
The Interwar Years
In the post-World War I era, the development and organization of mechanization was viewed as a possible decisive factor in warfare. Military mechanized
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further innovation and experiment in armor. Even after the rise of Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) and British
recognition of the German continental threat, little
was done to improve land forces, as such action was
politically unpopular and financially difficult to reconcile with expenditure on the British navy.
Germany had always believed war to be a useful
instrument to ensure national security and to foster
Germanys higher status in Europe. Therefore, although antiarmor elements existed in Germany, it
was on the whole a more conducive environment for
armored warfare. Mechanization of the army was
part of a more encompassing program, and the creation of tank formations was initially a subordinate
element in improving overall mobility. Tank warfare
became increasingly important and by 1929 formed
the main thrust of army modernization. The turning
point had come in 1927, when Germany concluded
that the principles of tank warfare would need to
be reconsidered, embracing the concept of decisionoriented, operationally independent armored warfare.
With the rise of National Socialism in the 1930s,
the partys leader, Hitler, guaranteed rearmament,
and his new government immediately began to fulfill
this promise. Armor doctrine found fertile ground,
and supporters in the government backed the development of armored forces against the skepticism
of more conservative officers. Light- and mediummodel armored vehicles equipped with machine
guns, an armor-piercing gun, and radios, and capable
of speeds of up to 25 miles per hour, began to appear
in 1938 and 1939 as the Panzer III and Panzer IV. At
the outbreak of World War II in September, 1939, six
Panzer divisions existed and were being trained in
the technique of the Blitzkrieg, literally lightning
war, the violent and surprise offensive by which Poland was overwhelmed in 1939.
The Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) set the stage
for the armored warfare of World War II. The Republicans, supported by France and the Soviet Union,
followed French armor doctrine and distributed their
tanks within the infantry formations. They employed
the tanks in support of infantry frontal attacks, forcing the vehicles to move at walking pace and providing lucrative targets for the Nationalist antitank gunners. The Germans, who supported the Nationalists,
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tection against both KE and CE attack; the T-72, for
example, was fitted with this armor as well as with
ceramic inserts in cavities within the cast turret armor. Another development was explosive reactive
armor, developed by the Israelis and consisting of
small panels bolted to the exterior of the tank. When
struck by a high explosive antitank (HEAT) projectile, the explosive detonated, driving the plates apart
and disrupting the shaped charge jet. The most significant of the new armors was Chobham armor, a
complex laminate developed by the British and first
publicly shown in 1976. It was composed of spa-
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mile. The M-1A1 has a range of about 288 miles. It
carries forty rounds and is equipped with an advanced
carbon dioxide laser rangefinder, thermal viewing for
night fighting, and a better suspension than earlier versions. The M-1A1 is considered the most sophisticated and capable main battle tank in the world. Even
the Iraqi use of the Soviet T-72, a generation behind
the M-1A1 in development, could not make the battle
any real test for the coalition forces. Although the
preceding air campaign created highly favorable conditions for the ground forces to accomplish their mission, it was ultimately the ground forces and their tactical air support that destroyed the Iraqi army.
With the growing emphasis on airpower in the
1990s, particularly in Bosnia and Kosovo, the true
potential for armored warfare remained unrealized.
As in the first tank battles, it remains clear that there
must also be an armed force to hold any ground that is
gained. Tanks and armor, therefore, will always have
their place in the waging of war.
434
Spielberger, Walter J. Panzer II and Its Variants. Vol. 3 in The Spielberger German Armor and
Military Vehicles. Atglen, Pa.: Schiffer, 1993.
Stone, John. The Tank Debate: Armour and the Anglo-American Military Tradition. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic, 2000.
Wright, Patrick. Tank: The Progress of a Monstrous War Machine. London: Faber, 2000.
Films and Other Media
Hell on Wheels. Documentary. History Channel, 1998.
The Tanks Are Coming. Short film. Warner Bros., 1941.
Aaron Plamondon
Types of Aircraft
Airships, also called dirigibles, existed at the beginning of the twentieth century. These large, specially
built balloons had propeller engines and small wings
at their stern that allowed controlled flight. In 1900
Germanys Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin (18381917) introduced cigar-shaped, metal-framed versions called rigid dirigibles or, after the builder himself, zeppelins. Already in operation were more
sausage-shaped airships with less rigid frames, later
nicknamed blimps. Since airships could remain airborne for long periods, they served best in observational roles. However, their expense, large size, support demands, slow speed, clumsy handling, and
hydrogen interiors combined to make them unsuitable for direct combat.
The airplane first flew in 1903, and by 1911 primi435
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they were usually slower than fighters, most bombers
through World War II carried many defensive guns.
The greater aircraft speeds and long-range, air-to-air
missiles seen afterward dictated that bombers carry
fewer guns, if any at all. Later designs relied upon
speed, electronic countermeasures, or stealth antiradar design for protection.
Early Uses of Military Aircraft
Although World War I produced basic air combat designs, the airplanes earliest and most obvious military missions were observation and reconnaissance.
World War I observation planes carried weapons and
usually did not differ from attack or fighter types,
though the Germans specially designed their Rumpler planes to fly at high attitudes. World War II air
arms modified fighters and fast bombers such as
Englands Mosquito to carry camera gear and use
performance to evade defenders. This practice continued afterward, but the Cold Wars explosive improvements in jet fighter and SAM performance
forced the creation of special models. The U.S. U-2
and SR-71 were capable of either or both great speed
and ultra-high altitude.
Post-World War I military needs and technological innovations created more airplane types to meet
force enhancement and support requirements. Although primitive resupply operations occurred in
World War I, postwar transport plane advances
opened military air supply opportunities. Cargo
planes obviously required long-range and load carriage ability to support aerial logistic and army paratroop operations. The subvariants split between those
with exceptional capacity and range, such as the U.S.
C-5, and smaller, rugged types able to operate from
short, unimproved airfields, such as the U.S. C-130.
The U.S. Air Force led other air arms in modifying
large planes, usually transports, to accomplish various electronic support missions. These included airborne early warningradar at high altitude allowed
greater surveillance coverageand electronic intelligence-gathering. Later models tracked ground vehicular traffic. Also, the leading national air arms
modified transports and other types to fly airborne
tanker missions. These tankers had a decisive effect
upon airplane endurance and striking distance. Fi-
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nally, the Vietnam War (1961-1975) and later conflicts witnessed the use of remotely piloted planes, or
drones, for surveillance and decoy purposes.
Helicopters
After their first appearance in World War II, helicopters made great strides. Initially, piston engines limited thrust restricted helicopter missions to smallscale logistics. Jet-powered helicopters appearing
from the 1950s onward enjoyed expanded opportunities. Big cargo helicopters conducted large-scale
airmobile troop transfers, and smaller, faster, and
more agile attack helicopters flew traditional scout-
Aircraft Weapons
From almost their first appearance in battle, aircraft
have used these basic weapons types: guns, missiles,
and bombs. Although each weapons fortunes fluctuated throughout the twentieth century, by the centurys end, all three remained in active use, meeting
specific combat demands served by each weapons
individual strengths.
The machine gun has been an aircraft weapon since World War I,
though early airplane designs limited
its impact. Most fighters were too
small to carry many guns or much
ammunition. The thin wings of
these aircraft meant that one or two
fuselage-mounted, forward-firing
guns shot either above the propeller
or through it via a synchronization
mechanism. Other planes fired guns
toward the rear against attackers or,
in early rear-engine planes, from the
very front. World War II fighters
more substantial wings mounted up
to eight machine guns or fewer guns
of high 20-millimeter caliber. A few
planes carried small cannon for use
against hardened targets.
In the 1950s some U.S. fighters
lacked guns, because air leaders believed that high aircraft speeds and
guided missiles rendered these weapons useless. However, guns reestablished their worth during close-in
dogfight combats of various 1960s
wars, and later U.S. fighters carried
guns. Gun caliber, muzzle velocity, and rate of fire also dramatically
Hulton Archive/Getty Images
improved during this time, reaching its zenith when the Americans
World War I ace Eddie Rickenbacker, standing beside one of the
introduced the Gatling rotary canfighter planes he piloted. Fighter action was the best-known action of
non technology featuring phenomeWorld War I air combat.
439
for other aircraft. As for guided air-to-ground missiles, initial designs such as the U.S. Bullpup required that the pilot continually guide the missile toward the target. Indeed, the laser-guided, antitank
missiles used by helicopters through the twentieth
centurys end also required continual laser illumination. However, more lethal air defenses made selfguided missiles ever more attractive. In the 1970s,
the United States introduced Maverick tactical missiles that tracked video or infrared image contrast.
Additionally, considering radar-guided SAMs and
AAA, the United States and other nations built missiles that were guided by radar transmissions.
However, the best air-to-ground guided missiles
were long-range, or cruise, missiles. The primary
worth of these jet- or rocket-powered weapons was
standoff capability: hitting targets while avoiding air
defenses. As early as the 1960s, both U.S. and Soviet bombers carried cruise missiles for standoff strategic attacks. In the 1980s efficient engines, along
with vastly improved navigation and targeting gear,
gave these weapons remarkable speed, range, and accuracy. Navies equipped attack planes with antiship
cruise missiles, and these achieved spectacular success in the 1982 Falkland Islands War. In the 1990s,
U.S. bombers used cruise missiles in various wars
and punitive air strikes. These achieved the desired
politico-military impact with little threat to the attackers.
Bombs
However, bombs were the most common method for
achieving the airpower payoff. Although the earliest
bombs were grenades and modified shells, from
World War I through the twentieth centurys end
their outward appearance remained essentially the
same: that of a cigar-shaped metal cylinder with tail
fins. They achieved explosive destruction of ground
targets, and even by World War Is end, aircraft
carried bombs of more than 1,000 pounds in weight.
Additionally, the war introduced bomb variants designed for specific destructive effects. Some achieved
basic blast impact, others inflicted fragmentation
damage upon people and thinly protected facilities,
and still others featured incendiary effects. In World
War II, bomb size increased to over 20,000 pounds,
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and different variations continued. Hardened bombs
pierced armor, air-dropped mines blocked shipping
lanes, and still others intensified incendiary damage
by carrying jellied gasoline (napalm) or phosphorus.
Most significant not only for airpower but also for
warfare overall were atomic bombs, which achieved
cataclysmic destructive effects.
The Cold War witnessed the rise of other bomb
types, such as the conventional cluster bomb and the
nuclear hydrogen bomb. Cluster bombs used a
bomb-shaped shell that opened while airborne and
released many smaller bombs designed for either
antipersonnel or antiarmor effects. Hydrogen bombs
nuclear fusion achieved unlimited blast and radioactive impact.
The most significant development in bomb technology came with the widespread use, at least by the
United States, of precision-guided bombs. These
weapons first appeared in World War II, but conventional war demands, particularly in Vietnam, accelerated development of bombs with laser or television
seekers, along with controllable fins for steerage.
Most required that a crew member guide them to the
target. Their most significant impact was a virtual
revolution in precision, in which fewer planes were
needed to destroy a given target.
Development
War and technological progress created fluctuations
in the fortunes of general aircraft types. In World
War I, airships and airplanes both executed war missions, but by World War II, the airships combat use
had faded, as the airplane became the preeminent
combat air machine. By the 1960s the helicopter had
joined the airplane as part of the modern air arsenal.
At the beginning of the twentieth century military
balloons already existed, having been used in previous wars for observation. At this time dirigibles
offered the best hope for more aggressive combat airpower projection, because they possessed the controlled mobility that balloons lacked. Indeed, some
military observers feared airship attacks in future
wars. However, despite the better range and load capacity of airships compared to those of the earliest
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destroyed two Turkish divisions in a narrow pass. In
the Germans 1918 western front offensive, dedicated air support units in purpose-built Halberstadt
attack planes flew concentrated strikes against Allied
troops at or near the front. They enjoyed better success than that seen in previous British efforts, though
British planes materially assisted their armys counterattack via interdiction and attacks upon antitank
defenses.
Early in the war, the Russians and Italians produced large bombers for long-range attacks, but they
lacked the resources to sustain deep bombing operations. In 1917 the Germans fielded huge multiengine planes that continued the attack that zeppelins
had started against England. Like airships, they were
inaccurate and failed to cause significant damage.
Although British defenses soon forced them to attack
Turning Points
After an Italian pilot flies the first combat mission, using
his plane for reconnaissance, during the Italo-Turkish
War, Italy begins using airplanes and dirigibles for
bombing attacks.
The German Luftwaffe conducts the first combat
parachute and glider troop landings to open
Germanys western front attack.
The British Royal Navy produces a decisive aerial
victory at Taranto Harbor, Italy, crippling the
anchored Italian fleet with nighttime bomb and
torpedo attacks.
The Japanese navy launches a morning surprise air raid
against the U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, sinking
or damaging several U.S. battleships and affirming
airpowers military importance.
In the first nuclear air strike, an American B-29 bomber
drops an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, hastening
Japans surrender and the end of World War II.
The Israeli Air Force (IAF) launches devastating surprise
counter-air raids against threatening Arab nations.
The IAF suffers heavy losses against densely packed
Arab missiles in the first day of the Arab-Israeli
October War.
A U.S.-led U.N. coalition leads a well-orchestrated air
attack against Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein in an
effort to oust his forces from Kuwait.
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only at night, German planes still mounted a bombing campaign that caused public outcry and forced
the British to divert fighters from the front.
The Evolution of the Fighter Plane
The fighter plane was created to stop the enemy from
flying these emerging missions, as well as to protect
friendly missions from enemy fighters. Fighter designs evolved especially quickly, in part because of
their fiercely competitive purpose. Initially, rearengine pusher planes with forward-mounted guns
represented the fighter ideal. However, the appearance of Germanys Fokker E-IIIs in the summer
of 1915 heralded the first major fighter technology
advance. The E-III synchronized machine-gun fire
through its front-mounted propeller and, flown by a
great aerial tactician such as the German ace Oswald
Boelcke (1891-1916), it became an aerial scourge.
Escalations in technology encouraged disciplined
formation flying for protection. Improved Allied
fighters such as Frances Nieuport countered the E-III,
until Germany introduced the Albatross series in
1917. This development and massed German fighter
sweeps inflicted high air losses. The Allies permanently regained the technological and numerical edge
later that year with such planes as Englands Sopwith
Camel and Frances SPAD.
Fighter action was the best-known aspect of
World War I air combat. The top pilots received national adulation, and those who downed at least five
planes (actually, the number varied by country) were
dubbed aces. Fighters helped end the zeppelin
threat and forced attack and bomber planes to fly at
night or in formations escorted by their own fighters.
Boelckes air fighting principles remained valid
through the centurys end.
The war established more than fighter aces. Naval
air war, attack, and strategic bombing concepts
emerged. Germanys bombing of England stirred a
public uproar and spurred the creation of the Royal
Air Force (RAF) in 1918. Although airplanes were
relatively primitive, good production required dedicated organization and advanced industrial capacity.
Russia and Italys internal problems stifled bombings promise. The United States lacked the time to
produce competitive designs. Industrial strength and
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pan developed a similar carrier doctrine, and both navies fielded planes that delivered a knockout blow or
defeated air threats, such as the U.S. Dauntless divebomber and Japans Zero fighter. Englands navy anticipated facing many European land-based planes
and built smaller, more rugged carriers. Small carrier
size and the RAFs control and neglect of naval aircraft development meant that British carriers lacked
the aerial punch of other navies carriers.
World War II began with Germanys 1939 Poland
invasion and 1940 Western Europe offensives. The
Luftwaffe was an important part of what became
known as Blitzkrieg warfare. It simultaneously stifled enemy air defense and attacked any direct or resupply effort impeding rapid tank advances. On May
10, 1940, it conducted the first combat parachute and
glider troop landings to open Germanys western
front attack.
The Luftwaffe embarked upon more independent
action in the summer, 1940, Battle of Britain, the first
air-dominated major battle in history. The Germans
pre-invasion daylight air campaign failed for many
reasons. Their leaders established an unrealistic campaign timetable, their attacks did not destroy the radar sites that gave British fighters a decisive edge,
and they ceased attacking airfields just when these
missions began hurting the RAF. Downed German
fliers fighting over the RAFs homeland could not fly
again as could their British opponents. Meanwhile,
British industry recouped fighter losses. On September 15, 1940, the Germans suffered a mauling that
convinced them of their campaigns failure.
Germanys bombers also had insufficient defensive armament, and its fighters lacked sufficient
range to escort them. However, these deficiencies
also existed in other air forces. The British had earlier
encountered similar problems when they lost many
bombers during unescorted daylight raids. After the
Battle of Britain, both sides reverted to nighttime
bombing and daylight fighter sweeps. Bombing accuracy was atrocious, and both sides justified the
raids as a way to destroy industrial workers morale,
if not the workers themselves.
The European air war assumed an electronic character. German bombers used intersecting radio
beams as an approximate bomb-release point, and the
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446
Japan was too distant for sustained bombing. In both
theaters, tactical campaigns featuring tank battles, carrier battles, or amphibious landings were themselves
decisive, and required that attack planes execute their
missions even as fighters struggled for air superiority.
In some amphibious landings, no air threat and no rear
area existed to justify fighters or an interdiction campaign, but air support missions were very important.
Other results echoed World War Is lessons. As it
evolved, airpower demanded tremendous resources,
and the American war effort understandably overwhelmed its opponents. Under great pressure, given
their many well-armed opponents, the Germans and
Japanese made critical airplane procurement and
pilot training errors that helped them to lose the
air war. Indeed, insufficient resources and incoherent application hampered Germanys introduction
of Messerschmitt-262 jet fighters at wars end. The
Soviet air force suffered frightful losses but possessed ample resources and people with which to
overcome them.
447
U.S. Airpower in the Vietnam War
However, similar conditions arose in the U.S. war in
Vietnam. U.S. airpower was omnipresent, providing
on-call fire support, transportation, and surveillance.
Indeed, it significantly supported the defeat of the
Communists 1968 Tet Offensive and was primarily
responsible for thwarting North Vietnams 1972 offensive.
However, Vietnam warfare exposed problems in
U.S. air strategy. U.S. planes could not completely
disrupt North Vietnams war effort due to jungle concealment, political restrictions, and the Communists
determination despite severe air-inflicted losses. Oriented toward bomber interception and nuclear strikes,
U.S. fighters and attack planes and their crews performed less well than expected against North Vietnams Soviet-supplied fighters and SAMs. Indeed,
these defenses forced the Americans to use special
radar jamming and attack planes.
Vietnams ground war and relatively light air
defenses brought forth special attack planes, some
of which defied air progress notions. The AC-130
transport-turned-gunship and maneuverable, Korean
War-vintage A-1 were two examples. Their weapons
capacity and endurance made them excellent close
air support machines.
Helicopters confirmed their worth during the
ground war in Vietnam. They had first been used by
the United States in 1944 for light logistics duties in
Burma, and they performed similarly in subsequent
small wars. Before Vietnam, U.S. Army generals and
other officers developed helicopter organizational
setups that, combined with the capabilities of jetpowered helicopters such as UH-1 transports and
AH-1 gunships, gave unprecedented mobility and
immediate firepower to Army troops in South Vietnam. Despite their utility, however, helicopters remained vulnerable to ground fire, as the Soviet
Unions helicopter misfortunes in its Soviet-Afghan
War (1979-1989) also revealed.
Across the world, airpower proved more decisive
when the Israeli Air Forces (IAF) June 5, 1967, surprise counter-air raids crippled the Arab nations
threatening Israel. After destroying their opponents
air forces, Israeli jets spent the rest of the Six-Day
War pummelling Arab army units, who could not
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452
A U.S. Air Force TM-76 B Mace tactical range ballistic missile in a 1961 test launch at Cape Canaveral.
Robert H. Goddard (1882-1945), who took a practical engineering approach. Goddard began by experimenting with solid-fuel rockets and developed a
portable rocket, the forerunner of the bazooka, for
the military. He became the world pioneer in the development of liquid-fuel rockets, but his work was
eventually surpassed by that of Wernher von Braun
(1912-1977) and his associates, who were working
for the German military.
World War II
With Germany leading the way, World War II saw
the reemergence of the rocket as a useful weapon.
The post-World War I Treaty of Versailles (1919)
453
flare mounted on the missiles tail ignited, and the
bombardier watched the flare while using radiocontrolled flaps and spoilers to guide the missile to its
target. Glide bombs were quite successful when they
were first deployed in the summer of 1943. The
rocket-powered HS 293 was used against convoy escort ships. The armor-piercing Fritz-X sank or disabled a number of warships, including battleships
and cruisers. These missiles would have been even
more successful, but they were subject to radio jamming. The controlling aircraft also were vulnerable,
and, after the Allies gained air superiority, German
bombers could no longer get close enough to their
targets to use these missiles.
Russian aircraft successfully used unguided salvos
of RS-82, and later, RS-132, rockets against ground
troops and armor. British aircraft used their 60pounder to decimate German tanks. The 60-pounder
was named for the weight of its high-explosive warhead. General-purpose rockets, such as the U.S. 4.5inch (114-millimeter) HE M8 rocket, were used
against vehicle convoys, tanks, trains, fuel and ammunition depots, airfields, and barges. In mid-1944,
the M8 was upgraded to the 5-inch (127-millimeter)
High Velocity Air Rocket (HVAR), also known as
the Holy Moses because of its impressive destructive
effect.
The V-1
The Allies had no counterpart to the German theater
missiles, the V-1 and V-2. The V-1 was a cruise missile with a maximum range of about 260 kilometers
and a top speed of 645 kilometers per hour. Launched
from the Pas de Calais area of France, it could reach
London in twenty-two minutes. It carried 850 kilograms of high explosives and could have carried
nerve gas, but German leader Adolf Hitler was under
the mistaken impression that the Allies also had
nerve gas and would have used it. Hitler launched the
V-1s in retaliation for the Allied bombing of Germany, hence the name Vergeltungswaffen Einz,
meaning Retaliation Weapon One. This translation
quickly evolved to the pithier Vengeance Weapon
One, or V-1.
The V-1s motor was a surprisingly simple pulse
jet: a long stovepipe with shutter strips across the air
454
intake at the front end. Air mixed with fuel was exploded by a spark plug. The explosion closed the
shutter strips, forcing the exhaust gases out the back
end. Incoming air opened the strips, and the process
repeated forty-two times a minute, making a characteristic low rumble or buzzing sound that inspired the
name buzz-bomb. The motor only worked at high
speeds, so the V-1 was flung into the air at 400 kilometers per hour (250 miles per hour) from a 48meter-long ramp equipped with a steam catapult.
Beginning in June, 1944, more than 8,000 V-1s
were fired at London. Many failed, many were shot
down, but about 2,400 arrived. When a timing mechanism indicated that the missile was over its target,
the flight control surfaces put the missile into a dive
that normally extinguished the engine. Londoners
learned to dread hearing the buzzing stop. Over six
thousand people were killed and another forty thousand were wounded by V-1s. The bombs destroyed
130,000 British homes and damaged an additional
750,000. The Germans sent 9,000 V-1s against various cities in Europe, including 5,000 against the Belgian port city, Antwerp.
The V-2
V-2s were about twenty times as expensive to build
as V-1s, but both weapons carried enough explosives to destroy a large building. V-1s were developed by the German air force, whereas V-2s were
developed by Wernher von Braun and his associates
for the German army. Both weapons were manufactured by forced laborers working under deplorable
conditions. The V-2 burned liquid oxygen and ethyl
alcohol mixed with water, and it weighed about
12,300 kilograms at launch. Although powered flight
lasted only seventy seconds, by then the rockets
speed was nearly five times the speed of sound. It had
a 320-kilometer range and could reach England in
about five minutes. Because it traveled so quickly,
there was no defense against it. Furthermore, the V2s mobile launch facilities were difficult to find and
destroy.
More than 1,100 V-2s fell in southern England
beginning in September, 1944, killing about 2,700
people and injuring over twice that number. About
half of these V-2s hit London. Between December,
Development of Modern
Battlefield Missiles
Great improvements in missile accuracy required the
development of better sensors and of sophisticated
electronics based on integrated circuits. Integrated
circuits became available in the early 1960s and
grew progressively more complex and more reliable.
Antitank Missiles
On the day after the Soviet Sagger antitank missile
was introduced in the Vietnam War in 1972, the
Americans introduced its counterpart, the TOW missile. TOW is an acronym for tube-launched, optically
tracked, and wire-command-link-guided. During the
brief 1973 Israeli-Arab October War, TOW and
Sagger missiles together destroyed more than 1,500
Israeli, Jordanian, Iraqi, and Syrian tanks.
After a TOW is launched, the gunner must keep
the crosshairs of the launch tube sight centered on the
target until the missile impacts. As the missile flies at
half the speed of sound, a thin wire unreels behind it.
A small beacon on the missiles tail sends an infrared
signal to a sensor on the launch tube, and a computer
in the launch tube sends flight corrections back to the
missile through the connecting wire and guides the
missile to the target. The TOW can be fired from the
ground using a tripod-mounted tube or from launchers mounted on vehicles, including the high-mobility
multipurpose wheeled vehicle (HMMWV) and the
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missiles (SAMs)man-portable air defense systems
(MANPADS) in their smallest versionsenable
troops to counter high-speed, low-level, groundattack aircraft, or bring down high-flying aircraft.
After World War II, German rocket technology was
adapted to Cold War needs, though it was not until
the late 1950s that it proved to be effective. The Soviet Union was in the forefront of SAM development,
adapting German models to the new battlefield climate. One of the most notable achievements of this
emerging technology came on May 1, 1960, when
the Soviet Union downed a U-2 spy plane, piloted by
Gary Powers, with an SA-2 surface-to-air missile.
After that time, several generations of SAMs and
MANPADS were developed, leading to greater precision and portability. Older technologies are widely
available and relatively inexpensive, while more so-
Turning Points
2009
456
the dark early morning hours of January 17, 1991, when eight Apache
helicopters launched laser-guided
Hellfire missiles and Hydra-70 rockets against two Iraqi early-warning
ground control radar sites. The Iraqi
air defense system was so extensive
that only Moscow was judged to be
better defended than Baghdad. Because of this, only unmanned cruise
missiles and the nearly invisible
Stealth aircraft penetrated deeply
into Iraq at first. The first goal was to
create gaps in the Iraqi air defense
and open the way for more conU.S. Department of Defense
ventional aircraft. F-4G Wild Weasel aircraft broadcast strong radar
A Soviet surface-to-air missile being deployed in Egypt.
jamming signals and also recorded
Iraqi radar signals, playing them
phisticated versions are readily available to organiback with various delays to clutter Iraqi radar diszations or individuals with sufficient funding. As a
plays with floods of false targets.
result, MANPADS became a characteristic weapon
of the late Cold War and in the practice of terrorism.
One of the most widely used systems, the FIM-92
Development of Modern
Stinger, was developed by the United States and proCruise Missiles
vided to Islamic guerrilla fighters, the Mujahideen, in
Afghanistan for use in their defense against Soviet
Cruise missiles are theater weapons. Early cruise
invasion during the 1980s. It is estimated that more
missiles, such as the Snark, the Matador, and the
than 270 Soviet aircraft were shot down with
Hound Dog, deployed in the 1950s and 1960s, sufStingers. When the gunner sights an aircraft, he can
fered from various problems, especially unreliability
send an electronic signal to identify whether it is
and inaccuracy. However, as bombers found it ever
friend or foe. The Stinger is another fire-and-forget
more difficult to penetrate improved air-defense sysweapon: Once it has been launched, the gunner can
tems, stand-off, unmanned weapons became increasdive for cover or engage another target. The Stinger
ingly attractive. Eventually improvements in engine
uses both infrared and ultraviolet sensors to home in
technology and guidance systems led to the modern
on the target and can approach it from any aspect. Its
cruise missiles originally deployed in the 1980s and
speed is supersonic, and its maximum range is 8 kiloused during and after the Gulf War.
meters. As global terrorism expanded following the
The Tomahawk cruise missile is launched from
attacks of September 11, 2001, military planners recsurface ships and submarines with a solid propellant
ognized the danger of MANPAD attacks, particurocket that burns for twelve seconds, after which a
larly against civilian aircraft, but no cost-efficient
small turbofan motor takes over and propels the miscountermeasure could be found.
sile at 880 kilometers per hour (550 miles per hour).
The Tomahawk is not easy to shoot down, because it
Missiles in the Gulf War
is difficult to track. Detection by radar is difficult, beSeveral modern missiles were put to the test during the
cause the missile is small and cruises at only 15 to 30
1991 Gulf War. The start of the air war came during
meters above the ground. Detection by infrared sen-
457
horizontally, pop up and dive down on the target, or
fly over and burst above the target. The 109D is similar to the 109C but dispenses 166 BLU-97/B Combined Effect Munitions (CEM). Each CEM is about
the size of a soft-drink can, weighs about 1.5 kilograms, and consists of three types of submunitions:
fragmentation, incendiary, and shaped-charges that
can penetrate 13 to 18 centimeters of armor. The
109D can dispense the CEMs in batches on several
targets.
The air-launched cruise missile (ALCM) AGM86 uses INS, TERCOM, and GPS guidance systems.
It originally carried a 200-kiloton nuclear warhead
but has been converted to carry a massive 900kilogram (2,000-pound) blast-fragmentation warhead
that sprays a cloud of ball bearings. The ALCM is
designed to destroy dispersed, soft targets such as
surface-to-air missile batteries. B-52G and B-52H
bombers can carry twelve missiles in external racks,
and some B-52H bombers can carry eight more missiles internally.
On January 17, 1991, at the start of the Gulf War,
297 Tomahawks were prepared to be launched from
ships, but nine failed prelaunch tests. Of the 288
actual launches, 6 failed to cruise and 242 (81 percent of those launched) hit their targets. At about
the same time, high-flying bombers launched thirtyfive ALCMs at targets in Iraq. Televison reporters
watched in amazement as missiles streaked past their
hotel and made right turns into the next street on their
way to their targets.
In January, 1993, forty-five Tomahawks were
launched against Iraqi nuclear development facilities
and similar targets. In September, 1995, thirteen
Tomahawks hit surface-to-air missile sites in Bosnia.
As a response to Iraqi harassment of Western aircraft
patrolling the no-fly zone, 13 ALCMs were fired
from B-52Hs and thirty-one Tomahawks were fired
from ships in the Persian Gulf in September, 1996. In
response to the terrorist bombings of U.S. embassies
in Kenya and Tanzania, thirteen Tomahawks destroyed a suspected chemical weapons factory in the
Sudan, and sixty-six Tomahawks hit guerrilla training camps in Afghanistan in August, 1998. Striking
against weapons of mass destruction and Iraqi airdefense sites in December, 1998, the United States
458
and Britain attacked about one hundred targets in
central and southern Iraq. They used fighters, bombers, ninety ALCMs, and 330 Tomahawks. In March,
1999, NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
forces struck targets in Yugoslavia and Kosovo with
fighters, bombers, and one hundred cruise missiles.
Cruise missiles seem to have become the weapon
of choice in many situations. Although laser-guided
bombs can be up to ten times more accurate and are
significantly less expensive to build, they put pilots
at risk. Even though a few cruise missiles do go
astray and cause unintended damage, they have
proven accurate enough and reliable enough to be
used against targets surrounded by civilians. Future
upgrades will cut the production costs of cruise missiles in half by discontinuing the capability to launch
them from torpedo tubes, including a small television
camera for tracking the target, replacing mechanical
gyroscopes with laser-ring gyroscopes, and giving
them the ability to be redirected to new targets while
in flight.
Development of Intercontinental
Ballistic Missiles
After World War II, the United States and the Soviet
Union experimented with captured German V-2
rockets and worked to develop intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). In 1957 the Soviets launched
an SS-6 Sapwood multistage ballistic missile and
also put the first two artificial satellites, Sputnik 1
and Sputnik 2, into orbit. (A multistage rocket has the
advantage that the excess weight of spent stages can
be discarded.) The United States suddenly perceived
a missile gap and reinvigorated its own missile
program. The first U.S. satellite, Explorer 1, was
lifted into orbit by a Juno 1 rocket atop a Jupiter C on
January 31, 1958. The Jupiter ICBM was declared
operational in 1958 and deployed in Italy and Turkey, while the Thor missile became operational in
1959 and was deployed in the United Kingdom. Both
missiles were liquid fueled, with ranges of 3,200 kilometers. They had inertial guidance systems and
carried 1.5-megaton nuclear warheads.
The Soviet SS-6 had a range of about 5,600 kilo-
459
were housed in a floating ball. It also updated its posiwas held ready in a underground silo and had a range
tion by sighting stars or certain satellites. Many conof 10,000 kilometers.
sider the MX to be a first-strike weapon, because it is
In the mid-1960s, the Soviets, the British, and the
accurate enough to destroy missiles in their silos.
United States equipped some of their missiles with
The Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty II (START II,
multiple reentry vehicles (MRVs), warheads that
1993-2000) required the United States to remove
separated before the missile returned into the atmoMIRV capability from its ICBMs. Although the treaty
sphere. Several warheads from the same missile
was never formally put into force, both the United
striking the target area made it more likely that the
States and Russia generally followed its provisions.
target would be destroyed. In 1982 the British used
MX missiles were retired and Minuteman III misMRVs to incorporate penetration aids such as desiles were refitted with single 300-kiloton warheads.
coys, radar-reflecting chaff, and electronic jammers
Their updated guidance systems have a CEP of 100
in missiles designated to attack Moscow, which was
protected by an antiballistic missile
shield. The United States took the
next step and developed multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) to penetrate the nationwide antiballistic missile system that
it feared the Soviets would build.
The missile payload was now a bus
that could maneuver in space and
send its warheads to different targets. It had to be liquid fueled so that
it could repeatedly start and stop its
rocket motors. The United States
deployed its first MIRVed missile,
the Minuteman III, in 1970. Its first
three stages were solid fueled, with
a range of 13,000 kilometers and a
CEP of 365 meters. That was close
enough because it carried three 200to 350-kiloton nuclear warheads.
The United States feared that not
enough Minuteman missiles in its silos would survive a Soviet preemptive strike and decided to build a mobile missile, the MX Peacekeeper. It
carried up to ten 300-kiloton nuclear
warheads, with a range of 11,000 kilometers and a CEP of 90 meters.
Because no satisfactory mobile basing plan was found, the MX was
housed in Minuteman silos. Its radiU.S. Department of Defense
cally improved accuracy was due to
a new inertial guidance system in
A Minuteman III missile being launched from Vandenberg Air Force
which the gyros and accelerometers
Base in California.
460
meters. Trident submarine missiles were allowed to
continue to carry up to eight warheads. Russia was
required to make corresponding reductions.
The minimum amount of uranium required to produce an explosion is called the critical mass. Critical
mass depends not only on the amount of material
present but also on its shape and on the materials surrounding it. If there is less than a critical mass, too
many neutrons escape from the uranium without producing fissions, and the process fizzles out. The critical mass of weapons-grade uranium-235 metal is 17
kilograms, if it is surrounded by a good neutron reflector. The critical mass of weapons-grade plutonium metal is only 4 kilograms, but that increases to
10 kilograms without a neutron reflector. A critical
mass cannot be assembled before it is intended to explode, because a stray neutron produced by a cosmic
ray could initiate an untimely explosion.
The atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, weighed 4.4 metric tons (9,700 pounds)
and had a yield equal to 14.5 kilotons of the high explosive TNT. The yield was about 1.3 percent of the
maximum possible yield for the amount of fissile material used. The core contained 60 kilograms of uranium 235, surrounded by 900 kilograms of uranium
238 to serve as a tamper and neutron reflector. The
inertia of the tamper briefly slows the cores expansion and allows a few more generations of fission to
occur. To keep it below critical mass, a large segment
of the uranium-235 core was removed and placed
into a short cannon. When the Hiroshima bomb fell
to 680 meters above the ground, the cannon fired
the missing segment into the core. That action also
mixed a small amount of beryllium and radioactive
polonium 210, a combination that produced a flood
of neutrons. Two-thirds of the city was destroyed in
the explosion, and about 140,000 people were killed,
either immediately or within a few months from injuries they sustained during the explosion.
The bomb that was dropped on Nagasaki on August 9, 1945, used plutonium, primarily plutonium
239. When plutonium is made in a nuclear reactor by
adding neutrons to uranium 238, plutonium 240 and
plutonium 242 are also formed. The latter two isotopes can spontaneously fission and produce too
many neutrons to make gun assembly predictable.
The Nagasaki bomb used 6.1 kilograms of plutonium
in a noncritical configuration. This plutonium core
was surrounded by 2,300 kilograms of high explo-
461
Kingdom (1952), France (1960), and China (1964)
had all developed nuclear weapons. In an attempt
to prevent further expansion, the Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) was negotiated in 1968. Although it
was generally effective in discouraging further development of nuclear weapons, India, Israel, and Pakistan failed to sign the treaty and later acquired nuclear capability. Iran, North Korea, and Syria are
widely regarded as supporting programs that might
lead to the development of nuclear weapons.
During the Cold War, Warsaw Pact nations
equipped and maintained an army twice the size of
that of the defending North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces. In an effort to make up for this
imbalance, the United States deployed many tactical
nuclear weapons with yields of about 10 kilotons or
fewer. The most notorious of these was the neutron
bomb, or Enhanced Radiation Weapon (ERW). One
version was a projectile for an 8-inch howitzer (artillery gun) with a range of about 17 kilometers. A second version was a warhead for the Lance missile with
a range of about 130 kilometers. These warheads
were fission-fusion devices, small plutonium bombs
containing tritium, with a 1-kiloton yield. The blasts
of such warheads would destroy buildings within a
radius of 760 meters (0.5 mile), and the neutron radiation would kill unshielded people at about twice that
distance. Strategists argued that because these weapons caused less collateral damage than larger weapons, the Warsaw Pact nations would believe that they
were more likely to be used and would be deterred
from attacking. These weapons were kept ready for
use for about ten years, after which they were included in the nearly 7,000 nuclear warheads and
bombs retired at the end of the Cold War.
Development of Nuclear
Strategies
World War II military strategists used the Nagasaki
bomb to show that the Hiroshima bomb had not been
a fluke and that more such bombs would be used if
necessary. This ploy was partially a bluff, given that
the next bomb would not have been ready to deploy
until the end of August, 1945. However, the Japanese
462
initiated surrender negotiations the day after Nagasaki was destroyed. Most historians agree that the use
of these nuclear weapons probably saved more lives
than they took, because they ended the war quickly
and without the necessity of invading the Japanese
homeland. Even as World War II ended, the Cold
War with the Soviet Union had already begun. As the
only nation with nuclear weapons, the United States
could threaten to use them without fear of retaliation
in kind. As the West disarmed, nuclear weapons were
seen as a relatively cheap substitute for maintaining a
large military force, and the United States began
building a large nuclear stockpile.
Several years before the Western Allies believed
it would happen, the Soviets exploded a plutonium
bomb on August 29, 1949. In response, the United
States developed the hydrogen bomb, first testing it
in 1952. The Soviets tested a hydrogen bomb only
one year later. To contain communism, the United
States threatened massive retaliation if the Soviets
committed unspecified aggression anywhere in the
world. The Soviets could have been attacked from
bomber bases in Europe or, after 1948, by intercontinental bombers based in the United States.
After the Soviets had developed a large number of nuclear weapons and its own intercontinental
bomber force in 1955, the doctrine became mutual
assured destruction (MAD). With each country able
to destroy the other, neither could afford to try anything foolish. MAD required that the United States be
able to absorb a nuclear attack by the Soviets and still
deliver a devastating response. It was seriously proposed that nuclear missiles be placed on the Moon,
because missiles aimed at the Moon would take days
to arrive, and during that time, U.S. bombers could
hit the Soviet Union. If, instead, the Soviets first targeted the continental United States, missiles from the
Moon could be launched at the Soviet Union. A more
practical course was taken by building up a triad of
nuclear bombers, ICBMs, and submarine-launched
missiles. It was judged that the Soviets could not destroy enough of the triad in a preemptive strike to escape overwhelming retribution.
Intercontinental bombers might take fifteen hours
to reach their targets, and they could be recalled in
case of a false alarm. ICBMs put a hair trigger on
463
fense against incoming missiles and aircraft, and a recent upgrade allowed it also to engage small, fastmoving surface craft during both day and night.
The Avenger Pedestal-Mounted Stinger system
can shoot down cruise missiles. It is mounted on a
heavy high-mobility multipurpose wheeled vehicle
(HMMWV). A gyro-stabilized turret gives it a shooton-the-move capability. The gunners turret has a
.50-caliber (12.7-millimeter) machine gun and eight
Stinger missile launch pods. It has a forward-looking
infrared sensor, laser range finder, and a video
autotracker. It can also receive tracking cues by radio
from a nearby radar set, if one is available.
The Patriot missile was originally an antiaircraft
weapon but was hurriedly modified in the mid1980s to defend against ballistic missiles. A phasedarray radar locates the target and directs the missile to
it. As it nears the target, the missile homes in on radar
waves reflected from the target, then a proximity fuse
detonates a 90-kilogram, high-explosive warhead.
At first the Patriot missile seemed to be very successful at stopping Iraqi Scud missiles during the Gulf
War (1990-1991). Later analysis showed that many
of the Scuds simply broke apart as they hit the lower
atmosphere at high speed, and that the Patriot usefully destroyed some of the debris. Other Scuds were
only knocked off course by Patriot explosions, but
certainly the Patriot missile was at least a partial success. The Patriot missile and radar, upgraded to the
Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3), was scheduled to deploy alongside earlier Patriot missiles in
2012. Although slower than some earlier models, it
has hit-to-kill capabilities, and can protect five times
the area.
In March, 1983, U.S. president Ronald Reagan
gave dramatic impetus to the development of missile
defenses with announcement of his Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), with the ultimate goal of
eliminating the threat posed by strategic nuclear missiles. This spawned a series of expensive and technologically unproven initiatives, including the creation of laser defenses, that led critics to dub the
program Star Wars, after the fantasy film series of
the same name. By 1993, the program was renamed
Ballistic Missile Defense Organization (BMDO), and
the emphasis had shifted from national to regional
464
defense. Although a comprehensive global defense
system was never developed, a number of the technologies emanating from the SDI were pursued and
eventually deployed.
Testing of weapons using high-energy lasers has
demonstrated the technologys battlefield potential
for combating missile attacks. Israel and the United
States collaborated in developing a Tactical High Energy Laser (THEL) system, which was expected to
be useful against short-ranged (20-kilometer) Katyusha rockets frequently employed against Israel by
Hizbullah units. The systems weakness against
medium- and long-range missiles led to interest in
various mobile systems (MTHEL), including the creation of a prototype of airborne units, unveiled in
2006. With funding for the MTHEL discontinued by
the United States in 2004, its deployment became unlikely in the short term. The first generation of lasers
required chemical reactions to produce high amounts
of energy in a short period of time, usually burning
ethylene with nitrogen trifluoride before adding deuterium. Studies suggested that effective MTHEL systems would require electrically produced lasers,
which likely could not be deployed until the 2010s.
The Navy Area Theater Ballistic Missile Defense
(TBMD) system was developed to protect U.S. and
Allied forces and areas of vital national interest
against theater ballistic missiles. The lower-tier defense uses Aegis cruisers and destroyers, which have
phased-array radars and battle management computers that can simultaneously detect and track more
than one hundred targets. Incoming enemy missiles
are intercepted with the Standard Missile (SM)-2,
which has a range of 185 kilometers. Missiles slipping through that defense are then engaged by the
Phalanx system. As a result of massive cost overruns
in perfecting radar and SM-2 Block IVA capabilities,
the Department of Defense canceled the program in
December, 2001, though upper-tier defense uses the
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD)
systems long-range, hit-to-kill interceptor, which
was first activated in 2008. Surviving enemy missiles
aimed at ground targets are then engaged by the Patriot (PAC-3) system. Arrow-2 is a two-staged interceptor developed jointly by the United States and Israel. It uses a blast-fragmentation warhead to destroy
465
version of the current system. It would acquire and
track the missiles shortly after launch and provide the
greatest warning. The systems weapon component
is the Ground-Based Interceptor (GBI), a missile always kept ready to launch a Kill Vehicle (KV) into
space. The KV would have its own sensors, propulsion, communications, and guidance systems and
would maneuver to the target, distinguish decoys,
and destroy the target in a high-speed collision. Concern over the possibility of attacks from rogue states
and terrorist groups led to continued government
funding of SBIRS, despite its prohibition by the
Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty signed by the
United States and Russia in 1972. The United States
unilaterally withdrew from the treaty in 2002.
466
Development
Chemical Weapons
Three distinct classes of chemical weapons have existed throughout the developmental history of chemical warfare. The first, lethal agents, cause death at
various degrees of potency, depending on the biochemical properties of the components. The second,
incapacitating agents, are used to render soldiers incompetent for battle, and they generally do not kill
more than 2 percent of exposed populations. The
third, irritating agents, such as lachrimators, or tear
gases, make it difficult for soldiers to fight without
wearing cumbersome protective gear, such as face
masks and respirators. Irritating agents are generally
nonlethal to all except individuals with preexposure
conditions, such as asthma.
There have been at least five generations of chemical weapons since the 1500s. The first generation
predated the development of the large-scale industrial production facilities that facilitated the first concerted use of chemicals during World War I. Secondgeneration chemical weapons, mostly respiratory
impairment gases, were developed for use during
World War I. Third-generation agents, mostly nerve
gases, were developed after World War I. Fourthgeneration agents include psychoactive chemicals
capable of inducing hallucinations in exposed individuals. Fifth-generation chemical weapons include
new combinations of previously known chemical
weapons, combinations of chemical and biological
agents, or binary chemical weapons, which are endowed with innovative modes of delivery and action.
The first generation of chemical weapons in the
467
468
Turning Points
469
British soldiers wear gas masks to protect against respiratory-impairment gases as they wield a Vickers machine gun at the Battle of the Somme, July, 1916.
470
Biological Weapons
The development of modern biological weapons occurred in four distinct phases based on scientific advancements in the understanding of
infectious diseases and the manipulation of microorganisms and ensuing technological innovations. The
contagion and miasma phase (300
b.c.e.-1763 c.e.) occurred before the
AP/Wide World Photos
causative microbial origin of diseases was fully understood. During
U.N. workers prepare Iraqi rockets, reportedly filled with sarin, a
this period biological weapons conchemical weapon that affects nerve function, for destruction after the
sisted of attempts to contaminate the
Persian Gulf War.
environment with actual bodies of
diseased animals or humans. The
best-known psychoactive chemical weapon is quinusecond phase of biological weapons development
clidinyl benzilate, known as BZ, a relative of the
(1763-1925) was marked by the use of fomites, or
psychedelic drug lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD),
materials that have been in contact with diseased perwhich induces altered states of consciousness. In the
sons, used as weapons. The third, the culture and
United States, BZ was advertised in a publicity camstockpile phase, involved the development of techpaign known as Operation Blue Skies, intended to renical capacity to cultivate large quantities of microduce public anxiety about chemical warfare. The
organisms and vaccines. This period lasted from
campaign promoted the drug as one that caused only
1925 to 1969. The fourth phase, beginning in 1969,
temporary insanity and paralysis of the will to fight,
no less than a biological-science revolution, is marked
thereby pacifying violent individuals. However, BZ
by the development of genetic engineering, or rewas too expensive for large-scale manufacture, and
combinant DNA, facilitating the construction of orthe dose required for effect was unpredictable.
ganisms with new pathogenic traits.
Binary weapons are representatives of the fifth
Until the seventeenth century diseased corpses
generation of chemical weapons. Binary artillery
and carcasses were used as biological weapons by the
projectiles were developed in the United States in reGreeks, Romans, and Persians to contaminate drinksponse to growing tensions during the Cold War era
ing water and spread disease. Modern biological
(1945-1991) and to the apparent superiority of Soviet
weapon development was initiated in 1763 when
chemical weapons. Between 1978 and 1985, reAmerican military officers contemplated the use of
search was intensified on the development of binary
smallpox-contaminated blankets against Native Amerprojectiles designed for deployment in war crises. In
icans in the French and Indian War; however, there
1987 the United States designed a binary system to
is no concrete evidence that the proposal was imincrease the quantity of sarin that could be transplemented.
471
biological weapons was severely limited under battlefield conditions. This policy reversal led to the relaxation of international research and development programs on biological warfare. Consequently, there was
widespread support for the 1972 Biological Weapons
Convention on the prohibition of the development,
production and stockpiling of bacteriological (biological) and toxin weapons and on their destruction.
The fourth phase of biological weapons development effectively began in 1969, with the invention of
recombinant DNA techniques. These new biotechnology techniques created endless possibilities of
recombining pathogen attributes from a variety of
sources to produce more potent biological weapons
than those isolated directly from nature. An outbreak
of anthrax in Sverdlovsk, in the Soviet Union, killed
at least sixty-four people in 1979. By 1982 several reports had been published in Western news media on
the use of genetic engineering in the Soviet biological weapons development program. In 1988 the potential impact of U.S. biological weapons testing in
Utahs Dugway Proving Grounds was publicized.
During the 1980s and 1990s, attention became focused on the relatively easy access that developing
nations have to genetic engineering techniques for
producing potent pathogens. Moreover, belief in the
boundless potentials of recombinant DNA created
the fear that it is virtually impossible to develop effective defense technology against biological weapons.
There were allegations that biological weapons
were used during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988). In
1998 the defunct apartheid regime of South Africa
was accused of developing and using biological
weapons. The involvement of developing countries
worldwide, and African countries in particular, in the
development and use of biological weapons is particularly troublesome because the continent harbors
some of the most deadly pathogens, including viruses such as the Ebola virus. The increasing incidence of antibiotic-resistant strains of pathogenic
bacteria has been a relatively recent cause for alarm
in the development of biological weapons. Antibiotic
resistance traits can evolve naturally in microbial
populations, but the dangerous traits can also be manipulated to render the defense strategies based on
known medications ineffective.
472
Modern Fortifications
Dates: Since c. 1500
Medieval Fortifications
474
ditch that protected them from direct artillery fire.
The guns mounted atop the walls of the fort were
close to ground level, allowing grazing fire.
At the end of the 1530s, King Henry VIII (14911547) of England, facing the threat of invasion from
the European continent, protected his coastline with
a series of new forts designed to mount artillery and
muskets. These forts, located near the beaches, consisted of a series of rounded bastions surrounding a
central circular keep and sitting in a deep and wide
dry moat. The best known of these forts are Deal,
Walmer, and St. Mawes.
During the Renaissance, new forts built to secure
key positions were large enough to resist the increasingly large armies that moved across Europe. When
the Europeans arrived in America, they secured their
hold on the land whenever possible with the newest
type of stone fortifications. Otherwise, they relied on
wooden stockades not much different from those
used in the Middle Ages. The most interesting transfer of technology occurred in the sixteenth century,
when the Portuguese helped the Ethiopians build
castle-like fortifications at Gonder in northwestern
Ethiopia. The influence of the new Renaissance techniques began in Africa with Portuguese forts from
Ceuta (1415) to Mozambique (1506) and in Asia
from Goa (1510) to Malaca (1511).
Modern Fortifications
475
Turning Points
476
the towns perimeter to keep modern long-range artillery out of range. By the mid-1880s, the French
had developed a new high-explosive shell that rendered all existing forts obsolete. All masonry forts
had to be reinforced with concrete. Many of the
newly outdated German forts and exposed artillery
positions were replaced with detached battery positions. Interval works were created to fill the gaps in
the rings. The new forts were built with concrete instead of bricks and reinforced with armor.
Both France and Germany adopted armored galleries and turrets for their artillery in the 1870s, but it
was not until the 1890s that these became the essential artillery positions of key forts. The German
Gruson Works, founded in 1869 and later absorbed
by Krupp, became a primary supplier of armored turrets to Germany and other countries, such as Switzerland. The French used turrets built at Saint-Chamond
in southeast-central France. The new French forts also
included armored observation positions and machinegun turrets with Bourges casemates designed for
flanking fire and mounting 75-millimeter guns. Belgian military engineer Henri-Alexis Brialmont (1821-
Twentieth Century
Modern Fortifications
nean forts on their East Wall in the 1930s, but after
1936 they created a new type of fortified line, the
West Wall, which used smaller bunkers deployed in
depth and protected by massive minefields. The Italians created a new line of Alpine fortifications
known as the Vallo Alpino, and the Swiss created
similar, smaller positions to defend their National
Redoubt with only a few modern, smaller versions of
Maginot-style forts on the border. The Czechs, with
French assistance, created a line of fortifications to
encircle their vulnerable border, one section of which
included Maginot-style ouvrages. Even the Belgians
built a series of new forts to defend Lige from German attack. The Soviets created the Stalin line, with
numerous positions similar to those on the Swiss and
Czech lines, but abandoned it in 1940 for another line
that was not completed. The Finns built a line of
small fortifications called the Mannerheim line, with
small bunkers and obstacles, and, after its loss, built a
stronger position called the Salpa line. The longest
defensive line, the Atlantic Wall, was created by the
Germans between 1941 and 1944. It stretched from
the Spanish border along the coast through Norway.
This was not a continuous line but included many
fortress zones built around ports with smaller
strongpoints. Bunkers, mines, artillery positions, and
477
other obstacles defended possible landing sites. In
addition, the Germans built special concrete positions for heavy artillery on coastal sites, huge fortified submarine pens, command posts, and shelters in
the lands they occupied. Their opponents built similar positions before and during World War II, from
the English coast to Gibraltar and Singapore and
from the American coast to the entrance to Manila
Bay.
After World War II, the heavily defended gunbearing fortifications forming continuous defensive
lines were largely abandoned in favor of smaller
strongpoints and lighter border defenses. The Cold
War led to a new generation of fortifications that
were created largely to protect command centers,
such as the U.S. Air Force command center at Cheyenne, Wyoming. Some older fortifications, such as a
few Maginot ouvrages, were restored for that purpose. Underground missile silos were constructed to
protect nuclear missiles. However, when conventional war broke out most armies relied upon fortified
lines consisting of field fortifications, fortified
strongpoints, and even trenches. Such was the case in
the Korean and Vietnam Wars, and in the 1990s,
when the Iraqis built defenses on the border of occupied Kuwait.
478
Kaufmann, J. E., and Robert Jurga. Fortress Europe. Conshohocken, Pa.: Combined, 1999.
Kaufmann, J. E., and H. W. Kaufmann. Fortress America: The Forts That Defended America,
1600 to the Present. Illustrated by Tomasz Idzikowski. Cambridge, Mass.: Da Capo Press,
2004.
Stephenson, Charles. The Fortifications of Malta, 1530-1945. Illustrated by Steve Noon
Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2004.
Weaver, John R. II. A Legacy in Brick and Stone: American Coastal Defense Forts of the Third
System, 1816-1867. McLean, Va.: Redoubt Press, 2001.
Films and Other Media
Last of the Mohicans. Feature film. Morgan Creek Productions, 1992.
Modern Marvels: Atlantic Wall. Documentary. History Channel, 1999.
Modern Marvels: Forts. Documentary. History Channel, 1999.
Modern Marvels: The Maginot Line. Documentary. History Channel, 2000.
Vincennes. Feature film. Chronicles of America Pictures, 1923.
J. E. Kaufmann
Development
In the early modern period, siege warfare closely resembled siege warfare of the earliest recorded times.
In general, once the line of circumvallation, or wall
that denied the besieged city any outside contact, was
completed, the opposing forces sat and waited for
one side or the other to run out of supplies. The ability
to create a breach in the defenses was extremely limited, and going over the defenses was extremely
costly in lives.
Cannons were used by the English during the
Siege of Calais (1346-1347). The cannons of the day
were direct-fire weapons with limited range and
power. It was not until the Siege of Constantinople
(1453) that a mortar was able to lob artillery fire over
the walls and into the defenses behind them. Although these new weapons made it a little easier to
breach some defenses, they did not alter the way
sieges were conducted. It was not until Charles VIII
479
480
Turning Points
1494
1565
1673
1696
1781
1832
1942
1968
481
482
cations, the same was true. Both sides fought from
trenches during the Siege of Paris (1870) during the
Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871). This trend continued through the end of World War I. To some extent,
combat across the entire western front of that war had
devolved to siege warfare techniques by early 1915.
The introduction of the tank to the battlefield late
in World War I began the move away from trenches
and toward strongpoints. Defensive works soon became a series of individual strongpoints or fortifications, linked by fields of fire and communications
lines but fighting independently. This change would
also affect the way sieges were conducted. It was no
longer possible to create one breach and force the defender to surrender; each strongpoint had to be dealt
with individually. However, some fundamental rules
still applied. The first objective of a besieging force
remained the isolation of the defender from resupply
and reinforcement. This was no longer done with
lines of circumvallation, however, but with strongpoints and patrols. Once that had been accomplished,
the attacker then sought to create weaknesses in the
defense. Finally, if surrender was not obtained,
storming was necessary.
Each of these steps became more difficult to make
as technology advanced. As weapon lethality increased, so did troop dispersion. It became more difficult to concentrate forces to cut off the defender.
Too many holes existed and small units could escape
by avoiding the besiegers patrols and fixed positions. Besiegers were further hindered by the increased use of aircraft for resupply. It was no longer
necessary to move through the sieges. Instead, supplies and reinforcements could be brought in over the
top of the lines. There were limitations, however, as
the Germans found out during World War II at Stalingrad (1942-1943). The number of aircraft sorties
required to resupply the army was beyond the capability of the German air force, and eventually the surviving 91,000 men of the German Sixth Army were
forced to surrender to the Russians. Similarly, in
Vietnam at Dien Bien Phu (1954), the French attempted to supply their defending force by air. Although they were successful for some time, the attacking Vietnamese inflicted enough damage to the
runway that flights in and out became impossible.
The introduction of the helicopter diminished the
need for runways and made aerial resupply more
practical, but limited lift capacity was a problem. At
Khe Sanh (1968) American forces were able to successfully resupply their forces in this manner and
were able to break the siege.
The introduction of the atom bomb (1945) and
other weapons of mass destruction have provided a
possible means to overcome any strongpoint but also
present tremendous risk to the entire environment.
Since the late 1960s, advances in conventional
weapons technology have also greatly reduced the
need to conduct sieges. Precision strikes, remote imagery, and other tools make the work of assaulting
defended positions so much easier that attacking armies in the most recent large-scale conflicts have not
had to resort to sieges in order to clear enemy positions.
483
Haskew, Michael E., et al. Siege Warfare. In Fighting Techniques of the Oriental World, A.D.
1200-1860: Equipment, Combat Skills, and Tactics. New York: Thomas Dunne Books/St.
Martins Press, 2008.
Jrgensen, Christer, et al. Siege Warfare. In Fighting Techniques of the Early Modern World,
A.D.1500-A.D.1763: Equipment, Combat Skills, and Tactics. Staplehurst, England: Spellmount, 2005.
Melegari, Vezio. The Great Military Sieges. London: New English Library, 1972.
Showalter, Dennis E., and William J. Astore. Gunpowder Cannons, New Fortresses, and
Siege Warfare. In The Early Modern World. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2007.
Watson, Bruce Allen. Sieges: A Comparative Study. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1993.
Films and Other Media
Masada. Television miniseries. Arnon Milchan Productions, 1981.
The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc. Feature film. Gaumont, 1999.
Soldiers: A History of Men in Battle, Engineer. Documentary. Churchill Films, 1990.
Yorktown. Documentary. Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, 2006.
Jacob P. Kovel
485
diers call lethality, and it behooved sixteenth century commanders to develop tactical systems that optimized its strengths and mitigated its weaknesses.
Part of this strategy was combining firearms with
pikes, the other was developing a firing drill as elaborate as those of the pikes.
The most common method was to arrange the shot
in a formation of eight to twelve ranks. The first rank
would fire and fall away to the rear of the formation
to reload. The next rank would then step up and fire,
followed by the next, followed by the next. The commander could time his shots to regulate the expenditure of ammunition or intensify his fire as needed. An
eight-rank formation could sustain a rate of fire of
one volley every five seconds. These formations
could advance or retire while firing and deliver aggressive, point-blank attacks at a jog or run. They
could also double their ranks to the front, thus turning
eight ranks into four, and deliver a single smashing
volley in the face of an enemy charge.
This formidable combination of firepower and
shock effect made infantry the anchor of any battle formation. Ironically, however, the infantrys limited mobility meant that it was not
1503
usually the decisive force in battle.
A common scenario would be for
the infantry to plod ahead and lock
1522
its opposite numbers in prolonged
push of pike and point-blank mus1525
ketry, while the cavalry battled on
the flanks. The cavalry that was victorious would then ride around the
c. 1600
rear of the enemy infantry. Most infantry would break and run at this
point, while the best soldiers, such as
the Spanish tercios at Rocroi (1643),
1688
would form squares and patiently
wait to die.
Turning Points
1792-1815
Development
1914-1918
1939-1945
486
of twelve ranks depth in the pikes and eight in the
shot.
The battalion formation, with pikes in the center
and shot on the flanks, allowed every man to use his
weapon, and provided for much greater tactical flexibility. Conversely, it meant that every man needed to
pull his weight, and that there was no safe place to
keep the less reliable men.
Infantry Around the World
The firearm spread rapidly and was adopted from
Japan to Morocco. The Japanese, under the influence of the Portuguese, developed a balanced infantry force that combined harquebuses with blocks of
well-drilled spearmen.
Outside Japan and western Europe, the adoption
of the firearm did not bring with it a parallel adoption
of pikes, a development of drill, or an improvement
in the status of the infantry. In Indias Mughal Empire, Persia, and Muscovy, infantry remained at best
old-fashioned and at worst rabble. The cavalry was
the place of honor and the key to victory. In China it
was said that one should not use good iron to make a
nail, nor a good man to make a soldier, emphasizing
long-term strategy over tactical efficiency.
Only in the Ottoman Empire was there a large and
efficient corps of professional infantry, known as the
janissaries. They were armed primarily with firearms
and relied on friendly cavalry and wagons to protect
them from enemy cavalry. Unlike European shot,
they were freely engaged in close combat and carried
both swords and shields. They would deliver a closerange blast at their enemies, draw their swords, and
charge. They did not employ rigid formations or precise drill. Although the Turkish janissaries were the
best in the world in the fifteenth century, they generally found themselves outclassed by pike and shot
formations on level ground in the sixteenth.
Interestingly, while Europe continued to develop
increasingly more deadly and efficient ways of making war, the armies of the East changed little until
they found themselves the objects of European imperial ambitions in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. They then either adapted to a European model or
were conquered.
487
Somme (1916), and Vimy Ridge (1917), there were
developments taking place that would point the way
toward the future of the infantry. The French were
developing a system for small-unit operations that involved some units providing covering fire, while others maneuvered to new firing positions, whence they
would provide covering fire in their turn. They had
perfected the fire and maneuver system that is the
key to all modern small-unit infantry tactics.
The Germans formed elite corps of heavily armed
and well-trained shock troops called Sturmtruppen,
or storm troopers, who would slip forward and probe
for weaknesses in the line. When they found one,
they would attack with grenades and other close
combat weapons to punch a hole in the enemys
trench lines. While the main body of the infantry widened the holes and eliminated strongpoints, teams of
storm troopers would work their way deep into enemy territory, disrupting communications, ambushing reinforcements, and attacking supply and command centers.
The most significant development for the infantryman in World War I was not tactical but technological. The British solution to the trench warfare
problem was the tank. The massive iron war machines of World War I were crude in nature, but by
World War II, they had come to be the decisive force
on the battlefield.
In World War II, infantry without tanks were no
better off than had been the infantry in the trenches of
World War I. However, if tanks without infantry encountered enemy infantry, they had to button up
and blindly crash around until immobilized and
killed by infantrymen they could not see. Therefore,
by the twentieth century, tanks and infantry had developed a symbiotic relationship similar to that of the
sixteenth century pikes and shot. Each needed the
other to survive and win.
The twentieth century infantryman became a
member of a combined arms team that balanced the
strengths and weaknesses of foot soldiers, tanks, artillery, and to an increasing degree, aircraft. He also
became accustomed to operating more autonomously than ever before. The modern battlefield is an
alarmingly empty place. Friends and foes alike are
concealed, and all are disbursed. The infantryman
488
National Archives
U.S. soldiers from the 289th Infantry make their way down a snowy road in Belgium in January, 1945.
can see only a few friends and can usually glimpse the
enemy for only a few fleeting moments. Modern infantrymen must be able to work in small and often unconnected groups toward a common goal. Soldiers are
made to understand the plan and their place in it and
should be willing to continue to carry out the mission
even when out of the sight of leaders. Many infantries
have not met this standard, and large numbers of soldiers in any operation spend the whole time isolated
and paralyzed by uncertainty, but success in modern
combat depends on some significant number of soldiers continuing to carry on, despite uncertainty.
In World War II, infantrymen who had been as-
489
man, on foot, doing what an infantryman has always
done, is called a dismount, as if to suggest that his
natural place is inside an armored vehicle, and his existence as an infantryman is a temporary and transitory state of affairs.
Cavalry
Modern
Dates: Since c. 1500
for a variety of noncombat duties, including observing or searching for the enemy, carrying and intercepting messages, escorting officers and dignitaries,
protecting or plundering supplies and equipment,
and gathering food and supplies from local settlements.
A horse was mature enough for cavalry duty at
about age four, was at the height of its power by age
nine, and was useful until age eighteen. On the march
at about 4 miles per hour, 20 to 25 miles per day was a
horses reasonable limit. A military cavalry horse
was trained to the sights and noises of the battlefield;
therefore, training exercises might include mock battles with drumbeats, gunshots, artillery, waving colors, and drills in crossing and jumping obstacles
without hesitation.
During battle, cavalry were typically positioned
on the flanks of the line to protect the sides and rear of
infantry and to be located outside the infantry and artillery lines of fire. Cavalry formations also were positioned behind infantry to stop deserters, to reinforce weak sectors of the battle line, and to wait for
the proper moment to deliver the final thrust to finish
a weak or shaken enemy. If the battle was won, the
light cavalry was used to pursue a retreating enemy
and capture prisoners.
Development
The sixteenth century is significant in the development of cavalry warfare; technical and strategic advances in weaponry and the formalization of fulltime national professional armies took place during
that time. Gunpowder weapons such as muskets, pistols, and artillery could penetrate a knights armor
and could kill from beyond the reach of swords, axes,
490
Cavalry
491
Friedrich Wilhelm von Seydlitz leads the decisive cavalry charge at the Battle of Rossbach (1757) during the
Seven Years War.
or spears. Significant increases in population, commerce, and trade enabled political leaders to build
large national treasuries from taxes and to pay, train,
and equip professional armies and officers. The
French Wars of Religion (1562-1598), the Thirty
Years War (1618-1648), and the English Civil War
(1642-1651) resulted in the development and sharing
of new skills, tactics, weapons, and equipment.
The Hundred Years War (1337-1453) influenced
the decline of the armored knight. The English longbows and steel-tipped arrows used in that conflict
could penetrate the heavy armor of French knights
from 100 yards and could be shot four to five times
per minute. This scenario repeated itself at the Battles
492
Turning Points
Cavalry
493
In the army of the French king Louis XIV (1638lines would charge with the sword. The pistol was
1715), a French cavalry regiment varied in size from
used only during the ensuing close-contact melee
300 to 450 men and formed 20 to 30 percent of the
fight. Each regiment of his cavalry was supported in
army. Louis XIV had four types of horsemen: the
its attack by medium, musket-armed cavalry, known
Household Cavalry, who were the smartly uniformed
as musketeers, and two light 4-pound cannons, each
chosen elite used during special ceremonies and for
drawn by one horse or three men.
royal escorts; the armored heavy cavalry, known as
A regiment in the Swedish cavalry of 1620 concuirassiers; the medium foot cavalry, known as carasisted of about one thousand men divided into eight
bineers and dragoons, so called for their carbine or
squadrons; each squadron had a support staff of ten or
dragon musket weapons; and the line cavalry, lighter,
more individuals who served as quartermaster, musmore mobile lancers, hussars, and mercenary Ruster clerk, chaplain, provost, barber, medical orderly,
sian cossacks.
ferrier, and trumpeter. By the 1630s, to increase maFrederick the Great (1712-1786) of Prussia is
neuverability, a regiment was reduced to 560 men in
credited with the first use of a select group of expert,
eight squadrons. At the Battle of Breitenfeld (1631),
mounted shooters or marksmen, called Jgers, or
10,000 Swedish cavalry clashed with 16,000 Imperial
huntsmen. These huntsmen were typically from
cavalry with great success, and light Swedish cavalry
the rural countryside and had developed expert skills
pursued the beaten foe for four days afterward.
in riding, shooting, and the hunting of select tarDuring the Thirty Years War the grenadier cavgets. Frederick is credited also with increasing the
alry made its first appearance in the French army.
number of light cavalry and giving some of them
Grenadiers were a few brave select men chosen from
the task of military policing and preventing desermusketeer units to attack enemy fortifications in
tion. Fredericks forces used horse artillery in greater
small groups using hand bombs, or grenades. Grenanumbers than had been used previously. A horse ardiers wore a different type of headgear called a
tillery team consisted of three drivers on six horses
colpack, which allowed them to sling their muspulling the cannon, and eight gunners, who accomkets over their heads onto their backs, freeing both
panied on horseback. By 1786 Fredericks total
hands to light the grenade fuse and throw it. In some
parts of Europe, colpacks became
more elaborate, resembling a bishops miter.
Historians believe that during the
English Civil War, Prince Rupert
(1619-1682) of the kings Royalist
army was the first to have his cavalry
use mobile horse artillery. Called a
galloping gun, it was a small brass
cannon mounted on a horse-drawn
cart. The gunners accompanied the
cart on horseback. A cavalry regiment serving the kings Royalist
army consisted of three hundred to
five hundred men organized into six
troops. Historians agree that the cavalry, who fought mostly from a disF. R. Niglutsch
mounted position, decided the Battles of Marston Moor (1644) and
Russias Cossack Imperial Guard advance into Turkey in 1877 during
Naseby (1645).
the Third Russo-Turkish War.
494
horse artillery consisted of six troops of nine cannons
each.
Cavalry warfare reached its historical peak during
the reign of Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821), military commander and later emperor of France. Under
Napoleons great cavalry leaders, Antoine Charles
Lasalle (1775-1809), Joachim Murat (1767-1815),
and Franois Christophe Kellermann (1735-1820),
the French cavalry of the era became known for its
aggressive audacity on the battlefield and its flamboyant lifestyle off it.
In 1805 Napoleon created a Cavalry Reserve
Corps of 22,000 men commanded by Marshal Murat.
However, during battle, this corps was under the direct control of Napoleon himself. In that first organization, the Cavalry Reserve had two heavy divisions
consisting primarily of cuirassiers and five medium
divisions consisting of dragoons. The individual infantry corps was assigned the use of light cavalry regiments.
An important component of the Cavalry Reserve
Corps was the Imperial Guard regiments, whose soldiers were promoted to that elite status based on
proven experience, bravery, and loyalty to Napoleon.
Especially in the cavalry, Napoleons soldiers were
expected to dress according to a strict uniform code,
and individual regiments even had a distinct color of
horse. Napoleonic soldiers of different types wore
uniforms of various colors to make themselves distinct on both parade grounds and battlefields.
Cavalry made up approximately one-fourth of an
army during the Napoleonic era, and the largest numbers of cavalry in battle were at Eckmhl (1809) and
Borodino (1812). At Eylau in 1807, Marshal Murat
led eighty squadrons of French cavalry in a massive
column charge against the Russian center of infantry,
thereby saving the French from defeat. The confrontation took place on a cold, snowy day, the low temperatures allowing the French cavalry to gain an irresistible speed over the frozen ground and causing the
Russian muskets to misfire.
Napoleons army was defeated at the Battle of
Leipzig in 1813 by a large allied force that included
60,000 cavalry. Because the allies had their cavalry
assigned to the direct control of various infantry
corps, there was no effective pursuit of the French,
Cavalry
495
496
Library of Congress
At the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876, the U.S. Seventh Cavalry was almost entirely wiped out by a superior
number of Sioux.
Cavalry
style of trench warfare. Horses were used mostly to
transport supplies, equipment, and artillery. The
communication and reconnaissance duties of light
cavalry were taken over by the use of airplanes, zeppelins, bicycles, motorcycles, and automobiles. The
most active and numerous cavalry units were Russian cossacks positioned on the eastern front of Europe. A few British Lancers and German Uhlan units
on the western European front were stationed in the
rear of their armies to serve light cavalry duty, prevent desertion, and as a possible rear guard in the
event retreat was necessary.
Two significant cavalry actions occurred in the
Middle East (Arab) sector of the war, where British
and Australian forces were fighting mostly Turkish
forces. On October 31, 1917, at the Gaza-Beersheba
Line, the Fourth Australian Light Horse Brigade
charged in loose order across an open, sandy plain
and defeated two entrenched lines of Turkish infantry who used rifles and machine guns. Analysts believe that Australian horse artillery support and the
497
audacity and speed of the charge enabled the horsemen to close faster then the Turks could lower the
sights of their guns to shoot accurately.
At the Battle of Megiddo, Palestine (September
19-21, 1918), a large force of General Allenbys British and allied cavalry successfully rode around the
Turkish-German flank, cut their communications,
and caused much confusion as the enemy forces retreated. In several instances where the retreating
forces were attempting to establish a new line of resistance, they were attacked and dispersed before
they became too strong.
There were no cavalry battles during World War II
(1939-1945), but there are several accounts of Polish
lancer cavalry being slaughtered by German tank
columns in 1939 as Hitler invaded Poland. One account describes the Polish cavalry as being falsely
led to believe the German tanks were fake cardboard versions. During World War II, armored tank
development permanently replaced cavalry in warfare.
498
Naval Development
The Age of Sail
Dates: c. 1500-1850
Nature and Use
The period from 1500 to 1850 saw dramatic developments in naval warships. Although the first effective
gun-armed sailing ships had appeared around 1500,
these ships were little more than converted merchant
ships, not designed to make the most effective use of
artillery. Nonetheless, they allowed Europeans to
display maritime power on a global scale for the first
time, as evidenced by the creation of the Spanish and
Portuguese empires in Asia and the Americas, and
also in parts of Africa, in the early sixteenth century.
The first type of sailing ship designed around gun armament was the galleon, which appeared in approximately 1550. Although galleons were still used by
the Spanish as cargo carriers, warships became increasingly differentiated from merchant ships. By
1600 the principal missions of warships were fairly
well defined: to seize command of the sea in order
to facilitate or prevent invasion; to
attack and defend maritime commerce; and also to attack onshore
targets. These basic missions con1501
tinued throughout the age of sail,
and into the age of propulsion.
In the sixteenth century, galleons
1571
became the principal fighting ships.
They were supported in the early
seventeenth century by ships known
1588
as pinnaces, smaller vessels that
were especially useful in coastal waters too shallow for galleons. Be1653
cause all warships of the sailing era
were constructed of wood, they were
1700-1815
vulnerable to fire. Fireships were
1850
designed to be set on fire with the
intention of crashing into enemy
Turning Points
The development of gunports allows a ships heaviest guns
to be mounted on its lowest decks, stabilizing its center
of gravity.
The Battle of Lepanto II, fought between the Ottoman
Turks and the Christian forces of Don Juan de Austria, is
the last major naval battle to be waged with galleys.
The English employ galleons to individually attack the
larger ships of the formidable Spanish Armada, defeating
the Spanish and revolutionizing naval tactics.
The line of battle, allowing for more effective use of
broadside firepower, is developed.
Naval battles are fought by ships of the line.
Most navies have converted their sailing ships to steam
propulsion.
499
500
carry messages and repeat flag signals from senior
commanders to subordinates.
In general, warships became more standardized
and more specialized as the age of sail progressed.
The distinction between warships and merchant ships
became more sharply drawn, especially after the
mid-seventeenth century, when the line of battle was
developed. Ships grew in size, and also in number.
Fleet actions were increasingly decided by shipboard
artillery, leaving little scope for the boarding and
Development
Artillery
One of the dominant themes in the
development of sailing warships was
the effort to make shipboard artillery
more effective, which characterized
both ship design and naval tactics.
Although guns had been mounted
on warships as early as the fourteenth
century, they tended to be small because they had to be fitted to shoot
over the bulwarks that lined the sides
of the upper decks. The fitting of too
many heavy guns in this manner
would have endangered the stability
of ships, because the guns would
be placed comparatively high above
the waterline. Around 1500 the
major Atlantic maritime powers
England, Spain, Portugal, Scotland,
501
F. R. Niglutsch
Peter the Great, czar of Russia, made a trip to Western Europe, including a highly anticipated visit to Holland in
the Dutch Republic to learn the art of shipbuilding.
502
Introduction of the Galleon
To solve the problems of gun placement, Portugal,
England, Spain, and Denmark invented a new type of
ship around 1550: the galleon. Galleons had a lower
bow structure, like that of a galley (hence, perhaps,
the name), so a heavier armament could be mounted
in the bow. This proved effective at the Battle of
Lepanto in 1571. The lower bow also lessened wind
resistance, facilitating maneuverability. This design
culminated in the so-called race-built galleons, developed by the English in the 1580s. These ships
had comparatively fine lines and carried a relatively
heavy gun armament. The increase in armament
was important: The English navy believed it would
have to rely on shipboard artillery to defeat the
Spanish, their major rivals, who carried many more
soldiers on their ships. In contrast the Spanish intended to use artillery mainly to weaken their opponent before boarding, which they believed was
the decisive tactic. A test of these theories came
in 1588, when the Spanish Armada was unable to
force a boarding battle on the English fleet. Although
the English had little success in sinking outright
Spanish ships by gunfire, they did inflict sufficient
casualties to demoralize the Spanish fleet, much of
which was destroyed on its way home. The defeat of
the Spanish Armada prevented Spain from invading
England.
Even after the decisive defeat of the Spanish Armada, naval experts remained divided on the issue of
guns versus boarding. Although wooden ships could
be wrecked by gunfire, causing many casualties, they
proved difficult to sink. Indeed, the English fleet
nearly ran out of ammunition defeating the Spanish
Armada. Therefore it is not surprising that the Dutch,
the foremost naval power of the early seventeenth
century, continued to advocate the importance of
boarding. They used this tactic to win spectacular
victories against the Spanish, such as the Battle of the
Downs (1639). The Dutch, in relying so heavily
on boarding tactics, may have been merely making
a virtue out of necessity, initially lacking the relatively plentiful supply of artillery possessed by the
English.
The bows-on attacks favored by all navies from
the introduction of the galleon down to the mid-
503
Hence an increasingly sharp differentiation arose between those ships fit to fight in the line of battle and
those that were not. This differentiation was defined
by a rating system based on the number of guns a ship
carried. By the 1670s, first-rates carried one hundred or more guns, second-rates carried sixty to
ninety guns, and so forth. Only ships of the first four
rates ranked as ships of the line. A ship required multiple decks in order to carry as many as seventy to one
hundred guns; in the English and French navies firstrates always had three decks. The gun batteries became heavier, as navies increasingly used cheaper
cast-iron guns instead of the more expensive, if
slightly more reliable, bronze guns. The use of iron
guns was another technological development pioneered by England.
The huge fleetscontaining as many as one hundred shipsamassed for the great sea battles of the
late seventeenth century rendered command and control nearly impossible for the admirals of the period.
No matter where they placed their flagships, part of
Ships of the line were considered powerful enough to fight in the line of battle, which became the characteristic
fleet tactic.
504
their line of battle, which could stretch for 10 miles or
more, would likely be out of visual range. This problem would be compounded by the vast clouds of
smoke given off by black powder weapons and by atmospheric conditions such as fog. Naval commanders were also hampered by inadequate signaling systems. For all these reasons, late seventeenth century
lines of battle often disintegrated into melees.
Moreover, naval tactics in the age of sail suffered
from the fundamental problems associated with relying on the wind for propulsion. Winds could die
down or suddenly shift direction. Furthermore, the
square rigthe most common rig on Western warshipsdid not permit ships to sail directly into the
wind. Neither was sailing highly efficient with the
wind directly behind.
By the eighteenth century, fleets had become easier to control. Although navies were larger, individual fleets tended to be smaller. This paradox arose because the major naviesthose of England, France,
and Spainnow operated over a much larger area of
the globe, using multiple fleets. Smaller fleets had
less difficulty maintaining the line formation. Navies
also developed better signaling techniques, involving not only signal flags but also night signaling by
use of lanterns. The increasing adoption of professional officer corps by eighteenth century navies
brought the line of battle under better control.
However, these very improvements in the line of
battle, in some ways, worked against its decisiveness. If fleets arrayed in the line of battle were relatively equal in numbers of ships and guns, it was difficult for either side to win a clear-cut victory. Such
was the case, for example, at the Battle of Mlaga
(1704) in the War of the Spanish Succession (17011714), fought between an Anglo-Dutch fleet and the
French. In addition, fireships, previously an effective
tool, were difficult to use against the better-controlled fleets. To regain the advantage, navies turned
to the finer points of naval tactics. Much attention
was paid to the relative advantages of being to windward of the enemy fleet, possessing the wind
gauge, or having the enemy fleet to windward, possessing the lee gauge. Although it was easier to
withdraw from the lee gauge, it was generally easier
to shoot from the wind gauge, in part because the
505
Increasing Importance of Frigates
Whereas the ship of the line dominated fleet actions,
frigates played a major role in scouting and in the attack and defense of commerce. Frigates carried between 30 and 50 guns firing 18- to 24-pound shot
usually arranged on only one complete gun deck.
Frigates were usually faster than ships of the line;
they were also much smaller, generally less than
1,000 tons before 1780. However, by 1800, a number
of navies, including that of the United States, had
built very large frigates, such as the famous USS
Constitution, launched in 1797 with 44 guns and
weighing 1,500 tons. The French even cut decks off
ships of the line in an effort to combine the greater resistance to gunfire and heavier guns of the ship of the
line with the greater speed of the frigate. These ships
were called razes. All navies employed smaller
F. R. Niglutsch
Admiral Horatio Nelsons brilliant naval strategy overwhelmed Napoleons forces during the Battle of the Nile
in 1798.
506
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507
Naval Development
The Age of Propulsion
Dates: Since c. 1850
Nature and Use
Turning Points
508
509
510
lowed a separate policy. Clearly unable to match
Englands industrial capacity, the French navy opted
for a wartime strategy of guerre de course, or preying
upon an enemys seaborne commerce in lieu of a major fleet action. This strategy emerged from the success enjoyed by the small number of Confederate
commerce raiders during the American Civil War
(1861-1865). Although they were few in number,
the Confederate raiders sank many Union merchant
ships, drove up insurance rates, and diluted Union
seapower. Unable to match the British in a building
contest, the French followed the Confederate example
to combat English numerical superiority. To achieve
its wartime objectives, the French navy relied not
on battleships but on large numbers of commerceraiding cruisers.
Late Nineteenth Century Naval
Innovations
At the end of the nineteenth century, however, additional technological advances further changed warship development. The creation of advanced optical
range finders vastly increased the accuracy of largecaliber guns, dramatically increasing the expected
battle range. The demand for additional speed led to
In 1862, the American Civil War witnessed the first battle of armored warships: the Unions Monitor (right), the
U.S. Navys first ironclad, and the Confederacys Virginia.
511
512
tool, aircraft developed into offensive weapons thanks to new weapons such as the airdropped torpedo
and bombs delivered by horizontal
dive-bombers. The significance of
naval airpower increased when several navies introduced the aircraft
carrier in the 1920s. The United
States, Great Britain, and Japan began with makeshift vessels such as
the USS Langley, converted from a
collier, or coalship, and progressed
to larger, dedicated carrier construction, beginning with HMS Hermes
in 1923. Carrier construction also
benefited from the 1922 WashingHulton Archive/Getty Images
ton Treaty by permitting the United
States and Japan to convert battle
The British ship HMS Dreadnought in 1909.
cruisers canceled under the terms of
the treaty, such as the USS LexingWar I. The answer to the torpedo boat and submarine
ton and the Akagi, into aircraft carriers. These large
threat was the destroyer. A small, multipurpose warships, capable of carrying more than one hundred airship, the destroyer was fast enough to hunt down and
craft, gave the United States and Japan operational
destroy torpedo boats while delivering its own torexperience in large-scale carrier operations that both
pedo attack to enemy capital ships. The destroyers
nations used to devastating effect in World War II.
maneuverability and speed also suited it to hunt submarines.
World War II Naval Innovations
Naval warfare changed dramatically in World War II,
Post-World War I Naval Innovations
as the stresses of war pushed technology to its limit.
The most significant operational change caused by
After World War I, naval technology expanded into
the war was the shift in emphasis as the aircraft carwider fields, particularly after a naval limitation
rier replaced the battleship as the primary capital
treaty signed at the Washington Naval Conference in
ship. The range and flexibility of aircraft, coupled
1922 restricted capital ship construction. Unable to
with the high-profile loss of many battleships early
build new battleships, the major navies applied adin the war, forced the combatants to rely on carvances in technology to update existing capital ships:
rier airpower in lieu of battleships. This is especially
converting them to fuel oil, adding exterior bulges to
true in the Pacific, where fast, wide-ranging carricounter torpedoes, and mounting antiaircraft guns to
ers, with their ability to destroy both naval targets
ward off attacking airplanes. Although they were deand inland enemy positions, proved a much more usenied new battleships, navies faced no restrictions on
ful weapon. Airpower also benefited from the Amerother types of warships. Improved torpedoes fired
ican capacity to mass-produce warships. Although
from larger submarines greatly enhanced the impact
the Americans and British had mass-produced small
of both weapons. Intended for fleet reconnaissance,
antisubmarine vessels in World War I, the rapid prothe larger submarines with greater range developed
duction of all types of warships in World War II
into deadly commerce raiders in World War II (1939transformed the scale of naval warfare. In addition
1945). Technology also promoted the use of aircraft in
to smaller ships, American shipyards churned out
naval warfare. From their origin as a reconnaissance
513
514
Savannah. Italian battleships, steaming out to surrender to the Allies on September 9, came under attack
from the missile; the battleship Roma was sunk, and
the Italia was severely damaged. The Allied development of electronic jamming, however, reduced the
later impact of the weapon.
Naval Aircraft and Personnel Carriers
Specialized amphibious warfare ships represented
the final major development during World War II.
The conflict marked the first time that large-scale invasions came from the sea, and specialized landing
craft emerged to carry troops onto enemy shores. The
craft ranged from small personnel carriers to the utilitarian landing ship tank (LST), often referred to by
their crews as large slow target, which came directly onto the beach. The immense landing ship
dock (LSD) was capable of carrying other landing
craft into the invasion area. In dozens of landings in
the Pacific and Europe, the Allied navies perfected
their ability to mass and deliver thousands of men
and tons of matriel. During the Normandy landings
of June 6, 1944, D day, the Americans and British
landed 100,000 men. Operation Olympic, the anticipated American invasion of Japan, envisioned the
landing of more than one-half million men in the
opening attack.
In the postwar era, navies struggled to incorporate
many of the technological advances and weapons introduced during World War II. With the exception of
the United States, the world navies relegated their
battleships to the scrap yard as the aircraft carrier
maintained its position as the primary capital ship.
Two requirements caused a surge in the size of new
American carrier construction. First, heavier jet aircraft, introduced at the end of the war, needed longer
takeoff and landing spaces than wartime carriers permitted. Second, wary of losing its influence to the
new U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Navy demanded larger
carriers capable of accommodating large carrierbased nuclear bombers. The first of these postwar
carriers emerged in 1954 when USS Forrestal, the
first of the supercarriers, was launched. Specially designed to operate jet aircraft, with British-developed
steam catapults, arresting gear, and an angled landing
deck, Forrestal and subsequent supercarriers formed
515
For defense against this threat, warships acquired
radar-guided, rapid-fire guns. In the air defense role,
surface-to-air missiles replaced massed batteries of
antiaircraft guns beginning in the late 1950s, when
the guns could no longer defeat the fast-moving jets.
A final feature of naval development in the postwar era is the proliferation of the multipurpose ship.
Due to the high cost of new technology, most navies
can no longer afford specialized warships, and small,
cheap, multipurpose frigates have come to form the
backbone of most navies. Only major navies can afford such expensive items as aircraft carriers, amphibious warships, and dedicated antiaircraft cruisers.
516
Political Considerations
In the sixteenth century, Europe experienced a period
of civil strife, rebellions, and conflicts that came to be
called the European Wars of Religion. The Protestant
Reformation fueled strife between the Catholic and
Protestant churches and led to changes in weapons
and war across the subcontinent. Christendom divided into camps willing to fight and die for their versions of the religion. Roman Catholics, Lutherans,
Calvinists, Eastern Orthodox, and members of other
sects became polarized around the reformist ideas of
Desiderius Erasmus (1466[?]-1536) and Martin Luther (1483-1546). Luthers 1517 publication of his
Ninety-five Theses ignited the Wars of Religion.
Peasant revolts along with the separation of nobility
and clergy from the papacy followed. French, German, and east European territories fell into a century
of civil turmoil. European political powers became
embroiled in the debate even as the Renaissance, absolutism, mercantilism, and the scientific revolution
changed Europe from within.
Challenges outside Europe also fueled change.
The Islamic Ottoman Turks under Sleyman the
Magnificent (1494/1495-1566) captured the medieval city of Constantinople in 1453, opening Europe
to invasion by powerful Turkish sultans who challenged the emerging Habsburg line and Holy Roman
Empire. The Eastern Orthodox Church of Constantinople was exiled to Russia as the Russian state grew
across Eurasia under Ivan IV the Terrible (15301584). Early modern states struggled to emerge
through political and economic consolidation amid
these external pressures. Simultaneously, seafaring
advances helped extend European political power
across the seven seas, providing an outlet for and
from the religious wars. The conquest of the Americas and the opening of trade routes into the Indian,
Atlantic, and Pacific oceans led to global changes
Military Achievement
European states from 1517 to 1618 achieved military
successes abroad but only mixed results within Europe, owing to civil conflict and the gunpowder revolution, which created equilibrium among larger
states. Warfare was revolutionized, from naval and
land battles to fortifications and logistics. Several of
the great debates in history center on if and when Europe experienced a Military Revolution and what
relationship any such revolution had to the rise of
the West in global affairs.
The formation of the Catholic Spanish Habsburg
Empire (1518-1648) under Charles V (1500-1558)
and the rise of a number of Protestant statesincluding England, Sweden, and the Dutch Estates Generalspread civil revolts into state conflicts. Northwestern Europe moved toward Protestantism, while
Mediterranean and central Europe remained in
league with the Roman Catholic Papacy. Eastern Europe, especially Russia, emerged as the new home of
Eastern Orthodox Christianity. Europe became a mosaic of territories where identity was based on a blend
of religious beliefs, ethnicity, and political state.
The Spanish Habsburg Empire became the most
powerful in Europe as Charles V developed the first
global empire with holdings on all the major continents, taking the title of Holy Roman Emperor in alliance with Catholic Europe. Charles used military and
political means to control much of Europe, the Americas, and parts of coastal Africa and Asia. Conquests
of the Aztec (1521) and Inca empires (1535) helped
fund the Military Revolution of gunpowder in Eu519
520
The Ottoman Turks besieged the old Habsburg capital of Vienna in 1529 and formed an alliance with Frances
King Francis against the Habsburgs in the 1530s and 1540s.
521
Bu r g
un
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522
and robinets. The gun carriage, consisting of wooden
side brackets, trunnions, and transoms, held the gun
through recoil. By 1550 the English had sixteen naval
cannon sizes, the Spanish twelve, and the French six.
Shot could be canister, grape, chain, double, exploding, or even heated, depending on the situation. Powder was refined from the ground powder of land siege
cannon to a corned variety of coarse grain that allowed for uniform firing across a broadside volley.
Military Organization
In sixteenth century Europe, the Wars of Religion
and the emergence of gunpowder weapons disrupted
state development and the ability of rulers to field
An engraving of the St. Bartholomews Day Massacre of 1572, in which Huguenot leaders and thousands of
other Protestants were killed by French Catholic nobles in Paris.
523
(sometimes labeled the devils weapon). Dynastic rivals among Habsburgs, Tudors, Valois, Osmans, and
Bourbons often struggled to fund the Military Revolution while building states, so the economic doctrine
of creating wealth became key. Turkish, Russian,
and Spanish Habsburg gains on land and Portuguese,
Dutch, and English gains at sea often came as internal
turmoil racked rival states in France, Hungary, the
Italian peninsula, or Poland, thus indicating that opportunism was perhaps the most successful doctrine.
Strategy and tactics were transformed in the sixteenth century by the emergence of gunpowder
weapons and large sailing ships. Strategy became
dominated by expensive siege warfare on land and
control of lucrative global sea trade. Armies lived off
the land and the work of peasants, who were often
unpaid, leading to revolt, mutiny, and worse. Tactically, pike and shot dominated, and musketeers (after 1550) became as common as pikemen in the seventeenth century. Training manuals and drill made it
easy, inexpensive, and fast to train peasants into sailors, pikemen, or volley-fire infantry. Expensive cavalry adopted the tactic of caracol, or riding forward
and firing pistols en masse before wheeling in reverse, but this was ineffective and their numbers
declined. Steady rates of infantry volley fire were
achieved by the Dutch using the countermarch system of six to twelve lines of infantry. After the soldiers in the first line fired, they would retreat to the
rear to go through the complex reloading process.
At sea, the expense of naval seafaring again was
key. The Portuguese alone had a variety of ships, including naus, caravels, gales, and bergantim. All
served as both merchant ships and warships. Only the
English man-of-war was utilized mainly for war fleet
activity. The Portuguese caravel, English man-ofwar, and Spanish galleon led to these nations domination of naval battles abroad but to stalemates at
home. The Habsburg Holy League owed its victory
over the Turkish Empire at the naval Battle of
Lepanto in 1571 (in which more than 100,000 men
were involved) mainly to gunpowder weapons, while
the defeat of the Spanish Armada of 1588 owed more
to storms than to gunpowder. Europe thus remained
deadlocked into the seventeenth century at home but
was expanding successfully abroad.
524
Contemporary Sources
The popularization of the European printing press in the sixteenth century meant that works
on militarism and religion became widely influential in Europe. Christians became polarized
around the ideas of moderate reformer Desiderius Erasmus, whose works accounted for 20 percent of all print sales by 1530. Erasmus was in communication with most European scholars of
the period, and his five editions of critical analysis and discussion of language translation issues
concerning the Bible were most influential. The third and fourth editions of his Testamentum
(1527; The Essential Erasmus, 1964) relied on Hebrew, Greek, Latin Vulgate, and his own
Latin texts in parallel columns. Erasmus also produced works on the role of princes and Christian soldiers of the time. Martin Luther, with his publication of the Ninety-five Theses (originally known as the Disputation of Martin Luther on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences)
in 1517, spurred on the Reformation in local languages. In the influential work The Prince, Machiavelli discusses leadership strategy in the early modern world, and he also produced works
on war. Jacob de Gheyn IIs book of engraved prints The Exercise of Armes (1607) was a military drill book that could be used to train peasants in volley firearm tactics regardless of their
language.
Books and Articles
Black, Jeremy. Cambridge Illustrated Atlas of Warfare: Renaissance to Revolution. New
York: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
De Souza, Philip. Seafaring and Civilization. London: Profile Books, 2001.
Knecht, Robert. The French Religious Wars, 1562-1598. New York: Osprey, 2002.
Konstam, Angus. The Spanish Armada. New York: Osprey, 2009.
Lynn, John. Battle: A History of Combat and Culture. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 2003.
Parker, Geoffrey, ed. Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
Rogers, Clifford, ed. The Military Revolution Debate. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1995.
Films and Other Media
Battlefield Britain: Spanish Armada. Documentary. DD Home Entertainment, 2005.
Historys Mysteries: Drakes Secret Voyage. Documentary. A&E Home Video, 2006.
The Return of Martin Guerre. Feature film. Arrow Films, 1982.
Christopher Howell
526
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after over thirty years of revolution of Dutch Protestant provinces against Spanish occupation. The ability of the tiny Dutch republic, with a population of
only 1.5 million, to fight to a standstill what was then
the strongest military power in Europe represents one
of the greatest military achievements of the century.
The Dutch army, commanded by Maurice of Nassau
(1567-1625), became the wonder of Europe.
The Swedish king Gustavus II Adolphus (15941632), who ruled an even less populous and much
poorer country than the Netherlands, copied and improved upon the Dutch model. By defeating the hith-
va
Carniola
Mantua
Adriatic
Sea
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Republic Of Venice
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Frankfurt
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France
Silesia
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United
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527
against body armor, it was unreliable, with a misfire
rate of about 50 percent. Its operation depended on a
continuously burning slow match, which could
easily be extinguished by rain and wind. Furthermore, the rate of fire was slow. Soldiers could fire
about one shot every two minutes, even after the development of drills to teach loading. Although more
sophisticated ignition systems, such as the wheel
lock and the flintlock, were available, they were often prohibitively expensive. In addition, the wheel
lock, although widely used in cavalry pistols, proved
too fragile for infantry use.
The sturdier flintlock began to be issued in musket
form to elite infantry units around the middle of the
seventeenth century, by which time flintlock pistols
F. R. Niglutsch
528
had largely replaced the wheel lock among cavalrymen. By 1700, flintlock muskets had become the
most common infantry firearm, allowing a significant improvement over the matchlock in both rate
and reliability of fire.
Plug bayonets, so named because they were inserted directly into the muzzle, were used throughout
the century but were never very popular, because,
when mounted, they blocked the gun from being
fired. In 1687 French military engineer Sbastien Le
Prestre de Vauban (1633-1707) invented the far superior socket bayonet. Because the socket bayonet
fitted around, not inside, the muzzle, the gun could be
both loaded and fired with the bayonet attached.
Socket bayonets were soon adopted throughout Europe. By effectively converting every musket into a
spear, socket bayonets also rendered the pike obsolete.
Steel armor, widely worn by infantry into the midseventeenth century, was largely abandoned by the
1690s, because it offered too little protection against
gunfire to justify its weight and cost. Only heavy
cavalry continued to wear armor, but only breastplates and backplates, and not the helmets or the arm
and thigh protection that had been carried into the
1640s.
Grenades became popular in the waging of siege
warfare, and special units of infantry known as grenadiers appeared. Although the grenade was their
main weapon, the term grenadier soon came to be
1609
1631
c. 1687
1697
Military Organization
Although sixteenth century peacetime standing armies were small, consisting chiefly of royal guards
and fortress garrisons, the seventeenth century was
characterized by large standing armies and navies.
The Dutch republic set the example, keeping some
30,000 men under arms after its truce with Spain
in 1609. In contrast, France, with ten times the population of the Netherlands, had only 10,000 soldiers
at that time. The Dutch, and later the Swedes, also
pioneered the creation of a professional, long-service officer corps.
The Dutch also led the way in creating a professional navy, although
The Battle of Nieuwpoort is the first battlefield test of Maurice
the English had surpassed them by
of Nassaus linear infantry tactics.
the 1650s.
The Netherlands forces Spain to grant a truce tacitly recognizing
Standing forces with professional
Dutch independence after over thirty years of revolution of
officers
could be far more effectively
Dutch Protestant provinces against Spanish occupation.
drilled
and
disciplined than forces
The Battle of Breitenfeld is successful test of Gustavus
raised, or hired as units under the
Adolphuss military reforms.
contract system, for a single conflict.
Sbastien Le Prestre de Vauban invents the socket bayonet,
The dangers of mercenaries are well
which attaches to the musket barrel and allows simultaneous
illustrated by the career of Count
use of the musket.
Albrecht Wenzel von Wallenstein
The European balance of power is shifted at the end of the War
(1583-1634). Wallensteins position
of the Grand Alliance.
as a military contractor on a grand
Turning Points
1600
529
off the fortress and allowed the relatively secure deployment of devastating artillery fire against the fortress walls.
If the assault and defense of fortresses increasingly ruled strategy, it by no means eliminated battles
between field armies. Interest in the improvement of
battlefield tactics remained high throughout the century. Infantry were traditionally deployed in squares
of pikemen, fifteen ranks deep, surrounded on all
sides by musketeers. Although this formation was
defensively effective, it was inefficient in the use of
manpower. Beginning in the 1590s, Maurice of
Nassau replaced these square formations of around
1,500 men with a more linear formation of about 800
men as the basic tactical building block. The new formation was still composed of pikemen and musketeers, but these were now deployed in only five ranks,
with the pikemen in the center and the musketeers on
the wings. Because the formation was more shallow,
it could actually occupy a longer front and bring
more muskets to bear to the front. To make this musketry effective, Maurice developed elaborate drills to
allow some men to reload while others fired, permitting a continuous fire. These new tactics required almost mechanical discipline, something best achieved
by professional forces.
Successfully tested at the Battle of Nieuwpoort
(1600), Maurices new linear formations were
copied and improved upon by Gustavus II Adolphus,
beginning in the 1620s. By the end of the century infantry formations had become increasingly linear,
typically only three ranks deep.
As infantry formations became less capable of allaround defense, cavalry played increasingly decisive
roles in battle. The mark of a superior tactician, such
as the Great Cond, came to be in timing the launch
of a decisive cavalry charge. Cavalry required reforms to become truly effective in this newly decisive role. At the beginning of the century, most cavalry in Western Europe had abandoned the heavy
lance and adopted the pistol as their principal
weapon. Instead of charging in lines, they attacked in
a snakelike formation, the caracole, designed to facilitate the reloading of pistols.
Influenced by his experience fighting the Poles,
Gustavus II Adolphus, who had never abandoned
530
the traditional cavalry charge, trained his cavalry to
charge in lines, using their swords instead of pistols.
Another of Gustavuss pioneering military reforms
was his use of more mobile field artillery, which assisted cavalry shock action by softening up infantry
formations in preparation for the cavalry assault.
Gustavus based his revolutionary battle tactics on
mobility and firepower, arranging his infantry in more
shallow formations to fire heavy volleys on command.
As successful commanders increasingly came to agree
with Gustavus, firepower increasingly dominated infantry tactics, while shock increasingly dominated
cavalry tactics.
Naval tactics also evolved throughout the seventeenth century, with the development of the line of
battle by the English navy in the 1650s. The line of
battle formation, which had become universal by the
1670s, maximized the importance of broadside firepower and allowed for more effective deployment of
shipboard artillery.
Contemporary Sources
Although the seventeenth century witnessed an enormous outpouring of military treatises,
memoirs, and histories, only a few are available in modern editions. Robert Monros Monro,
His Expedition with the Worthy Scots Regiment Called Mac-Keys (1637) is an excellent account of the Thirty Years War from the perspective of a Scottish soldier of fortune. The works
of the Habsburg general Count Raimondo de Montecuccoli (1609-1680) are generally regarded
as the most penetrating of the military treatises written during the seventeenth century.
Sbastien Le Prestre de Vauban wrote a number of military works, especially on siege warfare, of which he was probably the greatest practitioner of all time.
Books and Articles
Asch, Ronald G. Warfare in the Age of the Thirty Years War, 1598-1648. In European Warfare, 1453-1815, edited by Jeremy Black. New York: St. Martins Press, 1999.
Brauer, Jurgen, and Hubert van Tuyll. The 1600s: Gustavus Adolphus and Raimondo de
Montecuccoli. In Castles, Battles, and Bombs: How Economics Explains Military History.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008.
Brzezinski, Richard. The Army of Gustavus Adolphus (1): Infantry. Illustrated by Richard
Hook. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 1991.
_______. The Army of Gustavus Adolphus (2): Cavalry. Illustrated by Richard Hook. Botley,
Oxford, England: Osprey, 1993.
Chandler, David. The Art of Warfare in the Age of Marlborough. 2d ed. Staplehurst, England:
Spellmount, 1990.
Duffy, Christopher. The Fortress in the Age of Vauban and Frederick the Great, 1660-1789.
London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1985.
Frost, Robert I. The Northern Wars: War, State and Society in Northeastern Europe, 15581721. New York: Longman, 2000.
Guthrie, William P. Battles of the Thirty Years War: From White Mountain to Nordlingen,
1618-1635. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2002.
Lynn, John A. Giant of the Grand Sicle: The French Army, 1610-1715. Cambridge, England:
Cambridge University Press, 1997.
Parker, Geoffrey, ed. The Thirty Years War. 2d ed. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1997.
Rothenberg, Gunther E. Gustavus II Adolphus. In The Readers Companion to Military History, edited by Robert Cowley and Geoffrey Parker. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
Van der Hoeven, Marco, ed. Exercise of Arms: Warfare in the Netherlands, 1568-1648. Leiden,
Netherlands: E. J. Brill, 1998.
531
Wedgwood, C. V. The Thirty Years War. London: J. Cape, 1938. Reprint. New York: New
York Review Books, 2005.
Weigley, Russell Frank. The Return of the Legions: Gustavus Adolphus and Breitenfeld. In
The Age of Battles: The Quest for Decisive Warfare from Breitenfeld to Waterloo. 1991. Reprint. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004.
Films and Other Media
Alatriste. Feature film. Estudios Picasso, 2006.
The Last Valley. Feature film. ABC Pictures, 1970.
Marston Moor. Documentary. Cromwell Productions, 1999.
Mark S. Lacy
Turning Points
532
533
Military Achievement
Warfare in the age of Louis XIV had
been a product of the 1600s. Professional soldiers and sailors sought to
disengage, rather than to engage. To
fight meant to risk both reputation
and army. To win without fighting,
commanders largely ignored mobility and methodically maneuvered for
the best position. Battle was offered
only when the advantage was theirs
and pursuit, in the event of victory,
was generally refused as an unnecessary risk. Further, to buttress this baLibrary of Congress
sically defensive posture, the Dutch,
the Austrians, and the French built
King Frederick the Great reviews his troops.
massive interlocking fortresses and
supply depots that were designed to
(1701-1714), unbeknownst to the enemy, the two
protect the frontier and either to slow or to halt an adfriends unexpectedly combined against a French
vancing enemy. It was an age in which Sbastien Le
army at Blenheim (1704), turned its flank, and disPrestre de Vauban (1633-1707) and Baron Menno
persed it, capturing most of the survivors. Two years
van Coehoorn (1641-1704) were the premier fortress
later Churchill accomplished the identical feat at
builders on the continent and defined the war that miliRamillies-Offus. In 1708 the men reunited, through
tary leaders such as Claude-Louis-Hector de Villars
forced marches, at Oudenarde, turned both flanks of
(1653-1734), Franois de Neufville, marquis de Villean unprepared French army, and drove it from the
roi (1644-1730), and Louis-Franois de Boufflers
field. Unfortunately, a similar linkup at Malplaquet
(1644-1711) practiced.
in 1709 was met and badly repulsed, hindering a
Still, not everyone conformed to the expected defuller acceptance of the doctrine of mobility.
fensive norm. Austrian general Eugne of Savoy
It remained for the young king of Prussia, Freder(1663-1736), for one, was noted for his forced
ick II, to undercut the doctrine of defense, impressing
marches, surprise attacks, and flank movements. His
all of Europe with his concept of movement and atrapid victory at Turin (1706) was decisive and helped
tack. For Frederick the objective was not to hold terto reduce French forces in Italy. He was supported by
ritory but to force the enemy to give ground. Through
his friend and fellow soldier John Churchill, first
experience, he learned to avoid costly sieges and set
duke of Marlborough (1650-1722), who preferred
battles and instead sought short wars to maximize his
night marches and interior lines of movement. Churlimited resources. He also utilized rapid movement,
chills opinion that a single victory was of far
interior lines of march, and the element of surprise to
greater advantage to the common cause than the takkeep his multiple enemies off balance. I have so
ing of twenty towns was reinforced by that of
many enemies that I have no choice but to attack, he
Eugne. During the War of the Spanish Succession
534
F. R. Niglutsch
The duke of Marlborough leads his troops during the Battle of Blenheim (1704).
535
guns, and to increase their maneuverability on the
battlefield.
Uniforms, standard by 1700, changed little until
the French Revolution of 1789, but armor was almost
totally discarded. Only in the heavy cavalry, and especially among the French, was armor retained. Deflective chest plates were worn on the front and the
back, but they were unable to withstand direct musket fire. Regimentals remained much the same until
the leve en masse, a French draft of sorts, mandating
large numbers of new battalions, including light infantry and cavalry. At this point, and especially under
Napoleon, different uniform designs and colors would
proliferate.
Naval ships of the period changed little. The ships
of most nations were similar in design; the vessels of
individual navies differed only in construction techniques, quantity, and quality. France, for example,
built a better ship and used fewer, but heavier, guns,
whereas England, whose vessels sailed better, used
sturdier construction. Yet, all nations divided their
major capital ships into categories with the top three
categories carrying more than 100 guns, more than
80 guns, and from 74 to 80 guns. The last, a thirdclass ship of the line, was generally the workhorse of
every fleet.
536
Military Organization
Over the course of the century, organizational
change brought larger armies, smaller but betterarmed battalions, fewer cavalries, and a more effective use of artillery. In response to the strategies of
military leaders such as Swedish king Gustavus II
Adolphus (1594-1632), Churchill, and Eugne, continental states gradually decreased the number of
men in a battalion, the primary building block of the
regiment. By 1720 most armies had reduced their
battalions to 500 to 700 men and had improved their
deployment, thereby increasing firepower. Artillery,
lighter and more numerous, was advocated by the
late 1700s as a weapon to prepare the way for an assault. Massed cannons were used to good effect at
Valmy (1792) and at Jemappes (1792) during the
French Revolutionary Wars, but it was not until 1796
F. R. Niglutsch
King of Prussia Frederick II made masterful use of the oblique attack at the Battle of Leuthen in 1757.
537
mended a restricted use of the column with an attack
upon a narrow front or a salient. Massed artillery fire
and sharpshooters could pin down the defenders as
the attacking column, hopefully shielded by terrain,
advanced. Folard and Guiberts work, intended as an
option for traditional line tactics, soon became the
standard for French revolutionary armies.
Contemporary Sources
The best accounts of the eighteenth century are to be found in the memoirs, papers, and instructions of the chief soldiers of the era. Sbastien Le Prestre de Vaubans Mmoire, pour
servir dinstruction dans la conduite des siges et dans la dfense des places (1740; A Manual
of Siegecraft and Fortification, 1968), John Churchills Memoirs of John, Duke of Marlborough (1818-1819), Prince Eugnes Feldzge gegen die Trken (1876-1892), and Maurice,
comte de Saxes Les Rveries: Ou, Mmoires sur lart de la guerre (1757; Reveries: Or, Memoirs upon the Art of War, 1757) are all highly informative as to the actions and lives of the principals. Among the best and the most explicit, however, is Die General-Principia vom Kriege
(1747; The Instruction of Frederick the Great for His Generals, 1985), by Frederick II. Alfred T.
Mahans The Influence of Sea Power upon History, 1660-1783 (1890), despite its publication
date, is the best available source for naval service.
Books and Articles
Almond, Mark. Frederick the Great and the Era of Limited War. In Revolution: Five Hundred
Years of Struggle for Change. New York: De Agostini, 1996.
Brauer, Jurgen, and Hubert van Tuyll. The 1700s: Marlborough, de Saxe, and Frederick the
538
Political Considerations
Eighteenth century warfare prior to the 1789 French
Revolution had been shaped by the political, social,
and economic conditions of the day. Wars were
fought over narrow dynastic issues by small professional armies. These armies were composed of soldiers from the lowest levels of society, commanded by
aristocratic officers. Casualties were kept to a minimum, because each soldier represented a major investment of state resources, and battles fought using
rigid linear tactics were seldom decisive. However,
the French Revolution dramatically altered the basis
of eighteenth century warfare. The revolution opened
the way for an era of mass armies and full national
mobilization and set in motion the transformation of
France from a royal kingdom to a modern nationstate. The revolution enabled France to institute the
leve en masse, a draft of citizen soldiers that supplied
unprecedented levels of manpower for military service. To support this enlarged French army, the revolutionary government was compelled to mobilize the
economic resources of the nation fully. After 1792,
faced with the threat of internal counterrevolution
and foreign intervention, France became a nation at
arms; a full national response was needed to save the
revolution from its many enemies. Armies increased
dramatically in size, higher casualty rates became acceptable, and war became more decisive and total.
Revolutionary France could afford neither the expensive professional armies that were the hallmarks
of the old style of warfare nor the time needed to train
rough conscripts in the ways of rigid eighteenth century linear warfare. The revolution served to undermine the traditional aristocratic officers corps. In the
place of the old royal army, a new national army was
formed, composed of conscript citizen-soldiers commanded by officers who advanced through their talent rather than their titles. The poor economic condi539
540
F. R. Niglutsch
The foundations for the age of Napoleon were laid by the French Revolution, which is widely considered to have
begun with the storming of the Bastille prison on July 14, 1789.
Military Achievement
The Napoleonic Era ushered in a revolution in warfare: No longer was military power limited by the
economic, political, and social conditions of the
eighteenth century. The French Revolution produced
the age of national warfare, in which the near-total re-
sources of a nation were placed into pursuit of victory. Not only were large pools of manpower mobilized, but civilian resources were also tapped. War
became more mobile, more destructive, and more decisive. To a large degree, the elements of this new
type of warfare were in place prior to Napoleons rise
to power. Prerevolutionary military thinkers in the
French royal army had published writings advocating
change, and the various revolutionary governments of
France had swept away the old army, opening the way
for new military innovations. Apart from substantially improved artillery, the weapons used by armies
of the Napoleonic period had changed little since the
start of the eighteenth century. Key to the changes in
warfare were the overall changes produced by an age
of revolution. Frances opponents had little choice
but to adopt the new way of war or face defeat. The
541
with the goal of quick decisive victories on the battlefield. It should be noted that the Napoleonic era also
produced a number of capable generals other than Napoleon, including Louis-Nicolas Davout (1770-1823)
and Andr Massna (1758-1817), two of Napoleons
own marshals, as well as Arthur Wellesley, the duke
of Wellington (1769-1852), Archduke Charles of
Austria (1771-1847), and Russian prince and field
marshal Mikhail Illarionovich Kutuzov (1745-1813).
This period, with the introduction of systematic military education, ushered in the beginning of military
professionalism. In 1802 the Royal Military College
was opened at Sandhurst, England; West Point was es-
armies of Britain, France, Austria, Prussia, and Russia would decide the fate of Europe on the battlefield.
Considered one of the most gifted generals in history, Napoleon dominated this period in the history
of warfare. The French Revolution provided him
with the tools of success and opened the way for his
rise to power. Napoleon personally embodied the
motto of careers open to talent. He fought nearly fifty
pitched battles and won most of them. More than one
hundred years after Napoleons defeat at Waterloo,
generals were still trying to copy his achievements.
The stress on offensive operations became the accepted road to victory for all military establishments
= Battle sites
KINGDOM
OF NORWAY
RUSSIAN EMPIRE
Stockholm
Borodino
KINGDOM
OF DENMARK
KINGDOM
OF PRUSSIA
Hanover
GREAT BRITAIN
London
Waterloo
Leipzig
Berlin
Auerstdt
Friedland
Eylau
GRAND DUCHY
OF WARSAW
KINGDOM
OF WESTPHALIA
Bautzen
Austerlitz
Jena
Ltzen
Paris
Ulm
Vienna
FRANCE
Hohenlinden
Marengo
Vitoria
KINGDOM
OF ITALY
Salamanca
Ciudad Rodrigo
KINGDOM
OF SPAIN
Madrid
KINGDOM
OF PORTUGAL
Trafalgar Cadiz
Bailen
KINGDOM
OF NAPLES
Moscow
Wagram
AUSTRIAN EMPIRE
542
weapon of the period was the smoothbore, muzzleloading, flintlock musket. The most famous muskets
of the period were the British Brown Bess and French
Model 1777. These weapons had changed little from
the beginning of the eighteenth century; all were
highly inaccurate and unreliable, with an effective
Weapons, Uniforms, and Armor
range of 300 yards. The caliber of the weapons varied
widely, and their low rate of accuracy made a high
The battles of Napoleonic era were noisy, smoky afrate of volley fire essential. Army manuals of the
fairs with the discharge of a great deal of black powday often stressed that soldiers should concentrate
der. Battlefields were often covered in dense, black
on rapid fire over aim. A well-trained soldier could
smoke that limited visibility. A soldier in combat
produce a rate of fire of three shots per minute. Miscould rarely see much beyond the few yards in front
fires in battle were common. Each soldier carried
of him as a battle unfolded. The primary infantry
an angular sleeve bayonet that varied between 15 and 18 inches in
length. The bayonet was used for
shock on the battlefield and rarely
for hand-to-hand combat. In addition
to the smoothbore musket, soldiers
were equipped with muzzle-loading
rifles. Rifles had greater accuracy
than muskets but had a substantially
reduced rate of fire of ten shots in
ten minutes. Muskets were the chief
weapon of the line infantry. Rifles
were employed chiefly by light infantry units for skirmishing.
Cavalry relied upon the saber and,
to a limited extent, the lance. Cavalry units were divided into light and
heavy formations. Light cavalry was
used for reconnaissance and security and carried curved swords for
cutting. Heavy cavalry was used to
break the line of enemy infantry and
carried longer and straighter sabers.
The lance was most effective
against infantry or retreating cavalry. Short carbines and pistols supplemented the sabers, swords, and
lances. Little armor was used in the
Napoleonic era. Heavy cavalrymen
known as cuirassiers were equipped
North Wind Picture Archives via AP Images
with partial body armor that covered
the upper part of the torso. They also
French uniforms during the Napoleonic period (from left): for infanwore helmets, gauntlets, and heavy
try, grenadiers, and cavalry.
tablished in the United States in the same year; in 1808
St. Cyr opened in France; and Prussias war academy,
the Allgemeine Kriegsschule, was created in 1810.
543
The advance of industrialization in the first half of
the nineteenth century had a significant impact on
military affairs. Introduction of the system of interchangeable parts made the mass production of weapons possible. Industrialization and the development
of the steam locomotive had given rise to the development of the railroad by the 1820s. Railroads revolutionized warfare by providing armies with greater
mobility and speed. The shift in military technology
from smoothbore muskets to rifled muskets was not
accompanied by a similar change in tactics on the
battlefield. The consequences would be the heavy casualty rates of the American Civil War. Technological developments began to shift the battlefield advantage from offensive to defensive operations.
Although the Napoleonic period is often remembered for its elaborate uniforms, the reality was frequently far from ideal. Most troops, except for certain elite groups such as guard formations, had to
make do with whatever clothing they could get. Few
soldiers were ever fully outfitted in regulation uniforms. The scope of Napoleonic warfare placed great
strain on governments abilities to produce enough
clothing for the needs of European armies. At times,
even in the best-regulated armies, soldiers wore civilian gear.
Military Organization
Prior to the French Revolution, innovators in the old
royal army introduced the practice of organizing armies into divisions that contained both artillery and
infantry. Later, after the revolution, the divisional organization that contained infantry, cavalry, and artillery was introduced. Each division was capable of independent operations, greater speed, and increased
mobility. In effect, each division functioned as a
mini-army combining all three combat arms. By the
time of Napoleon, with larger armies reaching numbers of 200,000 or more soldiers, divisions were
grouped into corps for administrative purposes and
for better command and control. Each division was
organized into two or three infantry brigades of two
regiments each and one brigade of artillery composed of two batteries. Corps were made up of two to
544
four divisions under a single commander. Most armies followed the French organizational pattern.
Nevertheless, the British army was still organized
into independent brigades until 1807, when they followed the French model and adopted divisional organization. For the ill-fated Russian campaign, Napoleon organized his vast army into three army groups
composed of two to three corps each.
545
546
Contemporary Sources
The two most influential military thinkers of the period were Swiss soldier Antoine-Henri de
Jomini (1779-1869) and Prussian army officer Carl von Clausewitz (1780-1831). Each of these
men provided influential interpretations of Napoleonic warfare. Jomini had served on the military staff of Napoleon and that of Russian czar Alexander I (1777-1825) as well. His most influential work, Prcis de lart de la guerre (1838; Summary of the Art of War, 1868), came to be
widely used by all Western armies. In it Jomini sought to identify what he saw as the unchanging principles of war by studying the conduct of military campaigns. He laid great stress on seizing the opponents lines of communication. Once that had been achieved, a successful battle
would follow, because the victorious army would have the overall strategic advantage as well
as superior manpower and matriel. Jominis writing, with its stress on unalterable principles of
war, tended to prevent a careful review of the changing circumstances of nineteenth century
warfare.
Clausewitz served in the Prussian army against Napoleon and went on to become the head of
the Allgemeine Kriegsschule, the Prussian war college. His famous philosophical reflections
on war were published after his death under the title of Vom Kriege (1832-1834; On War, 1873).
Clausewitz argued that war was in fact a political act in which the chief goal was total victory.
Unlike Jomini, Clausewitz rejected the ideal of unchanging principles of war. He argued that
the conduct of war always changed due to new technological advances and altered circumstances. He contended that the main objective in war should be the destruction of the enemys
military forces. The ideals of Clausewitz had their greatest impact in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Napoleon, the greatest soldier of the era, never wrote in a systematic way about
his art of war. His writings and remarks were formed into a collection of a little more than one
hundred maxims that served as the closest expression of his ideals of tactics and strategy.
Books and Articles
Addington, Larry H. The Patterns of War Since the Eighteenth Century. 2d ed. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1994.
Bell, David A. The First Total War: Napoleons Europe and the Birth of Warfare as We Know
It. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2007.
Black, Jeremy. Revolutionary and Napoleonic Warfare. In European Warfare, 1453-1815,
edited by Black. New York: St. Martins Press, 1999.
Bruce, Robert B., et al. Fighting Techniques of the Napoleonic Age, 1792-1815: Equipment,
Combat Skills, and Tactics. New York: Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martins Press, 2008.
Chandler, David. On the Napoleonic Wars. London: Greenhill Books, 1999.
Doughty, Robert A., and Ira Gruber. Warfare in the Western World: Military Operations from
1600 to 1871. Lexington, Mass.: D. C. Heath, 1996.
Esposito, Vincent J. A., and John R. Elting. Military History and Atlas of the Napoleonic Wars.
New York, Praeger, 1964. Reprint. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole Books, 1999.
Gates, David. The Napoleonic Era and Its Legacy. In Warfare in the Nineteenth Century.
New York: Palgrave, 2001.
Isemonger, Paul Lewis, and Christopher Scott. The Fighting Man: The Soldier at War from the
Age of Napoleon to the Second World War. Stroud, Gloucestershire, England: Sutton, 1998.
Keegan, John. Intelligence in War: Knowledge of the Enemy from Napoleon to Al-Qaeda. London: Hutchinson, 2003.
547
McNab, Chris, ed. Armies of the Napoleonic Wars: An Illustrated History. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2009.
Muir, Rory. Tactics and the Experience of Battle in the Age of Napoleon. New Haven, Conn.:
Yale University Press, 1998.
Paret, Peter, ed. Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age. Princeton,
N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1986.
Pois, Robert A., and Philip Langer. Napoleon in Russia, 1812. In Command Failure in War:
Psychology and Leadership. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004.
Rothenberg, Gunther E. The Art of Warfare in the Age of Napoleon. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1980.
Weigley, Russell Frank. The Climax of Napoleonic War: To Austerlitz and Jena-Auerstadt.
In The Age of Battles. 1991 Reprint. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004.
Weller, Jac. On Wellington: The Duke and His Art of War. London: Greenhill Books, 1998.
Films and Other Media
Biography: The Great Commanders: Napoleon Bonaparte. Documentary. Biography Channel,
1998.
The Duellists. Feature film. Enigma Productions, 1977.
Foot Soldier: The Napoleonic Soldier. Documentary. A&E Home Video, 1998.
Horatio Hornblower. Television series, Meridian Productions, 1998-2003.
Master and Commander. Film. Twentieth Century Fox, 2003.
Napoleon and Wellington. Documentary. A&E Home Video, 1999.
Waterloo. Feature film. Paramount Pictures, 1970.
Van Michael Leslie
Military Achievement
The Crimean War was sparked by rivalries between
the great European powers. Russia had long coveted
access to the Mediterranean Sea through the straits of
the Dardanelles and the Bosporus, both of which remained in Turkish hands in the 1850s. Because Russia, France, and Britain were competing for trade
with the Ottoman Empire, any Russian expansion
548
549
E M P I R E
Inkerman
Nov. 5, 1854
A U S T R I A N
Sea of
Azov
Sevastopol
October, 1854September, 1855
E M P I R E
Balaklava
Oct. 25, 1854
SERBIA
Sinope
Nov. 30, 1853
E M
P I R E
GREECE
e d
i t e
r r a
n e a n
Dard
an
el
le
MONTENEGRO
S e a
a c k
B l
Gallipoli
April, 1854
S e a
battle armed with smoothbore muskets. Turkish infantry also used the now-outdated smoothbore muskets. Turkish cavalry soldiers were issued short sabers and carbines that did not always work properly.
The Turkish cavalry also tended to be poorly
equipped with horses that were too small and old to
compete with those of the other Allied armies. In addition, the saddles used by the Turks were often in
poor condition and their spurs were rusty. The irregu-
550
lar cavalry, known as the Bashi-Bazouks, used any
weapon possible, including bamboo spears. The
Russian cavalry also tended to have smaller mounts,
and its mobility was hampered because these smaller
animals were expected to carry heavier packs than
those borne by the horses of the other armies.
The armies that fought in the Crimean War were
clearly unconcerned with camouflaging themselves
from the enemy, wearing a variety of colorful uniforms and headgear. For instance, Sardinian riflemen
wore light blue overcoats, blue turtleneck tunics,
dark blue pants tucked into black leather boots, and
wide-brimmed black hats with black rooster feathers.
Other Sardinian troops were outfitted in green. Green
was also used by the African-Egyptian troops from
the Sudan who were part of the Turkish force. In this
case, they wore bright green jackets and white trousers. Because the Turks did not have standardized
A cartoon by John Leech decries the wretched conditions British soldiers faced in the Crimea. One soldier says
to the other, Well, Jack! Heres good news from home. Were to have a medal, and the other replies, Thats
very kind. Maybe one of these days well have a coat to stick it on!
551
The Turkish military engineers proved to be the
best in battle. Their artillery was excellent and accurate, and their soldiers were equipped with modern
British cannons. The British Royal Horse Artillery
was equipped with the same 6-pound cannons, but
the British troops were less well trained in this area
than were the Turks. The heavier siege guns of the
British were not as good as those of the French or
Russians. During the Crimean War, the Russian
army proved particularly innovative in this area and
pioneered the use of rockets, horse-drawn artillery,
and heavy siege guns.
Mines were used by both the French and the Russians during the Siege of Sevastopol. The French
tried to put mines under the defenses of the city, but
their mines had conventional fuses that sometimes
went out before detonating. The Russians were more
successful. They would tunnel under the French tunnels and set off mines that detonated electronically.
The Crimean War involved naval power as well as
artillery and mines. At the time, Britain had the
worlds best navy, with more total ships, more steampowered ships, and better long-range guns than any
other power. The French navy was weaker than that
of the British but was stronger than those of the Russians and Turks. In total, the British and French
fielded a combined eight triple-decked battleships,
twenty-two double-decked battleships, seven frigates, thirty paddle-driven warships, and several hundred troop transports. By comparison, the Turkish
navy had only six, severely outgunned battleships in
the Black Sea and almost no steam-powered ships.
Similarly, the Russian navy had yet to convert its
ships to steam power, and its naval forces are best remembered during the Crimean War for the role they
played in the defense of Sevastopol, sinking six ships
to block the entrance to the citys harbor and then removing the guns from their ships for use on land.
Military Organization
The armies that fought the Crimean War were similar
in structure but different in composition. Each army
had infantry and cavalry divisions. The cavalry was
usually split between light and heavy brigades with
552
The vast majority of British troops were volunteers: Only 1 percent were criminals and vagrants
being punished by the legal system. Wages were a
shilling a day. Infantryman signed on for a ten-year
period, whereas cavalryman served twelve-year
terms. Irishmen had flocked to the British army during the Great Potato Famine of 1845; by the time of
the Crimean War, fully one-third of the British troops
were Irish. Although the British also hired mercenaries from parts of Germany, Sardinia, Switzerland,
and the United States, these men were sent home before seeing action in the Crimean War. Almost all of
the officers in the British army came from societys
elite. One-third were from titled or landed families,
and the rest came from families associated with the
so-called gentlemens professions, such as the clergy
and the law. British officers tended to be well educated but had little formal military training. Since
both commissions and promotions were sold, the
wealthy dominated the higher ranks of the armed
forces, and British officers could sell their commissions and go home whenever they wished.
The French army emphasized merit rather than
birthright. Few officers were from the nobility. Instead, they had to earn their promotions and to live on
their military salaries. Consequently, they had more
sympathy and understanding for the men under their
command. Whereas British officers spent little time
with their soldiers, French officers would more frequently share the living and dining quarters of their
men. French soldiers were conscripted by lottery
for six-year terms, and during their service they
were given rudimentary education in hygiene, history, and the meaning of morale and military spirit.
They were not subject to flogging or
other forms of corporal punishment.
After a series of defeats in the
eighteenth century, the Turks began
American inventor Robert Fulton invents the first steamship,
to reform their army along French
which by the time of the Crimean War has largely replaced
and Russian lines. By the start of
the sail-powered ships in British, French, and American
the Crimean War, these reforms had
navies.
seen some success: Junior officers
Turkey creates its first military academy.
were literate and had received some
The telegraph becomes widely used and links governments with
military training. However, they
field commanders.
were resented by many senior offiThe first use of anesthesia during a battlefield operation.
cers who remained illiterate. Cor-
Turning Points
1807
1834
1840s
1847
553
554
trained to think about supplies or to plan ahead. This
lack of emphasis on strategic planning meant that the
Allied armies entered the Crimean War without any
knowledge of battlefield terrain. The commanders
were also ignorant of the local climate and the size of
the forces they would face. For instance, the British
commander Fitzroy James Henry Somerset, the
Baron Raglan (1788-1855), assumed that fresh water
supplies and horses would be available. The British
took neither medical supplies nor their hospital wagons with them during the invasion of the Crimea and,
in fact, made no provisions at all to care for wounded
soldiers. The supply base built by the British was at
Balaklava, at times more than 9 miles from the front
lines. The only way to the base was along a dirt road
that ran uphill and became a river of mud when it
rained. The situation was made worse by the lack of
pack animals; all supplies had to be carried to the
front by the soldiers themselves. Only at the end of
April, 1855, was a rail link completed between the
British supply base at Balaklava and the front.
The British were not alone in these oversights,
however; the Turks had little transport to speak of
and had made an agreement with the British to supply
them. Because the Turks did not organize their own
supply trains and the British were not in a position to
fulfill the agreement, Turkish soldiers were forced to
live off the land. The French were closer to their supply base and were accompanied by viviandires,
young women who acted as provisioners for the
French troops. Because the French had brought pack
animals to use for the transportation of material, they
transported food and ammunition for all of the Allied
armies. The situation was equally bad for the Russian
soldiers. Their officers frequently stole the funds allocated to purchase food, and supply conveys were
often delayed by poor weather.
The officers who served during the Crimean War
were no better at planning battles than they were at
organizing their forces. Despite the creation of a
Turkish military academy in 1834, many senior
Turkish officers remained illiterate. British officers
received little formal military training, and the vast
majority had not studied maps, topography, or military tactics. Moreover, in peacetime these officers
spent little time with their regiments and preferred to
555
556
F. R. Niglutsch
the Turkish horsemen, refused to fight against regular cavalry and had to be used to terrorize enemy civilians instead.
Infantry advances and cavalry charges continued
to be used during the Siege of Sevastopol but were
supplemented with several other tactics as well. Before the soldiers would attack, the Allied armies
would pound the city with heavy artillery bombardments and try to tunnel under the Russian fortifications. New long-range rifles meant that sharpshooting emerged as an effective tactic during the
Contemporary Sources
A variety of contemporary sources are available to readers who wish to know more about the
Crimean War. British newspaper correspondents accompanied the British army and telegraphed their stories to London, where the items would be published without censorship. The
Times had a circulation of 40,000 copies per issue at the time of the Crimean War. The French
were also accompanied by correspondents, but their stories were subject to strict censorship
and, consequently, are not as accurate as those that appeared in British newspapers.
557
558
Political Considerations
Long considered a watershed in American history,
the American Civil War (1861-1865) was also a turning point in the execution of warfare. Although it did
not begin as a radically new kind of war, this conflict
developed into the first total modern war, in which
farmers, artisans, and businessmen played as important a role as soldiers and sailors. It was the first time
that a nation, having passed through the Industrial
Revolution, put to large-scale military use new scientific discoveries and modern technological advances.
Breech-loading rifles replaced smoothbore muskets,
ironclads replaced wooden ships, and the telegraph
replaced dispatch bearers. Military leaders made use
of such new weapons as land and naval mines, machine guns, armored railroad cars, submarines, and
aerial reconnaissance from anchored balloons. The
American Civil War was the first conflict to be extensively photographed, the first to combine weapons
technologies with mass production, and the first to
transport large numbers of men and equipment over
long distances via railroad.
The Civil War was rooted in the political paradoxes of the American Revolution (1775-1783),
which had been a civil war as well as a war for independence. The American Revolution created the
worlds leading democracy, which was also a slavebased republic. Founding fathers such as George
Washington (1732-1799) and Thomas Jefferson
(1743-1826) established a union of states in which
white liberty and black slavery coexisted. In the decades following the Revolution, Northern states instituted programs of emancipation, whereas Southern states, spurred by the productivity of the cotton
gin and the demands of European textile factories for
raw cotton, promoted the expansion of slavery.
According to many scholars, the increasing political, economic, and cultural tensions between North559
560
solved as leaders debated a series of controversial
war measures, including conscription and emancipation. The military became enmeshed in politics when
soldiers were required to capture and imprison influential Copperheads, Northerners who sympathized
with Southern secession. Following the instructions
of Republican politicians, some state militia arrested
draft dodgers and dissenting newspaper editors. Particularly troublesome to many was the brutal suppression of the 1863 Irish-immigrant riots against the
draft in New York City. Because the wealthy could
buy substitutes to serve in their place, many less advantaged Irish felt that the federal government was
failing to live up to its egalitarian ideals.
President Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) did try
to engage an important group of Americans in the
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r r da
ito
ry
ory
a Terr
New
Hampshire
Dakot
a
Territ
ory
Nebra
sk
Utah
Terri
tory
t ts
Ma
ine
e rr i t
nT
to
Oregon
Confederate states
ta
in
es
o
Wa s
h
Mexico
Atlantic
Ocean
561
562
Turning Points
Apr. 12, 1861
Mar. 9, 1862
May 5, 1862
bers and arms had defeated it. Certain Northern sympathizers saw the war primarily as a moral crusade
against slavery. Lincoln himself believed that he was
using the men, matriel, and weapons at his disposal
to save the Union. Even his Emancipation Proclamation, which became effective January 1, 1863, actually freed no slaves but declared that only slaves in
rebellious states would be freed. After the war, emancipation reshaped American race relations, but during the war Lincolns political actions resulted in increased federal power over civilians and the military.
The significance of the Civil War for the military
has been a central concern to scholars. Some have
emphasized the role of traditional weapons and techniques during most of the war, whereas others have
located the center of this wars modernity in its evolution into a total war. Both of these views came under criticism in the 1980s, when some scholars argued that technology, in the form of new rifles and
other weapons, actually made little difference on
small-scale Civil War battlefields. Others questioned
the notion of the Civil War as the first total war,
claiming that military leaders rarely destroyed civilian lives and property in any systematic way. During
the 1990s there were some comparisons with the
War of the Triple Alliance in South America (18641870) where the Paraguayans fought even more bitterly than the Confederates in the U.S. Civil War,
leaving their country even more devastated than the southern states. Similarly that conflict was seen as a contest between the martial spirit of one
country against the industrial power
of its enemies. These interpretations
and reinterpretations of a war that
has been so extensively studied and
so charged with moral, religious, and
political meaning are likely to continue.
The military goals of both the Confederacy and the Union can be simply stated. The South was fighting for independence,
the North for restoration of the Union. The Confederacy was thus forced into a war whose ultimate goal
was the defense of its own territory. Although it
did occasionally expand the war into the enemys
territory in the west and north, that was a matter of
operational strategy rather than national policy. The
Norths goals were different from those of the South
and far more difficult to accomplish. In order to restore the Union, Lincoln had to destroy the Confederacy. To force a new country of several million people
to cease to exist is a much more daunting task than to
protect such a country from external attacks. At the
start of the war, slaverys abolition was not one of the
Norths military goals. Both Lincoln and the Congress were explicit in asserting that they wanted to restore the Union without interfering with slavery.
Military aims guided military achievements. To
preserve its independence, the Confederacy built an
army but did not want to use it: It wanted only to be
left alone. In contrast the North had to be aggressive.
Unless Lincoln could compel the rebellious states to
return to the Union, he would lose the war. The Union
was initially successful in achieving some of its
goals. With the aid of military force it was able to
keep the border states of Maryland, Missouri, and
Kentucky in the Union, but because of the small
number of Union sympathizers in the eleven seceded
563
564
Gettysburg, 1863
Confederate
attacks
Union
positions
e
ry Ridg
Cemete
Little
Round
Top
reek
Willoughby Ru
Culps
Hill
C
Rock
Lees
HQ
GETTYSBURG
Cemetery
Hill
Picketts
Charge
Meades
HQ
Big
Round
Top
and South exchanged control of Harpers Ferry numerous times during the conflict, and so its production of weapons was hampered, whereas the Springfield armory was able to produce about two million
rifles during the four years of the war. These Springfield rifles, single-shot muzzle-loaders, became the
most widely used weapon of the U.S. Army.
The Confederacy found weapons to be in short
supply, particularly early in the war. In 1861 the
weapons collected from citizens and confiscated
from federal armories were insufficient to arm the increasing numbers of recruits. The Souths output of
small arms measured in the hundreds rather than the
thousands, hence the need for European purchases.
However, lack of funds, competition from the North,
and difficulty of shipping through the Northern
blockade handicapped the Souths attempts to acquire arms for its troops. Only 50,000 arms had
reached the South from Europe by August of 1862.
The situation improved later in the war, and by the
wars end the Souths Ordnance Bureau had imported some 330,000 arms, mostly Enfield rifles,
through the blockade.
565
cannons, scattered their lethal pellets over a wide
area.
At the start of the war, the U.S. Army had about
4,200 cannons, most of which were heavy pieces in
coastal fortifications; only 167 were field artillery.
The Union army used 7,892 cannons in the war, compared with more than four million small firearms.
These data imply that the Civil War was basically an
infantry war, in which artillery played a supporting
role. Numbers can be deceiving, however; artillery,
I O WA
DELA-
Philadelphia
Harrisburg
WA R E
Gettysburg
Baltimore
M A RYWheeling
Antietam
Columbus
LAND
Washington, D.C.
Indianapolis
W
E
S
T
Cincinnati
Manassas
VIRGINIA
Chancellorsville
Richmond
Peninsular
Charleston
Louisville
VIR
campaign
GIN
O H I O
INDIANA
ILLINOIS
E
V NA
A N
LL D
E OA
Y
H
Kansas
City
Pittsburgh
Lexington
St. Louis
MISSOURI
KENTUCKY
Cairo
Appomattox
Courthouse
Bowling Green
Columbus
Fort Donelson
Fort Henry
Nashville
TENNE
Murfreesboro
S
IA
Monitor
vs.
Virginia
Petersburg
Island No. 10
ve
IS
Jackson
Montgomery
Port Royal
Fort Pulaski
Savannah
Meridian
GEORGIA
Ri
sip
E
A
Fort Sumter
ALABAMA
PPI
Wilmington
IN
Charleston
Augusta
SSI
IA
SOUTH C
A RO
L
Columbia
SI
Atlanta
IS
Vicksburg
Shreveport
Chickamauga
Missis
Jenkins
Ferry
Charlotte
Chattanooga
Shiloh
Corinth
Tupelo
pi
Little Rock
SEE
Memphis
ARKANSAS
Raleigh
NORTH CAROLINA
Fort McAllister
Pea Ridge
Prairie Grove
Pensacola
Baton
Rouge
Jacksonville
o f
M e x
c o
I D
u l
St. Augustine
U N I O
B L O C K AN
D
G
L
O
New Orleans
U N I O
N
LOU
Mobile
Atlantic
Ocean
566
when properly used, was often highly effective.
Union artillery was superior to its Confederate counterpart in terms of numbers, quality, maintenance,
and skilled use.
If hit in the head or chest by bullets or shrapnel, infantry soldiers often died. The Mini ball shattered
bones, shredded tendons, and mangled major organs
beyond repair. Arm and leg wounds frequently required amputation. Soldiers wounded but not killed
on the battlefield frequently succumbed to infections
in camp hospitals. On the Northern side, the total
medical casualties recorded from May 1, 1861, to
June 30, 1866, were 6,454,834. Of this number, at
least 195,627 died. If the 425,274 cases due to battle
wounds and injuries (and the subsequent 38,115
deaths) are subtracted from the total medical casualties, the remainder, constituting the diseases, numbered 6,029,560 cases, and 157,512 deaths. Southern
casualties exhibited a similar pattern, but Confederate medical data are so incomplete and disordered
that it is impossible to be specific. With more research into the developments of military medicine
during the war, the large numbers of casualties in battles and elsewhere has been better able to be analyzed.
Because of its weaknesses in small arms, artillery,
and medical care, the South had greater incentives
than the North to develop new weapons. For example, early in the war a Confederate general introduced
land mines, and a Confederate captain invented a machine gun. The first use of land mines in war took
place during a delaying action that the Confederate
army fought near Williamsburg, Virginia, on May 5,
1862. To cover his withdrawal to Richmond, General
Gabriel J. Rains ordered 10-inch shells to be buried in
the road, with strings attached to the fuses. Union
cavalry set off these buried shells, causing casualties
and panic.
A breech-loading machine gun, invented by Confederate captain R. S. Williams, was first used at the
Battle of Seven Pines, or Fair Oaks (May 31-June 1,
1862). This unwieldy weapon, weighing 275 pounds,
with an ammunition box of 600 pounds, was pulled
by one horse and was operated by three men. Operators turned a crank that fed bullets from a hopper into
the breech, and the gun fired these at the rate of
567
both North and South, proved to be more effective
than submarines in sinking enemy ships.
Uniforms, as well as weapons, evolved over the
course of the Civil War. In the early months of the
conflict, individual states provided uniforms, which
led to a motley of styles and colors. For example,
some Union soldiers wore uniforms patterned after
those of the Zouaves, French colonial soldiers in Algeria: baggy red breeches and brief blue coats with
yellow sashes. Some Union regiments were initially
attired in gray, and some Confederate soldiers wore
blue, leading to tragic confusion on early battlefields.
The Confederate government soon adopted cadet
gray as the official color for its uniforms, but it was
never able to clothe its soldiers consistently. Confederate officers were expected to provide their own uniforms, and these often did not conform to the standards set by the War Department in 1861. Coats were
of many different cuts and materials, but after the
first year of the war, they were generally a shade of
gray. Not until 1862 were Union soldiers consistently
A new weapon during the Civil War was the ironclad gunboat, such as the CSS Virginia. The ironclad arrived at
a time of a rapid naval transition from sail to steam and from thick wood sides to iron armor.
568
uniformed in blue. As with weapons, the North had
an advantage over the South, because their uniforms
were made by the newly invented sewing machine,
which had helped create a highly developed Northern
clothing industry. Northern textile mills were converted to war production, and the factories of Lowell
and Lawrence, Massachusetts, were soon turning out
thousands of pairs of blue trousers and dark blue fatigue jackets.
Underneath their uniforms many Union volunteers
wore body armor to protect themselves against enemy bullets. At least three New England firms manufactured and aggressively marketed the soldiers bulletproof vest. This vest, containing large pockets into
which steel plates were inserted, weighed 3.5 pounds.
In some regiments more than half the soldiers used
these steel-plated vests, but, as the war progressed,
enthusiasm for this uncomfortable body armor waned,
especially when enemy sharpshooters chose to aim at
soldiers heads instead of their chests. These bulletproof vests were far less common among Confederate soldiers, because steel was in very short supply in
the South.
The number of regiments in the Confederacy is unknown because of the loss of relevant records, but estimates range from 750 to 1,000.
Military regiments were organized into increasingly larger units: brigades, divisions, corps, and armies, each commanded by a brigadier or major general. Union armies were normally named after rivers
in the area of their command (for example, the Army
of the Potomac), whereas Confederate armies often
took their names from a state or part of a state (for example, the Army of Northern Virginia). Although
regimental organization and numbers varied from
army to army, time to time, and place to place, overall
structures tended to remain constant. As the war continued, however, both the North and the South failed
to maintain the strengths of existing regiments in the
face of attrition due to casualties, deaths, and desertions. States preferred to set up new regiments rather
than re-man old ones. Thus, as the war proceeded, the
number of regiments became a very unreliable guide
to the actual strength of armies.
Throughout history, soldiers have performed according to their and their leaders understanding of the nature of war itself. This understanding, which is an important component of military doctrine, is concerned
with the beliefs that drive soldiers to fight and the
methods by which they actually fight. These doctrines are also related to the means by which leaders
establish military standards and how, in battle, they
determine the balance between offense and defense,
individual and group action, and traditional and modern technologies. Theoretically, a nations founding
principles help to shape its military doctrines, which,
in turn, influence its military strategies and tactics.
Practically, military doctrines determine how wars
are fought.
At the start of the Civil War, the military doctrines
of both North and South were guided by French military ideas about the organization and use of large
numbers of soldiers. For Napoleon, a military campaign was an orderly sequence of informed decisions
leading to a clear objective. American soldiers of
569
Union troops retreat at the First Battle of Bull Run (First Manassas) in 1861.
seen with the British and French forces in the Crimean War in the previous decade.
Like military doctrine, strategy has evolved in
meaning over time. Initially strategy meant the military leaders art of war, but by the American Civil
War its sense had become generalized to mean the
science of war, or the use of reason to achieve national goals by military means. For example, the
overall grand strategy of the Union was to reconquer
and reoccupy all original U.S. territory and to restore
federal authority throughout. The grand strategy of
the Confederacy was to defend its political independence and territorial integrity.
The Northern strategy of preserving the Union at
first seemed to require a military strategy of limited
war: first suppress the insurrection in the eleven se-
570
ceded states, then arrest Confederate leaders, and finally put Unionists in control. On May 3, 1861,
General-in-Chief Winfield Scott (1786-1866) presented an offensive plan to bring the rebels to accept
these terms with as little bloodshed as possible. He
proposed economically strangling the Confederacy
by blockading its ocean and river ports and gaining
military control of the border states. Several newspapers contemptuously called this the Anaconda Plan,
because it would take an interminably long time for
the strangulation to become effective. Meanwhile,
public opinion was clamoring for an immediate invasion to crush the rebellion.
By 1862 Union military strategy had evolved, under pressure from public opinion and President Lincoln, to a policy of conquest of Confederate territory.
This new plan succeeded in Tennessee and the lower
Mississippi Valley but was stalemated by Lees vic-
Richmond falls to Union troops in April, 1865; the war is effectively over.
571
572
during the initial phases of the war, railroads were
used primarily to transport supplies, not troops, although reinforcements did arrive at the First Battle of
Bull Run by railroad during the course of the fighting, changing the outcome. By the summer of 1862,
when thousands of Union troops were transported to
Washington, D.C., by rail to prevent Lees army
from capturing the capital, the advantages of train
over foot and horse transport became obvious. The
South, too, quickly realized the military significance
of railroads, and Southern raiders destroyed Northern tracks, bridges, and locomotives. These tactics
led to the creation of a special corps in the Union
army to repair torn-up tracks and destroyed bridges.
This corps used standardized, interchangeable parts
and made a science of track and bridge reconstruction. This construction corps was also a destruction
corps, because its men developed new ways of destroying enemy rails and bridges. For example, they
both bent and twisted heated rails to render them irreparable and useless. The armored railroad car was
yet another contribution to military transport technology that made its first appearance during the Civil
War. These bulletproof cars were used to patrol important railroads, protecting key supply and trooptransport lines for Union armies.
Finally, naval tactics, like land tactics, experienced radical changes during the Civil War. Before
the war naval tactics had involved the effective detection of enemy ships and the countermeasures to
neutralize or destroy them. Guns were a fleets decisive weapons, and a tightly spaced line of ships was
Contemporary Sources
The American Civil War has generated an immense and ongoing literature, with new books
and articles are constantly appearing. An extensive introduction to the first hundred years of
these writings is provided by the two-volume Civil War Books: A Critical Bibliography (19671969), edited by Allan Nevins, James I. Robertson, and Bell I. Wiley. A good way to keep up
with new books and articles is through the bibliographies published annually by such periodicals as Civil War History.
Several multivolume histories of the Civil War provide excellent coverage of the conflict as
well as a critical selection of primary and secondary sources. Alan Nevinss eight-volume The
Ordeal of the Union (1947-1971) is both scholarly and significant, with the final four volumes
emphasizing the war itself, largely from a Northern social, political, and military perspective. A
history that emphasizes the Southern point of view is Shelby Footes three-volume The Civil
573
574
Colonial Warfare
Dates: 1420-1857
Political Considerations
Significant political, economic, and cultural changes
in Europe during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
allowed for extensive European colonial expansion
to Asia, Africa, and the Americas. The medieval order was in a state of collapse; the concept of Christendom, a Europe united by the force of Christianity,
was giving way to the rise of humanism and secularism. As Christian Europe split into ideological
factions, nation-states emerged. France, England,
Spain, and, for a brief period, Portugal all developed extra-European colonies and extended their
historic rivalries in armed conflicts overseas.
The development of nation-states paralleled
the rise of capitalism. Characterized by the ownership of private property, the emphasis on competition and profit, and the institution of bank credit,
capitalism contributed to the hostilities among nations when expressed in the variation of mercantilism. Mercantilism, which was not fully articulated
until the late seventeenth century, advanced a
static view of wealth: If one nation increases its reserves of gold and silver, the reserves of other nations must decrease. Because there was, essentially, a fixed amount of gold and silver in the
world, there was a race to obtain as much as possible; this economic philosophy resulted in a perpetual state of economic warfare among the European states.
Another factor that contributed to the beginning of colonial warfare was the technological
revolution that made possible the commercial revolution. Europeans had ships and navigational instrumentation that made possible the acquisition of
colonial outposts; they also possessed more sophisticated weaponry than did the native populations
that they encountered in their overseas expansions. It was not surprising that the earliest colo-
ke
Mag
ellan
Ocean
1 5 20
Pa c i fi c
Dra
57
Potos
1545
8
Rio de
Janeiro
1516
Strait of Magellan
7-
South
America
Spa
Manish
in
Cape Horn
Santiago
Lima 1535
Cuzco
1534
Quito 1534
Br
az
il
8
7-
and
Newfoundl
Cabot 1498
-35
Cabral
1 50 0
Ocean
Atlantic
ci
Ceuta
Lisbon
Co
1482
Mombasa
15
14
0
1-2
152
7-8
no
7
e 15
Ocean
Elca
Dr a k
Calicut
India
Indian
00
Madagascar
Bombay
Goa
98
Hormuz
Persia
a
aG
Ethiopia
Constantinople
Africa
Europe
n
ndo
Lo Amsterdam
Arctic Ocean
Cape Timbuktu
Verde
Elmina
1485
Cabot 1497
Cartier 15
34
m bu s 1493
St. Augustine
Co l u
en
New (Avils) 1565 de L
r
Spain
nc e 15
Po 15San Salvado lu m bu s
Corts
1492
Co
1519
Mexico City
Cuba
Hispaniola
1519
Jamaica
Balboa 1513
North
America
Quebec
1608
Greenland
57
1 5 19
ellan
Mag
ru
e1
49
ak
Pe
a1
Dr
m
Ga
Ve
sp
01
15
a
al
-87
br
85
da
Ca
15
Macao
China
Beijing
Sumatra
Java
Melaka
Asia
Born
eo
Da
vis
- 88
D ias 148 7
Australia
New Guinea
M ag el la
n 15
21
Ocean
Pa c i fi c
Japan
Kynshn
Pinto
1543
Korea
Colonial Warfare
Under the leadership of Prince Henry the Navigator (1394-1460), Portugal during the 1420s was the
first nation to establish colonial outposts in the Madeira and Azores islands. Henry recognized the capabilities of new navigational devices and sailing ships
that were then being constructed. The early Portuguese penetration of coastal African and Indian
Ocean locales was cut short by the emergence of
Spain in 1492, when the kingdoms of Aragon and
Castile combined to unite most of the Iberian Peninsula. In 1580, two years after an unsuccessful colonial war in Morocco, where the young Portuguese
king was killed (the country briefly being ruled by his
childless great-uncle), Portugal was incorporated
into Spain for the next sixty years.
Throughout the sixteenth century, colonies in the
Americas, Africa, and Asia were viewed as fiscal resources from which great wealth could be obtained.
The native populations were viewed as pagans who
should be Christianized; nonetheless, there was little
if any sympathy for the native populations. The Europeans exploited the colonies and brought them into
the network of the national policies and controversies. European wars, rivalries, and perceptions were
also extended to the colonies.
Spain, the dominant colonial power in the sixteenth century, developed a global network of colonies in the Americas (Central and South America),
Asia (the Philippine Islands), and numerous colonies
in North Africa and along the route to India. The
wealthiest power in Europe, Spain extended its interests into the areas now known as Belgium and eastern
France. At the same time, the nation was identified as
the defender of the Roman Catholic Church, its ruler
taking the title His Most Catholic Majesty. In this capacity, Spain became an enemy of Anglican England
as well as the Lutheran and Calvinist principalities in
Central and Eastern Europe.
A variety of conflicts during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries witnessed the rising power of
France, the resurgence of England, and the decline of
Spain. These included the Wars of Religion between
England and Spain (1587-1601), the Dutch Wars of
Independence (1566-1648) against Spain, and the
Thirty Years War (1618-1648), which spread through
much of Europe. Although Spain retained most of
579
its overseas empire and Portugal reassumed control
of its empire after 1640, the major colonial forces
through the remainder of the century were France,
England, and the Netherlands. In the sixteenth century the French established colonial claims and settlements in Canada, the West Indies, and Africa. The
English were active in North America, establishing
significant colonies there in the seventeenth century.
The Netherlands established centers of trade on territories in the West Indies, the Indian Ocean, and the
Pacific. From the outset, the geopolitical conditions,
combined with the tradition of continuing national
conflicts, created an environment that lent itself to
the probability of colonial wars.
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, France
emerged as the preeminent European power. Historians have frequently interpreted seventeenth and
eighteenth century diplomacy as a contest between
the absolutist regimes of France, Austria, Prussia,
and Russia and the constitutional, representative governments of England and the Netherlands. One should
be very careful in extending this general explanation.
In most instances it provides an accurate context for
European wars at home and abroad, but the particulars of many crises appear to have had little if anything to do with the concept of government.
Under the influence of King Louis XIV (16381715), France launched four major European wars:
the War of Devolution (1667-1668), the Dutch War
(1672-1678), the War of the Grand Alliance (16881697), and the War of the Spanish Succession (17011714), all of which were reflected in the colonies. England and the Netherlands, an important colonial
power with trade routes and significant financial resources, combined under William III; William led
the Netherlands against France during the 1670s and
1680s and became William III of England in 1689.
In the context of European power, the principal issue
at this time was the overwhelming power of France;
the question related to the French ability to destroy
the balance of power within Europethe independence of action of the other European powers was at
risk. In the colonies the last two of the wars of Louis
XIV resulted in major hostilities in North America.
Between 1689 and 1697 England and France fought
King Williams Warthe English designation for
580
the struggle. The French and English were assisted
by their respective Native American allies and fought
to a stalemate; when the war ended, all territories
were returned (status quo ante bellum). While the
Europeans fought the War of the Spanish Succession, which resulted in containing French power and
ambitions, the English successfully fought the
French and their Spanish allies in Florida, Acadia,
and the Caribbean.
The Anglo-French rivalry was the primary cause
for colonial wars in the eighteenth century. In 1739
the War of Jenkinss Ear broke out between Spain
and England; it included an unsuccessful English attempt to take Cuba and Florida from the Spanish.
This struggle was submerged by a larger European
war, the War of the Austrian Succession (17401748), that once again pitted the French and English
against each other; in addition to the Anglo-French
contest, this war was significant because of the impact it had on the development of Central European
political history. Austria, allied with France, and
Prussia, partnered with England, fought to gain a
dominant position in Central Europe. While that issue was not resolved in the eighteenth century, the
Prussian and English victories destroyed the reality
of Habsburg hegemony throughout Central Europe.
After a brief interlude of peace the colonial war between France and England was renewed in both
America (the French and Indian War, 1754-1763)
and India. In 1756 the Seven Years War (17561763) began in Europe. Both European and colonial
wars were concluded by the 1763 Treaty of Paris,
through which Britain gained French territory in
Canada and India. However the war had been costly
for all powers. Britains relations with its American
colonists declined over the issues of increased taxation and also representation in the British Parliament,
as well as sharing the cost of defense. In July, 1776,
the Americans declared their independence and were
later joined by the French and the Dutch in the struggle with England. In the 1783 Treaty of Paris, England recognized the independence of the United
States but retained Canada and its colonies in the
West Indies.
At the close of the eighteenth century, the ideology of the Enlightenment challenged many basic
Colonial Warfare
continued their respective interests in Australia, New
Zealand, and Africa. In 1857 the British were confronted in India by the Sepoy Rebellion, precipitated
by the introduction of a new rifle that required soldiers to bite off a cover lubricated with pig grease.
Muslim soldiers refused to comply and mutinied
against their British officers. In 1859 Charles Darwins On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection was published; the concept of social Darwinism quickly followed, and the notions of survival of the fittest and the natural conflicts in human
and international relations became acceptable. These
ideas paved the way for the emergence of a new colonialism, imperialism, which was advanced in the
New Imperialism of British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881).
581
Military Achievement
The major military achievements in the age of colonial warfare included the conquest, suppression, or
dislocation of the native populations of North and
South America; the triumph of Britain in the French
and Indian War (1754-1763) in both North America
and India; the success of the Americans in their war
of independence against Britain; the initial military
success and ultimate strategic failure of Napoleons
Egyptian Campaign of 1798 and 1799; and the expansion of Britain and France into Africa during the
first half of the nineteenth century.
The Spanish advance in the New World was extensive and based upon the strength of the Spanish
military. As well as their own military power, it re-
Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro captures Inca king Atahualpa in 1532. By 1600 Spain controlled all of
the land from New Mexico and Florida in the north to Chile and the Ro de la Plata in the south, with the exception of Portugals Brazil.
582
lied on tactical alliances with some of the people in
the Americas, with Hernn Corts managing to get
much support from Native Americans who were angered by the rule of the Aztecs. This policy of divide
and rule had been practiced by the Romans in the
building up of their empire and was quickly adopted
by the European colonial powers.
By 1600 Spain controlled all of the land from New
Mexico and Florida in the north to Chile and the Ro
de la Plata in the south, with the exception of Portugals Brazil. The oppressive Spanish Conquest rested
on a continued military presence and the suppression
of the native populations; it was aggravated by the introduction of slaves from Africa. The destruction of
the Mayan civilization was achieved through military forces under Francisco de Montejo in the sixteenth century. Spanish colonization remained the
most active near seaports; the development of the interiors required extensive time and effort.
In the mid-eighteenth century Great Britain and
France fought several wars. From the perspective of
colonial wars, the most significant was the French
and Indian War. During this struggle both powers
were supported by the colonists and opposing Indian
tribes. During the early years of the war, each side encountered victories and defeats; Britain was defeated
at Fort Duquesne (1754) but prevailed at Lake George
(1755). The turning point occurred in the campaign
of 1759, when the British defeated the French at Quebec. Both Quebec and Montreal then came under
British control, and by the end of September, 1760,
Canada was British territory. This acquisition was
ratified in the 1763 Treaty of Paris, which ended the
war. In the same treaty Britain received Martinique,
Grenada, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, and other French islands in the West Indies.
Without doubt the most significant colonial war
of the era was the American Revolution against Britain. British forces prevailed militarily in almost every encounter during the war. However, at Yorktown
(1781), a combined American-French force defeated
the British army under the First Marquess Cornwallis
(1738-1805). With traditional tactics, commander in
chief of the Continental army George Washington
(1732-1799) succeeded in forcing a British surrender. The British effort was doomed from the outset.
Colonial Warfare
583
F. R. Niglutsch
Bengali mobile cannons are shown being pulled by oxen during the Battle of Plassey (1757).
584
Although the use of such armor in colonial wars
was less frequent, breastplates and helmets continued to be used. The protection associated with armor
was based on personal hand-to-hand battlefield combat. With the increased use of gunpowder weapons, however, the armor of the time was ineffective
and hindered the movements of the soldiers. Mobility was emphasized by Sir John Churchill, first duke
of Marlborough (1650-1722) and Prince Eugne of
Savoy (1663-1736), the leaders of the coalition forces
against France during the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714). Likewise, armor was more of a
detriment than an advantage in the colonial wars of
the period. Armor for weapons was considered and
adopted by the European armies during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Coastal gun emplacements frequently provided armored protection
for the guns and the personnel.
Military Organization
The design of the military organizations of the European colonial powers differed from those states that
were not involved in colonial struggles. The two
most evident differences were their reliance on colonial militias and their reliance on strong naval forces
to transport troops and supplies. Britains success in
colonial wars resulted in large part from its superior
navy and from the large numbers of colonial militiamen that could be brought into combat.
During the early centuries of the era of colonial
war, the medieval notion that the landed aristocracy
would provide the officer class continued. It was not
until the eighteenth century, with its emphasis on
professionalism, that the officer corps was opened to
talented men from other classes. Once again, the
British were more advanced than others. The French
army during the French Revolution (1789-1793) and
the ensuing Napoleonic period was accessible but reverted to the aristocracy after Napoleons defeat
(1815).
The colonial militias consisted of gentlemen
farmers and merchants and their men. Although
Washington had served in the French and Indian
War, he was basically a farmer without any formal
Colonial Warfare
America, it was not until the nineteenth century that
this information was generally known and published;
in South and Central America, Africa, and Asia, this
information was not categorized until the mid-twentieth century. Finally, European military doctrines
and strategy failed to appreciate fully the nature of
585
colonial rebellions. Americans, Zulus, Chinese, and
other local revolutionaries entered struggles to expel
Europeans, not simply to gain a victory or to prevail
in one of a series of wars. This raison dtre for colonial revolts provided an ideological motivation that
was not recognized fully during the colonial wars.
Contemporary Sources
From the fifteenth to the mid-nineteenth centuries, with the expansion of printing and transportation, military strategists had increasing access to the strategic and tactical thoughts of others. In most instances, the strategy and tactics employed in Europe were extended and adapted
in colonial wars. Among the earliest sources were Hernn Cortss (1485-1547) description of
the Siege of Tenochtitln in 1529 and Francisco de Jerezs (born 1504) analysis of the capture
of the last Incan emperor, Atahualpa (c. 1502-1533), in 1533.
More widely disseminated sources include Niccol Machiavellis (1469-1527) Il principe
(1532; The Prince, 1640), Discorsi sopra la prima deca di Tito Livio (1531; Discourses on the
First Ten Books of Titus Livius, 1636), Dellarte della guerra (1521; The Art of War, 1560), and
Istorie fiorentine (1525; The Florentine History, 1595). Although Machiavellis works provided many insights into the Renaissance concepts of war, they clearly indicate that Machiavelli did not understand the value of artillery.
Two contemporary sources on naval strategy and tactics were Richard Hakluyts (c. 15521616) description of the destruction of the Spanish Armada in The Principall Navigations,
Voiages, and Discoveries of the English Nation (1589, 1598-1600) and Armand Jean du
Plessis, duc de Richelieus (1585-1642) thoughts on sea power, published in his Testament
politique (1645; Political Testament, 1961). Military organization and formations were studied
in Jean-Charles de Folards (1669-1752) Trait de la colonne et de lordre profond (1730; treatise on the column) and Nouvelles dcouvertes sur la guerre (1724; new developments in warfare). Two other significant eighteenth century sources were Maurice, comte de Saxes (16961750) Les Rveries: Ou, Mmoires sur lart de guerre (1756-1757; Reveries: Or, Memoirs
Concerning the Art of War, 1776) and King Frederick the Great (1712-1786) of Prussias Instructions militaires du roi de Prusse pour ses gnraux (1765; Military Instructions for His
Generals, 1944). The era of warfare associated with the French Revolution and Napoleonic
Wars produced many significant works by its participants. Horatio Nelsons The Trafalgar
Memorandum (1805) is a classic and clear statement of naval strategy, and Napoleon
Bonapartes views on strategy and tactics were published in his Maxims de guerre de Napolon
(1827; Military Maxims of Napoleon, 1831), which were included in several books published
after his death in 1821. Finally, the experience of Prussian Carl von Clausewitz (1780-1831) in
the wars against Napoleonic France led him to work to reform the Prussian army. His classic
study, Vom Kriege (1832-1834; On War, 1873), was published after his death in 1831 and influenced military planners for generations.
As well as books on strategy and military science, there were countless books published that
were written by participants in various conflicts. Many of these had a ready audience in their
home countries, and some were translated and sold elsewhere. There was also coverage, from
the 1790s, in newspapers and later in weekly and monthly magazines.
586
Political Considerations
The Ottoman Empire, founded by Osman I (r. 12901326), dominated much of southeastern Europe, the
Middle East, and North Africa between the fourteenth and early twentieth centuries. Ottoman military superiority in the Balkans in the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries stemmed from the use of new
modern armaments integrating infantry and cavalry
with innovative tactics. The Ottomans borrowed
methods from their adversaries and even used Christian and Jewish soldiers and officers in their cam-
Library of Congress
The Ottoman Turks seize Constantinople from the Byzantines in 1453 to establish the Ottoman Empire.
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Poland
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Iraq
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Christian states, and Turkish soldiers served as mercenaries in Christian armies, just as Christians fought
in the Turkish armies.
National mythology has also greatly exaggerated
the historical significance of key Ottoman victories
before 1453, such as the defeat of the Serbs at Kosovo
on June 15, 1389. In many ways the Ottomans inherited the Balkans by default, because the Byzantine
army collapsed as a result of internal civil wars and
external invasions by the Western European Christian Crusaders and other neighboring Christian states.
The decisive victory that established the Ottoman
domination of the Balkans was the Siege of Constantinople in 1453. The Turks had prepared for this battle for fifty years. According to legend, the city was to
fall to a sultan bearing the name of the prophet Muwammad. Sultan Mehmed I (r. 1402-1421) initially
appeared to be that man, but an internal contest for
the throne and a war against Tamerlane in the east
Mecca
589
states for control of the Danubian plain for two hunthe entrance to the citys vulnerable side. Mehmeds
dred years. However, they found a European ally in
fleet of 125 ships and an additional number of
France. In the late seventeenth century the grand vismaller support craft was five times larger than that
ziers of the Albanian Kprl family arrested the
of the Greeks. With this fleet, Mehmed prevented the
decline of the Ottoman Empire and spearheaded a reByzantines from bringing supplies by sea as they had
vival of its former power. However, in 1664 at Szentdone in the past. The first Turkish troops to reach the
gotthrd, on the Austrian-Hungarian border, the Otwalls of Constantinople in April, 1453, were a few
tomans suffered their first loss of land to the Christian
knights, who were successfully met by the Byzantine
powers. After the Thirty Years War (1618-1648) the
soldiers in a brief skirmish. Ottoman reinforcements
improved European armies surpassed the Turkish
then drove the Greeks back behind the walls. Masarmy in organization, tactics, training, armament,
sive Turkish forces gathered over the next days,
and even leadership. The Turks, whose advanced
including cavalry, infantry, engineers, and naval
techniques and equipment had previously been their
forces. Most important were the cannons Mehmed
strong points, now found themselves falling behind
had placed at the heretofore impenetrable walls; they
their adversaries in these areas.
began a constant bombardment that continued for
The Ottomans failure to take Vienna in a second
seven weeks until they finally breached the wall.
attempt (1683) began the loss of their territory to the
Mehmed and his entourage of janissary soldiers,
European powers. In the eighteenth century the emadvisers, and imams, or religious leaders, took up their
pire lost wars and land to both Austria and Russia.
positions before the city. Mehmed offered the city eiInside the empire local warlords carved out virtually
ther mercy if it surrendered without a fight, or pillage
independent fiefdoms throughout the imperial provif it chose to fight. The Greeks chose to fight to the last.
inces. The sultans personal authority in reality did
After the fall of Constantinople the Ottomans connot extend beyond Constantinople. The grand janistinued to expand throughout the Muslim world in the
sary corps, which had gained the right to marry, were
Near East and North Africa. At the height of the emless an effective fighting force than a collection of sipire under the sultan Sleyman I the Magnificent
necures. In 1792 Sultan Selim III (1761-1808) turned
(1494 or 1495-1566) the European boundaries
to France, the empires old ally, for assistance in
reached beyond the Danube River to the gates of Vimodernizing Ottoman armed forces, creating a modenna. Sleymans failure to take the Habsburg capital
ern corps in addition to the janissaries. However, the
owed as much to the limitations of Ottoman military
French Revolution (1789-1799) and the Napoleonic
tactics, especially the definition of its campaigns by
Wars (1793-1815) interrupted the partnership. The
annual sorties lasting only from the spring to the fall,
as it did to the defense of the Viennese. Sleyman also fought and lost
to the naval forces of King Philip II
of Spain (1527-1598) in the Medi1453 With use of large cannons, the Turks capture Constantinople from
terranean at the celebrated Battle of
the Byzantines, establishing the Ottoman Empire.
Lepanto (1571).
1571 The Battle of Lepanto II, fought between the Ottoman Turks and
After Sleyman the Ottoman Emthe Christian forces of Don Juan de Austria, is the last major
pire went into a decline. Succeeding
naval battle to be waged with galleys.
sultans rarely left their palaces and
1792 Modern French military techniques and arms are introduced into
placed state matters in the hands of
Turkey.
their ministers, most of whom were
1826 The janissary corps are destroyed and the Turkish army is
Christian slaves taken in the child
modernized.
tax from Balkan families. The Otto1923 The Treaty of Lausanne creates the Republic of Turkey, bringing
mans fought against Austria, Poland,
the Ottoman Empire to its official end.
the Papacy, and other European
Turning Points
590
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Military Achievement
The Ottoman Empire in its early years successfully
defeated the Christian powers of Europe and the Muslim states of the Near East. This success stemmed
from the Ottomans innovative use of tactics and
strategy integrating cavalry and infantry. The Ottoman cavalry, or sipahi (rendered in English as
spahi), was drawn from the noble free-born Muslim class, whereas the infantry, the janissaries, were
slaves of the sultan forcibly recruited from the children of conquered European peoples, converted to
Islam, and trained as fierce fighters. There were also
irregular cavalry and infantry troops. The Ottomans
also did not hesitate, when it served their purposes, to
use Christian or Jewish commanders, as well as
Christian allies and mercenaries.
The Muslims were among the first to effectively
use cannon and gunpowder. Their success against
European armies continued into the seventeenth century, when the decline of the empire began.
591
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Officers bore titles from the kitchen such as the First
Maker of Soup, First Cook, and First Water-Bearer.
The soup pot was the sacred object around which the
janissaries gathered to eat or discuss events and policies. In rebellions they traditionally overturned these
soup pots.
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries Turkish armament lagged behind the times. In 1796 the
French ambassador General Jean-Baptiste AubertDubayet brought to Turkey several pieces of modern
armament and artillery as models for the Turks to
copy and French engineers and artillery officers to
teach the Turks modern methods. In the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries the Ottoman Empire continued to modernize its forces and weaponry. Before
World War I the Germans improved upon Turkish
arms. German General Otto Liman von Sanders
(1855-1929) came to Turkey to oversee the training
of troops. During the war the Turks had excellent
gunnery. However, two battleships ordered from England, which were to be the best of the fleet, had not
been delivered before the Turks joined the Central
Powers and were confiscated by the British. In the
late nineteenth century the Turks adopted typical European khaki winter and summer army and blue navy
uniforms. For officers, the feza brimless, flatcrowned hatreplaced the turban.
Military Organization
Within the Ottoman Empire the government and the
military were closely linked. The empire was divided
into two parts: European and Asian, each governed
by aghas, area governors who administered the empire in the name of the sultan. Under the aghas stood
the provincial governors, or sanjak beys. The sanjak,
which has come to mean province, was literally the
standard of the governor, or bey. In 1453 there were
twenty sanjaks in Asia and twenty-eight in Europe.
The sanjak beys commanded troops, operated the policing powers in their provinces, and collected taxes.
Within the sanjaks there were two types of agricultural estates: large zaimets and smaller timars. Ottoman theory held that all land belonged to God and
was managed by the sultan; the managers of these es-
593
janissary corps began to deteriorate. Muslims were
recruited into the janissaries, affecting the traditional
camaraderie. Janissaries also worked as artisans to
supplement their income. During Sleymans reign,
they received the right to marry, and their sons began
entering the corps, first through loopholes in the law
and later through quotas. Nepotism grew rampant.
Murad IV (1612-1640), recognizing the de facto
practice, abolished the devshirme. Janissaries often
paid others to serve in the field in their place, while
still collecting their pay and enjoying their privileges.
The corps, if they disagreed with the imperial policies, would often mutiny in the field or in Constantinople. The janissaries began to influence politics as
early as the fifteenth century, when they backed the
sultan Mehmed I against his brothers, but in the seventeenth century the corps became stronger than the
sultan. Sultans and ministers curried favor with the
janissaries as well as the spahis through promotion
and pay raises.
RUSSIA
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594
The vizier Kprl Amca-z3de Hseyin (died
1702) tried to reverse the downward trend by revising the muster roles of the janissaries, improving military equipment for both the janissaries and the navy,
building new barracks, and refurbishing the imperial
defenses, but the measures proved to be only temporary. The Ottoman forces also included renowned artillery and engineering units and highly skilled artisans who were supported through a guild system.
These artisans supplied the Ottoman armies and
maintained their morale and standard of living.
The Turkish sipahi cavalry were considered to be
without peer. They were ready at any moment on the
command of the sanjak beys to leave their fields and
join in battle. Failure do so would mean loss of their
position. Although the ranks were not hereditary, the
son of a deceased spahi might be given a small
amount of land for his needs. He would then have to
prove himself in battle to earn a tamir or zaimet.
There were also mounted soldiers at a lesser rank
than spahi, and the spahis of the Porte in Constantinople, the men of the sultan, who formed a separate
corps. In the seventeenth century the number of feudal spahis dwindled, and, like the janissaries, the
spahi also began to hire substitutes, some of whom
were unscrupulous adventurers. Spahis were no longer suited for all-year duty against the modern European artillery. At the Battle of Mez-Keresztes
(1596) against Hungary they left the field en masse.
The sultan dismissed thirty thousand spahis, turning
a large group of nobles into landless malcontents and
further increasing the problems of the empire.
In times of war the Ottoman Empire employed a
supplemental irregular cavalry, the akinjis. Other irregular troops were the azab corps, a reserve infantry
founded by Orhan. The sixteenth century governor of
Bosnia used another irregular force to police his
sanjak. These irregular troops did not receive regular
pay but were rewarded with spoils of war. However,
jealous of the pay and privileges of the regular forces,
they sometimes rebelled.
In the seventeenth century the Ottoman Empire
also fell behind in inventory and supply. While the
great powers of Europe established modern professional armies in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the sultans stubbornly held on to their antiquated
595
F. R. Niglutsch
The British defeat of the Ottoman fleet at the Battle of Navarino Bay in 1827 effectively destroyed the Ottoman
navy and paved the way for Greek independence.
military and society in the Western manner. Selim established the Topijia small force of prisoners, European deserters, and poor Muslimsand had them
trained in the Western fashion as a prototype army.
Impressed by the Topijis superiority, Selim tried to
introduce their methods and arms into the Turkish
forces. The spahis accepted the new methods, but the
janissaries continued to resist modernization. Selim
thus enlarged the Topiji force, which by then included some of the French officers who had remained in Turkey. In 1805 he introduced a draft but
was assassinated the following year in a janissary revolt. Mahmud II then ascended the throne.
The success of Mehmed Ali of Egypt in building a
Western army with Muslims encouraged Mahmud to
do away with the janissaries and rely solely upon the
new army. Mahmud replaced the European officers
596
ter of war and handled police duties in Constantinople. He paid special attention to the new army.
Twelve thousand men were stationed at Constantinople and elsewhere in the provinces. Mahmud turned
to England and Prussia for assistance training the
new army. Officers were sent to England, and British
officers came to Turkey. Prussia sent Lieutenant
Helmuth von Moltke (1800-1891), who later became
an architect of Prussias renowned army, as a military
adviser. Von Moltke helped to modernize the Ottoman Empires defenses and to train and organize the
new troops. He was dissatisfied, however, with
Mahmud and the Ottoman army, who resisted instruction from foreigners. Turkey and Prussia exchanged cadets and officers as well, establishing a
German tradition that would continue through the
life of the empire.
In the 1840s the army was reorganized into active
and reserve units, and the term of active service was
reduced from twelve to five years. Soldiers who had
actively served for five years would serve the balance
of seven years in their home provinces as reserves.
The military was further reorganized along Western
lines, the number of troops was increased to 250,000,
and military schools were established.
In 1808 the Young Turk Revolution brought German trained officers forward. Enver Pala (18811922), one of the leaders of the revolt, had trained in
German methods as a young officer and now went to
Berlin as military attach. The war minister Sevket
Pala (1858-1913) actually trained in Germany. Thus,
the German influence that had existed since the time
of Mahmud actually increased during the nineteenth
century.
After the Young Turk Revolution, the use of officers in government positions reduced the efficiency
of the army and navy in the field. Furthermore, capable officers opposed to the government were sent to
distant posts. The defeats of the Italian and Balkan
Wars impressed upon the new leaders the need for
massive reform. Enver Pala, who by that time had
become one of the ruling triumvirate along with
Mehmed Talt Pala (1872-1921) and Ahmed Cemal
Pala (1872-1922) took this in hand. Much of the
problem was the mistrust that the older officers had
of the young military supporters of the revolution, a
597
vishes. If the enemy forces outnumbered the Turks,
the strategy changed, and the Ottomans would wait in
hiding for the battle to begin.
The Ottoman forces, well suited for siege warfare,
used both cannons and mines. They dug trenches
about 1,500 meters from the besieged city walls and
set up their artillery behind the ridges. Archers then
continually rained arrows on the city, while janissaries scaled the walls. The Turks were willing to continue a siege as long as it took for a city to surrender or
fall. They often gave generous terms of surrender, allowing those who wished to leave the city to go
freely.
Contemporary Sources
The best primary sources on the military history of the Ottoman Empire available in English
and held in American libraries are memoirs and contemporary accounts of battles. Among the
best of the former are the memoirs of Sir Edwin Pears (1835-1919), Forty Years in Constantinople: The Recollections of Sir Edwin Pears, 1873-1915 (1916), Evliya elebis (c. 1611-c. 1682)
Travels in Palestine (1834), and Konstanty Michalowiczs (born c. 1435) Memoirs of a Janissary (1975), an account of a fifteenth century Turkish warrior found in the microform collection
of the University of Michigan. The University of Michigan is the repository of numerous eyewitness accounts of Turkish-Western battle, a number of which have been published. Suraiya
Faroqhis Approaching Ottoman History: An Introduction to the Sources (1999) is a general
survey of sources in Turkish and other languages.
Books and Articles
Aksan, Virginia. Ottoman War and Warfare, 1453-1812. In European Warfare, 1453-1815,
edited by Jeremy Black. New York: St. Martins Press, 1999.
_______. Ottoman Wars, 1700-1870: An Empire Besieged. Harlow, England: Longman/
Pearson, 2007.
Almond, Ian. Muslims, Protestants, and Peasants: Ottoman Hungary, 1526-1683. In Two
Faiths, One Banner: When Muslims Marched with Christians Across Europes Battlegrounds. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2009.
Faroqhi, Suraiya. The Strengths and Weaknesses of Ottoman Warfare. In The Ottoman Empire and the World Around It. New York: I. B. Tauris, 2004.
Gabriel, Richard A. The Siege of Constantinople. Carlisle, Pa.: U.S. Army War College, 1992.
Goodwin, Godfrey. The Janissaries. London: Saqi, 1992.
Guilmartin, John F., Jr. Ideology and Conflict: The Wars of the Ottoman Empire, 1453-1606.
In Warfare and Empires: Contact and Conflict Between European and Non-European Military and Maritime Forces and Cultures, edited by Douglas M. Peers. Brookfield, Vt.:
Ashgate/Variorum, 1997.
Imber, Colin. The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The Structure of Power. New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2002.
Murphey, Rhoads. Ottoman Warfare, 1500-1700. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University
Press, 1999.
598
Political Considerations
Geographical features have played a critical role in
the history of warfare in the vast subcontinent now
called India. The snow-covered Himalayas in the
north protected India from massive military invasions. The protective Himalayan barrier has allowed
Indian civilization to develop in an unbroken historical tradition that goes back well beyond five thousand years. The Himalayas are also the source of Indias great rivers, such as the Ganges, which were
vital for food and water supply, transport, and trade
and along the banks of which civilization from ancient times developed.
Lower in height than the Himalayas, the Vindhya
Mountains run from west to east, dividing northern
India from southern India, known as the Deccan.
Southern India developed a complex and unique civilization rich in art, language, literature, music, and
religious traditions. Conquest of the wealthy Deccan
became the goal of many northern rulers intent on reviving the political and administrative unification of
India first accomplished by the Maurya Dynasty
(321-c. 185 b.c.e.).
The Western Ghats, the Eastern Ghats, and other
ranges of hills compartmentalize the Deccan into
small, easily defended sectors. Here, the inhabitants
built vast self-sufficient forts to ward off intruders,
and it was in these regions that an Indian variation of
guerrilla warfare proved to be the ultimate challenge
to Mughal supremacy, particularly during the reign
of the later Mughal rulers. The political fate of the
north hinged on great battles fought by conventional
forces on fields such as P3ntpat. In the south, however, the numerous isolated states sometimes held
their own, and the conquering armies were frequently at a disadvantage because of unfamiliar terrain, hostile populations, and impregnable defenses.
Indias considerable wealth was amassed through
599
600
frequently had enormous tactical advantages over
defending Indian armies and frequently prevailed.
The defenders, raised in a relatively nonviolent environment, fought with courage and valor but were frequently no match for the raiders. Hence India fell
prey to frequent invasions that caused enormous turmoil until the process of civilizing and assimilating
the outsiders took over. Occasionally, as with the
Mughals, the invaders successfully utilized new military weaponry and innovative battle strategies in
their bids to conquer India. In the process, they
helped to change the methodology of warfare in the
subcontinent.
As with most Indian governments, past and present, success and survival were largely dependent on
the energy, determination, and dedication of a particular leader. The early Mughals produced a few outstanding rulers, the most prominent of whom was the
emperor Akbar (1542-1605).
Turning Points
601
the Mughal Empire, which now extended from Afghanistan in the north to Bengal in the east.
The defending Indian forces lost because their armies were unwieldy and undisciplined. These forces
ranged from cavalry to infantry, some of whom were
peasants armed only with bamboo sticks. A veritable
city of servants, camp followers, and attendants hindered the mobility of the defending troops, which
were unable to march more than a short distance each
day. The cumbersome size of this force and the absence of effective communication between different
wings of the army made cohesive fighting difficult.
Indian armies relied on the use of war elephants,
which served a similar purpose to tanks in modern
warfare. Elephants could push forward large guns,
carry the commander into battle, act as a battering
ram against a fort, or crush opposing infantry underfoot by rushing into the ranks. Equipped with an iron
chain in its trunk and taught to wield it in all directions, an elephant could wreak havoc against an enemy force. Although these great animals were impressive and could frighten an enemy, they were also
unpredictable and could retreat under attack into the
ranks of panicked Indian foot soldiers. Frequently
commanders rode on the elephants so that they had
the best view of the battlefield; this high perch made
the commanders prime targets for enemy arrows. If
the commander was wounded, or if he felt the need to
descend from the howda on top of his elephant, his
troops often assumed that he was dead and scattered.
Although the Rajput Indians did not initially have
firearms, they fought the Mughals with valor and determination. When all hope for victory was lost, they
donned their traditional saffron garments and embarked on their final death ride, fighting the enemy
with a ferocity that made them legendary in Indian
history. Rajput women often committed mass suicide
rather than surrender to the invaders. The Rajput ideals of chivalry and courage in the face of defeat have
inspired generations of Indians.
Military Achievement
B3burs strategy at the Battle of P3ntpat became a
model followed by his descendants in numerous bat-
602
tles throughout Indian history. B3burs strategy in
this battle was to provide as much protection to his
forces as possible while allowing them the opportunity to act swiftly to take advantage of enemy weaknesses as the battle advanced. B3bur utilized ditches
and jungle foliage to guard his left flank, protecting
his right with control of houses in P3ntpat. The front
of his force was shielded by 700 baggage carts tied
together with ropes and interspersed with a screen of
shields behind which he stationed the squadrons
armed with new matchlock rifles to fire at the Indian
troops. The use of this new weapon was decisive and
successful against the densely packed ranks of defending forces.
One tactical technique B3bur utilized was the
taulqama, a Turkish word referring to the horns of
the crescent, in which the Mughals closed in on and
destroyed the rear guard of the opponent. Each soldier in the thoroughly trained Mughal army knew his
place, in either the vanguard, left wing, right wing, or
the all-important center commanded by B3bur himself. The combination of good defenses and mobility
ensured that B3burs troops could take advantage of
every weakness in the ranks of the defending force.
First, a determined hail of arrows was directed at the
Indian elephants, which panicked and turned to flee,
killing many of the defending forces. The disorder in
Indian ranks was as decisive a factor as the new
Mughal weaponry. A lethal combination, this led to
death for Sultan Ibr3htm Lodt and thousands of his
followers, slain on the battlefield and during the invaders consequent plunder and devastation.
P3ntpat heralded a new age of warfare in India and
ensured that future Mughal rulers would rely increasingly on firearms in battles. Although B3bur had utilized hand weapons and some light guns stationed on
forks, the need for large mortars soon became evident. Large guns were cast for B3bur in Agra and first
used during the Battle of Kanwa. These huge guns
were transported on baggage carts from one battle
to the next. Deceit was a favored tactic: Wooden
dummy guns were mingled with the real guns to provide the appearance of a vastly more powerful arsenal than B3bur actually possessed. B3burs determination and tactical expertise secured for him most of
northern India.
603
tle of Haldighat (1576), Akbar and his opponent, the
heroic R3n3 Prat3p Singh, ruler of Mew3r between
1572 and 1597, both used elephants in battle. R3n3
Prat3p lost the battle but retreated strategically to the
hills, later returning to regain some of his lost territory. His efforts to survive Mughal rule provided im-
personal ambitions continually drove Akbar to warfare and conquest. His Rajput opponents had not, in
those early stages, acquired the use of firearms. With
these weapons and with the Turkish tactic of using
archers on horseback, the Mughals were largely successful. At the Battle of Gogunda, also called the Bat-
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604
consciousness, and this label reflects the admiration with which he is perceived.
Fratricidal conflict became a marked feature of
Mughal political and military history with the rebellion from 1601 to 1604 of Prince Saltm (15691627), son and eventual successor of Akbar. Renamed Jah3ngtr, Saltm took the throne upon
Akbars death in 1605 and ruled until his own
death in 1627. Jah3ngtr added Ahmadnagar and
Kangra to the empire and subdued the Afghans in
Bengal. Jah3ngtrs encounters with the English
and Portuguese failed to convince him of the need
to take aggressive action to modernize his army;
build a great fleet; and acquire the superior armaments, tactical knowledge, and training methods
possessed by the English adventurers who sought
to trade with his empire.
Jah3ngtrs failure to appreciate the importance
of modernization had devastating consequences
for India, which eventually succumbed to the military might of the British and did not regain its
independence until 1947. An absence of imperial concentration on Western military techniques,
technology, and strategy resulted in long-term adverse political and economic consequences for
India.
The fifth Mughal emperor, Sh3h Jah3n ruled
between 1628 and 1658, when he was ousted from
the throne by his son 4#lamgtr, and died a prisoner.
Sh3h Jah3n is famous mainly as the builder of numerous palaces, particularly the Taj Mahal (16321653), a monument to his love for his wife. Militarily, he succeeded to an extent in the Deccan but
failed in his numerous attempts to oust the Persians
from Qandah3r. His illness in 1657 triggered a fratricidal war between his four sons, who all vied to capture the throne.
4#lamgtr emerged the victor, becoming Indias
sixth Mughal emperor and ruling until his own death
in 1707. Elephants were used with great effectiveness in this succession struggle. At the Battle of
Khajwa (1659), 4#lamgtrs brother and opponent
Prince Shuja (died c. 1660) utilized elephants swinging large iron chains from their trunks, wreaking
havoc among 4#lamgtrs troops. 4#lamgtr, however,
remained calm and emerged victorious.
605
vacuum that was energetically exploited by British
adventurers seeking to expand the British Empire
into the subcontinent.
4#lamgtr was so obsessed with his persecution of
the Hindu majority that he failed to grasp the significance of the European military threat and did not
comprehend the need to build a strong Indian navy to
match those of England and France. European nations controlled the oceans and this would be a fatal
weakness for India.
This tactical error contributed to the loss of Indian
independence, to its political takeover, and to its economic and financial degradation during European
colonial rule. Unlike earlier invaders and conquerors, the British had no intention of assimilating into
Indian civilization and saw India primarily as a
source of wealth, raw materials, and markets for their
homeland. This perception became more significant
as Britain led the world in industrialization and Indias wealth became vital to British economic survival, imperial expansion, and global wars with other
European colonial powers. 4#lamgtr effectively destroyed loyalty to the Mughal Empire, and, after his
death, weaker emperors could not recapture Akbars
earlier tradition of toleration. The Mughal Empire
collapsed under a series of internal revolts, fratricidal
conflicts, and determined pressure from the British
East India Company, which was founded in 1600 as a
trading agency and went on to acquire a vast empire
in the subcontinent.
606
steel bows, metal javelins, and 16-foot lances. Additionally, the Muslims had mobile artillery carried on
camels and elephants. B3burs tactic of using supplies as a wall of protection for the front line of gunners was utilized once again. Historians estimate that
the defeat of Vijayanagar resulted in the deaths of
16,000 troops. The great southern empire of Vijayanagar and its capital were destroyed by the invaders.
Indian warriors did not readily adopt the use of
firearms during warfare. The Rajput ruler Maharaja
Jaswant Singh (died 1678) would not use firearms in
the Mughal War of Succession (1658-1659) against
4#lamgtr, because he felt such weaponry was not
worthy of his heroic people.
During the Mughal era, the efficiency and range of
firearms improved considerably. The rather crude
primitive guns of B3burs day were replaced by more
accurate, sophisticated weapons, mounted on individual carriages pulled by bullocks. Indian artisans
were able to copy the latest guns for their customers
with a facility that would later amaze the Europeans.
Shtr Sh3h, recognizing the importance of the new
technology, trained and used over 25,000 matchlock
men in his army. Akbar took care to import and copy
the latest weaponry from Europe, and eventually infantry were equipped with guns rather than spears.
Indian commanders during the eighteenth century
also used field glasses to survey the battlefield.
Military Organization
Although B3bur took over India with a brilliant combination of strategy, tactics, discipline, and innovative weaponry, his successors had to fight continuously to consolidate the empire he had founded.
Constant warfare became a fixed feature of Mughal
history, and there was accordingly a great emphasis
on the organization of the military. B3burs contribution to military organization lay in his introducing India to a new type of warfare that included significant
reliance upon firearms. His emphasis on a highly mobile cavalry ensured victories in every major battle.
His determination to protect his forces while enabling them to fight ensured that his archers and
matchlock soldiers inflicted enormous casualties
607
The Second Anglo-Sikh War (1848-1849) ended with British control of the Punjab and Indias northwestern regions. Late Mughal intolerance of religious minorities, including the Hindus and Sikhs, deflected attention from
the real threat: British colonialism.
608
detrimental to the welfare of the Mughal Empire, because they frequently changed sides, plotted constantly against their employers, and even deserted on
the battlefield.
The spate of revolts fired by ethnic, religious, and
other forms of oppression adversely affected state
revenues by increasing the number of wars that had
to be fought at the very moment when Indians were
no longer contributing as generously to the Mughal
treasury. As the empire declined, soldiers were not
paid regularly and often revolted because they were
hungry and their families were starving. The Mu-
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609
with a few thousand hardy followers, lost its military focus and dedication after succumbing to the
luxury and opulence reaped from the resources of
India.
Although most Mughal battles were fought on
land and consisted of a variety of strategies and tactics suited to the particular terrain of the battlefield,
the imperial fleet was occasionally utilized, as in the
Battle of Daulambapur (1612). The Mughals won
this battle with artillery and well-trained marksmen.
Warfare played a crucial role throughout the long
history of Mughal India. It was the method by which
the Mughals gained India and ironically it was their
incompetence in warfare that cost them their empire.
The Mughals were the product of a military tradition
and utilized Indias vast wealth to further their imperial ambitions to conquer the whole subcontinent.
Their rule brought greatness to India politically and
militarily and may have created a latent Indian consciousness among the hordes of Turkish, Afghani,
Persian, Rajput, Sikh, Mar3zh3, and numerous other
groups that had made India their homeland. In the
end, the failure of Mughal rulers such as 4#lamgtr to
appreciate the value of this cultural and religious pluralism doomed the Mughal Empire. The nascent national outlook fostered by Akbar would have to wait
a few hundred years for Mahatma Gandhi (18691948) and Jawaharlal Nehru (1889-1964) to create a
nation from the descendants of the Mughals and all
the other peoples who came to India.
Contemporary Sources
The B3bur-n3meh (early sixteenth century; Memoirs of B3bur, 1921-1922), the memoirs of
the first Mughal emperor B3bur, are available in translation and provide a firsthand account of
his perceptions. Additionally, numerous contemporaries of the Mughals wrote detailed accounts of the battles in both the Persian and Indian languages. Some of these records of military
engagements have been translated or summarized into English and provide a vivid first-person
view of warfare during this era.
610
African Warfare
Dates: c. 1500-1935
Americas. An accurate assessment of the slave trade
as a cause of war is difficult, because there are insufficient records. There were states, such as Dahomey, that went to war to obtain captives to sell to
Europeans, but historians also have demonstrated regional and local causes for many African hostilities, such as the Yoruba civil wars of the nineteenth
century. There is agreement on one point: In virtually
all wars, regardless of their causes, captives were
sold to Europeans as slaves, often in exchange for
firearms.
In this environment of increased warfare, some
kingdoms disappeared and others grew, as centralization emerged as a strategy for both expansion and
defense. By the eighteenth century political and economic patterns had shifted. The savanna region of
West Africa declined, as trade routes moved southward to forest states, such as Asante, Benin, and Dahomey, where commerce was linked with European
merchants. In the nineteenth century there was a revival of state-building in the savanna region, as a series of jihads created new governments under Islamic
law. The states of Futa Toro and Futa Jalon emerged
in the west, and the Hausa city-states in northern Nigeria coalesced into the Sokoto caliphate. By midcentury the Tukulor Empire of 4Umar Tal (c. 17971864) and the Mandinka Empire of Samory Toure
(c. 1835-1900) had also emerged as expansionist
states with powerful military establishments. The
Mossi states, significant since 1500, became more
centralized and used their cavalry to resist Islamic
expansion and avoid conquest. With the collapse of
the Oyo Empire in the early 1800s, the Yoruba states
underwent a series of civil wars that lasted almost to
the end of the century. States, such as Ibadan, attempted to fill this power vacuum and adjust to
changing economic conditions, as Europeans encroached along the coast.
In East Africa, Swahili economic and military
Political Considerations
From the sixteenth to the late nineteenth centuries,
sub-Saharan Africa underwent drastic change,
evolving from a continent of empires, kingdoms,
states, and city-states to a continent under European
domination. Although some sixteenth and seventeenth century African groups were living in stateless
societies, most tended toward centralized states with
significant military institutions. Powerful empires
and kingdoms included those of Songhai, Oyo, Benin, and Bornu-Kanem in West Africa; Bunyoro,
Buganda, and the Swahili city-states in East Africa;
the kingdoms of the Kongo, Lunda, Luba, Changamire, and Mwanamutapa across Central Africa; the
Funj Sultanate in the Sudan; and the Kingdom of
Ethiopia.
Major causes of warfare were for the control of
trade routes, including rivers and lakes, and of markets and agricultural and grazing land. Other causes
were for the subjugation of peoples to serve as workers, soldiers, and taxpayers. There were hostilities
along the west coast of Africa for control of international trade. Some wars were waged to consolidate
power. Others, such as the Islamic jihads, or holy
wars, in West Africa, involved religion, although
most also had underlying economic or political considerations. In the nineteenth century African states
warred against one another, but these confrontations
soon were replaced by wars of resistance against European imperialism.
There is little consensus among historians concerning the relationship between the slave trade and
warfare. During the 1500s Portugal expanded into
Angola and Mozambique, disrupting existing states,
seizing land and slaves, and initiating Africa into the
Atlantic slave trade. Other European nations followed, and in the subsequent three hundred years,
millions of Africans were enslaved or died in the
611
612
African Warfare
613
away from the Atlantic slave trade toward the socalled legitimate trade, with a corresponding rearrangement of economic patterns and power balances.
Politically, the process of centralization continued
unabated in most parts of the continent. The integration of groups into larger, more centralized political entities provoked conflict and warfare, but in
some cases promoted wider security and stability.
The ending of the overseas slave trade, however,
corresponded with the beginning of European imperialism. The development of African states and
their subsequent increase in military prowess did
not prevent the onslaught of European imperialism,
but it did enable many African states to fight intense
wars of resistance, such as the heroic efforts of the
Mandinka and Dahomey kingdoms against France.
The Zulu, Asante, and Benin kingdoms raised similar resistance to English imperialism. Ultimately futile, this resistance inspired subsequent generations,
and in some instances, provided the basis for resistance to colonialism. Ethiopia escaped conquest
Military Achievement
Between 1500 and 1900 the evolution of African
warfare corresponded with the increasing centralization of African kingdoms, states, and empires. Centralization increased control of trade and resources
that were used for further expansion. Conquest augmented the human and material resources for state
formation, empire building, and consolidation of
power. By the nineteenth century such consolidation
had led to the economic integration of various regions of Africa.
West African states north of the rain forest were
able to purchase horses for cavalry. Some smaller
614
F. R. Niglutsch
In 1896, the Mahdist state of 4Abdull3h et Ta43$isha proclaimed a jihad and used extensive cavalry units to force
Egypt out of the Sudan.
African Warfare
networks were linked to long-distance routes, bringing products from remote regions into a wider market
arena connected to both the Atlantic and Indian
Oceans. Along the East African coast, trade was
dominated by the Swahili, who conducted armed
caravans into the interior, developed long-distance
commerce, and established Kiswahili as the lingua
franca, or common language, of eastern Africa.
Although the consolidation of territory and governance and the expansion of economic relations were
important accomplishments, two more overarching
achievements of the African states and their militaries were realized in the years from 1500 to 1900. The
first was the prevention of foreign occupation of African territory from 1500 to the 1870s. By the latter
date only 10 percent of African territory, mostly in
South Africa and Algeria, was under direct European
control. Although diseases and other factors contributed to this state of affairs, the strength of African
kingdoms and empires played a major role. Even during the era of the devastating slave trade, Africans
were able to control the terms of trade and limit Europeans to small fortifications on the west coast.
The other important achievement was the powerful resistance of many African states to nineteenth
century European imperialism. For many reasons,
such as superior European military technology and
logistical support, the use of African troops against
each other, and the inability of African states to form
alliances, the resistance was doomed to fail. Nevertheless, the era of resistance not only gave African
people a sense of pride but also fostered the development of political and ethnic identities. Dahomey resisted French armies for four years. Although the
massive, heavily armed British-Egyptian force defeated the Mahdist state at the Battle of Omdurman
(1898), the foundations had been laid for Sudanese
nationalism. In southern Africa political and economic turmoil also created broad-based ethnicities.
Despite defeat by the English and exploitation by the
Afrikaners, the concept of Zulu nationhood had been
established; today, the Zulu are South Africas largest ethnic group and a political force of considerable
importance. The founder of the Sotho kingdom,
Moshoeshoe (c. 1786-1870), used remarkable diplomacy and military acumen to develop armed moun-
615
tain fortifications that survived Zulu and Afrikaner
depredations; his kingdom emerged as the independent nation of Lesotho in 1966. With their defensive
positions, diplomacy, and Zulu-style military organization, the Swazi consolidated chieftaincies into a
kingdom that maintained its territorial integrity and
emerged as the independent nation of Swaziland in
1968. These are but a few examples. The memory of
the resistance survived in oral tradition and continues
to play a large role in contemporary African historical writing. It provided a historical and psychological
frame of reference in the nationalist struggles for
freedom and established the foundation for future nationhood.
616
African Warfare
shot Snider were used in West Africa. Eventually, repeating rifles, such as the Winchester, were also used.
Other firearms sold to African states included the
Snider-Enfield, Martini-Henry, Chassepot, Mauser,
French Gras, Lee-Enfield, and French Lebel models.
Although Europeans sold these weapons by the thousands, they were reluctant to sell machine guns and
artillery to African states, with the exception of Ethiopia. Some artillery was captured from European
armies, but its availability and usage was limited.
Overall, Africans failed to take advantage of modern
firearms. Their courage and high morale allowed
them to resist the European onslaught, but they could
not prevail.
Throughout Africa soldiers wore distinctive uniforms for identification, protection, and mobility.
The most elaborate uniforms belonged to the standing armies; the least formal were worn by the citizens armies. Soldiers of the Mandinka Empire wore
conical straw hats, rust-colored trousers, and leather
sandals; officers were identified by red turbans. Ethiopian soldiers wore trousers and knee-length tunics
with bands tied around the waist. Cavalry troops
wore long Islamic-style robes for lightweight protection from the sun. Throughout West Africa military
jackets were common, as were long or short trousers
with apronlike coverings. Troops in hot, dry regions
usually wore sandals; in forest areas and in southern
Africa, soldiers usually went barefoot.
Many African soldiers wore hats or helmets for
protection and identification. Protective devices ranged
from metal helmets in Benin and Ethiopia to strips of
rolled cloth tied in turbans around the head. Other
headgear was made of tightly woven palm fiber or
heavily quilted cotton.
The shield served as the basic armor for the infantry and some light cavalry. Shields were made of animal hide, wood, or tightly woven grass. They varied
in size and shape and sometimes reflected the social
status of the user. Ethiopians placed high value on
elaborately decorated shields. In southern Africa
shield-making was a specialized craft. Oval-shaped
Zulu shields, made from thick cattle hide, were 5 feet
long. When infantry advanced in close order, shields
were raised; when hitting the enemy line on the run,
shields produced a shock effect on the enemys de-
617
fenses. As the use of firearms spread, the use of
shields declined.
Units of heavy cavalry, such as those of the Sudan,
wore armor made of quilted cotton that was padded
with fiber. Armor covered both man and horse. In
some areas imported chain mail also was used. Not
all heavy cavalry wore armor, as it was expensive,
cumbersome, and reserved for the most elite units.
Other armor included metal breastplates, padded
jackets, and leather aprons worn around the waist.
Military Organization
Given the diversity of African civilizations, military
organization took a wide variety of forms. Historian
Bruce Vandervort describes four types of organization used by African states and empires. All were hierarchical systems. The first type included armies in
which recruits were summoned locally or regionally
to serve as discrete units within the military structure.
In Ethiopia, for example, regions supplied military
units that were under almost feudalistic local control;
after 1855 the centralized monarchy commanded a
more national army, with each unit representing its
individual region. The armies of Dahomey, Benin,
and Asante were similar in form. Some Islamic
states, such as the Tukulor Empire, also had regional
armies under central command; soldiers were under
royal control but served under officers from their
own regions.
In the second type of military organization, exemplified by that of the Zulu, individual soldiers from
various regions were integrated into preexisting
units. While under arms they lived, trained, and
fought together, although they represented different
regions or groups. Zulu kings Dingiswayo (c. 1770c. 1818) and Shaka (c. 1787-1828) changed the militarys traditional structure, transforming the Zulu age
groups into military units. Age groups were composed of young men who underwent a common
circumcision ceremony and initiation rite to enter
adulthood. With growing military threats, the Zulu
leadership did not want its young men to be far from
home during this initiation. Instead, young unmarried men were placed in regiments with others of
618
their age range. They were barracked in military settlements near royal households and became part of
the Zulu standing army under direct control of the
king. Additional youth were easily integrated into the
units. They bonded by living and training together
into a fighting force. The officers, or indunas, who
replaced traditional territorial chiefs, were appointed
by the king. The Ndebele instituted a similar system,
in which soldiers served not under officers from their
own region but under commanders who were part of
a rigid hierarchy.
A third type of military organization was the citizens army, in which all physically able males were
expected to bear arms during times of war. These levies commonly served as infantry under local officers
and usually were required to bring their own weapons and provisions. Using this model, Mai Idris
Alooma (r. 1571-1583) of Bornu-Kanem was able to
put more than 100,000 soldiers in the field. This general call-up system was common throughout West
Africa.
The fourth type of military organization was the
standing army of professional soldiers. Earlier African armies had been loosely composed of units called
up for specific purposes; by the nineteenth century
there was a parallel development in the growth of
centralized governments and the expansion of standing armies. Early examples were Bornus standing
unit of musketeers and Oyos professional war
chiefs. Later examples included Ethiopia and Dahomey and the Zulu, Tukulor, and Mandinka empires.
The roles of slaves in African armies varied. Because of the potential risk in arming slaves, many
states used them only for transport. Most typically,
slaves were used as soldiers in infantry units in the Islamic states of West Africas savanna regions. The
states of Bornu-Kanem and Sokoto made regular use
of slave-soldiers, and Samory Toure integrated enslaved riflemen into Mandinka infantry units. In the
nineteenth century some Yoruba states also used
slaves as soldiers.
Military structure also varied in terms of balance
between different types of units. In West Africas
open savanna regions the main force was cavalry,
usually supported by infantry. The cavalry was an
elite corps, sometimes forming a military aristoc-
African Warfare
Tactics included the conduct of the war, types of
assaults or maneuvers, coordination of cavalry and
infantry units, and use of weapons in the battle plan.
Tactics varied widely from region to region. This was
evident in the use of infantry. In late nineteenth century Ethiopia, for example, riflemen formed the core
of the infantry. They were assault forces trained to
maximize the effectiveness of their firepower, but
they were also skilled in the techniques of ambush
and skirmish. Infantry in the forest regions, however,
relied primarily on the frontal assault supported by
flanking movements. The armies of Asante and Dahomey had a standard marching formation: Advancing scouts preceded a main body with left and
right wings, followed by a rear guard. Such infantries
balanced units of archers, spearmen, swordsmen, and
those armed with knives and clubs.
The integration of firearms into African infantries
was a slow and uneven process. Firearms predomi-
619
nated only in Ethiopia, the Mandinka and Tukulor
Empires, and the forest states of West Africa. Although muskets were available in the forest states after the sixteenth century, their increasing use generally did not revolutionize warfare. Even in the second
half of the nineteenth century, when more effective
breechloaders were introduced, there was little change
in either military organization or tactics. Most states
failed to develop a coordinated use of firearms.
Cavalry units dominated the armies in the western, central, and eastern Sudanic regions. Mounted
units were composed of both light and heavy cavalry.
Heavy cavalry carrying lances and swords were used
as shock troops in direct assaults. Light cavalry rode
small, fast horses that were used in flanking movements or surprise attacks; these horsemen carried
lightweight spears and small javelins. Although most
states had infantry units that exceeded cavalry in
numbers, foot soldiers generally retained a support-
Nineteenth century East African slavers march their captives to the coast. In virtually all African wars of the sixteenth through nineteenth centuries, captives were sold to Europeans as slaves, often in exchange for firearms.
620
ive role. Heavy cavalry were sometimes accompanied by archers; light cavalry often had footmen to
carry extra javelins. Although 4Uthman dan Fodio
(1754-1817) eschewed heavy cavalry in favor of
light cavalry in his conquest of the Hausa states and
establishment of the Sokoto caliphate, his cavalry
tactics underwent few changes. Even the introduction of firearms had little impact on the Sudanic ideal
of the warrior-horseman.
There were two significant exceptions to the traditional Sudanic cavalry and its associated military tactics. Nineteenth century Tukulor and Mandinka were
Islamic states that incorporated large regions and di-
African Warfare
rather than throwing. The infantry advanced, sometimes running, in a tight line with shields raised to
ward off enemy spears. With their stabbing spears
they were able to engage the enemy at close quarters.
To take full advantage of this new weapon, they developed an assault formation known as the cowhorns. This consisted of three equal-sized regiments,
with a fourth held in reserve, formed into a crescent
shape. The center regiment was used as a shock
force; the other units that flanked to the left and right
extended forward. The center regiment initiated a
furious assault on the opponent, while the horns
enveloped the enemy from the sides and rear. Once
in close quarters, the soldiers used their stabbing
spears in hand-to-hand combat. Some Zulu shields
had hooks on top, which were used to pull down an
enemys shield and expose part of his body. Zulu soldiers underwent extensive training and maintained a
621
high level of fitness. Their highly mobile regiments
sometimes traveled 50 miles in a day. Zulu tactics
produced decisive victories and changed warfare
throughout southern Africa, as Nguni groups carried
the new developments northward into Mozambique,
Zambia, Zimbabwe, and Malawi.
African military doctrine was influenced by the
interrelationship of religion and warfare. Written
documentation, oral tradition, and material culture
indicate that virtually all armies engaged in pre- and
postbattle ceremonies for purification, protection,
and victory. Some kings and military leaders used
divination to choose the best time for battle. In some
societies the religious pantheon included a god of
war who was usually associated with iron, such as Gu
in Dahomey or Ogun in Yoruba territory. Invocation
of the supernatural was considered essential in warfare.
Contemporary Sources
Primary sources for the study of African military history include African, Arabic, and European writings; African oral tradition; and local histories written by African authors. For the savanna regions of West Africa, there are many sources written in Arabic by African Muslims and
North Africans. Two seventeenth century works are essential: Tarikh al-Fattash by Mahmud
Kati (1468-1593) and Tarikh as-Sudan by Abd al-Rahman as-Sadi (1596-1656). Ibn Fartua (fl.
1582), the imam of Mai Idris Alooma, wrote an account of his experience. The Kano Chronicle is a native history of the Hausa people. There is a large body of contemporary Arabic documentation on nineteenth century Islamic states written by Fulani scholars. There is a similar
collection of writing in Kiswahili on the history of the East African coast, among the most valuable being the Kilwa Chronicle and the History of Pate.
Beginning in the 1500s European merchants made regular visits to the African coasts.
Many left descriptions of wars, trade, and diplomacy. There are accounts by William Snelgrave, William Bosman, John Norris, Archibald Dalzel, Jean Barbot, O. Dapper, and many
others. A plethora of Portuguese records exist, but these accounts, written before the midnineteenth century, deal almost exclusively with African coastal regions and contain little reliable information on events in the interior.
Many late-eighteenth and nineteenth century European sources were written by explorers,
merchants, and missionaries. Some of the most important authors include Richard Burton,
Hugh Clapperton, Henry Fynn, Heinrich Barth, Henry Stanley, John Duncan, Samuel Baker,
Ren Cailli, J. S. Gallieni, John Speke, Mungo Park, and James Bruce. These works are valuable as sources but must be used carefully, as they contain ethnocentric observations and stereotypes, exaggerations, and misleading information. Nevertheless, they remain important sources
for the study of African armies.
There are two other types of African sources. The first, oral tradition, is an integral part of
African cultures and a rich source for military history. Given the connection between warfare
and royal power, oral tradition must also be evaluated with caution, because it often reflects the
622
Iran
Dates: c. 1500-1922
flict. The eastern provinces of the former Safavid
Empire (Khor3s3n, Sist3n, Her3t, and Qandah3r),
now passed into the hands of the Afghan Durr3ni Dynasty established by Awmad Sh3h Durr3ni (c. 17221773) at the death of N3dir Sh3h, while in the west
internecine warfare prevailed. By the close of the
eighteenth century, however, much of the plateau
had been brought under the firm control of the head
of the Q3j3r tribe, Agh3 Muwamm3d Kh3n (17421797). A cruel eunuch who had been castrated at the
age of six by one of N3dir Sh3hs nephews, Agh3
Muwammad Kh3n Q3j3r proved to be a brilliant and
rejuvenating leader of tribal cavalry who was able
to establish the frontiers that Iran continues to possess.
Agh3 Muwammad Kh3n Q3j3r bequeathed his
conquests to a nephew whose descendants, the Q3j3r
Dynasty, ruled Iran until 1925. Under this dynasty,
Iran experienced humiliating military defeats at the
hands of Russia (1804-1813 and 1826-1828) and
Great Britain (1856-1857), a successful war with the
Ottoman Empire (1821-1823), numerous internal
uprisings, and an unsuccessful expedition against the
Yomut Turkomans of the Gurgan region in 1889. The
two wars with Russia led to the loss of substantial territory in Transcaucasia beyond the Aras River.
Throughout the nineteenth century, the government of Iran faced intense diplomatic pressure and
threats to its national integrity from both Russia and
Great Britain and confronted the challenges of
Westernization and modernization. In 1906 popular
protests against the ineptitude and corruption of the
shahs government and its subservience to foreign interests led to the promulgation of a constitution and
the establishment of a rather dubious parliamentary
regime. However, the Anglo-Russian accord of 1907
divided Iran into spheres of influence between the
two great powers, an arrangement that the government of Iran was powerless to prevent. During World
Political Considerations
The names Iran and Persia are virtually synonymous. Iran is the name by which Iranians have always known their country. The name Persia, derived
from the ancient Greek Persis, was used by outsiders
until the twentieth century, when Reza Shah Pahlavi
(1878-1944), the shah of Iran from 1925 to 1941, insisted that Iran should become the international
usage.
Before the development of mechanized transport,
the Iranian plateau was a singularly forbidding land
in which to campaign. Its vast extent and prevailing
aridity, its alternating landscape of desert and mountain, its virtual absence of navigable rivers, and its
lack of roads and wheeled transport meant that it was
best suited to the traditional warfare of pastoral nomadic tribesmen.
From 1500 to 1722 Iran was ruled by the Safavid
Dynasty, one of the gunpowder-empires of the
early modern period of Islamic history. The Safavids
united the entire Iranian plateau and, at times, the adjacent regions of southern Iraq, Transcaucasia, and
western Afghanistan under the rule of a single monarchknown as a shah (king) or shahanshah (king
of kings)and imposed a form of Shiism upon most
of their subjects. Safavid rule eventually collapsed
under assault from Ghilzay Afghans of the Qandah3r
region, thereby inducing czarist Russia and the Ottoman Empire to seize extensive areas of northern and
western Iran.
Territorial integrity was restored by N3dir Sh3h
Afshari (1688-1747), a tribal leader of great military
capacity, who expelled the invaders and launched
successful campaigns far beyond the frontier of modern Iran, from Baghdad to Bukhara, and from the
Caucasus to Delhi. N3dir Sh3h was assassinated by
rival tribesmen in 1747, and the Iranian plateau then
reverted to tribal particularism and intertribal con623
624
Military Achievements
The military history of the period
from 1500 to 1922 falls into four
broadly overlapping phases. First,
under the rule of the Safavids (15001722) and of N3dir Sh3h (r. 17361747), Iran was a formidable military power, confronting neighboring Ottomans, Mughals, and Central
Asian Uzbeks. Iran relied mainly
upon its superb tribal cavalry but
increasingly adopted Ottoman and
European weaponry and military organization. At first, the Iranians were
no match against Ottoman artillery
and well-disciplined infantry, the famous janissaries, as shown by their
crushing defeat at aldiran (1514),
Hulton Archive/Getty Images
but they were quick to learn, and
early in the reign of Shah Zahm3sp I
Reza Shah Pahlavi, who as a colonel modernized the Iranian army
(1514-1576) the sources refer to the
and in 1925 overthrew the Qajar Dynasty that had ruled Iran since the
existence of gunners (tupchiyan) and
end of the eighteenth century.
musketeers (tufangchiyan). However, for most of the sixteenth cenWar I (1914-1918), despite its official neutrality, Iran
tury, the Safavids continued to rely upon their hardy
found itself invaded by the forces of the belligerents
and mobile cavalry, as in Zahm3sps great victory
and was later denied a voice at the Paris peacemaking
over the Uzbeks at Jam (1528).
in 1919. With Russia temporarily preoccupied with
The dynamic 4Abb3s I the Great (1571-1629),
the Bolshevik Revolution (1917-1921), Great Britain
who reigned from 1588 to 1629, introduced major inattempted, without success, to impose upon the Iranovations. His objectives were to enhance the power
nian government a treaty that would have reduced Iran
of the throne, to break the independence of the turbuto a virtual British protectorate. It was against the
lent tribal leaders, and to win back the lands lost to
Iran
the Ottomans by previous shahs. His reforms, primarily the establishment of regular units personally
loyal to and paid by the shah, some of whom were
equipped with handguns and field artillery, soon produced the sought-for results. In 1598 Her3t was recaptured from the Uzbeks, and in 1605 the shah won
a great personal victory over the Ottomans at Sufiyan, near Tabrtz. During protracted campaigning
thereafter, the shah reoccupied Erivan and Nakhshivan, and in 1624 captured Baghdad, from which
the Safavids had been expelled in 1534. In 1625, he
took the great frontier-fortress of Qandah3r from the
Mughals, and in 1626 he showed outstanding generalship in foiling a massive Ottoman attempt to reconquer Baghdad. Both Baghdad and Qandah3r were
lost in 1638, but 4Abb3s Is great-grandson, 4Abb3s II
(1633-1666), regained Qandah3r in 1648 and beat
back three Mughal attempts to retake it. Thereafter,
however, inept rulers, flaccid government, and declining revenues led inevitably to the debacle of
1722, when Iran was conquered by Afghan raiders.
The spectacular conquests of N3dir Sh3h, who devoted himself to reestablishing Irans former frontiers, made him the terror of neighboring lands. N3dir
Sh3h raised Iranian military prestige to unprecedented heights achieved at a dreadful cost of lives
and revenues.
In the second phase of Irans military history,
from 1747 to 1797, Iran, exhausted by the loss of manpower and resources that was the price paid for N3dir
Sh3hs glory, seemed to have turned in upon itself.
The country was wholly preoccupied with intertribal conflicts, cause and effect of the general economic decline, and paid little attention to developments beyond its frontiers. The forces involved were
much smaller than those of the recent past, were
probably less well equipped, and maintained themselves by plunder. The genius of Agh3 Muwammad
Kh3n Q3j3r in large measure reconstituted the Iranian monarchy as it had been under the Safavids.
During the third phase, which spanned the greater
part of the nineteenth century, Iran was forced to confront the reality of the overwhelming military superiority of Europe, specifically, of Russia and Great
Britain. Threatened by Russia in the northwest,
4Abb3s Mtrz3 (1789-1833), the heir-apparent of the
625
second Q3j3r ruler, Fatw 4Alt Shah (1771-1834), who
was also governor of Azerbaijan, became an enthusiastic reformer and variously sought the help of British and French advisers and equipment to defend his
exposed province. The British and French presence
was dependent upon the exigencies of those countries relations with Russia, but 4Abb3s Mtrz3 also
employed up to 88 Russian deserters and any other
European mercenaries who came his way. During the
First Russo-Iranian War (1804-1813), he possessed a
force of 6,000 infantry trained by European officers
and known as the Nizam-i Jadid, or the New Army.
The infantrys numbers had grown to 8,000 by 1817
and to 12,000 by 1831. In addition, there was a corps
of 1,200 gunners trained by European artillery officers and a single cavalry regiment, although where
the cavalry were concerned, 4Abb3s Mtrz3 retained
his faith in the esprit and mobility of traditional tribal
levies. To meet the needs of these forces, he established, under European supervision, an arsenal with a
cannon foundry and powder mill in Tabrtz and renovated the forts of Tabrtz, Ardabtl, and Khvoy.
Opinions varied considerably regarding the fighting capacity of the Nizam-i Jadid troops, and it was
said that 4Abb3s Mtrz3s rival for the throne, Muwamm3d 4Ali Mtrz3, governor of Kerm3nsh3h, had
greater success against the Russians with his Kurdish
tribal levies, armed and deployed as in the time of
Agh3 Muwamm3d Kh3n. 4Abb3s Mtrz3 encountered
opposition not only from military conservatives but
also from the Shiite clergy, who opposed innovations
of all kinds as likely to lead to the introduction of further infidel ways. Enthusiasm for further military reforms diminished after the Second Russo-Iranian
War (1825-1828) and confirmed the permanent Russian occupation of the Transcaucasian provinces.
The poor showing of Iranian troops during the AngloIranian War (1856-1857), which had been designed
to force the Iranian withdrawal from Her3t, only reinforced Iranian disillusion. It was quite apparent to
the new ruler, N3;tr al-Dtn Sh3h (1831-1896), that
his country lacked the ability to withstand foreign
aggression. Merely employing more foreign advisers, a stream of which made their way to Tehran
from Britain, France, Italy, and Austria, was not
enough; a much more radical solution was called for.
626
Although the shah was not unintelligent, he found
himself, in this, as in other aspects of the administration, pulled back and forth between reformers and reactionaries.
N3;tr al-Dtn Sh3hs first prime minister, Mtrz3
Taqt Kh3n Amtr Kabtr (c. 1798-1852), vigorously
initiated reforms, which came to nothing when, having provoked powerful enemies, the shah dismissed
him in 1851 and later had him executed. In 1857 a
ministry of war was created, and the reforming minister planned changes for the army between 1871 and
1881 that his capricious master would not allow him
to implement.
The fourth phase, however, emerged after N3;tr
al-Dtn Sh3hs European tour of 1878, during which
he developed great enthusiasm for what he saw of the
czars Cossack regiments. As a result, on his return to
Tehran, an Iranian Cossack Brigade was formed,
with Russian officers, equipment, and drill. The Cossack Brigade possessed a professionalism that no
previous unit of the Iranian army had possessed and
by the close of the century was the most effective
force in the country. Ironically, when a reactionary
ruler, Muhammad Ali Shah (1907-1909) used it in an
attempt to overthrow the newly granted constitution,
it was a rebel army of Bakhtiyari tribesmen who
marched on Tehran and saved the constitution. The
success of the Cossack Brigade led to the creation of
a Swedish-officered gendarmerie in 1910. During
World War I, the British, concerned with German
agents and recalcitrant tribes in eastern and southern
Iran, formed the South Persian Rifles. Service in all
these units exposed an ever-increasing number of
Iranian officers, noncommissioned officers, and
other ranks to European military discipline, drill,
weaponry, and tactics. They would constitute the
first generation of troops in Reza Shahs new model
army.
Iran
627
mander in the field. His victories and the enormous
booty he derived from them provided the revenues
with which to maintain increasingly larger armies.
These were composed of not only Iranians but also
Caucasians, Uzbeks, Afghans, and Baluchis. After
N3dir Sh3hs death in 1747, no further changes occurred for the remainder of the eighteenth century.
The revival of Iran under Agh3 Muwamm3d Kh3n
Q3j3r, who reigned from 1779 to 1797, was based
upon his skillful generalship, his astute balancing of
tribal rivalries, and his ability to bring out the best in
the fighting qualities of his followers.
Khanate
of Khiva
sp
Se
Ca
Black
ian
Ox
us
Sea
Chaldiran
Ottoman
Empire
Khanate of
Bukhara
Ti
ra
te
Tehran
s R.
Balkh
gri
Eup
Mosul
Qum
s R.
Baghdad
: a fav i d
Elfah3n
Karbala
Najaf
Her3t
Kabul
Empire
Basra
Shtr3z
Pe
n
Gulf
In
Hormuz
rs
ia
Strait of
Hormuz
R.
Mughal
Empire
Re
d
Se
a
s
du
Arabian
Sea
628
The most significant development during the
nineteenth century was the employment of European
military advisers, who introduced the Iranian military to European uniforms, drill, discipline, and tactics. These advisers were attached to the forces of not
only the shah but also his sons, who were themselves
provincial governors and who sought to improve the
quality of their provincial levies in anticipation of the
inevitable fratricidal struggle for the throne, which
would occur at the shahs demise. Thus, Muwamm3d
4Ali Mtrz3, governor of Kerm3nsh3h, enlisted French
officers to train his Kurdish levies. Such officers, Napoleonic veterans unemployed since Waterloo, were
en route for the Punjab to seek service with the Sikhs.
European units generally trained with weapons of
European origin, typically redundant muzzle-loaders
known as the Brown Bess. European observers commented unfavorably on the condition in which Iranian soldiers maintained their firearms, which were
inadequately cleaned and were often allowed to rust.
In the early decades of the nineteenth century, most
cannons were of British or French origin, but later in
the century there were imported Austrian muzzleloaders, including 7-centimeter mountain guns for
mule batteries. By the end of the century, the best artillery was of Russian manufacture. Again, European
observers visiting the Tehran arsenal saw artillery
pieces deteriorating from neglect, many with gun
carriages that had been allowed to rot. Unquestionably, during the quarter-century prior to the 1921
coup, the best-armed unit of the Iranian army was the
Cossack Brigade.
Military Organization
Throughout the Safavid period and down to the time
of Agh3 Muwamm3d Kh3n Q3j3r, there was a minimum of military organization. In wartime, the shah
summoned his vassal chieftains, who then, if they
were so inclined, came to his summons with their followers, who thereafter continued to serve under their
own hereditary leaders, who fought alongside those
of the shah, or abandoned him, if self-interest required. For this reason 4Abb3s I the Great was determined to rely as little as possible upon the turbulent
and often insubordinate tribal levies, even while recognizing their advantages: speed, mobility, hardiness, and agility. With these benefits in mind, he
formed two new units: the shahisevan, those loyal to
the shah, recruited from tribesmen willing to sublimate their tribal affinities in fanatic dedication to the
service of the shah, and the gullar or ghulams, slavesoldiers similar to the Mamlnks of earlier Muslim armies in the Middle East. Iranian slave-soldier troops
consisted of Christian slaves or prisoners of war, typically Armenians, Circassians, and Georgians. They
became converts to Islam and were recruited to join
what was, in effect, a kind of Safavid Praetorian
Guard, properly known as the ghulaman-i khassa-yi
sharifa, Slaves of the Noble Household. These
troops were paid for by revenues from the crownlands and were provided by the government with
firearms. Their commander (gullar-agasi) enjoyed
the prestige of being one of the greatest officers of
state. Unfortunately, the later Safavids allowed this
standing army to deteriorate to the point that little of
it remained by the eighteenth century. The Q3j3rs had
to begin anew, relying mainly upon foreign advisers
in an international situation far less favorable than
that enjoyed by their Safavid predecessors.
The military weakness of the Q3j3rs, and the pressure to initiate army reform that built up after 1921, is
easily demonstrated by a glance at the Iranian army
as it was in 1891. The total strength of 43,889 consisted of 12,427 irregular cavalry amassed through
tribal levies; 2,493 European-style semiregular cavalry; 25,000 European-style regular infantry; 1,800
artillery troops, with a nominal 164 guns; 80 camel
artillery, useless ceremonial relics of Safavid times;
169 Austrian Corps under the command of Austrian
officers; and 2,000 militia.
Only a few of these units were significant. The irregular cavalry were recruited from the tribes that
had formerly played so large a part in Iranian military exploits, among which the Kurds, Timuris, and
Bakhtiyaris stood out prominently. Tribal units were
commanded by tribal chieftains, who held the rank
of general (sartip) or colonel (sarhang). The subordinate officers consisted of a commander of one
hundred (yuzbashi), a commander of fifty (panjbashi), and a lieutenant (naib). On active service, of-
Iran
ficers received allowances but no pay. The common
soldier (sarbaz) and his noncommissioned officers
received a graduated scale of pay and rations: for the
sarbaz, 6.5 pounds of barley for himself and 13
pounds of straw for his horse per diem. Both officers
and men provided their own cavalry mounts. The latter were not more than 14.5 hands high but struck observers as possessing great strength, speed, stamina,
and remarkable powers of endurance. Riders were extremely agile and could perform extraordinary feats
of marksmanship at full gallop. One English officer,
Sir Henry Creswicke Rawlinson (1810-1895), who
trained tribal levies in southwestern Iran during the
early nineteenth century, described his men as the
very beau ideal of military material, the men being
athletic, strong, hardy and active. European conventional wisdom, however, held that the native officer
corps were of deplorable quality and that Iranian soldiers would perform well only when commanded
by European officers. The irregular cavalry were
organized into approximately ninety squadrons ofbetween fifty and seven hundred men drawn from
all parts of the country, the majority coming from
Khor3s3n (24 squadrons), Azerbaijan (23), Tehran
(6), Gtl3n and M3zandar3n (5), and Kerm3nsh3h (5).
The semi-irregular cavalry were equipped, drilled,
and trained in European style and consisted of three
regiments, two cantoned in Tehran and one in Elfah3n. The two regiments in Tehran formed the Cossack Brigade, with officers and weapons provided by
Russia, although both officers and men supplied their
own horses. The government issued rifles, swords,
saddles, and bridles. The government also provided
barracks (sarbazkhana), accommodations facing an
open square or courtyard, with stabling on the
ground-floor, resembling a traditional caravansary.
The regiment in Elfah3n was equipped and trained in
imitation of Prussian uhlan light cavalry, a whim of
the powerful governor Zil as-Sultan, a son of N3;tr
al-Dtn Sh3h. Taken as a whole, the semi-irregular
cavalry, and especially the Cossack Brigade, were regarded as the most effective part of the army, thanks
to the zeal of their Russian officers.
The regular infantry were conscripted province by
province, under the command of the local governor.
So grim was the life of the sarbaz held to be that re-
629
cruitment was by virtual impressment, local communities banding together to designate the unfortunate
recruit or sometimes paying a sum of money to anyone who would volunteer freely. Service was for life,
unless a soldier could raise enough money to buy a
discharge from his colonel, and the age range in the
regiments ran from adolescent boys to toothless
graybeards. However, Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians, and cultivators on crown-lands were exempt
from military service. A regiment ideally consisted
of 10 companies of 100, both officers and men, making a total of 1,000 men per regiment, but the full
complement of men was rarely achieved, and most
companies were fixed at around 70. The pay and allowances of the common soldiers were pitiable and
were further subject to various perquisites and bribes
demanded by the officers. Uniforms, provided by the
government, consisted of a tunic of coarse blue serge,
trousers of the same material, a brown leather belt,
and a black lambskin hat known as a shako, with a
brass badge. Outside Tehran, however, most soldiers
lacked a full uniform.
630
pecially those stationed in Azerbaijan, acquired the
rudiments of strategic thinking and battlefield tactics
from their European military advisers, but for most of
the century they received no formal military education. At the beginning of N3;tr al-Dtn Sh3hs reign,
his first reforming prime minister, Mtrz3 Taqt Kh3n
Amtr Kabtr, founded a European-type academy, the
Dar al-Funun, which included some classes in military instruction designed specifically for young officers. Later in the reign, the shahs favorite son and
commander in chief, Naib as-Saltana, established a
military academy. However, as late as 1891, the
shrewd Lord George Curzon (1859-1925) could write
of the officer corps: Ignorant of military science,
Contemporary Sources
Accounts of warfare under the Safavids and Q3j3rs are to be found in contemporary Persianlanguage chronicles. Two excellent examples are Iskandar Beg Munshis (1560-1633) Tarikh-i
4Alamara-yi 4Abaci (c. 1571-1629; The History of Shah 4Abb3s the Great, 1978) and Hasan-e
Fasais (born c. 1821), Farsnamah-t Nasiri (1895-1896; History of Persia Under Q3j3r Rule,
1972). Safavid military organization is described in an anonymous Safavid administrative
manual, Tadhkirat al-muluk (c. 1137-1725; A Manual of Safavid Administration, 1943). Chapters 21, 23, and 26 of Sir John Malcolms (1769-1833) two-volume The History of Persia from
the Most Early Period to the Present Time (1815) provide material on the early Q3j3r army by
an eyewitness. In addition to the official reports of foreign embassies in Tehran, European travelers in nineteenth century Iran frequently wrote down their subjective but insightful impressions of military matters. The most informative is that of Lord George Curzon, Persia and the
Persian Question (1892). Brigadier-General Sir Percy Sykes (1867-1945), who commanded
the South Persian Rifles during World War I, provides a personal account of wartime Iran in
chapters 85 through 89 of A History of Persia (1915).
Books and Articles
Atkin, M. Russia and Iran, 1780-1828. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1980.
Axworthy, Michael. The Sword of Persia: Nader Shah, from Tribal Warrior to Conquering Tyrant. New York: I. B. Tauris, 2006.
Blow, David. Shah Abbas: The Ruthless King Who Became an Iranian Legend. New York: I. B.
Tauris, 2009.
Chalabian, Antranig. The Scorched-Earth Strategy That Shah Abbas I Used Against the Turks
in Armenia. Military History 16, no. 6 (February, 2000): 22.
Cronin, Stephanie. The Army and the Creation of the Pahlavi State, 1910-1926. London: I. B.
Tauris, 1997.
English, Barbara. The War for a Persian Lady. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1971.
Finkel, Caroline. Battle of aldiran. In The Readers Companion to Military History, edited
by Robert Cowley and Geoffrey Parker. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
Haneda, Masashi. The Evolution of the Safavid Royal Guard. Iranian Studies 21 (1989): 57-86.
Iran
631
Kazemzadeh, Firuz. The Origin and Early Development of the Persian Cossack Brigade.
American Slavic and East European Review 15 (1956): 351-363.
Lockhart, Laurence. The Persian Army in the Safavid Period. Der Islam 24 (1959): 89-98.
Matthee, Ruda. Unwalled Cities and Restless Nomads: Firearms and Artillery in Safavid
Iran. In Safavid Persia: The History and Politics of an Islamic Society, edited by Charles
Melville. London: I. B. Tauris, 1996.
Savory, Roger. The Sherley Myth. Iran 5 (1967): 73.
Ward, Steven R. Immortal: A Military History of Iran and Its Armed Forces. Washington, D.C.:
Georgetown University Press, 2009.
Films and Other Media
Iran: The Forgotten Glory. Documentary. Mystic Films International, 2009.
The Persians. Documentary. History Channel, 2006.
Gavin R. G. Hambly
Japan
Modern
Dates: c. 1600-1930
Political Considerations
the bakufu, which helped to make policy and personnel decisions, and supervised the some 260 daimyos
who still presided over feudal Japan. Daimyos were
In the years from 1600 to 1930, Japan underwent
divided into inside (fudai) and outside (tozama), with
three major shifts in political leadership: The Tokuthe former receiving political favors for their loyalty
gawa period was followed by the era of the Meiji
to the government in Edo.
Restoration, and then, shortly before 1930, the nation
The emperor and the samurai remained two major
saw the triumph of military ultranationalism over
feudal entities of the Tokugawa peace, but their
constitutional government. The Tokugawa era, or
power waned in the ensuing century as the daimyos
period of Great Peace, marked a turning point for
jockeyed for influence in the new government, and
Japan after centuries of civil war that had divided the
landed estates required less protection from samurai
archipelago as families struggled against one another
armies than in previous periods. Challenges to the
for power around landed estates called shoen. After
rule of the shogun were minimal as violence was rethe military failures of two pretend shoguns (Oda
stricted to small skirmishes in the streets, peasant reNobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi), Japan was fibellions, and the enforcement of maritime restrictions
nally dominated by a powerful political daimyo lord
and the ban on Christianity imposed in the 1630s and
named Tokugawa Ieyasu. The shogun used the alter1640s. The spread of Christianity and the Portuguese
nate attendance system in order to capture rival
Christian missionaries who arrived in Japan with
daimyos by forcing each to maintain two residences,
Western and Chinese merchants were seen as threats
one at home and one in the new capital city of Edo
to the unity and stability of the Tokugawa state. With
(later called Tokyo). He also created an elaborate busome very particular exceptions (such as the Dutch),
reaucratic structure under a tent government called
foreigners were banned from the interior parts of the Japanese archipelago, and Japanese Christians were
persecuted. These actions, along
1603 Tokugawa Ieyasu becomes shogun, marking the beginning of
with famines and other difficulties,
early modern Japanese history.
later led to a number of rebellions
1867 The last Tokugawa shogun surrenders power to imperial forces,
and uprisings, the largest and most
paving the way for the Meiji Restoration and Japans reentry
famous of which was the Shimabara
into world politics and culture.
Rebellion in 1637-1638.
1904 Japan attacks the Russian-controlled port of Lshun, traditionally
The next major period of change
known as Port Arthur, beginning the Russo-Japanese War,
for
Japan did not arrive until the
fought between Russia and Japan for control over Korea and
mid-nineteenth
century, when the
Manchuria.
appearance
of
gunboat
diplomacy
1905 The Japanese navy wins a stunning victory at the Battle of
forced the so-called opening of JaTsushima, devastating the Russian fleets and forcing Russia to
pan by Western powers, underscorsurrender Korea and other territory to Japan.
ing the weaknesses of the shogunate
Turning Points
632
Japan
633
634
Japan, c. 1615
Sea of
Ja p a n
Japan
H L. Biwa
Kyfto
bsaka
Castle
Mito
Battle of
Sekigahara
Edo
Odawara
Shikoku
KyNshN
Pa c i f i c
Ocean
= Tokaido Road
Military Achievement
Around 1600, the Japanese were focused first on defeating enemies militarily within their borders; by the
nineteenth century, their focus was on challenging
international rivals in several theaters in the Pacific
Rim. The Tokugawa period was marked at first by a
civil war that led to a struggle between members of
the daimyo class as they fought to become the first
unifier of Japan under the shogunate. After conquering his competitors at the Battle of Osaka Castle in
1615, Tokugawa Ieyasu inaugurated a long period of
peace during which few outside invaders or internal
struggles plagued the Japanese mainland.
It was really not until the nineteenth century, after
the opening of Japan by the United States in 1853,
that the Japanese began to be engaged in military
conquest outside their national borders. After a treaty
negotiation with the Chinese in 1871 that granted extraterritoriality, Japan expanded its influence by engaging in a five-month war with neighboring Taiwan
Japan
over a dispute in the Ryukyu Islands that led to
Japans attaining control over the complete archipelago. The expanding empire next turned toward
neighboring Korea, which was believed to be the
dagger pointing at the heart of China. Diplomatic
missions to Korea finally led to a complete breakdown in Japans relationship with China in 1894, resulting in the Sino-Japanese War. During the nine
months of this conflict, Japanese troops expelled the
Chinese army from Korea, defeated the north Chinese navy, captured Port Arthur and the Liaodong
Peninsula in south Manchuria, and seized a port
on the Shandong Peninsula. The ensuing Treaty of
Shimonoseki, signed in April of 1895, gave Japan
Taiwan and the Pescadores, Port Arthur and the
Liaodong Peninsula, an indemnity, and a promise by
China to respect Koreas autonomy.
These military and diplomatic achievements did
not last, however, as Russia, backed by other Western powers, forced Japan to cede all of its mainland
acquisitions back to Russia. By 1900, Japan had begun the drive toward greater power status by signing
635
an alliance with Britain and going to war against Russia in 1904-1905. Russias holdings threatened Japanese interests in Korea, and when Russia refused to
make concessions, Japan launched a surprise attack
on Port Arthur. The Treaty of Portsmouth (1905), negotiated by the United States and President Theodore
Roosevelt, gave Japan expanded power after the humiliating defeat of the Russian army and navy, which
had sailed halfway around the world to engage the
Japanese. Japan envisioned an empire that would
bring prestige and power and would be a liberating
force for what later ultranationalist Kita Ikki deemed
a world of Asia for Asians.
During World War I, Japan expanded both economically and diplomatically. By protecting sea lanes
in the Pacific and mounting an offensive against the
German-held Shandong Peninsula, Japan acquired a
mandate over German-held islands in the region. Japan tried to impose its will on China through the
Twenty-one Demands by the end of 1918, and many
concessions were offered to Japan at the Versailles
peace conference.
Japanese warships take Port Arthur during the bloodiest and most controversial battle of the Sino-Japanese
War of 1894-1895.
636
Following World War I, Japan spent most of the
1920s expanding its military influence while at the
same time playing an active role in the development of
the worlds economy. By 1930, the Japanese military
had begun a full-scale plan to take over all of Manchuria, eventually setting up the Greater East Asia
Co-Prosperity Sphere on the eve of World War II.
F. R. Niglutsch
Japan
637
style of warfare. The size of a daimyos army was determined by the assessed wealth of the daimyos rice
fields; thus the largest property owners could muster
the largest armies. Troops were known as samurai
those who servea reflection of the hierarchical
system of obligation, at the apex of which was the
shogun. The ashigaru were low-level infantrymen
drawn from the samurai ranks. Traditionally, the
samurai were the only troops mounted on horseback.
After the last great battle at Osaka Castle in 1615,
samurai as a military class were given land and titles
under Tokugawa rule.
The feudal system of retainers and landowners
lasted until the Meiji Restoration of 1868, when the
military was reorganized into the Japanese Imperial
Army. Copying the Western style of military organization based on the German model of promotion
through the ranks, the Japanese system was directly
related to the political reorganization of the government. Army and general staffs reported directly to the
emperor Meiji himself, and the military had virtually
no oversight by the Japanese parliament, known as
the Diet. The emperor surrounded himself with a
small group of military advisers and had veto power
over military spending. This system, based on the
Prussian system designed after German unification
in 1871, allowed an elite class of military advisers
to expand their power throughout Japans constitutional monarchy. Huge amounts of money were spent
on military organization both before and after the
Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895, much of the funding going to the foremost general of the period,
Yamagata Aritomo. Yamagata cast a long shadow
over the Japanese military during the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries. Along the way, Japan
produced an efficient military schooling system, a
well-organized active and reserve force, a professional officer corps that thought in terms of regional
threat, and well-trained soldiers armed with the most
advanced weapons of the day.
Military Organization
The organization of Japanese armies from 1600 to
1930 evolved from an elite fighting corps of samurai
armies commanded by individual daimyos to a modern imperial army after 1868 based on the European
638
from 1600 to 1868, mainly centered on the samurai
warrior class, the members of which were controlled
by the daimyos, or local territorial lords. These armies used cavalry tactics and close formations on
horseback led by the samurai; daimyos led these divisions. Dismounted cavalry would be used in siege situations, along with ashigaru (foot soldiers). Castle
towns provided defense to local townspeople and to
daimyos families; thus, during the struggle to inaugurate what became known as the Tokugawa era,
Tokugawa Ieyasu needed to overrun Osaka Castle
using artillery followed by a main assault using
ground troops. Practicing ancient bushidf discipline
and tactical approaches to combat, samurai armies
after the Battle of Osaka Castle concentrated mainly
on land development as their feudal responsibilities
centered primarily on peace.
From 1868 to 1930, the Japanese military moved
in a new direction in its uses of strategy and tactics.
After the Meiji Restoration, Japanese modernizers
traveled the globe and brought back to Japan the latest in military weapons and doctrine. The Choshu
Five, a small coterie of Japanese, laid the groundwork for what has been called technological plagiarism on a truly heroic scale. The Japanese government brought both French and German military
advisers to Japan to set up military training posts and
academies for the development of an officer corps.
With the development and implementation of the
Japanese Imperial Army, which served the newly restored emperor, Japan abolished all territorial land
rights and installed mandatory military service in order to build a citizen army on the nineteenth century
Library of Congress
Contemporary Sources
All historical understanding of the Japanese samurai should begin with the seventeenth century text Hagakure (Hagakure: The Book of the Samurai, 1979). This history, written by a samurai who converted to Buddhism, chronicles the ethical path that all warriors must follow. The
story of the 1615 Battle of Osaka Castle was reported by the first Japanese newspaper shortly
after the battle, which also printed an image depicting the burning of the castle and the victory of
Tokugawa Ieyasu. Probably the most significant document in regard to the Japanese military
from the pre-Meiji era is political writer Honda Toshiakis 1798 work, A Secret Plan for Government, in which Honda lays out a program aimed at Japans fulfilling four major needs: to
learn the effective use of gunpowder, to develop metallurgy, to increase trade, and to colonize
Japan
639
nearby islands and more distant lands. This program set the stage for Japan to embrace Westernstyle imperialism after 1868.
No understanding of the impact of the Meiji era would be complete without a reading from
either Itf Hirobumi or Fukuzawa Yukichi. The formers influence on the Meiji Constitution
(1889) is evident, and reading that document provides a glimpse into the source of the Japanese
militarys power. Fukuzawa urged Japan to embrace Westernization and to take a hard-line approach to foreign affairs. His work led to the publishing of an 1885 editorial titled Escape from
Asia, which became an anthem for the Japanese national essence after 1900. Finally, Lieutenant Tadayoshi Sakurai, a low-grade officer, wrote a fascinating account of a military engagement during the Russo-Japanese War titled Attack upon Port Arthur, 1905; this work gives
the reader some understanding of the honor culture in the Japanese military during the imperial
era.
Books and Articles
Beasely, W. G. Japanese Imperialism, 1894-1945. New York: Oxford University Press, 1991.
Drea, Edward. Japans Imperial Army: Its Rise and Fall, 1853-1945. Lawrence: University
Press of Kansas, 2009.
Ebrey, Patricia Buckley, Anne Walthall, and James B. Palais. East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and
Political History. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2006.
Gordon, Andrew. A Modern History of Japan: From Tokugawa Times to the Present. 2d ed.
New York: Oxford University Press, 2008.
Jansen, Marius B. The Making of Modern Japan. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
2000.
Myers, Ramon, ed. The Japanese Colonial Empire, 1895-1945. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1987.
Paine, S. C. M. The Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895: Perceptions, Power, and Primacy. New
York: Cambridge University Press, 2005.
Turnbull, Stephen. Osaka 1615: The Last Battle of the Samurai. New York: Osprey, 2006.
Films and Other Media
Japan: Memoirs of a Secret Empire. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service/Paramount,
2004.
The Last Samurai. Feature film. Warner Bros., 2003.
Letters from Iwo Jima. Feature film. Malpaso/Amblin, 2006.
Nova: Secrets of the Samurai Sword. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service/WGBH,
2008.
The Seven Samurai. Feature film. Toho, 1954.
Shogun. Feature film. Paramount Pictures, 1980.
J. Nathan Campbell
China
The Qing Empire
Dates: 1644-1911
tural infrastructure. Regulations were also enacted to
reduce the ability of the aristocracy to accumulate
large amounts of agricultural land. These laws were
the first modern attempt in China to enact meaningful
land reform.
Most of these programs, however, were unsuccessful, and Chinas agricultural elite used the widespread hatred of the Manchus to reduce the authority
of the Qing government. This allowed the aristocracy
to violate new regulations and continue to amass
large landholdings. The gulf between the rich and rural poor grew to dangerous proportions.
Chinas commercial sector also began to expand
at an unprecedented rate. Much of this expansion was
fueled by the new wealth of Western Europe and the
silver from its mines in the Western Hemisphere. The
Manchu government reacted to this new international economic reality by lifting the travel restrictions on Chinese merchants. This new freedom allowed the evolution of an extensive trade network
that had far-reaching effects on Chinese society. The
most important social impact of this trade was the
creation of a powerful new class of merchants that
controlled the majority of Chinas international commerce. This new class used its wealth and power to
challenge Manchu authority, especially in southern
China.
By the 1780s the Qing Dynasty was beginning to
show signs of serious decline. The governmental bureaucracy was no longer the domain of the best and
the brightest of Chinese society. The classical civil
service examination system had been corrupted, and
both cheating and favoritism had become commonplace. Wealthy landed aristocrats and merchants used
their power to purchase influence within the government bureaucracy. Corrupt officials redirected money
allocated for civil engineering projects into their own
Political Considerations
The adoption of an isolationist policy by the Ming
Dynasty (1368-1644) began a period of decline that
ended in the downfall of the regime. This decline became evident by the beginning of the sixteenth century and was accelerated by the corruption of the
bureaucratic infrastructure that destroyed the effectiveness of the central government. Chinas most significant domestic problem was the collapse of the
empires vast public works system. Widespread corruption led to misappropriation of funds meant for
the construction and repair of the dikes and irrigation
systems upon which Chinas agricultural life depended. This shortfall led to starvation and open rebellion and invasion by the Manchus from Mongolia.
The Manchus captured Beijing in 1644, and by 1647
they had brought the rest of the nation under their
control.
The new rulers of China established the Qing
(Ching) Dynasty (1644-1911), which would be the
last dynasty in Chinas history. The new leadership
retained much of the Mings political structure, but it
took a more activist role in the day-to-day operation
of the government, placing Manchu officials in the
most important positions. The Qing continued to use
the Confucian examination system as the educational
foundation of their governmental system. Despite the
fact that the Qing maintained much of the traditional
culture, many Chinese continued to consider them
inferior and unfit to rule.
The early years of the Qing Dynasty were marked
by a concerted effort to end the poverty of the rural
population. The government passed reforms that
lowered both the taxes and labor requirements of the
peasants. The dynasty also allocated a considerable
amount of money to the maintenance of the agricul640
China
641
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642
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cade and cost twenty million lives. An attempt to reform the social injustices inherent in the traditional
Chinese social and political structure, it was motivated by the overwhelming feelings of disgrace and
humiliation that had resulted from the Chinese defeat
in the Opium Wars. A growing segment of Chinese
society believed that history was passing China by,
and if significant reforms were not made, the nation
would be at the mercy of the growing power of the
West. The social reforms, especially those concerning land redistribution and the rights of women, reflected the belief that the real power of the West
rested in its mobile and egalitarian social structure.
The provincial gentry attempted a series of re-
China
643
Military Achievement
The last century of the Qing Dynasty was devoid of
any significant military achievement and was witness to the collapse of Chinas defense establishment. This once-mighty nation was defeated by the
armies of both Europe and Japan, which by the middle of the century had surpassed Chinas military in
both tactical and technological skill. The military disasters suffered during this century not only threatened to make China into a colonial subject, but they
also were at the heart of two bloody and disastrous
civil uprisings.
The Opium Wars were the first of these great military failures and clearly exposed both the diplomatic
and military weaknesses of China. By the beginning
644
China
645
F. R. Niglutsch
universal relationship and basic equality of all humankind in the eyes of God. The goal of the uprising
was to create a society based upon social and economic equality. This new Western ideology challenged the traditional foundation of Chinese civilization, which was structured upon the Confucian
model of the unchanging relationship between superior and subordinate. The rebellions program of economic equality based upon the complete redistribution of land threatened Chinas landed aristocracy.
The Qing Dynasty was saved by a coalition of
Chinese and international forces that eventually isolated and annihilated the rebel forces. Once again,
however, the Chinese body politic was deeply frightened by these events, and the power and prestige of
the Manchu Dynasty was degraded.
As the nineteenth century neared its conclusion,
China faced a new threat from a traditional Asian
competitor, Japan. These rivals had followed different courses in the nineteenth century. While China
under the Qing Dynasty steadfastly fought to maintain its traditional structure and worldview, Japan
openly and aggressively embraced Western science,
technology, and educational models. After the arrival of Commander Matthew C. Perry (1794-1858),
the Japanese realized that their future would be
threatened if they ignored the technological superiority of the West. Unlike the Confucian traditionalists
that fought to save the Qing Dynasty and its outdated
and corrupt structure, Japanese intellectuals and political leaders undermined the feudal Tokugawa regime (1603-1867) and restored the emperor to a position of power. This period is known as the Meiji
Restoration (1866-1868), and was a major turning
point in the history of East Asia. Rather than limiting
Japans exposure to Western ideas, the new Japanese
646
government sent the countrys best and brightest to
the most prestigious Western institutions of higher
learning. Japans goal was to learn as much as possible about these new scientific advancements so it
would be able to prevent the West from making Japan into another China.
By the 1870s Japan was well into the process of
industrialization, and by 1890 it had developed a
new, highly technological and very powerful military force. Both the army and navy had utilized
Western technology to increase their military effectiveness, and Japan could now declare itself a true international power. Japans new political and military
leadership were cognizant of the extent of European
imperialism in Asia, and began to exercise its right to
enter into this new international competition. Japans
new aggressive posture was supported by a highly
developed sense of cultural superiority and a unique
racial bias that supported the Japanese belief in the
nations right to dominate Asia.
The First Sino-Japanese War centered on the
question of which country would control the Korean
Peninsula. Because China had dominated the area for
centuries, the Qing government believed that Korea
remained within the Chinese sphere of influence.
The Japanese challenged this perception in 1876
when they sent one of their new naval squadrons to
forcibly open the peninsula to Japanese economic interests. All-out war was avoided when Japan and
China signed the Treaty of Kanghwa (1876), which
gave Japan trading privileges at two of Koreas ports.
This was only a temporary solution, however; Japan
fully expected eventually to dominate the area.
The Japanese military establishment continued to
push for a military solution to the Korean question,
and it was finally presented with an opportunity
when the peninsula was the site of an anti-Japanese
uprising in July, 1894. Units of Japans new modernized army put down the rebellion, captured the Korean monarch, and forced him to remove all Chinese
nationals from the country. Within two days, the Japanese navy had engaged the Chinese fleet stationed
in the area and destroyed the Kowshing, a British
steamer that was carrying Chinese reinforcements.
Relations between the two nations continued to deteriorate, and war was declared on August 1, 1894.
China
647
F. R. Niglutsch
Japanese forces enter China after crossing the Yalu River (1894).
648
and Christianity. Because most of the missionary stations were located in isolated rural areas, the Christian clergy were especially easy targets. The rebels
took advantage of this situation and carried out a series of vicious attacks that included rape and mutilation.
The Western diplomatic community responded
by creating a multinational strike force of more than
9,000 men to put down the uprising. The two most
important engagements were at the cities of Tientsin
(1900) and Beijing (1900), with especially brutal
fighting at Tientsin. Most interesting to the historian
of East Asian military history is the fact that the Japanese army played a crucial role in both battles. The
success of the Japanese armed forces instilled considerable confidence within the military leadership
and would be a significant factor in Japans decision
to engage Russia four years later. The Boxer Rebellion had disastrous effects on the Qing Dynasty. The
victorious allies forced China to dismantle the majority of its armed forces and also fined it the equivalent
of 333 million dollars.
Military Organization
The Ninth U.S. Infantry Gatling Gun Detachment in Beijing, protecting U.S. interests in China during the Boxer Rebellion (1900).
China
tary fighting force. These reforms began with the officer corps, which would now be allowed to choose
subordinates and create units that were based upon
close working relationships between officers and
soldiers. In the future, when recruits joined a unit,
they would be obligated to obey only the orders of
their commanding officer. The theory behind this
military paradigm was that the average fighting man
would perform much better in the heat of battle if
he had absolute confidence in his superiors. These
reforms were the foundation of Chinas military organization until its humiliation in the First SinoJapanese War.
In 1895, after the First Sino-Japanese War, the
Chinese military initiated sweeping changes in the
organizational structure of its armed forces. These
changes were based upon the regulations used by the
armies of the industrial nations and were the result of
the latest research conducted in the most prestigious
military academies in the world. The foundation of
this new organizational structure was the creation of
a large permanent professional army. This new force
would consist of two divisions, each having two infantry brigades and one cavalry and artillery unit.
The enlisted personnel would serve four years of fulltime duty and would then be placed on First Reserve
unit duty. As First Reserves, they would be classified
as civilians but would be required to report for training one month per year. During this time enlisted personnel would receive 50 percent of their regular army
pay. At the end of three years, the soldiers would then
be transferred to Second Reserve units, where they
would serve for another four years, after which they
would be released from military service. The theory
behind this force structure was that China would always have a large supply of trained military personnel to draw upon in a time of crisis.
649
that would provide China with the organization it so
desperately needed.
The first significant work in this area was carried
out in the years following the Opium Wars by the Qing
historian and geographer Wei Yuan (Wei Yan; 17941854), who published a book on the planning of
coastal defenses, in which he made two important observations about the future of Chinese security. First
and foremost was that the Qing government needed
to accept that European ships and guns were superior
to those of China. Wei Yuan suggested that the emperor should allocate funding for both the purchase
of these weapons and the creation of a military industrial complex that would enable China to manufacture similarly high-quality armaments.
Wei Yuan also argued that the success of Western
armies was based upon the quality of their military
personnel. Every Western army paid both high wages
and good benefits, a requirement in the modern world
of training, discipline, and action under fire. Wei
Yuan advocated Chinas development of a military
pay structure that would attract strong, intelligent,
and loyal recruits.
Wei Yuan noted that once the nation made these
basic changes, it must then develop the correct plan
of implementation utilizing both military and diplomatic strategies. He believed that China needed to
realize that it did not possess the military power to
actively engage potential adversaries either in the
South China Sea or along its coastline and instead
should concentrate on protecting its inland waterways where it could use its vast territory and large
population to its best advantage. Many military historians believe that Wei Yuan was the first to conceive of the strategy of a retrograde defense, based
upon drawing a potential enemy deep into ones own
interior, isolating and then destroying it.
Like most intellectuals of his day, Wei Yuan believed that the use of the military must never be the
first choice, but should be considered only when all
other diplomatic alternatives have been exhausted. It
was thought that a great leader should always use a
combination of military alliances and international
trade as the foundation of foreign policy. The ancient
tradition of using one barbarian to control another
was still relevant, and an extensive knowledge of cur-
650
rent events was a necessary tool in advancing this
strategy. Positioning ones nation to take advantage
of the current imperialist competition among the industrial nations could one day produce fruitful results. Wei Yuan also adhered to the concept that trading partners rarely entered into military conflict with
one another, and he lobbied extensively for China to
open its doors to foreign trade.
The second great strategist of the post-Opium War
period was Feng Guifen (Feng Kuei-fen; 1809-1874).
Like Wei Yuan, he believed that China should adopt
Western weaponry, but that it should also master
the new scientific and technological knowledge that
formed the theoretical foundation of this new world
order. He believed that Chinas military security was
linked to the reform of its educational system. In the
future, Chinese schools would have to offer courses
in modern mathematics, chemistry, physics, and astronomy. Feng Guifen advocated these reforms as
part of a Self-Strengthening Movement (1861-1895)
that would propel China into the twentieth century.
The late nineteenth century witnessed the rise of a
group of military philosophers who based their work
on the teachings of Confucius (551-479 b.c.e.). They
referred to themselves as Confucian rationalists, and
believed that Chinas future was to be found in a combination of Western science and Confucian ethics.
The first of these Confucian military theorists was
Zeng Guofan (Tseng Kuo-fan; 1811-1872), who occupied a position of authority within the Qing bureaucracy. He had received his military training under battlefield conditions when he was directed to
organize the central Chinese militia during the
Taiping Rebellion. As a result of this experience, he
developed a military philosophy that in fact utilized
both Western technology and Confucian philosophy.
Tactically, he concluded that a commander should
always follow the doctrine of the concentration of
force. If one divides ones unit it will necessarily become weaker and give ones opponent the advantage.
In conjunction with this fundamental reality, he created the overriding concept of the master-guest
theory of the battlefield, arguing that the successful
commander will always choose to be on the defensive, because the true position of strength is found in
knowing both the adversarys objectives and tactics.
China
651
Contemporary Sources
Most of the ideas of the nineteenth century Chinese military theorists can be found in publications of their collected works. The most respected publication of the period was written by
Wei Yuan. In Haiguotuji (1844; also known as Hai-kuo tu chih, an illustrated handbook of
maritime countries), Wei formulated the basic principles of nineteenth century Chinese military thought.
Books and Articles
Edgerton, Robert. Warriors of the Rising Sun: A History of the Japanese Military. Boulder,
Colo.: Westview Press, 1997.
Gelber, Harry Gregor. Opium, Soldiers, and Evangelicals: Britains 1840-42 War with China,
and Its Aftermath. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
Hsin-pao, Chang. Commissioner Lin and the Opium War. New York: W. W. Norton, 1970.
Lorge, Peter. War and Warfare in China, 1450-1815. In War in the Early Modern World, edited by Jeremy Black. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1999.
_______. War, Politics, and Society in Early Modern China, 900-1795. New York: Routledge,
2005.
Mackenzie, S. P. The Armies of the Heavenly Kingdom and the Taiping Rebellion in China,
1850-68. In Revolutionary Armies in the Modern Era: A Revisionist Approach. New York:
Routledge, 1997.
Perdue, Peter C. China Marches West: The Qing Conquest of Central Eurasia. Cambridge,
Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2005.
Spence, Jonathan D. Gods Chinese Son: The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom of Hong Xiuquan.
New York: W. W. Norton, 1996.
Swope, Kenneth, ed. Warfare in China Since 1600. Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate, 2005.
Waley-Cohen, Joanna. The Culture of War in China: Empire and the Military Under the Qing
Dynasty. New York: I. B. Tauris, 2006.
Worthing, Peter. A Military History of Modern China: From the Manchu Conquest to
Tiananmen Square. Westport, Conn.: Praeger Security International, 2007.
Films and Other Media
Eternal Emperor: Emperor Kangxi in Qing Dynasty, 1654-1722. Documentary. Peninsula Audiovisual Press, 2007.
Eternal Emperor: Emperor Qianlong in Qing Dynasty, 1711-1799. Documentary. Peninsula
Audiovisual Press, 2007.
The Opium War. Feature film. Golden Harvest, 1997.
Richard D. Fitzgerald
Imperial Warfare
Dates: 1857-1945
The principal colonial rivalries prior to 1900 focused on Britain, the preeminent imperial power. The
French opposed Britain in the Middle East, constructing the Suez Canal, but they lost the canal and
their influence in the region when Disraeli managed
to acquire for Britain a controlling interest in the canal in 1876. Later, France and Britain were almost
brought to the point of war during the Fashoda Incident (1898-1899), which involved control of the Upper Nile and hegemony in East Africa.
The British were also colonial rivals of the Russians. In 1878 Disraeli thwarted the Russian military
successes against the Ottoman Turks (1877-1878);
as a result of the Treaty of Berlin (1878), Britain obtained Cyprus, and Russia only partially achieved its
objectives. Britain and Russia opposed each other in
the Anglo-Afghan Wars (1839-1842; 1878-1880)
and were competitors in Persia and China. In 1891
France and Russia entered into an alliance directed at
a defensive war with Germany. The Germans allied
themselves with Austria-Hungary and Italy. In 1898
Britain began a move away from political and diplomatic isolation. Although the initial preference was
for an agreement with Germany, Britain was rebuffed and sought to resolve its colonial disputes.
In 1902 the Anglo-Japanese Alliance was formalized; it required the signatories to adopt a position of
benevolent neutrality in the event that one of them
was attacked by a third party. In 1904 the AngloFrench Entente, or the Entente Cordiale, resolved the
colonial dispute between France and Britain over Africa. Britain agreed to recognize Northwest Africa as
a French sphere of influence, and France recognized
Northeast Africa as a British sphere of influence. Despite British support for Japan in the Russo-Japanese
War (1904-1905), the colonial disputes between Russia and Britain were addressed in the Anglo-Russian
Entente of 1907. Britain received Afghanistan and
the southern third of Persia as spheres of influence;
Political Considerations
The one hundred years between 1850 and 1950 constituted one of the most violent and troubled periods
in all of recorded history. It witnessed the growing reliance of governments on military power to resolve
European and colonial disputes, the competition for
dominance among ideologically opposing camps,
and the loss of millions of lives in wars. Yet, at the
same time, this age experienced increased prosperity, enhanced longevity, and the ascendancy of liberal ideals that were focused on eliminating the
causes for the distress. In 1857 Britain experienced
the Sepoy Rebellion in India, when Muslim soldiers
refused to bite pork-greased cartridges that were required for a new rifle. Although Britain suppressed
the revolt and established direct control over India,
the Sepoy Rebellion exemplified the cultural divide
between the European powers and their non-Western
colonies. The revolt was more than a resistance to the
British affront to Muslims; it was a reaction to Britains foreign presence and power.
Between 1870 and the outbreak of World War I in
1914, European nations frequently were involved in colonial disputes and wars while peace was sustained on
the European Continent itself. The most active imperial powers were Britain, France, Italy, and, after 1885,
Germany, the United States, and Russia. Imperialism
gained support in the 1870s under the leadership of
British prime minister Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881),
the new leaders of the French Third Republic, and the
government of Kaiser Wilhelm (William) II (18591941) of Germany. They believed that imperialism
reflected the natural state of affairs, demonstrated national power, and provided sources of raw materials
and markets for manufactured products. Within increasingly democratic societies anti-imperialists, such
as William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898), developed
support and, on occasion, gained power.
652
Imperial Warfare
653
Oran
OCC
OR
Tunis
Algiers Constantine
TUNISIA
Alexandria
ALGERIA
O
OR
EGYPT
Cairo
Suez
LIBYA
ERITREA
ABYSSINIA
Stanleyville
C
EN
BELGIAN
F RBrazzaville
CONGO
Lopoldville
U GA
IT
AL
IA
N
TO
(ETHIOPIA)
UA
EQ
SOMALILAND
PROTECTORATE
Addis
Ababa
SUDAN
RIA
TOGO
MIDDLE
CONGO
FRENCH
SOMALILAND
SO
M
PORTUGUESE
Sokoto B ORNU
GUINEA
GAMBIA
LIBERIA
NIGERIA
Freetown
IVORY
Lagos
COAST
SIERRA
KAMERUN
LEONE
Accra
Monrovia
GOLD
COAST
RO MUNI
L A FR
NE
ANGLO- Khartoum
Adowa
EGYPTIAN
AL
IL
AN
D
CHAD
IC A
NIG
Timbuktu
Dakar
SENEGAL
A
ND
Mogadishu
Kismayu
Nairobi
EAST AFRICA
Witu
PROTECTORATE
Mombasa
ZANZIBAR
GERMAN EAST
PROTECTORATE
AFRICA
Zanzibar
Dar-es-Salaam
K ATAN G A
ANGOLA
Mozambique
German
Spanish
Belgian
Salisbury
Bulawayo
BECHUANALAND
PROTECTORATE
TRANSVAAL
Mafeking
NATAL
Johannesburg
SWAZILAND
Kimberley
Ladysmith
UNION OF
Durban
SOUTH AFRICA
Indian Ocean
Cape Town
Port Elizabeth
CAPE OF GOOD HOPE
SOUTHWEST
Windhoek
AFRICA
MA
French
Portuguese
RHODESIA
DAG
AS
GERMAN
MB
Italian
MOZA
British
IQ
Lusaka
CAR
UE
European Holdings
654
view, it was ignored in the text of the treaty. Nonetheless, Wilsons anti-imperialism had the support of
many Europeans who believed that imperial rivalry
had contributed to the outbreak of the war. During the
1920s anti-imperialism gained momentum. Britain
moved toward granting independence to India. More
important, in the new Soviet Union, the communist
leaders denounced Western imperialism and urged
all native peoples to revolt.
Also during the 1920s a new totalitarian ideology
called fascism grew in influence, coming to power in
Italy in 1922, in Germany in 1933, in Spain in 1939,
and in Japan in 1940, although the turn toward fascism in Japan had begun during the 1920s. Unlike
the liberal democracies, the fascist states supported
the continuation and expansion of their empires.
They challenged the progressive view of society in
which liberty and individual values were valued. Authoritarian and antidemocratic, the fascist states advanced a corporate political agenda that emphasized
collective or national and racist values at the expense
of individual freedoms. The resulting conflict, World
War II (1939-1945), between Germany, Italy, and
Japan and the Western democracies and the Soviet
of
Florida
A t l a n t i c
Bahamas
Mexico
Key
West
O c e a n
Cuba
Mexico
Santiago
r i
b b
e a n
Jamaica
S e a
Haiti Dominican
Republic
Puerto
Rico
U.S. troops
occupy Puerto Rico,
July, 1898
Imperial Warfare
Union, was the deadliest and most gruesome conflict
in history. The victors came to recognize not only the
folly of imperialism but also its drain on national
economies. Regrettably, the Cold War (1945-1991)
between the Soviet Union and its allies and the Western democracies resulted in extending variations of
imperialism as the two camps competed for global
support.
Military Achievement
The significant military achievements of the imperial
era were the successful defense and extension of
the British Empire during the Zulu War (1879), the
Anglo-Afghan Wars, and World Wars I and II; the
notorious defeat of Ethiopia by Italians; and the American reacquisition of the Philippines from Japan. In
1879 the Zulu King Cetshwayo (c. 1832-1884) defeated the British in the Battle of Isandhlwana on January 22, 1879, and threatened the British position in
South Africa. Britain responded, defeating the Zulus
in the Battle of Ulundi on July 4, 1879, and neutralizing the Zulu threat.
British wars against Afghanistan in the 1870s
and 1880s were directed at local chieftains and the
Russians who could threaten the northern gateway to
India. In both instances British influence prevailed
and, in 1907, Russia recognized the British influence
in Afghanistan. In both World Wars I and II, British
colonial power was threatened. In 1914 and 1915
German units threatened the British in East Africa
near the Bandu River but were defeated by Britains
regular and colonial military resources.
In 1934 Italy, which had long entertained aspirations to acquire Ethiopia, seized the opportunity to
create a war-in-sight crisis when Italian and Ethiopian troops clashed at Ualual in a dispute over the
border between Somaliland and Ethiopia. During
1935 the European powers attempted to mediate the
dispute; the French foreign minister sold out Ethiopia
by giving the Italians a free hand. In October, 1935,
Italian army and naval units started an invasion of
Ethiopia. The League of Nations denounced the Italian aggression but lacked the resolve and the forces
necessary to implement its position. In May, 1936,
655
Italian forces occupied Addis Ababa after a spirited
resistance by the Ethiopians and, in the same month,
they announced the annexation of Ethiopia. The Italian military action involved mechanized forces including planes and tanks; they were opposed by
poorly equipped Ethiopians who could not mount a
defense against such power.
After the Spanish-American War the United
States acquired the Philippine Islands. A politically
reluctant imperial power, the United States was moving the Philippines toward self-government in the
1930s. Shortly after the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor on December 7, 1941, the Philippines were
attacked and an invasion was initiated. By May 6,
1942, the last American outpost, the island fortress at
Corregidor, had fallen to the Japanese. The United
States, confronted with a global struggle, never lost
sight of its defeat in the Philippines. On October 19,
1944, the United States launched a successful amphibious invasion of the Philippines under the leadership of General Douglas MacArthur (1880-1964);
the Japanese forces were removed in 1945. In the
struggle for the Philippines, the United States relied
on active support from native resistance forces and
on the general sympathy of the populace. Shortly after the war was won, the Philippines were granted full
independence in 1947.
656
In 1857, Muslim soldiers in India refused to bite pork-greased cartridges that were required for a new rifle. Although the British executed such rebels and established direct control over India, the Sepoy Rebellion exemplified the cultural divide between the European powers and their non-Western colonies.
Zealand and in China during the Opium Wars (18391842) that secured for Britain the control of Hong
Kong. With grenades, grenade launchers, and rocketpropelled weapons, the European and American governments continued to develop a dazzling array of lethal weapons that were designed for defense from
one another but which also could be used to suppress
native populations. The new weapons technology,
with planned obsolescence, established a built-in
arms race that became an important component in
global culture. By 1940 the U.S. Army was equipped
with the very efficient, gas-chamber-powered, semiautomatic M1 rifle.
Combat uniforms evolved during this period from
the brightly colored and decorated uniforms of the
past into more practical uniforms that concealed the
troops from the enemy. Combat in imperial wars resulted in the adaptation of standard uniforms in ac-
Imperial Warfare
cord with the local conditions; uniforms were made
of varying weights to provide comfort in diverse climates.
The advent of steel and the need for mobility in the
field resulted in less and lighter armor for the individual soldier. The most important component was the
helmet, which protected the soldiers head from rifle
fire as well as from shrapnel from artillery, grenades,
and mortar fire. Reinforced steel also protected
heavy gun emplacements, fortified riverboats, fortified trains and transports, and other military devices
that were used in imperial wars.
Military Organization
Military organization during the era of imperial warfare reflected the movement toward a trained professional officer corps, the importance of strategic and
tactical planning, the need for continuous preparedness training, and the value of utilizing science and
technology in advancing weaponry. The model of the
German General Staff was replicated throughout Europe with varying success. Although the European
nations developed plans for the deployment of multidivision forces in the event of hostilities at home,
their approach to military organization at the imperial level was much more limited.
Because of costs, all of the imperial powers attempted to develop reliable local forces that included
natives at the soldier and noncommissioned officer
levels; they were led by European officers. Further,
in most instances, the organization of the defense of
imperial colonies was predicated upon sustaining a
supply line to the mother country through which reinforcements could be sent if necessary; a reliable navy
was required to support a global empire. Without
doubt Britain had the most sophisticated imperial
military organization. Not only did Britain have the
means to support its dominions and crown colonies
in the event of attack, but it also developed plans for
the colonies to support Britain in the event of a European or global conflict. This imperial military organization was effective during periods of peace or occasional local conflict, but, with the exception of
Britain, for most nations it proved ineffective be-
657
cause of inadequate forces and the precarious nature
of the lines of supply.
658
with the absence of such a will, there was an abandonment of colonial struggles that were not defensible on the grounds of national defense.
The most significant factor that altered military
doctrine, strategy, and tactics was the revolution in
industry, technology, and communications that began in the mid-nineteenth century. Military strategists had to consider the rapid deployment of troops
and the delivery of firepower through new weaponry.
The advantage provided by new weapons was short-
lived; enemies quickly adjusted and developed effective countermeasures. Ongoing weapons development became essential. The combination of modern
military technology with successful strategies and
tactics allowed for the deaths of millions of people.
The resulting carnage led to a consensus against the
continuing cycle of warfare, manifested in the twentieth century establishment of the League of Nations,
the United Nations, and the European Union.
Contemporary Sources
Strategic military theory and practices were elevated to a professional level with the emergence of general staffs and the educational support services that emerged in the post-Napoleonic period. Throughout the period of imperial warfare strategists and tacticians considered
Napoleon Bonapartes military planning and successes. Likewise European military thinkers
studied the relevant memoirs and works on strategy and tactics that became available in great
numbers following the American Civil War.
National military colleges and schools, such as the United States Military Academy at West
Point, New York, trained generations of officers in strategic military theory and practices. One
of the most renowned contemporary sources of this era was Alfred Thayer Mahan (1840-1914),
who wrote The Influence of Sea Power on History, 1660-1783 (1890) and Naval Strategy
Compared and Contrasted with the Principles and Practices of Military Operations on Land
(1911). Another was General Alfred von Schlieffen (1833-1933), author of the famous
Schlieffen Plan (1905), a German war strategy that became operational in August, 1914, with
the outbreak of World War I. The primary military theorist of the late 1930s was Field Marshal
Erich von Manstein (1887-1973), whose Blitzkrieg tactics were successful during the early
years of World War II.
Other influential contemporary sources were Helmuth von Moltke the Elder (1800-1891),
the military architect in the unification of Germany and the author of Moltkes Militrische
Korrespondenz aus den Dientschriften des Krieges (1866; Moltkes Projects for the Campaign
of 1866, 1907) and the Russians Vladimir Ilich Lenin (1870-1924) and Leon Trotsky (18791940), the architects of the 1917 Russian Revolution. Advocates of mechanized forces included
Heinz Guderian (1888-1954), Basil Liddell Hart (1895-1970), and J. F. C. Fuller (1878-1966).
Giulio Douhet (1869-1930) and William Billy Mitchell (1879-1936) recognized the importance of airpower and its impact on all aspects of warfare. Warfare in the colonies was considered by T. E. Lawrence (1888-1935), Mao Zedong (1893-1976), and Joseph-Simon Gallieni
(1849-1916).
Books and Articles
Barthorp, Michael. The Zulu War: Isandhlwana to Ulundi. London: Cassell, 2002.
Bayly, Christopher Alan. Imperial Meridian: The British Empire and the World. New York:
Longman, 1989.
Black, Jeremy. 1783-1914: Wars of Imperialism. In Why Wars Happen. New York: New
York University Press, 1998.
Imperial Warfare
659
Chaliand, Grard. Art of War in World History: From Antiquity to the Nuclear Age. Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1994.
Creveld, Martin van. Technology and War: From 2000 B.C. to the Present. New York: Free
Press, 1989.
David, Saul. Victorias Wars: The Rise of Empire. New York: Viking, 2006.
De Quesada, Alejandro. The Spanish-American War and Philippine Insurrection, 1898-1902.
Illustrated by Stephen Walsh. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2007.
Dupuy, Trevor N. Evolution of Weapons and Warfare. New York: Da Capo Press, 1990.
English, Allan D., ed. Changing Face of War: Learning from History. Montreal: McGillQueens University Press, 1998.
Fremont-Barnes, Gregory. The Indian Mutiny, 1857-58. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey,
2007.
Keegan, John. History of Warfare. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1993.
Killingray, David, and David Omissi, eds. Guardians of Empire: The Armed Forces of the Colonial Powers, c. 1700-1964. Manchester, England: Manchester University Press, 1999.
MacKay, Kenneth. Technology in War: The Impact of Science on Weapons Development and
Modern Battle. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1984.
McNeill, William H. The Pursuit of Power: Technology, Armed Force, and Society Since A.D.
1000. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982.
Porch, David. History of Warfare: Wars of Empire. New York: Cassell Academic, 2000.
_______. Imperial Wars: From the Seven Years War to the First World War. In The Oxford
History of Modern War, edited by Charles Townshend. New York: Oxford University Press,
2005.
Preston, Diana. A Brief History of the Boxer Rebellion: Chinas War on Foreigners. London:
Robinson, 2002.
Silbey, David J. A War of Frontier and Empire: The Philippine-American War, 1899-1902.
New York: Hill and Wang, 2007.
Films and Other Media
The British Empire in Color. Documentary. History Channel, 2008.
The Century of Warfare. Documentary. Time-Life Video, 1994.
Congo: White King, Red Rubber, Black Death. Documentary. Priscope Productions, 2003.
William T. Walker
Political Considerations
The Congress of Vienna, held to settle European affairs after the Napoleonic Wars (1793-1815), completed its work in 1815 after deciding not to unite the
German states, creating instead the German Confederation of thirty-nine principalities that replaced the
Holy Roman Empire. Austria, the leading German
state, was ruled from Vienna by Germans but also included a dozen other nationalities. The strongest of
the remaining German states, Prussia, stretched across
north-central Europe, its western end separated from
its eastern, its pride drawing it to claim leadership of
the non-Austrian Germans, and its power unequal to
the project.
When Austria was weakened in 1848 by a liberal
revolution in the capital and indifferent performance
in putting down an uprising in its Italian provinces,
Prussia dared support the Frankfurt Parliaments proposal of a league of the northern German states. The
Austrians mobilized for war and Prussia had to endure a humiliating loss of face. In 1862 the ultraroyalist diplomat Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898)
became Prussian foreign minister and president of
the cabinet. He immediately took up the project of
unifying the northern Germans. When the king of
Denmark, a former Austrian ally, died in 1863, Bismarck perceived Austrias isolation. Austria could
expect aid neither from Russia, with which it was at
odds over the Balkans, nor from France, which supported the Italian struggle to drive the Austrians back
beyond the Alps. Bismarck created a diplomatic crisis that united Austria and Prussia in a successful war
against the Danes in 1864, then saw to it that serious
friction arose between the victorious allies. The resulting Austro-Prussian War (1866) defeated Austria
in only seven weeks and gave Prussia unquestioned
leadership of the northern Germans. When Bismarck
provoked the French emperor Napoleon III (1808-
Military Achievement
In 1864 Prussia took advantage of a diplomatic contretemps to join with Austria in wresting the provinces of Schleswig and Holstein from Denmark. The
best way to force the issue was to overrun the provinces, which the Prussians and Austrians were able to
Library of Congress
664
DENMARK
Added in 1864
Added in formation of the North
German Confederation, 1867
Added to form the German
Reich in 1871
SCHLESWIGHOLSTEIN
ER
LA
ND
MECKLENBURG
HANOVER
P RU S S I A
NE
TH
Berlin
RU S S I A N E M P I R E
BELGIUM
Frankfurt
LUXEMBOURG
BA D
FRANCE
LORRAINE
R
T
BE TE
RG M -
PALATINATE
ALSACE
SWITZERLAND
BAVA R I A
AU S T R I A - H U N G A RY
665
Library of Congress
666
artillery, dividing its batteries in thirds, with two sixcannon batteries and a battery of ten mitrailleuses.
Because cannons had far greater ranges, the mitrailleuses were easily destroyed by Prussian fire, and the
system was an overall weakening of the French artillery capability.
Military Organization
The sizes of armies increased remarkably in the nineteenth century, and their control became possible
only through their organization into two or more
corps, each the size of an eighteenth century army.
Each corps was then organized into two or more divisions to facilitate command and control. Professional
general staffs became increasingly necessary to plan
and support mobilization, logistics, and operations.
However, not all nations adopted the general staff
system. Those that did develop such staffs often employed them merely as clerks to field commanders.
Helmuth von Moltke became chief of the Prussian
General Staff in 1858 and strengthened it by selecting only the most outstanding graduates of the military academy to undergo staff training. Some of these
officers then moved into field commands. Those who
remained with the staff were rotated periodically into
field armies. In this way, the barriers between staff
and field personnel were gradually erased, and each
better understood and relied on the other. Moltke realized that the advent of mass armies meant that a
general headquarters could deploy armies wisely
only for strategic purposes and must leave tactical responsibilities to field commanders. Between 1858
and 1866, he and the Prussian minister of war, Count
Albrecht von Roon (1803-1879), increased the Prussian army from 100,000 to 300,000 men. They bound
the Landwehr, a citizen militia, more tightly to the
regular army by requiring that Landwehr recruits
come from the ranks of ex-regulars and by giving
command of the Landwehr recruits to officers from
the regular army. After the Prussian victory over
Austria, Prussia was able to create the Army of the
North German Confederation, using armies of the
other German states organized into corps and subordinated to Prussian control. This army was able to put
667
F. R. Niglutsch
Otto von Bismarck (left), with French ministers Adolphe Thiers (center) and Jules Favre, negotiating peace
terms at the conclusion of the Franco-Prussian War in 1871.
668
emy line and unleash a cavalry pursuit of the disorganized survivors. Moltke envisioned using rifle companies such as skirmishers to disrupt the enemy line
and carry out a tactical envelopment. In this way,
small units trained in riflery and moving and shooting from cover could destroy far larger enemy formations. These small-unit tactics were the mirror image
of the movement of armies, for Moltke envisioned
spreading his forces into a wide net to envelop the enemys army. Railroads enabled him to bring armies
Contemporary Sources
Invaluable contemporary accounts of the weaponry, strategy, tactics, and operations of Bismarcks wars are to be found in Prusso-German official histories, The Campaign of 1866 in
Germany (1872), compiled by the Department of Military History of the Prussian Staff, and the
five-volume The Franco-German War, 1870-1871 (1874-1884), by the English War Office.
The Austrian official history of the Danish war, Der Krieg in Schleswig und Jtland in Jahre
1864 (1870; the war in Schleswig and Jtland in 1864) is by Friedrich von Fischer (1826-1907).
The five-volume official French history of the Franco-Prussian War, La Guerre de 1870/71
(1901-1912; the war of 1870-71) is more cold-eyed and rigorous for having appeared so long
after the fact. Moltkes military writings are voluminous. The most useful for the period in
question are Moltkes militarische Korrespondenz aus den Dienstschriften des Krieges 1866
(1896; Moltkes Projects for the Campaign Against Austria, 1907) and Geschichte des deutschfranzsischen Krieges von 1870-71 (1891; The Franco-German War of 1870-71, 1891). A
good selection is available in Daniel J. Hughess edited volume Moltke on the Art of War: Selected Writings (1993).
An analysis of the military lessons of Austrias war against Piedmont and France in 1859
that was important for the formation of Austrian tactics in the Seven Weeks War is Anton von
Mollinarys Studien ber die Operationen und Tactique (1864; studies on the operations and
tactics). A thoughtful and influential eyewitness account on the first of Bismarcks wars is Antonio Gallengas The Invasion of Denmark in 1864 (1864). Louis Jules Trochus LArme
franais en 1867 (1867; the French army in 1867) provides a description of the French army.
The key and crucial role of artillery is thoroughly explored in Carl Edouard von Hoffbauers
Die deutsche Artillerie in dem Schlachten und Treffen des deutsche-franzsischen Krieges,
1870-1871 (1876; German artillery in the Franco-Prussian War), and the military use of railroads is analyzed in Alfred Ernoufs Histoire des chemins de fer franais pendant la guerre
franco-prussienne (1874; the history of the French railroad during the Franco-Prussian War).
F. F. Steenackers Les Tlgraphes et les postes pendant la guerre de 1870-1871 (1883) discusses military telegraphy.
Books and Articles
Badsey, Stephen. The Franco-Prussian War, 1870-1871. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey,
2003.
Bucholz, Arden. Moltke and the German Wars, 1864-1871. New York: Palgrave, 2001.
_______. Moltke, Schlieffen, and Prussian War Planning. New York: Berg, 1991.
Carr, William. The Origins of the German Wars of Unification. New York: Longman, 1991.
669
Citino, Robert M. Moltkes Art of War: Innovation and Tradition. In The German Way of
War: From the Thirty Years War to the Third Reich. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas,
2005.
Embree, Michael. Bismarcks First War: The Campaign of Schleswig and Jutland, 1864.
Solihull, West Midlands, England: Helion, 2006.
Gates, David. The Franco-Prussian War. In Warfare in the Nineteenth Century. New York:
Palgrave, 2001.
Howard, Michael. 1992. Reprint. The Franco-Prussian War. New York: Routledge, 2001.
Shann, Stephen, and L. Delperier. The French Army of the Franco-Prussian War. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 1991.
Showalter, Dennis F. Railroads and Rifles: Soldiers, Technology, and the Unification of Germany. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1975.
Solka, Michael. German Armies, 1870-71: Prussia. Illustrated by Darko Pavlovic. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2004.
_______. German Armies, 1870-71: Prussias Allies. Illustrated by Darko Pavlovic. Botley,
Oxford, England: Osprey, 2005.
Wawro, Geoffrey. The Austro-Prussian War: Austrias War with Prussia and Italy in 1866.
Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
_______. The Franco-Prussian War: The German Conquest of France in 1870-1871. New
York: Cambridge University Press, 2003.
_______. War and Society in Europe, 1792-1914. New York: Routledge, Chapman and Hall,
2000.
Films and Other Media
Battles That Changed the World: The Franco-Prussian War. Documentary. Madacy Records,
1997.
Bismarck: Germany from Blood and Iron. Docudrama. Phoenix Learning Group, 2008.
Field of Honor. Thierry Brissaud, 1987.
The History of Warfare: The Franco-Prussian War, 1870-71. Documentary. Cromwell Productions, 2007.
Joseph M. McCarthy
Political Considerations
Beginning in 1871, with the unification of Kaiser
Wilhelm (William) Is (1797-1888) German Reich
through the diplomacy of Chancellor Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898) and the efficiency of the Prussian
Army, the balance of power in Europe began to
change. The swift German defeats of Denmark in
1864, Austria in 1866, and France in 1870-1871 had
created a central European state that alarmed all nine
of its neighbors. France, clearly seeking revenge for
its defeat and for the loss of Alsace-Lorraine, was
ready to join other states in a coalition against Germany. Bismarck maintained friendly agreements
with Russia and Austria, thus isolating France. By
1882 this agreement had culminated in a Triple Alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy, as
well as a nonaggression understanding with Russia.
The Bismarck system was weakened by the 1887
refusal of German banks to extend new loans to Russia, causing the czar to turn to French bankers. After
Bismarcks 1890 dismissal by Kaiser Wilhelm (William) II (1859-1941), the German treaty with Russia
lapsed, and a Franco-Russian defensive military alliance followed in 1894. Britains search for allies after the Second Boer War (1899-1902) led to an alliance with Japan, a 1904 colonial entente with
France, and a similar understanding with Russia in
1907. Although Britain was not bound under the
agreement to support France and Russia, and Italy
had expressed reservations on its obligations to the
alliance, the average European citizen saw the powers as rival campsTriple Alliance versus Triple Entente. In 1914 neither the people nor the leaders of the
larger European powers were planning for or seeking
war, although they all sought military security and
considered their windows of opportunity for military
670
671
Turning Points
German planes bomb Paris.
German U-9 submarines torpedo Allied ships.
First aerial dogfight takes place.
German zeppelins bomb London.
German submarine torpedoes the Lusitania, enraging
the American public.
Anglo-French attack on the Gallipoli Peninsula fails to
exploit the soft underbelly of the Central Powers.
Battle of Jutland effectively ends German naval threat.
Limitations of heavy artillery bombardment exposed in
the Battle of the Somme.
United States enters the war on the side of the Allies.
Allies establish Atlantic convoy system.
British make a successful tank attack at Cambrai.
Following the Bolshevik Revolution of November,
1917, Russia leaves the war.
672
FLANDERS
June-Nov., 1917
N Y
M A
R
i v
e
r
BELGIUM
e
i n
R h
Brussels
e r
R i v
Ypres
VIMY
April, 1917
M e u s e
Antwerp
Ghent
NETHERLANDS
Vimy
So
Arras
mm
Ri
River
SOMME
June-Nov., 1916
is
Ri
ve
Amiens
r
Ais
Rive
ne
e
os
ll
ve
Ri
River
Marne
Paris
ar
Verdun
Rheims
v
er
Se
F R A N C E
ine
Riv
Strasbourg
er
CHAMPAGNE
Jan.-Mar. &
Sept.-Oct., 1915
April, 1917
VERDUN
Feb.-Dec., 1916
paredness rallies and appropriations. After his reelection, President Wilson asked both the Allied and
the Axis Powers to state their specific war aims, but
each side replied in vague terms. The restriction of
territorial annexations gained support among those
tired of the war, but there was no agreement on the
673
674
Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire, as well as
in Ireland and Asia. Ludendorff ignored the political
trends and the possibilities of defensive strategy and
gambled that he could find military victory in France
with a well-planned attack and revised infantry tactics. His offensive broke the front and gained ground,
but again the troops outran their reinforcements and
supplies. When the Allies, finally united under the
command of French marshal Ferdinand Foch (18511929), struck back in mid-June with the advantage
of tanks and air support, the overextended German
lines could no longer halt the Allied attacks. In September, Ludendorff declared victory out of reach,
and in October the German chancellor asked Wilson
for armistice terms based on the Fourteen Points. Negotiations proceeded as Bulgaria made terms on September 29, Turkey on October 31, and Austria on November 4. Part of the German navy mutinied on
October 29, and an armistice delegation left Berlin
for France on November 7. Demonstrations in Berlin
led Kaiser Wilhelm to abdicate on November 9 and
flee to Holland the following day. The German delegates, now representing a new government, signed
an Armistice at Compigne on November 11. President Wilson arrived in Europe on December 13,
1918, hailed as a powerful idealist bringing peace,
democracy, justice, and security at the end of the
Great War.
Military Achievement
Germanys goal in the major theater of World War I
was to defeat France by taking Paris within six weeks
and then shifting troops eastward to stop the invading
Russians. The drive for Paris failed. The Germans
were stymied by problems with supplies and reinforcements that were multiplied with the distance
from the German railheads, whereas the French used
their own transport network, centered on Paris, for
rapid countermoves.
Falkenhayns 1916 attrition strategy in the attack
of Verdun killed almost as many Germans as Allies
and was basically unsound, given the Allied predominance in manpower. Colonel Max Hoffmans (18691927) 1917 campaign on the eastern front took advantage of the Russian Revolution to drive the Russians
to accept German peace terms and created an opportunity for a negotiated peace that was acceptable to
Germany. Ludendorff, in the west, preferred to gamble on submarines and a 1918 capture of Paris before
American intervention could be effective. A better
German foreign policy might have been the avoidance of a two-front war or the negotiation of an acceptable peace plan in late 1916 or early 1917. Germanys wartime aims for territory or dominance in
Europe, Africa, and the Middle East were militarily
impractical.
The French offensive aims never achieved their
ostensible goals until the Ludendorff Offensive of
1918 depleted German manpower. Only then could
the French achieve the obvious goal of gaining
Alsace-Lorraine plus security. Frances Plan 17 in
1914 was geographically unsound and misjudged the
location of the German attack, but it drew the German battle eastward and away from Paris. Joffres
1915 nibbling with bombardments was ineffective, and General Robert-Georges Nivelles (18561924) surprise breakthrough in 1917 had been too
widely advertised to surprise anyone. Ptains defensive strategy gave the French army a chance to recover, a sensible goal after the French army mutinies
of 1917. The French general staff was generally less
effective than its German counterpart but made fewer
costly mistakes.
The Russian goals of taking Berlin, threatening
675
Vienna, and dominating Constantinople at least had
the advantage of a numerous, courageous, and usually uncomplaining infantry. Against Austrian and
Turkish forces, the Russians had many successes,
limited only by inadequate transportation. Against
the Germans, however, the Russian army officers
seemed to be too preoccupied by the probability of
defeat to act on the possibility of success. With a
shortage of both experienced noncommissioned ranks
and competent officers, the quality of Russian army
leadership was so bad that the troops were losing
faith in the army leaders, even as the home front was
losing faith in the government and the czar.
Britain achieved some limited and peripheral
goals: It prevailed narrowly in the Battle of Jutland; it
maintained a blockade of the Central Powers; it
brought world, and especially U.S., resources to the
western front despite German submarines; it helped
to finance the Allies; it did most of the fighting in
Germanys African colonies, in the Middle East, and
at the Dardanelles and Gallipoli; and it committed a
sizable army to the western front. These were significant goals and achievements. Without victory over
the submarines, there might well have been no Allied
victory in the European theater. On the other hand,
Germanys chief threat to Britain was economic, and
on that score, the liquidation of Britains overseas investments to finance the war benefited the United
States more than it hurt Germany and was certainly
an important step in Britains later decline as a world
power.
Austria did occupy Serbia in 1915, thereby more
or less achieving Austria-Hungarys goal to eliminate Serbia as a factor in Balkan politics. It also held
off the Italians until the collapse of 1918, but its campaigns against Russia lacked direction, and of course
the 1918 wave of self-determination simply dissolved the polyglot Habsburg Empire. The Treaty of
Versailles that ended the war in 1919 drew very restricted boundaries for Hungary and forbade the Austrian remnant from making any political or commercial union with Germany.
The Allied Powers had made generous territorial
promises to Italy for joining them in 1915, and the
Italian Armys military goal from 1915 to 1918 was
to take the Austrian capital of Vienna. Adverse geog-
676
raphy and an army that was both poorly equipped and
poorly trained stalled the Italians on the Isonzo River,
until their defeat at Caporetto forced them to develop
assault squads that finally won the Battle of Vittorio
Veneto (1918) as Austria-Hungary collapsed. Even
though Italy did gain the Trentino, Tyrol, and, later,
Fiume, in the Treaty of Versailles, it still felt shortchanged. The Ottoman Empire wished to gain territory, such as the Suez Canal, from the British, and
land in the Caucasus from Russia, but was more successful in defensive campaigns, such as Gallipoli
(1915-1916). In the Balkans, the Serbian army had
been forced out of Serbia into Salonika, a French territory, but in the Treaty of Versailles, the Serbian premier gained leadership over the kingdom of Serbs,
Croats, and Slovenes. Bulgaria had joined the Central Powers to invade Serbia but lost border enclaves
in the Treaty of Versailles. Romanias goal had been
to gain Transylvania, and despite a complete military
defeat, did so at Paris; it had also regained Bessarabia
from Russia under the earlier Treaty of Brest Litovsk.
Greece had the distinction of being forced into the
war by the British and French for modest territorial
gains. Belgium had wanted Luxembourg but had no
means of armed occupation. Japans goal had been to
acquire German bases and islands in the Far East, and
its army and navy enforced these claims. Japans military presence in Shandong and Siberia and its naval
construction program aroused U.S. hostility.
The United States entered the war on April 6,
1917, participating in the battles of 1918 as an Associated Power on the Allied side. The American political goals were to defeat Germany, making the
world safe for democracy and ending war by means
of a League of Nations based on self-determination
and justice. The U.S. military goal was German surrender.
used in short bursts to avoid overheating and jamming, these machine guns, whether water-cooled
Maxims or air-cooled Hotchkiss types, fired 400 to
600 rounds per minute. Also, bolt-action repeating rifles, such as the German Mauser Gewehr 98, the British Lee-Metford, the Austrian Mannlicher Model
1895, the Italian Mannlicher-Carcano, the French
Lebel M-1e 1886/93, the Russian Nagant, and later,
the American Springfield, achieved a range, accuracy, and rate of fire unprecedented in European warfare. Battles of encounter became a story of heavy
losses, entrenchment, barbed wire, and stalemate.
Light field artillery was used to attack the trenches,
ranging from the 75-millimeter gun (known in French
as the soixante-quinze) to the 105-millimeter howitzer. The Germans used 30.5-centimeter Skodas and
42-centimeter Krupps Big Berthas for howitzer shelling of the forts at Lige and Namur. Larger artillery,
such as the Paris gun, used by the Germans to shell
Paris in 1918, had to be moved by rail. Antitrench
bombardments, however, so cratered the terrain as
to slow down the assault troops, a self-defeating result.
The mining of enemy trenches, as by the British at
Messines Ridge in June, 1917, was effective but
caused massive terrain dislocation and took a great
deal of time for a limited gain. Flamethrowers were
tried with good results at close quarters but without
achieving major breakthroughs. Poison gas, under
the right conditions, could break down a line of defense, but advancing in gas masks was slow work and
some gases persisted for days. Repeatedly, attacking
armies were hampered in moving men and supplies
across ravaged battlefields while retreating armies
drew on rapid support from the rail center it was defending. For most of World War I defense was a
stronger position than offense in terms of reinforcement and supply.
Another defensive form, the blockade, dominated
the war at sea, but undersea and aerial weapons
threatened the traditional line of battle style of naval
warfare. Submerged mines kept the British from entering the Dardanelles in 1915 and effectively kept
them out of the Baltic Sea. Aerial reconnaissance at
sea by dirigibles, blimps, and airplanes became a new
factor, and German diesel-electric submarines did
677
U.S. infantry soldiers fire a 37MM machine gun at Germans during a battle in the Argonne Forest in 1918.
678
ing them an incentive to land their planes safely if hit.
Survivors could not remember any dogfights quite
as crowded as those depicted in later Hollywood
films.
Armored trains and armored cars were not new,
but they could not cross trenches. In 1916, British
Colonel Ernest Swinton (1868-1951) developed a
land warship, code-named tank, with a caterpillar tractor-type continuous tread stretched over a
long and rigid track. This tread gave the 30-ton vehicle the ability to cross trenches while carrying 6pound guns or machine guns in side-mounted gun
platforms as it advanced through the German defenses. In 1918 Britain produced a 14-ton Whippet
model tank with a machine gun, and France introduced the 6.5-ton Renault Char-Mitrailleuse with a
360-degree turret. The British used a few tanks on the
Somme in 1916 and successfully at Cambrai in 1917.
Germany produced a few 30-ton tanks and only prototypes for a lighter machine. Germanys western
offensive in 1918 depended chiefly on the use of captured Allied tanks. Despite their persistent tendencies to ditch or break down, tanks were the Allies
best new weapon in 1918. Although the tank became
a tactical breakthrough weapon in World War I, it
was not yet capable of leading a sustained offensive.
Several elements of civilian life came to have military significance. Trucks became necessary links
between railheads and battlefields, although horses
still pulled field artillery. Telephones and wireless telegraphy became variably useful. Voice radio would
have been very useful for conveying reports and orders over large combat areas, but the transmitting and
receiving equipment had a limited range.
By 1914 armor at sea had been maximized. Waterline blisters were added to battleships for protection against mines and torpedoes, but the addition
of any more deck armor to protect against aerial
bombs or the plunging fire of long-range shooting would have made ships top-heavy and ready to
capsize. German compartmentalization and wider
dry docks gave the Germans stronger ships at Jutland.
Armor on land principally concerned tanks. Although World War I tanks had enough armor to stop
ordinary rifle or machine-gun bullets, .50-caliber or
Military Organization
The belligerents of World War I originally organized
their military forces along the same general lines developed during the French Revolution (1789-1799).
The head of the government or the war cabinet determined war policies for the army and navy. The service chiefs developed and executed the military war
plans. This latter group was described as General
Headquarters (GHQ) in Britain and the United States,
as Grand Quartier Gneral (GQG) in France, as
Stavka in Russia, and Oberste Heeresleitung (OHL)
in Germany.
The land forces were divided into army groups of
field armies composed of corps. The corps was an allarms group including two infantry divisions, a cavalry brigade or division, an artillery brigade, and several support groups. The division continued to be a
basic all-arms unit capable of independent action if
ordered and composed of brigades, regiments, battalions, companies, platoons, and squads in diminishing
order of size. A typical infantry division included
headquarters personnel, two or three brigades of
infantry, one or two regiments of field artillery, a
squadron or up to a regiment of cavalry, a battalion or
regiment of engineers, one or more signal companies
(in the United States, this included airplanes as well
as telegraph and radio), ambulance companies, field
679
diers. Otherwise, general staffs tended to defer to the
commanding general without giving him needed information. Britains imperial general staff suffered
from the fact that the British had little regard for military desk jobs and opted instead for field commands.
Although the United States had capable staff chiefs,
it still seemed that General John Pershing did too
much of his own staff work. On the whole, most
countries felt that their own general staff needed improvement and that the German staff should be abolished. The abolition turned out to be only a matter of
form.
680
against ever-increasing odds. The Germans held a
similar philosophy.
The western front battles of 1914 began as openfield encounters of deadly firepower that drove the
troops into hasty trenches. The short lesson was bullets kill men, and earth stops bullets. The dominant
tactic from 1915 to 1917 was bombardment by more
and bigger howitzers. This offensive was undeniably
more wracking for the target infantry, and fatal for
some outposts, but it destroyed the element of surprise and left a scarred no-mans-land of a battlefield
that was too chewed up for an offensive advance. Extensive mining could destroy an entire enemy entrenchment, but again, the zone of destruction was
difficult for the attackers to cross. This method was
effective, but time-consuming and expensive. Attacks with poisonous gases were frequently surprising and damaging to the defenders but also caused
problems for the attackers. Tank attacks were promising but not very effective in 1916 and 1917.
French general Nivelle promised a new kind of offensive when he replaced Marshal Joffre in 1917. On
paper his plan did seem to incorporate some of the
flexible infiltration ideas advocated by earlier theo-
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erals rejected the idea of elite storm troopers as bad
for general army morale. However, the resemblance
of these early troops to World War II German Panzer
divisions and to later U.S. assault team formations is
clear enough to show the eventual significance of
these tactics for future offensives.
In Britain and France the lessons that generals
learned in 1918 mattered less to the public, press, and
political leaders than did the preceding four-year
western front stalemate and slaughter. The doctrine
of the offensive and the strategy of attrition were discredited among the postwar disillusioned, or lost,
generation. Without American or Soviet support, the
remaining Allies adopted a defensive doctrine, believing that the Maginot line, a line of fortifications
along the French-German border, and a British naval
blockade would be enough to defeat Germany economically. This strategy was crushed by the German
Blitzkrieg of 1940.
Contemporary Sources
The best prewar analysis of World War I fighting was that of Ivan Bloch (1836-1902), a
Russo-Polish financier. His The Future of War in Its Technical, Economic, and Political Relations: Is War Now Impossible? (1899), a one-volume English-language summary of his work,
displays outstanding military and logistical insight as well as a curiously poor grasp of wartime
government finance. General Friedrich von Bernhardis (1849-1930) The War of the Future in
the Light of the Lessons of the World War (1920) was notable for its authors distrust of the
Schlieffen Plan.
Once the shooting started, morale-boosting propaganda replaced news in press reports. German reporting was censored, and British, French, and Russian correspondents were not permitted in the war zones. Official sources, meaning either an information office or a military
service department, issued statements, which correspondents duly reported. Philip Gibbs
(1877-1962), a popular British correspondent, collected his reports in wartime books such as
The Soul of the War (1915).
Letters from soldiers at the front were a better source of information, and in 1914 some British provincial weeklies published these generally optimistic reports from local soldiers. Government censorship halted this practice by 1915, only allowing publication of handouts by government agencies.
U.S. publications from 1914 to 1917 generally followed the lead of British and French accounts but also included reports from the Central Powers. The Germans conducted journalists
such as Irvin S. Cobb (1876-1944) on guided tours to verify their claims of success, reflected in
Cobbs Paths of Glory: Impression of War Written at or Near the Front (1915). The British and
French followed the Germans example in 1915. U.S. newspapers and magazines were at least
more balanced than those of the belligerents and somewhat more realistic in estimating the
hardships of the war.
682
683
684
Political Considerations
In July of 1936, the government of Spains five-yearold Second Republic, an unstable popular front composed of liberal democrats, socialists, and communists, came under fire from the political right. After
failing to gain control in either Februarys election or
the ensuing wave of assassinations, the National
Front, an alliance of conservative democrats, monarchists, and fascist parties, including the militant
Falange Espaola, now followed a clique of disloyal
army officers in open revolt. The Spanish Roman
Catholic Church sided with the revolutionaries.
Like these civilian political factions, Spains
armed services were divided. Ninety percent of the
armys officers and fifty percent of its enlisted men
chose to follow their rebellious generals. In the navy,
however, the crews of all but three ships mutinied
against rebel officers, and more than half of the air
force remained loyal. Further confounding the Nationalist bid for an early victory were numerous unity
of command problems. The Nationalist general Francisco Franco (1892-1975), who had opposed an earlier coup, emerged as the sole leader of the rebellion
only after one potential rival had fallen to a Republican firing squad and another had died in a plane crash
while attempting to return from exile. During the
early campaigns, Falangist militiamen often mobilized and operated beyond the pale of Francos authority. Carlists, who longed for the ultimate return
of the monarchy, acted similarly. Although both Nazi
Germany and Fascist Italy provided military aid, foreign intervention did not decide the wars outcome.
Whereas the socially disparate Nationalists gave
vent to their hatred of the Red Republic by eventually conceding all command authority to Franco,
Loyalist hatred for fascism occasioned no parallel
sacrifice. Although fighting on the side of the Republican Popular Army, Basque and Cataln separatists
Military Achievement
More unified in spirit than their enemies, the Nationalists were ultimately successful in their bid to overthrow the Republic. Nevertheless, several factors limited their efforts. First, because trade unionists sided
with the Republic, the rebels had to take Spains industrial centers by force; the two largest cities, Madrid
and Barcelona, remained under government control
until the wars final weeks. Second, Nationalist objectives, like Republican ones, were often chosen for
political rather than military reasons. Third, because
Franco often differed with his German and Italian advisers on tactics, troop dispositions, and objectives,
some of the advantage that otherwise would have accrued from foreign military assistance was negated.
During the wars first phase, from July, 1936, to
March, 1937, four Nationalist columns converged on
the capital at Madrid but failed to break in, partly because of fanatical Republican resistance at University City, on the Jarama River, and at Guadalajara,
and partly because Nationalist general Emilio Molas
(1887-1937) estimate that a Fifth Column of sym685
686
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Sea
Seville
Granada
Republican strongholds
Cadiz
Nationalist strongholds
Tangier
S PA N I S H
the East was slow to attack, and the Nationalists reacted, saving Saragossa (1937) and retaking Teruel
(1937-1938). The Republics loss of Teruel proved
especially costly in terms of men, equipment, and the
consequent loss of Soviet aid. During the wars final
phase, the Republic was in a state of collapse, and
only the rebels were capable of strategic offensives.
Franco drove eastward to the Mediterranean in
March and April of 1938 and isolated Catalonia from
the remainder of Republican territory. In January,
1939, he took its key city, Barcelona. The defenses of
687
Turning Points
First tank-versus-cavalry and tank-versus-tank engagements
of the Spanish Civil War, near Esquivias, south of
Madrid.
Destruction of a poorly supported Italian armored column by
conventional Republican arms near Trijeque, northeast of
Guadalajara.
The Condor Legions air arm bombs Guernica, killing
approximately 2,100 of the towns 8,000 inhabitants in
arguably the first premeditated use of terror bombing.
Republican armored assault at Fuentes de Ebro fails because
of poor coordination with infantry, artillery, and air
support, contributing to the dismantling of the Soviet
Armys independent armored formations on the eve of
World War II.
In the first significant combat test of the tactic of divebombing, the Condor Legions air arm attacks
Republican positions near Teruel.
688
ing powers placed small numbers of up-to-date
weapons and advisory groups to train Spanish clients
in their use. Several hundred German 5.8-ton Pzkw I
light tanks (but never more than 180 at a time) served
on the Nationalist side, as did a similar number of the
Italian 4.6-ton CV-33 tankettes. Both were thinly armoredthe CV-33 had no turret or roof armorand
equipped with machine guns only. In crew protection
and gun power the Soviet-supplied Republican
tanks, the 9-ton T-26B and 11-ton BT-5, were far superior; both mounted 45-millimeter cannons. Lowwing fighter aircraft with retractable landing gear
made their debut in Spain, but here the Soviet
Polikarpov 1-16 was quickly outclassed by the German Messerschmitt Bf-109. Later variants of the
Bf-109 and the Junkers Ju-87 Stuka dive-bomber
would play prominent roles in Germanys early victories of World War II (1939-1945), as would the
twin-engined Dornier Do-17 and Heinkel He-111
bombers, also introduced in Spain. However, these
modern aircraft served side by side with more numerous biplanes of the previous generation and, like the
tanks, in numbers too small to tip the strategic balance. Among the German antiaircraft contingent
were four batteries of 88-millimeter guns, which
proved equally effective in the direct-fire role against
ground targets at Brunete (1937) and after. Unlike
other weapons tested in Spain, the dual-purpose 88
neither became obsolete nor required significant improvement during World War II.
Military Organization
Both opponents in the Spanish Civil War were
undersupplied and employed semi-independent militias, and neither had an effective centralized replacement system. For these reasons, standardized tables
of organization and equipment were slow to take
hold. During the first year of the war, for example,
the all-communist Fifth Regiment grew into the Popular Armys V Corps. Other Republican units, notably the component battalions of the five International
Brigades, shrank and consolidated as they sustained
severe losses. Nationalist formations consolidated as
well but more often retained prewar schemes of orga-
689
Three tanks in battle during the Spanish Civil War, which proved a testing ground for the European forces that
later fought World War II.
690
porting infantry and air cover. The subsequent Republican counterattack regained almost all of the lost
territory, and all but a few Western observers interpreted the Italian failure as an indictment of all independent mechanized operations. Later Italian success in the Catalonia Offensive (1938-1939) drew far
less commentary, as the Popular Army was then in its
final stages of collapse.
The senior Soviet tank officer in Spain, Dmitri
Pavlov (1897-1941), interpreted similar Republican
failures as proof that the independent mechanized
formations designed by Tukhachevsky in 1932 should
be cannibalized and tied piecemeal to nonmechanized
infantry. Tukhachevsky, like Guderian, believed that
only tactically independent mechanized penetration
could win land wars and, during 1936 and 1937,
some of Pavlovs subordinates agreed. Two events
settled the debate. The first was Tukhachevskys trial
and execution during the Purge of 1937, which rendered Deep Battle tank doctrine politically incorrect. The second was the failure of two Republican
tank battalions to break through Nationalist defenses
at Fuentes de Ebro on October 13, 1937. Although
this defeat had been foreordained by poor planning
and training, it nevertheless provided the ambitious
Pavlov with more ammunition to use against a rival
philosophy. His victory, and the consequent dismantling of Tukhachevskys large formations, contributed to the Soviet defeat in 1941.
The relationship between Spanish Civil War air operations and doctrinal progress was also inconsistent.
The most strategically significant use of aircraft
the airlifting of Nationalist forces from Spanish Moroccomade little impression on the Germans, for
whom airlift capacity was to remain a third priority
during World War II. Dive-bombing was indeed a
higher priority, but the Germans had already committed to it by 1936, and only one Stuka ever appeared over Spain before January, 1938. Condor
Legion fighter pilots, led by Werner Mlders (19131941), developed the finger four formation that
they would use so effectively during World War II,
whereas the bombers they escorted sometimes flew
against civilian targets, as at Guernica (1937). Even
so, the Luftwaffe never developed strategic bombardment or long range escort capabilities.
If Nationalist and Republican commanders had
been more receptive to tactical innovation, a thoroughgoing doctrinal revolution would have been difficult anyway. Unlike the European battlefields of
World War II, much of Spain was too mountainous
for mechanized operations, and its road and rail networks were poor. Foreign instructors were few, and
conducting hands-on training through translators
was exceedingly difficult. On the Republican side,
this lack of communication was especially problematic: In the first Soviet tank training detachment to arrive in October, 1936, only one man spoke Spanish.
Contemporary Sources
Ferdinand Miksches Attack: A Study of Blitzkrieg Tactics (1942) argues that Spain was the
perfect tactical laboratory for the intervening powers who would later fight World War II, and that
the Allies failed to conduct the proper experiments or draw the correct conclusions when the Condor Legion did. More general accounts from the International Brigades are plentiful, but most
mix political ideology with more strictly military matters. Arnold Vieth von Golssenaus Der
spanische Krieg (1955; the Spanish War), written under the pseudonym Ludwig Renn, is
among the best. English-language sources concentrate mainly on the Fifteenth Brigade, in which
most of the American, British, and Canadian volunteers served. These include Our Fight: Writings by Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, Spain, 1936-1939 (1969), edited by Alvah
Bessie and Albert Prago, and English Captain (1939) by Tom Wintringham. Spanish Republican
accounts, even when useful, often mix polemics and tactics, as in the memoirs of rival communist
commanders Juan Modesto, Soy del Quinto Regimiento (1969; I am of the Fifth Regiment) and
Enrique Lster, Nuestra Guerra (1966; our war). Ramn Sender includes a revealing account of
the first Republican tank operation in Counter-attack in Spain (1937), whereas Jose Miajas chief
of staff Vicente Rojo provides a view from Popular Army headquarters in Espaa heroica (1942).
691
Fewer Nationalist sources have made it into English, but no study of the tank attack at
Fuentes de Ebro can be complete without the interview related by Henry J. Reilly in the article
Tank Attack in Spain, published in the July/August, 1939, issue of Cavalry Journal. German
frustrations in the area of doctrinal development are recounted by Gustav Diniker in his article
Betrachtungen ber die Bewertung von Erfahrungen mit Kriegsmaterial in Spanien, in the
June, 1937, issue of Wissen und Wehr.
Books and Articles
Baxell, Richard. British Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War: The British Batallion in the International Brigades, 1936-1939. New York: Routledge, 2004.
Beevor, Antony. The Battle for Spain: The Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939. Rev. ed. New York:
Penguin Books, 2006.
Bolloten, Burnett. The Spanish Civil War: Revolution and Counterrevolution. Chapel Hill:
University of North Carolina Press, 1991.
Carver, John. Airmen Without Portfolio: U.S. Mercenaries in Civil War Spain. Westport,
Conn.: Praeger, 1997.
Coverdale, John F. Italian Intervention in the Spanish Civil War. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
University Press, 1975.
Eby, Cecil D. Comrades and Commissars: The Lincoln Battalion in the Spanish Civil War.
University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2007.
Elstob, Peter. The Condor Legion. New York: Ballantine, 1973.
Henry, Chris. The Ebro, 1938: Death Knell of the Republic. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey,
1999. Reprint. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2004.
Howson, Gerald. Arms for Spain: The Untold Story of the Spanish Civil War. New York: St.
Martins Press, 1998.
Jensen, Geoffrey. Franco: Soldier, Commander, Dictator. Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books,
2005.
Keene, Judith. Fighting for Franco: International Volunteers in Nationalist Spain During the
Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939. New York: Leicester University Press, 2001.
Landis, Arthur. Death in the Olive Groves: American Volunteers and the Spanish Civil War,
1936-1939. New York: Paragon House, 1989.
Lannon, Frances. The Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 2002.
Proctor, Raymond. Hitlers Luftwaffe in the Spanish Civil War. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood
Press, 1983.
Wyden, Peter. The Passionate War. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1983.
Films and Other Media
For Whom the Bell Tolls. Feature film. Paramount, 1943.
Land and Freedom. Feature film. Kino Film Company, 1995.
Libertarias. Feature film. Warner Home Video, 1996.
Pans Labyrinth. Feature film. Warner Bros., 2006.
The Spanish Civil War. Documentary. MPI Home Video, 1987.
The Spanish Earth. Docudrama. Prometheus Pictures, 1937.
John Daley
World War II
United States, Britain, and France
Dates: 1939-1945
dictator Benito Mussolini (1883-1945), and Fascism
spread into Romania and Hungary, as the rest of Eastern Europe began to disintegrate. At the same time,
Communist activities directed by Communist International (Comintern), the Communist organization
founded by Vladimir Ilich Lenin (1870-1924), under
the control of the Soviet Union increased. Governments were forced to direct all available resources to
provide social services for the large numbers of unemployed and destitute.
International tensions escalated after Hitler began
to rebuild German military power. In 1933, after the
League of Nations refused to weaken the restrictions
on German rearmament, Hitlers Germany left the
organization. In 1935 the Saar was returned to Germany in response to a wave of Nationalist propaganda, and Hitler then attempted to take over Austria.
Britain and France were able to thwart Hitler but only
with the support of Mussolini, who allied with Hitler
two years later when Britain and France refused to
support his conquest of Ethiopia. In 1936 Hitler and
Mussolini also sent aid to Nationalist general Francisco Franco (1892-1975) in Spain at the beginning
of the Spanish Civil War, whereas the West relied on
sanctions and weak protests. By 1936 Germany under Hitler and his National Socialist Party (Nazis)
had begun to rearm at a frantic pace, whereas Britain,
France, and the United States used almost all of their
resources to bolster their economies. However, it
should be noted that a considerable amount of the
Works Progress Administration (WPA) spending in
the United States was devoted to military purposes,
including the building of two aircraft carriers and
several military posts. Britain, in the meantime, had
devoted a large portion of its 1936, 1937, and 1938
defense budgets to the building of radar stations and
the infrastructure of an early warning system.
Political Considerations
At the end of World War I (1914-1918), there was no
longer a balance of power in Europe. Britain and
France had been physically devastated and were
close to financial bankruptcy; Germany had been defeated and disarmed; Russia, by then the Soviet
Union, had been excluded as a result of the Russian
Revolution (1917-1921) and the spread of Communism. The United States had withdrawn from European affairs, devoting its attention to the Western
Hemisphere and the Pacific and leaving Britain and
France as the only real powers in an unstable political
and military system. France decided to strengthen its
border defenses, known as the Maginot line, using
the Treaty of Versailles (1919) to prevent the rearmament of Germany and entering into a series of security alliances. Great Britain, perceiving no serious
threat, returned to the advancement of its imperial interests, relying upon its navy for defense. Although
both Britain and France belonged to the League of
Nations created at the end of World War I, neither
saw this organization as a credible deterrent to war.
With the exception of the persistent threat of
Communism, the 1920s witnessed a lessening of international tensions, with the drafting of the Locarno
Pact (1925), establishing Germanys western borders; the Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928), renouncing the
use of war in settling international disputes; and the
entrance of Germany into the League of Nations
(1926).
Everything changed, however, after the U.S.
stock market collapsed in 1929. Financial and economic crisis brought political instability and a renewal of international tensions. On January 30, 1933,
Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) came to power in Germany. Italy began to assert its authority under Fascist
692
693
vasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, neither
France nor Britain was prepared to fight. In actuality,
the military weakness of Britain and France encouraged Nazi aggression and added to the crises that led
to World War II.
The United States was even further behind its European allies in military development. Preoccupied
with the efforts to deal with the Great Depression and
perceiving no immediate external threat to national
security, the U.S. Army was less prepared to wage
war than it had been in any time since the American
Civil War (1861-1865). Ranked equally with Britain
and Japan in naval power, in 1939 the United States
was ranked seventeenth in overall military strength,
behind both Spain and Romania. The U.S. armed
forces had no tanks, few first-line fighter aircraft, and
barely enough rifles for its army.
It should be remembered that the United States,
disillusioned by the outcome of World War I, was determined to stay out of World War II. However, as
British and French power in the Pacific diminished as
Turning Points
Germany invades Poland, leading to British
declaration of war.
Lend-Lease Act in the United States establishes
the principle of providing military aid to Great
Britain.
Germans begin the Battle of Britain, a series of
air raids over Britain aimed at destroying
British infrastructure and morale.
The United States enters World War II after the
Japanese bombing of the U.S. Navy fleet at
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
Anglo-American force invades French North
Africa.
Allies begin invasion of Normandy, France, on
D day, marking the largest amphibious
operation in history and the beginning of
Allied victory in Europe.
The first atomic bomb to be used against a
civilian population is dropped by the United
States on the Japanese city of Hiroshima,
killing more than 70,000 people and hastening
the end of the war.
694
Digital Stock
Smoke looms on the horizon after the first mass air raid on London during World War II.
Military Achievement
The military role of France during World War II was
limited by its early defeat and surrender in 1940.
Hampered both by its reliance on the fixed fortifica-
695
696
ing and production genius, the United States was able
to carry out successful landings on hostile beaches in
both the European and Pacific theaters of operation.
The most important amphibious operations were the
landings during Operation Overlord on Normandy
beaches launched on June 6, 1944 (D day), which
marked the start of the final campaign of World
War II.
British and American intelligence was able to
break the German and Japanese codes during the
war, thereby gaining advanced warning of enemy intentions. At Bletchley Park, 50 miles north of London, Britain assembled a large group of cryptologists, who successfully decrypted the German codes
throughout the war, providing real-time intelligence
to the commanders in the field. The Allied intelligence system was code-named Ultra, and its existence was not revealed until almost twenty years after
the war ended. At the same time, U.S. cryptologists
broke the Japanese codes. Despite this success, however, the United States was surprised by the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor, and reliance upon the Ultra
codes contributed to the failure of U.S. intelligence to
realize the seriousness of the German attack in December, 1944, that resulted in the Battle of the Bulge
(1944-1945).
Perhaps the greatest military achievement during
World War II was the development and use of the
atomic bomb by the United States. Rarely has a single weapon so changed the nature of warfare and the
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697
global balance of power. The decision to drop the atomic bomb, though
controversial, hastened the end of
the war.
Weapons, Uniforms,
and Armor
World War II witnessed the development and deployment of a large
number of weapons ranging from
the M1 Garand rifle to the atomic
bomb. Science and technology played
a greater role in the operational aspects of World War II than in those
of any other war in history. In fact,
a whole new area of military operU.S. Army
ations, called operational analysis,
developed from the application of
General Dwight D. Eisenhower briefs paratroopers in preparation for
science to military problems. Operthe D-day invasion.
ational analysis dealt with everything from the best depth at which to
excellent weapons. The standard infantry weapon
set depth charges to the most efficient force structure
was the M1 Garand, which was a gas-operated, clipfor combat divisions.
fed, semiautomatic rifle that fired eight shots and
During the 1920s and 1930s the British experiweighed 9.5 pounds. The artillery, especially the
mented with a wide variety of armored vehicles, as
105-millimeter howitzer and the 155-millimeter gun,
well as other weapons systems. However, due to a
used the fire-control system developed early in the
lack of funding and a perceived lack of a serious miliwar and proved to be the most effective arm of the
tary threat, these experiments were carried no furarmy.
ther. The British went to war in 1939 with an army
In the air, the U.S. heavy bombers (B-17s, B-24s,
that was essentially equipped with slightly upgraded
and B-29s) and fighters (P-47s and P-51s) were
World War I weapons, except for the Spitfire and
dependable and proved capable of defeating their
Hurricane fighters and some heavy bombers, which
adversaries. One of the less well known technical
were developed late in the war. This failure in militriumphs of American ingenuity was the proximity
tary modernization resulted in an increasing reliance
(V.T.) fuse. Actually a small radar set built into an
throughout the war upon U.S. weapons, especially
explosive shell, it was so effective that no one was altanks and armored vehicles. After its defeat in 1940,
lowed to fire it over land, for fear the enemy might
the reconstituted French army that fought alongside
get their hands on one that did not explode. The greatthe Allies in 1944 and 1945 relied almost entirely
est success of American technology was the atomic
upon American weapons.
bomb, which hastened the end of the war against
Within a year after the United States entry into
Japan and revolutionized warfare.
the war, the country had become the Arsenal of DeThe greatest failure of American weaponry was
mocracy, providing weaponry and supplies for all
the M4 Sherman medium tank. Although the reliable
of the Allies, including the Soviet Union. At the same
Sherman tank was capable of performing most of the
time, it equipped the ninety-division U.S. Army with
698
tasks assigned to it, it had not been designed to be an
antitank weapon and failed when called upon to engage the German medium or heavy tanks known as
Panthers and Tigers. Produced in large numbers,
more than 40,000, it provided armor not only for the
U.S. Army but also for the British, French, and Polish
forces in Europe. The M26 Pershing, which was designed to fight other tanks, was introduced at the end
of the war but arrived too late to have any real effect.
Only 700 Pershings were shipped to Europe.
Military Organization
At the beginning of World War II, the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) was dispatched to France. While
retaining its independence, it served under the French
commander General Maurice-Gustave Gamelin (18721958) and later General Maxime Weygand (18671965). Organized into two army groups, the French
concentrated the bulk of their mobile forces in the
north with the BEF. After the defeat of France and
the evacuation of the BEF from Dunkirk, most of the
French army became a home-defense force. The remainder, along with Commonwealth forces, were
sent to North Africa, whereas the British army stationed in India under separate command was used to
reinforce the defenses in the Near East and Asia.
After the United States entered the war, the British
army, although more experienced, came under U.S.
field command. At the highest levels, the military
command structure was the Combined Chiefs of
Staff, consisting of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff and
the British Imperial General Staff. Although the
Combined Chiefs of Staff operated on the principle
of unanimity, the United States was decidedly the
dominant partner. The staffs of both countries became more elaborate as the war progressed. The
U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff became increasingly involved in the formulation of U.S. foreign policy during the war. When the North African campaign began, the Free French were brought in as a junior
partner. However, this relationship remained tenuous throughout the war because of President Franklin
D. Roosevelts (1882-1945) personal distrust of the
French leader, General Charles de Gaulle (1890-
699
Britain experimented with a variety of armor operations during the interwar years. For example,
General Sir Percy Hobart conducted deep penetration armor maneuvers in 1935. However, the lack of
adequate funding and the absence of a clear threat
limited any deployment to small units more suitable
for use as an empire constabulary rather than a continental army.
American planners such as Colonel George S.
Patton did conceive of the use of large armored formations but the absence of any real threat, the financial restraints created by the Great Depression and
the conviction that the United States would not be involved in a European war in the future resulted in inadequately trained and equipped forces. The army
Omaha Beach, June, 1944, in the early days of Operation Overlord following the D-day invasion.
700
and many planning staff did develop very extensive
plans (the Rainbow Plans) and realized many of the
possible difficulties that were found later in the war.
For example, under the leadership of Major Earl H.
Ellis (USMC), doctrine and planning for amphibious
warfare were developed prior to the war.
By not entering the war until December of 1941,
American planners were able to take advantage of the
experience of both the Allies and the Germans. The
decision to create only a ninety-division army hampered some operations, especially the large-scale
armor attacks favored by the Germans and the Russians. Much of American doctrinal development during the war centered on the use of the vast material
advantage that the United States possessed, especially in artillery and airpower.
In the area of airborne operations, the U.S. Army
developed the doctrine, organization, equipment, and
tactics during the early part of the war. After basing
much of their development on reports of German
successes in 1939 and 1940, the U.S. airborne units
and their British counterparts proved to be some of
the most effective fighting forces in the European
theater of operations, despite their limited use. The
82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions were considered
two of the best.
Contemporary Sources
Discussion of the role of armor and airpower dominated writing about military theory both
before and during World War II. French military thinking was dominated by the French World
War I experience, as seen in the Provisional Instructions Concerning the Tactical Utilization of
Larger Units drawn up in 1921 and revised in 1936, which stressed firepower, the power of fortifications, and the need to increase the offensive power of the infantry. Colonel Charles de
Gaulle was one of the few officers who disagreed. In his books Vers larme de mtier (1934;
The Army of the Future, 1940) and Fil de lpe (1932; The Edge of the Sword, 1960), he described many of the elements of the modern armored division and suggested that France organize a large armored force to protect its northern front.
Two British theorists also were important in the development of armor doctrine: Major General J. F. C. Fuller (1878-1966) and Captain Basil Liddell Hart (1895-1970). In his books The
Foundations of the Science of War (1926), On Future Warfare (1928), and The Army in My
Time (1935), Fuller criticized British military doctrine and advocated a force structure that relied heavily on armor and airpower. Liddell Harts works The British Way in Warfare (1932) and
Thoughts on War (1944) provided the most insightful and influential studies on military doctrine of the period. Liddell Hart probably had a greater impact on German than British military
history. Although George S. Patton (1885-1945) and other American officers had written numerous articles in service journals about the future of armor, they had little impact until the war.
701
702
World War II
The Soviet Union
Dates: 1939-1945
Germans was led to a large extent by officers who
were learning on the job. Stalins usually paranoid
nature deserted him in 1941, when he refused to believe numerous internal and external warnings of the
impending German attack. As a result, on June 22,
Operation Barbarossa, the German attack on the Soviet Union, achieved strategic surprise. The initial attacks quickly cut through and rapidly encircled Soviet forces that had been deployed on orders from
Stalin, on the Soviet frontiers. The result was disastrous. Within two months, hundreds of thousands of
Soviet soldiers were captured, and the Soviet military was decimated. It would not recover the initiative until 1943.
Stalin did not deal well with the outbreak of war.
The invasion itself threw him into a state of shock. He
did not make a radio broadcast to the nation until July
3, 1941, and remained largely out of sight after that.
As the Germans advanced steadily into the Soviet
Union, he grew more and more frantic, worrying as
much about his loss of power as the loss of Soviet
land. When the Germans reached the outskirts of
Moscow, Stalin was close to a nervous breakdown.
Stalins anxiety created a temporary and partial
vacuum at the top of the Soviet hierarchy, but it also
had two beneficial effects. First, it allowed senior
army officers, such as Marshal Semyon Konstantinovich Timoshenko (1895-1970) and Marshal Georgy
Konstantinovich Zhukov (1896-1974), to put their
stamp on a reorganization and revitalization of the
Soviet army. Second, it forced Stalin and his commissars to turn from the Communist Party toward
Russian nationalism as the center of Russian loyalty.
Within weeks after the German invasion, messages
from the Kremlin began to emphasize the Russian
motherland rather than the Communist Party. This
appeal to nationalism revitalized the Russian popula-
Political Considerations
When the Germans invaded the Soviet Union on June
22, 1941, they turned what had been a relatively localized readjustment of the balance of power in Europe into a continent-wide total war. Despite the mythology that surrounds events such as the fall of
France in May and June, 1940, and the landings at
Normandy on June 6, 1944 (D day), the European
theater in which World War II was fought and won
(by the Allies) was on the eastern front. The majority
of Germanys resourcesmen, tanks, airplanes, and
other weaponswere committed there; the great
preponderance of the casualties were suffered there;
and it was there that the Soviet Union first retreated,
then held, and then finally pushed back the German
advance. The Soviets ultimately succeeded through a
combination of sheer numbers, implacable stubbornness, and a series of war-winning weapons and strategies that the Germans could match only belatedly and
incompletely.
The Soviet experience had, in essence, two overall
phases. In the first, the Soviets desperately tried to
overhaul and re-create the organization, equipment,
and doctrine of their military, while at the same time
attempting to prevent an utter rout by the Germans.
The second came as the Soviets succeeded at that
gargantuan task and created a military with the soldiers, training, and ability to defeat the Germans.
That accomplishment, possibly more than any other,
ensured Germanys defeat in World War II.
The political context of the Soviet Union during
World War II centered on the regime of Communist
dictator Joseph Stalin (1879-1953). Stalin had decimated the officer corps of the Red Army before the
war, seeking to eliminate threats to his control. Because of Stalins purges, the army that fought the
703
704
Turning Points
Military Organization
In the initial stages of World War II, Soviet military
organization was both ineffective and confused. The
705
largest unit in the army was the corps, consisting of
nearly 40,000 men and, supposedly, nearly 1,000
tanks. Few of these corps were up to strength, and
their units tended to be dispersed widely and, worse,
to answer to different regional headquarters. The Soviets thus had neither the large-scale forces needed
for a war of maneuver nor the central organization to
use the forces they had effectively.
The near-destruction of the military in the initial
months of the war led to its drastic and fundamental
reorganization, done on the fly and even as Soviet
forces were being forced back to Moscow. The military was commanded from the top by the Stavka,
a group that encompassed both the Supreme High
Command, led by Stalin, and the General Staff of officers, who advised the Command.
At first, there were three Main Commands, each
of which controlled several fronts, responsible to the
Stavka. Stalin and his generals made such a habit of
bypassing the Main Command commanders that this
tier was soon abolished, and the front commanders
became the next organizational level for the rest of
the war. These fronts were centered on geographic
areas, such as Leningrad, the trans-Caucasus, or
Moscow. Each front headquarters controlled all the
military forces within that area, armored, air, or infantry. Such headquarters often found themselves
barely able to control such an enormous responsibility, and as the war continued, the Soviets increased
the number of fronts.
Very quickly, the Stavka abolished the corps and
replaced it with a smaller field army. It did so because
of both the shortage of equipment, especially tanks,
and the lack of experienced midlevel officers.
Along with this reorganization came renewed
power for the political commissars who controlled
the army on behalf of the Communist Party. Commissars were present at every level of command. It
was not until late 1942 that the commissars lost much
of their power, as Stalin reined them in to reduce any
threat to his personal power.
Below the front level, Soviet organization in the
first months was chaotic, broken up by the rapid retreat. Beginning in 1942, however, the Stavka began
to build up mobile mechanized units, in somewhat of
a return to the prewar deep-penetration ideas.
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June through August, 1944, sending the German
Army Group Center on a retreat from the Ukraine
and killing or capturing more than 400,000 Wehrmacht soldiers in the process.
Two external factors aided the Russian strategy.
The first was Adolf Hitlers obsessive refusal to allow his commanders to retreat to more defensible positions. His stand-fast orders, as at Stalingrad,
played right into the Soviet strategy by setting Wehrmacht units up to be encircled. Second, Dodge trucks
provided through the U.S. Lend-Lease program
formed the Soviet logistical spine and kept the armored spearheads resupplied and refueled.
Soviet tactics relied on infantry-armor combinations, backed up by overwhelming fire support from
both artillery and ground attack aircraft. A typical assault in 1944 or 1945 began with reconnaissance battalions infiltrating the German defensive lines to
seize key points. As this was occurring, artillery and
air units would pound the Germans to soften them
up for the assault. After the initial phase, the bombardment would shift to targets in the rear, allowing
an assault on the German lines by infantry, heavy armor, and combat engineers. Finally, combined-arms
groups would follow up and take advantage of newly
made gaps to begin encircling the German forces.
The cost of this strategy was enormous. Estimates
of Soviet military casualties ranged from twenty to
Contemporary Sources
A vast array of material has been published in Russia on World War II, but little of it has been
translated into English, the major exceptions being Vasili I. Chuikovs The End of the Third
Reich (1967) and The Memoirs of Marshal Zhukov (1971). As a result, most of the available
sources for the eastern front in World War II have tended to lean heavily toward the German
point of view. During the Cold War, access to Soviet documents was limited, but that changed
in the 1990s. The collapse of the Soviet Union made thousands of pages of documents and
other contemporary sources available. Although this access has remained restricted and the
Russian Federations processing has often affected the content of available material, the
change in attitude has been remarkable. The new sources have allowed a flowering in studies of
the Soviet experience during World War II, led by such scholars as David Glantz. Harold
Orensteins The Evolution of Soviet Operational Art, 1927-1991: The Documentary Basis
(1995) is probably the best English-language account of the important Soviet documents. Simon Sebag-Montefiores Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar (2003), was based on hitherto unprecedented access to Stalins own records. There have also been many accounts, previously
available only in Russian, that have been translated into English or German, such as D. F.
709
Lozas Commanding the Red Armys Sherman Tanks (1996) and his Fighting for the Soviet
Motherland (1998) as well as Gabriel Temkins My Just War: The Memoir of a Jewish Red
Army Soldier in World War II (1998).
Books and Articles
Dunn, Walter S. Hitlers Nemesis: The Red Army, 1930-1945. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1994.
Erickson, John. The Road to Berlin: Continuing the History of Stalins War with Germany.
Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1983.
_______. The Road to Stalingrad. New York: Harper and Row, 1975.
Forczyk, Robert. Leningrad, 1941-44. New York: Osprey, 2009.
Glantz, David M. Stumbling Colossus: The Red Army on the Eve of World War. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1998.
Glantz, David M., and Jonathan House. When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1995.
Jukes, Geoffrey, The Second World War (5): The Eastern Front, 1941-1945. New York: Osprey, 2002.
Morgan, Hugh. Soviet Aces of World War 2. New York: Osprey, 1997.
Rottman, Gordon L. Soviet Field Fortifications, 1941-45. New York: Osprey, 2007.
_______. Soviet Rifleman, 1941-45. New York: Osprey, 2007.
Sakaida, Henry. Heroes of the Soviet Union, 1941-45. New York: Osprey, 2004.
Shukman, Harold, ed. Stalins Generals. New York: Grove Press, 1993.
Smith, Myron J. The Soviet Army, 1939-1980: A Guide to Sources in English. Santa Barbara,
Calif.: ABC-CLIO, 1982.
Stolfi, R. H. S. Hitlers Panzers East: World War II Reconsidered. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1991.
Zaloga, Steven J. The Red Army of the Great Patriotic War, 1941-45. New York: Osprey, 1989.
Films and Other Media
Army Group North: The Werhmacht in Russia. Documentary. Cromwell Productions, 1999.
Ballad of a Solider. Film. Mosfilm, 1959.
The Battle of Russia. Documentary. Hughes Leisure Group, 1991.
Defiance. Film. Paramount Vantage, 2008.
Enemy at the Gates. Film. Paramount Pictures, 2001.
The World at War. Documentary. Thames Television, 1973.
David Silbey
World War II
Germany and Italy
Dates: 1933-1945
sailles settlement. Police units began to arm and
train secretly, forming what was called the black
Reichswehr, or black defense force.
Any examination of the German military between
1933 and 1945 must address the central role of Adolf
Hitler (1889-1945), who combined the function of
chief executive of the Nazi state with that of supreme
commander of the armed forces. Consequently, the
rise to power of the National Socialist German
Workers (Nazi) Party had profound implications for
the armed forces. Hitler, appointed chancellor in January, 1933, had repeatedly and explicitly called for
the abolition of the Treaty of Versailles and for the rearmament of Germany. The Nazis espoused a worldview predicated on a virulently racist and anti-Semitic
social Darwinist conception of struggle among nations and individuals for resources and power. A perceived racial hierarchy of peoples placed the Aryan
Germans at the top, the Germanic and Latin peoples
of Europe in the middle, non-Europeans and Slavs
near the bottom, and Jews in the lowest category. Hitler fervently believed the Jewish people to be the
source of capitalism, Socialism, and Marxism, and
he felt that the sole intention of the Jews was to corrupt and ultimately destroy the so-called Aryan race.
Consequently, he believed, the Aryans had to eliminate the Jews and expand Aryan territory into the Soviet Union in order to survive and flourish. Germany
would acquire this living space in Eastern Europe
only through military conquest, which, in turn, hinged
on rapid rearmament and expansion.
Following the death of President Paul von Hindenburg (1847-1934) on August 2, 1934, Hitler combined the offices of chancellor and president and required civil servants and members of the armed
forces to swear a personal oath of loyalty to him. Between 1935 and 1939, Germany openly rearmed and
Political Considerations
In the years between 1918 and 1933, German armed
forces assumed a political posture fundamentally
hostile to the young Weimar Republic created at the
end of World War I, blaming that state for Germanys
humiliating defeat in the war, for its enduring political turmoil and economic problems, and for the perceived fraying of its social fabric. For more than a decade after the end of World War I, the German
military tried to circumvent the constraints imposed
upon it by the Treaty of Versailles (1919). With
that treaty, the victorious Allies had abolished German conscription, limited the size of the German
army to 100,000 men (including 5,000 officers) obligated to 12-year terms of service, reduced the German navy to 15,000 men without capital ships or
submarines, and forbidden Germany to create and
maintain a separate air force. Furthermore, Germany
was not allowed to maintain any armor, heavy artillery, or chemical weapons. The Allies, especially
France, clearly intended to limit the role of the German army largely to constabulary duties, thereby
preventing the reemergence of any substantial military threat.
The Versailles treaty elicited virtually universal
disapproval across the political spectrum in Germany; the armed forces themselves took steps to rearm covertly both within and outside the Reich. The
General Staff, forbidden by the Allies, emerged in
embryonic form in one of the administrative offices
of the army. Men who were trained in the numerous
flying clubs that emerged in Germany entered the
army to form the core of a future air force. During the
1920s officers tested armored warfare doctrine and
practiced chemical warfare in the Soviet Union, another nation that regarded itself as a pariah in the Ver710
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Turning Points
713
virtuosity, resilience, and determination. German scientists developed and the Reich launched the V-1 and
V-2 rockets, the first cruise missiles and ballistic missiles, respectively, at targets in Great Britain, Belgium, and the Netherlands. Germany had thereby in
some respects advanced to the frontier of aerospace
research and technology.
The Italian army fought over a longer period than
the Germans, but with far less success. Although the
Italians were involved in the attack of Corfu in 1923,
their first major military action was with the invasion
of Abyssinia in 1935-1936. Although well organized, the Italians were more prepared for a European
war, and that invasion had not allowed for the poor
conditions of roads and the bitterness of the guerrilla
714
warfare waged by the Abyssinians, which hindered
the Italian advance considerably. Although the Italians achieved a victory, it was not an easy one. Italian
soldiers also fought in the Spanish Civil War, though
technically as volunteers. Subsequently, in April of
1939, the Italians invaded Albania in what proved to
be their easiest military action. That against France in
June of 1940 was badly managed and again did not
allow for the ground conditions. In October, 1940,
the Italian invasion of Greece and its subsequent actions in Yugoslavia also went badly. Italians fought
the Allies in North Africa and from 1941 in the Soviet
Union. However, it was during the Allied invasion of
Italy in 1943 when the Italian army fought most tenaciously, although by that time some were supporting
the Allies and others, with German support, were
holding back the Allied advances in southern Italy.
715
siderably with the location of the fighting, with the
elite Alpini, who defended Italys northern frontier,
being well armed, but with many others in the Italian
forces being armed with the single bolt-action
Mannlicher-Carcano Model 1891. As with weapons,
the Italian army had a range of uniforms. These varied because of the climate in the areas where they
were fighting. In Abyssinia and later in North Africa,
the Italians wore khakis, either large, baggy trousers
or shorts. In Europe, their armies wore gray woolen
clothes.
Military Organization
Hitler, in his capacity as fhrer (leader), retained
overall direction of the German armed forces, collectively called the Defense Force, or Wehrmacht. A
war minister had exercised high command until the
dissolution of the war ministry in 1938. Hitler then
established a high command of armed forces (OKW)
as the body through which he would direct the war.
He appointed Wilhelm Keitel (1882-1946), who distinguished himself through particular obsequiousness, as chief of staff and Alfred Jodl (1890-1946) as
head of operations.
Hitler exercised tight control over Germanys
conduct during World War II for several reasons.
First, each member of the armed forces was bound to
him by the oath of loyalty. Second, the Prussian army
officer code had fostered introspection and emphasis
on the purely technical aspects of the conduct of war.
Consequently the German officers excelled at the
tactical level, performed well at the operational level,
and proved deficient at the strategic level. Hitler,
however, believed that he possessed an infallible
grasp of strategy and in the course of the war began to
involve himself increasingly in the details of military
operations. He did so both because of his growing
confidence in himself, especially after Germanys
stunning victories in 1940, and because of his growing distrust of his senior commanders. Hitler had, after all, advocated the attack on Poland and the Benelux countries against the advice of most of his senior
commanders, who feared that Germany was insufficiently prepared for full-scale war at the time. The
716
rapid victories had vindicated Hitler in his own eyes
and, it should be noted, in the perception of many others as well.
The armed forces lacked a single voice, and this
allowed Hitler to exercise his tight control over them.
The service chiefs all had direct access to him, but
usually they acted as partisans of their own branches
and not in tandem with the other armed forces. Hitler
also actively encouraged his subordinates in the military as well as the civilian branches of government to
compete among themselves. He thereby preserved
for himself the role as final arbiter in any dispute and
prevented any power block from forming against
him. Unfortunately for Germany, this approach also
largely prevented effective coordination of the armed
forces into an instrument of coherent strategy.
Mussolini directly controlled the MSVN, the militia, which remained loyal to him. The royal army,
navy, and air force were technically under the command of the King of Italy, and thus when Mussolini
was deposed in 1943, some supported the new proAllied Fascist government, while others remained
loyal to Mussolini.
717
Popperfoto/Getty Images
ing the highest-ranking German, Italian, and Japanese commanders. Germanys fate was sealed by
Hitlers fervent belief in both his own infallibility
and the ascendancy of willpower over material preponderance, by his overestimation of German capabilities and concurrent underestimation of Allied capabilities, and by the subservience of the German
armed forces. Germanys enemies, in contrast, all
learned from their mistakes, improved their own initially inadequate tactics, and mobilized their economies for full-scale war much earlier and more efficiently.
Unlike the German army, the Italians were not
nearly so well mechanized, and they continued to
make heavy use of horses, which in Abyssinia and
Albania proved effective given the poor roads. However, this reliance proved to be a weakness else-
718
where, especially during the Allied invasion of Italy.
The Italians tactics prior to that invasion had been to
try to extend Italys colonial power, whether over
Abyssinia, Albania, North Africa, Yugoslavia, or the
Ionian Islands. Italy was also providing troops for the
Contemporary Sources
Two very important contemporaneous sources are The German Army (1939), by Herbert
Rosinski (1903-1962), and The Handbook of German Military Forces (1945), by the U.S. War
Department. Rosinski assessed the performance and thinking of the Germans and discussed at
length the changes that had transpired in the mindset of German commanders. The breadth of
vision that had characterized the nineteenth century reformers Gerhard Johann David von
Scharnhorst (1755-1813) and August von Gneisenau (1760-1831), Rosinski argued, had
yielded to a narrowly technocratic approach to war that emphasized tactical and operational
proficiency at the expense of the vital, and ultimately decisive, element in military affairs: strategy. The handbook provides the reader with a plethora of valuable technical information about
the organization, weapons, and equipment of the German armed forces and likely provided the
U.S. Army with a most useful tool as it fought Germany in the waning days of World War II. An
invaluable translation entitled Hitlers War Directives, 1939-1945, edited by H. R. TrevorRoper, appeared in several editions (London: Pan, 1966). Hitlers own Mein Kampf (19251927; my struggle) is available in English translation by Ralph Manheim (1939; reprint, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1999), and the 1935 diary of his lover Eva Braun can be read in a 2000
edition from Spectrum International, The Diary of Eva Braun.
Although Mussolini tried to encourage the martial spirit in Italy, compared to the information on the German army there are far fewer works on the Italians available in English. Some of
these include Primo Levis Se questo un uomo (1947; If This Is a Man, 1956; revised as Survival in Auschwitz: The Nazi Assault on Humanity, 1961); Eugenio Cortis Few Returned:
Twenty-eight Days on the Russian Front, Winter 1942-1943 (1997); and Donna M. Budanis
Italian Womens Narratives of Their Experiences During World War II (2003).
719
_______. The Italian Army, 1940-45: Italy, 1943-45. New York: Osprey, 2001.
Millett, Allan, and Murray Williamson. A War to Be Won: Fighting the Second World War.
Cambridge, England: Belknap Press, 2000.
Nicoll, David. The Italian Invasion of Abyssinia, 1935-36. New York: Osprey, 1997.
Thomas, Nigel. German Army in World War II. New York: Osprey, 2002.
_______. The German Army, 1939-45. 5 vols. New York: Osprey, 1997-2000.
Weinberg, Gerhard. Hitler, Germany, and World War II. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1995.
_______. A World at Arms. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994.
Films and Other Media
Das Boot. Feature film. Columbia Pictures/Bavaria Film, 1981.
Massacre in Rome. Feature film. Carlo Ponti, 1973.
Mussolini and I. Television miniseries. HBO, 1985.
The Pianist. Feature film. Focus Features, 2002.
Schindlers List. Feature film. Amblin Entertainment, 1993.
The Sorrow and the Pity: Chronicle of a French City Under the Occupation. Documentary.
Milestone Film & Video, 2001.
Tea with Mussolini. Feature film. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1999.
Triumph of the Will. Propaganda film. Reichsparteitag-film, 1935.
The World at War. Documentary. Thames Television, 1973.
Oliver Griffin
World War II
Japan
Dates: 1931-1945
In September, 1939, the Japanese, seeking to counteract the power of the Allied nations, signed the Tripartite Pact with Germany and Italy, allying itself
with those two Fascist nations in their confrontation
with France and England.
In 1940 Japan had established bases in French
Indochinathe present-day countries of Vietnam,
Laos, and Cambodia. On December 7, 1941, the Japanese launched a surprise attack on the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, in Hawaii, while at the same
time invading the Philippines and the Malay Peninsula. The Japanese forces then attacked the Dutch
East Indies, which they seized for its critical oil
fields.
Political Considerations
The core of Japans military institution, the Imperial
Japanese Army, began its ascendancy to political
dominance in the 1930s. Through the intimidation
and, often, the assassination of its political opponents, the military succeeded in controlling the inner
circle of advisers to the Japanese emperor, Hirohito
(1901-1989). The army, citing its loyalty to the emperor, subscribed to a theory of preparation for total
war and devised a master plan that sought to make
Japan the primary political power in Asia and the
Pacific.
The Japanese Kwantung Army, which, following
World War I, had occupied bases in Manchuria by
treaty with the Chinese, provoked a confrontation
with local Chinese authorities there and launched a
series of military strikes that ended with the occupation of Manchuria in 1931. Six years later, in the vicinity of the Marco Polo Bridge near Beijing, the Japanese alleged an attack by elements of the Chinese
Nationalist Army and launched a campaign of fullscale warfare against China in an attempt to dominate, control, and occupy much of the country.
The U.S. government, together with a number of
Western European nations, sought to oppose the Japanese expansion. These nations launched an economic embargo seeking to limit the growth of Japanese military and naval power. Because Japan lacked
many of the natural resources needed to produce the
supplies and equipment required to fuel a powerful
military machine, these restrictions prompted the
more aggressive elements in the Japanese army to
press for an all-out war against the United States and
its European supporters, mainly the British, Dutch,
and French, all of whom had colonies on both the
South Asian continent and the islands situated off it.
Military Achievement
The initial attacks by Japans armies and navy proved
to be spectacularly successful. The task force that attacked Pearl Harbor consisted of six aircraft carriers
with 183 planes aboard and supporting vessels. This
force wreaked havoc on the unprepared American
fleet tied up at the base. The Americans lost or suffered severe damage to eighteen warships. Some
2,335 sailors were killed, and an additional 1,178
were wounded. The Japanese lost only twenty-nine
aircraft and fifty-five flyers in the attack. The Imperial fleet returned to home base with no loss to its surface units.
The isolated Central Pacific U.S. bases at Guam
and Wake Island fell quickly to the Japanese, who also
occupied both Kiska and Attu, in Alaskas Aleutian Island chain, forestalling any move by the United States
to use the Aleutians as a base in a retaliatory attack.
The Imperial Japanese Army also enjoyed a series
of quick successes in its campaigns in the Philippine
720
721
Islands, the Malay Peninsula, and the Dutch East Indies. Although the Americans put up spirited defenses on Luzons Bataan Peninsula and Corregidor,
by April 9, 1942, the Japanese had secured control of
the Philippines. General Douglas MacArthur (18801964), commanding the combined American and
Filipino forces, had received his orders to leave for
Australia before the actual fall of the Philippines.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945) and the
Allies needed him to prepare that continent against
attack in the event that the Japanese moved in that direction.
The British defense of Malaya and Singapore
proved to be even more disastrous. Despite numerical superiority, the British were no match for the Japanese infantry, whose units included the best of the
Imperial Japanese Army. By February 15, 1942, Japan had captured Singapore, gaining control of the
entire Malay Peninsula.
The Japanese had advanced into both Burma and
the Dutch East Indies as well, ensuring the island
empires supply of both rice and oil. In fewer than
one hundred days, the Japanese military had accomplished all of the goals originally established by Imperial General Staff.
The euphoria of these early Japanese victories had
disappeared by mid-1942. Their advance in the Pacific islands was far less successful. In April of that
year, U.S. B-25 bombers flew off a
carrier to conduct a raid on the cities
of Tokyo, Yokohama, Kobe, and
Nagoya. Moreover, the Americans
July, 1937
turned back Japanese invasion fleets
Dec. 7, 1941
intent on taking all of New Guinea
to the south and Midway, formerly
June 4-7, 1942
Brooks Islands, to the east. In the
latter battle, a turning point in the
war, the Japanese lost four virtu1944
ally irreplaceable aircraft carriers
and some of their best naval aviaApr., 1945
tors. General MacArthur then began
a campaign to recover all of New
Guinea and to take back the PhilipAug. 5, 1945
pines. This action by the Americans
ended the threat of Japanese invaAug. 15, 1945
sion of Australia.
Turning Points
Japan invades China.
The Japanese attack on the U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii, brings the United States into World War II.
Japanese loss of aircraft carriers at the Battle of Midway
undermines the possibility of holding earlier gains in
the Pacific.
The Japanese begin kamikaze attacks on Allied ships in
the Pacific.
In the last major amphibious offensive of World War II,
U.S. forces invade Okinawa and, after meeting fierce
resistance, seize the island from Japan.
The United States drops an atomic bomb on the Japanese
city of Hiroshima, killing more than 70,000 people.
Emperor Hirohito announces Japans surrender.
722
Soviet Union
Sakh
la
nd
alin
n
l a
I s
A l
e u t i
a n
ur
il
Is
Outer
Mongolia
Peking
Manchuria
Korea
Hiroshima
Tokyo
China
Japan
Shanghai
The
Hump
Nagasaki
Okinawa
Hong Kong
Formosa
Burma
Bataan
Rangoon
Luzon
Siam
(Thailand) Indo-
Philippine
Is.
Pearl
Harbor
Mariana
Is.
Hawaiian Is.
Wake I.
Guam
Marshall
Is.
china
Leyte
Midway I.
Iwo Jima
Caroline I.
Eniwetok
Malaya
Tarawa
Gilbert I.
Singapore
Borneo
Sumatra
New
Guinea
Solomon
Is.
Java
Guadalcanal
Port
Moresby
Indian
Coral
Ocean
Sea
Australia
723
The Japanese submarine fleet did not conduct
long-range raiding campaigns on U.S. shipping, as
did the German fleet in the Atlantic Ocean. More often it operated either as part of larger fleet units or
as supply ships for the armys increasingly isolated
Pacific island bases. U.S. submarines, in contrast,
preyed constantly upon the limited number of Japanese merchant ships and the extended supply lines on
which Japan depended to move materials to its home
islands.
Military Organization
Japan had, by 1940, become a totalitarian nation. The
military, utilizing Hirohito as a symbol, had organized Japanese society into a cohesive body dedicated to the worship of the emperor and total obedience to a government dominated by the leaders of the
Japanese Imperial Army and Navy. Civilian diplomats, including the countrys prime minister, served
only to cover the aggressive planning of the military
factions. Japanese industry no longer operated as a
competitive economic entity in the world market, as
manufacturers subordinated themselves to government control and dedicated themselves to meeting
the needs of the armed forces.
The war in China had, however, decimated both
Japans manpower and its resources. By mid-1941
Japan had already lost 185,000 soldiers, and peace in
China remained elusive to Japanese planners. The
Japanese High Command, however, insisted on the
empires expansion to provide the raw material necessary for the growth of Japan as a major global
power.
One critical factor continued to plague the military hierarchy throughout the 1930s and 1940s: An
intense rivalry existed between the army and navy
factions. Each force had its own assessment of the direction the armed forces should take, and they quarreled constantly over the countrys military priorities.
The Japanese army saw Japans major long-term
enemy to be the Soviet Union and its implied threat of
a communist world revolution and sought to concentrate the empires resources on a continuing buildup
724
of its ground forces and support troops on the Asian
mainland itself. The army saw the European colonies
on the continents southern boundaries as the solution to its needs for basic commodities to strengthen
its military capabilities. It was prepared to go to war
with the United States only if that country denied Japan the raw materials necessary to create and maintain a self-sufficient empire.
The Japanese navy saw the United States as Japans primary threat. It recognized the potential of
the powerful American fleet, with its capabilities for
a wide range of operations throughout the Pacific, its
virtually unlimited supply of fuel, and its shipyard
construction capacity. The navy sought to increase
substantially its number of capital ships in order to
NARA
On May 11, 1945, in the Pacific theater, two Japanese kamikaze pilots directed their aircraft into the USS
Bunker Hill off Kyushu.
725
U.S. Navy
The tail section of a Japanese Suisei aircraft on the deck of the USS
Kitkun Bay after exploding over the ship.
726
training began. Future officers completed their
schooling at the military academy in Ichigaya. Subjected to constant heavy indoctrination, they adopted
the concept of a will which knows no defeat. Their
mentors emphasized physical conditioning and discouraged independent thinking. Future officers were
expected to subscribe fully to the bushidf code.
They, in turn, demanded the same obedience to orders from the enlisted personnel under them.
Throughout the many battles for the islands of the
Pacific, the sites were secured by invading U.S. soldiers only after every last Japanese fighter was killed.
On Saipan and Okinawa, Japanese civilians, both
men and women, joined the doomed soldiers in the final conflict. In the case of Okinawa, 150,000 civilians, one-third of the islands population, died following the U.S. invasion, often accompanying and
aiding soldiers and sailors of the Imperial Army and
Navy.
The bushidf code had its dark side. By Western
standards Japanese army and navy units engaged in
substantial violations of human rights in their contact
with civilian populations in conquered lands and
with captured military prisoners. After seizing the
city of Nanjing from Chinese forces in 1937, the Imperial Japanese Army ran amok, slaughtering an estimated 250,000 of the citys civilian population. Tens
of thousands of Chinese civilians were also massacred in Singapore soon after the Japanese capture of
the city.
In another example of contempt for those who
chose to surrender, during the so-called Bataan Death
March (1942) Japanese soldiers killed thousands of
captured American and Filipino troops suffering
from illness and exhaustion. After their surrender
some of the weakened and starving prisoners had
failed to keep pace with the march to prison camps
ordered by their conquerors. Those who fell behind
were summarily shot or beaten to death. A similar series of atrocities took place on the Burma-Siam Railroad, and in the Sandakan Death March. In these
cases and in many others, the Japanese failed to recognize the precepts of the Geneva Conventions as
they applied to the humane treatment of prisoners of
war.
The overall strategy of the Japanese military
counted on the capture of critical Southeast Asian areas that were rich in resources. Once secured, the
army was prepared to hold these bases tenaciously,
while the navy protected the seas around them. The
Japanese High Command expected the troops in the
field to resist to the last man any forces seeking to dislodge them. Unfortunately for the Japanese strategists, Japan lost both air and sea supremacy as the
war continued. The island bastions fell one by one.
Finally, U.S. forces dropped atom bombs on cities in
the home islands, which the Japanese could no longer
successfully defend.
Tactically the Japanese military depended on the
tenacity of its infantry, termed by the military propaganda as men of spirit. Adopting this concept,
the infantry followed a pattern of aggressive offensive tactics. Convinced of his superior physical
conditioning, the Japanese soldier sought to close
with the enemy and engage in hand-to-hand combat,
often in nighttime sneak attacks. The military planners designed this approach to terrify their opponents.
With the use of Kamikaze air and sea formations,
the Japanese High Command believed it could exact
such fearful losses on U.S. naval and civilian shipping that the United States would refrain from trying
to invade the Japanese home islands. Even after the
Japanese armed forces lost their ability to stop the advancing Allied armies, they prepared to give up their
lives rather than surrender. This Japanese commitment to self-destruction, as well as the potential loss
of both American and Japanese civilian lives, motivated U.S. president Harry S. Truman (1884-1972)
to use atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in
order to convince Japanese emperor Hirohito to surrender his nation.
Contemporary Sources
English translations of Japanese texts actually written during World War II are rare. Some
insight into the Japanese thinking at the time can be found in Paul S. Sakamakis I Attacked
727
728
China
Modern Warfare
Dates: Since 1912
Attempts to restore the Qing Dynasty continued
until 1919. Meanwhile, competition had developed
between isolationist military officers led by General
Yuan Shikai (Yuan Shi-kai, 1859-1916), based in
northeastern China, and the pro-Western Nationalist
Party, or Guomindang (Kuomintang), led by Sun
Yat-sen (Pinyin, Sun Yixian, 1866-1925), based in
southern China. Suns meager armed forces were
crushed by Yuans allies in 1913, and the introduction of democratic elections was cut short. Yuans associates arranged for him to be named emperor, but
his death in 1916 ended their cooperation. Instead,
their armies clashed with each other during Chinas
Warlord Period (1916-1928).
Sun Yat-sen sought democratic government in
China, but he recognized that military unification
must precede political modernization. Suns small
force was defeated in 1922 by the warlords of central
China. Nonetheless, Suns Nationalist Party opened
the Huangpu (Whampoa) Academy to train officers
loyal to Sun and the academys president, General
Chiang Kai-shek (Pinyin, Jiang Jieshi, 1887-1975).
Before Suns death in 1925, the Nationalist Party
formed an alliance with the small Chinese Communist Party, which drew its support chiefly from Chinas tiny urban working class. Communist leader
Zhou Enlai (Chou En-lai, 1898-1976) was the chief
political instructor at Huangpu, and soon both Nationalists and Communists were recruiting officer
trainees there.
This period of alliance, known as the First United
Front, ended when Chiangs forces attacked Communist networks in August, 1927. The Communists
fought back but were scattered. A splinter group,
led by Mao Zedong (Mao Tse-tung, 1893-1976) retreated into a mountainous hinterland and began recruiting peasants to party membership. Meanwhile,
Political Considerations
Late nineteenth century China was ruled by the imperial government of the Qing (Ching) Dynasty, which
had its capital at Beijing (Peking). Although the royal
family and most senior officials were Manchus, an
ethnically and linguistically distinct Northeast Asian
people who had overthrown the native Chinese Ming
Dynasty in 1644, ethnic Chinese elites retained control over local affairs. Chinas military apparatus
atrophied, and clashes with expanding European
powers led to stunning military defeats. Meanwhile,
Chinas economy failed to sustain industrial development, and widespread peasant rebellions compounded economic instability and further eroded the
Manchus political authority.
The imperial government authorized a military
modernization program designed by scholar and
military strategist Li Hongzhang (Li Hung-chang,
1823-1901). Li oversaw the construction of weapons
factories and shipyards, but financial and political
difficulties stunted his efforts. After Lis forces were
defeated by Japan during the First Sino-Japanese
War (1894-1895), Japan took control of the island of
Taiwan, humiliating the Qing court and sparking an
expansion of Lis military modernization program.
Lis reforms elevated a new generation of Chinese
military commanders, who soon threatened the
weakened Manchus. The Boxer Rebellion (1900), an
antiforeign uprising by secret societies, further demonstrated Qing vulnerability, with the court initially
hoping that they could use the uprising to achieve
their objectives without having to commit their army,
although they eventually did so with disastrous results. The courts decision to form a national assembly in 1910 failed, and the imperial government collapsed in 1911.
731
732
Chiang unified most warlord armies under his command. During the early 1930s, he attacked Maos
base areas, and the Communists peasant army was
forced to retreat to more remote rural areas in Chinas
interior on a 6,000-mile trek known as the Long
March.
Meanwhile, Japans encroachment into Chinas
northern provinces expanded in the mid-1930s to include central China. In 1936 a new alliance, known
as the Second United Front, was forged between the
Nationalists and Communists, who pledged to cooperate against Japan. Mao used the respite from Nationalist attacks to expand the Communist Party. As
the 1940s began, Japan advanced into southern
China and most of Southeast Asia, while the Nationalist armies quietly awaited Allied victories over Japan in the Pacific. The Communists, meanwhile,
achieved wide popularity by harassing Japanese
troops and installations and by implementing land reforms and building Party networks behind Japanese
lines.
After Japan surrendered in 1945, units of the
Communist-led Peoples Liberation Army (PLA)
occupied the rural areas of most northeastern provinces, while Nationalist forces were airlifted to the
major cities. Military clashes soon escalated into a
full-scale civil war. With widespread popular support, Communist forces swept through northern and
central China. Hundreds of thousands of Nationalist
troops fled or defected. Finally, in late 1949, the remaining Nationalist troops gathered on the island of
Taiwan, where Chiang established a government-inexile. The Communist Party under Mao founded its
national government in Beijing in October, 1949.
In 1950, acting as the Chinese Peoples Volunteers, PLA troops entered Korea in aid of the Korean
communists quest to unify the peninsula. Chinese
Communist troops also reinforced the coast nearest
Taiwan, pursued remnant Nationalist units along the
border with Indochina and Burma, and moved to establish Communist Party authority in Tibet. In Korea, however, the PLA faced U.N. forces led by the
United States until a ceasefire agreement was concluded in 1953. There was also a war with India from
June until November 1962.
During the late 1950s political tensions between
China
However, the more important developments within the military were
to face possible confrontations from
outside. The controversy over the
U.S. spy plane incident (the Hainan
Island incident in April, 2001) demonstrated to the Chinese that there
was still a worry about U.S. incursions. With the Chinese continuing
to invest heavily in their air force,
there was also uncertainty over
events in North Korea and the possibility of the Chinese intervening to
support the North Korean government should it face an external invasion.
Military Achievement
733
Turning Points
1928
1934-1935
1937
1946-1949
Oct., 1950
Nov. 10, 1950
Jan.-Feb., 1955
Mar.-Apr., 1959
Oct.-Nov., 1962
1964
1966
Chinas defeat in 1895 bolstered the
position of Manchu reformers who
endorsed military modernization.
Their great accomplishment was the
Feb.-Mar., 1979
creation of the New Armies, in
Apr.-June, 1989
which Chinese soldiers were uniformly organized under profes1993
sional officers and armed with modern weapons. These brigades were
July, 2009
trained in European tactics, organized into specialist battalions that
included artillery and engineers, and
armed with imported European weaponry.
In the 1920s warlord armies undermined domestic order and caused economic havoc. The unification of most warlords under the Nationalist Party of
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek reestablished Chinese political unity and laid the foundation for the
reemergence of a united Chinese state.
From 1934 to 1935 the Communist Party leadership under Mao Zedong was able to preserve an experienced corps of military leaders by undertaking
the strategic retreat known as the Long March. By
withdrawing rather than confronting superior Nationalist troops, the Communists retained an autonomous and politically reliable military force. This
734
USSR
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R iv e
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Harbin
Mongolia
Changchun
Jilin
Shenyang
Xinbao-an
Dunhuang
Dahushan
Jinzhou
Beijing
Ko
Tainjin
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Luoyang
China
Ye l l o w
Sea
Kaifeng
Sea of
Ja p a n
an
Zhangjiakou
Jap
Xuzhou
Shuangduiji
Ti
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Ya
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Hankow
Nanjing
Langxi
Shanghai
Hangzhou
East
China
Sea
a
Guangzhou
French
IndoChina
Burma
Hong Kong
Taiwan
Th
ail and
first successful test shot in 1964, Chinas military establishment also undertook development of missilebased weapons delivery systems.
The PLA, which managed manufacturing, agricultural, and transportation systems during the
1970s and 1980s, shed its auxiliary enterprises during the 1990s. Free market companies assumed
some functions; others were eliminated completely.
At the same time, through joint ventures with foreign
companies, the PLA acquired advanced military
technologies, especially in the aerospace sector.
China
and spear-tipped poles. The bow and arrow were
standard equipment as late as 1910. Bannermen,
the Qing Dynastys regular troops, included some
units selected for modernization. These troops
were issued flintlock muskets, outdated by European
standards. Each soldier carried his gunpowder ration
in a vulnerable bamboo case.
In the early 1900s the New Armies, composed
of native Chinese, planned for artillery units to be attached to each division; in reality, however, the use
of artillery pieces and ordnance was rare. Infantry
firearms varied in design and caliber and included
weapons of Japanese, German, and French manufacture, as well as locally produced copies. Ammunition
was frequently unavailable. Both artillery and muskets were manufactured using British designs at the
Jiangnan (Chiangnan) Arsenal near Shanghai. The
modernized Beiyang (Peiyang) Fleet was commanded by military reformer Li Hongzhang and included Chinas earliest armored elements, metalplated gunwales and armored steamships from the
Fuzhou (Fuchou) Arsenal.
From 1911 Chinas armies adopted Europeanstyle uniforms of cotton tunic coats with standing
collars, trousers, and peaked caps. Winter outfits included quilted jackets and leather boots. Rank insignia were adopted and affixed to cuffs and caps, with
colored shoulder straps and cap bands indicating
branch of service. Labor units assisting the Allies
during World War I wore tunic and trouser outfits
without insignia, and cloth shoes.
During the Warlord Period, the number of men
under arms in China grew rapidly. Primarily landless
laborers, warlord soldiers enlisted for three-year to
five-year tours of duty. Weaponry symbolized status,
and functioning weapons quickly passed on to new
owners from dead or wounded soldiers. Machine
guns and artillery were scarce, as were spare parts. In
the northern provinces cavalry units were common,
but southern unfamiliarity with horses stunted cavalry development there. Chiang Kai-shek contracted
with U.S., Soviet, and British arms dealers to supply
his Nationalist troops, who received huge quantities
of weapons, ammunition, and supplies from the U.S.
government during the Chinese Civil War (19261949).
735
After World War II (1939-1945), Communist
forces seized Japanese weapons and supplies, including winter uniforms of leather boots, lined caps, and
quilted jackets. During the Civil War, Nationalist
troops also lost large stockpiles of U.S. military
equipment, including heavy artillery, machine guns,
and explosives, to the Communists, who later used it
against U.S. troops in Korea. At the same time Chinese troops were sent to Korea with inadequate clothing, including lightweight summer uniforms, shoes
made of rubber and canvas, and few hats or gloves.
The PLA in the early 1950s had few trucks, aircraft, or ships and lacked modern logistical systems.
The Soviet Union provided some vehicles and ships
and supervised development of specialized systems
such as quartermaster, field communications, and
antiaircraft batteries. Soviet advisers also oversaw
the introduction of rank insignia on PLA uniforms, a
step that Chinese leaders had opposed as elitist.
After Soviet aid was withdrawn in 1959 and 1960,
Chinese research and development efforts accelerated. The PLA Navy produced antiship missiles, underwater ordnance, submarine weapons systems, and
electronic countermeasures technology. A first generation of Chinese destroyers, submarines, deepwater survey vessels, and frigates was introduced
during the 1960s. Antisubmarine destroyers became
a production priority in the 1970s, as did mine
sweepers and acoustic guidance systems for submarine missiles. During the 1980s development of
nuclear-powered submarines became a premier national goal. In 1985 Chinas leaders endorsed a plan
to prepare for local war under high-tech conditions, and ordered the military integration of computer technology. In 1999 a ten-year plan was adopted
for investments in highly advanced weaponry, including submarine-launched ballistic missiles and
missile defense systems.
After Chinas nuclear weapons capability was
demonstrated in 1964, the development of more advanced delivery systems became a priority. In 1965
research began on intercontinental ballistic missiles
capable of delivering nuclear warheads to the continental United States, a goal achieved in the mid1980s. In 1957 PLA soldiers began to be outfitted
with increasingly sophisticated radiation protection
736
equipment, including face masks, disposable clothing, and special rubber boots and gloves. This would
increase in later decades, especially after the war
with Vietnam in 1979. The lack of success in that
conflict saw an overhaul of the supply systems for
soldiers.
The launching, in 2003, of the first Chinese Taikonaut (astronaut) into space was greeted with great
pride by the Chinese and represented a major move
for the Chinese military into space technology on top
of an extensive series of satellites.
Military Organization
During the late Qing period, the imperial Manchu
and native Chinese bureaucracies each maintained
distinct military organizations. Manchu forces known
as bannermen were responsible for national defense, whereas Chinese armies and militia managed
civil administration, revenue collection, and local security. Economic dislocations cut the number of
bannermen supported by the imperial government
from 250,000 in 1840 to about 170,000 in 1900.
Bannermen were compulsorily enrolled from Manchu
clans and organized into a series of banners, sociomilitary groups based on kinship among the clans.
Manchu soldiers were traditionally skilled horsemen, but cavalry units had disappeared by 1895, and
in many imperial garrisons bannermen were primarily bureaucrats.
After Chinas defeat by Japan in 1895, officer
training academies were opened with Japanese instructors, most of them influenced by the German
principles of military conscription, centralized command, and standardized troop organization. In 1904
an imperial commission approved plans for a new national army of native Chinese, composed of thirty-six
divisions manned at half strength during peacetime.
European systems of officer ranks and reserves were
introduced, with supplies and logistics managed at
the divisional level. The divisions raised were poorly
armed, and junior officers developed personal loyalties to their commanders rather than to the government. Yuan Shikai emerged as a leader from among
these commanders, and between 1908 and 1911 con-
servative Manchu officials tried unsuccessfully to remove troops from his control. After the collapse of
the Qing Dynasty, Yuan utilized his personal networks to consolidate his power.
During the Warlord Period following Yuans
death in 1916, his allies raised larger armies with less
stringent organizational schedules. Personal loyalties meant that officers of like rank were not interchangeable, and the lack of weapons and training inhibited the development of specialized units such as
artillery and engineers. In 1937 Nationalist general
Chiang Kai-shek reorganized the Nationalist Army
to promote his political allies. A system of regional
war theaters was devised under which Chiangs
trusted lieutenants were concentrated in northern and
central China near Communist base areas. Less reliable warlord armies lately merged with Nationalist
forces were deployed against the Japanese in the
coastal provinces.
The internal characteristics of the Communist
Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) reflected its rural
origins. Many of its early officers had no formal command training and relied heavily upon personal connections to consolidate their authority. Regional field
armies, each with a particular mix of peasants and
professionals, emerged during the 1930s. The PLA
also developed large labor corps recruited from the
peasantry for transportation and construction projects. Their recruitment relied upon propaganda and
coercion rather than forced conscription. Soldiers
and laborers were induced to volunteer to help
their villages meet manpower targets. Terms of service were unlimited, and no leave was permitted.
During the 1930s the communist military organization gained a commissariat, a system of Communist Party operatives whose structure paralleled that
of the army. The commissars function was to assure
the allegiance of the military forces to the Party. Political surveillance was conducted from the squad
level up using the three by three method, in which
each soldier was observed by two others whose reports influenced both his and their advancement. The
commissariat was governed by the General Political
Department of the Communist Party, and the PLA
was controlled by the Central Military Commission
under the Partys Central Committee.
China
737
738
fense, submarine warfare, and intelligence were enlarged. The proliferation of specialist arms of the
PLA demonstrated the Chinese militarys doctrinal
shift from popular participation in a peoples war
to the articulation of main force operational plans appropriate to a technically advanced battlefield environment.
During the 1990s, the Chinese were involved in
continuing to develop their missile program and their
nuclear arsenal. In 1996 missiles were fired over Taiwan as a warning as the people there voted and it
looked as though they might seek independence ending the Republic of China. The Chinese government
has built up its navy, which was involved in disputes
over the Spratly Islands and some other islands in
the South China Sea. With the increasing wealth
of China, many Chinese military officers began to
travel overseas far more than ever before, and this led
to far greater engagement between the Chinese military and other countries than ever before.
China
739
Contemporary Sources
Maos development of a rural-based, politico-military strategy was the most significant and
influential strategic doctrine originating in twentieth century China. Its first detailed explication appeared in 1927 in Report on an Investigation of the Peasant Movement in Hunan, in
which Mao defined a Communist-led revolution originating among rural agricultural peasants
rather than urban industrial workers, as Soviet orthodoxy dictated. In The Struggle in the
Chinkiang Mountains (1928) Mao described the breadth of the peasantrys support for the
Communist military apparatus and emphasized the importance of concentrating forces on specific targets. In Problems of Strategy in Chinas Revolutionary War (1936) Mao argued that
despite its shortcomings, the Communist-led military could prevail over larger and betterequipped forces by utilizing guerrilla and mobile main force operations. He accepted the need
for a protracted struggle and for a strategic defense that would conserve military strength and
exploit tactical opportunities. Maos Problems of Strategy in Guerrilla War Against Japan
(1938) outlined procedures for recruiting peasants and explained his famous revolutionary formula on rural areas engulfing the cities. Finally Mao explained the combination of main force
military units with a mobilized peasantry to achieve a revolutionary victory in The Present Situation and Our Tasks (1947).
During the 1960s and 1970s, the Foreign Languages Press in Beijing published reminiscences of many generals, officers, and ordinary soldiers, but these rarely contained much more
than anecdotes about famous incidents or battles. More detailed biographical and autobiographical works have been published in Chinese, although few have been translated into English, and of these generally only extracts have been published.
Books and Articles
Beckett, Ian, ed. Communist Military Machine. London: Bison, 1985.
Benton, Gregor. Mountain Fires: The Red Armys Three-Year War in South China, 1934-1938.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992.
Bodin, Lynn. The Boxer Rebellion. New York: Osprey, 1979.
Chen, Jian. Chinas Road to the Korean War: The Making of Sino-American Confrontation.
New York: Columbia University Press, 1994.
Cheung, Tai Ming. Fortifying China: The Struggle to Build a Modern Defense Economy.
Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2009.
Corfield, Justin J. The Australian Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Boxer Uprising, 1899-1901.
McCrae, Vic.: Slouch Hat Books, 2001.
740
Political Considerations
The World War II (1939-1945) alliance of the United
States, Great Britain, France, China, and the Soviet
Union against the Fascist regimes in Germany, Italy,
and Japan masked fundamental ideological differences among the Allies, which became apparent as
the victorious powers attempted to reorder international relationships. The United States, as leader of
the democratic, capitalistic nations, promoted free
elections, collective security through the United Nations, and freedom of trade. The Soviet Union, still
stinging from the loss of twenty million dead during
the war and fearful of American nuclear capability,
was intent on securing its borders and surrounding itself with subservient, communist governments. As a
result of these differing goals, the United States and
the Soviet Union clashed over occupation of Japan,
the Soviet withdrawal from Persia, the selection of
postwar governments throughout Eastern Europe,
the development of nuclear weapons, and the eventual fate of Germany and Berlin, which had been divided among the European victors at the end of the
war. On February 9, 1946, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin (1879-1953) followed an ideological line in blaming capitalism for World War II, thus justifying an
aggressive five-year plan of rearmament.
In reaction to Soviet exploitation of postwar economic instability in Europe, particularly in Greece
and Turkey, American leaders implemented two programs designed to forestall Soviet influence. The
Truman Doctrine (March, 1947) called for a policy of
global containment of communism and offered
American support for free peoples resisting foreign
domination. Its economic counterpart was a European recovery program proposed by Secretary of
State George C. Marshall (1880-1959) in June, 1947,
741
742
parties more tightly under Soviet control. Two events
in 1949 raised the international diplomatic position
of the Soviet Union to one of near equality with the
United States, creating the superpower rivalry that
lasted until 1991. After four years of civil war in
China, the Russian-backed Communists under Mao
Zedong (Mao Tse-tung; 1893-1976) defeated the
pro-Western Nationalist Party of Chiang Kai-shek
(Jiang Jieshi; 1887-1975), driving him to the island
of Taiwan. In the same year, Russian scientists successfully exploded their first atomic bomb.
By 1950 the world had become clearly polarized
in an ideological struggle known as the Cold War.
For more than four decades, almost every facet of international relations was a battleground between the
United States and its democratically oriented allies
on one hand and the Soviet Union and other communist countries on the other. Both superpowers vied for
supremacy in weapons, space, economics, security,
and influence in the undeveloped (Third World)
nations. Ironically, with two superpowers possessing
nuclear weapons by 1949, direct confrontation be-
National Archives
President John F. Kennedy meets with U.S. Air Force staff to discuss surveillance flights over Cuba in October,
1962.
743
Turning Points
July 16, 1945
Feb. 22, 1946
Mar. 12, 1947
Oct. 4, 1957
1989
First successful test of the atomic bomb is made at Alamogordo, New Mexico.
George F. Kennans Long Telegram articulates the rationale behind Soviet aggression and advocates
a firm U.S. response, with force if necessary.
President Harry S. Truman introduces the Truman Doctrine, committing the United States to
responsibility for defending global democracy, a clear signal of U.S. intention to check Soviet
expansion and influence.
The Soviet Union launches the world s first artificial earth satellite, inaugurating the space race,
sparking a reassessment of U.S. military and technologic capabilities, and providing impetus for the
development of both a space program and more sophisticated weapons-delivery systems.
A U.S. pilot takes pictures indicating that Soviets are placing missiles on Cuba, and the ensuing crisis
takes the world to the nuclear brink before ending on October 26.
The United States pursues a policy of escalated military involvement in Vietnam.
The United States engages in a policy of dtente, seeking to establish more stable relations between it
and NATO and the Soviet Union, China, and their respective allies.
After an Iranian mob takes over the U.S. embassy in November, 1979, and the Soviet Union invades
Afghanistan in December, 1979, the United States vows that it will consider threats to the Persian
Gulf region as threats to its vital interests.
Mikhail Gorbachev is chosen as the new General Secretary of the Soviet Union, and his reforms
initiate a thaw in relations between the United States and the Soviet Union.
U.S. president Ronald Reagan and Soviet general secretary Gorbachev sign the INF Treaty governing
intermediate nuclear forces (INF) and calling for the destruction of U.S. and Soviet missiles and
nuclear weapons.
The dismantling of Germanys Berlin Wall signifies the end of the Cold War, as U.S president George
H. W. Bush promises economic aid to the Soviet Union.
November, 1969, concluding with the SALT I agreement (May 26, 1972), which prohibited nationwide
deployment of antiballistic missile systems and declared a five-year moratorium on strategic rocket
launch systems. In the same year, Nixon made a historic trip to Beijing, leading to marginally better relations with the Chinese.
After decades of massive military spending, the
Soviet Union had achieved a rough technological
parity with the United States by the 1980s. Beginning in 1985 Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev
(born 1931) attempted to modernize Soviet political
and economic institutions by restructuring the government and allowing greater freedom of expression.
In March, 1988, he declared a policy of nonintervention in Eastern Europe, which rapidly led to the
ouster of communist officials (1989). In December,
1989, Lithuania became the first Soviet republic to
abolish the communist monopoly of political power,
with other republics following suit. In 1990, the Soviet government cut back aid to communist regimes.
After prolonged strikes, negotiations, and threats, the
Warsaw Pact was disbanded in 1991, and the Soviet
Union finally ceased to exist on December 25, 1991,
leaving the United States as the only world superpower.
Military Achievement
The principal goal of United States and NATO troops
during the Cold War was to contain communism
within borders established during and shortly after
World War II. A major NATO action in Korea, dominated by American troops, successfully stopped
North Korean communist expansion south of the
thirty-eighth parallel. From the 1950s, Western
ideological commitment to democratic governments
744
was complicated by two important prewar rivalries.
First, indigenous nationalistic movements in Africa
and Asia, seeking to free themselves from American
influence or European colonial domination, were attracted by the communist model of anticapitalist,
state-controlled economies, and by the offer of economic and military assistance from the Soviet Union.
Second, and closely related to emergent nationalism,
was the conflict between Jews and Arabs, which had
been simmering since the advent of the Zionist
movement in the 1880s, and which broke out into
open conflict with the creation in 1948 of the state of
Israel. Although Germany and the United States
played a major role in building up the Israeli military,
and the Soviet Union contributed heavily to the modernization of armed forces in Egypt, Syria, and Iraq,
both superpowers stood aside from combat during
the Israeli Wars (1948-1949, 1956, 1967, 1973, 1982).
Important developing nations such as Egypt, India, and Indonesia declared themselves neutral in the
Cold War in 1955, but many undeveloped countries
found it difficult to resist superpower pressure and
enticement. Fidel Castro (born 1926 or 1927) led Cuban rebels in overthrowing the pro-American Batista
regime in 1959, then joined the communist bloc in
1960. The threat posed by a socialist government in
the Western Hemisphere led the United States to support the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion (April 17,
1961). Increasing Russian support of Cuba, including the installation of silos that could house missiles
capable of supporting a nuclear attack on the United
States, led to the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. An
American blockade and intense negotiations forestalled direct conflict, as the Soviets agreed not to deploy offensive weapons, though limited numbers of
Russian troops remained in Cuba until 1991. Fearing
further communist expansion in the Caribbean, the
United States sent troops to the Dominican Republic
(1965-1966) and Grenada (1983) to support proWestern regimes.
In the wake of the French defeat in Indochina
(1954), the United States in 1961 pledged to support
South Vietnam in combating communist guerrillas
known as Viet Cong. Despite the commitment of
more than 500,000 troops at the height of the war
(1964-1973) in Vietnam, the United States was un-
745
The USS Vincennes, a guided missile cruiser, firing an antisubmarine rocket during trials in 1985.
746
themselves were the means of delivering them. In
1950 the United States possessed 38 B36s, which
provided the first true intercontinental delivery capability. In 1957 the Soviet Union successfully launched
the first satellite, Sputnik, and the first intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), leading to an intensification of American research and development of similar capabilities. In early 1962, the United States
enjoyed a significant lead in both heavy bombers,
with 639 B-52s alone to 100 Russian bombers, and
ICBMs, with 280 U.S. to 35 Russian missiles. By the
early 1970s, however, the Soviet Union had surpassed the United States in the production of both,
though each country had many times the number of
nuclear weapons necessary for annihilating both its
adversary and the earth itself.
After the peak period in Vietnam, the U.S. military reached its low point in numbers (420,000) in
1972 and remained relatively weak in troop strength,
quality, and morale throughout the 1970s. At the
same time, the Soviet Union made massive strides in
improving the quality of its air force, navy, and missile delivery systems, leading to much debate in
NATO countries about basic defense doctrines. With
the growing strength of the Soviet Union and increased U.S. responsibilities in the wake of the Iranian Revolution of 1979, President Jimmy Carter issued Presidential Directive 59 (July, 1980), which
ordered significant development of new forces designed to win a limited nuclear war. This was followed by the aggressive administration of President
Ronald Reagan (1981-1989), which spent more than
$2 trillion in building up both conventional and nuclear weapons, including the controversial spacebased Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), commonly
called Star Wars, in 1983. As the Cold War drew to
a close, NATO forces included about 1.1 million
troops; 20,000 main battle tanks; 3,250 combat aircraft; and 650 attack helicopters, all excluding potential French contributions.
Military Organization
Throughout the Cold War, mobile army infantry
units were central to the projection of American
747
Contemporary Sources
In an age of easy access to both battlefields and print, the number of contemporary sources is
immense. The amount of documentation is further augmented by memoirs of government officials, which in an age of limited political warfare become as important as those of field com-
748
749
Glynn, Patrick. Closing Pandoras Box: Arms Races, Arms Control, and the History of the Cold
War. New York: Basic, 1992.
Graebner, Norman A., Richard Dean Burns, and Joseph M. Siracusa. Reagan, Bush, Gorbachev:
Revisiting the End of the Cold War. Westport, Conn.: Praeger Security International, 2008.
Jordan, Robert S. Norstad: Cold War NATO Supreme Commander. New York: Palgrave, 2000.
LaFeber, Walter. America, Russia, and the Cold War, 1945-2006. 10th ed. Boston: McGrawHill, 2008.
Mayers, David. The Ambassadors and Americas Soviet Policy. New York: Oxford University
Press, 1995.
Miller, D. M. O., et al. The Balance of Military Power. New York: St. Martins Press, 1981.
Oberdorfer, Don. The Turn: From the Cold War to a New Era. New York: Poseidon Press,
1991.
Schmidt, Gustav, ed. A History of NATO: The First Fifty Years. 3 vols. New York: Palgrave,
2001.
Stone, David. Wars of the Cold War: Campaigns and Conflicts, 1945-1990. London:
Brasseys, 2004.
Thomas, Nigel. NATO Armies, 1949-87. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 1987.
Tsouras, Peter G., ed. Cold War Hot: Alternate Decisions of the Cold War. Mechanicsburg, Pa.:
Stackpole Books, 2003.
Von Mellenthin, F. W., and R. H. S. Stolfi. NATO Under Attack: Why the Western Alliance Can
Fight Outnumbered and Win in Central Europe Without Nuclear Weapons. Durham, N.C.:
Duke University Press, 1984.
Wenger, Andreas, Christian Nuenlist, and Anna Locher, eds. Transforming NATO in the Cold
War: Challenges Beyond Deterrence in the 1960s. New York: Routledge, 2007.
Films and Other Media
The Cold War. Documentary. Cable News Network, 1999.
Dr. Strangelove: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. Feature film. Columbia Pictures, 1964.
Fail-Safe. Feature film. Columbia Pictures, 1964.
The Falcon and the Snowman. Feature film. Metro-Goldwyn Mayer, 1985.
Spy in the Sky. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service, 1996.
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. Feature film. Salem, 1965.
John Powell
Political Considerations
In the initial years after World War II (1939-1945),
there remained hope for a continuation of the SovietAmerican wartime alliance, but suspicions on both
sides opened a rift between the two superpowers. The
new phenomenon of nuclear and thermonuclear
weapons, combined with the introduction of intercontinental missiles in the late 1950s, had made a
third world war unthinkable, giving the war its
name. Still, over the four decades of the Cold War
confrontation, a number of crises defined the U.S.Soviet relationship and affected the nations military
preparation.
In 1948 the Soviet Union cut off access to the
western sectors of Berlin, located in Soviet-controlled
East Germany. The United States and its allies defeated this strategy without resorting to war by using
massive airlifts to support civilians. In 1949 the Soviet Union detonated its first atomic device, and in
1954, a year after the United States had done so, it developed a hydrogen bomb. After the West formed a
military alliance, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in 1949, the Soviet bloc countered
with the Warsaw Pact in 1955. The original countries
of the pact were Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia,
East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and the
Soviet Union. Albania withdrew in 1968, seven years
after it had severed relations with the Soviet Union.
Romania refused to join the other pact members in
the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia. In 1956 the
Hungarian Uprising and subsequent Soviet invasion
did not bring a Western military response, leading
Moscow to understand that the United States would
tacitly recognize Soviet mastery over their satellites.
750
The Cold War: Soviet Union, Warsaw Pact, and the Left
and the United States began measures to ease military tensions in an era of dtente. The two nations installed a hotline connection between Moscow and
Washington, D.C., to prevent accidental disasters.
The powers engaged in the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) in 1972 and 1974 and the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks (START) in 1986 and also
agreed to nuclear test ban treaties and conventional
arms reduction talks. Nevertheless the arms race between the two superpowers continued, especially in
the increase of nuclear arms and missiles of various
types. Both sides developed the capacity to destroy
the world many times over. Although both nations
also developed sophisticated chemical and biological weapons, talks limiting these were more successful than those concerning nuclear bombs.
After a period of economic setbacks and political
751
difficulties, Khrushchev was dramatically and suddenly replaced by Leonid Brezhnev (1906-1982) in
October, 1964. Although Moscow continued to seek
dtente with the United States, Cold War crises continued. The rift between the Soviet Union and China
that had begun under Khrushchev widened, at times
breaking out in actual armed conflict on the borders.
The Soviet Union also became involved in a long war
in Afghanistan (1979-1989).
During the 1980s the Soviet Union softened its
confrontational stance, especially after Mikhail Gorbachev (born 1931) became the countrys leader in
1985 and a nuclear disaster occurred at Chernobyl in
1986. Although both the Soviet Union and the United
States signed new agreements, both nations also considered employing satellite-based Strategic Defense
Initiative (SDI) programs, known as Star Wars. In
National Archives
Soviet Cold War leader Nikita Khrushchev speaks at the Fourth Convocation of the Fourth Session of the Supreme Soviet in January, 1956.
752
1991, after a failed attempt by hardliners to overthrow Gorbachev, the Soviet Union dissolved, the
Communist Party lost power in Russia, and the Cold
War ended.
weapons systems and strategies, despite mutual attempts at limitation. Like the United States, the Soviet Union came to depend on military complexes
that greatly affected the economy, politics, and social
structures. The militarys prestige, which had fallen
substantially during the Stalinist purges of the
1930s, increased in great measure. After World
Military Achievement
War II the Soviet Union established its dominance
over Eastern Europe. In one sense Moscow saw this
The Soviet Union prepared for any eventual confrondominance as its right, a part of the spoils of war.
tation while hoping to deter the United States. MosHowever, much of the territory was land that Russian
cow continued to develop offensive and defensive
imperialists had coveted since the
time of the czars; some of it had actually been part of the old empire.
However, Moscow did not incorpo1949
The Soviet Union tests its first atomic bomb.
rate these countries of Eastern Eu1953
The Soviet Union tests a hydrogen bomb.
rope into the Soviet Union, as it had
1957
The Soviet Union successfully tests an intercontinental
done with the Baltic states and parts
ballistic missile.
of Finland and Romania that it had
May 1, 1960 U.S. U-2 spy plane is shot down over the Soviet Union.
taken over in 1940 and 1941. Instead,
1962
The Cuban Missile Crisis brings the United States and the
the Kremlin established these ComSoviet Union closer than ever before to the brink of
munist-led states as peoples renuclear war.
publics. Over the course of the Cold
1968
The Soviet Union invades Czechoslovakia, establishing
War the Eastern European governthe Brezhnev Doctrine of Soviet military domination
ments declared that they had evolved
over Warsaw Pact states.
into the Marxist stage of socialism
1970-1979
During an era of dtente, more stable relations prevail
and changed to socialist republics.
between the Soviet Union and the United States and
A major factor in the Soviet contheir respective allies.
trol of Eastern Europe was fear of
1985
Mikhail Gorbachev is chosen as the new general secretary
another massive land attack and inof the Soveit Communist Party, and his reforms initiate
vasion of its territory across the
a thaw in relations between the Soviet Union and the
United States.
northern tier of states, as France had
1987
U.S. president Ronald Reagan and Soviet general secretary
done in 1812 and Germany had done
Gorbachev sign the INF Treaty governing intermediate
in 1941. Thus tighter military connuclear forces (INF) and calling for the destruction of
trol was maintained over Poland,
U.S. and Soviet missiles and nuclear weapons.
Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and East
1989
Gorbachev is elected state president in the first pluralist
Germany than over Romania, Bulelections since 1917, and by the end of the year all
garia, Yugoslavia, and Albania, the
Warsaw Pact nations had overthrown their communist
southern states, which had more leeleadership.
way for independent action. Stalin
1991
After the Baltic States of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania
expelled Yugoslavia from the Comare granted independence and other former soviets join
munist Information Bureau (Comthe Commonwealth of Independent States, Gorbachev
inform), Moscows association of
resigns as president and the Soviet Union is officially
Communist states, in 1948. Albania
dissolved.
severed relations with Moscow in
1961. Romania often opposed the
Turning Points
The Cold War: Soviet Union, Warsaw Pact, and the Left
753
A U.S. Air Force C-54 landing at Berlins Templehoff Air Base during the Berlin Airlift in 1948.
ern Europe, during the Cold War, Soviet military advisers were active in a number of countries, and Soviet soldiers were occasionally employed in an
advisory capacity. Certainly the Soviet Union was
keen to test its weaponry, and Soviet planes were
used in the Korean War, albeit disguised. The Soviet Union tested its air defense systems in Hanoi
during the U.S. bombing of the city during the Vietnam War.
Apart from Afghanistan, where the Soviet Union
deployed large numbers of soldiers from 1979, the
Soviet Army advisers were active in many other
countries. In Latin America, there were Soviet advisers in Cuba after the rise to power of Fidel Castro, and
later in Grenada, sparking the U.S. invasion in 1983.
In Africa, Soviet advisers were present in Egypt, and
in the wars in Angola and Mozambique, as well as in
Libya and Ethiopia. All six countries made heavy use
of Soviet weaponry.
Actively engaged in the Middle East, the Soviet
754
Union had close military ties with Syria, and with
Iraq. Its advisers were in Baghdad during the IranIraq War, and when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990. Indeed, a large part of Saddam Husseins army was
equipped with Soviet weaponry. India also was a Soviet ally and purchaser of Soviet weaponry, as has
been North Korea and Vietnam. The Soviet Union
was also in contact with many of the communist parties in Asia and elsewhere in the world.
The older Midas and Bison planes were used for inflight refueling of the Bear-H. The SS-N-21 was a
land-based cruise missile.
Intermediate-range missiles included the mobile
SS-4 Sandal MRBM and SS-20 IRBM. SS-12s,
SS-23s, and SS1-Scuds were short-range missiles.
Soviet strategic surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) included the SA-2, SA-3, SA-5, SA-10, SA-12A/
Gladiator, and the SA-X-12B/Giant. Other Soviet
aircraft were the Fulcrums, MiG-31 Foxhounds, and
SU-27 Flankers. The long-range Gazelle and Galosh
antiballistic missiles were designed for antimissile defense. The Soviets had a space-based defense system,
the Global Navigation Satellite System (GLONASS),
and antisatellite missiles such as the SL-11. During
the 1980s the Soviet Union introduced missiles with
multiple nuclear warheads, multiple independently
targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs), on intercontinental missiles.
Tanks had always been a major part of the Soviet
Red Army. In the 1960s the Soviets began use of the
T-64, the first real improvement since World War II.
The improved T-64A and T-72 followed. In the
1980s the standard was the T-80 model with nuclear,
biological, and chemical protection and enhanced
firepower. More than 1,400 T-80s were stationed in
Eastern Europe, in addition to a greater number of
the older models. During this period the Soviets also
replaced their old artillery with mobile and selfpropelled 152-millimeter guns with nuclear capability, 240-millimeter mortars, 203-millimeter selfpropelled guns, and a 220-millimeter multiple rocket
launcher capable of firing chemical and high-explosive munitions.
In Afghanistan the Soviet forces relied on searchand-destroy tactics, especially in aerial attacks. MI-6
Hip, MI-8 Hook, and the most modern MI-24 Hind
helicopters sought out guerrilla strongholds while
fixed-wing aircraft carried out carpet bombing attacks. However, the Afghan guerrillas heavy machine guns forced the helicopters to fly higher and
lessened their effectiveness. In the first years of the
war in Afghanistan, the Soviets used tank columns
supported by helicopters to attack villages suspected
of hiding insurgents. Although many villages were
destroyed, this tactic was ineffective against the
The Cold War: Soviet Union, Warsaw Pact, and the Left
guerrillas. In order to keep their casualties
low, Soviet infantry rarely engaged in open
battle.
Soviet airborne brigades were sent into Afghanistan by helicopter. The Soviets would
also encircle Afghan villages and then move
in from different directions. After 1982 they
began to use smaller, more flexible units, but
their reliance on helicopters led to the United
States arming the Afghan resistance with
surface-to-air missiles, which changed the
nature of the war considerably.
By 1984 Soviet equipment losses included
546 aircraft, 304 tanks, 436 armored personnel carriers, and more than 2,700 other vehicles. Soviet forces in Afghanistan were attached to the Fortieth Army in Soviet Central
Asia. Initially they sent five airborne and
four motorized rifleman divisions. Elements
of six other rifleman divisions and smaller
units were added. Weapons included T-72
tanks and 152 self-propelled howitzers. The
Soviets also employed MI-24 gunships and
Sukhoi Su-25 frogfoot fighter-bombers and
MiG fighters. New weapons included the
AGS-17 automatic grenade launcher and the
Kalashnikov AK-47 rifle. Although Western sources accused the Soviets of using
chemical warfare and antipersonnel butterfly mines in the war, Moscow denied such
claims. In 1988 the Soviets introduced Scud
missiles and continued to launch them into
Afghanistan until 1991, even after the war
was officially over.
755
National Archives
Military Organization
The highest Soviet command structure consisted of
three parts: the Council of Defense, led by the General Secretary of the Communist Party and including
the highest political and military leaders; the Chief
Military Council, the chief officials of the ministry of
defense; and the General Staff, known as the Stavka.
Although the first two units were political bodies, the
Stavka was the actual military command. It included
756
chief, one or more first deputy commanders in chief,
and a chief of political administration equal in level
to the first deputies. There were in addition several
deputy commanders. The army and air force were deployed in sixteen military districts within the Soviet
Union. The navy was deployed in four fleets. The
countries of the Soviet allies were integrated into
Moscows command structure through the Warsaw
Pact.
Within the Warsaw Pact, there was a Combined
Supreme Command, established in 1956 with its
headquarters in Moscow. This controlled all the
armed forces of the members of the Warsaw Pact, the
Soviet army being divided into those based in Germany and those under the three commands: the Baltic, Belorussian, and Carpathian military districts.
Within the Red Army itself, apart from the regional divisions, the army, at its height in the 1980s,
included some 210 divisions within the ground
forces. These all included soldiers who were ready
for immediate action as well as those required to be
called up, including reservists. National service existed throughout the Soviet Union, and this ensured
that all adult males within the country had some degree of military training and were able to be called up
to serve alongside regular soldiers. However NATO
The Cold War: Soviet Union, Warsaw Pact, and the Left
pute among the Afghan leaders threatened the proMoscow government there. The Soviet forces, initially 80,000, had increased to 120,000 by the end of
the war in 1988. In addition Moscow sent about
10,000 military and civilian advisers. The Afghan
army fighting under Soviet command had an additional 40,000 troops. The government and Soviet
forces were engaged in a guerrilla war by a broad coalition of opponents with over 150 small units supplied with American and other foreign arms and operating out of neighboring Pakistan. The Soviet
military doctrine, geared toward tank and infantry
battles in flat areas, was unprepared for mountainous
insurgency warfare, and their forces suffered from
inappropriate training, deficient equipment, and low
morale. With Mikhail Gorbachevs coming to power
in 1986, Soviet efforts evolved away from winning
757
Contemporary Sources
Among the most important contemporary sources on the Cold War are the various Janes Information Groups military series, especially All the Worlds Aircraft, published annually, and
Janes Missiles and Rockets. The Defense Intelligence Agency published a series entitled Soviet Military Power (1979). There are a number of collections of documents including Edward
H. Judge and John W. Langdons The Cold War: A History Through Documents (1999). Memoirs of Soviet leaders include those of Nikita Khrushchev, Vospominananiia (1970; Khrushchev Remembers, 1970), and Leonid Brezhnev, Vospominananiia (1982; Memoirs, 1982).
Within the Soviet Union, and now the former Soviet Union, a large number of memoirs were
published in Russian, and some have been translated into English. These include accounts of
the war in Afghanistan such as Gennady Bocharovs Russian Roulette: Afghanistan Through
Russian Eyes (1990) and Svetlana Alexievichs Zinky Boys: Soviet Voices from a Forgotten
War (1992).
758
Rottman, Gordon L. The Berlin Wall and the Intra-German Border, 1961-89. New York: Osprey, 2008.
_______. Warsaw Pact Ground Forces. New York: Osprey, 1987.
Schwartz, Richard Alan. The Cold War Reference Guide: A General History and Annotated
Chronology, with Selected Biographies. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 1997.
Ward, Robin, and Geoffrey Jukes. Soviet Generals Database. Canberra: Australian National
University, 1999.
Zaloga, Steven J., and James Loop. Soviet Bloc Elite Forces. New York: Osprey, 1985.
Films and Other Media
Afghan Breakdown. Feature film. Lenfilm, 1990.
Cold War. Documentary. Warner Home Video, 1998.
Frederick B. Chary
Israeli Warfare
Dates: Since 1948
Political Considerations
Military Achievement
The formation of the Israeli army goes back to the
1920s and 1930s, when Jewish settlements needed
protection against attacks by local Arab forces and
the British mandate government. As the numbers of
Jewish immigrants to Palestine, both legal and illegal, increased, a military force known as the Haganah
(Hebrew for defense) was founded. After statehood in 1948, the Haganah became the core of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). The IDF initially functioned as a militia of volunteers, lacking any ranks or
uniforms. It also had an elite unit as a special strike
force known as the Palmach. This unit was based
on the kibbutzim, or cooperative settlements, which
served as frontline fortresses during the 1948 ArabIsraeli War. The youth of these settlements were organized as agriculturalists and military reservists, receiving training as members of a special organization
known as Nahal. Other assault strike forces were
founded by various factions of the Jewish underground, such as the Irgun Zvai Leumi, headed by
Menachem Begin; the Stern, led by Yitzhak Shamir;
and Lohamei Herut Yisrael. These were later merged
with the Haganah, which became the IDF. From
759
760
sponding to surprise attacks until the reservists are
fully mobilized. More important, the ability of the air
force to mount a preemptive attack and render quick
support for ground troops has lost its deterrent effect,
largely because of the emergence of Arab guerrilla
forces, which challenge Israels seemingly limitless
ability to deliver painful blows to its enemies. The
lessons of the failed 1982 invasion of Lebanon, which
saw Israeli troops hold the Lebanese capital under
siege, are implicated in the Sabra and Shatila massacres of civilian Palestinians in September, 1982 (witness the abortive failure of the Israeli-Lebanese
treaty and eventual retreat back to Israels northern
region). These failures have severely lowered Israeli
faith in the effectiveness of their own superior air
power and ground troops.
The Israeli attack on the Lebanese guerrilla force
Hezbollah in December, 2006, was also thwarted by
the unexpected show of force on the part of Lebanese
irregular troops. Additionally, the U.S.-Israel alliance came under scrutiny when the 1990-1991 Gulf
War forced the United States to exclude Israel from
Popperfoto/Getty Images
Israeli Warfare
Israeli ground forces developed into an impressive machine, so that by the 1980s they ranked third
in the world after the United States and the Soviet
Union. By the 1980s, regular ground troops numbered around 450,000, divided among ten mechanical brigades, thirty-three armored brigades, twelve
territorial/border infantry brigades, and fifteen artillery brigades. With the rise of the Chinese and Indian
militaries, the Israeli military fell back to fifth rank in
terms of effectiveness, mobility, and offensive capability. By 1994, ground forces had reached 558,112,
divided into forty-two armored brigades, twenty-one
infantry brigades, and six territorial brigades. Normally, ground forces would be mobilized within
forty-eight hours, although this has been relaxed in
recent years. Today, only 30 percent of the ground
forces constitute a standing army, while the rest are
maintained as reserves, who wear a uniform only one
month out of the year.
The IAF increased in 1983 to 830 aircraft, and in
1993 to 1,052 aircraft, its personnel swelling from
37,000 to 45,889. The effectiveness of Israels air
power is due to keeping technical and administrative
personnel per combat aircraft to a minimum. The IAF
relies heavily on ground troops, maintaining only
25 percent of its air force pilots and personnel as reserves. The IAF pilot-training program was always
unusually rigorous. Students aspiring to serving with
the air force are required to go through a demanding
set of initial tests and psychological profiling. Unlike
other countries, where pilot candidates are expected
to receive a college degree first, Israel enrolls successful candidates immediately after they complete
high school. Students training usually lasts about
twenty months before they learn how to operate some
aircraft. Students are then immersed in a regimen
of applied mathematics, physics, and other scientific subjects, and are put through rigorous infantry
training.
Israel is known to have acquired a significant nuclear capability, amounting to three hundred nuclear
warheads by the beginning of the twenty-first century. Israel has the capacity to deliver these warheads
but managed to avoid signing the United Nations
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. It is believed that
Israel built two nuclear reactors, one at Nahal Soreq
761
and one at Dimona in the Negev. The former was provided by the United States and devoted mostly to research and the training of scientists; the other was
based on French technology and built in the late
1960s. Uranium was always acquired surreptitiously
from a variety of European and African sources. The
United States attempted to subject the Dimona reactor to inspection during the Kennedy administration
but was deliberately misled about its true purposes.
Israels means of delivery of atomic payload is based
on a ballistic missile code-named Jericho. It was developed in the mid-1980s based on a French design
by the firm of Marcel Dassault. According to some
reports, Israel maintains nuclear bases at various locations in the Galilee region. Israel is also suspected
of developing chemical and biological weapons at its
Nes Ziona plant south of Tel Aviv. Prime Minister
Menachem Begin (1913-1992) resisted U.S. pressure
during the Camp David negotiations in the 1970s to
halt his countrys nuclear program as a price for
peace with Egypt. He also initiated the Begin Doctrine, which stated that no state in the region would be
allowed to develop a nuclear capability threatening
to Israel. This policy led to Israels raid on the Osirak
nuclear plant near Baghdad in 1981, the first such an
attack on a nuclear facility in modern times.
Israels defense industries had a modest start
when Bedek Aircraft, Ltd., was formed by the late
1940s, in order to provide maintenance services for
the countrys fledgling air force. Later, this company
developed into Israel Aircraft Industries (IAI), which
began to produce its own line of combat aircraft,
transport jets, and other vehicles. Spurred by frequent arms embargoes due to the desire of the United
States and other countries to curtail Israels frequent
initiation of wars, and fearful of Egypts acquisition
of immense arms supplies from Czechoslovakia in
the mid-1950s, Israel began to manufacture most of
its own weapons. This effort was greatly aided by its
own scientifically trained population, U.S. funds for
research, and the early availability of markets for its
weapons in Central and South America, Africa, and
East Asia. Israels main weapons industries have always been state-owned. They include Israel Military
Industries, the Raphael Armament Development Authority, and the Haifa Shipyards. These produce a va-
762
riety of weapons often based on U.S. technology,
such as the Kfir, its fighter plane; the Merkava, a
highly rated battle tank; missile-carrying boats; a
large selection of artillery pieces; and a variety of
missiles. In addition, Israel produces radar, computers, and much electronic equipment, provided by the
IAIs subsidiary Elta Electronic Industries. The
Haifa-based Soltam Company produces guns and
howitzers.
The Israeli arms industry is the countrys main
economic endeavor, employing an estimated onethird of the Israeli labor force and generating more
than a billion dollars in annual arms sales abroad. Israel ranks in the top ten exporters of arms worldwide.
Israels arms sales are often in direct competition
with the American arms industry, even though it is
highly dependent on U.S. fiscal and technological assistance. One example of this relationship was the
Lavi project, which sought to build a fighter plane,
supported by U.S. credits that Congress approved in
1983. The Lavi project, which employed four thousand skilled workers, was canceled by the Israeli cabinet in 1986 because of its excessive cost to the
United States (in the amount $2 billion). U.S. strategic cooperation with Israel and the sharing of advanced military technology were always justified by
access to battlefield testing of weapons in Israels
various wars. The United States also frequently overlooked its own legislation prohibiting the use of
American-supplied arms in aggressive wars, such as
the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 and the Foreign
Sales Act of 1968.
Military Organization
The least important branch of IDF is the navy, although this is also changing. The navy is the smallest
of the three branches because of the countrys limited
coastline of about 225 kilometers, which includes
Gaza. After the Israeli destroyer Eilat was sunk by
Egyptian missiles in the June war of 1967 (the socalled Six-Day War), Israel began to acquire small
but fast-track boats designed by the West German
firm Lrssen Werft, which were actually produced
by a French company. These were fitted with Israeli
Gabriel surface-to-surface missiles. Eventually, Israel developed an advanced type of this design in its
own Haifa shipyards. By 1993, the navy was estimated to have 12,402 units, including submarines. By
2004, Israel had guaranteed the regional superiority
of its navy by acquiring German submarines of the
Dolphin type, equipped with nuclear cruise missiles.
Thus, while the Israeli IDF suffer from a dramatic
negative quantitative comparison with the standing
armies of the surrounding Arab countries, even when
all the reserve units are mobilized, Israel continues to
enjoy a decisive qualitative edge when it comes to the
total effectiveness of its units. Israels limited territorial depth made it vulnerable prior to the acquisition
of Sinai, the Golan Heights, and the West Bank in the
1967 war. Although much ameliorated, this vulnerability continues to be addressed through a strong and
extensive early-warning system. Israels dependence
on a vast army of reservists and its frequent lengthy
mobilization of manpower and civilian transport vehicles often resulted in severe economic disruption.
This was the case prior to the 1967 war, when a monthlong period of mobilization along all fronts aggravated the political crisis, leading to a preemptive
attack against all surrounding Arab air bases.
Israeli Warfare
763
764
of the Osirak reactor in Israel in order to practice
mounting a strike against it. Any such attack on
Irans nuclear reactor was expected to come in the
form of serial bombings, which would provide ample
opportunity for Iranian retaliation.
Even though a nuclear attack against Egypts most
vulnerable strategic asset, the Aswan Dam, was
averted by the signing of the Camp David agreement
and these two countries adherence to their international obligations, by 2010 it seemed that Israel had
used uranium-based weapons in some of its recent
wars. It is known that Israel has used weapons (such
as American buster bombs, which were dropped
on Hezbollahs offices in Beirut in the 2006 cam-
Contemporary Sources
As the field is a relatively current one, there is much in the way of archival, firsthand material
on the history of the Israeli military. Much information on the early wars surrounding the
founding of the state of Israel is available in the David Ben-Gurion Archive, held at the BenGurion University of the Negevs Sede Boker campus. The archive contains not only BenGurions personal papers and speeches, but also the minutes of meetings and other documents
produced by Israels first prime minister. In addition, the Israel State Archives in Jerusalem
holds its record groups 72 and 153, which contain the private papers of many prominent Israeli
politicians and government officials.
Books and Articles
Bar-On, Mordechai. Never-Ending Conflict: Israeli Military History. Mechanicsburg, Pa.:
Stackpole Books, 2006.
Dunstan, Simon. The Yom Kippur War: The Arab-Israeli War of 1973. New York: Osprey,
2007.
Karsh, Efraim. The Arab-Israeli Conflict: The Palestine War 1948. New York: Osprey, 2002.
Maman, Daniel, Eyal Ben-Ari, and Zeev Rosenhek, eds. Military, State, and Society in Israel:
Theoretical and Comparative Perspectives. Piscataway, N.J.: Transaction, 2001.
Varble, Derek. The Suez Crisis 1956. New York: Osprey, 2003.
Films and Other Media
Beaufort. Feature film. Keshet Broadcasting, 2007.
Cast a Giant Shadow. Feature film. Batjac Productions, 1966
Clear Skies: The Story of the Israeli Air Force. Documentary. TES Video, 1990.
The Fifty Years War: Israel and the Arabs. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service, 2000.
Operation Thunderbolt. Feature film. Warner Bros., 1978.
Six Days in June: The War That Redefined the Middle East. Documentary. WGBH Boston,
2007.
Ghada Talhami
Political Considerations
The term nonaligned states refers to those nations
that attempted to stake out independent positions between the American- and Soviet-led power blocs in
the international politics of the Cold War. A seminal
event in the collective history of these states was the
Asian-African Conference held in Bandung, Indonesia, in April, 1955; the nations attending this conference adopted a declaration promoting world peace
and cooperation and expressing their desire not to become involved in the Cold War.
The ideals of peace, cooperation, and independence in international affairs became the founding
principles of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM),
which was established in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, in
1961. This organization was largely the brainchild
of Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser (19181970), Indian prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru
(1889-1964), and Yugoslavian president Tito (Josip
Broz, 1892-1980). NAM was intended to form the
basis of an alliance as close as that of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) or the Warsaw
Pact, but it demonstrated little of the same cohesion. Some member states became involved in armed
conflicts with other members during the Cold War
period, most notably India and Pakistan (1965 and
1971).
Despite the stated aims of noninvolvement in the
geopolitics of the Cold War, regional or global tensions, such as conflicts with neighboring states, have
ultimately compelled many member states to demonstrate close ties to one or the other of the two superpowers throughout this period. Since the end of
the Cold War in 1991, NAM has struggled to find
international relevance. While Egypt and India remain member states, the states of the former Yugo-
Military Achievement
Throughout the period of the Cold War, the conflicts
waged by the nonaligned states tended to evolve
from border disputes or displays of nationalism. Because the states involved in these conflicts found they
could gain military advantage over their regional opponents through closer relations with one or the other
of the two superpowers, these localized wars often
threatened to spiral out of control and lead to much
wider and deadlier conflicts.
In 1956, Nasser oversaw Egypts nationalization
of the Suez Canal, sparking an invasion by a joint Israeli, British, and French task force to compel the
Egyptian government to relinquish control of the canal. Ten years later, he hatched a plot with neighboring Arab states to overrun Israel, resulting in the disastrous Six-Day War of June, 1967, and the Israeli
occupation of Egypts Sinai Peninsula. Finally, in
October, 1973, Nassers successor as Egyptian president, Anwar el-Sadat (1918-1981), launched a surprise attack against Israel to regain the Sinai Peninsula (the conflict camed to be called the October War
or the Yom Kippur War). In 1956 and 1967, Nasser
had been emboldened to act by his close ties with the
Soviet Union, which had been arming and training
Egypts soldiers. In 1956, the U.S. government
forced a cease-fire on the belligerents before the situation escalated and led to a confrontation between the
Soviet Union and the Western powers that opposed
Nasser. In 1973, the American and Soviet govern765
766
Pakistani protesters burn effigies and flags outside the Indian embassy in Islamabad in January, 1997. The two
countries long-standing conflict was supported during the Cold War by the opposing superpowers.
The two countries were at war again in 1971 over Pakistans repression of members of the Bengali independence movement in East Pakistan. This time India won a decisive victory, resulting in the secession
of East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, from Pakistan.
767
natory because it allowed those countries that had acquired nuclear weapons prior to the agreement
the United States, the Soviet Union, Great Britain,
France, and Chinato retain their arsenals.
Military Organization
Prior to the dissolution of the nation of Yugoslavia in
late 1991, the Yugoslavian military was the fourth
strongest in Europe. The Yugoslav Peoples Army,
which had its origins in the partisan movement of
the Yugoslav Peoples Liberation War against the
Nazi occupiers during World War II and was the
principal military organization of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1943-1992), comprised
an army, navy, and air force. These three services
were organized into four military regions: Belgrade,
Zagreb, Skopje, and the Split naval region. The
ground forces of the Yugoslav Peoples Army made
up the bulk of the countrys military forces and consisted of infantry, armor, artillery, and air defense as
well as signal, engineering, and chemical defense
corps. The Yugoslav air force was responsible for
transport, reconnaissance, and the countrys national
air defense system. The backbone of the Yugoslav
navy was the Adriatic Fleet, which was headquartered at Split. In 1992 the Yugoslav Peoples Army
was dissolved along with the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, as the newly independent republics adopted their own militaries.
The Indian armed forces consist of the three
branches of army, navy and air force. The Indian
army was formed soon after India achieved indepen-
Turning Points
Israel launches surprise attack on Arab air forces,
beginning the Six-Day War.
Egypt sinks Israeli destroyer Eilat with a Soviet Styx
cruise missile.
Egypt launches air strike against Israel, beginning ArabIsraeli October War.
The Iranian Revolution ends Irans close military ties
with the United States.
768
dence and retained most of the regiments of the British Indian army. Throughout the conflicts that India
fought during the first half of the Cold War, coordination between the Indian air force and the Indian
army was quite poor. For example, during the war between India and Pakistan in 1965, the Indian air force
was used extensively, but it acted independently of
the army, conducting raids deep into Pakistani territory in obsolete World War II-era aircraft that ultimately surrendered air superiority over the combat
zones to the Pakistani air force. The primary mission
of the Indian navy during that period was to patrol Indias coast, but during the 1971 war with Pakistan the
navy played a significant role in the bombing of the
Karachi harbor.
The Egyptian military originally consisted of
three branches: army, navy, and air force. Following
the disastrous events of the Six-Day War, however,
during which a surprise attack by the Israeli air force
destroyed most of Egypts planes on the ground,
Egypt added a fourth service branch: the Egyptian Air
Defense Command. It was patterned on the Soviet
Unions antiaircraft defense branch and integrated all
of Egypts air defense capabilities, including antiaircraft guns, missile units, interceptor planes, and radar
and warning installations.
Contemporary Sources
Two important contemporary works provide valuable information on the nonaligned states
as a whole. The first is George McTurnan Kahins The Asian-African Conference, Bandung, Indonesia, April 1955 (1956). This is a very accessible work that details the events that occurred
during the 1955 Bandung Conference. The first half of the volume presents the authors account
of the conference based on his own experiences as an observer at the open sessions, and the second half provides transcripts of the speeches delivered by key attendees as well as the conferences final communiqu. The second collection, The Conference of Heads of State or Government of Non-aligned Countries (1961), edited by Slobodan Vujovi6, contains speeches from
the 1961 summit of nonaligned nations held in Belgrade, where NAM was established.
English versions of contemporary sources of the military affairs of the nonaligned states during the Cold War do not appear to be extensive. The Indian Ministry of External Affairs and the
United Nations published a four-volume collection of some of the U.N. Security Council proceedings on the 1965 India-Pakistan conflict: India-Pakistan Security Council Documents,
September-December, 1965. On the 1971 India-Pakistan conflict, a document collection titled
The Fourteen Day War was published in 1972. Additionally, the heads of state of Yugoslavia,
Egypt, and India left partial records of their respective nations foreign policies during the Cold
War. Regarding Yugoslavia, two works have been published that deal specifically with
nonalignment: Tito o nesvrstanosti (1976; Tito on Non-Alignment, 1976) and Govori
Predsednika SFRJ Josipa Broza Tita na konferencijama nesvrstanih zemalja (1979; Tito and
Non-Alignment: President Titos Addresses at Conferences of Non-aligned Countries, 1979).
Nasser similarly documented his position in President Gamal Abdel Nasser on Non-Alignment
(1964).
Nehru left several collections that outline Indias diplomacy during the period of his leadership. These include a volume of speeches titled Indias Foreign Policy: Selected Speeches, September 1946-April 1961 (1961) along with two volumes that deal with his thoughts on Indias
relations with China in the lead up to and during the 1962 border war: The Prime Minister on
Sino-Indian Relations (1961) and Chinese Aggression in War and Peace: Letters of the Prime
Minister of India (1962). Finally, Nehrus daughter, Indira Gandhi, who was prime minister of
India during the 1971 India-Pakistan conflict, published Selected Speeches and Writings of
Indira Gandhi: The Years of Endeavour, August 1969-August 1972 (1975).
Books and Articles
Aloni, Shlomo. Arab-Israeli Air Wars, 1947-82. New York: Osprey, 2002.
Laffin, John. Arab Armies of the Middle East Wars, 1948-73. New York: Osprey, 1982.
Marston, Daniel P., and Chandar S. Sundaram, eds. A Military History of India and South Asia:
From the East India Company to the Nuclear Era. Westport, Conn.: Praeger Security International, 2007.
Meital, Yoram. Egypts Struggle for Peace: Continuity and Change, 1967-1977. Gainesville:
University Press of Florida, 1997.
Milivojevi6, Marko, John B. Allcock, and Pierre Maurer, eds. Yugoslavias Security Dilemmas: Armed Forces, National Defence, and Foreign Policy. New York: St. Martins
Press, 1988.
Pollack, Kenneth M. Arabs at War: Military Effectiveness, 1948-1991. Lincoln: University of
Nebraska Press, 2002.
769
770
Political Considerations
In the late nineteenth century a combination of increasing European industrialization, expanding trade
and finance from growth centers in North America
and Western Europe, and developing technological
advances in transportation and communications fostered a global expansion of the imperial powers
political and military domination. In Asia, Chinas
military and industrial underdevelopment allowed
Britain, France, the United States, and Japan to assert
colonial control over such former Chinese tributary
states as Burma (1824-1885), Indochina (1862-1895),
and Taiwan (1895), while also creating neocolonial
spheres of influence in Thailand (1896) and in China
itself (1839-1945). The vast interior of Africa, meanwhile, was visited by semiofficial European explorers and missionaries and was conquered by European
troops operating from coastal bases beginning in
1880. Earlier European coastal encroachments that
facilitated the slave trade, such as those of Portugal,
were expanded.
A European-based alliance system preserved international balances of power in Europe, Asia, and
Africa until the start of World War I (1914-1918).
After the war the victorious Allies awarded themselves control over former German and Ottoman possessions in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. The
anomalous position of the former German colony of
South-West Africa, seized by South Africa during
World War I, was resolved when, in 1920, the
League of Nations made it a mandate territory of
South Africa, to eventually be known as Namibia.
Although colonial powers had various purposes
for waging colonial wars, they generally sought to
extend or preserve a global presence unfettered by
the geographic limitations of their metropolitan
homelands. In the late twentieth century this impulse
came into conflict both with evidence of the military
771
772
colonies provinces of the motherland and tenaciously defended its colonial system, particularly after the embarrassment caused by Indias easy seizure
of Portuguese Goa in 1961. Throughout the 1960s
and 1970s Portugal used force to suppress independence movements in Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique,
and Angola, with disastrous results.
Networks of anticolonial nationalists readily
evolved, including the Pan-African Congress movement of the 1920s and 1930s, the Communist International movement of the 1930s and 1940s, and the
Nonaligned Movement of the 1950s and 1960s.
Through these and other initiatives, anticolonial insurgents gained international recognition and built
political alliances. Meanwhile, nationalist leaders,
who endorsed social changes such as land reform in
addition to anticolonial causes, often conceived of
their movements as national liberation struggles.
Of these, many included well-organized local Communist parties whose leaders studied the strategies
developed and employed by Mao Zedong (Mao Tsetung; 1893-1976) in the Chinese Civil War (19261949). Material and political support from the Soviet
Union and China bolstered anticolonial forces in several colonies. These facts greatly complicated the international context of many colonial wars, as EastWest tensions became integrated with local colonial
politics. Once local nationalists embarked upon an
armed struggle, whatever its external orientation, colonial powers were loath to withdraw without first
quashing the armed rebellion. Typically each side in
the ensuing conflict interpreted the military activities
of the other as an escalation of the conflict, and partisan support galvanized on each side as casualties and
costs mounted.
For their part, local nationalists could not organize
cohesive political, let alone military, opposition
where some form of genuine antipathy to imperial
rule did not already exist. Leaders sought to transform local dissatisfactions into an organized resistance movement through propaganda, recruitment,
and political instruction. Leaders also carefully monitored East-West tensions and studied the progress of
other anticolonial movements, looking for external
support and examples of successful struggle strategies.
Military Achievement
Although few colonial wars produced clear military
results for either party, there are important examples
of decisive battlefield victories that prefigured political change. Colonial powers thoroughly suppressed
mid-twentieth century armed rebellions in both Madagascar and Malaya, allowing gradual transitions to
independence in each case. Similarly, certain nationalist forces were able to force colonial administrations to withdraw after inflicting military defeat upon
colonial troops. This occurred in Indochina, where
Vietnamese forces engineered the collapse of the fortified French position at Dien Bien Phu and in Algeria, after a less disastrous but equally costly six-year
conflict (1954-1962).
For both colonial and nationalist militaries, one of
the great challenges of anticolonial conflict lay in asserting cohesive command over multinational and
multicultural troops. Where anticolonial commanders failed in this project, as the Chinese-dominated
Malayan Communist Party did, broad popular support proved elusive. Where they succeeded, as in ethnically diverse Guinea-Bissau under the political
leadership of Amilcar Cabral (1921-1973), the shared
experience of colonial occupation became a unifying
factor that promoted nation-building. Colonial pow-
773
traditional spears and shields, supplemented by stolen or smuggled handguns. Arms smuggling proliferated during the 1960s and increasingly included
heavier weapons such as light artillery, mortars, and
rocket launchers. In the 1970s superpower weapons
deliveries to African fighters introduced greater
weapons standardization. In Angola and Namibia,
Soviet and Cuban military advisers oversaw combat
operations, and in Indochina Soviet and Chinese
advisers were sporadically present from the early
1950s until the early 1970s.
Anticolonial forces typically had greater difficulty obtaining ammunition for their varied weapons
stock than in obtaining the guns themselves. As a result self-activating weapons such as explosives were
particularly valued. Plastic explosives were preferred because of their stable state, easy detonation,
and amenability to cutting and shaping to meet specific operational demands. Land mines were of similar utility because of their destructive capabilities
against both personnel and vehicles. Lightweight
shoulder-launched rockets were prized for their effectiveness against aircraft, particularly slow-moving
helicopters.
Asian and African anticolonial forces uniforms
were seldom standardized but usually consisted of
dark-colored cotton shirts, trousers, and rubber-soled
shoes with cotton uppers, or sandals. Exceptionally,
PAIGC forces in Guinea-Bissau in 1964 received
shipments of lightweight khaki camouflage uniforms
made of Chinese cotton sewn in Cuba. Colonial
troops were universally better clothed and equipped
that their anticolonial counterparts. Typical uniforms
were European summer-weight issue, with mosquito
netting, wide-brimmed cotton hats, and rubberized
boots as appropriate for deployments into jungle,
desert, or riverine environments. In Kenya white
combatants blended into the local African population
by staining their skin, wearing native dress, and
adopting rebel practices such as oiling their skin with
animal fat to avoid detection by tracking dogs. Elsewhere equipment innovations proved vital. In Malaya British paratroopers were regularly injured in
treetop landings and in climbing to the jungle floor;
new safety equipment was introduced to reduce the
weight of jump kits, and in 1950 paratroopers were
774
issued newly developed abseil, or rappelling, devices.
Conventional equipment and weaponry found
new uses in colonial wars, and new weapons were introduced. British troops used explosives and mechanical saws to prepare landing pads for helicopters, because drooping rotors and steep descent
angles made extensive foliage removal essential.
Airborne delivery of high explosives and new small
fragmentation bombs was common. Napalm, or jellied petroleum, bombs were widely used in Indochina, Malaya, and Guinea-Bissau to attack villages
and storehouses and to clear deep jungle growth. Airplanes and helicopters sprayed toxic defoliant chemicals to destroy jungle cover and food cultivation
sites. Airplanes dropped whistles and bottles known
as screamers in conjunction with resettlement programs to intimidate civilians without causing physical harm.
In 1950 helicopters were introduced by Britain
in Malaya for troop transport, reconnaissance, and
liaison where mountainous terrain interrupted wireless communications. Despite functional problems
caused by heat, humidity, and high-altitude operations, the helicopters utility was fully demonstrated
in Malaya. Helicopters were used by the British in
Cyprus and Kenya, by the French in Indochina and
Algeria, and by the Portuguese in Guinea-Bissau,
Mozambique, and Angola. In each case only colonial
troops deployed helicopters, guaranteeing their
forces important mobility, reconnaissance, and tactical advantages.
Military Organization
The maintenance of political control over armed activists was critical for the coherent management of
independence movements. In Malaya, the Malayan
Communist Party (MCP) controlled its guerrilla organization, the Malayan Races Liberation Army
(MRLA), through a political commissariat attached
to guerrilla units. Commissars were charged with
assuring the political allegiance of armed units and
transmitting political directives from the Communist
leadership. A commissariat system was also estab-
775
776
A Turkish army tank rolls through the Turkish section of Nicosia, Cyprus, in July, 1974, part of an invasion
sparked by an abortive coup by supporters of union with Greece.
the coastal plan, and loosely organized bands of guerrillas operating in the forested foothills of Mount
Kenya. Within one year of the arrival of British regular troops, the KCA launched a general offensive in
the low country (1953). In a rare organizational innovation by colonial forces, the British military authorized the creation of special units of white Kenyan
settlers known as pseudos, which included captured
Mau Mau operatives and defectors. From them
pseudos learned local techniques for tracking guerrilla fighters through the jungle, as well as the locations of rallying points and supply caches. The 1956
arrest of the elusive guerrilla commander Dedan
Kimathi, which effectively terminated the Mau Mau
Rebellion, was made by a pseudo unit. In general,
however, colonial military commanders used standard troop configurations against anticolonial forces,
relying on superior numbers, weapons, and the administrative tools of the colonial administration to
counter armed rebels.
777
lonial military strategy, culminating in a series of
positional battles against French troops and the surrender of the French redoubt of Dien Bien Phu. Vietnamese guerrilla forces in southern and central Vietnam remained relatively quiescent in favor of the
main-force battles. The situation was reversed in
Mozambique and Angola, where, under the guidance
of Soviet and Cuban military advisers, anticolonial
military organizations developed some main-force
units that confronted Portuguese regulars, but smallscale guerrilla operations remained the primary engine of the insurgent movements.
Many anticolonial military organizations sought
tactical advantages over metropolitan forces by utilizing military base areas located outside colonial
borders, and thus beyond the operational theater of
the colony itself. FLN forces in Algeria received
weapons, supplies, and reinforcements from crossborder camps in Tunisia from 1956 to 1957. Frelimo
forces from Mozambique operated bases in Tanzania. Angolas Movimento Popular de Libertao de
Angola (MPLA), or Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola, received aid from the Congo. In
Namibia from 1966 to 1990 the South West Africa
Peoples Organization (SWAPO) operated its guerrilla organization largely from bases in southern Angola.
Elsewhere guerrilla organizations made tactical
decisions to concentrate their operations in terrain
that offered them operational advantages over colonial regular forces. In Cyprus EOKA guerrillas concentrated in the mountains on the western end of the
island, where British troops mobility was impaired.
In Malaya MRLA guerrillas retreated into deep
mountainous jungle territory to avoid British air reconnaissance and sweep operations. Upland Mau
Mau guerrillas led by Dedan Kimathi eluded British
troops for years.
Colonial powers military planning was influenced by such strategic concepts as the domino theory, which posited that a Communist takeover of
one colony would cause the successive collapse of
other pro-Western governments in Asia and Africa.
Thus for Britain to protect its naval facilities in Singapore it had to extinguish the insurgency in Malaya.
The domino metaphor retained its cachet into the
778
1960s: To retain its access to Kuwaiti oil, Britain
committed troops against insurrectionist tribesmen
in Yemen from 1958 to 1961.
Colonial powers saw as a strategic imperative
the separation of guerrilla forces from their civilian
sources of supply. In Malaya British commanders
implemented a food denial campaign that combined strict food rationing, identity registration, and
air strikes against crop cultivation. Similar tactics
were used in Kenya. Mass arrests, interrogations, and
trials of suspected sympathizers were conducted in
Indonesia, Malaya, Kenya, Algeria, and Cyprus.
Area domination also segregated insurgents
from their civilian sources of food, supplies, and recruits. Troops and aircraft were used to clear known
guerrilla strongholds, and a police presence was established. The British Briggs Plan (1950) in Malaya
followed this approach, forcing MRLA units from
the south to the north of the peninsula. In Kenya
British troops established guerrilla-free exclusion
zones, creating mile-wide clearings that prevented
insurgents from crossing and a 50-mile-long ditch
around the foothills of Mount Kenya. In Algeria from
1954 to 1956 the French used quadrillage tactics,
developing fortified areas free of insurgents.
Another common segregation tactic was population resettlement. As part of the Briggs Plan in Malaya civilians were forcibly removed from their villages and located in access-controlled strategic
hamlets. Similar projects were undertaken in Indochina, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, and Algeria.
The elimination of cross-border bases was a key
colonial military objective. In 1958 French forces in
Algeria built a 200-mile-long controlled barrier,
known as the Morice line, along the border with Tunisia to interdict the flow of weapons and reinforcements. The Morice line included electrified fences,
machine gun nests, and land mines; it was patrolled
by 80,000 French troops including mechanized units,
armored trains, paratroopers, helicopters, and mobile
infantry. In 1975 South African troops concentrated
in northern Namibia to attack SWAPO bases in
southern Angola and continued these military incursions until an international settlement was reached in
1989.
In deploying the helicopter in counterinsurgency
warfare, colonial forces developed new troop movement and air-support tactics. Small payloads, slow
airspeeds, and exposed fuel tanks made helicopters
vulnerable to ground attack, and rapid approach and
departure protocols were developed for battlefield
landings. The helicopter was, however, the vehicle of
choice for rapid troop deployments in difficult terrain. In one 14-day operation in Malaya in 1953, 415
helicopter sorties moved 1,600 troops and their
equipment on counterinsurgency patrols through
high-altitude jungle that prevented rapid deployment
by foot.
Contemporary Sources
Most insurgent movements made extensive use of radio broadcasts to deliver political instructions, propaganda, and military directives. Many of the publicized analyses of anticolonial
military campaigns produced by their leaders were prepared for use by other combatants, and
thus were broadcast rather than printed for general circulation. An important exception to this
rule was the promulgation by Abel Djassi, a pseudonym for Amilcar Cabral, the political leader
of the anticolonial movement in Guinea-Bissau, of The Facts About Portugals African Colonies (1960), a pamphlet that outlined nationalists complaints about Portuguese political and
military policies in their colonies. Djassi drew attention to the brutality of Portuguese colonial
forces, and appealed to the United Nations for military assistance in restraining Portuguese
troops in Guinea-Bissau.
General Georgios Grivas (1898-1974), leader of the Cypriot insurgency against the British,
published a treatise on small unit tactics entitled Agon EOKA kai Antartiopolemos:
Politikostratiotike (1962; General Grivas on Guerrilla Warfare, 1965), in which he extolled
the psychological and political uses of terrorist attacks on colonial targets. He endorsed the tac-
779
780
Horne, Alistair. A Savage War of Peace: Algeria, 1954-1962. Rev. ed. New York: Viking Penguin, 1987.
Lawrence, Mark Atwood, and Fredrik Logevall, eds. The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict
and Cold War Crisis. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2007.
Lord, Cliff, and David Birtles. The Armed Forces of Aden, 1839-1967. London: Helion, 2000.
Meredith, Martin. The Fate of Africa: A History of Fifty Years of Independence. New York:
Public Affairs, 2005.
Peluso, Nancy Lee. Rich Forests, Poor People: Resource Control and Resistance in Java.
Berkeley: University California Press, 1992.
Postgate, Malcolm. Operation Firedog: Air Support in the Malayan Emergency, 1948-1960.
London: H.M.S.O., 1992.
Robie, David. Blood on Their Banner: Nationalist Struggles in the South Pacific. London: Zed
Press, 1989.
Shrader, Charles R. The First Helicopter War: Logistics and Mobility in Algeria, 1954-1962.
Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1999.
Films and Other Media
The Battle of Algiers. Feature film. Magna, 1966.
Le Crabe-tambour. Feature film. AMLF, 1977.
French Foreign Legion. Documentary. History Channel, 1998.
Guns at Batasi. Feature film. Twentieth Century-Fox, 1964.
Simba. Feature film. Group Film Productions Limited, 1955.
Laura M. Calkins
Warfare in Vietnam
Dates: 1945-1975
North Vietnam, determined to conquer the South,
had the political, financial, and technological support
of the Soviet Union and China. The South Vietnamese
government sought, with the support of the United
States, to maintain its rule in the South. The United
States government feared a so-called domino effect;
if South Vietnam fell to communism, it reasoned, so
would other nations in Asia, including India. Both
North and South Vietnam were now markers in the
Cold War conflict between the three superpowers
the United States, the Soviet Union, and China. During its long struggle in Vietnam, the United States
remained hampered by Cold War concerns and the
desire to avoid pushing either of the other superpowers into active engagement in the fighting.
Political Considerations
As the conclusion of World War II liberated Southeast Asia from Japanese domination, Indochinese
Communist Party leader Ho Chi Minh (1890-1969)
swiftly moved ahead with his political goal of a unified and independent Vietnam, proclaiming a Democratic Republic of Vietnam on September 2, 1945. At
the same time, however, France began reasserting its
colonial rule in Indochina. Ho, previously allied with
the United Statesespecially through its Office of
Strategic Services (OSS), the forerunner of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), against the Japanese,
looked for support in his goal from the United States.
However, with a Cold War developing between
the United States and the Soviet Union, U.S. president Harry S. Truman (1884-1972) chose not to risk a
break with France and adopted a policy of what has
been called guarded neutrality. The United States
accepted Frances return to Indochina but required
that aid to France not be used in Vietnam. As war in
Korea threatened in 1950, the United States recognized the French-supported government of Emperor
Bao Dai (1913-1997), the last emperor of the Nguyen
Dynasty, and made available both economic aid and
military supplies.
The Geneva Conference (1954), which ended the
war between France and Hos Viet Minh, called for a
partition of Indochina into four countriesNorth
Vietnam, South Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodiaand
for an election no later than 1956 to unify the two
Vietnams. The United States, however, assumed political control of South Vietnam from the French in
1955, when the American choice for president, Ngo
Dinh Diem (1901-1963), replaced Bao Dai. Diem
proclaimed the Republic of Vietnam, and both he and
the United States refused to be bound by the call for a
reunification election, knowing that the popular Ho
Chi Minh would win.
Military Achievement
The crushing defeat of the French at Dien Bien Phu in
northern Vietnam in 1954 essentially brought the
First Indochina War (1946-1954) to an end. However, Ho Chi Minh controlled only the northern half
of Vietnam, and although the French had been forced
out, the Americans had replaced them. Now the
North Vietnamese turned their attention to undermining the South Vietnamese government and extracting such a high price for American involvement
that the United States would withdraw.
The date often given for the beginning of the Second Indochina War, or what Americans call the Vietnam War, is 1956, the year in which the United States
and Diem rejected the Geneva-mandated reunification elections. In 1959, North Vietnams Central Executive Committee formally changed the countrys
approach from political to armed struggle. Remnants
of the Viet Minh who had stayed in the South (the
Viet Cong) were activated by the North Vietnamese
Poliburo.
781
VIE
TN
Haiphong
Gulf
Hanoi
of
To n k i n
H A I NA N
Demilitarized Zone
Quang Tri
Hue
S o u t h
Da Nang
SO
My Lai
C h i n a
UTH
S e a
Qui Nhon
VIETN
C A M B O D I A
AM
r
ive
R
g
on
ek
M
Nha Trang
Phnom Penh
G u l f
o f
Saigon
T h a i l a n d
Mekong
River Delta
(1) France falls, 1954. (2) Tet Offensive, January, 1968. (3) Cambodian invasion, April-May, 1970. (4) Sihanouk
falls, April, 1970. (5) Laotian incursion, February, 1971. (6) Areas of U.S. bombing, 1972. (7) Mining of
Haiphong Harbor, May, 1972. (8) Lon Nol falls, April, 1975. (9) North Vietnamese offensive, spring, 1975.
(10) South Vietnam surrenders, April 30, 1975.
Warfare in Vietnam
The Viet Cong specialized in terrorist warfare
against U.S. soldiers and South Vietnamese loyal to
the Diem government. Their largest campaign was
the Tet Offensive of 1968, which ended in the almost
complete destruction of the Viet Cong infrastructure
and the end of the Viet Cong as a significant military
threat. From that point on, the war to unify the country was carried out primarily by traditionally organized North Vietnamese military forces.
U.S. president Richard M. Nixon (1913-1994),
taking office in 1969, implemented the policy of
Vietnamization, whereby the war effort would be
turned over gradually to the South Vietnamese. The
final American fighting forces withdrew from Vietnam in late March, 1973, following a January 27
peace agreement. The South Vietnamese were given
some breathing room by many American victories, including the decimation of the Viet Cong forces and the
disruption of Communist staging areas and transportation routes in Cambodia by means of a 1969 bombing (Operation Menu) and a 1970 invasion. Nonetheless, Saigon eventually fell, on April 30, 1975.
783
including 120-millimeter mortars, recoilless cannons, and bazookas.
Effective additions to Viet Minh uniforms were
two large wire-mesh disks, one over the helmet, the
other hanging from the back. The wire mesh was
filled with foliage to hide the troops from both aerial
and ground observation.
In the Second Indochina War, or the Vietnam
War, the most powerful aerial weapon for the United
States was the Air Force B-52 Stratofortress strategic
bomber, modified to carry thirty tons of conventional
bombs and with a range of 7,500 miles. Leading
fighter-bombers were the Air Force F-105 Thunderchief and the Navy and Marine Corps A-4 Skyhawk.
The top fighter plane was the F-4 Phantom, flown by
the Air Force, Navy, and Marines. Napalm, a jellied
gasoline, was widely employed by the United States
and South Vietnam in aerial bombs. The South Vietnamese Air Force, trained and supplied by the U.S.,
flew F-5 Freedom Fighters and A-37 Dragonfly
fighter-bombers.
The North Vietnamese essentially had no air force
until the mid-1960s when China and the Soviet
Union started supplying the North with MiG-15,
MiG-17, MiG-19, and MiG-21 jet fighters.
The United States relied heavily on helicopters.
The Huey utility helicopter (UH-1) was used to transport troops and supplies, evacuate wounded, and
even attack the enemy when modified with heavy
armaments. The primary attack helicopter was the
AH-1 Cobra gunship, armed with a grenade launcher,
machine guns, and rockets.
The U.S. Navys Seventh Fleet deployed attack
carrier strike forces consisting of carriers, cruisers,
destroyers, and other vessels. American forces also
had access to amphibious ships, swift inland boats to
patrol rivers, and air-cushioned hovercraft (PACVs)
and airboats for marshy areas.
U.S. artillery included 105-millimeter towed
artillery, 105-millimeter and 155-millimeter selfpropelled howitzers, 175-millimeter guns, and 8-inch
howitzers. The portable, shoulder-fired M72 light
antitank weapon (LAW) was used by Americans and
South Vietnamese against tanks and bunkers. North
Vietnam began to use medium and heavy artillery in
the South during the 1970s. Their artillery pieces ul-
784
Warfare in Vietnam
785
Turning Points
1945
1954
1955
1956
1959
June, 1961
Aug. 5, 1964
Mar. 2, 1965
1968
1969
May-June, 1970
1973
1975
As World War II concludes, Indochinese Communist Party leader Ho Chi Minh proclaims a
Democratic Republic of Vietnam, and France begins reasserting its colonial rule in Indochina.
The Geneva Conference calls for a partition of Indochina into four countriesNorth Vietnam,
South Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodiaand for an election within two years to unify the two
Vietnams.
The United States assumes political control of South Vietnam from the French.
The United States and the U.S.-backed South Vietnamese president, Ngo Dinh Diem, reject the
Geneva-mandated reunification elections, knowing that the popular Ho Chi Minh would win.
North Vietnam begins armed struggle against U.S. soldiers and South Vietnamese loyal to the Diem
government.
Washington conferences lead to the assignment of training specialists and increased military
funding for the South Vietnamese army.
Tonkin Gulf Resolution by the U.S. Congress authorizes President Lyndon Johnson to take all
necessary measures . . . to prevent further aggression by North Vietnam.
Beginning of systematic U.S. bombing campaign (Operation Rolling Thunder) of North Vietnam.
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong launch the Tet Offensive, which, although unsuccessful,
contradicted U.S. reports that a decisive end to the war was near at hand.
U.S. President Richard Nixon institutes Vietnamization policy designed to transfer military
responsibilities gradually to the South Vietnamese government.
U.S. invasion of Cambodia in pursuit of North Vietnamese troops.
The final American fighting forces withdraw from Vietnam in late March, following a January 27
peace agreement.
Saigon finally falls to the North Vietnamese forces, and Vietnam is united under Communist rule.
Military Organization
Both the French and Communist forces used traditional patterns of organization such as battalions, regiments, and divisions. However, Viet Minh general
Vo Nguyen Giap (born 1911) gave his commanders
considerable flexibility regarding strategy and tactics,
thus permitting quick decision-making. French control remained more centralized along World War II
models to coordinate armor, infantry, airpower, and
parachute drops.
During the Second Indochina War, or Vietnam
War, American decision making was fragmented,
split along various vectors that included the president of the United States as commander in chief,
the secretary of defense, the joint chiefs of staff, and
the commander in chief of the Pacific Command
(CINCPAC), the latter stationed in Honolulu and
responsible for prosecution of the war.
786
Marine Corps. Below the Seventh Air Force in Vietnam was the 834th Air Division, divided into wings,
squadrons, and flights. A flight included about five
aircraft. Marine and Naval air units were similarly organized.
The South Vietnamese Armed Forces were organized largely in the image of the United States but
under the South Vietnam National Armed Forces
(SVNAF) Joint General Staff, which increasingly
took direction from MACV. The South Vietnamese
Regional Forces and Popular Forces, both civilian
militias, also were under the Joint General Staff. The
Civilian Irregular Defense Groups (CIDGs), primarily Montagnards, were trained and usually led by
U.S. Army Special Forces.
The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong were organized generally along the same lines as the U.S.
forces, starting with divisions but including regiments rather than brigades. The Viet Cong had a
party secretary and various supply, social welfare,
and propaganda units. After Tet, remaining Viet
Cong were organized into cadres under North Vietnamese control.
Warfare in Vietnam
nists toward serious negotiations. The United States
also steadily bombed the Ho Chi Minh Trail in fruitless efforts to halt infiltration of men and materials
into the South.
Airpower never achieved the major goals the
United States set for it, but it did help win many battles in the South with bombing and close support for
ground operations. Helicopters proved extremely effective in transporting men and supplies and evacuating the wounded. In addition, the bombing of Cambodia in 1969 and 1970 bought time for the South
Vietnamese armed forces to try to improve their war
capabilities.
On the ground, American forces attempted to en-
787
gage the enemy in direct combat operations, which
first occurred in the fall of 1965 in the Ia Drang Valley. Like most such encounters, the short-term effect
was a victory for the Americans.
Counterinsurgency tactics included such pacification efforts as educational, medical, and economicdevelopment programs and search-and-destroy operations such as Cedar Falls (1967) and Junction City
(1967) to deny the Viet Cong access to the countryside and its people. The hammer-and-anvil tactic
caught Viet Cong between forces already in place
(the anvil) and forces sweeping in from the sides (the
hammer). These operations cleared the land for a
time, but the Viet Cong inevitably moved back in.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara discussing strikes on North Vietnam during a 1966 Pentagon
news conference.
788
Warfare in Vietnam
neither force nor negotiation been able to drive the
Communists out of the South. The United States had
the military might but not the strategy, and therefore
not the tactics, to defeat the enemy.
With the expectation that the March, 1975, offensive would be both a prelude to a final triumph the
following year and a test to see whether the United
States would intervene, the North began its military
789
push on March 11 with a victory at Ban Me Thuot in
the Central Highlands. South Vietnamese president
Nguyen Van Thieu (born 1923) decided to abandon
the Central Highlands, and the North Vietnamese
drove to the sea, cutting South Vietnam in half. The
northern provinces fell, Thieu resigned on April 21,
and on April 30, the new president, General Duong
Van Minh (born 1916), surrendered.
Contemporary Sources
Historians who expressed insights during the Indochina Wars included Joseph Buttinger,
author of The Smaller Dragon: A Political History of Vietnam (1958) and Vietnam: A Dragon
Embattled (1967); and George Coeds, author of Histoire ancienne des tats hindouiss
dExtrome-Orient (1944; The Indianized States of South-east Asia, 1968). French colonialism
was analyzed in John T. McAlisters Vietnam: The Origins of Revolution, 1885-1946 (1968)
and David G. Marrs Vietnamese Anticolonialism, 1885-1925 (1971).
Bernard Falls important Street Without Joy: Indochina at War, 1946-1954, first published
in 1961, was followed by a string of other important critiques of French and American policy in
Vietnam: The Two Viet-Nams: A Political and Military Analysis (1963), Viet-Nam Witness,
1953-1966 (1966), and Hell in a Very Small Place: The Siege of Dien Bien Phu (1967).
The Pentagon Papers (1971), including official statements and Defense Department
memos, depicts, in some 7,000 pages written between 1967 and 1969, the actions and policies
of the United States in Vietnam starting in 1945.
Americans would have better understood the enemy by examining a variety of books published by North Vietnamese, including General Vo Nguyen Giap, commander of the Peoples
Army of Vietnam (1946-1972). He published a book on the battle that earned him lasting fame,
Dien Bien Phu (1959; Dien Bien Phu, 1962).
Books and Articles
Arnold, James R. Tet Offensive, 1968: Turning Point in Vietnam. Botley, Oxford, England: Osprey, 1990. Reprint. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2005.
Cash, John A. Seven Firefights in Vietnam. New York: Bantam, 1993.
Dunn, Peter M. The First Vietnam War. New York: St. Martins Press, 1985.
Ha, Mai Viet. Steel and Blood: South Vietnamese Armor and the War for Southeast Asia. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 2008.
Harder, Robert O. Flying from the Black Hole: The B-52 Bombardiers of Vietnam. Annapolis,
Md.: Naval Institute Press, 2009.
Herring, George C. Americas Longest War: The United States and Vietnam, 1950-1975. New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986.
Karnow, Stanley. Vietnam: A History. 2d rev. ed. New York: Penguin, 1997.
Lawrence, Mark Atwood, and Fredrik Logevall, eds. The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict
and Cold War Crisis. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2007.
Moore, Harold G., and Joseph L. Galloway. We Were Soldiers Once . . . and Young: Ia Drang,
the Battle That Changed the War in Vietnam. New York: Random House, 1992.
Moyar, Mark. Triumph Forsaken: The Vietnam War, 1954-1965. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006.
790
Warfare in Afghanistan
The Soviet-Afghan Conflict
Dates: 1979-1989
vade was improvised and poorly conceived. Instead
of gaining support for the moderate regime, the Soviets encountered a mounting backlash, as thousands
of government soldiers and their officers defected to
the Islamic guerrillas, or the Mujahideen, as they
called themselves, seizing government outposts and
their arsenals of weapons and ammunition.
The turning point in the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan came in 1986, when the Mujahideen began
to receive large amounts of weapons and technical
support through covert programs conducted by the
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Mujahideen
acquired Stinger surface-to-air missiles, 120-millimeter mortars, and communications equipment that
allowed for the coordination of attacks on a broad
scale.
Political Considerations
The war in Afghanistan was the last major conflict of
the twentieth century involving a superpower, the
Soviet Union, and a regional actor, Afghanistan. The
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 was precipitated by a premeditated series of events that took
place in Kabul and were rooted in the milieu of
domestic Afghan politics. In the preceding years,
following the coup dtat that had toppled President Mohammed Khan Daoud, the Khalq faction
within the Peoples Democratic Party of Afghanistan
(PDPA) seized power and began implementing
sweeping reforms that included eradicating illiteracy, eliminating womens dowries, and changing the
land tenure system, which alienated the traditional,
conservative rural society where 90 percent of the
population resided. The PDPAs reform program
was hugely unpopular in the countryside.
A spontaneous rural insurgency followed, which
the government was unable to control. Between July,
1978, and the autumn of 1979, the Afghan government lost two-thirds of Afghanistan. Complicating
the situation was the murder of Soviet citizens in
February, 1979, by angry mobs in Her3t. Then in
March, 1979, the accession of Hafizullah Amin, also
of the Khalq faction, to the post of prime minister
marked a steady disintegration in the countryside
that culminated in the September assassination of
President Nur Mohammed Taraki by bodyguards of
Amin, who then assumed the presidency. Amin was
killed three months later, shortly after the invasion
of the Soviet forces in December, and replaced by
Barbak Karmal.
Two patterns emerged from the 1979 Soviet invasion. The first was the Soviets lack of preparedness
to fight, and the second was that their decision to in-
Military Achievement
The military conflict in Afghanistan can be characterized as static, with the Soviets retaining control of
the cities and towns and the transportation infrastructure, while the Mujahideen retained control of the
countryside.
The Soviets established garrisons at strategic
points, such as cities, villages, and valleys, from which
the army could carry out offensives. Spetsnaz (special
forces) units were dispatched into the Mujahideencontrolled countryside to gather intelligence, ambush
Mujahideen guerrilla units, and create confusion and
chaos among the populace. This tactic effectively divided the Afghan resistance and rendered the Mujahideen incapable of challenging the Soviet army.
Even with the introduction of covert military aid
from the CIA, the Mujahideen were incapable of sustaining prolonged attacks on Soviet positions.
791
792
Turning Points
Apr. 27, 1978
Apr. 30, 1978
Dec. 5, 1978
Dec. 27, 1979
Jan. 9, 1980
Jan. 23, 1980
Mar., 1981
Aug. 20, 1985
July 28, 1986
Autumn, 1986
Feb., 1989
Oct., 1989
Military officers sympathetic to the Peoples Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) overthrow
President Mohammed Daoud, who is killed during a coup dtat.
Nur Mohammad Turaki is appointed Chairman of the Revolutionary Government and Prime Minister.
While in Moscow Nur Mohammad Turaki signs a treaty aligning Kabul with Moscow and setting the
stage for later Soviet involvement in Afghanistan.
Soviet forces enter Afghanistan ostensibly to overthrow the government of Prime Minister Hafizullah
Amin and install a puppet government loyal to Moscow.
President Babrak Karmal gives a press conference justifying Soviet intervention in Afghanistan.
U.S. president Jimmy Carter declares that the United States will consider any threat against the
Persian Gulf a threat against its vital interests and will react, if necessary, with military force.
Soviets launch their first well-planned offensive in Afghanistan.
The Soviet-Afghan troops launch their second offensive of 1985.
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev announces a limited withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan.
Stinger missiles are first used by the Mujahideen to counter the Soviets overwhelming air superiority.
The Afghan Interim Government (AIG) is established, and the Soviet Union completes its withdrawal
from Afghanistan.
Soviet foreign minister Edvard Shevardnadze publicly condemns the 1979 Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan.
Military Organization
The Soviet military was a modern, centralized military structure, but in order to counter the resistance
they encountered, the Soviets continually introduced
changes in the size, equipment, and organizational
structure of their forces. The occupational forces
consisted of three motorized rifle divisions, two independent rifle brigades, one airborne division, one
independent air brigade, and three Spetsnaz brigades.
These Soviet units were deployed carrying their full
equipment, including antitank weaponry and antiaircraft batteries, both of which were poorly geared
toward anti-insurgency warfare.
Mujahideen units were organized along ethnic or
tribal lines, which dictated the composition of the
793
which to base their resistance. Historically, warfare
was used to improve ones social standing vis--vis
the other qawm.
Initial Soviet military strategy in Afghanistan was
in line with traditional operational strategy: the rapid
Mounted Afghan guerrillas ready for combat with Soviet and government forces in western Afghanistan, January, 1980.
794
deployment of large numbers of armor and troops
was intended to strengthen Afghanistans faltering
government. Once the Soviets had become ensconced in the capital of Kabul, little thought was
given to strategic and security concerns. Soviet strategy evolved to consolidate control over the country
without long-term commitment. Soviet aircraft and
heavy artillery would first lay down heavy bombardment, while helicopter transports ferried troops to
nearby ridges where they would lay down covering
fire. Tanks and combat vehicles could then plough
through what was left of the villages.
Initial Soviet tactics, using ground forces supported by tanks, were similar to those used in the
1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia. Following initial
consolidation in and around Kabul, the Soviets deployed motorized rifle units to support the Afghan
army waging classic large-scale armored warfare.
The well-planned Soviet offensives deployed motorized rifle divisions that used tactics based on warfare in the European theater. These motorized rifle
units suffered heavy casualties owing to their lack of
training in mountain and counterinsurgency warfare.
Contemporary Sources
By all accounts the Soviet-Afghan War was particularly vicious in nature. Atrocities were
committed by both sides. Alex Alexiev, in Inside the Soviet Army in Afghanistan (1988), chronicled the individual experiences of individual Soviet soldiers in Afghanistan. Svetlana
Aleksievich wrote Tsinkovye malchiki (1991; Zinky Boys: Soviet Voices from the Afghanistan
War, 1992), a harrowing account of the lives of men and women who lived and served in Afghanistan, many of whom carry deep psychological scars from the devastation they witnessed
there. Artyom Boroviks The Hidden War: A Russian Journalists Account of the Soviet War in
Afghanistan (1990) is a journalistic account of the Soviet-Afghan War. Each book chronicles
Afghanistans deadly descent into near-anarchy, as each battle brought vicious reprisals against
the enemy. The Soviets used the terror of carpet bombing and forced migration to depopulate
entire villages in hopes of depriving the Mujahideen of their support. The Mujahideen were also
guilty of wartime atrocities, as they often shot their Soviet prisoners.
Mujahideen also terrorized Soviet-controlled towns and villages, bombing and killing civilians. In the Soviet-Afghan conflict, the use of terror became the norm. Little has been written
about the real victims of the war, the people of Afghanistan, who endured ten years of civil war
and forced migration, as the Soviets depopulated huge areas of the countryside. Although, as in
Rasul Bakhsh Raiss War Without Winners: Afghanistans Uncertain Transition After the Cold
War (1994), attempts have been made to examine the factors that account for the Afghan tragedy and the fragmentation of the country, until the people of Afghanistan can tell their own stories, the full scope and nature of the Soviet-Afghan War will not be known.
795
Warfare in Iraq
Dates: Since 1990
by President George H. W. Bush (the first Bush presidency), began Operation Desert Shield, massing
troops in Saudi Arabia, ostensibly to prevent a further
Iraqi invasion. The United Nations Security Council
condemned Iraqs invasion, giving the American
buildup international backing. By November, the
U.N. Security Council had voted to place a deadline
of January 15, 1991, on Iraq to remove all troops
from Kuwait. After waiting one extra day, American
forces, along with those of other allied countries, began the softening of Iraqi forces through a massive
bombing campaign, and on February 24, 1991, Operation Desert Storm began when coalition ground
forces engaged the Iraqis, beginning an extended
period of conflict.
Political Considerations
Although conflict between Iraq and the United States
and its allies did not begin until 1990, in order to understand the political situation that led to the conflict,
it is necessary to start with a review of U.S.-Iraqi relations from 1980 to 1990. In 1979, a group of Islamist
Iranian revolutionaries occupied the American embassy, taking fifty-three Americans hostage as a protest against U.S. support of the regime of Mohammad
Reza Shah Pahlavi. In this pivotal episode in the history of U.S.-Iranian relations, the hostages were held
for more than a year, through a failed U.S. rescue attempt, and released only after the intervention of Algeria just as President Ronald Reagan took office. As
the Iranian hostage crisis wore on into 1980, American and Saudi leaders looked for a bulwark against
the spread of Islamic revolution throughout the Middle East. The most likely candidate seemed to be
Iraq, led by President Saddam Hussein. More than
willing to invade Iran, Hussein quickly became an
ally of the West, keeping both Iran and his own nation mired in an eight-year-long war of attrition.
By the end of the Iran-Iraq War in 1988, however,
Hussein was embittered toward the Arab and American leaders, who he felt had led him into a selfdefeating conflict. Additionally, he was particularly
angry at Kuwait, his neighbor to the south, which he
accused of slant drilling across the border into Iraqi
oil fields and, at the same time, refusing to extend
credit to Husseins regime. U.S. ambassador April
Glaspies ambiguous response to Husseins explanation of his frustration with Kuwait gave Hussein the
impression that the United States would not oppose
his planned invasion. He could not have been more
wrong.
On August 2, 1990, Iraqi forces crossed the border
into Kuwait, easily seizing control of the small nation. Within less than a week, the United States, led
Military Achievement
By the time Operation Desert Storm began, the
United States was engaged in a War on Terror,
even though it was not yet called that. The holding of
the fifty-three American hostages for 444 days in the
U.S. embassy in Iran had turned the Middle East
from a troubled but far-off region to a clear and present danger in the American mind. The 1983 bombing
of the U.S. embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, and, later
that same year in the same city, the deaths of 241
Marines in another bombing only intensified fears.
Terrorist attacks, such as the 1988 bombing of Pan
Am flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, continued
throughout the decade. These attacks were directed
against the West and nationals from Arab states, such
as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, who were friendly with
the West. When Husseins attitudes toward the West
changed during the late 1980s, he quickly went from
being a friend of the United States to becoming an enemy, and he was consequently painted with the same
brush as terrorist groups such as Hezbollah, Islamic
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800
the region during the second Bush presidency (20012009). As a part of the agreement that ended the Persian Gulf War, Hussein agreed to the presence of
U.N. weapons inspectors and an American patrolled
no-fly zone over much of Iraq. These measures
placed the United States and the United Nations in
Iraq for the long term, which only exacerbated antiWestern feeling both in Iraq and throughout the Middle East.
For much of the interwar period, the United Nations Special Commission on Iraq conducted nonotice inspections on sites throughout Iraq, uncovering clandestine programs to create weapons of mass
destruction (WMDs). Though sporadic incidents of
airborne conflict continued throughout the 1990s, it
was not until after the terrorist attacks against the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September
11, 2001, and the second Bush presidency that Iraq
once again came to be seen as a primary threat in the
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Warfare in Iraq
War on Terror. Although the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) repeatedly asserted that there was no
connection between Iraq and al-Qaeda, the terrorist
group headed by Osama Bin Laden that carried out
the 9/11 attacks, the American people wanted someone to pay for the thousands of Americans who had
died, and Iraq was a convenient and immediate target. Those who opposed the war speculated that the
second conflict, known as the Iraq War, or Operation
Iraqi Freedom, was more about finishing the job begun by the first President Bush and protecting American oil interests than actually fighting against world
terrorism. The final assessment of the achievement
of goals will have to wait until years after the Iraq
War concludes, but members of the second Bush administration, notably Vice President Dick Cheney,
have repeatedly asserted that the Iraq War, and the
larger War on Terror, have been successes, as evidenced by the fact that there have been no further terrorist attacks on American soil after 9/11.
801
siles during the conflict, resulting in about thirty
deaths. At the end of the first conflict, the weaponry
allowed to what remained of the Iraqi military was
severely curtailed. Almost all of the Scuds were destroyed, and the Iraqi Air Force basically ceased to
exist. Therefore, by the beginning of the Iraq War in
2003, the Iraqi military was at an even greater disadvantage, while the American forces were even better
equipped.
Although the coalition forces fielded a much
wider variety of weapons, their workhorses are also
easily listed. The infantry rifle used was the M16A2
semiautomatic rifle. The main battle tanks of the conflicts were the M1 and M1A1 Abrams tanks, though
the venerable M60 Patton also saw action. In the air,
the F-14, F-15, F-15E, F-16, and F/A-18S fighters
saw heavy action in the first conflict, being joined by
the F-117 Stealth fighter during the second. The Patriot and Tomahawk missiles were the weapons that
struck fear into Iraqi civilians, as the Scuds did for the
Saudis and Israelis. Among the vast numbers of
weapons wielded by the West that the Iraqis did not
have were the strategic bombers, including the B-52,
B-1B, and B-2 Stealth bombers. The might of the
U.S. Navy stood unchallenged by the few small Iraqi
patrol boats.
Military Organization
During the Persian Gulf War, the command of the coalition forces was divided between the Western armies, under the leadership of U.S. general Norman
Schwarzkopf, and allied Arab nations forces, under
the leadership of Saudi general Khaled Bin Sultan.
This division was seen as necessary to avoid the perception that the offensive into Iraq was a case of a
Western nation invading and occupying an Arab nation. The two separate commands coordinated very
closelythanks to the efforts of the Coalition Coordination, Communications, and Integration Center
and no problems arose because of the division. It was
clear to all that Schwarzkopf had the final word. The
Iraqis operated under a unified command structure
with approval from Baghdad necessary for nearly every military action. The practical ramifications of
802
this were that when the United States began its bombing missions in anticipation of the invasion, the centers of authority for the Iraqi military were primary
targets, which were hit with regularity. The ensuing
confusion played directly into the coalitions hands.
Although the Iraqi military was said to have been the
fourth largest standing army in the world, it was an
army that had recently finished a grueling eight-year
war with its neighbor, Iran. Although it fielded sixty
divisions, many units were undermanned and many
commanders were inexperienced, due to Husseins
purges of military leaders. What did concern coalition leaders were the elite Republican Guard and
other special forces units, who were battle-hardened.
The end of the Persian Gulf War, however, was
not the end of conflict. The cease-fire agreement that
ended the war called for Iraq to allow U.N. weapons
inspectors to enforce a ban on offensive weapons
systems and allowed the coalition air forces (those of
the United States, the United Kingdom, and France)
to enforce so-called no-fly zones over northern and
southern Iraq. Although defeated in the Persian Gulf
War, Iraq bristled under the restrictions and actively
engaged coalition air forces with antiaircraft weap-
Warfare in Iraq
manned all four Air Command Sector Operations
Centers, which were set up to coordinate defense on a
regional level.
Just as in the Persian Gulf War, the aerial bombardment of Iraq was effective, this time even more
so as the technology behind the smart bombs had
evolved dramatically during the twelve years between the conflicts. Though Iraq fielded a larger
army and more tanks than did the coalition, Iraqi
tanks were even more outdated and their army much
more poorly trained and led. In addition, the superiority of American air forces was complete.
803
The U.S. doctrine going into the Persian Gulf War
was simple. President Bush hoped to liberate Kuwait
in fulfillment of the United Nations mandate, defend
the worlds oil supply, and emasculate the Iraqi militarys capabilities and pursuit of WMDs.
Whereas Iraq followed the strategy of an entrenched, defensive war, the coalition followed the
strategy set out in the Army AirLand Battle Doctrine.
This set out the idea that gaining and maintaining total air superiority and overwhelming, but carefully
targeted, bombing were the keys to success. Hussein,
for his part, did not believe that the bombing campaign would weaken his defenses significantly, and
he did believe that the U.S. strategy would mean a
long, costly land war, which he could either win or
force into a stalemate. However, what he was not prepared for was a new generation of weapons that allowed the coalition forces to target military installations precisely and hit them with massive force. As
former Air Force chief of staff Michael Dugan said:
Technology has caught up with doctrine.
During the interwar period, the U.S. strategy on
the militarily diminished but not destroyed Iraq
rested on two ideas: economic sanctions and the no-
804
fly zones. President Clintons goal was to diminish
Husseins influence in the region through diplomatic
means and the threat of military force. Iraq was allowed to sell oil only to buy food, which was used as a
means of keeping Iraq from recovering economically. As effective as that might have been, it was not
the military in Iraq that suffered but the people.
Hussein was able to rebuild his military capability,
though not to the level he had in 1990. The army was
approximately 40 percent smaller. The same tanks he
had in 1990 were fewer in number and twelve years
older. His air force was practically nonexistent.
As George W. Bush took office in 2001, Iraq already occupied a prominent place on his agenda.
Though Iraq was diminished, the Bush administration feared that Hussein was succeeding in acquiring
weapons of mass destruction that could be launched
against Saudi Arabia or, worse yet, Israel. When the
9/11 attacks happened, Bush administration officials
immediately attached their agenda on Iraq to the
newly declared War on Terror. Though there was no
evidence that Iraq played any role in fomenting or
supporting the attacks, Vice President Cheney and
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld led a massive
public opinion campaign to transform the resurgence
in patriotism spurred by 9/11 into support for a war in
Iraq. Ignoring world opinion and leading a small coalition consisting of only Americas closest allies,
U.S. forces under the command of General Tommy
Contemporary Sources
Over the course of the interwar years, many of the policy makers and commanders during the
Persian Gulf War wrote memoirs. A number of memoirs by the chief policy makers during the
first Bush administration are among them, including Secretary of State James A. Baker IIIs
The Politics of Diplomacy: Revolution, War, and Peace, 1989-92 (New York: Putnam, 1995)
and Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Colin Powells My American Journey (New York: Random
House, 1995). Both the Western and Arab commanders during the conflict have written as well:
H. Norman Schwarzkopfs It Doesnt Take a Hero (New York: Bantam, 1992) and Khaled Bin
Sultans Desert Warrior (New York: HarperCollins, 1995). Numerous assessments of the Persian Gulf War have also been published, including the House Armed Services Committees Defense for a New Era: Lessons of the Persian Gulf War (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
Office, 1992). A good memoir of the interwar period was written by Hans Blix, the chief U.N.
weapons inspector in Iraq: Disarming Iraq (New York: Pantheon, 2004). Over the course of
both conflicts, numerous soldiers wrote accounts of their time in Iraq, and embedded journalists
during the Iraq War also wrote extensively. There are not as many insider memoirs on the Iraq
War, as the conflict is ongoing, though some hearings have proven fruitful for firsthand opin-
Warfare in Iraq
805
ions about the conflict. A prime example is a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing with
the American commander Tommy R. Franks and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, entitled Lessons Learned During Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan and Operation
Iraqi Freedom, and Ongoing Operations in the United States Central Command Region
(Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 2004).
Books and Articles
Atkinson, Rick. Crusade: The Untold Story of the Persian Gulf War. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1993.
Collins, Joseph J. Choosing War: The Decision to Invade Iraq and Its Aftermath. Washington,
D.C.: National Defense University Press, 2008.
Cordesman, Anthony H. The Iraq War: Strategy, Tactics, and Military Lessons. Westport,
Conn.: Praeger, 2003.
Karsh, Efraim. The Iran-Iraq War, 1980-1988. New York: Osprey, 2002.
Loges, Marsha J. The Persian Gulf War: Military Doctrine and Strategy. Research paper.
Washington, D.C.: Industrial College of the Armed Forces, National Defense University,
1996.
Mahnken, Thomas G., and Thomas A. Keaney, eds. War in Iraq: Planning and Execution. New
York: Routledge, 2007.
Marston, Daniel, and Carter Malkasian. Counterinsurgency in Modern Warfare. New York:
Osprey, 2008.
Mockaitis, Thomas R. The Iraq War: Learning from the Past, Adapting to the Present, and
Planning for the Future. Carlisle, Pa.: Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College,
2007.
Rottman, Gordon L. Armies of the Gulf War. New York: Osprey, 1993.
Schlesinger, Robert. Iraq, the Surge, and the Sunni Awakening: Not So Fast, Jack. U.S. News
and World Report, September 25, 2008.
Summers, Colonel Harry G. On Strategy II: A Critical Analysis of the Gulf War. New York:
Dell, 1992.
Triumph Without Victory: The Unreported History of the Persian Gulf War. New York: Times
Books, 1992.
Films and Other Media
Frontline: Bushs War. Documentary. WGBH Boston, 2008.
Frontline: The Gulf War. Documentary. WGBH Boston, 1996.
Green Zone. Universal Studios, 2010.
Iraq in Fragments. Documentary. Daylight Factory, 2006.
Jarhead. Feature film. Universal, 2005.
Three Kings. Feature film. Warner Bros., 1999.
Steven L. Danver
Warfare in Afghanistan
The United States
Dates: Since 2001
nomic reconstruction of that devastated country after
more than twenty years of civil war. ISAF was originally tasked with defending the capital city of Kabul
and surrounding areas, but on October 13, 2003, the
UNSC authorized ISAF to expand its presence
throughout Afghanistan and in 2006 began to operate
throughout the country. Until August, 2003, command of ISAF rotated among different nations on a
six-month basis, but thereafter NATO assumed responsibility for appointing a commander, and ISAF
was commanded by generals from Germany, Canada, Turkey, Italy, Britain, and the United States.
As of May, 2009, ISAF forces numbered more
than 58,000 troops from forty-two different countries, including the United States, NATO-European
countries, Australia, New Zealand, and Jordan. The
ISAF force comprised 25,000 U.S. troops along with
30,000 troops from non-U.S./NATO countries. Another 17,000 U.S. troops operated independently of
ISAF in training the Afghan National Army (ANA)
and battling al-Qaeda and Taliban forces in eastern
and southern Afghanistan along the lawless border
regions of Pakistan used by al-Qaeda and the Taliban
as a sanctuary. After the United States, Great Britain
had the second largest presence in Afghanistan, with
a total of 8,300 troops, the vast majority serving in
Helmand Province, the heartland of the al-Qaeda and
Taliban insurgency; Canada had 2,830 troops stationed in Kandaharthe former capital of the Taliban when it ruled Afghanistanin the dangerous
south; France had 2,800 troops deployed in Kabul;
Germany had 3,500 troops stationed in the relatively
peaceful north and northeast of the country; the Netherlands had almost 2,000 troops deployed in dangerous southern Afghanistan; and Italy had 2,350 troops
in relatively peaceful western Afghanistan. A total of
159 British, 118 Canadian, 27 French, 31 German, 19
Political Considerations
The attacks by al-Qaeda against the United States on
September 11, 2001, led to the war in Afghanistan,
also known as Operation Enduring Freedom. Since
1996, Osama Bin Laden had been granted sanctuary
in Afghanistan by the Taliban, a militant Islamic
group (led by Mullah Mohammad Omar) that seized
power that same year. Because both al-Qaeda and the
Taliban were hostile to the United States and the
West, espousing a militant and violent interpretation
of Islam, they quickly became allies. One month after
the attacks of 9/11, the United States, Allied forces
(primarily those of Britain), and anti-Taliban forces
known as the Northern Alliance invaded Afghanistan with the stated aim of overthrowing the Taliban
government and ending Afghanistans role as a terrorist sanctuary for al-Qaeda. Suffering heavy casualties from U.S. and Allied air strikes and ground
combat assault by U.S. and Allied special forces and
Northern Alliance forces, al-Qaeda and Taliban
forces retreated toward the eastern mountains of Afghanistan along the Pakistan border. Despite the
swift collapse and defeat of the Taliban and alQaeda, Bin Laden and Mohammad Omar eluded
capture or death, presumably fleeing during the December, 2001, Battle of Tora Bora into the lawless
border areas of Pakistan (the North-West Frontier
Province and Federally Administered Tribal Areas).
On December 20, 2001, the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) established the International
Security Assistance Force (ISAF), led primarily by
members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) but including nonmembers as well. ISAF
was given the dual responsibility of assisting the
United States in securing Afghanistan against alQaeda and the Taliban and also of promoting eco806
807
808
dismantle, and defeat al-Qaeda and the Taliban,
Obama dispatched an additional 17,000 combat
troops to Afghanistan, as well as 4,000 military trainers from the Eighty-second Airborne Division to
train that countrys armybringing the total number
of U.S. troops in Afghanistan to some 60,000. Of
these 17,000 additional troops, 10,000 were to be
Marines stationed in the south; 3,800 were to be with
an Army Stryker Brigade; 1,000 were to be Special
Operations Force trainers; and 3,200 were to be force
enablers.
Military Achievement
After the defeat in Afghanistan of al-Qaeda and the
Taliban in the fall of 2001, fighting continued on a
sporadic basis, with occasional real battles, and control of the country largely reverted to the regional
warlords who had held power before the Taliban.
Britain, Canada, France, the Netherlands, and other
NATO nations provided forces for various military,
peacekeeping, and humanitarian operations. By the
end of 2002, some stability, though tenuous, had
been achieved in Afghanistan, but sporadic, generally small-scale fighting continued, particularly in
the southeast, with the Taliban regaining some
strength and even control in certain districts. In August, 2003, NATO assumed command of the international security force in the Kabul area. In early 2004,
the United States and NATO both announced increases in the number of troops deployed in the country, and these increases continued into 2005. The
U.S. troop increase coincided with new operations
against an increasingly resurgent Taliban and alQaeda, and the spring of 2005 was marked by an increase in attacks by these militants.
Tensions with Pakistan escalated in early 2006, as
members of the Afghan government increasingly accused Pakistan of failing to control Taliban and alQaeda camps in areas bordering Afghanistan; by the
end of the year, President Karzai had accused elements of the Pakistani government of directly supporting the Taliban. In January, 2006, a U.S. air strike
destroyed several houses in eastern Pakistan where
al-Qaeda leaders were believed to be meeting. May
saw the U.S.-led coalition launch its largest campaign against Taliban forces since 2001; some
11,000 troops undertook a summer offensive in four
southern Afghan provinces where the Taliban had
become stronger and more entrenched. In July,
NATO assumed responsibility for peacekeeping in
southern Afghanistan. NATO troops subsequently
found themselves engaged in significant battles with
the Taliban, particularly in Kandahar Province, the
birthplace of the Taliban. NATO took command of
all peacekeeping forces in the country, including
some 11,000 U.S. troops, in October; some 13,000
U.S. troops remained part of Operation Enduring
Freedom, assigned to fighting Taliban and al-Qaeda
forces in the rugged mountainous areas bordering Pakistan. In the second half of 2006, as casualties
mounted, NATO commanders encountered difficulties when their call for reinforcements failed to raise
the necessary number of troops and resources. NATO
leaders also joined Afghan leaders in criticizing Pakistan for failing to end al-Qaedas and the Talibans
use of areas bordering Afghanistan, especially in
Baluchistan, as safe havens. By the end of 2006, 98
U.S. soldiers and 93 Allied soldiers had been killed.
In March, 2007, NATO forces launched a new offensive in Helmand Province against the Taliban and
al-Qaeda. Around the same time, Pakistans construction of a fence along the border with Afghanistan led to protests from Afghanistan and sparked
several border clashes between the forces of the two
countries, as Afghanistan disputed the border with
Pakistan. In May, NATO forces killed the top Taliban
field commander, Mullah Dadullah, but Taliban
forces mounted some guerrilla attacks as deep as the
outskirts of the capital, Kabul, and in the north during
2007. Also in 2007 and particularly in 2008, as Afghanistan suffered the worst violence since the overthrow of the Taliban in 2001 with more than 4,000
killedperhaps as many as one-third estimated to be
civiliansAfghan civilian casualties during U.S. air
strikes increasingly became a source of anger and
concern among Afghans, which in turn not only put
immense pressure on the Karzai government but also
made it unpopular.
Afghan civilian casualties from U.S. air strikes
continued to be a problem in 2008, straining relations
809
ernment. The Pakastani government seemingly alternated between trying to fight and trying to appease
the militants. Indeed, in late April, 2009, while consolidating their control over two northwestern districts after Pakistans government agreed to the Talibans demand for Islamic law to be applied in the
Swat valley, Taliban forces moved to within 60 miles
of Pakistans capital, Islamabad, before withdrawing. This move prompted Pakistan to launch a military offensive in the North-West Frontier Province,
allegedly to rid the region of al-Qaeda and the Taliban; such operations in the past, however, had failed
in their objectives.
After complaints in private failed to diminish or
end the practice, President Karzai in 2009 demanded
an end to U.S. air strikes in Afghanistan because of
the allegedly high number of innocent civilians being
killed. The U.S. and Allied forces, in turn, blamed the
Taliban and al-Qaeda for hiding among innocent civilians and continued the air strikes.
American dead and casualties between 2001 and
mid-2009 in Afghanistan were 610 killed and at least
2,766 injured. The total number of Allied casualties
for that period was 452 dead. In April, 2009, six
NATO soldiers, all Canadian, were killed in a roadside blast, bringing to 118 the total killed for Canadian troops alone. Although President Obama decided to send 17,000 more U.S. combat troops and
4,000 more training personnel, European NATO allies such as Britain, Canada, France, and Holland declined his request to send additional combat forces,
although Australia announced it was deploying 450
additional troops to Afghanistan (bringing the total
number of Australian troops to 1,550, of whom 10
had already died in the conflict). On Monday, May
11, as President Obama tried to turn around what by
all accounts was a stalemated war, it was announced
that he was replacing the top general in Afghanistan,
David McKiernan, with Army Lieutenant General
Stanley McChrystal. With national elections scheduled in Afghanistan for August, 2009, al-Qaeda and
the Taliban were expected to continue and escalate
their attacks.
Because al-Qaeda and the Taliban lack the firepower, particularly in terms of artillery and air power
as well as night-vision equipment, of U.S. and Allied
810
forces, they generally avoid open and direct, prolonged engagements and prefer ambush, hit-and-run
attacks, and suicide bombings to frustrate and demoralize their adversaries by denying them a decisive victory. These tactics significantly prolong the
conflict and, in so doing, make the conflict seem endless and thus unwinnable. Based on events between
2006 and 2009, the militants had succeeded in turning the war in Afghanistan into a stalemate, with the
momentum on their side.
Military Organization
As it did in Iraq, the United States appointed one supreme commander for the Afghanistan theater. In
May, 2009, Lieutenant General Stanley McChrystal
took over for General David McKiernan as head of
the nearly 30,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, headquartered at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. Reporting to the U.S. commander were the Combined
Joint Task Force 101, which handled specific missions throughout Afghanistan, and the Combined
Security Transition Command-Afghanistan, which
worked directly with the Afghan National Army and
the Afghan National Police to train them for an eventual takeover of security operations.
Under separate, NATO-led command were approximately 65,000 troops (including approximately
an additional 30,000 U.S. troops, along with troops
from Australia, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, France, Finland, Germany, Hungary,
India, Italy, Latvia, the Netherlands, New Zealand,
Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Turkey,
and the United Kingdom), which form the ISAF. The
ISAF was led by the Joint Force Command Brunssum
in Brunssum, Netherlands. The ISAF commander reported to the Joint Force Command Brunssum and
had five regional commanders who reported to him.
The opposing forces, usually given the umbrella
term Taliban, really were made up of several distinct groups, all fighting against the Afghan government and U.S. and NATO forces. The official
Taliban leadership, headed by Mullah Omar, was
strongest in the Kandahar and Helmand provinces.
Some insurgent forces operated under the jurisdiction and with the approval of the Taliban central authority, but many acted independently of any authority and sometimes were no more than local criminal
elements using the Taliban name as a means of legitimization.
811
Blocks of TNT explosives used for improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and other weapons, confiscated from insurgents in August, 2009.
812
Despite his immense popularity in Europe, President Obama failed during his April, 2009, European
trip to garner pledges for additional support for the
war in Afghanistan from European members of
NATO. Withdrawing or abandoning Afghanistan
would not, however, make the United States safe
from al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and future terrorist attacks but would only embolden these groups and
once again turn Afghanistan into the terrorist safe haven it was during the 1990s.
On February 9, 2009, Frederick W. Kagan, a
noted military historian and influential scholar behind the successful surge strategy used in Iraq, in
an article entitled Planning Victory in Afghanistan, published in the National Review, criticized
the current U.S. strategy in Afghanistan for conducting effective counterterrorism operations against alQaeda and the Taliban without simultaneously protecting the population from the militants and using
economic and political programs to build popular
support for the Afghan government (which would
promote popular resistance to al-Qaeda and the
Taliban). The U.S. focus exclusively on defeating alQaeda and the Taliban without simultaneously working to win over the Afghan people had delegitimized
and marginalized both groups.
Contemporary Sources
The war in Afghanistan is an ongoing conflict, and much of the primary source information
on the Afghanistan War is current and available online, including the U.S. Department of Defenses annual Narcotics Control Reports (Afghanistan section) and the U.S. Department of
States South and Central Asia Reports.
Most of the book-length primary sources take the form of memoirs that are just beginning to
appear. At the Center of the Storm: My Years at the CIA (New York: HarperCollins, 2007) is a
memoir by former director of the Central Intelligence Agency George Tenet, in which he discusses all aspects of the U.S. response to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the War on
Terror, the Afghanistan War, and the Iraq War. Douglas Feith, former undersecretary of defense for policy, in War and Decision: Inside the Pentagon at the Dawn of the War on Terrorism
(New York: Harper, 2008), gives an insiders view of the history of the early years of the War on
Terror, including the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars. His book also includes facsimiles of U.S. government memos and other documents from the period.
Books and Articles
Combs, Cynthia. Terrorism in the Twenty-first Century. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Prentice
Hall, 2008.
Jacobson, Sid, and Ernie Coln. After 9/11: Americas War on Terror, 2001-. New York: Hill
and Wang, 2008.
Maley, William. Afghanistans Wars. 2d ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009.
Films and Other Media
Afghanistan: The Forgotten War. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service, 2008.
The History Channel Declassified: The Taliban. Documentary. The History Channel, 2007.
The Road to 9/11. Documentary. Kunhardt Productions, 2005.
Suicide Killers, Documentary. City Lights Entertainment, 2007.
The War Against Al Qaeda. Documentary. The History Channel, 2008.
Stefan M. Brooks
Political Considerations
Though the name War on Terror was invented by
the administration of U.S. president George W. Bush
(2001-2009), the conflict between the Western powers (and their allies) and the usually less organized
and therefore more difficult-to-track terrorist groups
long predates the 2000s. The constant conflict between Israel and its Arab neighbors, not to mention
its Palestinian residents, made terrorism a concern of
the United States, as Israels staunchest ally. During
the late 1970s, the birth of the Islamic revolutionary
movement in Iran provided the United States with its
longest involvement with Arab groups bent on Americas destruction, when fifty-three hostages were held
in the U.S. embassy in Iran for 444 days. Further
attacks, such as the 1983 bombings of the U.S. embassy and Marine Corps encampment in Beirut, Lebanon, and the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103
over Lockerbie, Scotland, continually kept terrorism
near the top of the evening newscasts.
The 1990s witnessed a rise in the frequency and
lethality of international terrorism, principally from
the Middle East, perpetrated by Islamic religious fanatics and culminating in the attacks against the
United States on September 11, 2001. This tragic,
three-pronged attackin which hijacked airlines
were deliberately crashed into the World Trade Center towers, the Pentagon, and (after heroic action on
the part of passengers) a field in Pennsylvaniawas
followed by bombings in Bali, Indonesia, in 2002;
Madrid, Spain, in 2004; London, England, in 2005;
and Mumbai, India, in 2008.
After the 9/11 attacks, the United States efforts
under President Bush to combat international terrorismparticularly from al-Qaeda and its associates
and affiliateswas called the War (or Global War)
on Terror. Taking office in 2009, President Barack
Obama dropped this controversial phrase in favor of
813
814
Turning Points
1988
1993
1995
1996
1998
2000
Military Achievement
Before the mass casualties inflicted by the attacks of
9/11, the United States and the rest of the world regarded terrorism as a problem for law enforcement
rather than the military, emphasizing the arrest and
prosecution of terrorists, such that where military
force was used, it was limited to missile or air strikes
designed to punish rather than destroy the terrorists
and their safe havens. Until 9/11, despite several at-
815
tacks overseas, the United States did not view terrorism as an act of war, and consequently airport security was lax and ineffective. Not until after 9/11 did
President Bush declare a War on Terror, announcing
to the world on November 6, 2001, that you are either with us [the United States] or against us in the
global war on terrorism. Until 9/11, neither President
Bill Clinton nor President Bush regarded terrorism as
much of a threat to the United States. For that matter,
the world was as surprised and horrified as Americans were at the ability of al-Qaeda to inflict such
death and destruction (more than twenty-seven hundred people died in New York alone) on 9/11.
Despite the 1993 World Trade Center bombing,
which had killed six people and injured more than
one thousand, and the 1996 bombing of the U.S. Air
Forces Khobar Towers barracks in Saudi Arabia,
which killed nineteen airmen, not until August 7,
1998, and the American embassy bombings in Kenya
and Tanzania, which killed twelve Americans and
more than two hundred Africans, did President
Clinton launch cruise missile strikes (on August 20)
against al-Qaeda targets in Sudan and Afghanistan.
These strikes, however, failed to kill al-Qaedas leadership, including Bin Laden and al-Zawahiri, and, although destroying some al-Qaeda training camps
(abandoned in anticipation of an American attack),
had no effect on the organization; indeed, Bin Laden
and al-Zawahiri promised more attacks against the
United States. Although it is likely that any American
response would have provoked additional al-Qaeda
attacks, because Americas response was ineffective
and the use of missiles was interpreted by al-Qaeda
as a sign of weakness (that the U.S. was unwilling to
commit significant military forces and risk suffering
casualties by committing ground troops to Afghanistan), Clintons missile strikes probably only emboldened al-Qaeda.
It is worth remarking, however, that no political
support existed among either Democrats or Republicansor among the American peoplefor launching an invasion or even a limited ground campaign in
Afghanistan, where the Taliban government had
granted al-Qaeda sanctuary in 1996. In 1998, America still suffered from a false sense of invulnerability
against terrorism, and therefore neither the will nor
816
The USS Cole, after a terrorist attack in Yemeni waterways in October, 2000, possibly by the Aden-Abyan Islamic Army.
the support existed for overthrowing the Taliban regime and depriving al-Qaeda of its sanctuary and
bases in Afghanistan. In 2000, al-Qaeda terrorists attacked the U.S. Navy ship USS Cole in Yemen, killing seventeen sailors and severely damaging the
ship, but failed in an attempt to bomb Los Angeles International Airport after the bomberwho apparently was under surveillance by Canadian intelligencewas arrested at the U.S.-Canadian border
with explosives in his vehicle.
The attacks of 9/11, however, shattered Americas
sense of invulnerability and, tragically, literally
brought home the threat posed by al-Qaeda. Like his
817
American casualties, had declined significantly and
the country and its nascent democratic government
had become much more stable.
Although the situation in Iraq improved, conditions in Afghanistan worsened as al-Qaeda terrorists
fled from Iraq to Afghanistan, political instability
consumed Pakistan and sapped its willingness to
confront Taliban and al-Qaeda terrorists hiding in
Pakistan, and the Taliban and al-Qaeda regrouped
and launched an insurgency against U.S. forces and
the democratic Afghan government of Hamid Karzai. As American military deaths in Afghanistan rose
by 35 percent in 2008 (and to 113 soldiers killed in
February, 2009), President Obama pledged to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al-Qaeda and the Taliban
and dispatched to Afghanistan an additional 17,000
combat troops and 4,000 military trainers from the
Eighty-second Airborne Division to train that countrys army, bringing the total number of U.S. troops
to about 27,000.
818
Military Organization
The organization of forces in the war against terrorism is as nebulous and varied as it is vast. On the U.S.
and Allied side, military organization comprises military and civilian departments within the U.S. government and the military forces and government offices of other Allied nations. Although the military
structure and interrelationships of the myriad terrorist and extremist groups worldwide would take more
than one volume to cover in detail, some rundown of
the main players in the War on Terror is helpful.
Each terrorist group has a different structure, and
often those structures change as soon as Western intelligence can classify them. Although al-Qaeda and
the Taliban dominate the headlines, groups classified
as current threats are not limited by geography. Other
groups involved in the War on Terror include Colombias National Liberation Army and Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia (both of whose members
have carried out kidnappings of American citizens),
Al-Jihad (whose members assassinated Egyptian
president Anwar el-Sadat), al-Gamaa al-Islamiyya
in Egypt, the National Liberation Army of Iran in
Iraq, Aum Shinrikyo (Supreme Truth) sect in Japan
(which carried out the 1995 Tokyo subway attack using sarin nerve gas), Hezbollah in Israel and Lebanon
(which carried out the 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks), Hamas in Israel, Harakat ul-Ansar and
Harakat ul-Mujahidin in Pakistan, the New Peoples
Army in the Philippines, the Revolutionary United
Front in Sierra Leone, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam in Sri Lanka, the Revolutionary Peoples Liberation Party in Turkey, and the Islamic Movement of
Uzbekistan. Of course, the very nature of these transitory groups means that they are constantly and currently metamorphosing, as new groups are founded
out of the remnants of old ones.
In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, President Bush created the Department of
Homeland Security, under whose auspices many previously independent federal bureaus and offices were
consolidated, including the National Guard, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Coast
Guard, Customs and Border Protection, Immigration
and Customs Enforcement, Citizenship and Immi-
gration Services, the Secret Service, the Transportation Security Administration, and the Civil Air Patrol. In addition, although the U.S. government has
long called operations to quell terrorism and secure
the country a war, the varied and often unstructured nature of terrorist organizations has raised
questions as to the status of their soldiers. For its
purposes, the United States has called them unlawful combatants, which allows the United States to
escape the provisions of the Geneva Conventions.
However, such a characterization has not gone without criticism by the American public, as has been
demonstrated by the backlash against the use of torture and the indefinite confinement, without being
charged, of Iraqis and other nationals deemed to have
been involved in international terrorism at the Joint
Task Forces detention camps at Guantnamo Bay
(Gitmo).
819
a weak and unstable Pakistani government, paraforces), so did civil services, and the insurgents and
lyzed from both a series of political disputes and a
terrorists lost much of their support and, at least temsurge of terrorist acts fomented by al-Qaeda and
porarily, were rendered largely ineffective. In 2009,
its affiliates and associates. The tension and hostilal-Qaeda no longer even mentioned Iraq in its propaity between the United States and its NATO allies
ganda broadcastsa tacit admission it had failed to
regarding Afghanistan was another factor contributturn Iraq into a terrorist state.
ing to the problems: The United States resented havIn addition to the surge, al-Qaedas killing of
ing to shoulder most of the military burden in AfMuslim insurgents contributed to the improvement
ghanistan and viewed Europe as not doing enough to
in Iraqs security, encouraging many Iraqis to turn
help in the the fight against al-Qaeda and the Taliban;
against al-Qaeda through so-called awakening counin addition, most European countries did not permit
cils and enabling the United States to recruit former
their forces in Afghanistan to engage in combat (or
insurgents and terrorists to fight al-Qaeda.
limited such engagements to responses to being atWhether such a surge can succeed in Afghanistan
tacked).
is a different matter, since conditions in that country
On the other side, the Iraq War strained U.S.are very different from those in Iraq. Unlike Iraq, terrain in Afghanistan is dotted with high mountains and deep valleys and caves, along with
treacherous weather, especially in the winter.
There is little sense of a national identity or
unity among the people of Afghanistan, and
politics are based instead on ethnic (tribal, clan,
and linguistic) identities. The country lacks a
history of a centralized government and, in addition to its rough terrain, its lack of a national
system of roads makes travel difficult. Furthermore, the presence of a porous mountainous border with Pakistan to the eastand vast, essentially anarchic border regions (the North-West
Frontier Province and Federally Administered
Tribal Areas), autonomous from Pakistani government controlgives al-Qaeda and the Taliban sanctuary.
In his first year in office, President Obama
continued the Bush administrations policy of
unmanned Predator drone strikes along the
Afghan-Pakistani border and also inside both
the North-West Frontier Province and Federally
Administered Tribal Areas, much to the anger
of local residents, who not only sympathized
with al-Qaeda and the Taliban but also claimed
that these strikes have killed innocent civilians. The Pakistani government also objected to
U.S. Navy
these strikes as a violation of its sovereignty,
because of the civilians killed as well as the efA small portion of the destruction of the World Trade Cenfect that attacks had of fanning anti-American
ter towers in Manhattan, a few days after the September 11,
sentiment. Exacerbating these problems was
2001, terrorist attacks.
820
European relations, and most European governments,
regarding the war in Afghanistan as unwinnable, objected to the military focus of the American war effort, arguing that the best way to blunt the appeal and
strength of al-Qaeda and the Taliban was to rebuild
the countrys economy and infrastructure. Despite
President Obamas immense popularity in Europe,
his April, 2009, European trip was notable for its lack
of success in gaining pledges of additional support
for the war in Afghanistan.
In any case, withdrawing or abandoning Afghanistan would not make the United States safe from alQaeda and future terrorism; such a course of action
would only embolden al-Qaeda and Afghanistan
would once again become the terrorist safe haven it
was during the 1990s. It seems likely that the War on
Terror will continue for a very long time, and the
best-case scenario is that the United States will stop
and maybe even reverse much of the surge in alQaeda and Taliban attacks.
Contemporary Sources
Despite President Obamas change in nomenclature, the War on Terror is an ongoing conflict, with new primary sources being generated almost daily. There are a few indispensable
pieces, without which the War on Terror cannot be fully understood. The 9/11 Commission Report: Final Report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States
(New York: W. W. Norton, 2004), is a sort of manual for the War on Terror, outlining the context of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and the U.S. governments response to the attacks. Most of the book-length primary sources take the form of memoirs that are just beginning
to appear. At the Center of the Storm: My Years at the CIA (New York: HarperCollins, 2007) is a
memoir by former director of the Central Intelligence Agency George Tenet, in which he discusses all aspects of the U.S. response to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the War on
Terror, the Afghanistan War, and the Iraq War. Douglas Feith, former undersecretary of defense for policy, wrote War and Decision: Inside the Pentagon at the Dawn of the War on Terrorism (New York: Harper, 2008), in which he gives an insiders view of the history of the early
years of the War on Terror, including the Afghanistan and Iraq wars. The book also includes
facsimiles of U.S. government memoranda and other documents from the period.
Books and Articles
Combs, Cynthia. Terrorism in the Twenty-first Century. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Prentice
Hall, 2008.
Homeland Security: Protecting Airliners from Terrorist Missiles. Congressional Research
Service Report for Congress RL31741, February 16, 2006.
Jacobson, Sid, and Ernie Coln. After 9/11: Americas War on Terror, 2001-. New York: Hill
and Wang, 2008.
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States. The 9/11 Commission Report: Final Report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States.
Thomas H. Kean, chair, and Lee H. Hamilton, vice chair. New York: W. W. Norton, 2004.
Films and Other Media
Afghanistan: The Forgotten War. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service, 2008.
The Road to 9/11. Documentary. Kunhardt Productions, 2005.
Suicide Killers, Documentary. City Lights Entertainment, 2007.
The War Against Al Qaeda. Documentary. The History Channel, 2008.
Stefan M. Brooks
International law recognizes the right of states to defend themselves. The United Nations system requires all states to abide by Article 2.4 of the U.N.
Charter, prohibiting threat and use of force while also
requiring that states resort only to peaceful countermeasures when addressing a breach of their legal
rights by another state.
Chapter VII of the U.N. Charter vests the U.N. Security Council with broad powers of forcible intervention. It can intervene whenever it determines,
under Article 39, that there exists a threat to the
peace, a breach of the peace, or an act of aggression.
It can then decide, under Article 41, upon sanctions
that do not involve the use of force of arms, or it can
then decide, under Article 42, to take action by force
of arms against the aggressor or the state threatening
peace.
The basic rule about the unilateral use of force in
international relations is that such use is forbidden.
The only exception is in the inherent right of individual or collective self-defense if an armed attack
occurs. The term armed attack in this context
means a very serious onslaught either on the territory of the injured state or on its agents or citizens,
while they are at home or abroad, meaning in another
state or in international waters or airspace. According to Article 51 of the U.N. Charter:
States have the right to resort to collective selfdefense in the case of aggression by arms, subject to
the request or consent of the victim of aggression.
The collective self-defense measures do not affect or
prejudice the possible operation of the U.N. security
system. The U.N. security system may authorize
states to take forceful measures against the wrongdoer if the U.N. Security Council concludes that a
gross violation of international community obligations amounts to a threat to the peace, a breach of the
peace, or an act of aggression. The U.N. Security
Council takes over when it faces an international
wrongful act that it deems that Article 39 of the U.N.
Charter covers.
The U.N. Charter also sets a number of limits
upon the right of self-defense, which Article 51 enshrines. This provision, which has developed into a
provision of general international law, allows the use
of force only in self-defense in order to repel an
armed attack, and the defending State must immediately inform the Security Council of the action of
using arms in self-defense. Article 51 envisages selfdefense as a provisional measure by which the victim
of an attack by force of arms may safeguard its rights
until the security system, which centralizes this function, begins to work.
The basic deficiencies of the collective security
system the U.N. Charter outlines include the assumption of continuing agreement among the permanent
members of the Security Council: the United States,
Russia, China, the United Kingdom, and France.
This P5 consensus was the basis for the proposal of
a collective monopoly of force that they would hold
accordingly. Dissent with the individual veto power
that the U.N. Charter gives to each permanent mem-
Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right of individual or collective self-defence
if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the
United Nations, until the Security Council has taken
measures necessary to maintain international peace
and security. Measures taken by Members in the exercise of this right of self-defence shall be immediately reported to the Security Council and shall not
in any way affect the authority and responsibility of
the Security Council under the present Charter to
821
822
powers under Chapter VII of the U.N. Charter (Resolution 814/1993). In Resolution 836 (June, 1993), the
U.N. Security Council authorized the U.N. Protection Force (UNPROFOR) in the former Yugoslavia,
acting in self-defense, to take the necessary measures, including the use of force, to reply to bombardments against the safe areas by any of the parties.
The United Nations deployed forces in all three
cases where no peace existed to keep, that is, in situations of ongoing conflict within states and in which a
partial or nearly total breakdown of governmental
authorities had taken place. This trend in entrusting
peacekeeping forces with enforcement functions has,
however, undergone strong criticismnor has it deMilitary Achievement
veloped to the point of creating a special category of
U.N. peace-enforcement units, which U.N. Secretary
The end of the Cold War with the 1991 dissolution of
General Boutros Boutros-Ghali envisaged in 1992 in
the Soviet Union led to an increase in Great Power
his Agenda for Peace.
cooperation. The net result has been an increase in
On other occasions, the U.N. Security Council imthe number of peacekeeping operations, as well as in
plicitly authorized regional or other organizations or
their size and complexity. The United Nations estabarrangements to use force. The Security Council aulished only fifteen peacekeeping operations before
thorized, for example, maritime operations to en1988. Since then, the United Nations has established
force the embargo, as well as air operations to back
approximately forty such operations.
up the peacekeeping forces (UNPROFOR) protectTwo other critical features of peacekeeping opering safe areas. The implementation of the authorizaations are consent of the territorial state and impartion was implicitly but obviously to occur through
tiality. In some cases, peacekeeping has proceeded
the West European Union (WEU) and the North Aton the basis of a partial consent, meaning that peacelantic Treaty Organization (NATO). The Security
keeping forces have lacked the consent of one or
Council authorized NATO to establish a multinamore of the parties in the conflict. This situation has
tional force in Bosnia-Herzegovina, the Implementajeopardized the impartiality requirements of the option Force (IFOR), which subsequently became the
eration. In 1992-1995, the U.N. Operation in SomaStabilization Force (SFOR) after the end of the war
lia (UNOSOM I) underwent a radical transformain 1995. Its mandate was to ensure, if necessary by
tion through action by the Security Council, when
the use of force, the implementation of the General
UNOSOM I became UNOSOM II. The Security
Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and HerCouncil endowed UNOSOM II with enforcement
zegovina (Dayton Agreement).
Yugoslavia was the conflict with
the greatest degree of complexity
that the United Nations had conFeb., 1991 U.N. forces undertake a decisive ground assault on Iraqi
fronted since the end of the Cold
positions in Kuwait.
War. The developments in the folApr., 1991 No-fly zones are established and enforced in Iraq to prevent
lowing years of war in the former
repression of Kurds in northern Iraq.
Yugoslavia included unsuccessful
Jan., 1996 An international force composed largely of NATO troops is
diplomatic efforts to end the conflict,
deployed in Bosnia to ensure the implementation of the
including the Vance-Owen plan, the
Dayton Accords.
establishment by the Security Counber gives each the right to cripple the system. The
Cold War gave the permanent members the incentive
to exercise this veto against an adversarys draft resolutions proposed under Chapter VII. Consequently, a
distinguishing tendency to the present has emerged
among states to engage in war under the cloak of
self-defense without having to fear any decisive
hindrance from the United Nations. In a number
of cases, states have resorted to unilateral force under the cover of self-defense, protection of nationals
abroad, or preemptive self-defense.
Turning Points
823
824
UNPROFOR as of December 20, 1995, and to ensure
compliance with the Dayton Agreement. Apart from
the air strikes, in the case of Yugoslavia the Security
Council was reluctant to back up by military sanctions the decisions it had taken under Chapter VII following the initial Resolution 713 of September 25,
1991.
The 1999 Kosovo crisis put this post-Cold War
system, which the international community had consolidated, at significant risk. NATO decided to attack
the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and
Montenegro) without any Security Council authorization because of the massive gross violations of human rights by de facto and de jure state agents who
were perpetrating them against the Kosovar population. The response of some commentators is that the
Security Council, acting through Resolution 1244/
1999 (adopted after the end of the war), endorsed
NATOs action ex post facto. A gradual alteration of
the legal framework governing the use of force
emerged as a consequence of the events of September 11, 2001, which focused world attention on terrorism. Which terrorist group had actually launched
the attack was not clear on that day or for weeks afterwardnor was the answer clear as to whether or not
one or more states had been instrumental in organizing and effecting the strike or at least harboring and
assisting the terrorists.
The U.N. Security Council unanimously passed a
resolution, 1368, on September 12, 2001. Its preamble recognized the right of individual and collective self-defense, plainly of the United States and
other states willing to assist it, respectively. The resolution defined the terrorist acts of September 11 as a
threat to the peace and, therefore, not as an armed
attack, which would legitimize self-defense under
Article 51. A later U.N. Security Council resolution,
1373, which it adopted on September 28, 2001, expressed the Security Councils readiness to take all
the necessary steps to respond to the terrorist attacks . . . in accordance with its responsibility under
the Charter of the United Nations. The U.N. Security Council declared itself, thereby, to be ready to
authorize military and other action, if necessary. This
resolution wavered between the desire to take matters into its own hands, on one hand, and resignation
825
leged that its aim was to destroy the bases and infrastructure of the terrorist organization al-Qaeda in that
country. It also intended to disrupt the incumbent
Afghan authorities, the Taliban. The United States
claimed that the Afghan authorities actively assisted,
supported, and even used the terrorist organization.
The United States invoked the right to individual
self-defense, and the United Kingdom relied upon
the right of collective self-defense. Both the United
States and the United Kingdom claimed that they
were responding to the terrorist attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon, thereby acting to
deter further terrorist attacks. The military action in
Afghanistan lasted a few weeks. Only Iraq and Iran
among the community of states openly and expressly
challenged the legality of resort to force by the
United States, with initial British help. Later, in a letter to the U.N. Security Council, the United States
asserted its right to use force not only against Afghanistan but also against other organizations and
countries that it claimed were supporting terrorism.
Later, the United States mentioned Iran, Iraq, and
North Korea. The United States acted forcibly
through the United Nations in Iraq in 1990-1991,
in Somalia in 1992, and in BosniaHerzegovina, 1992-1995, but when
the U.N. support was not forthcoming, it acted through NATO in Kosovo in 1999. In other instances, the
United States refrained from taking
action because it did not have a sufficiently intense interest to intervene
(Rwanda in 1994, Sierre Leone in
2000), or it engaged in military operations without any U.N. authorization (Iraq, 2003-2004).
Military Organization
The founders of the United Nations never envisaged
the formation of an army that was to be at the disposal of the U.N. proper, exclusively dependent on
the U.N. Security Council. Originally, the various
member states were to place forces at the disposal of
the Security Council as military contingents. Special
agreements would determine the number and type of
forces and their readiness. The U.N. Security Council would exercise its authority over national forces.
These national forces would act under the strategic
and military direction of the Security Councils Military Staff Committee. The Charter did not envisage
that a state sending a contingent would continue to
exercise command and control over it, but by the
same token it did not clearly exclude national control,
Weapons, Uniforms,
and Armor
National ground-force contingents
participating in U.N. peacekeeping
operations are typically characterized
by their distinctive, white-painted
armored vehicles, designed to facili-
The U.N. Security Council in 1999, voting to allow one more month for
the Taliban, which controlled Afghanistan, to hand over Osama bin
Laden for trial.
826
U.N. peacekeepers with clearly marked vehicles drive toward Kibati in eastern Congo in November, 2008.
leading to the dangerous possibility of a dual allegiance paralyzing these units. However, with the
polarizing effect of the Cold War, the attempt at centralizing the use of force failed.
827
patory self-defense becomes a justification for any
use of force. Nuclear weapons, and arguably other
forms of weapons of mass destruction (WMDs),
have added a new dimension to this argument. Many
reject the principle of anticipatory self-defense as legally valid, arguing that it has no legal basis in Article
51 of the U.N. Charter or in customary international
law.
Contemporary Sources
For the U.N. report on the sequence of events and causes escalating to UNOSOM II combat
with Somali militia, leading to numerous Somali and many UNOSOM II casualties in
Mogadishu in 1993, see the Report of the Commission of Inquiry Established Pursuant to Security Council Resolution 885 (1993) to Investigate Armed Attacks on UNOSOM II Personnel
Which Led to Casualties Among Them (U.N. Security Council, S/1994/653, June 1, 1994).
For a U.N. summary and critical analysis of U.N. military peacekeeping operations in Bosnia
and Herzegovina leading up to the Srebrenica massacre in the former Yugoslavia, see Report
of the Secretary-General Pursuant to General Assembly Resolution 53/35, the Fall of
Srebrenica (U.N. General Assembly, A/54/549, November 15, 1999). For a U.N. summary
and critical analysis of U.N. peacekeeping operations in Rwanda, see Report of the Independent Inquiry into the Actions of the United Nations During the 1994 Genocide (U.N. Security
Council, S/1999/1257, December 16, 1999). All U.N. Security Council resolutions are available at http://www.un.org/Docs/sc.
Books and Articles
Cassese, Antonio. International Law. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005.
Falk, Richard A. The Costs of War: International Law, the U.N., and World Order After Iraq.
New York: Routledge, 2008.
Lowe, Vaughan, et al., eds. The United Nations Security Council and War: The Evolution of
Thought and Practice Since 1945. New York: Oxford University Press, 2008.
Malone, David M., ed. The U.N. Security Council: From the Cold War to the Twenty-first Century. Boulder, Colo.: Lynne Rienner, 2004.
Silber, Laura, and Allan Little. Yugoslavia: Death of a Nation. New York: Penguin, 1996.
Films and Other Media
Black Hawk Down. Feature film. Columbia, 2001.
Crisis in Kosovo. Documentary. ABC News, 1999.
Ghosts of Rwanda. Documentary. Public Broadcasting Service, 2004.
Hotel Rwanda. Feature film. Lions Gate Entertainment, 2004.
The Peacekeepers. Documentary. BFS Entertainment, 2005.
Sometimes in April. Television film. HBO Films, 2005.
Welcome to Sarajevo. Feature film. Miramax, 1997.
Yugoslavia: Death of a Nation. Documentary. Discovery Channel, 1996.
Benedict E. DeDominicis
Significance
Throughout the ages, armies have used superior
speed and mobility to gain an advantage, and the armies of today must be faster than ever before. Beyond conventional warfare, a modern military must
also be able to compete with asymmetric warfareto
deal with guerrilla tactics, kidnappings, terror bombings, and fighting in close proximity to civilians.
Like conventional warfare, asymmetric warfare has
evolved. Insurgents and malcontents make excellent
use of mass communications to strike at civilians
around the globe.
829
AFP/Getty Images
U.S. president Barack Obama at the Group of Eight (G8) meetings in Italy during July, 2009, where he expressed serious concern over post-election violence against demonstrators in Iran.
Hence, the major asset of a nuclear arsenal remains the defensive advantage gained by the threat of
large-scale destruction. An excellent example is the
newest member to the nuclear club. In 2006, North
Korea conducted its first successful nuclear test. The
result was that Western powers were forced to see
North Korea in a new light; once admitted to the club,
nuclear nations are given a new respect. Even before North Korea started its nuclear weapons program, it had built a substantial military. In fact, having the enormous amount of money that is necessary
to develop nuclear weapons, as all of these nations
have, means there is a great deal of money available
for investment in building an excellent conventional
army. Let us take a closer look at the military capabilities of the United States and China.
830
A robot designed to detect improvised explosive devices (IEDs), used by terrorists and other insurgents, in Afghanistan in 2005.
831
of the Chinese military Peoples Liberation Army
(PLA) but is in fact adherence to Chinas central international policy: noninvolvement. Despite that ideology, China is beginning to emerge from its shell
and is enhancing its capabilities for power projection. In mid-April of 2009, China celebrated its
navys sixtieth anniversary. To mark the occasion, it
brought out a great deal of its fleet on maneuvers. The
fleet is composed of modern destroyers, submarines,
and frigates. Although many Chinese citizens flocked
to the highly publicized event, the maneuvers were
not for the peoples entertainment; they were intended as a spectacle for the rest of the world to see.
China has the largest land army in the world, but it
is still in the process of modernization. China announced that during the 2010s it will focus on
closely integrating its various military branchesa
prerequisite for developing advanced strategic capabilities. Chinas two international focuses are acquiring sources of oil and the reintegration of Taiwan (the
latter is considered a domestic issue by the Peoples
Republic). Although the United States pledges its
continued support to Taiwans independence, if
China decided to invade Taiwan, the conflict would
be short and likely end in Chinas favor, since China
is fully capable of quickly pacifying the tiny nation.
American support, however, keeps Taiwans independence a political and not a military issue. In January of 2007, China shot one of its own satellites out of
space. The action was a show of Chinas military advances. Along with its own program to put more satellites into space, the satellite strike suggested that
China is moving to become a player in the game of information warfare.
Network-centric Warfare
The greatest technological advances have been in
information-gathering technology, not robotics.
Since 1991, a great deal of the information and communication technology that the United States used to
overpower Iraqi forces has become commercial technology: the Global Positioning System (GPS), nightvision goggles, thermal imaging cameras, and satellite photographs of anywhere on Earth available over
832
the Internet. Since these technologies are now widely
available, advanced nations seek to gain further control over the flow of information. This information
advantage forms the basis for network-centric warfare (sometimes referred to as net-war).
Freed from constant military threats, advanced
nations like the United States, Russia, and China
have turned their focus to dominating their opponents communications. Because of the incredible
amount of information that is available from satellites, spy planes, and long-distance detection devices, a battle can be fought over hundreds of miles
in multiple locations. The modern theater of engagement could include offshore batteries from miles
away, tactical bombing and missile attacks from
aircraft, indirect fire from mobile batteries, and enfolding tactics from soldiers behind enemy lines
(deep striking). With modern technology, attacks can
be synchronized and coordinated across an entire
country.
The key theory in net-war is that the army that has
the most information, and that is able to make best
use of that information, is unbeatableor, as stated
in a report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, [to be] able to penetrate the enemys
decision making system and react so quickly that the
opponent cannot compete. In ages past, if a battlefield commander could find a key spot in battle from
which to gain the advantage, that commander was
said to have an eye for the battlefield. Now battlefields are so large that the only eye of any use is one
from a satellite or aircraft.
833
gues that nuclear weapons are most useful to those
(perhaps useful only to those) aiming to spread terror.
Governments are justifiably worried about terrorist
groups acquiring weapons of mass destruction. In the
1960s the United States was forced to fight asymmetric warfare against national communists in Vietnam; however, the Vietnamese were incapable of
striking at the American people. The situation has
changed: In 2010, militaries and governments must
prepare to fight a new breed of nonconventional opponent who is globally mobile and capable of massive attacks on civilians.
Militaries of today face the constant pressure of
modernization and preparation. If there is any single
military truth that has made its way through history
and is unlikely to change soon, it is that militaries
must constantly evolve. Not only are traditional militaries expanding their capabilities; even nonconventional military forces are expanding and adapting
their strategies to gain the upper hand. This element
adds a new level to an already difficult and expensive
competition. Today the threat from the nonconventional opponents is perhaps the most pressing.
To meet these threats, foreign and domestic militaries will continue to adapt. They will buy more robots, build more ships, acquire new long-range cameras, piece together new tanks, and develop new
tactics and technologies. The militaries will continue to evolveas they must. The militaries of 2010
are our militaries of today; however, with phenomena like global reach, network-centric warfare, airplane drones, and combat robots, the capabilities of
some advanced militaries embody our ideas of the future.
834
Some Geographic
Considerations
Warfare takes place within natural contexts that humans can do little to affect. Whether in military action, gathering to fight, campaigning, or fighting in
pitched battle, geographical factors such as terrain,
food resources, water, weather, and climate have all
played major roles in shaping the nature and conduct
of organized human conflict. Natural features such as
swamps or marshes, ore fields, natural harbors, and
mountain passes, or human-made features such as
roadways, cultivated fields, and cities have provided
both the means for waging war and the targets of territorial aggressors.
Natural resources dictate the availability of military matriel: wood for ships; plentiful grass for
herds of horses; and iron, copper, or tin for weapons.
Geographic access is necessary for trade that can enhance natural resource deficiencies, and natural trade
routes themselves can become military targets, for
either control or plunder. In the premodern world,
climate tended to dictate where people congregated,
and weather tended to restrict military campaigning
to the summer months between spring planting and
fall harvest.
Human interaction with the landscape shaped the
course of warfare in China, the West, and other rather
limited regions in the premodern world. Organized
cultivation of the land provided rich stocks of food
that attracted hungry nomadic peoples who took
what they wanted and were able to take. Walled cities, in which people, wealth, and industry concentrated, developed both defensive and offensive capacities that revolutionized military thinking and
action. Developed ports became wealthy points of
trade and colonial expansion, as well as cradles of naval development and warfare, especially around the
Mediterranean basin. Chinese, Persian, Roman, and
Incan roads channeled armies quickly within their
empires, enabled rapid communication, and consoli837
Uncontrollable Forces
838
mia, Akkadian king Sargon the Great (c. 2334-2279
b.c.e.) melded the independent, feuding city-states
into an empire and created the core of a limited imperial army drawn from throughout the region. In their
movement from kingship to functional democracies
to imperial subjection, the ancient Greeks shifted
from an organization of heroic warriors to a phalanx
of citizen shock troops, a force of multiethnic mixed
arms with a heavy reliance on cavalry. The Greeks
proximity to and contact with their many neighbors,
such as the Persians, Egyptians, Romans, Etruscans,
and Carthaginians, resulted in trade, competition,
and conflict that necessitated unprecedented innovations. Not least among these areas of development
were naval technology and strategy. Rarely outside
the West was sustained land and naval competition
so fierce and so regular.
Religious considerations drove the Hebrew people to conquer and dominate much of the Levant, and
the terrific successes of Islam stemmed far more
from aggressive religious fervor than from military
innovation or organization. The conflicting desires to
create a territorial Hebrew promised land, to spread
the Dar al-Islam, and to reconquer the same promised
land for Christian purposes from the Dar al-Islam all
speak to the geographic expressions and impulses
upon which Western religions as well as political entities have relied. The same religious zeal also applied to the Crusaders who were fighting in terrain
that was generally unfamiliar, and in far hotter
weather than they were used to in Western Europe.
Geographic Resources
and Warfare
Humans have certain needs for food and shelter that
nature must supply. Historically humans largely
have occupied a zone of the globe in which climate is
conducive to food crops and extremes in temperature
and weather are minimal. Some communities shifted
from hunting and gathering to herding or domesticating animals and cultivating the soil. After settling in
one place, people began to create and store food surpluses and to build permanent shelters. People who
remained wanderers (nomadic peoples) or who were
839
military organization that could allow operation at a
distance from home bases. It also could require adaptation of tactical and sometimes strategic assumptions and factors. Assyrian and Hyksos warriors created and ruled their empires from horse-drawn
chariots. Alexander the Greats (356-323 b.c.e.)
combination of sarissa-wielding phalanxes and superb cavalry spelled the end for the Persian charioteers and lightly armored infantry. Frankish heavy
cavalry bested the lighter Arab horsemen on open
fields in central Gaul, and the articulated Roman
maniples maneuvered skillfully through rough Italian mountain terrain in ways no massed phalanxes
could have. Roman soldiers were also road-builders
and connected their conquests directly with urban
supply bases and ultimately with Rome itself.
The Assyrians were apparently the first people
systematically to utilize protected lines of communication, supply depots, and baggage trains. Alexanders widely ranging army often relied upon supply
from both coastal ships and stocked depots, and they
suffered tremendously when these failed them. Persian king Xerxes (c. 519-465 b.c.e.) lost his bid for
control of southern Greece when his supply ships and
their escorts were destroyed at Salamis in 480 b.c.e.
In his fourth-century b.c.e. Bingfa (c. 510 b.c.e.;
The Art of War, 1910) the Chinese military theorist
Sunzi (Sun Tzu) recommended that the armies of
invading commanders carry their own equipment
from the homeland but rely on enemy lands for provisions.
Seaborne empires require unobstructed sailing
channels that connect the home ports to those of the
colonies. Ships had to be adaptable for either trade
or battle and ideally could carry on both simultaneously. Ships sought either friendly or directly controlled ports as safe havens along the routes, and
those that harbored hostile ships were given a wide
berth. Open sea could not be controlled effectively,
and individual ships were very vulnerable to predators either alone or in groups. Control of surrounding
land could be a factor protecting shipping, but, as
Venice discovered in its own Adriatic Sea, it was no
guarantee of insulation from bold, swiftly moving
enemy fleets.
Ports, as interfaces between land and sea, enjoyed
840
Uncontrollable Forces
841
and Chinese created artificial surfaces that retained
the roads integrity in all but the worst weather. Carts
might be drawn by people or draft animals, such as
oxen. The use of horses did not become widespread
until after breeders had developed animals of suitable
size and strength, and carters had created appropriate
harnesses. Progress at human and draft animal speed
was steady but slow on easily traversed terrain without steep grades and somewhat faster on paved roadways.
Before horses were ridden, they were harnessed to
light chariots. Developed earliest on the Iranian Plateau, horses provided warriors and soldiers much
greater speed and range, both prior to and during battle. Organized aggression on a large and mobile scale
began with the charioteers. Flat, hard terrain was
a necessity, however, and chariots triumphed only
where this was in abundance: in Mesopotamia,
China, Egypt, and parts of Celtic Western Europe.
Before battle, Persian soldiers swept and leveled the
field to aid the maneuver of their wheeled warriors.
Aryans initially invaded the Indus Valley in chariots,
and Mycenean Greeks and Etruscans also used war
chariots, but the rocky geography of Italy and Greece
limited their usefulness in large formations. Chariots
provided platforms from which to shoot arrows or
hurl missiles and could easily run down broken formations of lightly armed infantry. Although the
fielding and maintenance of a corps of chariots was
an expensive proposition, chariot warfare became a
standard part of empire building in both China and
western Asia. Horses needed large amounts of grass
or grain, however, and when dessication set in, as in
Mesopotamia, their days were numbered.
Where the availability of grasses allowed, horses
were eventually bred, raised, and used for cavalry,
first perhaps on the Iranian Plateau around 1400
b.c.e. By around the eighth century b.c.e. horses with
backs strong enough to be ridden forward, rather than
on the haunches, provided people of the Eurasian
steppe between the subarctic northern forest and the
great Asian deserts with devastating power and mobility. These horse people had the run of their own
vast areas of grass, but were drawn to the civilization
and wealth of India, China, and the West. Scythians,
Cimmerians, Huns, Mongols, and Turks each in turn
842
terrorized civilized peoples and forced them to adapt
to the horsemans threat. However, these were culturally nomadic peoples, and only those Mongols
settling in China and those Turks remaining in Asia
Minor were transformed into a stable populace. The
mobility of the steppe nomads provided their freedom and defined their military tactics: bow-, sword-,
and spear-wielding hordes aligned in a great crescent
that thundered across the open plain. They were
quick to fire their missiles and disperse, reforming
and charging again as needed. They could bleed or
milk their mounts for food, and as long as the grass
was plentiful, they could maintain their control. Beyond the steppe, however, they could not long survive without adapting or retreating.
Arabs and Europeans adopted cavalry as an arm
of mixed-force armies, and Western armies gained
clear, if limited, mobility from the use of cavalry. Islam was spread as quickly as it was by fervent horsemen who established both the religion and its rulers
from southern Gaul to India. These Islamic warriors
arrived in desert areas by camel and fought on horseback. Their goal was not territorial conquest per se,
but the diffusion of the truth of Islam and worship of
Allah. Yet their tremendous mobility spurred the
post-Roman West to create its own cavalry, with
enormous repercussions for medieval European society and politics. Western cavalry units were quite
small relative both to those of the steppe hordes and
to the size of their own societies because local Western economies were settled and agricultural rather
than nomadic. The warrior class was supported by
the agricultural and trading classes, and the European
idea of the chivalry of the mounted knight dominated
in Europe as part of a larger social, political, and economic reality.
When horsemen introduced themselves into areas
previously lacking in horses, such as South Africa,
the Americas, and Australia, the enhanced range and
speed, as well as accompanying firepower, gave
these invaders a huge advantage over local warriors.
Nonetheless, areas of extreme heat or cold and mountainous, heavily forested, jungle, and swampy regions have all proven inhospitable as theaters of
operation to bodies of cavalry.
In general, the same routes that provided the most
Uncontrollable Forces
direct pathways for merchants, pilgrims, diplomats,
and migrating peoples also served the needs of campaigning armies. The paths of least geographical resistance have been trod for centuries, if not millennia.
Just as cities are rebuilt time and again upon the ruins
of their predecessors for reasons of geography, so
battles will repeatedly occur on the same spots as
armies vie to enter or defend territory that retains its
importance. If the province of Edirne, formerly
Adrianople, is the most contested spot on the globe,
however, it is not because of its natural resources, but
rather because of its position along the southern
bridge between Europe and Asia. Similarly, the
southern region of Israel has seen conflict from the
ancient Egyptians attacking northward, their enemies the Hyksos and later the Hittites moving south
to attack Egypt, the Macedonians under Alexander
the Great, the Selucids in the Diadochi Wars, the Romans, the Seljuk Turks, the Crusaders, and the Ottoman Turks, as well as, many years later, the French
under Napoleon I, the Allies in World War I, and the
Arab-Israeli wars of the second half of the twentieth
century.
Similarly, in northern France, conflict in that region in the Hundred Years War (1337-1453) was
only a harbinger of future wars: the Wars of Religion
(c. 1517-1618), the War of the Spanish Succession
(1701-1714), the War of the Austrian Succession
(1740-1748), the Seven Years War (1756-1763),
the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars (17931815), and World War I (1914-1918), which have all
involved fighting in a relatively small area of land.
Nature has provided the obstacles to human movement as well as the highways along which the armies
of the world have campaigned.
843
The use of javelins, bows, and slings enabled irregular fighters to engage at a distance, ensuring a
buffer that allowed for escape when necessary. The
Chinese, Persians, Macedonians, and Romans all incorporated irregulars into their service, adding a
needed dimension to their infantry and cavalry arms.
The wilderness areas from which irregulars came
also provided places of resistance and refuge in times
of upheaval or invasion. The difficulty of operating
either deterred incursion by regular armies, hampered it effectively, or led to disaster, as in the
Teutoburg Forest in 9 c.e., when Germanic warriors
annihilated a Roman army that had pursued it too far.
In that instance it is thought that the Germans allowed the Romans to enter a narrow defile where the
numbers of their attackers would lead to a German
victory. Similarly, at Agincourt in 1415, a much
smaller English force was able to defeat a larger
French one.
By the time of the first Sack of Rome (410 c.e.),
the Roman soldier had become increasingly barbarized and was expected to wield the sling, bow, and
even darts. Flavius Vegetius Renatus recognized the
barbarian origins of the sling in the Balearics and
suggested its use derived from the waging of war in
stony places. He cited the need for mounted archers
to count the same among their enemies and mentioned the origin of the lead-weighted darts among
the Illyrians. Vegetius also recognized the untrained
and undisciplined nature of the auxilia soldiers
drawn from diverse barbarian peoples. Roman adaptation to the strengths and weaknesses of their enemies had evolved by Vegetiuss time, so that the use
of concealment and ambush played major roles in his
thinking. He believed that good generals would not
attack in open battle where the danger is mutual, but
rather from a hidden position. Similarly, when the
Welsh nationalist leader Owain Glendower faced the
English army near Worcester in 1405, neither was
prepared to move from a defensive position, and
hence no battle was fought. The nature of the battlefield is also of major consideration to the commander
and should be studied with regard to its appropriateness to either the cavalry or the infantry.
The difficulties of forcing large groups of foot soldiers to cross desert environments meant that battles
844
in truly desert terrain generally occurred between
bodies of men on camels or horses. The heat and lack
of water allowed for armies of only limited size, and
generally lightly armed and armored characters took
part in desert warfare. On the fringes of these areas
fought the Byzantine cataphracts and crusading
knights, relatively heavy shock troops whose enemies generally wielded the bow and maneuvered
agilely into the desert wasteland itself when retreat
was warranted. Fluidity and expectations of minimal
gains influenced their tactics and strategies, as they
did peoples of the mountains and forests. From horseback slings, bolos, and even lassoes could be used by
light cavalry to hamper heavy formations in open
fields.
Uncontrollable Forces
mor characterize warm-climate warriors and soldiers. As such, lighter weapons could kill them. Native allies often became very important when an
empire struck too far north or south from its homeland, and adaptations to local conditions became
mandatory. Deaths from dehydration, heat stroke,
and unfamiliar diseases had to have been plentiful
when men from the temperate zones marched south.
One explanation for Attilas (c. 406-453) refusal to
march south into Italy is his fear of the areas summertime heat and disease.
Ships at sea are far more vulnerable than land armies to occasional storms, and occurrences of storms
breaking up large fleets are not rare in ancient chronicles. Perhaps the most famous is the kamikaze, or
divine wind, that destroyed the Mongol invasion
fleets that threatened Japan in 1274 and 1281.
It is similar, in some ways, to the divine wind that
brought, according to legend, William of Normandys fleet to England in September, 1066, although modern historians have suggested that his
reasons for delaying the attack were not solely dictated by the weather. In spite of these recent reservations about Williams actions, conditions on the
English Channel were sufficiently variable for the
Allied Command for the D-day operation to consult
weather forecasters on a daily basis to work out the
best time to launch the invasion of France in June,
1944. Prior to the use of professional weather forecasters, soothsayers and fortune-tellers were consulted.
845
More than 100,000 American and British soldiers landed on the Normandy coast of France during the D-day invasion of June, 1944, overcoming the challenges of an amphibious assault.
was willing to bypass strongholds, the major exception being Tyre, which he besieged at a great cost
in time and energy from January to July 332 b.c.e.
Empires and kingdoms tended to fortify along their
frontiers, leaving the interior relatively unprotected.
The decision of the Roman emperor Aurelian (c. 275215 b.c.e.) around 270 b.c.e. to build up the city
of Romes walls speaks to the Romans very real
fear of the Germanic tribesmen, as distant as they
were. After all, fortified cities were needed along the
imperial boundaries, not deep within. Where and
when the political geography was fragmentedas in
classical Greece, China during the Warring States
period, feudal Europe, and Renaissance Italian citystatesevery center was vulnerable and had to be
defended.
Few premodern city walls were spared the experience of siege, and great innovations accompanied the
evolving practice of siegecraft. It has been suggested
Uncontrollable Forces
846
that the first true professional soldiers evolved from
the need for protracted and well-organized sieges.
Professional soldiers were neither elite warriors nor
citizen soldiers. They brought the patience and skill
necessary to invest a fortified area successfully.
Weapons and techniques for gaining forced entry developed as simple blockades of city gates proved of
little practical use. Egyptians may have used battering rams as early as 1900 b.c.e.; siege towers were
depicted from the eighth century b.c.e.; and catapultlike machines for hurling projectiles against the walls
or into the protected areas emerged in the fourth century b.c.e. The use of scaling ropes and ladders and
the practice of undermining walls are probably of
even greater antiquity: The earliest levels of Jericho
show signs of a dry moat. Other methods of defense
included bastions that jutted out from the walls to
provide flanking fire by archers and others; towers
that protected vulnerable corners and gates; crenellations; machiocolations; battering (sloping out) of
wall bases; and, at least during the high Middle Ages,
increasingly ingenious ways of defending gateways.
Like other types of military technology, siege engines and defensive forms migrated: The round towers and curtain walls of Edward Is (1239-1307)
Welsh castles have their origins in the Islamic Near
East.
Geography above all other considerations determined the locations of cities and fortifications. When
defense was a major factor, location on hills or along
847
Nossov, Konstantin. Hittite Fortifications, c. 1650-700 B.C. New York: Osprey, 2008.
OSullivan, Patrick. Terrain and Tactics. New York: Greenwood Press, 1991.
Preston, Richard A., Sydney F. Wise, and Alex Roland. Men in Arms: A History of Warfare and
Its Interrelationships with Western Society. 5th ed. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
1991.
Rose, E. P. F., and C. P. Nathanail, eds. Geology and Warfare: Examples of the Influence of Terrain and Geologists on Military Operations. Bath, England: Geological Society, 2000.
Stephenson, Michael. Battlegrounds: Geography and the Art of Warfare. Washington, D.C.:
National Geographic, 2003.
Woodward, Rachel. Military Geographies. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2004.
Joseph P. Byrne
the emergence of the Sumerian culture in Mesopotamia (c. 4000-2340 b.c.e.) and the cultures of ancient
Egypt (c. 2920-1070 b.c.e.). The artifact known as
the Royal Standard of Ur or the Standard of Ur
(c. 2600-2400 b.c.e.) shows the chariots of the
Sumerian kings army returning to him with the
spoils of war, including prisoners, while the king
stands motionless at the center of the top panel of this
three-paneled work. The kings position in the image
highlights his absolute power; all things begin and
end with him. The ancient Egyptian artifact known as
the Palette of King Narmer (c. 3150-3125 b.c.e.) conveys a similar message of imperial power, but here
the king is seen taking direct action: He holds his
enemy with one hand while preparing to strike with
the other.
Later cultural productions from Greece and Rome
did not differ greatly in message from these earlier
works, but they moved toward a more sophisticated
representation of warfare. The north frieze of the
Treasury of the Siphnians, located at Delphi in
Greece, is known as the Battle of the Gods and Giants
(c. 530 b.c.e.). Despite the mythical subject of this
work of art, viewers can envision the battle with
much greater facility than they can with such earlier
representations of war as the Royal Standard of Ur.
Men engage in hand-to-hand fighting in this scene,
using swords and spears, and an animal is even depicted biting into the side of one of the soldiers. The
realistic portrayal of mythical battles was continued
by the Romans, but they began to include elements of
more recent history in their war art as well. One example of this Roman method of representation can be
found in the Ara Pacis Augustae (c. 13-9 b.c.e.), a
large sculpted marble altar that was commissioned
by the Emperor Augustus (63 b.c.e.-14 c.e.) to celebrate the peace brought about during his reign. The
figures on the north and south walls of the altar represent the various segments of Roman society, including the family of the newly crowned emperor, while
those on the east and west sides depict episodes from
War art is a form of artistic expression with warfare as its subject. Historians of art as well as military
historians have traditionally interpreted war art in
purely mimetic terms, defining it by what they believed it represented: the timeless essence of war.
This understanding of war art led to studies that focused on the continuity of the representation of war
throughout the ages rather than on culturally specific
differences. More recent studies of war art have begun to acknowledge that both war and art are expressions of specific times and places, and scholars are finally acknowledging the role of cultural change in
shaping the understanding of both art and war.
Significance
The cultural turn in the study of war art is important
for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that
it forces a reconsideration of the complex relationships among art, war, and culture. Furthermore, this
change of focus in regard to war art leads to increased
reflection on the understanding of change and continuity throughout time. War art has followed a progression over a broad expanse of time, from the ancient world to the present day. The discussion of this
progression below is far from comprehensive, but it
offers a window into key moments in the evolution of
war art.
852
Roman mythology. Together these scenes are designed to create the impression of peace and stability,
but they also suggest imperial power. The Ara Pacis
Augustae illustrates that war art in the ancient world
was primarily a matter of putting state power on display. Consequently, most ancient war art was what
today would be considered public art; it took such
forms as temples, sculptures, statues, territorial
markers, and royal burial chambers, all of which
highlighted the role of the ruler as the guarantor of
both victory and peace.
Medieval World
In the medieval period (476-c.1400), war art continued to illustrate the power of the monarch in matters of
peace and war, but the added element of Christian belief meant that the secular king would have to share his
power with God. Since secular power was subordinate to divine authority, one of the primary sources for
war art in this period was the Bible. Medieval Bibles
were extensively illustrated with both stand-alone
plates and images skillfully blended into the text. Of
these illuminated manuscripts, the Maciejowski
Bible (c. 1250), also known as the Morgan Bible,
contains some of the most graphic imagery of war
found in the art of this period. One set of illustrations
depicts the death of King Saul and his sons at Beth
Shan. Sauls body hangs headless and partially naked
in the top left-hand corner of the page, dominating
the viewers attention. Careful examination of the
Eugne Delacroixs Liberty Leading the People commemorates the July Revolution of 1830.
853
Francisco Goyas Third of May 1808: Execution of the Citizens of Madrid (1814).
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who produced both kinds of works were interested in
war art as historic record, they had entirely different
focuses and understandings of war.
Jacques-Louis Davids (1748-1825) painting Napoleon Crossing the Alps (1800) represents the earlier heroic tradition, both in the artists choice of subject and in the works execution. The great leader
Napoleon I (1769-1821) is at the center of this portrait, preparing to lead his armies across the Alps and
on to victory. Also seen, engraved into the rocks on
which Napoleons horse stands, are the names of the
two military leaders who had previously crossed the
Alps with their armies: Hannibal and Charles the
Great. Davids painting thus places its subject within
an ongoing narrative of military leadership and imperial power. Francisco de Goyas (1746-1848) painting The Third of May 1808 (1814) is more historically specific than Davids, as the title tells the exact
date of the events portrayed. The shift of perspective
in this painting, from military leaders to civilian victims of war, also radically changes the story about
war that it tells. Here war is the bringer of sudden and
violent death rather than the preserver of an ancient
code of heroism. What little heroism the viewer finds
in the painting is in the courage of the main character,
who, bathed in an eerie light of unknown origin,
kneels upon a pile of the already dead as he awaits his
own execution by firing squad.
When compared to the majority of nineteenth century war art, Goyas painting is an anomaly. It was
not until World War I (1914-1918) that the pathosladen and unheroic vision of warfare that his painting
represents became the dominant artistic mode in the
portrayal of war. This shift in focus coincided with
the emergence of photography as a new medium of
artistic expression. As photographic technology
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Dillon, Sheila, and Katherine E. Welch, eds. Representations of War in Ancient Rome. New
York: Cambridge University Press, 2006. Collection of authoritative and accessible essays
focuses on nationalism in ancient Rome in relation to the war art produced there. Provides
some interesting insights into how Roman culture compares with that of ancient Greece in
regard to attitudes toward warfare.
Hale, J. R. Artists and Warfare in the Renaissance. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press.
1990. Contrasts the representations of war produced by artists of northern and southern Europe during the Renaissance.
Malvern, Sue. Modern Art, Britain, and the Great War. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University
Press, 2004. Focuses on the concepts of witnessing and testimony in showing how the war
culture spawned by Britains experience in World War I not only altered English art but also
prepared the way for a post-Holocaust obsession with authenticity and remembrance.
Moeller, Susan D. Shooting War: Photography and the American Experience of Combat. New
York: Basic Books, 1989. Follows the development of the art of photography alongside the
development of warfare. Covers only American photographers, but offers many insights that
can be applied to other Western nations.
Paret, Peter. Imagined Battles: Reflections of War in European Art. Chapel Hill: University of
North Carolina Press, 1997. Presents an informative overview of war art, focusing on a limited number of works that are representative of larger trends in European art with war as its
subject.
Sekules, Veronica. Medieval Art. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. Excellent overview of medieval art devotes a chapter to the representation of war in the artworks of the
period.
John Casey
Commemoration of War
Overview
Commemoration relies on objects (such as monuments) and rituals (such as parades) that function as
catalysts for remembering specific events. The selection of these catalysts for collective memory depends
largely on the values and beliefs of the particular society as well as the nature of the events to be remem-
Significance
Richard Gunion/Dreamstime.com
Commemoration of War
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History of the
Commemoration of War
Ancient World
Sing, O Muse, of the wrath of Achilles
thus begins one of the earliest works of Western literature, Homers Iliad (c. 750 b.c.e.;
English translation, 1611), which also happens to be a commemoration of war. Documenting events that took place during the Trojan War (c. 1200-1100 b.c.e.), the Iliad is a
written artifact from an earlier oral culture. In
oral cultures the poet was both a priest, serving as an intermediary between the gods and
humanity, and the keeper of cultural traditions. War was remembered in oral cultures as
part of a larger set of norms and mores that
were reinforced with each telling of specific
tales.
As writing began to replace storytelling, the
commemoration of war moved away from ritual
retellings of cultural truisms to fixed objects
of remembrance. One example of this change
can be found in ancient Rome. The Aeneid
Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
(29-19 b.c.e.; English translation, 1553), created by the poet Vergil (70-19 b.c.e.), pointed
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., conback to an earlier oral culture that was contains the names of American soldiers who died in that connected to the ritual commemoration of war. At
flict, engraved into a wall of polished black marble.
the time Vergil wrote his epic, however, Roman culture was experiencing a massive tranthe victorious army through the capital with the
sition, not only from a republican form of governspoils of war, in the empire triumph was presented as
ment to an empire but also to a form of memory that
an accomplished fact. The Column of Trajan (113
relied heavily on public monuments. Although monc.e.), which was built to commemorate the victory of
uments had been part of the communal remembrance
the emperor Trajan (c. 53-c. 117 c.e.) against the
of war during the Roman Republic (527-509 b.c.e.),
Dacians in what is now Romania, does not require
it was not until the early years of the empire and the
participation to create its meaning. Trajans victory
reign of Augustus (27 b.c.e.-14 c.e.) that they were
is already interpreted for the viewer, whose only
gradually separated from social rituals. Triumph was
job is to see and agree with its message. Movement
transformed from an event into an object. Whereas in
from a republican participatory remembrance of war,
the Roman Republic the triumph was a procession of
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however, to the more passive approach of the empire
did not lessen the Roman obsession with victory.
Like most ancient cultures, Rome saw little use for
the recollection of defeat unless it was that of its enemies. Roman commemorations of war were thus designed primarily to put the states power prominently
on display.
Medieval World
Unless churches are considered to be monuments,
the medieval world contained few public memorials
of war. Most of the objects of war commemoration created in this period took the form of handillustrated books or interior decoration of churches
and castles. Also, with the notable exception of the
Bayeux tapestry (c. 1077), which depicts the Norman
invasion of England in 1066, early medieval remembrances of war focused on ideal warriors and the
chivalric code by which they lived rather than on
specific real-world wars and battles. Consequently,
many commemorations of battles from ancient mythology and history or the Bible were created. For example, a wall painting in the church of San Pietro al
Monte, Civate (c. 1100) in Como, Italy, shows the archetypal Christian warrior, the angel Saint Michael,
slaying the seven-headed dragon from the Bibles
book of Revelation. This image would have highlighted for the medieval viewer the necessary connection between Christian belief and martial valor.
An illustration from the Anglo-Norman poet
Thomas de Kents work the Book of All Chivalry
(1308-1312) seems to represent a complete departure
from the Christian iconography mentioned above.
This works illumination shows a well-known historical scene, Alexander the Great fighting the Persian
king Darius, but the text helps the viewer interpret the
scene properly. Alexander becomes evidence of the
classical roots of the Christian warriors sense of self,
which in turn suggests the universal and timeless appeal of the chivalric code.
Because most medieval authors assumed that their
audience would be familiar with the chivalric code,
few texts from the early medieval period discuss the
code with any consistency or at any length. It was not
until the late medieval period that explanations of the
chivalric code began to appear. One such text is
Commemoration of War
Such a relatively neutral vision of war also predominated in the monuments created in England
to commemorate World War I. Official (that is,
state) monuments included the Whitehall Cenotaph
(1920), located near the seat of Parliament in London; the Cross of Sacrifice (c. 1918), designed by the
Imperial War Graves Commission for cemeteries
near the European battlefields of the war; and the
Port Sunlight Memorial (1921) in Liverpool. These
monuments were designed to celebrate English valor
and patriotism, but the names of the dead engraved
on them remind the viewer that they are also sites
of mourning. This juxtaposition of individual suffering and loss with martial valor represents in itself a
great change in the nature of modern war commemoration.
859
Even greater, however, is the growing desire to remember military defeat. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial (1982) in Washington, D.C., commemorates
a highly unpopular war that ended with what many
Americans viewed as a humiliating defeat. A list of
names of the fallen greets the viewer at this site; the
names, arranged chronologically in the order of
death, are carved into a wall of black marble that is
set slightly below ground level. This memorial, designed by Maya Lin (born 1959), powerfully displays the human cost of war, but the creation of
meaning is ultimately left up to the viewer. The memorial, ironically, represents a move away from
monuments and other objects of remembrance and
back to a much older participatory form of commemoration.
Beams of light shoot up from the sites of the twin World Trade Center towers as a temporary memorial to those
who died in the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
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Film and warfare have been linked ever since celluloid images were first projected onto a screen. The
practice of using cinema as a nationalistic propaganda tool is as old as the medium itself. Beginning
in 1896, one-reelers consisting of actuality footage
were part of traveling exhibits. In 1898, films of fabricated events of the Spanish-American War (using toy boats floated in a bathtub) were used to sway
public opinion in the United States. In Great Britain, the drama The Call to Arms (1902) rallied support for the Boer War (1899-1902) in South Africa.
The cinema has provided a mirror for the values of
its parent societies. Though documentaries offer direct messages, narrative feature films are often a
better barometer of prevalent societal values. A film
depicting current events is later valuable as impressionistic historical evidence. Audiences often focus
on World War II when thinking of war films, but
the entire history of warfare has been represented
on the screen.
Significance
During World War I, Western society experienced
one of the first mass propaganda campaigns of the
twentieth century. Leaders in Europe and the United
States used the burgeoning mass media to rally support for the Allied war effort. The motion-picture industry, just beginning to develop the feature film and
its simplistic conventions, became the ideal medium
for this campaign. American film producers, who
originally depicted warfare to increase ticket sales,
were influenced by those presenting positive views
of national preparedness.
Ancient World
Filmmakers have repeatedly been attracted to historical subjects. Audiences have been captivated by
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The American Civil War was initially represented
by Hollywood blockbusters based on pro-Confederate novels. The silent era was revolutionized technically by D. W. Griffiths The Birth of a Nation
(1915), featuring political and racial stereotypes solidified decades later by David O. Selznicks nostalgic Gone with the Wind (1939), which includes some
brief scenes of wartime devastation, such as its towering crane shot showing a sea of wounded Confederate soldiers on the streets of Atlanta.
John Hustons 1951 adaptation of Stephen Cranes
1895 novel The Red Badge of Courage includes
some anachronistic weaponry, but its focus on a
young soldier (World War II hero Audie Murphy)
horrified by the reality of war was one of the first realistic portrayals of the conflict on film. The Civil
War has energized countless Westerns, including
Sergio Leones spaghetti epic The Good, the Bad,
and the Ugly (1966), with Clint Eastwood braving
battles while searching for buried Confederate gold.
Glory (1989), Edward Zwicks powerful, semifactual film about the African American Fifty-fourth
Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, has been praised
for providing an antidote to the falsehoods of Gone
with the Wind.
Western war films often feature (highly stylized)
battles between whites and Native Americans. Raoul
Walshs fictionalized film about the life of George A.
Custer, They Died with Their Boots On (1941), became a heroic vehicle for Errol Flynn, while John
Ford depicted several battles in his cavalry trilogy:
Fort Apache (1948), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon
(1949), and Rio Grande (1950).
Prior to the U.S. governments establishment of
propaganda policy during World War I, feature films
created support for the military. The Brand of Cowardice (1916) and The Deserter (1916) both depicted
American men who became like treacherous foreigners when they refused to fight. After President
Woodrow Wilson declared war in April, 1917, the
Committee on Public Information exerted a control
over fiction films that was more important than that
directed toward the documentaries being produced. The most extensive federal involvement in
Hollywood films came from the Department of Publicity for the Fourth Liberty Loan Drive. Criticized
864
for his pacifism, actor, writer, and director Charles
Chaplin did his part by supporting the Third and
Fourth Loans, then combined propaganda with comedy in Shoulder Arms (1918).
Hollywoods first World War I epic, The Big Parade (1925), opens in stereotypical fashion with men
anxious for the fun of warfare but later features an
Allied march through an empty forest that explodes
with German machine-gun fire. Another scene captures the appalling stench of no-mans-land when
James Apperson (played by John Gilbert) lands in a
shell hole with the corpse of an enemy he has just
killed. Aerial warfare was staged on a grand scale for
William Wellmans Wings (1927) and Howard
Hughess Hells Angels (1930), both featuring heroic
flyboys in aerial sequences that were remarkably realistic for the period.
Perhaps the most memorable World War I film,
Lewis Milestones All Quiet on the Western Front
(1930), based on Erich Maria Remarques antiwar
novel Im Westen nichts Neues (1929; English translation, 1929), was groundbreaking in its use of the
German perspective. The films horrific images of
soldiers being ripped to pieces during combat is surpassed only by the final scene: Amid the mud and
blood of the trenches, the protagonist, Paul Bumer
(played by Lew Ayres), is shot to death as he reaches
out to grasp a butterfly.
Realizing that Depression filmgoers might be ill
served by realistic images of the wars western front,
Hollywood filmmakers produced paeans to the
heroes of World War I who made the world safe for
democracy, including Warner Bros. Sergeant York
(1941). Previously, Warner Bros. had taken risks depicting the challenges faced by veterans, in The Public Enemy (1931) and I Am a Fugitive from a Chain
Gang (1932).
John Fords The Lost Patrol (1934) depicts British cavalrymen battling a deadly, unseen enemy in
the sands of Mesopotamia (now Iraq). Aerial warfare
energizes Edmund Gouldings The Dawn Patrol
(1938), whichin the hands of Errol Flynnreinforces cinematic clichs involving World War I
fighter pilots: white scarves flowing in the wind,
chivalrous behavior during dogfights, and fatalistic
attitudes wrought by impending death. Warner
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A scene from the 1918 film The Kaiser, the Beast of Berlin, which promulgated anti-German sentiment and
American support for post-World War I antisedition laws.
866
the pseudohistorical content of war films, admitted,
There is nothing duller on the screen than being accurate but not dramatic.
Both theaters of war are represented in the 1970
epics Tora! Tora! Tora!, a U.S.-Japanese coproduction about the attack on Pearl Harbor told from both
perspectives, and Patton, a biography of the general
whose military brilliance was undermined by his
cavalier treatment of soldiers. D day also is depicted
in The Big Red One (1980), which is based on director Samuel Fullers service in the U.S. First Infantry.
The German perspective is offered in Wolfgang
Petersens Das Boot (1981), an accurate view of Uboat warfare set primarily within the confines of a
submarine.
The first twenty-four minutes of Steven Spielbergs Saving Private Ryan (1998) have been hailed
as the most realistic combat scene in film history.
This meticulous re-creation of the landings at Omaha
Beach on D day features actual World War II landing
craft and weaponry. Spielberg also coproduced the
television miniseries Band of Brothers (2001), a look
at Easy Company, a parachute regiment attached
to the 101st Airborne, based on the 1992 book of the
same title by historian Stephen Ambrose and interviews with veterans.
The Korean War and the Cold War are represented in films made over four decades, including
films that depict combat (The Bridges at Toko-Ri,
1954; Pork Chop Hill, 1959), espionage (The Manchurian Candidate, 1962), nuclear war (The Day After, 1983), and military training (Top Gun, 1986).
John Wayne attempted to repeat his Alamo tribute for
soldiers in Vietnam with The Green Berets (1968), a
counter to the antiwar movement and supported by
the presidential administration of Lyndon B. Johnson. Following the withdrawal of U.S. troops from
Vietnam, filmmakers created a new, graphically violent subgenre of films depicting the Vietnam War,
including Apocalypse Now (1979), Francis Ford
Coppolas updating of Joseph Conrads 1902 novel
Heart of Darkness; Platoon (1986), a response to The
Green Berets based on Oliver Stones own experiences; and Full Metal Jacket (1987), Stanley Kubricks tale of U.S. Marines at the Tet Offensive.
Hollywood continues to chronicle U.S. involvement in foreign conflicts, increasingly focusing
on how warfare psychologically affects soldiers. The
Persian Gulf War of 1990-1991 is addressed in Courage Under Fire (1996), Three Kings (1999), and
Jarhead (2005), while the Iraq War begun in 2003
and the War on Terror are explored in Home of the
Brave (2006), In the Valley of Elah (2007), and Body
of Lies (2008).
In 1965, Frank Sinatra directed the first U.S.Japanese film coproduction, None but the Brave, a
war film depicting the viewpoints of combatants on
both sides. Four decades later, Clint Eastwood expanded on this idea by directing two innovative companion films, both of which were released in 2006:
Flags of Our Fathers, the fact-based story of the
troops who raised the U.S. flag on Mount Suribachi;
and Letters from Iwo Jima, based on two nonfiction
books, one by General Tadamichi Kuribayashi, who
commanded the Japanese garrison during the battle.
Flags of Our Fathers incorporates vivid battle flashbacks while focusing on the fates of seven U.S.
Marines and their Navy corpsman, while Letters
from Iwo Jima portrays the battle from the perspective of Kuribayashi and his men. Both films were
critically acclaimed for their realism and evenhanded
historical accounts, with Letters from Iwo Jima receiving the lions share of praise for its empathetic
view of the Japanese soldiers.
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Chadwick, Bruce. The Reel Civil War: Mythmaking in American Film. New York: Alfred A.
Knopf, 2001. Examines how the revisionist version of Civil War history perpetrated in the
late nineteenth century by many writers for magazines and newspapers, as well as novelists
and even historians, later came to be depicted in motion pictures as well.
Davenport, Robert. The Encyclopedia of War Movies: The Authoritative Guide to Movies
About Wars of the Twentieth Century. New York: Facts On File, 2004. Presents brief articles
on more than eight hundred films, including cast lists, synopses, and other details.
Eberwein, Robert. The Hollywood War Film. Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010. Provides
an informative, readable introduction to the history of war films as made by American filmmakers. Includes an overview of the genre as well as in-depth discussion of individual films
depicting wartime action from World War I through the Iraq War of the twenty-first century.
_______, ed. The War Film. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2005. Collection
of essays by film scholars presents discussion of aesthetic and narrative elements of specific
war films. Topics addressed include the conventions of the genre as well as the films depictions of race and gender issues.
Harty, Kevin J. The Reel Middle Ages: American, Western and Eastern European, Middle Eastern, and Asian Films About Medieval Europe. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 1999. Presents
synopses and brief analyses of some six hundred films, including silent films and animated
works, that depict life in the Middle Ages, including medieval warfare. Supplemented with
photographs and bibliographies.
Nollen, Scott Allen. Abbott and Costello on the Home Front: A Critical Study of the Wartime
Films. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2009. Focuses on the popular American World War IIera films starring the comedy team of Abbott and Costello. Provides information on each
films story line, production history, and reception.
Scott Allen Nollen
War has been a universal and almost continuous human phenomenon from the earliest days of human
life. The conduct of war until the modern era was
mostly a matter for kings, emperors, chiefs, and their
warriors. However, in the modern era, the Industrial
Revolution, the Enlightenment, and the French Revolution (1789-1793) produced profound changes in
the mobilization of populations in a political system
for war. Ideas were coalesced into ideologies, which
began to be used to motivate people to participate
in all manner of causes. Such ideological causes
seek to make great changes in the world that would
be, according to some intellectual element in the ideology, just or equal or nationalor whatever
term was needed to mobilize the emotions of the
masses.
Significance
Ideology is a belief structure that forms the minds of
true believers, or ideologues. Ideology so molds
their thoughts that it becomes their worldview. It also
binds them with similar ideologues and organizes
their emotions for action. However, since a questioning attitude about their ideology is often not a
part of their thought, their views are often rigid, selfrighteous, and closed. The modern world has seen
many ideologies that have provided the motives for
war or other acts of violence.
Medieval World
The fastest-growing religion of the medieval age, Islam, in many ways functioned as an ideology that led
followers to engage in warfare to support its expansion throughout the Arab world, and even into parts
of Europe. The religion, founded by Muwammad in
the early seventh century, provided a framework for
many parts of its followers lives, from social relationships to the proper conduct and aims of warfare.
The Qur$3n gives instruction on, among many other
things, the use of jihad (struggle) as a means of expanding the new religion. After Muwammads death
in 632, warriors inspired by Islamic ideology wrested
control of not only Muwammads in the Arab Peninsula but also the Levant, Asia Minor, North Africa,
and the Iberian Peninsula. In Europe, Charlemagnes
History of Ideology
and Warfare
Ancient World
The explicit study of ideologies began with the Enlightenment. However, many scholars across diverse
fields believe that ideologies have always existed.
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1938), in which they disagreed with Destutt de
Tracy, who had defined ideology as the science of
ideas. Instead, Marx and Engels saw ideology as a
fabrication by some group (ruling or commercial or
other) to justify themselves. Disagreement over the
very definition of ideology has grown ever since. For
social scientists and especially political scientists,
there is no single agreed-upon definition of ideology.
There are, however, features of ideologies that are
identifiable, and there are also clearly identifiable
macro- and micro-ideologies.
Modern, explicitly stated ideologies are often political, materialistic, action-oriented, simple-minded,
and mass-oriented. Politically, ideologies use selected sets of political ideas. They use ideas in ways
that are simplistic, limited, and closed because they
are seeking to move the hearts and minds of the
masses to undertake action. In contrast to political
philosophies, which teach understanding, ideologies
incite to action.
The materialistic aspect of many ideologies arises
from their vision of the present and near future. Ideologies often offer followers a hope for material improvements in life that are seen as attainable within a
lifetime. Such ideologies promise that political evils
will be overcome and replaced with a brave new
world of peace and plenty. Ideologies also give solidarity to their followers. Political parties and movements come to a common identity from the ideas they
hold, which creates an ism. Nazism, communism,
socialism, fascism, and other political philosophies
that define factions or parties are known by their political idea sets. Nationalism seeks to enlist all the
people of a political system into its fold.
Ideologies are also action-oriented because they
seek to mobilize people into joining the cause.
There is some evil to be ended (global warming, saving the environment, ending poverty, or any number
of others), which requires actions that are in line with
the specific steps that must be followed to attain the
goal. This leads to the creation of organizations that
may be political, cultural, civic, economic, social, or
even religious in order to put into action steps to
reach the common purpose.
The simplistic nature of ideologies is found in the
way in which ideas are combined that may or may not
870
be fully coherent. Intellectual rigor is not required for
true believers who follow ideologies. As a consequence, symbol manipulation (which is very close to
propaganda) enables the leaders of ideology-driven
parties to gain support for vague or undetermined
goals.
Mass mobilization to achieve the goals of the ideology is the final feature of ideologies. Quite often
the mobilization is pitched in terms of war. The ideology uses affective language (language that appeals to
emotions) to invite people to join the struggle, the
battle, the crusade, the jihad, or even the war. The
propagandists of ideologies use simple ideas with
significant emotional appeal to mobilize the masses.
This joining of people allows opportunities for personal expression to arise.
Revolutionary ideologies in the modern world
have created a variety of wars. This is especially the
case for the ideologies of liberalism and socialism.
The nineteenth century wars of liberation in Mexico
and South America were driven by varieties of liberalism that battled against autocratic rule. A number
of the revolutions in Europe in the nineteenth century, especially those of 1848, were also revolutionary, their violence aimed at ending ancient forms of
rule.
Nationalismone of the most potent ideologies
of the modern worldhas been the source of numerous conflicts. In the late eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries, as various groups of people in Europe
abandoned autocratic forms of government that had
ruled for centuries, the mobilization of the masses
into nations ledin the case of the Frenchto a
bloody Reign of Terror, then to wars to maintain the
Republic, and then to wars to spread the ideology of
the revolution, all in the name of the ideology of liberty, equality, and fraternity. The ideology was a
combination of both nationalism and universalism.
The revolutionaries and their Napoleonic successor
saw themselves as bearers of a universal gift of freedom for all people. The conservative counterrevolution was ultimately successful, instituting a peace designed by the prevailing autocratic powers.
During the Napoleonic Wars (1793-1815), Johann
Gottlieb Fichte (1762-1814) delivered his Reden an
die deutsche Nation (1808; Addresses to the German
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The list of ideologies ranges widely, from economic ideologies of capitalism and socialism, to political ideologies such as communism, fascism, and
liberalism, to other types of ideologies such as racism, environmentalism, pacifism, and many more.
While all are ideologies and share ideological characteristics, they also can, under the right conditions,
condone violence in some form or other to gain the
political changes they seek.
Significance
Literature that focuses on war recognizes how war
affects human behavior through characters created in
literature.
History of Literature
and Warfare
Ancient World
Organized armies have fought against each other for
at least ten thousand years. Either at war or in anticipation of war, military infrastructures have played a
key role in the organization of human societies. The
earliest civilizations of China, for example, were established by organized armies.
Accounts of the earliest conflicts were preserved
in song and story through oral tradition, often setting
warfare in a mythological context. Rigvedic hymns
of ancient India, for instance, relate tales of the warrior god Indra. A Babylonian epic poem, War of the
Gods, deals with the myth of world creation and the
establishment of divine hierarchy, which formed part
of a New Years festival.
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land following the Trojan War andafter a series of
adventures, some harrowingarrives in Italy, where
he proceeds to recount the details of the Trojan War.
After defeating the Rutulian leader Turnus in battle
and miraculously recovering from a wound received
in combat, Aeneas marries Lavinia (daughter of
Latinus, king of the Latins) and establishes the new
kingdom on the Seven Hills that has been promised
to him in a dream.
Medieval World
The adopted nephew of Charlemagne, the knight
Roland, and his bosom friend Oliver, together with
their valiant comrades, sacrifice their lives to protect
Charlemagnes army by defending the pass at
Roncesvalles in the Pyrenees Mountains in 778 c.e.
Their epic defense was later immortalized in the
anonymous Chanson de Roland (c. 1100; The Song
of Roland).
Among Germanic peoples, one of the most influential works of literature was the Nibelungenlied
(c. 1200; English verse translation, 1848; prose translation, 1877), set in the fifth century in north-central
Europe. Although medieval in origins, the Nibelungenlied, like the Homeric writings, draws on numerous myths, including Siegfrieds titanic battle
with a great dragon, including rituals of ancient worship that are woven throughout the work. War, again,
is depicted in the context of national origins and identity, with an emphasis not on realism but on the
mythic and glorified aspects of battle, reflecting an
ancient Germanic cult of hero worship.
By the late Middle Ages and early Renaissance,
the literature of war had begun to depart from the reliance on mythology found in earlier literature and to
concern itself more with historical reality. The topic
of war continues to provide an opportunity for writers to speak of glory, honor, and courage, but with increasing fidelity to the background against which the
story is set. William Shakespeares Henry plays, for
exampleHenry IV, Part I (1592), Henry IV, Part II
(1597) and Henry V (c. 1598-1599)smoothly
blend poetry and history both to glorify England and
to explain how the notoriously un-princely Henry V
evolved from a rakish and somewhat unprincipled
youth into a revered king, the hero of Agincourt. In
875
Barkley. Wounded, Henry is hospitalized and eventually has surgery on his knee. He and Catherine are
together during his rehabilitation. She becomes pregnant. While attempting to avoid capture by the Germans, Henry deserts, and the two manage to reach
Switzerland, where Catherine and the baby both subsequently die.
One of the most meaningful works of modern literature to address the subject of war, Norman
Mailers The Naked and the Dead (1948), is regarded
by some as the best novel of World War II. The author set his story on a South Pacific island, focusing
primarily on one platoon of soldiers: their trials and
tribulations, their interactions with one another, and
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877
rather than a criminal to be huntedas the soldiers
grapple with the moral ambiguities of following orders not because they believe in the war but because
they need to avoid the fate that Cacciato will inevitably meet when they finally locate him near the Laotian border.
Music, a prime means of expressing the human experience, has been closely connected to warfare from
earliest times. Within military establishments, music fosters team spirit, conveys signals, and provides
the cadence for coordinated marching. Music also
plays a vital liturgical role, invoking Gods help in
battle and celebrating victory. Less formally, most
cultures have created a large genre of soldiers music sung by fighting men and women. A large body
of civilian music also reflects on war, ranging from
simple tunes about soldiers seen on the street to
magnificent orchestral works that conjure up a purified battlefield experience. The nineteenth and especially the twentieth century also saw the rise of antiwar music at both the popular and the concert-hall
levels.
Significance
The scholarly trend of studying war and society
rather than narrow battlefield history has encouraged
investigation of the intersection between music and
warfare. Music offers a practically unmined wealth
of sources that reveal what society at large has
thought of the experience of warand what the soldiers felt about the matter. Study of music and warfare is, however, still in its infancy. There are major
studies of the music of the U.S. Civil War (18611865), the two world wars (1914-1918, 1939-1945),
and the Vietnam War (1961-1975), but the war music
of earlier eras has scarcely been touched.
879
(and magnifying) a defeat Charlemagnes rear guard
suffered in Spain, glorifies warfare rather more than
the earlier Germanic epics, but the poem still ends in
death and betrayal. Clearly the age of chivalry involved more than just a senseless glorification of
war.
The European Middle Ages also shed more light
on liturgical music before and after military endeavors. Most notable is the Te Deum, a plainchant of
thanksgiving to God. While war is not mentioned in
the text (which begins: We praise you, God, we acknowledge you to be the Lord), it was the custom by
the High Middle Ages to hold public religious ceremonies after great military victories, in which the Te
Deum played a central part. We can also see warriors,
most notably Crusaders after 1095, singing hymns
while invoking God in processions; unfortunately,
few of the lyrics and none of the music in this genre
have survived.
A system of music notation was created in the
eleventh century, making it possible to imagine what
Europes warlike songs sounded like, although at
first few secular tunes were written down. Some of
the earliest were propaganda pieces for the Crusades.
One of the most haunting was a famous song by the
troubadour Marcabru (died 1150) that begins Pax in
nomine Domini (peace in Gods name) and encourages crusading in Spain. The music, with a rising cadence as Marcabru describes how men can have their
souls cleansed by fighting for Christ, conveys both
excitement and longing.
The short medieval songs that have survived tend
to be positive. A notable example is the Agincourt
carol, written shortly after Englands victory over
France on October 25, 1415. It begins:
Our king went forth to Normandy
With grace and might of chivalry
There God for him wrought marvelously
Wherefore England may call and cry
Deo gratias [thanks be to God].
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Modern World
Music for drill and marching reentered European armies in the sevenA facsimile of the Agincourt carol in the Bodleian Library, Oxford.
teenth century, most closely identified with the military reforms of
most popular songs of the fifteenth century was the
Gustavus II Adolphus of Sweden (r. 1611-1632). His
French LHomme arm (the armed man). Its text
pike and musket drill gave birth to the drummer boy,
runs:
a figure familiar on western battlefields for centuries.
The military marching band became increasingly
complex and formal, until by the eighteenth century
The man, the man, the armed man,
The armed man
most army bands included woodwinds and brass inThe armed man should be feared, should be feared.
struments as well as percussion (the first Marquess
Cornwalliss band played The World Turned Upside Down when he surrendered to the American
The composer indulged in considerable word paintrevolutionaries at Yorktown in 1781). Such bands
ing, raising the pitch as he told of a proclamation that
provided both popular tunes (George A. Custers
all should be armed and clothing the whole song in an
band is reported to have played the Irish drinking
awkward rhythm that hints at how unsettling the
song Garryowen just before the Battle of the Litpresence of soldiers could be.
tle Bighorn) and specially composed works, such as
The greatest innovation in war music of the medi-
881
continued to reflect on the high cost of war. Some of
the most tuneful came from Ireland, whose sons died
for centuries in Britains foreign wars. The early
nineteenth century Johnny, I Hardly Knew Ye,
tells of a young man marching proudly to war, only to
return blind and crippled. Based on it, the U.S. Civil
Wars When Johnny Comes Marching Home
Again (1863) interjected a somber commentary on
the human cost of that war. The text is cheerful:
When Johnny comes marching home again,
Hurrah, hurrah,
Well give him a hearty welcome then,
Hurrah, hurrah. . . .
882
the authentic voice of the troops was submerged in
the process, as, for example, the Nazis blared the music of Beethoven and Richard Wagner from loudspeakers. Similarly, it must be asked how much composed and disseminated works of patriotism, such as
the Russian Svyaschennaya voyna (sacred war),
which proclaimed a longing to drive a bullet into the
forehead of the rotten Fascist scum, really reflected
the troops beliefs. Did all Japanese fighters agree
with the theme of their music, that no sacrifice was
too great for emperor and land, or did the music teach
them to hold such beliefs?
In the wars of the late twentieth and early twentyfirst centuries, antiwar themes became dominant.
Many were produced during the Vietnam War (like
Bob Dylans 1963 classic Blowin in the Wind)
and have remained popular ever since. The striking
Israeli Ratziti Sheteda (1979; I wanted you to
know), by Uzi Hitman, is also poignant in its longing
for peace. Surely the world has rarely heard such a
scathing indictment of war as Benjamin Brittens
War Requiem, composed in 1962 for the consecration of the new Coventry Cathedral, replacing the edifice destroyed by a German bomb.
Religion, inseparable from warfare throughout human history, has changed in significance over time,
between contemporary cultures, or even within a nation or culture. War has at times been a ritual process
of religious significance, without any competition
between dogmas or beliefs. Religion has been a
source of inspiration to soldiers, without war having
a particular religious purpose. In certain periods, religious conversion or competition has become the very
reason for wars to be fought.
Significance
As wars are fought by human beings, who are often
motivated by religious beliefs, religion can impact
warfare as either an arbiter or actual cause for taking
up arms. Many wars have been fought, and continue
to be fought, in the name of religion, to impose a revealed truth or to resist encroachment.
History of Religion
and Warfare
Ancient World
Ancient warfare was religious in nature. Peoples, nations, or empires generally had their own tribal or national gods, presumed to fight for their devoted worshippers. It was rare for any conqueror to seek mass
conversion from one faith to another. Worship of the
suzerains gods might be demanded as an act of submission or to promote imperial unity, but practice of
preconquest cults was generally not questioned. The
aid of lesser deities, worshiped by conquered subjects, might even be enlisted at times. Alternatively, a
conquered people might transfer loyalty to the victors gods, which had proved to be the more powerful
deities. Ancient cultures did not question the exis883
884
Hindu cosmology. Although Buddhism was by origin a pacifist faith, arising later in the same region,
that did not prevent kingdoms that adopted it as official religion from engaging in war.
Christianity in the Roman Empire, prior to the accession of Constantine, was largely a pacifist faith.
Christians often refused military service. Not only
were officers and soldiers required to worship Caesar, but also military service was deemed to violate
the gospel of reconciliation. Saint Maximilian (274295 c.e.) wrote, You can cut off my head, but I will
not be a soldier of this world, for I am a soldier of
Christ. . . . Origen (c. 185-c. 254 c.e.) wrote that we
no longer take sword against a nation, nor do we learn
any more to make war, having become sons of peace
for the sake of Jesus, who is our commander.
There is evidence of Christians serving in the Roman armies after 170 c.e., but many served in police
or diplomatic functions rather than in battle. After
416 c.e., only Christians were permitted to serve as
soldiers in the Roman armyChristianity having become the empires official religion. Ambrose (bishop
of Milan, 374-397 c.e.) and Augustine (bishop of
North Africa, 395-430 c.e.) provided the theology of
the just war. The features of a just war included just
cause, proper authority, good intentions, and probability of success.
Medieval World
Christianity and Islam introduced the first wars motivated by advance of religious doctrine. S3s3nian rulers of Persia at times considered the loyalty of Christians within their empire to be suspect, once the rival
Roman and Byzantine empires adopted it as official
imperial faith. A distinctly organized Christian hierarchy, particularly adhering to the Nestorian heresy,
satisfied the demands of Persian patriotism. Kingdoms and empires professing either Christianity or
Islam fought over political, religious, financial, and
cultural disputes during several centuries. As each
religion fragmented into competing schools or sects,
internecine warfare against perceived heresies became a recurrent feature of both Christian and Islamic cultures.
Initially disfavored or persecuted by the Roman
emperors, Christianity achieved imperial recogni-
885
stantines set the example; he adopted Christianity before his 312 c.e. victory at Romes
Milvian bridge. Chlodowech (Clovis), king
of the Franks, adopted Roman Christianity in 496 during a difficult battle with the
Alamanni. His subsequent conquest of the
Visigothic kingdom, north of the Pyrenees,
marked a triumph of Rome over Arianism.
Religiously motivated wars known as the
Crusades began more than four and a half
centuries after the establishment of the Islamic caliphate. Before 1000 c.e., the 4Abb3sid caliphs, leaders of the Sunni branch of
Islam, had fallen under the rule of Sht4ite
princes, while the Sht4ite F3zimids had established a rival caliphate in Egypt. By the later
1050s, Turkish armies were clashing with
Byzantine armies, which had taken advantage of the weakened caliphate to regain Tarsus, Antioch, and parts of northern Syria. In
the 1060s and 1070s, Turkish armies, nominally acting in the name of the 4Abb3sid
caliphs, established a sultanate ruling Iraq,
Iran, and parts of Syria, restoring Sunni ascension. Between 1074 and 1798, Western
Europe generated a series of Crusades against
the rising Ottoman Turkish Empire.
One feature of the crusades was the formation of professed religious orders dedicated
to military purposes. Previously, qualified
laymen were considered to have a moral obligation to bear arms in defense of their faith,
or specifically at the direction of the Roman
church. However, when the Knights Templar
Godfrey of Bouillon, holding a poleax. Leader of the First
(1118-1119) and the Order of the Hospital of
Crusade in 1095, he became king of Jerusalem.
Saint John in Jerusalem (1163-1206) became military orders, communities devoted
Protestant Reformation. Following the Council of
to prayer and service became explicitly institutions
Trent (1545-1547), Roman popes sought to suppress
of warfare. The notion that the vocation of churchthe Protestant heresy but also fought to reduce the inmen denied them the use of force was largely abanfluence of the Habsburg emperors in Italy. While
doned. The Teutonic Knights, established in 1198,
Holy Roman Emperor Charles V fought Protestant
followed a similar pattern.
German princes from 1531 to 1555, his French (Roman Catholic) rivals often allied with the Protestants
Modern World
and also with (Muslim) corsairs from North Africa.
One demarcation of the medieval from the modern
Protestant faith inspired British military rivalry with
world, at least in western and central Europe, was the
886
Spain, culminating in defeat of the Spanish Armada
in 1588 and Dutch independence from Spanish Habsburg rule. In the 1540s, England avoided bankruptcy
by funding two-thirds of its military expenses from
the sale of confiscated church lands. From 1618 to
1648, a period known as the Thirty Years War entangled the causes of Protestant religion and German
liberty with the national and dynastic aspirations of
Sweden, Denmark, France, the Holy Roman Emperor, Habsburg Austria, the Dutch Republic, and
Spain.
Library of Congress
Since 1700, religion has seldom been the motivator for wars, but it has commonly served as an ideological rationale. The American War of Independence was framed, in part, as an Appeal to Heaven
from the rule of British monarch George III. Expansion of European colonial empires, in the Americas,
Africa, and Asia, was given a veneer of moral purpose by calls to spread the Gospel to the heathen
of those continents. Armies, governments, and civilians of almost any belligerent power have invoked
prayers for victory and divine protection for those
serving in the armed forces. In a world dominated by
monotheistic faiths, this means, as Abraham Lincoln
said in his second inaugural address, that both sides
generally pray to the some God, who cannot answer
the prayers of both, and may not answer the prayers
of either.
Most modern armies make extensive provision
for chaplains to serve the spiritual needs of both enlisted men and women, and officers. Serving as officers in a military chain of command, chaplains are
expected to maintain troop morale and serve the assigned military mission, as well as minister to individual soldiers. While some nations have emphasized a single national church in military chaplaincy,
a diversity of faiths increasingly requires a variety of
chaplains. The United States, with its variety of immigrants, is a model, but Britain has soldiers from
dissenting Protestant sects, and a Roman Catholic
minority, while many European countries have significant Islamic populations. Germany has established Protestant and Roman Catholic regions, and
Latin America has a growing number of evangelical
Protestant converts.
A prominent feature of religion in the modern
world has been the rise of pacifism in direct opposition to warfare in general. The philosophical basis of
pacifism is not modern. Pacifism was never a practical political option, when any valley or city was in
constant danger of being invaded by the nearest rival
feudal lord, king, or imperial army, for any reason or
no reason. The development of large, stable nationstates, with civilian control of the military and periods of substantial peace in parts of the world, gave
pacifism a more plausible context. The sheer volume
of slaughter in World War I, and the imbalance of co-
887
More and Desiderius Erasmus also provided some
precedent for pacifist thinking, but More, for example, served as chancellor in England, and Erasmus
served the Counter-Reformation. Modern religious
denominations opposed to war include the Society
of Friends (Quakers), Church of the Brethren, and
Seventh-day Adventistsbut individual members of
these churches have served in the military. Among
the religiously motivated pacifist organizations of
the twentieth century are the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the American Friends Service Committee, the
Catholic Worker Movement, and the Catholic Peace
Fellowship.
888
News Coverage
The first American war to be covered on television
was not the Vietnam War but the Korean War (19501953). However, the television coverage of the Korean War did not have the impact of the coverage of
the Vietnam War, for two reasons. First, in the early
1950s, network broadcast signals reached only half
of the country, and less than half of the families in the
areas to which signals were broadcast actually owned
television sets. Second, the footage of the Korean
War was provided largely by military cameramen
who worked with black-and-white film and within
the format established during the 1930s and 1940s
for newsreels distributed to movie theaters. Therefore, although much of the footage of the war shot by
these cameramen is vivid and often very moving, it
reached relatively few viewers and demonstrated
very little awareness of the possibilities peculiar to
the new medium of television.
By the mid-1960s, when the American involvement in the Vietnam War dramatically escalated,
the television networks had expanded and refined
their news shows into centerpieces of their programming and had developed large organizations of overseas reporters and cameramen, rivaling the newsgathering capabilities of the major newspapers and
newsmagazines. The crews assigned to cover the
Vietnam War competed to scoop competitors on
important or controversial developments. Their re-
Significance
Although war coverage on television goes back to its
roots in the late 1940s, it was in the 1960s when
television first began to have a significant impact. In
January, 1968, although the war in Vietnam (19611975) was controversial, Middle America largely
supported the war and believed the statements of
President Lyndon B. Johnson, Defense Secretary
Robert McNamara, and General William Westmoreland: that the end of the war, in victory, was imminent. That all changed when the North Vietnamese
Army (NVA) and the Viet Cong (VC) launched what
came to be known as the Tet Offensive, attacking
more than thirty cities throughout South Vietnam at
once during the Vietnamese New Year celebration
week, which was traditionally a time of truce. Television crews were there when the VC breached the
gates of the U.S. embassy in Saigon.
Although, as a battle, the Tet Offensive had to be
considered a loss for the NVA and VC, it proved to be
a victory in the long term. The reason for that victory
is the key to the significance of television and war:
889
890
ports from the battle front, which in Vietnam was
just about anywhere, often led off the nightly news
broadcasts, and because the cameramen used color
film, the conflict had an immediacy that was dramatically new. Indeed, because war had never officially
been declared against the Viet Cong and the North
Vietnamese, reporting was not anywhere nearly as
strictly censored as the reporting on World War II
(1939-1945) had been. Families often sat eating their
TV dinners while they watched some harrowing
footage of firefights in which soldiers on both sides
were wounded or killed on camera. The blood was
red, and the gore was not always edited out. Moreover, because the draft system meant that every
neighborhood and most families had someone serving in the war, the television coverage of its brutal realities not only fueled the radical antiwar movement
but also, perhaps more significantly, eroded mainstream confidence in the conduct of the war. Indeed,
the turning point in public support for the war effort is
often identified as Cronkites declaration that he believed that victory was no longer possible, if indeed it
had ever been possible.
Nonetheless, given the protracted nature of the
Vietnam conflict, it eventually became a challenge to
show or say anything new about it. Because the news
reports were still recorded on film that had to be sent
to processing centers, it was also difficult to protect a
scoop. In the mid-1970s, the development of videotape and then the rapid expansion and refinement
of satellite transmission would have had a dramatic
effect on the coverage of the invasions of Grenada
and Panamabut those military operations were so
focused, suddenly launched, and quickly concluded
that the new technologies had relatively little impact
on the coverage of the conflicts.
Then, after Saddam Hussein seized Kuwait in
1990, the United States and its coalition of allies took
some months to build a sufficient force on the ground
and to reduce the Iraqi military capabilities from the
air. The military strictly controlled coverage of this
prolonged buildup to what was a very swiftly decisive ground war. News organizations subsequently
complained that their ability to cover the conflict
with any objectivity had been seriously compromised by military controls. The military and political
Television Documentaries
Some of the documentaries that have been shown on
television were originally developed as newsreel ma-
891
episode series produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that originally aired between 1980
and 1982. Not surprisingly, the Iraq War of the early
2000s has already resulted in a large number of documentaries. Of those that have aired on television
Baghdad ER, which aired on HBO in 2006, has perhaps received the most visceral attention and critical
acclaim.
War-related documentaries have largely focused
on twentieth and twenty-first century conflicts because there is no archival footage from earlier conflicts on which the filmmakers can draw. Most recently lauded for his documentary series on the World
War II, titled simply The War, Ken Burns had a profound impact on the application of the documentary
form to earlier conflicts with his series The Civil War.
A nine-part series that aired on the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) in 1990, The Civil War remains
one of the most popular programs ever aired on that
network. The Civil War was groundbreaking because
Burns recruited well-known actors and actresses to
read letters and journals from combatants and their
loved ones, which were voiced over actual photographs of the people, battles, and national events associated with the war, skillfully intercut. Moreover,
he found commentators on the conflictnotably historian and author Shelby Footewho made the history truly compelling without indulging in any melodramatic turns. The producers of the documentary
series The American Revolution were obviously inspired by Burnss success, but they lacked the photographic archives that Burns had available to him.
Thus, in this thirteen-part series originally aired on
the History Channel in 2006, they employed actors to
portray the famous figures and ordinary people from
whose perspectives the story of the war is told. Thus,
the documentary series moved very close to the television miniseries.
Television Miniseries
The two most successful television miniseries have
both treated World War II. In the 1970s, Herman
Wouks novels The Winds of War (1971) and War
892
and Remembrance (1978) were turned into the most
costly miniseries in television history. The series
featured some major film actors, including Robert
Mitchum, who played the scion of a widely dispersed
American family that manages to be on the scene
in most of the wars major theaters. In contrast,
the HBO series Band of Brothers (2001) was based
on a nonfiction book of the same title by historian
Stephen Ambrose and follows an airborne unit from
the weeks preceding the D-day landings in Normandy to the mountains of Austria at the wars conclusion.
Other notable miniseries treating wars have included Julius Caesar (2002), treating the conflicts
that marked Romes transformation from a Republic
to an Empire; Masada (1981), depicting the desperate climax of Jewish resistance to Roman rule in 73
c.e.; John Adams (2008), dramatizing the second
U.S. presidents pivotal contributions to the American Revolution; The Blue and the Gray (1982),
Gettysburg (1993), and Lincoln (1974), treating the
American Civil War; Holocaust (1978), personalizing the Nazi genocide against Europes Jews; Uprising (2001), focusing on the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising;
Then There Were Giants (1994), depicting the Tehran Conference during World War II; Changi (2002),
documenting the Japanese mistreatment of Australian prisoners of war; Oppenheimer (1980), focusing
on the physicist who coordinated the effort to develop the atomic bomb; Nuremberg (2000), dramatizing the war-crimes trials of surviving Nazi leaders;
and Lord Mountbatten: The Last Viceroy (1986),
capturing the bloodletting that marked the partition
of the British raj into the independent nations of India
and Pakistan.
893
Thrall, A. Trevor. War in the Media Age. Creskill, N.J.: Hampton, 2000. Investigates the press
strategy of the American government from the Vietnam War to the 1991 Persian Gulf War,
drawing attention to the increasing importance of the press in the war over political opinion.
Thussu, Daya Kishan, and Des Freedman, eds. War and the Media: Reporting Conflict 24/7.
Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage, 2003. Looks at the historical and contemporary relationships
between the media and the military and how the reporters role has changed along with the
changing definitions of war and terrorism.
Martin Kich
Military forces often relied on civilians to fulfill labor and support demands, obtaining weapons, food,
and other essential items to enable combat troops to
focus on warfare. Civilian laborers built and reinforced structures to help troops withstand enemy
assaults and prepare offensive maneuvers. Civilian
workers represented both voluntary employees and
people forced into labor. In the early twenty-first
century, many historians analyzed how occupation
forces had coerced or overpowered ethnic groups
to perform work to achieve military goals. Some
scholars evaluated how gender and race affected civilians seeking wartime employment. Economic and
political historians considered civilian laborers impact on industrial production and legislation during
wars.
Many aspects of civilian labor associated with warfare have been universal in different eras. Throughout the history of warfare, civilian laborers supplemented military endeavors in what often became a
symbiotic relationship. Military forces relied on
civilians to accomplish necessary support services
that enabled troops to concentrate on their orders and
not be distracted by time-consuming activities such
as securing food. Civilians usually wanted military
forces to protect them from enemies during wars. Civilian labor varied from formal, organized systems
monitored and financed by governments and military
leaders to assistance offered spontaneously when citizens encountered military troops in need of supplies
and support.
Incentives for voluntary civilian laborers included
patriotism and a sense of duty to their leaders or
country. Most workers welcomed the opportunity
to help relatives, friends, and neighbors fighting in
wars by manufacturing war materials useful to military forces. Warfare offered many civilians income
sources to support their families. Wartime civilian
workers faced risks and suffered injuries and casualties both in home-front industries and during battlefield assignments. Civilian laborers sometimes became prisoners of war or slaves, depending on the era
and conqueror when they lived. After warfare concluded, some civilian laborers retained work similar
to their wartime employment, while others became
unemployed when veterans returned home.
Significance
Civilian laborers frequently filled manpower shortages at businesses and factories when peacetime
workers left for military service. Civilians work
mostly ensured ample production of items, especially weaponry, crucial to military successes. However, fluctuations in civilians work ethic and inconsistent supplies of laborers impacted the quantity
and quality of the military equipment civilian workers manufactured. Some civilian specialists, such
as blacksmiths or mechanics (depending on the era
in which warfare occurred), applied their professional skills to benefit military troops. Sometimes
civilians forced to work for occupying forces sabotaged projects assigned them, hindering enemy
troops effectiveness. Civilian laborers also completed reconstruction work to restore areas damaged
by warfare.
Ancient World
Power struggles between leaders of ancient civilizations often provoked military conflicts. Histories of
ancient warfare, some of them written by those who
were contemporary with the eventsincluding
Homer, Thucydides, and Plutarchand biblical passages described activities of warriors defending their
897
898
communities or engaging in offensive maneuvers to
seize land from rivals. Most accounts omitted details
concerning individuals performing labor to assist
troops, but generalizations about civilian workers
suggested how they participated in warfare. Civilians
assisted their communities military forces by reinforcing shelters, stockpiling supplies, and building
roads, trenches, and bridges. Using soil and rocks, civilian laborers constructed defensive structures, including walls around cities and towers for soldiers to
post outlooks to detect approaching enemies. Civilian-built barricades protected troops from assaults.
Civilian laborers in Assyria and other civilizations
aided soldiers by preparing weapons and equipment
for sieges. The Bible describes how Solomon forced
people he conquered to work to supplement his military resources.
When soldiers traveled to pursue military objectives, their community, including family members
and skilled craftspersons and artisans, often followed
them. The civilian laborers accompanying Macedonian leader Alexander the Great (356-323 b.c.e.) on
his extensive military expeditions were among the
best-documented ancient noncombatant workers
serving in wartime. A diverse labor group assisted
Alexander and his soldiers. Alexander arranged for
royal pages to serve him. He ordered servants, known
as ektaktoi, to monitor his troops baggage and the
livestock transporting it. In addition to overseeing
the movement of supplies, the ektaktoi set up tents to
shelter troops. Most soldiers provisioned themselves
with personal clothing and weapons. Sutlers sold
drinks, food, or services to troops not otherwise
available. Cooks prepared meals for large groups.
Alexander hired engineers to create weaponry, including catapults, for specific battlefield needs or
strategies. Blacksmiths and carpenters contributed
their talents to fashion metals and wood into military
equipment. Physicians treated battle wounds and
sicknesses. Civilians assisted in burying casualties.
Some civilian workers met Alexanders intellectual
and spiritual demands by serving as historians, scientists, and philosophers to share their observations and
insights regarding warfare, foreshadowing the roles
of military chaplains, tacticians, and journalists accompanying troops.
899
Modern World
Civilian laborers affiliated with modern warfare experienced more rigid bureaucracy, but women and racial minorities were offered increased opportunities.
World War I presented these civilian workers temporary employment as telephone operators, clerks, and
medical personnel. After invading France and Belgium in World War I, German troops forced civilians from those countries to work for various labor
projects, such as transporting supplies to frontline
trenches. In 1915, German military leaders ordered civilian workers to build three defensive trenches in the
Flandern Stellung and build large concrete structures,
which the Germans called Mannschaften Eisenbetten
Understnde (MEBUs). Civilian laborers placed steel
in the concrete so the MEBUs could withstand artillery shells.
World War II civilian labor strengthened military forces by providing them sufficient weaponry to
fight enemies effectively. In April of 1942, U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt selected Paul V. McNutt
to direct the War Manpower Commission to oversee
procuring civilian labor. Yearly, 53,750,000 U.S. civilian laborers performed work supporting wartime
needs. Iconic images of Rosie the Riveter symbolized the influx of North American women into factories to construct aircraft, ships, and munitions crucial
for Allied troops to defeat Axis forces. Newsreels depicted the diverse roles the civilian laborers pursued,
including agricultural work. Organized labor groups,
such as the Transport Workers Union of America,
discussed concerns regarding how wartime employment issues affected their members. McNutt dealt
with labor strikes, security issues, and absenteeism.
Military leaders frequently dismissed McNutts efforts because he was a civilian, and historians have
criticized his administration.
When German troops invaded the Soviet Union in
June, 1941, Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin ordered civilians to focus on work that aided troops in what was
referred to as the Great Patriotic War. To prevent Germans from disrupting industrial production, Stalin
demanded that laborers relocate approximately fifteen
hundred factories, steel-rolling mills, and machinery,
in addition to 25 million civilian laborers and their
families, to eastern areas of the Soviet Union. Nikolai
900
Alekseevich Voznesensky (1903-1950) outlined plans
for evacuating industrial resources, which Council
for Evacuation deputy chairman Aleksey Kosygin
(1904-1980) oversaw from July through November,
1941. Enemy forces sometimes interrupted transportation by railroad and other vehicles, but eventually most designated Soviet industrial materials were
moved. Civilians produced weapons and artillery in
Soviet factories. An estimated 11,600 people worked
at the Kirov tank factory, which was a significant
contributor to Soviet military successes. Soviet workers produced 8,200 airplanes in 1941 and expanded
their output to 29,900 airplanes in 1943.
German youths served mandatory two-year German Labor Service terms. In contrast to Allied
forces use of voluntary civilian workers, German
military leaders often relied on forced labor. Germans routinely acquired laborers from areas that
troops had invaded and occupied. German military
personnel also forced many people interned in con-
centration camps to work; labor of this sort represented one-fourth of civilian laborers working for
Germans. German occupation troops also forced
civilians to manufacture rope and other utilitarian objects in factories where they had previously worked
in peacetime. Japanese military leaders directed
forced labor of civilians in Asia to build airfields and
military work to sustain troops.
In the twenty-first century, civilian laborers, representing native and international workersmany of
them contractorscontributed to work related to the
Iraq War. These civilians helped troops by serving in
such diverse roles as translators, drivers, and bodyguards. Few civilians expressed interest in performing work associated with warfare in Afghanistan, and
as a result, U.S. government officials in the spring of
2009 considered assigning military reservists to
those jobs, because they had regularly practiced expertise the military needed, such as engineering, in
their civilian employment.
Counterinsurgency
Overview
issue was the ability of the Jews to practice their religion. The revolt finally ended when the Seleucids extended religious tolerance to the Jews. The significance here is that the Seleucids received the loyalty
of the Jewish people when they were allowed to practice their religion. The Romans, as well, contended
with numerous uprisings of peoples whom they
sought to control. These included the revolts of the
Celtiberians (195-179 b.c.e. and 153-133 b.c.e.),
Quintus Sertorius (c. 123-72 b.c.e.), and the gladiator
Spartacus, (109-71 b.c.e.). The Roman solution in
these cases was usually quite harsh, including
scorched earth, the enslavement of peoples who rose
against their control, and the colonization of Romans
on their lands in order to disrupt the ability of the restive populace to stand against the empire.
The approaches utilized by the Romans for putting down rebellions failed to be effective in the long
run. Many provinces of the empire rose in rebellion
on several occasions. One method of counterinsurgency practiced in both the ancient and medieval
periods was that of constructing fortifications at strategically significant points. This method met with
only limited success.
Significance
An appreciation of counterinsurgency is significant
to a broader understanding of warfare in all periods.
Many conflicts over the course of history possessed a
counterinsurgency component. At the same time,
this aspect of warfare is very often overlooked, as
much attention is focused on the insurgency dimension and not the manner in which these uprisings are
subdued. Likewise, this is the direction toward which
many current military theorists see warfare heading
in the twenty-first century, with a great emphasis
placed on nonstate actors that seek to undermine the
legitimacy of established governments.
Medieval World
During the medieval period in European history,
probably the best-documented counterinsurgency is
that of Edward I (r. 1272-1307) against the Welsh.
Edward sought to confirm his control over their
lands. He succeeded in disrupting the control of the
Welsh leaders by waging a simultaneous land and sea
campaign through which he managed to disrupt their
food supply, thus undermining the legitimacy of the
local rulers. In addition, he had the leaders of the revolt executed. Edward likewise dealt with the challenges to his authority in the areas of Scotland that
were nominally under his control. The Scots were revolting against English rule in some of the border
areas, while the English sought to expand their domination of Scotland. In suppressing these challenges
History of Counterinsurgency
Ancient World
Among the earliest counterinsurgencies in the ancient period was that of the Jews against the Seleucid
Empire, one of the successor states to the empire of
Alexander the Great, in the second century b.c.e. At
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to his power, Edward tended to make use of fairly
harsh methods.
The Hundred Years War (1337-1453) as well
witnessed a fair amount of counterinsurgency, as
there were several major revolts in both England and
France. These were very much related to the heavy
exactions placed on the peasants of both countries in
order to wage the war. In France, the revolt was
known as the Jacqueline (1358). This insurgency
was put down when the leader, Guillaume Caleb,
met with the leaders of the French nobility. He was
arrested and decapitated. Much the same fate befell Watt Tylers rebellion in England (1381). In
this case, the rebels were following the lead of the
French. When they marched into London, King Richard agreed to meet with them. Watt Tyler was killed
in front of his people by the kings men. In both cases,
once deprived of their leadership the insurgencies
lost their momentum and collapsed.
Modern World
Among the counterinsurgency campaigns that receive
the most attention at the start of the modern period is
the fighting in the southern states of the United States
during the American War of Independence. In the
fighting in this theater, both sides resorted to partisan
tactics, and both sought to create some semblance of
a legal authority. In the south, especially in South
Carolina, political legitimacy devolved into a contested ground after the British capture of Charleston
in May, 1781. The Whig government was literally on
the run, and the British set up a military government.
This was as far as British measures went, however.
The British failed to reinstall a civilian authority in
any of the former colonies save Georgia, while the
American revolutionaries under Nathanael Greene
reestablished civilian authority in South Carolina
and, through his efforts at restoring order, eventually
made the Whig side the one with more legitimacy.
The government of revolutionary France faced a
number of internal challenges while simultaneously
fighting many of its European neighbors. The most
persistent of these came from the northern region
known as the Vende (1793-1800). Here several
groups of counterrevolutionaries rose up against the
Paris government in defense of the local nobility, and
Counterinsurgency
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F. R. Niglutsch
The comte de La Rochejaquelein leads a group of peasants during the Wars of the Vende.
insurgencies to place a heavy reliance on certain social classes. The Mexican government responded to
the threat with repressive measures that included
mass deportations and the confinement of large numbers of the population in concentration camps. In the
case of Zapata, while these activities certainly inflicted damage on his movement, they did not destroy
it. His resistance collapsed only after Zapatas death
in an ambush in 1919.
The aftermath of World War II brought on another
series of insurgency and counterinsurgency operations as the Europeans colonial empires were dismantled through wars of national liberation. The
most successful counterinsurgency operation of this
period was that of the British in Malaya, referred to as
the Malayan Emergency (1948-1960). At first, the
British were unsuccessful against the communistbacked insurgents. Then they adopted the plan of
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Lieutenant General Sir Harold Briggs. The plan comprised four stages: (1) to create a sense of stability in
the populated areas that would lead to solid intelligence on the insurgents; (2) to disrupt the hold of the
communist organizations in the populated areas; (3)
to isolate the guerrillas from logistical support in the
populated areas; and (4) to destroy the insurgents
through forcing them into armed confrontations on
terms benefiting the government forces. This plan
worked very well. Coupled with the military arrangements was support for civilian projects to better the
living conditions of the bulk of the Malayan populace.
Overview
Military veterans and officers instruct soldiers how
to fight effectively in combat. Lessons often include
lectures or textbook assignments describing military
history and exercises to enhance physical strength
and agility and acquire skills with weapons. Military
education emphasizes discipline and organization to
achieve warfare goals. Nonmilitary schools incorporate warfare discussion in curricula for varying
objectives. While some educators tell pupils facts,
other teachers present versions to satisfy government requirements. In the early twenty-first century,
some military historians shifted from institutional
studies of how specific military academies, service
branches, and governments educated troops to examining warfares role in diverse cultures, peoples
perceptions of war, and educational depictions influencing them.
Significance
Education provides credentials for soldiers to advance professionally within the military. Academic
accomplishments reinforce peers and subordinates
respect for officers authority. Military histories educate commanders to make decisions such as when to
go to war, continue fighting, or withdraw forces.
Textbooks, intended for either military personnel or
school-age students, deliver narratives designed to
achieve specific goals. While military textbooks train
soldiers, many school history textbooks emphasize
positive aspects and ignore controversial topics.
Some educational resources misrepresent military
history intentionally with rhetoric and propaganda to
promote nationalism. Ideas presented by textbooks
shape how students view warfare and influence their
attitudes toward their countrys military forces
motivating them, for example, to consider serving as
adults.
Ancient World
Historians consider Sunzis Sunzi Bingfa (c. fifththird century b.c.e.; The Art of War, 1910) to be
the first known military text. Initially available in
ancient Chinese territories, this work influenced
contemporary military and political leaders and extended its impact through time, continuing to shape
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A Tangut script of Sunzis Art of War (c. 510 B.C.E.), one of the oldest texts on military theory.
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including honor, glory, dutifulness to rulers, chivalric expectations, and religious beliefs.
Some copyists revised ancient handbooks to meet
conditions in their location and time. Freculph, bishop
of Lisieux (fl. ninth century), gave his edited copy
of Vegetiuss handbook to Charles the Bald, stating that it could help military leaders form effective fighting techniques to resist Viking attacks in
the mid-ninth century. By the thirteenth century, a
French translation of Vegetiuss handbook was distributed. In the fifteenth century, craftspersons used
the printing press to produce copies of De re militari.
Various histories stated that notable medieval commanders took copies of Vegetiuss handbook into
battle, but no evidence verifies that they applied this
guide in combat.
About 856, King Lothair II commissioned Rabanus Maurus (c. 780-856), a scholar and church
leader, to appropriate Vegetiuss work to write a revised handbook entitled Recapitulatio (recapitulation). Rabanus selected text that was relevant to
medieval warfare, including such topics as weaponry, strategies, and tactics. Other medieval military handbooks included one credited to Emperor
Maurice (Flavius Tiberius Mauricius, c. 539-602)
entitled Strategikon (Maurices Strategikon: Handbook of Byzantine Military Strategy, 1984), which
was distributed around the year 600. The Frankish
count Nithard (790?-844), whose grandfather was
Charlemagne, wrote Historiae, or De dissensionibus
filiorum Ludovici pii (c. 843; on the dissensions
of the sons of Louis the Pious), in which he described military training and drills for Carolingian
horse soldiers. Students might have had access to
these handbooks at military schools, especially at the
Carolingian monastery, Saint-Riquier, where milites
(soldiers) associated with the royal family lived and
trained. Despite references to Vegetius, Rhabanus,
and other military theorists in histories, sources are
unclear on whether medieval military officers actually read those books and utilized their concepts in
warfare.
Contemporary reception of Dellarte della guerra
(1521; The Art of War, 1560) by Niccol Machiavelli (1469-1527), is better known. Machiavelli, who
served the Florence government as a secretary, mod-
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Basic cadets salute during their first reveille formation at the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado
Springs, Colorado.
After World War II, the Japanese Ministry of Education told educators to ink out military sections in
textbooks to appease U.S. occupation forces. The Supreme Command for the Allied Powers (SCAP) required new Japanese textbooks written by professional historians to replace educational resources
deemed to be unsuitable. In 1946, historian Saburf
Ienaga (1913-2002) wrote Shin Nihonshi (1947; new
Japanese history), which emphasized themes of democracy, pacifism, and truth. His book Taiheiyf
sensf (1968; The Pacific War: World War II and the
Japanese, 1931-1945, 1978) acknowledged Japans
war crimes in Nanjing, China.
During the 1950s, Japans education ministry
rejected books it considered contrary to values they
wanted Japanese children to acquire, including Ienagas books (unless he would agree to revise them).
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facts. The ministrys approval of that textbook provoked criticism throughout Asia. Numerous Japanese historians and educators stated that it inaccurately perpetuated myths and included flawed
interpretations. Most Japanese school districts refused to use it. Historians worldwide voiced concerns about textbooks presenting military history responsibly to students.
Paramilitary
Organizations
Overview
History of Paramilitary
Organizations
Ancient World
In the ancient world, militias and local armies effectively controlled towns. However, with the emergence of large empires, localities continued to have
means to protect themselves from local banditry or
sudden incursions from their neighbors by raising
small forces. Owing to the scanty nature of information from much of the ancient world, there is academic debate over the exact nature of some of the
military forces that operated and whether or not they
had a degree of central control. An example is the
army of Hannibal (247-182 b.c.e.), which, although
it was referred to as the Carthaginian army, may in
fact have its origins in a paramilitary force raised by
his father, Hamilcar Barca, in Spain. By contrast, the
soldiers raised by Marcus Licinius Crassus in Rome
in 71 b.c.e., against Spartacus, although paid for by
Crassus himself, were put at the disposal of the Roman government (admittedly led by Crassus) and
were therefore not paramilitaries. There is also clear
evidence that some of the armies during the barbarian invasions of the Roman Empire operated with
sufficient autonomy to imply that they might also
have been paramilitary forces. Indeed the fall of
the Roman Empireessentially with the collapse of
central authorityled to the formation of regionally
based military groups to protect cities, towns, and
villages.
Significance
Throughout history, paramilitary groups have played
a major role in determining political control of particular parts of countries, and they have been prominent
in local affairs. They have been especially important
in civil wars, the control of civilians, and keeping
some governments in power, as well as unseating (or
attempting to unseat) others. In full-scale warfare,
they are usually outgunned if they are fighting regular armies, although the nature of paramilitaries has
often meant that they can blend into the general civilian population, which, in turn, has meant that they
have had success in guerrilla warfare, insurgencies,
and periods of civil strife.
Medieval World
The lack of central authority in the medieval world
resulted in the formation of local militia groups and
essentially in the paramilitary groups as they exist in
the modern world. This occurred in parts of Germany, along the eastern borders of Europe, and for
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periods in France. In England, the Wars of the Roses
(1455-1485) were essentially a battle between paramilitary forces raised by respective landowners. As
the feuding families of medieval and Renaissance Italy needed their own soldiers, their paramilitaries,
often augmented by the hiring of mercenaries and alliances with regional powers, came to dominate Italian politics for centuries. Mercenary bands such as
the White Company of Sir John Hawkwood in the
fourteenth century were also paramilitary groups, as
were the followers of Cesare Borgia in Italy after the
death of his father, Pope Alexander VI. Also in Spain
during the Reconquista, paramilitary forces operated
from regional powers that were involved in alliances
with and against the Moors from the twelfth to the fifteenth century.
Modern World
The European voyages of discovery led to the establishment of large colonial empires and powerful
chartered companies such as the British East India
Company and the Dutch Vereenigde Oost-indische
Compagnie (VOC, or Dutch East India Company).
Most of these companies maintained their own armed
forces (and navies), which had military ranks and
raised soldiers both from the homeland and in their
new possessions. These sometimes fought alongside
colonial armies. This was particularly the case with
the armies and navies of the British East India Company, which did not integrate its armed forces with
those of the British Army and British India until
1858. Prior to this, and certainly before the 1830s,
the British East India Company was involved in waging wars of aggression without needing to get prior
agreement from the British government.
In the cases of civil wars such as aspects of the
Thirty Years War (1618-1648) and the English Civil
Wars (1642-1651), councils and wealthy individuals
raised their own forces, which were sometimes put at
the disposal of the main commanders but often were
involved in local skirmishes or the defense of their
own property or town, making them effectively paramilitaries.
The best-known paramilitary forces have operated in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. In
Germany after World War I, there were problems
Paramilitary Organizations
Following the Chinese Revolution of 1911 and the
fragmentation of the country, many warlords established their own armies, again as paramilitary
groups, sometimes allied with the government but often able to control civilians in areas that had achieved
a degree of local autonomy. One example is the
group led by Zhang Zulin (Chang Tso-lin, also
known as the Old Marshal or Mukden Tiger) in Manchuria. His forces were armed and trained, controlled
a significant part of the country, but only loosely took
orders from the central government. As a result, technically until the Northern Expedition, the armies
loyal to the Guomindang (Kuomintang) from southern China were also essentially paramilitaries.
In Ireland, there were also paramilitary groups
formed along religious and political lines. The Irish
Republican Army, which was led by people holding
military rank, and for official occasions dressed in
uniforms, was also a paramilitary groupalthough
labeled by its opponents as a terrorist organization.
While it served to oppose the British army first in Ireland and later in Northern Ireland, the Ulster Defence
Association was established in 1971 to support British rule in Northern Ireland, and uniquely it was a legal organization with its commanders able to use military ranks, although they were not allowed to use
weapons.
During the civil war in Lebanon from 1975, many
militia groups emerged, including Amal for the
Sht4ites, the Druze militia of Walid Jumblatt, the
Falangist militia of Pierre Gemayel and then Bashir
Gemayel, and later Hezbollah. All these groups were
effectively paramilitary groups, as were the Palestinians based in Lebanon during much of this time. Discussion of paramilitary groups in Lebanon is also
problematic because of the success of some paramilitary leaders who have attained political power. This
could be seen with the election of Bashir Gemayel,
leader of the Falangist militia, as president of Lebanon and then, after his assassination, the election of
his brother Amin Gemayel and the subsequent assumption of power by Michel Aoun. As commanders
of one of the most powerful paramilitary groups in
the country, they were also heads of the government.
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In many cases there are also instances when secretive paramilitary forces have been used to work
alongside the official military but in roles from which
the military have shrunk. These include militia
groups in Indonesia involved in the Killings in
1965 and the destruction of East Timor in 1999, and
the death squads in many Central American countries during the 1980s.
Many paramilitary groups have emerged in Africa. Some have been made up of colonists opposed
to independence, such as the Algerian supporters of
the 1960 Barricades Revolt in Algiers. In the 1990s,
paramilitary militia-style groups in regions of Africa
gained considerable notoriety, among them the
Interahamwe in Rwanda and the Janjaweed in the
Darfur region of Sudan. Although both these groups
operated with significant support from their local
governments, they operated with considerable local
autonomy. To complicate matters, attempts for independence by people in Biafra and Katanga led to
wars that the central governments in Nigeria and the
Congo, respectively, saw as resistance to illegal
paramilitary groups rather than the suppression of independence movements. Similar arguments can be
made over whether the African National Congress
(ANC), National Union for the Total Independence
of Angola (Unio Nacional para a Independncia Total de Angola, or UNITA) in Angola, the Mozambican National Resistance (Resistncia Nacional
Moambicana, or RENAMO), and the Polisario
Front are, or were, paramilitary groups. In South Africa as it moved toward majority rule in the early
1990s, the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB),
led by Eugne TerreBlanche, which was opposed to
the end of apartheid, effectively turned itself into a
militia, with its supporters wearing military-style
clothing, carrying weapons, and becoming involved
in events such as driving into Bophuthatswana in
1994 as part of the paramilitary Afrikaner Volksfront. Similarly, it could be argued that the Zulu
groups, armed with traditional weapons, were effectively a paramilitary group, as possibly were the
war veterans involved in land seizures in Zimbabwe in the 2000s.
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Significance
The relationship between the media
and the state during wartime has often blurred the distinction between
information and propaganda and created the conflict between censorship
and the right to know. Both institutions have competing agendas: the
states desire to control the distribution of information, especially information that might be embarrassing
or harmful to wartime objectives;
and the medias mission to obtain
the truth and to inform the public.
It is especially during the last 150
years, with the rise of democracies
and the accelerating pace of tech-
Getty Images
CNNs Peter Arnett reports from Iraq during the Gulf War in 1991.
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Ancient Romans received their daily news at the
Forum through reading placards. The placards fed
the Romans desire for news about life abroad. Most
of all, the baths were a favorite gathering place for
Romans of all classes, where they could exchange
news and the daily gossip. The Acta Senatus and the
Acta Diurna served as the means by which Romans
could learn about their government and their empire.
Julius Caesar (100-44 b.c.e.) had written treatises
on the Germanic tribes he encountered in his campaigns in Gaul, but they did not have the current feel
of a modern newspaper. Unlike the modern newspaper, however, placards reported facts only randomly, without any kind of editorial oversight. There
was no criticism of government policies during peace
or war.
Medieval World
The collapse of the Roman Empire meant a total
breakdown of society. Because of the collapse of the
political order, the infrastructure and security that
made an urban and cosmopolitan way of life possible
simply disappeared. In Western Europe, people were
reduced to a far simpler way of living. Between 500
and 1000 c.e., invasions by barbarian tribes made
the world of the Dark Ages unpredictable. Life was
more isolated, and information much harder to come
by. Knowledge of the first few centuries of the Middle Ages survived only through the work of a handful
of monks and chroniclers.
By the High Middle Ages, between about 1000
and 1300, Western Europe had recovered a degree of
civilization with the rise of towns, but nowhere near
the same level of sophistication that had thrived under the Romans. Tales of war, courtly love, and chivalry became popular as minstrels and troubadours
spread news about far-off lands through verse and
song.
Modern World
The emergence of the modern newspaper can be
traced to the seventeenth century. Prior to this, town
criers and heralds announced royal proclamations.
Eventually, they would be replaced by circulars and
printed journals. The precursors of the newspaper
were the nouvellistes, who scoured the country for
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AFP/Getty Images
A pedestrian passes by a television screen in Seoul during a report about a North Korean missile launch on
July 4, 2009.
scoop. The Continental System established by Napoleon had the unintended effect of making British
newspapers prized on the Continent. By the end of
the Napoleonic Wars, British newspapers such as
The Times had refined their information-gathering
methods and themselves became the source of information for the British government when it sought updated information on Napoleons forces.
By the middle of the nineteenth century, the modern newspaper was undergoing an evolution: The
formerly haphazard means of gathering information
were becoming more structured and standardized,
leading to the sophisticated media organizations recognized today. American journalists such as George
William Curtis for The New York Times, Margaret
Fuller for The New-York Tribune, Charles A. Dana,
William Cullen Bryant, and Theodore Sedgwick competed with their European counterparts for breaking
news on the battlefield. Correspondence on the Mexican War (1846-1848) showed that American jour-
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nalism had come of age. First, the new technology
of photography allowed this conflict to be the first to
be photographed. American war correspondents
unlike their dignified and restrained European counterpartsreported directly from the battlefield and
even fought on the battlefield. George Wilkins Kendall of the New Orleans Daily Picayune captured a
Mexican flag and acquired the title of major. American newspapers jostled with each other to get the first
scoop on the latest fighting. The telegraph, which had
just been invented at the outset of the war, had not yet
realized its potential. Thus, newspaper agencies still
depended on courier services. Coverage of the Mexican War suited every appetite for news, describing
everything from the tactical and strategic aspects of
the conflict to human-interest stories and letters to
home.
The Crimean War (1853-1856) marked a turning
point in wartime correspondence. Newspaper organizations began the organized practice of using a civilian reporter to inform the general public. The age
of the newspaper correspondent dawned with William Howard Russell (1820-1907). His journalistic
career began when he was hired by The Times in 1841
to cover elections in Ireland. He first covered the
Crimean War in 1854, when editor John Thaddeus
Delane (1817-1879) of The Times assigned him to
cover a British force in Malta. When Russell arrived
at Gallipoli, he saw firsthand the conditions of the
British army, which was supposed to be fighting the
Russians. He was dumbfounded at the unsanitary
conditions the injured soldiers had to endure and the
incompetence of the officers, who came from the aristocracy. Upon observing these conditions, he faced
the dilemma of whether to publish his findings to The
Times. Delane encouraged Russell to continue reporting. As the editor, Delane selected which of Russells reports were fit for public consumption and
which he would distribute privately to the government, which led to the collapse of an entire cabinet.
Another effect of Russells reports on the lot of the
ordinary British soldier was that they inspired Florence Nightingale to lend her services, which in turn
led to the modern nursing profession. While Russell
was reporting on the conditions of the British army,
the British government, perhaps instigated by Prince
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The Korean War (1950-1953) was such a war. JourBritish Ministry of Information established protocols
nalists found it difficult to understand the objectives
for the control of information in 1936; its objective
of this conflict, which killed 2 million Koreans and
was to make the next war a newsless war. Corre300,000 troops under the United Nations. Military
spondents movements would be restricted by the
censorship hampered journalists ability to obtain
military. Censors would keep unflattering informafacts, as in previous wars.
tion away from the public view. The Germans took
In the 1960s, technology revolutionized the distheir cue from the example set by during British
semination of information as television and satellite
World War I, creating an elaborate propaganda macommunication brought the war to peoples living
chine directed by Joseph Goebbels (1897-1945). The
rooms. The Vietnam War (1961-1975) was broadmilitary establishment carefully screened all matecast into the homes of Americans every evening. As
rial written by correspondents and intimidated anythe public watched, the reality of warbattles, casuone who wrote unfavorable news about the German
alties, maimed and dying children, and soldiers rewar effort.
turned in body bagsmounted in the evening news.
The United States also established measures to
prevent the leaking of sensitive information. Despite its democratic institutions,
the U.S. government resorted to propaganda as a means to bolster public morale.
Such practices dated to the Creel Commission during World War I. During the
World War II Pacific campaign, for example, General Douglas MacArthurs return
to the Philippines was publicized with
photographers and newsreel cameras. At
the same time, however, the news of the
Holocaust found a skeptical audience.
Having been raised on the German atrocity
stories of World War Isubsequently discreditedthe Allied public assumed that
stories of the concentration camps were
mere propaganda. As in World War I,
journalists during World War II were their
own censors, glorifying their own countries at the expense of the truth.
After World War II, the Grand Alliance
broke down into superpower tensions between the United States and the Soviet
Union. The witch hunts of McCarthyism
led Americans to fear the spread of communism throughout Eastern Europe and
the Third World. Unlike World War II, in
which the enemy was clearly established,
wartime coverage of conflicts in Africa,
Hulton ArchiveGetty Images
Asia, and Latin America was ambiguous
for journalists because of the nature of the
War correspondent Walter Cronkite reporting from Vietnam
client-state relationship of the Cold War.
during the Tet Offensive in 1968.
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American public opinion turned against the war, and
for the next decade and a half the experience of the
Vietnam War, for both soldiers and civilians, made
the United States reluctant to engage in any major
conflict.
With the end of the Cold War came new conflicts.
The Persian Gulf War (1990-1991) marked a return
of the United States to the field of war. Journalists
once again were restricted by the military establishment and were fed information without the opportunity to investigate its veracity, though they were allowed to be present to report the impact of Saddam
Husseins bombs falling as the U.S. troops entered
Kuwait. This was the first major conflict the United
States had been involved with since the advent of
twenty-four-hour cable news organizations, such as
Propaganda
Overview
Propaganda, simply put, is the manipulation of opinion. This, however, is the only thing simple about it.
In its nuances and implications, propagandas basic
appearance belies its utter complexity. To begin with,
the propagandist aims to communicate
messages at the level of the emotions
rather than thought. The more emotional
the message is, the more successful the
propaganda will be in persuading its audience. It is important to avoid logical
thought; members of the target audience
must become so enchanted with the message that they are seduced into a state of
willing disbelief. Confusion and deception, rather than discussion and debate,
rule the day for this subterfuge. Through
the telling of partial truths and the omission of others, the propagandist attempts
to shape perceptions, manipulate cognitions, and directly control the behavior of
the intended audience.
While propaganda can be utilized by
governments or groups to push forward
social agendas or movements, it holds
its most powerful potential in warfare.
In warfare, propaganda often conveys a
message concerning a real or imagined
threat. Here propaganda is aimed at two
targets: the nations own citizens and the
enemy.
Significance
Propaganda has taken as many different
forms as there are societies in which it has
been used. In its broadest sense, propaganda is information intended to persuade
or orient its audience toward a certain way
National Archives
A World War II poster reminds Americans never to reveal sensitive information to anyone, because loose lips sink ships.
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ate soldiers proclaiming that a charge was about to
ensue. Some are subtle, such as the poster of a coquettish woman announcing that if she were a man
she would join the U.S. Navy. Some are persistent,
such as North Korean radio, announcing good morning from the Great Leader as the Sun peeks over the
horizon. Some are selective, such as the medias decision to show jetliners colliding into the World
Trade Center but not to show civilians leaping from
windows and plummeting to their deaths. All of these
examples of propaganda, while seemingly disparate,
have a common purpose: They serve to rally a group
of people around an image or to manipulate the morale of an common enemy. All are forms of propaganda.
Both the people of Imperial China and their enemies saw the power of the emperor in the Great Wall.
Later, the great cathedrals that filled Europe were
symbolic not only of the Christian godhead but also
of the worldly power of the Roman Catholic Church
and the Papacy. In the 1930s, during the worldwide
Great Depression, different ideologies were displayed
through building projects to demonstrate the supremacy of their causes. The Soviet Union built the worlds
largest fixed-wing aircraft, the Tupolev ANT-20;
Nazi Germany built the worlds largest airships, the
Zeppelins; and at the same time, the German Volkswagen, or peoples car, crossed the Third Reich on
the Autobahn. To buoy up the the capitalist democracy of America during the economic crisis, President Franklin D. Roosevelt spent on great public
works projects, and the federal government subsidized artists who painted murals and actors who presented plays in the Art for the Millions program.
Such projects not only put people to work; they reinforced the greatness of America in the minds of
the nations downtrodden citizens. For the Soviet
Union, the hammer and sickle provided a strong image of plebeian empowerment. Nazi Germany took
a Sanskrit symbol, the swastika, turned it at an angle,
and made it the symbol of the National Socialist
(Nazi) Party and Aryan purity. The United States
adopted the bald eagle as the countrys symbol: an
image of fierce beauty and proud independence, flying above others and symbolizing what many consider great about America. Propagandists, in sum-
History of Propaganda
Ancient World
In the ancient world, the success of a society depended on many things, but predominantly on the
size of the population. One of the ways this was promoted was to persuade the people that they were
somehow set apart. Historically, building the notion
of the greatness or moral superiority of the group
has been accomplished in many waysfrom early
tribal organizations that taught that the gods held
their people in special favor to later civilizations in
which the leaders themselves claimed some form of
divine right. To doubt the groups moral superiority,
therefore, was to doubt the gods, tantamount to a
form a sacrilege. As civilizations advanced, architecture was used as a physical symbol to illustrate the
greatness of the state.
Methods of communication enhanced the ability
of civilizations to broadcast their superiority, especially the development of written forms. At first these
symbols were limited to pictographs that recounted
the greatness of the society. Early examples can be
found in the prehistoric cave paintings at Lascaux,
France, where a landscape filled with bounty was depicted. As language continued to develop into the
written word, the fact that literacy was limited to the
elites forced the propagandists to continue to rely
heavily on representative (rather than abstract) symbols for expression. Although Ramses the Great was
possibly the most famous of the Pharaohs for his
building projects, by no means was he the only one to
undertake projects to assure his greatness through
the ages. Almost every Egyptian ruler had murals
painted and reliefs sculpted depicting the favor of the
gods upon their society. Edifices ranging from the
brightly painted temple walls to the tall obelisks recounted the favor the gods showed the Pharaoh and,
by extension, the people of Egypt. This form of propaganda was not limited to the civilizations of the
Propaganda
Mediterranean basin; symbols propounding greatness can also be found among other ancient peoples, from the triumphal arches of the Romans to the
image-laden walls of Temple of Warriors at Chichn
Itz.
Medieval World
The collapse of the Western Roman Empire marked
the entry of Europe into the medieval age. With the
breakdown of large-scale infrastructure in the West,
a void was created that was filled by the increasing
power of the Roman Catholic Church, the development of the feudal system, and the growth of aristocracy and monarchy. Each of these elements of society
used some form of propaganda to justify its position
of authority.
The Church built symbol-laden cathedrals, which
beyond their gargoyles, statuary, and ornate stainedglass windowsspoke to parishioners of Gods grace
and favor for his people. Feudal lords built impregnable fortifications both for the protection of their people and as tangible expressions of their greatness.
These fortifications, with their tall, thick walls of
stone surrounded by defensive moats, were designed
to deter enemies who might attack not only physically but also psychologically, with their stark, daunting appearance. Armor slowly developed until it
reached the pinnacle of defensive propaganda: the
metal plate of the knight. Weapons, such as the crossbow, were developed that were so dangerousand
whose possession was so effective as a propaganda
toolthat the Church attempted to outlaw them. Because building and supporting armies with the latest
technologies took resources, the escalating need to
out-might the enemy eventually led to the formation of centralized nation-states under the governance of monarchs. As strong governments reappeared, the focus could be expanded beyond merely
survival and the modern age arrived.
During the late tenth through twelfth centuries the
Crusades against the Islamic infidels of the Middle
East and North Africa were promoted by the Roman
Catholic popes as a struggle behooving all good
Christians. Beginning with his speech at Clermont in
1095, for example, Pope Urban II used his power of
the pulpit and graphic language (re-rendered here
923
from the account of Robert the Monk, about twentyfive years later) to call on Christian soldiers to fight
Muslims in the Levant who were killing Christians
and destroying churches:
When they [the infidels] wish to torture people by
base death, they perforate their navels, and dragging forth the extremity of the intestines, bind it to
the stake. . . . On whom therefore is the labor of
avenging these wrongs and of recovering this territory incumbent, if not upon you? You, upon whom
above other nations God has conferred remarkable
glory in arms, great courage, bodily activity, and
strength to humble the hairy scalp of those who
resist you. . . .
924
tion of propaganda images to an illiterate population,
often casting the pope, as the representative of the
Roman Church, in a negative light. Lucas Cranachs
Whore of Babylon and Albrecht Drers series of
what would now be called political cartoons, Passion
of the Christ and Anti-Christ (the anti-Christ being
the pope), are examples. As literacy increased, bills,
pamphlets, and other writings disseminated Protestant and Catholic propaganda messages to the mass
populace. Perhaps the most important of these was
the Ninety-five Theses of Martin Luther himself
widely considered to be the spur to the the Reformation.
Modern World
During the modern age, propaganda has become
more vivid and widely used, as an ongoing revolution
in communications media has allowed for the easier
distribution of inflammatory imagery and messages.
Should the government need its population to take
action against a real or perceived threat, the focus of
propaganda becomes the unquestioned supremacy of
the group. Propaganda has continued to be used to
dehumanize and incite hatred toward the enemyan
enemy that can be either external or internal (that is,
anyone who stands against the ideal the propagandist
supports). To this end, the propagandist manipulates
the use of symbols. The enemy is reduced to a malicious, dehumanized caricature.
Some groups used these tactics simply to put forth
their agendas. The Grangers (later the Farmers Alliance), for example, promulgated images of the fat
eastern capitalist draining the wealth of the hardworking western farmers. Immigrants were often
caricatured by xenophobic nativist (anti-immigrant)
Americans as evil-looking beasts; the Irish in the
mid-nineteenth century, the Chinese during the late
nineteenth century, and Mexican Americans in the
early to mid-twentieth century are among these
groups. Both Native Americans and African Americans have been the victims of such propaganda from
the arrival of Europeans in North America, suffering
the double atrocities of oppression and slavery as
well as hatred incited by propaganda. Today, some
might even consider the portrayal of a greedy, uncaring tobacco industry as nothing more than a type of
Propaganda
925
926
lets as the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, and Radio Liberty,
the U.S. government broadcast messages crafted to entertain, inform,
and, of course, warn against the dangerously aggressive Soviet Union,
portraying it as a system that sought
to brainwash citizens in any territory
it acquired. The Soviet Union, for its
part, happily used the image of the
fearless juggernaut the West provided, employing Radio Moscow to
broadcast its own messages that the
West was a place of moral decadence
whose governments were dominated
by greedy capitalists who exploited
the citizenry, leaving them to live in
conflict and poverty.
In the so-called War on Terror
(following the attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center on September 11, 2001), propaganda continued to be employed. This global
conflict, however, has produced an
interesting form of propaganda, almost a sterile anti-propaganda. If
propaganda is the manipulation of
Library of Congress
facts, it is interesting to note what
facts are presented to the AmeriThe New York World two days after the USS Maine exploded in Hacan people. With an almost sanivana harbor.
tized coverage of the war over much
of the media, many Americans have
themselves part of the pure Aryan race were desenjoyed a comfortable mental separation from the
tined to rule the world. As a result, the deaths of six
conflict (unlike what they experienced during the
million Jews and approximately one million others
Vietnam War [1961-1975], when images of battle
were blinked at by a brainwashed citizenry.
and carnage could be seen daily on their television
Propaganda became global during the Cold War
sets and the draft threatened sons, brothers, and boy(1945-1991). The propaganda produced during the
friends). Moreover, Americans were asked to sacrisecond half of the twentieth century, a period of
fice nothing as the War on Terror began in 2003: Solbrinkmanship and dtente, was nationalistic and
diers were not drafted; food and personal items were
ideological. The governments of both the United
not rationed. Likewise, caricatures of zealous terrorStates and the Soviet Union employed any and every
ists have not been presented. At times it seems as
media outlet they could to reinforce, remind, and ultithough the only propaganda use of the conflict occurs
mately convert other nations to their point of view.
when a political party sees an opportunity to further
The United States Information Agency was created
its agenda. Once pulled out of the box, however, the
to spread its message of freedom. Utilizing such outWar on Terror and its attendant conflicts have just as
Propaganda
quickly been stuffed back inside: to be forgotten or
dropped. The media, perceiving the citizenrys lack
of appetite for coverage of seemingly endless and
goal-less conflict, after the initial years have tended
to report on the war with the same emphasis they give
to the death of a pop musician, using the events to fill
gaps in the twenty-four-hour news cycle. With no casualties seen or advancements toward a clear victory
heralded, it seems as if this lack of coverage may be a
new, postmodern form of propaganda by omission.
In the twenty-first century, the proliferation of information transmitted by handheld communication
927
devicessuch as smart cell phones equipped with
still and video cameras whose images are easily
uploaded to Web sites on the Internet such as YouTubevies with editorially vetted sources of information such as established news agencies. The speed
with which information, confirmed or unconfirmed,
is globally transmitted both facilitates and complicates the propagandists purpose. What is clear is that
information must be consumed responsibly, and dispassionately, if the peoples of the world are to perceive, and protect themselves from, the intention
behind the message.
928
Significance
While it would be easy to dismiss revolt, rebellion,
and insurgency as events cut from the same cloth,
there is a slight, but nonetheless important, distinction. Only insurgency would seem to offer any outside credibility, which might entitle it not only legal
recognition from other nations but also material support, and quite possibly legal protection in the event
of failure. If one is facing a well-entrenched opposition and the odds of success appear slim, being able
to win acceptance as an insurgent movement could
offer some very important perquisties, including the
chance of avoiding execution in the event of failure.
Medieval World
Runnymede may seem like a strange name to some
people, but to others it is the home of one of the most
significant rebellions of the medieval world. It was at
Runnymede in England that the people of Britain
successfully forced their king to acknowledge that
the rule of law surpassed his power as monarch.
In 1066, the Normans had conquered England and
in the process established a highly centralized form
of government that put tremendous power in the
hands of the king. The system seemed to work until
the early thirteenth century, when John of England
became king. He suffered a series of military setbacks, which cost him valuable lands in France and
required him to raise taxes to mount a counterattack.
He also ran afoul of the Catholic Church over the
History of Revolt,
Rebellion, and Insurgency
Ancient World
No doubt Roman leaders in charge of the security of
their empire spent more than one sleepless night wor929
930
931
government and went about the business of running
their own country. The independence was shortlived, however, apparently faltering when Chechens decided to export their rebellious notions to
neighboring Dagestan. This time the Russians responded in a more organized fashion, coordinating
air and ground operations first to eject the Chechens
from Dagestan and then to invade Chechnya itself.
The Russian incursion disrupted Chechnyas rebel
movement and claimed the life of its president. By
2000, Russia had installed a pro-Moscow government in Chechnya, ending the rebel movement indefinitely.
In the eyes of the worldor at least in the eyes of
those who recognize international lawinsurgency
may be the most legitimate form of resistance to an
existing order. To engage in insurgency is to participate in a revolt against a government in a manner
less organized than a revolution. Revolutions are
more cerebral; they leave paper trails of those who
have spoken of them, written about them, and even
planned them. Insurgencies are more action-oriented,
headed by leaders sometimes characterized by dedication, swagger, and daring and pitted against seemingly overwhelming odds. Fidel Castro and his insurgent forces in Cuba or Ho Chi Minh and his
insurgent forces in Vietnam might come to mind.
In the beginning, neither Castro nor Ho and his
forces were able to control large areas of territory, but
they certainly were capable of offering stiff resistance to the Cuban and French governments, respectively.
The question of how insurgents should be dealt
with in the event of their success (or failure) is at
issue: Recognition by third parties? Summary execution? At the very least, international law has instructed its adherents that insurgencies can be recognized as wars against the established order. At the
same time, recognition of an insurgency expresses
the belief by third parties that the insurgents should
not be executed if captured and that they should be
entitled to prevent the opposition from gaining access to supplies from neutral nations. In their insurgency against the French, Ho Chi Minh and his followers enjoyed the support of the Soviet Union and
the Peoples Republic of China, and they diligently
932
attempted to deny France the supplies it received
from a seemingly neutral party, the United States. In
the end the insurgency prevailed, and Ho went on to
bigger things.
In the tangled maze of revolts, rebellions, and insurgencies, with their confusing mix of terms, one
thing seems clear: It is how others see them that really
counts.
Although most histories focus on the battles that accompany wars, few address the economic impact
those conflicts have on the societies involved or the
neutral parties connected to them. Land produced
most human wealth before the twentieth century,
but cities and towns have been the centers of commerce, grain stores, and treasury as well as political
power. Destroying or consuming crops imposed
hardship on a population, but sacking cities reduced a
civilizations financial reserves, all but eliminating
its ability to recover. Disease, starvation, and the
mass removal of population as slaves followed, intensifying the damage. Civil wars have proven particularly devastating for the loser.
Significance
A conflicts impact on the participants economies
often has lasting effects beyond the conflict itself.
Wars that endured with no particular victor exhausted the participants, leaving them too weak to
withstand an outside poweror the economic price
and deprivation imposed on the population led to the
destruction of the established political order, even in
cases where no conquering army occupied the land.
Chinas and Europes dynastic collapses illustrate
the political upheaval created by wars economic and
corresponding political impact, as does the postWorld War II breakup of Europes colonial empires.
934
Romes superior diplomacy prevented Hannibal from
drawing more than a handful of Italian city-states to
his side. He eventually was forced to return home,
but the devastation he inflicted on Romes economy
drove the Senate to seek Carthages permanent removal as a threat. The resulting Third Punic War
(149-146 b.c.e.) ended with Rome salting the fields
around Carthage, sacking the city, and thereby permanently destroying its capacity for trade and war.
Romes expansion after that came at the expense
of conquered lands, as plunder and populations sold
into slavery fed Romes coffers. Captured wealth
peaked in the first century after Julius Caesars death,
but as Romes borders stabilized and conquest gave
way to consolidation, the absence of seized riches began to tell on the Roman treasury, a factor exacerbated by the empires numerous civil wars, which
disrupted internal trade and destroyed farmland. The
barbarian invasions further decimated Romes agricultural and mineral production. The exact cost may
never be calculated with certainty, but descriptions
of the looting, destruction, and casualties suggest the
barbarian incursions cost Rome more than 25 percent, and possibly as much as 40 percent, of its productive capacity between the third and fifth century
c.e. The same can be said for the Eastern Empire,
which survived Romes fall, leaving Byzantium in a
constant state of constrained finances despite its later
monopoly on the European silk trade.
Medieval World
While the Dark Ages followed Romes demise at
the end of the fifth century, Asia saw extensive trade
and wealth, with India and China each producing
roughly 23-25 percent of global economic activity
into the twelfth century. The Islamic armies sweep
across North Africa and the Holy Land destroyed
the traditional Afro-European trading patterns in the
seventh and eighth centuries and that between Europe and the Middle East during the late eleventh
century. The Mongol and Muslim invasions also disrupted trade between Europe and Asia during that
century, and the Mongols all but destroyed the trading empires of central Asia. They wiped out entire
city populations and laid waste to the countryside
around enemy cities as a terror tactic. Although the
935
40 percent. The wars cost drove all the participants
into near bankruptcy. All of Europes major empires
fell as their entire societies collapsed from the weight
of supporting those war efforts, giving rise to several
revolutionary movements across the globe. Japan
and neutral America gained from the participants
need for their loans, industrial production, and raw
materials. Shielded by distance from joining the
costly fighting in Europe, Japan acquired territories
in China and the Western Pacific, gained further access to new military technologies, expanded its merchant marine to handle the escalating trade in war
materials, and expanded its shipyards to meet French
and British shipbuilding requirements. Although the
United States did not gain any territory, its neutrality
in the wars early years enabled it to transition from a
debtor to a creditor nation. By the time America entered the war in 1917, France, Britain, and Russia
owed the United States more than $16 billion, equal
to about 15 percent of Americas gross domestic
product.
World War II proved even more expensive and
destructive. The massive bombing of that war, Russias scorched-earth policies, and German looting of
its occupied territories destroyed more than 70 percent of Europes total industrial capacity. Spared invasion and bombing, the United States was the only
country to end the war with a larger industrial capacity than it had at wars start. Germany and Japan lost
more than 90 percent of their industrial capacity and
Russia more than 50 percent. Britains economy
shrank nearly 16 percent during the war, and its war
debt approached 50 percent of GDP. By wars end,
Frances transportation networks were all but destroyed, particularly in the north, and would take a
decade to rebuild. The same could be said for Germanys, Japans, and Russias. Italys limited prewar
industrial base suffered some damage but largely was
spared by the countrys September, 1943, surrender,
which came before the Allied bombing campaign
reached fruition. In fact, more than half of the worlds
total economic output was either destroyed or expended in World War II.
Except for civil wars, the conflicts that followed
World War II have been more limited, but the growing cost of armaments has ensured that wars cost re-
936
mains high. More important, today the worlds poorest nations (such as the Democratic Republic of
the Congo, Eritrea, Somalia, and North Korea) are
those that have been afflicted by conflict or have allocated excessive resources to readiness for war. The
Arab-Israeli wars have suppressed economic growth
among all the participants, and only extensive foreign aid and other forms of outside funding have kept
them from bankruptcy. High oil prices have enabled
the Arab nations to draw almost unlimited credit and
provide funding to the so-called frontline states facing Israel. Coming at a time when the United States
was addressing its social inequities, the Vietnam War
(1961-1975) imposed an expanding deficit on the
United States and destroyed South Vietnams economy. North Vietnam reportedly expended nearly 40
percent of its GDP on the war and sustained that effort only with support from the Soviet Union, Warsaw Pact nations, and China.
However, the costliest wars of the twentieth centurys second half were the incessant civil wars that
plagued Africa. The nearly twenty years of fighting
that afflicted Angola, the Democratic Republic of the
Congo (DRC), the Cte dIvoire (Ivory Coast), Liberia, Rwanda, and Somalia have cost more than 5 million lives and may have deprived those countries of
the equivalent of fifty years of GDP. Somalia remains a failed state. Angolas oil revenues have
funded the de-mining and reconstruction efforts that
may enable it to recover by 2015, but of the others,
only Rwanda and Liberia remain completely at peace
and are making progress toward recovery.
Elsewhere, Afghanistans and Iraqs economies
937
1991. Looks at events leading to the war from an economic standpoint, from the Eisenhower
administrations views on the French conflict in Indochina to the Nixon presidency.
Cohen, Jerome B. Japans Economy in War and Reconstruction. New York: Institute of Pacific
Relations, 1949. Presents a history of Japans economic development from the last few years
before World War II, through the war, and then into the miracle resurgence of the postwar
years.
Finley, M. I. The Ancient Economy. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1973. Argues that
the ancient Mediterranean powers lacked the economic structure to conduct warfare in the
same way as modern nations.
Harrison, Mark, ed. The Economics of World War II: Six Great Powers in International Comparison. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998. Presents chapters written by different economists on the impact of World War II on the economies of the United Kingdom, the
United States, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the Soviet Union.
Singer, Clifford. Energy and International War: From Babylon to Baghdad and Beyond.
Hackensack, N.J.: World Scientific, 2008. Examines the history of warfare involving energy
resources, from ancient times to the present and into the future. Resources at the core of these
conflicts have included slaves, gold, silver, iron, coal, oil, and other mineral resources. Challenges the notion that resource wars are endemic to industrial society.
Taylor, Alan M., and Reuven Glick. Collateral Damage: Trade Disruption and the Economic
Impact of War. Working Paper W11565. Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic
Research, 2006. Looks at the effects of war on trade with other nations, beginning in 1870.
Weinstein, Jeremy, and Kosuke Imai. Measuring the Economic Impact of Civil War. CID
Working Paper 51. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Center for International Development, 2000. Seeks to examine civil wars empirically, particularly how they impact economic growth through negatively impacting investment.
Carl Otis Schuster
Since ancient times, although men have predominated in leading and fighting in wars, women and
children have been involved as well. Women have
participated in war as leaders and combatants. They
have formulated strategies and have supported militaries by providing services as scavengers, cooks,
seamstresses, laundresses, informants, vendors, prostitutes, clerks, nurses and doctors, technicians, pilots,
and morale boosters, among other roles. They have
been casualties of war, suffering abduction, sexual
assault, injury, and death. Children, even the very
young, have accompanied armies, have served in
support roles and as soldiers, and have been bounty
and victims of war.
In studying wars and children, it is necessary to
keep in mind that the definition of what constituted a
child as distinct from an adult has differed across
Significance
History of Women,
Children, and War
Ancient World
Ancient writings and artifacts provide evidence of
women and children accompanying militaries and
being involved in wars. However, the scarcity of
written records, embellishments and other alterations
in later accounts, and the challenges of analyzing archaeological objects can make it difficult to determine womens and childrens activities with certainty. For example, the Egyptian queen Hatshepsut
(c. 1503-1458 b.c.e.), who also ruled as a king and
coregent with her stepson, might have led a military
campaign to Nubia (now Sudan), but this remains
speculation, even in the light of recently discovered
evidence. Chinese writings and artifacts tell of women
soldiers and military leaders, among them the general Fu Hao (c. 1200 b.c.e.) and Wei Hua Hu (also
known as Hua Mulan, c. third century c.e.). Greek
and Roman historians wrote of legendary events,
passed down from oral accounts, said to have occurred centuries before they were transcribed. The
Greek historian Herodotus (fifth century b.c.e.) wrote
of Sammu-ramat, queen mother of Neo-Assyria in
the ninth century b.c.e., conducting military campaigns against Babylonia and India. Modern scholarship, however, asserts that it is not possible to verify
reports of Sammu-ramats military exploits and notes
that she and other Neo-Assyrian queens wielded
power only through male relatives.
The Old Testament contains numerous stories of
women and childrens involvement in wars, as collaborators with male enemies, plunder, defenders,
and fighters. One story is that after attacking the
Midianites, the Israelite leader and prophet Moses
(c. 1250 b.c.e.) allowed soldiers to keep thousands of
virgin girls as spoils of war but ordered all boys and
women to be killed. A famous biblical story is that of
Deborah (twelfth century b.c.e.), an Israelite judge,
prophet, and military leader who helped to plan and
conduct an attack against the Canaanites. One must
bear in mind that the historical authenticity of biblical figures and events often has been difficult to ascertain. That said, biblical accounts can offer insight
939
into how earlier peoples conceived of roles of, as well
as restrictions on, women and children in warfare.
Near-contemporaneous Greek and Roman writers
left accounts of womens and childrens involvement
in wars and relationships with soldiers. Scholars in
later ages have used these writings as well as other
evidence in their studies of this topic. Ancient Greeks
told of women warriors and of women defending
their towns when attacked by outside armies. Roman
officers could marry and were allowed to bring families to forts, archaeological evidence for which exists, for example, from the Vetera I fort in the Lower
Rhine region (c. first century c.e.). It was not until
c. 197 c.e. that ordinary Roman soldiers could enter
into legal marriage, although before then many maintained households with women and children. The evidence from Vetera I also raises the possibility of
women and children at commercial sites at the fort,
perhaps as vendors catering to the Roman army.
Greek and Roman leaders complained of large numbers of women (including prostitutes) and children
encumbering the travel of armies, but some also expressed the view that family members motivated
male soldiers to fight.
Roman authors also described women who fought
on the side of the Romans opponents. Plutarch (46c. 119 c.e.) described a battle between the Romans
and the invading Cimbri (believed to be a Germanic
or Celtic people) in France in 102 b.c.e. in which
Cimbri women fiercely defended themselves against
Roman attackers. Another historian, Tacitus (c. 56120 c.e.), wrote of Germanic women exhorting their
men to fight the Romans.
Medieval World
As in previous ages, women and children in medieval
times assisted soldiers, accompanied militaries in
their travels, and played various roles in supporting
wars. Combat remained chiefly a male domain, although exceptional girls and women engaged in warfare. The best known of these is Joan of Arc (c. 14121431), a French farmers daughter who during the
Hundred Years War (1337-1453) claimed that Christian saints had come to her in visions instructing her
to aid in ousting the English from France. At approximately age seventeen, dressed in armor, she led
940
941
would be just for an enemy to hold a child for ransom, the response was that reason does not agree
that innocence should be trifled with; for it is evident
that the child is innocent and not guilty in anything
connected with war. Thus, like other scholars before, during, and after the Middle Ages, Christine de
Pizans depiction of warfare as essentially constituting conflict between men obscured the roles played
by women and children and positioned them mainly
as encumbrances and victims.
Modern World
Although in modern times males continued to dominate in waging war,
occasionally women led armies or,
as heads of state, saw their countries
through war. Queen Njinga Mbande
of Angola (1582-1663) led her military against Portuguese slave traders. The rani of the Indian district of
Jhansi, Lakshmi Bai (born c. 1830),
who previously had cooperated with
British officials, in 1858 led battles
in a rebellion against them, losing
her life. Despite the complexity of
her relationship with the British,
she became an enduring symbol of
Indian resistance to colonial rule.
Golda Meir (1898-1978) served as
prime minister of Israel during the
1973 Arab-Israeli War, which began when Egyptian and Syrian forces
launched a surprise attack on Israel
on Yom Kippur, a Jewish holy day.
In 1982, when Argentina attempted
to reclaim the Falkland Islands, a
British territory located in the Southern Hemisphere, British prime minister Margaret Thatcher (born 1925)
oversaw the dispatch of United Kingdom forces to the archipelago and
succeeded in retaining it.
According to the eminent military scholar Barton Hacker, During
the decades that spanned the end of
the nineteenth century and the start
of the twentieth, Western armies became almost exclusively male, perhaps for the first time in history.
Women still provided crucial support for professional Western militaries, but they were physically
more separated from male soldiers than in previous
eras, when they had lived and worked with them in
close proximity. In independence and revolutionary
movements in various parts of the world, however,
women participated as combatants as well as in support roles, as in uprisings against colonial governments in Latin America in the early 1800s and
Chinas Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864).
National Archives
942
armed forces resulted from recognition of their effectiveness in World War II and from evolving views of
gender equality. Besides serving as official members
of armed forces, women in the twentieth century participated in wars as resistance fighters and guerrillas
for instance, against the Germans in World War II
and in anticolonial and civil wars in Africa and Asia.
Although sexual assaults against women and children, and sometimes against men, had occurred in
wars since ancient times, the 1998 Rome Statute of
the International Criminal Court declared that rape,
forced pregnancy, and other forms of
sexual violence constituted crimes
against humanity and war crimes.
These weapons of war had been recently used against girls and women,
many of them Muslim, in conflicts
in the former Yugoslavia during the
1990s, and against Tutsi girls and
women in the 1994 Rwandan genocide.
In modern times, changing attitudes about childhood and about protecting children from warfare gained
traction in many countries. Childrens advocates sought the protection of children in international and
civil wars from conscription, dislocation, hunger, disease, poverty,
torture, sexual assault, psychological trauma, land mines, and other
risks to their well-being. The 1989
United Nations Convention on the
Rights of the Child declared that
states could not recruit children under the age of fifteen years into their
armed forces. However, boys and
girls served as soldiers into the early
twenty-first century in Burma, Colombia, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Somalia, Sudan, and more than a dozen
other countries. Australia, Canada,
the United States, and several EuroNARA
pean countries allowed seventeenyear-olds to serve in their militaries
In a now-famous World War II poster, Rosie the Riveter enjoins
in noncombat roles.
women to support the war effort.
In the latter part of the twentieth century, women
in numerous countries attained official status as soldiers in their nations armed forces, among them the
United States (1948), the United Kingdom (1949),
Canada (1951), Germany (1975), Norway (1977),
the Netherlands (1979), and Spain (1988). Most
countries did not draft women or allow them into direct combat. As of 2006, the countries that did draft
women were China, Eritrea, Israel, Libya, Malaysia,
North Korea, Peru, and Taiwan. In some societies,
the inclusion of women as official members of the
943
Overview
Science and war have always developed side by side.
New inventions were often made during war or to
further bellicose goals. Scientists were tasked with
inventing weapons that could kill the enemy more efficiently or ways to protect their governments own
forces. Biology is the science of all living organisms.
Biological warfare, also known as germ warfare, is
the use of viruses, bacteria, or other disease-causing
living organisms as biological weapons (bioweapons). Chemistry deals with the structure, composition, and properties of all kinds of matter and the reactions they may cause in interaction. The use of
nonliving toxic products as weapons is considered
chemical warfare. Both biological and chemical
weapons can occur in nature and be employed as
weapons, which tended to happen in ancient and medieval times. In modern times, science and technology have been applied to develop such weapons and
the means of delivering them.
Ancient World
Early recorded uses of bioweapons include the poisoning of wells by toxic plants during the First Sacred
War in Greece (595-586 b.c.e.) and by the Roman
commander Manius Aquilius in 130 b.c.e. Wells were
often poisoned by placing poisonous plants, dead
horses, or even killed persons in them. In sea battles,
catapults, or ballistae, were sometimes loaded with
snakes, which were lobbed onto the decks of enemy
ships and caused panic aboard that confined space.
According to archaeological evidence, bitumen
and sulfur crystals were ignited by the armies of ancient Persia to give off a dense, poisonous smoke that
killed Roman soldiers. Sunzis Sunzi Bingfa (c. fifththird century b.c.e.; The Art of War, 1910) and Hindu
books describe ways to poison wells, create toxic
smoke, and poison weapons. The effect of such
weapons seems to have been limited, however.
Medieval World
In medieval times, the poisoning of wells continued.
Even though the exact mechanisms of infection remained unknown, it was clear that disease could
spread from animals to people or from person to person. Aggressors, when laying siege to a town, would
catapult sick or dead animals into the town, hoping
that the carcasses would infect the inhabitants. Victims of the bubonic plague (Black Death) or decomposing corpses were also shot into besieged towns,
as were feces. During the Siege of Caffa in 1346,
the besieging Mongol forces catapulted cadavers of
plague-infested animals into the city. However, the
plague most likely first affected the attackers. Thousands were killed, according to eyewitnesses. The
Black Death spread from there toward Constantinople, Italy, and France. It is unclear whether and to
what extent the use of bioweapons contributed to this
pandemic.
Significance
Both biological and chemical weapons are considered to be weapons of mass destruction (WMDs),
since they are designed to kill millions of people, and
thus they pose a grave threat to humanity as a whole.
Sometimes called the poor mans atom bomb, the
sheer existence of these weapons inflicts fear, and because the threat of their use is a potent means of intimidation, their effect can be more psychological
than real. Whoever is in possession of such weapons
will have the upper hand in any conflict, at least once
conventional means fail, and this makes the party
possessing chemical or biological weapons a potential aggressor, feared by neighbors. These WMDs not
only threaten annihilation and defeat; their inhumane
nature has also led to their banishment in the modern
world.
947
948
Gunpowder, a chemical invention and hence a
form of chemical weapon, revolutionized warfare.
Military units were now able to fight numerically superior forces, fortifications could be breached more
easily, and small groups of skilled knights gave way
to mass formations of riflemen.
Modern World
In the fifteenth through eighteenth centuries, Europeans colonizing the Americas, perhaps unbeknownst
to them at first, brought many diseases with them to
the New World, and these essentially functioned as
biological weapons, even when they were not initially intended as such. Smallpox epidemics raged
among indigenous Americans, and there have been
allegations that British commanders spread the disease deliberately to quell Native American uprisings. While it is a fact that smallpox had a very high
morbidity rate among Native Americans, because
of their complete lack of immunity to the virus, and
thus affected them more than the European settlers,
those allegations cannot be proved in most cases.
However, some evidence exists to support the intentional use of the smallpox virus against Native Americans. In 1763, during Pontiacs Rebellion, one Mr.
McKee and Captain Simeon Ecuyer, the commanding officer at Fort Pitt, gave two blankets and a
handkerchief out of the Small Pox Hospital to Delaware chiefs with the hope it will have the desired effect.
Smallpox caused many casualties during the
American Revolution (1775-1783), and there are allegations that it was spread deliberately by both
sides. Again, there is no way to prove this today, and
analysts still argue whether this kind of biological
warfare took place or events occurred naturally. Native Americans, for their part, poisoned wells by
throwing killed animals in them, a method repeated
during the American Civil War (1861-1865). Additional proposals were brought forward to produce
various types of chemical weapons during the Civil
War, but it was thought that battlefield doctors and
nurses would have a difficult time dealing with the
effects of these weapons, and the proposals were
shelved. Other nations drew back from chemical
weapons as well. Some in the British military, during
949
950
951
terrorists. This incident shocked the world and highlighted how vulnerable civilian populations were to
chemical and biological attacks.
Today, both biological and chemical warfare are
covered by conventions under the auspices of the
United Nations. The 1992 Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling,
and Use of Chemical Weapons and on Their Destruction, administered by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, and the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention, signed by more than one
hundred countries, outlaw the storage, stockpiling,
and use of these weapons.
Significance
Military medicine on the battlefield cannot be
viewed in the narrow confines of a field of combat.
It encompasses the treatment of injuries sustained
on the battlefield, from spear wounds to gunshot
wounds, as well as the side effects of such injuries,
such as shock and infection. Medicine on the battlefield begins with the recruitment of troops who
are healthy enough to fight on the battlefield. It continues with the maintenance of the health of fighters through adequate sanitation, the provision of
safe foods, and the availability of clean water. It
proceeds with the treatment of the wounded on the
field and in hospitals. Battlefield surgeons have also
shaped public policy to ensure better treatment of the
wounded.
History of Medicine
on the Battlefield
Ancient World
In the ancient world, killing technology and defensive technology were fairly well balanced. As a re952
953
battlefield death. Of 100 soldiers wounded in action, 13.8 would die of shock and bleeding within
two to six hours. The numbers were lower for Roman soldiers. Like other ancients, the Romans knew
to use a tourniquet to stop bleeding and prevent
shock. Unlike their peers, the Romans had the organizational skills to move the wounded quickly from
the battlefield to a hospital where physicians could
tie off the severed arteries. Another 6 percent of the
wounded would likely contract tetanus, and 80 percent of those would die within three to six days.
About 5 percent would contract gangrene, of whom
at least 80 percent would die within a week. Septicemia struck less than 2 percent of soldiers but generally killed them all within ten days. Most soldiers
died of disease rather than the result of combat,
which would remain the case until the twentieth century: Ignorance about such dangers as typhus and
dysentery, as well as improper nutrition, ensured this
greater risk.
Medieval World
The same four major factorsshock and bleeding,
tetanus, gangrene, and septicemiawould serve as
the leading causes of death among military wounded
until the twentieth century. The near-total disintegration of Western culture following the fall of Rome in
476 c.e. resulted in the loss of most medical knowledge until the Renaissance. The only significant development is found in the Byzantine military, which
provided each battalion with its own detachment of
two physicians, a general practitioner and a surgeon.
The medical staff was augmented by eight to eighteen medical orderlies, who served as combat medics
and stretcher bearers. The Byzantines copied the Roman practice of immediate medical treatment. Unlike the Romans, they gave medical personnel a gold
bonus for every wounded soldier rescued from the
battlefield and brought to the medical tent.
The Islamic world practiced medicine based upon
the Qur$3n. Since the Qur$3n prohibited dissection,
medical personnel lacked a thorough knowledge of
the body, as did physicians in the West. Fevers and
infection were treated by bleeding and purging, again
similar to Western practice. Surgery was akin to
butchery, with amputation being accomplished by
An illustration from an early sixteenth century German field manual for wound treatment, by Hans von
Gersdorff, shows typical wounds. The image is by
Hans Wechtlin.
954
Modern World
Until the late eighteenth century, surgeons did some field surgery, but the
wounded were typically gathered after the battle and brought to the surAP/Wide World Photos
geon. Military leaders feared that
any attempt to remove the wounded
U.S. Marines get plasma transfusions during the 1945 invasion of
would disrupt the fighting integrity
Okinawa.
of the unit. The wounded often lingered for hours and sometimes days
self. These cutters were typically the only source of
before being evacuated. This situation did not immedical care for the common soldier. The barberprove until the Napoleonic Wars (1793-1815), when
surgeons, many of whom had probably begun as
Baron Dominique-Jean Larrey (1766-1842) invented
cutters, acquired a high level of medical craftsmanflying ambulances that located, treated, and evacuship, especially in surgery. They needed this skill
ated the wounded under fire.
to deal with the shattered bones produced by the
The state of medical knowledge was also advancnew invention of gunpowder. Amputation proved
ing in the eighteenth century. Surgery stopped bethe most common treatment for gunshot-induced
ing a technical craft practiced by physicians of a
compound fractures, in which there is an open wound
lower order while medical publishing expanded. In
of the soft parts leading down to the break in the
this century, governments accepted the obligation
bone. Such fractures became the most common batto provide and pay for the military medical care of
tlefield injury. A French barber-surgeon, Ambroise
the common soldier. In 1776, military surgeon John
Par (1510-1590), developed the best technique for
Jones (1729-1791) published the first American textperforming battlefield amputations. He used ligbook on surgery as well as the first American mediature prior to amputation, as the Romans had
cal book. Jones, who had served colonial troops
done. Instead of plunging the limb into boiling oil,
during the French and Indian War (1754-1763),
Par treated the amputation with a mixture of egg
treated Revolutionary War soldiers as a surgeon
yolk, oil of roses, and turpentine. Pars patients
with the Continental Army. His book Plain Conhad lower infection rates, but few other physicians
cise Practical Remarks on the Treatment of Wounds
adopted his humane techniques until the nineteenth
and Fractures (1776) provided a guide to surgery
century.
and advice on hygiene. As Jones realized, in times of
Infection remained a major killer of soldiers. Often,
revolution, recruits were eager to join the fighting,
955
to 50 percent over the rate in the first months of the
war. In 1923, Hiram Orr, a Nebraskan who had
served with both the British and the American forces
in France during World War I, proposed a closed
treatment for broken bones by encasing the leg
splint in plaster of Paris casts. Orrs treatment received its first military test during the Spanish Civil
War (1936-1939). Jos Trueta (1897-1977), a Spanish surgeon, reported that of 1,073 gunshot fractures
treated with casts, only six patients died. He also
noted the almost complete absence of gas gangrene,
a notorious killer among the wounded in previous
wars.
Largely because of advances in military medicine
during World War II (1939-1945), the death rate for
combatants dropped dramatically. In the 1945 Battle
of Iwo Jima, 32.6 percent of the U.S. Marines became casualties, making the campaign the bloodiest
in the history of the Marine Corps. If the same casualties had been suffered by Union forces in the Civil
War (1861-1865), the death rate would have been
14.6 percent. The overall death rate among wounded
U.S. sailors and Marines for all Pacific campaigns
stood at 2.3 percent. The improved figures resulted
from administering first aid on the scene of battle,
speedily evacuating the wounded, providing wholeblood transfusions, and using penicillin. In 1943,
wounded U.S. soldiers returning from the Pacific became the first group of soldiers to receive the newly
invented antibiotic. Tests on American soldiers in
1943 and 1944 revealed that penicillin reduced the
death rate from staphylococcal infections from 75
percent to 10 percent while limiting infection from
wounds and burns.
In the subsequent decades, military physicians
improved their treatment of shock with readily available blood and transfusions. Vascular surgeons were
used on the front lines for the first time during the
Korean War (1950-1953). During the Vietnam War
(1961-1975), helicopters with trained corpsmen
aboard quickly evacuated the wounded to hospitals.
Of the wounded who were still alive upon reaching a
hospital, 97.5 percent survived. The Iraq War (beg.
2003) led to improvements in the treatment of combat trauma, particularly vascular injuries.
956
Ancient World
In the ancient worldalthough little was known
about the workings of the mindenthusiasms, shock,
and trauma would have been noticeable. Many of the
writings of the Greeks and the Romans pay great respect and honor to those who fought for their city
or country. Nevertheless, many people clearly did
whatever they could to avoid conflict, and most, such
as the ancient historian writer Flavius Josephus, rejected the idea of honorable wartime service or suicide in favor of living, albeit in a Roman-dominated
world.
Even though there are many examples of wanton
cruelty, such as the brutal games in the Colosseum
in Rome and other arenas where people fought each
other or wild animals, there were still many Romans
who shunned these events. Most Romans, moreover,
if we are to believe the writings that survive, were far
from the fighting, while some who wrote of war, like
Julius Caesar, could reflect on the events from the
relative safety of battlefield command. Being so far
from the scenes of cruelty and killing, and aware that
these battles served to build the empire, the citizens
of Rome certainly entertained great war fever and rejoiced in their triumphs; those involved in the fighting themselves, however, often felt very differently.
One early recorded example of obvious trauma was
during Caesars siege of Alesia in 52 b.c.e. The
Gauls, holding out but running short of food and desperate, forced their women and children out into the
no-mans-land between the Gallic fortifications and
those of the Romans, leaving them to die.
Certainly Caesar and the Romans also understood
the need to terrify people who opposed the Romans,
and they did this by their triumphal marches through
Rome, after which large numbers of captives were
murdered in public, while some of their number were
Significance
The topic of wars pscyhological impact took on significance gradually over the course of the twentieth
century. During World Wars I and II, many instances
of shell shock (combat fatigue) were reported, but
not seriously addressed, by the psychological establishment. However, with the return to the United
States of large numbers of American veterans after
the Vietnam War (1961-1975), the massive number
reporting psychological problems caused the issue to
receive more of a focus. Diagnoses of post-traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD) skyrocketed, and both practicing and academic psychologists began to address
the needs of returning soldiers (though the effects
of warfare on civilian groups, who are often just as
seriously damaged as soldiers, received far less attention).
957
958
allowed to return home to tell people of the horrors
they had seen and the mighty power of the Romans.
Similar tactics would be followed by countless armies throughout history.
Medieval World
In Europe during the Dark Ages and the later medieval period, there are many examples of wanton cruelty to terrorize people. During the Viking raids on
England in the eighth, ninth, and tenth centuries, the
tactic of desecrating the bodies of the dead served to
frighten their opponents; likewise, the Mongols, Saracens, and Crusaders sacked whole cities in the expectation that other cities would quickly surrender.
Since ancient times, people had lived in fortified
settlements throughout the world, and this continued
into the Middle Ages as a defensive measure against
both invasions and civil wars. Castles were built to
provide protection, and hence were regarded as comforting symbols of safety, but also to intimidate, and
thus could also be seen as signs of oppression. The
motte-and-bailey castles in Norman England and the
great castles built by Edward I in Wales were intended to overawe the population and show them
who ruled the regions where they were built.
Hatred of people from rival kingdoms was combined with the concept of treason: the support of war
against ones own rulers. In many cases, wars clearly
wreaked havoc on the ordinary people, especially
those in unprotected villages. Attacks by English
raiders traumatized Joan of Arc during her childhood, and the earlier persecution of the Cathars in
southern France was conducted with such ferocity
that its aim was clearly to create trauma in those who
harbored heretical or unpopular beliefs, or who
supported those who did.
Modern World
During the Renaissance, there were efforts on the
part of theorists and philosophers to rationalize and
advocate this use of terror in war. Niccol Machiavelli wrote about this, and Cesare Borgia practiced it.
There were also clear campaigns of hatred against individual groups of people, especially Jews, who were
blamed for many conflicts and other troubles during
early modern Europe. In other cases the scapegoats
959
960
Some soldiers also turned to alcohol. There were
large numbers of suicides of former soldiers during
the 1920s and 1930s, as well as violence against
family members, especially wives and children.
Some murders were clearly also related to the traumatic scenes many soldiers had encountered during
the war.
World War II (1939-1945) was generally supported by the American and Allied populations, but,
like the soldiers of World War I, many veterans of the
later war returned to a world in which the social codes
of the time discouraged sharing and verbal processing of their experiences, and like their earlier counterparts, many men elected to bury the horrors they
had witnessed and move on with their livesoften
finding, however, that the experiences of an entire,
formative chapter of their youth were impossible to
suppress and inevitably emerged through coping behaviors that led to alcoholism and emotional problems. In one sense, however, these veterans held an
advantage: The nation was grateful, as evidenced by
passage of the G.I. Bill and clear public support not
only of the war effort but also of returning veterans.
After World War II, there were wars throughout
the world that proved unpopular in their home countries. Some veterans from the Vietnam War found
themselves ostracized when they returned home to
the United States or to Australia. After Vietnam, soldiers often turned not only to alcohol but also to drugs
(to which in many cases they had been introduced
during the war). Likewise, veterans of the Iraq
Waranother war far less popular at home than
World War IIbecame morose over their rejection
by the same society that had sent them to war. In the
case of Vietnam, and perhaps also in the case of Iraq,
the societys lack of support for war veterans relative
to their counterparts in World War II may also have
occurred because these wars generally were considered lost, inadvisable, or at least not won in a clear
victory.
961
Collaboration in War
Overview
fore the rise of the modern nation-state, such behavior did not necessarily have the ugly connotations it
has today.
The Greek historian Herodotus (c. 484-c. 425
b.c.e.) demonstrates some concept of collaboration
in his account of the Persian Wars, but its significance should not be exaggerated. Numerous Greek
towns submitted to the Persians during Xerxes invasion in 480 b.c.e. Free Greek city-states labeled them
Medizers (the Greeks referred to Persia as Medea).
The Persians gained troops and logistical support
from most of the towns they occupied, not out of
ideological consensus but for survival. Early resistance was crushedtowns were razed and populations enslavedprompting widespread compliance.
Based on the calculations of Herodotus, 15 percent of
Xerxes force at the Battle of Thermopylae (480
b.c.e.) was Greek. Persian victory at the battle was
achieved when Ephialtes, a Greek seeking a reward,
showed Xerxes a route through the mountains to outflank the Spartan defenders. Medizing continued
even after the defeat of the Persian fleet at Salamis.
Greeks provided the shock troops for the Persian
forces at the Battle of Plataea in 479 b.c.e. The victorious free Greeks did not seek vengeance upon the
Medizers, which suggests that Panhellenism was not
yet so advanced for this type of collaboration to be
deemed treasonous. If ones primary loyalty lay with
ones city-state, Medism was more reflective of opportunistic alliance making than it was of collaboration.
Greek loyalty to the city-state was made evident in
the Peloponnesian War (431-404 b.c.e.), fought between Athens and Sparta and their allies. According
to Thucydides (c. 459-402 b.c.e.), the war began with
an example of collaboration. A small Theban force
was able to seize the town of Plataea when a local faction opened the gates at night, hoping to use the
Thebans to kill off a rival faction and obtain power
for themselves. In this case, collaboration came as
the result of internal local politics, but it did not end
Significance
Invading armies often seek the collaboration of enemy populations in order to limit casualties and
expenditure of resources. Subversive activity by collaborators behind enemy lines can hasten the collapse of a defending force. Likewise, by co-opting local administrative personnel, an invader can improve
security, exploitation, and communications in its occupied territories at relatively little cost. Regardless
of motive, wartime collaboration can result in significant and lasting changes for a population. Whether
successful or not, the presence of collaboration may
ultimately force a society to redefine itself, both politically and culturally.
966
well for the plotters. When the Plataeans realized
how few Thebans there were, they revolted and massacred the foreigners.
The Romans had stronger notions of collaboration. They used the legend of Tarpeia as a warning for
potential traitors or collaborators. During the war
with the Sabines, Tarpeia, the daughter of the commander defending Rome, let the Sabines into the citadel. According to one of the versions told by Livy
(c. 59 b.c.e.-17 c.e.), Tarpeia demanded the heavy
gold bands that the Sabines wore on their left arms as
payment. Not willing to reward a traitor, the Sabines
piled their shieldsalso worn on their left arms
upon the girl, crushing her to death.
In their later campaigns of expansion, the Romans
actively sought the collaboration of local auxiliaries,
especially in the form of cavalry, which they lacked.
From the point of view of the collaborators, however,
such acts did not constitute treason. Troops in auxiliary units were primarily loyal to their leader, who
might well choose to ally with the Romans against
other tribes for personal gain. Thus, Julius Caesar
conquered Gaul with the help of other Gauls, but
their tribal nature meant that, like the Greek Medizers, they were more allies than collaborators.
Medieval World
The medieval period saw few developments in Western concepts of collaboration. Despite the bonds of
chivalry, the feudal system ensured that loyalties remained at the level of the individual, between lord
and vassal. Small armies serving for short periods of
time on expeditions with limited aims provided little
opportunity for large-scale collaboration. Hugh of
Maine provides a typical example of medieval collaboration. In 1091, Hugh, a vassal of Matilda of
Tuscany, informed the Holy Roman Emperor Henry
IV of an impending attack, enabling the latter to defeat Matildas forces at Tricontai.
Religious wars, such as the Crusades, provided
the conditions for a broader range of collaboration,
but religious motives often coalesced with personal
and political ones. Armenian Christians supplied the
Crusader armies besieging the Turkish-held city of
Antioch in 1097. Their main intention, however, was
to gain the Crusaders as allies in their attempt to
Collaboration in War
Nazi expansion, this collaboration was imbued with
moral connotations that have permanently attached
themselves to the concept. For these reasons, World
War II provides the best case study to categorize the
various types of collaboration in the modern world
and to explain the different motives behind them.
World War II introduced a new term for collaborators. During and since the conflict, collaborators
came to be referred to as quislings. The name of
the Norwegian collaborator Vidkun Quisling (18871945) became synonymous with treasonous collaboration. Interestingly, though, one of the most famous
collaborators in history was also one of the most inept. Quislings Fascist-style National Union Party
was politically irrelevant in 1939. Realizing that his
only chance of success was through foreign help,
Quisling lobbied the Germans to invade Norway.
The Germans had their own reasons for an incursion
into Scandinavia and initially wanted nothing to do
with Quisling, whose value was limited by his lack of
popularity. Nonetheless, with the fall of Oslo in
April, 1940, Quisling committed the treasonous act
of proclaiming himself head of a new Norwegian
government. He was a complete failure. His efforts to
Nazify the country only fueled resistance, and he
never gained independence of command from the
German occupation authorities. After the war, the
Norwegian court convicted Quisling of treason, and
he was executed by firing squad.
Other groups collaborated with the Nazis on ideological grounds, but without subordinating their ideas
so completely to German chancellor Adolf Hitlers
worldview. French marshal Henri-Philippe Ptain
(1856-1951) signed an armistice with the Germans in
1940 and headed the collaborationist French government in Vichy partly out of defeatism and the conviction that he was saving France from an even worse
fate. However, Ptain and other Vichy leaders also
hoped to institute a patriotic national revolution in
France to replace republicanism. Disaffection with
the Third Republic had been fairly widespread before
the war, which gave the Vichy regime some degree
of popular backing until Hitler ordered the complete
occupation of France at the end of 1942. Ptains
death penalty after the war was commuted to life imprisonment.
967
German and Italian occupation forces were able to
use religious and ethnic divisions in the Balkans to
their advantage, gaining collaborators to help administer and police the conquered territories. A fascist regime was established in Croatia, headed by Ante
Paveli6 (1889-1959), to free the Axis from the direct
occupation of that country. When Paveli6s regime
proved incapable of maintaining security against the
communist-led partisan movement, the Italians had
few qualms against using Orthodox Serbian %etniks
as auxiliaries. The %etniks themselves were royalist
or nationalist guerrilla fighters opposed to Axis occupation, but they saw communism as the greater evil.
These examples demonstrate the frequently ambivalent nature of collaboration.
As the war progressed and partisan resistance became greater, local auxiliaries became increasingly
important to Axis policies in occupied Europe. Large
numbers were recruited in the occupied Soviet
Unionfar more, in fact, than the Soviet partisans
themselves could mustermore out of the need to
feed themselves and their families than out of support
for the Nazis, who envisioned their eventual reduction to slavery. It was nonetheless this widespread
form of collaboration that Europeans found most difficult to come to grips with after the war. Particularly
disconcerting was the predominant role of local auxiliaries in the Holocaust. These forces, rather than
German units, were frequently used in the rounding
up and execution of Jews in Eastern Europe. As in
previous eras, the most important motive behind collaboration during World War II was survival. Although collaboration was widespread, Hitlers ideological aims and overbearing nature ensured that it
could never be total.
Collaboration remains an important goal of occupation forces in present operations, though for very
different aims and in new ways. In Afghanistan,
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces
seek the cooperation of village elders in formulating
reconstruction plans, thereby promoting the creation
of democratic traditions at the local level. This type
of collaboration faces the same challenge it did in
previous times: the need to balance the aims of the
occupier with that of the occupied. Collaboration has
always been a two-sided affair.
968
Genocide
Overview
cide began in the early 1980s. Since that time, historians, political scientists, sociologists, and others have
created a distinct field, commonly labeled genocide studies, which has done much to broaden the
worlds knowledge and understanding of specific
genocides throughout history, as well as to identify
the contexts, including war, in which genocide has
occurred. In fact, much scholarship argues that genocide and war are Siamese twins and therefore
should not be treated as separate phenomena, as has
frequently been the case. Ample evidence for this assertion can be found throughout history, as war, both
international and civil, has time and again created circumstances and conditions that allow perpetrators
opportunities to annihilate, either in whole or in substantial part, specific victim groups while facilitating
their efforts to do so.
History of Genocide
The twentieth century has been characterized as the
century of genocide, with good reason. Several
indisputable cases of genocide, as defined by Lemkin, the 1948 U.N. convention, and other sources
notably Nazi Germanys persecution and systematic
mass murder of an estimated six million European
Jewsdate to the twentieth century. However, recent scholarship, specifically that which accepts a
broader definition of the term and thus takes a more
inclusive approach in identifying instances of genocide, argues that genocide was not exclusive to the
twentieth century; that, in fact, it has occurred
throughout history; and that examples, frequently intertwined with warfare, are to be found in the ancient
world, the medieval world, and the pre-twentieth
century modern world.
Significance
Ancient World
According to an increasing number of scholars, the
Assyrians, a highly militaristic people native to north-
Building on more than a decade of research and writing on the Holocaust, serious scholarly study of geno969
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ern Mesopotamia, perpetrated genocidal acts during
the first millennium b.c.e. Between 1000 and 665,
while conquering a vast empire in western Asia,
which included their Mesopotamian homeland,
much of southern Asia Minor, Syria, Palestine, and
Egypt, the Assyrians deliberately massacred entire
populations, irrespective of age, gender, and physical
condition, and conducted mass deportations, forcibly
resettling conquered populations, either in whole or
in part. Designed to warn those who might dare resist
in the future and/or to eliminate those who had already resisted, the practices of mass murder and
deportationethnic cleansing, to use twentieth
century terminologywere fundamental to the Assyrian way of war.
Other examples of genocide in the ancient world
commonly cited by genocide scholars include atrocities committed by the Athenians against the population of Melos in the fifth century b.c.e. and by the Romans against the Carthaginians in the second century
b.c.e. In the former case, Athenian forces captured
Melos, an island located in the Sea of Crete, in 416
b.c.e., after which they killed all men deemed capable of bearing arms, enslaved the women and children, and introduced Athenian colonists. In the latter
case, Roman military forces destroyed the North African city of Carthage in 216 b.c.e., killed an estimated 150,000 Carthaginiansof a total population
of somewhere between 200,000 and 400,000and
poured salt into the land surrounding the city to destroy its arability. What is significant about these
cases is that war served as the context for both. The
Athenian actions, maybe best characterized as gendercide, were triggered by Meloss refusal to ally itself with Athens, at that time involved in the Peloponnesian War (431-404 b.c.e.) against Sparta,
while those of Rome came at the end of the Third
Punic War against Carthage (149-146 b.c.e.) and
should be seen as the Roman decision that there
would be no fourth contest with their chief rival for
dominance in the western Mediterranean.
Medieval World
During the medieval era, Christian Crusaders perpetrated mass slaughters that some scholars interpret
as genocidal. Major targets and victims included
Genocide
lematic, and subject to differing interpretations, evidence for genocide in the modern world is far more
conclusive, and thus scholars who investigate modern genocides stand on much firmer ground when
they interpret specific cases of mass atrocity as genocide. However, the modern era has its share of socalled disputed, as opposed to denied, genocides,
including the annihilation of indigenous peoples during the European conquest of the Americas (fifteenth
and sixteenth centuries), the Atlantic slave trade (sixteenth to nineteenth centuries), the Committee of Public Safetys crushing of the Vende uprising (1793)
during the French Revolution, the rubber terror
(1880s-1890s) of Belgian king Leopold II (r. 18651909) in the Congo Free State, the German suppression of the Herero revolt (1904) in southwest Africa,
the Ukrainian famine (1932-1933), the Allied strate-
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gic bombing campaigns (including the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki) in Europe and Asia
during World War II (1939-1945), and the ethnic
cleansings conducted by the Serbs in Croatia, BosniaHerzegovina, and Kosovo (1991-1999) during the
so-called Wars of Yugoslav Succession. What cannot be contested is that the twentieth century witnessed the leaders of the Ottoman Empire commit
genocide against the Armenian population of the empire; the leadership of Nazi Germany perpetrate genocide against Europes Jews and several other victim
groups; Pol Pot (1928-1998) and the Khmer Rouge
leadership of Cambodia carry out a genocide that
targeted the countrys ethnic minorities, Buddhist
monks, and suspected political opponents; and the
Hutu leadership and population of Rwanda engage in
genocide against the Tutsi population of the country.
Getty Images
In 1492, countless Jews either were burned alive or expelled from Spain after refusing to convert to Christianity.
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Genocide
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National Archives
These starved prisoners died en route to the Dachau concentration camp, while they were packed like sardines
in freight cars.
tors from across Europe, proceeded to murder, primarily by mass shootings and mass gassings conducted
in specially established death camps, approximately
two-thirds of Europes Jewish population before the
Third Reichs military defeat finally brought this
genocidecharacterized as unique by some, unprecedented by othersto a conclusion.
At the end of the century, civil war in the central
African country of Rwanda served as the context for
a genocide characterized by one expert as in some
ways without precedent. Beginning in 1990, the
civil war pitted Paul Kagames (born 1957) Rwandan
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In Rwanda, human skulls on display, many of which show evidence of deep gashes. The killings were the result of
the 1994 Rwandan genocide, the mass murders of several hundred thousand Tutsis and Hutu political moderates
by Hutus subscribing to the Hutu Power ideology.
Genocide
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Jones, Adam. Genocide: A Comprehensive Introduction. New York: Routledge, 2006. A good
beginning point for those interested in the history of genocide and major components of
genocide studies.
Lemkin, Raphael. Axis Rule in Occupied Europe: Laws of Occupation, Analysis of Government, Proposals for Redress. Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, 1944. The work that introduced genocide to the world.
Markusen, Eric, and David Kopf. The Holocaust and Strategic Bombing: Genocide and Total
War in the Twentieth Century. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1995. Focusing on the Nazi
murder of Europes Jews and the Allied bombing of Germany and Japan during World
War II, the authors argue against treating genocide and war as separate phenomena.
Shaw, Martin. War and Genocide: Organized Killing in Modern Society. Cambridge, England:
Polity Press, 2003. Demonstrates the close connection between war and genocide and argues
that there exists a fine line between degenerate war and genocide in modern history.
Totten, Samuel, William S. Parsons, and Israel W. Charny, eds. Century of Genocide: Critical
Essays and Eyewitness Accounts. 2d ed. New York: Routledge, 2004. Written by leading experts and accompanied by primary documents and first-person accounts, this compilation of
essays examines major twentieth century genocides.
Bruce J. DeHart
Mercenaries
Overview
when those conflicts are settled or the political situation has stabilized to a point where concerns about
the presence of these armed foreigners with uncertain
loyalty outweighs that of potential defeat.
History of Mercenaries
Ancient World
The Egyptian Pharaoh Ramses II is the first ruler
known to have hired mercenaries. He used some
eleven thousand paid auxiliaries during his military campaigns in the fourteenth century b.c.e. Indeed, Egypt first started employing mercenaries as
scouts and light infantry during the Old Kingdom and
continued the practice through the New Kingdom
period. Nubian, Syrian, and Canaanite light troops
supported most of the Egyptian campaigns in the
Levant, even serving as the Pharaohs personal security detachment.
However, the best-known mercenaries of the preRoman era were those of Greece. Greek hoplites and
Cretan archers served in the armies of Persia, Egypt,
and even Carthage throughout the classical period.
Alexander the Great included mercenary archers and
Thracian infantry in his army. He also employed
Greek mercenaries hired to remain with him for his
Bactria and India campaigns after he sent the citystate contingents home. The Balearic Islands provided another source of mercenaries, primarily
slingers, and the Nubian kingdom provided mercenary light cavalry units to the Egyptian and Carthaginian empires. Gallic tribesmen also hired out as
mercenaries, constituting the bulk of Hannibals
army when he invaded the Italian peninsula.
The Roman Republic and early Roman Empire
employed few mercenaries; even their auxiliary
troops were considered part of the Roman Army and
were recruited from among the empires population,
if not its citizens, although auxiliaries could earn citi-
Significance
Typically, the use of mercenaries rises during a period of constant warfare or during the declining years
of a kingdom, empire, or country, when they are seen
as a ready source of trained military manpower, but
falls out of favor during periods of strong governments. Their employment carries political and operational risks, since their only loyalty is to money or
plunder and thus that loyalty cannot be ensured when
their compensation becomes unreliable during periods of hardship or in the face of heavy losses. Thus,
mercenaries have thrived during periods of limited
warfare and political instability but have suffered
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Mercenaries
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they thought the risks were too great or their casualty rates became excessive. Despite this, mercenary
companies prospered across Europe.
By the fifteenth century, some ethnic groups, cantons, and regions became known for their specialized
mercenary forces. For example, the Flemish and
Genoese were noted as crossbowmen, while England
and Wales provided archers. Switzerlands pikemen
were perhaps the most famous and popular mercenaries, dominating Europes battlefields from the fifteenth to the seventeenth century. German principalities recruited and trained competing pikemen
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The World War II group known as the Flying Tigers were sometimes called mercenaries because they were private contractors fighting for a combination of monthly pay and a bounty for every Japanese plane they shot
down. The fronts of their airplanes were painted to resemble sharks, as seen in the middleground.
Mercenaries
The rise of nationalism accelerated the decline of
mercenaries in Europe, but civil wars in China, Central America, and South America inspired hundreds
to hire out to political factions and in some cases try
to become local warlords and rulers in their own
right. Typically, mercenaries were hired for their
technical expertise with specific weapons, such as
machine guns and artillery. Mercenary pilots hired
themselves out to Chinas warlords during the postRepublic civil war era, and both Ethiopia and China
hired mercenary pilots to fight the Italians and Japanese, respectively, in the 1930s. In fact, General
Claire Lee Chennaults famous Flying Tigers were
mercenaries fighting for a combination of monthly
pay and a bounty for every Japanese plane they shot
down.
The post-World War II breakup of Europes colonial empires provided many opportunities for mercenary employment as newly formed nations sought
immediate military expertise either to suppress competing political movements or to secure disputed border areas. White mercenaries, so called because
they were primarily Caucasian, fought in civil wars
across Africa throughout the 1950s and into the
1980s. In some cases, they were successful in ending conflicts without excessive bloodshed, such as in
the Congo in 1964, where South African mercenary
Michael Hoare led a mercenary unit that worked in
concert with Belgian paratroopers to rescue more
than one thousand Europeans threatened by a rebel
group called the Simba that had become notorious for
murdering civilians. Separatist Biafra hired mercenary soldiers and pilots during the Nigerian Civil
War (1967-1970), as did Southern Sudan when it
tried to break away from the Arab-led regime in
Khartoum during the first Sudanese Civil War (19551972). Postcolonial Angola saw one of its factions
employ mercenaries during the struggle for power
after the Portuguese withdrawal in 1974. Funded
by the United States through its Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA), the operation was a dismal failure,
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and six of the captured mercenaries were executed in
1976. This was followed later by the aborted mercenary coup in the Seychelles and two mercenary coups
in the Comoros Islands, which were overthrown by
the French military. The 1980s saw little mercenary
activity in Africa, although several Middle Eastern
countries hired foreigners for oil-field security and to
maintain their high-technology military equipment.
The 1990s saw a resurgence in mercenary activity. Sierra Leone employed a private security firm,
Executive Outcomes, to train its troops and suppress
several insurgent groups. Although this effort was
successful, political pressure from its African neighbors and concerns about the return of mercenary armies to the continent led Sierra Leone to cancel the
contract in 1997. More recently and more controversially, in 2004 Zimbabwe arrested a group of sixtyseven mercenaries en route to Equatorial Guinea,
where they reputedly were destined to support a coup
attempt. Funded by unknown benefactors who allegedly included former British prime minister Margaret Thatchers son Sir Mark Thatcher, the former
South African soldiers were supposed to link up with
local regime opponents and place opposition leader
Severo Moto in power. Most were sent to prison,
where they would await trial on various charges.
The day of mercenaries does not appear to be over,
although the bulk of their service today is related
more to training and maintenance than to direct combat roles. Private security, or military, companies
(PMCs), such as Blackwater, DynCorp International,
Executive Outcomes, and Sandline International,
have deployed military specialists and security personnel to Afghanistan, Angola, Bosnia, Croatia,
Haiti, Indonesia, Iraq, Kuwait, Sierra Leone, and Somalia. Although their industry is considered unsavory, as long as there is a need for specialized military expertise, mercenaries will find employment in
areas were political sovereignty is unsettled and the
outcome of a conflict is considered critical to someone willing to pay.
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the policies they oppose, which call for the elimination all forms of structural violence resulting in death
and oppression.
Significance
Peace movements and conscientious objection are
significant concepts in relation to the overall understanding of military conflict and the nature of warfare
because of the fear of global annihilation. Estimates
put the total number of people killed by organized
violence in the twentieth century, both military and
civilian, between 167 million and 188 million. This
would calculate to be roughly five thousand lives lost
every single day for one hundred years. The goal of
those engaged in peace efforts is to eliminate or at
least restrict armaments, conscription (draft), nuclear
proliferation, imperialism, racism, and war itself.
Peace movements and pacifists are also part of a
social-reform movement, presenting alternatives to
Medieval World
During the Middle Ages, the Roman Catholic Church
attempted to limit war among Christians on the European continent. Two religious doctrines prevailed in
the name of peace: the Truce of God, which forbade warfare on Sundays and holy days (from
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which derived the modern term holidays), and the
Peace of God, which prohibited combat in certain
holy places. However, one must not overlook the
Churchs promotion of the Crusades and the prosecution of just wars as conveyed in the fifth century by
Saint Augustine in his De civitate Dei (413-427; The
City of God, 1610) and later adapted and explicated
upon by Saint Thomas Aquinas in his thirteenth
century treatise Summa theologiae (c. 1265-1273;
Summa Theologica, 1911-1921).
The appearance of traditions of absolute pacifism
took place during the latter Middle Ages and the Reformation. These traditions were marked by a very
strong antistate attitude. The Waldensians in the
twelfth century and the sixteenth century Anabaptists were opponents of organized rule and vigorously persecuted by the Catholic Church and the
state. The AnabaptistsMennonites, Moravians,
Dunkers, and later the Church of the Brethrenwere
entirely German-speaking from Central Europe and
based their doctrine of nonresistance on what they
called Wehrlosigkeit, which meant renunciation of
war and refusal to participate in politics.
Modern World
The historical origins of peace movements as they
are known today began during the Thirty Years War
(1618-1648) in Europe. The gradual formation of
nation-states, along with the development of professional armies in support of European monarchs, led
some thinkers to question the desirability of societys
militarization. One of the first European thinkers to
question the need for large standing armies was the
Dutch jurist Hugo Grotius (1583-1645). Witnessing
the expansion of large armies on the continent that far
outnumbered his native population, Grotius wrote
De jure belli ac pacis (1625; On the Law of War and
Peace, 1654). Although he recognized the prospects
for international war, his work was the first to draw a
sharp distinction between what was war and what
was peace.
Later in the seventeenth century, pacifist sects relying on religious grounds of conscientious objection
transplanted their beliefs in the New World. The
best-known American sectarian peace group was the
Society of Friends (originally founded in England by
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984
During these same years, inspired by the movement for international arbitration, European peace
activists also created their own international network. Though not organized as peace movements the
way they were in Great Britain and the United States,
peace societies sprang up in France, Italy, Germany,
Belgium, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and even
czarist Russia, thanks in large part to Count Leo Tolstoy (who would become most famous for his novel
Voyna i mir [1865-1869; War and Peace, 1886]). In
1892, peace societies created the International Peace
Bureau in Bern, Switzerland, as a clearinghouse for
publicizing their differing philosophies. Until 1914,
peace workers lectured throughout the Continent,
wrote books and pamphlets criticizing military expenditures, developed peace curricula for schools,
and held meetings nearly every year, at which peace
resolutions were submitted to foreign ministries.
The movement for international arbitration also
became widely popular in the United States at the
start of the twentieth century. Among the most influential organizations were the American Society of
International Law, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (CEIP), and the World Peace Foundation (WPF). These organizations were specialized
agencies for transmitting the experts knowledge of
peace to the masses and encouraging conciliatory
gestures among governments. At the same time, the
Hague Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907 created
the hope that disarmament and arbitration would end
wars forever.
The outbreak of World War I in 1914, however,
presented serious challenges to the rights of conscientious objectors as well as the two major organized
peace movements. In Great Britain, Edward Grubb
(1854-1939), a theologian, Friend, and social reformer, played a prominent role in establishing the
No-Conscription Fellowship (NCF). The NCF waged
a vigorous battle in its efforts to protect the right of
conscience and in breaking down barriers separating religious and nonreligious war resisters. Largely
through Grubbs efforts, the British government reexamined its views on the treatment of war resisters
and absolute pacifists, adopting an entirely new policy that recognized their legal rights to exemption
from state service.
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weapons. He rallied the British peace movement and
took the lead in numerous Aldermaston marches. His
writings also inspired American pacifists, who initiated a series of direct action campaigns aimed at defense plants, submarine bases, missile sites, and the
Pentagon. In America, moreover, scientist Randall
Caroline Forsberg (1943-2007) led the way in calling
for a nuclear freeze.
In June, 1982, the movement for a nuclear freeze
was dramatically illustrated at a disarmament rally in
New York City. More than 700,000 people participated, making it the largest political demonstration in
U.S. history. The campaigns grassroots impact was
enormous as the freeze referendum appeared on state
ballots across the nation. It represented, in the
words of one reporter, the largest referendum on any
issue in American history; sixty per cent of the voters supported the resolution. Although the freeze
movement did not achieve its ultimate goal, the antinuclear arms movement did result in a change in attitude, both at home and abroad. It provided a badly
needed political platform in support of arms control
and disarmament.
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that began after
the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, have also
witnessed massive antiwar demonstrations. Among
the salient aspects of this peace movement have been
the sheer size of protests and its global scale. Prior to
the commencement of military action in Iraq in 2003,
peace demonstrations were larger than those that opposed the Vietnam War at its height. One of the
unique aspects of this peace movement, particularly
in the United States, has been its online organizing,
which has helped many antiwar groups succeed in
their efforts to mobilize at the grass roots. This peace
movement has emerged as a force for organizing,
Getty Images
In San Francisco, people of all ages demonstrate against the imminent U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003.
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Overview
The four Geneva Conventions of 1949 and their Protocol I of 1977 constitute the legislation covering the
protection of war victims. Lawful combatants who
fall into the hands of the enemy either because they
surrender or because they are wounded, sick, or shipwrecked have entitlement to the status of prisoners of
war. The capturers must intern them in prisoner-ofwar camps, which must be located far from the combat zone. The capturers must hold prisoners in good
health and treat them humanely. Prisoners also have a
Significance
The recognition of individuals having rights as prisoners of war has evolved along with the changing nature of warfare and more broadly with the recognition and development of universal individual human
rights.
Library of Congress
Indian prisoners are marched away from their homeland by U.S. troops under the command of General George
Custer. The U.S. warfare against and removal of Native Americans throughout the nation constituted one of the
most shameful legacies of American history.
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instead allowing the mere wearing of an insignia or any outward token, along with the
open carrying of weapons, to signify combatant status. These requirements can be met
either during or immediately prior to an attack. If combatants fail to fulfill the insignia or
weapons-bearing requirement, they are still entitled to prisoner-of-war treatment, but they become vulnerable to punishment for violating
Article 44.3.
The 1977 protocol relaxed these requirements further with regard to such situations as
wars of national liberation and military occupation. In these situations, the second sentence
of Article 44.3 requests only that a combatant
carry arms openly (a) during each military engagement, and (b) during such time as he is visible to the adversary while he is engaged in a military deployment preceding the launching of an
attack in which he is able to participate. If combatants are not satisfying the second sentence
of Article 44.3, and the opposing forces capture
them in the course of a war of national liberation or in territory under occupation, they then
forfeit their status of lawful combatants and
therefore cannot enjoy prisoner-of-war treatAP/Wide World Photos
ment. Therefore, someone who hides a gun and
draws it to fire on occupying soldiers loses
An Iraqi POW at Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad was
prisoner-of-war status if he or she was, in fact,
forced to stand on a box, arms outstretched, in one of sevpart of a military operation. If the combatant is a
eral cases of abusive treatment later litigated under the
disguised, failed suicide bomber as part of a
Uniform Code of Military Justice.
planned military operation, then he or she also
logically loses prisoner-of-war status. By conterritory is occupied; partisans must have a direct
trast, if the combatant acted spontaneously and on his
link to a party in the conflict.
or her own, then he or she still receives prisoner-ofThe legal debate over irregular, guerrilla fighters
war status.
became particularly important after 1949, with the
The adoption of Article 47 at the Geneva Conferrise of guerrilla warfare within the framework of
ence (leading to the 1977 Protocol) constituted offiinterstate wars or wars of national liberation. The decial recognition in paragraph 1 that a mercenary
bate led the 1974-1977 Geneva Convention negotiashall not have the right to be a combatant or a prisoner
tions to adopt a compromise formula: The combatof war. The definition of prisoners of war came unants also are obliged to distinguish themselves from
der challenge with the development of the concept of
the civilian population while they are engaged in an
unlawful combatant to refer to irregulars who reattack or in a military operation preparatory to an atfuse to wear identification markers or who openly
tack (Article 44.3, first sentence). This formula recarry weapons in order to identify and differentiate
laxes the distinction from civilians requirement,
themselves from the civilian population. As a result,
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international practice with regard to the designation
of Protecting Powers by belligerents for ensuring
humanitarian treatment of their prisoners. Traditionally, each of the belligerents could appoint a third
state as a Protecting Power, but the consent of both
belligerents was necessary. An advance of the 1949
Convention was in the provision for Substitutes for
the Protecting Powers, declaring that the Detaining
Power (the state detaining the enemy wounded, shipwrecked, prisoners of war, or civilians) is under the
obligation to accept the offer of the services of a humanitarian organization, such as the International
Committee of the Red Cross, to assume the humanitarian functions performed by Protecting Powers under the present Convention.
Significance
World War II brought sweeping changes to populations and places and new definitions and understandings of war crimes. This global conflict transformed
the concept of war crimes, necessitating a practical
means of defining them and determining the punishments for them. Chief among the reasons for this
transformation were the Nazi murders of seven million people, mainly Jews, and the Japanese murders
and mistreatment of both civilians and prisons of
war. The Allied powers prosecuted the Nazis for their
war crimes at the Nuremberg Trials in 1945 and
1946, and twelve Nazi leaders were executed as a result. Japanese perpetrators were also tried, in Tokyo
in 1948, and seven Japanese commanders were
hanged, although Japanese emperor Hirohito was excluded from the prosecutions.
The idea that an individual can be held responsible
for the actions of a country or that nations soldiers is
the core concept of war crimes. Genocide, crimes
against humanity, and mistreatment of civilians or
combatants during war all fall under the category of
war crimes, with genocide being the most severe of
these crimes. The trials at Nuremberg and Tokyo set
the precedents for the cases that the modern-day tribunal in The Hague hears.
Since World War II, the issue of war crimes has
become even more pressing with the outbreak of
smaller wars all over the globe. The United Nations
established tribunals to try crimes against humanity
in the former Yugoslavia and in Rwanda. The U.S.
Senate, on March 13, 1998, unanimously passed a
resolution urging the United Nations to create a tribunal to indict and try Saddam Hussein as an international war criminal for his crimes against humanity. Congress also passed the War Crimes Act of
1996, which defines and punishes offenses against
the law of nations and violations of both the Geneva
and Hague conventions. This U.S. law granted juris-
Humans have committed war crimes against one another since wars were fought with clubs and stones,
and for centuries war crimes were accepted as part of
the horrendous price of waging war. As war evolved,
so did a body of treaties and laws that sought to regulate the treatment of soldiers and civilians involved in
war. The Hague Conventions were international treaties negotiated at the First and Second Peace Conferences at The Hague, Netherlands, in 1899 and 1907,
and were, along with the Geneva Conventions,
among the first formal statements of the laws of war
and war crimes in international law. Article 147 of
the Fourth Geneva Convention defines war crimes as:
Willful killing, torture or inhuman treatment including . . . willfully causing great suffering or serious injury to body or health, unlawful deportation
or transfer or unlawful confinement of a protected
person of the rights of fair and regular trial, . . . taking of hostages and extensive destruction and appropriation of property, not justified by military necessity and carried out unlawfully and wantonly.
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war, which laid down the ground rules governing
conflicts. Many of these ordinances dealt with matters that might in later centuries be considered to be
war crimes. For example, in 1385, Richard II of England set out in his Durham Ordinances rules that
prohibited robbery, pillage, and the killing or capture
of unarmed persons belonging to the Church and
of unarmed women. In 1419, Henry V put out his
Mantes Ordinances, which barred soldiers from entering a place where a woman was lying and prohibiting them from robbing women. Lower-class tenant
farmers were protected, and the capture of children
below the age of fourteen, unless they were the children of persons of rank (because they would bring a
high ransom), was also prohibited. Not all monarchs
or lords were so inclined to limit the activities of their
soldiers, and such ordinances were issued only on a
case-by-case basis.
Modern World
In the twentieth century, war crimes have come to
be defined by international conventions, the Geneva
Conventions and the Hague Conventions, which had
evolved over the course of the late nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries. Following World War II,
the atrocities perpetrated by aggressor states reached
not only international proportions but also levels of
inhumanity that offended most modern human sensibilities. Hence, in the 1950s and later, the Geneva
Conventions were refined to define war crimes and
their prosecution, and the International Criminal
Court at The Hague was set up to hear tribunals involving those who have perpetrated ethnic cleansing and other atrocities.
Even democratic governments can be guilty of
genocide and war crimes. The Trail of Tearsthe
forced relocation of Native Americans from their
homelands in the southern United States to Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma) in the western United
Statesis a significant example. In 1831, the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole
tribes, together known as the Five Civilized Tribes,
were living as autonomous nations in the American
South. By 1839, with the Cherokee removal, all of
them had been forced to walk hundreds of miles west
to live on reservations in Indian Territory.
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President Andrew Jackson pressured the Cherokees to sign a removal treaty. Jacksons successor,
Martin Van Buren, imposed the terms of the treaty by
allowing Georgia, Tennessee, North Carolina, and
Alabama to raise an armed force of seven thousand
troops, composed of militia, regular army, and volunteers. General Winfield Scott (later famous for his
role in the Civil War) led the army, which rounded
up thirteen thousand Cherokees and forced them to
march more than one thousand milesmostly on
foot and without shoes, moccasins, or adequate
clothingto face the harsh winter weather of the Indian Territory. Approximately fifty-five hundred
Cherokees died during this trek, now called the Long
March (1834-1835).
During these tumultuous times, the Cherokee
John Ross (1790-1866) proved to be the dominant
spokesperson for his people. Of about seven-eighths
Scottish ancestry, Ross had grown up in Cherokee
and frontier American environments and had earned
great wealth and an elite place in the Cherokee Nation. He represented the Cherokee Nation to the U.S.
government, especially in the Cherokees cases before the Supreme Court. Rosss life and career shone
a glaring spotlight on many nineteenth century European American assumptions about Native Americans and race, revealing the willingness of white
American citizens, as well as the U.S. government, to
engage in war crimes and de facto genocide before
modern definitions of war crimes identified their acts
as such.
Another war, the American Civil War (18611865), highlighted the uneven relationships between
war crimes, military tribunals, and practical applications of justice. Samuel Alexander Mudd (18331883), a physician, practiced medicine in Maryland
and in 1865 was implicated and imprisoned for aiding and conspiring with actor John Wilkes Booth and
others in the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln had used the exigencies of war to justify suspending the writ of habeas corpus and allowing controversial, and some claimed illegal, military
tribunals to try both civilians and soldiers. In an
ironic twist of history on May 1, 1865 (about two
weeks after Lincoln was assassinated), President Andrew Johnson authorized one of the controversial tri-
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set a historic precedent by establishing the principle
that no one can use following orders as a defense
for committing war crimes. The New York Times
quoted Secretary of the Army Howard Callaway as
stating that Calleys sentence was reduced because
he (Calley) honestly believed that he was following
orders. This reasoning directly contradicts the standards of the Nuremberg and Tokyo war crimes tribunals, which executed German and Japanese soldiers
for murdering civilians.
The United States invasion of Iraq in 2003 applied another wartime litmus test of the Geneva Con-
NARA
Defendants at the Nuremberg Trials circa 1946 are (left to right, front row) Hermann Gring, Rudolf Hess,
Joachim von Ribbentrop, Wilhelm Keitel, and (left to right, second row) Karl Dnitz, Erich Rder, Baldur von
Schirach, and Fritz Sauckel.
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ventions. In 2004, stories of physical, psychological,
and sexual abuse of prisoners began to surface from
the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, including a 60 Minutes
II news report and a New Yorker article by Seymour
Hersh. The personnel of the 372nd Military Police
Company of the United States Army and other government agencies were identified as the perpetrators.
Donald Henry Rumsfeld (born 1932), an American businessman, served as the thirteenth secretary of
defense under President Gerald Ford and the twentyfirst secretary of defense under President George W.
Bush (2001-2006). When the stories about Abu
Ghraib broke, he addressed the Senate Armed Services Committee on May 7, 2004:
These events occurred on my watch. As secretary of
defense, I am accountable for them. I take full responsibility. It is my obligation to evaluate what
happened, to make sure those who have committed
wrongdoing are brought to justice, and to make
changes as needed to see that it doesnt happen
again. . . . To those Iraqis who were mistreated by
members of U.S. armed forces, I offer my deepest
apology. It was un-American. And it was inconsistent with the values of our nation.
Cryptography
Overview
destruction of supply lines necessary for transportation of both military and civilian resources so officers
could order strikes to stop enemies before they could
act. Military leaders unaware of their opponents
plans have often experienced defeat.
History of Cryptography
Warfare has been influenced by cryptography for
centuries. Although applications have varied, military forces in different eras have appropriated universal aspects of cryptography to transmit secret information. Basic ciphers often involved substitution of
letters in a word or the rearrangement of their order.
The frequency of specific letters and patterns has
alerted cryptanalysts to the enemys encoding key, so
they could convert the remaining letters. Some cryptographers assigned words unique codes, which they
Significance
Since ancient times, military forces
have benefited from various forms
of cryptography, which allows sensitive information to be transmitted
without informing the enemy and
which can also deliberately misinform the enemy, in the effort to win
battles and wars. Codes disguising
military information have enabled
victories over enemies who were unaware when and where troops would
attack, their strength, and other crucial facts. Moreover, the ability to
intercept and decipher enemies encrypted messages has alerted commanders to invasions so they can
plan defenses and revise strategies.
Military cryptanalysts have deciphered enemy messages regarding
Greg Goebel
1002
recorded in code books accessible to people composing messages and translating them; code books were
vulnerable to being misplaced or theft by enemies.
Knowledge of keys became essential for effective
cryptography.
Ciphers and techniques associated with cryptography advanced as people recognized more complex
ways to conceal messages with elaborate combinations of codes and sophisticated technology, such as
machines and computers, devised to generate or decipher coded messages. Military cryptographers have
constantly sought more secure encryption methods
to outwit code breakers. Cryptanalysts honed their
skills to comprehend meanings in otherwise nonsensical text. Military code specialists developed strategies to prevent enemy cryptographers from realizing
their codes had been broken unless such awareness
could be manipulated to confuse enemy officers.
Codes associated with warfare throughout history
have rarely proved impossible for enemies to decipher.
Ancient World
Humans in ancient civilizations first utilized cryptography to protect secrets in communications from
economic and political rivals, particularly during
combat. Early methods often relied on peoples insights regarding how to confuse enemies. Julius
Caesar (100-44 b.c.e.) explained in Comentarii de
bello Gallico (52-51 b.c.e.; The Gallic Wars, in his
Commentaries, 1609), that he had disguised a communication to his Roman military officers fighting in
Europe to prevent enemies from comprehending the
message if they secured access to it. Aware that
Cicero, overwhelmed by opposing forces, was thinking of surrendering, Caesar prepared a message to reassure his officer that he was sending reinforcements.
Concerned about the enemy learning that more Romans were en route, Caesar wrote his message with
Latin vocabulary formed with Greek letters. Cicero,
fluent in both languages, announced Caesars news
to his soldiers, who rebounded to resist enemy attacks. Caesar also used substitution ciphers, in which
pairs of letters corresponding with each other could
be used to encode words. The Caesar shift that ancient historian Suetonius describes involved corre-
Cryptography
recipients. Demaratuss clever approach succeeded
in preparing Greeks to repel Persian efforts to conquer their territory.
In Aineiou poliorketika (after 357 b.c.e.; Aeneas
on Siegecraft, 1927), Aeneas the Tactician described
placing holes in disks in patterns to conceal messages
that could be deciphered by threading a cord in the
holes.
Medieval World
During the Middle Ages, mathematicians and scientists created methods of encryption that were more
complex than their ancient predecessors. Many of
these encoded messages were used in military communications to outwit increasingly adept code breakers. By the late fourteenth century, governments
were using ciphers for diplomatic correspondence in
an effort to thwart spies.
In Italy, architect and engineer Leon Battista Alberti (1404-1472) devised a disk consisting of two
rings with the alphabet printed on both. A person encoding a message set the rings and coded a few words
with the corresponding letters, then moved the rings
to code more text. Recipients deciphered messages
by using a similar cipher disk and awareness of how
they needed to adjust their device as they translated.
Alberti innovated polyalphabetic cipher methods and
discussed cryptography in his text De componendis
cifris (c. 1466; A Treatise on Ciphers, 1997).
The Italian city-states sought cipher experts to
create keys for codes and read rivals messages, appointing people to positions of cipher secretary and
cryptanalyst. In Venice, the Council of Ten and its
secret police force maintained power and selected
cryptanalyst Giovanni Soro (died 1544) in 1506 as
Venices cipher secretary. He skillfully cracked
codes, including one used in a request that Holy Roman Empire army commander Mark Anthony Colonna had sent to Emperor Maximilian I, telling him
he needed more funds, thus revealing that forces
weakness.
In Polygraphia (1518), Johannes Trithemius
(1462-1516) described a method of altering cipher
keys as each letter was enciphered to produce more
secure messages. Blaise de Vigenre (1523-1596), in
Traict des chiffres (tract on ciphers), examined con-
1003
temporary cryptography and described coding messages with his tableau technique, which used twentysix rows and columns in which letters shifted to the
next position in each succeeding column and row.
About 1550, Italian mathematician Gerolamo Cardano (1501-1575) publicized a concept in which the
key for enciphering words in a message changed for
every word following the first. Also trained as a physician, Cardano created masks with slots for writing
portions of a secret communication on paper. The
message, concealed when other text was written
around it, was revealed only if a mask with the proper
slots was available to the recipient. The Knights
Templar used ciphers to write letters representing
credit because they did not carry currency when they
traveled on military crusades to the Holy Land.
Modern World
In the seventeenth century, French cryptologist
Antoine Rossignol (1600-1682) contributed his skills
to create and crack codes for King Louis XIII. In 1626,
Rossignol examined an intercepted encoded letter that
Huguenot leaders in Ralmont had written during
their siege of that city. Rossignol decoded the letter,
which revealed that the Huguenots were considering
surrendering. Rossignol gave French representatives
the deciphered message to show the Huguenots their
dire situation was known, thus securing Ralmont for
the French army. Rossignol continued his cryptographic services for the king and military. His son,
Bonaventure Rossignol, also pursued cryptography.
The pair devised a cipher using syllables instead of letters to encode royal messages. They emphasized capturing enemies coded messages for military purposes,
resulting in the creation of the Cabinet Noir, a group
of cryptanalysts devoted to decoding intercepted diplomatic communications. Other European nations
established similar cryptography services, which provided useful military intelligence during warfare.
By the nineteenth century, technological advances were having a great impact on military cryptography. The telegraph resulted in officers ordering
cryptographers to encrypt messages prior to their
subsequent transcription into Morse code. Auguste
Kerckhoffs (1835-1903) contributed articles about
cryptography to the Journal of Military Science,
NARA
A letter of recommendation for a Navajo enlistee emphasizes his ability to speak the Navajo dialect,
which is completely unintelligible to all other tribes and all other people.
Cryptography
1005
U.S. Army
Comanche code talkers for the Fourth Signal Company, U.S. Army Signal Center, Ft. Gordon.
1006
cian Marian Rejewski (1905-1980) and associates
told British and French officials how their technology helped decipher Enigma messages during the
interwar period. World War II Bletchley Park cryptanalysts, mostly linguists and mathematicians such
as Alan Turing, focused on the more complex Enigma
ciphers German military branches used for orders,
particularly those directing U-boat missions, which
were disrupting North Atlantic Allied shipping. Engineer Thomas H. Flowers (1905-1998) built a digital computer, Colossus, to process encrypted German
messages. Using Colossus computers, Bletchley Park
cryptanalysts decoded more than 2.5 million communications during the war, which helped the Allied
military prepare maneuvers in Europe, including the
June, 1944, Normandy invasion.
In the Pacific, Leo Rosen created a facsimile of Japans cipher machine. William F. Friedman (18911969), the U.S. Army Signals Intelligence Service
chief, and Frank Rowlett (1908-1998) cracked Purple, the Japanese cipher used for diplomatic communications. Access to decoded Japanese military
orders enabled U.S. naval pilots to hit the plane trans-
Bletchley Park, north of London, where the Enigma codes were cracked.
Cryptography
Gulf of Tonkin incident, where it was used to obtain
congressional approval for nearly unlimited U.S. action in Vietnam. A part of the verification process
that supported the idea that North Vietnamese torpedo boats attacked two American destroyers was
the use of deciphered North Vietnamese communication. A National Security Agency report, declassified in 2006, revealed that it was likely that the communications were incorrectly deciphered.
1007
Modern communication monitoring really hit its
stride with the Persian Gulf War (1990-1991), as
traffic analysis allowed Americans listening to
massive amounts of communication to decipher Iraqi
war plans. However, American cryptographic experts may have eventually become victims of their
own success, as nations wishing to avoid American
eavesdropping operations have returned to lowertech ways of personally delivering messages.
Diplomacy
Overview
History of Diplomacy
Medieval World
Diplomacy in the medieval world followed patterns
established in the ancient world. One of the most frequently cited examples of medieval diplomacy is the
relationship between Charlemagne (742-814), king
of the Frankish Empire, which governed most of
western and central Europe, and H3rnn al-Rashtd
(763/766-809), ruler of the 4Abb3sid caliphate,
which included modern Iran, most of the Middle
East, and North Africa. In China, the diplomacy of
the Ming Dynasty, which emerged in 1368, involved
the management of relations with subordinate, tributary states that existed on the periphery of the empire.
The same could be said for the diplomacy of the Ottoman, Mughal, and Persian empires. The Papacy was
particularly active diplomatically, at one point maintaining a permanent mission at the Byzantine court.
Permanent diplomatic missions would become a
hallmark of the modern conception of diplomacy.
Ancient World
Diplomacy in the ancient world consisted of emissaries who were sent by the ruler of one state to the ruler
of another state on a specific mission. Emissaries
Modern World
Most scholars would trace the origins of the modern
system of diplomacy to Renaissance Italy. By the
time of the Renaissance, the Italian peninsula was di-
Significance
Diplomats are heavily involved in negotiations that
precede the outbreak of wars. No student of World
War I, for example, could come to a proper understanding of that war without developing a familiarity
with the wars origins. During wartime, diplomats
are actively engaged in attempting to win the active,
or passive, support of neutral states. In coalition
wars, or wars between alliance systems, diplomats
are responsible for maintaining the strength of the coalition through the ups and downs of war. Diplomats
discuss peace proposals with the enemy and take the
leading role in talks that conclude the war. Postwar
peace conferences, such as the Paris Peace Conference
of 1919, are likewise the responsibility of diplomats.
1008
Diplomacy
1009
F. R. Niglutsch
The court of the influential French minister Cardinal de Richelieu, who was a dominant diplomatic figure during the reign of Louis XIII.
1010
U.S. president Richard M. Nixon is widely credited with having helped open China to the West during the height
of the Cold War.
Diplomacy
1011
1012
1930s, with Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler
(1889-1945) challenging Britain and France, saw the
rise of summit diplomacy. Air travel, along with
modern communication, meant that leaders could
conduct their own face-to-face meetings with foreign
leaders to resolve crises. Accordingly, British prime
minister Neville Chamberlain (1869-1940) flew to
Germany three times in 1938 to negotiate a solution
to the crisis over Czechoslovakia. War broke out a
year later, but summit diplomacy remained as a key
characteristic of modern diplomacy. During World
War II (1939-1945), Allied leaders met repeatedly to
plan the course of the war.
The numerous crises of the ensuing Cold War ensured that the practice continued. The meetings of
Soviet and American leaders always received massive publicity and press coverage. The Cuban Missile
Crisis of 1962, which brought the world to the brink
of a nuclear war, reinforced the need for instant communication between leaders. President John F. Kennedy (1917-1963) and Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971) set up a telephone hot line to
ensure clear communication in a crisis.
Face-to-face meetings between world leaders remain the preferred means of diplomacy in the
twenty-first century. International institutions such
as the United Nations, the European Union, and the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) also
serve as important venues for diplomacy. Ambassadors and foreign ministries continue to play important roles, if slightly diminished compared to the age
of classical diplomacy. The vast increase in the number of independent states since 1945 has ensured that
the practitioners of diplomacy today are far more diverse and varied in their backgrounds and worldviews than in the past.
Financing War
Overview
Ancient World
Probably the most basic way in which war has been
financed has been through plundering. Tribal chiefs,
bandit chiefs, or other leaderswho if successful
enough came to be called kingswould gather an
armed body of men who would raid their neighbors,
their enemies, or even distant victims. The goal was
to take what could be found and then return.
Raids are temporary. The Bedouins of the Arabian, Syrian, and North African deserts, as well as
other nomadic groups, would usually steal livestock,
women, children, and portable goods in order to trade
them at home. However, when raids turned into
permanent invasions, then the method of finance
changed into demands for tribute. The conquered
would be forced to finance their own subjugation,
with tribute payments in kind, in precious metals or
gems, or even in people.
Armies in ancient times supported themselves by
capturing the supplies of other armies. The Greeks,
after the Battle of Marathon (490 b.c.e.), were astounded at the riches they had captured from the
Persians. Many armies, especially guerrilla groups,
have financed themselves with captured weapons
and matriel.
Capturing slaves was another method for financing war, used in both ancient and medieval times.
Captured sites would yield not only valuable objects
as booty but also soldiers and civilians who could be
sold into slavery. The slaves would be exploited as
servants, laborers, sacrificial victims, and even sexual objects.
Significance
Since war is as old as humanity, the financing of war
has varied through the ages. It is also an expensive
activity: As Sunzi (Sun Tzu) noted in his book, Sunzi
Bingfa (c. fifth-third century b.c.e.; The Art of War,
1910), written during Chinas Warring States period,
an army is kept for a thousand days to be used on one
daythat is, the army (or navy) must be paid for
more than a thousand days, but then all is spent in one
day, when it is probably destroyed.
The method for financing war can contribute to
the ultimate success of the combatants. The French
Army under Napoleon I traveled on its stomach by
foraging, which was simply taking from the local
agrarian populations whatever food it could find.
During the Iberian campaign, the British practice of
paying in gold sovereigns for its supplies bought
goodwill among civilian populations.
Many revolutions, civil conflicts, and wars have
been won because the victors had superior resources
for sustaining war over a long period of time, enabling them to exhaust the vanquished. Ultimately
this is how the West defeated the Soviet Union in the
fifty-year Cold War (1945-1991) between the communist bloc and the West. In the end, President Ronald Reagan moved the United States into an arms
race that bankrupted the Soviet Union but caused no
special financial damage to the West.
Medieval World
The feudal system required that kings and their vassals provide protection for the people of their estates.
Despite that obligation, kings and vassals turned to
those people for military service rather than hiring
trained soldiershence, service to the lord of the
1013
1014
Modern World
Whenever governments have grown
large enough to impose taxes, these
taxes have on occasion been used to
finance wars. High taxes that have
been paid unwillingly in wars that
have continued for a long period of
time have often caused enough political instability to destroy governments.
Wars have also been financed by
loans. The American Revolution was
financed in part by loans obtained
from bankers in Europe. The use of
loans to finance the revolution also
occurred at the local level. Many
Revolutionary War soldiers, for example, borrowed against their farms.
This activity was to contribute to an
uprising of Revolutionary War veterans in Shayss Rebellion in 1786.
Some classical economists, such as
Adam Smith, author of The Wealth
of Nations (1776), opposed financing wars through loans because they
believed it masked the costs of wars.
Library of Congress
Their opposition was not motivated
by pacifism but by a practical belief
The Battle of Valmy was touted as the first step in the French Revoluthat paying directly for wars would
tion and was used in this poster to encourage French citizens to buy
reduce both their occurrence and
war bonds so that France will be victorious as at Valmy.
their duration. Also during the
American Revolution, the British
manor in the form of military service was a method
used an old method for recruiting armies, the hiring
for financing war in economies that were essentially
of mercenary troops (in this case, from Germany).
agrarian. At times wars were also financed by kings
Money management during the revolution also infrom out of their own personal incomes. The develvolved inflationary printing of money. American
opment of the English parliament arose from the
colonists were accustomed to manufacturing their
Financing War
own money as a way to have enough specie and other
forms of cash available for business in economies
that suffered from the mercantilist policies of the
British Empire. Continental currency was printed
and used among the revolting colonists. Eventually
the Continentals generated inflation sufficient to earn
the expression not worth a Continental damn. Inflation, nevertheless, would continue to be used to finance wars.
On the high seas, another form of indirect funding was used until the Paris Declaration Respecting
Maritime Law was signed on April 16, 1856. The
declaration outlawed letters of marque and reprisal.
Letters of marque had frequently been issued by governments to privateers, allowing them to wage war at
sea against the merchant and naval vessels of the enemy country or countries. The letters of marque gave
the privateers legal authorization for activities that
otherwise would have been treated as piracy. The
ships that were seized and their cargos could be sold
in home ports or neutral ports as prizes of war. The
privateers ship owner, captain, and crew would share
in the profits as well as in the dangers of naval warfare. Hence, letters of marque generated inexpensive
ways for governments to finance naval warfare.
During the American Civil War (1861-1865),
both the North and the South issued currency to finance the war. In the North the currency was popularly known as greenbacks. In the South it came to
be called Confederate money. Both also instituted
taxes, although the South taxed lightly compared to
the North. Both also seized the contraband of the
others supporters as well as the public material or
money of their respective governments. Bank robberies in raids were used to acquire funds. A raid on
St. Albans, Vermont, by Confederate cavalrymen
targeted three banks and netted more than $200,000.
With the entry of the United States into World
War I, the U.S. government again resorted to borrowing in order to finance the war effort. Financing wars
grew enormously at this time, when the French and
British used the financial services of J. P. Morgan
(through the House of Morgan) to provide loans for
the purchase of war supplies. In the process, the Morgan bank became a virtual sutler to the Allied effort,
letting contract for herds of livestock, food, ammuni-
1015
tion, and other war supplies. The Morgan bank also
was seen by isolationists, pacifists, and others as an
arms merchant that profited from the blood of others.
Borrowing to finance war is limited only by the
amount of credit that a government can get, and defaulting on war debts is a funding tactic that has been
used historically many times. The Fifth Amendment
to the Constitution of the United States repudiated
Confederate War debts, a default upheld by the Supreme Court in Principality of Monaco v. Mississippi
(1934) to the loss of British bond holders and others.
Library of Congress
A poster by Winsor McCay exhorts Americans to support World War I; the American soldier is defended
against the threats of devastation, starvation,
war, pestilence, and death by the shield of
liberty loans.
1016
Bank loans were not enough, however, so campaigns to fund the war with liberty bonds (debt
securities) and (in Canada) victory bonds were
marketed to citizens. Even before the United States
entered World War II, it began selling war bonds
identified as Series E, F, and G bonds. Canada financed half of its war costs though war bonds. Bonds
had three advantages: they financed the war, reduced
inflationary pressures, and enlisted patriotic fervor.
Germany also used drives to sell the public war
bonds, called Kriegsanleihe. The Nazis financed
much of their war effort with bonds, and the AustroHungarian Empire conducted nine drives.
The method used by the United States to raise the
more than $300 billion it spent fighting the Axis
powers in World War II combined borrowing and
taxation with Federal Reserve management of the
money supply to increase war finance while keeping
inflation low. The taxation transferred spending from
individuals to the government. However, its spending put money into the bank accounts of millions of
military personnel, war production personnel, and
others, thereby raising the bank reserves of the nations banks. By managing the reserve requirements,
the Federal Reserve was able to provide banks with
liquidity for war loans to industry, to the government,
and to individuals. In all, about a third of the funding
came from borrowing, a third from taxation, and a
third from expansion of the money supply, which allowed for more borrowing and taxation. Such methods would be used later to finance the Cold War as
well as the wars in Korea (1950-1953) and Vietnam
(1961-1975).
Clandestine warfare has at times been funded
from both legal and illegal sources. The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) laundered money through the
Financing War
1017
Murphy, Henry Clifford. The National Debt in War and Transition. New York: McGraw-Hill,
1950. Gives an analysis of the use of savings bonds to finance the war effort in the United
States shortly before, during, and after World War II.
Samuel, Lawrence R. Pledging Allegiance: American Identity and the Bond Drive of World
War II. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997. Examines how different
groups of Americans, defined by race and class, participated in the war effort through the
purchasing of war bonds, and how that played into their racial, class, and national identities.
Steil, Benn, and Robert E. Litan. Financial Statecraft: The Role of Financial Markets in American Foreign Policy. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2006. Outlines, in a thorough and systematic way, how international capital has been and still is used by Western nations as a tool to implement foreign policy.
Taylor, Leonard B. Financial Management of the Vietnam Conflict, 1962-1972. Washington,
D.C.: Department of the Army, 1974. Lays out the various aspects of the financial management of Army operations during the Vietnam War.
Andrew J. Waskey
Intelligence and
Counterintelligence
Overview
Significance
The role of intelligence and the agencies that conduct
intelligence activities can be broken down into four
primary components. The first is to prevent a potential enemy from achieving strategic surprise. Second
is to provide policy makers with knowledge that has
been collected and assessed by experts, usually over
a long period of time. This is especially important in
governments where the leadership is transitory. The
third role is to support the policy-making process.
Decision makers require current intelligence in order
to determine what policies they may wish to carry
out. Timely intelligence can offer critical background information, help determine risk, and enable
leaders to consider the potential risks and rewards of
the decisions they are considering. Finally, there is
the need to keep secret the methods of collecting intelligence as well as the information needs of decision makers. Governments and the military need to
1018
1019
defend Elizabeth from domestic plots. The intelligence community created by Walsingham is noteworthy for its reliance on academics, linguists, scientists, engineers, and other experts for both the
gathering and the analysis of intelligence. During the
Thirty Years War (1618-1648), the Cardinal de Richelieu in France played an important role in the establishment of French intelligence. He used domestic
spies judiciously in order to defend the monarchy
from potential enemies, and his spies abroad not only
provided intelligence culled from other European
monarchs but also worked to deceive them with false
information.
Modern World
Intelligence began to take on forms that are more recognizable in todays world. A series of revolutions
and wars from the seventeenth through the nineteenth century led to an increasing appreciation of intelligence and counterintelligence and the use of
clandestine and covert operations. George Washington was especially aware of the importance of good
intelligence, and he worked diligently to learn about
the intentions of the British during the American
Revolution (1775-1783). Washington proved to be a
most capable spymaster: He successfully organized
and supervised spy rings, recruited agents, organized
deceit and deception operations, helped develop the
codes and disappearing inks his spies used, and even
served as his own intelligence analyst. Washington
fully understood the importance of secrecy in intelligence operations in order for them to be successful.
Later, as president, he oversaw the intelligence activities of the United Statesthe first American president to do soand thereby established the precedent
of executive control of the intelligence function.
A diplomat named William Wickham (17611840) oversaw British intelligence efforts against
France during the French Revolution (1789-1793)
and Napoleonic Wars (1793-1815). Operating from
his diplomatic post in Switzerland, Wickham organized spy rings and supported operations designed to
restore the French monarchy. Although these attempts failed, Wickham continued to operate spy
rings that provided the British with key information
about French military activities until the French
1020
learned of his spying and got the Swiss to have him
removed from his post. British agents also carried out
several unsuccessful attempts to assassinate Napoleon Bonaparte during his reign as emperor. Intelligence was equally important to the French. Counterintelligence was carried out by Joseph Fouch, who
had enemy agents discredited or killed. Napoleon
also oversaw intelligence operations, supervising
spies and organizing operations designed to deceive
enemy commanders. Likewise, under the direction
of Prince Klemens von Metternich, Austria devel-
1021
Finally, despite their alliance with both countries,
Soviet spies penetrated the British and American
atomic bomb projects.
Prior to World War II, the United States had no
real intelligence organization to speak of. The Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941,
had demonstrated the need for a structured intelligence function within the government, and this led to
the establishment of the Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) in 1947. The United States was the last of the
worlds major powers to create a national intelligence agency, and the CIA quickly took up its role
in gathering foreign intelligence and conducting covert and clandestine activities abroad. Other major
intelligence agencies included the Soviet Komitet
Gosudarstvennoi Bezopasnosti (Committee of State
Security, or KGB), Britains MI6, Chinas Central
Department of Social Affairs (now the Ministry of
State Security), and Israels Mossad.
Decades of distrust between the United States and
the Soviet Union and the destruction of the balanceof-power system in World War II helped bring about
conflict between the United States and the Soviet
Union. The Cold War would result in a great deal of
intelligence activity between the United States and the
Soviet Union, along with their respective allies. The
competition for intelligence between the two sides
was intense. Massive espionage networks sought to
gather intelligence and engaged in counterintelligence
operations against each other. The Soviets tended to
rely more on human intelligence (HUMINT), or
spies, for acquiring intelligence, while the United
States emphasized technology to a greater degree.
The establishment of the National Security Agency
in 1952 and its mission of collecting foreign signals
intelligence (SIGINT) and cryptanalysis reflected
the American focus on technology as a primary collection resource.
Aerial reconnaissance, such as U-2 and SR-71
overflights of the Soviet Union and other nations,
provided the United States with critical information
about their missile and nuclear capabilities, and both
sides eventually used orbiting satellites to monitor
compliance with nuclear and arms reductions treaties, movements of military units, and the general
state of affairs within other nations, as well as for in-
1022
tercepting communications. Spies such as Julius and
Ethel Rosenberg, Aldrich Ames, and Robert Hanssen in the United States, and Kim Philby and Klaus
Fuchs in Great Britain, turned over atomic and other
secrets to the Soviet Union, while Soviet military officers such as Oleg Penkovsky and Pyotr Popov provided British and American intelligence with vital
information about Soviet military and intelligence
capabilities and operations.
The end of the Cold War brought new challenges
for intelligence agencies, particularly the rise of international terrorism. The penetration of terrorist
cells is difficult for a variety of reasons, not least of
which is that members of terrorist organizations are
known to one another or have contacts who can
vouch for them. Therefore intelligence agencies often rely heavily on a variety of other techniques, including SIGINT, imagery intelligence (IMINT), and
financial research and analysis, to monitor terrorist
organizations and apprehend their members.
Besides terrorism, nations face other threats to
their security, and they will continue to seek out intelligence about the intentions and capabilities of enemies, potential enemies, and even friendly nations.
In addition, border security issues, internal dissent,
competition for natural resources, the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction, the resurgence of piracy, and numerous other regional and global issues
will make intelligence a vital function of governments for a long time to come.
1023
volume examines both technological and human intelligence and their impact on history, decade by decade: from Adolf Hitler through the Cold War to economic espionage.
Volkman, Ernest. The History of Espionage. London: Carlton Books, 2007. An investigative
reporter and former executive editor of Espionage magazine provides an overview of spying
from ancient times to the world after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
Weiner, Tim. Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA. New York: Doubleday, 2007. A Pulitzer
Prize-winning New York Times correspondent uses archives and interviews with CIA insiders (such as former chiefs Richard Helms and Stansfield Turner) for this history of the
agency. Weiner argues that the CIA has, in the main, done more damage than good when it
became distracted by gadgetry and covert actions under presidential influence while neglecting its mission to provide accurate intelligence.
Wise, David. Nightmover: How Aldrich Ames Sold the CIA to the KGB for $4.6 Million. New
York: HarperCollins, 1995. Wise, an acclaimed espionage expert, rehearses the Ames case
and the mole-hunt team that brought him to justice. The damage inflicted achieves a human
dimension as Wise tells the tragic stories of the CIA operatives whom Ames identified.
Gregory Moore
Significance
Since ancient times, the international arms trade has
been very important, because if one side in a conflict
has access to better weaponry, that gives them the
military edge in conflicts. Also in terms of the money
spent on weapons, it has been estimated that some
2 percent of the worlds gross domestic product is
spent on weaponry, leading to the emergence of a
military industrial complex. In 2007, it was estimated
that nearly $33 billion (in U.S. dollars) was spent on
weapons in that year. In 2008, that amount declined
significantly, to about $14.3 billion, and by 2009 it
was expected that the financial constraints on many
countries would continue to cause a diminution of the
international arms trade. However, the arms trade
will remain important for military as well as economic reasons well into the foreseeable future.
Medieval World
Greater trade in medieval times allowed for the increasing manufacture of weapons, and the decline in
the large empires and creation of city-states led to
changes in the international arms trade. Some parts of
Europeespecially northern Italy and central Ger-
Ancient World
There is much evidence that there was an extensive
international arms industry during ancient times.
Much of this concerned the development of particu1024
1025
Modern World
In the early modern period, the heavy use of firearms
by one side over the other gave the side that possessed them such a major military advantage that it
rapidly became necessary for all armies to be reequipped with such weaponry. Because of the complicated nature of firearms manufacture, some craftsmen specialized in making firearms, which were then
sold to armies and paramilitary groups. As a result,
the international sale of such weapons spread
throughout the world, equipping armies, often with
weapons sourced from a range of countries. During
periods of particularly fierce hostilitysuch as the
Wars of Religion in France from 1562 to 1598, the
Thirty Years War (1618-1648), and the English
Civil Wars (1642-1651)the need for firearms and
also gunpowder led to a lucrative trade in which neutral countries or states recognized that they could
make fortunes in the provision of firearms and cannons.
The provision of large standing armies in Europe
during the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries led to the uniform equipping of entire armies.
As a result, many major countries began to establish
their own arms industries, which quickly developed
the ability to sell surplus weapons to other nations.
After the major wars of the periodthe War of the
Spanish Succession (1701-1714), the War of the Polish Succession (1733-1735), the War of the Austrian
An AK-47 rifle, one of the most popular weapons of the international small-arms trade.
1026
America, the Caribbean, South America, and Africaand some groups able to buy weapons from
Europe were able to create secondary empires of
their own. The export of weapons to Asia led to a
transformation in that continent, with some groups
able to reequip their armies quickly and others unable
to do so.
The French Revolution (17891793) and Napoleonic Wars (17931815) coincided with a period of industrialization in Europe, starting in
Britain, which led to that nations
becoming one of the leading arms
exporters. At the end of the Napoleonic Wars, it was the ability of people in South America to buy many
of the surplus weapons that led to
the successful wars of independence
that saw the countries of South and
Central America gain their independenceand for some of them, their
own arms industries. By the midnineteenth century, British arms sales
contributed significantly to the international arms trade. Although
many of the weapons made were
used throughout the British Empire,
a large number were sold overseas.
Although companies had operated since medieval times making
arms, the nineteenth century saw
companies such as Blyth Brothers in
Limehouse, London, start to focus
heavily on manufacture of weapons
for sale overseas. The arms industry
soon came to be linked heavily with
the foreign policy of the country
in which companies were located.
AP/Wide World Photos
There was a worry that the weapons
could be used against the armed
Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North, a central figure in the Iran-Contra
forces of the manufacturing counaffair, testifies before a joint House-Senate panel in 1987. North, a
try. Thus the introduction of export
Marine officer working for the National Security Council, was acpermits generally resulted in bans
cused of directing a secret U.S. operation to sell arms to Iran and seplaced on the sale of weapons to
cretly diverting the profits to the Contras, a group trying to overthrow
countries that were likely to go to
the government of Nicaragua. He was found guilty of crimes arising
war with that of the manufacturer.
from the affair, but his conviction was overturned.
Succession (1740-1748), and the Seven Years War
(1756-1763)there was often an abundance of
weapons at the end of fighting, and this generated an
arms industry of its own.
Many of the weapons were sold to places that
lacked the industrial capacity or manufacturing ability to make their own weaponsparts of North
1027
ing the role played by the international arms trade. As
well as the main manufacturersthe United States,
the United Kingdom, France, the Soviet Union/Russia, and then Chinathere were a number of other
countries that became heavily involved in the international arms trade, such as Czechoslovakia, Chile,
Argentina, and also, because of their peculiar circumstances, South Africa and Israel. The latter two
both manufactured their own weapons to prevent reliance on foreign imports, but to finance their arms
industries, they began a trade in exporting their
weaponrywith the added benefit to purchasers that
the weapons had generally been tested in combat.
In the period from the 1960s to the present day,
the international arms trade has continued to be an
important part in the extension of the political and
foreign policy goals of many countries. The sale of
arms from one country to another tended to signify
political support rather than a mere financial transaction, and similarly there were organized boycotts of
sales of weaponry, such as the United Nations sanctions on the apartheid government in South Africa.
Countries and companies involved in breaching such
sanctions were often blacklisted, as in the case of
those who supplied the Iraqi government of Saddam
Hussein in the run-up to Operation Desert Storm in
1991. As a result, many companies have become involved in the international arms trade, seeking to sell
their weapons to countries that have difficult reputations and often selling those arms through middlemen in a country that can provide the requisite enduser certificates to prove that the weaponry is to be
used by that country and not sold to another. This illegal sale of weaponry has led to the arming of militia
and paramilitary groups around the world.
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Military Organization
Overview
Ancient World
The most famous of the Greek military formations
was the phalanxa mass of troops equipped with
long spears or pikes. Each line, or stoechis, consisted
of sixteen to twenty-five troops, and each phalanx
was eight to thirty-two lines deep. The largest formation, the taxis, consisted of between five hundred and
fifteen hundred troops and was commanded by a general. A generals council or a single commander in
chief led the entire army, usually consisting of more
than one taxis.
Military reforms by Gaius Marius in 106-107 b.c.e.
standardized Roman military organization, training,
and equipment and introduced a self-contained, combined arms unit, the legion, that could operate independently or as part of a larger army. Not simply reliant on mass, the legion could use a variety of tactics
that enabled it to outmaneuver the unwieldy phalanx.
While the composition of the legion varied widely,
in general the basic unit was the centuriate, consisting of sixty to one hundred troops and commanded
by a centurion. Two centuriates were a maniple,
commanded by the senior centurion; six to eight
centuriates formed a cohort, commanded by the senior centurions of the legion. There were ten cohorts
per legion. The overall commander was the legatus
legionis.
The centuriate consisted of heavy infantry, whose
main weapons were the pilum, or javelin; a short
sword, or gladius; and a heavy shield, which could be
used to form a tight defensive line. Light infantry, the
velites, were used to confuse and harass the enemy.
In addition, cavalry, the equites, and auxiliary troops
filled out the legion, giving it a strength of approximately 5,126 troops.
Significance
Understanding a nations military organizational
structure reveals a great deal about how a military
perceives and seeks to accomplish its mission. The
United States, for example, with a large industrial
base, has a table of organization and equipment that
seeks to maximize technology and avoid casualties.
This is a logical outgrowth of the principles of the Enlightenment on which the United States was founded.
The Vietnamese, on the other hand, have an organizational structure that reflects dau tranh, which emphasizes the need to carry the struggle to the enemy at
all costs.
Additionally, in many societies, the rank system mirrors the social structure; for example, in the
Prussian army the landed gentry, the Junkers, generally held officerships, while the enlisted ranks were
the peasantry, who in civilian life worked under
them.
Medieval World
Medieval European armies reflected the social organization of their day. The elites in the armies, the
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1030
knights and heavy cavalry, generally came from the
nobility or royal classes, and the common soldiery,
the infantry, typically came from the peasantry. Most
nobles and royalty did keep a retinue of professional
men at arms, commanded by a sergeant at arms. Men
at arms were generally expensive to maintain, and a
kings ability to wage war depended greatly on the
nobles who had sworn loyalty to him and the manpower they themselves could generate. With the exception of mercenary armies, which had a definitive
command-and-control structure, most medieval
wars were fought by armies that had strong social and
political loyalties but little in the way of professional
training or effective organization. The result was often disastrous. At the Battle of Agincourt in 1415, for
example, the French outnumbered the English by
three to one. Charles I dAlbret was unable to coordinate his reserves or his men at arms with the heavy
cavalry effectively, and the result was a French defeat.
The French defeat underscored another important
development in the medieval period: the rise of specialized, professional troops. English longbowmen,
largely credited with the English victory at Agincourt, were highly trained. The inclusion of such
troops could often turn the tide in battle, and in the
Middle Ages the development of artilleryat first
catapults, ballistae, and trebuchets but also battering
rams and siege towersgave an increasing edge to
those armies that could afford them. By the eighteenth century, the development of cannons had created a specialized niche in European armies.
In the 1620s, the Manchus developed the fourbanner system, which became the main organization
for China (expanded to eight banners in 1642) until
the end of the Qing Dynasty in 1911. Originally a
means of controlling the Manchus, each banner became a means of civil administration after the establishment of the Qing Dynasty in 1644. In military
terms, each banner army was independent and answered directly to the emperor. The smallest unit was
niru (three hundred men). The next was jalan (consisting of five nirus), and five jalans constituted a
gusa (banner). There were banners for the Manchus,
the Han Chinese, and the Mongols. In 1631 a separate Chinese artillery corps was formed.
Military Organization
Modern military organization varies from army to
army, but all have a similar outline. The basic unit of
maneuver in the U.S. Army is the squad, consisting
of five to seven troops. In communist armies, the
three-man fire team is the smallest unit, but the squad
remains the basis of operations. Each squad is led by
a noncommissioned officer, usually a corporal or sergeant. Four squads make up a platoon, led by a sergeant first class and officered by a second lieutenant.
Five platoons comprise a company, usually with one
platoon devoted to heavy weapons, such as a mortar
or heavy machine gun. Captains command companies.
Two to five companies are a battalion; three battalions are a brigade. In some armies, battalions are
organized into regiments. In the U.S. Army, while
each battalion retains its regimental identity, its organizational identity remains with the brigade to which
it is attached. For example, the second brigade of an
infantry division might contain First Battalion, Second Infantry Regiment; the First Battalion, Third Infantry Regiment; and First Battalion, Sixth Infantry
Regiment.
Each brigade consists of infantry and armor ele-
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ments. An infantry brigade consists of two infantry
battalions and one armor battalion; an armor brigade
consists of one infantry battalion and two armor battalions. There are usually two to three brigades in a
division. The number of infantry to armor brigades
determines if the division is infantry or armored. A
colonel or brigadier general usually commands a brigade. A lieutenant general or major general commands a division.
In addition to the brigade structure, each division
usually has an armored cavalry squadron, an aviation
unit, and a divisional artillery battalion attached,
in addition to transportation, logistical, and health/
hospital services.
The company/battalion structure is for the infantry. Artillery units are organized into batteries rather
than companies, and cavalry and armored cavalry
units use troops rather than companies and squadrons
rather than battalions.
Modern armies are still organized into corps, but
usually by geographic locale. For example, most
U.S. Army elements in Germany during the Cold
War were part of VII Corps. An organization of corps
is an army.
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Strategy
Overview
Simply stated, military strategy is the planning, coordination, and implementation of a set of actions, or
tactics, that are aimed at defeating the enemy in an individual engagement or in a war as a whole. Although many have written on the topic since then, it
might have best been broken down in 1838 by the
French general Antoine-Henri de Jomini:
Strategy is the art of making war upon the map, and
comprehends the whole theater of operations. . . .
Strategy decides where to act; logistics brings the
troops to this point; grand tactics decides the manner of execution and the employment of the troops.
Of course, within that definition, endless permutations are possible and, indeed, probable.
Significance
An understanding of tactics is essential for anyone
seeking to develop a comprehensive evaluation of
why wars have been won and lost. For example, if
one seeks to understand why the Nazis lost World
War II when they seemed to have achieved such a
stunning victory so early in the war, a look at Adolf
Hitlers war strategy, and specifically his fascination
with waging war against the Soviet Union, is absolutely crucial. In the modern world, military strategy
may not be the only factor in determining the outcome of a conflict, but it remains a vital field of inquiry by generals and historians alike.
History of Tactics
Ancient World
Although wars have been fought dating to ancient
times, one of the most influential early codifications
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1034
the forces and strategies that he innovated. Luring the
Romans into engagements in terrains where he knew
his forces had an advantage, Hannibal came closer
than anyone else in the ancient world to conquering
Rome. Eventually, however, the Roman general
Quintus Fabius Maximus employed his own strategy, specifically designed to wear Hannibal down
gradually by cutting off his supply lines, engaging
him only in small skirmishes that diverted his attention, and avoiding a direct conflict with his powerful
army.
The Roman emperor Julius Caesar (100-44 b.c.e.)
was the first Roman to combine civil and military
power, so that he could implement his strategic vision with both the political and military arms of the
Roman government. Following a war of conquest
through Italy that consolidated his power, turning the
Roman Republic into the Roman Empire, Caesar executed his brilliant conquest of Gaul, not only cutting
off his opponents military supply lines but also patiently waiting until they had exhausted their water
supply. Fear of Roman power was implemented ruthlessly as a strategy, as he often cut off the heads of
surviving opposing soldiers as a warning to others
not to rebel against Rome.
Medieval World
During the seventh century c.e., it was the Islamic
world that was expanding, and that expansion was
largely directed by the Prophet Muwammads greatest general, Kh3lid ibn al-Waltd (died 642 c.e.). After
honing his strategies in helping Muwammad expand
his new religion throughout the Arabian Peninsula,
Waltd oversaw the invasion and conquest of both the
Persian Empire and the Roman province of Syria
within three years. Seeking to fight against many
smaller foes before they could unite into a large
army, Waltd defeated tribes seeking to escape the
Muslim hegemony. Planning attacks from multiple
sides while making sure that there were no enemies
on his own flanks and marching his own forces
through inhospitable deserts that his foes thought he
could not, he completed the conquest of Persia in 633
c.e. and of Roman Syria the following year.
The early medieval period was a low point in the
application of strategy in Europe, as the feudal sys-
Strategy
interior areas, Frederick employed strategies that
took advantage of his knowledge of the terrain and
the best ways to exploit it to create weak points in his
opponents forces.
However great Frederick was, his legacy, and
most others, pales in comparison to the giant of military strategy in the early modern world, Napoleon
Bonaparte (1769-1821). Despite the growth in the
size of armies because of the implementation of conscription, Napoleon was able to implement high maneuverability to achieve a strategy of scorched earth
and terrorized civilian populations. The mobility of
Napoleons forces allowed him to dictate the order of
battle, where his opponent would be enticed to strike,
and how to find his opponents weakest points to win
the battle. Cutting his opponents supply and communication lines sped their defeat. Warfare based on
lines of soldiers was shown to be ineffective in the
face of Napoleons cavalry surrounding the lines,
cutting them off from their reserves. With the judicious use of mobile forces in strategic locations, Napoleon was routinely able to defeat much larger, linear forces. Perhaps no greater compliment can be
paid to Napoleons strategies than to note that they
inspired the rise of the study of military strategies,
which saw the first two modern masterworks of military strategy, Carl von Clausewitzs Vom Krieg
(1832; On War, 1873) and Jominis Trait des
grandes oprations militaires (1805, 5 volumes;
Treatise on Grand Military Operations, 1865).
Napoleon also influenced later military strategists
during the American Civil War (1861-1865), such as
Union generals Ulysses S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman and Confederate generals Robert
E. Lee and Thomas Stonewall Jackson. However,
advances in technology meant that the weapons of
war were much more efficient and could fire much
more rapidly, necessitating larger-scale strategies
that could be implemented only by the political leaders of the belligerent nations. The impact of communications technologies, such as the telegraph, allowed political leaders to work more directly with
military commanders. Working with the Unions political leaders, Grant and Sherman used scorchedearth strategies and highly mobile forces, along with
naval blockades and the destruction of supply and
1035
communication lines, to surround Lees forces and
bring about the end of the war.
If the technological changes of the nineteenth century revolutionized military strategy, by the early
twentieth century consistent change in military technology would continue to transform strategies with
each and every large conflict. At the beginning of
World War I (1914-1918), the forces implemented
strategies learned from the conflicts of the late nineteenth century, only to be overwhelmed by the large
artillery pieces developed. This necessitated the retreat of forces on both sides into trenches, which
would characterize the rest of the conflict. World
War II would see the addition of the elements of powerful tanks and airpower, resulting in massive tactical
and strategic, and eventually atomic, bombing, again
necessitating massive changes to war strategies.
However, a return to an emphasis on mobility and
concentration of forces accompanied the new technologies. The unified German forces (Wehrmacht),
acting under Hitlers directives, implemented Blitzkrieg (literally, lightning war), a sudden, surprise
attack of overwhelming force, often employing coordinated air and ground forceswhich proved to be
an extremely effective offensive strategy. Fortunately, Hitlers fixation on the conquest of the Soviet
Union proved to be his undoing.
With the hesitancy of the United States and the
Soviet Union to engage directly during the Cold War
(1945-1991), for the latter half of the twentieth century warfare took a less technological turn, as exemplified by the conflict in Vietnam from the 1950s to
the mid-1970s. Despite massive technological superiority, guerrilla warfare caused the United States to
employ a series of unsuccessful strategies, causing
frustration not only among soldiers but among the
American public as well. Guerrilla warfare dominated many of the small-scale conflicts of the last
half of the century, especially in locations where the
landscape lent itself to easy concealment.
Technology came to the fore once again with the
two Gulf Wars of the 1990s and 2000s. The use of socalled smart bombs and the massive implementation of
the surge in Iraqa significant influx of boots on
the groundled to military superiority in Iraq, although the lessons of Vietnam continue to be taught, in
1036
that indirect, small-scale engagements by a force committed to a conflict by ideology or religion can keep a
large, technologically advanced force off its stride,
extending a conflict until the superior force, or the
nation behind it, tires of the conflict and withdraws.
The counterstrategies employed by insurgents
and ideologically driven guerrillas have fallen under
the rubric of terrorism, which expands the war
from the arena of the battlefield to all areas of daily
life, in a strategy that employs any tactic necessary
from the hijacking of civilian airlines to their use as
Tactics
Overview
Military units preparing for and in battle are governed by the overall strategy of the campaign. All
component elements of a military force in a campaign maneuver fight within an operational plan. At
the sharp end (in contact with the enemy), all personnel use tactics to achieve their aimin movement
around the battlefield, in defense, and in attack.
Significance
To a great extent, tactics have always been influenced by the technology available at the time. From
rock to rifle to rocket, tactics have evolved to use
what is available to inflict the most damage on the enemy while preserving lives on the users side. The
evolution of battlefield weapons and their increasing
range and power have affected tactics directly. Another significant factor in tactics is mobility: Both defenders and attackers need to be able to move freely
about the battlefield; failure to maintain freedom of
movement can easily lead to defeat.
History of Tactics
Ancient World
Tactics are governed by weapons to a large extent,
and the range and firepower of those weapons. In the
period of early warfare, available weapons were limited in range to below the total range of vision. This
meant that anyone out of range of bow or catapult
was safe to move. Tactics developed to bring the enemy within range by maneuver and speed of deployment.
Weapons available in the pre-firearm period included the sword, bow and arrow, spear, javelin,
lance, and siege engines. Men en masse on foot
moved slowly and were difficult to maneuver once a
Medieval World
The arrival of firearms on the battlefield further limited the effect of cavalry, although initially the range
and firepower of these early weapons were limited,
and musketeers were normally protected from cavalry by pikemen, who stood to their front.
The first military firearms were designed perhaps
more to frighten the horses than to have killing effect.
Both handheld and heavier weapons were developed,
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1038
and cannons served well to reduce static defenses.
The rate of fire, accuracy, and general effect of the
weapons was limited, but technology made great
strides in improving the characteristics of these
equipments.
Tactics throughout the ages have always been crucial in determining how much damage each side can
do to the other in battle. The side with the most soldiers and the best weapons could normally be expected to prevail, but there are occasions when small
groups that were better armed and equipped were
able to inflict disproportionate damage on much
larger forces. The use by the British army of machine
guns in nineteenth century colonial warfare and the
Spencer rifle (invented by Christian Spencer in 1860)
in the American Civil War are examples of this.
Modern World
In the nineteenth century, changes to firearms began
to create a need for changes in tactics. Firearms became more effective. The rate of fire was increased,
accuracy improved, and the arrival of the breechloading rifle, the machine gun, and quick-fire cannon
would affect tactics more rapidly than had been seen
before.
Breech-loading rifles meant that no longer did infantry have to stand to fire; earlier muzzle-loaded
weapons had to be reloaded with the soldier standing
up. The ability to reload lying down meant that infantry were less obvious on the battlefield and hence
better protected against enemy cannon fire. Defenders began to dig into the ground to lower their
silhouettes and to protect themselves even more, and
attacking infantry had to move toward the enemy
across ground that was covered by the defenders
fire.
The cannon on the battlefield had, for a long time,
been limited in effect by its lack of maneuverability,
but manufacturing techniques slowly overcame this
problem and guns were soon able to keep up with the
cavalry by being horse-drawn on highly mobile and
stable carriages. Breech-loading methods improved
the rate of fire, higher standards of manufacture increased accuracy, and the cannon became the field
gun with considerable effect upon bodies of troops
present on the battlefield.
Tactics
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War Films
The following films are important in the study of military history. They are selected for their
value in representing the conflict and/or the period in question, and they are arranged in
roughly chronological subsections, within which they are arranged alphabetically by title. An *
(asterisk) denotes a foreign production; a ^ (caret) denotes a television production.
Ancient Greece
Alexander
Released: 2004
Alexander the Great began his conquest of the
known world in 334 b.c.e. His Asian campaign,
which pitted his Macedonian army against Persians,
Bactrians, Scythians, and East Indians, lasted until
326 b.c.e. Unfortunately, of the myriad battles and
sieges he fought, Alexander depicts only two: Gaugamela (331 b.c.e.) and Hydaspes River (326 b.c.e.).
The decision to emphasize Alexanders personal life
robs the film of much of its value as a war film; however, there are few other films about the campaigns of
Alexander. The film is successful in accurately portraying the scale of the massive Battle of Gaugamela,
arguably Alexanders most important victory, while
close-up shots are excellent in portraying the Macedonian phalanx in battle, as well as the extent to
which Alexander relied on his cavalry.
Ancient Rome
Spartacus and Gladiator
Released: 1960 and 2000 respectively
Taken together, these films provide an accurate
depiction of the Roman legion and Roman warfare.
Though the former is primarily fiction and the latter
is based on the Third Servile War (73-71 b.c.e.), each
nicely complements the other. Gladiators opening
battle scene shows the Roman legion in action up
close, while the battle scene at the end of Spartacus
shows an absolutely astounding portrayal of legion
tactics and maneuvers from a distance. In addition to
their depictions of warfare, both go into some detail
in portraying the politics of Rome and, of course, the
role of Roman blood sports. Which film is superior is
a matter of preference.
1044
becomes too much for the ice to bear and the Teutons
break through, drowning under the ice. This film, a
Soviet production, is not only a masterful piece of
propaganda but also one of the first epic war movies.
It is a useful film both because of the period it depicts
and because of the period that created it.
Braveheart
Released: 1995
Mel Gibsons film about the life of William Wallace is both a blessing and a curse. Historically speaking, Braveheart is plagued with many significant
inaccuracies, something Gibson acknowledged as
necessary in order to enhance cinematic value; however, Bravehearts numerous battle scenes (Stirling
Bridge, 1297; Falkirk, 1298; and Bannockburn, 1314)
are massive, intense, and thoroughly engaging. They
also provide a depiction of a major turning point
in military history: the use of pikes by infantry to defeat charging cavalry. Braveheart is a good visual
supplement for study of the Scottish Wars of Independence.
Henry V
Released: 1989
On Saint Crispins Day, 1415, Henry V of England took the field against a French army twice as
large and made up of mounted knights, yet at the end
of the day the English had won a decisive victory.
The Battle of Agincourt, as it is known, is one of the
most important battles in history because it demonstrated that, armed with longbows, peasant infantry
could defeat cavalry, thus threatening the social hierarchy of Europe. The entire film traces the events
leading up to the battle, the battle itself, and the battles significance. Though the battle scene is only
a fraction of the film, it aptly depicts the impact of
both the longbow and the thick mud that covered the
field and hindered the French against their lighterarmored opponents. Because the film is based on
Shakespeares play and follows it closely, the language will be difficult to follow for some. Kenneth
Branaugh (Henry V) and his fellow actors, however,
bring both language and action to life.
Research Tools
Kingdom of Heaven
Released: 2005
Beginning in 1095, the Crusades served as a centuries-spanning source of conflict between Christian
and Muslim. In 1187, Saladin the Saracen laid siege
to the city of Jerusalem, which was defended by an
army under the command of Balian of Ibelin. Kingdom of Heaven tells of Balians rise to the status of
noble and Crusader, his journey to the Holy Land,
and his unsuccessful defense of Jerusalem. The film
provides a nice visual portrayal of medieval warfare,
especially siegecraft, and reveals some of the complex politics involved in the governance of the Crusader states.
The Messenger
Released: 1999
Joan of Arc is one of the most famous individuals
in French history. Her victory at Orlans in 1429
marked a turning point in the Hundred Years War
(1337-1453) between England and France. The Messenger not only provides a brief but adequate background to the Hundred Years War, along with good
visuals for medieval warfare and siegecraft (particularly the use of the culverin), but also explores Joans
mentality, visions, and belief that she was chosen by
God to push the English out of France.
Feudal Japan
The Last Samurai
Released: 2003
This film is a double-edged sword. On one side, it is
an excellent portrayal of the Japanese transition from
feudal warfare and weapons to those of the modern
age, intermixing the social, military, and political consequences of the transition. The films portrayal of the
Japanese warrior code of bushidf and its many battle
scenes are tremendous; however, the portrayal of the
opposing sides is too skewed (as in The Patriot). The
Japanese samurai and peasants are shown to have had
a perfect life until those awful, modernizing Western
nations came along. However, if one can look past
the revisionist history, the film has a lot to offer.
War Films
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Ran*
Released: 1985
Ran is an excellent film for bringing feudal Japanese warfare to life. The film offers excellent visuals,
both in its epic battle scenes and in its beautiful costumes. The battle scenes, though sometimes gory to
the point of being comedic, accurately depict the formations, tactics, and weapons of the Japanese warlords, in particular their use of the harquebus. The introduction of firearms is a pivotal point in military
history, and the film shows why. Ran is also useful in
depicting the samurai warrior code of bushidf. The
films only real drawback is that it is based on William Shakespeares King Lear (c. 1605-1606) and
therefore is not historically based.
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American Revolution
April Morning
Released: 1988
The film adaptation of Howard Fasts novel, this
better-than-average portrayal of the beginning of the
war depicts a boys coming-of-age as the colonists
stand up to the British on Lexington Green.
Drums Along the Mohawk
Released: 1939
Newlyweds settle in the Mohawk Valley just as
the revolution is erupting, and the young husband
goes off to war; the film ends on a bright note with the
birth of a new nation. Though a fictionalized and
sentimental chronicle, this classic, directed by John
Ford, offers a rich depiction of frontier life during the
war. Props had to be made from scratch, and many
are true to historic detail. Flintlock muskets, however, were those actually used during the erathe
prop department tracked them down in Ethiopia,
where they had been used to fight the Italians during
World War II.
is too critical of the British, too praising of the colonists, too focused on the southern theater of war, and
too idealistic in its depiction of race relations and
slavery. However, the film is accurate in its portrayal
of the military aspects of the war, particularly the difficulties of the Continental Army in maintaining adequate numbers and discipline. While the character of
Benjamin Martin is so perfect that he is unbelievable,
he is loosely modeled after the real soldier Francis
Marion. Additionally, the scenes of the Battles of
Camden (1780) and Guilford Courthouse (1781) are
excellent portrayals of the traditional close-order formations and tactics used by European armies in the
colonial era. The Camden scene also shows how cavalry are effectively used to break a wavering line and
run down the fleeing troops.
1776
Released: 1972
The film version of the stage musical, depicting
the Founding Fathers and Americas first congress.
Napoleonic Wars
John Adams^
Released: 2008
Based on the book by David McCullough, this acclaimed biographical television miniseries (HBO)
chronicles Adamss role as Founding Father, including the Revolutionary War period, beginning with
the Boston Massacre.
Johnny Tremain
Released: 1957
The first adaptation of Esther Forbess novel portrays the beginning of the American Revolution from
the perspective of a young man whose views on the
war change as he evolves into a revolutionary. Emphasizes the human perspectives on the war, from
both sides.
The Patriot
Released: 2000
As a film about the course and causes of the American Revolution (1775-1783), The Patriot falls flat. It
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1869; War and Peace, 1886), but the 1956 American
version, in limiting the films duration (though it is
still more than three hours long), also limits its depiction of key battles such as those at Austerlitz and
Borodino. The 1967 Soviet version requires a full day
to watch, but it is more comprehensive and detailed
in explaining the history behind Napoleons fatal invasion of Russia and allows the story of the breaking
of Napoleon to be told by the country that broke him.
Waterloo
Released: 1970
The last battle of the Napoleonic Wars, Waterloo
(1815) pitted the French under Napoleon against the
British and Prussians under the duke of Wellington
(Arthur Wellesley) and Gebhard Leberecht von
Blcher. The film begins with Napoleons return
from exile and ends almost immediately after the battle. The first hour sets the stage for the battle. The remaining half of the film is devoted entirely to the battle itself and presents it on a scale that is worthy of its
subject. Waterloo is fantastic for showing the battle
on a remarkable scale (using twenty thousand extras
to flesh out the armies); one particular scene beautifully shows the use of the infantry square as a defense
against cavalry.
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ally, Howards version carries the story through to
the pivotal Battle of San Jacinto (1836).
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Crimean War
The Charge of the Light Brigade
Released: 1968
Far superior to the 1936 Hollywood production of
the same name (in terms of both historical accuracy
and overall presentation), this film portrays the disastrous British cavalry attack known as the Charge of
the Light Brigade, which took place at the Battle of
Balaclava (1854) during the Crimean War, in which
the British charged a fortified Russian artillery position, suffering casualties of nearly 50 percent. The
battle, and the characters best associated with it (Lord
Cardigan and Lord Raglan in particular), are wonderfully brought to life. The only drawbacks to the film
are its abrupt ending, which comes just moments after the attack, and the numerous Monty Python-esque
animation scenes that harm the films authority by
making it appear comic.
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Zulu War
Zulu
Released: 1964
After the disastrous defeat at Isandhlwana (1879),
the British troops in southern Africa braced for a final
knockout blow at the small outpost of Rorkes Drift.
Over the course of two days (January 22-23, 1879),
the small garrison of around 150 British successfully
held off an army of more than four thousand Zulu. In
making his argument for a western way of war,
Victor Davis Hansen pointed to the Battle of Rorkes
Drift as an example of superior discipline in battle.
The entire film, but in particular the last battle scene,
does an excellent job of showing how discipline, especially the efforts of sergeants and other noncommissioned officers to keep the soldiers from breaking
and fleeing, contributed to the British victory.
Boer War
Breaker Morant*
Released: 1980
At the beginning of the twentieth century, the
British Empire went to war against Dutch farmers
(Boers) in the southern tip of Africa. Because the
Boers could not fight toe-to-toe with the British
Army, the (second) Boer War (1899-1902) was an
unconventional war and required the British to adopt
unorthodox tactics in order to defeat the Dutch Kommandos. Breaker Morant is based on a true story
and, though focusing on a court-martial (meaning the
majority of the film is courtroom drama), the events
leading up to the courtroom are told in flashbacks
that display very well the aspects of the war that made
it so unconventional.
World War I
All Quiet on the Western Front
Released: 1930, 1979 (television)
Based on Erich Maria Remarques famous war
novel Im Westen nichts Neues (1929), All Quiet on
the Western Front is the classic World War I film.
Depicting the fighting between the French and the
Germans from the German viewpoint, the film not
only shows the brutality of trench warfare but also
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illustrates the patriotic fervor that led millions of
young men on both sides to enlist, as well as the disparity between what the German home front was being told and the actual situation. Of the two versions,
each has its advantages. The original version follows
the novel more precisely and is a film classic, but
color film and improved special effects make the
1979 version better for providing a visual of trench
warfare on the western front.
Gallipoli
Released: 1981
In 1915, the British attempted to break the deadlock of trench warfare in Europe and knock the newly
entered Turkey out of the war in a single stroke.
Soldiers of the Australian and New Zealand Army
Corps (ANZAC) assaulted the Turkish positions at
Gallipoli in an attempt to wrest control of the Dardanelles away from Turkey. The film is a bit slow at
the beginning but does an excellent job of showing
the impossibility of trench warfare and the catastrophic Battle of Gallipoli (1915-1916).
Hells Angels
Released: 1930
Considering the films age, Hells Angels is a remarkable film. Though incredibly exepensive, director Howard Hughes captured some amazing aerial
footage in his filming of Great War dogfights. Most
of the scenes involving aircraft are shot with real
planes, not models, giving the film enhanced authority and authenticity. The film also illustrates the Zeppelin raids over London, a topic often left out of
World War I lectures. The accompanying love story
does little to enhance the film, but viewers who stick
it out to the end will get to witness a wide-shot aerial
battle between the British Royal Flying Corps and
the infamous Red Barons Flying Circus.
Joyeux Nol* (merry Christmas)
Released: 2005
One of the most remarkable events of World War I
took place on Christmas Eve, 1914. The British,
French, and German troops in one section of the front
put down their weapons and fraternized with the enemy. The Christmas Truce, as it was called, wit-
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nessed soldiers who only a day before were shooting
at each other now sharing family pictures, exchanging gifts, and even kicking around a soccer ball.
When news of the unofficial truce reached respective
headquarters, it was quickly ended and fighting resumed. The Christmas Truce was never repeated.
Joyeux Nol was a collaborative effort of German,
French, and British filmmakers to bring to the screen
an excellent portrayal of one of the most curious and
positive events of the war.
La Grande Illusion*
Released: 1937
Jean Renoirs classic antiwar film is set in World
War I. Though there are no battle scenes, the film still
portrays the brutal reality of war through the terrible
toll it extracts from those who fight it, showing that
the grand illusion is that war is noble and glorious.
Like many other films in this list, La Grande Illusion
has been included because of what it says about the
time in which it was produced more than about the
time depicted in the film. In 1937, Fascist aggression
was pushing Europe toward war. Renoirs film was a
reminder of what happened the last time Europe went
to war.
Lawrence of Arabia
Released: 1962
Taking place in the Middle East during World
War I, this film, though long (four hours), brings to
life one of the most dynamic and controversial figures of the time period. Lawrence of Arabia is a biography of the wartime career of British officer Thomas
E. Lawrence. Not only does it depict the guerrillastyle desert warfare between the British, with their
Arab allies, and the Turks, but it also explores Lawrences attempts at fostering Arab nationalism. The
Turkish front was not the decisive theater in the war,
but the impact of Lawrences actions remains today.
Sergeant York
Released: 1941
Alvin York fought with the U.S. Army in the
trenches of World War I and distinguished himself
by becoming a highly decorated war hero despite being a pacifist and conscientious objector. His most
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World War II
Action in the North Atlantic
Released: 1943
Despite its enormous importance to the war effort,
the task of the U.S. Merchant Marine in keeping Britain and the Soviet Union supplied with arms and
equipment seldom receives much attention in war
films. This film, however, is wholly devoted to the
perilous journey across the submarine-infested Atlantic Ocean. By 1943, the Battle of the Atlantic was
just beginning to turn in favor of the Allies. Action in
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these international squadrons, see the Czech production, 2001s Dark Blue World). In addition, the film
also portrays the devastation of the Blitz, Germanys
switch from military to civilian targets.
Battle of the Bulge
Released: 1965
In the winter of 1944, Germany launched a massive attack (Operation Wacht am Rhein) against the
Allies in Western Europe, hoping to turn the tide. The
attack faltered and instead of moving the entire front
it only pushed through in the center, creating a large
bulge, hence the name. The end of the film contains a
large tank-battle scene that does a good job of showing tank combat. Another important part of the battle,
and the film, is the German use of spies to disrupt
Allied transportation and communication during the
offensive.
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Alec Guinesss character, who initially resists the
Japanese attempts to put POWs to work and unwittingly ends up fully cooperating in the end).
A Bridge Too Far
Released: 1977
After the successful D-day landings, Field Marshall Bernard Law Montgomery concocted Operation Market Garden, a plan that, if successful, would
end the war by Christmas of 1944. The plan was for
American and British paratroopers to capture strategic bridges across the major rivers in the Netherlands, paving the way for an invasion of Germany. A
Bridge Too Far, based on the book by journalist
Cornelius Ryan, is an excellent retelling of the event
and includes both the Allied and German perspective. It is one of the standards of World War II films.
Catch-22
Released: 1970
Taking place on the Italian Peninsula in the later
years of World War II, Catch-22 is an adaptation of
Joseph Hellers novel about the American bombing
efforts from Italy after the fall of Benito Mussolini.
As a sharp criticism of war (Vietnam in particular,
with which the film was contemporaneous) and the
people who run it, Catch-22 is unconventional and
comedic in its portrayal of war and the American military. The absurdity of the characters and events in
the film are meant to express the absurdity of war.
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The very term catch-22 entered the English vocabulary as a result of Hellers unorthodox and comedic
approach to war criticism.
Das Boot* (the boat)
Released: 1981
Whereas Action in the North Atlantic tells the
story of the war in the Atlantic from the perspective of the U.S. Merchant Marine, Das Boot shows
the war from the view of the German U-boats that
hunted Allied ships from beneath the waves. Wolfgang Petersons intention was to make an antiwar
film that not only showed the terror of war at sea
but also drew clear distinctions between Nazis and
Germans. It is an excellent film for showing life
and combat onboard a submarine. The more recent
U-571 (2000) is another good film for depicting
World War II submarine warfare, but its historical inaccuracies make Das Boot a better choice.
Defiance
Released: 2008
An important, though often forgotten, aspect of
World War II on the eastern front is the role of the
partisans. Many bands of these guerrilla fighters,
composed of Jews, communists, Eastern Europeans,
and other groups deemed undesirable or subhuman by the Nazis, fought against the Germans for
the majority of the war. This is an excellent film for
depicting the lives and various difficulties of the partisans in World War II.
The Desert Fox
Released: 1951
See Cold War section below.
The Great Dictator
Released: 1940
Charles Chaplins personally funded critique of
Nazi Germany appeared on the silver screen only one
year after the war in Europe officially began but before the United States entry. In typical Chaplin style,
the film uses slapstick comedy to attack Adolf Hitler,
Benito Mussolini, and fascism in general. Although
there are no battle scenes, the film is an excellent
resource for an illustration of Nazi Germanys for-
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eign and domestic policies through Chaplins unique
comedic style.
The Great Escape
Released: 1963
Films about German prisoner-of-war (POW)
camps present an interesting problem. Unlike those
depicting Japanese camps, the spectrum for films
about German camps (outside Holocaust films)
ranges from the adventurous, such as Von Ryans Express (1965), to the wildly comedic 1960s television
program Hogans Heroes. However, the best choice
is The Great Escape. Based on real events, the film
depicts the attempt of British and American POWs to
stage a massive escape. Though the story does not exactly have a happy ending (few of the men actually
succeed), The Great Escape is an excellent film for
showing life and conditions in a German POW camp.
The Grey Zone
Released: 2001
Though not a war film per se, The Grey Zone depicts the Holocaust as the consequence of combining
nationalism, modernity, industrialism, and warfare.
No list of war films would be complete without at
least one film that addresses the Holocaust, and
this onenot Steven Spielbergs Schindlers List
(1993)is the best choice. It is based on the Jewish
inmates at Auschwitz who helped run the gas chambers and crematoria in exchange for a few months
stay of execution. It is the best choice because it is as
dramatic and graphic as Schindlers List, but it explores more of the complex issues related to the Holocaust, such as the fine line between collaboration
and survival and other moral questions posed by the
Holocaust.
Hadashi no Gen* (barefoot Gen)
Released: 1983
On August 6, 1945, an American B-29, Enola
Gay, dropped the worlds first atomic bomb. The
Hollywood production Fat Man and Little Boy
(1989) retells the story of the bombs construction,
and many other American films allude to the bomb,
but to see a film about the impact of the bomb we
must turn to Japanese anime. As the only cartoon on
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Kanal*
Released: 1957
In 1944, the German army was in retreat. As the
advancing Red Army entered Poland, partisans in the
city staged a massive uprising, hoping for help from
the approaching Soviets. Unfortunately, the Soviets
halted outside Warsaw, allowing the Germans time
to crush the uprising. Kanal, a Polish production, is
the first film about the uprising (not to be confused
with the Warsaw Ghetto uprising in 1943). The film
depicts the hopelessness of the struggle as well as the
determination of the Poles to fight on, even when defeat is inevitable.
Memphis Belle
Released: 1990
Beginning in 1942, the United States Army Air
Force took part in the air war against Germany by
conducting daylight bombing raids using the B-17
Flying Fortress. Memphis Belle, like many war
films, is double-edged. Nearly the entire film is devoted to the actual mission, giving viewers a chance
to experience every aspect of a daylight mission from
takeoff to touchdown. The disadvantage of the film is
that while it claims to be based on a true story, the
story has been so altered as to leave only the name of
the plane as historically accurate. This is an excellent
film for showing an example of the air war, but not
for telling the story of the Memphis Belle.
Midway
Released: 1976
In June of 1942, the American and Japanese navies fought a battle in which neither fleet actually
saw the other. The entire engagement was a dual between aircraft launched from carriers just off the
coast of the island of Midway. The battle resulted in a
resounding victory for the United States and critically crippled the Japanese ability to pursue the war
in the South Pacific. Midway is entirely devoted to
this pivotal battle and reaffirmed what Pearl Harbor
demonstrated: that the aircraft carrier was now the
king of the seas. Additionally, the film successfully
weaves stock footage into the battle scenes, making
them more authoritative.
Patton
Released: 1970
General George S. Patton was one of the most colorful and controversial figures of World War II. Hav-
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ing fought the Axis powers from Africa all the way to
Germany, Patton earned a reputation as one of the
best generals of the war. Although the film takes a
few liberties here and there, Patton brings to life one
of the United States most famous military figures
through the brilliant performance of George C. Scott.
The film portrays Pattons brilliance in combat, his
eccentricities off the battlefield, and his personality
and ego clashes with Field Marshall Bernard Law
Montgomery.
Roma, citt aperta (Rome, open city) and
LArme des ombres (army of shadows)
Released: 1945 and 1969 respectively
After the fall of France in 1940, those men and
women who continued to resist both the Germans
and the Vichy government formed the Maquis, the
French Resistance. As an important part of World
War II, no film list would be complete without a film
about the Resistance. This film, which covers the
middle war years when the Resistance was small and
particularly vulnerable, provides an excellent illustration of the cloak-and-dagger world in which the
Maquis had to operate. Like LArme des ombres
(1969), Open City is a film about the clandestine resistance efforts in occupied Italy. Though not as famous as the Maquis, the Italian Resistance faced
many of the same trials and suffered many of the
same pains as the French Resistance.
Saving Private Ryan
Released: 1998
Operation Overlord was the largest amphibious
assault in history and involved American, Canadian,
and British troops storming the beaches of northern
France, guarded by Germans and Ostbattalionen
(conscripts from Eastern Europe). To gain a better
understanding of the history surrounding the Allied
invasion of Normandy, The Longest Day is the best
choice, but Saving Private Ryan, through improved
special effects, attention to detail, and stripping away
of the sanitized depictions of war, portrays the battle so vividly and with such intensity that it not only
revolutionized battle scenes but also traumatized
many war veterans who saw the film.
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Since You Went Away
Released: 1944
Along with The Best Years of Our Lives, Since
You Went Away is a film that reminds its audience
that war is not just about over there. In many ways
this film is simply producer David O. Selzniks Gone
with the Wind retold in a World War II setting. The
entire film takes place on the home front and shows
what civilians, particularly the families of soldiers,
must go through in wartime. Although romanticized,
the film does address issues such as rationing, women
in the war industry, recruitment, scrap metal drives,
and the pain of receiving a telegram from the War
Department.
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Stalingrad*
Released: 1993
The Battle of Stalingrad is arguably the decisive
battlefield of World War II. It lasted through the winter of 1942-1943 and saw some of the most intense
urban combat of the war as the Germans fought the
Soviets for control of the gateway to the Caucasus
and the city named for Stalin. By February, 1943, the
German army at Stalingrad and thus the war in the
east were broken. The German production Stalingrad
portrays the battle from the perspective of the Germans who fought it and depicts the bloody fighting
and horrible conditions under which they fought.
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Thirty Seconds over Tokyo
Released: 1944
Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the United
States wanted to take some sort of immediate, punitive action against the Japanese. The result was the
Doolittle Raid, a bombing raid over Tokyo comprising 16 B-25 Mitchell bombers, which would attack
the city and then fly to safety in unoccupied China.
Although ineffective strategically, the Doolittle Raid
was a big morale boost for the United States following the shock of December 7. This film adequately
depicts the raids planning, training, and execution.
To Hell and Back
Released: 1955
Audie Murphey was Americas most decorated
soldier in World War II and in many respects is to
World War II what Alvin York was to World War I.
Murphy rose from private to lieutenant and earned almost every medal the United States had to offer. The
film, based on his war autobiography of the same
name, follows Murphys life from his adolescence
through the end of the war. The battle scenes are
good, but not spectacular. This movie is included,
like Patton and Sergeant York, because of the importance of the individual to American military history.
Tora! Tora! Tora!
Released: 1970
On December 7, 1941, carrier-based planes of the
Japanese Navy laid waste to the American fleet at
Pearl Harbor. Although the more recent film Pearl
Harbor (2001) makes use of computer graphics and
better special effects to make a much more actionpacked battle scene, Tora! Tora! Tora! is by far the
better film for explaining the reasoning, planning,
and execution of the attack (and the battle scene is
well done). As a collaborative effort between the
United States and Japan, the film tells the story from
both sides objectively and remains the best film made
about the day of infamy.
The Tuskegee Airmen^
Released: 1995
Along with women, World War II provided the
black community with opportunities to challenge so-
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Windtalkers
Released: 2002
As the United States continued to fight the Japanese in the Pacific, the American military had problems with maintaining security. Japanese intelligence
continually broke American radio codes, severely
hampering the American effort. To solve the problem, the United States began using Navajo Indians as
radio operators to prevent the Japanese from cracking the code. The code talkers played an important
part, not only in winning the war, but also in the advancement of race relations back on the home front,
and although Windtalkers is not the best film about
the war in the Pacific theater, the subject of its plot
makes it an important film.
Valkyrie
Released: 2008
In July of 1944, a small group of Adolf Hitlers top
officers plotted to kill him. Though this event forms a
large part of the film The Desert Fox, Valkyrie is devoted entirely to the planning and failed execution of
the attempt. The film does a good job of establishing
that the officers involved were motivated, not for any
moral concerns, but because they thought Hitler was
leading the country to ruin militarily. The film also
offers a nice contrast to The Desert Fox, because the
two illustrate a long-standing debate over the role of
Erwin Rommel in the assassination attempt. Desert
Fox places him at the center, while Valkyrie makes
no mention of him at all.
A Walk in the Sun
Released: 1945
After defeating the Germans in Africa, the Allies
moved on to Sicily and then the Italian Peninsula,
where the fighting bogged down in conditions similar to the trenches of World War I (though in Italy the
Cold War
The Day After^
Released: 1983
One of the most controversial films of its day,
aired on television, The Day After depicts the grim
aftereffects of a nuclear bombing in Lawrence, Kansas, at the height of the antinuclear movement that
characterized the Cold War period.
The Desert Fox
Released: 1951
Erwin Rommel led the Afrika Korps against the
British and Americans in North Africa. Although ultimately failing in Africa, Rommel has became a legend both in German and in British and American history, partly because of his skill as a general, partly
because of his supposed involvement in the July plot
to assassinate Adolf Hitler. The Desert Fox is in-
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fect to the United States and the United States attempt to prevent the defection from leading to open
war. Like the later production Crimson Tide (1995),
The Hunt for Red October has a wholly fictitious
story line, but both films are excellent for showing
life on a submarine and portraying modern naval
warfare. The much later K-19: The Widowmaker
(2002) is also a good submarine film and gives the
Soviet perspective in a more historically based setting.
Dr. Strangelove
Released: 1964
Although completely fictitious, the context and
themes of Dr. Strangelove are completely accurate.
Just two years before the films release, the United
States and the Soviet Union came within inches of
nuclear war during the Cuban Missile Crisis. This
film explores the tension and fears of nuclear holocaust while poking fun at the generals and politicians
who ultimately made the decisions that would lead to
or avert a nuclear war. In playing on the fear of nuclear attack and the impotency of all but a few to do
anything about it, director Stanley Kubrick appropriately subtitled his film Or, How I Learned to Stop
Worrying and Love the Bomb.
Fail Safe
Released: 1964
Released almost simultaneously with the classic film Dr. Strangelove (whose director, Stanley
Kubrick, is said to have complained to studio executives that the nearly identical story line plagiarized
his filmand won first release), Fail Safe is the
dead-serious counterpart to Kubricks eerie send-up,
showing U.S. bombers headed toward Russia after
a faulty order to drop the nuclear bomb cannot be reversed. The two can be regarded as complementary
treatments of a similar scenario, both released only
two years after the Cuban Missile Crisisbut the
tone of Fail Safe is unrelentingly grim and chilling.
The Hunt for Red October
Released: 1990
The story line of The Hunt for Red October follows a high-ranking Soviet officers attempts to de-
Thirteen Days
Released: 2000
For two weeks in October of 1962, the United
States and the Soviet Union came as close as they
ever would come to starting World War III over
the Soviet positioning of missiles in Cuba. Thirteen
Days tells the story of the Cuban Missile Crisis from
the initial discovery of the missile sites to the peaceful resolution and does an excellent job of conveying
the tension of the crisis and creating an engaging film
without making too many sacrifices to historical accuracy. Although bearing the same title as Robert F.
Kennedys book, this film is based on the book The
Kennedy Tapes (1997), by Ernest May and Philip
Zelikow.
Korean War
The Bridges at Toko-Ri
Released: 1954
Although Germany began experimenting with jet
aircraft during World War II, jets did not come into
their own until the Korean War five years later. The
Bridges at Toko-Ri was the first film in which American moviegoers would have been able to see jets on
the silver screen, introducing them to modern aerial
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combat as well as a detailed depiction of launching
and landing jets from aircraft carriers. However, being first does not also mean being the best: Top Gun
(1986) is much better at depicting aerial combat using modern jet aircraft.
M*A*S*H
Released: 1970
Set during the Korean War, M*A*S*H is a unique
war film. First, it takes place in a field hospital and
portrays the battles waged in the operating room after
the battles on the frontline end. Battlefield medicine
is an essential part of any war, but M*A*S*H is one of
the only films dedicated to it. Second, as a comedy,
M*A*S*H belongs to that very small group of films
that critique war through humor and satire; third, the
film introduces the helicopter, a new technology at
the time; finally, it is a product and reflection of its
time. Written, filmed, and released while the United
States was embroiled in the Vietnam War, the movie,
later to become a long-running television series, can
be seen as much as a commentary on Vietnam as a
show set in the Korean conflict.
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makes this film so essential is that it portrays the war
as a Korean war. Most other major films about the
Korean War portray the American effort against the
Chinese. This film however, portrays the film as a
civil war and does an excellent job, not only in utilizing the filming techniques that made the battle scenes
of Saving Private Ryan so surreal but also in making
an antiwar statement by emphasizing the brutality of
war and showing both North and South Koreans
committing atrocities.
Vietnam War
Apocalypse Now
Released: 1979
Francis Ford Coppolas rendition of Joseph Conrads 1902 novel Heart of Darkness is a scathing criticism of the Vietnam War. As the story develops, the
film blurs the line between friend and foe and leaves
the viewer questioning the wars purpose, conduct,
and goals. Not only is the films message blatant, but
the images and script have had a tremendous impact
on American popular culture. Even today, people
who have never seen the film quote lines from it.
Taegukgi hwinallimyeo*
Released: 2004
The Korean War pitted the North Koreans and
their Chinese allies against United Nations forces
consisting of South Koreans, Americans, British, Canadians, and a half dozen other countries. What
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is only one short combat scene, yet the movie is intensely gory in its depiction of the actions of both
American and Vietnamese soldiers, suggesting that
in Vietnam there were no good guys and no bad
guys, just a mass of senseless violence characterized by numerous scenes in which people play Russian roulette for money.
Dien Bien Phu*
Released: 1992
The siege of the French fortress at Dien Bien Phu
began in March, 1954, and ended two months later.
The Viet Minh, with help from communist China, besieged the fortress and slowly strangled it into submission. The battle was significant because it signaled the end of French control in Vietnam, and the
beginning of the path toward eventual American involvement. Dien Bien Phu, a French production, is
one of the only films available about the battle.
Flight of the Intruder
Released: 1991
Nearly every set in movies about the Vietnam War
represents the ground and recounts the war from the
standpoint of the men who waded through the jungles
and rice paddies. However, airpower was a big part
of the American effort in Vietnam, and thus Flight of
the Intruder makes the list to provide a film about the
war from the viewpoint of the pilots who flew the air
raids always seen in the ground films.
Full Metal Jacket
Released: 1987
Like Platoon (1986), Apocalypse Now (1979),
and The Deer Hunter (1978), Stanley Kubriks Full
Metal Jacket is a classic antiwar, anti-Vietnam film.
The film is best known for its first thirty minutes,
which are dedicated to depicting life in a marine boot
camp, and the breaking down of the individual in order to rebuild him as a killer. The film also contains a
scene depicting the Tet Offensive, the massive Viet
Cong attack of South Vietnam in January of 1968.
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The Green Berets
Released: 1968
The Green Berets is John Waynes pro-Vietnam,
pro-American propaganda film, released (coincidentally, on July 4) shortly after the Tet Offensive in an
attempt to gain support for the war. The film depicts
the war as a good war, the Americans as fighting a
just cause, and the war itself as harsh but not overly
brutal or bloody; there are also clear distinctions between good guy and bad guy. The war portrayed
in The Green Berets is very different from, and is seriously challenged by, almost every Vietnam film
that follows.
Platoon
Released: 1986
Oliver Stones first anti-Vietnam film has become, arguably, the anti-Vietnam film. The film depicts the actions of one platoon in Vietnam and illustrates the myriad conflicts and problems within the
army itself, to say nothing of difficulties fighting the
enemyproblems such as insubordination, drug addiction, fragging, and atrocities against the Vietnamese, to name a few. Although no specific historical
battle is portrayed, the film gives an excellent depiction of the guerrilla tactics that characterized the war,
as well as a few scenes showing the elaborate tunnel
system that the Viet Cong used with great success.
We Were Soldiers
Released: 2002
Near the close of 1965, the United States had its
first, and one of the only, pitched battles against
North Vietnamese regulars in the Ia Drang Valley.
We Were Soldiers is the story of the Ia Drang battle
and not only provides an excellent portrayal of the
conflict but also highlights the introduction and role
of the helicopter, a technology that has come to characterize the Vietnam War. This film is also important
because it is a reaction against anti-Vietnam films
and an attempt to return to the war as portrayed in The
Green Berets.
War Films
Arab-Israeli Conflict
Kippur*
Released: 2000
In October of 1973, Egypt and Syria jointly attacked Israel on Yom Kippur. Kippur, an IsraeliFrench production, is based on the actual experiences
of a helicopter rescue team as they evacuate the
wounded from the battlefield. There are very few
films about the Arab-Israeli conflict readily available, and what makes Kippur stand out is its ability to
turn the viewer into a participant. The film also
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contains many long, unbroken scenes that help make
the experience real, chaotic, and sometimes necessarily boring, rather than jumping from action to action as many war films do.
Falklands War
An Ungentlemanly Act^ and Iluminados por el
fuego* (blessed by fire)
Released: 1992 and 2005 respectively
The fight for the Falkland Islands (or the Malvinas,
to the Argentineans) began in April of 1982. The war
lasted only a few months and ended in a British victory. Each of these films is biased in favor of the country that produced it, but together they paint a good
picture of the entire conflict as well as demonstrate
that history changes depending on who is telling it.
An Ungentlemanly Act focuses primarily on the initial Argentinean invasion. Only the last five minutes
of the film address Britains counterattack and eventual reconquest of the island. Iluminados por el fuego
begins in the midst of the war, after the British returned in force, and carries through to the postwar era.
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War Literature
The following works are important in the study of military history. They are selected for their
value in representing the conflict and/or the period in question, and they are arranged in
roughly chronological subsections, within which they are arranged alphabetically by title.
Ancient World
Anabasis
Author: Xenophon
First published: 386-377 b.c.e., as Kyrou anabasis
Anabasis chronicles the determined survival of an
army of ten thousand Greek mercenaries stranded in
northern Mesopotamia by the death of the claimant to
the Persian throne who hired them. Although the authors account of the mercenaries endurance against
enormous military odds and great geographical obstacles is clearly colored by self-interest, the narrative is so stirring that it is said to have provided the
literary inspiration for Philip of Macedon and Alexander the Greats shared conviction that they could
conquer the Persian Empire with a relatively small
but highly disciplined Greek army.
The History
Author: Herodotus
First published: c. 424 b.c.e., as Historiai
Herodotou
Known as the Father of History, Herodotus
originally published his History in nine volumes. His
primary subject was the Greco-Persian Wars of the
fifth century b.c.e., which ensured the continuing independence of the Greek states and their formative
role in the development of Western culture. He also,
however, traveled widely throughout the Mediterranean world, and his histories include not only what he
learned, first- and secondhand, about the lands that
he visited but also what he learned about lands that
lay beyond those he visited. Thus, he provides many
of the earliest European references to regions such as
sub-Saharan Africa and India.
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History of the Peloponnesian War
Author: Thucydides
First published: 431-404 b.c.e., as Historia tou
Peloponnesiacou polemou
Establishing many of the fundamental elements
of modern historiography, Thucydides attempted to
provide an objective history of the Peloponnesian
War, despite the fact that he had been a combatant
and could be expected to be biased toward the side on
which he fought. The war was fought between the
Delian League, led by Athens, and the Peloponnesian
League, led by Sparta. The war ended Athenss preeminence and opened the way for the Macedonian
conquest of Greece less than a half century later.
Covering the first twenty-one years of the twentyseven-year conflict, History of the Peloponnesian
War has been divided into eight books. It is assumed
that Thucydides was still working on the project
when he died.
Iliad
Author: Homer
First published: c. 750 b.c.e.
The oldest surviving work in the Western literary
canon, this epic poem describes the extended Greek
siege of Troy, a major port in Asia Minor. Focusing
on the martial achievements of the heroes on both
sides and the dramatic deaths of many of the noteworthy combatants, the poem presents the great warrior as a sort of demigod. The greatest of all these
warriors is the Greek Achilles, against whom no Trojan hero, not even Hector, can stand. The war and
the poem conclude with the Greeks apparent withdrawal and their gift to the besieged city of the socalled Trojan horse. Actually filled with Greek warriors who, under cover of darkness, open the citys
gates to the returning mass of the Greek army, the
Trojan horse has become a symbol for any audacious
deception.
The Mahabharata
Author: Vyasa
First published: c. 400 b.c.e.-200 c.e.,
Mah3bh3rata
One of the two great epics in Sanskrit that define
much of the cultural and religious traditions of Hin-
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duism, the Mahabharata includes more than 100,000
verse lines and 1.8 million words. On a basic narrative level, this epic poem is a chronicle of the struggle
for royal succession in the Kuru kingdom of Hastinapura, a struggle that reached its great climax in the
Kurukshetra War. The contending claimants to the
throne are the Kaurava and the Pandava branches of
the royal bloodline. Despite incredible demonstrations of valor by the great warriors on both sides during the war, the Pandava are ultimately victorious.
Commentators have often drawn parallels between
this Sanskrit epic and the Iliad.
Masters of Rome
Author: Colleen McCullough
First published: 1990-2007
Best known for The Thorn Birds (1977), the melodramatic family saga about the development of Australia, McCullough followed its tremendous commercial success, including its adaptation as an
extremely popular television miniseries, with a complete change of direction. In the seven novels of her
painstakingly researched series Masters of Rome,
McCullough chronicles the fall of the Roman Republic and its transformation into an imperial state. The
seven novels include The First Man in Rome (1990),
The Grass Crown (1991), Fortunes Favorites (1993),
Caesars Women (1996), Caesar: Let the Dice Fly
(1997), The October Horse (2002), and Antony and
Cleopatra (2007).
Memoirs of Hadrian
Author: Marguerite Yourcenar
First published: 1951, as Mmoires dHadrien
Working from the fact that the Roman emperor
Hadrian wrote an autobiography that was lost to history, Yourcenar provides a fictional version of that
autobiography in this, her most acclaimed novel.
Epistolary in form, the novel is framed as a letter
from Hadrian to his presumptive successor, Marcus
Aurelius. After years of immersing herself in Roman
history and culture, Yourcenar was able to create and
sustain a voice for Hadrian that won over classicists
as well as more general readers, re-creating the milieu that he shaped at a level far beyond the usual
costume novel.
War Literature
Spartacus
Author: Howard Fast
First published: 1951
Fast transformed the leader of the largest slave revolt in Roman history into a champion of egalitarian,
progressive ideals. The novel is divided into two
types of sections. Those told in the past tense present
the recollections of Roman leaders of the failed attempts to quell the uprising and the terror it created
throughout Italy. These accounts exhibit the political
machinations and the class consciousness that eventually subverted the core values of the Roman Republic and led to the rise of the imperial state. The
other sections are told in the present tense from the
rebels very different perspective. In contrast to the
Roman vilification of Spartacus as a barbarous agent
of civil disorder, to his followers he is an iconic figure, the embodiment of valor and honorableness.
Medieval World
Genghis
Author: Conn Iggulden
First published: 2007-2008
Called the Conqueror series in the United Kingdom, this series includes Birth of an Empire (2007),
Lords of the Bow (2008), and Bones of the Hills
(2008). It reconstructs the rise of Genghis Khan from
the leadership of a small nomadic tribe to the master of
the largest empire in human history. The series is notable both for the extensiveness of Igguldens research
and for his unobtrusive integration of that research
into the narratives. Projecting this as a seven-volume
series, Iggulden has indicated that he will focus on
Kublai Khan in the fourth through sixth novels.
Ivanhoe
Author: Sir Walter Scott
First published: 1819
The most enduring work by the prolific and popular Scottish novelist, Ivanhoe is a Romantic historical
novel set in twelfth century England. The title char-
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acter is a Saxon knight who not only supports Richard, the Norman king of England, but also accompanies him on his crusades to the Holy Land. Ivanhoe
and the Lady Rowena, a direct descendant of the last
Saxon king, are very much in love, but Ivanhoes father, who is also Lady Rowenas guardian, has disinherited him for his support of a Norman king and is
scheming to marry her off to Lord thelstane, the
most powerful Saxon lord in England.
Poem of the Cid
Author: Unknown
First published: c. 1140, as Cantar del mo Cid
The hero of this great epic poem is based on
Rodrigo Daz de Vivar. He emerged at the head of a
private army of knights in the midst of the political
chaos that marked the eleventh century efforts of the
Spanish states to reconquer the Iberian Peninsula
from the Moorish states. Rodrigo had to anticipate
the shifting alliances and conflicts among the Spanish states, the Moorish states, and the outside forces
that attempted to take advantage of the chaos. In the
poem, this Machiavellian figure becomes a great patriot whose fidelity to his king and the nascent notion
of a Spanish state is rewarded with ingratitude and
even perfidy.
Romance of the Three Kingdoms
Author: Luo Guanzhong
First published: mid-fourteenth century, as Sanguo
zhi yanyi
This epic novel treats the political turmoil and the
military campaigns that followed the Yellow Turban
Rebellion against the Eastern Han Empire. The three
kingdoms of the titleWei, Wu, and Shuenter
into a precarious and frequently broken truce. The
fortunes of each of the kingdoms are shown to rise
and fall not simply on the skills of their kings but
even more on the skills of the military advisers serving those kings. The novel chronicles the many
schemes and battles that lead eventually to the defeat
of both the Shu and Wu kingdoms by the Wei and the
ascension to power of Ssu-Ma Yen as the first Emperor of China.
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The Saracen Blade
Author: Frank Yerby
First published: 1952
Although he has been much criticized for refusing
to address issues of race in his fiction and although
his early efforts and even some of his later novels can
rightly be dismissed as historical romances or costume novels, Yerby was actually a fairly accomplished writer of historical novels. The Saracen
Blade is a competent and even insightful treatment of
the Crusades. Beyond some melodramatic inventions, Yerby demonstrates an awareness of the broad
cultural conflicts that formed the backdrop to the specific battles and other historical events. Moreover, he
takes pains to present a culturally balanced view of
those events, representing with some nuances both
the Christian and the Muslim perspectives on them.
The Tale of the Heiki
Author: Kakuichi
First published: 1371, as Heike monogatari
This classic epic of Japanese literature first appeared in oral versions, with the bulk of the composition being attributed, in the folk tradition, to a monk
named Yukinaga. The most widely read and first authoritative written version, however, was completed
by Kakuichi two centuries after the events described
in the work. The main theme of The Tale of the Heiki
is the Buddhist concept of impermanence, especially
as it is reflected in the shifting centers of military and
political power and in the stature of individual warriors. The work is a stylized account of the Gempei
Wars (1180-1185), in which the Taira clan first defeated the Minamoto clan and then was defeated
by it.
Spanish Conquest
Aztec
Author: Gary Jennings
First published: 1980
Jenningss novel is the first in a five-novel series,
which also includes Aztec Autumn (1998), Aztec
Blood (2002), Aztec Rage (2006), and Aztec Fire
American Revolution
Drums Along the Mohawk
Author: Walter D. Edmonds
First published: 1936
One of the best-known novels about the American
Revolution (1775-1783), Drums Along the Mohawk
is set in the Mohawk River Valley of upstate New
York, at that time the frontier between colonial settle-
War Literature
ments and the territory of the Iroquois. Allied with
the British and the Tory colonists who remained
loyal to the British crown, the Iroquois terrorized the
colonial settlers. Moreover, when the settlers banded
together to present an effective fighting force, they
had to leave their homes, their crops and animals, and
sometimes their wives and children defenseless.
Napoleonic Wars
Horatio Hornblower series
Author: C. S. Forester
First published: 1937-1967
Chronologically, this is the second novel in the
eleven-novel series following Horatio Hornblowers
experiences as a British naval officer during the Napoleonic Wars. Published in 1952, Lieutenant Hornblower was the seventh novel of the series in order
of publication but seems to have been the pivotal
novel in terms of securing the popularity of the series
on both sides of the Atlantic. Chronologically, the
other novels in the series include Mr. Midshipman
Hornblower (1950), Hornblower and the Hotspur
(1962), Hornblower and the Crisis (1967), Hornblower and the Atropos (1953), Beat to Quarters
(1937; also known as The Happy Return), Ship of the
Line (1938), Flying Colours (1938), Commodore
Hornblower (1945), Lord Hornblower (1946), and
Admiral Hornblower in the West Indies (1958).
Master and Commander
Author: Patrick OBrian
First published: 1969
This is the first in a series of twenty novels featuring Captain Jack Aubrey and surgeon Stephen
Maturin, serving together with the British navy during the Napoleonic Wars. Considerably different
from the film adaptation in 2003, the novel follows
the career of the warship Sophie from helping to protect a convoy of British supply ships to preying on
French merchant ships to a vicious battle with a
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Spanish warship to its dramatic capture by a squadron of French warships. The novel establishes three
hallmarks of the series: OBrians great interest in the
intricacies of naval politics, in the physical workings
of ships of the period and the ways in which their
crews functioned, and in the individual personalities
of his characters.
Richard Sharpe series
Author: Bernard Cornwell
First published: 1981-2006
Set during the Napoleonic period, Cornwells series follows the title character across several continents and a broad range of adventures and misadventures. Sharpe is introduced as a private serving with
the British East India Company in India, serves in the
extended campaigns against the French in Portugal
and Spain, participates as a field-promoted officer in
the Battle of Waterloo, and visits St. Helena and meets
Napoleon on his way to Chile on a privately commissioned mission. The series was not initially published
in chronological order. It eventually included twentyone numbered novels and three numbered short stories, from Sharpes Tiger to Sharpes Devil.
War and Peace
Author: Leo Tolstoy
First published: 1865-1869, as Voyna i mir
The greatest war novel ever written, War and
Peace treats Napoleons invasion of Russia, which to
that point was the greatest military undertaking and
the greatest military debacle in human history. Told
from the Russian point of view, with much attention
to the class structure of Russian society, this twelvehundred-page novel is equal to Napoleons grand
ambition and the size of his Grande Arme to the
vastness of the Russian landscape and of the desolation left by the retreating Russians burned earth
policy and the great scope of the Russian effort, materially and morally, to drive the Antichrist from the
motherland. Every ambitious war novel written since
War and Peace has inevitably been compared to it
and has been found wanting.
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The Trilogy
Author: Henryk Sienkiewicz
First published: 1884-1888
Although Sienkiewicz received the Nobel Prize in
Literature in 1905, he is remembered today primarily
as the author of the international best seller Quo
Vadis (1896). In his trilogy, Sienkiewicz synthesized
the conventions of the historical epic with aspects of
naturalism, then a relatively new literary movement
derived from the controversial theories of scientific
determinism. Ogniem i mieczem (1884; With Fire
and Sword, 1890) focuses on a Cossack revolt
against Polish rule. Potop (1886; The Deluge, 1891)
treats a catastrophic Swedish invasion of Poland.
Pan Wouodyjowski (1888; Pan Michael, 1893, also
known as Fire in the Steppe, 1992) depicts the seventeenth century conflicts between Poland and the Ottoman Empire, which halted the Ottoman advance
into eastern and central Europe.
Gunga Din
Author: Rudyard Kipling
First published: 1892
The best known of Kiplings Barrack-Room Ballads, Gunga Din focuses on the hard existence and
unexpected nobility of an Indian water carrier for the
British forces on the Afghan frontier. The poem exploits the fact that the title character is regarded as an
War Literature
inferior by most soldiers in the army that he serves
and that, when he is noticed, it is generally as the target of indignities. The narrator of the poem, however,
recounts how this unlikely figure heroically gave his
life to save the lives of the narrator and many of his
fellow soldiers.
The Siege of Krishnapur
Author: J. G. Farrell
First published: 1973
Set during the Indian Mutiny or Sepoy Rebellion
of 1857, Farrells novel focuses on the siege of a
small fictional town. Told from the points of view of
the British residents of the besieged town, the novel
shows how those residents struggle to continue their
daily lives without the Indian laborers on whom so
much of their social rituals and basic comfort depend.
Despite the inevitable leveling effects of the siege,
the residents are also unable to let go of their class
consciousness. Even cholera, scurvy, and general
starvation are not enough to subvert completely their
ingrained notions of who they arewhich is, ironically, what dooms both the town and the rebellion to
which it falls victim.
Crimean War
The Charge of the Light Brigade
Author: Alfred, Lord Tennyson
First published: 1855
As part of his duties as the British poet laureate,
Tennyson produced poems on events of national interest. This poem celebrates the heroism of British
cavalry that charged down a valley into Russian artillery fire during the Battle of Balaclava. The battle occurred during the Crimean War, which is now largely
remembered as the only conflict involving most of
the major European powers between the Napoleonic
Wars and World War I. Tennysons poem turned a
military debacle into an iconic, if tragic, demonstration of national character.
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Andersonville
Author: MacKinlay Kantor
First published: 1955
For this historical novel about the horrors endured
by Union prisoners of war in the prison camp near
Andersonville, Georgia, Kantor received the Pulitzer
Prize. Although Kantor drew on historical sources
(such as 1879s Andersonville: A Story of Rebel Military Prisons, by John McElroy) that were largely biased in favor of Northern antipathy toward the Confederates, his novel is notable for his attempt to
present balanced portraits of the key historical figures, especially the vilified camp commandant, Henry
Wirz. Likewise, the novel provides a broad spectrum
of fictional figures representative of the factions
among the prisoners and even among the residents of
the surrounding countryside.
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Cold Mountain
Author: Charles Frazier
First published: 1997
Set in the closing months of the American Civil
War, this debut novel by Charles Frazier juxtaposes
the stories of W. P. Inman, a wounded Confederate
veteran who decides to desert, and his love interest,
Ada Monroe, who has moved from Charleston to the
supposed safety of the mountains of North Carolina.
As Inman travels the 250 miles to Cold Mountain and
Ada, he confronts all sorts of scurrilous characters
and is hounded by the Home Guard. Meanwhile, Ada
has to cope with her fathers death and survives
largely because of her growing friendship with a
mountain woman named Ruby Thewes. The lovers
reunite but only long enough for her to become pregnant with his child.
The Killer Angels
Author: Michael Shaara
First published: 1974
In this sprawling novel, Shaara attempted to describe the Battle of Gettysburg from the perspectives
of as many of the combatants as possible. The result
is an intimate sense of the intensity with which the
battle was fought, the confusion that very often
caused opportunities to be lost or advantages to be
gained by both sides, and the terrible carnage that the
soldiers on both sides somehow managed to endure
even when it became clear that the battle was moving
toward some climactic slaughterwhich turned out
to be Picketts Charge. The novel received the Pulitzer Prize and was adapted for a landmark television
miniseries.
The March
Author: E. L. Doctorow
First published: 2005
In his previous novels, Doctorow has experimented with the conventions of the historical novel
and has brought a postmodern sensibility to his treatment of historical subjects and to his fictional reconstruction of historical eras. In this novel, which
depicts General William Tecumseh Shermans devastating march across Georgia in the fall of 1864,
Doctorow explores the paradoxes in Shermans pub-
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lic persona, the ambiguities in his personal character,
and the complexities in his temperament. Sherman is
more a focal than a truly central character, however,
for the novel presents characters representative of the
many types of people affected by the devastation of a
sixty-mile-wide and three-hundred-mile-long section of Georgia by sixty thousand loosely controlled
troops.
The Red Badge of Courage
Author: Stephen Crane
First published: 1895
The best-known and most critically acclaimed
novel about the American Civil War, The Red Badge
of Courage was a largely imaginative work, inspired
by Cranes fascination with photographs of the battlefields and his dissatisfaction with the generally dry
reminiscences of veterans. The short novel focuses
on a young soldier named Henry Fleming. In his second battle, he breaks from the Union lines as the Confederates attack. Finding himself among either other
deserters or the wounded, he is embarrassed by his
lack of a wound. However, an argument with an artillery man leaves him with a gash in the head, and
when he returns to his unit, his injury is accepted as a
battle wound. In the next days battle, Fleming becomes almost recklessly courageous, inspiring his
fellow soldiers and impressing their officers.
Spanish-American War
Cuba Libre
Author: Elmore Leonard
First published: 1998
Leonards novel was published on the hundredth
anniversary of the event that made the SpanishAmerican War inevitable, the explosion on the battleship Maine in Havana harbor. Although Leonard
had begun his career as a novelist writing Westerns,
this foray into the genre of the historical novel at the
height of his fame as a crime novelist surprised reviewers and readers. However, the novel explores familiar Leonard themesin particular, the way that
most moneymaking schemes inevitably become
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Boer Wars
Ladysmith
Author: Giles Foden
First published: 1999
In this, one of the most significant novels about
the Boer War, Foden focuses on the lengthy Boer
siege of the British town of Ladysmith. The siege followed some early Boer victories over the British,
which surprised not just the British military and government but also observers from all over the world.
The outcome of the siege became a critical issue for
the British and the Boers, not only because the town
was located near the Boer republics and strategically
important but also because of the psychological effect of a clear victory for the Boers or even a stalemate for the British.
Mexican Revolution
The Underdogs
Author: Mariano Azuela
First published: 1916, as Los de abajo
Written while Azuela served as a surgeon with
Pancho Villas forces in northern Mexico in the mid1910s, this novel is not only the most significant
work about the decade-long Mexican Revolution but
also one of the most influential works of social protest in Mexican and Latin American literature.
Azuela conveys the massive dislocations of the population caused by the almost continuously shifting alliances that made each successive leaders hold on
power very tenuous. Likewise, he captures the extraordinary brutality of the conflict, which was fueled as much by feverishly confused ideologies as by
ideological fervor.
World War I
All Quiet on the Western Front
Author: Erich Maria Remarque
First published: 1929
One of the most highly regarded novels to come
out of World War I, All Quiet on the Western Front is
also one of the few German novels about that war to
have been made widely available in translation. It focuses on a group of school friends who are encouraged to enlist for idealistic reasons that quickly seem
bitterly delusory amid the carnage of trench warfare.
When the soldiers return to their homes on leave,
they realize that in going off to save their homeland,
they have lost all connection to home.
Birdsong
Author: Sebastian Faulks
First published: 1993
This novel is the middle volume of Faulkss
French Trilogy, which also includes The Girl at the
Lion dOr (1989) and Charlotte Gray (1998). The
most commercially successful and critically acclaimed novel of the trilogy, Birdsong has, moreover, been one of the most popular and most highly
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regarded British novels of the last quarter century.
The main character is Stephen Wraysford, and the
primary focus is on his experiences during World
War I, especially during the great British offensive
along the Somme. A parallel narrative concerns the
efforts of his granddaughter, Elizabeth, to learn about
his wartime experiences more than a half century
later.
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Clerambault: The Story of an Independent
Spirit During the War
Author: Romain Rolland
First published: 1920, as Clrambault: Histoire
dune conscience libre pendant la guerre
Most remembered for his ten-novel cycle Jean
Christophe (1904-1912), Rolland received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1915. Five years later, this
novel presented a powerful indictment of all wars.
The major character struggles to come to terms with
his sons death in combat during World War I.
Throughout the novel, father and son are out of step.
Initially, the father is skeptical about the causes and
ramifications of the war, while his son is stirred
deeply by a sense of the momentousness of the war.
Then as the son experiences the horror of the trenches
and becomes profoundly disenchanted, the father
finds himself searching for ways to express his heightened patriotism. In the end, the main character embraces pacifism and is accused of being traitorous.
Collected Poems
Author: Rupert Brooke
First published: 1915
One of the best-known British poets of World
War I, Brooke was twenty-seven when he died of
blood poisoning on his way to the battlefield at
Gallipoli. He had experienced relatively little of the
horrors of the trench warfare that would transform
much of northern France into a muddy, carnagestrewn wasteland. Shortly before he died, Brooke
wrote a series of patriotic sonnets that captured the
intense patriotism and navet of prewar Britain. The
most remembered of these sonnets are Peace,
Safety, The Dead, and The Soldier, considered by most to be Brookes signature poem.
The Complete Poems of Wilfred Owen
Author: Wilfred Owen
First published: 1963, edited by C. Day Lewis
Owen served on the western front in 1916 and
1917, participating in the Battle of the Somme. While
recuperating from shell shock, Owen met Siegfried
Sassoon, who influenced Owens composition of a
series of poems in which he sought to describe his
own wartime experience and to emphasize the pity
War Literature
underlying all battlefield experience. Only a few of
these poems were published before Owen returned to
the front, where he perished one week before the Armistice. His best-known poems include Anthem for
Doomed Youth, Dulce et Decorum Est, and the
never completed Strange Meeting.
The Enormous Room
Author: E. E. Cummings
First published: 1922
In this autobiographical novel, Cummings recreates his four-month imprisonment in France during
World War I. A volunteer ambulance driver, Cummings was the recipient of a series of letters from another driver who in very strong terms denounced the
war. Although Cummings himself was simply the recipient of these letters, he along with the writer was
imprisoned on suspicion of disloyalty to the Allied
cause. Following American diplomatic intervention,
Cummings was released and returned to the United
States just as the entry of American troops into the
Allied effort on the western front was escalating.
A Farewell to Arms
Author: Ernest Hemingway
First published: 1929
Hemingways novel is set in northeastern Italy, in
the region surrounding the Isonzo River, where a series of great battles were fought between the Italian
and Austro-Hungarian forces during World War I.
The main character is Frederic Henry, an American
serving as a volunteer with the Italian ambulance
corps. While he is recuperating from wounds, he falls
in love with an English nurse, Catherine Barkley.
Eventually he returns to the front lines, but the anarchic brutality that follows an Italian retreat from the
Isonzo convinces him to flee to neutral Switzerland
with Catherine, who is pregnant with their child. The
child is stillborn, and Catherine dies in childbirth.
The Good Soldier: vejk
Author: Jaroslav Haek
First published: 1921-1923, as Osudy dobrho
vojka vejka za sv0tove vlky
When the Czech writer Jaroslav Haek died of tuberculosis in 1923, he had completed only four of the
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projected six books about vejk (often rendered as
Schweik). The four completed books have subsequently been published for the most part as a single
book. The tone of the work is clearly satiric, with
Schweik repeatedly demonstrating the ridiculousness of the Austro-Hungarian military, its other institutions, and the continued viability of the empire itself. Haek is able to sustain the satire because
Schweik remains an ambiguous figure; that is, one is
never sure whether he is a clever malcontent or is
simply an imbecile who accidentally or coincidentally makes those around him seem ridiculous.
In Flanders Fields
Author: John McCrae
First published: 1915
The best-known poem about World War I, In
Flanders Fields was written by a Canadian physician,
John McCrae, who was serving as a battlefield surgeon with the British forces in Belgium. Following the
very costly Second Battle of Ypres, during which one
of McCraes closest friends was killed, McCrae wrote
In Flanders Fields as a memorial to his dead friends
and, by extension, to all of the war dead. A practiced
poet and a military veteran who had served during the
Boer War, McCrae captured the terrible pathos of
war while avoiding the usual bromides about the glorious sacrifices made by the war dead. In the last year
of the war, McCrae himself died from pneumonia.
Parades End
Author: Ford Madox Ford
First published: 1924-1928
Ford may be most remembered for The Good Soldier (1915), which remains one of the most cited illustrations of the use of an unreliable narrator, but
this tetralogy of novels about a British officers experiences in the trenches during World War I is arguably his masterwork. The main character is Christopher Tietjens, the scion of prominent family of Tory
gentry, and the novels trace his deepening preoccupation with sustaining both his commitment to the
war and his determination to conduct himself honorably. The four novels of the tetralogy include Some
Do Not (1924), No More Parades (1925), A Man
Could Stand Up (1926), and The Last Post (1928).
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Paths of Glory
Author: Humphrey Cobb
First published: 1935
Published in the mid-1930s when another world
war seemed to be increasingly inevitable, Paths of
Glory offered a scathing indictment of military culture and command structure. Set in World War I, the
story hinges on a French generals first ordering an
impossible attack against a German position and then
ordering the execution of forty arbitrarily selected
French soldiers as a punishment for the cowardice
evident in the failure to achieve the attacks objective. In Stanley Kubricks film adaptation, Colonel
Dax, the commander of the units that spearheaded the
attack, provides an uncompromisingly moral perspective, but in Cobbs novel, he is more ineffectual,
mitigating only by degrees what is unambiguously
morally outrageous.
Regeneration Trilogy
Author: Pat Barker
First published: 1991-1995
Barkers highly regarded trilogy includes Regeneration (1991), The Eye in the Door (1993), and The
Ghost Road (1995). The first novel was a finalist for
the Booker Prize, and the third novel received that
prize. The trilogy about World War I is set primarily
in a British army hospital, where a psychiatrist
named W. H. R. Rivers attempts to treat soldiers suffering from shell shock. One of his patients is the
aristocratic poet Siegfried Sassoon, whose commitment to the facility has kept him from being tried for
treason for publicly expressing his increasingly virulent antiwar sentiments. At the opposite end of the
spectrum is the working-class character Billy Prior,
whose premonitions about his terrible death in the
trenches manifest themselves first in indiscriminate
sexual affairs and then in bisexuality.
A Soldier of the Great War
Author: Mark Helprin
First published: 1991
The title character, now an elderly man on his way
to visit his daughter, impulsively joins a much younger man on a seventy-kilometer walk to their destinations. Along the way, the title character reminisces
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about his life and, in particular, recounts his experiences during World War I. Having enlisted in the
navy to avoid the carnage of the ground war, he was
assigned to a riverboat patrolling first near the Austrian front to monitor enemy movements and then in
Sicily to apprehend deserters. He himself eventually
becomes a deserter, barely escapes execution, serves
with the infantry, is wounded, falls in love with a
nurse who is killed in an air attack on her hospital,
and ends up after the war in Vienna, tracking down
the pilot responsible for her death.
Three Soldiers
Author: John Dos Passos
First published: 1921
One of the most significant American novels
about World War I, Three Soldiers is, in contrast to
the modernist experimentation with form and language in Manhattan Transfer (1925) and The U.S.A.
Trilogy (1937), a work set squarely in the realist tradition. The three soldiers of the title are Andrews
from Virginia, Chrisfield from Indiana, and Fuselli
from California. The novel describes the ways in
which the soldiers training and the authoritarian regimen of military life combine to reduce their sense of
individuality and of the significance of their individual fates. Despite their very different temperaments
and ambitions, all three soldiers are left irreparably
brutalized by their experiences in uniform.
Under Fire
Author: Henri Barbusse
First published: 1916, as Le Feu
Written while Barbusse was still serving in the
trenches with the French army during World War I,
Under Fire imitates the form and style of a journal,
and its narrator moves anecdotally from one days
experiences to the next. The narrator is a member of a
squad of French volunteers who responded patriotically to the German invasion and try to maintain
their sense of purpose in the midst of a conflict that
has acquired a scope terribly beyond any cause. The
novel is notable for its unsparingly realistic descriptions of the hardships of life in the trenches and the
carnage of trench warfare.
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The Wars
Author: Timothy Findley
First published: 1977
The recipient of the Governor-Generals Award
for fiction, Findleys novel stands as one of the major
Canadian works about World War I, even though it
was published just short of six decades after the Armistice. Like Wallace Stegners Angle of Repose
(1971), The Wars is framed as a historians reconstruction of past eventsin this case, the mysteries
surrounding the last days in the life of a young officer
named Robert Ross. Stationed on the western front,
Ross is increasingly traumatized by the cumulative
effect of his wartime experiences. Following his
gang rape by a group of soldiers, he madly sets free
a corral of horses and shoots dead the officer who
tries to stop him. He and the horses are eventually
caught in a barn, and when it is set on fire, Ross suffers terrible burns, from which he ultimately dies.
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Homage to Catalonia
Author: George Orwell
First published: 1938
In this memoir of his experiences during the Spanish Civil War, Orwell focuses as much on the divisions on the Republican side as on the battles fought
between the Republican and Fascist forces. A communist who was opposed to Stalinism, Orwell joined
the POUM militia on the Republican side, but in less
than a year after his arrival in Spain, the Republican
leadership had outlawed POUM because the Republican cause had become increasingly dependent on
Soviet aid and dominated by Soviet political advisers. After barely escaping a Stalinist purge of antiStalinist elements on the Republican side, Orwell became a lifelong critic of totalitarian communism.
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Sino-Japanese War
Empire of the Sun
Author: J. G. Ballard
First published: 1984
The protagonist of this autobiographical novel is
Jim Graham, a British boy who is living with his parents in Shanghai when the Japanese overwhelm the
city. Separated from his parents, Jim is eventually
picked up by the Japanese and sent to a civilian detention center. The novel chronicles the ways in which
he learns to survive by his wits and sometimes manages to survive by sheer luck. Despite his awareness
of the brutality of his Japanese captors, the boy inevitably admires their proud bearing and martial discipline. The novel vividly depicts the deprivation of the
wars final months and the uncertainty of its closing
weeks.
Music on the Bamboo Radio
Author: Martin Booth
First published: 1997
Like J. G. Ballards Empire of the Sun, Booths
novel treats the Sino-Japanese War that merged into
the broader war in Asia and the Pacific between the
Allies and the Japanese. Also, like Ballard, Booth has
chosen to depict these events through the perspective
of an English boy separated from his parents by the
Japanese attack against the city in which they are living, in this case Hong Kong. Unlike Ballards protagonist, however, Nicholas Holford ends not in a detention camp but adopted by a Chinese family, and he
becomes increasingly involved in sabotage and other
clandestine activities of Chinese Communist partisans.
Red Sorghum
Author: Yan Mo
First published: 1992
Set in rural China during the period of the Japanese invasion and occupation, Red Sorghum was
originally published as a series of four short novels.
The sorghum crop is at the center of the novel, literally as well as symbolically, for the survival of the
World War II
Armageddon
Author: Leon Uris
First published: 1964
In this, his fifth, novel, Uris provides a contemporary history of the city that a quarter century earlier
had become the monument-dominated capital of
Adolf Hitlers Third Reich. The grandiose plans of
Hitler and his architects had just begun to be realized,
however, when the city became a favorite target of
the Allied air war against Germany. Then, although
largely reduced to ruins, it became the setting for the
wars climactic and bloodiest battle. Following that
apocalyptic framing of Hitlers suicide, it then was
rebuilt, but as an occupied and militarily divided city
that became a symbolic as well as actual focal point
of Cold War tensions.
Battle Cry
Author: Leon Uris
First published: 1953
Based on Uriss own combat experience as a Marine, this novel focuses on a communications company of the Sixth Marine Regiment, following its
members from boot camp through some of the bloodiest battles of the Pacific campaigns in World War II
Guadalcanal, Tarawa, and Saipan. The novel is narrated by the companys battle-hardened sergeant,
and it follows the pattern of many GI novels in emphasizing the ethnic diversity among the men in the
company, which includes a farm boy from Indiana, a
Native American, and a Chicano.
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Beasts of No Nation
Author: Uzodinma Iweala
First published: 2005
Relatively young boys have sometimes been enlisted into armies desperate for manpower (such as
the German Home Guard in the closing months of
World War II), but the forced recruitment of very
young boys, even preadolescents, as a deliberate
strategy for creating an easily indoctrinated fighting
force is a relatively recent phenomenon seen primarily among insurgents in a number of African and several Asian nations. Iwealas novel is set in a West African nation. It is narrated by a boy soldier who loses
his childhood and almost loses all sense of himself
amid the commonplace horrors of a war as ill-defined
as his terror-sustained allegiance to his commander.
A Bell for Adano
Author: John Hersey
First published: 1944
That Herseys novel, published in wartime, was
awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1945, as World War II
was drawing to a close, suggests the sort of appeal
that it initially had. The novel is set in Italy after the
Americans and British have driven the German
forces back to the Italian mainland. The main character, an Italian American officer, becomes committed
to replacing the bell in a village church that had been
confiscated by the Fascists to be melted down and recycled into munitions. Although still admired for its
craftsmanship, the novel has been increasingly regarded as the sort of approbative tale that is, in effect,
a type of relatively benign propaganda.
Black Rain
Author: Masuji Ibuse
First published: 1966, as Kuroi ame
In Japan, Ibuse remains an important literary figure of his generation, though he has not achieved the
stature, through translation into English and other
Western languages, of some of his contemporaries.
Drawing on the diaries of survivors of the atomic
bombing of Hiroshima, Ibuse created a masterpiece
of documentary realism in Black Rain. The central
characters are an elderly man and his niece, whose
determined attempts to reconstruct their lives from
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the absolute devastation of the bombing are shadowed by the specter of the long-term effects of the
black rain, or radioactive fallout from the atomic
blast.
Bomber
Author: Len Deighton
First published: 1970
Although Deighton may be best known for his series of Cold War espionage novels featuring Bernard
Samson, he is also the author of several novels and
nonfiction books about World War II. Indeed, according to several critics, Bomber may be his most
accomplished novel. It focuses on a single Royal Air
Force bombing raid against the German industrial
plants in the Ruhr Valley. The chapters follow the
progress of the raid from hour to hour, and the suspense is heightened by the crews increasing awareness that the raid is not going as planned.
The Bridge over the River Kwai
Author: Pierre Boulle
First published: 1952, as Pont de la rivire Kwai
Although Boulles novel won the Prix Sainte
Beuve and was adapted for an acclaimed film, it has
continued to generate controversy. The novel deals
with the hurried construction of a railroad between
Bangkok, Thailand, and Rangoon, Burma, to support
the Japanese conquest of Burma during World
War II. The massive project was completed with almost no heavy machinery. Instead, the Japanese relied on native conscripts and Allied prisoners of war
to complete the work with rudimentary tools. The
controversy surrounds Boulles suggestion that
Allied officers in effect collaborated with the Japanese in an ill-conceived effort to protect their men.
The Brotherhood of War
Author: W. E. B. Griffin
First published: 1983-2001
Griffin is the pseudonym of William Edmund
Butterworth III, who has written more than a half
dozen popular series of novels, most of which focus
on the military. This series of nine novels follows a
group of American Army officers who initially
served as lieutenants during World War II and re-
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mained in the military through the immediate postVietnam era. The series is notable because its primary emphasis is not on the combat experiences of
these officers, though that certainly is described, but,
instead, on the tactics and strategies required to work
changes through the military and political bureaucracies.
Castle Keep
Author: William Eastlake
First published: 1965
Just before the Battle of the Bulge, a loosely organized group of American soldiers are taken out of the
front lines and billeted at a Belgian estate for muchneeded rest and recuperation. Initially the owners of
the estate welcome the soldiers as protectors, but
when the German offensive in the Ardennes begins
and the American commanding officer decides to
turn the estate into a fortified position, the owners
recognize that he is putting at great risk not just the
lives of his soldiers and their own lives but also the
estate and all of the irreplaceable artwork and family
heirlooms that their mansion contains. The novel
also explores the tension in each soldier between
conditioned discipline and unit cohesion, and selfassertion and self-preservation.
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Catch-22
Author: Joseph Heller
First published: 1961
This antiwar novel was published just before the
escalation of the Vietnam War and is associated with
the antiwar movement. However, it is actually a
novel about World War II. Specifically, it satirically
treats the experiences of American bomber crews in
the Mediterranean theater. The title, which has
passed into the general lexicon, refers to the circular
logic of bureaucratic policies. Specifically, if an airman contends that he is too crazy to fly any more missions, he has, in effect, proved his sanity because no
sane person would want to continue flying missions,
given the losses that the bomber force is suffering.
The main character, a bombardier named Yossarian,
struggles against the insanity of his wartime experience until he finally decides that his only viable option is to disappear.
Cryptonomicon
Author: Neal Stephenson
First published: 1999
This massive novel (918 pages in hardcover) presents two parallel stories. The first follows the efforts
of the British cryptographers based at Bletchley Park
who eventually cracked the complex codes produced
by the Nazi Enigma machine. That extremely complex device was used to communicate with the Uboat fleet that was devastating the British merchant
fleet, the United Kingdoms main source of military
supplies and foodstuffs. The second story is set in the
near future and concerns an effort to use computerdriven cryptography to create an impenetrable data
center in a nation called Kinakuta, which resembles
the East Indian Kingdom of Brunei.
The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner
Author: Randall Jarrell
First published: 1945
Given the great scope and length of many of the
most acclaimed American novels about World
War II, it is ironic that this, one of the best-known
American poems about the war, is only five lines
long. The ball-turret gunner operated a machine gun
that swiveled 360 degrees within a plexiglass hemi-
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sphere attached to the bottom of the B-27 bombers
that were the mainstay of the American forces in the
costly air war against Germany. The gunner was an
easy target, and the ball turret was often very difficult
to escape when a bomber was badly damaged.
The End of My Life
Author: Vance Bourjaily
First published: 1947
Bourjailys first novel caused reviewers to make
complimentary comparisons to Ernest Hemingways
A Farewell to Arms (1929), and for several decades it
was regarded as one of the best American novels
about World War II. The novels standing has, however, declined in proportion to the decline in Bourjailys broader reputation as a novelist. An autobiographical novel, The End of My Life presents the
experiences of Skinner Galt, an ambulance driver in
North Africa, who eventually recognizes that whatever meaning war may have on a political level, it is
always an exercise in horrible absurdity for the individual soldiers.
Execution
Author: Colin MacDougall
First published: 1958
One of the most acclaimed Canadian novels about
World War II, Execution was MacDougalls only
novel. It follows a Canadian infantry unit through the
course of the Italian campaign, and, dramatically and
thematically, it revolves around two executions. The
first is the execution of two Italian deserters that the
Canadians have adopted into their unit as cooks and
genuinely like. The second is the execution of one of
their own, a goodhearted but mentally limited soldier
who has become involved with a group of soldiers engaged in the black market who murder an American.
Fires on the Plain
Author: Shfhei boka
First published: 1951, as Nobi
Set in the Philippines following the American invasion to retake the islands from the Japanese, this
novel vividly details the experiences of a single Japa-
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nese soldier, Private Tamura. Ostracized by the soldiers in his unit, Tamura decides to desert and finds
himself caught between the ambiguous battle lines,
between soldiers on two sides who equally despise
him and among a civilian population conditioned to
hate him. His only recourse is to flee ever more
deeply into the jungle, where survival is a more primal exercise and spectral experience than it is even
on the battlefield.
From Here to Eternity
Author: James Jones
First published: 1951
Joness first novel remains his best known. The
first in a somewhat loosely connected trilogy, From
Here to Eternity focuses on a group of American soldiers stationed in Hawaii in the months leading up to
the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The main characters are Sergeant Milt Warden, who becomes involved in an affair with the wife of his commanding
officer, and Private Robert E. Lee Prewitt, who resists all sorts of pressure to fight on the companys
elite boxing team. Though it focuses of these and
other individual soldiers, the novel is ultimately concerned with the prewar army as a self-defined institution.
The Gallery
Author: John Horne Burns
First published: 1947
Set in Naples after the American occupation of the
city, the novel treats the relationships among American soldiers and between those soldiers and the civilian population in and around the Galleria Umberto
Primo, an arcade of shops and bars at the center of the
city. The novels opening and closing sections are
called the Entrance and Exit, and the intervening
chapters shift between nine chapters called Portraits and eight transitional sections called Promenades. Each Portrait focuses on the tensions that
define an individual character, and each Promenade recounts, in the first person, a soldiers experiences from the North African theater to Sicily to the
invasion of Italy.
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Guard of Honor
Author: James Gould Cozzens
First published: 1948
This Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Cozzens
has long been regarded as one of the more significant American novels about World War II. Drawn
broadly from Cozzenss own experience as an information officer for General Henry H. Hap Arnold,
the commander of the U.S. Air Forces during the
war, the novel remains one of the few to focus on the
stateside military during the war. It centers on three
days events on a Florida air base, emphasizing the
ways in which the military bureaucracy and the personalities of individual officers intersect to define
each other.
Gunner Asch Tetralogy
Author: Hans Hellmut Kirst
First published: 1954-1955, 1964
A committed Nazi who gradually became increasingly disaffected by the regimes excesses and its
corruption of German institutions, Kirst is now best
known for his suspense novels, such as Night of
the Generals (1963), but all of his novels have satiric elements, and the satire is very close to the surface in the Gunner Asch novels, for which he first received international acclaim. The first three novels
were published as a trilogy called Zero Eight Fifteen
(1955-1957). They include The Revolt of Gunner
Asch (1955), Forward, Gunner Asch! (1956), and
The Return of Gunner Asch (1957). These novels
concern the increasingly absurd experiences of the title character, an enlisted man serving on the eastern
front. A fourth volume, What Became of Gunner
Asch (1964), follows the protagonist into the postwar
years.
Hiroshima
Author: John Hersey
First published: 1946
Now considered a forerunner of such movements
or genres as the New Journalism, the nonfiction
novel, and creative nonfiction, this slender volume
sparely but movingly documents the aftermath of the
dropping of the first atomic bomb on the Japanese
city of Hiroshima. Originally written as a four-part
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article for The New Yorker, Herseys book was not
the first account of the atomic bombing, but it was the
first account to focus on the recollections of Japanese
survivors. Ironically, this aspect of the narrative,
which has ensured its continuing appeal, was originally a point of concern for critics who thought that
Hersey was characterizing the enemy too sympathetically.
The Hope and The Glory
Author: Herman Wouk
First published: 1993 and 1994 respectively
This pair of novels has not achieved anywhere
near the commercial success or even the critical recognition of Wouks earlier pair of novels about
World War II, Winds of War (1971) and War and Remembrance (1988). Nonetheless, these novels are
marked by a thorough, albeit pro-Israeli, understanding of the historical events and figures that shaped the
first four decades of the existence of the modern state
of Israel. The Hope covers the events from the 1948
War of Independence up to the Six-Day War of 1967,
while The Glory covers events from the Yom Kippur
War (1973) through the peace agreement between Israel and Egypt. The complicated love lives of the two
main fictional characters provide contrived melodrama that is the novels main weakness.
Johnny Got His Gun
Author: Dalton Trumbo
First published: 1939
This antiwar novel was published in 1939 as
World War II became inevitable, but the novel actually concerns an American soldier, Joe Bonham,
terriblyalmost inconceivablyinjured by a shell
blast in the trenches of World War I. Bonham has lost
all of his limbs and, because of massive injuries to his
face, all of his senses except for the ability to feel
someone touching him. Nonetheless, his mind remains intact, and the novel presents his thoughts as
he comes to terms with the horror that he is completely isolated in what remains of his own body. The
novel was withdrawn from publication after Nazi
Germany invaded the Soviet Union, and because
Trumbo was blacklisted during the 1950s it was not
released again until the Vietnam era.
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The Jukebox Queen of Malta
Author: Nicholas Rinaldi
First published: 1999
The tiny, British-controlled island of Malta became strategically important during World War II
because it lay across the supply routes from Fascist
Italy to Libya, where the German Afrika Korps had
reversed early British victories and was threatening
Egypt and the Suez Canal. The island was subjected
to one of the longest sieges of the war, with German
bombers reducing many of the mostly stone buildings to rubble. The main character is an American radio operator who begins a passionate relationship
with the title character, a woman who travels around
the island repairing jukeboxes.
King Rat
Author: James Clavell
First published: 1962
Clavells first novel is drawn from his own experiences as a prisoner of war held for three years by the
Japanese at the notorious Changi Prison in Singapore. The title character is an American corporal,
generally referred to as the King, who has transformed his detention into a business opportunity and
has created a thriving business in black-market
goods. The ranking British officer in the camp rightly
views this black market as an exploitation of other
prisoners miseries, and he becomes determined to
prove that the King is guilty of collusion with the enemy. The pivotal character is the narrator, a young
British officer named Peter Marlowe, who cannot
help but admire the Kings ingenuity and audacity
but ultimately recognizes their moral cost.
Mister Roberts
Author: Thomas Heggen
First published: 1946
Like Herman Wouks The Caine Mutiny (1951),
Heggens novel has been adapted very successfully
for stage and for film. Also like The Caine Mutiny, it
focuses on the tensions between the captain and the
crew, not on a big warship such as a carrier, battleship, or cruiser, but on a support ship. Unlike the destroyer converted to a minesweeper in The Caine
Mutiny, however, the ship in Mister Roberts is a
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cargo ship operating far from the widely scattered
battlefronts of the Pacific theater. The story presents
a battle of wits between the well-meaning title character, respected by the crew but yearning for a combat assignment, and the ships captain, protecting his
ships clean record by perversely exerting his authority.
The Naked and the Dead
Author: Norman Mailer
First published: 1948
Mailers first novel remains the most highly regarded American novel about World War II. Set on a
Japanese-held island on which American forces have
landed, the novel features a broad range of characters, but the three focal characters are the aristocratic
and fascist-leaning General Cummings; his wellborn but more egalitarian aide, Lieutenant Hearn;
and the battle-hardened but hardly heroic Sergeant
Croft. The novel provides ample illustrations of the
brutality of combat in the Pacific, as well as manifold
evidence of the disjunction between the abstraction
of painstakingly developed campaign strategies and
the fluid realities of the battlefield. It vividly explores
the connections and disjunctions between the characters civilian lives and their military experiences.
The Painted Bird
Author: Jerzy Kosinski
First published: 1965
In his first and most enduring novel, Kosinski
chronicles the experiences of a Jewish-looking
young boy who is sent by his parents from a Polish
city into the ostensible safety of the countryside. The
peasants with whom the boy seeks refuge are typically as anti-Semitic as the Nazis, and his survival is
something of a miracle resulting from completely accidental turns in circumstance, the intercession of a
few beneficent individuals, and the boys own increasing store of survival skills. In the end, he is
adopted into a Russian military unit and finds a father
figure in an accomplished sniper. The novels closing provides a hopeful note about the boys capacity
to transcend at least some of the trauma of his formative experiences.
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Partisans
Author: Alistair MacLean
First published: 1982
Not as well known as The Guns of Navarone
(1957), Partisans also treats the Yugoslavian theater
during World War II, but it provides a more nuanced
sense of the very complicated range of contending
forces in that conflict. Although all Yugoslavian partisan groups are ostensibly resisting the German and
Italian occupation of their country, their military
strategies and actions are directed as much against
each other as against the occupiers. The three main
partisan groups are the Communists; the Serbian
Chetniks, who support the reinstatement of the Yugoslav monarchy; and the Croatian Ustashe, who
have a fascist ideology. MacLeans protagonist is
clearly a Nazi hater, but beyond that his allegiances
and aims are very ambiguous.
The Polish Officer
Author: Alan Furst
First published: 1995
The third novel in Fursts Night Soldiers series,
The Polish Officer is set primarily in Poland after the
German and Soviet conquest and partition of that nation. The main character, Captain Alexander de
Milja, is an expert mapmaker who becomes a pivotal
figure in the Polish underground and its attempts to
support the Polish government in exile. He takes the
lead in concealing Polands gold reserves from the
Nazis and Soviets and in smuggling those reserves
through Romania to Great Britain. While emphasizing de Miljas courage and ingenuity, Furst also conveys the physical and psychological strain caused by
his clandestine activities and his recurring impulse
simply to save himself regardless of the cost.
Run Silent, Run Deep
Author: Edward L. Beach, Jr.
First published: 1955
Drawing on his own extensive service as a submariner during World War II, Beach wrote this novel in
the middle of a lengthy and distinguished military career. It presents a vivid depiction of the experiences
of American submariners in the Pacific theater dur-
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ing World War II. The central characters are Commander P. J. Richardson and his executive officer,
Jim Bledsoe. Richardson is obsessed with sinking the
Japanese destroyer that destroyed the submarine he
had previously commanded as well as several others,
and the crew begins to question his decisions.
Bledsoe shifts from second-guessing Richardson to
pursuing his objectives after Richardson is accidentally disabled after suffering a fractured skull.
Slaughterhouse-Five
Author: Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
First published: 1969
With this novel and Cats Cradle (1963), Vonnegut made the dramatic transition from a littleknown writer of speculative fiction to one of the leading literary voices of the counterculture period. In
Slaughterhouse-Five, he startled readers by synthesizing aspects of historical and speculative fiction.
The novel includes a lengthy and harrowing account
of the American bombing of Dresden, seen through
the perspective of American prisoners of war, who
were afterward employed in the collection and disposal of the corpses of some of the tens of thousands
caught in the firestorm. Like Catch-22 (1961), this
novel about World War II became a major antiwar
work of the Vietnam era.
The Soldier
Author: Richard Powell
First published: 1960
Set in the Pacific in the months following the
American entry into World War II, this novel focuses
on the effects of the war on the career of Lieutenant
Colonel William A. Farralon. His assignment to a remote Pacific post serves as an unmistakable indication that his career is on a downturn. However, after
the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and most of the
other American and European bases in the Pacific
and Southeast Asia, Farralon takes advantage of a series of opportunities to distinguish himself. By the
end of the war, he has risen to the rank of general, and
his earlier fall from favor has been permanently
eclipsed by his wartime service.
War Literature
The Thin Red Line
Author: James Jones
First published: 1962
In this loose sequel to From Here to Eternity
(1951), Jones re-presents the major characters from
that novel under similar names. This novel provides a
fictional account of the Guadacanal campaignin
particular, the Battle for Hill 53. Jones emphasizes
that the sense of unit cohesion provided the individual
infantrymans only psychological defense against
the isolating terror of hand-to-hand combat in the
hellishly tropical environment. In his later nonfiction
study of the war and the art that it inspired, Jones
contrasts the battle for Guadacanal, the outcome of
which depended very much on the efforts of very
small groups of Marines, with the corporatization of
the war effort at Saipan, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa, the
outcomes of which were never in doubthowever
much their ultimate cost in blood and matriel may
have been miscalculated.
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A Town Like Alice
Author: Nevil Shute
First published: 1950
The protagonist of this novel is Jean Paget, an
Australian woman who is in Malaya at the time of the
Japanese invasion and is detained for the duration of
the war with a group of European women and children. During the course of their detainment, they are
helped by an Australian prisoner of war who steals
food and other supplies that keep them alive and then
accepts the punishment for those actions without implicating them. That punishment is so severe that
Jean mistakenly assumes that he has not survived the
war. The rest of the novel describes the convoluted
process by which they are eventually reunited and the
terms on which they decide to build a life for themselves in a rural Queensland community.
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crews, and his superior officers. Although he repeatedly exhibits great skill and daring, his need continually to push the limits becomes increasingly regarded
as recklessness and dangerous self-indulgence, especially since others seem to pay for the chances he
takes while he survives unscathed. Critics of the
novel have praised Herseys attention to technical
and sociological detail, but they have also suggested
that the density of detail is detrimental to the literary
value of the novel.
War of the Rats
Author: David L. Robbins
First published: 1999
One of the few noteworthy American novels
about the eastern front of World War II, War of the
Rats depicts the titanic battle for Stalingrad in all of
its terrible scope and ghastly particulars. The city had
quickly been reduced to rubble, and soldiers on both
sides were fed into prolonged battles for individual
city blocks and even individual buildings. Despite
the firepower of the masses of mechanized weapons
employed in the battle, the fighting was largely handto-hand and medieval in its ferocity. The novel provides a microcosm of the battle through the contest of
skill and wits played out between the most celebrated
German and Soviet snipers.
Williwaw
Author: Gore Vidal
First published: 1946
This novel is notable because it is the debut effort
of a long, prolific, and distinguished literary career,
because it was regarded as the first literary novel
about World War II to be published, and because it is
the only significant novel to treat the Aleutian theater
of the war. Vidal wrote the novel while serving with
the Navy on a supply ship. The title refers to a strong
wind that blows down from the snow-covered coastal
mountain peaks and collides with the warm air rising
up from the sea, creating violent storms and currents.
Given that the war in the Aleutians claimed far fewer
lives than the weather, among all branches of the military, it is important that Vidals novel is meteorologically as well as psychologically accurate.
Cold War
The Manchurian Candidate
Author: Richard Condon
First published: 1959
Condon has been described as one of the most
paranoid novelists ever. Certainly this landmark
novel of the Cold War captured the profound distrust
on both sides of the conflict. The novel begins with
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the capture of a platoon of American soldiers by the
Chinese during the Korean War. The soldiers are
brainwashed into believing that Sergeant Raymond
Shaw, an unlikely hero, has saved them from being
massacred. Shaw receives the Medal of Honor, but
after they all return to the United States, his captain,
Bennett Marco, gradually uncovers the truth that
Shaw has been programmed to perform a political assassination.
Once an Eagle
Author: Anton Myrer
First published: 1968
Although not highly regarded by literary critics,
Meyers best-known novel is one of only two works
of fiction on the recommended reading list for the
U.S. Armys Officer Professional Development program. The novel follows the careers of two officers
over three decades, from World War I to the beginnings of the Cold War in the years immediately following World War II. The two officers are very different in temperament and mores. Sam Damon is an
upright person in both his personal and his professional relationships; in contrast, Courtney Massengale is a much more Machiavellian character who has
very little sense of personal loyalty. The novel provides an intimately knowledgeable account of how
the military bureaucracy operates.
The Red Wheel
Author: Alexsander Solzhenitsyn
First published: 1983-1991, as Krasnoe koleso:
includes Avgust chetyrnadtsatogo, 1971,
expanded 1983 (August 1914, 1972, expanded
1989); Oktiabr shestnadtsatogo, 1984
(November 1916, 1999); Mart semnadtsatogo,
1986-1988 (partial translation as March 1917,
2006); Aprel semnadtsatogo, 1991 (partial
translation as April 1917, 2006)
Solzhenitsyn will be most remembered for his two
works about the Stalinist penal camps, Odin den
Ivana Denisovicha (1962; One Day in the Life of Ivan
Denisovich, 1963) and Arkhipelag GULag, 19181956: Opyt khudozhestvennogo issledovaniya (19731975; The Gulag Archipelago, 1974-1978). However, The Red Wheel, his cycle of novels covering the
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years from the Russian entry into World War I to the
collapse of the Russian monarchy in 1917, is a massive work of literary as well as historical merit. The
Red Wheel includes August 1914, November 1916,
March 1917, and April 1917, with the middle novels
consisting of two volumes each. Solzhenitsyn had
originally planned to carry the series through 1922,
or the Bolsheviks consolidation of power at the end
of the civil war and Lenins personal decline due to a
series of strokes.
Smileys People
Author: John le Carr
First published: 1980
This is the third novel in le Carrs Karla Trilogy,
which also includes Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1974)
and The Honourable Schoolboy (1977). All three focus on British intelligence agent George Smiley and
provide a perspective on Cold War espionage dramatically different from the glamorous, high-adventure doings in Ian Flemings James Bond series. If le
Carr is the master of the Cold War novel of intrigue,
then this portrait of a career spy who is not permitted
to settle quietly into retirement is his masterwork. Although Smiley maneuvers in a world in which violence is a very real and ugly hazard, the emphasis is
on his experienced understanding of the subtle surface indications that some clandestine scheme is being orchestrated.
Arab-Israeli Conflicts
Exodus
Author: Leon Uris
First published: 1958
A novel with epic sweep, Exodus depicts the violence that preceded and followed the declaration of a
Jewish state in Palestine. It begins with the efforts of
Jewish underground groups to smuggle refugees and
weapons into Palestine in anticipation of independence, and their violence against the British forces
that had been garrisoned in Palestine to prevent the
Jews and Arabs from prematurely intensifying their
inevitable conflict. Criticized for its consistent char-
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acterization of the Jews as courageous and its general
demonization of the Arabs, the novel presents its
Jewish protagonist, Ari Ben Canaan, as a very human
but undeniably representative figure.
Korean War
The Bridges at Toko-Ri
Author: James Michener
First published: 1953
The Bridges at Toko-Ri focuses on the experiences of carrier pilot Harry Brubaker. Having survived much air combat during World War II, Brubaker had just begun to settle comfortably back into
civilian life when he was recalled to service in the
Korean War. By the time that the mission to destroy the heavily defended bridges at Toko-Ri is announced, Brubaker is suffering from combat fatigue
and has become haunted by the foreboding that he
will not survive many more missions. Although he
manages to destroy the last of the bridges, his plane
goes down and he is killed by the Chinese infantry
who have shot down the helicopter sent to rescue
him.
The Hunters
Author: James Salter
First published: 1957
Like James Micheners The Bridges at Toko-Ri,
Salters first novel focuses on the air war over Korea,
but Salter is much more interested than Michener in
the way a fighter wing functionsin how the fighter
pilots compete for recognition and their alliances and
conflicts shape how they are led and how long they
manage to survive. Despite the complex tactics on
which each wing is trained and despite each pilots
dependence in combat on the wingman with whom
he is paired, flying fighters is ultimately a solitary test
of the pilots skill, courage, endurance, and temperament. Salters protagonist, Cleve Connell, eventually
downs a notorious MiG pilot known as Casey Jones
but cannot provide confirmation of the kill and so
attributes it to his own downed wingman.
M*A*S*H
Author: Richard Hooker
First published: 1968
Published at the height of the Vietnam War,
adapted for an experimental film directed by Robert
Altman, and providing the basis for one of the
longest-running and most acclaimed television series
of all time, this novel was based on Hornbergers experiences as a battlefield surgeon during the Korean
War and was actually more an irreverent take on military life than a pointedly antiwar work. Following
on the success of the film and television series, however, Hornbergerusing the pseudonym Richard
Hookerwrote two sequels in 1972 and 1977, and
collaborated with William E. Butterworth on a series
of twelve novels, published between 1974 and 1977,
that followed the mobile army surgical hospital
(MASH) surgeons to the far corners of the world.
War Trash
Author: Ha Jin
First published: 2004
Ha Jins highly regarded novel treats the Korean
War from the Chinese perspective. The novel is
framed as the memoir of its protagonist, Yu Yuan.
Drafted into the Chinese army after the Communist
takeover of China, he finds himself among the hundreds of thousands of troops sent across the Yalu
River to drive back the United Nations forces that
had routed the North Koreans. In addition to relating
Yus experiences on the march and in battle during a
bitterly cold winter, the novel treats his eventual capture by U.N. forces and his extended detention as a
prisoner of war.
Colonial Wars
The Dogs of War
Author: Frederick Forsyth
First published: 1974
The discovery of significant plutonium deposits
in a small African nation governed by a dictatorial regime leads a British industrialist to underwrite a mercenary force to remove the existing government and
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to replace it with one more disposed to sell the mineral rights under favorable terms. The novel details
the ways in which the mercenary force is recruited,
given some cohesion as a unit, equipped and supplied, and clandestinely transported to the target nation. The novel is purportedly based on Forsyths
own failed attempt to use a mercenary force to seize
the small nation of Equatorial Guinea and to offer it
as a haven for the Nigerian insurgents defeated in the
Biafran War.
The Four Feathers
Author: A. E. W. Mason
First published: 1902
Following the Mahdis conquest of Khartoum and
the death of Chinese Gordon, the British forces
massed in Egypt under Lord Kitchener to defeat the
Mahdis forces, who were driven equally by religious fervor and anticolonial resentments. The protagonist of this novel resigns from his unit as it is
about to be shipped overseas and is justifiably reviled
for his cowardice. Seeking to redeem himself, he
travels on his own to the Sudan, where, in order to
pass himself off as a native, he disfigures himself, infiltrates the Mahdis forces, and provides critical assistance to his former comrades in arms.
Guerrillas
Author: V. S. Naipaul
First published: 1975
One of Naipauls most unsparing, harrowing novels, Guerrillas concerns an uprising against the continuing colonial influence on a Caribbean island. The
three main characters are Roche, a South African exile with progressive political views; his disaffected
lover, an Englishwoman named Jane, who mistakes
her own world-weariness for depth of understanding
and reliable judgment; and Jimmy, a political radical
who disdains Roche and Jane but is willing to use
them, and anyone and anything available to him, to
promote his cause and his own movement toward the
centers of power. The novel explores the ease with
which the comfortable certainties of daily life can be
undermined.
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Cuban Revolution
The Death of Che Guevara
Author: Jay Cantor
First published: 1983
In this very ambitious first novel, Cantor has
sought to re-create fictionally the life of the Cuban
revolutionary, Che Guevara, who has become an increasingly iconic figure since his pointless death
while attempting to breathe life into a listless Bolivian insurgency in 1967. Cantor constructs the story
around a broad range of historical documents, from
personal diaries and correspondence to news accounts and government reports. Almost all of these
documents, however, are Cantors fictional creations, and taken together, they add layers of complexity and possibility to the portrait that the novel
provides of this personally and culturally enigmatic
figure.
Vietnam War
Dispatches
Author: Michael Herr
First published: 1977
This book, a seminal work of the New Journalism,
was published a decade after Herr traveled to South
Vietnam to report on the Vietnam War for Esquire.
The essays that he produced for that magazine as well
as for Rolling Stone, New American Review, New
York, and Crawdaddy were revised extensively and
synthesized into the continuing narrative of the book.
Nonetheless, that narrative consists largely of vignettes that convey, often with ironic or horrific immediacy, the grunts view of the war. The power of
the narrative derives from Herrs identification with
the average soldier and his recognition that however
close he comes to the fighting, he is more a witness
than a combatant.
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Going After Cacciato
Author: Tim OBrien
First published: 1978, revised 1989
The most acclaimed American novel about the
Vietnam War, Going After Cacciato combines the
documentary realism of OBriens other books about
the war with an extended episode of Magical Realism. The novel is divided into three types of chapters.
The narrative is organized around ten Observation
Post sections, set in November, 1968. In these sections, the main character, Paul Berlin, reflects on the
ironies, paradoxes, improbabilities, and hard realities
of the war. These sections also provide a narrative
frame for the other two types of sections: his memories of his units harrowing experiences in combat
between June and October and an extended fantasy
about his units pursuit across two continents of the
AWOL soldier Cacciato.
Meditations in Green
Author: Stephen Wright
First published: 1983
In this, his first novel, Wright presents the recollections of a veteran of the Vietnam War who is
attempting, through meditation exercises in which
he focuses on plants, to recover some sense of emotional and moral equilibrium. His recollections of the
war include characterizations of officers too selfcentered to inspire confidence in their leadership and
of soldiers too young to cope with the alternating
boredom and terror of war without using mind-altering drugs or retreating into varying degrees of psychotic detachment. The focal event involves an effort
to locate and recover the remains of an intelligence
patrol crew presumed lost when their helicopter went
down. The bodies are found gruesomely mutilated
and displayed.
No Mans Land
Author: Duong Thu Huong
First published: 2005
Perhaps the most internationally known Vietnamese dissident writer, Duong Thu Huong supported
the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong cause during
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the Vietnam War. Following the reunification of the
country, however, she became a critic of the abuses
of power and the corruption that she felt had become
endemic within the communist regime. Though not
pointedly political, her once popular novels were
banned, and she was imprisoned several times. In No
Mans Land, a missing-in-action North Vietnamese
soldier returns home fourteen years after the end of
the war. Although he has been physically and psychologically damaged by his wartime experiences,
which are presented in flashback, his wife is pressured into leaving her current husband and their son,
both of whom she loves dearly, and to endure the privations and humiliations of life with him.
Pacos Story
Author: Larry Heinemann
First published: 1986
When this, Heinemanns second novel, won the
National Book Award, it was generally regarded as
a very surprising choice. Like Heinemanns first
novel, which had been published nine years earlier,
Pacos Story concerns the experience of a Vietnam
veteran. The title character is seeking a respite in
which he can recuperate physically and psychologically from his wartime experiences. Although he
finds a job washing dishes in a small-town restaurant
operated by a sympathetic veteran of World War II,
he cannot escape the stigma of having served in an
unpopular war or the memories of the atrocities that
he and his fellow soldiers committed in Vietnam.
Much of the novel is narrated by the ghosts of the
men in Pacos unit who died in Vietnam.
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War II European empires, drove U.S. involvement in
Vietnam from its clandestine beginnings. Narrated
by Thomas Fowler, a world-weary British journalist,
Greenes novel explores the enigmatic character of
Alden Pyle. Nominally an American aid worker,
Pyle is clearly working for the Central Intelligence
Agency to ensure that a South Vietnamese alternative to the Viet Minh will be available if the French
do not prevail in the largely guerrilla war against
them. Pyle is murdered, but not before he gets
Fowlers beautiful Vietnamese mistress.
Tree of Smoke
Author: Denis Johnson
First published: 2007
A recipient of the National Book Award, Johnsons novel seems a high mark in a steadily distinguished, if idiosyncratic, literary career. Certainly,
Tree of Smoke stands out in a body of work consisting
of very spare novels on eccentric subjects. It is a long
and lushly descriptive fictional treatment of the Vietnam War. The main character is Skip Sands, an agent
with the Central Intelligence Agency who serves in
Vietnam from 1965 to 1970, or from the dramatic escalation of American involvement to the post-Tet Offensive recognition that deescalation, if not defeat,
was inevitable.
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The Rebels Hour
Author: Lieve Joris
First published: 2008
Published variously as a nonfiction novel and as a
work of creative nonfiction, Dutch journalist Joriss
book resulted from extensive reporting on and a complex understanding of the conflicts of central Africa
and, in particular, the Democratic Republic of the
Congopreviously referred to as Zaire, the Belgian
Congo, and the Congo Free State. The focal character
is a Tutsi named Assani. Originally from Rwanda,
his family fled from the Hutu genocide into the eastern Congo, where the ethnic conflicts in Rwanda and
Burundi became intertwined with an equally vicious
cycle of civil war. Assani was recruited by Lawrence
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Kabila, whose largely Tutu force overthrew the infamously corrupt and pro-Hutu Mobuta regime,
shortly before Kabila himself was assassinated.
Afghan Wars
The Kite Runner
Author: Khaled Hosseini
First published: 2003
The story of the unlikely friendship of two boys in
Afghanistanone rich and one pooris set against
the backdrop of Afghanistan from the end of the
monarchy through the wars of the present.
Martin Kich
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with a nuclear warhead designed to explode in the
vicinity of incoming enemy missiles, rendering
them harmless. ABM systems were supposed to
be severely limited as a provision of the 1972 Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT I), but verification proved difficult.
Antimissile missile. Any missile intended to destroy
an incoming enemy missile before it can do any
damage. Satellite-guided antimissile missile systems were a fundamental component of President
Ronald Reagans Strategic Defense Initiative
(SDI), known as Star Wars, in 1983, but their
technology was still not practical decades later.
Antiballistic missiles are a special type of antimissile missile.
Antitank gun. A rifled firearm specifically designed
to destroy tanks. The earliest, in 1918, was the
German 13.3-millimeter Mauser Tankgewehr
bolt-action rifle, firing armor-piercing bullets. By
World War II (1939-1945), antitank weaponry
was recognized as very important. Most were
field pieces, such as the German 37-millimeter
Panzerabwehrkanone (PAK36) and the Soviet
100-millimeter M-1944, all firing armor-piercing
shells. After World War II, recoilless guns, mortars, and rocket launchers firing guided armorpiercing missiles replaced antitank guns.
Arbalest. Originally, after about the eleventh century, the French word for crossbow, derived from
two Latin words, arcus, or bow, and ballista, or
big, rock-shooting crossbow. Around 1400, the
term also began to mean a particular type of large,
very powerful, heavy-draw Northern European
crossbow, whose bow was shorter than average
and either reinforced with steel or made entirely of
steel.
Arban. The smallest unit in the Mongol army, consisting of 10 soldiers.
Armor-piercing shell. Special antitank or antiship
artillery ammunition, in two varieties: kinetic and
chemical. The former is a hard, high-velocity,
Abteilung. German term for a detachment or battalion in either the German (later West German or
East German) or Swiss armed forces. During
World War II (1939-1945), an Abteilung was generally for a unit of about 1,000 soldiers and was
used in the Waffen-SS and other groups.
Aircraft carrier. A large, motorized warship with a
flat topdeck to serve as a runway for fixed-wing
aircraft. Invented by the British in 1918, developed by most major navies in the 1920s and
1930s, and first used in World War II (19391945), its effectiveness was dramatically proved
at Pearl Harbor in December of 1941, and then the
Battle of Midway, in June of 1942, when planes
from three American carriers, Enterprise, Hornet,
and Yorktown, commanded by Admiral Raymond
A. Spruance, destroyed four Japanese carriers,
Akagi, Hiryu, Kaga, and Soryu, commanded by
Admiral Isoruku Yamamoto. The carrier immediately superseded the battleship as the primary instrument of naval firepower.
Amabutho. This term is often used interchangeably
with regiment for Zulu armies. The number of
warriors in this unit ranged from 900 to 4,000.
Antiaircraft gun. A machine gun, often with two or
more barrels for wide-pattern fire; pedestalmounted with rapid 360-degree traverse in fixed
batteries, land vehicles, or ships; designed for accurate, long-range, high-angle fire to shoot down
enemy aircraft. Developed late in World War I
(1914-1918) and popularly known as ack-ack
(both from its sound and from British signalmens
variant pronunciation of its acronym, AA), it was
a standard weapon in World War II (1939-1945)
but was superseded by guided antiaircraft missiles
in the late twentieth century.
Antiballistic missile (ABM). Developed by the
United States in the late 1950s and widely deployed by both the United States and the Soviet
Union by the 1970s, any guided missile, either
ground-launched, sea-launched, or air-launched,
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usually pointed shell that punctures the armor
and then explodes inside the target; the latter is
designed to explode either near or on the armor,
shattering it from the outside. Development of
armor-piercing ammunition was necessitated by
the introduction of ironclad warships in the American Civil War (1861-1865) and tanks in World
War I (1914-1918).
Army. A general term to describe the land force of
the defense forces of any country. In the Byzantine Empire, an army consisted of 9,000 soldiers
(or three meroi). In the British army, specifically,
army refers to a land formation that consists of
more than one corps. In the latter case, the armies
are given numerical prefixes, such as First Army
and Second Army.
Army group. A land-force formation that includes
two or more numbered armies. An example of
an army group occurred during the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941; army groups
were given geographical descriptors: Army Group
South, Army Group North, and so on. Army Group
Africa consisted of Italian and German soldiers.
In all these cases, army groups were commanded
by a field marshal. The Japanese army in World
War II (1939-1945) was divided into six army
groups; and during the Sino-Japanese War (19371945) and the Chinese Civil War (1946-1949),
there were also army groups, which might have
anywhere between 500,000 and 1.5 million soldiers. After World War II, armies of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) were formed
into army groups combining soldiers from a variety of allied countries.
Artillery. Sometimes called ordnance, the term comprises all firearms, or weapons powered by explosions, that must be operated by more than one soldier for maximum effectiveness, such as cannons,
most rockets, and most missiles, as well as some
pre-gunpowder heavy siege weapons such as catapults, onagers, trebuchets, and large varieties of
the crossbow. Artillery is traditionally classified
as either heavy or light.
Assagai. A short-handled, long-bladed, double-edged
traditional spear of the Zulu nation of South Africa. Used mainly as a multiple thrusting weapon,
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it could also be hurled as a javelin or wielded for
slashing. It fit well into the standard chest-andhorns assault and surround tactics of the Zulu, in
which a large body of troops in close ranks would
run suddenly at the enemy to gain advantage in
hand-to-hand combat, as they did when they destroyed the British at Isandhlwana in 1879.
Assault helicopter. A versatile fighting aircraft developed by the United States in the 1950s, first
used extensively in the Vietnam War (1961-1975)
and refined by the Soviet Union in the 1970s. The
mainstay of modern air cavalry, its tactical equipment includes computerized search-and-destroy
weapons, antitank guns, machine guns, rockets,
air-launched minelaying systems, and sophisticated navigation devices for rapid, ground-hugging
flight. Among the most prominent types are the
Soviet Mi-24 and Mi-28 and the American Apache
and Black Hawk.
Assault rifle. Fully automatic rifle that can fire either
single-shot or rapid fire, developed by many nations during World War II (1939-1945) but primarily by Mikhail Kalashnikov (b. 1919) for
the Soviet Union between 1941 and 1944. His
AK-47, named for the year of its invention, is the
most famous weapon of this type. Others include
the Israeli Uzi and the American M-16. Most
models have a straight stock to prevent the recoil
from pushing successive shots gradually too high
during rapid fire.
Atomic bomb (A-bomb). An extremely powerful
explosive device involving the fission of radioactive elements, invented during World War II
(1939-1945) by an American team of scientists in
fulfillment of the secret, federally funded Manhattan Project. It was first tested on July 16, 1945,
at Alamogordo, New Mexico; first used on August 6, 1945, when the United States dropped Little Boy, a uranium bomb, on Hiroshima, Japan;
and used for the second and last time in the twentieth century on August 9, 1945, when the United
States dropped Fat Man, a plutonium bomb, on
Nagasaki, Japan.
Automatic firearm. Any firearm that loads automatically, usually from either a bandolier belt or a
magazine, and fires more than one shot for each
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squeeze of the trigger. The reloading process is
typically powered by the energy from each previous shot, as hot gas, recoil, or blowback. The first
sustained use of automatics in warfare was as the
various Browning, Maxim, Spandau, and Vickers
heavy machine guns that caused millions of casualties in World War I (1914-1918).
Ballista. A gigantic crossbow used in both ancient
and medieval warfare, developed by the Romans
but patterned after the mounted crossbows invented by Archimedes. Tactically employed as a
catapult, it was cocked with a winch and ratchet,
usually wheeled, and capable of hurling bolts or
stones of up to about 10 pounds (4.5 kilograms)
accurately for relatively long distances (about 400
yards or meters) at tolerably low trajectory.
Ballistic missile. A large, long-range guided missile,
usually with a nuclear warhead, developed by the
United States in the late 1950s, self-propelled by
a rocket engine on a high-trajectory, often stratospheric, course, and guided in its upward arc
but usually free-falling in its descent. Its earliest
prototype was the Nazi VZ (Vergeltungswaffe
Zwei) rocket, used with a high explosive warhead
against London from September, 1944, to March,
1945.
Ballistite. Smokeless powder introduced in 1887 by
Alfred B. Nobel (1833-1896) and consisting of
40 percent low-nitrogen nitrocellulose and 60 percent nitroglycerin. The product could be manufactured as small flakes and was a common
propellant for firearms until after World War II
(1939-1945). In the English-speaking world, cordite, a similar mixture invented shortly after ballistite, was more common.
Band. This term, often referring to warrior bands,
was used to describe the many Native American
military units during the nineteenth century.
Bangalore torpedo. An indefinitely long metal tube,
consisting of a series of short lengths screwed together, with an explosive charge at one end and a
fuse inside the tube. By pushing it slowly toward
or under its target, demolition teams could remain
in positions of cover and cut paths through barbed
wire, neutralize minefields, or blast fortifications.
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The Allies, notably the amphibious forces on D day,
used it extensively during World War II (19391945).
Banner. Aunit within the Manchu army, the vast majority originally mounted, who would follow a
particular banner in battle; altogether there were
eight banners. During the Qing (Ching) Dynasty
in China (1644-1912), it came to represent a military unit within the Chinese army consisting of
thousands of soldiers, almost exclusively of Manchu descent. Manchu soldiers came to be known
as bannermen.
Barbed wire. Thick wire with sharp metal points
built in at regular intervals, first patented in the
United States in 1867, first used for civilian purposes to mark boundaries, and extensively deployed as a defensive obstacle in both world wars.
Since the late twentieth century, varieties have
been manufactured with embedded fiber-optic cable so that computerized sentry systems can determine precisely where the enemy breaches it and
immediately direct defensive fire to that spot.
Barrage balloons. Defensive antiaircraft apparatus
used in both world wars, especially by the British.
Small balloons trailing long cables or nets were
tethered at high altitude in the hope that enemy
aircraft attacking below the balloons would catch
their wings on the dangling obstacles.
Baselard (or basilard). A double-edged European
dagger common from the fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries, typified by two prominent crosspieces, one at the pommel, or the end of the hilt,
the other at the guard, or the joint between the hilt
and the blade.
Battalion. An infantry unit that is commanded, in the
case of the U.S. and British armies, by a lieutenant
colonel. Within the British army, over time, its
size has changed considerably. Traditionally at
full strength it was similar to that of a Roman legion, around 1,000 soldiers. In the Australian
army in World War I (1914-1918), it had, at full
strength, about 1,000 soldiers. For the German
army in World War I, battalions were subdivisions of regiments, usually with three battalions
in a regiment, numbered I, II, and III. Overall, a
German battalion had, at full strength, 23 officers,
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3 regimental medical officers and paymasters, and
1,050 other ranks. By 1917, because of the shortage of soldiers, most battalions had about 750 soldiers in them. In the U.S. Army, battalions can
have as little as three companies (300 soldiers) or
as many as 1,200 soldiers.
Battering ram. An ancient and medieval siege engine for breaching enemy walls, consisting of a
large pole, usually a tree trunk, with a metal head,
sometimes pointed, slung horizontally from ropes
under a sturdy frame so that it could be swung
back and forth with great force. The frame, covered with water-soaked hides to prevent defenders
from burning it, could be wheeled up to the target
wall by soldiers underneath it, chocked, and put to
work.
Battery. A unit of artillery, commanded by a major.
To some degree the equivalent of a company of infantry or a squadron of cavalry.
Battle-ax. A slicing and chopping weapon invented
in the Stone Age when someone lashed a sharp
stone to the end of a stick, developed throughout
the Bronze Age, and nearly perfected during the
Iron Age, when more sophisticated versions
evolved from both the mace and the hand ax. Although warriors needed great strength to wield it
well, it proved popular in all pre-firearm cultures,
especially in the eighth to eleventh centuries
among the Vikings, who revered their axes and often gave them proper names, such as Skarphedins
gigantic Rmmuggr, or Ogress of War, in
Njals Saga.
Battleship. A gigantic, armored, motorized ship bristling with long-range, large-caliber, breech-loading
cannon, mounted mostly in turrets, intended primarily for ship-to-ship combat. It dominated naval warfare from the late nineteenth century until
the aircraft carrier was proved superior at Midway
in 1942. Before 1906 it was relatively slow, with
the intermediate battery larger than the main battery, but thereafter the standard was the dreadnought, faster, larger, more heavily armed and
armored, and with its strength disproportionately
concentrated in the main battery.
Bayonet. An edged weapon attached to the muzzle of
a firearm, usually a musket or rifle, first used in
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Europe in the seventeenth century to substitute for
a pike. The earliest, the plug bayonet, was inserted
into the muzzle itself. The socket bayonet includes a sleeve to fit over the muzzle; the sword
bayonet has a regular sword hilt with an adapter
slot that slides under the barrel; and the integral
bayonet is permanently affixed to the firearm.
Bayonet tactics evolved into complex and deadly
offensive maneuvers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Since the twentieth century, bayonets have mostly been multipurpose survival
knives conveniently detachable from a soldiers
personal weapon.
Bazooka. An American recoilless antitank weapon,
the M9A1, common in World War II (19391945). A short-range, handheld, direct-fire, lineof-sight weapon firing unguided projectiles, it
was superseded after the war by more sophisticated recoilless guns and especially by mortars
firing guided antitank missiles.
Big Bertha. Any of several large German howitzers
mounted on railway cars and used extensively in
World War I (1914-1918) on the western front until 1916, when the newer Allied heavy artillery
outranged them. The designation especially refers
to the Krupp 42-centimeter L-14, because Gustav
Krupps wifes name was Bertha.
Bilbo. A high-quality, wide-bladed, double-edged,
fancy Spanish rapier of the Renaissance, so called
from the place of its manufacture, Bilbao, Spain.
Bill. Type of pole arm whose head includes a regular
spear point, a hook for unhorsing mounted knights
or cavalrymen, and numerous perpendicular
spikes. One of the first pole arms, it evolved from
the pruning hook, or billhook, and was in use from
the early Middle Ages until the end of the eighteenth century. Many variants exist, some resembling the voulge, with a small ax-blade instead of
the spikes, but the required feature is the hook.
Biological weapons. Organic substances introduced
into enemy areas by bombing, artillery, or infiltration, designed to cause debilitating disease outbreaks. Sometimes, but not quite accurately,
known as germ warfare, the employment of such
weapons includes loading medieval trebuchets
with dead horses, tampering with water supplies,
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and releasing noxious aerosol particles in enemy
airspace. Among the diseases that could be caused
by these tactics are cholera, influenza, anthrax, typhoid, dysentery, encephalitis, malaria, typhus,
yellow fever, bubonic plague, and smallpox.
Bireme. A galley with two banks of oars. Shortly after the naval ram was invented, around 800 b.c.e.,
the Greeks and Phoenicians developed fast galleys to exploit this weapon. More oarsmen meant
more speed and power, but, since single-banked
ships long enough to hold crews of more than 50
were impractical, the bireme was developed
around 700 b.c.e., with an upper bank of oars on
outrigger fulcrums so as not to interfere with the
lower bank. It was between 25 and 35 meters long,
carried a crew of about 100, and reached top oared
speeds between 7 and 9 knots per hour.
Blockbuster. A popular name for the high-capacity
bomb, the giant aerial bomb dropped by both the
Allies and the Germans in World War II (19391945), so called because each one was capable of
demolishing an entire city block. Developed first
and best by the British, the largest could hold
22,000 pounds (10,000 kilograms) of TNT (trinitrotoluene), RDX (cyclo-1,3,5-trimethylene2,4,6-trinitramine), PETN (pentaerythitol tetranitrate), or some combination of these explosives.
Blowgun. A long, straight, thin, smallbore, hollow
tube through which light projectiles, usually darts,
are driven with amazing accuracy to surprising
distances, solely by the force of rapidly but
smoothly exhaled breath. Independently developed by many preliterate tropical cultures, such as
those of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Brazil, its darts
are sometimes poisoned, and a flared mouthpiece
is often added to concentrate the breath for more
power.
Blunderbuss. A short-range, short-barreled, muzzleloading, smoothbore, personal firearm developed
in either Holland or England early in the seventeenth century and common through the eighteenth, characterized by a flaring muzzle to facilitate loading and to scatter the shot, which could be
either a single bullet or a pellet load. Extremely inaccurate, with the effect of a sawed-off shotgun or
scattergun, it was typically used as a defensive or
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deterrent weapon for property owners, ships officers, and stagecoach drivers.
Bofors gun. A type of light, mobile, antiaircraft gun,
usually 40 millimeters, intended for use especially
against low-flying planes, and named after the
Swedish company that introduced it in the 1930s.
Naval varieties are typically mounted with double, quadruple, sextuple, or octuple barrels.
Bolt-action rifle. Any breech-loading rifle that uses
the manual action of a sliding bolt to open the
breech block and eject the spent cartridge. The
bolt handle is pushed up out of a slot to unlock
the breech and down into the slot to lock it. The
weapon can be either repeating, if it can take a
magazine, or single-shot, if it cannot. Typically,
the repeaters have military application, while
single-shot bolt-actions are for sport. Developed
in the 1860s and 1870s, bolt-action weapons
were the norm in the Second Boer War (18991902) and World War I (1914-1918).
Bomb. Any offensive explosive device designed to
detonate only under certain conditions, but especially, since World War I (1914-1918), one
dropped from an airplane, thrown, or otherwise
delivered aerially, but not by artillery.
Bombard. A primitive smoothbore mortar, probably
dating from the early fifteenth century, characterized by a narrow powder chamber; an extremely
short, sometimes flaring, barrel; and a hugecaliber bore, sometimes as wide or wider than its
length.
Bomber. An aircraft designed to drop explosive devices accurately on target. The first bombers were
observation planes dropping handheld bombs early
in World War I (1914-1918). By the end of that
war, both sides had specialized planes for bombing missions, particularly the British DeHavilland
and the German Gotha. The Spanish Civil War
(1936-1939) and World War II (1939-1945) were
the first wars in which airpower played a dominant role, and during their courses, aerial bombing
became a carefully studied science.
Booby trap. An offensive obstacle designed to kill,
maim, or terrorize unsuspecting soldiers or passersby. Extensively used by the Viet Cong against
the Americans in Vietnam, by native populations
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against invading forces, by fortress defenders, and
by terrorists, the wide variety of booby traps includes car bombs, mines, mail bombs, pitfalls,
nets, tripwires, spikes, spring traps, snares, positioned firearms, and time bombs.
Boomerang. An aboriginal Australian, aerodynamically enhanced throwing stick, designed in two
basic forms: one flying a curved path and returning to the thrower, and the other flying a straight,
far, end-over-end path but not returning. The former is used mainly for hunting and exhibitions,
the latter for war. War boomerangs exist in many
styles but are generally heavier and may have
cutting edges or protuberances. Some throwing
sticks, similar to boomerangs, were found in the
tomb of the Egyptian Pharaoh Tutankhamen.
Bouncing bomb. This device, created by the British
inventor Barnes Wallis, was designed to penetrate
the defenses of the German dams in World War II
(1939-1945). The idea came to Wallis when he
watched a boy skimming a stone at a village pond;
he used it effectively in the dam-buster raids Operation Chastise in May, 1943.
Bow. Invented in the Stone Age, a simple combination of string and spring to hurl projectiles, usually
arrows, much farther, more powerfully, and more
accurately than they could be thrown by hand. The
shape, tension, material, length, weight, and curve
of a bow all affect its spring energy. Bows are of
four basic kinds: simple, made of a single piece;
backed, two pieces of different materials glued together; laminated, three or more pieces of the
same material glued together; and composite,
three or more pieces of different materials glued
together.
Bowie knife. An American single-edged fighting
knife about 20 inches long overall, named for
American frontiersman James Bowie (1796-836),
but actually designed by his brother, Rezin.
Evolved from the frontiersmans hunting knife
and the straight-bladed Arkansas toothpick, it
featured a simple hilt; a flat, wide crossguard with
a prong at each end angled about 45 degrees toward the point; a tempered steel blade, mostly
straight, but, from the point toward the hilt about
3 inches, convex in front and concave in back; and
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a strip of soft metal, such as brass, inlayed along
the back of the blade to catch enemy blades. It was
edged blade-length in front and along the concave
portion in back.
Breechloader. Any firearm that loads its ammunition through the rear of the barrel. Attempted for
centuries, but barely practical in time for the Crimean War (1853-1856) and the American Civil
War (1861-1865), it soon thereafter superseded
muzzle-loaders and made repeating arms and automatic weapons possible.
Bren gun. A British light machine gun, the Bren
Mk1, first produced in 1937 and used extensively
in World War II (1939-1945). Because the British
based its design on the Czech ZB/vz26, invented
eleven years earlier, they coined its name from the
Br in Brno, where the Czech gun was made, and
the En in Enfield, where the British gun was
manufactured. The Royal Small Arms Factory,
Enfield, North London, was founded in 1804 and
has been responsible for a great number of historically important weapons.
Brig. A sailing, two-masted, square-rigged, wooden
warship, related to the nonnaval brigantine,
smaller than a frigate but bigger than a sloop of
war or corvette, carrying between 12 and 32 guns
on one or one and a half decks. Brigs were common from the eighteenth century until the end of
the age of sail.
Brigade. An army unit that, in the British army, is
an operational formation led by a brigadier (or
brigadier-general). The number of soldiers serving in a brigade varies tremendously. Essentially a
brigade has to consist of two or more fighting
units, along with an operational formation structure. In the Australian army in World War I (19141918), a brigade consisted of four battalions
(4,000 soldiers at full strength), and three brigades
formed one division. After World War II (19391945), in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO), a brigade would consist of 4,000-5,000
soldiers, but in the Swiss and Austrian armies,
there could be as many as 10,000 soldiers in a brigade. Words similar to brigade are used in other
countries; in the Estonian army, for example, a
brigaad includes 8,750 infantry soldiers.
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Broadsword. A large, straight European sword dating from the early Middle Ages, usually doubleedged, often two-handed, intended for slashing,
chopping, and cutting, rather than thrusting.
Browning automatic rifle (BAR). An American
light machine gun, the .30-06-caliber M-1918A2,
invented by John M. Browning (1855-1926).
Weighing only 20 pounds, air-cooled, with gaspowered reload and a bipod at the muzzle, it was
well known as the squad automatic of World
War II (1939-1945).
Bunker-busting bomb. A bomb developed to penetrate targets buried deep underground. Although
prototypes of this bomb were used in the Gulf War
in 1991, their first major use was by the U.S. military in Afghanistan in 2002.
Caltrop. Asmall, throwable, defensive obstacle consisting of four metal spikes protruding from a central vertex, each at an angle of 120 degrees to the
other three, so that whichever three form a tripod
on the defended ground, the fourth will be sticking
straight up. At Bannockburn in 1314, Robert the
Bruce devastated the English cavalry with caltrops.
Canister shot. A type of case shot, preloaded into a
brittle tin shell designed to disintegrate immediately upon firing and thus add its own fragments to
the antipersonnel pattern of projectiles. It differs
from grapeshot by being sealed in a container and
from case shot by specifically incorporating a tin
shell. Its advantage over both was ease of loading.
Cannon. A firearm too big to be carried by an individual soldier, an artillery piece, invented early in
the fourteenth century, that exists in three basic
forms: gun, howitzer, and mortar, which are distinguished by caliber, trajectory, projectile velocity, range, and barrel length.
Carbine. A rifle with a short barrel designed to be
convenient for cavalrymen. Developed by the
French during the wheel-lock era, it achieved its
greatest renown in the nineteenth century, when
early breech-loading carbines such as the Sharps,
Enfield, Springfield, and Winchester became
standard British and American cavalry issue.
Carronade. A short-barreled, large-caliber, relatively lightweight, smoothbore naval cannon, in-
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accurate but highly effective at short range, introduced by the Carron Company of Scotland in
1779 and common until the mid-nineteenth century.
Case shot. Short-range, wide-dispersion, antipersonnel muzzle-loading artillery ammunition. Consisting of small metal balls or shards and common
during the last hundred years of the muzzle-loading era, it differs from grapeshot by being sealed
in a container, which would either break, burn, or
disintegrate as soon as the charge was fired, thus
allowing the load to spread. A variety of case shot
sealed specifically in a tin shell is canister shot.
Catapult. An ancient and medieval artillery engine
using a lever to hurl large projectiles. Its power
came from a leaf spring; the torsion of a twisted
skein, as in the onager; or a huge counterweight,
as in the trebuchet. Made obsolete by the development of the cannon, catapults nevertheless remained fairly common in warfare until the sixteenth century and were used as recently as World
War I (1914-1918) to hurl grenades into enemy
trenches. The term also refers to devices used to
launch planes from aircraft carriers.
Cell. Although usually used to describe political
groupings in which secrecy ensured that members
of the cell did not know the identities of other
members in order to avoid infiltrators and people
who had been captured, this term was also applied
to the soldiers in the National Liberation Front for
South Vietnam (Viet Cong) during the Vietnam
War (1960-1975).
Chain shot. A type of ammunition for smoothbore,
muzzle-loading cannons. Compact when loaded
but expanding when fired, it was designed for naval use in the sixteenth century to cut the rigging
of enemy ships. Later it was also used by ground
troops as an antipersonnel charge.
Chariot. An ancient attack vehicle, a two-wheeled
backless cart with high front and sides, pulled by
usually one or two but sometimes as many as four
horses. It could contain either a single occupant,
who both drove and fought, or two, one to drive
and the other to shoot arrows, thrust spears, or
slash with his sword. At Gaugamela in 331 b.c.e.,
the Persians used chariots with protruding scythes
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affixed to rotate with the axles, but the maneuvers
of Alexanders phalanxes snagged the scythes
with one another and rendered the chariots ineffective.
Chassepot. A bolt-action 11-millimeter rifle invented in 1866 by Antoine Alphonse Chassepot
(1833-1905) and carried by French soldiers in the
Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871). Based on the
Dreyse needle gun, which was standard in the
Prussian army after 1848, it used a combustible
paper cartridge. When the trigger was pulled, a
needle pierced the cartridge from behind before
hitting the primer and firing the charge.
Chemical weapons. Organic or inorganic agents,
usually delivered by shell, intended to poison the
enemy. Safety for the attacker is often achieved
through the binary system, whereby two ingredients are kept isolated from each other within the
shell until impact, when they combine to create
the poison. Since World War I (1914-1918), various provisions of the Geneva Conventions and
other international treaties have limited chemical
warfare, especially the use of poison gas.
Cheval de frise (pl. chevaux de frise). Literally, a
Frisian horse, a late medieval and early modern
defensive obstacle consisting of many long spikes
protruding radially from a central log, barrel, or
other convenient cylindrical object serving as an
axis. A good anticavalry defense for musketeers,
it could safely be moved into position by four soldiers, two at each end. Not much used after the
eighteenth century, it was finally superseded by
barbed wire in the late nineteenth century.
Claymore. A gigantic two-handed Scottish broadsword with a blade up to 6 feet long. The traditional blade of Scotland, known in Gaelic as
claidheamh mr, it was developed in the late Middle Ages and used extensively throughout the Renaissance and early modern era.
Club. A short, stout, heavy, sticklike object, usually
wooden, with a large knob on one end to crush
skulls or break bones. Of prehistoric origins, it
could have either a plain, blunt warhead or a spike
driven through the warhead for added deadliness. Almost exclusively a weapon of traditional,
preliterate, or aboriginal cultures, it nevertheless
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appeared also in more advanced cultures as armorbreaking weapons: the mace and the war hammer.
Perhaps the most famous club is the Irish shillelagh, cut from the blackthorn tree.
Cluster bomb. Developed by the Soviet Union in the
1930s and common since the 1960s, an aerial
bomb that jettisons its casing at a predetermined
altitude to release dozens or even hundreds of
small bombs, or bomblets, typically used as an antitank, antivehicle, or antipersonnel weapon.
Cohort. Consisting of approximately 480 soldiers
(except for the first cohort of every legion, which
had 800 soldiers), this term for a unit in the Roman
army was subsequently used to describe a body of
soldiers, of varying sizes, who were designated a
particular task, like a column.
Column. A division of an army, often with no specific number of soldiers, that had the job of moving to a particular place, especially for sieges or
for a specific task.
Company. In late medieval and early Renaissance
times, this term often referred to the subunit of an
army with a separate commander, such as Sir John
Hawkwoods White Company, and there was no
specific number of soldiers. Gradually the term
company come to signify a subunit of a battalion or regiment, and in the case of the British
army, it has, at full strength, 120 soldiers, commanded by a major. A company is further divided
into two or more platoons. In the German army,
the company is the subunit of a battalion, usually
with twelve companies in an infantry battalion,
making a total, at full strength, of about 80 soldiers.
Composition B. Also called cyclotol, a castable
mixture of 40 percent TNT (trinitrotoluene) and
60 percent RDX (cyclo-1,3,5-trimethylene-2,4,6trinitramine), insensitive to temperature and shock,
commonly used as a military explosive because of
its tremendous power to crush and shatter. It was
the usual load of Allied bangalore torpedoes in
World War II (1939-1945).
Composition C. Plastic explosive consisting of 80
percent RDX (cyclo-1,3,5-trimethylene-2,4,6trinitramine) and 20 percent plasticizing agent,
designated C-1 through C-4 according to which
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plasticizer is used. Like all practical military explosives, it is insensitive to environmental conditions, safe to handle, and long-lived. It is frequently used in land mines.
Cordite. An efficient form of smokeless powder
invented in Britain in 1889 by Sir Frederick Augustus Abel (1827-1902) and Sir James Dewar
(1842-1923), consisting of nitroglycerin, guncotton, petroleum jelly, and acetone pressed into thin
brown cords. Similar to ballistite, it was used extensively in small arms ammunition throughout
the twentieth century.
Corps. In the ancient Egyptian army, a corps consisted of some 4,000 soldiers. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, within the British
army, the term was often used interchangeably
with regiment, when reference was being made
to an infantry regiment. From the late nineteenth
century, the corps referred to an army formation
that consisted of two or more divisions but was itself smaller than an army. Traditionally in military books and maps, a Roman numeral was ascribed to the Corps: VI Corps, VII Corps, and so
on. In the German army in World War I (19141918), at the start of the war, a German corps consisted of two divisions, each of 17,500 soldiers.
There were also instances when specific units in
the British, Australian, or Canadian armies had
special corps that kept the former use, making
them similar in size to regiments, that is, 1,000 or
more soldiers. Examples of these include the
Camel Corps, Medical Corps, Veterinary Corps,
and, in the case of the German army in World
War II (1939-1945), the Afrika Korps.
Crossbow. A shooting weapon invented in China
about 500 b.c.e. and known in Europe by the end
of the first millenium, consisting of a short, thick
bow transversely attached to a wooden stock that
featured a trigger, a groove to guide the projectile,
and usually a detachable cranking mechanism to
draw the string. Its ammunition was either stones,
pellets, or short arrows called bolts or quarrels.
With a range of about 400 yards (370 meters), it
was so accurate and powerful that in 1139 the
Lateran Council banned its use against Christians.
After the Battle of Crcy in 1346, the British pre-
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ferred the longbow, which could shoot six times
as fast, but the crossbow, with its longer range, remained dominant on the Continent through the
fifteenth century. By the mid-sixteenth century, it
was obsolete in warfare, superseded by firearms,
although it is still occasionally used by commandos because it is silent and also for its range and
accuracy.
Cruise missile. A tactical, self-propelled, groundhugging, guided missile developed by the United
States and the Soviet Union in the 1960s and
1970s. A smart bomb, capable of pinpoint accuracy, it can carry either nuclear or nonnuclear
warheads and can be launched from land, sea, or
air. The American sea-launched Tomahawk and
the air-launched ALCM turbofan-powered cruise
missiles proved devastating against Iraq in the
1991 Persian Gulf War.
Culverin. A long, smoothbore, muzzle-loading,
medium- to large-caliber European field cannon
of the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries. Since
cast iron technology was not yet dependable for
large objects, its barrel was not cast but constructed of overlapping and superimposed hoops
of wrought iron. A typical culverin had a 6-inch
bore and fired an 18-pound ball.
Cutlass. A short, curved, wide-bladed saber with a
thrusting point and a stout hand guard, developed
in Europe in the seventeenth century, remotely related to the English falchion of the thirteenth century, and used mostly in naval warfare and by pirates.
Dagger. Next to stones, probably the most ancient of
all weapons, originally made of chipped flint. A
sharp-pointed, straight-bladed knife intended primarily for stabbing, it can be held with the little
finger toward the blade for powerful downward
stabbing or with the thumb toward the blade for
more versatile thrusting and slashing.
Davach. A subunit within the Irish army in early medieval times, which included enough soldiers to
man one fighting ship.
Defoliant. Any chemical weapon intended to destroy
plant life and thus prevent the enemy from taking
cover in the forest or living off the land. The most
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notorious was Agent Orange, used extensively by
the United States in Vietnam and subsequently
discovered to have debilitating long-term side effects on exposed personnel.
Depth charge. An antisubmarine high explosive device, first used in 1916 by the British against the
German U-boats in World War I (1914-1918).
Since World War II (1939-1945), depth charges
have been standard armaments on destroyers, destroyer escorts, and PT boats. Typically, several
are catapulted overboard simultaneously in different directions, set to explode at different depths to
maximize the chance of hitting the target either directly or with shock waves.
Derringer. A small, easily concealable, short-barreled, medium- to large-caliber, usually singleshot rifled pistol, first manufactured about 1850
by Henry Deringer (1786-1868) of Philadelphia.
With the D lowercased and another r added, the
name became generic. John Wilkes Booth (18381865) used a derringer to assassinate Abraham
Lincoln (1809-1865).
Destroyer. A fast, relatively small, motorized warship of the twentieth century, intended to defend
fleets and convoys from all sorts of attack: surface, undersea, and air. It is armed with a great variety of weapons, including torpedoes, depth
charges, antiaircraft guns, medium-caliber cannons, and sometimes missiles.
Destroyer escort. A motorized warship, smaller and
usually slower than a destroyer, developed by the
United States early in World War II (1939-1945)
to support destroyers in their mission to defend
fleets and convoys. Since 1975, it has been also
known in the U.S. Navy as a frigate.
Detachment. A loose term to define a military unit
assigned to another command on the battlefield;
there is no set size.
Detail. A military unit within the British army, run
from headquarters, for transport, intelligence, catering, or another purpose.
Dirk. A dagger used by the British navy in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and by Scots generally since the Middle Ages. This traditional
Scottish weapon, regularly issued to regimental
pipers, is characterized by a wide, straight, sym-
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metrical, double-edged, tapering blade about one
foot long. The genuine Scottish dirk has no guard,
but the naval dirk does.
Dirty bomb. A device that uses conventional explosives to disperse radioactive material. Although
tests have taken place in the United States, it is believed that the weapon is still speculative.
Dive-bomber. A small, maneuverable, propellerdriven airplane capable of steep, steady dives and
abrupt, rapid climbs, intended to drop bombs accurately at low altitude and escape before antiaircraft fire or enemy fighter aircraft could bring it
down. Armed with either bombs or torpedoes, it is
especially effective for attacking ships broadside.
Dive-bombing originated as a tactic in World
War I (1914-1918) but achieved prominence in
World War II (1939-1945) through such planes as
the German Junkers Ju-87 Stuka, the Japanese
Aichi D3A and Yokosuka D4Y, and the American
Douglas SBD Dauntless and Curtiss SB2C Helldiver.
Division. In early modern times, a division was an
administrative grouping made up of a number of
infantry regiments, with no set size. During the
eighteenth century, within the British army, a division was a subset of a battalion similar to what
became known as a platoon. Since the late nineteenth century, a division in the British army,
along with those of many other countries, has
come to be a field formation comprising two or
more brigades. In addition to these brigades, there
is a divisional command structure that often has
extra units assigned to it. In the Australian army
during World War I (1914-1918), a division consisted of three brigades, and each brigade consisted of four battalions, making the number of
soldiers in a division, when at full strength, around
12,000. In the German army in World War I, a
division, at full strength, consisted of 8,407 infantry, 170 cavalry, 1,363 artillery, 838 pioneers,
757 divisional troops, and 108 in the divisional
headquarters.
Drone. An unmanned aerial vehicle used in reconnaissance missions and also for remote-controlled
bombing. Its task is to fly into areas where it
would be risky to send crewed aircraft. Much use
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of drones has been made by the United States in
Iraq and in Afghanistan, and by Israel.
Dumdum bullet. A hollow-point or soft-nosed bullet designed to expand quickly upon impact, causing tremendous internal damage and leaving a
horrible exit wound. Developed around 1891 by
the British at their colonial arsenal in Dum Dum,
India, near Calcutta, they used it in India and the
Sudan in the 1890s until it was banned by the
Hague Convention of 1899.
Dynamite. Powerful high explosive invented in
1867 by Alfred B. Nobel (1833-1896), consisting
of an inert, porous substance saturated with nitroglycerin. Its greatest advantage is rendering nitroglycerin safe to handle, but because it cannot be
stored for long periods without becoming unstable, it has limited military application.
Elephants. A type of pachyderm that not only provided transportation for soldiers and equipment
but also functioned as the first tanks. Used in
warfare in India from prehistoric times and by the
Persians against the Greeks in the fourth century
b.c.e., elephants gained military importance, most
famously in their role in Hannibals crossing the
Alps to attack Italy in 218 b.c.e. Elephants, aside
from being monstrously strong, are fearless, difficult to kill, and a terror to enemy horses.
Equite. An elite Roman cavalry unit designed to protect the emperor and other high-ranking individuals.
Explosive projectile. Any hurled device designed to
explode either on impact or at a predetermined
point in its flight. Not limited to artillery shells,
they may include hand grenades, long-range
guided missiles, and even medieval firepots.
Falchion. A short, single-edged sword popular from
the thirteenth to the sixteenth centuries in Europe,
featuring a wide, heavy, straight-backed blade, a
convex cutting edge near the point, and usually an
S-shaped crossguard. It evolved into the cutlass.
Falconet. A very light, smoothbore, muzzle-loading,
small-caliber European field piece of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, characterized
by a long, narrow, cast-metal barrel, usually
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bronze. The largest known was a 3-pounder (that
is, it fired a 3-pound ball). The name means little
falcon.
Fanika (or Fahnlein). A Finnish term used to describe a military unit in the Swedish army that follows a single banner into battle. Traditionally it
consisted of about 1,000 soldiers, similar to a battalion, but during the Thirty Years War (16181648) there were only some 500 soldiers in each
fanika.
Farm tools. Throughout history, when large numbers of peasants either revolted or were impressed
into service, their weaponry included their familiar tools from home. Scythes, sickles, threshing
flails, pitchforks, and pruning hooks were extensively used in such conflicts as the Crusades
(1095-1270), the Thirty Years War (1618-1648),
and the French Revolution (1789-1799). Minor
modifications turn a sickle into a curved dagger or
a pruning hook into a pole arm.
Fasces. A bundle of rods holding an ax. Used in war,
it became the symbol of the authority of the Roman Republic and came to have significance similar to that of the later parliamentary mace in Britain and former British colonies. During much
of the first half of the twentieth century, it was
adopted as the symbol of the Italian Fascist Party.
Felucca. Slender, swift, lateen-rigged, wooden sailing ship of the Mediterranean, developed in the
sixteenth or early seventeenth century. Favored
by the Barbary corsairs until their demise at the
beginning of the nineteenth century, it typically
carried ten to fourteen guns (seldom, as many as
twenty).
Field piece. Any light or medium-weight cannon designed to be highly mobile and versatile in the
thick of battle. The term especially refers to the
horse-drawn cannons of the muzzle-loading era.
Most of the victories of Napoleon I involved his
expert use of such artillery.
Fighter aircraft. Early in World War I (1914-1918),
personnel in observation planes would fire pistols
at enemy observation planes. Soon, two-seater
planes were equipped with a swivel machine gun
for the copilot. In 1915 Anthony Fokker (18901939) invented for the Germans a gear system to
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allow mounted machine guns to fire forward without hitting the propeller, thus creating the first
practical fighter planes. Ideal fighters are small,
fast, and maneuverable. Propeller fighters such
as the Japanese Mitsubishi Zero, the German
Messerschmitt, the British Spitfire, and the American Flying Tiger reached their zenith in World
War II (1939-1945) and were superseded by jets
in the late 1940s.
Fighter jet. Although developed first by the Germans and later by the Allies during World War II
(1939-1945), jet fighter aircraft did not see much
action until the Korean War (1950-1953). Outstanding jet fighters include the Russian MiG
(Mikoyan-Gurevich) series and the American F-11
Tiger, F-86 Sabre, and F-104 Starfighter.
Firepot. An ancient and medieval incendiary weapon,
consisting of a ceramic container filled with an inflammable substance. Flung from a catapult, onager, or trebuchet, it was designed to ignite easily
upon impact.
Fireship. A derelict wooden sailing ship or barge, set
afire and sent among the enemys wooden ships. It
represented an effective and common naval tactic
from ancient to early modern times.
Flail. A type of mace with one, two, or three warheads, usually solid iron spheres studded with
spikes, attached to a thick, reinforced wooden
handle by short lengths of chain. It was used for
the same purpose as the mace, to crush armor, but
the chains provided a whiplike effect that added
velocity and force to the warhead.
Flak. Invented by the Germans in 1936, the 88-millimeter Flugabwehrkanone (FLAK36) automatic
cannon, with an effective range of about 26,000
feet (8,000 meters), was the standard Nazi antiaircraft gun of World War II (1939-1945) and
the basis of several later antiaircraft and antitank
weapons. Allied airmen soon applied the term
to antiaircraft fire in general, especially the hazardous flying debris from exploding antiaircraft
shells.
Flamethrower. An offensive incendiary device
whereby a single infantryman can safely and effectively shoot a stream of burning liquid from a
high-pressure nozzle to distances of about 200
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feet (60 meters). Developed during World War I
(1914-1918) and used extensively in World
War II (1939-1945) and Vietnam (1961-1975), it
was a significant advance in military technology
because fire is often dangerous for the attacking
and attacked armies alike. Soldiers using flamethrowers typically wear flameproof armor, head
to toe.
Fleet. Either the entire navy of any country or a substantial group of ships involved in a military action, under the command of an admiral.
Flintlock. Amuzzle-loading firearm ignition mechanism, invented around 1610 and common from
1650 until the end of the muzzle-loading era in the
mid-nineteenth century, a simple improvement
of the snaphance, from which it differs by being
single-action rather than double-action. When its
trigger is pulled, the hammer pushes the pan cover
away from the pan, thus creating sparks, igniting
the primer, and firing the weapon.
Fragmentation bomb. Invented during World War I
(1914-1918), an artillery shell or aerial bomb
whose thick but brittle metal casing is scientifically designed to shatter upon impact, sending
jagged debris in all directions as antipersonnel
projectiles.
Francisca. A throwing ax used by the Franks in the
early Middle Ages and by some Germanic peoples and the Anglo-Saxons in England. French in
origin, a double-headed version of the francisca
was used during World War II (1939-1945) by the
pro-German Vichy government.
Frigate. A sailing, square-rigged, three-masted
wooden warship larger than a brig but smaller than
a ship of the line. It usually carried between twenty
and forty-eight guns on two decks. The USS Constitution, Old Ironsides, launched in Boston in
1797, was a forty-four-gun frigate. From 1950 to
1975, the U.S. Navy designated some large destroyers as frigates, and after 1975 the Navy used
the term to refer to destroyer escorts.
Fusil. A light, small-caliber, French flintlock musket
of the seventeenth century. British soldiers armed
with these weapons were called fusiliers. Subsequently, fusil became the ordinary French word
for rifle.
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Galleon. A warship developed in Spain and England
in the fifteenth century, trimmer and more streamlined than the floating fortresses of the fourteenth
century. Without their high, overhanging forecastles and poops, but with three or four full-rigged
masts, it was the first ship able to hold position
against the wind while delivering broadsides to the
enemy. The British were victorious over the galleons of the Spanish Armada in 1588 not only because of the weather but also because Sir Francis
Drakes galleons were smaller, shallower, faster,
and more maneuverable. The galleon was superseded in the seventeenth century by the British
man-of-war.
Galley. A long, low, slender, shallow-draft warship
of the eastern Mediterranean, usually rowed but
equipped with a single square sail. Developed in
Greece, Crete, or Phoenicia around the ninth century b.c.e. and later adopted by the Romans, it was
the primary warship until the fall of the Roman
Empire. With the foremost part of the prow at or
just below the waterline reinforced and sharpened, its basic tactics involved ramming the enemy ship broadside; then it could be boarded.
sunk, or set afire. Galleys were used in war as recently as the Battle of Lepanto (1571).
Garand rifle. A semiautomatic .30-06 caliber rifle
invented in the 1930s by John C. Garand (18881974), engineer at the U.S. Armory, Springfield,
Massachusetts. Also called the M-1, it had an
eight-round magazine. When the U.S. Army made
it the standard infantry weapon in 1936, it was the
worlds first semiautomatic rifle to be so honored.
American ground troops carried it in World War II
(1939-1945) and the Korean War (1950-1953).
Gas shell. A basic element of chemical and biological warfare, an artillery projectile filled with poison gas released at or just before impact. Used
extensively in World War I (1914-1918), armed
chiefly with mustard gas, phosgene, or lewisite, it
differs from a gas grenade in that it is fired rather
than thrown. Even though military poison gas was
outlawed by the 1925 Geneva Protocol, most countries have continued to develop such weapons.
Gatling gun. A primitive machine gun invented in
1862 for the Union army in the American Civil
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War (1861-1865) by Richard Jordan Gatling
(1818-1903), characterized by several, usually six
to ten, revolving barrels that were cranked around
to produce rapid fire. The Gatling gun was superseded by the machine guns of Hiram Stevens
Maxim (1840-1916) in the 1890s, but the Gatling
principle was employed for airborne and antiaircraft weapons in the late twentieth century, when
very high rates of fire, in excess of six thousand
rounds per minute, were desired.
Gladius. A short, straight thrusting sword carried by
the Roman infantry legions. From its name derives the word gladiator. It was superseded in
battle by the spatha in the Christian Roman Empire.
Glaive. A type of pole arm whose head consists of a
single blade resembling that of a sword. Common
variants include a curved, single-edged, saberlike
blade and a broadsword blade. It was developed
by the French during the High Middle Ages and
used primarily for slashing.
Grapeshot. A type of spreading antipersonnel and
anticavalry muzzle-loading artillery ammunition,
consisting of ten or twenty loose, grape-sized,
solid metal balls packed as a group into a cannon.
Very common in warfare from the eighteenth century until the end of the muzzle-loading era, it differs from case shot and canister shot by not being
sealed in a container. The effect was like that of a
giant shotgun. The Russians fired grapeshot into
the Light Brigade at Balaklava in 1854.
Greek fire. An early medieval, and perhaps ancient,
incendiary mixture of unknown ingredients, usually delivered by catapult in breakable containers
and extensively used in naval warfare because it
was unaffected by water. Some say it ignited on
contact with saltwater and was first used in 673 by
the Byzantines defending Constantinople against
the Arabs. Others, who discount the story that Archimedes set Roman ships afire with mirrors during the Second Punic War (218-201 b.c.e.), suggest that he may have been the inventor and first
user of Greek fire.
Grenade. A small bomb, either thrown by hand or
launched from a hand-carried device. Developed
in Europe in the sixteenth century, it originally
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contained either gunpowder or an incendiary mixture, but later versions contain smoke screens,
poison gas, or other chemical agents. Grenades
are detonated by percussion, impact, or a short
fuse activated just before throwing or launching.
Grenade launcher. Dating from the fifteenth century and in constant military use ever since, any
short-barreled, wide-bore, muzzle-loading, personal firearm designed to throw grenades farther
and more accurately than they can be thrown by
hand. Some muskets and rifles can be temporarily
converted into grenade launchers with specialized
muzzle attachments. The 40-millimeter American
M203 grenade launcher, standard infantry equipment in the 1990s, is easily combined with the
M-16 rifle to create a double-barreled weapon.
Guided missile. Developed by the United States, the
Soviet Union, and many other industrialized nations after World War II (1939-1945), a selfpropelled, usually rocket-propelled, air- or spacetraversing missile, distinguished from an ordinary
missile by its being capable of having its course
corrected during its flight. It can be groundlaunched, air-launched, surface-ship-launched, or
submarine-launched. Among water-traversing
missiles containing guidance systems, guided torpedoes are generally not called guided missiles,
but sea-launched tactical antiship missiles, such
as the French Exocet and the American Harpoon,
are. Inventing missile guidance systems required
the prior development of radar, radio, and computers.
Guisarme. A type of pole arm whose head includes
two blades curving away from each other, sharpened on the outer, or concave, edges. Invented in
Europe in the eleventh century, it was used until
the fifteenth for slashing, unhorsing, tripping, and
thrusting.
Gun. In military parlance, always a cannon, never a
personal firearm. As a piece of ordnance, it is usually a big, powerful, long-range cannon firing with
a flat trajectory and thus is distinguished from
howitzers and mortars.
Guncotton. An explosive compound, also called
nitrocotton, a variety of nitrocellulose invented by
German chemist Christian Friedrich Schnbein
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(1799-1868) in 1845 and produced by soaking
plain cotton in nitric acid and sulfuric acid.
Guncotton burns too fast to be a safe and efficient
smokeless propellant for firearms, but it was later
used in the invention and manufacture of practical
smokeless powders.
Gunpowder. Although Roger Bacon (c. 1220c. 1292) was the first Westerner to give exact directions for making gunpowder (in 1242), gunpowder had been developed by the Chinese many
centuries earlier. A simple mixture of potassium
nitrate, sulfur, and charcoal, gunpowder revolutionized warfare by enabling projectiles to be fired
long distances from hollow tubes closed or partially closed at one end. Later improvements, such
as powder B, ballistite, and cordite, include less
volatile and less smoky varieties.
Halberd. A versatile type of pole arm whose head includes an ax on one side, a spike, pick, or hook on
the other side, and a spear point at the tip. Developed in Switzerland in the thirteenth century,
gradually improved through the sixteenth, and still
carried by the Swiss Guards of the Vatican, it was
an important multipurpose weapon of European
foot soldiers during the Renaissance, employed to
unhorse, thrust, parry, or slash. Horsemen would
frequently become intimidated by companies of
well-seasoned infantry armed with halberds.
Hand cannon. A primitive European muzzle-loading
personal firearm, developed about 1400, featuring
a long stock, short barrel, smooth bore, and large
caliber. Intended to be fired from a bench-rest position, it featured, under the stock near the muzzle,
a protruding spike to hook over the rest to prevent
recoil. It was superseded by the harquebus about
1450.
Hand grenade. Invented in the sixteenth century and
in constant military use ever since, a small explosive device designed to be thrown by hand and
detonated by either impact or a time fuse. Among
its most prominent users were the British Grenadiers of the eighteenth century. Twentieth century
examples include the German Steilhandgranate
(potato masher), the Japanese 97, and the American Mk2 pineapple.
Lexicon
Harquebus. AEuropean muzzle-loading firearm developed about 1450. Fired by either a matchlock
or a wheel-lock mechanism, it was in general use
until about 1550, when the snaphance was invented and the flintlock musket became possible.
Also called an arquebus, hackbut, or hagbut, it
evolved from the hand cannon, was heavy, bulky,
short-range, and inaccurate, and was typically
fired from a monopod or tripod.
Hazara. A relatively small unit within the Mongol
army, sometimes called a minghan, consisting of
1,000 soldiers, similar in size to a Roman legion or
modern battalion. Subsequently the Mongol army
was reorganized into ming bashi, which also consisted of 1,000 soldiers.
Heavy artillery. Large cannons that differ from light
artillery not only by weight but also by caliber, mobility, and purpose. Such guns are suitable for fortress defense, shore batteries, and siege work, but
not for battlefield situations where quick adaptability could be the key to victory. The peak use of
heavy artillery was in World War I (1914-1918),
when guns of 40 centimeters and larger were
moved by railroad or mounted on battleships.
Horse artillery. A type of field artillery in which the
gunners ride horses. Until the end of the eighteenth century, guns, carriages, and caissons were
pulled by horses while the gun crews and drivers
walked. One of Napoleons most important tactical innovations was to develop the horse artillery,
dramatically increasing the versatility, mobility,
and effectiveness of his cannon. In the American
Civil War (1861-1865), the term referred to the
Confederate practice of disassembling small howitzers, loading the components on packhorses,
running them with the cavalry through terrain
where normal gun carriages could not pass, then
quickly reassembling them at the next battle.
Host. The term used in ancient Egypt to designate
250 chariots, which were subdivided into corps of
25 chariots each.
Howitzer. A type of cannon, originating in the seventeenth century, with a barrel longer than that of
a mortar but shorter than that of a gun, designed to
fire medium-velocity projectiles at medium to
high trajectories.
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Hundertschaft. A term that arose in early medieval
times to describe a unit of about 100 fighting men.
Subsequently it continued to be used to denote a
unit of around 100 men, notably by the German
State Police and the German Federal Police.
Huo. The smallest subunit of a Chinese medieval
army. During the Tang Dynasty (618-907), it consisted of 10 soldiers.
Hydrogen bomb (H-bomb). Athermonuclear device
that uses the power of an atomic fission reaction to
fuse heavy hydrogen atoms, deuterium and tritium,
into helium. Fused in this way, hydrogen releases
about four times as much destructive energy as the
same mass of uranium or plutonium in an atomic
bomb. The United States tested its first hydrogen
bomb in 1952, the Soviet Union in 1953.
Ikhanda. A corps within the Zulu army from the
1820s to the 1870s. During the Zulu (or AngloZulu) War of 1879, the number of soldiers in a
Zulu ikhanda varied considerably. The entire Zulu
army was divided into three of these, and they
consisted of between 2,400 and 15,000 warriors,
each with a number of amabuthos, or regiments.
Impi. A nonspecific term referring to a number of
Zulu warriors. The size of impi units varied considerably.
Incendiary bomb. Any chemical device intended
to cause an outbreak of flames among the enemy,
including fire bombs, napalm bombs, Molotov
cocktails, and firepots. Some commonly used inflammatory agents are white phosphorus, gasoline, thermite, and magnesium.
Intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). Astrategic weapon of mass destruction, the focus of the
Cold War (1945-1991) arms race between the Soviet Union and the United States; a very long
range, nuclear-armed guided missile, such as the
Soviet SS-9, SS-16, SS-17, SS-18, and SS-19, and
the American Minuteman III and Titan II, landlaunched from underground silos. Similar, but
shorter-range, missiles, such as the American Polaris and Trident, can be launched from submarines.
Ironclad. A motorized or, less commonly, sailing
wooden warship armored with metal plates on its
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hull and topsides, developed early in the American Civil War (1861-1865). As demonstrated in
the classic draw between the USS Monitor and the
CSS Virginia (formerly the USS Merrimack) at
Hampton Roads, Virginia, on March 9, 1862, it
revolutionized naval warfare.
Jacketed bullet. A small arms projectile consisting
of a soft metal core, usually lead, coated with a
harder metal, often copper, which is still soft
enough to grip the rifling inside a gun barrel. It
was standard military issue throughout the world
as of the late nineteenth century. The main advantage of such ammunition is that it can be fired at
higher velocity, thereby gaining a flatter trajectory and hence a longer range.
Javelin. The generic term for any light, usually short,
spear whose sole purpose is to be thrown, sometimes with a throwing device to extend the arm and
increase the weapons range. Invented during the
Stone Age, it was common among most ancient
troops, especially the Greek hoplite infantry. One
famous type of javelin is the Roman light pilum.
Jeddart ax. A type of pole arm whose head consists
of a grappling hook on one side and, on the other
side, a long ax-blade with an undulating edge and
a spear point. Developed from the halberd and
voulge, contemporaneous with the Lochaber ax in
the sixteenth century, it could be used for scaling
walls and unhorsing riders, as well as for thrusting, chopping, and slashing.
Jeep. Named by altering the acronym GP for general purpose, a small, light, fast, tough, dependable, all-terrain motor vehicle with four-wheel
drive, an 80-inch wheelbase, and often a machine
gun mounted in the back, developed by the Americans in the late 1930s and used extensively in
World War II (1939-1945), Korea (1950-1953),
and Vietnam (1961-1975). (Jeep became a trademark for a civilian vehicle based on the military
original.)
Judo. See Jujitsu.
Jujitsu. An unarmed Japanese martial art whose origins are lost in antiquity but whose basic principles were codified by samurai in the seventeenth
century. Named from two Japanese words mean-
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ing gentle skill, it is not the same as judo, gentle art, a more recent derivative that emphasizes
leverage and throwing. True jujitsu also involves
complex maneuvers of kicking, punching, and
holding.
Karate. Based on ancient Chinese boxing techniques, this hard-hitting, unarmed Japanese martial art features extraordinary leaps, chops, and
kicks. It became systematized during the seventeenth century on the island of Okinawa and was
named from two Japanese words meaning empty
hand. Tae kwon do, or Korean karate, evolved
from it in the 1950s.
Kidney dagger. Sometimes called ballock dagger, a
symmetrical, double-edged, usually ornate European dagger of the thirteenth to seventeenth centuries, so called from the shape of its guard.
Knife. A hand weapon with a multipurpose short cutting blade, dating from prehistoric times and differing from a dagger in its versatility, from a
sword in its length, and from a bayonet in its independence.
Knobkerrie. A Zulu striking or throwing club,
carved from a single piece of hardwood, with a
long, thin, straight handle and a smooth, small to
medium-sized spherical or ovoid knob for the
warhead.
Korps. See Corps.
Kris. A traditional Malay dagger, common throughout Southeast Asia, characterized by a long,
asymmetric, double-edged, distinctively wavy or
serpentine blade. A spur on one side of the base of
the blade typically blends into a sort of hand
guard. The handle is often ornate and the blade is
sometimes ridged, laminated, and inlayed with
elaborate designs or battle scenes.
Kukri. A traditional, single-edged, guardless, long
knife or short sword of the Gurkhas of Nepal,
characterized by the distinctive shape of its blade:
straight out from the hilt to about a third of its
length, then bent abruptly downward toward the
edge at an angle of about 35 degrees. The back of
the blade thus resembles a hockey stick, but the
edge is sinuous and, from the vertex of the angle to
the point, usually convex.
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Lance. A light, long, narrow spear, often with a hand
guard, carried by horsemen. An ancient weapon, it
was used for tournament jousting in the Middle
Ages, fell out of military favor in the Renaissance,
but was revived by Napoleon. Throughout the
nineteenth century until World War I (19141918), the lance was common among European
and Asian cavalry regiments and Native American horsemen.
Land mine. An explosive obstacle or booby trap,
typically buried just under the surface of the
ground and easily detonated by pressure or a
tripwire. A mainstay of twentieth century warfare,
most land mines are antipersonnel devices, but
some, set to detonate only from heavy pressures,
are used as antitank or antivehicle weapons.
Langue-de-buf. A type of pole arm whose head
consists mainly of a long, double-bladed spear
point named for its shape, like that of the tongue of
an ox (langue de buf in French). Developed by
the Swiss and French in the fifteenth century, it
was an early form of the partisan.
Laser. An acronym for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation. This emission of
light in a continuous narrow beam of all the same
wavelength (visible, ultraviolet, or infrared) was
developed in the late 1950s. Its most successful
military use is in rangefinding and guidance systems for precision-guided munitions (PGMs).
The United States used laser-guided bombs with
great effectiveness in the 1991 Persian Gulf War
(1990-1991).
Legion. This division of the Roman army consisted
of approximately 4,500-5,500 soldiers. In early
Rome, at full strength, it was formed by 4,200 legionaries and 300 equites, but during the Roman
Republic it had 5,200 legionnaires, as well as a
range of auxiliaries.
Lewisite. A poison gas, C2H2AsC13, a colorless
or brown, fast-acting blistering agent and eye
irritant, smelling of ammonia and geraniums, synthesized in 1918 by Winford Lee Lewis (18781943), then a captain in the U.S. Army Chemical Warfare Service. It was used briefly by the
Americans toward the end of World War I (19141918).
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Light artillery. A cannon with a small to medium
caliber and a light barrel, distinguished from
heavy artillery mainly by its superior versatility.
Usually wheeled and sometimes portable by as
few as two or three soldiers, it can be quickly redeployed, realigned, and redirected amid volatile
battlefield predicaments. The category includes
field artillery, tank guns, automatic cannons, antiaircraft guns, antitank mortars, and most howitzers.
Limpet mine. Named after the marine gastropod
mollusk that clings to undersea surfaces, a twentieth century naval explosive device containing
magnets for divers or amphibious saboteurs to attach it to an enemy ships metal hull below the
water line. American versions from World War II
(1939-1945) weighed about 10 pounds and used a
time-delay fuse to detonate a high-explosive
charge, usually torpex.
Lochaber ax. A type of pole arm whose head includes, on one side, a hook for scaling walls or unhorsing riders and, on the other side, a long, wide,
convex blade. About half the length of the blade
extends beyond the end of the staff. Developed in
Scotland late in the sixteenth century, it was popular with clansmen in their struggles against the English until Culloden in 1746.
Long-range bomber. During World War II (19391945), the Americans developed aircraft that
improved offensive punch by flying faster and farther for bombing runs. Early in the war, they replaced their B-17 Flying Fortress with the B-29
Superfortress, which flew at 350 miles per hour
and could bomb a target 2,000 miles from base
and return safely. The Enola Gay, which dropped
the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, was a B-29. From
the 1950s until the 1990s, the B-52 Stratofortress was the world standard for long-range jet
bombers.
Longbow. The mainstay of English military success
from the thirteenth to the sixteenth centuries, the
longbow made archery more accurate and deadly,
as well as inexpensive and uncomplicated. It was
a simple bow about 6 feet long, drew about 80 or
90 pounds, and shot a 3-foot arrow about 270
yards (250 meters). In its time, the only personal
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weapon that could outrange it was the crossbow,
but the crossbow was slow, and a practiced archer
could shoot ten or twelve arrows per minute. The
longbow proved devastating against the French at
Crcy in 1346.
Longship. A long, low, slender, shallow-draft vessel
of the eighth to eleventh centuries, usually propelled by a single square sail amidships but also
equipped with oars. Developed in Scandinavia by
expert seafarers, it was the swiftest ship of its time
and struck terror throughout coastal Europe as the
preferred raiding ship of the Vikings. From the
name of its flat rudder, steer-board, always
lashed to the right side of the ship, derives the
word starboard.
Lucerne hammer. A type of pole arm that evolved
from the voulge in the fifteenth century and whose
head consists of a heavy, four-pronged warhead: a
stout, thick spear point for thrusting; a pick perpendicular to the staff; and two claws opposite the
pick and also perpendicular to the staff. Its sole
purpose was to smash or penetrate armor.
Mace. A type of club, developed early in the Bronze
Age and refined during the Middle Ages, consisting of a short, thick staff and a massive metal warhead with four to six blunt blades or flanges parallel to the shaft and equally spaced around the head.
Alternately, a mace warhead could be a solid
metal sphere studded with spikes. It was used extensively by mounted knights to smash or dent armor. After knights in armor disappeared from
warfare, the mace continued to be used as a ceremonial symbol of authority.
Machete. A long knife or short sword that originated
in the tropical Spanish colonies in the sixteenth
century, with a short, thick, single-edged, heavy
blade for cutting sugarcane, hacking through jungle, or slashing enemies.
Machine gun. Developed in the second half of the
nineteenth century, a complex automatic rifle capable of rapid fire with ordinary small arms ammunition. Prototypes were developed by James
Puckle (1667-1724), Richard Jordan Gatling, and
Thorsten Nordenfelt (1842-1920), but the first
successful true machine gun was invented around
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1884 by Hiram Stevens Maxim (1840-1916) and
adopted by Britain, Germany, and the United
States in the 1890s. Loosely, the term can refer to
any automatic weapon.
Man-of-war ship. Developed in Britain early in the
seventeenth century, any large sailing warship,
especially either a frigate or a ship of the line,
square-rigged and with at least two gun decks.
Bigger, faster, more fully rigged, and more
heavily armed than the ship it replaced, the galleon, it survived until the end of the age of sail and
made the British navy supreme.
Mangonel. A medieval torsion-powered catapult
closely related to the onager but smaller and, because its throwing arm traveled through an arc of
only 90 degrees, less efficient. When cocked, the
arm was horizontal; when released, it hit the padded leather buffer at the vertical, thus dissipating
all its follow-through energy. Like all torsion engines, it was adversely susceptible to changes in
humidity affecting the twisted skein.
Maniple. A subunit in the Roman Republican army
that consisted of 120 legionnaires. There were
thirty maniples in each legion.
Matchlock. Introduced in Europe in the early fifteenth century and used until the early eighteenth
century in the West and until the mid-nineteenth
century in Asia, muzzle-loading firearm ignition
mechanism consisting of a lighted wick or match
that the trigger action brought into contact with
the pan of powder after the pan cover was lifted by
hand.
Meros (pl. meroi). A unit within the Byzantine army
consisting of about 3,000 soldiers. It was further
divided into ten tagmata. Three meroi formed an
army.
Metal-case cartridge. The earliest cartridge cases
were either paper or cloth. They were satisfactory
for muzzle-loaders but impractical for breechloaders, especially when the shooter wanted to reload quickly and cleanly. The metal case replaced
the paper case in the 1870s and had several important advantages, chief among which was that it
expanded to seal the breech as soon as the weapon
was fired. It not only made breech-loading efficient but also made automatic weapons possible.
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Militia. Traditionally, any nonregular military unit
made up of volunteers drawn from areas about to
be attacked. In Britain, militias originated with the
Anglo-Saxons during the Viking raids.
Mine. A naval or land booby trap, an explosive
weapon usually set to detonate by pressure.
Floating mines, moored just below the surface,
were typically equipped in both world wars with
Herz horns, a German invention that, when hit,
triggers an electrochemical reaction that detonates the high explosive charge. Land mines can
be laid by sappers or sown by mortars or from
cluster bombs. Antimine apparatus includes
probes, metal detectors, bangalore torpedoes,
tanks equipped with flails, ploughs, or rollers, and
minesweeping ships.
Minenwerfer. Literally, a mine thrower; a rifled,
muzzle-loading, short-barreled, 25-centimeter
German mortar of World War I (1914-1918), often loaded with gas shells.
Ming bashi. Sometimes known as a minghan, a division in the Mongol army, which previously had
been divided into hazara. The ming bashi was further divided into ten yuz bashi.
Mini ball. Not really a ball, but a conical lead bullet
with a hollow, expanding base, invented in 1849
by French army officer Claude-tienne Mini
(1804-1879). Firing the weapon pushed the bullet
tightly into the rifling of the barrel, thus dramatically increasing its range and accuracy. The Crimean War (1853-1856) and the American Civil
War (1861-1865) proved the superiority of the
Mini rifle over both the smoothbore musket and
the rifled musket, which used spherical ammunition.
MIRV. See Multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle.
Missile. Any self-propelled ammunition or projectile; loosely, the term can mean any hurled object. Its three main types of self-propulsion are jet
engines, propellers, and rockets. Because rocket
propulsion is by far the most common, some missiles, especially small ones, are loosely called
rockets. In the late twentieth century, the term
became mostly synonymous with guided missile.
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Mitrailleuse. A hand-cranked machine gun developed in 1869 for France and characterized by
thirty-seven barrels in a hexagonal pattern inside
a single air-cooled barrel. A metal ammunition
block inserted vertically into the breech, transverse to the barrels, held all thirty-seven rounds.
The French used the mitrailleuse too far back
from the front lines for it to be effective in the
Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871). The term later
became the ordinary French word for machine
gun.
Molotov cocktail. A terrorist and insurrectionist incendiary weapon developed in Europe in the early
twentieth century and named after Soviet statesman Vyacheslav Mikhailovich Molotov (18901986). Consisting of a glass bottle filled with gasoline and plugged with an oil-soaked rag, it is
thrown like a hand grenade as soon as the rag is ignited.
Morning star. A medieval clublike weapon with a
spiked end (hence its name). Used by both infantry and cavalry, it became popular in the fourteenth century and was soon replaced by the more
effective flail.
Mortar. A short-barreled, large-caliber, usually
muzzle-loading cannon designed to lob shells at
low velocity and high trajectory with moderate
accuracy for short distances, such as over the
walls of a besieged fortress. It has been in constant
military use since the fifteenth century, but in the
late twentieth it became mostly an antiarmor,
guided-missile-launching weapon.
Multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle (MIRV). A type of nuclear warhead on either
an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) or a
sea-launched ballistic missile (SLBM), developed in the 1970s, consisting of a cluster of
guided missiles to saturate the general area of the
target and make antimissile defense more difficult
for the enemy.
Musket. Any muzzle-loading, long-barreled, personal firearm, originally smoothbore, though it
could be either smoothbore or rifled. Invented in
the fifteenth century, it was a standard infantry
weapon for four hundred years until superseded
by the breech-loading rifle in the 1860s.
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Mustard gas. A poison gas, C4H8C12S, an acrid,
noxious substance that penetrates and irritates
skin, causes severe blisters, and can cause blindness. It was used extensively by both sides in
World War I (1914-1918).
Muzzle-loader. Any firearm, either a personal
weapon or an artillery piece, that loads its charge
and projectile through the front end of the bore.
Muzzle-loaders dominated for almost six hundred years, but, with the exception of mortars,
most military firearms since the late nineteenth
century have been breechloaders. The greatest
drawback to muzzle-loaders is that they cannot
repeat.
Naginata. A traditional Japanese pole arm whose
head consists of a long, high-quality, curved,
saberlike sword blade rigidly attached to the staff
with an overly long shank or tang. An expert in
naginatajutsu, the martial art of wielding this
weapon, was a very deadly warrior.
No. A sailing, deep-draft, broad-beam Portuguese
merchantman and warship, called nau in Spain
and carrack in England, developed in the late thirteenth or early fourteenth century, probably by
Basque shipbuilders. Usually with three or four
masts, armed with one or two decks of bronze cannons, and full-rigged, it was sturdy but slow. Famous nos include the Santa Maria, Christopher
Columbuss flagship; most of Ferdinand Magellans fleet that circumnavigated the world from
1519 to 1522; and the Henry Grce Dieu, Henry
VIIIs naval flagship.
Napalm. An incendiary substance, ammunition for
flamethrowers and firebombs, developed by the
United States in 1942 and used extensively in the
Pacific theater of World War II (1939-1945) and
in Vietnam (1961-1975). Also called jellied gasoline (especially in its early years), it exists in several formulas, the most successful of which is
napalm-B: 50 percent polystyrene, 25 percent
benzene, and 25 percent gasoline. The name derives from two of its original ingredients, naphthenic acid, or aluminum naphthene, and palmitic
acid, or aluminum palmate. Napalm adheres to its
target, making it difficult to extinguish.
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Nerve gas. Any gas composed of a nerve agent or
agents that forms a chemical weapon capable of
being used against opponents. It was first developed in Germany in 1936 but was most extensively used against the Kurds in the Iran-Iraq War
of 1980-1988.
Neutron bomb. The so-called dirty bomb, developed in the 1970s, an enhanced radiation bomb
intended as an antipersonnel tactical nuclear
weapon, designed to do minimal damage to nonliving structures but to kill or incapacitate all animal life within a certain radius.
Niru. A subunit in the Chinese army during the Qing
(Ching) Dynasty (1644-1912) consisting of about
300 bannermen who were drawn from the Manchu minority.
Nuclear-powered warship. The technology of substituting nuclear fuel for diesel in oceangoing vessels, especially effective for submarines, enabling
them to stay submerged much longer and refuel
less frequently, thus increasing the threat of the
sea-launched ballistic missile (SLBM). The first
nuclear-powered submarine, the USS Nautilus,
was launched in 1954.
Nunchaku. A Japanese weapon developed from the
flail used in the threshing of rice. It consists of two
sections of wood (or later metal), attached by a
chain, and was similar in some ways to the European flail.
Oil pot. Defensive weapon for besieged medieval
garrisons, a large metal cauldron containing hot
oil to be poured on attackers trying to scale the
walls.
Onager. A light, versatile, mobile catapult developed by the Romans, probably in the third century, so called because, after launching its load,
when the throwing arm landed on the padded
leather buffer at the front of the stout wooden
frame, it kicked like its namesake, the Asian wild
ass. Its power came from a skein twisted around
one end of its arm, which traveled through an arc
of about 135 degrees.
Ordnance. A term with two distinct meanings in
military parlance, depending on context. On one
hand, it means military equipment and hardware
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in generalnot only weapons and ammunition,
but also vehicles, tools, and durable supplies. On
the other hand, and more properly, it means artillery, cannons, and their ammunition. Ordnance
officers are responsible for procuring and maintaining this matriel and ensuring that the artillery
is in good working order.
Pack. A grouping of submarines, specifically German U-boats in World War I (1914-1918) and
World War II (1939-1945).
Parang. The Malay name for the jagged-edged,
oddly angled sword traditionally used by the
Dyak headhunters and pirates of Borneo. The tip
is sometimes squared off, with three or more separate points in line. The hilt is usually guardless and
often elaborately decorated with horn, hair, or
feathers.
Partisan. A type of pole arm whose head consists
mainly of a long, broad, double-bladed spearhead,
characterized by two small, winglike extensions
or flanges at the base of the spearhead curving up
toward the point. It evolved from the langdebeve
(French langue-de-buf) in the sixteenth century
and was common throughout the seventeenth. In
William Shakespeares Hamlet (act I, scene i, line
144), Marcellus asks whether he should strike the
ghost with his partisan.
Patriot missile. This U.S. missile was developed in
1981 as a surface-to-air missile, used mainly to
shoot down incoming enemy missiles. There was
much publicity about its deployment and use during the Gulf War of 1990-1991.
Patrol. A military unit involved in a specific task, on
land, at sea, or in the air. It has no fixed size.
Patrol-torpedo (PT) boat. A very small, very fast,
shallow-draft, motorized vessel, typically armed
with torpedoes, machine guns, and depth charges,
used extensively by the Americans in the Pacific
theater during World War II (1939-1945). John F.
Kennedy became a war hero while commanding
PT-109.
Percussion cap. A small container of priming substance that is detonated when struck in a specific
way, thus setting off the main charge and propelling the projectile down the barrel of the firearm.
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Alexander John Forsyth (1769-1843), a Scottish
minister, patented the first practical percussion
firing mechanism in 1807. His invention proved
to be among the most important in the history of
firearms, because it eventually made possible
metal-case cartridges, breech-loading, rapid fire,
and quick reloading. Cartridges are designated according to the placement of their internal percussion caps: rimfire, centerfire, and the obsolete
pinfire.
Petard. Explosive demolition device of the sixteenth
century, consisting of a container of gunpowder
which could be placed against a wall, gate, portcullis, or drawbridge, then detonated in an attempt
to open a breach. Because of its extraordinarily
loud report, it was named after the French word
for to break wind. Because so many of its users
were killed by the explosion before they could get
away, the phrase, hoist with (or by) ones own
petard arose, meaning literally to be blown up
by ones own bomb, or defeated by ones own
designs.
Petronel. A large-caliber matchlock carbine developed in France in the late sixteenth century, featuring a banana-shaped butt, curved sharply downward for bracing the weapon against the chest.
Phosgene. Poison gas, COC12, a colorless lung irritant that smells like freshly cut grass. It causes
choking death by pulmonary edema (that is, by
drowning in ones own mucus) and was used extensively by both sides in World War I (19141918).
Pike. A very long type of pole arm whose head consists mainly of a heavy but narrow spear point rigidly attached to the staff with a long metal shank.
The pike dates from ancient times, but its most
celebrated tactics involved infantrymen creating
defensive formations such as the mobile cheval
de frise against enemy cavalry in the sixteenth to
eighteenth centuries to allow musketeers safety
while reloading. Such pikes could be 16 feet
(5 meters) long.
Pilum. A Roman spear, standard equipment for foot
soldiers in the legions. It existed in two forms: one
long, heavy, often with a hand guard midway
down the shaft, and used mainly for thrusting; the
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other short, light, without a hand guard, basically
a javelin with a small head designed to break off
upon impact.
Pistol. A short-barreled handgun, invented in the late
fifteenth or early sixteenth century, frequently in
military use as an officers sidearm. Its onehanded operation made it suitable for cavalrymen. In automatic or semiautomatic pistols, the
magazine can be conveniently contained in the
handle.
Plastic explosive. A stable, moldable, high-explosive
mixture created by combining a plasticizing agent
such as oil or wax with a high-explosive compound such as RDX (cyclo-1,3,5-trimethylene2,4,6-trinitramine) or TNT (trinitrotoluene). First
developed in the 1890s, research into plastic explosives expanded dramatically during and after
World War II (1939-1945), resulting in such products as composition C.
Platoon. A subunit of an army company; in the case
of the British army, there are three platoons in a
company. At full strength, it consists of between
30 to 40 soldiers, and it is commanded by a subaltern. It is further divided into sections.
Polaris missile. This missile, first developed in 1960
in the United States, was an early submarinelaunched missile used by the U.S. Navy and the
(British) Royal Navy.
Pole arm. Any long, multipurpose spear. Pole arms
have been developed at every time and in every culture, but especially in Europe throughout the Middle Ages. The typical pole arm was used extensively by foot soldiers and palace guards until the
nineteenth century and consisted of a large, finely
crafted metal head rigidly affixed to a wooden
staff. Varieties include the bill, guisarme, glaive,
halberd, jeddart ax, langue-de-buf, Lochaber ax,
Lucerne hammer, partisan, pike, poleax, spetum,
and voulge.
Poleax. A type of pole arm whose head includes a
broad-bladed ax on one side. There may be a spear
point at the tip of the head and either a spike, pick,
or hook on the other side, so that the weapon
would resemble a halberd. It was developed in Europe in the late Middle Ages and used throughout
the Renaissance and early modern era.
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Pom-pom. So named from the sound of its report, a
small-caliber automatic cannon whose reloading
mechanism is powered by the firing of each previous round. Developed in the 1880s and 1890s by
Hiram Stevens Maxim and originally intended as
a mounted naval gun, its first use was as a field
piece by both the British and the Boers in the Second Boer War (1899-1902). In subsequent naval
and antiaircraft use, it was typically mounted in
pairs. The British used a 37-millimeter version as
a field piece in World War I (1914-1918).
Poniard. A Renaissance French dagger with a long,
slender, triangular or square blade, somewhat resembling a stiletto. In combat it was often wielded
in conjunction with the rapier as a parrying
weapon. The name derives from poing, the French
word for fist.
Powder B. The first successful smokeless powder,
invented in 1885 by Paul Vieille (1854-1934) and
soon adopted by the French army. It consists of
nitrocelluose gelatinized with ether and alcohol,
evaporated, rolled, and flaked.
Pursuit plane. From 1920 to 1948, American fighter
aircraft were officially designated Pursuit and
were numbered with the prefix P. Among the
outstanding planes in this series were the Curtiss
P-1 Hawk, the Boeing P-26 Peashooter, the
Lockheed P-38 Lightning or Fork-Tailed Devil,
and the Curtiss P-40 Flying Tiger.
Quarterstaff. A particularly stout medieval English
stave of oak or ash, about 8 feet long and 1.5 inches
thick, occasionally banded with iron at both ends
and commonly wielded with one hand in the middle and the other near one end. A surprisingly versatile weapon in the quick hands of an expert, it
can stun, stab, crush, unhorse, fracture, or even
kill. The legendary meeting of Robin Hood and
Little John involved their famous quarterstaff
duel on a narrow bridge.
Rapier. A long thrusting sword developed in Europe
in the sixteenth century and popular until the eighteenth. With a rigid, slender, straight blade of fine
steel and usually an elaborate hilt and hand guard,
it served the privileged classes, both civilian and
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military, as a dueling weapon, an instrument of
stealth and assassination, and a symbol of rank
and authority.
RDX (cyclo-1,3,5-trimethylene-2,4,6-trinitramine).
Also called cyclonite or hexogen, one of the most
common military explosives of the twentieth century, especially in World War II (1939-1945). Invented in 1899 by the Germans and named by the
British, its name is an acronym for Research Department Explosive. More powerful than TNT
(trinitrotoluene) and comparatively stable, RDX
is often mixed with TNT (trinitrotoluene), as in
torpex, the standard torpedo load, or in aerial
bombs and artillery shell fillings.
Recoilless rifle. Invented by the Americans during
World War II (1939-1945), a hollow tube, open at
both ends, allowing a single soldier to fire an artillery shell from the shoulder. The American M20
superseded the M9A1 after World War II (19391945). The Swedish Miniman and the German
Armbrust are late twentieth century disposable recoilless antitank guns firing just one load of shaped
charge, that is, a shell that explodes on the outer
surface of the armor and bores a hole through it.
Regiment. In the British army, a permanently established unit within the infantry, and also the Royal
Armoured Corps, Royal Artillery, Royal Engineers, Royal Signals, or Army Air Corps, being
commanded by a lieutenant colonel. It could consist of a number of battalions, and most regiments
had county or regional names showing where they
were raised or had connections. Within the German army in World War I (1914-1918), regiments
were assigned names of a king, prince, or other
military identity.
Repeating rifle. A breech-loading personal firearm,
using manual action to feed the next round from a
magazine into the firing chamber. Developed independently and gradually by many inventors in
the mid-nineteenth century, its eventual perfection early in the twentieth century was made possible by two innovations: the metal-case cartridge
and smokeless powder. The repeating action can
be a lever, as in the Winchester 1873; slide, as in
the Colt Lightning; or bolt, as in most World War I
(1914-1918) repeaters.
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Revolver. A type of breech-loading pistol, invented
in the mid-nineteenth century, classified in four
basic kinds according to how the multichambered
cylinder is exposed for reloading: side-gate, where
a flap opens on one side of the weapon; breakopen, where the barrel swings down on a hinge;
swing-out, where the cylinder swings to one side
on its hinge; and removable cylinder. Arevolver is
either single-action, if it needs to be cocked manually, or double-action, if the trigger cocks the
hammer. Famous manufacturers include Tranter,
Webley, Colt, and Smith and Wesson.
Rifle. Any long-barreled personal firearm, either
muzzle-loading or breech-loading, that has spiral
grooves machined inside the barrel to spin the bullet, thus increasing its accuracy, range, and power.
Invented in the fifteenth century and first popularized by the American colonists in the mideighteenth century, it superseded smoothbore
weapons in the 1860s. Outstanding examples are
the Winchester, M-1, Springfield, and Enfield.
Robot bomb. An early type of guided missile developed by both sides in the European theater late in
World War II (1939-1945), a small drone, or
pilotless airplane, loaded with high explosives
and sent on a descending course toward its target.
The best known is the jet-powered Nazi V-1
(Vergeltungswaffe Eins), used against England in
1944.
Rocket. A self-propelled airborne missile, powered
by the rearward thrust of gases from burning either
solid or liquid fuel, invented by the Chinese about
1000, developed in Europe in the sixteenth century, and made practical for warfare by Sir William
Congreve (1772-1828). It was developed into a
major element of modern warfare by Konstantin
Eduardovich Tsiolkovsky (1857-1935), Robert
Hutchings Goddard (1882-1945), and Wernher
von Braun (1912-1977). The first important military rocket was the German V-2 of World War II
(1939-1945).
Rocket launcher. Developed by all sides during
World War I (1914-1918), any device designed to
make small rockets more portable, versatile, and
mobile as artillery ammunition. In the form of a
mortar or recoilless rifle, a rocket launcher and its
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ammunition can be mounted on a tank, jeep, or
gun carriage, or carried by one or two infantrymen,
who fire it either handheld or from a bipod or tripod mount.
Rubber bullet. Also called a baton round, a largecaliber antimob projectile, typically 37-millimeter, developed by the British in the 1960s and
designed to stun and intimidate rather than kill, although it can kill if fired at close range. The same
specialized weapons that fire it can also fire canisters of tear gas, smoke screen, and other antiriot
ammunition.
Sa. A subunit of the ancient Egyptian army that consisted of between 200 and 250 soldiers. Each
fought under a different standard in New Kingdom Egypt (sixteenth-fourteenth dynasties, 15701070 b.c.e.).
Saber. A long slashing sword invented in Europe in
the eighth century. Used in most wars since then,
it achieved its greatest prominence as a cavalry
weapon in the nineteenth century. Usually curved
with a blade-length single edge on the convex
side, it could also be edged a few inches down from
the point on the concave side for back-slashing.
Sai. A Japanese three-pronged weapon, a long
dagger. Often it was attached to a long pole, which
in some ways made it similar to the European trident. It was effective against cavalry.
Samurai sword. A traditional weapon of the feudal
Japanese warrior class who followed the military
religion of bushidf. This high-quality, gently
curved, single-edged, two-handed, long sword
features a small guard, long handle, and elaborate
workmanship. Known in Japan as a daisho, nodachi, tachi, or katana, depending on length and
style, its standard design was established in the
early ninth century by the great swordsmith Yasutsuna.
Sax. Also called a scramasax, a long dagger or short,
straight, iron sword of the Northern European
tribes in the Dark Ages.
Scimitar. A traditional saber of Islamic nations, developed prior to the Crusades, characterized by a
long, thin, single-edged, crescent-shaped blade. It
was made from Damascus steel, which was pre-
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pared at a very low temperature. Varieties include
the Persian shamshir, the Turkish kilij, and the
Arab saif.
Scud missile. A Soviet tactical nuclear or highexplosive missile, liquid-fueled, relatively shortranged, and equipped with an inertial guidance
system. Scuds with nonnuclear warheads were
used ineffectively against Israel by Iraq in the
1991 Persian Gulf War.
Section. A subunit of a platoon in the British army.
At full strength, it consists of between 7 and
10 men, serving under the command of a noncommissioned officer. There are generally three sections in a platoon.
Semiautomatic firearm. Any firearm that loads automatically but fires only one shot for each
squeeze of the trigger. Mechanically, it is midway
between a repeating rifle and a fully automatic
weapon. The earliest was the 1893 Borchardt
pistol.
Shell. Any cannon-fired projectile filled with explosive, typically designed to explode at a given point
in its flight or upon impact. The earliest artillery
shells, in the fifteenth century, were hollow iron
spheres filled with gunpowder and fitted with
fuses. Besides varieties of gunpowder or black
powder, common explosive shell fillings include
picric acid, ammonium picrate, TNT (trinitrotoluene), amatol, RDX (cyclo-1,3,5-trimethylene2,4,6-trinitramine), and PETN (pentaerythitol
tetranitrate).
Ship of the line. A large three-masted, squarerigged, sailing warship with at least two and usually three fully armed gun decks, carrying between 64 and 140 guns, so called either because it
was powerful enough to hold the line of battle or
because, with sister ships fore and aft, they formed
an impregnable line. Developed by the British in
the seventeenth century, it was the mainstay of naval power in general and the British navy in particular for the next two hundred years, superseded
only by ironclad and motorized vessels.
Shrapnel. An antipersonnel explosive shell invented
in the 1790s by British artillery officer Henry
Shrapnel (1761-1842), consisting of a case of
small shot with a fuse designed to detonate over
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the heads of enemy soldiers. The term also loosely
refers to any small airborne metal fragments or debris from an explosion.
Siege artillery. Class of large weapons, originally
only mechanical instruments such as catapults
and trebuchets, but later also explosion-powered
weapons such as mortars and other large firearms,
employed during sieges to breach walls, destroy
defensive works, and keep besieged garrisons
confined.
Siege tower. A tall, shielded platform that could be
wheeled up to a besieged wall for archers inside
the platform to shoot down on defenders. Because
they were so vulnerable to fire, siege towers were
covered with water-soaked hides or metal plates.
In a famous incident during the Siege of Acre
(1191) by King Richard I of England (1157-1199)
in the Third Crusade, the Muslim defenders first
saturated a huge copper-plated Christian siege
tower with a flammable liquid, then set it afire
with a burning log hurled from within the fortress
by a trebuchet.
Sling. Invented in the Stone Age and existing in myriad forms ever since, a simple flexible or elastic
device for extending the range and velocity of
hurled objects. The basic weapon is just a small
pouch in the middle of a thong. The warrior places
a stone in the pouch, grabs both ends of the thong,
whirls the sling, and releases one end at the optimal moment, as David did in his famous encounter with Goliath in 1 Samuel 17. Slings are sometimes attached to certain kinds of catapults, such
as the trebuchet.
Sloop of war. A single-masted, sailing, wooden warship, rigged fore and aft with a lone jib, carrying
between ten and twenty-eight guns on a single
deck. Sometimes called a corvette, a ship of this
class could also have a small foremast, and if so, it
could be square-rigged. Developed by the British
in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, it was a staple of naval warfare until the middle of the nineteenth century.
Smokeless powder. Several attempts were made in
the mid-nineteenth century to find an explosive
that would burn more completely, produce less
smoke, and thus be a more effective propellant for
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firearms than gunpowder. Prussian major Johann
Schultze offered a prototype in 1864, but it burned
too quickly, violently, and uncontrollably. The
first successful smokeless powder was powder B,
developed in France in 1884. The French produced the first smokeless powder cartridge in
1886. Other successful smokeless powders include ballistite and cordite. Such powders are
either single-base, consisting of mostly nitrocellulose or guncotton, or double-base, consisting
of nitrocellulose or guncotton and nitroglycerin.
Conventional munitions typically use double-base
powder.
Snaphance. Invented in Europe, perhaps by the
Dutch, sometime between 1550 and 1570, a major
technological advance in muzzle-loading firearm
ignition mechanisms. When the trigger is pulled,
the powder-pan cover swings up and the hammer
swings down so that, when the two collide, sparks
are produced which, as the hammer continues
down into the pan, ignite the priming powder and
fire the weapon. The snaphance achieved great
popularity in the seventeenth century and made
the flintlock possible.
Snickersnee. From two Dutch words meaning thrust
and cut, a large knife or short, saberlike sword
used in Europe in the eighteenth century for both
thrusting and cutting. The term has also become
generic for any swordplay.
Spatha. An ancient Roman sword with a broad blade
for slashing. Longer than the gladius, it was used
by both infantry and cavalry in the last centuries of
the Roman Empire.
Spear. Any long, pointed shaft for either thrusting or
throwing. In prehistoric times it was first just a
sharp stick, but later in the Stone Age hunters and
warriors added sharp heads of stone, bone, teeth,
or ivory. As knowledge of metallurgy grew, so did
the sophistication and keenness of spearheads. By
the Renaissance, European spears were highly
specialized, some involving the functions of the
ax or sword as well as the spear. By the twentieth
century, most spears were only ceremonial.
Spetum. Type of pole arm evolved from the trident.
In the middle of the warhead was a langdebeve
(French langue-de-buf) spear point and at the
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sides were a symmetrical pair of shorter pointed
blades, each with one or more bill hooks on the
outer edge. A very versatile weapon for both
thrusting and slashing, it combined the best features of the partisan, the guisarme, and the bill.
Squadron. A unit from the (British) Royal Armoured Corps, the Royal Engineers, the Royal
Corps of Signals, or the Army Air Corps. At full
strength, it consisted of between 50 and 100 men,
often further divided into troops, sections, or
flights. After 1882, in the United States, cavalry
were divided into squadrons; before then there
were cavalry battalions.
Star shell. A nineteenth century artillery projectile
that explodes in midair, optimally at the high point
of its arc, releasing a bright display of sparks, either to illuminate a target or to signal friendly
forces. Used during the British night attack on
Fort McHenry on September 13, 1814, these
shells were immortalized by Francis Scott Key
(1779-1843) in The Star-Spangled Banner as
the bombs bursting in air.
Stave. A peasant weapon of the Middle Ages, especially in England, where it evolved from the walking stick into a long club and became the standard
defense for pedestrian travelers as well as a popular infantry weapon. The toughest kind of stave is
the quarterstaff.
Stealth bomber. The American B-2 Spirit bomber,
developed in the 1980s as part of President Ronald Reagans Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI),
characterized by its unique bat-wing appearance
and its ability to avoid detection by enemy radar.
Even though it first flew in 1988, it was not flown
in the 1991 Persian Gulf War because it was
not capable until 1996 of delivering nonnuclear
bombs. It flew against Serbia during the Kosovo
crisis of 1999.
Sten gun. A British 9-millimeter light, simple, inexpensive submachine gun invented in 1940 by
Major Reginald Vernon Sheppard and Harold
John Turpin. The name comes from the S in
Sheppard, the T in Turpin, and the En in either Enfield Small Arms Company or England.
Versatile, effective, and often having a collapsible
stock, nearly four million Sten guns were manu-
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factured during World War II (1939-1945). American soldiers in the European theater, equipped
with more sophisticated weapons, called it the
Stench gun.
Stiletto. A thin, symmetrical, Renaissance Italian
dagger with a round, square, or triangular blade
and no edge, used only for stabbing. Also called a
stylet, some round-hilted varieties were used by
infantrymen as plug bayonets. A highly specialized stiletto, the fusetto, had a slender, graduated,
cone-shaped or isosceles-shaped blade for early
artillerymen to gauge the bore, clean the vent, and
puncture the powder bags of muzzle-loading cannons.
Stones. Always available, and with deadly power obvious even to the most prehistoric of our hominid
ancestors, small, jagged rocks picked off the
ground and hurled are the most ancient of all
weapons. Still in prehistoric times, early humans
learned to chip stones into sharper hand weapons,
rudimentary knives, and later arrowheads, spearheads, and ax-heads. Naturally smooth or artificially smoothed stones became ammunition for
slings.
Submachine gun. A fully automatic personal firearm, small and light enough to be fired by a single
individual without support, developed between
the world wars, in particular by John Taliaferro
Thompson (1860-1940), inventor of the most famous submachine gun, the tommy gun. The
sub- prefix refers only to size and weight, not to
either the mechanism or the degree of automatic
operation.
Submarine. An undersea naval craft. David Bushnell (1742-1824) used a one-man submarine, the
Turtle, in the American Revolution (1775-1783).
A Confederate nine-man, hand-cranked submarine, the CSS Hunley, sank the USS Housatonic,
and itself, in 1864. The first practical motorized submarines were developed in the United
States by John Philip Holland (1840-1914). During World War I (1914-1918), the deadliness of
the German U-Boat wolf packs proved submarines an indispensable aspect of effective naval
warfare. The first nuclear submarine, the USS
Nautilus, was launched in 1954. Torpedoes are
Lexicon
the standard armament of submarines, but since
the Cold War (1945-1991) many have also carried
missiles.
Surface-to-air missile (SAM). A small, defensive,
guided missile launched from a usually mobile
ground station toward an airborne target. As either
an antimissile missile or an antiaircraft weapon, it
can be equipped with a small nuclear warhead.
The smallest have a range of about 6 miles (10 kilometers) and can be fired by one soldier from a
shoulder-held recoilless launcher. The largest have
a range of about 40 miles (65 kilometers) and are
launched from a semipermanent launch vehicle.
Sword. Any edged weapon with a long blade and
usually a sharp point. Invented in the Near East
about 6000 b.c.e., it may have been one of the earliest things that humans learned to make out of
metal, though its technology did not become practical until the Iron Age, about 1000 b.c.e. Some
varieties of sword, such as the rapier, are mainly
for thrusting; others, such as the saber, mainly for
slashing; and a few, such as the cutlass, are dualpurpose. A basic weapon in nearly every war until
the end of the nineteenth century, the sword since
then has been used for mainly ceremonial purposes.
Tae kwon do. See Karate.
Tagma (pl. tagamata). A tactical unit in the Byzantine army consisting of about 300 soldiers. Ten
tagmata formed a meros.
Tank. Amotorized, fully armored attack vehicle running on self-contained tracks, usually with guns
mounted in a revolving turret, invented by the
British in 1915 and first used in battle at FlersCourcelette on September 15, 1916. The Allies
used nearly five hundred tanks at Cambrai in November, 1916. The Germans were slower to recognize the value of this new technology, and the
first tank-versus-tank battle occurred at VillersBretonneux on April 24, 1918. Early in World
War II (1939-1945), German Panzers dominated,
and it was the Allies turn to play catch-up, which
the Americans did very well with the Sherman
tank. Tanks were a mainstay of ground warfare
throughout the twentieth century.
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Tear gas. Any solid, liquid, or gaseous substance
that irritates the mucous membranes when dispersed. Although used primarily in riot control
rather than in military operations, it is also useful
as a nonlethal system of disabling enemy combatants. As a result it is often used in hostage situations.
Thermonuclear device. Any bomb that relies upon
the principle of the fusion of atoms of low atomic
weight. At the dawn of the twenty-first century,
they were the most powerful bombs yet produced.
To fuse the nucleus of one atom with another requires tremendous heat as a trigger and produces
tremendous heat when accomplished. Since the
early 1950s, these bombs have been extensively
tested, manufactured, deployed, and stockpiled,
although never used in warfare.
Time bomb. Any explosive device with a time-delay
fuse set to detonate at an exact, predetermined
time and usually hidden in or near its target. Invented in the nineteenth century, it comes in three
types, classified according to their means of detonation: burning-fuse, the most primitive, first
made practical in 1831 by the British; clockworkfuse, developed in the twentieth century and used
extensively in World War II (1939-1945); and
chemical-reaction-fuse, the most sophisticated,
invented by an Anglo-American team in World
War II and common among demolition engineers,
terrorists, and saboteurs ever since.
TNT (trinitrotoluene). A high explosive first synthesized in the 1860s but not used as a military
explosive until the German armed forces adopted
it in 1902 and not extensively used in warfare until
World War I (1914-1918). Ideal military explosives are powerful, are nonreactive, are safe to
handle, have a long storage life in any climate, and
can detonate only under specific conditions. TNT
meets all these criteria. The power of nuclear
bombs is measured by kiloton, a unit equal to
1,000 tons of TNT, or by megaton, equal to 1 million tons of TNT.
Toledo. A finely tempered, very sharp, elegant steel
sword produced in Toledo, Spain. Swords manufactured in this Spanish city have had the reputation for high quality since perhaps as early as the
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first century b.c.e. They have been commonly
called Toledos since the sixteenth century.
Tomahawk. A small, light ax or hatchet invented in
pre-Columbian times, probably by the Algonquins, but carried by most Eastern North American native tribes. Its head was originally stone, but
metal after the seventeenth century. It could be either wielded as a hand weapon or thrown. Its name
was adopted for one of the best-known cruise missiles.
Torpedo. A naval waterborne antiship missile, either
guided or not, launched from a ship, submarine,
patrol-torpedo boat, or aircraft, and driven by a
propeller. The first practical torpedo, developed
by British engineer Robert Whitehead (18231905), was invented in Britain in 1866. Earlier, for
example in the American Civil War (1861-1865),
the word referred to antiship mines. The first extensive use of true torpedoes in war was by the
German submarines, U-boats, in World War I
(1914-1918). Among the explosives commonly
used in torpedo warheads is torpex, a mixture of
42 percent RDX (cyclo-1,3,5-trimethylene-2,4,6trinitramine), 40 percent TNT (trinitrotoluene),
18 percent aluminum powder, and a tiny bit of
wax, developed by the British during World
War II (1939-1945).
Tracer bullet. Used in the nineteenth century but developed comprehensively in the twentieth, any
projectile, usually from a machine gun and often
for antiaircraft fire, either containing or coated
with chemicals to produce a visible trail of luminous smoke, especially useful at night to verify
the gunners aim. A variant is the spotter bullet,
which contains chemicals to provide a visible
flash upon impact. Tracers or spotters can also be
armor-piercing or incendiary.
Trebuchet. The largest, most efficient, and most effective of medieval catapults, developed in the
thirteenth century and used exclusively as a siege
engine. Essentially a first-class lever whose effort
was about 20,000 pounds (9,000 kilograms) of
rocks in a bucket on the short arm, whose load was
a boulder of about 300 pounds (140 kilograms) at
the end of the long arm, and whose fulcrum was a
massive wooden frame, it had a range of several
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hundred yards at a medium to high trajectory. Often the throwing arm incorporated a sling to increase the range and velocity of the projectile. As
the short arm was very short and the long arm
could be up to 50 feet (15 meters), the machine
had to be cocked with a complex system of pulleys.
Trident. The ancestor of most pole arms except the
pike, evolving from the agricultural pitchfork and
at first indistinguishable from it. Intended only for
thrusting, its three points created a broad warhead
that increased the likelihood of wounding the enemy. It was used in most ancient and medieval
wars but is best known as a weapon of Roman
gladiators. A later, more sophisticated version is
the spetum.
Trireme. A galley with three banks of oars. Developed from the bireme for speed and power
around 650 b.c.e. and reaching its height of development during the fifth century b.c.e., it had an
overall length between 115 and 130 feet (35-40
meters), a crew of about 170, a draft of only 3 feet
(1 meter), and a top oared speed between 9 and
11 knots per hour. Each higher bank of oars was
mounted on outrigger fulcrums farther abeam
than the next lower bank. Because rowing required precise timing by all crew members, only
carefully trained freemen, not slaves, were used,
to ensure high morale. By 500 b.c.e., the trireme
dominated the Mediterranean.
Troop. Asubunit of a cavalry squadron or an artillery
battery in the British army roughly comparable to
a platoon in the infantry. More recently, when
used in the plural form, the term has been popularly used, coupled with a number, to refer to individual soldiers (for example, 25,000 troops
means the same number of soldiers).
Tulwar. A traditional saber of India, characterized
by a large, disk-shaped pommel, a knobbed crosspiece at the guard, and a broad, deeply curved
blade sharpened along the length of the convex
edge. Some varieties had knuckle guards, and
many had elaborately engraved or inlaid blades.
Tumen (tuman in Arabic). Originally a geographical division of the Mongol Empire that was organized in such a manner as to provide the Mongol
Lexicon
ruler with 10,000 soldiers. Later, the subunit of a
Mongol army that had 10,000 soldiers in it. This
unit was further divided into the hazara or
minghan. The term is still used in the Turkish
army to denote a unit of between 6,000 and 10,000
soldiers.
Vanguard. The soldiers who are in a military tactical
formation that serves in the front of any army.
There is no prescribed number of soldiers that
may serve in any vanguard action.
Voulge. A type of pole arm whose head consists of a
very large, broad single-edged ax blade with
small, sharp spikes or hooks at the top and back.
One of the earliest pole arms, it evolved from the
ancient pruning hook, a farm tool. The Lochaber
ax, the jeddart ax, and the Lucerne hammer all
evolved from it.
War hammer. A medieval, especially late medieval,
sophisticated, metal-headed, European club,
sometimes called a battle-hammer, either a shorthandled hand weapon or a pole arm, designed
with both a pick head to break armor and a blunt
head to cause concussions, trauma, or fractures inside the armor without breaking it.
Wheel lock. A complex muzzle-loading firearm ignition mechanism, invented around 1500. When
the trigger was pressed, a wheel turned, opening
the pan, creating sparks from friction with iron pyrites, and igniting the powder. It was superseded
by the snaphance in the mid-sixteenth century.
Whizbang. A British trench soldiers onomatopoeic
name for a German high-velocity, low-trajectory
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artillery shell in World War I (1914-1918), usually 88-millimeter. The soldiers believed that if
they could hear the whiz, then the bang would
not get them.
Xiquipilli. A unit within the Aztec army that consisted of around 8,000 soldiers.
Yataghan. A Turkish short saber without a crosspiece or hand guard. The blade is nearly straight,
but in the shape of an S-curve with the edge concave near the hilt and convex near the point.
Yeomanry. During the eighteenth century, volunteer cavalry units in the British army, generally
made up of yeomen, freeholders of land, or tenant
farmers. Subsequently it became a term for some
cavalry units in the British army, and later still for
units in the Royal Armoured Corps.
Yuz bashi. A division in the Mongol army, often also
called a yaghun, consisting of about 100 soldiers.
Ten yuz bashi constituted a ming bashi.
Zeppelin. A rigid airship or dirigible, a steerable
lighter-than-air aircraft, as opposed to the blimp,
which is nonrigid, and the balloon, which is
rudderless. Invented in 1900 by German Count
Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin (1838-1917), it was
originally intended for civilian passenger service
and performed that function until the Hindenburg
disaster in Lakehurst, New Jersey, on May 6,
1937. The Germans bombed England by zeppelin
during World War I (1914-1918) but abandoned
that practice because airships are difficult to defend.
Eric v.d. Luft, updated by Justin Corfield
Military Theorists
Although weaponry has changed substantially, some of the fundamental military tactics remain the same. Essentially generals have learned to choose their own battlefield, if possible,
and to disengage if they face inevitable defeat. Over history, various generals have tried to
adapt these and other tactics, and theoreticians have refought battles to identify the causes of
victory and defeat, as well as plan future strategies. The ancient Daoist general Sunzi wrote the
oldest surviving manual on military tactics, and the books by Julius Caesar are the oldest surviving accounts of battles by a commander. The works of Caesar and later Carl von Clausewitz
were heavily studied in Europe, and many of the recommendations by all three are still followed, albeit with changes to incorporate new technologies, such as cannons, guns, machine
guns, tanks, and aircraft.
Military Theorists
quest that took them to the gates of Rome itself.
Attilas tactics relied on the speed, skill, and savagery of his troops, as well as the terror they inspired.
Augustus (Roman, 63 b.c.e.-14 c.e.): After defeating Marc Antony at the great Battle of Actium, as
first emperor of Rome, following the loss of three
legions to German forces in the Teutoburg Forest
in 9 c.e., Augustus fixed the boundaries of the Roman Empire along strong defensive lines. Gaius
Suetonius Tranquillus, in De vita Caesarum
(c. 120 c.e.; History of the Twelve Caesars, 1606),
notes that, obviously fearing mutiny, he never
kept more than three companies on duty at Rome,
and even these had no permanent camp, but were
billeted in various City lodging houses.
Bayinnaung (Burmese, r. 1551-1581): As king of
Burma (now known as Myanmar), Bayinnaung
unified the country and made it the most powerful
in Southeast Asia, dominating its neighbors and
imposing Buddhism throughout the region.
Belisarius (Byzantine, c. 500-565): The greatest of
Byzantine generals, Belisarius served on all imperial frontiers as well as crushing the Nika Uprising
(532) that nearly toppled the emperor Justinian I
(483-565). Belisarius wrested North Africa from
the Vandals, conquered Sicily, and expelled the
Ostrogoths from southern Italyvictories achieved
with probably never more than about 18,000 troops
at any one time. In one speech, he is quoted as saying, Ours is a real enemy in the field; we march to
a battle, and not to a review.
Ben Boulaid, Mustapha (Algerian, 1917-1956):
Benboulaid served in the French army and then
used French tactics against the French during the
Algerian War of Independence, coordinating
many attacks on that colonial power until his
death. The French would withdraw from Algeria
four years later.
Bolvar, Simn (Colombian, 1783-1830): Bolvar
led the South American independence movement
against the Spanish, which saw the formation of
Gran Colombia and later the independent nations
of Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia,
and Panama. He is reported to have said, The
army is a sack with no bottom.
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Braun, Wernher von (German American, 19121977): A pioneer in German rocketry and a visionary of space flight, von Braun helped develop the
German rocket program during World War II,
which included the V-2, the first large military
rocket. After the war he was a key member of the
American space program.
Briggs, Sir Harold (British, 1894-1952): In 1950,
Briggs devised the plan that bears his name, the
Briggs Plan, which allowed the British to win
the Malayan Emergency by the establishment of
so-called new villages. The success led to the
Strategic Hamlets program in South Vietnam,
which was a dismal failure.
Bywater, Hector (British, 1884-1940): As a spy in
World War I and then as a British diplomat,
Bywater recognized the importance of the emerging power of Japan, warning that the Japanese
navy could dominate the Pacific during a European war. Most British experts ignored his book
The Great Pacific War (1925), which, however,
was avidly read by the Japanese. In 1920, Maurice Prendergast (who illustrated R. H. Gibsons
1931 The German Submarine War, 1914-1918)
summed up Bywaters ideas: Naval policies still
appeared to revolve, but in a dull and unnatural
manner, round that vacuum where once the German Fleet had existed. The magnetic pole of maritime affairs had not vanished with German sea
power; it had only altered its position and required
re-discovery.
Cabral, Amilcar (Cape Verdean, 1921-1973): He
helped plan the defeat of the Portuguese by training people in Guinea-Bissau against the colonial
power, using a trade-and-barter system in parts of
the country his forces had taken, and using political ideology as well as nationalism to hold together his supporters.
Caesar, Julius (Roman, 100-44 b.c.e.): A nephew of
the Roman general Marius, Julius Caesar rose rapidly in public life and in 60 b.c.e. was elected consul. The following year he was named governor of
Cisalpine and Transalpine Gaul and seized the opportunity to conquer the whole of Gaul. Caesar
next marched into Italy, precipitating a civil war
with his rival, Pompey the Great (106-48 b.c.e.).
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In a whirlwind campaign, Caesar pushed Pompey
out of Italy, captured Spain, and defeated Pompey at Pharsalus (48 b.c.e.). Master of the Roman world, Caesar was preparing for a campaign
against the Parthian Empire when he was assassinated. He was bold to the point of rashness, but his
brilliant mind and swift reactions made him master of any battlefield. He recorded his Gallic and
civil war campaigns in his Commentarii de Bello
Gallico (52-51 b.c.e.) and Commentarii de Bello
Civili (45 b.c.e.), collectively translated as Commentaries (1609). Plutarch quotes Caesar as telling his men during the civil war, when sailing
from Italy to modern-day Albania, Go ahead my
friends. Be bold and fear nothing. You have
Caesar and Caesars fortune with you in your
boat.
Castro, Fidel (Cuban, born 1926): As leader of the
Cuban revolutionaries, he not only led his insurgents to victory in Cuba against the Batista government but also proved to be an inspiration to
many other Latin American revolutionaries. After
his rise to power in Cuba, he supported revolution
elsewhere in the world, notably in Angola. A keen
reader, he wrote, When I read the work of a famous author, the history of a people, the doctrine
of a thinker, the theories of an economist or the
theses of a social reformer, I am filled with the desire to know everything that all authors have written, the doctrines of all philosophers, the treatises
of all economists, and the theses of all apostles.
Charlemagne (Frankish, 742-814): King of the
Franks and, after 800, Holy Roman Emperor,
Charlemagne returned a strategic vision to European warfare. Thanks to an effective system of
communications with his subordinate commanders, Charlemagne directed independent campaigns that established a large, relatively stable
state in Western Europe.
Chin Peng (Malayan, born 1924): As the leader of
the Malayan Communist Party, Chin Peng succeeded in hit-and-run tactics based on heavy use
of sympathizers, which nearly caused him to win
the Malayan Emergency despite being outnumbered fifty to one. In his memoirs, My Side of History (2003), he summed up his strategy: Our hit-
Research Tools
and-run tactics, though more often than not devoid of centralized control, had been successful to
the point that public morale on the enemy side had
clearly deteriorated. In order to maintain this trend
we resolved to hit the British even harder with the
specific aim of racking up a higher killing rate
among government security forces.
Churchill, John, first duke of Marlborough (English, 1650-1722): During the War of the Spanish
Succession (1701-1714), Marlborough made effective use of the allied forces through a blend of
battlefield brilliance, logistical thoroughness, and
diplomatic skills.
Churchill, Winston S. (British, 1874-1965): A British soldier and politician who planned the ill-fated
Gallipoli operation in 1915, Churchill displayed
skill and tenacity during World War II, as well as
doggedness, which contributed to Britains triumph in 1945. Although some of his speeches are
well known, his determination was best summed
up by this famous quotation: [W]e shall fight on
the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds,
we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we
shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender. . . .
Clausewitz, Carl von (German, 1780-1831): Although he served as general in the Prussian army
and fought against Napoleon in the Russian campaign of 1812, Clausewitz made his most important contribution when he wrote the posthumously
published book Vom Kriege (1832-1834; On War,
1873). His representation of war as an instrument
of the state to coerce an enemy into desired action
is often paraphrased as the continuation of politics by other means. Warfare, therefore, should
be guided by political leaders who understand it.
Political leaders and generals alike must also recognize what is known as the Clausewitzian trinity of violence, chance, and reason, represented
in war respectively by the people, the military, and
the government. Finally, war brings uncertainty
the fog of war and frictionin the context of
which military decisions must be made and executed. Clausewitz thought commanders should
reduce uncertainty, noting that courage and selfconfidence are absolutely essential, especially for
the general who seeks the most effective way to
Military Theorists
victory, that of destroying the enemy army in a
single, decisive battle. Initially Clausewitz was
regarded as a lesser military thinker, subordinate
to his near-contemporary Antoine-Henri Jomini,
and some have faulted him for not presenting specific rules or principles for waging war. Although
historical and technological changes have made
parts of his work less relevant today, Clausewitz
remains one of the few essential military theorists
in the history of warfare.
Colt, Samuel (American, 1814-1862): Colt invented
the revolver that continues to bear his name, a pistol with a rotating cylinder holding six bullets that
could all be fired before reloading. It proved a success in the Mexican War (1846-1848), and by
1855 Colt had built the worlds largest private gunmaking facility in Hartford, Connecticut, where
he improved mass manufacturing through the use
of assembly lines and interchangeable parts.
Crazy Horse (Native American, 1842?-1877): Chief
of the Oglala Sioux, Crazy Horse joined with Sitting Bull (1831-1890) to use mobile warfare to destroy the forces under General George A. Custer
(1839-1870) at the Battle of the Little Bighorn
(1876). At that battle he rallied his warriors before
battle, telling them, Come on, it is a good day to
die!
Cromwell, Oliver (English, 1599-1658): The eventual commander of the Parliamentarian forces
during the English Civil War, Cromwell recognized the importance of training and of professional soldiers through the creation of the New
Model Army. He was also to establish an English
Republic. After he dissolved the Parliament in
1649, a Presbyterian cleric said to him, Tis
against the will of the nation: there will be nine in
ten against you, to which Cromwell replied, But
what if I should disarm the nine, and put a sword in
the tenth mans hand?
Cyrus the Great (Persian, c. 601 to 590-530 b.c.e.):
Founder of the Persian Empire, Cyrus was the
worlds first great cavalry commander and an expert at siege warfare. His conquests stretched
from modern Turkey to the Persian Gulf, and the
Greek writer Xenophon quoted him as telling his
soldiers, Remember my last saying: show kind-
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ness to your friends, and then shall you have it in
your power to chastise your enemies.
Darius the Great (Persian, 550-486 b.c.e.): Darius
established a strong central government in Persia
with excellent roads and a powerful army. He extended the empire into northern India and conquered Thrace and Macedonia in Europe and
Libya in Africa. Around 500 b.c.e., Ionian Greeks
revolted, beginning the Greco-Persian Wars (499448 b.c.e.). Darius died before he could mount his
invasion of the Greek mainland.
Dayan, Moshe (Israeli, 1915-1981): As Israels
minister of defense, Dayans rapid strike at his
countrys opponents led to victory in the Six-Day
War in 1967. In an interview with the British
newspaper The Observer in 1972, he said, War is
the most exciting and dramatic thing in life. In
fighting to the death you feel terribly relaxed
when you manage to come through.
Douhet, Giulio (Italian, 1869-1930): Originally an
artillery officer, Douhet commanded Italys Aeronautical Battalion from 1912 to 1915 and became
convinced of the superiority of airpower. Like the
American William Billy Mitchell, Douhet argued with such vehemence that he was courtmartialed and forced into retirement. However, Italys poor performance in World War I brought
about his recall. Douhets Il dominio dellaria
(1921; The Command of the Air, 1921) argued for
an independent air force capable of strategic
bombing. In his book, he wrote, Victory smiles
upon those who anticipate the changes in the character of war, not those who wait to adapt themselves after they occur.
Drake, Francis (English, c. 1540-1596): Drake
combined the roles of pirate, privateer, and admiral in Englands struggle against Spain. He contributed to the tactics of fast, hard-hitting raids on
Spanish ports and shipping. His concentration of
the English fleet in the western entrance to the
English Channel was a key factor in the defeat of
the Armada in 1588. Although the most famous
statement ascribed to him was made when he was
playing bowls and said of the Spanish Armada,
There is time enough to finish the game and beat
the Spaniards too, his 1587 letter to Lord Wal-
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shingham is more prescient: There must be a beginning of any great matter, but the continuing
unto the end until it be thoroughly finished yields
the true glory.
Eisenhower, Dwight D. (American, 1890-1969):
Eisenhower oversaw the D day Operation in June,
1944, one of the best-planned and -executed military operations and one of the most difficult yet
successful seaborne invasions during World
War II. In an address in London in June, 1945, he
said, Humility must always be the portion of any
man who receives acclaim earned in the blood of
his followers and the sacrifices of his friends.
Epaminondas (Greek, c. 410-362 b.c.e.): Commander of the Theban army at the Battle of
Leuctra (371 b.c.e.), Epaminondas defeated a
much larger Spartan force by concentrating his
forces on his left wing and overwhelming the enemys right. This use of the oblique order was
an important development in phalanx warfare. He
described the battlefield as the dance floor of
Aries, referring to the god of war.
Eugne of Savoy (French, 1663-1736): Although
French-born, Eugne was rejected by King Louis
XIV (1638-1715) and became instead an Austrian
general and statesman. He was a master of coalition warfare and cooperated successfully with the
duke of Marlborough in victories over the French
at Blenheim (1704), Oudenarde (1708), and
Malplaquet (1709). He wrote, I never saw better
horses, better clothes, finer belts and accoutrements; but money, which you do not want in England, will buy fine clothes and horses, but it cannot buy the lively air I see in every one of these
troopers.
Fabius (Roman, c. 275-203 b.c.e.): Called to defend
Rome during Hannibals invasion of Italy, Fabius
was nicknamed the Delayer for his refusal to
meet his Carthaginian opponent in open battle. Instead, he wore down his foes by harassing them in
their movements and denying them supplies, a logistical approach to warfare that had great implications for future commanders.
Fisher, John Jackie (English, 1841-1920): Fisher
revolutionized naval warfare with the introduction of the HMS Dreadnought in 1906, the first
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all-big-gun battleship, which began a new arms
race. Fisher instituted other sweeping changes in
British naval policy, including concentrating the
Royal Navy in home waters for quicker mobilization against a European enemy.
Foch, Ferdinand (French, 1851-1929): A supporter
of the offensive and the power of morale, Foch believed a defeat to be final only when an army lost
the will to fight. In the last year of World War I,
the Allies named Foch as supreme commander,
and his positive attitude, along with the arrival of
American troops, brought an end to the war. In
Des principes de la guerre (1903; The Principles
of War, 1918), he wrote, A battle won is a battle
in which one will not confess himself beaten.
Franco, Francisco (Spanish, 1892-1975): As commander of the Nationalists during the Spanish
Civil War, Franco devised a system of war by attrition in which he saw his role as to destroy all opposition in areas captured before advancing any
farther. He was to become the longest-serving
European dictator during the twentieth century.
Frederick the Great (Prussian, 1712-1786): With
the hope of promoting Prussia to great-power status, Frederick relied upon both his superb army
and his ability to draw the maximum from his
troops. At battles such as Leuthen (1757), he used
the famous oblique order, massing troops on
one flank to achieve a decisive local superiority.
Even more important was his genius at combining
his arms, as at Rossbach (1757). The result was to
establish the Prussian army as the most powerful
in Europe, a position that remained unchallenged
more than a decade after Fredericks death. In one
letter, he noted, The lifetime of one man is not
sufficiently long to enable him to acquire perfect
knowledge and experience; theory helps to supplement it; it provides youth with early experience
and makes him skilful through the mistakes of
others. In his Die Instruktion Friedrichs des
Grossen fr seine Generale (1747; Military Instructions, Written by the King of Prussia, for the
Generals of His Army, 1762; also known as Instructions for His Generals, 1944), he noted that
battle is lost less through the loss of men than by
discouragement.
Military Theorists
Fuller, J. F. C. (British, 1878-1966): During World
War I, Fuller planned the Battle of Cambrai
(1916-1917), the first to employ tanks. As both an
author and an instructor at the British Staff College, he strenuously advocated the extensive use
of armor and airpower. In his book The Reformation of War (1923), he noted, I have not written
this book for military monks, but for civilians who
pay for their alchemy and mysteries. In war there
is nothing mysterious, for it is the most commonsense of all sciences.
Genghis Khan (n Temjin; Mongol, between 1155
and 1162-1227): Genghis Khan united the Mongol tribes and organized the Mongolian army into
a powerful force. After his conquests of northern
China and central Asia, he established a vast empire that was peaceful, well administered, and
strategically positioned. He encouraged trade and
opening routes between Europe and China. Genghis Khans military skill in battle was matched
by his attention to organization and administration. His armies were highly disciplined and well
supplied. Campaigns were carefully prepared using intelligence gathered by spies and scouts. His
reputation and that of his army were his most powerful weapons. He is quoted as saying, The greatest happiness is to vanquish your enemies, to
chase them before you, to rob them of their
wealth, to see those dear to them bathed in tears, to
clasp to your bosom their wives and daughters.
Geronimo (Native American, 1829-1909): With
only a handful of supporters, Geronimo managed
to evade capture by the U.S. forces for decades,
preventing them from taking control of the
Apache lands for much of that period.
Goddard, Robert H. (American, 1882-1945): The
father of modern rocketry, Goddard developed
rockets using liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen
as fuels and invented steering systems, multistage
rockets, and other technologies that allowed rockets to be used in modern warfare. From 1930 until
the mid-1940s, Goddard conducted much of his
research in Roswell, New Mexico.
Gribeauval, Jean-Baptiste Vacquette de (French,
1715-1789): As inspector general of French artillery, Gribeauval significantly modernized that
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military arm. By making cannons bored instead of
cast, he improved range, power, and accuracy. His
cannons were smaller, lighter, and exceptionally
mobile when harnessed to a new design of gun
carriage.
Grotius, Hugo (Huigh de Groot; Dutch, 15831645): The father of international law, Grotius
developed the first systematic set of laws to govern warfare. His masterpiece, De iure belli ac
pacis libri res (1625; On the Law of War and
Peace, 1654), became the foundation for international law regarding the conduct of warfare.
Guderian, Heinz (German, 1888-1954): A combat
officer in World War I, Guderian recognized early
the value of motorized armor. His book AchtungPanzer! Die Entwicklung der Panzerwaffe, ihre
Kampfstatik, und ihre operative Mglickeiten
(1937; Achtung-Panzer! The Development of Armoured Forces, Their Tactics, and Operational
Potential, 1937) outlined the tactics he and other
German commanders would use in World War II.
He condemned aspects of the Nuremberg war
crimes trials in his book Erinnerungen eines
Soldaten (1950; Panzer Leader, 1952), arguing,
All the reproaches that have been leveled against
the leaders of the armed forces by their countrymen and by the international courts have failed to
take into consideration one very simple fact: that
policy is not laid down by soldiers, but by politicians. This has always been the case and is so
today.
Guevara, Che (Argentine/Cuban, 1928-1967): Guevara gained legendary status in Cuba after the victory of Fidel Castro in his Cuban Revolution.
Guevara planned to extend the revolution to all of
Latin America. Although this plan failed and Guevara himself was killed, he proved an inspiration
to revolutionaries not only in Latin America but
also throughout the world. In his book La guerra
de guerrillas (1960; Guerrilla Warfare, 1961), he
noted, Guerrilla warfare incites no nuclear retaliation. It avoids the troops-cross-border criterion
needed to activate our defensive treaties. For the
aggressor, guerrilla warfare has none of the heavy
costs of all-out warfare. It exploits the Communists long experience in revolutionary activities.
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It can be conducted in countries not contiguous to
the Communist land mass. The aggressor merely
finds a suitably vulnerable nation, then supplies a
few catalysts.
Gustavus II Adolphus (Swedish, 1594-1632): Called
the father of modern warfare, Swedish king
Gustavus II Adolphus improved infantry by mixing pikemen and musketeers in battalions. His
lighter cannons introduced mobile field artillery
that could support infantry on the battlefield. He
also reintroduced cavalry, especially heavy cavalry, as a major element in warfare, giving it a critical role to play. Ironically, he was killed leading a
cavalry charge in his victory at the Battle of
Ltzen (1632). His religious beliefs led him to explain in 1632, My lord God is my armour.
Hadrian (Roman, 76-138): As Roman emperor,
Hadrian helped strengthen the borders of the Roman Empire. He is most remembered for the construction of one of the most massive military
structures of his time, Hadrians Wall (c. 122-136
c.e.), in northern England.
Hannibal (Carthaginian, 247-182 b.c.e.): Hannibal
was a brilliant battlefield commander, and his victory at Cannae (216 b.c.e.) remains the standard
by which all battles are judged. Hannibals contribution to military theory comes mainly from his
invasion of Italy during the Second Punic War.
Hannibal cast himself as a liberator of the Italian cities and sought to detach them from Rome.
When this proved unsuccessful, his unbroken
string of tactical victories proved strategically
useless. In Ab urbe condita libri (c. 26 b.c.e.-15
c.e.; The History of Rome, 1600; also known as
Annals of the Roman People), Livy quoted Hannibal as telling Scipio Africanus just before the Battle of Zama in 202 b.c.e., It is difficult for a man
to whom fortune has never proved false to reflect
upon its uncertainties.
Henry V (English, 1387-1422): In his victory at
Agincourt in 1415, Henry skillfully employed the
long-range firepower of English archers and mobile field fortifications, consisting of sharpened
stakes driven into the ground, to defeat a larger
army of mounted French knights, thus undermining the basis of traditional feudal military theory.
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In a play named for him, William Shakespeare has
Henry heroically ordering his soldiers at Harfleur,
Once more into the breach dear friends,/ or close
up the walls with our English dead.
Heraclius (Byzantine, c. 575-probably 641): Threatened along his borders, Byzantine emperor Heraclius reformed the Byzantine military and administrative system by establishing the theme system,
in which military commanders were placed in
complete control of provinces, or themes.
Hideyoshi, Toyotomi (Japanese, 1537-1598): A
peasant who rose to command armies and ultimately Japan itself, Hideyoshi combined military
ability, diplomacy, and political skills to unite the
island. His career is an excellent example of the
interrelated nature of warfare and politics.
Hitler, Adolf (German, 1889-1945): Influenced by
his experience in World War I and his own racist
views, Hitler believed that Germany must conquer both Western Europe, to gain security, and
Eastern Europe, especially the Soviet Union, to
secure Lebensraum, or living room, for Germanys population. He was successful in wedding
traditional military strategy to this malign political theory and in maintaining the support of the
German people and military throughout most of
World War II. Hitler was a supporter of new
weaponry, such as the Luftwaffes tactical bombers and fighters, the V-1 and V-2 rockets, and advanced submarines. He also encouraged innovative military techniques such as the Blitzkrieg. In
a 1942 speech to the Reichstag, the German parliament, he said of World War II, This war is one
of those elemental conflicts which usher in a new
millennium and which shake the world.
Jomini, Antoine-Henri de (French, 1779-1869): A
French general, Jomini entered Russian service
after being denied a promotion. Jominis Prcis
de lart de la guerre (1838; Summary of the Art of
War, 1868) was a systematic distillation of his
thoughts on military science. He emphasized the
immutable principles of war and the importance
of maneuvering the mass, or main portion, of an
army to make it most effective. He thought the
mass should be concentrated at the decisive theater of war, threatening the enemys communica-
Military Theorists
tions if possible; that a commander should place
the mass of his entire army against a part of his opponents forces; that the mass of the army should
concentrate on the decisive point on the battlefield; and that attacks should be coordinated for
maximum impact. Jominis ideas were highly influential, especially among commanders in the
American Civil War (1861-1865). In his book he
wrote, Ageneral thoroughly instructed in the theory of war but not possessed of military coup
doeil, coolness and skill, may make an excellent
strategic plan and be entirely unable to apply the
rules of tactics in the presence of an enemy. His
projects will not be successfully carried out, [and]
his defeat will be probable. If he is a man of character he will be able to diminish the evil results of
his failure, but if he loses his wits, he will lose his
army.
Jurez, Benito (Mexican, 1806-1872): As leader of
the Indians and poor in Mexico, Jurez managed
to wage a successful guerrilla war against the
Mexican government and then against the Royalists under Emperor Maximilian.
Kangxi (Kang-Hsi; Chinese, 1654-1722): The
fourth emperor of the Qing (Ching) Dynasty
(1644-1912), who ruled China from 1669 to 1722,
Kangxi consolidated Manchu power and legitimized Manchu rule in China. He defended his
realm against incursions from the Russians to the
north, seized the island of Taiwan, and overcame a
serious internal revolt. In these efforts he made
great use of Western technology, particularly cartography and cannons.
Khair ed-Dtn (Ottoman, 1483-1546): Creator of the
Ottoman navy, Khair ed-Dtn was also known as
Barbarossa because of his red beard. In 1533
Turkish sultan Sleyman I the Magnificent (1494/
1495-1566) ordered him to reorganize the imperial navy, a task he accomplished with speed and
ability. The new galleys were used in raids on
Christendom and in the conquest of Tunis and
Nice in France. Khair ed-Dtn used galleys to evacuate the Spanish Moors from Spain in 1533, a task
of great logistic complexity. He noted, He who
rules on the sea will very shortly rule on the land
also.
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Krupp family (German, 1587-1968): The Krupp
family was for four centuries the premier weapons
manufacturer in Germany and perhaps the world.
Alfred Krupp (1812-1887) perfected techniques
to manufacture modern weapons and was known
as the cannon king. Krupp guns contributed to
Prussias victory in the Franco-Prussian War
(1870-1871) and were important to Germanys efforts in World War I. The Krupp family supported
Adolf Hitler, and a second Alfred Krupp helped
devise the 88-millimeter gun, one of the most
deadly artillery weapons of World War II. In
1968, following financial reverses, the Krupp
family left the armaments business.
Lawrence, T. E. (British, 1888-1935): Part military
adviser, part visionary, Lawrence directed operations of Arab irregular forces during World War I
desert campaigns in 1917 and 1918 and helped the
Arabs liberate themselves from the Ottoman Empire.
Lee, Robert E. (American, 1807-1870): Offered
command of the Union armies at the start of the
American Civil War, Lee sided with his native
state of Virginia and rose to command the Army
of Northern Virginia. He was noted for his aggressiveness, ever willing to defy military convention
and divide his smaller forces in the face of the enemy to achieve a devastating flank attack. At the
Battle of Gettysburg (1863), he said, To be a
good soldier, you must love the army. To be a
good commander, you must be able to order the
death of the thing you love. Later he said to Lieutenant General James Longstreet, We are never
quite prepared for so many to die. Oh, we do expect the occasional empty chair; a salute to fallen
comrades. But this war goes on and on and the
men die and the price gets ever higher. We are prepared to lose some of us, but we are never prepared to lose all of us. And there is the great trap
General. When you attack, you must hold nothing
back. You must commit yourself totally. We are
adrift here in a sea of blood and I want it to end. I
want this to be the final battle.
Lettow-Vorbeck, Paul von (German, 1870-1964):
As commander of the German forces in Tanganyika (now Tanzania), Lettow-Vorbeck developed
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a system of guerrilla warfare that allowed him to
avoid defeat by the British throughout World
War I. In his memoirs, Meine Erinnerungen aus
Ostafrika (1920; My Reminiscences of East Africa, 1920; also known as East African Campaigns, 1957), he wrote, There is almost always a
way out, even of an apparently hopeless position,
if the leader makes up his mind to face the risks.
Liddell Hart, Basil Henry (British, 1895-1970):
Liddell Harts contributions to military theory include his concept of the expanding torrent of
armed forces through the enemys line, which was
a precursor of the later German Blitzkrieg. He also
advocated attacking key aspects of the enemys
civilian sector. In 1929, he wrote in the Encyclopedia Britannica, In war, the chief incalculable
is the human will. In his Thoughts on War
(1944), he noted, Those who are naturally loyal
say little about it, and are ready to assume it in others. In contrast, the type of soldier who is always
dwelling on the importance of loyalty usually
means loyalty to his own interests.
Louvois, marquis de (French, 1639-1691): As war
minister under Louis XIV, Louvois strengthened
the French army, making it possible for Louis to
wage his numerous wars. Louvois also supported
Sbastien Le Prestre de Vauban and others who
helped modernize the French military.
Lumumba, Patrice (Congolese, 1925-1961): Trained
in Moscow, Lumumba led the Congolese to independence from Belgium and became a hero to
many African revolutionaries.
MacArthur, Douglas (American, 1880-1964):
From a family of career soldiers, MacArthur was
defeated in the Philippines by the Japanese in
early 1942 but became the author of the islandhopping strategy that would lead to the defeat of
Japan in August of 1945. He later commanded
U.S. forces (and others serving as part of the
United Nations) in the Korean War. At the Republican National Convention in 1952, he said, It is
fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.
Machiavelli, Niccol (Italian, 1469-1527): Best
known for Il principe (1532; The Prince, 1640),
Machiavelli also wrote Dellarte della guerra
(1521; The Art of War, 1560). Machiavelli looked
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to Republican Rome to argue that a truly stable
and secure nation required a disciplined, welltrained citizen army instead of mercenaries. Machiavelli directly linked politics and war, anticipating the simplification of Carl von Clausewitz
that war is the continuation of politics by other
means. The Art of War was held in high regard by
readers such as Frederick the Great, Napoleon,
and Clausewitz. Machiavelli wrote from experience: He drafted the Florentine Ordinanza of
1505, a military law to end use of mercenary
troops. In The Art of War, he wrote, It is better to
subdue an enemy by famine than by sword, for in
battle, fortuna has often a much greater share than
virtu.
Maginot, Andr (French, 1877-1932): Maginot,
French minister of defense, advocated the building of forts on Frances eastern border to protect
France from invasion by Germany. Built during
the 1930s, these became known as the Maginot
line during World War II.
Mahan, Alfred Thayer (American, 1840-1914): An
American naval officer, Mahan published The Influence of Sea Power upon History, 1660-1783 in
1890, arguing that sea power was the decisive factor in national strength. The Influence of Sea
Power upon the French Revolution and Empire,
1793-1812 (1892) extended and solidified his influence. Both books were widely read and studied
in Great Britain and Germany prior to World
War I and contributed to the naval arms race,
which helped spark that conflict. In his book Naval Strategy Compared and Contrasted with the
Principles and Practices of Military Operations
on Land (1911), he wrote, Where evil is mighty
and defiant, the obligation to use force that is war
arises.
Mahan, Dennis Hart (American, 1802-1871): Instructor at West Point and writer, Mahan published editions of his An Elementary Treatise on
Advanced-Guard, Out-Post, and Detachment Service of Troops and the Manner of Posting and
Handling Them in Presence of an Enemy in 1847,
1853, and 1863. Out-Posts, as it came to be known,
was a comprehensive review of strategy and tactics. Mahan helped teach Civil War generals to be-
Military Theorists
lieve in an active offensive campaign of maneuver
as a means of victory. He wrote, How different is
almost every military problem except in the bare
mechanism of tactics. In almost every case the
data on which a solution depends is lacking.
Mao Zedong (Mao Tse-tung; Chinese, 1893-1976):
As a military and revolutionary theorist, Mao believed that the countryside, not the city, was the
seedbed of a peoples revolution. He stated that
political power comes out of the barrel of a gun
and that all reactionaries are paper tigers. He advocated a small but dedicated revolutionary force
that would move among the general population
until it could seize total control of the nation. His
most famous comments on fighting were published in Six Essays on Military Affairs (1971).
Marius, Gaius (Roman, 157-86 b.c.e.): Gaius
Marius was the prime mover behind the second
century b.c.e. evolution of Roman armies from
groups of citizens serving for limited periods to
standing armies raised and paid by their commander, to whom they were therefore loyal. He
also instituted the cohort as the principal unit of
the Roman army and improved training and discipline. In one battle, his opposing commander is
said to have claimed, If you are a great general,
come down and fight me, to which Marius replied, If you are a great general, come and make
me fight you.
Maurice of Nassau (Dutch, 1567-1625): Commander of the Dutch forces in their revolt against
Spain, Maurice introduced drill, discipline, organization, standardized equipment, and clear command structure. He drew upon classical examples
to make his troops more flexible and responsive,
and he effectively utilized artillery and engineers.
Maxim, Hiram Stevens (British, 1840-1916): Born
in the United States, Maxim became a British subject in 1900. He invented the automatic machine
gun, the basis for one of the most important of
modern weapons.
Mehmed II (Ottoman, 1432-1481): The sultan Mehmed II completed the defeat of the Byzantine Empire with the Siege of Constantinople (1453), in
which he used the largest cannons yet known,
specifically cast for the purpose. After capturing
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Constantinople, he famously is reported to have
said, The city and the buildings are mine, but I resign to your valor the captives and the spoil, the
treasures of gold and beauty; be rich and be happy.
Mini, Claude-tienne (French, 1804-1879): In
1849, Mini, a French officer, invented a bullet
with a conical point and an iron cup at the bottom.
When the Mini ball was fired from a muzzleloading rifle, the cup caused the bullet to expand
and fit snugly against the rifling grooves of the
barrel, increasing the accuracy. The Mini ball
was quickly adopted by Western armies.
Mitchell, William Billy (American, 1879-1936):
An advocate of airpower in armed forces and of
the creation of a separate air force, Mitchell commanded the U.S. Army Air Service in Europe during World War I. He was a friend of British air
corps commander Hugh Trenchard, an equally
strong proponent of airpower. Mitchells forceful
arguments that airpower would be the decisive
factor in warfare and his attacks on his superiors
led to his court-martial and resignation. In his
book Winged Defense: The Development and
Possibilities of Modern Air PowerEconomic
and Military (1925), he noted, It is probable that
future war will be conducted by a special class, the
air force, as it was by the armored knights of the
Middle Ages.
Monash, John (Australian, 1865-1931): As a commander in World War I, Monash oversaw the
broad attack at Villers-Bretonneux in 1918 that
forced the German to retreat, the first major defeat
for the Germans after four years of trench warfare.
In spite of his success in the war, he did say, I do
not regard and have never regarded permanent
soldiering as an attractive proposition for any man
who has some other profession at his command. I
would recommend to him to stick to private practice every time.
Napoleon I (Napoleon Bonaparte; Corsican French,
1769-1821): Napoleons rise from a position of
relative obscurity to that of French emperor in
1804 and his final defeat at Waterloo (1815) and
ensuing exile to the barren island of St. Helena are
romantic aspects of his life. His reputation rests
solidly on his reforms of the French legal and ad-
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ministrative system and, especially, his military
genius. Napoleon inherited an army that had made
major improvements in artillery, infantry tactics,
and organization, and he incorporated these into a
coherent system that improved the armys logistics, speed, and fighting power. He evolved a
command system that allowed him to control operations in an extensive battlefield so he could
menace one portion of an enemys line and at the
decisive moment strike at the most vulnerable
point. With this flexibility, he won complex battles at Castiglione (1796) and Austerlitz (1805),
both of which relied upon careful timing. Above
all, Napoleon brought a vision to warfare that
moved beyond the immediate battle to a strategic
plan to win the war. He commented, In war, everything depends on morale; and morale and public opinion comprise the better part of reality.
Nasution, Abdul Haris (Indonesian, 1918-2000):
This Indonesian general developed the concept of
territorial warfare and also the tactics of guerrilla
warfare against the Dutch during the DutchIndonesian War. In his book Pokok-Pokok
Gerilya (1953; Fundamentals of Guerilla Warfare, 1953), he argued, The guerrilla should be a
revolutionary vanguard; this was our ideal in the
past and should be our ideal in the future.
Nelson, Horatio (British, 1758-1805): During the
Napoleonic Wars (1793-1815), Nelsons victories at the Battle of the Nile (1798), Copenhagen
(1801), and Trafalgar (1805) ensured English naval domination. Nelsons tactics, never formalized and always open to innovation, consisted of
breaking the line of enemy ships and then concentrating on the scattered elements. At the Battle of
Trafalgar, he noted, England expects every man
to do his duty.
Nimitz, Chester W. (American, 1885-1966): Commander in chief of the United States Pacific fleet
during World War II, Nimitz used an islandhopping strategy that seized key points and left
Japanese forces isolated. He combined airpower
and military intelligence to win the decisive Battle
of Midway in 1942. In March, 1945, he noted of
his soldiers, Among the men who fought on Iwo
Jima, uncommon valor was a common virtue.
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Oppenheimer, J. Robert (American, 1904-1967):
As director of the Los Alamos Laboratories during World War II, Oppenheimer was in charge of
the team of scientists who developed the nations
first nuclear weapons, a program called the Manhattan Project. An excellent administrator as well
as a scientist, he also was a member of the scientific panel that supported the use of the atomic
bomb against Japan.
Philip II (Macedonian, 382-336 b.c.e.): As king of a
marginal state on the edge of the Greek world,
Philip transformed the Macedonian army into his
eras most potent force, largely through effective
use of the military formation known as the phalanx. He was preparing an invasion of the Persian
Empire when he was assassinated by a Macedonian youth. He was then succeeded in rule, ambition, and achievement by his son, Alexander the
Great, who would go on to conquer much of the
known world.
Qi Jiguang (Chi Chi-Kuang; Chinese, 1528-1587):
Qi Jiguang incorporated the precepts in Sunzis
(Sun Tzus) Bingfa (c. 510 b.c.e.; The Art of
War, 1910) in reforms that allowed large Chinese armies to cross the steppes and fight against
mounted, more mobile opponents. He thereby
made China a more unified and stable nation.
Saladin (Seljuk Turk, c. 1137-1193): As leader of the
Seljuk Turks, he led his troops to victory at the
Battle of Hattin, and he managed to destroy the
Kingdom of Jerusalem, and blunt the Third Crusade, holding together an Empire which included
modern-day Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and
Yemen.
San Martn, Jos (Argentine, 1778-1850): San
Martn managed to rally Latin Americans who
supported independence from Spain, lead them
across the Andes, and attack Spanish-dominated
Peru, thereby ensuring independence for Argentina, Chile, and Peru.
Schlieffen, Alfred von (German, 1833-1913): The
German chief of staff from 1891 to 1905, Schlieffen devised an intricate plan for Germany to strike
first against France and then move against the
slower Russian armies. The plan was the supreme
example of war by timetable and went through
Military Theorists
more than fifty revisions. When war finally came,
however, it failed.
Schwarzkopf, H. Norman (American, born 1934):
Schwarzkopf oversaw the victory of the U.S.dominated coalition forces in the Gulf War of
1991 with relatively few casualties. His role was
not only to lead a sometimes uneasy coalition but
also to use the media to make the Iraqis believe
that he was about to launch a seaborne invasion instead of attacking on land. In an interview in 1991,
he said, It is very important that if we commit
again to any kind of battle we are sure to understand the ramifications of what happens if we do
accomplish our objectives, an observation that
appeared prescient following the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq mounted in 2003.
Scipio Africanus (Roman, 235-183 b.c.e.): During
the Punic Wars, Scipio Africanus managed to defeat Hannibal by embarking on a risky invasion of
North Africa and forcing the Carthaginians to
leave Italy in order to save their capital. His dislike
of politicians was shown when he was later tried
for bribery. Warning the Roman people against
politicians, Scipio exclaimed, Ungrateful country, you will not possess even my bones.
Scott, Winfield (American, 1786-1866): A veteran
of the War of 1812, a victor in the Mexican War
(1846-1848), and a long-serving army commander, Scott instilled professionalism in the new
American nations army. His amphibious expedition against Mexico in 1847 used maneuvering
more than frontal assault to achieve victory. In
1861, in his mid-seventies, he proposed the Anaconda Plan, which eventually defeated the Southern Confederacy by blockade, driving down the
Mississippi River into the heart of the South.
Servius Tullius (Roman, 578-534 b.c.e.): Servius
was a possibly fictitious Etruscan king credited
with revising the Roman state, including its military. His army was organized around centuries
of one hundred men capable of providing their
own arms and armor. Servius is said to have built
the first walls around Rome, the first bridge across
the Tiber, and Romes seaport at Ostia. During his
reign (or during this time), Rome emerged as the
leading power in central Italy.
1131
Severus, Lucius Septimius (Roman, 146-211):
Severus restored military strength to the Roman
Empire after a period of civil war. He increased
the number of Roman legions, created a mobile
reserve, used native troops, and tied the army to
the throne by increased pay. His dying words to
his sons were, in effect, Be generous to the soldiers and dont care about anyone else.
Shaka (Zulu, c. 1787-1828): Founder of the Zulu
Empire in southern Africa, Shaka introduced the
assagai, or the short stabbing spear, and organized disciplined units that could be effectively
commanded on the battlefield. The empire he
founded resisted European control until 1897.
Sherman, William Tecumseh (American, 18201891): The commander of Union armies in the
western theater during the American Civil War,
Sherman declared that war is hell and you cannot
refine it, believing that the morale of an enemy
civilian population was as much a target as its armies in the field. He employed this doctrine during his devastating March to the Sea (1864) and
his subsequent advance across the Carolinas.
Looking back on the war, in 1880 he said, There
is many a boy here to-day who looks on war as all
glory, but, boys, it is all hell.
Shihuangdi (Shih Huang-ti; Chinese, 259-210
b.c.e.): The first emperor (also known as Qin
Shihuangdi) to rule a unified China, Shihuangdi
came to power in 246 b.c.e. as ruler of Qin
(Chin), a feudal state that unified China in 221
b.c.e. He centralized government and military administration. He divided the country into thirtysix military districts and standardized weights,
measurements, and even the axle lengths of carts
to make roads more uniform. He built much of the
Great Wall.
Shrapnel, Henry (British, 1761-1842): An English
artillery officer, Shrapnel developed an artillery
projectile with many small metal pieces. When
exploded, these were effective against enemy
troops. The name for his device, first used in 1804
and known as shrapnel, has come to be used for
similar fragments from artillery shells or bombs.
Skanderbeg (Albanian, 1405-1468): As prince of
Albania, Skanderbeg was able to lead a spirited
1132
resistance against the Ottoman Turks for two decades, developing a system of hit-and-run raids
yet managing to maintain some strategic strongholds.
Slim, Viscount (Sir William Slim; British, 18911970): A commander of guerrilla groups harassing the Japanese in Burma (now called Myanmar)
in World War II, Viscount Slim noted in 1957, in
Courage and Other Broadcasts, The more modern war becomes, the more essential appear the
basic qualities that from the beginning of history
have distinguished armies from mobs.
Sunzi (Sun Tzu; Chinese, fl. c. fifth century b.c.e.):
Little is known about the author of Bingfa (c. 510
b.c.e.; The Art of War, 1910) except that he was
active in military affairs during the Zhou (Chou)
Dynasty (1066-256 b.c.e.) and had a profound influence on Asian military thought. He was largely
unknown in the West until the eighteenth century,
and he received widespread appreciation only in
the twentieth. Sunzi stressed moral more than
physical force, seeing defeat as a psychological
condition that a successful commander imposes
upon an opponent. A proponent of Daoist thought,
Sunzi preached that a commander must use the
natural flow of conditionsterrain, weather, enemy strength, and moraleto shape the battle
plan. To dominate an enemy morally, one must
understand the enemy completely, necessitating
the use of intelligence gathering, deception, and
trickery. In Sunzis concept of warfare, the ultimate goal is to make the enemys plans fit ones
own strategy so that his strengths become weaknesses and lead to his ultimate defeat. A quote he
ascribed to Wu Chi was The troops must have
confidence in the orders of their seniors. The orders of their superiors [form] the source whence
discipline is born.
Templer, Gerald (British, 1898-1979): As commander of the British in Malaya, Templer managed to use intelligence and strong-arm tactics
to win the Malayan Emergency, in one of the
most successful counterinsurgency campaigns in
the twentieth century. When asked how he won
the conflict, he said, It all depended on intelligence.
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Themistocles (Greek, c. 524-c. 460 b.c.e.): After the
Greek victory over the Persians at Marathon (490
b.c.e.), Themistocles established a strong Athenian navy. In 480 b.c.e., the combined Greek fleet
defeated the Persians at Salamis. Although Themistocles was exiled from Athens, he laid the
foundation for the Athenian Empire.
Thompson, Robert (British, 1916-1992): A leading British counterinsurgency expert, Thompson
advised the British military in Malaya and later
the Americans in Vietnam. He started his book
No Exit from Vietnam (1969) by noting that war as
a continuation of politics is comprehensible only
in relation to the achievement of its political aim.
Tiglath-pileser III (Assyrian, r. 745-727 b.c.e.): Assyrian ruler Tiglath-pileser III established a
strong, centralized government and army that allowed the Assyrian Empire to conquer Syria,
Phoenicia, Israel, and much of the Middle East.
Tito (Josip Broz; Yugoslav, 1892-1980): As leader
of the Partisans, Tito managed to defeat the Germans in Yugoslavia and outmaneuver the Yugoslav Royalists. In 1942 he wrote that success
would come from swift, surprise assaults, night
forays, surrounding the enemy and regularly attacking him from the rear.
Torstenson, Lennart (Swedish, 1603-1651): ASwedish general and artillery commander, Torstenson
served under Gustavus II Adolphus and was expert in the use of the new mobile field artillery. After rising to the command of the Swedish army in
1641, he won a series of victories that relied on his
skillful use of field artillery.
Trenchard, Hugh (British, 1873-1956): After serving in the British Army, Trenchard became the
Royal Flying Corps field commander in 1913. In
1918 he established the Independent Air Force as
a separate branch. He supported strategic bombing and instituted its first use against Germany in
the closing days of the war.
Trotsky, Leon (Russian, 1879-1940): Known as
a political leader of the Bolshevik Revolution
(1917-1921), Trotsky was the creator of the Red
Army during the Russian Civil War (1918-1921).
As the first modern military force motivated and
guided by ideology, the Red Army preserved the
Military Theorists
Soviet revolutionary government against its internal and external enemies. In 1921, Trotsky wrote,
If we happen to be too weak for attack, then we
strive to detach ourselves from the embraces of
the enemy in order later to gather ourselves into a
gist and to strike at the enemys most vulnerable
spot. This and other comments were published as
Military Writings (1969). As his long-term strategy, he noted, First of all you must build the morale of your own troops. Then you must look to the
morale of your civilian population. Then, and
only then, when these are in good repair, should
you concern yourself with the enemy morale. And
the best way to destroy the enemy morale is to kill
him in large numbers. There is nothing more demoralizing than that.
Tsuji, Masanobu (Japan, 1902-1961): Tsuji was a
Japanese army officer who helped plan the invasion of Malaya, oversaw the war in Malaya, and
later served in Burma and Guadalcanal. His book
Shingapfru: Unmei no tenki (1952; Singapore:
The Japanese Version, 1960) is one of the few accounts in English by a senior Japanese officer. He
noted famously, Patience is a virtue in staff discussions.
Vauban, Sbastien Le Prestre de (French, 16331707): Vauban is chiefly remembered as Europes
best and most prolific military engineer at a time
when siegeworks and fortifications were crucial
to the art of military affairs. He developed a system of geometric, angular, defensive works that
were mutually reinforced by firepower and difficult to attack. Vauban was equally adept using
counterwalls or circumvallations; indirect approaches, such as zigzagging trenches; and explosives, such as mines, in capturing enemy fortresses.
Vegetius Renatus, Flavius (Roman, fifth century
c.e.): Vegetiuss De Re Militari (383-450 c.e.;
The Fovre Bookes of Flauius Vegetius Renatus:
Briefelye Contayninge a Plaine Forme and Perfect Knowledge of Martiall Policye, Feates of Chiualrie, and Vvhatsoeuver Pertayneth to Warre,
1572; also translated as Military Institutions of
Vegetius, 1767) provided an excellent description
of Roman infantry doctrine, especially its empha-
1133
sis on drill and maneuver. This work was consulted as a practical manual on military matters
well into the nineteenth century.
Vo Nguyen Giap (Vietnamese, born 1911): Viet
Minh general Giap believed revolutionary warfare
should follow a three-step progression: guerrilla
fighting, equality with the opponent, and final victory. During the long struggle in Vietnam, he employed this strategy against the French, South
Vietnamese, and Americans, leading to military
victories, such as that at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, as
well as politically beneficial military defeats, such
as the 1968 Tet Offensive. Commenting on his
military tactics, in 1982 he said famously, There
is only one rule in you: you must win.
Wallenstein, Albrecht Wenzel von (Bohemian,
1583-1634): As a general in the forces of the Holy
Roman Empire during the Thirty Years War
(1618-1648), Wallenstein raised his own armies
and provided for them from the lands of his opponents. His maxim was that war must feed war.
Washington, George (American, 1732-1799): As
commander of the American forces during the
American Revolution, Washington transformed
the militia into the Continental Army after training them at Valley Forge. In 1796 he stated, It is
our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliance
with any portion of the foreign world.
Weinberger, Caspar (American, 1917-2006): As
U.S. secretary of defense (1981-1987), Weinberger oversaw the massive expansion of the U.S. military, including nuclear submarines, that prompted
the Soviet Union to compete, bankrupting itself in
the process. In 1990 he published an account of his
time in the Pentagon, Fighting for Peace: Seven
Critical Years in the Pentagon.
Wellington, duke of (Arthur Wellesley; British,
1759-1852): As commander of the British forces
in the Peninsular War and then at Waterloo, Wellington invoked planning, shrewdness, and conservatism to achieve many victories against Napoleon. In 1810 he said of the French, They
wont draw me from my cautious system. Ill fight
them only where I am pretty sure of victory.
Wet, Christiaan de (South African, 1854-1922): As
commander of the Boer guerrillas, de Wet was
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1134
able to wage a long war against a massively superior British army during the Second Boer War. In
his book De strijd tusschen Boer en Brit (1902;
Three Years War, 1902), he said, [W]e had always felt that no one is worthy of the name of man
who is not ready to vindicate the right, be the odds
what they may.
Whitney, Eli (American, 1765-1825): American inventor Whitney perfected the manufacture of interchangeable parts in 1798, standardizing the
machine-made parts of a musket to predetermined
specifications and bringing mass production to
warfare.
Yamamoto, Isoroku (Japanese, 1884-1943): Japans
most successful admiral during World War II,
Yamamoto devised the surprise attack on Pearl
Harbor. He forced the decisive battle with the
American fleet at Midway; the American victory
there was the turning point in the Pacific war. In
1937 he urged that Japan should never be so foolish as to make enemies of Great Britain and the
United States.
Yi Sun-sin (Korean, 1545-1598): Yi developed probably the first ironclad battleship, the kobukson or
turtle ship, whose upper deck was covered with
iron plates and with cannons mounted along the
sides and stern. When the Japanese invaded Korea
in 1592, Yis fleet cut them off from supplies and
reinforcements. His naval victories are ranked
with those of the Battle of Lepanto (1571) and the
defeat of the Spanish Armada (1588).
Zhukov, Georgy (Soviet, 1896-1974): A Red Army
commander during World War II, Zhukov earned
a reputation for tenacity and planning, which led
to the destruction of the Axis forces at Stalingrad
and later their defeat in Europe.
Mimka, Jan (Bohemian, c. 1360-1424): Military
leader of the Hussites, Mimka used linked, stoutly
built wagons filled with troops and small cannons as mobile field fortifications known as
Wagenburgs. Mimka was never defeated in battle,
despite the fact that he was, for much of his life,
blind.
Time Line
c. 13,000 b.c.e.
c. 10,000 b.c.e.
c. 7000 b.c.e.
c. 5000 b.c.e.
The city of Jericho becomes arguably the first town to be fortified with a stone
wall.
c. 5000 b.c.e.
c. 4000 b.c.e.
Horses are first domesticated and ridden by people of the Sredni Stog culture.
c. 4000 b.c.e.
Copper is used to make the first metal knives, in the Middle East and Asia.
c. 3500 b.c.e.
c. 3200 b.c.e.
c. 2500 b.c.e.
c. 2500 b.c.e.
2333 b.c.e.
c. 2300 b.c.e.
After the composite bow is introduced by Sargon the Great, the use of the
Sumerian phalanx declines.
c. 2250 b.c.e.
c. 2100 b.c.e.
c. 2000 b.c.e.
c. 1950-1500 b.c.e.
c. 1900 b.c.e.
c. 1810 b.c.e.
c. 1800-1000 b.c.e.
Aryan invaders conquer India, mixing with earlier cultures to produce a new
Hindu civilization in the area of the Ganges River Valley.
1135
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1136
c. 1700 b.c.e.
Assyrians employ integrated siege tactics with rams, towers, ramps, and sapping.
c. 1674 b.c.e.
The Hyksos people introduce the horse-drawn chariot during invasions of Egypt.
c. 1600 b.c.e.
1600-1066 b.c.e.
c. 1500-900 b.c.e.
During their Middle Empire period, the Assyrians drive the Mitanni from Assyria,
laying foundations for further expansion.
1469 b.c.e.
At the Battle of Megiddo, the first recorded battle in history, the ancient Egyptians
win a resounding victory against their opponents.
1400-1200 b.c.e.
c. 1384-1122 b.c.e.
c. 1300 b.c.e.
c. 1300-700 b.c.e.
The Hebrews conquer Transjordan and Canaan under the leadership of Joshua.
1274 b.c.e.
At the Battle of Kadesh, the Egyptian Pharaoh uses massed chariots against the
Hittites, wining a great victory in spite of his opponents possession of iron
weapons against the Egyptian soldiers, who are armed with bronze ones.
c. 1200 b.c.e.
The use of the chariot in warfare declines and foot soldiers increasingly come into
use, as barbarian tribes, fighting on foot and armed with javelins and long
swords, overrun many ancient Middle Eastern kingdoms.
c. 1200 b.c.e.
The chariot is introduced to China from the northwest and is later adapted for use
in siege warfare.
1200-1100 b.c.e.
c. 1200-1100 b.c.e.
The fortified city of Troy is besieged by the Greeks for ten years, with many
leaders on both sides involved in single combat. The city falls only after
succumbing to the Greek deception tactic of the Trojan horse placed outside the
citys gates.
c. 1122 b.c.e.
Shang Dynasty armies introduce the chariot to northern China in warfare against
the Zhou (Chou) Dynasty.
1100-750 b.c.e.
In the period known as the Greek Dark Age, petty chieftains replace the
Mycenaean kings.
1066-256 b.c.e.
c. 1000 b.c.e.
c. 1000 b.c.e.
Time Line
1137
c. 1000 b.c.e.
1000-990 b.c.e.
David consolidates the reign of Judah and Israel and defeats neighboring
kingdoms of Moab, Edom, Ammon, and Aramaea, among others.
c. 1000-600 b.c.e.
The Aryan Hindu civilization comes to dominate most of northern and central
India while smaller states wage war for control in the southern region of the
subcontinent.
c. 900 b.c.e.
Cavalry begins to compete with chariotry as a method of warfare in the NeoAssyrian Empire.
c. 900 b.c.e.
Scyths and succeeding steppe warriors master the use of bows while on horseback.
c. 900 b.c.e.
Iron weapons become increasingly popular. Smiths master the use of iron to make
stronger, more lethal swords.
900-600 b.c.e.
Assyria undergoes its Late Empire period, its greatest era of military expansion.
850 b.c.e.
753 b.c.e.
The city of Rome is said to be founded on the banks of the Tiber River by
Romulus, one of the twin sons of Mars, the Roman god of war.
c. 750-650 b.c.e.
745-727 b.c.e.
721 b.c.e.
705-701 b.c.e.
c. 700 b.c.e.
Tight-formation hoplite tactics, well suited to the small plains of the ancient Greek
city-states, are first introduced in Greece.
c. late 7th cent. b.c.e. The Greeks develop the trireme, a large ship powered by three rows of oarsmen.
626 b.c.e.
612 b.c.e.
The lance is first used by the Alans and Sarmatians, and the chariot is first used by
various tribes in battle.
587 b.c.e.
587-586 b.c.e.
c. 546 b.c.e.
Persian king Cyrus the Great uses chariots to great advantage at the Battle of
Thymbra.
539 b.c.e.
c. 510 b.c.e.
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1138
c. 5th cent. b.c.e.
The crossbow is developed in China; it provides more power, speed, and accuracy
than the composite bow.
The Republican Revolt in Rome leads Horatius and two others to hold back a
large Etruscan army as the bridge over the River Tiber is destroyed.
499-448 b.c.e.
The Persian Wars are fought between Persia and the Greek city-states.
480 b.c.e.
The Persians advance into Greece, but their massive force is held back at
Thermopylae and their navy is later defeated at Salamis.
431-404 b.c.e.
c. 429-427 b.c.e.
c. 401 b.c.e.
Slings are used to great effect against the Persians at the Battle of Cunaxa,
outranging Persian bows and arrows, and charioteers are overwhelmed by more
flexible cavalry, ending the dominance of chariots in warfare.
c. 400 b.c.e.
The development of the gastraphetes, or belly bow, allows the shooting of more
powerful arrows.
The earliest known stirrups, made from leather or wood, are used by the Scyths.
Onboard catapults are added to ships, effectively rendering them as floating siege
engines.
c. 399 b.c.e.
c. 390 b.c.e.
Gallic warriors overwhelm the Republics forces, capturing and plundering the
city of Rome.
371 b.c.e.
c. 350 b.c.e.
Philip II of Macedon develops the Macedonian phalanx and adopts the use of the
sarissa, a pike nearly 15 feet long and wielded with two hands.
338 b.c.e.
334 b.c.e.
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1139
333 b.c.e.
Alexander uses combined infantry and cavalry forces to rout the Persian cavalry
under Darius III at the Battle of Issus.
332 b.c.e.
331 b.c.e.
Alexander defeats main army of Darius III at Gaugamela, which sees Alexander
charge the center of a much larger army, forcing Darius to flee prematurely.
326 b.c.e.
The Indian king Porus employs war elephants against Alexanders forces at the
Battle of the Hydaspes, seriously disrupting the Macedonian phalanx.
323 b.c.e.
The death (or murder) of Alexander the Great leads to the start of the Diadochi
Wars, which will see fighting throughout the Near East and Middle East over
much of the next century.
c. 321 b.c.e.
Chandragupta Maurya expels Alexanders forces from India and establishes the
Mauryan Dynasty.
307 b.c.e.
King Wu Ling of Zhao (Chao), inspired by steppe nomad tribes to the north,
introduces the use of cavalry in China.
305-304 b.c.e.
Macedonians employ a huge siege tower known as a helepolis during the Siege of
Rhodes.
c. 3d cent. b.c.e.
The Parthians, a steppe nomad people, perfect the Parthian shot, fired backward
from the saddle while in retreat.
c. 3d cent. b.c.e.
Romans utilize the corvus, a nautical grappling hook that allows sailors to board
and capture opposing vessels.
280 b.c.e.
Pyrrhus from Macedonia defeats the Romans at the Battle of Heraclea, but his
losses are so great that similar battles become known as a Pyrrhic victories.
275 b.c.e.
The guards in Rome associated with the Scipio family become known as the
Praetorian Guards, later the guards for the Roman emperors.
c. 274 b.c.e.
Akoka the Great, grandson of Chandragupta Maurya and a military genius in his
own right, solidifies the strength of the Mauryan Empire.
264 b.c.e.
Outbreak of the First Punic War, the first major war in the central Mediterranean.
247 b.c.e.
241 b.c.e.
In the final naval victory of the First Punic War, Rome expels the Carthaginians
from Sicily.
237 b.c.e.
Hamilcar begins a Spanish military campaign in preparation for ultimate war with
Rome.
221 b.c.e.
221-206 b.c.e.
The Qin (Chin) Dynasty rules in China, vastly expanding the area under imperial
control.
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1140
218 b.c.e.
Hannibal leads a force of war elephants, cavalry, and foot soldiers across the Alps
to trap and defeat the Romans at Trebia. The Second Punic War begins.
216 b.c.e.
214 b.c.e.
Chinese emperor Qin Shihuangdi (Chin Shih huang-ti) orders that the many
portions of the Great Wall be joined to form a unified boundary.
202 b.c.e.
197 b.c.e.
168 b.c.e.
167-161 b.c.e.
146 b.c.e.
Rome defeats Carthage in the Third Punic War, destroying its greatest enemy and
assuring its long-term dominion.
Aksumite Ethiopians emerge as dominant players in the control of Red Sea trade.
87 b.c.e.
The rise of Sulla as dictator of Rome leads to a power struggle that lasts for the
next sixty years.
73 b.c.e.
Hsiung-nu (Huns) invade and attack Turkestan, heading westward from China.
73-71 b.c.e.
The Third Servile War sees slaves revolt and fight under the command of
Spartacus. Crassus, a wealthy Roman politician, pays for the furnishing of
soldiers.
62 b.c.e.
Defeat of Roman populist leader Catiline, who stages a revolt to bring down the
Roman Republic. His supporters essentially form the basis for those who will
support Julius Caesar in the Roman Civil War.
58-45 b.c.e.
Julius Caesar employs independently operating cohorts in the Gallic Wars and the
Roman Civil Wars against Pompey.
55 b.c.e.
Caesars soldiers build a bridge over the River Rhine to help with the invasion of
Germany.
53 b.c.e.
Parthian mounted archers defeat heavily armed Roman infantry at the Battle of
Carrhae, destroying the army of Marcus Licinus Crassus.
c. 50 b.c.e.-50 c.e.
39-37 b.c.e.
Herod is named king of Judea by the Roman senate and leads campaigns to
establish his kingdom.
c. 31 b.c.e.
Time Line
1141
20 b.c.e.
66-70 c.e.
70 c.e.
The Romans besiege Jerusalem, taking the citys population captive and leveling
its buildings.
70-73 c.e.
The Romans employ ramps and siege towers in their successful three-year Siege
of Masada.
c. 2d cent. c.e.
c. 100
With the increasing use of cavalry in Roman warfare, the spatha, a long slashing
sword, becomes popular.
c. 122-136
c. 3d-4th cent.
Despite the increasing role of cavalry due to barbarian influence, infantry remains
the dominant component of the Roman legions.
220-280
226
c. 250
265-316
267
270
284
c. 4th cent.
300-1763
312
At the Battle of the Milvian Bridge, the Roman commander Constantine sees a
cross in the sky and promises to become a Christian if he wins the battle. The
cross inspires his soldiers, who defeat Maxentius, leader of the Gauls. After the
battle Constantine disbands the Praetorian Guard.
317-420
320
Chandragupta II establishes the Gupta Dynasty, recalling the glory days of the
Mauryan Empire and employing a feudal system of decentralized authority.
324
370
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1142
378
The Second Battle of Adrianople sees Goths advancing into Thrace and
threatening Constantinople.
386-588
c. 400
c. 400
c. 400
c. 400
The Chinese first make steel by forging cast and wrought iron together.
c. 400
410
451
476
The Sack of Rome by barbarians brings about an age of cavalry, during which
foot soldiers play a diminished role in warfare.
500
Central Asian invaders appear in India, bringing superior fighting techniques and
concentrated use of cavalry.
507
527-565
Roman emperor Justinian reigns, definitively codifying Roman law, waging war
against the Germans and Persians, and changing the empire from a constitutional
to an absolute monarchy.
536
553
568
c. 580
581
c. 7th cent.
610-641
Heraclius reigns over the Byzantine Empire, Hellenizing the culture and
introducing the theme system of Byzantine provinces ruled by military governors.
622
In a journey known as the Hegira, the Islamic prophet Muwammad (c. 570-632)
flees from Mecca to Medina to avoid persecution.
632-661
Muwammad is succeeded after his death in 632 by the four legitimate successors
of the rashidun (from Arabic r3shidnn, rightly guided) caliphate.
674-678
Greek fire, an inflammable liquid, is used by the Byzantines against Arab ships
during the Siege of Constantinople.
680
Time Line
1143
680
The forces of Muwammads grandson Wusayn are ambushed and massacred at the
Battle of Karbal3, marking the beginning of Shia as a branch of Islam.
687
Ppin of Herstal wins the Battle of Tertry, solidifying rule over all Franks, and
unifies the office of Mayor of the Palace.
c. mid-8th cent.
Islam becomes the dominant religio-political power structure of the Middle East,
from the Atlantic to the Indian frontier, including the Mediterranean coast and
Spain.
c. 700-1000
Ghana emerges as the dominant kingdom and military power of the western Sudan
in Africa.
714
Ppins illegitimate son, Charles Martel, seizes control over Frankish kingdom in
a palace coup.
732
740
740-840
c. 750
c. 757-796
Offas Dyke is built in the kingdom of Mercia to protect the kingdoms Welsh
border.
793
800
839
840-920
The Kirghiz invade Mongolia and drive out the Uighurs, thereafter dominating the
region.
843
845
Charles the Bald, king of the Franks, pays Vikings money to retreat.
880s
886
891
900
980
Research Tools
1144
c. 10th cent.
911
The Viking Rollo receives the county of Normandy from the French king.
920
The Khitans drive out the Kirghiz and establish an empire in Mongolia and China.
c. 930
954
990s
c. 10th-11th cent.
1013
Danish king Sweyn I Forkbeard defeats English king thelred I and forces him
into exile.
1017-1035
Sweyns son Canute I (the Great) rules both England and Denmark.
1044
1066
The defeat and death of Harold Hardrada at the Battle of Stamford Bridge ends
Viking invasions of Britain. William of Normandy defeats the English at the
Battle of Hastings, using cavalry armed with lances against a shield wall, and a
rapid proliferation of motte-and-bailey castles follows.
1082
At the battle of Durazzo (or Dyrrachium), Norman cavalry tactics from the Battle
of Hastings are used against Byzantines to great effect.
1089-1094
El Cid (Rodrigo Daz de Vivar) captures Valencia, leading a mixed ChristianMoorish army.
1095-1099
During the First Crusade, initiated by Pope Urban II, European Crusaders, fighting
to protect the Holy Land for Christianity, capture Jerusalem.
1100
European knights adopt the use of the couched lance, which provides more force
than previous hand-thrust weapons.
1125
Jrcheds conquer northern China, driving out Khitans, and Mongolia descends
into tribal warfare.
1139
1145-1149
The Second Crusade, unsuccessfully led by the kings of France and Germany, is
prompted by Muslim conquest of the principality of Edessa in 1144.
1187-1192
The Third Crusade succeeds, especially through the efforts of English king
Richard I, in restoring some Christian possessions.
1192
Time Line
1145
1196-1198
King Richard I of England builds Chteau Gaillard with three baileys, which had
to be captured before the castle could be taken and hence served as multiple lines
of defense.
1198-1204
The Fourth Crusade, initiated by Pope Innocent III, captures Constantinople and
seriously damages the Byzantine Empire.
c. 1200
c. 1200
As forged steel processes are refined, several European cities, including Sheffield,
Brussels, and Toledo, emerge as sword-making centers.
1206
1213
1215
The Magna Carta is signed by King John of England, granting rights to the people
of England, especially the barons; King John outlaws the use of the crossbow and
the deployment of mercenaries in England.
1217-1221
The Fifth Crusade, organized to attack the Islamic power base in Egypt, succeeds
in capturing the Egyptian port city of Damietta but ends in defeat when the
crusading army attempts to capture Cairo.
1228-1229
c. mid-13th cent.
The cog, with high sides that offer protection against other vessels, is developed in
northern Europe.
1230
The kingdom of Mali is founded by a Mandinka prince after the defeat of the Susu
kingdom.
1236-1242
1248-1254
The Seventh (or Sixth) Crusade is led by Louis IX of France and follows a course
similar to that of the Fifth Crusade.
1258
1260
Mongols invade Syria and capture Damascus but are defeated at the Battle of Ain
Jalut by Mamlnk slave cavalry, trained by the Egyptians to steppe nomad levels.
1261
A war between the Il-Khanate of Persia and the Golden Horde of Russia begins.
1269-1270
The Eighth (or Seventh) Crusade is organized by the now elderly Louis IX, whose
death upon landing in Tunisia leads to the breakup of his army.
1270-1272
Edward I, the son of Henry III of England, decides to press on alone to Palestine
after the French abandon the Eighth Crusade and achieves some modest success
with a truce before the ultimate fall of Acre, the last bastion of the Crusader states,
in 1291.
Research Tools
1146
1274, 1281
1277-1297
King Edward I of England builds a series of ten Welsh castles, with an implicitly
offensive function as continuances of the kings campaigns.
1279
1298
The English army, employing large numbers of Welsh archers, uses the longbow
to great effect against the Scots at Falkirk.
c. 14th cent.
An infantry revolution, spurred by the greater use of the pike and bow, takes
place in Europe.
c. 1300
c. 1300
The Chinese first use black powder to propel projectiles through bamboo tubes,
revolutionizing warfare.
1300
Japanese craftsmen perfect the art of sword making, creating the katana, a curved
sword used by samurai warriors.
1302
1314
Emperor Amda Tseyon comes to power in Ethiopia, expanding and solidifying the
Solomonid Dynasty.
1315
1331
The first recorded European use of gunpowder weaponry occurs at the Siege of
Friuli in Italy.
1335
1340
1346
English longbowmen defeat French knights at the Battle of Crcy, which also
marks the first definitive use of gunpowder artillery on a battlefield.
1346-1347
c. mid-14th cent.
The carrack, an efficient sailing ship with multiple masts, becomes popular in
Atlantic and Mediterranean waters.
1360
Sir John Hawkwood forms his White Company, English mercenaries operating in
Italy.
1368
The Chinese Yuan Dynasty ends, and the Mongols are driven back to Mongolia,
where a period of civil war ensues.
1369
Time Line
1147
1377
Cannons are first used successfully to breach a wall at the Siege of Odruik in the
Netherlands.
1398
1415
English archers and infantry inflict a major defeat upon mounted French knights at
the Battle of Agincourt, initiating the decline of the heavily armored cavalry
knight.
1420
Hussite leader Jan Mizka stymies German knights during the Hussite Wars with his
Wagenburg, a defensive line of wagons and cannons.
c. 1425
French cavalry succeed in defeating English longbowmen for the first time in the
Hundred Years War.
1432
The sacking of Angkor ends the domination by the Khmer kingdom of mainland
Southeast Asia.
1450
In West Africa, Songhai incorporates the former kingdom of Mali and comes to
control one of the largest empires of the time.
c. 14th-15th cent.
1450-1700
Sword blades become lighter, narrower, and longer, gradually evolving into the
familiar rapier design.
1453
With use of large cannons, the Muslim Turks besiege and capture Constantinople
from the Byzantines and establish the Ottoman Empire, a watershed event often
used to mark the transition from the medieval to the early modern world.
1468
Songhai armies invade Timbuktu, execute Arab merchants and traitors, and sack
and burn the city, thereby heralding a period of anti-Islamic sentiment in West
Africa.
1471
The Battle of Barnet, north of the English capital, London, involves cannons for
the first time on an English battlefield, but bad weather prevents their use.
1477-1601
Perpetual civil war is waged throughout the Sengoku (Warring States) period.
c. 1480
The Battle of Bosworth Field, which results in the death of King Richard III and
victory for King Henry VII, effectively ends the Wars of the Roses in England.
1492
Spanish troops capture Granada, ending the Reconquista; later the same year,
Christopher Columbus sails to the New World.
1494
Charles VIII introduces the modern siege train in his invasion of Italy, confirming
the obsolescence of high medieval defenses.
Research Tools
1148
1494
c. 1500
c. 1500
The development of gunpowder muskets, pistols, and cannons forces tactical and
strategic changes in the use of spears, bows and arrows, swords, cavalry, and
armor.
c. 1500
As European plate armor becomes more prevalent, the sharper, narrower rapier is
developed to combat it.
c. 1500
Leonardo da Vinci draws what could arguably be the first design for a helicopter.
c. 1500
1501
1503
The first effective use of the combination of firearms and pikes, a formation called
the Spanish Square, is made at the Battle of Cerignola.
1520-1521
Hernn Corts and a small force of Spanish conquistadors destroy the Aztec
Empire.
1522
Spanish harquebusiers slaughter Swiss pikemen in the service of the French at the
Battle of Bicocca.
1525
B3bur makes effective use of artillery to defeat Sultan Ibr3htm Lodt at the famous
Battle of P3ntpat, establishing the Mughal Empire.
1527
1529
Muslim leader Awmad Gr3 defeats forces of Lebna Dengel at the Battle of
Shimbra-Kure, opening southern Ethiopia to Islamic rule.
1529
c. 1530
1531-1532
The Spanish under Francisco Pizarro start the sacking of the Inca Empire.
c. mid-1500s
European cavalries begin to appear armed with short muskets that can be fired
from both mounted and dismounted positions.
1541
Portuguese musketeers arrive to help defend Ethiopia, ending the Islamic threat
two years later, under the emperor Galawdewos.
Time Line
1149
1541
1543
1544
At Cerisolles, French knights fighting in the traditional style play a major role in
gaining victory over the Swiss, the last battle in which they are to do so.
1545-1550
1556
B3burs grandson Akbar is victorious at the second Battle of P3ntpat, against the
Sur descendants of Shtr Sh3h, and eventually conquers most of northern and
eastern India, Afghanistan, and Baluchistan.
1562
1565
The Siege of Malta ends the Turkish advance across the Mediterranean.
1571
The Battle of Lepanto II, fought between the Ottoman Turks and the Christian
forces of Don Juan de Austria, is the last major naval battle to be waged with
galleys.
1575
Three thousand musketeers help General Oda Nobunaga win control of central
Japan.
Aug. 4, 1578
1588
The English employ galleons to attack the larger ships of the formidable Spanish
Armada individually, thereby defeating the Spanish and revolutionizing naval
tactics.
1591
c. 17th cent.
The howitzer is developed by the English and Dutch for use against distant targets.
c. 1600
The military reforms of Maurice of Nassau reduce the size and depth of pike
formations to facilitate maneuverability and increase the number of muskets in
units.
1600
The Battle of Nieuwpoort in the Netherlands is the first battlefield test of Maurice
of Nassaus linear infantry tactics.
1603
Tokugawa Ieyasu establishes the Tokugawa shogunate, with its capital at Edo,
marking the beginning of early modern Japanese history.
1605
Research Tools
1150
1609
1609
The Kalmyk people on the Caspian Sea become a part of the Russian Empire, and
their horsemen start serving in the Russian cavalry.
1618-1648
The Thirty Years War leads to mass destruction of Central Europe, with major
atrocities and killing of civilians. It is estimated that some eight million people in
Germany alone die in the war.
1631
1632-1653
The fifth Mughal emperor, Sh3h Jah3n, builds the Taj Mahal as a monument to his
love for his wife.
1642-1651
During the English Civil Wars, the Royalist Army is the first to use horse artillery
in the form of a small brass cannon mounted onto a horse-drawn cart.
1645
1653
The line of battle is developed as a naval tactic, allowing for more effective use of
broadside firepower.
1657
4#lamgtr becomes the sixth Mughal emperor and ultimately expands the Mughal
Empire to its greatest extent.
c. 1660
Jan. 1, 1660
The Coldstream Guards (from a unit raised by Colonel George Monck from 1650)
become the first part of a standing army in Britain.
1673
The first transportable mortar, invented by Baron Menno van Coehoorn, is used at
the Siege of Grave.
1673
1673
Polish King John III Sobieski leads 3,000 Polish landers and hussars and 17,000
other cavalry against the Ottoman army, in the largest cavalry charge in history at
the Battle of Vienna.
1688
Sbastien Le Prestre de Vauban introduces the socket bayonet, which fits over a
muskets muzzle and allows the musket to be loaded and fired with the bayonet
attached. As the socket bayonet replaces the pike, specialized pike troops
disappear from use. At the Siege of Philippsburg that year, he introduces ricochet
fire.
Time Line
1151
1689
Russian czar Peter II the Great disbands the Streltsy Corps, which has protected
the czars since the 1550s (but became involved in many court intrigues).
1690
The Brown Bess flintlock musket is developed, and its variations remain in use by
all European nations until the mid-nineteenth century.
c. 1700
c. mid-1700s
Advances in cannon technology allow smaller guns to shoot farther with less
powder.
1712-1786
King Frederick the Great of Prussia is the first to use Jaegers, or huntsmen,
expert mounted marksmen.
1754-1763
Large muskets are first used successfully by Americans in the French and Indian
War.
1757
Frederick the Great wins renown and respect with his masterful use of the oblique
attack at Leuthen.
1759
Frederick the Great introduces the first true horse artillery units, which, because of
their unprecedented mobility and firepower, are quickly adopted by other
European nations to become a staple of most eighteenth and nineteenth century
armies.
British troops under General James Wolfe land secretly and attack Montreal,
suprising the French commander, Louis-Joseph de Montcalm. Both Wolfe and
Montcalm are killed in the battle.
1763-1925
During the fomites phase of biological warfare, specific disease agents and
contaminated utensils are introduced as weapons, with smallpox, cholera, and the
bubonic plague as popular agents.
1769
1775
David Bushnell invents a one-man submarine, the Turtle, which is used in the
American Revolutionary War.
George Washington starts training his soldiers at Valley Forge, continuing until
June 19, 1778.
1778-1779
1781
1790s
British artillerist Henry Shrapnel invents the shrapnel shell, packed with
gunpowder and several musket balls and designed to explode in flight.
1792
Modern French military techniques and arms are introduced into Turkey.
1792
War rockets are used by the sultan of Mysore to terrorize British soldiers.
Research Tools
1152
1795
1798
British admiral Horatio Nelson abandons traditional line tactics, achieving victory
over the French at Abn Qtr Bay.
1799
The Royal Military College is established at Woolwich to train British army officers.
1802
The Royal Military College at Sandhurst is founded to train British army officers.
1802
The Tay Son Rebellion ends, leading to the emergence of the Nguyen Dynasty in
Vietnam.
1803
1804-1815
French emperor Napoleon I (Bonaparte) develops his cavalry to the height of its
quantity and quality, making it as significant as infantry in the outcomes of battles
and campaigns.
1805
British artillerist William Congreve develops the first warfare rockets and
launching tubes.
1807
American inventor Robert Fulton invents the first steamship, which by the time of
the Crimean War (1853-1856) has largely replaced the sail-powered ships in
British, French, and American navies.
Feb. 8, 1807
Joachim Murat leads 11,000 French cavalry in an attack on the Russians at the
Battle of Eylau, allowing Napoleon Bonaparte to win the battle.
July-Dec., 1809
1812
In the opening part of the War of 1812, the British capture Washington, D.C.
Napoleons Grande Arme, consisting of French and allied soldiers, retreats from
Moscow and is destroyed by Cossacks and by disease, especially typhus, in their
retreat.
1814
The Russian cavalry enter Paris as Napoleon flees and later abdicates. He is sent
into exile on the island of Elba.
1814-1815
The defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo signals the end of the Napoleonic Wars and
the end of French military dominance in Europe. Napoleon is sent into exile at St.
Helena.
1816-1819
The rise of Shaka and the establishment of the Zulu Kingdom in southern Africa.
1817
Gurkhas start serving in the Pindaree War, alongside the British, under a contract
between them and the East India Company.
Time Line
1153
Jos de San Martn and Simn Bolvar meet at Guayaquil, Ecuador, drawing up
plans for an independent South America.
1826
The janissary corps are destroyed and the Turkish army is modernized.
1831
The duke of Wellington establishes the Royal United Services Institute in London.
Mar. 9, 1831
1832
1834
1836
The Colt revolver is first manufactured in the United States by Colts Patent
Firearms Manufacturing Company, later renamed Colts Manufacturing Company.
It was patented by its inventor, Samuel Colt, and quickly emerged as a popular
handgun in the United States.
Feb., 1836
Mexicans capture the Alamo but are defeated soon afterward at the Battle of San
Jacinto.
Voortrekkers in South Africa win the Battle of Blood River against the Zulus by
forming a laager with their wagons.
1838-1842
1840s
The telegraph becomes widely used and links governments with field
commanders.
1840s-1850s
1845-1920
Asphyxiating gas weapons are developed for chemical warfare, using chlorine and
phosgene.
1846-1848
Although military swords have entered a period of decline, cavalry sabers prove
decisive during the Mexican War.
1847
1848
1848
The Austrian army uses balloons loaded with explosives to attack the Italian city
of Venice.
1853-1856
Research Tools
1154
1856
1856
The Victoria Cross, the highest British medal for bravery in battle, is awarded for
the first time.
1857
1860
1861
The first machine gun, the Gatling gun, is designed by Richard Gatling.
Confederate forces attack Fort Sumter, South Carolina, starting the American
Civil War.
Mar. 9, 1862
The Battle of Hampton Roads, between the ironclads USS Monitor and CSS
Virginia, revolutionizes naval warfare.
May 5, 1862
Confederate General Gabriel J. Rains uses the first land mines to cover his retreat
from Williamsburg, Virginia.
May 31-June 1, 1862 At the Battle of Seven Pines (Fair Oaks), Virginia, a machine gun is used for the
first time in war.
Sept. 17, 1862
At the Battle of Antietam, Union General Ambrose Burnside blunders his way
into a defeat, becoming one of the least successful commanders in the war.
1863
1864
The Confederate submarine CSS H. L. Hunley becomes the first underwater vessel
to sink an enemy ship, the USS Housatonic, near Charleston, South Carolina.
May, 1864
General William T. Sherman starts his Atlanta Campaign, which will see the
destruction of a large part of Georgia.
1866
1867
The last Tokugawa shogun surrenders power to imperial forces, paving the way
for the Meiji Restoration and Japans reentry into world politics and culture.
Feb., 1868
1870
The Russians order Smith and Wesson pistols, the first military order for these.
Time Line
1155
1870-1871
The Franco-Prussian War sees the French quickly defeated and the Prussians take
Paris.
1873
German arms manufacturer Alfred Krupp invents one of the first practical recoil
systems for field artillery pieces.
1873
The Bofors iron and arms company is established in Sweden; it is later owned by
Alfred Nobel.
1873
The Battle of Isandhlwana sees the defeat of a British expeditionary force by the
Zulus at the start of the Anglo-Zulu War; on the following day, at Rorkes Drift,
the British are victorious.
1880s
The French develop high-explosive artillery, rendering all existing forts obsolete.
Aug., 1880
The Enfield rifle is tested and approved for use by the British Army.
1884
The Siege of Khartoum, Sudan, ends in the capture of Khartoum and the death of
Charles Gordon.
1889
1892
Mar. 1, 1896
The Italian army is defeated at the Battle of Adowa, the first major defeat of a
European army in Africa.
1897
The French develop the first antiaircraft gun for use against balloons.
1898
The Mauser Model 1898 is produced; it is the culmination of military bolt action
design.
1898
Sept. 2, 1898
Some 400 British lancers charge and rout 2,500 Sudanese at the Battle of
Omdurman.
1900
The Siege of the Foreign Legations in Beijing, China, results in the dispatch of a
large, multinational European force to China to rescue diplomats and others in the
Legations.
1900
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1903
The Wright brothers, William and Orville, launch the first successful airplane at
Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.
1904
1904-1905
Trinitrotoluene (TNT) is first used as a military explosive during the RussoJapanese War.
1904-1905
The effective use of indirect fire during the Russo-Japanese War spurs American
and European leaders to adopt it for their own armies in order to defend their guns
against counterbattery and infantry weapon fire.
1905
The Japanese navy wins a stunning victory at Battle of Tsushima, devastating the
Russian fleets and forcing Russia to surrender Korea and other territory to Japan.
1905
1905
1906
1908
1910
A plane takes off for the first time from the deck of a ship, presaging the modern
aircraft carrier.
After an Italian pilot flies the first combat mission, using his plane for
reconnaissance, during the Italo-Turkish War, Italy begins using airplanes and
dirigibles for bombing attacks.
1912
Bangalore torpedoes are produced for the first time by Captain McClintock.
1912
Manufactured by Krupp for the Germans, Big Bertha was a howitzer capable of
firing artillery long distances, used extensively in World War I.
1912
World War I armies form large cavalry components, which are converted into
infantry as the war evolves into stagnant trench warfare, and high casualty rates
occur.
1914
Rolls-Royce manufactures an armored car for the British Royal Naval Air Service,
designed to protect the Belgian airfields from attack by the Germans. These were
used in Palestine in 1917-1918.
Aug., 1914
The Battle of the Heligoland Bight is the first naval battle of World War I.
Sept., 1914
Nov. 1, 1914
In the Battle of Coronel, the German East Asiatic Fleet destroys a smaller British
force and then is itself destroyed at the Battle of the Falklands.
1915
The Beretta pistol is developed in Italy; the Beretta machine gun follows in 1918.
Time Line
1157
During the Battle of the Dogger Bank, the British fleet is warned by radio
intercepts.
Feb. 4, 1915
Apr., 1915
The first aerial dogfight takes place after German aircraft are fitted with
machine guns that are coordinated to fire between the blades of a moving
propeller.
Apr., 1915
The Second Battle of Ypres sees the first use of poison gas in battle on the western
front.
May, 1915
May 7, 1915
The sinking of the Lusitania leads to a major public outcry in the United States.
1915-1917
1916
Unmanned aerial vehicles (drone aircraft) are developed for attacking zeppelins;
they are later used for reconnaissance and for bombing of enemy targets.
Defeat of British forces after the Siege of Kut, which started on December 7,
1915.
In the Battle of Jutland, the German fleet destroys the British fleet.
July 1, 1916
On the first day of the Battle of the Somme, 19,000 British soldiers are killed, the
highest loss by the British army on any single day.
Feb., 1917
May, 1917
The Imperial War Graves Commission (later the Commonwealth War Graves
Commission) is formed by Fabian Ware to look after the war dead from Britain
and its empire.
July, 1917
T. E. Lawrence leads the Arabs in their capture of Aqaba from the Turks.
In the Battle of Beersheba, the Australian Light Horse charge at Turkish positions
in Beersheba, capturing the city.
Nov. 7, 1917
The second Russian Revolution sees communists seize power in Petrograd (St.
Petersburg), leading to the start of the Russian Civil War. (The date was October
25 in Russia, then still using the Gregorian calendar.)
The Red Baron, Manfred Richthofen, the most famous air ace of World War I,
is shot down.
Research Tools
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Nov. 11, 1918
1919
The restrictions imposed on the German military by the Treaty of Versailles at the
end of World War I meet almost universal disapproval across the political
spectrum in Germany.
1919
1920
American John Taliaferro Thompson invents the most famous submachine gun,
known as the tommy gun, fully automatic and small and light enough to be fired
by a single individual without support.
1920-1960
Nerve gases, such as tabun and sarin, are developed for chemical warfare to
inhibit nerve function, leading to respiratory paralysis, or asphyxia.
The League of Nations holds its first meeting to mediate in disputes between
nations.
At the Battle of Komarow, the Poles are involved in the last great cavalry charge
in history.
Sept., 1920
Oct., 1920
Oct., 1920
1921
British spy and later naval analyst Hector Bywater publishes Sea-Power in the
Pacific, describing how the Japanese could win a Pacific war. The book prompts
great interest in Japan.
1922
Turks capture Smyrna, signaling the defeat of the Greeks in the Greco-Turkish
War.
1923
The Treaty of Lausanne creates the Republic of Turkey, bringing the Ottoman
Empire to its official end.
1923
1923
The building of the Singapore Naval Base to protect British interests in East Asia
and Southeast Asia is announced.
1925-1940
During the cell-culture phase of biological warfare, biological weapons are massproduced and stockpiled; Japans research program includes direct
experimentation on humans.
1925
The Schutzstaffel (SS) is formed to protect members of the Nazi Party, later
becoming a government agency in Germany. Its members perpetrate major
crimes during World war II.
1926
Time Line
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1928
Chiang Kai-shek captures Beijing and, as leader of the Nationalist Party, heads
Chinas first modern government.
Nov., 1928
Am westen nichts neues (All Quiet on the Western Front), an antiwar novel by
German World War I veteran and writer Erich Maria Remarque, is published in
Germany.
Britons and other Europeans are airlifted from Kabul, Afghanistan, in the first
major airlift in war.
1930
As the building of extensive fortified lines begins, the French start work on the
Maginot line along the eastern border of France, naming the fortifications for
Andr Maginot, French minister of defense.
1930s
German scientist Wernher von Braun develops the first liquid-fueled rockets.
1931
The Japanese bomb Mukden in the first major aerial bombing of any city in
history.
1932
1933
Adolf Hitler, leader of the National Socialist German Workers (Nazi) Party, is
appointed chancellor of Germany and calls for the abolition of the Treaty of
Versailles and the rearmament of Germany.
1934-1935
Mao Zedong leads his Chinese communist forces on a 6,000-mile strategic retreat
known as the Long March.
1935
1935
1935
The Germans first develop the Stuka dive-bombers; the Stuka is used in combat
for the first time in 1936 during the Spanish Civil War.
The Catalina flying boat is first used for reconnaissance by the (British) Royal
Navy.
Mar., 1936
July, 1936
The Spanish Civil War begins; during this conflict, much of Spains infrastructure
will be destroyed and new weapons will be tested.
July, 1936
German air force volunteers fighting on the Nationalist side in the Spanish Civil
War form the Condor Legion.
1936
The M-1 Garand rifle is the first standard-issue semiautomatic military rifle.
1936
Research Tools
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1936
Oct., 1936
Apr., 1937
German air forces supporting the Nationalist cause in the Spanish Civil War bomb
the Spanish town of Guernica, killing approximately 2,100 of the towns 8,000
inhabitants in arguably the first premeditated use of terror bombing.
May 6, 1937
July, 1937
1938
The British use the Bren gun after its original design in Czechoslovakia.
Mar., 1938
Sept., 1938
With the agreement of other European powers, Germany annexes the Sudetenland
from Czechoslovakia, and then the rest of Czechoslovakia in March, 1939.
Apr., 1939
Italy launches a joint naval and air attack on Albania, quickly capturing the
country and annexing it.
Sept., 1939
German chancellor Adolf Hitler uses combined arms forces to invade Poland,
which is then partitioned between Germany and the Soviet Union.
Sept. 1, 1939
The German Luftwaffe conducts the first combat parachute and glider troop
landings to open Germanys western-front attack on the Netherlands.
June, 1940
The French sign an armistice after their defeat by Germany in less than six weeks.
British prime minister Winston Churchill announces that the battle of France is
over; the battle of Britain is about to begin.
Aug., 1940
Germans begin the Battle of Britain, a series of air raids over Britain aimed at
destroying British infrastructure and morale.
The British Royal Navy produces a decisive aerial victory at Taranto Harbor,
Italy, crippling the anchored Italian fleet with nighttime bomb and torpedo attacks.
1940-1969
During the vaccine development and stockpiling phase of biological warfare, there
are open-air tests of biological dispersal in urban environments in the United
States.
German parachutists land in Crete in the first mainly airborne invasion in history.
June, 1941
Time Line
1161
1941
U.S. pilots form the Flying Tigers to assist the Chinese in fighting the Japanese.
Spanish volunteers form the Blue Division to fight on the eastern front in World
War II.
Dec. 7, 1941
The Japanese navy launches a morning surprise air raid against the U.S. fleet at
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, sinking or damaging several U.S. battleships and bringing
the United States into World War II.
During the Wannsee Conference, the Germans inaugurate plans for the Holocaust.
Apr., 1942
Soviet leader Joseph Stalin discovers information about the U.S. nuclear program.
May, 1942
The Battle of the Coral Sea is the first naval battle fought entirely by carrier-based
aircraft.
May, 1942
Navajo Indians are first used to transmit messages that cannot be decoded by the
Japanese.
The United States forms the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), forerunner of the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
With the use of aerial resupply, the Russians withstand the German Siege of
Stalingrad, marking the ultimate German failure on the Russian front.
The Italian cavalry charge the Soviet artillery near the River Don in the last
successful cavalry charge.
During the Dam Buster raids, the British Royal Air Force drops bouncing bombs
on dams in Germany.
July, 1943
The Russians defeat the Germans at the Battle of Kursk, one of the largest tank
battles in history.
1944
Germany launches the first long-range ballistic missiles, the V-1 and V-2, against
England during World War II.
1944
1944-1946
June 6, 1944
The Germans fire the Fieseler Fi 103 (V-1) for the first time at London. It is later
followed by the V-2 rocket bombs, used to strike terror in southern Britain.
Research Tools
1162
Feb. 24-25, 1945
The U.S. Air Force firebombs Tokyo, and General Curtis LeMay promotes U.S.
airpower.
Apr., 1945
In the last major amphibious offensive of World War II, U.S. forces invade
Okinawa and, after meeting fierce resistance, seize the island from Japan.
Apr.-May, 1945
The Russians wage air, artillery, and tank attacks in the Battle for Berlin, which
ultimately leads to German surrender.
Aug. 6, 1945
The first atomic bomb to be used in war is dropped by the United States on the
Japanese city of Hiroshima, killing more than 70,000 civilians and hastening the
end of the war. Four days later, the second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki,
killing 40,000.
1945
1945
1945-1946
1946
1946-1949
Civil war rages in China between Nationalist and Communist Party forces,
resulting in the triumph of Communism and in Nationalist leader Chiang Kaisheks flight to Taiwan.
King Davids Hotel in Jerusalem is bombed, the first modern major bombing in
the Middle East.
1947
The Kalashnikov AK-47 becomes the first widely deployed modern assault rifle.
U.S. president Harry S. Truman introduces the Truman Doctrine, committing the
United States to responsibility for defending global democracya clear signal that
the United States intends to check Soviet expansion and influence.
Jan. 4, 1948
Time Line
1163
Aug., 1949
The Korean War begins, becoming the first conflict to involve the United Nations.
U.N. soldiers under General Douglas MacArthur land at Inchon, the first major
seaborne operation since D day.
1952
The worlds first hydrogen bomb is exploded at Enewetak Atoll in the Pacific
Ocean.
1953
1954
The Geneva Conference, after discussions on the Korean War, calls for a partition
of Indochina into four countriesNorth Vietnam, South Vietnam, Laos, and
Cambodiaand for an election within two years to unify the two Vietnams.
1954
1955
The United States starts actively supporting South Vietnam, taking over from the
French.
1955
1956
1956
The United States and the U.S.-backed South Vietnamese president, Ngo Dinh
Diem, reject the Geneva-mandated reunification elections, knowing that the
popular Ho Chi Minh would win.
The Suez Crisis leads to Egypts capturing and nationalizing the Suez Canal
Company.
The Hungarian Uprising resists the influence of the Soviet Union in Hungary.
1957
Oct. 4, 1957
The Soviet Union launches the worlds first artificial Earth satellite, inaugurating
the space race, sparking a reassessment of U.S. military and technological
capabilities, and providing impetus for the development of both a space program
and more sophisticated weapons-delivery systems.
1959-1970
Jan., 1959
Jan., 1960
U.S. president Dwight D. Eisenhower warns about the rise in the militaryindustrial complex.
1961
Research Tools
1164
Oct. 14-26, 1962
A U.S. pilot takes pictures indicating that Soviets are placing missiles on Cuba.
The ensuing Cuban Missile Crisis takes the world to the brink of nuclear war.
1963
May, 1963
Oct. 7, 1963
The United States and the Soviet Union sign the Partial Test Ban Treaty.
Nov. 1, 1963
1964
The Peoples Republic of China conducts its first successful nuclear weapons test.
1964
War in Congo involves the use of mercenaries, including Mad Mike Hoare.
1964
1965
Mar. 2, 1965
The U.S. Air Force begins Operation Rolling Thunder, which involves sustained
bombing of North Vietnam.
1966
Mao Zedong initiates the decadelong Chinese Cultural Revolution to purge his
opponents from the Communist Party and renew the peoples revolutionary spirit.
More than sixty (and later many more) countries sign the Outer Space Treaty,
banning the use of outer space for warfare.
Apr., 1967
May, 1967
Biafras attempt to break away from Nigeria starts the Nigerian Civil War.
June 5, 1967
The Israeli Air Force (IAF) launches devastating surprise counter-air raids against
threatening Arab nations, beginning the Six-Day War.
Egypt sinks the Israeli destroyer Eilat with a Soviet Styx cruise missile.
1968
Jan., 1968
The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong launch the Tet Offensive, which, although
unsuccessful, contradicts U.S. reports that a decisive end to the war is near at
hand.
The North Korean navy captures the USS Pueblo, according to U.S. Navy
intelligence.
The United States starts secret bombings of Cambodia during Operation Menu, in
an attempt to destroy the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
Time Line
1165
1969-present
1970-1979
During an era of dtente, stable relations, relative to the earlier Cold War, prevail
between the Soviet Union and the United States and their respective allies.
1970-present
Binary chemical weapons, stored and shipped in their component parts, are
developed to allow chemical weapons to be safely transported to deployment sites.
1973
The last American fighting forces withdraw from Vietnam in late March,
following a January 27 peace agreement.
Oct. 6, 1973
Egypt launches an air strike against Israel, beginning Arab-Israeli October War,
also known as the Yom Kippur War.
India tests its first atomic bomb, known as the Smiling Buddha.
Jan., 1975
The fall of Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital, is accompanied by the rising rule
of the Khmer Rouge.
Saigon finally falls to the North Vietnamese forces, and Vietnam is united under
communist rule following a referendum held the following year.
1976
The emergence of Khun Sa and his private army in northern Burma is financed by
drug sales.
May, 1976
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam (known as the Tamil Tigers) emerge in Sri
Lanka.
July 4, 1976
1978
The United States develops the Abrams tank, named after General Creighton
Abrams, U.S. Army chief of staff and commander of the U.S. military forces in
South Vietnam from 1968 until 1972. The U.S. military begins using it in 1980.
1978
Dec., 1978
Vietnam invades Cambodia, capturing the vast majority of the country in two
weeks, and establishes the Peoples Republic of Kampuchea.
1979
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1166
1979
The Iranian Revolution ends Irans close military ties with the United States and
replaces the shahs regime with an Islamic theocracy.
Chinese soldiers invade northern Vietnam. The war quickly ends in a stalemate,
and subsequently the Chinese government overhauls its army structure.
Oct., 1979
After an Iranian mob takes over the U.S. embassy, taking hostages, and the Soviet
Union invades Afghanistan, U.S. president Jimmy Carter declares that the United
States will consider any threat against the Persian Gulf a threat against its vital
interests and will react, if necessary, with military force. The so-called Iranian
hostage crisis ensues.
1981
Mar., 1981
1982
May 4, 1982
The firing of an Exocet missile, manufactured by the French, by the Argentine air
force against the British HMS Sheffield leads to major changes in British naval
tactics during the Falklands War.
British soldiers on the Falkland Islands charge Argentines at the Battle of Mount
Tumbledown, the last successful bayonet charge until 2004.
Dec. 8, 1987
Dec. 8, 1987
U.S. president Ronald Reagan and Soviet general secretary Gorbachev sign the
Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, which calls for the destruction of U.S.
and Soviet missiles and nuclear weapons.
In Iraq, Saddam Hussein uses nerve gas against the Kurds in Halabja.
After Pan American Flight 103 explodes over Lockerbie, Scotland, killing
hundreds, state terrorism mounted by Libya is blamed.
1989
The Afghan Interim Government (AIG) is established, and the Soviet Union
completes its withdrawal from Afghanistan.
1989
Gorbachev is elected Soviet president in the first pluralist elections since 1917,
and by the end of the year all Warsaw Pact nations have overthrown their
communist leadership.
Time Line
1167
1989
The dismantling of Germanys Berlin Wall signifies the end of the Cold War, as
U.S president George H. W. Bush promises economic aid to the Soviet Union.
1989
The first flight of the Stealth bomber, made by Northrop Corporation and
Northrop Grumman, heralds the aircrafts role in combat after April, 1997.
A U.S.-led U.N. coalition leads a well-orchestrated air attack against Iraqi dictator
Saddam Hussein in an effort to oust his forces from Kuwait, which he invaded in
the summer of 1990.
U.S. Patriot missiles are used in combat against Scud missiles fired by Iraq at
Saudi Arabia during the First Gulf War.
Feb., 1991
Apr., 1991
No-fly zones are established and enforced in Iraq to prevent repression of Kurds in
northern Iraq.
1991
After the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania are granted independence
and other former soviets join the Commonwealth of Independent States,
Gorbachev resigns as president and the Soviet Union is officially dissolved.
A bomb attack on New Yorks World Trade Center kills 6 people and injures more
than 1,000.
1994
The Australian company Metal Storm forms to develop machine guns and
electronically initiated superimposed-load weapons technology.
1995
1996
Millionaire Islamic extremist Osama Bin Laden issues a declaration of war against
the United States.
Jan., 1996
An international force composed largely of troops under the auspices of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is deployed in Bosnia to ensure the
implementation of the Dayton Accords.
1998
Aug. 7, 1998
Research Tools
1168
2000
The October 12 suicide bombing of the USS Cole in the Persian Gulf kills 17
sailors.
Apr., 2001
A U.S. spy plane is brought down over China in the Hainan Island incident.
Two hijacked planes are deliberately crashed into the World Trade Center in New
York, another is crashed into the Pentagon, and a fourth crashes in a field in
Pennsylvania, in a coordinated series of attacks organized by Osama Bin Ladens
terrorist group al-Qaeda.
Oct. 7, 2001
U.S. president George W. Bush announces the start of the War on Terrorism in
response to the September 11, 2001, attacks on U.S. soil. A U.S.-led invasion of
Afghanistan starts to bring down the Taliban government of the country that has
been harboring Osama bin Laden.
Mar. 20-May 1, 2003 A U.S.-led invasion of Iraq topples Saddam Hussein. Justification for the Bush
administrations preemptive strike, previously presented before the United
Nations, includes controversial and, some maintain, poorly substantiated evidence
that the Iraqi dictator is refusing to be transparent about programs to develop
weapons of mass destruction and suspected use of Iraqi soil to provide terrorist
groups with safe harbor.
2003-2009
Fighting in the Darfur region leads to atrocities and severe humanitarian problems
for the people of southern Sudan.
2004
Oct. 9, 2006
Aug., 2008
A brief war erupts between the Russian Federation and Georgia over South
Ossetia.
On his second day in office, U.S. president Barack Obama issues an executive
order to close the terrorist detention camp at Guantnamo Bay, Cuba.
Mar. 4, 2009
The International Criminal Court (ICC) issues a warrant for the arrest of Sudanese
president Omar Hassan al-Bashir for war crimes, in its first action against a head
of state since the ICCs founding in 2002.
The Sri Lankan Civil War ends folllowing more than a quarter century of conflict.
After conducting nuclear tests, North Korea issues an announcement stating that it
is no longer bound by the 1953 armistice it signed at the end of the Korean War.
The United Nations issues sanctions in mid-June, in response to which North
Korea promises to step up its weaponization of plutonium.
Bibliography
Recently published secondary print resources are categorized by subject, such as General
Studies, Military Theory and Strategy, and type of weapon or technology. Abbreviations are
used at the end of each entry, summarizing features of the work as follows: ill for illustrations,
M for maps, tab for tables, chr for chronology, app for appendixes, glo for glossary,
B for bibliography, and i for index. These abbreviations are enclosed in brackets, for example: [ill, M, glo, B, i]
Several prominent publishers universally identified with series of works of compilation and
collection in military, naval, air, and space matters, often published annually, are not included
in the bibliographical listing but may be consulted for their ongoing and more professionally
targeted publications. Important examples are Janes Fighting Ships, Janes Weapons Systems,
Janes Infantry Weapons, Janes All the Worlds Fighting Aircraft, Brasseys Naval Annual,
Naval Institute Guide to Combat Fleets, Naval Institute Guide to World Military Aviation,
Conways All the Worlds Fighting Ships, Royal United Services Institute and Brasseys Defence Yearbook, Putnam Aviation Series, Guinness Book of Air Warfare, Guinness Book of Decisive Battles, and SIPRI Yearbook: Armaments, Disarmament, and International Security.
General Studies
1170
Clodfelter, Michael D. Warfare and Armed Conflicts:
A Statistical Reference to Casualty and Other
Figures, 1618-1991. 2 vols. London: McFarland,
1992. A statistical record of all military casualties of modern warfare, discussing the impact of
weapons since the introduction of gunpowder.
[tab, B, i]
Contamine, Philippe. War in the Middle Ages. Translated by Michael Jones. Oxford, England: Blackwell, 1980. A good survey of medieval European
warfare, neglecting naval aspects, by a prominent
French authority. [ill, B, i]
Cordesman, Anthony H., and Abraham R. Wagner.
The Lessons of Modern War. 3 vols. Boulder,
Colo.: Westview Press, 1990-1996. A study of the
changes that faced military planners at the end of
the Cold War. [ill, M, B, i]
Craig, Gordon A. The Politics of the Prussian Army,
1640-1945. New York: Oxford University Press,
1955. A classic study of the enormous influence of
the Prussian Army Officer Corps, and of armies
that were based on the Prussian military system.
[B, i]
De Moor, J. A., and H. L. Wesseling, eds. Imperialism and War: Essays on Colonial Wars in Asia
and Africa. Leiden, Netherlands: E. J. Brill, 1989.
A collection of academic essays on the nature of
the European colonial powers involving themselves in warfare around the world before the start
of World War I. [M, B, i]
DeVries, Kelly. Medieval Military Technology. Peterborough, Ont.: Broadview Press, 1992. An encyclopedic production divided into four sections:
arms and armor, artillery, fortifications, and warships. [ill, B, i]
Diagram Group. Weapons: An International Encyclopedia from 5000 B.C. to 2000 A.D. New York:
St. Martins Press, 1980. A profusely illustrated,
folio-sized reference work featuring all types of
weapons developed in all cultures over seven
thousand years. [ill, glo, B, i]
Echevarris, Antulio J., II. Imagining Future War:
The West Technological Revolution and Visions of Wars to Come, 1880-1914. Westport,
Conn.: Praeger Security International, 2007. A
short history and analysis of the changes in war-
Research Tools
fare in the three decades before World War I.
[ill, B, i]
Elgood, Robert. The Arms and Armour of Arabia in
the Eighteenth, Nineteenth, and Twentieth Centuries. New York: Scholar, 1994. A folio-sized,
profusely illustrated survey of Islamic arms. [ill,
app, glo, B, i]
Fuller, J. F. C. The Decisive Battles of the Western
World. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1954. A
detailed account of thirty-four battles from Salamis to D day, by a leading British military authority. [M, B, i]
Glete, Jan. Navies and Nations: Warships, Navies,
and State Building in Europe and America, 15001860. 2 vols. Stockholm, Sweden: Almqvist,
1993. A comprehensive and definitive reassessment by a remarkable Swedish scholar of the role
of naval warfare in the development of hegemonic
expansive powers of Europe and America; a multinational review and comparison in statistical and
quantitative detail of twelve major and more than
forty minor navies during the period. [ill, tab, B, i]
_______. Warfare at Sea, 1500-1650: Maritime
Conflicts and the Transformation of Europe. London: Routledge, 2000. A brilliant synthesis incorporating themes of naval technology, tactics,
strategy, personnel, administration, logistics, and
national states as related to maritime wars during
the early modern period. [M, B, i]
Hall, Bert S. Weapons and Warfare in Renaissance
Europe: Gunpowder, Technology, and Tactics.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997.
A discussion of gunpowder as a catalyst for historical change and related technological developments
in gun casting and gun carriages. [ill, M, B, i]
Hanson, Victor D., ed. Hoplites: The Classical Greek
Battle Experience. London: Routledge, 1991. Papers by experts on ancient warfare, covering men
and weapons, battlefield environment, and rules
of war. [ill, B, i]
Harkavy, Robert E., and Stephanie G. Neuman. Warfare and the Third World. New York: Palgrave,
2001. A survey of the nature of warfare in the
Third World from the end of the Cold War. [B, i]
Haythornthwaite, Philip J. The Colonial Wars Source
Book. London: Arms & Armour, 1995. A detailed
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reference work that includes vast amounts of information on colonial wars, colonial armies, and
weapons in use at the time, as well as biographies
of the major figures involved. [ill, M, tab, chr, glo,
B, i]
_______. The Napoleonic Souce Book. London:
Arms & Armour, 1990. An important reference
work on the Napoleonic Wars, starting with a general survey and then covering (alphabetically) all
involved countries, the types of weapons used by
them, and biographies of the major commanders,
with copious illustrations and quotations from
original sources. [ill, M, tab, chr, glo, B, i]
_______. The World War I Source Book. London:
Arms & Armour, 1992. Like others in this series,
this book provides much detail on the armies involved in the conflict, as well as the political background to their involvement and then the nature of
the fighting and the weaponry and biographies of
the important commanders, as well as a detailed
list of contemporary and secondary source material. [ill, M, tab, chr, glo, B, i]
Haywood, John. Dark Age Naval Power: A Reassessment of the Frankish and Anglo-Saxon Seafaring
Activity. London: Routledge, 1991. A look at a neglected subject: the impressive maritime achievements of Germanic seafarers before the Vikings,
with coverage of warfare, piracy, migration, and
trade. [ill, M, glo, B, i]
Headrick, Daniel R. Tools of Empire: Technology
and European Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century. New York: Oxford University Press, 1981. A
discussion of nineteenth century imperialism as
facilitated by innovations in technology such as
steamships, submarine cables, guns, and gunboats. [B]
Hedges, Chris. What Every Person Should Know
About War. New York: Free Press, 2003. A short
overview of warfare in the post-Cold War period.
[B, i]
Hogg, O. F. G. The Royal Arsenal: Its Background,
Origin, and Subsequent History. 2 vols. New
York: Oxford University Press, 1963. A comprehensive and heavily documented history of the
British ordnance industry since the eleventh century. [ill, app, B]
1171
Holsinger, M. Paul, ed. War and American Popular
Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. Westport,
Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1999. A large and detailed encyclopedia including not only conflicts
within the United States but also those overseas
involving the U.S. armed forces, such as Korea,
Vietnam, and other conflicts after 1975. [ill, B, i]
Howard, Howard E., ed. The Theory and Practice of
War. New York: Praeger, 1965. A series of fifteen
essays dedicated to Basil Liddell Hart, written by
noted scholars such as Peter Paret, Gordon Craig,
Jay Luvaas, Brian Bond, Norman Gibbs, and
Henry Kissinger. [B]
Ion, A. Hamish, and Keith Neilson, eds. Elite Military Formations in War and Peace. Westport,
Conn.: Praeger, 1996. A series of seven scholarly
presentations of the history of special units from
ancient times to the present. [B, i]
Isby, David C., and Charles Kamps, Jr. Armies of
NATOs Central Front. London: Janes Publishing Company Limited, 1985. A detailed survey of
the military forces of the member countries of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization in the last part
of the Cold War. [ill, i]
Jensen, Geoffrey, and Andrew Wiest, eds. War in the
Age of Technology: Myriad Faces of Modern
Armed Conflict. New York: New York University
Press, 2001. An analysis of how warfare has
changed from the end of the Cold War and the increasing importance of technology. [B, i]
Jones, Archer. The Art of War in the Western World.
London: Harrap, 1987. An overview of twentyfive hundred years of land-based warfare in the
West from the social-history perspective, with a
focus on institutions, comparative analysis, and
interactions. [ill, tab, M, B, i]
Jordan, Gerald, ed. Naval Warfare in the Twentieth
Century, 1900-1945. New York: Russak, 1977.
Thirteen essays in honor of Arthur Marder, by
noted scholars such as Paul Kennedy, on John
Fisher and Alfred von Tirpitz; Robin Higham, on
peripheral weapons; Peter Gretton, on U-boats;
Sadao Asada, on Japanese admirals; and W. A. B.
Douglas, on the Canadian navy. [B]
Keegan, John, ed. The Book of War: Twenty-five
Centuries of Great War Writing. London: Viking,
1172
1999. A collection of eighty-two contemporary
accounts from Thucydides to Desert Storm. [B, i]
Keen, Maurice, ed. Medieval Warfare: A History.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1999. Twelve
expert historians on methods of warfare from
700 to 1500, including H. B. Clarke on the Vikings, Clifford Rogers on the Hundred Years
War, and Felipe Fernandez-Armesto on naval warfare. [ill, M, B, i]
Kierman, Frank A., and J. K. Fairbank, eds. The Chinese Ways in Warfare. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1974. A historical survey
focusing on distinctive elements in Chinese warfare. [ill, B]
Kightly, Charles. Strongholds of the Realm: Defenses in Britain from Prehistory to the Twentieth
Century. New York: Thames, 1979. A history of
fortresses from early times to the present. [ill, B, i]
Laffin, John. Brasseys Battles: Thirty-five Hundred
Years of Conflicts, Campaigns, and Wars from
A-Z. New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1995. A
substantial alphabetical survey of seven thousand
battles, campaigns, and wars. [ill, M, i]
Lynn, John A., ed. Feeding Mars: Logistics in Western Warfare from the Middle Ages to the Present.
Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1993. A dozen
articles by expert scholars, such as Lynn, on Martin van Crevelds Supplying War; Bernard Bachrach, on logistics for the Crusades; Jon Sumida, on
British industrial logistics and naval war production during World War I; and Timothy Runyan,
on naval logistics during the Hundred Years
War. [B, i]
_______, ed. Tools of War: Instruments of Warfare,
1445-1871. Urbana: University of Illinois Press,
1990. A series of papers from a conference on how
weapons shaped military thought and organization of armed forces, including Simon Adams on
the late sixteenth century Habsburg hegemony,
William Maltby on sailing ship tactics, Dennis
Showalter on the Prussian army, and Hew Strachan
on the British army. [B, i]
McElwee, William L. The Art of War: Waterloo to
Mons. Bloomington: Indiana University Press,
1974. A general survey. [M, B, i]
McInnes, Colin J., and G. D. Sheffield, eds. Warfare
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in the Twentieth Century: Theory and Practice.
Boston: Allen & Unwin, 1988. Nine essays by expert scholars, including McInnes, on nuclear strategy; Keith Jeffery, on colonial warfare; and Geoffrey Till, on naval power. [B, i]
Macksey, Kenneth. For Want of a Nail: The Impact
on War of Logistics and Communications. Washington, D.C.: Brasseys, 1989. A study of technological developments in the fields of logistics and
communications and their impact on warfare. [ill,
M, B, i]
_______. Technology and War: The Impact of Science on Weapon Development and Modern Battle. London: Arms & Armour, 1986. Accounts of
how science and scientific developments have influenced weaponry. [ill, i]
McNeill, William H. The Age of Gunpowder Empires, 1450-1800. Washington, D.C.: American
Historical Association, 1989. An informative
guide by an outstanding scholar on the role of gunpowder in imperial expansion. [B]
_______. The Pursuit of Power: Technology, Armed
Force, and Society Since 1000. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982. One volume in a trilogy by the premier scholar on world history,
extending the concept of the military-industrial
complex back several centuries to 1000 and presenting its practical and far-reaching impact on
world society. [B, i]
Mallet, M. E., and J. R. Hale. The Military Organization of a Renaissance State: Venice, 1400-1617.
New York: Cambridge University Press, 1984. A
history of one of the earliest, and most innovative
and formative, military states, including coverage
of its standing army, the institutionalization of its
armed forces, its galley navy, and its famous arsenal. [ill, M, app, B, i]
Messenger, Charles. The Century of Warfare: Worldwide Conflict from 1900 to the Present Day. London: HarperCollins, 1995. A detailed overview of
changes in warfare during the twentieth century
based on the television documentary series of the
same name. [ill, M, B, i]
Millett, Allan R., and Williamson Murray, eds. Military Effectiveness. 3 vols. Boston: Allen & Unwin,
1988. Twenty-four eminent scholars systemati-
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cally assess twenty-one comparative case studies
of military performance in similar categories
political, operational, strategic, and tacticalfor
three designated periods: World War I, the interwar years, and World War II. [ill, M, B, i]
Moulton, James L. A Study of Warfare in Three Dimensions: The Norwegian Campaign of 1940.
Athens: Ohio University Press, 1966. A participants contention that the Norwegian Campaign
of 1940 was the first major campaign with operations on the surface, subsurface, and in the air. [ill,
M, B, i]
Murray, Williamson, and Allan R. Millett. A War to
Be Won: Fighting the Second World War. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2000. A
substantial survey of World War II, focusing on
traditional military operations on the battlefield
and assessing commanders such as Douglas MacArthur, Omar N. Bradley, Chester W. Nimitz, and
First Viscount Slim, categorized from bad to best.
[ill, M, B, i]
Nicolle, David. Medieval Warfare Source Book:
Christian Europe and Its Neighbours. London:
Brockhampton Press, 1996. One of two volumes
in an important reference book covering medieval
warfare over various time periods, with copious
illustrations, and original source material covering Europe and also the Crusades, and Central
Asia. [ill, M, tab, chr, glo, B, i]
_______. Medieval Warfare Source Book: Warfare
in Western Christendom. London: Brockhampton
Press, 1999. The second volume of Nicolles reference work covering warfare within Europe, arranged chronologically. [ill, M, tab, chr, glo, B, i]
Norman, Vesey B., and Don Pottinger. A History of
War and Weapons, 449-1660: English Warfare
from the Anglo-Saxons to Cromwell. New York:
Prentice-Hall, 1966. A survey of medieval warfare, exclusive of naval warfare, aimed at the introductory student. [ill, i]
Oakeshott, R. Ewart. European Weapons and Armour: From the Renaissance to the Industrial
Revolution. Rochester, N.Y.: Boydell Press, 2000.
A general survey. [ill, B, i]
OConnell, Robert L. Of Arms and Men: A History of
War, Weapons, and Aggression. New York: Ox-
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ford University Press, 1989. A general review of
the development of weapons, with the observation
that military leaders disliked revolutionary breakthroughs in weaponry. [ill, B, i]
Partington, J. R. A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 1960, 1998. A study of how these pyrotechnics and firearms went from China to the Mediterranean through the Muslim world. [ill, tab, glo,
B, i]
Payne, Samuel B. The Conduct of War: An Introduction to Modern Warfare. Oxford, England: Blackwell, 1989. A survey of contemporary warfare, including nuclear war; conventional land war, sea,
and air actions; and guerrilla warfare. [ill, B, i]
Perrett, Bryan. The Battle Book: Crucial Conflicts in
History from 1469 B.C. to the Present. New York:
Sterling, 1996. An easy-to-use, encyclopedic
guide covering 566 battles during more than three
thousand years of warfare. [B]
Pollington, Stephen. The Warriors Way: England in
the Viking Age. New York: Sterling, 1990. A
nicely illustrated, folio-sized volume covering the
period from Alfred the Great to William the Conqueror. [ill, app, M, B, i]
Porter, Bruce D. War and the Rise of the State: The
Military Foundations of Modern Politics. New
York: Free Press, 1994. An important synthesis of
the increasingly popular topic of war and state formation, exclusive of the United States, delineating dynastic, national, collectivist, and totalitarian
state patterns. [B, i]
Porter, Patrick. Military Orientalism: Eastern War
Through Western Eyes. New York: Columbia
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different techniques of fighting and how this has
transformed thinking with different forms of
asymmetrical warfare. [B, i]
Quick, John. Dictionary of Weapons and Military
Terms. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1973. A profusely illustrated, folio-sized dictionary defining
thousands of terms. [ill, B]
Ralston, David B. Importing the European Army:
The Introduction of European Military Techniques and Institutions into the Extra-European
World, 1600-1914. Chicago: University of Chi-
1174
cago Press, 1990. This book covers the transfer of
European technology within Africa, the Middle
East, and elsewhere, and the changes which have
resulted. [B, i]
Reardon, Carol. Soldiers and Scholars: The U.S.
Army and the Uses of Military History, 18651920. Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1990.
A description of the process of professionalization
within the U.S. Army, from an author with an outstanding record of historical writing. [B, i]
Roth, Jonathan P. War and World History. Chantilly,
Va.: The Teaching Company, 2009. Presented by
the well-known military historian and director of
the University of Calilfornias Burdick Military
History Project, these forty-eight lectures, captured on individual DVDs, cover such topics as
The Stone Age War, The Chariot Revolution,
Monotheisms and Militaries, The Weaponization of Information, and The Struggle for
Peace and Justice.
Southworth, Samuel A., ed. Great Raids in History:
From Drake to Desert One. New York: Sarpedon,
1997. Accounts of nineteen small-unit, irregular
warfare actions, both failed and successful, during
the last four hundred years, including raids by or
identified with Sir Francis Drake, George A.
Custer, Jimmy Carter, and Benjamin Netanyahu.
[B, i]
Stewart, Richard W. The English Ordnance Office,
1585-1625: A Case Study in Bureaucracy. Rochester, N.Y.: Boydell Press, 1996. An outstanding
example of the importance of logistics in warfare,
a case study of Englands supply of all ordnance
facilities to all services during a formative period.
[tab, B, i]
Stradling, R. A. The Armada of Flanders: Spanish
Maritime Policy and European War, 1568-1668.
New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992. A
thesis that proposes that Spanish arms at sea in the
long war against the Dutch produced a change in
the nature of warfare at sea; key factors were the
use of Dunkirk as base, the frigate warship, the
process of prize taking, and even the wages of seamen. [tab, glo, app, M, B, i]
Thompson, Julian. The Lifeblood of War: Logistics
in Armed Conflict. Washington, D.C.: Brasseys,
Research Tools
1991. Presents eight case studies to form a comprehensive analysis of this vital aspect of war, including North Africa, Italy, and Burma in World
War II; Korea; Vietnam; the Arab-Israeli October
War; and the Falkland Islands, the latter reported
from firsthand participation. [ill, M, B, i]
Thompson, Sir Robert, ed. War in Peace: An Analysis of Warfare from 1945 to the Present Day. London: Orbis, 1985. A detailed study by the British
counterinsurgency expert who advised successfully on the Malayan Emergency, and later advised the United States on Vietnam. [ill, M. B, i]
Townshend, Charles, ed. The Oxford Illustrated History of Modern War. New York: Oxford University
Press, 1997. A beautifully illustrated collection of
stimulating essays by prominent authorities, such
as Richard Overy, Richard Holmes, and Martin
van Creveld. [ill, M, B, i]
Toy, Sidney. Castles: Their Construction and History. 1939. Reprint. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover, 1985.
A survey of the general characteristics and history
of castles, with examples. [ill, B, i]
_______. A History of Fortification from 3000 B.C.
to A.D. 1700. New York: Macmillan, 1955. A
popular history presenting a general overview
covering five thousand years. [ill]
Unger, Richard W. The Ship in the Medieval Economy, 600-1600. London: Croom Helm, 1980. A
comprehensive and highly technical survey based
primarily upon extensive discoveries in underwater archaeology, a relatively new discipline that
has contributed vastly to knowledge in this field.
Stresses the economic, social, and cultural aspects
of ship design and how developments stimulated
commercial, military, and imperial expansion.
[ill, B, i]
Unsworth, Michael E., ed. Military Periodicals:
United States and Selected International Journals
and Newspapers. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood
Press, 1990. A comprehensive reference guide to
military journals and periodicals such as Armed
Forces and Society, Proceedings of the Naval Institute, Royal United Services Institute Journal,
Air Power History, Aviation Week, and Space
Technology. [chr, app, i]
Van Creveld, Martin L. Supplying War: Logistics
Bibliography
from Wallenstein to Patton. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1977. A provocative
early analysis from an innovative and controversial author, an Israeli professor who contends that
logistics is nine-tenths of the business of war. [M,
B, i]
_______. Technology and War: From 2000 B.C. to
the Present. New York: Free Press, 1989. A survey of dramatic changes in warfare over four
thousand years due to advances in technology,
concentrating on the systematization of war and
its increasing remoteness from reality; divided
into chronological sections such as the age of
tools, the age of machines, the age of systems, and
the age of automation. [ill, B, i]
_______. The Transformation of War. New York:
Maxwell Macmillan International, 1991. An account of the changes in warfare at the end of the
Cold War. [B, i]
Verbruggen, J. F. The Art of Warfare in Western Europe During the Middle Ages from the Eighth
Century to 1340. Translated by Sumner Willard
and Mrs. R. W. Southern. 2d rev. ed. Rochester,
N.Y.: Boydell Press, 1998. A classic by a noted
Belgian scholar of land warfare, featuring warfare
of knights and foot soldiers and their tactics and
strategies. [ill]
Warner, Philip. Firepower: From Slings to Star
Wars. London: Grafton Books, 1988. A good general history about the invention and use of new
weaponry. [ill, B, i]
Wright, Quincy. A Study of War: An Analysis of the
Causes, Nature, and Control of War. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1942. An encyclopedic and monumental study, with brilliant observations and analyses, originally formulated in the
1920s but updated during World War II. [ill, tab,
app, B, i]
1175
the United States up until the time of amalgamation of the armed services. [B, i]
Armitage, M. J., and R. A. M. Mason, eds. Air Power
in the Nuclear Age: Theory and Practice. London:
Macmillan, 1983. Nine essays assessing the role
of airpower during the Cold War. [B, i]
Asprey, Robert B. War in the Shadows: The Guerrilla in History. 2 vols. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1975. Rev. ed. Boston: Little, Brown,
1994. The classic history describing dozens of instances of the employment of irregular forces in
conjunction with a larger political-military strategy. [M, B, i]
Bacon, Benjamin W. Sinews of War: How Technology, Industry, and Transportation Won the Civil
War. Novato, Calif.: Presidio Press, 1997. An account of how the Union created and sustained a logistical advantage during the American Civil
War. [ill, i]
Ball, Desmond, and Jeffrey Richel, eds. Strategic
Nuclear Targeting. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1986. A description of an essential aspect of nuclear weapons development, covering,
for example, the Single Integrated Plan formulated by the United States. [ill, M, B, i]
Barker, A. J. Suicide Weapon: Japanese Kamikaze
Forces in World War II. New York: Ballantine,
1971. A study of the variety of kamikaze forces,
including aircraft, submarines, and entire fleets,
used during and especially toward the end of
World War II. [ill, B]
Bartlett, Merrill L., ed. Assault from the Sea: Essays
on the History of Amphibious Warfare. Annapolis,
Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1983. Fifty articles describing amphibious campaigns, such as the Norman Conquest, the Mongols against Japan, Gallipoli, Dieppe, and the Falkland Islands. [ill, B]
Bartusis, Mark C. The Late Byzantine Army: Arms
and Society, 1204-1453. Philadelphia: University
of Pennsylvania Press, 1992. A synthesis describing military institutions of Byzantium from the
Fourth Crusade until the empires fall to the Ottoman Turks. [ill, M, tab, glo, B, i]
Bateman, Robert L., ed. Digital War: A View from
the Front Lines. Novato, Calif.: Presidio Press,
1999. Eight essays by experts on the strategy and
1176
tactics for the digital battlefield. [tab, B]
Beaumont, Roger A. Military Elites: Special Fighting Units in the Modern World. Indianapolis, Ind.:
Bobbs-Merrill, 1974. A study of several modern
elite units, including the French Foreign Legion,
the Green Berets, and Combined Operation Headquarters. [ill, B, i]
Bellamy, Chris. The Evolution of Modern Land Warfare: Theory and Practice. London: Routledge,
1990. An analysis of land warfare at the very end
of the Cold War. [ill, B, i]
Bidwell, Shelford, and Dominick Graham. FirePower: British Army Weapons and Theories of
War, 1904-1945. Boston: Allen & Unwin, 1982.
A description of the process aimed to link together
artillery, infantry, tactical air, and communication, all to create a doctrine leading to effective
command and control. [ill, M, B, i]
Brodie, Bernard. A Laymans Guide to Naval Strategy. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press,
1943. A classic text on sea power, tools, command
of the sea, bases, and the air arm. [ill, M, B, i]
_______. Strategy in a Missile Age. 1959. Reprint.
Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1965.
An early analysis of the significance of the nuclear
age, pointing out the danger of precipitating total
war. [B]
Chaliand, Gerard, ed. Guerrilla Strategies: An Historical Anthology from the Long March to Afghanistan. Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1982. A collection of case studiesfor example, Burma, China, Cuba, South Africa, and
Yugoslavia. [B]
Colomb, Philip H. Naval Warfare: Its Ruling Principles and Practice Historically Treated. 3d ed.
London: W. H. Allen, 1891. Reprint. Annapolis,
Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1990. An early treatise
on the strategic implications of the study of naval
history to demonstrate certain laws governing naval warfare. [ill, tab, M]
Corbett, Julian S. Some Principles of Maritime Strategy. New York: Longmans, Green, 1911. Reprint.
Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1988. A
treatise seen by some experts as the most appropriate and important of all relating to naval, and
even national, strategy. [ill, B, i]
Research Tools
Corum, James S. The Luftwaffe: Creating the Operational Air War, 1918-1940. Lawrence: University
of Kansas Press, 1997. A German perspective on
air warfare.
Cox, Sebastian, ed. The Strategic Air War Against
Germany, 1939-1945: The Official Report of the
British Bombing Survey Unit. London: Cass,
1998. An extensive British investigation, originally withheld, now published, into controversial
strategic bombing. [ill, B, i]
Douhet, Giulio. The Command of the Air. Translated
by Dino Ferrari. New York: Coward, 1921. A
treatise by the Italian officer, the original theorist
and advocate of airpower. [B]
Ellis, John. Brute Force: Allied Strategy and Tactics
in the Second World War. New York: Viking,
1990. A revisionist assessment positing that the
Allies won the war because of industrial capacity
only and that Allied commanders were incapable
of effective warfare. [tab, app, M, B, i]
Gat, Azar. The Development of Military Thought:
The Nineteenth Century. Oxford, England: Clarendon, 1992. A continuation of the authors The
Origins of Military Thought, about strategy and
military theory during the nineteenth century, in
which the French Revolution introduced a new
mode of warfare, Prussia and the mass army developed, and total war began to be anticipated.
[B, i]
_______. The Origins of Military Thought: From the
Enlightenment to Clausewitz. Oxford, England:
Clarendon, 1989. An examination of how conceptions of military theory emerged from the Enlightenment and Counter-Enlightenment. [B, i]
Gray, Colin S. Strategy for Chaos: Revolutions in
Military Affairs and the Evidence of History. Portland, Oreg.: Frank Cass, 2002. Conceptually analyzes the idea of revolutions in military affairs,
the adoption of wholesale changes in military
strategies by numerous or important nations, comparing the changes that took place during the Napoleonic Era, World War I, and the nuclear era as
context for the revolution taking place in the
1990s and 2000s due to the application of information technology to warfare. [B, i]
Guilmartin, John F. Gunpowder and Galleys: Chang-
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ing Technology and Mediterranean Warfare at
Sea in the Sixteenth Century. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1974. A look at how the
sixteenth century domination of the galley over
the Mediterranean culminated in the Battle of
Lepanto (1571) and how the development of gunpowder and heavy cannons contributed to the decline of southern, and the rise of northern, Europe.
[ill, B, i]
Hague, Arnold. The Allied Convoy System, 19391945: Its Organization, Defence, and Operation.
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intensive study based on convoy records. [ill, B, i]
Handel, Michael I. Masters of War: Classical Strategic Thought. 1992. 3d ed. London: Cass, 2000. A
detailed textual analysis of the great military strategists, such as Sunzi (Sun Tzu); Niccol Machiavelli; Carl von Clausewitz; Antoine Henri, baron
de Jomini; and Mao Zedong (Mao Tse-tung). [tab,
M, B, i]
Hanzhang, Tao. Sun Tzus Art of War: The Modern Chinese Interpretation. Translated by Yuan
Sibling. New York: Sterling, 2000. The classical
work on military affairs, dealing with war, politics, economics, diplomacy, geography, and astronomy. [ill, M, i]
Hawkes, Sonia Chadwick, ed. Weapons and Warfare
in Anglo-Saxon England. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989. A collection of papers by experts from several disciplines, including history,
archaeology, anthropology, and metallurgy. [ill,
B, i]
Honan, William H. Bywater: The Man Who Invented
the Pacific War. London: Macdonald, 1990. A detailed account of the Bywater plan, outlined in a
number of books, on the strategy Japan would
eventually use to fight the Pacific war. [ill, M, B, i]
Hughes, B. P. Open Fire: Artillery Tactics from
Marlborough to Wellington. London: Bird, 1983.
A focused study of artillery in the formative eighteenth century, including the dominance of
smoothbore field artillery weapons and the tactics, organization, and operations that were developed along with them. [ill, M, B, i]
Hughes, Wayne P. Fleet Tactics: Theory and Practice. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1986.
1177
A major contribution to naval literature; a comprehensive survey of naval tactics over five distinct periods, such as those of sailing ships, big
gunships, and carriers. [ill, tab, app, B, i]
Inoguchi, Rikihei, and Nakajima Tadashi. The Divine Wind: Japans Kamikaze Force in World
War II. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press,
1958. The Japanese perspective and rationale for
the unique kamikaze force used on an increasing
scale during the war. [ill, i]
Jacobsen, Carl G., ed. The Uncertain Course: New
Weapons, Strategies and Mind-sets. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1987. An account of the
changing nature in war in the last years of the Cold
War. [B, i]
Joes, Anthony James. Guerrilla Warfare: A Historical, Biographical, and Bibliographical Sourcebook. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1996.
A series of case studies and 151 profiles of guerrilla leaders, including those of the American Revolution, Haiti, the Boer War, the Chinese Civil
War, and the Vietnam War. [M, B, i]
Johnson, David E. Fast Tanks and Heavy Bombers:
Innovation in the U.S. Army, 1917-1945. Ithaca,
N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1998. A critical
analysis with extensive documentation of how
and why the United States was unprepared for
World War II. [B, i]
Jones, Archer. Civil War Command and Strategy:
The Process of Victory and Defeat. New York:
Free Press, 1995. A sophisticated analysis of strategy during the American Civil War, focusing on
key decisions. [ill, M, B, i]
_______. Elements of Military Strategy: An Historical Approach. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1996. A
conceptualization supported by extensive statistics, using history as a source of ideas; a series of
case studies considering strategy, logistics, tactics, and operations. [ill, M, B, i]
Kane, Thomas M. Ancient China on Postmodern
War: Enduring Ideas from the Chinese Strategic
Tradition. New York: Routledge, 2007. Outlines
the social context in which Chinese military philosophers, such as the vaunted Sunzi (Sun Tzu),
wrote, noting that it, like the early 2000s, was a
time of social, economic, and military change.
1178
Using both Chinese military strategists and later
European military thought, the book looks at how
such classical military thought can benefit modern debates over military strategy. [B, i]
Kemp, Paul. Convoy Protection: The Defence of Seaborne Trade. London: Arms & Armour, 1993. A
study of the development and strategy of convoy
protection, as used, for example, by France during
the early modern period, against German U-boats
during World War I, and against American submarines in the Pacific during World War II. [ill,
tab, B, i]
Kennedy, Paul M., ed. Grand Strategies in War and
Peace. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press,
1991. Ten essays on national strategies by noted
scholars such as Kennedy, on Britain; John
Hattendorf, on the War of the Spanish Succession;
Michael Howard, on World War I; Dennis Showalter, on Germany; and Douglas Porch, on France.
[B, i]
Laqueur, Walter. Guerrilla: A Historical and Critical Study. Boston: Little, Brown, 1976. A general
and historical survey of guerrilla warfare, covering partisans against Adolf Hitler, National Liberation movements, and fictional accounts by
Honor de Balzac, Leo Tolstoy, and Ernest Hemingway. [chr, B, i]
_______. The New Terrorism: Fanaticism and the
Arms of Mass Destruction. New York: Oxford
University Press, 1999. An important review and
discussion on the history and psychology of terrorists, including animal rights activists, UFO
(unidentified flying object) cultists, and religious
extremists, linking them to literature and popular
culture. [B, i]
_______, ed. The Guerrilla Reader: A Historical Anthology. New York: New American, 1977. Accounts from forty authors taken from the eighteenth century to the present. [B]
_______, ed. The Terrorism Reader: A Historical Anthology. Philadelphia: Temple University Press,
1978. A series of writings selected by the author.
An examination, based on terrorism as it existed
in the 1970s, of the origins of terrorism as a tactic
and the military, social, and religious philosophies from which it flows. [B]
Research Tools
Leighton, Richard, and Robert W. Coakley. Global
Logistics and Strategy. 2 vols. Washington, D.C.:
Government Printing Office, 1955-1968. A study
of the intricate and complicated logistical process
worldwide and its impact on strategy. [ill, M, B, i]
Liddell Hart, Basil H. The Strategy of Indirect Approach. London: Faber and Faber, 1941. A survey, by one of the most influential strategic thinkers of the twentieth century, of the history and
making of strategy; later editions include a chapter on unconventional warfare. [M]
Luttwak, Edward N. The Political Uses of Sea Power.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1974.
A study of alternative operations related to diplomacy and international affairs, such as naval
presence, interposition, and blockade. [B]
_______. Strategy and History. New Brunswick,
N.J.: Transaction Books, 1985. A volume containing essays by Luttwak covering the strategy of
military deterrence, and the use of seapower, as
well as other topics. [i]
McNeilly, Mark. Sun Tzu and the Art of Modern
Warfare. New York: Oxford University Press,
2003. A treatise on the continued relevance of
Sunzi (Sun Tzu), including references to terrorism. [B, i]
Mahan, Alfred Thayer. The Influence of Sea Power
upon the French Revolution and Empire, 17931812. Boston: Little, Brown, 1892. The second
and continuing treatise about the impact of sea
power based on Mahans understanding of the
classic case study, the British success against
France. [ill, M, B, i]
_______. The Influence of Sea Power upon History,
1660-1783. Boston: Little, 1890. An enormously
influential treatise on the decisive influence of naval battle fleets on national development and expansion, based on Mahans perceptions of British
history during the early modern period; said to be
read and heeded by political and naval officials of
all the major powers during the 1890s and later,
and considered the bible of the Blue Water
School of naval expansionists. [ill, M, B, i]
_______. Naval Strategy: Compared and Contrasted
with the Principles and Practices of Military Operations on Land. London: Sampson, 1911. A
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later treatise of Mahan, demonstrating the differences between military and naval strategies. [ill,
M, i]
Mao Zedong. Six Essays on Military Affairs. Beijing:
Foreign Languages Press, 1971. Six essays, written between 1936 and 1948, that were influential in the thinking of the Chinese Communist
army.
Mao Zedong and Che Guevara. Guerilla Warfare.
London: Cassell & Company, 1962. An account
of the nature of guerrilla warfare by two of its
leading protagonists, involving comments not just
on conflicts in which they were involved but on
the philosophical underpinnings of their strategies
as well. [i]
Martin, Laurence W. The Sea in Modern Strategy.
New York: Praeger, 1967. A review and critique
of notable naval strategists, such as Alfred Thayer
Mahan, Julian S. Corbett, and Bernard Brodie, exclusive of important factors such as aircraft, submarines, and missiles. [ill, B]
Miller, Edward S. War Plan Orange: The U.S. Strategy to Defeat Japan, 1897-1945. Annapolis, Md.:
Naval Institute Press, 1991. An extensively researched and award-winning study of the famous
American war plan, first formulated about 1900,
in case of war with Japan and further developed as
opposing schools of thought, thrusting versus
cautionary, pressured for decisive influence.
[ill, M, B, i]
Mitchell, William L. Winged Defense: The Development and Possibilities of Modern Air Power, Economic and Military. New York: G. P. Putnams
Sons, 1925. Reprint. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover, 1988.
The classic advocacy of airpower by Billy Mitchell. [ill]
Murray, Williamson, MacGregor Knox, and Alvin
Bernstein, eds. The Making of Strategy: Rulers,
States, and War. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994. A study similar to Parets Makers
of Modern Strategy, with more emphasis on the
process and coverage of earlier times, including
seventeen case studies on topics such as the Peloponnesian War, Rome versus Carthage, Ming Dynasty China, Philip II of Spain, Winston Churchill, and Israel. [ill, B, i]
1179
Murray, Williamson, and Richard Hart Sinnreich,
eds. The Past as Prologue: The Importance of
History to the Military Profession. New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2006. Although the
study of history is clearly important to military
strategists, the book analyzes the challenges of applying historical events and ideas to modern warfare. Military conflict has long provided fertile
ground for historians, and there are problems that
have recurred throughout military history for
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Nasution, Abdul Haris. Fundamentals of Guerilla
Warfare, and the Indonesian Defence System,
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nature of successful guerrilla warfare during the
Dutch-Indonesian War, and also how this can be
used in other conflicts. [ill, M]
ONeill, Richard. Suicide Squads: Axis and Allied
Special Attack Weapons of World War II, Their
Development, and Their Missions. New York:
Salamander, 1981. A review of the use, mostly by
the Japanese, of torpedoes, midget submarines,
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Paret, Peter, ed. Makers of Modern Strategy: From
Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age. Princeton, N.J.:
Princeton University Press, 1986. Based on the
1943 classic edited by Edward Mead Earle, a superb guide to modern strategy; twenty-eight essays by eminent scholars, twenty-two of them
new, including Felix Gilbert on Niccol Machiavelli, R. R. Palmer on Frederick the Great, Paret
on Carl von Clausewitz, Hajo Holborn on the
Prussian-German school, and David McIsaac on
airpower theory. [B, i]
Parker, Geoffrey. The Grand Strategy of Philip II.
New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1998.
An argument by a noted expert on the early modern European military that Philip II of Spain formulated a grand strategy based on imperialism
and expansion, a view contrary to some prominent
scholars, such as Fernand Braudel, Paul Kennedy,
and Henry Kamen. [ill, B, i]
Perla, Peter P. The Art of Wargaming. Annapolis,
Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1990. An analysis of
1180
the techniques of war-gaming as essential to grand
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Reynolds, Clark G. Command of the Sea: The History and Strategy of Maritime Empires. 2 vols.
New York: William Morrow, 1974. A substantial
historical synthesis by a prominent authority,
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Robison, Samuel S., and Mary L. Robison. A History
of Naval Tactics from 1530 to 1930: The Evolution of Tactical Maxims. Annapolis, Md.: Naval
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survey focusing on technical aspects of naval warfare, from King Richard Is Third Crusade to the
Armada and Jutland campaigns. [ill, M]
Roskill, Stephen W. The Strategy of Sea Power: Its
Development and Application. London: Collins,
1962. Reprint. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood
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Julian S. Corbett, who had been ignored during
World War I. [B]
Ross, Steven T. American War Plans, 1919-1941. 5
vols. New York: Garland, 1992. Almost two thousand pages describing in detail the making of a series of American war plans during the interwar
period, the responsibility of the Joint Army-Navy
Board; individual volumes cover peacetime war
plans, plans for war against the British and Japanese, plans to meet the Axis threats, coalition
plans, and plans for global war. [ill, M]
_______. American War Plans, 1939-1945. London:
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complicated and challenging process, dealing with
problems within the coalition, interservice rivalries, disagreements between field commanders
and headquarters, and logistical restraints. [ill, M]
Ryan, Alan. Thinking Across Time: Concurrent Historical Analysis on Military Operations. Duntroon, Australia: Land Warfare Studies Centre,
2001. A short working paper on Australian military thinking.
Strachan, Hew, and Andreas Herberg-Rothe, eds.
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Oxford University Press, 2007. A series of articles
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Van Creveld, Martin. Command in War. Cambridge,
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of loosely connected essays about land warfare,
presenting the historical evolution of the function
of command, control, and communication in warfare, with an emphasis on the uncertainties. [ill,
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Wegener, Wolfgang. The Naval Strategy of the
World War. Translated by Holger Herwig. 1929.
Reprint. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press,
1989. A classic treatise written in approximately
1915 by a German vice admiral highly critical of
Alfred von Tirpitzs strategy and risk fleet theory and celebrated for his perceptiveness, his
appreciation of the importance of geopolitics in
naval strategy, and his Atlantic vision, which
Germany should possibly have followed in World
War I. [B, i]
Weigley, Russell F. The Age of Battles: The Quest for
Decisive Warfare from Breitenfeld to Waterloo.
Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1991. By
a preeminent authority, a look at war from the initiation of conflict to the the grand-scale battle, a
feature of military and naval professionalism. [M,
B, i]
_______. The American Way of War: A History of
U.S. Military Strategy and Policy. New York:
Macmillan, 1973. A study of American military
institutions and a survey of American strategy, including coverage of George Washington and attrition, Robert E. Lee and Napoleonic strategy,
Ulysses S. Grant and annihilation, Alfred Thayer
Mahan and Stephen B. Luce and sea power and
empire, Billy Mitchell and airpower, and Douglas
MacArthur and the frustrations of limited war in
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Wilt, Alan F. War from the Top: German and British
Military Decision Making During World War II.
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masterful analysis of the only two powers that
fought throughout World War II, using a comparative approach to conclude that the overall direction of the war was better handled by the British
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Wintringham, Thomas, and J. N. Blashford-Snell.
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bombing British cities. [ill, B, i]
Everett-Heath, John. Helicopters in Combat: The
First Fifty Years. London: Arms & Armour, 1992.
A survey. Presents a detailed history of military
helicopters from their first implementation as
evacuation vehicles to the 2000s, through their
evolution during the Korean War, the Vietnam
War (when aerial gunships first saw action), to the
modern era, where they are one of the most ubiquitous and deadly weapons available on the battlefield. [ill, app, B, i]
Godden, John, ed. Harrier: Ski Jump to Victory.
Washington, D.C.: Brasseys, 1983. A case study
of the success of the Harrier jump-jet during the
Falkland Islands campaign. [ill, i]
Gooch, John, ed. Airpower: Theory and Practice.
London: Cass, 1995. A series of essays about the
development of airpower, including the contributions of Giulio Douhet, Billy Mitchell, and Hugh
Trenchard and the debate between advocates of
precision and area bombing. [ill, M, B, i]
Harris, Arthur T. Bomber Offensive. London: Collins, 1947. Reprint. London: Greenhill, 1990.
Apologetics by the controversial commander of
British strategic bombing. [M]
Hastings, Max. Bomber Command: The Myths and
Realities of the Strategic Bombing Offensive,
1939-1945. New York: Dial, 1979. An examination of the controversial question about the effectiveness of the Strategic Bombing Offensive. [ill,
B, i]
Hearn, Chester G. Carriers in Combat: The Air War
at Sea. Westport, Conn.: Praeger Security International, 2005. Covers naval air power, aircraft carriers at war, air admirals, strategies, and tactics in
several twentieth century conflicts. [ill, M, B, i]
Higham, Robin. Air Power: A Concise History. Rev.
3d ed. Manhattan, Kans.: Sunflower University
Press, 1988. A historical survey. [ill, B, i]
Homze, Edward L. Arming the Luftwaffe: The Reich
1182
Air Ministry and the German Aircraft Industry,
1919-1939. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press,
1976. A case study of industry, logistics, politics,
and air force officials involved in the making of a
major airpower. [ill, B, i]
Hone, Thomas C., Norman Friedman, and Mark D.
Mandeles. American and British Aircraft Carrier
Development, 1919-1941. Annapolis, Md.: Naval
Institute Press, 1999. A study of the extraordinary,
fateful, and decisive innovations in the creation of
British and American aircraft carriers. [ill, B, i]
Kennett, Lee B. A History of Strategic Bombing. New
York: Charles Scribners Sons, 1982. A survey of
airpower, from the initial fear of bomber aircraft
to industrial preparation for massive production
and eventual total war. [ill, B, i]
Kozak, Warren. Lemay: The Life and Wars of General Curtis Lemay. Washington, D.C.: Regnert,
2009. A detailed history of General Curtis LeMay
and his belief in the superiority of airpower. [ill,
B, i]
Marriott, Leo. Royal Navy Aircraft Carriers, 19451990. London: Ian Allan, 1985. A detailed history
of the developments in aircraft carriers by the
Royal Navy from the end of World War II. [ill,
B, i]
Mason, R. A. Air Power: An Overview of Roles. London: Brasseys, 1987. A short account of the nature of airpower in the last years of the Cold War.
[ill, B, i]
Meilinger, Phillip S. Airwar: Theory and Practice.
Portland, Oreg.: Frank Cass, 2003. An analysis of
the changes in aerial warfare from the end of the
Cold War. [B, i]
_______, ed. The Paths of Heaven: The Evolution of
Airpower Theory. Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala.:
Air University Press, 1997. Essays by teachers
and students reviewing the origins and evolution,
covering theorists such as Giulio Douhet, Billy
Mitchell, and Hugh Trenchard. [B, i]
Mikesh, Robert C. Zero Fighter. New York: Crown,
1980. An exquisite, double-folio publication production with foldout pages, covering the Mitsubishi Type 0 Japanese fighter, the Zero, a completely original aircraft design that achieved
notable early success during World War II. [ill]
Research Tools
Murphy, James T. Skip Bombing. Westport, Conn.:
Praeger, 1993. The story of the development of
an effective low-altitude bombing tactic, used
against Japanese supply and troop ships in the Pacific war, that increased hits from 1 to 72 percent. [ill, i]
Nordeen, Lon O. Air Warfare in the Missile Age.
Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press,
1985. A detailed academic account of the changes
in air warfare during the last period of the Cold
War. [B, i]
Rimal, Raymond L. Zeppelin! A Battle for Air Supremacy in World War I. London: Conway, 1984.
A profusely illustrated, folio-sized volume telling
the story of British and German developments in
the use of the zeppelin during World War I and including photographs of bomb damage. [ill, M,
B, i]
Robinson, Douglas H. Giants of the Sky: A History of
the Rigid Airship. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1973. A scholarly survey and overview
covering about forty years of development of 161
rigid airships in four nations. [B, i]
Sherry, Michael S. The Rise of American Air Power:
The Creation of Armageddon. New Haven, Conn.:
Yale University Press, 1987. A winner of the
Bancroft Prize, the story of the creation and development of the American strategic bombing campaign and a cultural study of attitudes toward
bombing. [ill, B, i]
Smith, Peter C. Dive-Bomber: An Illustrated History.
Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1982. A
history of the development of the dive-bomber
and its impact. [ill, B, i]
Winton, John. Air Power at Sea: 1945 to Today. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1987. An account of
the nature of airpower during the Cold War. [ill,
M, B, i]
Amphibious Warfare
Alexander, Joseph H. Storm Landings: Epic Amphibious Battles in the Central Pacific. Annapolis,
Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1997. Covers amphibious operations during World War II. [ill, M, glo,
B, i]
Bartlett, Merrill L., ed. Assault from the Sea: Essays
Bibliography
on the History of Amphibious Warfare. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1983. Fifty articles
describing amphibious campaigns, such as the
Norman Conquest, the Mongols against Japan,
Gallipoli, Dieppe, and the Falkland Islands. [ill,
B, i]
Croizat, Victor J. Across the Reef: The Amphibious
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[ill, M, B, i]
Keyes, Lord. Amphibious Warfare and Combined
Operations. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1943. The chapters of the book, covering
military conflicts from the eighteenth century
through the mid-twentieth century, consist of lectures delivered by Britains first wartime director
of combined operations during World War II, at
the annual Lees Knowles Lectures at Trinity College, Cambridge University.
McGee, William L. Amphibious Operations in the
South Pacific in World War II. 2 vols. Santa
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B, i]
Polmar, Norman, and Peter B. Mersky. Amphibious
Warfare: The Illustrated History. London: Blandford, 1988. A profusely illustrated, folio-sized
volume beginning with early combined operations, moving toward the massive invasions of
World War II, and culminating in more recent amphibious operations, such as Suez, Vietnam, and
the Falkland Islands. [ill, M, B, i]
Army Weapons
Croll, Mike. The History of Landmines. London:
Cooper, 1998. A short, disjointed survey about the
use of land mines, consciousness-raising about
their implications, and international efforts to
limit their use. [ill, B, i]
Dastrup, Boyd L. The Field Artillery: History and
Sourcebook. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press,
1994. The history, use, and users of field artillery
from 1350 to the present. [glos, app, B, i]
Duffy, Christopher. Siege Warfare: The Fortress in
the Early Modern World, 1494-1660. New York:
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Routledge, 1979. A comprehensive study of siege
warfare by country, including Italy, France, England, the Baltic states, China, and Japan. [ill, M,
B, i]
Griffith, Paddy. British Fighting Methods in the
Great War. London: Cass, 1996. An effort to evaluate and rehabilitate opinion of British military
tactical leaders and their methods, which, the author insists, deserve more credit than they have
been given. [tab, B, i]
Gudmundsson, Bruce I. On Artillery. Westport,
Conn.: Praeger, 1993. A short academic account
of the use of artillery. [B, i]
Hazlett, James C., et al. Field Artillery Weapons of
the Civil War. Newark, N.J.: University of Delaware Press, 1983. An excellent reference work,
with a detailed analysis of developments in artillery. [ill, tab, app, B, i]
Hogg, O. F. G. Artillery: Its Origin, Heyday, and Decline. Hamden, Conn.: Archon, 1970. A history of
artillery. [ill, B]
Hughes, B. P. Firepower: Weapons Effectiveness on
the Battlefield, 1630-1850. New York: Charles
Scribners Sons, 1974. A profusely illustrated,
folio-sized assessment of the performance of
combined infantry, cavalry, and artillery during
the formative seventeenth through nineteenth
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Macksey, Kenneth. Tank Warfare: A History of
Tanks in Battle. New York: Stein, 1971. A history
of development with an emphasis on tactics by a
veteran armor officer. [ill, chr, B, i]
McLean, Donald B., ed. Japanese Tanks, Tactics,
and Antitank Weapons. Wickenburg, Ariz.: Normount Technical, 1973. The story of tank developments and the use of the tank in the Japanese
army. [ill]
Marsden, Eric W. Greek and Roman Artillery: Technical Treatises. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1971. A
detailed history of artillery used by and against the
Greeks and Romans. [ill, B, i]
Messenger, Charles. The Art of Blitzkrieg. New
York: Simon & Schuster, 1976. The story of developments in tank warfare, especially during the
interwar period. [ill, B, i]
Needham, Joseph. Military Technology: The Gun-
1184
powder Epic. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1987. The story of the increasing dominance of gunpowder in warfare during the early
modern period. [ill, B, i]
Perrett, Bryan. A History of Blitzkrieg. New York:
Stein, 1983. A popular history describing Germanys use of the Blitzkrieg from Poland to
Kursk, as well as the Blitzkriegs use by Americans, Japanese, and Israelis. [ill, B, i]
Roland, Paul M. Imperial Japanese Tanks, 19181945. New York: Bellona, 1975. A survey of tank
developments by the Japanese before and during
World War II. [ill]
Showalter, Dennis E. Railroads and Rifles: Soldiers,
Technology, and the Unification of Germany. Hamden, Conn.: Archon, 1975. A critical and scholarly
analysis by an eminent authority of the military
impact of advanced technological developments
on politics and international events. [M, B, i]
Strachan, Hew. European Armies and the Conduct of
War. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1983. An
outstanding example of the relation of strategic
theory to actual practice. [ill, M, B, i]
Van Creveld, Martin. Fighting Power: German and
U.S. Army Performance, 1939-1945. Westport,
Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1982. A comparative
analysis of German and American fighting power.
[tab, app, B, i]
Vuksic, V., and Z. Grbasic. Cavalry: The History of a
Fighting Elite, 650 B.C.-A.D. 1914. New York:
Sterling, 1993. A profusely illustrated, folio-sized
volume including one hundred color plates and a
short narrative essay. [ill, i]
Watson, Bruce A. Sieges: A Comparative Study.
Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1993. An analysis of
five case studies, including Jerusalem in 1099 and
Singapore in 1942. [ill, M, B, i]
Wright, Patrick. Tank: The Progress of a Monstrous
War Machine. London: Faber, 2000. An anecdotal history of the tank, from its beginnings in
1914, when the crisis in trench warfare prompted
British analysts to look toward engines and
tracked vehicles to break the deadlock, to its evolution for use in Blitzkrieg warfare. [ill]
Research Tools
Chemical and Biological Warfare
Adams, Valerie. Chemical Warfare, Chemical Disarmament: Beyond Gethsemane. New York: Macmillan, 1989. An analysis of the nature of chemical warfare at the end of the Cold War. [B, i]
Barnaby, Wendy. The Plague Makers: The Secret
World of Biological Warfare. New York: Continuum, 2002. A detailed account of the possibility of
biological warfare, including its potential use by
terrorists. [B, i]
Gander, Terry. Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical
Warfare. London: Ian Allan, 1987. A survey of
different forms of warfare during the Cold War.
[ill, B, i]
Hammond, James W. Poison Gas: The Myths and
Reality. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1999.
Definitions, history, various scientific factors, and
myths are reviewed. [B, i]
Hoenig, Steven L. Handbook of Chemical Warfare
and Terrorism. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood
Press, 2002. A reference book giving a detailed
survey on the nature of chemical warfare and also
its possible use by terrorists. [B, i]
Mauroni, Albert J. Americas Struggle with Chemical-Biological Warfare. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2000. A detailed review of the problems, challenges, and technicalities of chemical
and biological warfare. [ill, tab, glo, B, i]
Solomon, Brian, ed. Chemical and Biological Warfare. New York: H. W. Wilson, 1999. A post-Cold
War survey of chemical and biological weaponry
and scenarios for their possible deployment. [B, i]
Spiers, Edward M. Chemical and Biological Weapons: A Study of Proliferation. New York: St. Martins Press, 1994. A survey of the problems of proliferation, using the Middle East as a focus. [tab,
app, B, i]
_______. Chemical Warfare. Urbana: University of
Illinois Press, 1986. A brilliant analysis presenting the origins and nature of chemical warfare.
[app, B, i]
_______. Weapons of Mass Destruction. New York:
St. Martins Press, 2000. An overview and analysis, incorporating revelations of 1990s terrorism
proliferation and counterproliferation.
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Buderi, Robert. The Invention That Changed the
World: How a Small Group of Radar Pioneers
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De Archangelis, Mario. Electronic Warfare: From
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Kiely, D. G. Naval Electronic Warfare. Washington,
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1185
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Page, Robert M. The Origins of Radar. 1962. Reprint. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1979.
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Firearms
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Intelligence Technology
Alvarez, David J. Secret Messages: Codebreaking
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Andrew, Christopher M., ed. Codebreaking and Signals Intelligence. London: Cass, 1986. A series
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Budiansky, Stephen. Battle of Wits: The Complete
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use of many sources that did not become available
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Copeland, B. Jack, et al., ed. Colossus: The Secrets of
Bletchley Parks Codebreaking Computers. New
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Bletchley Park making copious use of British
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Hartcup, Guy. Camouflage: A History of Concealment and Deception in War. New York: Charles
Scribners Sons, 1980. A study of camouflage as
used in air, land, and naval contexts, with a series
of national examples. [ill, B, i]
Hesketh, Roger. Fortitude: The D-Day Deception
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successful deception campaign for the Normandy
Research Tools
invasion in which the focus was on Calais. [ill,
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Hinsley, F. H. British Intelligence in the Second World
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published in the late 1970s, which revealed for
the first time the unprecedented and massive intelligence operation based at Bletchley Park, seventy
miles northwest of London, where ten thousand
expert Allied operatives broke German, Italian,
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Hinsley, F. H., and Alan Stripp, eds. Code Breakers:
The Inside Story of Bletchley Park. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1993. A personalized
and informative presentation of accounts by participants in the massive intelligence operation
conducted during World War II. [ill, i]
Kahn, David. The Codebreakers: The Story of Secret
Writing. New York: Scribner, 1996. A detailed
history of codes and code breaking from ancient
times through to the Cold War, by one of the acknowledge experts in the field. [ill, B, i]
Neilson, Keith, and B. J. C. McKercher. Go Spy the
Land: Military Intelligence in History. Westport,
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military intelligence. [B, i]
Stripp, Alan. Codebreaker in the Far East. London:
Frank Cass, 1989. An account of code breaking in
East Asia and the Pacific war, including a detailed
account of how the Japanese devised their own
codes. [ill, B, i]
Welchman, Gordon. The Hut Six Story: Breaking the
Enigma Code. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1982.
The extraordinary story by a major participant of
Bletchley Park and the breaking of the German
codes, describing the Bletchley Park environment
and the process of decryption in an understandable manner. [ill, app, B, i]
Naval Weapons
Baxter, James P. The Introduction of the Ironclad
Warship. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University
Press, 1933. Reprint. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 2001. The best account of the nineteenth century transition to ironclad warships, de-
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scribing five innovations: steam power, shell
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Boudriot, Jean. The Seventy-four Gun Ship: A Practical Treatise on the Art of Naval Architecture.
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Breyer, Siegfried. Battleships and Battle Cruisers,
1905-1970. Translated by Alfred Kurti. New
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the battleship, followed by descriptions and more
than nine hundred illustrations of every battleship
of every country during the period from 1905 to
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Brogger, A. W., and Haakon Shetelig. The Viking
Ships: Their Ancestry and Evolution. Translated
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account not just of Viking longboats but also the
orgin of their design and how they were later
adapted in medieval Europe. [ill, M, i]
Busk, Hans. The Navies of the World. London: Routledge, Warnes and Routledge, 1859. Facsimile.
Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1973. When
originally published, this book provided a survey
of the navies around the world just before the start
of the American Civil War. Republished, this is
an important contemporary source about naval
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Campbell, N. J. M. Jutland: An Analysis of the
Fighting. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press,
1986. An extraordinarily detailed study and analysis of the performance of all guns of all calibers
on both the British and German sides, with statistics on ammunition expended, the disposition of
each round, the damage sustained, and the resulting damage-control measures. [ill, tab, B, i]
_______. Naval Weapons of World War II. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1985. An extensive, folio-sized, country-by-country survey of all
naval weapons, with 750 illustrations. [ill, tab, i]
Cipolla, Carlo M. Guns, Sails, and Empires: Technological Innovation and the Early Phases of Eu-
1187
ropean Expansion, 1400-1700. London: Collins,
1965. Reprint. New York: Barnes & Noble Books,
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related technological advances made European
expansion and hegemony inevitable during the
early modern period. [ill, B]
Clancy, Tom. Submarine: A Guided Tour Inside a
Nuclear Warship. New York: G. P. Putnams
Sons, 1993. An extraordinarily detailed report on
an official tour of a nuclear submarine. [ill]
Friedman, Norman. U.S. Naval Weapons: Every
Gun, Missile, Mine, and Torpedo Used by the U.S.
Navy from 1883 to the Present Day. Annapolis,
Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1982. A comprehensive review of naval weaponry. [ill, B, i]
Gardiner, Robert, ed. Cogs, Caravels, and Galleons,
1000-1650. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press,
1994. A large-folio-format survey of warships
during the transition from medieval to modern
times, from the Vikings to the Dutch. [ill, glo, B, i]
Garzke, William H., Jr., and Robert O. Dulin, Jr. Battleships: Axis and Neutral Battleships in World
War II. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press,
1985. An account of battleships operated by the
Axis Powers as well as neutral countries in the
early 1940s. [ill, M, B, i]
Gray, Edwyn. The Devils Device: Robert Whitehead
and the History of the Torpedo. Rev. ed. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1991. The story of
how an English engineer working in Austria invented and developed the torpedo. [ill, B, i]
Griffiths, Maurice. The Hidden Menace: Mine Warfare, Past, Present, and Future. London: Conway,
1981. A review of the numerous types of naval
mines in language understandable by the layperson. [ill, i]
Hobson, Rolf, and Tom Kristiansen. Navies in Northern Waters 1721-2000. Portland, Oreg.: Frank
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Howarth, Stephen. The Fighting Ships of the Rising
Sun: The Drama of the Imperial Japanese Navy,
1895-1945. New York: Atheneum, 1983. The story
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1188
victories and equally devastating defeats, from its
origin in 1894 until its demise in 1945. [ill, B, i]
Kaufmann, Robert Y., et al. Submarine. Annapolis,
Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1993. A profusely illustrated, folio-sized volume supporting a televised documentary about submarines during and
after World War II. [ill, B]
Lane, Frederic C. Venetian Ships and Shipbuilders of
the Renaissance. 1934. Reprint. Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1992. The history of
one of the earliest and most important naval powers and its associated features, such as galleys,
shipwrights, craft guilds, the construction process, timber supplies, and the famous Venice Arsenal. [ill, B, i]
Lavery, Brian, ed. The Line of Battle: The Sailing
Warship, 1650-1840. London: Conway, 1992.
Part of an important series, The History of the
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ships and fittings. [ill, B, i]
Lawliss, Chuck. The Submarine Book: A Portrait of
Nuclear Submarines and the Men Who Sailed
Them. New York: Thames, 1991. A short history of submarines and more details on modern
nuclear-powered submarines. [ill]
Macintyre, Donald G. F. W. Aircraft Carrier: The
Majestic Weapon. New York: Ballantine, 1968. A
popular account of the development of the aircraft
carrier, seen especially as the decisive factor in the
Pacific campaign of World War II. [ill, B]
_______. Wings of Neptune: The Story of Naval Aviation. New York: Norton, 1964. A historical survey. [ill, B, i]
Macintyre, Donald G. F. W., and Basil W. Bathe. The
Man-of-War: A History of the Combat Vessel.
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Manson, Janet M. Diplomatic Ramifications of Unrestricted Submarine Warfare, 1939-1941. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1990. A survey of
international law and its implications, including
case studies of U-boats during World War I,
World War II, and American submarines in the
Pacific, which all resorted to the same rationale.
[M, B, i]
Massie, Robert K. Dreadnought: Britain, Germany,
Research Tools
and the Coming of the Great War. New York:
Random House, 1991. A history of the political
impetus by the European navies to build the
dreadnoughts in an arms race before the outbreak
of World War I. [ill, M, B, i]
Neilson, Keith, and Elizabeth Jane Errington, eds.
Navies and Global Defense: Theories and Strategy. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1995. Papers from
a symposium held at the Royal Military College of
Canada in 1994. [B, i]
OConnell, Robert L. Sacred Vessels: The Cult of the
Battleship and the Rise of the U.S. Navy. New
York: Oxford University Press, 1991. A virtual indictment, critical of the U.S. Navys excessive
emphasis and reliance on the battleship, which,
the author contends, was never an effective
weapon. [ill, tab, B, i]
Padfield, Peter. Guns at Sea. New York: St. Martins
Press, 1973. A profusely illustrated, folio-sized
historical survey from the time of projecting stones
to the present, with an emphasis on the technical
and tactical aspects of guns at sea. [ill, B]
Pivka, Otto von. Navies of the Napoleonic Era. New
York: Hippocrene, 1980. A general overview that
fills a void in a neglected area with accounts of
spectacular Napoleonic battles, such as those of
St. Vincent, Camperdown, Nile, Copenhagen,
and Trafalgar. [ill, app, M, B]
Polmar, Norman, et al. Aircraft Carriers: A Graphic
History of Carrier Aviation and Its Influence on
World Events. New York: Doubleday, 1969. A
full, detailed, scholarly, and engaging presentation. [ill, app, B, i]
Reynolds, Clark G. The Fast Carriers: The Forging
of an Air Navy. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1968.
Reprint. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press,
1992. A contribution to a controversial debate, arguing that fast carriers were the most significant
naval development of World War II and especially decisive in the Pacific war. [ill, M, B, i]
Robertson, Frederic L. The Evolution of Naval Armament. London: Constable, 1921. Reprint. London:
Storey, 1968. A classic, comprehensive survey
featuring progressive developments in gunnery,
gun carriages, propelling machinery, and armor.
[ill, B, i]
Bibliography
Rodgers, William L. Naval Warfare Under Oars:
Fourth to Sixteenth Centuries: A Study of Strategy, Tactics, and Ship Design. Annapolis, Md.:
Naval Institute Press, 1939. Reprint. Norwalk,
Conn.: Easton Press, 1991. A narrative history of
events related to the use of galleys in the Mediterranean, by the Vikings, and during naval wars of
England, France, and Italy. [ill, M, B]
Sondhaus, Lawrence. Navies of Europe: 1815-2002.
Harlow: Longman, 2002. An overview of the
changes in the nature of navies from the end of the
Napoleonic Wars through to the end of the twentieth century. [ill, M, B, i]
Unger, Richard W., ed. Cogs, Caravels, and Galleons: The Sailing Ship, 1000-1650. London:
Conway, 1994. A profusely illustrated, foliosized volume focused on the technological advances of the sailing ship and its navigation. [ill,
glo, B, i]
Whitley, M. J. Battleships of World War II: An International Encyclopedia. London: Arms & Armour
Press, 1988. A detailed encyclopedia covering
battleships by all countries during World War II.
[ill, M, glo, B, i]
Nonlethal Weapons
Alexander, John B. Future War: Nonlethal Weapons
in Modern Warfare. New York: St. Martins
Press, 1999. An argument that innovative electromagnetic, acoustical, and psychological weapons
are called for in the post-Cold War era of peacekeeping, humanitarian, and antiterrorist military
missions. [ill, B, i]
Morehouse, David A. Nonlethal Weapons: War
Without Death. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1996.
The story of the development of nonlethal weapons in the twentieth century, associated with the
search for alternative methods of combat. [ill, tab,
B, i]
Rappert, Brian. Non-lethal Weapons as Legitimizing
Forces? Technology, Politics, and the Management of Conflict. Portland, Oreg.: Frank Cass,
2003. Addresses state-of-the-art nonlethal weapons such as acoustic weapons, electromagnetic
pulse beams, and calmative chemical agents. [ill,
B, i]
1189
Nuclear Weapons
Bernstein, Barton J., ed. The Atom Bomb: The Critical Issues. Boston: Little, Brown, 1976. A comprehensive assessment, featuring arguments both
for and against the development and use of the
atomic bomb. [B]
Caldicott, Helen. The New Nuclear Danger: George
W. Bush Military-Industrial Complex. New York:
New Press, 2004. An account of the increased importance of the military-industrial complex by
one of the leading Australian antinuclear campaigners. [ill, B, i]
Cimbala, Stephen J. Nuclear Weapons and Strategy:
U.S. Nuclear Policy for the Twenty-first Century.
New York: Routledge, 2005. An important survey
of the nature of nuclear weapons. [B, i]
Gerson, Joseph. Empire and the Bomb: How the U.S.
Uses Nuclear Weapons to Dominate the World.
Ann Arbor, Mich.: Pluto Press, 2007. A detailed
account of the use and the threat of use of nuclear
weapons, especially in Asia, including scenarios
in China, during the Korean War, during the Vietnam War, and in the Middle East. [B, i]
Gray, Colin S. The Second Nuclear Age. Boulder,
Colo.: Rienner, 1999. A discussion of the role of
nuclear weapons in the post-Cold War era, concluding that nuclear arms control is not working
and that China is a future potential antagonist.
[B, i]
Groueff, Stephane. Manhattan Project: The Untold
Story of the Making of the Atomic Bomb. Boston:
Little, Brown, 1967. A report by a French journalist about the extraordinary and massive endeavor,
with much interesting information from interviews of participants. [ill, B]
Groves, Leslie R. Now It Can Be Told: The Story of
the Manhattan Project. New York: Harper, 1962.
A firsthand account by the projects nonscientist
director, an American general. [ill, i]
Harris, John B., and Eric Markusen, eds. Nuclear
Weapons and the Threat of Nuclear War. New
York: Harcourt, 1986. A presentation based on
Cold War situations. [B]
Herf, Jeffrey. War by Other Means: Soviet Power,
West German Resistance, and the Battle of the
Euromissiles. New York: Free Press, 1991. A de-
1190
tailed account, from a political viewpoint, of the
introduction of nuclear missiles into Western Europe during the 1980s. [B, i]
Hilsman, Roger. From Nuclear Military Strategy to a
World Without War: A History and a Proposal.
Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1999. An account of
U.S. nuclear strategy by an adviser to President
John F. Kennedy. [B, i]
Irving, David J. C. The German Atomic Bomb: The
History of Nuclear Research in Nazi Germany.
New York: Simon & Schuster, 1967. By a controversial author, the definitive history of the attempt
by Germany to develop the atomic bomb; based
on extensive primary research. [ill, M, B]
Kahn, Herman. On Thermonuclear War. Princeton,
N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1960. Three lectures on the nature and feasibility, plans and objectives, and analysis of thermonuclear war. [ill,
tab, i]
Maddox, Robert James. Weapons for Victory: The
Hiroshima Decision Fifty Years Later. Columbia:
University of Missouri Press, 1995. An assessment of the controversial decision to drop the
atomic bomb at the end of World War II. [B, i]
Paul, T. V., and James J. Wirtz, eds. The Absolute
Weapon Revisited: Nuclear Arms and Emerging
International Order. Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Press, 1998. An essential and timely
study, reevaluating nuclear weapons policies in
the post-Cold War environment and analyzing
their problems and potential. [i]
Perkovich, George. Indias Nuclear Bomb: The Impact on Global Proliferation. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999. A report on a particularly crucial issue: India and the proliferation of
nuclear weapons in one of the most dangerous hot
spots in the world. [M, B, i]
Quester, George H. Nuclear First Strike: Consequences of a Broken Taboo. Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 2006. An account of
the problems with nuclear escalation and likely
scenarios in which the United States could resort
to nuclear warfare. [B, i]
Rhodes, Richard. Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb. New York: Simon & Schuster,
1995. A clear and understandable narrative about
Research Tools
the hydrogen bomb, with expert analysis and informative detail. [ill, glos, B, i]
_______. The Making of the Atomic Bomb. New
York: Simon & Schuster, 1986. Awarded the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, a comprehensive account focusing on developments in
nuclear physics and the scientific aspects and
technical complexities of the atomic bomb. [ill,
B, i]
Wainstock, Dennis. The Decision to Drop the Atomic
Bomb. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1996. A history
of the thinking that went behind the decision by
President Harry S. Truman to bomb Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, written on the fortieth anniversary
of the bombing. [B, i]
Walker, J. Samuel. Prompt and Utter Destruction:
Truman and the Use of Atomic Bombs Against Japan. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina
Press, 2004. Analyzes President Harry S. Trumans decision to use atomic weapons against Japan in 1945, looking not only at what was and was
not known by Truman himself but also at Japanese
attitudes toward surrender. Provides the context in
which the decision was made to use atomic weapons and examines an array of factors that eventually convinced Japan to end the war. [B, i]
Primitive and Ancient Weapons
Annis, P. G. W. Naval Swords: British and American
Naval Edged Weapons, 1600-1815. Harrisburg,
Pa.: Stackpole, 1970. A general survey. [B, i]
Bartlett, Clive. English Longbowman, 1530-1515.
London: Osprey, 1997. Explains how the success
of the English military during the Late Middle
Ages was built on the effective use of the longbow. A characteristically English weapon, it was
not overcome in its ability to pierce armor or in its
rate of fire until the early twentieth century. [ill, B]
Bishop, M. C., and J. C. N. Coulston. Roman Military
Equipment: From the Punic Wars to the Fall of
Rome. London: Batsford, 1993. An important history showing the changes in Roman military hardware. [ill, M, B, i]
Bradbury, Jim. The Medieval Archer. New York: St.
Martins Press, 1985. An important and useful, if
somewhat dated, survey. [ill, B, i]
Bibliography
De Souza, Philip. The Ancient World at War. London: Thames & Hudson, 2008. This study includes chapters on warfare in various regions
around the world. [ill, M, B, i]
Drews, Robert. The End of the Bronze Age: Changes
in Warfare and the Catastrophe ca. 1200 B.C.
Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1993.
Gives a military explanation for the fall of the
Levantine, Hittite, Mycenaean, and Trojan kingdoms and the dark age that followed the end of
the Bronze Age in the early twelfth century b.c.e.
[ill, M, B, i]
Featherstone, Donald. Bowmen of England. London:
Jarrolds, 1967. An account of how English archers were to change the nature of warfare in
western Europe in the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries, by one of the leading British authors on
war gaming.
Hamblin, William J., ed. Warfare in the Ancient Near
East c.1600 B.C. New York: Routledge, 2005. A
detailed account of the nature of fighting in the
Eastern Mediterranean and Mesopotamia. [ill, M,
B, i]
Kern, Paul Bentley. Ancient Siege Warfare. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1999. This book
covers various different parts of the ancient world
and is based on the premise that siege warfare was
responsible for unleashing violence throughout
the ancient world. [ill, M, glo, B, i]
Malone, Patrick M. The Skulking Way of War: Technology and Tactics Among the Indians of New England. Lanham, Md.: Madison Books, 1991. A
1191
survey of the ways of war among North American
indigenous peoples. [ill, M, B, i]
Osgood, Richard. Warfare in the Late Bronze Age of
North Europe. Oxford: Archaeopress, 1998. An
account of the nature of warfare among the Germanic tribes from Roman sources. Makes heavy
use of archaeological evidence. [ill, M, B, i]
Osgood, Richard, and Sarah Monks, with Judith
Toms. Bronze Age Warfare. Stroud, Gloucestershire, England: Sutton, 2000. Using contemporary written sources, mainly Roman, this history
makes extensive use of the latest archaeological
finds. [ill, M, B, i]
Sidebottom, Harry. Ancient Warfare. New York:
Oxford University Press, 2004. An account of
warfare in the ancient world, including descriptions on ancient military philosophy. [M, glo, B, i]
Snodgrass, Anthony. Early Greek Armour and
Weapons: From the End of the Bronze Age to 600
B.C. Edinburgh, Scotland: Edinburgh University
Press, 1964. With profuse illustrations and literary sources such as Homer, a collection of descriptions of helmets, shields, armor, swords,
spears, bows and arrows, and chariots. [ill, B, i]
Underwood, Richard. Anglo-Saxon Weapons and
Warfare. Stroud, Gloucestershire, England: Tempus, 1999. A study based on an extensive and informative survey from the artifacts, such as helmets, shields, mail coats, swords, spears, and
knives, recovered from the famous Sutton Hoo
ship burial in East Anglia. [ill, B, i]
Web Sites
cluding tanks, armored fighting vehicles, artillery,
missiles, and helicopters.
The AK Site
http://kalashnikov.guns.ru/
Affiliated with: Military Parade magazine
Contains detailed specifications and history of the
development of the Kalashnikov rifle, in all of its
variants the most widely adopted infantry weapon of
the late twentieth century.
Army Technology
http://www.army-technology.com/index.html
Affiliated with: Net Sources International
Provides current information about modern military equipment used by the armies of the world, in-
Web Sites
Presents an examination of the current chemical
and biological capabilities of major nations and
rogue states, as well as details about the effects of
chemical and biological weapons on military and civilian populations.
First Empire
http://www.firstempire.net
Affiliated with: First Empire magazine
Established by the leading magazine about the
Napoleonic period, this site contains a number of
sample articles from the magazine.
1193
The Geometry of War
http://info.ox.ac.uk/departments/hooke/geometry/
content.htm
Affiliated with: Oxford University
Applies and interprets geometry in its military application to Renaissance warfare. These applications
include cartography, gunnery, and ballistics. Based
on an exhibition at Oxford University.
The High Energy Weapons Archive: A Guide to
Nuclear Weapons
http://www.fas.org/nuke/hew/
Affiliated with: Federation of American Scientists
Dedicated to nonproliferation and disarmament,
this site provides extensive detail on the history, capabilities, and spread of nuclear weapons and technology over the past decades.
History and Archaeology of the Ship
http://www.history.bangor.ac.uk/Shipspecial/
SHIP_int.htm
Affiliated with: Department of History and Welsh
History, University of Wales, Bangor
An outlined history of military and commercial
ships, from ancient vessels to early modern galleys,
this site focuses on archaeological evidence to account
for changes in technology and military applications.
The History Channel
http://www.historychannel.com/war/
Affiliated with: Same
Provides links to previous History Channel programs on military equipment and conflicts, as well as
to book and video resources. The site also contains a
detailed time line of history from 500 b.c.e. to the
present, which includes many events of military significance.
The History Net
http://www.thehistorynet.com/
Affiliated with: Primedia History Group
Primedia is a publisher of a variety of military history journals, and this site features articles and source
material from these periodicals, as well as additional
materials on weapons and warfare from all periods of
history.
1194
Imperial War Museum
http://www.iwm.org.uk/
Affiliated with: Government of the United
Kingdom
Contains representative text, photographic, and
image collections from the holdings of the museum,
taken primarily from British and Commonwealth
military history.
Janes Defense Information
http://www.janes.com/index.shtml
Affiliated with: Janes Information Group
Provides extensive information about military
equipment, contractors, arms purchases, weapons
specifications, and intelligence about world events.
Janes is the worlds leading private consulting group
on military affairs and publishes standard works on
military hardware.
Land Forces of Britain, the Empire, and
Commonwealth
http://regiments.org/milhist/
Affiliated with: T. F. Mills, University of Denver
Provides detailed information about the historical
structure, military equipment, weapons, personnel,
and campaigns of the armed forces of the United
Kingdom and its associated territories.
MagWeb
http://www.magweb.com
Affiliated with: Network Solutions
This subscription site contains thousands of articles from military and war-gaming magazines from
around the world.
MILNET
http://www.milnet.com/milnet/index.html
Affiliated with: Same
This open-source intelligence site provides current information about the military forces of the
world, including their equipment, interests, and rivals, with particular focus on those of the United
States. Areas of military technology covered include
ground forces, military aviation, space-based weapons, intelligence capabilities, and naval warships.
Research Tools
Museum of Antiquities
http://museums.ncl.ac.uk/archive/index.htm
Affiliated with: Society of Antiquaries of
Newcastle upon Tyne and the University of
Newcastle upon Tyne
This museum of archaeology in northeast England concentrates on the Roman era in Britain. In
the collection are photographs of Roman weapons,
fortifications, and armor, along with a virtual book
on Roman military equipment.
Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
http://www.museum.upenn.edu/Greek_World/
Index.html
Affiliated with: University of Pennsylvania
Contains a text discussion of warfare in the lives
of the ancient Greeks as well as photographs of Greek
artifacts of war and representations of combat in artistic forms, taken from the museums collection.
Relevant sections of the online museum include warfare, hunting, chariots, horses, and daily life.
Napoleon
http://www.napoleon.org/index_flas.html
Affiliated with: Napoleon Foundation, Paris, France
Provides detail about the military campaigns of
Napoleon I (Bonaparte) and Napoleon III through
extensive image and text databases.
National Atomic Museum
http://www.atomicmuseum.com/
Affiliated with: U.S. Air Force
Provides image and text representations of the
U.S. nuclear weapons program, including information about the Manhattan Project, the Cold War arms
race, and the history of disarmament efforts.
Naval Historical Center
http://www.history.navy.mil/
Affiliated with: U.S. Navy
Provides image and photographic galleries, technical specifications, and the history of naval campaigns of the U.S. Navy since the American Revolutionary War.
Web Sites
Nihon Kaigun: Imperial Japanese Navy Page
http://www.combinedfleet.com/
Affiliated with: Jon Parshall, independent researcher
Based on years of research into the history of the
Japanese navy, this site includes detailed representations of the armaments and equipment of Japans air
and sea forces of World War II. In addition, it provides operational histories of major Japanese vessels
during the war and thorough discussions of ballistics,
ship armor, and other technical areas, as well as details of both major and minor naval campaigns.
Official History of New Zealand
http://www.nzetc.org/projects/wh2/
Affiliated with: New Zealand Department of Internal
Affairs and Victoria University of Wellington
Provides the official history of New Zealand in
World War II.
Photos of the Great War
http://listproc.cc.ukans.edu/~kansite/ww_one/
photos/greatwar.htm#TOP
Affiliated with: University of Kansas and Brigham
Young University
This photographic database includes almost two
thousand images of World War I, mostly from U.S.
sources. Main areas of focus include weapons, equipment, military aviation, animals at war, and naval
campaigns. Features include liberal rules for using
images, as well as an accompanying link to a World
War I text site.
1195
Royal Museum of the Army and Military
History
http://www.klm-mra.be/
Affiliated with: Government of Belgium
The Royal Museum of the Army and Military History contains more than ten centuries of texts and artifacts from Belgian and world military history, and its
Web site includes online exhibitions of main galleries and holdings, as well as a text and image database.
Springfield Armory National Historic Site
http://www.nps.gov/spar/home.html
Affiliated with: U.S. Park Service
The Springfield Armory, a National Historic Site,
was for almost two hundred years a critical manufacturer of weapons for the U.S. military. Its online site
demonstrates most of the equipment produced during the history of the armory, and its archive contains
more than twenty-five thousand documents.
A Storm of Shot and Shell: Weapons of the Civil
War
http://www.chipublib.org/003cpl/
civilwar_catalog.html
Affiliated with: Chicago Public Library
This exhibit presents photographs, engravings,
and illustrations of weapons of the American Civil
War, taken from the collection of the library and including artillery, ammunition, and small arms.
Regia Anglorum
http://www.regia.org/index.html
Affiliated with: Same
This living-history site includes photographs, descriptions, and illustrations of Anglo-Saxon, Viking,
Norman, and British weapons, armor, and daily life
from the period from 950 to 1066.
1196
fighting vehicles from more than twenty-five countries. In addition to photographs and illustrations, the
site has detailed technical information for an increasing portion of its collection.
Trenches on the Web: An Internet History of
the Great War
http://www.worldwar1.com/index.html
Affiliated with: History Channel Affiliate Program
Provides images, documents, maps, and other material about World War I. Also contains a booksearch engine, discussion forums, poster sales, and
extensive links to other sites.
U.S. Air Force Museum
http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/index.htm
Affiliated with: U.S. Air Force
This online presence of the U.S. Air Force Museum has special image collections, taken from the
holdings of the Air Force, and is especially strong in
the areas of aircraft weaponry, fighter and bomber
engines, and ground equipment.
U.S. Army Ordnance Museum
http://www.ordmusfound.org/
Affiliated with: U.S. Army
The museum contains more than eight thousand
artifacts, with the online collection focused on photographs and technical specifications primarily for
U.S. tanks, armored fighting vehicles, and artillery.
U.S. Civil War Navies
http://www.tfoenander.com
Affiliated with: Terry Foenander, military historian
This site has a vast array of material on the Union
and Confederate navies in the American Civil War.
War, Peace, and Security
http://www.cfcsc.dnd.ca/links/milhist/index.html
Affiliated with: Information Resource Centre,
Canadian Forces College
A detailed site, organized by period, subject, and
conflict, with links to archives, photograph galleries,
Research Tools
texts, and other resources from the ancient era to the
late twentieth century.
The War Times Journal
http://www.wtj.com/
Affiliated with: Same
Provides extensive archival information, photographs, and other materials about warfare from the
Napoleonic era to World War II. Also contains an extensive collection of articles about conflicts in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries, as well as wargaming information and hundreds of links to other
military history sites.
Warfare in the Ancient World
http://www.fiu.edu/~eltonh/army.html
Affiliated with: Department of History, Florida
International University
The focus of this site is on Greek, Roman, and
Byzantine warfare, with sections devoted to bibliographies of specific as well as comparative weaponry, fortifications, and other areas of military technology.
Web Sources for Military History
http://home.nycap.rr.com/history/military.html
Affiliated with: Richard Jensen, University of
Illinois, with support from the Gilder-Lehrman
Foundation, the National Endowment for the
Humanities, the Japan Foundation, and the Luce
Foundation
Provides a bibliography and extensive Web links
to hundreds of military history and technology sites,
especially those dealing with the modern era.
World War II Armed Forces Orders of Battle
and Organizations
http://freeport-tech.com/wwii/index.htm
Affiliated with: Dr. Leo Niehorster, independent
military historian and publisher
Thoroughly details the equipment, weapons, personnel, and campaigns of nearly all military forces
involved in World War II down to the company level.
Wayne H. Bowen
Index
4Abb3s I the Great (shah of
Persia), 624-625, 628
4Abb3s Mtrz3, 625
4Abb3sids, 281-282, 288-289
4Abd al-Rawm3n, 233, 284
4Abd al-Rawm3n ibn Mu$3wiyah
ibn Hish3m, 281
4Abd Allah al-Ghafiqi, 284
Abd el-Krim, 1120
Abdlhamid II, 972
Abdlmecid I (Ottoman sultan),
590
Abel, Frederick Augustus,
405
Aboukir, Battle of (1799),
582
Abrams tanks, 745, 801
Abteilung, 1091
Abn Bakr, 281
Abu Ghraib prison, 998
Abu Simbel, 93
Abyssinia, Italian invasion of
(1935-1936), 713
Accolade (sword blow), 21
Achaemenid Persians, 67, 101,
118
Acre, Siege of (1189-1191), 18
Acropolises, 43
Acta Diurna, 916
Acta Senatus, 916
Action in the North Atlantic
(film), 1051
#d3b-ul-Mulnk wa-kif3yat almamlnk, 342
Adam of Bremen, 258
Adams, Eddie, 854
Adams, Samuel, 924
Addams, Jane, 984
Addresses to the German Nation
(Fichte), 870
Adowa, Battle of (1896), 613
Index
Ambassadors, 1009. See also
Emissaries
Ambroise dvreux, 270
Ambrose (bishop of Milan), 884
Ambulances, 954
Ambushes; Mongol, 331; Native
American, 371; prehistoric, 4
Amda Tseyon (Solomonid
emperor), 305, 307
Amentum (sling), 27
American Black Chamber, The
(Yardley), 1005
American Civil War (18611865), 510, 543, 559, 561,
563, 565, 567, 569, 571, 573574, 679; biological warfare,
948; British complicity, 563;
cavalry, 495;
commemoration, 858;
economic impact, 935;
espionage, 1020; fiction
about, 1069; in film, 863,
1048; financing, 1015;
firearms, 404; fortifications,
475; in literature, 874; news
coverage, 918; psychological
impact, 959; war crimes, 996
American Friends Service
Committee, 984
American Indians, 364, 367, 369,
371-372, 948; fiction about,
1068; films about, 1047;
genocide, 971; removal, 995
American Peace Society, 982
American Revolution (17751783), 404, 481, 559, 580,
582; espionage, 1019; fiction
about, 1066; in film, 863,
1046; financing, 1014;
insurgents, 902; mercenaries,
978; naval warfare, 506;
smallpox, 948
American Revolution, The
(documentary series), 891
American School Peace League,
908
American Society of
International Law, 984
Americas; colonization, 579,
581. See also Categorized
Index of Essays
Ames, Aldrich, 1022
Amin, Hafizullah, 791
Amirs. See Emirs
Ammianus Marcellinus (Roman
historian), 121, 172, 176, 204,
208
Amorite Dynasty, 31
Amphibious operations in World
War II, 695
Amphictyonic League, 981
Amputations, 954
ANA. See Afghan National
Army
Anabaptists, 982
Anabasis (Xenophon), 1063
Anabasis Alexandri (Arrian),
117, 147, 215
Anaconda Plan (1861), 570
Anarchism, 871
Anasazi people, 366
Anastasius (Eastern Roman
emperor), 231
Anatolia, 293
Anbar Awakening, 804
ANC. See African National
Congress
Ancient world. See Categorized
Index of Essays
Andalus, al-, 284
Andersonville (Kantor), 1069
Andhra Dynasty, 211
Angelus Dynasty, 223
Angkor, 344-345
Angkor Thom, 347
Anglo-Afghan Wars (1839-1842;
1878-1880), 652, 655. See
also Afghanistan
Anglo-Dutch War, First (16521654), 502
Anglo-Dutch War, Third (16721674), 503
1201
Index
255; Visigothic, 185; for
weapons, 584; weapons
against, 4; West African, 300
Armor operations, World War II,
699
Armor-piercing shells, 1091
Armored fighting vehicles, 488
Armored personnel carriers, 488,
784
Armored railroad cars, 572
Armored vehicles, 427, 429, 431,
433-434; World War I, 678;
World War II, 697
Armored warships, 509
Armorica, 235
Arms control, 1011
Arms manufacture, Roman, 166
Arms race, 745, 1013;
beginnings, 656; U.S.-Soviet,
751
Arms trade, 1024-1025, 10271028; Africa, 616; illegal,
773, 1027; Israel, 762
Army, 1092
Army, U.S.; Cold War, 746;
Vietnam War, 785; World
War II, 695
Army Air Corps, U.S., 695
Army group, 1092
Army of the North German
Confederation, 664, 666
Army Signals Intelligence
Service, 1006
Arnaud, mile, 981
Arnett, Peter, 890
Arnold, Henry Harley Hap,
701
Arnulf of Carinthia, 248
rpd Dynasty, 248
Arrian (Roman historian), 117,
138, 172, 215, 907
Arrows, 12; Africa, 615;
Magyar, 249; Native
American, 369; quarrels, 19;
Scyths, 205. See also Bows
and arrows
Ashur-dan II (emperor of
Assyria), 94
Ashurnasirpal II (emperor of
Assyria), 56, 94, 1120
Ashur-uballit I (emperor of
Assyria), 94
Asia; ancient fortifications, 41;
anticolonial movements, 744;
colonialism, 579; trade, 934.
See also Categorized Index of
Essays
Asian-African Conference
(1955), 765, 768
Askars, 290
Akoka the Great, 209, 211
Assagai (spear), 28, 1092
Assassins (Islamic militant sect),
289
Assault rifles, 414
Asser (Welsh monk), 243
Assers Life of King Alfred
(Asser), 243
Assyrians, 89, 94-95, 97, 99-100,
839; archers, 14; bridges, 841;
fortifications, 40; genocidal
acts, 969; vs. Hebrews, 106;
infantry, 61; siege warfare, 56
Aswan Dam, 764
Asymmetric warfare, 828, 833
At the Center of the Storm
(Tenet), 812, 820
Atahualpa (Incan emperor), 585
Atarashii Rekishi Kyfkasho o
Tsukurukai, 909
Atatrk, 591
Ateas (Scythian ruler), 202
Athens, 140, 965; fortifications,
43; infantry, 61; navy, 70, 131
Atlantic, Battle of the (1943),
713, 1051
Atlantic Wall (German
fortification), 477
Atlas missiles, 458
Atlatls, 354, 367
Atomic Annie, 423
Atomic artillery, 418
Index
Band, 1093
Band of Brothers (book,
miniseries), 866, 892
Band of Brothers (film), 1051
Bandung Conference, 765, 768
Bangalore torpedoes, 1093
Banner, 1093
Banner (unit of knights), 268
Bannermen, 735-736
Bannockburn, Battle of (1314),
28, 63, 1044
Bao Dai (emperor of Vietnam),
781
Bar-le-Duc, Jean Errard de, 474
Barbarians; ancient, 140;
defined, 237; enemies of
Rome, 168-169; European
tribes, 183, 185, 187-188;
invasions of Rome, 843, 911,
916, 934
Barbarossa, 1127
Barbed wire, 427, 1038, 1093
Barber-surgeons, 953
Barbusse, Henri, 1074
Barcid clan, 149
Barding, 195
Bari, Capture of (1071), 222
Barker, Pat, 1074
Barrage balloons, 1093
Barricades Revolt (1960), 913
Barritus (Roman battle cry), 172
Baselard (European dagger), 23,
1093
Bashi-Bazouks, 550, 555
Basil I (Byzantine emperor), 222
Basil II (Byzantine emperor),
222
Basque separatists, 685
Basternae (supply wagons), 237
Bastions, 54, 474, 846
Bataan (film), 1051
Bataan Death March (1942), 726
Battalion (army unit), 486, 536,
678, 1031, 1093
Battering rams, 43, 56, 97, 846,
1094; elephants as, 341
Index
Boot, Das (film), 866, 1053
Booth, John Wilkes, 996
Booth, Martin, 1076
Borgia, Cesare, 912, 958
Born on the Fourth of July
(film), 1059
Bornu-Kanem, 614, 618
Borodino, Battle of (1812),
494
Borrowing for war financing,
1015
Bosch, Carl, 950
Bosnia-Herzegovina, 822
Boston Massacre (1770);
propaganda, 924
Boston Tea Party (1773), 925
Botheric, 995
Boufflers, Louis-Franois de,
533
Boulle, Pierre, 1077
Bouncing Betty (mine), 784
Bouncing bomb, 1096
Bourcet, Pierre-Joseph de, 544
Bourjaily, Vance, 1079
Boutros-Ghali, Boutros, 822
Bouvines, Battle of (1214), 265
Bowie knife, 393, 1096
Bows and arrows, 12-13, 15-16;
Africa, 300; Anglo-Saxons,
242; Assyrian, 97; belly bow,
57, 143; charioteers, 66;
China, 316, 735; composite
bows, 12, 87, 102, 111, 133;
decline of, 491; defined,
1096; Egypt, 111; Frankish,
235; Hittite, 91; India, 212;
Israelites, 108; Japanese, 323,
636; medieval, 265;
Mesoamerican, 354;
Mesopotamian, 85; Mongol,
329; Native American, 368369; poisoned, 347; recurve
composite, 249; Seljuk, 290;
Southeast Asia, 345, 347;
steppe nomads, 205. See also
Archers and archery
Index
Caracalla (Roman emperor), 168
Caracol tactic, 523
Caracoles, 383, 491, 529
Caravels, 501, 523
Carbines, 1097
Carchemish, Battle of (1350
b.c.e.), 89
Cardano, Gerolamo, 1003
Cargo planes, 437
Caricatures in propaganda, 924
Carlists (Spanish Civil War), 685
Carmagnola, conte di, 899
Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, 984
Carolingian Chronicles, 287
Carolingian Empire, 253; kings,
231; and Vikings, 253
Carpathia, 248
Carpet bombing, 754, 792
Carpini, Giovanni da Pian del,
334
Carracks, 71, 388, 501
Carrhae, Battle of (53 b.c.e.), 15,
68, 121, 143
Carrier, Jean-Baptiste, 902
Carronades, 425, 506, 1097
Carter, Jimmy, 746
Carthage, 68, 149, 151, 153, 155156, 158, 970; and Berbers,
179; Celts, 176; economy,
933
Cartridges, 410, 412, 420; metalcase, 1108
Carvels, 521
Case of Sergeant Grischa, The
(Zweig), 1072
Case shot, 1097
Castiglione della Stivere, Battle
of (1796), 536
Castillon, Battle of (1453), 378,
418
Castle Keep (Eastlake), 1078
Castles, 473, 958; Hungarian,
250; Japanese, 324; stone, 50;
timber, 50; Welsh, 846
Castriotto, Jacomo, 479
Index
Chinese Peoples Volunteers,
732
Chinese Revolution (1911-1912),
731, 913
Ching Dynasty. See Qing
Dynasty
Chivalry, 856, 858, 916, 990; age
of, 260, 263, 265, 267, 269,
271; ancient, 209; China, 199;
cult of, 260
Chlorine gas, 949
Chlotar I, 231
Chlotar II, 231, 233
Choctaw, 364
Choshu Five, 638
Chou En-lai. See Zhou Enlai
Christendom, 260, 263, 265,
267, 269, 271-272; defined,
577
Christianity; Byzantine, 221;
China, 644, 647; East Africa,
304; East-West split, 222;
Japan, 632; vs. Ottomans,
589; propaganda use, 923;
Roman Empire, 884. See also
Roman Catholic Church
Christians; Crusades, 276;
genocidal victims, 970;
Monophysites, 884; pacifism,
981; persecution, 884;
soldiers, 884
Christine de Pizan, 375, 858, 940
Christmas Truce (1914), 1050
Chronicle of Theophanes, The
(Theophanes), 287
Chronicon Roskildense, 258
Chronographia (Theophanes),
287
Chuikov, Vasili I., 708
Chunqiu period, 191
Church of the Holy Sepulchre,
277
Churchill, John, 533, 537, 584,
1122
Churchill, Winston S., 496, 670,
1038, 1122
Clench-built ships, 71
Cleopatra (film), 861
Cleopatra VII, 861
Clerambault: The Story of an
Independent Spirit During the
War (Rolland), 1072
Clermont, Council of (1095), 272
Clibanarii (Roman cavalry), 168
Climate and warfare, 838, 844
Clinker-built ships, 71, 387
Clinton, William J., 803
Clive, Robert, 580
Close-in weapon system, 463
Clotilde, 233
Clovis I, 231; conversion to
Christianity, 885
Clubs, 1098; ancient, 3, 5, 7;
development of, 4; Egyptian,
112; medieval, 3, 5, 7; Native
American, 370
Cluster bombs, 1098
CNN (Cable News Network),
890, 920
Coastal artillery, 424
Coastal defenses, 475
Cobb, Humphrey, 1074
Cobra helicopter, 455
Cochrane, Thomas, 468
Cocking mechanisms for
crossbows, 18
Code talkers, 1006, 1057
Coded messages, 1001, 1003,
1005, 1007
Codex Gothanus, 247
Coehoorn, Menno van, 474, 480,
533
Cogs, 71, 387
Cohort (military unit), 63, 161,
166, 1029, 1098
COIN. See Counterinsurgency
Cfla Dynasty, 338
Cold Mountain (Frazier), 1070
Cold War (1945-1991), 461, 655,
1012-1013; Afghanistan, 793;
and anticolonialism, 772;
beginnings, 698, 704; binary
Index
Convention on the Prohibition of
the Development, Production,
Stockpiling, and Use of
Chemical Weapons and on
Their Destruction, 951
Convention on the Rights of the
Child (1989), 938, 942
Cooper, James Fenimore, 1066
Copn, 353
Copperhead (guided weapons
system), 424
Copperheads (Southern
sympathizers), 560
Coppola, Francis Ford, 866
Coral Sea, Battle of the (1942),
444, 723
Corantos, 916
Cordite, 405, 1099
Crdoba, 282
Corned powder, 36, 376, 404,
522, 582
Cornwallis, First Marquess, 582
Cornwell, Bernard, 1067
Coronado, Francisco Vsquez
de, 372
Corps (army unit), 543, 678,
1030-1031, 1099
Corruption in the Russian army,
552
Corsair fighter, 445
Corselets, 134; lamellar, 66
Corseque, 28
Corts, Hernn, 20, 582, 585,
1066
Corvettes, 499
Corvus (grappling hook), 73,
149, 840
Cossack Brigade (Iran), 626, 629
Cossack-Polish wars; fiction
about, 1068
Cossacks, 490; Crimean War,
552
Coughlin, Charles, 1027
Council of Clermont (1095), 272
Council of Defense (Soviet
Union), 755
Index
Depth charges, 1100
Derringer, 1100
Dervishes, 496, 592
Desert Fox, The (film), 1053,
1057
Desert warfare, 68, 111, 307,
340, 623, 844
Deserter, The (film), 863
Desertion in Crimean War, 553
De Soto, Hernando, 372
Destroyers, 512, 1100; escorts,
1100
Destutt de Tracy, Antoine-LouisClaude, 869
Detachment, 1100
Detail, 1100
Dtente, 742, 751
Deterrence, 446, 461, 514, 747,
756
Detonators, 403
Deutsche Ideologie, Die (Marx),
869
Developed nations militaries,
828
Developing nations; during Cold
War, 744; economic impact of
war, 936
Devolution, War of (1667-1668),
579
Devshirme, 295
Dewar, James, 405
Dhanur Veda (Hindu sacred
text), 212, 215, 342
Dharmavijaya (victory for
justice), 214
Diadochi, 141
Daz de Vivar, Rodrigo, 1065
Daz del Castillo, Bernl, 358
Dichloroethyl sulfide, 950
Dien Bien Phu (1954), 482, 781,
786
Dien Bien Phu (film), 1060
Digital-age propaganda, 927
Digital Scene Matching Area
Correlator, 457
Dilger, Anton, 471
Index
century, 527; Viking raids,
49. See also Britain; Great
Britain
English Civil Wars (1642-1651),
400, 493, 527, 863, 912,
1025; films about, 1045
Enigma machine, 1005
Enlightenment, 580
Enlisted men, Crimean War, 553
Ennsburg, Battle of (907 c.e.),
251
Enola Gay (bomber), 407, 1053,
1107
Enomotia (Spartan military unit),
136
Enormous Room, The
(Cummings), 1073
Entente Cordiale (1904), 652
Enterprise, USS, 514
Enver Pala, 596, 972
Epaminondas (Theban
commander), 61, 132, 1124
pe (French sword), 394
Ephialtes, 965
Ephthalites. See White Huns
Epic poetry, 879
Epilektoi (Spartan corps), 132,
136
Equites (Roman cavalry unit),
167, 1029, 1101
Erasmus, Desiderius, 519, 524
Ericsson, John, 566
Escalade (scaling), 56
Espadon (sword), 395
Espionage, 1018-1019, 1021,
1023, 1085; American Civil
War, 563; Aztec, 357. See
also Categorized Index of
Essays under Intelligence and
espionage
Ethelred II, 253
Ethiopia, 870; ancient and
medieval, 304-305, 307-308;
Italian invasion of 1896, 613;
Italian invasion of 1935, 655,
771; mercenaries, 979;
Index
Formosa. See Taiwan
Fornovo, Battle of (1495), 38,
378
Forrestal, USS, 514
Forsberg, Randall Caroline, 986
Forsyth, Alexander, 410, 583
Forsyth, Frederick, 1086
Fort Detrick, 471
Fort Duquesne, Battle of (1754),
582
Fort Pulaski, 475
Fort Sumter, fall of (1861), 475,
561
Fort Wagner, 475
Fort William Henry, Siege of
(1757), 1045
Fortifications, 845, 1037;
ancient, 40-41, 43, 45-46;
civilian labor, 898; Egyptian,
115; and geography, 845;
Hittite, 91; locations of, 846;
medieval, 47, 49, 51, 53-54,
473, 958; Mexico, 46;
modern, 473, 475, 477-479;
Native American, 367;
Renaissance, 521; Roman,
169; in siege warfare, 55, 57,
59; Southeast Asian, 347
Fortified lines, 48
Fortresses; Assyrian, 98;
Bismarcks era, 666;
seventeenth century, 529
Forward-looking infrared
detectors, 463
Fouch, Joseph, 1020
Four Armies, Battle of the, 861
Four-banner system, 1030
Four Feathers, The (Mason),
1087
Fourteen Points (Wilson), 654,
673
Fourth-Generation War and
Other Myths (Echevarria), 833
Fourth-generation warfare, 828,
832
Fox, George, 982
Index
Geronimo, 1125
Geronimo (film), 1047
Gesiths, 240
Gesta Danorum, 258
Gettysburg (film), 1048
Gettysburg, Battle of (1863),
495, 570, 1048, 1070
Gza (rpd prince), 248
Gh3ghara, Battle of (1529), 601
Ghana, 298, 301, 303
Ghats (India), 599
Ghazi ethos, 293
Ghaznavids, 288-289, 336-337
Ghost Road, The (Barker), 1074
Ghost wars, 1016
Ghulams (Persian slavesoldiers), 628
GIA. See Islamic Armed Group
Gilgamesh epic, 13, 87
Girdles (fortifications), 476
Gisella (queen of Hungary),
248
Glacis (slope), 474
Gladiator (film), 862, 1043
Gladius (sword), 60, 158, 165,
394, 1103
Gladius hispaniensis (Spanish
sword), 22
Gladstone, William Ewart, 652
Glaives, 29, 398, 1103
Glanders, 471
Glantz, David, 708
Glaspie, April, 799
Glendower, Owain, 843
Global issues. See Categorized
Index of Essays
Global military capabilities,
828-829, 831, 833-834
Global Navigation Satellite
System, 754
Global Positioning System, 457,
831
Global War on Terror. See War
on Terror
GLONASS. See Global
Navigation Satellite System
Index
Haig, Douglas, 671, 682, 1038
Hainan Island incident (2001),
733
Hakluyt, Richard, 585
Halberds, 22, 26, 29, 63, 193,
265, 398-399, 1104
Haldighat, Battle of (1576), 603
Hale, William, 451
Halicarnassus, Siege of (334
b.c.e.), 57
Hallstatt spearheads, 26
Halsey, William F., 698
Hamas, 818
Hamilcar Barca, 149, 911
Hammurabi (Babylonian king),
31, 83
Hampton Roads, Battle of
(1862), 566, 572
Han Dynasty, 17, 33, 192; and
Xiongnu, 203
Hand cannons, 37, 1104
Hand grenades, 1104
Hand slings, 4
Hand-to-hand combat, 3, 5, 7, 9,
205; Crimean War, 555;
decline of, 404, 500; knights,
380; Native American, 371;
naval warfare, 390
Handarms; grenades, 1104; guns,
376, 408-409, 411, 413, 415,
417; medieval, 375, 377, 379.
See also Categorized Index of
Essays
Handbook of German Military
Forces, The (U.S. War
Department), 718
Hannibal Barca, 63, 68, 149,
157, 911, 933, 1126; use of
mercenaries, 976; strategy,
1033
Hanno Barca, 149
Hanseatic League, 71
Hanssen, Robert, 1022
Harakat ul-Ansar, 818
Harakat ul-Mujahidin, 818
Hara-kiri, 725
Heavy infantry, 60
Hebrews, 105, 107, 109-110;
intelligence gathering, 1018
Heggen, Thomas, 876, 1081
Heian period, 24
Heimskringla (Snorri), 258
Heinemann, Larry, 1088
Helepolis (siege tower), 57
Helicopters, 438, 774; assault,
1092; counterinsurgency
warfare, 778; in film, 10591062; Soviet, 754; Vietnam
War, 447, 783
Heliocles I (Bactrian ruler), 203
Hellcat fighter, 445
Hellenistic warfare, 140-141,
143, 145, 147-148
Heller, Joseph, 876, 1078
Hellfire missiles, 456
Hells Angels (film), 864, 1050
Helmand Province, Afghanistan,
806, 808
Helmets; Africa, 617; China,
195; Crimean War, 551;
Crusaders, 267; Frankish,
235; German, 715; Germanic
and Gothic, 185; Greek, 133;
Hellenistic, 143; Incan, 360;
Japanese, 636; Mesoamerican,
354; Mesopotamian, 85;
modern, 657; Roman, 165;
Safavid, 626; steppe nomads,
206; Viking, 255
Helots (Spartan serfs), 131
Helprin, Mark, 1074
Hemingway, Ernest, 875, 1073,
1075
Hemu (Hindu general), 602
Henikstein, Alfred, 666
Henry II (king of France), 383,
419
Henry III (king of England), 19
Henry IV (king of France), 384
Henry V (king of England), 995,
1044, 1126; Shakespearean
depiction, 874
Hohenfriedberg, Battle of
(1745), 534
Holocaust, 971-972, 994;
auxiliaries, 967; genocide
studies, 969; ignorance of,
919
Holy Alliance, 983
Holy Land; Crusades, 276
Holy Roman Empire, 231, 233,
235, 237, 239, 519
Holyrood, Siege of (1296), 58
Homage to Catalonia (Orwell),
1075
Home of the Brave (film), 866
Homeland Security Department
(United States), 818
Homer, 138, 857, 878, 1064
Homme arm, L, 880
Honda Toshiaki, 638
Hong Kong, 641, 656
Hong Xiuquan, 644
Honourable Schoolboy, The
(le Carr), 1085
Hook guns, 36, 376
Hooker, Richard, 1086
Hope and The Glory, The
(Wouk), 1080
Hoplites, 27, 33, 61, 124, 130,
134, 152
Hoplon, 134
Horatio Hornblower series
(Forester), 1067
Horse archers, 265; Assyrians,
14; Central Asian, 15;
Cimmerians, 68; Mongols, 15
Horse artillery, 418, 420, 1105
Horses and horse riding, 31, 65,
207, 265, 284, 490, 841,
1037; Africa, 300, 613; armor,
381; Berbers, 180; Chaldeans,
102; Egyptian, 113; Germanic
and Gothic, 186; India, 336;
Iran, 629; Islamic armies,
285; Japan, 324; Lombard,
246; Manchus, 736; Mongols,
317, 329; Napoleonic era,
Index
543; Native American, 369;
Persians, 118, 123; Rome,
157; Seljuk, 290; Southeast
Asia, 347; Viking, 257; World
War I, 678; World War II,
717
Horseshoes, 66
Hospitallers. See Knights
Hospitaller
Hospitals, 955
Hosseini, Khaled, 1090
Host, 1105
Hostages; Iran, 799, 813
Hotchkiss machine guns, 428,
676
Hotel Rwanda (film), 1062
Hotline (Moscow-Washington,
D.C.), 751
Hound Dog missile, 456
Housatonic, USS, 567
Hovercraft, 783
Howard, Charles (Effingham),
390
Howdah, 345
Howitzers, 404, 407, 543, 676,
680, 1105; artillery
classification, 418
Hoysala Dynasty, 338
Hsan-tsang. See Xuanzang
Hua Mulan, 939
Huangpu (Chinese military
academy), 731
Huari culture (Andes), 359
Huayna Capac (Incan emperor),
359
Huebner, Andrew, 1089
Hugh of Maine, 966
Hughes, Howard, 864
Human intelligence, 1021
Human wave tactics (China), 739
Humanism, 577
Hum3ynn (Mughal ruler), 602
Hume, David, 1010
HUMINT. See Human
intelligence
Hundertschaft, 1105
Index
coverage, 920; propaganda,
927. See also World Wide
Web
Inter-Parliamentary Union, 983
Intifadas, 759
Inuit peoples, 368
Invincible, HMS, 511
Iphicrates (Greek general), 132,
144
Iran; and Israel, 763; modern,
623, 625, 627, 629, 631. See
also Persia
Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), 449,
471, 754, 799, 951
Iranian hostage crisis (19791980), 757, 799, 813
Iranian Revolution (1978-1980),
746, 763, 799
Iranians vs. Uzbeks, 625
Iraq, 799, 801, 803, 805;
chemical warfare, 950;
economic impact of war, 936;
Gulf War, 424, 448, 456;
Soviet relations, 754
Iraq War (beg. 2003), 800-801,
817, 904, 997; and
Afghanistan, 807; antiwar
movement, 986; in film, 866;
news coverage, 920; on
television, 890; U.S.European relations, 819
Iraqi Air Force, 801
Ireland; ancient, 174; Crimean
War, 552
Irene (Byzantine ruler and saint),
222
Irgun Zvai Leumi, 759
Irish Potato Famine (1845), 552
Irish Republican Army, 913
Iron Age swords, 22
Ironclad ships, 508, 566, 1105
Ironworking, 1024; medieval,
898
Iroquois Confederacy, 364
Irregulars, 843
Irritating agents, 467
Index
Jrcheds, 328
Just war, 884, 982; Crusades,
276
Justice (military), 994-995, 997998
Justinian I (Byzantine emperor),
221
Jutland, Battle of (1916), 441,
511, 672
K-19: The Widowmaker (film),
1058
Ka-Bar combat knife, 393
Kadesh, Battle of (1274 b.c.e.),
14, 89, 116
Kadesh, Battle of (1366 b.c.e.),
89
Kagame, Paul, 973
Kagan, Frederick W., 812
Kahina of the Aurs, 284
Kairouan, fall of (684), 284
Kakuichi, 1066
Kalingas, 338
Kama-yari (pole arm), 28
Kamikaze (divine wind), 844
Kamikaze corps, 725-726
Kamikaze suicide missions, 445
Kamose (Egyptian Pharaoh), 116
Kanal (film), 1054
Kanauj, Battle of (1540), 602
Kanghwa Treaty of 1876, 646
Kangxi, 1127
Kani;ka (Kush3n ruler), 211
Kant, Immanuel, 982
Kantor, MacKinlay, 1069
Kanwa, Battle of (1527), 601
Kapeulu corps, 295
Karate, 1106
Karmal, Barbak, 791
Karzai, Hamid, 807
Kashmir, 766
Kasserine Pass, Battle of (1943),
695
Kassites, 85
Katana (Japanese sword), 24,
322, 397, 636
Index
League of Universal
Brotherhood, 983
Lebanese Civil War (19751990), 913
Lebanon; Hezbollah, 760; and
Israel, 763
Lebel (rifle), 676
Lebensraum, 870
Lebna Dengel, 306-307
Le Carr, John, 1085
Lechaeum, Battle of (390 b.c.e.),
61
Lechfeld, Battle of (955), 263
Lee, Robert E., 563, 571, 1035,
1127
Lee-Enfield rifle, 413
Lee-Metford rifle, 676
Lefaucheux, Casimir, 410
Leffs, 181
Legalism (China), 192, 319
Legates (Roman), 159, 166
Legatus legionis (military unit),
1029
Legion (Roman formation), 60,
62, 158, 166, 1029, 1107
Leipzig, Battle of (1813), 494
Lemkin, Raphael, 969
Lenin, Vladimir Ilich, 658, 673
Leninism, 756
Leo III (Byzantine emperor), 74,
222
Leo III (pope), 232
Leo VI (Byzantine emperor),
228, 238
Leo VI the Wise, 251
Leonard, Elmore, 1070
Leonardo da Vinci, 468
Leone, Sergio, 863
Leopard tanks, 745
Leopold II, 971
Lepanto, Battle of (1571), 387,
502, 520, 522-523, 589
Les Saintes, Battle of (1782),
506, 534
Lesotho, 615
Lethal agents, 467
Index
Malayan Campaign, 720-721
Malayan Emergency (19481960), 903
Mali, 298, 301, 303
Malik Sh3h I, 288
Malplaquet, Battle of (1709),
533
Malta, 479, 1081
Malta, Siege of (1565), 502, 520
Mamlnks, 69, 277
Man Could Stand Up, A (Ford),
1073
Man-of-war ships, 521, 523,
1108
Man-portable air defense
systems, 455
Manchuria, 720
Manchurian Candidate, The
(Condon), 1084
Manchus, 640, 647, 731, 733,
736, 1030
Mandekalu (West African battle
forces), 300
Mandinka Empire, 611, 613,
617, 620
Maneuverability, 1034; doctrine
of, 199
Mangonel (catapult), 273, 1108
Mangutai (Mongol suicidal
attack), 331
Maniple (Roman unit), 62, 157,
166, 1029, 1108
Mann, Anthony, 861
Mannerheim line, 477
Mannlicher rifle, 676
MANPADS. See Man-portable
air defense systems
Mansa Mns3 I (Malian king),
298
Mansabdari (organization of the
Indian army), 606
Manstein, Erich von, 658
Mantes Ordinances (1419), 995
Manuel I Comnenus (Byzantine
emperor), 290
Manusmjti, 215, 336, 342
Menelik II (emperor of
Ethiopia), 613
Menes (Egyptian pharoah), 10
Mental illness, 959; treatment,
960
Mercantilism, 577
Mercenaries, 976-977, 979-980,
1025; American Revolution,
1014; Berber, 179-181;
butsecarles, 256; in Byzantine
army, 227; in Carthage, 152;
Celts, 176; Christian, 588;
Cold War, 1016; Cretan, 15;
Crimean War, 552; Crusades,
274; dangers of, 528; in
Egypt, 115; Geneva
Conference definition, 992;
German tribes, 184; Hittites,
91; in India, 213; Italian, 17,
912; medieval, 1030; in
Mughal Empire, 608; in
Persian navy, 121;
synonymous with
professional, 484;
Renaissance, 522; Thracian,
144; Turkmen, 291, 588
Mercenaries, Revolt of the (241238 b.c.e.), 179
Merchant Marine, U.S., 1051
Merck, George W., 948
Merkismathrs, 256
Meros (Byzantine army unit),
1108
Merovingians, 231
Merrimack, USS, 566
Merseburg, Battle of (933 c.e.),
251
Meru tribe, 775
Mesne (retinue), 260
Mesoamerica, 351, 353, 355,
357-358; fortifications, 45,
53
Mesopotamia, 31, 83, 85, 87-88;
art, 851; fortifications, 41;
maces, 6; siege warfare, 56
Messenger, The (film), 862, 1044
1234
Index
Milestone, Lewis, 864
Militarism, 870
Military administration, 679
Military education, 541, 658,
679, 905, 907, 909-910;
China, 736; Japan, 726;
nineteenth century, 554
Military engineering. See
Engineers
Military horizon concept, 77
Military Institutions of the
Romans, The (Vegetius), 907
Military Intelligence Directorate
(Israel), 759
Military justice, 994-995, 997998
Military medicine, 952-953, 955956
Military occupation, 992
Military organization, 1029,
1031-1032
Military Revolution (Parker),
263, 519, 523
Military support, 897, 899-900
Military theory. See Categorized
Index of Essays
Military tribunals, 994
Militias, 1109; colonial, 584;
paramilitary, 911, 913-914
Milizi Volontaria per Sicurezza
Nazionale, 712, 716
Miller, Frank, 861
Miloevi6, Slobodan, 448
Milvian Bridge, Battle of (312
c.e.), 221, 885
Min Yuen, 774
Mindehi (Native American
weapon), 370
Minenwerfer (German mortar),
1109
Mines, 521, 1109; Afghanistan,
755; Claymore, 784; Crimean
War, 548, 551; land, 566, 773,
783, 1107; naval, 511, 567;
World War I, 676
Ming bashi, 1109
Index
Naked and the Dead, The (film),
865
Naked and the Dead, The
(Mailer), 875, 1081
Nakedness in battle, 176
NAM. See Non-Aligned
Movement
Namibia, 771-772
Nancy, Battle of (1477), 381
Nanjing, Rape of (1937-1938),
726
Nanjing Treaty of 1842, 643
No (Portuguese ship), 1110
Napalm, 774, 783, 1110
Naphtha, 143, 317
Napoleon (film), 863
Napoleon I (Bonaparte), 539,
541, 543, 545, 547, 585, 869,
966, 1013, 1020, 1035, 1129;
armies of, 536; artistic
representations, 854; cavalry
warfare, 494; Egypt, 582;
impact on imperialism, 658;
offensive strategy, 679; and
Ottomans, 590; reformer, 580;
tactics, 421, 568; total war,
934
Napoleon III (emperor of
France), 663, 1011
Napoleon Crossing the Alps
(David), 854
Napoleonic Wars (1793-1815),
486, 490, 536, 540, 902, 966,
1026; espionage, 1019; fiction
about, 1067; films about,
1046; news reporting, 916;
rockets, 451
Naram-Sin (Akkadian king), 13,
42
Narmer (Egyptian Pharaoh), 6,
851
Naseby, Battle of (1645), 493,
1045
Nasser, Gamal Abdel, 765
N3;tr al-Dtn Sh3 (Iranian shah),
625
Index
Nubia, 112; archers, 111; armor,
115; fortifications, 41, 115
Nuclear Defense Affairs
Committee, 746
Nuclear freeze movement, 986
Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty, 761; India, 767
Nuclear reactions, 460
Nuclear test ban treaties, 751
Nuclear weapons and warfare,
451, 453, 455, 457, 459, 461,
463, 465-466; artillery, 423;
China, 732-733, 735, 737;
Cold War, 742, 745;
explosives, 403; films about,
1053, 1057-1058; Iran, 763;
Israel, 761, 764; Maos
attitude toward, 739; North
Korea, 829; post-Cold War,
747; ships, 1110; Soviet, 754;
submarines, 514; terrorism,
833; twenty-first century,
829; warheads, 459
Numeri (Roman army units),
167
Numidia, 66, 161, 179, 181;
infantry, 152
Nunchaku, 1110
Nungs, 977
Nuremberg war crimes trials
(1945-1946), 960, 969, 994
Nurses in the Crimean War, 553
Oared vessels, 499
Oaxaca, fortifications in, 46
Obama, Barack, 804, 807, 817,
819
OBrian, Patrick, 1067
OBrien, Tim, 876, 1088
October (film), 864
October War. See Yom Kippur
War
Oda Nobunaga, 322, 632
Odruik, Siege of (1377), 36, 375
Odyssey (Homer), 26, 873
Offas Dyke, 48
Pa (Maori fortification), 53
Pachacuti (Incan emperor), 359
Pacific island colonies, 771
Pacific islanders, 77
Pacific theater (World War II),
695, 721, 1056-1057, 1082;
films about, 1052, 1054
Pacific War, The (Ienaga), 909
Pacifism, 886, 981, 983, 985,
987-988
Pack, 1111
Pack animals, 841
Pacos Story (Heinemann), 1088
Paddle wheels, 508
Pagan, Blaise Franois, comte
de, 479
Pagan Empire, 347
Pahlavi Dynasty, 624
Painted Bird, The (Kosinski),
1081
Painvin, Georges-Jean, 1005
Pakistan, 828; and Afghanistan,
806; economy, 936; India
conflicts, 766
P3las, 344
Palatini (Byzantine army unit),
226
Paleologus Dynasty (Byzantine
Empire), 227
Palestine and Palestinians, 105,
107, 109-110, 759-760, 813,
913, 930
Palette of King Narmer, 851
Palisades, 40, 44
Pallava Dynasty, 211, 344
Palmach, 759
Pamitniki janczara
(Mihailovi6), 296
Pamphylus (ship), 225
Pan-Africanism, 772, 777
Pan Am flight 103, 799, 813
Pan Michael (Sienkiewicz), 1068
P3ntpat, First Battle of (1526),
340, 342, 601
P3ntpat, Second Battle of (1556),
602
1240
Index
Passion of Joan of Arc, The
(film), 862
Passive nonresistance, 982
Passy, Frdric, 983
Pasternak, Boris, 1071
Pasteur, Louis, 471
Paths of Glory (Cobb), 1074
Patriot, The (film), 863, 1046
Patriot missiles, 463, 801, 1111
Patriotic music, 881
Patrol, 1111
Patrol-torpedo (PT) boats, 1111
Patronage, 240
Pattern welding, 22, 394
Patton (film), 866, 1054
Patton, George S., 700, 1054
Paul the Deacon, 238, 245, 247
Paulus, Friedrich, 707
Paulus, Lucius Aemilius, 150
Paveli6, Ante, 967
Pavia, Battle of (1525), 378,
409, 484
Pavlov, Dmitri, 690
Pay for military service, 157
Peace movements, 981-983,
985, 987-988
Peace of God, 982
Peace Pledge Union, 984
Peacekeeper missile, 459
Peacekeeping operations, U.N.,
821, 823, 825, 827
Peacemaker (Colt pistol), 415
Pearl Harbor attack (1941), 444,
694, 720, 1021, 1056
Peasants, 240, 274
Pechenegs (nomadic tribe),
248
Pedreros (early mortars), 419
Peloponnesian War (431-404
b.c.e.), 44, 61, 131, 965, 970,
981, 1064
Peltastai (Thracian mercenaries),
144
Peltasts, 61, 131
Penda (king of Mercia), 241
Penicillin, 955
Index
Printing press; Military
Revolution, 523; military
works, 524; propaganda use,
923
Prisoners of war, 989, 991, 993;
films about, 1052-1053, 1069,
1072-1073, 1077, 1081-1083,
1086; Incan, 362; India, 215;
Soviet, 704; World War II,
726
Private security companies, 979
Privateers, 522, 1015
Procopius (Byzantine historian),
182, 229, 238
Professional militaries; Africa,
618, 620; China, 649; Dutch,
528; egalitarianism, 584;
European, 539; Greek, 132;
ancient India, 213; and
mercenaries, 484; Napoleonic
era, 541, 658, 679; origin of,
846; Roman, 163; West
African, 302
Projectiles, 418; binary, 470; for
catapults, 846; Chinese, 375;
explosive, 1101; firearms, 35,
37, 39, 408; gas shell, 406;
jacketed bullet, 1106; lead
shot, 6; Mesoamerican, 354;
propellants for, 403; for
slings, 5; for trebuchets, 266;
West African, 300
Prolonge (ropes for pulling
artillery), 420
Promised lands, 838
Propaganda, 870, 921, 923, 925,
927-928; American, 682;
anticolonial movements, 778;
China, 736; film as, 1044,
1047, 1049, 1051, 1060,
1077; German, 681, 692, 919;
Japanese, 726; and
journalism, 915; music, 881
Propellants, 403, 412
Protecting Powers (Geneva
Conventions), 993
Index
Richard Sharpe series
(Cornwell), 1067
Richelieu, Cardinal de, 527, 585,
1009, 1011, 1019
Ricochet fire, 480
Riddah Wars (626-632), 281
Riff War (1919-1926), 687
Rifle; breech-loading, 1038
Rifled weapons; cannons, 564;
muskets, 564; vs. smoothbore
weapons, 421
Rifles, 404, 408, 411, 487, 542,
583, 665, 1113; American
Civil War, 563, 571; assault,
1092; bolt-action, 676, 1095;
Browning, 1097; Crimean
War, 548; Garand, 1103;
Mauser, 714; postwar, 744;
recoilless, 1113; repeating,
679, 1113; semiautomatic,
414; Spanish Civil War, 687;
Vietnam War, 784; World
War II, 697
Rifling, 411, 421
Riga, Battle of (1917), 680
Rigveda (Hindu sacred text),
118, 215, 873
Riwlah (Ibn Bazznzah), 308
Rimfire cartridge, 410
Rinaldi, Nicholas, 1081
Rivires, Raymond Adolphe Ser
de, 475
Roads, 841; Roman, 169
Robbins, David L., 1084
Robins, Benjamin, 420, 582
Robot bomb, 1113
Robotics, 831
Rocket launchers, 453, 1113
Rockets, 451, 453, 455, 457,
459, 461, 463, 465-466, 1113;
early, 404; Napoleonic era,
543; shoulder-launched, 773;
World War I, 439; World
War II, 406
Rocroi, Battle of (1643), 485,
1045
Sa, 1114
SA. See Sturm Abteilung
Sabers, 273, 1114; India, 212;
Magyar, 249
Sabines, 966
Sabre fighter plane, 745
Sabutai (Mongol general), 329
Sacred Band (Theban elite
force), 132, 136
Sacred War, First (595-586
b.c.e.), 947
Sacsahuamn (Incan fortress),
360, 473
Sadat, Anwar el-, 765
Saddles, 28
Safavid Empire, 623-624
Safeguard missiles, 464
Sagger missiles, 454
Sagum, 180
Saguntine spear, 28
Sai (dagger), 1114
Saigf Takamori, 633
Saigon, fall of (1975), 783
Sailing ships, 499, 501, 503, 505,
507; and colonialism, 579
St. Cyr (French military
academy), 542
St. Mawes (English fort), 474
Saint-Pierre, Abb de, 983
Saint Quentin, Battle of (1557),
383
Sakamaki, Paul S., 726
Kakas (nomads), 203, 211
Sakimori (Japanese soldiers),
321
Saladin (sultan of Egypt and
Syria), 18, 277, 1044, 1130
Salafism, 871
Salamis, Battle of (480 b.c.e.),
965
Sallust, 181
Salpa line, 477
Salses (fort), 473
SALT. See Strategic Arms
Limitation Talks
Salter, James, 1086
1246
Saltpeter, 35
Samaria, Siege of (725 b.c.e.),
106
Samarqand (Uzbekistan), 333
Sammu-ramat (Neo-Assyrian
queen), 939
SAMs. See Surface-to-air
missiles
Samurai, 321, 632, 636-638;
films about, 1044-1045;
swords, 24, 1114;
swordsmithing, 397
San Martn, Jos, 1130
Sanctions, U.N., 821
Sand Pebbles, The (McKenna),
1075
Sandakan Death March, 726
Sandal missiles, 458
Sanders, Otto Liman von, 592
Sandline International, 979
Sands of Iwo Jima (film), 865
Sangallo family, 473
Sanjak beys (Ottoman
governors), 592
Sant Angelo castle (Rome), 473
Santa Anna, Antonio Lpez de,
1047
Sapping, 56, 114
Saps and parallels system, 480
Sapwood missiles, 458
Saracen Blade, The (Yerby),
1066
Saracens, 233
Saragossa, Battle of (1937), 686
Sarajevo, Bosnia-Hercegovina,
823
Sardinians (Crimean War), 550
Sargon II (king of Assyria), 94
Sargon the Great (Akkadian
king), 42, 83, 86, 102, 838
Sarguntum, 150
Sarin gas, 469, 818, 951
Sarissa (pike), 26-27, 62, 132,
135, 141
Sarmatians, 68, 202
Sarzanello (fort), 473
Index
S3s3nian Dynasty, 118; navy,
123; attacks on Roman
Empire, 169
S3s3nians, 281, 283, 286, 884
Sashimono (Japanese flags),
323
Sassanid Empire. See S3s3nian
Dynasty
Sassoon, Siegfried, 875, 1074
Sasumata (spear), 28
Kazangaratha (Indian chariot),
213
Satellites; China, 831; missile
defense, 465
Satsuma Rebellion (1877), 633
Saturation bombing, 695
Saul (Hebrew king), 109, 852
SaurootTr, 143
Savannah, USS, 514
Saving Private Ryan (film), 866,
1055
Sax (dagger), 1114
Saxe, Maurice, comte de, 537,
544, 585, 1030
Saxo Grammaticus, 258
Saxon Shore, 48
Saxons, 245, 263
Scabbards, 245; Viking, 255
Scaling, 56
Scalping, 207
Scandinavians; medieval, 28,
253, 255, 257, 259
Scapegoating, 958
Scharnhorst, Gerhard Johann
David von, 718
Scheveningen, Battle of (1653),
503
Schindlers List (film), 1053
Schlieffen, Alfred von, 658, 670,
1130
Schlieffen Plan, 658
Schmeisser MP40, 415
Scholae Palatinae, 167
Scholarii domesticus (Byzantine
commander), 227
Schrader, Gerhard, 469
Secularism, 577
Sedgwick, Theodore, 917
Segregation tactics, 778
Sekigahara, Battle of (1600), 322
Kela (Indian javelin), 212
Selective-fire weapons, 415
Seleucid Empire, 118, 141, 143,
901
Self bows, 12, 112
Self-propelled artillery, 418
Selim III (Ottoman sultan), 589,
594
Seljuk Turks, 222, 276, 282,
288-289, 291-292, 970, 1025.
See also Ottoman Empire;
Turks
Seljuq (nomadic Turkic chief),
288
Selznick, David O., 863
Semiautomatic weapons, 414,
1114; pistols, 415; rifles, 697
Seminara, Battle of (1495), 381
Sempach, Battle of (1386), 29,
399
Sempronius Longus, Tiberius,
150
Sen3pati (Indian commander),
340
Sender, Ramn, 690
Sennacherib (Neo-Assyrian
king), 94, 107
Sepoy Rebellion (1857), 581,
652, 1069
Seppings, Robert, 506
Seppuku (ritual suicide), 725
September 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks, 800, 806, 813, 831,
890; antiwar movements, 986;
U.N. resolutions, 824
Septicemia, 952
Serbia; Byzantine age, 225;
Kosovo crisis, 448; World
War I, 675
Serbian Empire, 294
Serfs, 240; medieval English,
260; Ottoman Empire, 592;
Index
13; Assyrian, 97;
Babylonians, 102; China, 193,
199; crossbows, 266;
Egyptian, 114; Franks, 237;
gunpowder weapons, 36, 381;
harquebuses, 38, 377; Hittite,
91; Incan, 362; India, 212;
infantry, 68; Japanese, 324;
medieval, 58; Mesopotamia,
86; modern, 479, 481, 483;
Mongol, 331; Ottoman, 294,
597; Roman, 171; seventeenth
century, 529; slings, 5; World
War I, 1038. See also
Categorized Index of Essays
Sienkiewicz, Henryk, 1068
Sierra Leone, 979
Sights (aiming devices), 420
SIGINT. See Signals intelligence
Sigismund (king of Bohemia),
36, 376
Signals intelligence, 1021
Silius Italicus, Tiberius Catius
Asconius (Roman poet), 155
Simba, 979
Simeon I (Bulgarian king), 222
Simon de Kza, 252
Sinai, 763
Sinatra, Frank, 866
Since You Went Away (film),
1055
Singapore, Battle of (19411942), 695
Singh, R3n3 Prat3p (Mew3r
ruler), 603
Sinhalese, 338
Sink the Bismark! (film), 1055
Sino-Japanese War, First (18941895), 17, 634-635, 641, 646,
731, 935
Sino-Japanese War, Second
(1937-1945), 720, 732, 948;
fiction about, 1076
Sino-Turkic War (629-630), 315
Sinti genocide, 972
Sioux Indians, 496
Index
Stalin, Joseph, 443, 693, 703,
741, 750, 871, 899
Stalingrad (film), 1056
Stalingrad, Siege of (1942-1943),
482, 707, 1056, 1084
Stallari (marshal), 256
Stamford Bridge, Battle of
(1066), 241
Standard of Ur, 87, 851
Standing forces, 528
Star shells, 1116
Stark, USS, 463
START. See Strategic Arms
Reduction Talks
States parties to the Geneva
Conventions, 991
Static defenses, 1037
Status quo ante bellum, 580
Stave bows, 12
Staves, 1116
Stavka, 705, 755
Stealth bombers, 446, 448, 1116
Stealth fighter plane, 801
Steam engine (ships), 506
Steam-powered ships, 508, 548
Steel, 22, 1025; in armor, 267;
Iran, 626; watered, 24;
weapons, 657
Stela of the Vultures, 85, 87
Stelae, 98
Sten gun, 415, 1116
Stenay, Siege of (1654), 479
Stephen I (king of Hungary),
248
Stephen of Blois (king of
England), 267
Stephenson, Neal, 1078
Steppe nomads, 202-203, 205,
207-208, 838, 842; cavalry,
68; Indus Valley invasions,
209; Mongols, 328
Stereotypes, 924
Stern, 759
Stevin, Simon, 474
Stiletto, 1116
Stinger missiles, 456
Index
Talbot, James, 959
Tale of the Heiki, The
(Kakuichi), 1066
Taliban, 806, 810
Talikota, Battle of (1565), 605
Talvisota (film), 1056
Tamerlane (Turkic leader), 293,
329, 336, 338, 341, 588, 899
Tamil people, 338
Tamil Tigers, 818
Tamna (Mongol military unit),
330
Tang Dynasty, 311, 314
Tanks, 427, 429, 431, 433-434,
482, 487, 1038-1039, 1117;
Abrams, 801; films about,
1052; German, 715; Heinz
Guderian, 689; Japanese, 722;
postwar, 745; South
Vietnamese, 784; Soviet, 705706, 754; Spanish Civil War,
688; T-72, 801; World War I,
678; World War II, 697
Tannenberg, Battle of (1914),
671; airplanes, 440
Tanto (Japanese dagger), 25, 397
Tantri, Ktut, 779
Taraki, Nur Mohammed, 791
Taranto Harbor, Battle of (1940),
444
Taras Bulba (Gogol), 1068
Tarikh al-Fattash (Mahmud
Kati), 621
Tarikh al-Fattash (Songhai
military), 301
Tarikh as-Sudan (Abd alRahman), 621
T3riq ibn Ziy3d, 284
Tarpeia legend, 966
Tartaglia, Niccol Fontana, 419
Taulqama (Mughal tactic), 602
Tavannes, Gaspard de, 383
Taxes (war financing), 1014,
1016
Taxis (Greek regiment), 136
Te Deum, 879
Index
Tracer bullets, 1118
Trade. See Categorized Index of
Essays under Economics
Trade and warfare, 577, 837,
933, 935, 937; Africa, 304,
611; China, 640; Native
American, 366. See also Arms
trade
Trafalgar, Battle of (1805), 504
Trail of Tears (1838-1839), 995
Trajan (Roman emperor), 166,
857
Transport of armies, 841
Transport planes, 437
Transport Workers Union of
America, 899
Transylvania; World War I, 676
Trasimeno Lake, Battle of (217
b.c.e.), 157
Trauma, 957-959
Travels of Marco Polo, The
(Polo), 348
Treason, 958, 965
Treatise on Ciphers, A (Alberti),
1003
Treatise on Grand Military
Operations (Jomini), 1035
Treatise on the Political Good
(Kauzilya), 212
Treaty. See treaty name
Trebbia, Battle of (218-217
b.c.e.), 157
Trebuchet (catapult), 58, 266,
273, 1118
Tree of Smoke (Johnson), 1089
Trench, Battle of the (627), 283
Trench warfare, 481; American
Civil War, 571; Boer Wars,
427; Crimean War, 556;
Ottomans, 597; World War I,
406, 413, 422, 671, 676,
1038
Trenchard, Hugh, 441-442, 701,
1132
Trenches, 40
Triacontor (oared vessel), 71
Tughril, 282
Tukhachevsky, Mikhayl
Nikolayevich, 689, 706
Tukulor Empire, 611, 617, 620
Tulwar (Indian saber), 273, 1118
Tumen (Mongol military unit),
330, 1118
Turing, Alan, 1006
Turkey; precivilized, 78; republic
of, 591; World War I, 591,
1050
Turko-Mongolian peoples, 202
Turks, 288-289, 291-292; armies,
293, 295, 297; Crusades, 276.
See also Ottoman Empire;
Seljuk Turks
Turma (Roman army unit), 159,
166
Turney-High, Harry Holbert, 77
Turrets; armored, 476; revolving
naval, 425
Turtan (Assyrian field marshal),
97
Tuskegee Airmen, 1056
Tuskegee Airmen, The (film),
1056
Tutankhamen, 116
Tutsi genocide, 971, 973
Tuva, 205
Tu-y-hun (warrior band), 314
Twentieth and twenty-first
centuries. See Categorized
Index of Essays
Twentieth Century, The
(documentary series), 891
Twenty-first century. See
Categorized Index of Essays
under Twentieth and twentyfirst centuries
Twenty-one Demands (1918),
635
Tyler, Watt, 902
Tylers Rebellion (1381), 902
Typhoon submarines, 514, 754
Tyre, Siege of (332 b.c.e.), 44,
147, 845
Index
Valkyrie (film), 1057
Vallo Alpino (Italian
fortification), 477
Valmy, Battle of (1792), 536
Vamplates (armor), 28
Van Buren, Martin, 996
Vandall Wars (Procopius of
Caesaria), 182
Vandals, 180, 183-184
Vanguard, 1119
Varangian Guard, 227, 977
Variable time fuse, 423
Varna, Battle of (1444), 294
Varna, Crusade of (1444), 297
Varro, Gaius Terentius, 150
Vassals, 240, 260
Vauban, Sbastien Le Prestre de,
401, 474, 479, 528, 533, 537,
1037, 1133
Vedas (Hindu sacred texts), 211212
Vegetius Renatus, Flavius, 45,
172, 269, 842-843, 907, 1133
Vehicles of war. See Categorized
Index of Essays
Velites (Roman army unit), 158,
1029
Velleius Paterculus (Roman
historian), 245
Vende, Wars of the (17931800), 902, 971
Venice, 293, 1003, 1009
Vercingetorix, 176
Verdun Treaty of 843, 232
Vereenigde Oost-indische
Compagnie. See Dutch East
India Company
Vergil, 857, 873
Versailles Treaty of 1919, 452,
675, 692, 710
Vertical envelopment, 1039
Vertical infiltration, 680
Verutum (spear), 27
Vespasian (Roman emperor),
108
Vetera I fort, 939
Veterans, 1052
Vichy France, 967
Vickers and Armstrong, 1027
Vicksburg, Siege of (1863), 481
Victor of Vita, 182
Victory at Sea (documentary),
891
Victory bonds, 1016
Vidal, Gore, 1084
Vienna, Congress of (18141815), 590, 663
Vienna, Siege of (1529), 520
Viet Cong, 744, 783
Viet Minh, 775, 781
Vietnam; ancient, 314;
anticolonialism, 777; Chinese
aid, 732; Japanese in, 720;
military organization, 1029
Vietnam Veterans Memorial,
859
Vietnam War (1961-1975), 407,
423, 438, 744, 781, 783, 785,
787, 789-790; airpower, 447;
antiwar movement, 985;
battleships, 426;
cryptography, 1006; economic
impact, 936; fiction about,
1087; in film, 866, 1059;
financing, 1016; in literature,
876; news coverage, 919;
photographs, 854;
psychological impact, 957,
960; Soviet Union, 753; on
television, 889
Vietnamization policy, 742, 788
Vigenre, Blaise de, 1003
Vijayanagar kingdom, 338, 341
Vijayanagar Wars (1509-1565),
605
Viking raids, 958
Vikingar, 253
Vikings, 241, 253, 255, 257, 259;
impact on feudalism, 260; and
Franks, 233; and galleys, 70;
raids, 48, 253; as warrior
society, 838
1257
Index
Whitehall Cenotaph, 859
Whitesmiths, 394
Whitney, Eli, 1134
Whizbang, 1119
Why Dont We Learn from
History? (Liddell Hart), 908
Why We Fight (documentary),
891
Wickham, William, 1019
Wigmore, Lionel, 727
Wild Weasel aircraft, 456
Willem van Ruysbroeck, 334
William I (kaiser of Prussia), 670
William II (kaiser of Germany),
652, 670
William III (king of England),
579
William of Tyre (Latin prelate),
268, 270, 291
William the Conqueror (king of
England), 6, 17, 50, 241, 265,
844
Williams, R. S., 566
Williwaw (Vidal), 1084
Wilson, Ward, 833
Wilson, Woodrow, 654, 671,
984, 1011
Windage, 421
Windlass system, 19
Winds of War, The (Wouk novel,
miniseries), 891, 1080, 1084
Windtalkers (film), 1057
Wings (film), 864
Winter War, 1056
Wintertime and warfare, 844
Witchfinder General (film), 863
With Fire and Sword
(Sienkiewicz), 1068
WMDs. See Weapons of mass
destruction
Wolf packs (German
submarines), 513
Women, 1055; Celtic warriors,
176; Crimean War, 553;
Crusaders, 274; Germanic,
183; Mozambique, 774; peace
1260