Throughout the history of Western civilization, war, preparation for war, and its aftermath have dominated the use of surplus human and material resources. Yet, despite our recent history, the brute facts of military history are too often ignored by those who have instead sought to provide a more ideal understanding of the Middle Ages in Europe. This predilection for chivalry at the expense of logistics and for "just war theory" at the expense of military technology have distorted both scholarly and popular understanding of the role played by military matters in the Middle Ages. The aim of the fourteen articles reprinted here is to help provide a more balanced view, offsetting notions of romanticism and an anthropologically inspired primitivism of a Dark Age in pre-Crusade Europe. Particular topics include: the survival of Classical influences into the early Middle Ages; the strategy of castle-building in the early Angevin domains; and William the Conqueror's preparations for the invasion of England.
ISBN: | 9780860788706 |
Publication date: | 25th March 2002 |
Author: | Bernard S Bachrach |
Publisher: | Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 360 pages |
Series: | Variorum Collected Studies Series |
Genres: |
History and Archaeology European history Military history |