Just Finished Reading :
Ancient Warfare – A Very Short Introduction by Harry Sidebottom
I’ve been toying recently with the idea of doing another
Masters Degree as my brain seems (at least sometimes) to be turning into mush.
I’m almost more than a little fed up and think that’s because I’m not getting
enough mental stimulation. I didn’t want to do anything I’ve done or touched on
before so when I found a course on Ancient and Medieval Warfare at a nearby
University it seemed idea. At the moment I’m still thinking about it – and will
probably put it off until 2013 – but the course seems different enough that it
could be quite fun even taking into account that I’d need to learn some Latin.
This book then looked like an ideal introduction but turned out to be something
I hadn’t really expected.
What I had expected was a potted history of the Ancient
world with discussions of tactics and technology – The Greek phalanx and the
Roman Gladus for example – with side debates on various pivotal battles like Thermopylae . Doing justice to this subject in a mere 128
pages would be difficult, I thought, but do-able. What I found was completely
different. Instead of discussing things from the ground up the book took a far
more top down approach. The author posed the question: Did the Greek and Roman
civilisations create and develop a distinctive ‘Western Way of War’ in contrast to their
many enemies and are we living with that legacy today. What hooked me from the
start was the down to earth – and fun – approach to the subject. Not only does
the author know his stuff, which you should expect from someone who teaches in Oxford , but he’s
confident enough to play with his knowledge in order to engage his audience but
without talking down to them or appearing in anyway condescending. I actually
laughed as I read the first page which described the opening battle portrayed
in the movie Gladiator when the Roman legions faced down the German barbarians.
It seems true, the author starts, but in fact it was far from the truth. The Western Way of War
was, he maintained, a cultural construct and like other cultural constructs had
an origin, was based on how we see ourselves and how we want others to see us
and, importantly, changes over time as cultures themselves change.
Throughout the rest of the book – using examples from both
the Greek and Roman world – the author expands on his thesis by delving into
how the ancients viewed war, what myths and stories about themselves they
responded to (or against) and explodes a fair few myths about the way wars were
fought and the reasons for going to war in the first place. It certainly gave
me a flavour of what I might be up against in a future seminar and certainly
gave me a lot to think about.
6 comments:
What IS the "western" way of war? Is there some great difference between early wars of the 'western' tradition and those of say, Japan, or China that isn't acccounted for by terrain and so on?
Apparently it is: "The desire for open, decisive battle, which aims at the annihilation of the enemy. Ideally it is conducted by heavily armed infantry fighting hand-to-hand. The battle is won by courage, which is instilled in part by training and discipline. This is often linked to the combatants having political freedom and being landowners - so-called 'civic-militarism'
The author sees it differently "not so much as an objective reality, a genuine continuity of practices, but more as a strong ideology which since its creation by the Greeks has been, and still is, frequently reinvented, and changed with each reinvention. Those who subscribe to the ideology do not necessarily fight in a very different way to others, it is just that often they genuinely think they do."
The book debates the tensions between the two viewpoints.
Sounds like an idea worth chewing over; I wonder if it has been developed more fully in other books.
Not sure. Until I read this Introduction I'd never actually heard of it before.
The book does have an extensive 'Further Reading' section which you might want to check out.
If it makes it easier to find (if your library holds it or can get it on an inter-library loan) the ISBN is 978-0-19-280470-9
Ah, thanks! I'll load up WorldCat at work and see if I can find a copy in this state..
It's published by the OUP so should be available just about anywhere I guess.... Maybe......
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