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Armies and Warfare in the Middle Ages: The English Experience (1996)

de Michael Prestwich

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1452188,496 (3.5)1
Medieval warfare was hard, gruelling and often unrewarding. While military life in this era is sometimes pictured in terms of knights resplendent in armour and bearing colourful standards and coats of arms, the reality more often consisted of men struggling against cold, damp and hunger, pressing elusive foes who refused to do battle. In this fascinating book, Michael Prestwich re-creates the real experience of medieval warfare, examining how men of all ranks of society were recruited, how troops were fed, supplied, and deployed, the development of new weapons, and the structures of military command. Michael Prestwich challenges many common assumptions about medieval warfare. He shows that medieval commanders were capable of far more sophisticated strategy than is usually assumed: spies were an important part of the machinery of war, and the destruction of crops and burning of villages were part of a deliberate plan to force a foe to negotiate, rather than an indication of lack of discipline. Sieges, often lengthy and expensive, were more prevalent than physical battles. And in actual engagement the mounted knight was never as dominant as is often supposed: even in the twelfth century, many battles were won by unmounted men. Medieval warfare was not, on the whole, any more chivalric than warfare of other periods, although there were many instances of individual heroism, particularly during the Hundred Years War, that brought glory and renown to those who performed them.… (més)
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This is an excellent and enlightening look on English Medieval warfare. Prestwich has definitely done his research on his subject. The work challenges myths and assumtions that many modern readers have about warfare in the Middle Ages. Prestwich gives good detail about the logistics of armies, such as recruitment, supplying and feeding, and tactics. The ideas of chivalric knights in shining armor at jousts and tournaments that some people might envision is replaced by cold, hard data and some contemporary statistics of daily operations of armies in the field. ( )
  DanoWins | Jan 12, 2008 |
I finished reading this last night and found it to be a fascinating look at the nature of warfare in England during the Middle Ages. Prestwich focuses on he how-to's of war, rather than actual combat, though there is some space devoted to that as well.

Prestwich gives most attention to the question of whether there is a period of "revolution" in the history of warfare, and particularly whether that occurs during the Medieval period. He questions the premises of historians that preceded him, and concludes that though there was some change in warfare in the Middle Ages, it was not always for the best, and indeed not revolutionary. ( )
  ksmyth | Nov 5, 2005 |
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Informació del coneixement compartit en anglès. Modifica-la per localitzar-la a la teva llengua.
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The history of the medieval army is very different from that of more modern forces.
It is not easy to recapture the reality of medieval war.
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Medieval warfare was hard, gruelling and often unrewarding. While military life in this era is sometimes pictured in terms of knights resplendent in armour and bearing colourful standards and coats of arms, the reality more often consisted of men struggling against cold, damp and hunger, pressing elusive foes who refused to do battle. In this fascinating book, Michael Prestwich re-creates the real experience of medieval warfare, examining how men of all ranks of society were recruited, how troops were fed, supplied, and deployed, the development of new weapons, and the structures of military command. Michael Prestwich challenges many common assumptions about medieval warfare. He shows that medieval commanders were capable of far more sophisticated strategy than is usually assumed: spies were an important part of the machinery of war, and the destruction of crops and burning of villages were part of a deliberate plan to force a foe to negotiate, rather than an indication of lack of discipline. Sieges, often lengthy and expensive, were more prevalent than physical battles. And in actual engagement the mounted knight was never as dominant as is often supposed: even in the twelfth century, many battles were won by unmounted men. Medieval warfare was not, on the whole, any more chivalric than warfare of other periods, although there were many instances of individual heroism, particularly during the Hundred Years War, that brought glory and renown to those who performed them.

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