Part of a unique venture: the twenty-four volume Cassell History of Warfare series that captures the entire history of warfare. Fully Illustrated throughout, incorporating computer generated cartography that brings the battlefields to life.
This book is a richly illustrated history of warfare in Western Europe during those years.
Part One, the early Middle Ages, covers the late Romans, the Germanic invaders and Byzantines, the Franks, the Vikings and Hungarians, and the Anglo-Saxons and Normans in England.
Part Two, the high or central Middle Ages, considers the feudal system, knights and chivalry, knights at war, infantrymen, land warfare, siege and naval warfare, crusades in Palestine, templars and hospitalers, the Reconquista in Spain, and the Teutonic knights.
Part Three, the late Middle Ages, discusses the evolution of new types of armor and weapons, the Hundred Years’ War, mercenaries, and firearms.
Medieval Italy was characterized by regular warfare among its numerous city-states, as well as internal strife within comunes as aristocratic factions fought each other for domination of the cities' governments. In this context, Italian warfare developed quickly, with the crossbow playing a key role in improving the armour technology of the Italian city militias that used them. This book traces...
Warfare was an integral part of early medieval life. It had a character of its own and was neither a pale shadow of Roman military practice nor an insignificant precursor to the warfare of the central middle ages. This book recovers its distinctiveness, looking at warfare in a rounded context in the British Isles and Western Europe between the end of the Roman Empire and the break-up of the Carolingian Empire. In this work, Guy Halsall relates warfare to many aspects of medieval life, economy, society and politics...
This book reveals the darker side of Classical Greek civilization. From the horrific effects of overcrowding and the plague on the
population of Athens, to the vicious civil strife that often erupted in
cities allied with Athens or Sparta, this volume offers vivid and at
times disturbing insights into the impact of warfare on the people who
are celebrated as the founders of Western civilization.