Origins of the First World War, pt. 11 -- The 19th-Century Revolution in Warfare

The scale and horror of the First World War were possible only after the Nineteenth Century's double revolution in the nature of war. Warfare -- including weaponry, strategy, and command -- had remained mostly unchanged for three centuries, from the early integration of firearms in the 1400s until the French Revolution; the campaigns of Napoleon unleashed a new era of mass mobilization and nationalistic fury, while a series of haphazard improvements massively multiplied the killing power and reach of firearms, tearing open a battlefield "killing zone" unlike anything that prior generations of soldiers could have imagined. We follow both the breakdown in the old distinctions between war and civil society and the breakneck advance in land and sea warfare that set the stage for the nightmare of World War I.
Image: Japanese riflemen defending a breastwork embankment, Russo-Japanese War, 1904-5.
Margaret MacMillan on war & 19th-century society: • Margaret MacMillan: Eu...
Nicholas Murray on the emergence of trench warfare: • The Evolution of Warfa...
Suggested further reading: Nicholas Murray, "The Rocky Road to the Great War"; Margaret MacMillan, "The War That Ended Peace"; Hew Strachan, "A Clausewitz for Every Season," www.the-american-interest.com...
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Пікірлер: 7

  • @Jasmine1991forever
    @Jasmine1991forever3 ай бұрын

    273 views! It's a disgrace. Such erudite and engaging content should be hitting 100,000 views plus. The only reason it isn't is because comments and debates weren't encouraged. It's the comments that drive the algorithm. Anyhow, the lecture was brilliant.

  • @basedcatenjoyer2505
    @basedcatenjoyer25053 ай бұрын

    Morning instantly better.

  • @grandiane5569
    @grandiane55693 ай бұрын

    Swiss mercenaries! That was a surprise to me!

  • @grandiane5569
    @grandiane55693 ай бұрын

    Sam, so many of our idioms are gun related. Do you know if these idioms occur in other languages?

  • @Historiansplaining

    @Historiansplaining

    3 ай бұрын

    Not as far as I'm aware -- eg, "flash in the pan" in French and German is "straw fire"

  • @johnnotrealname8168
    @johnnotrealname81683 ай бұрын

    First and only Edit: "56" minutes late, is this comparable to the Military Revolution (Maybe.) of the 17th Century?

  • @Historiansplaining

    @Historiansplaining

    3 ай бұрын

    I think it was bigger -- in some ways an amplification (bigger standing armies, conscription, more powerful gunpowder) and in some ways a reversal (a de-emphasis on professional soldiering and new insistence on morale, or popular passion)