Warfare.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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organizations as the League of Nations in 1920 and the United Nations in 1945, and détente (suggested for scaling down the cold war).
See Arms Control.
Modern antiwar sentiment and organized peace movements are derived in large part from the beliefs of religious sects such as the Society of Friends and the MennoniteChurch.
The first peace societies in history were established in the U.S.
in 1815, and since then pacifists have actively opposed wars and conscription, and promoted thecause of conscientious objectors.
See Pacifism.
For additional information, see such entries as see Air Warfare; Army; Navy; see also separate articles on the armed forces of the U.S., for example, see United States Navy..
III WARFARE THROUGH THE AGES
Organized warfare began, along with Western civilization, in the Fertile Crescent between the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean Sea.
The peoples of that area werenomadic until the discovery of grass seeds that could be cultivated and animals that could be domesticated led to the establishment of settled communities.
Initially,military forces were organized to defend these communities from marauders; then, because of the pressures of increased population and proliferating herds, communityboundaries were pushed outward at the expense of neighboring peoples.
Beginning about 3500 BC, the Middle East from Mesopotomia to Egypt was in constant turmoil as empires rose and fell.
A The Ancient Middle East
The most powerful of these empires were the Assyrian and the Persian.
The Assyrians, a warrior people whose army was the state, controlled most of western Asia bythe 9th century BC.
Swift-striking cavalry was the major arm of both the Assyrian and Persian armies, but they both used archers and heavy infantry armed with spears to engage the enemy force before the chariots and the horsemen delivered the decisive assault.
The Assyrians also used terror as a weapon, sacking cities and killing allprisoners.
B Greece and Rome
The Assyrian and Persian armies—like those of the ancient empires of India and China—were basically professional forces.
The Greek city-states, on the other hand,relied on a civilian militia.
The backbone of the Greek army was the hoplite, or armored spearman, massed in a phalanx or square eight to ten ranks deep.
Slingers,archers, and dart throwers swarmed out from between the infantry squares to discharge their weapons and then retired through the intervals.
The chariots chargedand the cavalry tried to sweep around the enemy's flank.
Finally, the masses of infantry met in ponderous collision with sword, spear, and shield.
The phalanx wasalmost irresistible in frontal assault, but it lacked maneuverability.
As time went on, the Greek armies became more professional.
This was particularly true of the lightinfantry, which had originally been composed of the poorer classes.
Philip II of Macedonia, who conquered Greece in the 4th century BC, deepened the phalanx to 16 men and developed artillery—mobile machines that catapulted missiles at the enemy.
Philip's son, Alexander the Great, used the army created by his father to conquerthe Persian Empire.
The Romans, like the Greeks, initially relied on a citizen-soldiery, but the legion—the largest unit in their army—was more maneuverable than the phalanx.
In the courseof the Punic Wars (3rd and 2nd century BC), the Roman army became a professional force.
Drill and discipline were the keystones of Roman military power; the individual foot soldier was skilled in the use of heavy javelins and the short sword.
Roman siege techniques were highly developed and the supply service well organized.After the 2nd century AD the Romans began to rely increasingly on mercenaries.
This reduced their military effectiveness and made them vulnerable to attacks by the Germanic peoples of northern Europe.
C The Middle Ages
After the breakup of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century AD, military organization fell into a decline.
Europe lay open to invasion—by Avars and Bulgars from the east, the Vikings from the north, and the Moors from the south.
The Franks, a Germanic tribe that occupied present-day Germany and France, adopted a crudeversion of the Roman system and managed to halt the invading Moors at the Battle of Tours in 732, but their tactics were primitive when compared with those of theGreeks and Romans.
At the same time, the armies of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire had considerable success in adopting the fast-moving, hard-hitting tactics of their enemies.
Oneof the major innovations of Byzantine warfare was the horse-archer, a cavalryman able to shoot arrows to either side while riding at full speed.
Western Europeans attempted to deal with the persistent raids of the Vikings by creating a feudal system in which the aristocracy performed mandatory military servicein return for its privileges.
The mounted knight, who owed allegiance to one noble rather than to a national state, dominated medieval warfare.
Fighting out of a spirit ofadventure or for spoils, the Christian knight was in the forefront of the periodic Crusades mobilized to liberate the Holy Land from Muslim control.
In the 14th and 15thcenturies feudalism began to give way to nation-states, and kings began to form their own armies.
The English longbow, the pike employed by massed infantry, and theintroduction of gunpowder finally forced the armored knight from the field.
Once again, armies became professional and military organization underwent a renaissance.
D Modern Warfare
The Thirty Year's War (1618-1648) marked the beginning of modern warfare.
During that conflict King Gustav II Adolph of Sweden greatly improved army organizationand discipline, introducing more powerful artillery and a lighter infantry musket that permitted soldiers to load and fire faster.
During the wars of the English Revolution(1640-1649), Oliver Cromwell raised an extremely effective fighting force by conscription.
Pay, supplies, and discipline were fixed by law, and for the first time thescarlet coat became the badge of English troops.
D1 The 18th and 19th Centuries
In the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714), the British commander John Churchill, duke of Marlborough, made good use of mobility and firepower against thearmies of Louis XIV of France.
Frederick the Great of Prussia introduced strict discipline to maneuvers on the field of battle and won brilliant victories by using massedartillery in the Seven Years' War (1756-1763).
At the end of the 18th century the wars of the French Revolution produced a revolution in the conduct of warfare.
Revolutionary France mobilized huge armies byuniversal conscription and won victories by sheer human resources.
Napoleon Bonaparte welded this force into a sword of empire.
He organized the French army intocorps—self-contained, fast-moving, and hard-hitting formations, each consisting of two or three divisions of 6000 to 9000 men with its own cavalry and artillery.
Eachcorps was, in effect, a miniature army capable of pinning down vastly superior forces until other corps would come up and engage the enemy on the flank.
Trained asan artillery man, Napoleon utilized massed cannons and deployed them with a skill never before seen.
Boldness, the hallmark of the Napoleonic tactics, influenced.
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Liens utiles
- Quirinus (Quirinius) Roman An ancient god, perhaps of warfare or of citizenship.
- Palla s (Warrior) Greek A second generation Titan; considered by some to be the god of warfare and of the springtime battle season.
- Call Of Duty : Modern Warfare 2 (Jeu)