

An edition of The military revolution in sixteenth-century Europe (1995)
By David Eltis,David Eltis
Publish Date
1995
Publisher
Tauris Academic Studies,St. Martin's Press [distributor]
Language
eng
Pages
179
Description:
This ground-breaking study represents a new twist in the already complicated debate on military change in the early modern period. Previous writers have for the most part defined a 'military revolution' focused on the seventeenth or even early eighteenth centuries. Eltis suggests that key developments in training, organization, tactics and siege warfare occurred in the sixteenth century and, taken together, these innovations constitute a military revolution, changing the face of war. In England, these changes came later than in the rest of Europe, and in Ireland later still. English writers, in their anxiety to spur their countrymen to adopt the new methods, produced some of the most useful manuals of sixteenth-century Europe. These, together with Italian, Spanish, French and German texts, form the main basis of David Eltis's study, allowing the ideas of contemporaries to be set alongside accounts of actual military conditions in explaining one of the turning points of world military development.
subjects: History, History, Military, Military History, Military art and science, Ontwikkeling (proces), Kriegfuhrung, Krijgsmacht, Art et science militaires, Histoire, Militar, Taktik, Histoire militaire, Militaire technologie, Kriegswaffe, Modern Military history
Places: Europe
Times: 1492-1648, 16th century