THE ART OF WAR IN THE MIDDLE AGES A.D. 378—1515
Conclusion
We have now discussed at length the two systems of tactics which played
the chief part in revolutionising the Art of War in Europe. The one has been
traced from Morgarten to Bicocca, the other from
Falkirk to Formigny, and it has been shown how the ascendancy of each was at
last checked by the development of new forms of military efficiency among those
against whom it was directed. While ascribing to the pikemen of Switzerland and
the English archery the chief part in the overthrow of feudal cavalry—and to
no small extent in that of feudalism itself — we must not forget that the same
work was simultaneously being wrought out by other methods in other quarters of
Europe.
Prominent among the experiments directed to this end was that of Zisca and his captains, in the great Hussite wars of the
first half of the fifteenth century. In Bohemia the new military departure was
the result of social and religious convulsions. A gallant nation had risen in
arms, stirred at once by outraged patriotism and by spiritual zeal; moved by a
desire to drive the intruding German beyond the Erzgebirge, but moved even more
by dreams of universal brotherhood, and of a kingdom of righteousness to be
established by the sword. All Bohemia was ready to march, but still it was not
apparent how the overwhelming strength of Germany was to be met. If the fate of
the struggle had depended on the lances of the Tzech nobility it would have been hopeless : they could put into the field only tens
to oppose to the thousands of German feudalism. The undisciplined masses of
peasants and burghers who accompanied them would, under the old tactical
arrangements, have fared no better than the infantry of Flanders had fared at Rosbecque. But the problem of utilising those strong and
willing arms fell into the hands of a man of genius.
John Zisca of Trocnov had acquired military experience and hatred of Germany while fighting in the
ranks of the Poles against the Teutonic knights. He saw clearly that to lead
into the field men wholly untrained, and rudely armed with iron-shod staves,
flails, and scythes fixed to poles, would be madness. The Bohemians had neither
a uniform equipment nor a national system of tactics : their only force lay in
their religious and national enthusiasm, which was strong enough to make all
differences vanish on the day of battle, so that the wildest fanatics were
content to combine and to obey when once the foe came in sight. It was evident
that the only chance for the Hussites was to stand upon the defensive, till
they had gauged their enemies' military efficiency and learnt to handle their
own arms. Accordingly we hear of intrenchments being everywhere thrown up, and
towns being put in a state of defence during the first months of the war. But
this was not all; in his Eastern campaigns Zisca had
seen a military device which he thought might be developed and turned to
account. There prevailed among the Russians and Lithuanians a custom of
surrounding every encampment by a portable barricade of beams and stakes, which
could be taken to pieces and transferred from position to position. The Russian
princes habitually utilised in their wars such a structure, which they called a
'goliaigorod' or moving fortress. Zisca's development of this system consisted in substituting for the beams and stakes a
line of waggons, at first merely such as the countrywide supplied, but
afterwards constructed specially for military purposes, and fitted with hooks
and chains by which they were fastened one to another. It was evident that
these war-waggons, when once placed in order, would be impregnable to a cavalry
charge : however vigorous the impetus of the mail-clad knight might be, it
would not carry him through oaken planks and iron links. The onset of the
German horseman being the chief thing which the Hussites had to dread, the
battle was half won when a method of resisting it had been devised. With the
German infantry they were competent to deal without any elaborate preparation.
It might be thought that Zisca's invention would have
condemned the Bohemians to adhere strictly to the defensive in the whole
campaign, as well as in each engagement in it : this, however, was not the
case. When fully worked out, the system assumed a remarkable shape. There was
organized a special corps of waggoners, on whose efficiency everything depended
: they were continually drilled, and taught to manoeuvre their vehicles with
accuracy and promptness. At the word of command, we are told, they would form a
circle, a square, or a triangle, and then rapidly disengage their teams, thus
leaving the waggons in proper position, and only needing to be chained
together. This done, they took up their position in the centre of the
enclosure. The organization of the whole army was grounded on the waggon as a
unit : to each was told off, besides the driver, a band of about twenty men, of
whom part were pike-men and flail-men, while the remainder were armed with
missile weapons. The former ranged themselves behind the chains which joined
waggon to waggon, the latter stood in the vehicles and fired down on the enemy.
From the first Zisca set himself to introduce
fire-arms among the Bohemians : at length nearly a third of them were armed
with 'hand- guns', while a strong train of artillery accompanied every force.
A Hussite army in movement had its regular order of march. Wherever the
country was open enough it formed five parallel columns. In the centre marched
the cavalry and artillery, to each side of them two divisions of waggons
accompanied by their complements of infantry. The two outer divisions were
longer than the two which marched next the horsemen and the guns. The latter
were intended—in the case of a sudden attack—to form the front and rear of a
great oblong, of which the longer divisions were to compose the sides. To
enable the shorter columns to wheel, one forward and the other backward, no
great time would be required, and if the few necessary minutes were obtained,
the Hussite order of battle stood complete. To such perfection and accuracy was
the execution of this manoeuvre brought, that we are assured that a Bohemian
army would march right into the middle of a German host, so as to separate
division from division, and yet find time to throw itself into its normal
formation just as the critical moment arrived. The only real danger was from
artillery fire, which might shatter the line of carts : but the Hussites were
themselves so well provided with cannon that they could usually silence the
opposing batteries. Never assuredly were the tactics of the 'laager' carried to
such perfection; were the records of the Hussite victories not before us, we
should have hesitated to believe that the middle ages could have produced a
system whose success depended so entirely on that power of orderly movement
which is usually claimed as the peculiar characteristic of modern armies.
But in the Bohemia of the fifteenth century, just as in the England of
the seventeenth, fanaticism led to rigid discipline, not to disorder. The whole
country, we are assured, was divided into two lists of parishes, which
alternately put their entire adult population in the field. While the one half
fought, the other remained at home, charged with the cultivation of their own
and their neighbours' lands. A conscription law of the most sweeping kind,
which made every man a soldier, was thus in force, and it becomes possible to
understand the large numbers of the armies put into the field by a state of no
great extent.
Zisca’s first victories were to his enemies so unexpected and
so marvellous, that they inspired a feeling of consternation. The disproportion
of numbers and the inexperience of the Hussites being taken into consideration,
they were indeed surprising. But instead of abandoning their stereotyped feudal
tactics, to whose inability to cope with any new form of military efficiency
the defeats were really due, the Germans merely tried to raise larger armies,
and sent them to incur the same fate as the first host which Sigismund had led
against Prague. But the engagements only grew more decisive as Zisca fully developed his tactical methods. Invasion after
invasion was a failure, because, when once the Bohemians came in sight, the
German leaders could not induce their troops to stand firm. The men utterly
declined to face the flails and pikes of their enemies, even when the latter
advanced far beyond their rampart of waggons, and assumed the offensive. The
Hussites were consequently so exalted with the confidence of their own
invincibility, that they undertook, and often successfully carried out, actions
of the most extraordinary temerity. Relying on the terror which they inspired,
small bodies would attack superior numbers when every military consideration
was against them, and yet would win the day. Bands only a few thousand strong
sallied forth from the natural fortress formed by the Bohemian mountains, and
wasted Bavaria, Meissen, Thuringia, and Silesia, almost without hindrance. They
returned in safety, their war-waggons laden with the spoil of Eastern Germany,
and leaving a broad track of desolation behind them. Long after Zisca’s death the prestige of his tactics remained un-
diminished, and his successors were able to accomplish feats of war which would
have appeared incredible in the first years of the war.
When at last the defeat of the Taborites took place, it resulted from
the dissensions of the Bohemians themselves, not from the increased efficiency
of their enemies. The battle of Lipan, where Procopius fell and the extreme
party were crushed, was a victory won not by the Germans, but by the more
moderate sections of the Tzech nation. The event of
the fight indicates at once the weak spot of Hussite tactics, and the
tremendous self-confidence of the Taborites. After Procopius had repelled the
first assaults on his circle of waggons, his men—forgetting that they had to do
not with the panic-stricken hosts of their old enemies, but with their own
former comrades,—left their defences and charged the retreating masses. They
were accustomed to see the manoeuvre succeed against the terrorized Germans,
and forgot that it was only good when turned against adversaries whose spirit
was entirely broken. In itself an advance meant the sacrifice of all the
benefits of a system of tactics which was essentially defensive. The weakness
in fact of the device of the waggon-fortress was that, although securing the
repulse of the enemy, it gave no opportunity for following up that success, if
he was wary and retreated in good order. This however was not a reproach to the
inventor of the system, for Zisca had originally to
seek not for the way to win decisive victories, but for the way to avoid
crushing defeats. At Lipan the moderate party had been beaten back but not
routed. Accordingly when the Taborites came out into the open field, the
retreating masses turned to fight, while a cavalry reserve which far
outnumbered the horse-men of Procopius, rode in between the circle of waggons
and the troops which had left it. Thus three-quarters of the Taborite army were
caught and surrounded in the plain, where they were cut to pieces by the
superior numbers of the enemy. Only the few thousands who had remained behind
within the waggon- fortress succeeded in escaping. Thus was demonstrated the
incompleteness for military purposes of a system which had been devised as a
political necessity, not as an infallible recipe for victory.
The moral of the fight of Lipan was indeed the same as the moral of the
fight of Hastings. Purely defensive tactics are hopeless when opposed by a
commander of ability and resource, who is provided with steady troops. If the
German princes had been generals and the German troops well-disciplined, the
careers of Zisca and Procopius would have been
impossible. Bad strategy and panic combined to make the Hussites seem
invincible. When, however, they were met by rational tactics they were found to
be no less liable to the logic of war than other men.
Long before the flails and hand-guns of Zisca’s infantry had turned to rout the chivalry of Germany, another body of
foot-soldiers had won the respect of Eastern Europe. On the battlefields of the
Balkan Peninsula the Slav and the Magyar had learned to dread the
slave-soldiery of the Ottoman Sultans. Kossova had
suggested and Nicopolis had proved that the day of
the unquestioned supremacy of the horseman was gone in the East as much as in
the West. The Janissaries of Murad and Bayezid had stood firm before desperate
cavalry charges, and beaten them off with loss. It is curious to recognize in
the East the tactics which had won the battles of Crecy and Agincourt. The
Janissaries owed their successes to precisely the same causes as the English
archer. Their great weapon was the bow, not indeed the long-bow of the West,
but nevertheless a very efficient arm. Still more notable is it that they
carried the stakes which formed part of the equipment of the English bowman,
and planted them before their line whenever an assault by cavalry was expected.
Again and again—notably at Nicopolis and Varna—do we
hear of the impetuous charge which had ridden down the rest of the Turkish array,
failing at last before the 'palisade' of the Janissaries, and the deadly fire
of arrows from behind it. The rest of the Janissary's equipment was very simple
: he carried no defensive arms, and wore only a pointed felt cap and a flowing
grey tunic reaching to the knees. Besides his bow and quiver he bore a scimitar
at his side and a ‘handjar’ or long
knife in his waist-cloth. Though their disciplined fanaticism made them
formidable foes in close combat, it was not for that kind of fighting that the
Janissaries were designed. When we find them storming a breach or leading a
charge, they were going beyond their own province. Their entire want of armour
would alone have sufficed to show that they were not designed for hand-to-hand
contests, and it is a noteworthy fact that they could never be induced to take
to the use of the pike. Like the English archery, they were used either in
defensive positions or to supplement the employment of cavalry. Eastern hosts
ever since the days of the Parthians had consisted of great masses of horsemen,
and their weakness had always lain in the want of some steadier force to form
the nucleus of resistance and the core of the army. Cavalry can only act on the
offensive, yet every general is occasionally compelled to take the defensive.
The Ottomans, however, were enabled to solve the problem of producing an army
efficient for both alike, when once Orchan had armed
and trained the Janissaries.
The Timariot horsemen who formed the bulk of
the Turkish army differed little from the cavalry of other Oriental states. Not
unfrequently they suffered defeats; Shah Ismail's Persian cavaliers rode them
down at Tchaldiran, and the Mamelukes broke them at Radama. If it had been with his feudal horse alone that the
Turkish Sultan had faced the chivalry of the West, there is little reason to
suppose that the conquest of the Balkan Peninsula would ever have been
effected. Attacked in its own home the Hungarian—perhaps even the Servian—state
could in the fourteenth century put into the field armies equal in numbers and
individually superior to the Ottoman horsemen. But the Servian and the
Hungarian, like the Persian and the Mameluke, did not possess any solid and
trustworthy body of infantry. To face the disciplined array of the Janissaries
they had only the chaotic and half-armed hordes of the national levy. To this
we must ascribe the splendid successes of the Sultans : however the tide of
battle might fluctuate, the Janissaries would stand like a rock behind their
stakes, and it was almost unknown that they should be broken. Again and again
they saved the fortune of the day : at those few fights where they could not,
they at least died in their ranks, and saved the honour of their corps. At the
disaster of Angora they continued to struggle long after the rest of the
Turkish army had dispersed, and were at last exterminated rather than beaten.
No steadier troops could have been found in any part of Europe.
Perhaps the most interesting of Ottoman fights from the tactician's
point of view was the second battle of Kossova (1448). This was not— like Varna or Mohacs—an ill-advised attempt to break the
Turkish line by a headlong onset. John Huniades, whom long experience had made
familiar with the tactics of his enemy, endeavoured to turn against Sultan
Murad his own usual scheme. To face the Janissaries he drew up in his centre a
strong force of German infantry, armed with the hand-guns whose use the
Hussites had introduced. On the wings the chivalry of Hungary were destined to
cope with the masses of the Timariot cavalry. In
consequence of this arrangement, the two centres faced each other for long
hours, neither advancing, but each occupied in thinning the enemy's ranks, the
one with the arbalest-bolt, the other with the bullet. Meanwhile on the wings
desperate cavalry charges succeeded each other, till on the second day the
Wallachian allies of Huniades gave way before the superior numbers of the
Ottomans and the Christian centre had to draw off and retire. So desperate had
the fighting been, that half the Hungarian army and a third of that of Murad
was left upon the field. The tactical meaning of the engagement was plain :
good infantry could make a long resistance to the Ottoman arms, even if they
could not secure the victory. The lesson however was not fully realized, and it
was not till the military revolution of the sixteenth century that infantry was
destined to take the prominent part in withstanding the Ottoman.
The landsknechts and hackbut-men of Charles V and Ferdinand of Austria
proved much more formidable foes to the Sultans than the gallant but
undisciplined light cavalry of Hungary. This was to a great extent due to the
perfection of pike-tactics in the West. The Turks, whose infantry could never
be induced to adopt that weapon, relied entirely on their firearms, and were
checked by the combination of pike and hackbut. It is noticeable that the
Janissaries took to the use of the firelock at a comparatively early date. It
may have been in consequence of the effectiveness of Huniades’ hand-guns at Kossova, that we find them discarding the arbalest in
favour of the newer weapon. But at any rate the Ottoman had fully accomplished
the change long before it had been finally carried out in Europe, and nearly a
century earlier than the nations of the further East.
In recognizing the full importance of cannon the Sultans were equally in
advance of their times. The capture of Constantinople by Mahomet II was
probably the first event of supreme importance whose result was determined by
the power of artillery. The lighter guns of previous years had never
accomplished any feat comparable in its results to that which was achieved by
the siege-train of the Conqueror. Some decades later we find the Janissaries'
line of arquebuses supported by the fire of field-pieces, often brought forward
in great numbers, and chained together so as to prevent cavalry charging down
the intervals between the guns. This device is said to have been employed with
great success against an enemy superior in the numbers of his horsemen, alike
at Dolbek and Tchaldiran.
The ascendency of the Turkish arms was finally terminated by the conjunction of
several causes. Of these the chief was the rise in central Europe of standing
armies composed for the most part of disciplined infantry. But it is no less
undoubted that much was due to the fact that the Ottomans after the reign of
Soliman fell behind their contemporaries in readiness to keep up with the
advance of military skill, a change which may be connected with the gradual
transformation of the Janissaries from a corps into a caste.
It should also be remembered that the frontier of Christendom was now
covered not by one isolated fortress of supreme importance, such as Belgrade
had been, but by a double and triple line of strong towns, whose existence made
it hard for the Turks to advance with rapidity, or to reap any such results
from success in a single battle or siege as had been possible in the previous
century.
On the warfare of the other nations of Eastern Europe it will not be necessary
to dwell. The military history of Russia, though interesting in itself,
exercised no influence on the general progress of the Art of War. With the more
important development of new tactical methods in South- eastern Europe we have
already dealt, when describing the Spanish infantry in the chapter devoted to
the Swiss and their enemies.
All the systems of real weight and consideration have now been
discussed. In the overthrow of the supremacy of feudal cavalry the tactics of
the shock and the tactics of the missile had each played their part : which had
been the more effective it would be hard to say. Between them however the task
had been successfully accomplished. The military strength of that system which
had embraced all Europe in its cramping fetters, had been shattered to atoms.
Warlike efficiency was the attribute no longer of a class but of whole nations;
and war had ceased to be an occupation in which feudal chivalry found its
pleasure, and the rest of society its ruin. The 'Art of War' had become once
more a living reality, a matter not of tradition but of experiment, and the
vigorous sixteenth century was rapidly adding to it new forms and variations. The middle ages were at last over, and the stirring
and scientific spirit of the modern world was working a transformation in
military matters, which was to make the methods of mediaeval war seem even
further removed from the strategy of our own century, than are the operations
of the ancients in the great days of Greece and Rome.
THE END.
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