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 THE ART
              
            OF
              
            WAR IN THE MIDDLE AGES
              
            A.D. 378—1515
              
            BY
               C. W. C. OMAN
              
            CHAPTER I. The Transition from Roman to MEDIEVAL forms in War (A.D.
              378-582)
  
            CHAPTER II. The Early Middle Ages (A.D. 476-1066).
              
            CHAPTER III. The Byzantines and their Enemies (A.D. 582-1071).
              
            CHAPTER IV. The Supremacy of Feudal Cavalry (A.D. 1066-1346).
              
            CHAPTER V. The Swiss (A.D. 1315-1515).
              
            CHAPTER VI. The English and their Enemies (A.D. 1272-1485).
              
            CHAPTER VII. Conclusion. Zisca and the
              Hussites.
              
             
                   INTRODUCTION
                
                   The Art of War has been very simply defined as the art which enables any
              commander to worst the forces opposed to him. It is therefore conversant with
              an enormous variety of subjects : Strategy and Tactics are but two of the more
              important of its branches. Besides dealing with discipline, organization, and
              armament, it is bound to investigate every means which can be adapted to
              increase the physical or moral efficiency of an army. The author who opened his
              work with a dissertation on the age which is preferable in a ‘generalissimo’,
              or ‘the average height which the infantry soldier should attain’ was dealing
              with the Art of War, no less than he who confined himself to purely tactical
              speculations.
   The complicated nature of the subject being taken into consideration, it
              is evident that a complete sketch of the social and political history of any
              period would be necessary to account fully for the state of the Art of War at the time. That art has existed, in a rudimentary form, ever since the day on
              which two bodies of men first met in anger to settle a dispute by the
              arbitrament of force. At some epochs, however, military and social history have
              been far more closely bound up than at others. In the present century wars are
              but episodes in a people's existence : there have, however, been times when the
              whole national organization was founded on the supposition of a normal state of
              strife. In such cases the history of the race and of its 'art of war' are one
              and the same. To detail the constitution of Sparta, or of Ancient Germany, is
              to give little more than a list of military institutions. Conversely, to speak
              of the characteristics of their military science involves the mention of many
              of their political institutions.
   At no time was this interpenetration more complete than in the age which
              forms the central part of our period. Feudalism, in its origin and development,
              had a military as well as a social side, and its decline is by no means
              unaffected by military considerations. There is a point of view from which its
              history could be described as the rise, supremacy, and decline of heavy cavalry
              as the chief power in war. To a certain extent the tracing out of this thesis
              will form the subject of our researches. It is here that we find the thread
              which links the history of the military art in the middle ages into a connected
              whole. Between Adrianople, the first, and Marignano,
              the last, of the triumphs of the mediaeval horseman, lie the chapters in the
              scientific history of war which we are about to investigate.
   
 
 
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