From Flintlock To Rifle: Infantry Tactics, 1740-1866
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9780714641935 - Steven T. Ross: From Flintlock To Rifle: Infantry Tactics, 1740-1866
Steven T. Ross

From Flintlock To Rifle: Infantry Tactics, 1740-1866

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Kanada EN NW

ISBN: 9780714641935 bzw. 0714641936, in Englisch, Taylor and Francis, neu.

54,58 (C$ 76,83)¹
unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Kanada, In Stock, plus shipping.
Steven T. Ross, Books, From Flintlock To Rifle: Infantry Tactics, 1740-1866, This is a comprehensive study of the major changes in infantry tacticts from the time of Frederick the Great to the beginning of what many see as the era of modern war, in the 1860s. Ross lays social and political change side by side with technical change. He argues that the French revolution, due to the fervour and loyalty it inspired in its participants, led to huge citizen armies of devolved command which were able to make use of new tactics that swept the poorly paid and poorly treated professional armies of their enemies from the field. Shortly after the Napoleonic wars other European countries experienced similar social change and by the middle of the Nineteenth Century these massive conscript armies were equipped with breech-loading rifles and more powerful artillery. The battlefield of the late 1860's had become a place where close infantry formations could not survive for long in the linear formations of the past.
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9780714641935 - From Flintlock to Rifle

From Flintlock to Rifle

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Vereinigtes Königreich Großbritannien und Nordirland EN NW

ISBN: 9780714641935 bzw. 0714641936, in Englisch, Frank Cass, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, neu.

40,56 (£ 34,98)¹
versandkostenfrei, unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Vereinigtes Königreich Großbritannien und Nordirland, in-stock.
This is a comprehensive study of the major changes in infantry tacticts from the time of Frederick the Great to the beginning of what many see as the era of modern war, in the 1860s. Ross lays social and political change side by side with technical change. He argues that the French revolution, due to the fervour and loyalty it inspired in its participants, led to huge citizen armies of devolved command which were able to make use of new tactics that swept the poorly paid and poorly treated professional armies of their enemies from the field. Shortly after the Napoleonic wars other European countries experienced similar social change and by the middle of the Nineteenth Century these massive conscript armies were equipped with breech-loading rifles and more powerful artillery. The battlefield of the late 1860's had become a place where close infantry formations could not survive for long in the linear formations of the past.
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