Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- A—NAVAL
- B—MILITARY
- THE DIFFICULTIES ENCOUNTERED IN COMPILING MILITARY HISTORY
- THE VALUE OF THE STUDY OF MILITARY HISTORY AS TRAINING FOR COMMAND IN WAR
- THE PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF MILITARY HISTORY
- PRÉCIS OF THE PLANS OF NAPOLEON FOR THE AUTUMN CAMPAIGN OF 1813
- THE INFLUENCE OF TACTICAL IDEAS ON WARFARE
- FIELD-MARSHAL PRINCE SCHWARZENBERG: A CHARACTER SKETCH
- A DEFENCE OF MILITARY HISTORY
- FOREIGN REGIMENTS IN THE BRITISH SERVICE, 1793-1815
- INDEX
THE DIFFICULTIES ENCOUNTERED IN COMPILING MILITARY HISTORY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- A—NAVAL
- B—MILITARY
- THE DIFFICULTIES ENCOUNTERED IN COMPILING MILITARY HISTORY
- THE VALUE OF THE STUDY OF MILITARY HISTORY AS TRAINING FOR COMMAND IN WAR
- THE PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF MILITARY HISTORY
- PRÉCIS OF THE PLANS OF NAPOLEON FOR THE AUTUMN CAMPAIGN OF 1813
- THE INFLUENCE OF TACTICAL IDEAS ON WARFARE
- FIELD-MARSHAL PRINCE SCHWARZENBERG: A CHARACTER SKETCH
- A DEFENCE OF MILITARY HISTORY
- FOREIGN REGIMENTS IN THE BRITISH SERVICE, 1793-1815
- INDEX
Summary
The purpose of this paper is to put before you some of the difficulties encountered in compiling the branch of Military History which deals with campaigns, battles, and other operations in the field, difficulties as often as not insuperable.
And by the words “Military History” I do not mean only the larger works, such as those of Alison, Thiers, Lehautcourt, Hoenig, Fortescue, Oman, and others, but records of all kinds and sizes, such as the excellent monographs of the German General Staff (the Kriegsgeschichtliche Einzelschriften), and pamphlets; in short, all records whatever of war operations.
The difficulties to which I have referred are, however, not very great if the history is intended for general reading only. It is when it is intended for professional readers that they are encountered almost ab initio; and for soldiers this history is of ultra-importance and an absolute necessity. It is for the whole military profession, for the huge mass of men who have to do the fighting, that history has this importance; and why?
Look at the difference between learning to be a soldier and learning to be, say, a physician or a surgeon. The future physician begins by standing beside his elder in a hospital ward; he sees and hears him diagnose the disease of a human patient, notices the symptoms, reads the prescriptions, and watches the effect of the treatment; or in the operating theatre he watches some operation and follows it in detail, and can even practise his hand on flesh and bone, so that when he starts as physician or surgeon on his own account he has already seen, and to a small extent has perhaps already taken part in actual and real war against pain and suffering.
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- Naval and Military EssaysBeing Papers read in the Naval and Military Section at the International Congress of Historical Studies, 1913, pp. 117 - 132Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1914