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AUTHOR:
FORMAT: 1,024pp 64 Bw 29 dwgs Hb
Sieges were the predominant form of warfare across the medieval world and
siege methods and technology developed alongside improvements in defence. This
book goes back to the original sources to present a comprehensive view of the
whole subject, tracing links across continents and analysing the relationship
with changes in the design of town and castle defences, and linking contemporary
historical accounts with archaeological studies. It considers the most important
questions raised by siege warfare: who designed, built and operated siege
equipment? How did medieval commanders gain their knowledge? What were the roles
of theoretical texts and the developing science of siege warfare? How did
nomadic peoples acquire siege skills? Were castles and town walls built purely
of a military purpose, or did they play a symbolic role also? The first volume
begins in 450 AD with the replacement of the western Roman empire by barbarian
successor states, but also examines the development of the Byzantine Empire, the
Muslim Caliphate and its successors, and the links with China, through to the
early thirteenth century. The second continues with the Mongol conquests in Asia
and Europe and the thirteenth-century apogee of pre-gunpowder siege warfare,
before examining the slow impact of guns and the cumulatively massive changes in
attack and defence of the fifteenth century.
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