Amphibious warfare 1000-1700 : commerce, state formation and European expansion

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Amphibious warfare 1000-1700 : commerce, state formation and European expansion

edited by D.J.B. Trim and Mark Charles Fissel

(History of warfare, v. 34)

Brill, 2006

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Contents of Works

  • Amphibious warfare, 1000-1700 : concepts and contexts / D.J.B. Trim & Mark Charles Fissel
  • Amphibious operations from the Norman Conquest to the crusades of Saint Louis, c. 1050-c. 1250 / Matthew Bennett
  • Amphibious warfare in the Baltic : the Hansa, Holland and the Habsburgs (fourteenth-sixteenth centuries) / Louis Sicking
  • Portuguese amphibious warfare in the east in the sixteenth century (c. 1500-1520) / Malyn Newitt
  • Amphibious warfare in the Baltic, 1550-1700 / Jan Glete
  • The Siege of Malta (1565) and the Habsburg-Ottoman struggle for domination of the Mediterranean / John F. Guilmartin, Jr.
  • Amphibious operations and the Elizabethan assault on the Spanish Atlantic economy 1585-1598 / R.B. Wernham
  • English amphibious warfare, 1587-1656 : galleons, galleys, longboats, and cots / Mark Charles Fissel
  • The King's two arms : French amphibious warfare in the Mediterranean under Louis XIV, 1664 to 1697 / Guy Rowlands
  • The blue-water dimension of King William's War : amphibious operations and allied strategy during the Nine Years' War, 1688-1697 / John M. Stapleton, Jr.
  • Medieval and early-modern inshore, estuarine, riverine and lacustrine warfare / D.J.B. Trim
  • Conclusions / D.J.B. Trim & Mark Charles Fissel

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This volume reconceptualizes amphibious warfare and also fills an important gap in its historiography, examining how it was conceived, practised and employed, from the Crusades, through the first wave of European exploration and colonization, the Price Revolution and the European wars of religion, up to the early Industrial Revolution and the beginnings of a new wave of imperialism. Essays examine issues related to strategy, operational art, tactics, logistics and military technology, but also consider commerce and culture. They reveal that amphibious warfare was often waged for economic reasons and was the quintessential warfare of European imperialism, for sea power was required to deliver and sustain land power. The volume is lavishly illustrated with 30 plates and twelve maps. Contributors: Matthew Bennett; Louis Sicking; Malyn Newitt; Jan Glete; John F. Guilmartin; R. B. Wernham; Mark Charles Fissel; Guy Rowlands; John Stapleton; David J.B. Trim.

Table of Contents

1 Amphibious warfare, 1000-1700 : concepts and contexts / D. J. B. Trim, Mark Charles Fissel 2 Amphibious operations from the Norman conquest to the crusades of Saint Louis, c. 1500-c. 1250 / Matthew Bennett 3 Amphibious warfare in the Baltic : the Hansa, Holland and the Habsburgs (fourteenth-sixteenth centuries) / Louis Sicking 4 Portuguese amphibious warfare in the east in the sixteenth century (c. 1500-1520) / Malyn Newitt 5 Amphibious warfare in the Baltic, 1550-1700 / Jan Glete 6 The siege of Malta (1565) and the Habsburg-Ottoman struggle for domination of the mediterranean / John F. Guilmartin, Jr. 7 Amphibious operations and the Elizabethan assault on the Spanish Atlantic economy 1585-1598 / R. B. Wernham 8 English amphibious warfare, 1587-1656 : galleons, galleys, longboats, and cots / Mark Charles Fissel 9 The king's two arms : French amphibious warfare in the mediterranean under Louis XIV, 1664 to 1697 / Guy Rowlands 10 The blue-water dimension of King William's war : amphibious operations and allied strategy during the nine years' war, 1688-1697 / John M. Stepleton, Jr. 11 Medieval and early-modern inshore, estuarine, riverine and lacustrine warfare / D. J. B. Trim Conclusion / D. J. B. Trim, Mark Charles Fissel

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top