Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 326
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-5381-0968-7 • Hardback • May 2018 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
978-1-5381-0969-4 • eBook • May 2018 • $42.50 • (£35.00)
Subjects: History / Military / Strategy,
Political Science / Security (National & International),
History / Military / United States,
History / Military / Medieval,
History / Military / World War I,
History / Africa / General,
History / Asia / General,
History / Europe / General,
History / Latin America / General,
History / Middle East / General,
History / Europe / Russia & the Former Soviet Union
Jeremy Black graduated from Cambridge University with a Starred First and did graduate work at Oxford University before teaching at the University of Durham and then at the University of Exeter, where he is professor emeritus of history. He has held visiting chairs at the United States Military Academy at West Point, Texas Christian University, and Stillman College. He is a 2018 Templeton Fellow of the Foreign Policy Research Institute. Black received the Samuel Eliot Morison Prize from the Society for Military History in 2008. His recent books include Naval Warfare: A Global History since 1860, Insurgency and Counterinsurgency: A Global History, Air Power: A Global History, and Combined Operations: A Global History of Amphibious and Airborne Warfare.
Abbreviations
Preface
Chapter 1: Origins
Chapter 2: The Medieval Castle
Chapter 3: The Sixteenth Century
Chapter 4: The Seventeenth Century
Chapter 5: The Eighteenth Century
Chapter 6: The Nineteenth Century
Chapter 7: The World Wars
Chapter 8: Since World War Two
Chapter 9: Conclusions
Notes
Selected Further Reading
Credits
About the Author
Drawing on compelling comparisons informed by social and economic factors, Jeremy Black brings a global perspective and a clear understanding of how fortifications and siegecraft served specific military tasks. An invaluable contribution to a topic often overlooked in military history, his book highlights the ongoing interplay between defensive works and modes of attack in sophisticated and insightful ways.
— Stephen Morillo, Wabash College
With striking clarity, Black reveals how war across the ages has turned on fortifications. From ancient Mesopotamia to Mosul in the twenty-first century, armies have paid in blood for attacking them. Black charts the history of this long struggle between flesh and masonry, revealing how different cultures across the ages have used, located, developed, and elaborated such structures. Equally, he analyzes the interaction between fortifications and attack, revealing how human ingenuity has been applied to capturing forts; every method, from bloody assaults to bribery, has been applied. But, as Black shows, short of total destruction of the target, siege warfare is a terrible and costly business, even for the most modern of armies.
— John France, Swansea University