History of War

Filtering by: History of War

‘Royal Engineers, Railways, and the Retreat: Longmoor's Role in Delaying the Japanese Advance through Burma in 1942’
Jun
13
5:15 PM17:15

‘Royal Engineers, Railways, and the Retreat: Longmoor's Role in Delaying the Japanese Advance through Burma in 1942’

History of War Seminars 2018
Week 8: Wednesday 13 June

All events take place on Wednesdays 5.15, Wharton Room, All Souls College


Michael Charney (SOAS) ‘Royal Engineers, Railways, and the Retreat: Longmoor's Role in Delaying the Japanese Advance through Burma in 1942’

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The Global History of War Lecture: Reaping the Rewards:  How the Governor, the Priest, the Taxman, and the Garrison Secure Victory in World History
Jun
2
5:00 PM17:00

The Global History of War Lecture: Reaping the Rewards:  How the Governor, the Priest, the Taxman, and the Garrison Secure Victory in World History

Oxford’s Centre for Global History and the Changing Character of War Centre, Pembroke College are pleased to host:

The Global History of War Lecture

Wayne E. Lee (UNC)

'Reaping the Rewards:  How the Governor, the Priest, the Taxman, and the Garrison Secure Victory in World History'

Pembroke College Pichette Auditorium
Saturday 2 June 2018, 5pm


Francis Bacon once opined: "Augustus Caesar would say, that he wondered that Alexander feared he should want work, having no more worlds to conquer: as if it were not as hard a matter to keep as to conquer."  Many societies have found that the process of converting military success into a consolidated conquest was harder than they expected.  Oddly, historians have not spent that much time on the problem either, preferring to focus more on the battles than the ensuing garrisons.  In this sweep through world military history, strategy, and logistics, Lee explores the "four pillars" of conquest (the titular governor, priest, tax man and garrison) and he then compares how those same pillars worked in non-state societies on the Eurasian steppe and in the Native American woodlands.

Wayne E. Lee is the Dowd Distinguished Professor of History at the University of North Carolina, where he also chairs the Curriculum in Peace, War, and Defense. He is the author of Waging War: Conflict, Culture, and Innovation in World History (2016), Barbarians and Brothers: Anglo-American Warfare, 1500-1865 (2011), and Crowds and Soldiers in Revolutionary North Carolina (2001) as well as two edited volumes on world military history and many articles and book chapters.  Lee has an additional career as an archaeologist, having done field work in Greece, Albania, Hungary, Croatia, and Virginia, including co-directing two field projects.  He was a principal author and a co-editor of Light and Shadow: Isolation and Interaction in the Shala Valley of Northern Albania, winner of the 2014 Society for American Archaeology's book award. In 2015/16 Lee was the Harold K. Johnson Visiting Professor of Military History at the U.S. Army War College.

Registration is required by contacting global@history.ox.ac.uk. A drinks reception will follow the lecture and all are welcome to attend.

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‘Glamping with Guns: Louis XIV, the Camp of Compiègne and the Origins of the Modern Military Exercise’
May
30
5:15 PM17:15

‘Glamping with Guns: Louis XIV, the Camp of Compiègne and the Origins of the Modern Military Exercise’

History of War Seminars 2018
Week 6: Wednesday 30 May

All events take place on Wednesdays 5.15, Wharton Room, All Souls College


 Guy Rowlands (St Andrews) ‘Glamping with Guns: Louis XIV, the Camp of Compiègne and the Origins of the Modern Military Exercise’

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‘Mercenaries, Militiamen, and Modernity: the Rhetoric of Military Reform in Nassau c. 1580-1620’ & ‘Another Attempt at Greatness: Swedish finances and administration in occupied Poland (1655-1657)’
May
2
5:15 PM17:15

‘Mercenaries, Militiamen, and Modernity: the Rhetoric of Military Reform in Nassau c. 1580-1620’ & ‘Another Attempt at Greatness: Swedish finances and administration in occupied Poland (1655-1657)’

History of War Seminars 2018
Week 2: Wednesday 2 May

All events take place on Wednesdays 5.15, Wharton Room, All Souls College


Louis Morris (Oxford), ‘Mercenaries, Militiamen, and Modernity: the Rhetoric of Military Reform in Nassau c. 1580-1620’

Alex Turchyn (Oxford) ‘Another Attempt at Greatness: Swedish finances and administration in occupied Poland (1655-1657)’

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Pacification and Counter Insurgency in Historical Perspective
Oct
4
8:30 AM08:30

Pacification and Counter Insurgency in Historical Perspective

  • All Soul's College, University of Oxford (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

This one-day conference assesses whether the current terminology helps or hinders analysis. It will bring together historians and political scientists to foster a more holistic dialogue, and it will widen the spatial and temporal boundaries to explore these phenomena from late Roman antiquity through the wars of the French revolution, the era of imperial acquisition, twentieth-century decolonization, and modern wars of liberal intervention...

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Feb
8
5:15 PM17:15

New Work in Progress: Haley Flagg, Ursula Westwood and Ilya Berkovich

  • Wharton Room, All Souls College Oxford, OX1 4AL (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

This seminar will feature three speakers:

  • Haley Flagg (St Andrews) Making the System Work: Incorporating Cultural Values in the formation of Roman Auxiliary Cavalry
  • Ursula Westwood (Oxford) “Not only in Judaea”: Josephus on Roman civil war in the Jewish War
  • Ilya Berkovich (Ludwig Maximilians Universität Munich) Conscription and Marriage in the Army of Joseph II

 

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Nov
2
5:15 PM17:15

New Work in Progress

  • Wharton Room, All Souls College OX1 4AL (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

This event includes three speakers:

  • Lucia Staiano-Daniels (UCLA) War People: The Thirty Years’ War, the Experience of the Common Soldier, and the Mansfeld Regiment (1625-1627)
  • Andrew Tzavaras (Oxford) The Galleys of Santo Stefano as a Lens for Understanding the Mediterranean as a Geographical-Strategic-Political Space
  • Adam Storring (Cambridge) The Intellectual History of War. A New Perspective on Frederick the Great of Prussia

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Jun
15
5:15 PM17:15

New Work in Progress Workshop: Early Modern

  • Wharton Room, All Souls College Oxford OX1 4AL (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

This workshop will include four talks:

  • Michael Depreter: The ‘Artillery Revolution’ in the Burgundian Low Countries (1450-1493): A Reassessment
  • Tom Boyd: Artillery in the Early Modern Anglo-Scottish Border Region
  • Ryan Crimmins: Confession in the Armies of the Thirty Years War
  • Liao Ping: Religion and the Late Stuart Army, 1660-1714

 

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