Military Manners and Customs
Реклама. ООО «ЛитРес», ИНН: 7719571260.
Оглавление
Farrer James Anson. Military Manners and Customs
PREFACE
CHAPTER I. THE LAWS OF WAR
CHAPTER II. WARFARE IN CHIVALROUS TIMES
CHAPTER III. NAVAL WARFARE
CHAPTER IV. MILITARY REPRISALS
CHAPTER V. MILITARY STRATAGEMS
CHAPTER VI. BARBARIAN WARFARE
CHAPTER VII. WAR AND CHRISTIANITY
CHAPTER VIII. CURIOSITIES OF MILITARY DISCIPLINE
CHAPTER IX. THE LIMITS OF MILITARY DUTY
Отрывок из книги
It is impossible to head a chapter ‘The Laws of War’ without thinking of that famous chapter on Iceland headed ‘The Snakes of Iceland,’ wherein the writer simply informed his readers that there were none in the country. ‘The laws of war’ make one think of the snakes of Iceland.
Nevertheless, a summary denial of their existence would deprive the history of the battle-field of one of its most interesting features; for there is surely nothing more surprising to an impartial observer of military manners and customs than to find that even in so just a cause as the defence of your own country limitations should be set to the right of injuring your aggressor in any manner you can.
.....
It was in a campaign of this century, 1815, that General Roquet collected the French officers, and bade them tell the grenadiers that the first man who should bring him in a Prussian prisoner should be shot; and it was in reprisals for this that a few days later the Prussians killed the French wounded at Genappe.21
Grotius, after quoting the fact that a decree of the Amphictyons forbade the destruction of any Greek city in war, asserts the existence of a stronger bond between the nations of Christendom than between the states of ancient Greece. And then we remember how the Prussians bombarded the Danish town of Sönderborg, and almost utterly destroyed it, though it lay beyond the possibility of their possession; and we think of Peronne in France reduced to ruins, with the greater part of its fine cathedral, in 1870; and of the German shells directed against the French fire-engines that endeavoured to save the Strasburg Library from the flames that consumed it; and we wonder that so great a jurist could have been capable of so grievous a delusion.
.....