A Call to Arms : The Day War was Invented

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A Call to Arms : The Day War was Invented

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 226 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9789464261059
  • DDC分類 303.66

Full Description

One day, sometime around 1700 BC, a bronzesmith made the first sword. This marked a technological turning point, giving rise to an arms race that has never since ceased. Soon, over a vast area between the Baltic Sea and the Atlantic Ocean, thousands of weapons were manufactured. They were used in combat, then laid to rest, whole or broken, often during complex rituals that are still hard for us to understand.

 

Through the sword, the Bronze Age brought war into being. The warrior became an important figure. Societies were transformed, and came to revolve politically and economically around warfare. Western Europe developed new social structures, a new kind of civilisation involving neither towns, nor writing.

 

By tackling the subject 'a call to arms', Anne Lehoërff investigates war's long-term development. She focusses on oral societies which have for a long while remained poorly understood, passed over by a historical tradition that saw the world of Classical Antiquity in a different light to that of 'primitive' peoples. But our European ancestors have their own history, and this book tells it.

 

The French edition of A CALL TO ARMS was awarded the Verdun World Peace Center History Prize in 2018.

Contents

Introduction: Encountering War

How history comes to the historian

Going to war

History, a human science

Archaeology in history

War and European Protohistory revisited

 

What Wars?

Introductory narrative: Once upon a time, a warrior's weapons...

War words

Theories of war

The philosophical angle

Stateless societies as seen by Europeans

The 'savage' beneath our feet

Ever more archaeological evidence

Archaeology and history

The 'primitive' in the city

The war of origins

The Celt of our dreams

And there was war...

 

Research 'evidence'

Introductory narrative: Keeping Arms

An abundance of evidence

After the battle

The Metal Ages in pictures

Scenes of combat

The first battlefields

Sacred sites and cult objects

Skeletons and splinters

The Lessons of Bones

 

When Metal Speaks

Introductory narrative: The World of Metal

Fascinating metal

Metal choices in Europe

Unpicking harlequin's cloak

Hierarchies that dare not speak their name

Deciphering and understanding

In the laboratory

Starting the investigation at the end

In the bronze smith's cauldron

Under the metalworker's hammer

 

A list of weapons

Narrative introduction: The bronze-smith in his workshop

The sword extends the arm

The sword evolves

And a scabbard...

The spear thickens

Arrows of outrageous fortune

The ambiguity of the hafted axe

A shield to protect the body

The metal helmet reinforces the warrior's head

Metal to embellish the breast

 

Off to war

Introductory narrative: Taking up arms

Violence in the Palaeolithic

Multiple-use technology in the Neolithic

What kind of Neolithic 'war'?

Declaring war in the Bronze Age

The revolution in fighting in 1700 BC

Multifaceted war in the Iron Age

Violence upon violence

Farewell to arms

Metal hoards

 

War in all its States

Introductory narrative: The 1000 BC warrior on the Normandy coast

Women: goddesses or sinners?

Masculine domination

Rich women without weapons

Transgressing norms

Reasons for war

The State, primitives, the written word. Terms of power.

What sort of society?

Three ages of war?

Words and functions for all

The West in the dynamics of warfare

 

Conclusion: The human level

Questions of scale

War and peace

A trip to the Bronze Age kitchen

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