War; Reproduced with Amendments from the Article in the Last Edition of the "Encyclopaedia Britanica" |
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Сторінка 4
... move- ments and co - operation depended on perfect organisation , and on a training which made every officer and every man know almost instinctively what to do and what decisions to form as each emergency arose . The Germans had in the ...
... move- ments and co - operation depended on perfect organisation , and on a training which made every officer and every man know almost instinctively what to do and what decisions to form as each emergency arose . The Germans had in the ...
Сторінка 25
... move- ments . Hence , apart from the large means of transport , such as a great fleet or ample railway communication , which may be sometimes used to carry a whole army to a given destination , an army requires what is known as ...
... move- ments . Hence , apart from the large means of transport , such as a great fleet or ample railway communication , which may be sometimes used to carry a whole army to a given destination , an army requires what is known as ...
Сторінка 27
... move by railway . The miscalculations and mistakes , which were made so recently as 1870 by the * The entire army employed in Egypt was about 30,000 strong . The reference in the text is to the force which first landed at Ismailia ...
... move by railway . The miscalculations and mistakes , which were made so recently as 1870 by the * The entire army employed in Egypt was about 30,000 strong . The reference in the text is to the force which first landed at Ismailia ...
Сторінка 33
... move- ment to collapse , and obliged the Russians to turn their attention to the force which thus threatened them . of stra- This movement of Osman Pasha's illustrates very happily Relations several points in the relation between ...
... move- ment to collapse , and obliged the Russians to turn their attention to the force which thus threatened them . of stra- This movement of Osman Pasha's illustrates very happily Relations several points in the relation between ...
Сторінка 35
... move- ments of an army in such a way as to leave an enemy up to the last moment uncertain in what direction the blow would be struck . Usually also some special effort has been made to induce the enemy to believe that he would be ...
... move- ments of an army in such a way as to leave an enemy up to the last moment uncertain in what direction the blow would be struck . Usually also some special effort has been made to induce the enemy to believe that he would be ...
Загальні терміни та фрази
able action advance advantage ammunition arms artillery fire assailant attack battery battle-field Bazaine Berlin body Bruxelles Captain Carl von Clausewitz cavalry circumstances Clausewitz Colonel command Comte de Paris corps Crimea drill Dumaine effect employed Encyclopædia Britannica enemy enemy's engaged English experience exposed fact field of battle flank force Fortification France front Général German Gizycki Guerre guns Hamley Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen illustration important leaders London long-range fire Major manœuvres Marquis de Grouchy material ment Militaire military history military literature Mittler mounted infantry movements Napoleon necessary officers official history operations organisation paign Pajol Paris past Peninsular War Plevna position possible practical present Prince Kraft principles Prussian railway realise Regiment rience Royal Artillery Institution shells soldiers Spicheren strategy success supply tactics tion translated troops valuable volleys vols warfare Waterloo campaign weapons Wellington whole Wörth
Популярні уривки
Сторінка 136 - Crown 8vo, 5s. 6d. ADAMS. Great Campaigns. A Succinct Account of the Principal Military Operations which have taken place in Europe from 1796 to 1870. By Major C. ADAMS, Professor of Military History at the Staff College. Edited by Captain C. COOPER KINO, RM Artillery, Instructor of Tactics, Royal Military College.
Сторінка 131 - Despatches and Papers relative to the Campaign in Turkey, Asia Minor, and the Crimea, during the War with Russia in 1854, 1855, 1856.
Сторінка 7 - Hamley. masses from one kind of formation to another, or their transference from point to point of a battle-field, for purposes which become suddenly feasible in the changing course of the action.
Сторінка 8 - It must be emphatically asserted that there does not exist, never has existed, and never, except by pedants, of whom the most careful students of war are more impatient than other soldiers, has there ever been supposed to exist, " an art of war " which was something other than the resultant of accumulated military experience.
Сторінка 136 - Great Campaigns : a Succinct Account of the Principal Military Operations which have taken place in Europe from 1796 to 1870. Edited from the Lectures and Writings of the late Major C. Adams by Captain C. Cooper King.
Сторінка 11 - It is an unanswerable assertion that only by study of the past experience of war has any great soldier ever prepared himself for commanding armies.
Сторінка 138 - The System of Attack of the Prussian Infantry in the Campaign of 1870-7 1.
Сторінка 71 - The artillery must in the first place hit, in the second place hit, and in the third place hit." (Prince Hohenlohe's correspondent "Letters on Artillery," p. 385.) "A high velocity increases the probability of hitting, and therefore it would seem that velocity is of greater importance than the size of the shell after the latter has reached a certain limit. This is essentially so with shrapnel-shell...
Сторінка 13 - Now the great strategic movements of armies have depended always upon their means of obtaining food and warlike supplies.
Сторінка 29 - ... handles, and to breaking up and destroying the efficiency of that to which he is opposed. This is the central fact to be kept in mind. Generals and soldiers, long accustomed to look at war from this point of view, frequently embody their whole conception of strategy in a phrase which to a reader, taking it in its simple form, is apt to seem like a mere truism — that the great principle of strategy is to concentrate the largest possible force at the right moment at the decisive point. So stated,...