Lost Battles: Reconstructing the Great Clashes of the Ancient World
Stock No: WW430158
Lost Battles: Reconstructing the Great Clashes of the Ancient World  -     By: Philip Sabin

Lost Battles: Reconstructing the Great Clashes of the Ancient World

Bloomsbury Continuum / 2009 / Paperback

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Stock No: WW430158

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Product Description

For wargamers or those simply fascinated by historical warfare, Lost Battles offers some amazing perspectives on ancient war reconstruction. Using his experience with conflict simulation, Philip Sabin draws together ancient evidence and modern scholarship to construct a generic, grand, tactical model of 36 individual battles, uniting a mathematical framework with human decisions. Readers will be able to re-create fighting engagements, tweak the scenarios to fit their own ideas, and try out different tactics from those used historically! This book includes access to a downloadable computer simulation where the reader can view the author's simulations as well create their own. 298 pages, softcover.

Product Information

Title: Lost Battles: Reconstructing the Great Clashes of the Ancient World
By: Philip Sabin
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 320
Vendor: Bloomsbury Continuum
Publication Date: 2009
Dimensions: 9.30 X 6.20 (inches)
Weight: 1 pound 4 ounces
ISBN: 0826430155
ISBN-13: 9780826430151
Stock No: WW430158

Publisher's Description

From the author's introduction:

Ancient battles seize the modern imagination. Far from being forgotten, they have become a significant aspect of popular culture, prompting a continuing stream of books, feature films, television programs and board and computer games... there is a certain escapist satisfaction in looking back to an era when conflicts between entire states turned on clear-cut pitched battles between formed armies, lasting just a few hours and spanning just a few miles of ground. These battles were still unspeakably traumatic and grisly affairs for those involved - at Cannae, Hannibal's men butchered around two and a half times as many Romans (out of a much smaller overall population) as there were British soldiers killed on the notorious first day of the Somme.

However, as with the great clashes of the Napoleonic era, time has dulled our preoccupation with such awful human consequences, and we tend to focus instead on the inspired generalship of commanders like Alexander and Caesar and on the intriguing tactical interactions of units such as massed pikemen and war elephants within the very different military context of pre-gunpowder warfare.

Lost Battles takes a new and innovative approach to the battles of antiquity. Using his experience with conflict simulation, Philip Sabin draws together ancient evidence and modern scholarship to construct a generic, grand tactical model of the battles as a whole. This model unites a mathematical framework, to capture the movement and combat of the opposing armies, with human decisions to shape the tactics of the antagonists. Sabin then develops detailed scenarios for 36 individual battles such as Marathon and Cannae, and uses the comparative structure offered by the generic model to help cast light on which particular interpretations of the ancient sources on issues such as army size fit in best with the general patterns observed elsewhere. Readers can use the model to experiment for themselves by re-fighting engagements of their choice, tweaking the scenarios to accord with their own judgment of the evidence, trying out different tactics from those used historically, and seeing how the battle then plays out. Lost Battles thus offers a unique dynamic insight into ancient warfare, combining academic rigor with the interest and accessibility of simulation gaming. This book includes access to a downloadable computer simulation where the reader can view the author's simulations as well create their own.

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