The barbarian invasions

Front Cover
U of Nebraska Press, Jan 1, 1990 - History - 487 pages
Moral decadence did not contribute to the fall of the Roman Empire, but political instability that was most strongly reflected in a weakened army did, writes Hans Delbr_ck in volume 2 of History of the Art of War. The rise of sectionalism and the constant overthrowing of emperors left the empire without a secure superior authority demanding the loyalty of the legions and without the money to support them. Delbr_ck?s celebrated work traces the collapse of the Roman military system and its replacement with barbarian mercenaries by the fourth century, following the invasions by the Germanic peoples.

The Barbarian Invasions opens with a discussion of the military organization of the early German tribes, compares it with that of the early Roman legions, and goes on to show how tactics and strategies changed after entire peoples such as the Goths, Vandals, and Burgundians migrated to Roman soil and formed an uneasy alliance with the Romans. It ends with an examination of the decline of the Germanic-Romanic military system in the Middle Ages and the rise of the feudal system.

This Bison Book edition marks the first appearance in paperback of the English translation of volume 2 by Walter J. Renfroe Jr.

 

Contents

List of Illustrations
7
The Early Germanic Nation
15
II
27
Germanic Warriorhood
39
III
50
V
109
Romans and Germans in Stalemate
149
VIII
161
VI
317
Justinians Military Organization
339
The Battle of Taginae
351
The Battle of Mount Vesuvius
363
The Battle on the Casilinus
369
Strategy
375
The Military Organization in
387
Changes in Tactics
407

IX
201
Decline and Dissolution of
207
BOOK II
243
The Battle of Strasbourg
250
The Battle of Adrianople
269
Army Strengths
285
The Peoples Armies in the Migrations
301
The Decline of the Original
417
The Origin of the Feudal System
427
Battle of Adrianople
461
Laws of Wamba and Erwig
469
Index
475
Copyright

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