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Author Charles Oman takes a look at the peasant uprising of 1381 which came to become known as Tyler's Rebellion. Wat Tyler, a key figure in the revolt, led a group from Canterbury to the seat of government to protest an unpopular poll tax. The revolutionaries demanded economic and social reforms in the dwindling days of feudalism in England. The author shows what took place in various parts of England. While the government took care of Tyler quickly and the changes did not come rapidly, feudalism continued to decline. Perhaps the author's own words sum up it up best: "In short, the great rebellion which we have been investigating does not mark the end any more than it marks the beginning of the struggle between the landholder and the peasant." The Kindle version I downloaded lacked footnotes; however, other reviews of the work describe poor formatting of footnotes in other Kindle versions. I want to know the sources consulted so I'd prefer a version with footnotes, but I'd prefer for the publishers to get the footnotes properly formatted so they don't become a deterrent to reading. In the end I learned a little about a period in which my ancestors lived, and since the man employing at least one family was mentioned, I feel I got a sense for what they likely experienced during this time.½
 
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thornton37814 | Apr 12, 2020 |
 
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ME_Dictionary | otra reseña | Mar 19, 2020 |
For a long time, this was the definitive work on European Warfare in the period. It is still a worthy stop on the route of specialist study.
 
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DinadansFriend | Sep 22, 2019 |
A pleasant and important work in the history of military history; if you're interested in high politics, macro events, wars, and material history, this is an essential book.

Frankly though, I don't care about it any more. It says almost nothing about the social world.
 
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sashame | Dec 9, 2018 |
An excellent example of how people always want to re-fight the last war. Whenever someone in the Middle Ages would come up with a new tactical innovation, they would dominate for awhile before being swept aside by the next innovation. Everyone thought that their winning method was the end all solution to victory in war and therefore refused to change. The French, British, Swiss, Spanish, Italians, Poles, Hungarians and Bohemians are all shown staying with what has always worked even when it has ceased to work. The Byzantine are held up as the exception to this pattern in that they used tremendous skill and flexibility to preserve their empire against terrible odds for more than 500 years. The book also points out very well that, other than among the Byzantines, the sophistication of tactics sunk to a very low level after the Roman period. Tactical thinking was crude in the extreme (sending a small force around behind the enemy was considered bold and brilliant). Strategy was nonexistent until near the end of the period. First written as an essay in 1885 and later expanded into a book. Was very influential in the early 20th Century. The book is on Patton's reading list.
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SPQR2755 | Oct 13, 2013 |
This book is the Pelvic Girdle of Peninsular War studies. If you don't have its support your argument will only be able to crawl, if move at all. Discussing a tool without the knowledge of how it is constructed severely limits your understanding of the uses to which it can be put. Some books have tried to replace it, but if your looking for bang for your buck, it's the deal. It's short on sociology, but most of those other books ignore the logistical support wing. take your choice.
 
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DinadansFriend | otra reseña | Sep 14, 2013 |
Great adventure, a bit bloodier than other British memoirs I've read so far. Vivid descriptions of Cuidad Rodrigo, Badajoz, and Salamanca. Wellington again comes across well as general, but of poor character.½
 
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ShaneTierney | Jun 25, 2012 |
In his history of Europe, Norman Davies mentioned that Sir Charles Oman covered a year every 1.16 pages in his history of the Dark Ages. This seemed a reasonable amount (some years are of no importance) and I knew Sir Charles by reputation from some other works. A straight political history of an era that has been poorly documented is hard to find-especially in our day, and I’ve enjoyed my forays into the Victorians, so off I went. Oman does not disappoint. The Dark Ages is an excellent introduction to the events of the Dark Ages on the Continent in Southern and Western Europe. Covering the aftermath of the fall of the Roman Empire in the West and the progress of its successor states, Oman traces the rise of Europe from the ashes of the Greco-Roman world. This is done without the benefit of modern archeology, which limits its scope to those areas we have documentation for. The book is organized in parallel chronological chapters each covering the various regions, limited to Western Europe (minus the British Isles) and the Balkans and Asia Minor.

As with any historian, Oman has his heroes and villains. The figure which emerges the most clearly and openly as a hero is Theodoric, King of the Ostrogothic Kingdom of Italy. Most assuredly, Theodoric was an effective administrator, capable general and relatively tolerant king. However, there are four huge stains on his record. First is the execution of Odoacer, the barbarian king of Italy and usurper of Romulus Augustulus, the last Roman Emperor. Second, is the execution of the great Boethius on suspicion of conspiracy with the Emperor Justin (and possibly plotting to restore the Roman Republic!) Third, the execution of Boethius’ father-in-law Symmachus for no reason other than that he disliked the execution of his son-in-law. Fourth is his imprisonment of Pope John I for political and religious reasons. One of the groups Oman is sympathetic to throughout the work is the Arians, and most of Theodoric’s problems stem from his attachment to this heresy. The native population of Italy was overwhelmingly Catholic and the Ostrogoths’ tenacious attachment to Arianism led to enormous problems. These were exacerbated by the relatively intact governmental, religious and social structure of Italy in his reign, where the Roman civil service and religious hierarchy were staffed with Catholic Romans. Had Theodoric anticipated the example of Henry IV and converted, i.e. “Rome is well worth a Mass”, the Ostrogoths may have remained in power like the Franks in Gaul. Without the cooperation of the populace, the conquest of Italy by the Byzantines would have been far more difficult. A united Italy of Romans and Ostrogoths would have been better able to withstand this and the Lombard onslaught, perhaps even avoiding the later fragmentation of the peninsula. Only a leader of Theodoric’s standing and ability could have pulled this off. In light of the later Visigothic experience, it could have been done. Oman doesn’t address this possibility.

Other heroes are the Iconoclastic Byzantine Emperors Leo III and Constantine V. Again, both of these men were extremely capable generals (Leo saved Constantinople) and effective administrators, but their religious zealotry clouded their reigns. Without the waste of resources and fraying of internal cohesion that the campaign against orthodox iconodules caused, the Byzantine revival of the 9th Century could have been anticipated by a century. I haven’t been able to discover Oman’s denomination, but I suspect that he was some type of Calvinist and this inclined him towards this sympathy with the iconoclasts. Iconodules are described as grossly superstitious, and previous effective uses of icons by the Emperor Heraclius as propogandic talismans are downplayed.

The villains are primarily Franks. Clovis (or Clodovech. Oman uses the less familiar Frankish version of his and other Franks names), while hailed as a unifier and effective general is decried as a murder and liar. I don’t know if this animus against the Franks is part of some anti-French feeling in Oman’s works (he wrote THE history of the Pennisular War and anti-French feelings were running high in the 1890s), but it distracts from the work. The more effective Frankish kings and mayors of the palace, like Clovis and Charles Martel were no more ruthless than the Ostrogothic kings had been, and had a tougher time, starting with a less developed region than Italy or Asia Minor. The later Merovingians were non entities, but the glory days of the House of Arnulf and Charlemagne certainly made up for this.

The work loses some steam in the aftermath of the reign of Charlemagne. This is probably inevitable, given the nature of the time-Vikings pressing from the North, Muslims from the South, and Magyars from the East. The Byzantine Empire suffered under a series of non-descript emperors at the same time. Christendom’s brightest light and most inspiring story at the time was Alfred the Great in Wessex, outside the scope of this work.

Aside from the above criticisms, I think that this is an excellent work, despite its age, and I don’t want the minor criticisms above to get in the way of anyone who might like to read this. One can get lost easily in the sea of Thrasamunds and Geilamirs and other Tolkienesque names of the period and Oman does an excellent job navigating them. If you want the basic story of the time (without the great deal of insight we have added since from archeology, especially on the activities of the pre-literate Germanic peoples and the Vikings), this is an excellent introduction.½
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Wolcott37 | otra reseña | Nov 21, 2010 |
Excellent detailed account of the entire war in Spain and Portugal. Well written covering virtually everything.
 
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GeoKaras | Jan 13, 2010 |
signed with author's gratitude
 
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Tryon_Library | May 28, 2012 |
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