The Asian Military Revolution
Records show that the Chinese invented gunpowder in the 800s. By the 1200s they had unleashed the first weapons of war upon their unsuspecting neighbours. This extraordinarily ambitious book traces the history of that invention and its impact on the surrounding Asian world - Korea, Japan, South East Asia and South Asia - from the ninth through the twentieth century. As the book makes clear, the spread of war and its technology had devastating consequences on the political and cultural fabric of those early societies although each reacted very differently. The book, which is packed with information about military strategy, interregional warfare and the development of armaments, also engages with the major debates and challenges traditional thinking on Europe's contribution to military technology in Asia. Articulate and comprehensive, this book will be a welcome addition to the undergraduate classroom and to all those interested in Asian studies and military history.
- Traces the history of guns and gunpowder in Asia across a thousand years
- Challenges traditional thinking on Europe's contribution to military technology in Asia
- Packed with information about military strategy, interregional warfare and the development of armaments
Reviews & endorsements
'This is an important study that students and teachers will find both informative and challenging. I thoroughly recommend it.' The Historical Association
Product details
July 2008Paperback
9780521609548
202 pages
227 × 152 × 12 mm
0.32kg
9 maps
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. China through the Yuan
- 2. Japan and the wars of unification
- 3. The Chinese military revolution and war in Korea
- 4. Southeast Asia
- 5. South Asia to 1750
- 6. The military revolution in South Asia:
- 1750–1850
- 7. The arrival and departure of the West
- Conclusion.