Tag: Warriors

Warriors, Queens, and Intellectuals 36 Great Women Before 1400 [TTC Audio]


Free Download Warriors, Queens, and Intellectuals: 36 Great Women Before 1400 [TTC Audio]
English | June 21, 2019 | ASIN: B07SXB93MZ | M4B@128 kbps | 17h 58m | 1.01 GB
Lecturer: Joyce E. Salisbury
Throughout history, women have played integral roles in family, society, religion, government, war – in short, in all aspects of human civilization. Powerful women have shaped laws, led rebellions, and played key roles in dynastic struggles. Some were caught up in forces beyond their control, while others manipulated and murdered their way to the top. However, unearthing their stories from the historical record has been a challenge, with the ordinary difficulties of preserving information across the generations increased by centuries of historical bias and gendered expectations. Women, when they were mentioned at all, often filled the role of virtuous maiden, self-effacing mother, or seductive villain. Imagine what you are missing when only half the story is being told.

(more…)

Corporate Warriors; The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry


Free Download Corporate Warriors; The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry By P. W. Singer
2007 | 688 Pages | ISBN: 0801474353 | PDF | 14 MB
It was only indirectly that I first stumbled across the phenomenon of private companies offering military services for hire. I had never heard of such a thing, until I joined a U. N. -supported project in 1996, researching the postwar situation in Bosnia. As we interviewed regional specialists, government officials, local military analysts, and peacekeepers in the field, it soon became evident that the entire military balance in the Balkans had become dependent on the activities of one small company based in Virginia, (Military Professional Resources Incorporated)-MPRI. I visited the firm’s regional offices, located in a nondescript building along the Sarajevo riverfront, where the firm coordinated the arming and training of the Bosnian military.The members of the firm were polite and generally helpful, but the ambiguity between who they were and what they were doing always hung in the air. They were employees of a private company, but were performing tasks inherently military. It just did not settle with the way we tended to understand either business or warfare. However, there they were, simply doing their jobs, but in the process altering the entire security balance in the region. I was struck by this seeming disconnect, between the way we normally view the world of military affairs and the way it actually is, and wanted to learn more. I spent the next years following just that path, interviewing hundreds who either work in the industry or are close observers of it and even spent a period working at the Pentagon, helping to oversee one of the firm’s contracts.In the time since, both the industry and the firm I visited have certainly grown up. MPRI was recently bought by a Fortune-500 firm, while other companies offering military services have been discussed in many of the world’s most prominent newspapers, radio, and TV outlets. 1 Beyond the general media, the idea of private businesses as viable and legitimate military actors has also begun to gain credence among a growing number of political analysts and officials, from all over the political spectrum. 2 Their activities have caught the attention of legislative officials in a number of countries and led to the submission of several bills covering their actions. 3 An international forum of African heads of states advised their use in certain situations, as did the commander of the U. N. operation in Sierra Leone. 4 Even Sir Brian Urquart, considered the founding father of U. N. peacekeeping, advocated the hire of such firms.5 Another sign of emerging market maturity is that a new industry trade association, International Peace Operations. Association (IPOA), recently formed to lobby on behalf of military firms.Such company contracts are protected under proprietary law, often making their activities completely deniable.This secrecy can be an advantage to this line of business, and may in part explain its boom. The aura of mystery, however, somewhat curtails outside study. Thus, this work should be read with these limitations in mind. I have done my utmost to weed out the rumors from the facts and provide an objective analysis of the industry, indicating whenever appropriate what is confirmed and what is suspected. At the very least, it is the most complete overview of the private military industry available in the public domain.This study has been written with the conscious decision to speak to three different audiences. The first is the academic world. I hope that this project helps scholars and students (whether they study security issues, international relations theory-, political economy, or regional studies) gain greater insight into the privatized military phenomenon, not only its emergence, but also its importance. I also hope that the study dares academic readers to reexamine their theoretical presumptions. We should take a look beyond the dusty histories in the library and ensure that our understanding of the world is still in line with the momentous reality of an international system replete with players such as these firms.The second audience is the world of policy. Every day, individuals working in the field of foreign affairs and defense matters (whether in the government, the military, international organizations, humanitarian groups, or even the press) respond to crises and conflicts that touch on matters intimate to this new industry.Last is the general reader. Although the aim is a work of substance, I also hope to serve the individual who really doesn’t care about the fate of neo-realism or may never contract with one of these firms, but is simply looking to learn about a fascinating topic. The stories, personalities, and possibilities that emerge from this new industry are truly beguiling. Politics and war-fare are fundamentally exciting stuff. Of greater significance, they are also matters far too important to be left to the so-called experts.

(more…)

Warriors’ Wives Ancient Greek Myth and Modern Experience


Free Download Dr Emma Bridges, "Warriors’ Wives: Ancient Greek Myth and Modern Experience"
English | ISBN: 0198843526 | 2023 | 256 pages | EPUB | 1015 KB
Epic poetry and tragic drama provide us with some of the richest ancient Greek depictions of women who are married to soldiers. In tales of the Trojan War, as told by Homer, Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, we encounter these mythical warriors’ wives: Penelope, isolated but resourceful as she awaits the return of Odysseus after his lengthy absence; the war widow Andromache, enslaved and displaced from her homeland after the fall of Troy; the unfaithful and murderous Clytemnestra; and Tecmessa, a war captive who witnesses her partner’s breakdown and suicide in the aftermath of battle. Warriors’ Wives compares the experiences of these mythical characters with those of contemporary military spouses. Emma Bridges traces aspects of the lives of warriors’ wives-mythical and real, ancient and modern-from the moment of farewell, through periods of separation and reunion, to the often traumatic aftermath of war, to consider the emotional, psychological, and social impacts of life as a military spouse. By unearthing a wealth of contemporary evidence for the lives of the often silenced and unacknowledged partners of those who serve in the military, and by examining this alongside the ancient stories of warriors’ wives,

(more…)

Fierce Ruthless Warriors Who Shaped Ancient History Vol I & Vol II (2 Books in 1) Alexander the Great, Charlemagne [Audiobook]


Free Download Fierce Ruthless Warriors Who Shaped Ancient History Vol. I & Vol II: (2 Books in 1) Alexander the Great, Charlemagne, Genghis Khan, Hannibal, Julius Caesar, And Attila the Hun (Audiobook)
English | ISBN: 9798868650130 | 2023 | 8 hours and 18 minutes | M4B@64 kbps | 236 MB
Author: Andre T. Smith
Narrator: Alan Munro, Jim D. Johnston, Omar Johnson

"Fierce Ruthless Warriors Who Shaped Ancient History Vol. I & Vol II: Alexander The Great, Charlemagne, Genghis Khan, Hannibal, Julius Caesar, And Attila The Hun" by Andre T. Smith is a monumental two-in-one volume that brings to life six of the most formidable and influential warrior kings in ancient history. This comprehensive work meticulously chronicles the lives, battles, and staggering accomplishments of these legendary figures, whose actions reshaped the world. In Volume I, listeners are transported to the eras of Alexander the Great, whose vision of a united world extended far beyond his lifetime; Charlemagne, the bridge between ancient and modern Europe and a fierce proponent of Christianity; and Genghis Khan, possibly the greatest conqueror ever known, whose empire spanned continents.

(more…)

Warriors Extraordinary Tales from the Battlefield


Free Download Warriors: Extraordinary Tales from the Battlefield by Max Hastings
English | 6 Mar. 2006 | ISBN: 000719885X | True EPUB | 384 pages | 0.6 MB
An exhilarating and uplifting account of the lives of sixteen ‘warriors’ from the last three centuries, hand-picked for their bravery or extraordinary military experience by the eminent military historian, author and ex-editor of the Daily Telegraph, Sir Max Hastings.

(more…)

Warriors in Scarlet


Free Download Warriors in Scarlet by Knight Ian
English | June 9, 2022 | ISBN: 0230767303 | 549 pages | PDF | 19 Mb
With its exciting narrative style, careful analysis and emphasis on first-person accounts, Warriors in Scarlet is destined to become a classic.Following on from the bestselling success of Zulu Rising , acclaimed military historian Ian Knight has turned his attention to Queen Victoria’s army as it underwent seismic change between 1837 and 1860. The army drew men hoping to escape the harsh grind of rural life, the city slums of the Industrial Revolution and even prison sentences, and trained them to fight using techniques that had defeated Napoleon. But the rapid expansion of the British Empire meant they found themselves facing diverse and skilful enemies around the world. Often under-strength and operating in unfamiliar terrain, British troops had to adapt or die.In Warriors in The Life and Times of Britain’s Last Redcoa ts , Ian Knight draws on evocative accounts from ordinary soldiers as well as officers to show us what daily life was like in the army, from the floggings and desertions to the comradeship. He vividly recreates the action on the ground, from bloody skirmishes to disasters like the 1842 retreat from Kabul and Chillianwala – but shows that in reality the army won more than four-fifths of the battles they fought in this era. By 1860, redcoats no longer, they are a more professional, efficient and sometimes ruthless fighting force. .

(more…)