Even before your first example, the Austro-Hungarians performed the first aerial attack, on Venice, in around 1859/1860 (can't remember exactly when), by dropping bombs out of hot air balloons.

ATB
Moderator: pothos moderators
I stand corrected... if depressed.Semiramis wrote:I'm afraid bombing civilian centers with airplanes began earlier than WWII. This is what I could get my hands on at short notice and I doubt this list is comprehensive.
1911 - Italians bomb Libya as part of their invasion.
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Actually, there was - the British town of Whitby (I think it was) was bombed by the Germans in 1915 (I think it was - you can see that I'm a bit hazy off the top of my head) and a number of civilians were killed. The British used this as a piece of propaganda to gain recruits, calling for revenge, etc. It was the only attack on British soil during WWI.karen wrote: Was there no bombing in WWI, though?
It’s hard to talk about the attitudes of the general populace towards war pre-WWII in the English-speaking western countries, as the working-class grunt is rather ignored in the history books. Setting aside the cannon-fodder for the purposes of this discussion, if we look at the education system aimed at the sons of the English upper classes - the future cogs in the machine of the Empire - it’s obvious that some conquests and wars are glorified while others are derided as savage, violent and destroyers of civilization.karen wrote:Re the reputation of war: I am assuming, first off, that all along we've been talking about the reputation of war in the English-speaking western world. How good or bad a reputation it has in other parts of the world, I have no idea. (Anyone here who has?)
But for the English-speaking western world, I think we can use as a marker something we all know well -- the changing fortunes of Alexander's reputation. While everyone but the most extreme pacifists agrees that defensive war is morally defensible, it's aggressive war that the real debate is about. And having done what he did, Alexander is seen as a
symbol of aggressive war, its poster boy if you will.
What we see is that his reputation was unTarnished, as it were, in the early twentieth century, then took a dive in the late. My feeling is that this is due to a general turning of English-speaking western culture against wars of conquest and hence conquerors due to WWII, and perhaps some later conflicts, notably, for America, the Vietnam War.
I thought you were speaking about Curtius’ account of Alexander in the bold part, till I read the parenthesis. In the English-speaking western world, Badian may have been the first to offer a similar take on Alexander, giving more credit to those ancient Greek and Latin sources critical to Alexander, than the British and German historians before him.karen wrote:After Hitler and the cataclysm that was WWII, a new image of the conqueror arose: the genocidal megalomaniac, motivated by nothing but anger, ambition and greed, whose already-psychopathic character degenerates as his life goes on (all these things being fairly-well documented truths about Hitler).
what I am saying is that, if the academic consensus on Alexander is any indication, aggressive war is looked down upon more now than it was in the pre-WWII period of the twentieth century, in the English-speaking world.
Thank you, Sikander, for introducing me to this. I had not come across it before, and I am glad that I have now read it.sikander wrote:Mark Twain wrote "The War Prayer" and did not allow it to be pubished until after his death, because he said "It tells the truth and no one wants to hear the truth". If you have read it, you understand what he meant.
Sikander,sikander wrote:War has not lost its glamour, only its sutainability.
So many great posts, and good, thought-provoking comments. I agree very much about this attractiveness of war for the troops concerned. When the lads in 1914 were flocking to the recruiting stations, they were following in the footsteps of many generations before them, who'd felt that same pull.derek wrote:
As for the troops who take part in these wars? I'll guarantee that when the Falklands flared up, every soldier in the British army hoped his unit would be picked, and when Bush singled out Iraq, every US soldier hoped his unit would be picked. Why? Because every soldier (and man for that matter) wants the chance to at least experience war. When WW1 broke out, everyone thought it would be over by christmas and flocked to the recruiting stations, because none of them wanted to "miss out."
Derek
First off, welcome Fiona! I hope you like it here. I know that I've missed the forum during the recent downtime. It's great to be back though.Fiona wrote:So many great posts, and good, thought-provoking comments. I agree very much about this attractiveness of war for the troops concerned. When the lads in 1914 were flocking to the recruiting stations, they were following in the footsteps of many generations before them, who'd felt that same pull.
There's a great line in Thucydides about this - right at the beginning of the Peloponnesian War, he makes the beautifully dry comment:
"At the beginning of an undertaking the enthusiasm is always greatest, and at that time in both the Peloponnese and in Athens there were great numbers of young men who had never been in a war and were consequently far from unwilling to join in this one."
The implication being, of course, that once they had experienced war, they wouldn't be so keen on it - but by then, another generation will have come along, equally eager to find out for themselves. And so it goes on, and on, and probably always will.
Fiona
Something that was quite appropriate then and even more so in 338 when Athens, yet again indulging in the "Men of Marathon" mirage, called up the lists and sent to war men who'd largely no experience or - at most - little experience of what was to come.Fiona wrote:There's a great line in Thucydides about this - right at the beginning of the Peloponnesian War, he makes the beautifully dry comment:
"At the beginning of an undertaking the enthusiasm is always greatest, and at that time in both the Peloponnese and in Athens there were great numbers of young men who had never been in a war and were consequently far from unwilling to join in this one."