Logistics and Supply Flashcards

1
Q

According to Parker, how many European became soldiers in the seventeenth century

A

10-12 million

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2
Q

Name 5 reasons why people volunteered to join the army

A

1.They were paid, and received a premium based demand agricultural labour and food prices.
2. hardship and want, caused by economic recessions, crop devestations.
3. Perhaps 25,000 Scotsman crossed the sea to serve the ‘Protestant Cause’ in central Europe between 1626 and 1632, fighting in Swedish or Danish armies.
4. Some volunteers were criminals who fought as an alternative to Execution and severe punishment.
5.The most desired type of volunteer was veterans: who had already mastered the trade of armies and became professional soldiers.

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3
Q

What year was a particularly bad winter and why did that cause people to become soldiers?

A

1710, the worst winter in 100 years. The price of bread rose so high that armies offered starving men a better chance at survival.

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4
Q

Why marched with the Mackay regiment in the thirty years war to defect protestantism?

A

Robert Munro

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5
Q

Name a country that favoured military expatriation and give an example

A

The Spanish Hasburgs
Roughly 50% of the Spanish army of Flanders had been recruited outside the country in which they fought.

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6
Q

What was the allocation system?

A

This was the permanent form of compulsory military service at the age of 15, embraced by Finland and Sweden during the reigns of Charles IX and Gustavus Adolfphus.

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7
Q

Why was it hard to gage the size of an army?

A

There was high levels of wastage and desertion, meaning variations in troop strength made it almost impossible for generals and governments to be sure of exactly the size of the armies at any given time.

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8
Q

Give an example of how much higher military outlays were in this period?

A

Louis XIV devoted 75% of his revenues to war

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9
Q

Why was loans a bad way of waging war?

A

Time and again, the temporary bankruptcy of the Spanish Crown caused the failure of her military operations.

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10
Q

How much Durcats did Charles V borrow in his war against France and the Turks?

A

9.8 million Durcats

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11
Q

What was military devolution?

A

Governments paid private contractors to supply military services.

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12
Q

How did armies on the move secure resources?

A

The ‘contribution system’: An army threatened to set fire to, or sack, a community unless it produced a ransom. If produced, the town would receive a letter of protection.

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13
Q

How was the problem of supply solved?

A

by the presence of a steady and predictable demand; when European needed large numbers of horses on a regular basis again, large numbers could be provided.

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14
Q

Give an example of having trouble feeding a large army

A

To produce the 45 000 pounds of bread each day to feed an army, over 100 000 pounds of flour had to be baked.

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15
Q

What does Parker argue is the greatest problem of logistics and supply, and how is this helped?

A

(i) there was simply too many troop in too small an area
(ii) An innovation from the Netherlands of stone and timber ‘barragues’ was soon followed by other states in western Europe.

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16
Q

By 1640, what does Olivares (Vallido of Philip IV) say about supply in Spain?

A

‘There is the most urgent lack of all necessities’

17
Q

Why did Spain desire Cavalry in France in the 1630s?

A

The logistics of France’s wide open spaces were in radical contrast to those of Flanders;
Cavalry would be important not only in deciding battles but for rapidity and depth of penetration, and also for liaison between the separate invading commands.

18
Q

why did the cavalry importance decline?

A

The cavalry were rarely seen as a decisive element of the military, especially with the rise of the naval military. In battle, the set-piece of Seige and march dominated.
To transport horses, it proved costly and wasteful of space, with horses also being a liability for attack.

19
Q

What does David Potter say about Parrott’s Business of war?

A

1.He interestingly characterises as a ‘military devolution’, instead of revolution.
2.Parrott explores how mechanisms of finance were pushed to breaking point during the period of Swiss, German and Italian mercenaries, leading to the need of borrow money on financial markets. The role of the private enterprise operators was therefore a natural development.
3. Military enterprisers themselves entered into credit arrangements with governments which gave them great leverage

20
Q

What does John Lynn say about Parrott’s Business of war?

A

1.With regards to long wars, such as the Long Turkish War 1593-1606, states could ask enterprisers to cover their own initial costs, since such entrepreneurs would have the chance to recoup their investments over a number of years rather than months.
2. Wallenstein, and Gustavus Adolphus sustained armies based on ‘contributions’, this could not last, and the second half of the war in Germany brought to prominence of smaller and more nimble armies, maintained by more reasonable and regularised contributions.

21
Q

What does Bert Hall about Parrott’s Business of war?

A
  1. Devolution gave rulers access to military resources that would otherwise have lain beyond their reach.
  2. there is evidence that matters improved as the Thirty Years’ War dragged on, that contract armies became smaller, more efficiently operated, and tactically more effective than in the early decades.
22
Q

Who was mostly likely to move into Military Enterprise?

A

Nobels, those with patronage and connections

23
Q

Why did Wallenstein’s military enterprise fail?

A

it had heavy demands on financial resources across the empire, including the contribution system, and when this started to implode, the debt started to increase.

24
Q

Give three examples of Problems with Military Devolution

A

1.commanders needed to tap into large and flexible networks of munitions and arms manufacturers, suppliers of food and clothing, and transport facilities.
2. Wallenstein and Gustavus Adolphus could experiment with military gigantism: Yet under both Wallenstein and Gustavus the problems, above all, the logistical challenges, of seeking to manage vast military forces spread across wide territories, were already becoming overwhelming.