Iracundus wrote:What systems would you have chosen to compare then? Because it seems essentially you are saying you can never examine different cultures alongside each other in any sense because "Duh, they're DIFFERENT". Taken to that extent, one might say it is pointless to examine any history other than the present, because everything in the past is so different.
I have never seen a better strawman and reductio ad absurdum in my life. Good job.
Similar social constructs and methods of organization have arisen throughout history and some of these are similar enough to be grouped together. Hence why it is even possible to talk about "monarchies", "kingdoms", and other general institutions. Sure there are differences from how the Pharaoh of Egypt of any period ran things compared to Imperial China and so on, but that doesn't mean there cannot be comparisons on the points of similarity, and also the points of difference.
My isssue is that ancient kingdoms and medieval kingdoms and renaissance stater are so dissimilar that comparing them is already a pain. It makes no sense to me to compare vastly different cultures in vastly different times.
Of course there are broad themes of things like knock-on effects, but the discussion is in the details. Every decision of any polity has knock-on effects for good or ill.
Seems like details are being ignored here though for the sake of broad strokes designs. Broad stroke theories almost always fail in history.
As the quote said earlier, the times were chosen because of the view they were going through similar social and political changes and states despite their separation in time. It isn't a comparison of systems as they were on opposite ends of Eurasia at a single point in time.
This is bullshit, do you think the ancient world had no similar social and political changes? How is a comparison of the Diadochi states not vastly better here, given they were large warring states that spanned huge territories?
Equalized out in that no state had significant technological advantage over another. Qin and its peers were about equal technologically, and the European comparison for equal states of the same period. Each state gaining or failing to gain advantage over its peers could not be therefore laid at the feet of technological advantage or disadvantage.
That depends. There are vast technological differences between European states of the same time. I doubt any serious historian would argue that during the renaissance, say, a city like Krakow is in any way the technological equal to, say, the city of Milan.
Are you arguing that tax farming isn't weakening to the state in the long run, at least in the form it was conducted historically? It may have been done due to limits of government apparatus to conduct census and assessment or due to issues of saving time and effort, but how is paying interest to private individuals to collect government taxes (or signing away administrative rights to the farmed area) not weakening the state? Quite apart from the financial take, it diluted the state's power over its own territory. It creates regional centers of powers around what could end up as warlords (which is what happened under later Chinese dynasties when military powers were farmed out in addition to fiscal and administrative).
This argument is easily diffused by the simple fact that the Roman republic did exist for several hundreds of years without tax farming weakening it in the long run or creating local centers of resistance, nor did it put the Republic behind its competitors. In fact, one may easily make the argument that localized sub-contracting and localized administration allowed the Roman Republic to have a great deal of flexibility in terms of crisis management and a great amount of integration and assimilation of the local elites, which in turn directly fueled the Roman rise to power. In fact, this is one of the leading theories behind the rise of Rome in the first place - they were so successful because they allowed the local people to keep their traditions and culture and rulers as long as they adhered to certain conditions.
Machiavelli was cited to say the words and argue the point. There are a range of other papers cited supporting the idea of high desertion rates among mercenary forces.
As for the high desertion rate, that was from Parrott, David A. 1995 Strategy and Tactics in the Thirty Years' War.
You are still missing the point. Even if the author only used machiavelli as a prop, the truth remains that she badly slanders over 2 millennia of mercenary tradition. The Thirty Years war is also a bad example due to the extraordinary circumstances of that time.
At this point I have to conclude that anybody who says that mercenaries are inherently weaker than citizen forces is ignorant of the historical facts.
While any army will either disband or mutiny with no support, the issue of the revolt was tied into the other issue of fiscal burden, namely that the fiscal burden of mercenaries exceeded the capability of early European rulers to reliably pay them. Would the the fiscal burden of raising a massed levy army have been different? Certainly the effort on the part of the government would have been greater in establishing the logistical infrastructure and capabilities, but would it have paid out financially in the long term?
Failure to pay is nothing new to history. Raising massed levy armies is both impractical as financially ruinous in itself. If you conscript your peasants, you are weakening yourself. BTW, raising levvies was used en masse during the Thirty Years war to little effect. As long as firearms remained primitive and thereby weaponry training involved a great deal of skill and effort (effort no non-professional can make) citizen levvies cannot stand up to professional soldiers.
Sure mercenaries might be the best option in the lack of national armies, but why weren't there national armies until that much later?
There were some, see for example Maurice of Nassau. But national armies still are not superior to mercenaries due to the aforementioned difficulties.
Qin and the Warring States certainly went down that route of mass citizen troops. Certainly there is no mention of mercenary companies on any scale. If they could do that in circa 350 BC, why wasn't the same implemented in post-Roman states?
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Did you somehow miss the fact that mass citizen/tribe member levvies is exactly the way the Germanic tribes and Roman successor states fought? They still lost to the mercenary/professional armies of Byzantium. Anyway, up until the age of Karl Martell mass levvies was exactly the way warfare was done in post-Roman Europe. Thing is, this proved to be inferior to the specialized professional soldiers of Martell and Charlemagne.
ray245 wrote:Thanas wrote:
That is different. Those are contemporary empires with similar cultures, a common language and similar threats to their expansion. Unlike a culture which is on another continent, has different cultural and philosophical values and where there is a 1000 year difference.
Do you see much value in comparing the Tang dynasty with the Byzantine empire then? Comparing contemporary empires with vastly different culture would allow us to easier identify how has culture shaped the organisation and decision making process.
I am not much of a fan of comparative history in General, but I would agree that it can be useful when comparing empires in the same period and in similar situations. However, IMO only the comparison between the Roman Empire and the Qin or Han Empire is a valid one (especially considering trade between the nations etc.)
Iracundus wrote:
Why not just pick the Roman empire or the empire of Alexander?
Because again this isn't Qin dynasty vs. Roman empire or Alexander's empire. The comparison sought was a comparison of a divided political system with no superpower. Again I don't know why the united empires get dragged into this, because the book restricts its comparison to the time of division not the time after unification.
Then the age of the diadochi would be the perfect comparison, since it has similar levels of technology and no clear superpower as well. Much better than using the middle ages and the renaissance.