The Norman Commanders (Paperback)
Masters of Warfare 911-1135
Imprint: Pen & Sword Military
Pages: 256
Illustrations: 60 colour & black and white
ISBN: 9781526782014
Published: 17th August 2020
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Robert Guiscard, William the Conqueror, Roger I of Sicily and Bohemond Prince of Antioch are just four of the exceptional Norman commanders who not only led their armies to victory in battle but also, through military force, created their own kingdoms in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. Their single-minded and aggressive leadership, and the organization, discipline and fighting qualities of their armies, marked them out from their Viking forebears and from many of the armed forces that stood against them. Their brilliant careers, and those of Robert Curthose, William Rufus, Richard I of Capua and Henry I of England, are the subject of Paul Hill's latest study of medieval warfare.
In a narrative packed with detail and insight, and with a wide-ranging understanding of the fighting methods and military ethos of the period, he traces the course of their conquests, focusing on them as individual commanders and on their achievements on the battlefield. The military context of their campaigns, and the conditions of warfare in France and England, in southern Italy and Sicily, and in the Near East, are vividly described, as are their decisive operations and sieges – among them Hastings, Brémule, Tinchebrai, Civitate, Misilmeri, Dyrrhachium and the Siege of Antioch.
There is no doubt that the Normans' success in war depended upon the leadership qualities and military capabilities of the commanders as well as the special strengths of the armies they led. Paul Hill's accessible and authoritative account offers a fascinating portrait of these masters of warfare.
A masterpiece of historical research, "The Norman Commanders: Masters of Warfare 911-1135" is an extraordinary and impressive work of meticulous scholarship that is further enhanced for academia with the inclusion of a four page Bibliography and an eight page Index.
Midwest Book Review
Read the full review here
As featured on Balkan Wargamer
Balkan Wargamer
Paul Hill has produced a thorough and wide ranging overview of the Normans and their frequently superlative commanders in this detailed and readily accessible work. Through and examination of individual Norman commanders, battles, sieges and the methods of warfare they practised Hill explores how and why these victories allowed comparatively small groups of adventurers and mercenaries to establish themselves as kings and forge new Norma realms across the medieval world....
Medieval Warfare magazine, September - October 2016
... Hill's work is an excellent overview of the Normans, their commanders and the warfare they practised across the medieval world.
This brilliant book with a brilliant cast of participants follows the men of extraordinary ability and courage, who created and ruled their kingdoms with a mixture of cruelty and magnanimity.
The Bulletin of The Military Historical Society
From their campaigns to their battles, its remaining secrets are revealed.
After examining the rise of the Normans in this his latest period book, the author discusses the lives of eight different Norman Commanders. This section followed by a look at 11 battles and campaigns they variously conducted and then by an extensive analysis of the Norman way of war. This includes the Normans and their horses, logistics and supply, training, leadership and discipline, strategy - the role of castles and their garrisons, the nature of sieges, ravaging and harrying, using the landscape - the list goes on.
Military Modelling - Stuart Asquith
The extensive text is rounded off with the author's conclusion, a bibliography and an index. There are numerous illustrations - 30 photos in monochrome, 20 more in colour, 16 figures and 16 maps, plus a table showing the probable combatants at Hastings. This is a perhaps surprisingly absorbing book, with the author dispensing a great deal of information in a reliable but most readable manner. Highly recommended as an insight into aspects of early medieval warfare.
As seen on.
Books Monthly
http://www.booksmonthly.co.uk/nonfic.html
'... a narrative packed with detail and insight, and a wide-ranging understanding of the fighting methods and military ethos of the period...'
Oxted Today
Ask any person in the street to name a Norman commander (notwithstanding Norman Schwarzkopf the American Gulf War Commander!) and most will reply – William the Conqueror. His son, William ‘Rufus’ II is rarely remembered and his antecedents almost totally unacknowledged. In one volume Paul Hill gives us an accessible and scholarly history of the battle hardened Dukes of Normandy from their foundation by the Scandinavian born adventurer Rollo (the Northman/Normandy) to the creation and expansion of their seat of power in Normandy and their ultimate conquest of England.
Chris Heath - author of Denby & District
Commanders covered in detail include Robert Guiscard, Richard I (Count of Aversa), Roger I (Count of Sicily), William II and Henry I of England, Robert II Curthose (Duke of Normandy) and Bohemond (Prince of Antioch) as well as the ubiquitous William the Conqueror. After the first 100 pages we are by now well aware as to who was who and the author launches into the battles undertaken by these charismatic leaders. Hastings (of course) is included alongside others including Tinchebrai, Alencon, Bremule and others, some of which I had never heard of. A gap in my knowledge now more than fully assimilated due to this book.
The final section of the book details the nature of the warfare undertaken by the Norman’s, recruitment, logistics, supply, training, discipline, castles, sieges and tactics. A final section has details on light and heavy artillery, archers and crossbowmen.
This book deals with a subject matter I have never before seen brought into one volume and fills what I consider to be a void in the market and on the shelves of any Medieval history scholar, be they amateur or academic. The way the chapters are split means it is an excellent source of reference as well as an absorbing investigation of the time period involved (911-1135). The author displays his detailed knowledge and passion for the era on every page and has created a work which will entertain and inform all those with an interest in the origins and creation of the Dukedom of Normandy and their subsequent rule as mighty Kings of England.
About Paul Hill
Paul Hill is well known as a lecturer, author and expert on medieval warfare and military archaeology, and he has written several books on these subjects, among them The Age of Athelstan: Britain's Forgotten History, The Viking Wars of Alfred the Great, The Anglo-Saxons at War 800-1066, The Norman Commanders: Masters of Warfare 911-1135, The Knights Templar at War 1120 -1312 and The Kingdom of the Anglo-Saxons: The Wars of King Alfred 865-899.