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OCR History revision notes: 'The Changing Nature of Warfare' Chapter 1 Unit 2 - the impact of the quality of soldiers $3.89
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OCR History revision notes: 'The Changing Nature of Warfare' Chapter 1 Unit 2 - the impact of the quality of soldiers

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Key revision notes for unit 1.2, 'the impact of the quality of soldiers', from the OCR History course 'The Changing Nature of Warfare '.

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  • August 2, 2022
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1.2 the impact of the quality of soldiers
The ‘quality’ of soldiers may refer to:

 Size of armies
 Level of training of soldiers
 Morale of soldiers (ideological element)
 Equipment of troops
 Experience of troops

Soldiers in the dynastic era

 Soldiers in the dynastic era served the aims of their monarch
o They were led by aristocrats
o Their aim was not to serve the nation but the dynasty
 Armies were not used to destroy rival dynasties – instead to gain territories/establish
colonies/suppress internal results
 Costs involved in maintenance meant armies were relatively small
 Based in barracks away from the civilian population
o Clear + absolute distinction between civilian and soldier
th
 18 century battles placed emphasis on drills and discipline
o Soldiers were not expected to think for themselves
 There was little to no ideological element; armies were there to reflect the glory of the
monarch
o No room for promotion of talented officers if they were of lower birth
o No belief in a national cause
o Loyalty was to the regiment, one's comrades or one's general

The French Revolutionary Wars

 Major change in the nature of armies brought about by the French Revolution:
o Rise in nationalism
o Soldiers fighting for the very survival of the Republic against the professional armies
of the European monarchs
 Revolution swept away aristocratic privilege + allowed for promotion of commanders based
on talent and success

The size of armies

 Quality of soldiers naturally decreased as size of armies increased
o Conscription gave rise to the ‘citizen army’
 Size of armies grew continuously throughout the period….
France:
o Peak number of soldiers raised by French Republic who could actually serve in the
Revolutionary Wars: approx. 390,000
o WW1 – France had mobilised 3.58 million men by late summer 1914

America:

o American Civil war involved 1.5 million Union soldiers (6% conscripted) and 750,000
Confederates (12% conscripted)

, o WW2 – 4 million US soldiers served

Russia:

o War of 1812: a force of 410,000 fought Napoleon
o WW2 – 35 million Soviet soldiers served

Prussia/Germany:

o Prussia raised 1.2 million men to fight France in 1870
o It mobilised 3.8 million in 1914
o 13 million German soldiers served in WW2

Quality of soldiers in the French Revolutionary Wars

 Hastily recruited army raised by Levee en Masse involved a change in tactics, because years
of intensive training in drill + musket technique could not be crammed into basic training
o Rigid line formation gave way to dense columns of men used like a battering ram
against enemy lines
o Columns would rush across and attack the enemy with shock tactics
 Columns were a way of coping with the quality of soldiers – no longer professionals but a
citizen army
o Quick training complemented revolutionary enthusiasm
o Columns were quick and easy to train new recruits in, taking just 2 months
 Against well-trained armies, the columns could suffer high casualties
o The size of the French army meant they could accept a level of casualties that the
enemy could not
o Battle of Jemappes 1792
 40,000 French soldiers fought 13,000 Austrians
 French suffered 2,000 casualties to the Austrians’ 1200
 Victories at Wattignies, Jemappes, Fleurus showed that overwhelming size of the French
army was enough to overcome the higher quality soldiers in the armies they faced
 French Revolutionary armies were highly motivated – revolutionary ‘élan’
o French soldiers were fighting for a national cause (the survival of the Republic)
unlike the professional armies they faced
o The enthusiasm for the Revolution appeared to enable the citizen army to withstand
trained professionals
 Battle of Valmy 1792: overwhelming élan of the French forces was a factor
in persuading the cautious Prussian general Brunswick to spare himself a
loss of manpower (though in reality the Prussian retreat was mainly down to
French artillery).
 French troops sang ‘Ca ira’ and ‘La Marseillaise’ – Valmy exemplified eager
participation of politically motivated civilians

Quality of soldiers in the Napoleonic Wars

 National enthusiasm important for Napoleon
o By the time of his later campaigns his armies were increasingly made up of foreign
conscripts who did not share the same nationalist fervour or motivation as soldiers
of French origin = less successful
 E.g. in 1812, the army Napoleon took into Russia was a multinational force

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