No posting today, and 10 o'clock con-call is cancelled as well as the whole mission.

イメージ 1

The American Civil War, Oct 3rd 2009 P91 N4P12 南北戦争(書評)

A British military historian, even one as distinguished as Sir John Keegan, is hard put to say something new about America's civil war. Fine American scholars, such as Bruce Catton, Shelby Foote and James McPherson, have explored every inch of its blood-sodden battlefields. Sir John's achievement is to bring an international perspective to a conflict which, in the number of casualties in relation to population, ゛bears comparison only with the European losses in the Great War and Russia's in the Second World War.゛
In the 1860s the French army was regarded as supreme by the staff at the American military college at West Point and both sides in the war respected French generalship. Napoleon's crushing victories at Austerlitz and Jena influenced the South's Robert E. Lee as he aspired to end the war with a climactic Napoleonic battle. The North's George McClellan was inspired by the Anglo-French campaign on the Black Sea in the Crimean war (1853-56) when he mounted an amphibious assult on Richmond, the capital of the Confederacy.
The Crimean war also resulted in improved medical care. Dorothea Dix of the American Sanitary Commission modelled military hospitals in and around Washington, DC, on Florence Nightingale's hospitals in the Crimea. And the Crimea made soldiers more hairy. In the mid-19th century beards were grown by just about every man in Britain in imitation of veterans, excused from shaving during bitter winters outside Sebastopol. The craze spread to America where almost all leading generals ゛cultivated a full set of whiskers゛
As well as looking back at European influences, Sir John looks forward to how the civil war changed European warfare. Relatively primitive trench warfare on the Confederacy's northern front in Virginia presaged the slaughter of trench warfare on the Somme and at Passchendaele. General William Tecumseh Sherman's spoliation of Georgia and the Carolinas ゛inaugurated a style of warfare that boded the worst sort of ill for peoples unable to keep a conqueror at bay, as Hitler's campaigns in eastern Europe 75 years later would testify.゛
Sir John's take on the war is that of a detached foreign observer. He declines to take sides and is almost immune to the notorious charm of the South that, to paraphrase ゛1066 and all that゛, leads so many civil-war buffs to conclude that the Unionists were right and repulsive, the Confederates wrong and romantic.
He lets his studied neutrality slip only occasionally. When, for instance, he suggests that Southern women are a distinctive breed even today, admired for their feminity and outgoing personality, and in European eyes ゛much more akin to European women than American women generally.゛ He is shocked by the absence of Confederate graves at Arlington or Gettysburg. Southern dead, he notes, were bundled into mass graves by northerners. ゛Even during the world wars, the British and French buried the German dead, the Germans buried their enemies... The Union treated those who died in rebellion against it as non-penple.゛
As a Southern gentleman, Robert E. Lee is seen by Sir John as peerless, though not as a general, where he rates him inferior to his Unionist counterpart, Ulysses Grant. He praises Lee for his purity of character and describes as a devoted Christian and noble soldier who spared his reunited country the horrors of protracted guerrilla warfare when he accepted defeat with grace. But it was Sherman, not Lee, who set the pattern for modern warfare.