I will not begin by typing, “Read this book.” If you want to get a good introduction to the Renaissance, power struggles, princes, popes, and warfare during the Renaissance you could begin with The Renaissance at War, by Thomas F. Arnold, edited by John Keegan.
Thomas F. Arnold. John Keegan, ed. The Renaissance at War. London: Smithsonian Books. 2006. Paperback edition.
This book is all about presenting selected examples of warfare in the Renaissance via the vehicle of a historical narrative associated with maps, and charts, and illustrations, and topographical graphics.
Some say the authors reached few conclusions. Others say the illustrations, maps, and ephemera detracted from the book. Critics say they were sorry for reading it.
Thomas F. Arnold has written some very concise sentences and strung together paragraphs and chapters just as well crafted giving fine descriptions of battles, potentates, and the mixture or power-politics and daring martial exploits and he has even gone to the effort to provide good design with a bibliography (list of books), and a useful index. John Keegan as editor puts a mark of distinction of most anything he writes.
While perhaps not the definitive work on the Renaissance though the lens of the many wars, myriad rulers, and the life as usual pecking order among those in power or those seeking power, Thomas F. Arnold and editor John Keegan do a fine job with this book as set out in the “Introduction”. It always pays to read the introduction of books cuts down on confusion. The reader need not work on an advanced degree to enjoy this book. It was written for most readers.
The Renaissance was a period of ‘new birth’ in art, science, technology, and thinking, the word says it all. In the book The Renaissance at War the authors show and tell the reader and the visual learner how this word, Renaissance, applied to the same old topic of warfare, now with more firepower.
Critics aside, if the illustrations, maps, charts, and time-lines are confusing, how does one surf the web or read a newspaper? Give this book a second shot if any reader gave up on it. I am sure the effort will be rewarded.
This book is a good read, well designed, and nicely illustrated. Something for everyone interested in warfare, technology, the Renaissance, and European history 1453-1610.