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{{Short description|Military engagement}} | |||
{{alternateuses}} | |||
{{About|combat|other uses|}} | |||
{{more citations needed|date=April 2021}} | |||
] (red) and ] (blue) armies begin engagement of the decisive ], with ]n forces (gray) arriving from the northeast |alt=Overhead diagram of movement of forces at Battle of Waterloo]] | |||
Generally, a '''battle''' is an instance of ] in ] between two or more parties wherein each group will seek to defeat the others. Battles are most often fought during ]s or military campaigns and can usually be well defined in time, space and action. Wars and ] are guided by ] whereas battles are the stage on which ] are employed. German strategist ] stated that "the employment of battles to gain the end of war" was the essence of strategy. | |||
A '''battle''' is an occurrence of ] in ] between opposing ]s of any number or size. A ] usually consists of multiple battles. In general, a battle is a ] that is well defined in duration, area, and force commitment.<ref>p. 65, Dupuy</ref> An engagement with only limited commitment between the forces and without decisive results is sometimes called a ]. | |||
The word "battle" can also be used infrequently to refer to an entire operational campaign, although this usage greatly diverges from its conventional or customary meaning. Generally, the word "battle" is used for such campaigns if referring to a protracted combat encounter in which either one or both of the combatants had the same methods, resources, and strategic objectives throughout the encounter. Some prominent examples of this would be the ], ], and the ], all in World War II. | |||
]'' by ]]] | |||
== Characteristics of battle == | |||
] ] ] suggested an ideal definition of battle as "something which happens between two ] leading to the moral then physical disintegration of one or the other of them" though the origins and outcomes of battles can rarely be summarised so neatly. | |||
]s and ]s are guided by ], whereas battles take place on a level of planning and execution known as ].<ref>p. 10, Glantz</ref> German strategist ] stated that "the employment of battles ... to achieve the object of war"<ref>translation of part quote from p. 77, Clausewitz</ref> was the essence of ]. | |||
The "action" of battle is to reach a decision — the ideal decision is victory but strategy and circumstances often require a compromise. One party is deemed to have achieved victory when its opponent has ], been dispersed, forced to retreat or been rendered militarily ineffective for further combat operations. However, a battle may end in a ] which ultimately favours the defeated party. If no decision is reached in battle, the result is a ]. A conflict in which one side is unwilling to reach a decision in battle often becomes an ]. | |||
== Etymology == | |||
Up until the ] the majority of battles were of short duration, many lasting a day or less — the ] and the ] were exceptional for lasting three days. This was mainly due to the difficulty of supplying an army in the field. Typically the means of prolonging a battle was by ]. Improvements in ]ation and the onset of ], with its siege-like nature, saw the duration of battles increase to weeks and months, peaking during the ]. Nevertheless, in a long battle the regular rotation of units meant that the periods of intensive combat to which an individual soldier was subjected tended to remain brief. | |||
Battle is a ] from the ] {{lang|fr|bataille}}, first attested in 1297, from ] {{lang|la|battualia}}, meaning "exercise of soldiers and gladiators in fighting and fencing", from ] (taken from Germanic) {{lang|la|battuere}} "beat", from which the English word battery is also derived via ] {{lang|enm|batri}}.<ref>p. 33, Tucker</ref><ref>See also: Merriam-Webster Dictionary; Dictionary.com; and etymonline.com.</ref> | |||
== Characteristics == | |||
Battles may be small scale, only involving a handful of individuals, perhaps two ]s, up to battles on ] levels where hundreds of thousands may be engaged in a single battle at one time. The space a battle occupies depends on the range of the ]s of the combatants. Until the advent of ] and ], battles were fought with the two sides in sight, if not reach, of each other. The depth of the battlefield has also increased in ] with supporting units in the rear areas — supply, artillery, medical, etc. — now outnumbering the front-line combat troops. | |||
{{history of war}} | |||
The defining characteristic of the fight as a concept in ] has changed with the variations in the organisation, employment and technology of military forces. The English ] ] suggested an ideal definition of battle as "something which happens between two ] leading to the moral then physical disintegration of one or the other of them" but the origins and outcomes of battles can rarely be summarized so neatly.<ref>p. 302, Keegan</ref> Battle in the 20th and 21st centuries is defined as the combat between large components of the forces in a ], used to achieve ]s.<ref>pp. 65–71, Dupuy</ref> Where the duration of the battle is longer than a week, it is often for reasons of ] called an operation. Battles can be planned, ] or forced by one side when the other is unable to ] from combat. | |||
Battles are, on the whole, made up of a multitude of individual combats and the individual will usually only experience a small part of the events. To the ]man, there may be little to distinguish between combat as part of a minor raid or a major offensive, nor is it likely that they anticipate the future course of the battle; few of the British infantry who went over the top on the ], ], ], would have anticipated that they would be fighting the same battle in five months time. Conversely, some of the Allied infantry who had just dealt a crushing defeat to the ] at the ] fully expected to have to fight again the next day. | |||
A battle always has as its purpose the reaching of a ] by use of military force.<ref name = "lbcdnv">p. 67, Dupuy</ref> A victory in the battle is achieved when one of the opposing sides forces the other to abandon its mission and ] its forces, ]s the other (i.e., forces it to retreat or renders it militarily ineffective for further ]s) or ] the latter, resulting in their deaths or capture. A battle may end in a ], which ultimately favors the defeated party. If no resolution is reached in a battle, it can result in a ]. A conflict in which one side is unwilling to reach a decision by a direct battle using ] often becomes an ]. | |||
== The factors of battles == | |||
Battles are decided by various factors. The number of men, the ] of each army, and the terrain advantages are among the most prominent factors. Battles throughout history have shown that ] and the ] of troops are often more important than quantity. The ], for example, show that superior morale can overcome numerical disadvantages, especially in the ]. A good example of the opposite is the ]. Quality of the army is determined by morale, that is, spirit of the troops; equipment, and training of the troops. A unit may charge with high morale but less discipline and still emerge victorious. This tactic was effectively employed by ]. Weapons and armor may also play as a decisive factor; however, during the ] the ] emerged victorious over the ] despite inferior weaponry. Discipline within the troops is also important; at the ], the Romans were greatly outnumbered but won because of superior training. A squad that does not retreat is far more valuable than an army that flees upon sight. Battles can also be determined by terrain. Capturing high ground, for example, has been the central strategy in inumerable battles. An army that holds the high ground forces the enemy to climb, and thus wear down. Another advantage is it is physically easier to strike a blow from a higher position than from a lower position. Although this does not hold as much in modern warfare, with the advent of aircraft, terrain is still vital for camouflauge, especially for ]. Generals and commanders also play a decisve war during combat. ] and ] were both legendary generals and, consequently, their armies were extremely successful. An army that can trust the commands of their leader's with convinction in its success invariably has a higher morale than an army that doubts its every move. The British in the naval battle of ], for example, owed its success to the reputation of celebrated admiral ]. | |||
Until the 19th century the majority of battles were of short duration, many lasting a part of a day. (The ], the ] (1813) and the ] (1863) were exceptional in lasting three days.) This was mainly due to the difficulty of supplying ] in the field or conducting ]. The means of prolonging a battle was typically with ]. Improvements in ] and the sudden evolving of ], with its siege-like nature during the ] in the 20th century, lengthened the duration of battles to days and weeks.<ref name = "lbcdnv"/> This created the requirement for ] to prevent ], with troops preferably not remaining in a combat area of operations for more than a month. | |||
== Types of battle == | |||
], Pa. July 3d. 1863'', by Currier and Ives.]] | |||
]<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kulju |first1=Mika |title= Raatteen tie : Talvisodan pohjoinen sankaritarina |year=2007 |publisher=Ajatus kirjat |location=Helsinki |language=fi |isbn=978-951-20-7218-7 |ref=Kulju2007}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Karttimo |first1=Leo |last2=Salminen|first2=K. E.|title=Rannikolta Raatteen tielle : sotaveteraanien haastatteluihin, sotapäiväkirjoihin sekä moniin muihin lähteisiin perustuva teos |year=1992 |publisher=Karttimo-Salminen yhteistyöryhmä |language=fi |isbn=952-90-3809-7|ref=Karttimo1992}}</ref> during the ]]] | |||
Battles can be fought on land, sea, or by the modern age, in the air. ]s have occurred since before the ]. Air battles have been far less common, due to its late conception, the most prominent being the ] in ]. However since the ] land or sea battles have come to rely on air support. Indeed, during the ], five ]s were sunk without either fleets coming in to direct contact. | |||
The use of the term "battle" in military history has led to its misuse when referring to almost any scale of combat, notably by strategic forces involving hundreds of thousands of troops that may be engaged in either one battle at a time (]) or operations (]). The space a battle occupies depends on the range of the ]s of the combatants. A "battle" in this broader sense may be of long duration and take place over a large area, as in the case of the ] or the ]. Until the advent of ] and ], battles were fought with the two sides within sight, if not reach, of each other. The depth of the ] has also increased in ] with inclusion of the supporting units in the rear areas; supply, artillery, medical personnel etc. often outnumber the front-line combat troops. | |||
Battles are made up of a multitude of individual combats, ]es and small ] and the combatants will usually only experience a small part of the battle. To the ]man, there may be little to distinguish between combat as part of a minor raid or a big offensive, nor is it likely that he anticipates the future course of the battle; few of the British infantry who went over the top on the ], 1 July 1916, would have anticipated that the battle would last five months. Some of the Allied infantry who had just dealt a crushing defeat to the French at the ] fully expected to have to fight again the next day (at the ]). | |||
There are numerous types of battle. A "battle of encounter" is a ] where the opposing sides collide in the field without either having prepared their attack or defence. The goal of a "battle of attrition" is to inflict greater loss on the enemy than you suffer yourself; many battles of the First World War were intentionally (]) or unintentionally (]) attrition battles. A "battle of breakthrough" aims to pierce the enemy's defences, thereby exposing the vulnerable flanks which can be turned. A "battle of encirclement" — the ''Kesselschlacht'' of the German '']'' — surrounds the enemy in a ]. A "battle of envelopment" involves an attack on one or both ]s; the classic example being the double-envelopment of the ]. A "battle of annihilation" is one in which the defeated party is destroyed in the field, such as the ] fleet at the ]. | |||
==Battlespace== | |||
A "decisive battle" is one of particular importance; often by bringing hostilities to an end, such as the ], or as a turning point in the fortunes of the ]s, such as the ]. A decisive battle can have ] as well as military impact, changing the balance of power or boundaries between countries. The concept of the "decisive battle" became popular with the publication in ] of ]'s '']''. British ]s ] (''The Decisive Battles of the Western World'') and ] (''Decisive Wars of History''), among many others, have written books in the style of Creasy's work. | |||
{{Main|Battlespace}} | |||
Battlespace is a unified strategic concept to integrate and combine ] for the ] ], including ], ], ], ] and ]. It includes the environment, factors and conditions that must be understood to apply combat power, protect the force or complete the mission, comprising enemy and friendly ]; facilities; weather; terrain; and the ]. | |||
== Factors == | |||
== The differences among land battles throughout history == | |||
Battles are decided by various factors, the number and quality of combatants and equipment, the skill of ] and terrain are among the most prominent. Weapons and armour can be decisive; on many occasions armies have achieved victory through more advanced weapons than those of their opponents. An extreme example was in the ], in which a large army of Sudanese ] armed in a traditional manner were destroyed by an Anglo-Egyptian force equipped with ]s and artillery. | |||
There is an obvious difference in the way battles have been fought throughout time. Early battles were probably fought between rival hunting bands as disorganized mobs. However, during the ], the first documented battle, in 1275 BC, actual discipline was instilled in both armies. This continued through the Ancient Times and the ]. However, during the many wars of the ], ] continued using mob tactics. As the ] dawned, armies began to fight in highly diciplined lines. Each would follow the orders from their officers and fight as a single unit instead of individuals. Each army was successively divided into ], ], ], and ]. These armies would march, line up, and fire in divisions. ], on the other hand, did not fight in lines, utilizing instead guerrilla tactics. The ] during the ] also followed suit. Europe, during the ], continued using diciplined lines, continuing into the ]. A new style, during ], known as ], developed nearly half a decade later. This also lead to ] for communication between batallions. Chemical warfare also emerged with the use of poisonous gas during ] and the ]. By ], the use of the smaller divisions, platoons and companies, became much more important as precise operations became vital. Instead of the locked trench warfare of World War I, during World War II, a dynamic network of battles developed where small groups encountered other platoons. As a result, elite squads became much more recognized and distinguishable. Vehicle warfare also developed with an astonishing pace with the advent of the ], replacing the archaic cannons of the Enlightenment Age. Artillery has since gradually replaced the use of frontal troops. Modern battles now continue to resemble that of World War II, though prominent innovations have been added. Indirect combat through the use of aircraft and missiles now comprise of a large portion of wars in place of battles, where battles are now mostly reserved for capturing cities. | |||
On some occasions, simple weapons employed in an unorthodox fashion have proven advantageous; ] gained many victories through their ability to transform a traditionally defensive weapon into an offensive one. ] in the early 19th century were victorious in battles against their rivals in part because they adopted a new kind of spear, the ]. Forces with inferior weapons have still emerged victorious at times, for example in the ]. Disciplined troops are often of greater importance; at the ], the Romans were greatly outnumbered but won because of superior training. | |||
== The difference of naval battles throughout history == | |||
One significant difference of modern naval battles as opposed to earlier forms of combat is the use of ], which introduced amphibious warfare. Today, a marine is actually an infantry regiment that sometimes fights solely on land and is no longer tied to the navy. A good example of an old naval battle is the ]. Most ancient naval battles were fought by fast ships using the ] to sink opposing fleets or steer close enough for boarding in hand-to-hand combat. Troops were often actually used to storm enemy ships as used by ] and ]. This tactic was usually used by civilizations that could not beat the enemy with ranged weaponry. Another invention in the late ] was the use of ] by the Byzantines, which was used to light enemy fleets on fire. Empty demolition ships utilized the tactic to crash into opposing ships and set it afire with an explosion. After the invention of cannons, naval warfare became useful as support units for land warefare. During the ], the development of mines led to a new type of naval warfare. The ], first used in the ], resistant to cannons, soon made the wooden ship obsolete. The invention of a ], that is, submarine, during ] by the ] brought naval warfare to both above and below the surface. With the development of aircraft during ], battles were fought in the sky as well as below the ocean. ] have since become the central unit in naval warfare, acting as a mobile base for lethal aircraft. | |||
Battles can also be determined by terrain. Capturing high ground has been the main tactic in innumerable battles. An army that holds the high ground forces the enemy to climb and thus wear themselves down. Areas of jungle and forest, with dense vegetation act as force-multipliers, of benefit to inferior armies. Terrain may have lost importance in modern warfare, due to the advent of aircraft, though the terrain is still vital for camouflage, especially for ]. | |||
== Aerial battles throughout history == | |||
Although the use of aircraft has for the most part always been used as a supplement to land or naval engagements, since their first major military use in World War I aircraft have increasingly taken on larger roles if warfare. During World War I, the primary use was for reconnaissance, and small-scale bombardment, using ineffectual hand-dropped bombs. Aircraft began becoming much more prominent in the ] and especially World War II. Aircraft design began specializing, primarily into two types: bombers, which carried explosive payloads to bomb land targets or ships; and fighter-interceptors, which were used to either intercept incoming aircraft or to escort and protect bombers (engagements between fighter aircraft were known as ]. Some of the more notable aerial battles in this period include the ] and the ]. | |||
Generals and commanders also play an important role, ], ], ], ] and ] were all skilled generals and their armies were extremely successful at times. An army that can trust the commands of their leaders with conviction in its success invariably has a higher morale than an army that doubts its every move. The British in the naval ] owed its success to the reputation of Admiral ]. | |||
Another important use of aircraft came with the development of the ], which first became heavily used during the Vietnam War, and still continues to be widely used today to transport and augment ground forces. | |||
== Types == | |||
Today, direct engagements between aircraft are rare - the most modern fighter-interceptors carry much more extensive bombing payloads, and are used to bomb precision land targets, rather than to fight other aircraft. Anti-aircraft batteries are used much more extensively to defend against incoming aircraft than interceptors. Despite this, aircraft today are much more extensively used as the primary tools for both army and navy, as evidenced by the prominent use of helicopters to transport and support troops, the use of aerial bombardment as the "first strike" in many engagements, and the replacement of the battleship with the aircraft carrier as the center of most modern navies. | |||
] between Russia and Sweden, by ]]] | |||
== Battle naming == | |||
Battles can be fought on land, at sea, and in the air. ]s have occurred since before the 5th century BC. Air battles have been far less common, due to their late conception, the most prominent being the ] in 1940. Since the Second World War, land or sea battles have come to rely on air support. During the ], five ]s were sunk without either fleet coming into direct contact. | |||
]'' of ] by ].]] | |||
] | |||
Battles are almost invariably named after some feature of the battlefield ], such as the name of a town, forest or river. Occasionally battles are named after the date on which they took place, such as ]. In the ] it was considered important to settle on a suitable name for a battle which could be used by the ]s. For example, after ] defeated a French army on ], ], he met with the senior French ] and they agreed to name the battle after the nearby ] and so it was called the ]. In other cases, the sides adopted different names for the same battle, such as the ] which is known in Turkey as the ]. Some place names have become ] with the battles that took place there, such as ], ] or ]. ]s, many of which result in battle, are given ]s, which are not necessarily meaningful or indicative of the type or the location of the battle. ] and ] are examples of battles known by their military codenames. | |||
* A ] is an encounter where opposing sides agree on the time and place of combat. | |||
When a battleground is the site of more than one battle in the same conflict, the instances are distinguished by ], such as the ] and ]. An extreme case are the twelve ] — ] to ] — between ] and ] during the First World War. | |||
* A ''battle of encounter'' (or ''encounter battle'') is a ] where the opposing sides collide in the field without either having prepared their attack or defence. | |||
* A '']'' aims to inflict losses on an enemy that are less sustainable compared to one's own losses. These need not be greater numerical losses – if one side is much more numerous than the other then pursuing a strategy based on attrition can work even if casualties on both sides are about equal. Many battles of the ] in the First World War were intentionally (]) or unintentionally (]) attrition battles. | |||
* A ''battle of ]'' aims to pierce the enemy's defences, thereby exposing the vulnerable flanks which can be turned. | |||
* A ''battle of ]''—the {{interlanguage link|Kesselschlacht|de}} of the German battle of manoeuvre ({{lang|de|]}})—surrounds the enemy in a ]. | |||
* A ''battle of ]'' involves an attack on one or both ]; the classic example being the ] of the ]. | |||
* A '']'' is one in which the defeated party is destroyed in the field, such as the French fleet at the ]. | |||
Battles are usually hybrids of different types listed above. | |||
Some battles are named for the convenience of ]s so that periods of combat can be neatly distinguished from one another. Following the First World War, the British Battles Nomenclature Committee was formed to decide on standard names for all battles and subsidiary actions. To the soldiers who did the fighting, the distinction was usually academic; a soldier fighting at ] on ] ] was probably unaware he was taking part in what the committee would call the "]". | |||
A '']'' is one with ] effects, determining the course of the war such as the ] or bringing hostilities to an end, such as the ] or the ]. A decisive battle can change the balance of power or boundaries between countries. The concept of the ''decisive battle'' became popular with the publication in 1851 of ]'s '']''. British ]s ] (''The Decisive Battles of the Western World'') and ] (''Decisive Wars of History''), among many others, have written books in the style of Creasy's work. | |||
Many combats are too small to merit a name. Terms such as "action", "skirmish", "firefight", "raid" or "offensive patrol" are used to describe small-scale battle-like encounters. These combats often take place within the time and space of a battle and while they may have an objective, they are not necessarily "decisive". Sometimes the soldiers are unable to immediately gauge the significance of the combat; in the aftermath of the ], some British officers were in doubt as to whether the day's events merited the title of "battle" or would be passed off as merely an "action". | |||
=== Land === | |||
== The effects of a battle == | |||
There is an obvious difference in the way battles have been fought. Early battles were probably fought between rival hunting bands as unorganized crowds. During the ], the first reliably documented battle in the fifteenth century BC, both armies were organised and disciplined; during the many wars of the ], ] continued to use ]. | |||
Battles have both personal and political effects. The personal effect of a battle can be a psychological or a physical effect; a psychological effect is on the minds of the participants. For example, many battle-survivors have nightmares <!-- about wars such as the ] or ]. --> or abnormal reactions to certain sights or sounds. The physical effects of battle on survivors can include scars, amputations, lesions, loss of hearing, blindness, and paralysis. | |||
As the ] dawned, armies began to fight in highly disciplined lines. Each would follow the orders from their officers and fight as a unit instead of individuals. Armies were divided into ]s, ]s, ] and ]s. These armies would march, line up and fire in divisions. | |||
Battles also affect ]. A decisive battle that is won can cause one side to surrender – or that same victory can be a ]. An example of a Pyrrhic Victory would be the ]. A decisive victory can force one side to submit to the interests of the victor, perhaps by ceding territory or changing policies. Battles have been fought in ] to decide the fate of ] and different political factions. Examples include the ] and the ]. Battles have also affected such things as the continuance of a war. An example is the ]. | |||
], on the other hand, did not fight in lines, using guerrilla tactics. American colonists and European forces continued using disciplined lines into the ]. | |||
A new style arose from the 1850s to the First World War, known as ], which also led to tactical ]. ] also began in 1915. | |||
By the Second World War, the use of the smaller divisions, platoons and companies became much more important as precise operations became vital. Instead of the trench stalemate of 1915–1917, in the Second World War, battles developed where small groups encountered other platoons. As a result, elite squads became much more recognized and distinguishable. ] also returned with an astonishing pace with the advent of the ], replacing the cannon of the Enlightenment Age. Artillery has since gradually replaced the use of frontal troops. Modern battles resemble those of the Second World War, along with indirect combat through the use of aircraft and missiles which has come to constitute a large portion of wars in place of battles, where battles are now mostly reserved for capturing cities.{{Citation needed|date=July 2008}} | |||
=== Naval === | |||
]'' of 1653: episode from the ].]] | |||
One significant difference of modern naval battles, as opposed to earlier forms of combat is the use of ], which introduced amphibious warfare. Today, a marine is actually an infantry regiment that sometimes fights solely on land and is no longer tied to the navy. A good example of an ancient naval battle is the ]. Most ancient naval battles were fought by fast ships using the ] to sink opposing fleets or steer close enough for boarding in hand-to-hand combat. Troops were often used to storm enemy ships as used by ] and ]. This tactic was usually used by civilizations that could not beat the enemy with ranged weaponry. Another invention in the late ] was the use of ] by the Byzantines, which was used to set enemy fleets on fire. Empty demolition ships utilized the tactic to crash into opposing ships and set it afire with an explosion. After the invention of cannons, naval warfare became useful as support units for land warfare. During the 19th century, the development of mines led to a new type of naval warfare. The ], first used in the ], resistant to cannons, soon made the wooden ship obsolete. The invention of military ]s, during ], brought naval warfare to both above and below the surface. With the development of military aircraft during ], battles were fought in the sky as well as below the ocean. ] have since become the central unit in naval warfare, acting as a mobile base for lethal aircraft. | |||
=== Aerial === | |||
] bombers during the ]]] | |||
Although the use of aircraft has for the most part always been used as a supplement to land or naval engagements, since their first major military use in World War I aircraft have increasingly taken on larger roles in warfare. During World War I, the primary use was for reconnaissance, and small-scale bombardment. Aircraft began becoming much more prominent in the ] and especially World War II. Aircraft design began specializing, primarily into two types: bombers, which carried explosive payloads to bomb land targets or ships; and fighter-interceptors, which were used to either intercept incoming aircraft or to escort and protect bombers (engagements between fighter aircraft were known as ]). Some of the more notable aerial battles in this period include the ] and the ]. Another important use of aircraft came with the development of the ], which first became heavily used during the Vietnam War, and still continues to be widely used today to transport and augment ground forces. Today, direct engagements between aircraft are rare – the most modern fighter-interceptors carry much more extensive bombing payloads, and are used to bomb precision land targets, rather than to fight other aircraft. Anti-aircraft batteries are used much more extensively to defend against incoming aircraft than interceptors. Despite this, aircraft today are much more extensively used as the primary tools for both army and navy, as evidenced by the prominent use of helicopters to transport and support troops, the use of aerial bombardment as the "first strike" in many engagements, and the replacement of the battleship with the aircraft carrier as the center of most modern navies. | |||
== Naming == | |||
], ]]] | |||
Battles are usually named after some feature of the battlefield ], such as a town, forest or river, commonly prefixed "Battle of...". Occasionally battles are named after the date on which they took place, such as ]. In the ] it was considered important to settle on a suitable name for a battle which could be used by the ]s. After ] defeated a French army on October 25, 1415, he met with the senior French ] and they agreed to name the battle after the nearby ] and so it was called the ]. In other cases, the sides adopted different names for the same battle, such as the ] which is known in Turkey as the ]. During the American Civil War, the Union tended to name the battles after the nearest watercourse, such as the Battle of Wilsons Creek and the Battle of Stones River, whereas the Confederates favoured the nearby towns, as in the Battles of Chancellorsville and Murfreesboro. Occasionally both names for the same battle entered the popular culture, such as the ] and the ], which are also referred to as the First and Second Battles of Manassas. | |||
Sometimes in desert warfare, there is no nearby town name to use; map coordinates gave the name to the ] in the ]. Some place names have become ] with battles, such as the ], ], ], ] and ]. ]s, many of which result in battle, are given ]s, which are not necessarily meaningful or indicative of the type or the location of the battle. ] and ] are examples of battles known by their military codenames. When a battleground is the site of more than one battle in the same conflict, the instances are distinguished by ], such as the First and Second Battles of Bull Run. An extreme case are the twelve ]—] to ]—between Italy and ] during the First World War. | |||
Some battles are named for the convenience of ]s so that periods of combat can be neatly distinguished from one another. Following the First World War, the British Battles Nomenclature Committee was formed to decide on standard names for all battles and subsidiary actions. To the soldiers who did the fighting, the distinction was usually academic; a soldier fighting at ] on November 13, 1916, was probably unaware he was taking part in what the committee named the ]. Many combats are too small to be battles; terms such as "action", "affair", "skirmish", "firefight", "raid", or "offensive patrol" are used to describe small military encounters. These combats often take place within the time and space of a battle and while they may have an objective, they are not necessarily "decisive". Sometimes the soldiers are unable to immediately gauge the significance of the combat; in the aftermath of the ], some British officers were in doubt as to whether the day's events merited the title of "battle" or would be called an "action".{{citation needed|date=February 2012}} | |||
== Effects == | |||
Battles affect the individuals who take part, as well as the political actors. Personal effects of battle range from mild psychological issues to permanent and crippling injuries. Some battle-survivors have nightmares about the conditions they encountered or abnormal reactions to certain sights or sounds and some experience ]. Physical effects of battle can include scars, amputations, lesions, loss of bodily functions, blindness, paralysis and death. Battles affect ]; a decisive battle can cause the losing side to surrender, while a ] such as the ] can cause the winning side to reconsider its goals. Battles in ]s have often decided the fate of monarchs or political factions. Famous examples include the ], as well as the ]. Battles affect the commitment of one side or the other to the continuance of a war, for example the ] and the ] during the ]. | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
*] |
* ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== Further reading == | |||
* ] | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
{{Reflist|20em}} | |||
*{{cite book | title = The Face of Battle | author = Keegan, John | year = 1976 | id = ISBN 1844137481 | publisher = Pimlico }} | |||
;Sources | |||
{{refbegin}} | |||
* {{cite book |author-link=Carl von Clausewitz |last=von Clausewitz |first=Carl |title=Bemerkungen über die reine und angewandte Strategie des Herrn von Bülow oder Kritik der darin enthaltenen Ansichten |trans-title=Remarks on the Pure and Applied Strategy of Mr von Bülow or Criticism of the Views contained Therein |publisher=Verstreute ] |editor-last=Hahlweg |editor-first=Werner |language=de |edition=repr. Biblio Verlag |location=Osnabrück |year=1979}} no isbn | |||
* {{cite book |author-link=Trevor N. Dupuy |last=Dupuy |first=Trevor Nevitt |title=Understanding War: History and Theory of Combat |publisher=Leo Cooper |location=London |year=1992 |isbn=0-85052-293-5}} | |||
* {{cite book |author-link1=David Glantz |last1=Glantz |first1=David M. |last2=Vuono |first2=Carl E.|title=Soviet Military Operational Art: In Pursuit of Deep Battle |publisher=Taylor & Francis |year=1991 |isbn=0-7146-4077-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |title=The Face of Battle |author-link=John Keegan |last=Keegan |first=John |year=1976 |publisher=Pimlico |location=London |title-link=The Face of Battle |isbn=1-84413-748-1}} | |||
* {{cite book |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Official Names of the Battles and Other Engagements Fought by the Military Forces of the British Empire During the Great War, 1914–1919, and the Third Afghan War, 1919 (Cmd 1138) |year=1993 |orig-year=1922 |publisher=HMSO |location=London |edition=The Naval & Military Press, Uckfield |isbn=1-897632-06-1}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Richardson |first1=F. M. |last2=Hunt |first2=Sir Peter (Foreword) |title=Fighting Spirit: A Study of Psychological Factors in War |publisher=Leo Cooper |location=London |year=1978 |isbn=0-85052-236-6}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Tucker |first=T. G. |title=Etymological Dictionary of Latin |publisher=Ares |location=Chicago |year=1976 |isbn=0-89005-172-0}} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 19:29, 18 September 2024
Military engagement This article is about combat. For other uses, see Battle (disambiguation).This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Battle" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
A battle is an occurrence of combat in warfare between opposing military units of any number or size. A war usually consists of multiple battles. In general, a battle is a military engagement that is well defined in duration, area, and force commitment. An engagement with only limited commitment between the forces and without decisive results is sometimes called a skirmish.
The word "battle" can also be used infrequently to refer to an entire operational campaign, although this usage greatly diverges from its conventional or customary meaning. Generally, the word "battle" is used for such campaigns if referring to a protracted combat encounter in which either one or both of the combatants had the same methods, resources, and strategic objectives throughout the encounter. Some prominent examples of this would be the Battle of the Atlantic, Battle of Britain, and the Battle of France, all in World War II.
Wars and military campaigns are guided by military strategy, whereas battles take place on a level of planning and execution known as operational mobility. German strategist Carl von Clausewitz stated that "the employment of battles ... to achieve the object of war" was the essence of strategy.
Etymology
Battle is a loanword from the Old French bataille, first attested in 1297, from Late Latin battualia, meaning "exercise of soldiers and gladiators in fighting and fencing", from Late Latin (taken from Germanic) battuere "beat", from which the English word battery is also derived via Middle English batri.
Characteristics
The defining characteristic of the fight as a concept in military science has changed with the variations in the organisation, employment and technology of military forces. The English military historian John Keegan suggested an ideal definition of battle as "something which happens between two armies leading to the moral then physical disintegration of one or the other of them" but the origins and outcomes of battles can rarely be summarized so neatly. Battle in the 20th and 21st centuries is defined as the combat between large components of the forces in a military campaign, used to achieve military objectives. Where the duration of the battle is longer than a week, it is often for reasons of planning called an operation. Battles can be planned, encountered or forced by one side when the other is unable to withdraw from combat.
A battle always has as its purpose the reaching of a mission goal by use of military force. A victory in the battle is achieved when one of the opposing sides forces the other to abandon its mission and surrender its forces, routs the other (i.e., forces it to retreat or renders it militarily ineffective for further combat operations) or annihilates the latter, resulting in their deaths or capture. A battle may end in a Pyrrhic victory, which ultimately favors the defeated party. If no resolution is reached in a battle, it can result in a stalemate. A conflict in which one side is unwilling to reach a decision by a direct battle using conventional warfare often becomes an insurgency.
Until the 19th century the majority of battles were of short duration, many lasting a part of a day. (The Battle of Preston (1648), the Battle of Nations (1813) and the Battle of Gettysburg (1863) were exceptional in lasting three days.) This was mainly due to the difficulty of supplying armies in the field or conducting night operations. The means of prolonging a battle was typically with siege warfare. Improvements in transport and the sudden evolving of trench warfare, with its siege-like nature during the First World War in the 20th century, lengthened the duration of battles to days and weeks. This created the requirement for unit rotation to prevent combat fatigue, with troops preferably not remaining in a combat area of operations for more than a month.
The use of the term "battle" in military history has led to its misuse when referring to almost any scale of combat, notably by strategic forces involving hundreds of thousands of troops that may be engaged in either one battle at a time (Battle of Leipzig) or operations (Battle of Wuhan). The space a battle occupies depends on the range of the weapons of the combatants. A "battle" in this broader sense may be of long duration and take place over a large area, as in the case of the Battle of Britain or the Battle of the Atlantic. Until the advent of artillery and aircraft, battles were fought with the two sides within sight, if not reach, of each other. The depth of the battlefield has also increased in modern warfare with inclusion of the supporting units in the rear areas; supply, artillery, medical personnel etc. often outnumber the front-line combat troops.
Battles are made up of a multitude of individual combats, skirmishes and small engagements and the combatants will usually only experience a small part of the battle. To the infantryman, there may be little to distinguish between combat as part of a minor raid or a big offensive, nor is it likely that he anticipates the future course of the battle; few of the British infantry who went over the top on the first day on the Somme, 1 July 1916, would have anticipated that the battle would last five months. Some of the Allied infantry who had just dealt a crushing defeat to the French at the Battle of Waterloo fully expected to have to fight again the next day (at the Battle of Wavre).
Battlespace
Main article: BattlespaceBattlespace is a unified strategic concept to integrate and combine armed forces for the military theatre of operations, including air, information, land, sea and space. It includes the environment, factors and conditions that must be understood to apply combat power, protect the force or complete the mission, comprising enemy and friendly armed forces; facilities; weather; terrain; and the electromagnetic spectrum.
Factors
Battles are decided by various factors, the number and quality of combatants and equipment, the skill of commanders and terrain are among the most prominent. Weapons and armour can be decisive; on many occasions armies have achieved victory through more advanced weapons than those of their opponents. An extreme example was in the Battle of Omdurman, in which a large army of Sudanese Mahdists armed in a traditional manner were destroyed by an Anglo-Egyptian force equipped with Maxim machine guns and artillery.
On some occasions, simple weapons employed in an unorthodox fashion have proven advantageous; Swiss pikemen gained many victories through their ability to transform a traditionally defensive weapon into an offensive one. Zulus in the early 19th century were victorious in battles against their rivals in part because they adopted a new kind of spear, the iklwa. Forces with inferior weapons have still emerged victorious at times, for example in the Wars of Scottish Independence. Disciplined troops are often of greater importance; at the Battle of Alesia, the Romans were greatly outnumbered but won because of superior training.
Battles can also be determined by terrain. Capturing high ground has been the main tactic in innumerable battles. An army that holds the high ground forces the enemy to climb and thus wear themselves down. Areas of jungle and forest, with dense vegetation act as force-multipliers, of benefit to inferior armies. Terrain may have lost importance in modern warfare, due to the advent of aircraft, though the terrain is still vital for camouflage, especially for guerrilla warfare.
Generals and commanders also play an important role, Hannibal, Julius Caesar, Khalid ibn Walid, Subutai and Napoleon Bonaparte were all skilled generals and their armies were extremely successful at times. An army that can trust the commands of their leaders with conviction in its success invariably has a higher morale than an army that doubts its every move. The British in the naval Battle of Trafalgar owed its success to the reputation of Admiral Lord Nelson.
Types
Battles can be fought on land, at sea, and in the air. Naval battles have occurred since before the 5th century BC. Air battles have been far less common, due to their late conception, the most prominent being the Battle of Britain in 1940. Since the Second World War, land or sea battles have come to rely on air support. During the Battle of Midway, five aircraft carriers were sunk without either fleet coming into direct contact.
- A pitched battle is an encounter where opposing sides agree on the time and place of combat.
- A battle of encounter (or encounter battle) is a meeting engagement where the opposing sides collide in the field without either having prepared their attack or defence.
- A battle of attrition aims to inflict losses on an enemy that are less sustainable compared to one's own losses. These need not be greater numerical losses – if one side is much more numerous than the other then pursuing a strategy based on attrition can work even if casualties on both sides are about equal. Many battles of the Western Front in the First World War were intentionally (Verdun) or unintentionally (Somme) attrition battles.
- A battle of breakthrough aims to pierce the enemy's defences, thereby exposing the vulnerable flanks which can be turned.
- A battle of encirclement—the Kesselschlacht [de] of the German battle of manoeuvre (bewegungskrieg)—surrounds the enemy in a pocket.
- A battle of envelopment involves an attack on one or both flanks; the classic example being the double envelopment of the Battle of Cannae.
- A battle of annihilation is one in which the defeated party is destroyed in the field, such as the French fleet at the Battle of the Nile.
Battles are usually hybrids of different types listed above.
A decisive battle is one with political effects, determining the course of the war such as the Battle of Smolensk or bringing hostilities to an end, such as the Battle of Hastings or the Battle of Hattin. A decisive battle can change the balance of power or boundaries between countries. The concept of the decisive battle became popular with the publication in 1851 of Edward Creasy's The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World. British military historians J.F.C. Fuller (The Decisive Battles of the Western World) and B.H. Liddell Hart (Decisive Wars of History), among many others, have written books in the style of Creasy's work.
Land
There is an obvious difference in the way battles have been fought. Early battles were probably fought between rival hunting bands as unorganized crowds. During the Battle of Megiddo, the first reliably documented battle in the fifteenth century BC, both armies were organised and disciplined; during the many wars of the Roman Empire, barbarians continued to use mob tactics.
As the Age of Enlightenment dawned, armies began to fight in highly disciplined lines. Each would follow the orders from their officers and fight as a unit instead of individuals. Armies were divided into regiments, battalions, companies and platoons. These armies would march, line up and fire in divisions.
Native Americans, on the other hand, did not fight in lines, using guerrilla tactics. American colonists and European forces continued using disciplined lines into the American Civil War.
A new style arose from the 1850s to the First World War, known as trench warfare, which also led to tactical radio. Chemical warfare also began in 1915.
By the Second World War, the use of the smaller divisions, platoons and companies became much more important as precise operations became vital. Instead of the trench stalemate of 1915–1917, in the Second World War, battles developed where small groups encountered other platoons. As a result, elite squads became much more recognized and distinguishable. Maneuver warfare also returned with an astonishing pace with the advent of the tank, replacing the cannon of the Enlightenment Age. Artillery has since gradually replaced the use of frontal troops. Modern battles resemble those of the Second World War, along with indirect combat through the use of aircraft and missiles which has come to constitute a large portion of wars in place of battles, where battles are now mostly reserved for capturing cities.
Naval
One significant difference of modern naval battles, as opposed to earlier forms of combat is the use of marines, which introduced amphibious warfare. Today, a marine is actually an infantry regiment that sometimes fights solely on land and is no longer tied to the navy. A good example of an ancient naval battle is the Battle of Salamis. Most ancient naval battles were fought by fast ships using the battering ram to sink opposing fleets or steer close enough for boarding in hand-to-hand combat. Troops were often used to storm enemy ships as used by Romans and pirates. This tactic was usually used by civilizations that could not beat the enemy with ranged weaponry. Another invention in the late Middle Ages was the use of Greek fire by the Byzantines, which was used to set enemy fleets on fire. Empty demolition ships utilized the tactic to crash into opposing ships and set it afire with an explosion. After the invention of cannons, naval warfare became useful as support units for land warfare. During the 19th century, the development of mines led to a new type of naval warfare. The ironclad, first used in the American Civil War, resistant to cannons, soon made the wooden ship obsolete. The invention of military submarines, during World War I, brought naval warfare to both above and below the surface. With the development of military aircraft during World War II, battles were fought in the sky as well as below the ocean. Aircraft carriers have since become the central unit in naval warfare, acting as a mobile base for lethal aircraft.
Aerial
Although the use of aircraft has for the most part always been used as a supplement to land or naval engagements, since their first major military use in World War I aircraft have increasingly taken on larger roles in warfare. During World War I, the primary use was for reconnaissance, and small-scale bombardment. Aircraft began becoming much more prominent in the Spanish Civil War and especially World War II. Aircraft design began specializing, primarily into two types: bombers, which carried explosive payloads to bomb land targets or ships; and fighter-interceptors, which were used to either intercept incoming aircraft or to escort and protect bombers (engagements between fighter aircraft were known as dog fights). Some of the more notable aerial battles in this period include the Battle of Britain and the Battle of Midway. Another important use of aircraft came with the development of the helicopter, which first became heavily used during the Vietnam War, and still continues to be widely used today to transport and augment ground forces. Today, direct engagements between aircraft are rare – the most modern fighter-interceptors carry much more extensive bombing payloads, and are used to bomb precision land targets, rather than to fight other aircraft. Anti-aircraft batteries are used much more extensively to defend against incoming aircraft than interceptors. Despite this, aircraft today are much more extensively used as the primary tools for both army and navy, as evidenced by the prominent use of helicopters to transport and support troops, the use of aerial bombardment as the "first strike" in many engagements, and the replacement of the battleship with the aircraft carrier as the center of most modern navies.
Naming
Battles are usually named after some feature of the battlefield geography, such as a town, forest or river, commonly prefixed "Battle of...". Occasionally battles are named after the date on which they took place, such as The Glorious First of June. In the Middle Ages it was considered important to settle on a suitable name for a battle which could be used by the chroniclers. After Henry V of England defeated a French army on October 25, 1415, he met with the senior French herald and they agreed to name the battle after the nearby castle and so it was called the Battle of Agincourt. In other cases, the sides adopted different names for the same battle, such as the Battle of Gallipoli which is known in Turkey as the Battle of Çanakkale. During the American Civil War, the Union tended to name the battles after the nearest watercourse, such as the Battle of Wilsons Creek and the Battle of Stones River, whereas the Confederates favoured the nearby towns, as in the Battles of Chancellorsville and Murfreesboro. Occasionally both names for the same battle entered the popular culture, such as the First Battle of Bull Run and the Second Battle of Bull Run, which are also referred to as the First and Second Battles of Manassas.
Sometimes in desert warfare, there is no nearby town name to use; map coordinates gave the name to the Battle of 73 Easting in the First Gulf War. Some place names have become synonymous with battles, such as the Passchendaele, Pearl Harbor, the Alamo, Thermopylae and Waterloo. Military operations, many of which result in battle, are given codenames, which are not necessarily meaningful or indicative of the type or the location of the battle. Operation Market Garden and Operation Rolling Thunder are examples of battles known by their military codenames. When a battleground is the site of more than one battle in the same conflict, the instances are distinguished by ordinal number, such as the First and Second Battles of Bull Run. An extreme case are the twelve Battles of the Isonzo—First to Twelfth—between Italy and Austria-Hungary during the First World War.
Some battles are named for the convenience of military historians so that periods of combat can be neatly distinguished from one another. Following the First World War, the British Battles Nomenclature Committee was formed to decide on standard names for all battles and subsidiary actions. To the soldiers who did the fighting, the distinction was usually academic; a soldier fighting at Beaumont Hamel on November 13, 1916, was probably unaware he was taking part in what the committee named the Battle of the Ancre. Many combats are too small to be battles; terms such as "action", "affair", "skirmish", "firefight", "raid", or "offensive patrol" are used to describe small military encounters. These combats often take place within the time and space of a battle and while they may have an objective, they are not necessarily "decisive". Sometimes the soldiers are unable to immediately gauge the significance of the combat; in the aftermath of the Battle of Waterloo, some British officers were in doubt as to whether the day's events merited the title of "battle" or would be called an "action".
Effects
Battles affect the individuals who take part, as well as the political actors. Personal effects of battle range from mild psychological issues to permanent and crippling injuries. Some battle-survivors have nightmares about the conditions they encountered or abnormal reactions to certain sights or sounds and some experience flashbacks. Physical effects of battle can include scars, amputations, lesions, loss of bodily functions, blindness, paralysis and death. Battles affect politics; a decisive battle can cause the losing side to surrender, while a Pyrrhic victory such as the Battle of Asculum can cause the winning side to reconsider its goals. Battles in civil wars have often decided the fate of monarchs or political factions. Famous examples include the Wars of the Roses, as well as the Jacobite risings. Battles affect the commitment of one side or the other to the continuance of a war, for example the Battle of Inchon and the Battle of Huế during the Tet Offensive.
See also
Further reading
References
- p. 65, Dupuy
- p. 10, Glantz
- translation of part quote from p. 77, Clausewitz
- p. 33, Tucker
- See also: Merriam-Webster Dictionary; Dictionary.com; and etymonline.com.
- p. 302, Keegan
- pp. 65–71, Dupuy
- ^ p. 67, Dupuy
- Kulju, Mika (2007). Raatteen tie : Talvisodan pohjoinen sankaritarina (in Finnish). Helsinki: Ajatus kirjat. ISBN 978-951-20-7218-7.
- Karttimo, Leo; Salminen, K. E. (1992). Rannikolta Raatteen tielle : sotaveteraanien haastatteluihin, sotapäiväkirjoihin sekä moniin muihin lähteisiin perustuva teos (in Finnish). Karttimo-Salminen yhteistyöryhmä. ISBN 952-90-3809-7.
- Sources
- von Clausewitz, Carl (1979). Hahlweg, Werner (ed.). Bemerkungen über die reine und angewandte Strategie des Herrn von Bülow oder Kritik der darin enthaltenen Ansichten [Remarks on the Pure and Applied Strategy of Mr von Bülow or Criticism of the Views contained Therein] (in German) (repr. Biblio Verlag ed.). Osnabrück: Verstreute kleine Schriften. no isbn
- Dupuy, Trevor Nevitt (1992). Understanding War: History and Theory of Combat. London: Leo Cooper. ISBN 0-85052-293-5.
- Glantz, David M.; Vuono, Carl E. (1991). Soviet Military Operational Art: In Pursuit of Deep Battle. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-7146-4077-8.
- Keegan, John (1976). The Face of Battle. London: Pimlico. ISBN 1-84413-748-1.
- Official Names of the Battles and Other Engagements Fought by the Military Forces of the British Empire During the Great War, 1914–1919, and the Third Afghan War, 1919 (Cmd 1138) (The Naval & Military Press, Uckfield ed.). London: HMSO. 1993 . ISBN 1-897632-06-1.
- Richardson, F. M.; Hunt, Sir Peter (Foreword) (1978). Fighting Spirit: A Study of Psychological Factors in War. London: Leo Cooper. ISBN 0-85052-236-6.
- Tucker, T. G. (1976). Etymological Dictionary of Latin. Chicago: Ares. ISBN 0-89005-172-0.
External links