ABSTRACT

This study presents the first examination of the influence of ideas of honour on the causes, conduct and ending of wars from Ancient Greece to the present day.

Paul Robinson begins with a theoretical examination of the concept of honour, to clearly explain the many contradictions and tensions inherent within honour systems. He then shows how honour has often contradictory and paradoxical effects on the conduct of war and illustrates this through seven case studies: Classical Greece; Ancient Rome; mediaeval Chivalry; Elizabethan England; the American Civil War; the British Empire; and the Western world after World War II (including the Vietnam War and the current conflict in Iraq).

Key topics covered include:

  • honour and virtue
  • honour and the causes of war
  • honour as a motivation for fighting
  • honours and rewards
  • death and honour
  • honour and the conduct of war
  • honour and the enemy
  • honour and the ending of wars
  • women and honour

This book reveals that the often contradictory behaviour of soldiers during war is a product of the contradictions inherent in the concept of honour.

This book will be of great interest to all students of military ethics, military history, politics, international relations, anthropology, sociology, philosophy and the history of ideas.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|24 pages

Classical Greece

chapter 3|25 pages

Ancient Rome

chapter 4|23 pages

Mediaeval chivalry

chapter 5|28 pages

Elizabethan England

chapter 6|27 pages

Southern honour and the American Civil War

chapter 7|26 pages

British imperialism, 1815–1918

chapter 8|26 pages

The Cold War and after

chapter 9|2 pages

Conclusion