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  2. Antoine-Henri Jomini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antoine-Henri_Jomini

    Antoine-Henri Jomini (French:; 6 March 1779 – 22 March 1869) [1] was a Swiss military officer who served as a general in French and later in Russian service, and one of the most celebrated writers on the Napoleonic art of war.

  3. Summary of the Art of War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summary_of_the_Art_of_War

    Antoine-Henri Jomini. Summary of the Art of War: the Principal Combinations of Strategy, Grand Tactics, and Military Politics (French: Précis de l’Art de la Guerre: Des Principales Cominaisons de la Stratégie, de la Grande Tactique et de la Politique) is a military treatise by Antoine-Henri Jomini, originally published as a complete work in 1838. [1]

  4. Capture of the Dutch fleet at Den Helder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capture_of_the_Dutch_fleet...

    The traditional narrative of French cavalry storming and capturing the ships at Den Helder is primarily based on French sources, which all copy the story from each other, the main source for the story being the work of Antoine-Henri Jomini's work Histoire critique et militaire des campagnes de la Revolution. It is, however, unclear what source ...

  5. Principles of war - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principles_of_war

    Henry Lloyd proffered his version of "Rules" for war in 1781 as well as his "Axioms" for war in 1781. Then in 1805, Antoine-Henri Jomini published his "Maxims" for war version 1, "Didactic Resume" and "Maxims" for war version 2. Carl von Clausewitz wrote his version in 1812 building on the work of earlier writers.

  6. Military logistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_logistics

    It was in this sense that Antoine-Henri Jomini referred to the term in his Summary of the Art of War (1838). In the English translation, the word became "logistics". [4] In 1888, Charles C. Rogers created a course on naval logistics at the Naval War College.

  7. Battle of Kaiserslautern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kaiserslautern

    Jomini estimated that the French suffered 3,000 casualties while the Saxo-Prussians lost 1,300. [26] A second authority asserted that the French lost 1,300 killed and wounded plus an additional 700 men, two guns and one color captured, adding that Brunswick's army sustained losses of 44 officers and 785 soldiers killed and wounded, a total of ...

  8. Battle of Glarus (1799) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Glarus_(1799)

    The Battle of Glarus (also uncollectively the Combat of Näfels/Netstal [10]), was a battle fought on October 1, 1799. [d] The battle ended the Austro-Russian invasion of the Helvetic Republic and was the last campaign which involved the Russian undefeated general Alexander Suvorov. [11]

  9. Battle of Lübeck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Lübeck

    That the troops were guilty of atrocities was admitted by contemporary writers such as Antoine-Henri Jomini and Guillaume Mathieu, comte Dumas. Historian Francis Loraine Petre noted that Blücher's decision to fight a pitched battle in a neutral city made him at least partly culpable for the sack of Lübeck. [49]