Warriors and Fortresses: Military Strategy in the Dark Ages
MTA
Tactics, weapons, and fortification from late antiquity through the Carolingian era
2nd Edition
*Warriors and Fortresses* provides a synthetic analysis of military strategy, technology, and fortification from the collapse of the Roman West through the Carolingian era. The book argues that warfare was not merely a destructive force but a primary engine of state formation, social hierarchy, and landscape organization. By triangulating literary sources with archaeology and topography, the text explores how early medieval polities adapted Roman infrastructure and late antique military manuals to fit a decentralized world defined by personal oaths, elite retinues (*comitatus*), and seasonal campaigning.
The study details the tactical evolution of the period, specifically the enduring effectiveness of infantry shieldwalls and the gradual rise of the mounted warrior. While infantry remained the backbone of most northern European armies, the social and tactical significance of cavalry grew—particularly under the Carolingians—as technology like the stirrup and specialized breeding made the horse a tool for shock combat and prestige. The book also examines the material culture of war, contrasting the ubiquitous spear and shield of the common levy with the prestigious mail, helmets, and pattern-welded swords of the aristocratic elite.
A central theme is the development of the "landscapes of power," tracing the evolution of defensive architecture from reoccupied Roman town walls and Iron Age hillforts to purpose-built earth-and-timber strongholds like the Anglo-Saxon *burhs* and Carolingian *burgs*. These sites served as refuges against Viking and steppe raiders while doubling as administrative and economic hubs. The text identifies these enclosures as the essential precursors to the medieval castle, demonstrating how the need for localized defense fostered a transition toward the motte-and-bailey structures and stone towers that would dominate the High Middle Ages.
Ultimately, the book positions the "Dark Ages" as a period of sophisticated pragmatic adaptation. Through case studies of battles such as Vouillé, Tertry, and Tours–Poitiers, it illustrates how terrain, leadership, and logistics dictated the fate of dynasties. The legacy of this era's warfare is found in the crystallization of the knightly class, the feudal link between land tenure and military service, and a fragmented political map anchored by fortified centers—structures that collectively defined the social and political identity of Europe for centuries.
This book is designed for students and scholars of medieval history, military history, and archaeology who seek a nuanced understanding of warfare's role in shaping early medieval Europe. It will particularly benefit readers interested in the methodological integration of textual sources, archaeological evidence, and landscape analysis to reconstruct military practices. The work serves both specialists studying the transition from antiquity to the medieval period and educated general readers curious about how conflict forged the political landscapes, fortified networks, and martial identities of the Dark Ages.
January 22, 2026
69,575 words
4 hours 52 minutes
Click to order this hardcover:
Buy NowPrint copy is made to order and ships worldwide. Includes the ebook free, ready to read instantly.
$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts!