Creasy’s 15 Decisive Battles of the World – and 10 suggested additions
In 1851 the English historian and
jurist Sir Edward Shepherd Creasy published his “Fifteen
Decisive Battles of the World”. A different outcome of each of these battles would have resulted in a
significantly different course of world history, and as such they still influence
the world we live in today. As such they represent major “points of departure”
for alternative histories.
Battle of Tours (Poitiers) 739: Charles Martel repels the Arab Invaders
Each chapter of Creasy’s book describes
a different battle. The fifteen battles chosen are:
- The Battle of Marathon, 490 BC: Persian expansion into Europe halted
- Defeat of the Athenians at Syracuse, 413 BC: The end of Athenian power
- The Battle of Gaugamela,
331 BC: Opened Asia to Alexander’s armies
- The Battle of the Metaurus,
207 BC: Guaranteed Rome’s survival and triumph over Carthage
- Victory
of Arminius over
the Roman Legions under Varus,
AD 9: Ends Roman hopes of expansion into Germany
- The Battle of Châlons,
AD 451: Roman victory over the Huns saved Western Europe’s Future
- The Battle of Tours,
AD 732: Stopped Moslem expansion into Northern Europe
- The Battle of Hastings,
AD 1066: Essential first step towards Britain as a World Power
- Joan of Arc's Victory over the
English at Orléans, AD 1429; The end
of English power in France
- Defeat
of the Spanish Armada,
AD 1588: The beginning of the end for Spain as a World Power
- The Battle of Blenheim,
AD 1704: Britain’s emergence as a Superpower
- The Battle of Pultowa,
AD 1709: Russia’s first step to Superpower status
- The
Battle of Saratoga,
AD 1777: Secured the survival of the United States
- The Battle of Valmy,
AD 1792: Ensures survival of French Revolutionary power and thinking
- The Battle of Waterloo, AD 1815: France never again achieved Superpower status
Pultowa 1709: Russia's First Step to Superpower Status
It is notable that due to Creasy’s
focus on European (and North American) power, and because little was then known
in the West about Far Eastern history, no battles were listed which refer to
China’s consolidation and survival as an imperial power, the failed Mongol
invasions of Japan or to Japan’s failed bid for conquest of Korea in the 15th
and 16th centuries and the implications that had for subsequent Japanese
history. The Mameluk victory in 1260, over
the Mongols at Ain Jalut, in Galilee, which was critical in stemming Mongol
power, was also omitted. Taking these and other Asian battles into account
Creasy’s list might rightly have been extended to 20 or even 25 at the time he
wrote. There is also good reason that he should have included the 1836 Battle
of San Jacinto, which led in due course to United States acquisition of a vast areal
percentage, and an economically vital one, of the modern nation.
Since that time various writers have added to the
list of post-1851 battles. Given the increasing pace and scale of conflicts
since then it is not inappropriate to add at least 10. As a starting point for
discussion and speculation, and with all due lack of modesty I’m suggesting the
10 post-1851 decisive battles as below:
1) Gettysburg
(and Vicksburg) 1863: though fought in separate theatres, but at almost exactly
the same time, these battles made the defeat of the Southern Confederacy
inevitable, not least by ending hopes of international recognition. A long
attritional grind lay ahead but Union victory was now inevitable.
2) Sedan1870:
Not only did Bismarck’s Germany crush France decisively, and usher in the new
German Empire, but it was absolute enough to ensure that the French would
ultimately settle for a peace that ceded Alsace and Lorraine, thereby planting
the seeds for WW1.
3) Manila (and
Santiago) 1898: Two naval victories half a world apart that announced the arrival
of the United States and established a position in Asia that would be critical
in WW2.
4) Tsu Shima
1905: Japan’s victory over the huge Russian fleet was perhaps the most absolute
in naval history. It marked the arrival of Japan as a major power and encouraged
ambitions that would ultimately lead to WW2 in the Far East and the Pacific.
5) The Marne
1914: Decisive in the sense that Germany could not achieve the quick victory in
the west that it had built its strategy on. From this moment on Germany was on the
back foot in the West. The Western Allies bought time that would ultimately
lead to their defeat of Germany.
6) Warsaw 1920:
Bolshevik victory in the Russian Civil War was almost absolute when the Red
Army was launched westwards to carry revolution into Central Europe. The new
Polish state worked a miracle in defeating it. It saved Europe but at the cost
of stoking Russian resentment that would exact a terrible revenge in later
decades.
7) The Atlantic
1939-45: Though the struggle to secure Britain’s supply lines climaxed in 1943,
the fight went on from the first to the last day of WW2. Churchill described the
U-Boat menace as the thing that frightened him most – and with good reason.
Without victory in the Atlantic, no Allied victory in Western Europe.
8) Stalingrad
1942-43. The name says it all. No need to say more.
9) Saipan 1944:
I’ve identified the conquest of Saipan rather than Midway as being
the decisive battle in the Pacific in WW2. My reasoning is that though Midway
was critical in weakening the Japanese Navy, the United States would still have
prevailed, though over a much longer time scale, if it had lost the battle. National determination and industrial muscle would have prevailed. Saipan was critical in identifying the type of
war that had to be fought to beat Japan, leading in due course to the decision
to drop nuclear weapons, At Saipan not only did the Japanese military fight to the
death, but huge numbers of civilians, including women who killed their own
children, were prepared not only to resist but to commit suicide rather than
surrender. This was the first US encounter with a Japanese civilian population
and it highlighted just how costly an invasion of the Japanese Home Islands
would be. From this point on I believe that use of nuclear weapons was
unavoidable.
10) The Battle
That Never Was 1983-90: The US commitment to the Strategic Defense Initiative
(SDI – “Star Wars”), whether it was ever technically feasible or not at the
time, was believed to be feasible by the Soviets. Their military budgets were already an
unsustainable percentage of their total economy and the pressure to compete with
Star Wars was possibly the greatest single factor in bringing about the ultimate
collapse of the Soviet Union. Not a shot was fired and the tyranny hundreds of
millions had lived under for seven decades died not with a bang but a whimper.
The list
above is obviously subjective and I’d be welcome to hear comments.
Tsu Shima 1905: The end of the Russian Flagship Knyaz Suvorov
Miracle on the Vistula 1920
Poles salute Pilsudski as they advance to achieve the impossible
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