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In the Camp and on the March: Military Manuals as Sources for Studying Premodern Public Health

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 December 2018

G. Geltner*
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of Amsterdam, Kloveniersburgwal 48, 1012 CX Amsterdam, The Netherlands
*
*Email address for correspondence: g.geltner@uva.nl
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Abstract

Historians tend to view public health as a quintessentially modern phenomenon, enabled by the emergence of representative democracies, centralised bureaucracies and advanced biomedicine. While social, urban and religious historians have begun chipping away at the entrenched dichotomy between pre/modernity that this view implies, evidence for community prophylactics in earlier eras also emerges from a group of somewhat unexpected sources, namely military manuals. Texts composed for (and often by) army leaders in medieval Latin Europe, East Rome (Byzantium) and other premodern civilisations reflect the topicality of population-level preventative healthcare well before the nineteenth century, thereby broadening the path for historicising public health from a transregional and even global perspective. Moreover, at least throughout the Mediterranean world, military manuals also attest the enduring appeal of Hippocratic and Galenic prophylactics and how that medical tradition continued for centuries to shape the routines and material culture of vulnerable communities such as armies.

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Articles
Copyright
© The Author 2018. Published by Cambridge University Press. 

During the early nineteenth century, armies began to do away with tents, a trend whose drawbacks military theoretician Carl Von Clausewitz (1780–1831) felt compelled to stress. In his acclaimed Vom Kriege (On War) the Prussian certainly sympathised with generals who chose to devote their limited horsepower to carrying several canons instead of lugging thousands of small shelters. Nonetheless, he reminded his readers that the decision must take at least two important considerations into account. First, tents reduce armies’ impact on their environment, whether built, cultivated or pristine, which in turn had physical, economic and political implications. Secondly and no less important, tents influenced soldiers’ health:

The protection afforded by a roof of a cheap canvas may not be much, but over a period of time it is a relief that will be missed by the troops when it is not there. For a single day the difference is slight; a tent gives little shelter against wind and cold, and is far from rainproof. But a slight difference becomes a major one when the situation recurs two or three hundred times a year. Increased losses due to sickness will naturally result.Footnote 1

Camps’ material constitution, in other words, has to be aligned with an army’s strategic goals, since it too impacts soldiers’ health and hence their ability to wage war. This aspect of strategy began to ring especially true as campaigns became increasingly drawn-out affairs (indeed, this was one of Von Clausewitz’s overriding concerns). Given that armies marched and stayed put for ever longer periods, coming to terms with environmental factors and thinking preventatively grew more urgent.Footnote 2

Elsewhere in his magnum opus, Von Clausewitz revisits the theme of prophylactic healthcare in non-combat situations. For instance, he notes that a marching army faces high attrition rates in the absence of steady shelter, food supply, medical attention and comfort in movement. What is the right amount of rest on the march and how best to organise it were clearly being recognised as consequential to soldiers’ health:

It is commonly said that a long period of rest is not good for the physical health of an army, and that there is more sickness at such times than during periods of moderate activity. It may well be that sickness does occur when soldiers are crowded together in cramped quarters, but it can occur just as easily in billets along the march.Footnote 3

Von Clausewitz was not only pro-tent, then, but also an advocate of breaking up marches to help soldiers recover from their exertions. He saw rest as paramount for maintaining a healthy routine, arguably a more crucial measure than other, decidedly preventative interventions, which would ensure airflow in the barracks and keep soldiers to a schedule of physical exercise. Whatever the merits of his advice, he consciously waded into an ongoing – indeed, quite longstanding – debate.

1 A Community at Risk

Military theoreticians have long regarded physical objects, such as tents, human regimens including respite and diet, and other standards meant to keep armies healthy and safe outside of combat, as strategic assets. As Von Clausewitz put it, ‘It is not unusual that a victorious army suffers greater losses from sickness than from battle’: a painful truth confronting most armies until the mid-twentieth century.Footnote 4 If so, studying military manuals, of which Vom Kriege is among the most feted but hardly the first, promises to enrich the social and intellectual history of community health, that is interventions meant to promote health and fight disease at a population level, whatever defined a group as such and however loosely or temporarily it was bound together beyond a certain physical proximity. From the standpoint of public health’s deeper history, moreover, military treatises constitute a rarely-explored corpus, one that can be examined from a transregional and even global perspective given the steady output and survival of comparable sources from Europe, the Eastern Mediterranean, Asia and elsewhere. Even by comparison to the related genre of medieval travel literature, whose insights into public health have at least caught some scholars’ attention, military manuals remain virtually unknown as sources for the history of premodern prophylactics.Footnote 5

Certainly, historians of modern warfare, colonialism and imperialism have repeatedly remarked how instrumental armies were, as witting and unwitting agents, in promoting preventative medicine as well as impacting the health of militaries and civilian populations outside of combat.Footnote 6 In doing so they have overcome an understandable tendency to see armies mainly as machines of death and destruction rather than also as promoters of health and as stakeholders in environmental protection programmes.Footnote 7 By comparison, the smaller cohort of public health historians studying premodern societies usually suffer from a scarcity of sources, on the one hand,Footnote 8 and armies’ common (modern) reputation for hygienic apathy, on the other. Furthermore, despite premodern generals’ and military medical personnel’s explicit mandate to conserve the health of armies, historians tend to focus on the curative efforts of coeval army pharmacists, barber-surgeons and physicians, offering limited insights into the latter’s (and others’) preventative actions off the battlefield, where soldiers spent most of their time.Footnote 9

Examining prophylactic advice in early military manuals therefore provides a more granular view, complementing recent efforts to reconstruct preventative practices in ancient, medieval and early modern societies, which have largely dealt with monasteries and especially cities.Footnote 10 Scholars tilling the field of premodern public health have found rich evidence to challenge an entrenched view of population-level interventions as mere byproducts of modernity, rendered possible thanks to representative governments and advanced science, and relevant due to the proliferation of cities and massive environmental degradation. Carole Rawcliffe’s Urban Bodies (2013), most notably, marshals abundant material and written evidence illustrating how urban residents, guilds and governments in medieval England devised prophylactic policies and pursued them, including well before the onset of the second plague pandemic in the mid-fourteenth century.Footnote 11 The latter point is especially salient in rejecting an ostensibly benign recognition of premodern public health practices, if only as a reaction to plague by otherwise apathetic civilisations. Indeed, as Agostino Paravicini Bagliani has argued, a revival of learned medicine in eleventh-century Italy undergirded the practice of community prophylactics at the papal court, including the curia’s pursuit of healthy locations when Rome was deemed particularly dangerous, and the dissemination of preventative practices through the imposition of various measures upon host towns.Footnote 12 These and other successful attempts to historicise community prophylactics, however, make little use of evidence related to military life.

Indeed, although armies’ size and the scale of military logistics have changed dramatically at least in western Europe since the Napoleonic Wars,Footnote 13 their well-documented struggle against disease in earlier eras can help frame public health as something more than just a byproduct of modernity. For militaries were scarcely isolated communities of prophylactic practice; the medical theories informing their actions may well have been shaped by those of urban, monastic and other communities, and their practices (for instance of burial, exercise and sourcing food and water) could have inspired civic leaders to follow suit. Yet it is precisely this kind of integrated and dynamic perspective that many historians of premodern public health still mostly lack.Footnote 14

To begin developing a corrective, the present article draws on a number of texts produced by the civilisations of medieval western Europe and East Rome (Byzantium), before briefly suggesting further research possibilities afforded by comparable works hailing from the Islamicate Mediterranean and East Asia. Far from exhaustive, the selection reflects my linguistic limitations as well as the current state of publication and especially translation of relevant sources, even when casting a wide geographical and chronological net. Since this is an argument based predominantly on a single genre (or a cluster of related genres), the selected texts had to meet one basic criterion, namely that they were ostensibly written as a military commander’s guidebook (as distinct, for instance, from a medical manual that also dealt with battle injuries), and regardless of the author’s formal training or perceived authority among contemporaries.Footnote 15

Two preliminary observations are in order before delving into these texts. First, as a corpus, they display important points of resemblance. Throughout the long period under consideration, tactical manuals were mostly written for and by male military-political elites, the work of Christine de Pizan’s (1364–1430; see below) offering a unique as well as partial exception. Authors and readers thus shared access – within a given society – to a medical-cultural archive, a health literacy common to the intended audiences of the original works. The medical-theoretical knowledge upon which these texts drew usually remains implicit, but it can be surmised from coeval and earlier medical and natural-philosophical literature, works which themselves tended to circulate in similar groups. The present article’s focus allowed for only the briefest treatment of questions regarding each text’s dating, the details of its transmission and reception, its intended audience(s), the original compilation methods and linguistic peculiarities. Yet none of these shortfalls obscures the fact that Greece and Rome’s European, Asian and North African intellectual heirs shared a medical tradition associated with Hippocrates (c. 460–c. 370 BC) and his school in Greek Antiquity and furthered by Galen (129–200? AD) and his followers’ commentaries.Footnote 16 Diverse medical, religious and natural-philosophical traditions likely undergirded military prophylactics in other regions as well, but these too fall beyond the scope of the present study.Footnote 17

Secondly, if a modicum of shared health literacy was to be expected among the intended readers of military manuals, that hardly meant that the prophylactic framework supporting them was everywhere and always the same. Premodern medicine was a dynamic and evolving field of expertise even within medieval Europe and East Rome, and there is no reason to assume that coeval cultures across a vast swath of time and territory shared immutable principles.Footnote 18 Nor did premodern armies face a static and identical theatre of war, either in terms of climate and terrain or the scale and capacity of their foes. Latin crusaders’ efforts in an unfamiliar Levant since the later eleventh century is a well-documented case in point, as are the experiences of Mongol armies, fighting from Gaza to Java, in the thirteenth century. Nonetheless, mining this long era’s sources for preventative insights and concerns challenges medieval armies’ reputation, and that of premodern cultures more broadly, as ignorant or negligent when it came to public hygiene. For tactical manuals attest a sustained effort at least by certain learned elites to consider population-level threats also outside of armed conflict as pertinent to commanders’ and medical personnel’s remits, including many hundreds if not thousands of non-elites and non-combatants. Manuals’ ongoing production of knowledge thus played a major and often overlooked role in promoting biopolitical agendas in a period and across regions rarely associated with them. This has important implications regarding one aspect of the pre/modern divide that historians seldom interrogate, and which will be discussed in the conclusion.

2 Western Europe

In Latin Europe, discussions of preventative healthcare among armies build on and echo two influential treatises composed in Late Antiquity, namely Onasander’s Strategikos (first century) and, arguably to a greater extent, Vegetius’ Epitoma rei militaris (late fourth or early fifth century).Footnote 19 Both texts, also foreshadowing much later manuals, assume that military life entailed a regular confrontation with community-broad threats, be it during training, at times of peace, at war or in the immediate aftermath of battle. As Onasander warned the aspiring Roman general (his treatise was formally dedicated to Quintus Veranius Nepos [d. 57], the future governor of Britain), safe encampment depends on more than palisades, a ditch and vigilant guards. Indeed, a paramount concern is to identify a location ‘that is not marshy, nor damp; for such places by their rising vapours and rank smell bring disease and infection to the army, and both impair the health of many and kill many, so that the soldiers are left few in number and weakened in strength’.Footnote 20

Onasander argued that polluted air (miasma) causes diseases that were just as lethal to soldiers as, and indeed often more than, any enemy they faced in battle.Footnote 21 In doing so, he harkened back to the dictums of Hippocratic medicine, and in particular to the treatise known as Airs, Waters, Places. The work, most likely written by Hippocrates himself, inventories cities’ vulnerabilities as a function of their exposure to the elements of wind (air), water and humidity. While allowing for variation among people’s physiques and adaptability, as well as climactic diversity, the work nonetheless typified the impact of, for instance, cold wind or brackish water on communities as a whole. The unhealthiest cities, it maintained, are those having only a western exposure, which leaves them bereft of the most beneficial winds while being punished by the sun’s strongest rays. The author also claimed that waters that are ‘marshy, standing and stagnant’ in the summer become ‘unhealthy and bilious’ and in winter can be ‘very conducive to phlegm and sore throats’.Footnote 22 It was by working within this paradigm and drawing lessons from urban experiences that Onasander later sought to optimise a camp’s situation and make life in it sustainable for all.

Three centuries after Onasander, the otherwise unknown Vegetius stressed in similar terms (albeit now in Latin, which explains his work’s greater popularity in western Europe) how a general’s choice of site must be informed by considerations of human and non-human factors:

[Camps’] situation should be strong by nature, and there should be plenty of wood, forage and water. If the army is to continue in it any considerable time, attention must be had to the salubriousness of the place. The camp must not be commanded by any higher grounds from whence it might be insulted or annoyed by the enemy, nor must the location be liable to floods which would expose the army to great danger. The dimensions of the camps must be determined by the number of troops and quantity of baggage.Footnote 23

To Vegetius, then, military camps’ resilience relied on both topographical and human-relational aspects.Footnote 24 Yet the choice of a promising location had to be reinforced by encouraging salubrious behaviors as well. Here too Vegetius offers a complex assessment befitting a dynamic situation. For the health of troops

depends on the choice of situation and water, on the season of the year, medicine and exercise. As to the situation, the army should never continue in the neighborhood of unwholesome marshes any length of time, or on dry plains or eminences without some sort of shade or shelter. In the summer, the troops should never encamp without tents. And their marches, in that season of the year when the heat is excessive, should begin by break of day so that they may arrive at the place of destination in good time. Otherwise they will contract diseases from the heat of the weather and the fatigue of the march. In severe winter they should never march in the night in frost and snow, or be exposed to want of wood or clothes. A soldier, starved with cold, can neither be healthy nor fit for service. The water must be wholesome and not marshy. Bad water is a kind of poison and the cause of epidemic distempers.Footnote 25

Climactic, physical as well as human factors thus helped define the health of an army, alongside individuals’ capacity to perform their tasks.

Like Onasander before him, Vegetius too drew on Hippocratic insights, either directly or as refracted through later interpreters. The latter included Galen’s or Galenic commentaries on the Hippocratic corpus, from which Onasander could not have benefited. Galenism also preferred the efficiency of prevention (hygeia) to curing (panacea), and it considered in this respect environmental conditions to have a major impact on humans, as individuals and groups. This meant that location mattered, especially in combination with a people’s typical humoral constitution.Footnote 26 Galenism likewise stressed the role played by human behaviours and activities in obtaining humoral balance (eukrasia or symmetria). These were collectively known as the six non-naturals: air quality; sleep and wakefulness; exercise and rest; food and drink; secretion and excretion; and mental affections.Footnote 27 The perfect convergence of both types of factors (natural and non) should be reflected in the absence of disease. In military terms, this meant fitness for service, a specific display of health in what Galen called ‘[t]he unimpaired capacity of function’,Footnote 28 a criterion foreshadowing the late-modern activities of daily living (ADL) index famously developed by Sidney Katz.Footnote 29

Without offering a full survey of military tractates in medieval western Europe, it is clear that earlier insights’ legacy lived on.Footnote 30 For, whatever else Latin and later vernacular authors derived from Classical and late-antique medical thought, either through Onasander or especially Vegetius,Footnote 31 they were certainly mindful of armies’ vulnerability outside of combat and disseminated their predecessors’ advice on how to thwart attendant dangers. To offer just a few examples from several regions: the renowned Iberian physician Arnaud of Villanova (1240?–1311) probably consulted his copy of Vegetius in counseling James II of Aragon (1267–1327) on matters of military resilience.Footnote 32 Giovanni da Legnano, a late-fourteenth-century juror and author of an influential Tractatus de bello, is directly reliant upon Hippocrates, Vitruvius and above all Vegetius in reiterating the general’s duty to select and maintain healthy locations for camps (ut diutius commorandum sit, loci salubritas eligatur), by which he also meant places with a constant supply of good food, air and water.Footnote 33 Christine de Pizan, in The Book of Deeds of Arms and Chivalry (1410), relies explicitly on Vegetius in discussing how ‘to keep the army in good health if it stays for a long time in one place’, namely by taking into consideration ‘location, water, weather and exercise’.Footnote 34 And Roberto Valturio (1405–1475), an Italian humanist and engineer, dedicated an entire chapter to medicine in his widely circulating De re militari (1472), which opens with a reminder that the ancients knew better than to dwell only on cures for wounds and disease in warfare: in order for an army to hunker down safely, its leader had to establish the health of the place.Footnote 35 Health, in typical Galenic fashion, consists here not only in the location’s fertility and the quality of resources it provides (water, vegetation, animals), but especially in its compatibility with occupiers’ humoral constitution.Footnote 36

To take a final example, the same approach informed Niccolò Machiavelli, whose sixth book (of seven) On the Art of War (1519–1520) is devoted to discussing the army’s rest. A stronghold, he argues, is rendered secure by nature or art (forte lo fa o il sito, o l’arte), that is thanks to location or human intervention.Footnote 37 The Greeks, in his analysis, preferred the former, while the Romans tended to espouse the latter, which gave them the advantage of being able to supplement a potentially imperfect site with defensive artifice, including an internal organisation of space congenial to good communication, swift movement and timely response. The Romans, moreover, sought to position themselves in a salubrious place (luogo sano) to begin with, by avoiding swampy areas or those exposed to harmful winds (i luoghi paludosi, o esposti a’ venti nocivi). And they did so by engaging a kind of medical forensics familiar to any reader of Hippocrates:

For they recognized [these conditions], not so much from the quality of the site, as from the appearance of the inhabitants; so when the latter seemed to have a bad complexion, broken-winded, or hosting another infection, they did not tarry there.Footnote 38

According to the tradition Machiavelli strove to emulate, the accomplished capitano also kept his army healthy and avoided diseases and hunger by allowing soldiers to rest well, to wit ‘in tents…and where trees would create shade, [and] where there would be wood to allow for the cooking of food’ (sotto le tende…dove sieno arbori che facciano ombra, dove sia legname da potere cuocere il cibo). Further preventative measures to be maintained on the march included obviating extreme heat in the summer and snow and ice in the winter. And should these measures fail, and the men become sick, the general is to let them be cured by a physician, for he has ‘no recourse when he has to fight with disease as well as with an enemy’ (perchè uno capitano non ha rimedio, quando egli ha a combattere con le malattie e col nemico).Footnote 39 Mindfully following in the footsteps of his ancient predecessors, and foreshadowing principles still invoked by much later tacticians, Machiavelli too argued that prevention was the preferred path to armies’ health.

3 East Rome

As the above examples begin to convey, and contrary to premodern armies’ reputation for hygienic apathy, authors of military manuals throughout the eras known today as Antiquity, the Middle Ages and the Renaissance paid close and regular attention to community prophylactics. And what is true for western Europe certainly applies to East Rome, home to an arguably richer tradition of military literature, at least for the early and central Middle Ages, which likewise drew on the preventative insights of Onasander’s Strategikos and Vegetius’ Epitoma, among other ancient authorities.Footnote 40 For instance, the influential late sixth-century text known today as Maurice’s Strategikon (12.B.22) advises:

Healthy, clean places should be chosen for camps, and we should not stay too long in one spot, unless the air and the availability of supplies are more advantageous. Otherwise disease can spread among the troops. It is very important that sanitary needs not be taken care of inside the camp, but outside because of the disagreeable odor, especially if there is some reason for the army to remain in one place…. [T]he horses must not be watered [in the river] above the camp. If they are, their trampling around will make the water muddy and useless…. If it is a small stream, water the horses from buckets.Footnote 41

In keeping with that tradition, the anonymous East Roman author of a Treatise on Strategy (eighth century) explained that the security of strongholds relies on more than their walls’ thickness. He accordingly encouraged the ambitious general to investigate whether local water ‘is safe to drink and if there is enough to supply the population of the city’, as well as ‘whether the [surrounding] country produces enough food’, before embarking on a construction campaign.Footnote 42 Subsequently, treatises such as the Apparatus bellicus (tenth century) continued to share earlier works’ concern for ensuring water purity to protect the overall health of soldiers.Footnote 43 And the anonymous, late tenth-century Treatise on Skirmishing (5.6–8) likewise warns against horses muddying the water, ‘which could cause serious harm to the men and place them in real difficulty’.Footnote 44

Nor did later authors neglect to instruct generals about how to situate camps with combatants’ health clearly in mind. Emperor Leo VI’s Taktika, published in the early tenth century, dwells in particular on long-term military settlements, which should steer clear of wooded areas and swamps, because ‘[t]he rising vapors and foul smell of such places are unhealthy and bring pestilence and deadly diseases to the army’.Footnote 45 More than a century later, Kekaumenos’ Strategikon explicitly harks back to a Hippocratic tradition in calling to avoid humid and malodorous places ‘because they are prone to disease’, and instructs the general to refrain from staying put for too long in one place, given the greater risk of it developing ‘a bad odor and from it, diseases’.Footnote 46

Finally, the mid-tenth-century Sylloge tacticorum pays ample attention to what promotes an army’s health on the march, in the fort and during and under siege, dispensing advice on how best to treat the surrounding countryside (chapters 11, 53 and 55). Addressing the topic of disease prevention specifically, chapter 22 instructs the general to situate a camp away from rocky or swampy grounds and refrain from occupying the same spot at length ‘due to pestilential diseases which break out from putrefaction among both horses and men’. It furthermore notes that the observation holds for all seasons except winter, when ‘there is no such apprehension, due to the frozen temperature of the season’.Footnote 47 The treatise also elaborates on how to defend soldiers and animals from certain stratagems designed to kill them outside the context of battle. Chapters 58–61, for instance, instruct generals on how to detect and avoid food and drink poisoned for just such purposes by the enemy and strategically dispersed or left for their consumption. Another rubric (73; whose title alone has been preserved) purportedly advises on how horses and mules may obviate succumbing to pestilential disease. The entire section, finally, opens with a passage explaining how ‘soldiers may easily be prevented from falling ill from sun and fatigue’. Probably building on the medical authority of Julius Africanus (160–240), it reminds the reader about the importance of feeding soldiers well as a prophylactic measure, including the rejection of wine produced in marshy – and therefore unhygienic – lands, unless it is boiled to evaporate one tenth of the liquid in order to render it healthy to drink.Footnote 48

East Roman generals, in sum, much like their Latin counterparts, were encouraged to detect threats to their armies outside the context of combat and devise ways to reduce if not altogether eliminate them, building on the shared insights of ancient medical science.Footnote 49

4 Across and beyond the Mediterranean World

Military tractates that promote community prophylactics are fairly accessible and generally well-studied for medieval western Europe and East Rome. Yet there is little reason to assume that these premodern regions were unique in that sense. As the present section begins to demonstrate, identifying and reducing hazards their underlings faced was a responsibility claimed by many army (and civic and religious) leaders across the globe, at least insofar as it legitimised their authority and certain aspects of disciplining soldiers and related communities. My linguistic limitations prevent me from accessing evidence for many historical cultures where the hypothesis can be tested, but a few examples may suffice to propose how this path may fruitfully be pursued for the benefit of public health historians.

To begin with Europe’s and East Rome’s nearest neighbours in health: the vast majority of Arabic military treatises from the Middle Ages remain unpublished, untranslated and rarely studied.Footnote 50 Yet, given the early Islamicate world’s deep familiarity with and contribution to the Greco-Roman medical tradition, it is hardly surprising that prophylactics became a staple of Arabic military medicine.Footnote 51 An early source illuminating the topicality of preventative practices outside of combat is a passage by Abu Bakr Muḥammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi (aka Rhazes; 865–925). In his Kitab al-Mansouri fi al-Tibb, the acclaimed Persian medical scholar argued that military camps

should be pitched in summer on hills and high places, tents being directed towards the north wind, with plenty of air space between tents. Animals should be kept as far from the tents as possible. In winter the camps should be placed in low-lying places, preferably at the foot of hills or mountains, tents being directed towards the east or south, alternate pairs of tents being joined together. When moist south winds blow, rations should be cut down, wine should be interdicted, and more military exercises taken. When the air is dry, just the opposite regime should be enforced. Sick cattle should be kept far from the camp, in low windless places…. Poisonous odorous plants and trees should be burned or the camp site should be above them. Food and drink, as causing many diseases, should be inspected with great caution.Footnote 52

Al-Razi was not composing a military treatise, but the above passage, which may by now ring familiar thanks to the sources it shared with medieval Latin and Greek works, underscores at least for other elites the hazards posed by natural elements, alongside other non-naturals, to garrisoned armies. It also alludes, centuries before Von Clausewitz, to the health benefits of tents.

Such insights reverberate throughout a range of Arabic tactical treatises. For instance, al-Ansari’s Tafrı̄j al-Kurūb fı̄ Tadbı̄r al-Hurūb, an early fifteenth-century military manual, likely based on a ninth-century work, stresses the importance of knowing how to conduct responsible marching and identify salubrious stations. The able general is hence to be ‘experienced [with regard to handling] roads and watered places and water resources, and the conditions of way-stations and camping grounds, and the times during which marching and camping are proper’.Footnote 53 The work furthermore specifies that, in choosing a campsite, sustenance (pasture, water, food, etc.) as well as tactical variety and defensibility are crucial;Footnote 54 and that its internal organisation should enable good communication and order.Footnote 55

Exploring additional sources for similar purposes is possible well beyond Europe and the Mediterranean region. Once again, and without attempting a comprehensive overview, key treatises hailing from east Asia highlight preventative considerations, for instance, in discussing how best to manoeuvre an army. Sun-tzu’s Art of War, a Chinese collection codified in the early eleventh century but probably drawing on much earlier texts, observes that ‘the army likes heights and abhors low areas, esteems the sunny [yang] and disdains the shady [ying]. It nourishes life and occupies the substantial. An army that avoids the hundred illnesses is said to be certain of victory’.Footnote 56

And a similar prophylactic principle informs Wu-tzu’s manual, an acclaimed work originating in the fourth century BC and popularised under the Han dynasty (206 BC–220 AD):

Control is foremost [to ensure armies’ victory…]. What is meant by control is that when stationary [i.e. in camp] they observe the forms of propriety [li] and when in action they are awesome…In general the Way [Tao] to command an army on the march is not to contravene the proper measure of advancing and stopping; not miss the appropriate times for eating and drinking; and not completely exhaust the strength of the men and horses…. If advancing and resting are not measured; if drinking and eating are not timely and appropriate; and if, when the horses are tired and the men weary, they are not allowed to relax in the encampment, then they will be unable to put the commander’s orders into effect. When the commander’s orders are thus disobeyed, when encamped they will be in turmoil, and in battle they will be defeated.Footnote 57

Given Chinese influence on myriad aspects of Japanese culture it should come as no surprise that the broad social remit of military commanders was typical of Japanese manuals as well. As the martial artist and theoretician Miyamoto Musashi put it in 1632, ‘Large-scale military science is a matter of winning at keeping good people, winning at employing large numbers of people, winning at correctness of personal conduct, winning at governing nations, winning at taking care of the populace’.Footnote 58 And the author of an early eighteenth-century manual lamented: ‘People of all social classes, high and low, constantly overheat, drink too much, and indulge their desires to an unhealthy degree, all because of forgetting about death. This puts a strain on their internal organs, so they may die remarkably young, or else become sickly or invalid.’ Reducing health risks, in sum, requires visible hygienic discipline:

The principles of knighthood include washing your hands and feet and bathing morning and night, keeping your body clean, shaving and dressing your hair every morning, dressing formally according to the season and circumstances and always keeping your fan in your belt, not to mention your long and short swords.Footnote 59

Whatever their specific relations and impact, collectively such texts illustrate, first, elites’ concerns about armies’ vulnerabilities, and secondly, how prevention did not have to share the exact same medical or natural-philosophical paradigm across distant cultures to remain a pertinent consideration at least for army leaders. Be it on the march or in the camp, and well before the so-called professionalisation of military medicine, armies were seen as communities of prophylactic practices. As such, they strongly resembled other premodern communities at risk.Footnote 60

5 From Military Medicine to Social History

Tactical manuals illuminate preventative practices and medical literacy in premodernity, an era some medical historians continue to view as uniquely unhygienic.Footnote 61 Given the perspective’s freshness, military historians familiar with such texts may thus find themselves at the vanguard of a revisionist endeavour that could greatly benefit public health historiography.Footnote 62 However, in order to understand more fully what treatises on tactics can offer the latter field, it may be helpful to interrogate some of the terms and imagined trajectories still prevalent in the former. This is not to homogenise a rich and diverse historiography, but rather to highlight what is, especially among non-specialists, a common point of entry into it. In their ambitious A History of Military Medicine, Richard Gabriel and Karen Metz argue that, prior to the nineteenth century, ‘the military doctor’s only hope in preserving the army from disease was to prevent its outbreak in the first place’. Both before and after the so-called professionalisation of military medicine, however, promoting safety and fighting disease were hardly limited to ‘doctors’, as Gabriel and Metz in fact repeatedly show. Moreover, in contrast to their balanced assessment of prophylactic care in ancient armies,Footnote 63 the authors treat preventative care in medieval Europe with particular suspicion, incongruent as such practices would seem with ‘the nearly total disintegration of Western culture’ between the third and fifteenth centuries.Footnote 64 To emphasise, from their perspective, just how deep the West had sunk in this sense too, Gabriel and Metz juxtapose the region’s armies with those of Byzantium, which managed to cling to Roman hygienic standards, and the persistence in the medieval Islamicate world of ‘the usual hygienic practices now commonly found in military camps in almost all armies’. In western Europe, by contrast,

the low state of military medical care is demonstrated by the filthy conditions of military camps of the period. Even the simple art of field hygiene had been lost…. The combination of disorganized military structure and the low state of medical knowledge consistently combined to wreak havoc through disease on army after army over a 700-year period. It was not until 1415 that rudimentary regulations on camp hygiene finally addressed the terrible ravages of disease…. There is no evidence, however, that any of these regulations were regularly implemented.Footnote 65

As the foregone essay has shown also with respect to Latin Europe, however, field hygiene was never lost, at least not at the normative level. The authors justly warn against forcing the premodern world into a single mould when it comes to preventative practices. Islamicate and East Roman armies, as they rightly stress, remained active if not innovative in implementing hygienic programmes based on deeply rooted medical insights, even if their European counterparts fell far behind. Yet the diversity Gabriel and Metz purport to show is premised on employing rather different criteria for evaluating the reliability of medieval European sources than those used for other regions and subperiods. An equally open-minded reading of records documenting west-European military prophylactics, including military manuals, would probably narrow or at any rate redraw the contours of the gap between these neighbouring civilisations, whose medical-theoretical roots were after all strongly interlinked. At the very least it would have aligned with the nuanced approach of this otherwise exemplary treatment.

More importantly, however, a stance that is less strongly wedded to a narrative of Western medical (and general) decline after Late Antiquity would broaden the scope of an already vigorous historiography of medieval field medicine and military medical institutions. It would offer scholars, and historians of public health specifically, a gateway into the realm of army prophylactics, while expanding the source base for writing a social history of medicine and medical ideas. To be sure, much ground remains to be covered. First and most obviously, the production, chronology and specific relations among the manuals discussed above deserve further attention. Relatedly, texts falling under the category of tactical manuals are far more numerous. The broader corpus can in turn be fruitfully mined for further and comparative insights and examined for the transmission of ideas and debates among medical practitioners and traditions across regions, including during long campaigns (also at sea), training, sieges and occupations. There are many other prescriptive sources, moreover, whose preventative advice can be recovered, including images, regulae governing medieval military orders (Templars, Hospitallers, etc.), crusade-related edicts touching upon the sustenance of armies, guides for pilgrims across religions and ‘mirrors’ for princes.Footnote 66 Next, the specific relations in different times and places between prescriptive texts and social practices, in the camp and on the march, can be reassessed, for instance on the basis of narrative sources such as diaries and chronicles, documents of practice (including letters, charters and financial records), images integrated into such texts and those (including in paintings, maps, tapestries and sculpture) that stand alone, and of course human, animal, plant and structural remains.Footnote 67

Finally, an integrated strand of research into the prophylactic insights of tactical manuals can illuminate parallel and potentially cross-fertilising programmes emerging from monastic and urban contexts. In each of these environments, at-risk sites and communities formed a major concern of local regimes, charitable institutions, professional associations and informal bodies such as neighbourhoods, and often outside the context of paroxysmal events such as the early second plague pandemic (the Black Death). Interactions among such groups and shared motivations to fight the hazards they faced are possible to trace. Given their relatively large scale, as compared with many contemporary towns and cities, premodern armies could easily create city-like footprints upon a region. As Caroline Shenton notes for northwestern Europe, ‘By the mid-fourteenth century, sophisticated infrastructures were rapidly installed in large siege camps, which became temporary towns in their own right, catering for the needs of the many people involved in the hostilities’.Footnote 68 And as Babur, the founder of the Mughal dynasty, described his siege of Samarkand in 1496: ‘So many townspeople and merchants came out of Samarkand that the camp had become a regular town. Everything that one might want in a city was to be found there.’Footnote 69 One assumes that ‘everything’ included hazards as well.

Different but sizeable premodern communities regularly devised and enforced harm-reductive programmes. These involved the provision of food and removal of waste, fighting air and water pollution, curbing violence and crowdedness, promoting safety standards at home, work and during travel, and monitoring residents’ interaction with people, animals and matter considered dangerous, either morally (able-bodied poor, the blind, sex workers, ‘lepers’, Jews) or physically (horses, oxen and, above all, pigs).Footnote 70 Armies’, or rather military communities’ knowledge and needs, often played a key role in such contexts, not only in informing preventative programmes as objects, but also in enforcing them. For instance, however modest the urbanisation of western Europe and East Rome during the early Middle Ages, as well as the more extensive parallel process in north Africa, Iberia and Sicily, local armies were often involved in promoting and protecting the growth of cities.Footnote 71 Armies’ more direct involvement in defending urban health emerges in other contexts as well. The metropolitan janissaries of Constantinople, for example, fought fire, guarded gates and prisons, and ensured fair trading in markets as part of their overall mission to maintain civic order.Footnote 72 And with the arrival of plague in Pistoia in the early summer of 1348, combatants were mobilised explicitly to protect the city and its hinterland from further onslaught.Footnote 73 Such civic-military collaborations were deeply rooted in urban governance, at least across western Europe. In the relatively urbanised Italian peninsula and the Low Countries, military and civic leadership strongly overlapped, as did cities’ labour and fighting forces, facilitating the transmission of preventative theories and policies as well as their implementation.Footnote 74 What is more, as Janna Coomans has recently shown for the later medieval Low Countries, public works and waste disposal outfits often began when under-employed troops were seconded to the city government;Footnote 75 and as Sander Govaerts demonstrates with respect to the Meuse Valley, between the thirteenth and the eighteenth century armies in this region were bent on making life in cities, fort towns and villages more sustainable.Footnote 76 Armies’ routines, in short, can be studied profitably from the perspective of public health and further enrich the fields of medical and health history.

6 Conclusion

Achieving a blended (and for that matter more reliable) view of three premodern worlds, the military, the monastic and the civic, would help make one aspect of military history more directly pertinent to social, religious and health history, and vice versa. The outcome should be particularly welcome to scholars of premodern civilisations given the relative paucity of sources shedding direct light on public health in this long period. At least within a western European context, moreover, a revised view may challenge the consensus regarding the emergence, in the later eighteenth century, of a new form of power brokering dubbed by Michel Foucault and others as biopolitics. Foucauldians define biopolitics as the endeavour ‘to rationalize problems presented to governmental practice by the phenomena characteristic of a group of living human beings constituted as a population: health, sanitation, birth rate, longevity, race’.Footnote 77 Abundant evidence from monastic and urban milieus has already begun to undermine the chronology (but not the modality) of biopolitics as a uniquely modern European phenomenon. Studies illuminating the deployment of health discourses and preventative programmes in later medieval Portugal, the early modern Ottoman Empire and Italy, for example, situate them within competing claims to medical authority and forms of expertise that exceed the scope of traditional political elites.Footnote 78 Recovering similar evidence from army life to demonstrate the ubiquity and variety of prophylactic approaches may thus expand the circle of scholars historicising biopolitics, on the one hand, and challenge a key aspect of an accepted pre/modern divide, on the other.Footnote 79

Footnotes

For their comments on earlier drafts, bibliographical suggestions and copies of works in progress, I am grateful to Mieke Aerts, Sander Govaerts, John Haldon, Jonathan Harris, Mayke de Jong, Samuël Kruizinga, Piers Mitchell, Carole Rawcliffe, Justin Stearns, James Symonds, Claire Weeda and the journal’s editors and anonymous reviewers. In citing primary sources in translation, the text follows the original text and therefore involves occasional orthographical discrepancies between US and UK English. Funding has been provided by the European Research Council (grant no. 724114) as part of the Premodern Healthscaping Project (https://premodernhealthscaping.hcommons.org/).

References

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64. Ibid., 1:181. See also ibid., 2:67, which mischaracterises the medical profession of even later centuries as ‘having forgotten the old Roman notion of preventative medicine’, which purportedly explains why ‘few commanders gave much attention to preventing disease and illness on military campaigns’.Google Scholar

65. Ibid., 1:204. Richard A. Gabriel, Man and Wound in the Ancient World: A History of Military Medicine from Sumer to the Fall of Constantinople (Washington, DC: Potomac Books, 2012), 185–204 and 215–17, is a reiteration of the same reductionist image, which also lurks behind Roy J. Shepard, An Illustrated History of Health and Fitness, from Pre-History to our Post-Modern World (New York: Springer, 2015), 307–308. See, by contrast, the somewhat more positive evaluation in Histoire de la médicine aux armées, Vol. 1, Jean Guillermand (gen. ed.) (Paris: Charles Lavauzelle, 1982), 275–81.Google Scholar

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72. Godfrey Goodwin, The Janissaries (London: Saqi Books, 1997), 88–90 and 97–100.Google Scholar

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77. Michel Foucault, ‘The birth of biopolitics’, in Paul Rabinow (ed.), The Essential Works 1954–1984, Robert Hurley, et al. (trans.), Vol. 1, (New York: The New Press, 1997), 73–79: 73. And see Mitchell Dean, Governmentality: Power and Rule in Modern Society (London: Sage, 1999), 98–112.Google Scholar

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