History buff33
Warlord
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2009
- Messages
- 287
Greatest contribution Germany gave to the world
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What is "capitalist farming" and where can I get some?Also John Davies in Hanes Cyrmu says that Roman-Style Villa owners "Introduced capitalist farming" to Britain. Anyone have any idea what that means and if there's any truth to it? I don't trust his judgement on Roman affairs.
I have no idea. I was actually hoping you knew.What is "capitalist farming" and where can I get some?
Interesting.Flying Pig[/quote said:I think he means industrial-scale for-profit farming, with landowners having hundreds or thousands of slaves to work their land, as in the great farms of Italy and North Africa, rather than subsistence farming as Britain had previously known. 'Capitalist' is a poor term because it implies waged labour, which as far as I know was not really used in the Roman latifundia, which were worked by slaves.
The French thrusted into Alsace-Lorraine during the opening moves of 1914, but the Germans defeated them, I think.
You can get into candidates such as Pepi II, Taejo, and Drest I with claimed extraordinarily long reigns and lives, but I would lean towards them being overstated and would guess that 100 years old is hard to beat
Am I correct in thinking that in the big 3 France-Germany conflicts, there were no real attempts to assault each other across the southern section of their mutual border? Is the terrain there just too suited to defensive actions, what with the highland structure and the Rhine stuck in the middle?
Without knowing much about the terrain in the area, it seems odd that at least the three German invasions were all focused further North, around the Metz-Luxembourg-Belgium zone.
Dachs is the expert onthiseverything. He'll show up soon I'm sure.
the Roman latifundia, which were worked by slaves.
Still haven't purged that stuff from the Polish curriculum, huh?Later on by colons. A step forward on the road of progress from slavery to feudalism
The infamous Plan 17. Cut to pieces by German machine guns. Eventually outflanked by German forces in the North.
Dachs is the expert on this. He'll show up soon I'm sure.
Was there ever any attempt to try it again though? It seems to me that even slightly broken terrain would be superior to the types of attacks happening in the Northern sector...
Still haven't purged that stuff from the Polish curriculum, huh?
Feudalism was much better than slavery. What should be purged is the myth that Medieval peasant had similar situation and status to slave everywhere in Europe except of Russia (where it really was the case - but only in High and Late Medieval, not in times of the Kievan Rus).
Later on by colons. A step forward on the road of progress from slavery to feudalism:
There was a fundamental misunderstanding on both sides of the front concerning the state of weapons technology and it's implications for the field of battle. Once battle lines were established, defensive firepower superiority, particularly heavy machine guns and massed artillery (barbed wire, etc.) so far outstripped the offense that multiple attempts by both sides to seize the initiative resulted in a unbroken string of massacres and defeat.