The Europeans were generally adept politicians, but they did not rely primarily on their political skill; they relied primarily on their military power, which by 1900 allowed them to defeat native forces with a casualty ratio of more than 100:1.
This is not as impressive as you think. Those “native forces” were Neolithic people, nothing like that happened in conflicts against other civilizations like Islamic states or China. And such ratios require merely good organized violence—for example Romans claim 50:1 casualty ratios for conquest of Gaul.
It was only later on that they established an overwhelming military advantage.
Europeans didn’t really expand after Late Medieval / Early Modern period—they temporarily established various levels of controls over local governments all over the world, and had low level migration there, but all major areas of persistent European settlement are those conquered much earlier—thanks to disease and opponents still being in Neolithic.
Hitler rose to a place of prominence in the early years of the party (1919 − 1923) largely as a result of his considerable skills in oratory, organization and promotion.
Did you even read the article? They had twenty thousand people who were armed with rifles, which means that, even if they had a backwards culture, their technology was very far from Neolithic.
“Romans claim 50:1 casualty ratios for conquest of Gaul.”
All numbers that ancient historians give for enemy armies are highly suspect in general (everyone wanted to exaggerate their triumphs).
“Hitler rose to a place of prominence in the early years of the party (1919 − 1923) largely as a result of his considerable skills in oratory, organization and promotion.”
Yes- notice how rationality and intelligence are not on that list.
“Hitler rose to a place of prominence in the early years of the party (1919 − 1923) largely as a result of his considerable skills in oratory, organization and promotion.”
Yes- notice how rationality and intelligence are not on that list.
Intelligence should be, or at least it should be acknowledged that high generalised intelligence allowed success in the diverse combination of skills mentioned.
They had twenty thousand people who were armed with rifles, which means that, even if they had a backwards culture, their technology was very far from Neolithic.
Even if you disregard the rifles, the Ndebele were not a neolithic culture, since they worked iron.
Lobengula had 80,000 spearmen and 20,000 riflemen, armed with nine pound Martini-Henrys which were modern arms at that time. However, poor training meant that these were not effective weapons.
Hardware is tiny part of technology. This wasn’t an army with modern technology—just a mob which got its hands on hardware, without any of the know-how and training necessary to use it properly. And in any case rifles were already ancient technology by then—the battle was won with Maxim machine guns like most battles of that time.
Such number are not atypical. See battles of Carrhae, Legnica, Poitiers, Německý Brod and many others—all against modern enemy armies, not some Neolithic mobs which got its hands on some hardware it didn’t know how to use. It was very typical about warfare that losing side got massacred while fleeing, so 10:1 casualty ratios were the norm, and 100:1 not unheard of.
As for Hitler, organization skills require a lot of intelligence.
This is not as impressive as you think. Those “native forces” were Neolithic people, nothing like that happened in conflicts against other civilizations like Islamic states or China. And such ratios require merely good organized violence—for example Romans claim 50:1 casualty ratios for conquest of Gaul.
Europeans didn’t really expand after Late Medieval / Early Modern period—they temporarily established various levels of controls over local governments all over the world, and had low level migration there, but all major areas of persistent European settlement are those conquered much earlier—thanks to disease and opponents still being in Neolithic.
Re Hitler
“Those “native forces” were Neolithic people,”
Did you even read the article? They had twenty thousand people who were armed with rifles, which means that, even if they had a backwards culture, their technology was very far from Neolithic.
“Romans claim 50:1 casualty ratios for conquest of Gaul.”
All numbers that ancient historians give for enemy armies are highly suspect in general (everyone wanted to exaggerate their triumphs).
“Hitler rose to a place of prominence in the early years of the party (1919 − 1923) largely as a result of his considerable skills in oratory, organization and promotion.”
Yes- notice how rationality and intelligence are not on that list.
Intelligence should be, or at least it should be acknowledged that high generalised intelligence allowed success in the diverse combination of skills mentioned.
Even if you disregard the rifles, the Ndebele were not a neolithic culture, since they worked iron.
Hardware is tiny part of technology. This wasn’t an army with modern technology—just a mob which got its hands on hardware, without any of the know-how and training necessary to use it properly. And in any case rifles were already ancient technology by then—the battle was won with Maxim machine guns like most battles of that time.
Such number are not atypical. See battles of Carrhae, Legnica, Poitiers, Německý Brod and many others—all against modern enemy armies, not some Neolithic mobs which got its hands on some hardware it didn’t know how to use. It was very typical about warfare that losing side got massacred while fleeing, so 10:1 casualty ratios were the norm, and 100:1 not unheard of.
As for Hitler, organization skills require a lot of intelligence.