10-23-2006, 04:54 PM
I think it's Book Three.
[url:3s4uvevc]http://www.constitution.org/mac/artofwar3.htm[/url]
It's worth reading the whole lot though, simply because there are few in history who were as besotted with the Roman military as he was, and uses the book as an opportunity to espouse his theories on what they did, why, and how it related to warfare of his time when men were still fighting steel-on-steel. Check out his opinion that there was troop rotation at the very front lines as well :wink:
[url:3s4uvevc]http://www.constitution.org/mac/artofwar3.htm[/url]
It's worth reading the whole lot though, simply because there are few in history who were as besotted with the Roman military as he was, and uses the book as an opportunity to espouse his theories on what they did, why, and how it related to warfare of his time when men were still fighting steel-on-steel. Check out his opinion that there was troop rotation at the very front lines as well :wink:
TARBICvS/Jim Bowers
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