Peter2 wrote:Yes. I saw a quote somewhere to the effect that old generals studied strategy, but modern generals study logistics..
The usual form of the quote is "Amateurs study tactics. Professionals study logistics."
Another statement of the principal is "An army marches on its stomach." Keeping your people fed in the field, let alone supplied with clothing, weapons, and ammunition could become an insuperable problem.
Safehold's high roads remind me a bit of Rome's. Roman road building was sophisticated and thorough. Part of the purpose of the roads was logistics. Roman legions could
march, and the roads provided a good place for them to do it. The mobility the roads afforded the legions was one of the things that allowed Rome to create the empire and control it once they had.
And Nimue Alban recalls at one point an Academy instructor who said that Rome could conquer what became the Empire and hold it because they had the surplus to support and maintain a standing 40,000 man army, and no one else did.
Safehold is in a better position than Rome was, courtesy of genetically engineered plants courtesy of Shan Wei that produced high yields, and a basic understanding of agriculture and animal husbandry courtesy of Sondheim and Truscott, so Safehold could support a higher population density per area than Earth could at a comparable level of technology. But there are still intrinsic limits, witness the fact that Siddarmark has a population of about 130 million pre-Sword of Schueler, and an army of about 1% of that, with two thirds of that army being militia reserves.
Harchong's logistics get very interesting at this point. Most of the million and a half members of the Mighty Host of God and the Archangels are peasants pulled from the fields, and Harchong has a highly inefficient agricultural sector. They still rely on manual labor and techniques right out of Earth's Middle Ages when places like Charis and Siddarmark have long since adopted mechanical cultivation and harvesting aids.
How many peasants can you pull out of the fields before their agricultural sector collapses? And who will actually grow the food that will have to be shipped to the Mighty Host to keep it fed? I don't see the Temple Lands and the Border States having the
capacity, let alone the willingness to do so. And we haven't heard much about South Harchong or Sodar thus far, but we might if they get expected to pick up a major share of the burden.
One thing that might put a crimp in the Mighty Host will be a collapse back home in Harchong. If South Harchong does what Sharleyan once suspected would happen and secedes, and North Harchong goes up in rebellious flames, what does the Earl of Rainbow Waters, the Mighty Host's commander, do when the Harchongese Emperor says "We need you back here! Now!" while Zion orders him to continue east to smite the heretics? (And I suspect he's smart enough to guess that arming and training a million+ peasants may have unintended consequences if he's called upon to bring them home to quell a revolt by the peasants still back on Harchong.)
Wars like this are about morale, and continue till one or both sides just don't want to fight anymore, even if they technically still can. Desnair is effectively out of the game. Dohlor is almost so. If Harchong crumbles b3ehind it, Mother Church may have no choice about opening truce negotiations, even if the Mighty Host has not yet engaged Eastshare and Green Valley, because the Mighty Host will be somewhat distracted.
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Dennis