Book description
Military drummers have played a crucial role in warfare throughout
history. Soldiers marched to battle to the sound of the drums and used
the beat to regulate the loading and re-loading of their weapons during
the battle. Drummers wre also used to raise morale during the fight.
This is the first work to chart the rise of drums in military use and
how they came to be used on the battlefield as a means of signalling.
This use was to last for almost 4,000 years whne modern warfare with
communications rendered them obsolete. Even so, drummers continued to
serve in the armies of the world and performed many acts of heroism as
they served as stretcher bearers to rescue the wounded from the
battlefield. From ancient China, Egypt and the Montgol hordes of Genghis
Khan the dum was used on the battlefield. The 12th century Crusaders
helped re-introduce the drum to Europe and during the Napoleonic Wars of
the 18th and 19th centuries the drum was to be heard resonating across
Europe. Drummers had to flog their comrades and beat their drums on
drill parade. Today they are ceremonial but this work tells how they had
to face enemies across the battlefield with only their drum.
John Norris served for six years in the Grenadier Guards. He has
travelled extensively and visited battlefields across the world. He
escorts battlefield tours to Dunkirk, Normandy and Arnhem. He works as a
columnist on several leading specialist military magazines and liaises
with re-enactment groups, as well as classic military vehicle societies.
He has written a number of military history titles, including Pistols at
Dawn and Artillery: A History, Welsh Castles at War and Medieval Siege
Warfare (The History Press).