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History's Great Military Blunders and the Lessons They Teach
- Narrated by: Gregory S. Aldrete
- Length: 12 hrs and 12 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Military history often highlights successes and suggests a sense of inevitability about victory, but there is so much that can be gleaned from considering failures. Study these crucibles of history to gain a better understanding of why a civilization took - or didn't take - a particular path. Full of dramatic reversals of fortune and colorful characters, this course examines some of the world's most notable examples of military misfortune, from the humiliating destruction of a Roman army at Carrhae in 53 BC to the tragic landings at Gallipoli in World War I. Success and failure, as you'll learn, are two sides of the same coin.
These 24 lectures reveal how the trajectory of history hangs in the balance of individual battles; even a single person's actions in a particular moment have made drastic and irreversible impacts. From ancient Greece through global war during the first half of the 20th century, you'll delve into infamous conflicts such as the Charge of the Light Brigade and the Battle of Little Bighorn as well as lesser-known battles.
How could an army equipped with cannon be wiped out by Zulu warriors wielding spears and outdated firearms? How could armored French knights be vulnerable to the crude weapons of a band of Flemish shopkeepers? Why would a savvy Chinese general fall victim to a tactic he had previously used himself? Unpredictable twists of fate abound, demonstrating that when it comes to war, there are no givens. Sheer numbers, superior weaponry, and skilled leadership are never a guarantee of success.
Take a fascinating journey through some of the most gloriously inglorious wartime encounters. Along the way, you'll get to know some of the most legendary characters in world history.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
What listeners say about History's Great Military Blunders and the Lessons They Teach
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Audrey Arrowood
- 04-10-19
How in the world did this course get a 4.4 rating?
Out of 24 blunders covered, and a 2400 year timeframe, Aldrete includes 10 British or American incidents. 3 British "blunders" from WWII are included. It's hard to imagine how this "inept" British military managed to hold off the Axis powers alone for years... and then eventually win the war. Oh yes... and there are NO German blunders mentioned from WWII. Apparently the Nazis brilliantly planned and executed their efforts all the way to extermination... hmmm....
Genghis Khan, the Romans, and Napoleon are presented with a neutral attitude about the morality of their conquests. Aldrete reserves moralizing for the British and the Americans. Apparently it was perfectly fine for Genghis to rampage across the world murdering millions in his path. However, the British are arrogant for trying to hold their empire together and America was immoral for its efforts to subdue the marauding Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho tribes. Present the facts and save your judgements for an ethics course, professor.
Aldrete's speech pattern is halting and painful. He... pauses... after every... two or three... words... at... the most... And please learn how to pronounce common words in the English language.
I thought this course would never end. I want my credit back.
51 people found this helpful
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- Cynthia
- 08-16-16
Martial Chaos
I'm a military history buff and a US Army veteran, so I really couldn't have asked for a more apt "The Great Courses" lecture series. It's thing to read a translation of Sun Tzu's "The Art of War" (approximately 5th century BCE), an aspirational guide to tactical warfare that's travelled the millennia well. It's quite anther to fearlessly examine some of the most painful military debacles in history and take meaning from what's written in blood . "History's Great Military Blunders and the Lessons They Teach" (Gregory S. Aldrete, PhD) is a neat survey course of things that have gone militarily very, very, wrong for more than two millennia.
The lectures range from The Battles of Syracuse (415-414 BC) to World War II's Operation Market Garden (1944). Some are obvious, often repeated errors. Napoleon's 1812 winter invasion of Russia was about as successful as Charles XII of Sweden's 1707 invasion of the same country. The 1854 storied, tragic Charge of the Light Brigade is about attacking the wrong target. Some of the disasters of World War II were almost too painful to listen to. I remember hearing war stories first-hand from veterans in my grandparents' small town, and to know that sometimes their sacrifices were wasted hurts.
I like that the lectures aren't Eurocentric - one of the best is on the 2nd Century Red Cliffs Campaign of the brilliant but merciless Chinese General Cao Cao. Even the strongest of tyrants don't always prevail. I got a kick out of the lecture on 1879 Isandlwana: 25,000 Zulus, Undetected. It was horrifying to Victorian England, especially the post-battle mutilation (actually, a sign of respect: the Zulu Warriors were releasing the spirits of the slain soldiers), but a century and a half later, it's a study in absolute arrogance and the triumph of what must have been derided then as "savages."
I would definitely listen to another one of Professor Aldrete's courses.
[If this review helped, please press YES. Thanks!]
303 people found this helpful
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- Nathan Parker
- 07-11-16
Hindsight Bias?
The professor does an outstanding presentation of his material.
I have to wonder, though, whether many of these blunders are hindsight bias. For example, we only distinguish rashness from boldness when the endeavor succeeds or fails; there may be no way to determine which description applies beforehand.
Many of the behaviors that the professor describes also precede great successes as well as failures, and it's only when failure occurs that they look stupid. The problem is that we don't keep data on stupidity followed by success, which makes it look artificially easy to determine when you're screwing up.
118 people found this helpful
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- Boyd Tschaggeny
- 05-21-19
Good, not Great. (Almost No Analysis)
This should be titled 'History's Great Military Blunders (Full Stop)' because there is almost no discussion on the lessons that they teach. In a typical lesson, 95% of the lecture is the story of the blunder and 5% is an analysis of that blunder. This does make for a great, story-time approach to history. However, you won't actually get that much from the professors "insights".
I liked this course, but just know that it's just story-time.
21 people found this helpful
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- Alex Jordan
- 08-12-16
Great material, Shatner-esque delivery
This is fascinating material! However, while the narrator clearly has mastered the material, his delivery is... full of... awkward... pauses, strange pronunciations, and odd turns of phrase. He's clearly reading the material, which would be fine if the delivery was not so distracting!
31 people found this helpful
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- Billy
- 12-24-15
Great book
Great book,informative I loved it. Our public schools should be ashamed for missing the opportunity do teach real history
7 people found this helpful
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- Michael
- 10-26-15
Awesome as Aldrete's usual !!!
After listening to "Decisive battles" from the same author, I knew I had to listen to this title as well.
If you want to learn college-level history, With the ease of just curling up with a good book that is beautifully narrated this is the course for you.
30 people found this helpful
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- CC
- 04-14-16
Great Stories
This course is comprised of 23 great historical stories and one final lecture sort of tying the stories together. Very easy to listen to and stay engaged.
11 people found this helpful
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- J_T
- 03-05-16
Legitimate 5 stars
I am a big fan of The Great Courses. That being said, not all are worthy of 5 star reviews... unless they feature Professor Aldrete.
8 people found this helpful
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- Sam Fredericks
- 02-22-16
Very Interesting
What made the experience of listening to History's Great Military Blunders and the Lessons They Teach the most enjoyable?
The premise for these lectures is just great. You listen to how these commanders and others invovled make error after error resulting in a horrible defeat of their forces. Spanning time from ancient Egypt to WW2 there are a ton of interesting stories here.
What did you like best about this story?
The various accounts are presented with a ton of insight into the people involved, the time, the customs, etc.
What about Professor Gregory S. Aldrete, PhD’s performance did you like?
Dr. Aldrete is a great lecturer and often includes a comic touch when presenting these tales. I had listened to his history of the ancient world course as well and highly recommend it if you are interested in standard history.
Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?
I blew through these vary fast and some are quite comical.
Any additional comments?
Very entertaining.
8 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 10-04-18
Fascinating material ruined by woeful narration
This could have been a fantastic audio book. The content is compelling but the narrator removes any possibility of enjoying this book. He sounds as if each individual word has been recorded and pieced together, disrupting any possible fluidity. Such a shame.
5 people found this helpful
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- JJ
- 11-30-15
Interesting content with a truly awful narration.
What could have made this a 4 or 5-star listening experience for you?
A more fluid narration! The guy who reads this audiobook is very clearly reading the content from a script. His speech stops and starts and emphasises in all the wrong places. Its like listening to William Shatner struggling with a script !
If the book was read by somebody who could speak in a steady and confident manner it would fare much better, but sadly the narrator of this version sounds robotic, unusual, stuttering and impossible to listen to with any amount of concentration.
What was one of the most memorable moments of History's Great Military Blunders and the Lessons They Teach?
I'm not sure. Because I was so put off by the narrator's manner of speaking I stopped listening after a few chapters. The chapter about the battle of the Crater was quite interesting i guess.
Who might you have cast as narrator instead of Professor Gregory S. Aldrete, PhD?
Stephen Fry? Patrick Stewart? Quite frankly anyone who can hold together a deep, wise, and unwavering tone.
You didn’t love this book--but did it have any redeeming qualities?
The content itself was relatively interesting - its just a shame it was presented in such a mispronounced, stuttering, odd and disjointed fashion.
Any additional comments?
Dont buy it unless you can put up with slow reading and mispronunciation.
14 people found this helpful
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- B. Whelan
- 08-14-17
British military disaster
It's well narrated but if you are fan ok the uk it may annoy you in parts its seems 3/4 of the blunders are British. I'm not patriotic but even I grew tired of constant British blunders
4 people found this helpful
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- Ricky Bolt
- 10-02-20
Learn how to pronounce names!
Painful! Very interesting but find it very hard to take a historian seriously that A/ can't be bothered to learn how to pronounce names like Culloden and B/ thinks England and Great Britain are some how interchangeable after 1707, very shoddy and annoying. Makes me question some of accuracies of the rest of the information... Very disappointing...
1 person found this helpful
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- Muhammad ali rana
- 10-31-19
A good overview of some key battles
I won’t confess to being a history buff, but the battles covered spanned the planet and took places at different times throughout history. A good listen.
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- J. Leach
- 12-02-18
Wonderful recounting of history
even with my ani-war sentiments I really enjoyed this lively, well told and analysed account of war history. The hours flew past!
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- Lawrence Oxborough
- 03-01-17
More of a University Lecture than a Book...
... but still thoroughly enjoyable for a history nerd. Of course, it missed a few "blunders" that I would have considered pivotal in world history, such as the Third Reich's advance into Russia, and George Meade's failure to pursue the defeated Confederate Army immediately following Gettysburg, but all the lectures came together in the end very nicely and a solid point was made that I can't argue against.
... Even if the blunders committed by British generals were hard pills to swallow!
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- T.
- 11-11-21
A good book
I think it was interesting but feel that the analysis at the end of the chapters should have been longer to learn more where the reader can evaluate how they wouldn't make those mistakes. It boils the content rather than simmers it slowly to perfection.
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- Anonymous User
- 09-04-21
Lack of understanding of the military process.
The author lacks an understanding of the planning process, therefore comes to misguided conclusions.
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- Asher Girling
- 06-07-21
Instructive and engaging if a little repetative
A highly enjoyable and detailed series of lectures, presented in an engaging and easily-followed manner.
My only complaint is that the selection of military scenarios, campaigns and blunders evaluated in these lectures lack diversity: with a huge amount of theatres, time periods and conflicts to choose from, the same eras and wars are returned to frequently, and thus the same recurring themes are discussed to the point of repetitiveness.
Overall though, I greatly enjoyed this informative, well researched series of recordings.
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- Lachlan
- 09-29-19
Narrator is awful
He can't... string more than... three words... together. I couldn't listen for more than 3mins.
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- Anonymous User
- 05-11-22
Style of speech detracts
The lecturer is clearly very knowledgeable but his strange halting style of speech, with pauses at odd points of a sentence is extremely distracting. His constant mispronunciation of Culloden is really inexcusable.
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- Anonymous User
- 04-18-20
Great book, excellent presentation
Really great listen,thorougjlty enjoyed the presentation and the delivery was excellent.Definetly worth the listen if you are interested in military studies.
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- Anne Hawi Josiah
- 06-23-19
Alexander the Great, did not die of an arrow.
Hi there, seems to be some incorrect information about the dead of alexander the great at lecture 24. Its mentioned here he died during a seige in combat.
I only hear from other historians he died of a supposed fever, potential poisoning in his bed.
Please look into thank you
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- Michael
- 11-20-18
Great book
very interesting but can be hard to follow at times given the content as most blunders become a mess but he makes it easy enough to follow with the structure of his lectures.
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- Kevin Magee
- 05-19-18
A great find
By focusing the ‘bad practises’ of leadership and strategy that contributed to some of the greatest and most world defining military defeats rather than the practise of the victors, Professor Aldrete’s brings a fresh take on known events that shows them in a completely new light. His insights and explanation of from this new angle of the historic events and their background, circumstances, causes and consequences is fascinating, educational and at uplifting. This is a audio series I highly recommend.
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- Mark
- 05-14-18
Great Material but Presentaion Unlistenable.
THIS.. presentation "has" , weird pausing...mEANingless emphasis (Based) on timing or just completely raNdom. sadly this RENDERS the entire presentation.....completely InCoMPREhensible. Shame because the underlying script is sound.
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- Anonymous User
- 06-19-17
Brit bashing more important than interesting
I like the way this lecturer provides information and insight but of 23 lectures, 10 are examples of British “blunders”.
There are more interesting, more relevant, more significant battles and blunders in 3000+ years of warfare than some of the examples used here. After a while, it just comes across as though the lecturer has a chip on his shoulder.
I’d recommend other titles by this lecturer, but perhaps not this one if you’re British.