European bellicosity, 1100-1700

Commentary
European bellicosity, 1100-1700

One of the reasons for the rapid advance of military technology in Europe and for the growing impact of warfare on the structure of states and societies was the increasing frequency of conflict, which culminated in the war-torn seventeenth century. 

The pace of European military innovation accelerated from the fifteenth century onward. The introduction of gunpowder weapons was part of that broader development, but what turned Europe into a major global laboratory for military technology, strategy, tactics, and logistics was the growing frequency, intensity, scope and scale of European warfare and the impact which such conflict had on the structure of states, economies, and societies. 

Viewed from a global perspective, geography was an underlying factor here: fragmentation of the European landmass by bodies of water (the Mediterranean and its component parts, the Baltic, the North Sea and English Channel) and mountain ranges (Alps, Pyrenees, etc.) made the continent difficult to unify.  Within this geographical context, a wide range of impulses kept Europeans fighting with one and their neighbors at a rate which may be difficult to parallel elsewhere.  

As an aid to grasping this point, some of the major conflicts of the late medieval and early modern period are listed below, with links to more information elsewhere.  Rather than providing a simple chronological list, these conflicts are clustered together in categories.  These categories are purely heuristic and non-exclusive.  There was no such thing as a purely religious war, for instance, but religion certainly motivated and complicated many conflicts of the period. Many of the other sources of conflict also overlap: regional and dynastic conflicts, civil wars and wars of independence are not exclusive categories.

(A useful list of European wars -- major and minor -- arranged chronologically can be found here)

Religious wars
Regional conflicts
Dynastic conflicts
Civil wars
Wars of independence
Trade wars
Incipient global conflicts

Religious wars

Regional conflicts

Dynastic conflicts

Civil wars (most important have a religious dimensions)

Wars of independence

Trade wars

Incipient global conflicts