The other day I finished reading a book that I've been working through for a little while now. War and Society in Renaissance Europe by JR Hale is an informative, but not always an easy read. This was never a study in the art of warfare during this period, but to continue improving my understanding of the context in which war was conducted. In this case, the impact of war on society and government and the impact of society and government on war.
It was instructive. However, it is a surprising hobby moment that I'd like to share.
Whilst reading the chapter entitled The Society of Soldiers: The Professionals, I came across this:
"... there is one [woodcut] showing him [Maximilian I] as a boy learning to joust with the aid of jointed wooden models. Assisted by the publication of books containing diagrams of military formations, the model soldier became a more ambitious educational aid. Do not bring up boys to play with wooden horses, dolls or toy carts, advised the old soldier Jean de Tavannes in the memoirs he concluded in 1596. Order instead six thousand models (in wood or pottery) of horsemen, arquebusiers and pikemen, also model cannon, castles and towns. 'With these little models you can carry out and explain how to draw up companies, squadrons and main forces, and demonstrate the storming of breaches, charges, retreats, the posting of sentinels and watches... in such a way that by the age of ten... instead of having passed the time uselessly, they will have formed the habit of thinking of themselves as a soldiers or a captain.' By the late sixteenth century metal toy soldiers were being moved about by veterans reliving past battles."
Don't you love it when you chance upon something that reinforces the historical value given to wargaming as an intellectual, and pleasurable, pursuit.