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OverviewIn 1918, a pigeon named Cher Ami saved 194 soldiers. In 1517, thousands of camels conquered Egypt. In 390 BCE, geese saved Rome. None of this is legend-it's documented history. So why don't our textbooks mention the animals? History erases the inconvenient truth that pivots on biology as much as strategy, on animal capabilities as much as human genius. The Invisible Army restores what's been systematically deleted: the war elephants whose terror broke Alexander's army, the rats whose hunger decided medieval sieges, the mosquitoes who killed 90% of France's forces in Haiti, and the shipworms who destroyed San Francisco's infrastructure. What you'll discover: The Mongol Empire didn't expand through superior tactics alone-it expanded because Mongol horses had specific metabolic capabilities that made certain strategies possible and others impossible. The French didn't lose Haiti mainly to Haitian resistance-yellow fever mosquitoes killed more French soldiers than all combat combined. The Ottoman conquest of Egypt succeeded because camels could survive week-long water deprivation crossing deserts that killed horses and humans. War pigeons who carried messages through gunfire when radio failed. Elephants who broke infantry formations and altered battlefield doctrine for centuries. Rats whose disruption of grain supplies forced the lifting of sieges. Dogs who detected mines and changed modern warfare. Geese whose alarm calls prevented the fall of Rome. Marine organisms who devoured naval fleets from within. This book examines fifteen documented cases where animals weren't merely present during historical events-they were integral to how those events unfolded. War Elephants of Ancient South and Southeast Asia - How these ""living weapons"" reshaped battlefield doctrine and why Alexander's veterans refused to go further east Cher Ami and the Lost Battalion - The pigeon who flew through German fire to save 194 Americans in WWI (documented in U.S. military archives) The Camel Conquest of Egypt - How Ottoman forces crossed the ""impassable"" Sinai because camels have unique biological water storage The Capitoline Geese - The actual Roman records of how sacred geese raised an alarm that changed history Rats and Medieval Siege Warfare - How rodent grain consumption forced military decisions documented in castle records The Plague and the Mongol Biological Weapon - Disease vectors that accidentally created history's first biological warfare Yellow Fever Mosquitoes in the Haitian Revolution - How insects killed 90% of French casualties (verified in French medical reports) The SS Canberra's Sheep Problem - How luxury liner-turned-troop ship carrying livestock created documented tactical vulnerabilities in the Falklands War Horses and the Mongol Empire - The specific metabolic advantages that made conquest possible Shipworms and San Francisco - Marine organisms who destroyed millions in infrastructure (with engineering surveys) Medieval Animal Trials - The legal system that prosecuted animals (with surviving court records) And more verified historical cases where biology determined outcomes Why history erased these animals: It's easier to teach history as purely human drama. It's simpler to attribute outcomes to strategy, leadership, and ideology rather than admit that biology, environment, and non-human actors constrained what was possible. But this erasure creates a fundamentally incomplete-and often incorrect-understanding of how events actually unfolded. Full Product DetailsAuthor: C J HawthornePublisher: Rosewood Lantern Publishing Imprint: Rosewood Lantern Publishing Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.308kg ISBN: 9798233348853Pages: 226 Publication Date: 13 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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