打字猴:1.700097082e+09
1700097082
1700097083 The same applies to Nidau and Aarberg.
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1700097085 To my lords in the field, that they see to it that there be no kind of forceful haggling with those who provide you with goods for sale, and that they receive their just payment.
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1700097087 The decisive action is called for quickly,“for my lords cannot provide supplies for such an army over a long period.”
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1700097089 Ochsenbein, Documents on the Battle of Murten(Urkunden zur Schlacht von Murten),p. 301.
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1700097091 8.Escher, p.26,states that in the Zurich archives there is an explanation of the formation of the battle unit, indicating that it was fifty-six men wide and twenty men deep.Consequently, that would be a phalanx rather than a wedge. In a later period, where a unit formed a true square in space rather than a rectangle with an equal number of men in its width and depth, these approximate figures were to be found quite often. But at the time of the old Zurich war, the period to which Escher attributes his explanation, I can hardly imagine that it was applied from a practical viewpoint.
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1700097093 9.Häne, p.8,concludes from the military games of boys and other indications that maneuvers had actually taken place. I am not convinced of this. In particular, the fact that a knight once threatened that he would teach the soldiers(lansquenets)in such a way that one of them would be worth more than two men of the Confederation is no proof that he had Swiss drills in mind.
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1700097095 10.Elgger, p.253.
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1700097097 11.Paulus Jovius, in 1494.
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1700097099 12.The passages have been assembled by Studer in the Archiv des Historischen Vereins Bern, IV, Book 4,p.36.
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1700097101 13.Sempach letter of 1394. Blumer, p.374. Kriegsordnung of 1468 and 1490. Rodt, Berner Kriegswesen,1:250,253. Elgger, p.215.
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1700097103 14.Rodt, Campaigns of Charles the Bold(Feldzüge Karls des Kühnen),1:331.
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1700097105 15.According to the extract in Häne, p.29.
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1700097107 16.According to Thüring Frickhart’s Twingherrenstreit, edited by Studer, Quellen zur Schweizer Geschichte,1(1877):137.
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1700097109 17.Studer, Quellen zur Schweizer Geschichte,1(1877):145.
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1700097111 18.W.F.von Mülinen, History of the Swiss Mercenaries up to the Formation of the First Permanent Guard in 1497(Geschichte der Schweizer Sóldner bis zur Errichtung der ersten stehenden Garde,1497),Bern,1887.
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1700097113 19.Collection Petitot,10:245.
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1700097115 20.“Et jam Palatini cessurus equitatus fuerat, nisi prodeuntes a latebris pedites longis hastis Badensium equos confodere cepissent.”(“And the Palatine cavalry had already been about to yield, if the foot soldiers advancing from their hideouts had not undertaken to strike the horses of the Badensians with their long spears.”)Gobellinus, cited by Roder in Die Schlacht bei Seckenheim, Billingen,1877. The principal source is a poetic work by Michael Beheim.
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1700097117 7 勃艮第战争
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1700097119 1.To be sure, the Swiss, too, suffered defeats a few times, when they moved out of their mountains, as, for example, the Appenzellers in 1405 at Altstetten, and in 1408 at Bregenz, and the troops of Uri in 1422 at Arbedo. But those were not very important engagements.“Ueber Arbedo,” by Fr. Knorreck, Berlin dissertation,1910.
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1700097121 2.Dändliker, Geschichte der Schweiz, p.609.
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1700097123 3.Nicolaus Rüsch, the city scribe of Basel, even states that the Burgundians were 10,000 strong on horseback and 8,000 on foot. Busier Chroniken, Vol.Ill, p.304,1887.
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1700097125 4.Rodt,1:304.
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1700097127 5.According to the note in Tobler’s Schilling,1:163,the Solothurners reported to their home town in 1635.
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1700097129 6.Basler Chroniken,3:305.
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1700097131 7.Witte, Zeitschrift fur Geschichte des Oberrheins,45:394.
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