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    The Employment of War Dogs in the Medieval and Early Modern West

    Phillips, Gervase ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6522-5417 (2021) The Employment of War Dogs in the Medieval and Early Modern West. British Journal for Military History, 7 (1). pp. 2-20. ISSN 2057-0422

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    Abstract

    This article explores the military use of dogs in the west, principally from the thirteenth to the eighteenth century. It is argued that the use of ‘war dogs’ was a recurrent but essentially ad hoc, sporadic and localized practice, quite distinct from the regular dog handling units that were established in the late nineteenth century. However, from the earliest phases of European colonization in the fifteenth century, another tradition, which employed dogs as weapons and instruments of torture, developed in the context of racialized warfare. The legacy of this infamous practice would be felt again in the twentieth century.

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