Show
115 citations
related to Weapons
Show
115 citations
related to Weapons as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Article
Arthur G. Credland
(2024)
Abraham Charles Kirkmann, lawyer and antiquary; and the rediscovery of the Bosworth stonebow at Browsholme Hall.
Arms and Armour Society Journal
(pp. 205-219).
(/isis/citation/CBB925068491/)
Article
Edward Jones-Imhotep
(2024)
Striking the empire back: Dr. Strangelove and the global histories of technology.
History and Technology
(pp. 4-17).
(/isis/citation/CBB467241412/)
Article
Zak Leonard
(2024)
A benefactor to mankind? Captain Warner’s secrets and the politics of invention in early Victorian Britain.
History of Science
(pp. 81-110).
(/isis/citation/CBB405654853/)
Article
N. R. Jenzen-Jones
(2024)
Smoke & steel: Weapons concealed as tobacco pipes & smokers’ accessories in early modern Japan.
Arms and Armour Society Journal
(pp. 79-90).
(/isis/citation/CBB583871782/)
Article
Malcolm Mercer
(2024)
The Crimean War, Sevastopol, and British Military Collecting Strategies in the Black Sea Region c.1829–1856.
Arms and Armour Society Journal
(pp. 91-107).
(/isis/citation/CBB877794188/)
Article
Stephen Wren
(2023)
A Forgotten ‘Merchant of Death’. Auguste Schriever, the deal-maker of Liège.
Arms and Armour Society Journal
(pp. 90-105).
(/isis/citation/CBB746556967/)
Book
Filippo Cappellano; Bruno Marcuzzo
(2023)
L'universo parabolico della Grande Guerra: I 100.000 bombardieri e l'artiglieria da trincea.
(/isis/citation/CBB126909482/)
Book
Stefan Droste
(2022)
Offensive Engines: Projektemacher und Militärtechnik im langen 18. Jahrhundert.
(/isis/citation/CBB059140979/)
Book
Roberto J. González
(2022)
War Virtually: The Quest to Automate Conflict, Militarize Data, and Predict the Future.
(/isis/citation/CBB827413331/)
Article
David Nicolle
(2022)
A Khanjar of Ibrāhīm Ibn Ilyās Ibn Asad Ibn Sāmān dated 246 AH (28th March 860 to 17th March 861 AD).
Arms and Armour Society Journal
(pp. 1-19).
(/isis/citation/CBB594078810/)
Book
Alex Roland
(2021)
Delta of Power: The Military-Industrial Complex.
(/isis/citation/CBB562475074/)
Article
Alessio Patalano
(2021)
‘The silent fight’: submarine rearmament and the origins of Japan’s military engagement with the Cold War, 1955–76.
Cold War History
(pp. 91-111).
(/isis/citation/CBB287366616/)
Article
Ingo Trauschweizer
(2021)
Berlin commander: Maxwell Taylor at the Cold War’s frontlines, 1949–51.
Cold War History
(pp. 37-53).
(/isis/citation/CBB835368805/)
Book
Paul Douglas Lockhart
(2021)
Firepower: how weapons shaped warfare.
(/isis/citation/CBB410612717/)
Book
Jamie Holmes
(2020)
12 Seconds of Silence: How a Team of Inventors, Tinkerers, and Spies Took Down a Nazi Superweapon.
(/isis/citation/CBB898086688/)
Book
Peter Kasurak
(2020)
Canada's Mechanized Infantry: The Evolution of a Combat Arm, 1920–2012.
(/isis/citation/CBB564173928/)
Article
Rachel A. Horowitz; David J. Watt
(2020)
Eighteenth-and Nineteenth-Century Gunflint Assemblages: Understanding Use, Trade, and Variability in the Southeastern United States.
International Journal of Historical Archaeology
(pp. 95-114).
(/isis/citation/CBB913708828/)
Book
Jeremy Packer; Joshua Reeves
(2020)
Killer Apps: War, Media, Machine.
(/isis/citation/CBB034416699/)
Article
Casper J. Van Dijk
(2020)
A New Halberd Typology (1500-1800): Based on the Collection of the National Military Museum, The Netherlands.
Arms and Armour Society Journal.
(/isis/citation/CBB478621590/)
Article
M.L. Cummings
(December 2019)
Lethal Autonomous Weapons: Meaningful Human Control or Meaningful Human Certification?.
IEEE Technology and Society Magazine
(pp. 20-26).
(/isis/citation/CBB693727758/)
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