
Soldiers For Hire
From Italian condottieri to the Foreign Legion, Blackwater, and Wagner-mercenaries across eras
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Lucid H

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
From Renaissance Italy to today’s war zones, this sweeping history tracks the rise, fall, and return of soldiers who fight for pay. It opens with a night battle on the Euphrates in 2018, then rewinds to the ledgers of Florence, where condottieri signed their war contracts in ink and gold. Along the way, it follows Swiss pikemen, German Landsknechts, privateers at sea, and the vast machine of military entrepreneurs in the Thirty Years’ War. It shows how the East India Company built a private army, why Britain rented Hessian regiments, and how the French Foreign Legion and Gurkhas changed the label without ending the practice.
The story moves through decolonization and the TV age, from the Congo Crisis to globe-trotting coup makers. It takes you into the 1990s, when firms like Executive Outcomes sold a battlefield package that used helicopters, training, and mining deals. It then examines the boom in private military companies after 2001, from convoy teams in Baghdad to high-profile incidents that reshaped law and policy. It closes with Wagner’s blend of combat, politics, and resource contracts across Ukraine, Syria, and Africa, and a mutiny that stunned the world.
Based on contracts, pay lists, archives, court files, UN reports, company records, and veteran accounts, this is narrative history with clear analysis. The big question is simple: why do rulers hire outsiders, and what happens when pay, law, and control fall out of balance? The answer links past to present. When money, contracts, and oversight are strong, hired force can achieve narrow goals. When they are weak, civilians pay the price and leaders lose control. This is a gripping guide to the business of war.