This fully illustrated study tells the story the fighting men of the
Russo-Japanese War and how these two empires clashed, heralding a new
phase in modern warfare as World War I loomed on the horizon.
At the turn of the 20th century, the region of Manchuria sat atop a
potentially catastrophic political fault line; the ancient strength of
China was crumbling, leaving opportunities for both Russia and Japan to
claw out new territories from the edges of that dying empire. Russian
pride would contend with Japanese ambition in a conflict that ushered in
the age of massed armies fighting on battlefields that were being
redefined by the new tools of war such as newer, larger artillery
pieces, and the use of machine guns in pitched battles. The vast, but
over-stretched Russian Army was expected to steamroller its far smaller
opponent, but the aggressiveness and zeal of the more modern Japanese
military confounded expectations.