kairos wrote:...
the army war college would probably not consider using battles from the Book of Mormon.
...
Indeed.
But that same school might now and then refer to battles and
military threats as occurred along the Great Lakes during the
War of 1812.
I think THAT is what the Alma war chapters most resemble --
a highly mobile enemy, who can appear as if from out of
nowhere at a moment's notice -- moving great armies across
the wilderness at great speed.
Add in the element of white "King Men" allied with dark Indians,
massacres, wooden forts, etc., and we have scenarios typical
of the French & Indian War, Revolutionary War and War of 1812.
But I think there is another point of possible historical reference,
and that would be the Valley of Mexico contentions prior to the
arrival of the conquistadors. There we see city-states engaged
in wars upon a limited landscape, in which great armies can move
from one urban area to another very quickly.
There are also occasional overlaps with the Israelite/Philistine
warfare, the Iliad stratagems, fighting in the Aeneid, and bits
and pieces of the Ossian tales' battles.
http://solomonspalding.com/SRP/SRPpap11.htm#pg09aI think that the Alma war chapters were written by somebody
possessing a knowledge of the War of 1812 Great Lakes battles,
who also consulted war stories from the Bible and the classics.
UD