Before nation-states existed, rulers across the ancient and medieval world hired their armies. Volume 1 of Blood for Gold traces that tradition from its earliest documented forms to the threshold of the modern era.
The book begins in ancient Mesopotamia, where cuneiform texts record the first hired fighters, and moves through a global cast of warriors whose history is rarely told together: Nubian archers serving Egyptian pharaohs at Kadesh; the “Bronze men from the sea” absorbed into Ramesses II’s personal guard after he fought them on the battlefield; the 10,000 Greek hoplites who marched 1,600 kilometers through the Persian heartland after their employer died at Cunaxa; Celtic warriors who fought their enemies naked as deliberate psychological warfare; the multinational armies of Carthage that came within a generation of destroying Rome — and then turned on Carthage itself when the money ran out.
In the medieval chapters: Viking warriors carving their names into the marble of Hagia Sophia while serving as the Byzantine emperor’s bodyguard; Muslim cavalry serving Christian kings in medieval Spain while Christian knights served Muslim emirs in the same wars; the Free Companies that terrorized France after the Hundred Years’ War, with commanders who wore their contempt for God and mercy on their actual armor; Genoese crossbowmen massacred by their own French employers at Crécy; and the Catalan Company, which went from saving Byzantium to ruling Athens from the Acropolis across a span of forty years.
The volume also covers territory that standard military history misses almost entirely: the African Siddi warriors who arrived in India over a thousand years ago and built independent principalities that survived every change of dynasty on the subcontinent; the nomadic Qizilbash who founded the Safavid Persian Empire with 7,000 cavalry against an army four times their size; the Croatian Uskoks who operated at the junction of three empires, attacked everyone — Ottomans, Venetians, French — and had their raids blessed by Dominican and Franciscan priests who collected a tithe from the plunder.
What emerges across twenty-two chapters is a picture of hired warfare not as an aberration but as a constant — one of the few features present in every major civilization from Sumer to the Ottoman borderlands.










