In this addition to the bestselling 'shortest history' series, acclaimed historian and military expert Gwynne Dyer tells the story of war from its prehistoric - perhaps pre-human - origins up to the present age of algorithms and atom bombs. Dyer chronicles the spread of warfare in the world's first cities; the seemingly inexorable rise of inequality and tyranny as human societies expand; the millennium-long 'classical age' of combat ended by the firearm and the carnage of the Thirty Years' War; the brief ensuing interlude of 'limited war' before the popular revolutions of the 18th century ushered in an era of total war - itself abruptly halted by Hiroshima.
The final chapters deal with the precarious equilibrium of the past 75 years - the longest period of peace between major powers in modern history - and with the looming threats of nuclear proliferation, superpower rivalry and climate change.