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Jan Gotlib Bloch

Jan Gotlib (Bogumił) Bloch (Russian: Иван Станиславович Блиох or Блох) (July 24, 1836 – January 7, 1902) was a Polish banker and railway financier who devoted his private life to the study of modern industrial warfare. Born Jewish and a convert to Calvinism, he spent considerable effort to opposing the prevalent antisemitic policies of the Tsarist government, and was sympathetic to the fledgling Zionist movement.

Jan Gotlib Bloch
Иван Станиславович Блиох
Bloch, c. 1902
Born(1836-07-24)July 24, 1836
DiedJanuary 7, 1902(1902-01-07) (aged 65)
SpouseEmilia Julia Kronenberg h. Koroniec

Bloch had studied at the University of Berlin, worked at a Warsaw bank and then moved to St. Petersburg, capital of the Russian Empire (which governed much of the Polish lands at the time). There, he took part in the development of the Russian Railways, both in financing the construction of new railways and in writing research papers on the subject. He founded several banking, credit and insurance companies. In 1877 he was appointed a member of the Russian Finance Ministry's Scientific Committee.

Bloch was married to Emilia Julia Kronenberg h. Koroniec (1845-1921), the granddaughter of Polish banker Samuel Eleazar Kronenberg, daughter of medical doctor Henryk Andrzej Kronenberg and niece of industrialist and Polish nationalist Leopold Stanislaw Kronenberg; the Kronenberg and Bloch families had often been in competition with each other in several 19th century Polish businesses.

Research and analysis of modern warfare

Born in Radom, Poland, on July 24, 1836, Bloch became intrigued by the victory of the North German Confederation over France in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871, which suggested to him that the solution of diplomatic problems by warfare had become obsolete in Europe. He published his six-volume master work, Budushchaya voina i yeyo ekonomicheskie posledstviya (Russian: Будущая война и её экономические последствия, Future War and its Economic Consequences), popularized in English translation as Is War Now Impossible?, in Paris in 1898.[1]

His detailed analysis of modern warfare, its tactical, strategic and political implications, was widely read in Europe. Bloch argued that

  • The new technologies of smokeless powder, magazine rifles, machine guns and quick-firing artillery had rendered manoeuvres over open ground, such as bayonet and cavalry charges, obsolete. Bloch concluded that a war between the great powers would be a war of entrenchment and that rapid attacks and decisive victories were a thing of the past. He calculated that entrenched men would enjoy a fourfold advantage over infantry in the open.
  • Industrial societies would have to settle a stalemate by committing million-man armies. An enormous battlefront would develop. A war of this type could not be resolved quickly.
  • Such a war would become a duel of industrial might, a matter of total economic attrition. Severe economic and social dislocations would result in the imminent risk of famine, disease, the "break-up of the whole social organization" and revolutions from below.

Influence

Bloch attended the first Hague Peace Conference in 1899, possibly at the invitation of Tsar Nicholas II, and distributed copies of his work to delegates from the diplomatic missions of 26 states, to little avail. The British publicist W. T. Stead also worked to spread Bloch's insights. In each particular, Bloch's theoretical research was rejected or ignored. To the British readers of The Contemporary Review, Bloch wrote in 1901:

Having busied myself for over fourteen years with the study of war in all its phases and aspects, I am astonished to find that the remarkable evolution which is rapidly turning the sword into a ploughshare has passed almost unnoticed even by the professional watchmen who are paid to keep a sharp look-out. In my work on the war of the future I endeavoured to draw a picture of this interesting process. But writing for specialists, I was compelled to enter largely into details, the analysis of which ran into 3,084 pages. The facts which are there garnered together, and the consequences which flow from them, run too strongly counter to the vested interests of the most powerful class of the community to admit of their being immediately embodied in measures of reform. And this I foresaw from the first. What I could not foresee was the stubbornness which [it] not only recoiled from taking action but set itself to twist and distort the facts. Patriotism is highly respectable, but it is dangerous to identify it with the interests of a class. The steadfastness with which the military caste clings to the memory of a state of things which has already died is pathetic and honourable. Unfortunately it is also costly and dangerous. Therefore I venture now to appeal to the British masses, whose vital interests are at stake and whose verdict must be final.

Europe's patriots were unmoved. French cavalry and British infantry commanders only learned Bloch's lessons by a process of trial and error once Bloch's impossible war, World War I, had begun. The Russian and German monarchies proved equally incapable of assimilating Bloch's cautionary words concerning revolution, paying the price with summary execution and exile, respectively.

Bloch's foresight is somewhat qualified by what proved an underestimation of the tactical and strategic significance of indirect (e.g., artillery) fire, and his failure to foresee the development of the armoured tank and military aircraft. Bloch also did not realise the potential of non-rail motor-transport. None of these oversights was significant enough to undermine his broadest observations, however, for the period before about 1930.

He died on January 7, 1902, in Warsaw. An International Museum of War and Peace was established at Lucerne, Switzerland, in Bloch's name in the same year.[2] The museum closed in 1919 due to a lack of visitors [3]

Role in contemporary theory

Bloch survived long enough after publishing his theory to turn his analytical talents to investigating the institutional barriers which prevented the theory's adoption by the military establishment. He appears[original research?] to have concluded that the military had to be sidestepped, by a more direct appeal to voters.

Contemporary theory treats Bloch as the Clausewitz of the early 1900s. A review in 2000 in the journal War in History [4] concentrates on the interaction between Bloch's theory and the military professionals of the time. In short, it finds that they tended to dismiss Bloch, on the basis that, while his "mathematics" might be correct, his overall message ran the risk of being bad for morale.

Confronting antisemitism

Bloch converted to Calvinism, the religion of a small minority in the Russian Empire. In this way he was able to avoid the legal disabilities imposed on Jews under Tsarist rule, especially the geographical limitation to the Pale of Settlement, banning Jews from living in the Empire's main cites - without needing to regularly attend a church and be visibly practising Christianity. As became evident especially in the later part of his life, he retained a strong concern for the situation of the Jews, even if formally no longer one of them.

Following the wave of pogroms of the 1880s and the early 1890s, a commission headed by the vociferously antisemitic Interior Minister Vyacheslav von Plehve recommended a further worsening of the Jews' legal position. In response, Bloch sent to the government a series of well-reasoned memoranda calling for an end to the discrimination of the Jews.

Bloch also embarked upon an extensive research on the social and economic conditions of the Russian Empire's Jewish subjects. For that purpose, he established a team of scientific researchers headed by the Russian economist A.P. Subotin, on whose work he spent hundreds of thousands of rubles.

The result, completed only in 1901 - one year before Bloch's death - was a five-volume work entitled "Comparison of the material and moral levels in the Western Great-Russian and Polish Regions". On the basis of extensive statistical data, compiled mainly in the Pale of Settlement, he gave a comprehensive account of the Jewish role in the Empire's economic life, in crafts, trade and industry. The study showed that the Jews were a boon to the Russian economy - rather than damaging and threatening it, as was at the time regularly claimed by anti-semites.

Bloch's great effort was, however, in vain. The Russian Council of Ministers banned the work, and nearly all copies were confiscated and burned. Only a few surviving copies remained in circulation, as great rarities. Subotin was, however, later able to publish a summary entitled "The Jewish Question in the Right Light".

Sympathy to Zionism

Since 1897, Bloch became involved with Zionist activities in Russia, and became friendly with Theodor Herzl. In June 1899 Herzl arrived at the Hague Peace Conference in an effort to gain an audience with the Tsar, for which purpose he met with Bloch as with other people having access to higher echelons of the Russian government. Bloch supported Herzl's efforts and telegraphed a memorandum of recommendation to the Tsar via Baron de Staal.[5] Bloch noted that Herzl had been active to promote the Hague Conference's aims of international peace, and that among other things he had sent a letter to Frederick I, Grand Duke of Baden calling for a change in Germany's position on the issue of international arbitration.

In June 1899 Bloch, at Herzl's request, lobbied the Russian government to lift a ban on the sale in its territory of shares of the Zionist Jewish Colonial Trust (predecessor of the present Israeli National Bank).

See also

References

  1. ^ Bloch, I. S. (1899). Is War Now Impossible? Being an Abridgement of "The War of the Future in its Technical, Economic and Political Relations"; with a Prefatory Conversation with the Author by W. T. Stead; Translated from the Russian (online ed.). London: Grant Richards. Retrieved 18 September 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^ "A Museum of Peace and War; Interesting Collections Donated by M. de Bloch Just opened to the Public". New York Times. June 29, 1902. Retrieved 2008-08-06.
  3. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-09-11. Retrieved 2014-02-06. (in German)
  4. ^ "The Centenary of the British Publication of Jean de Bloch's Is War Now Impossible? (1899-1999), War in History, Vol. 7, No. 3, 273-294 (2000)". wih.sagepub.com.
  5. ^ "WHKMLA : The den Haag Peace Conference 1899-1900 as portrayed in Punch".

Further reading

  • Christopher Clark, "'This Is a Reality, Not a Threat'" (review of Lawrence Freedman, The Future of War: A History, Public Affairs, 2018, 376 pp.; and Robert H. Latiff, Future War: Preparing for the New Global Battlefield, Knopf, 2018, 192 pp.), The New York Review of Books, vol. LXV, no. 18 (November 22, 2018), pp. 53–54. Historian Clark singles out Bloch as a prophet of the trench warfare, between railroad-mobilized armies, that eventuated as World War I.
  • Bauer, Ela. "Jan Gottlieb Bloch: Polish cosmopolitism versus Jewish universalism." European Review of History—Revue européenne d'histoire 17.3 (2010): 415–429.
  • Murray, Nicholas. The Rocky Road to the Great War: The Evolution of Trench Warfare to 1914. Potomac Books Inc. (an imprint of the University of Nebraska Press), 2013. Historian Murray discusses Bloch's involvement in pre 1914 thinking about war, and the problems some of his argument's faced.
  • Pieczewski, Andrzej. "John Bloch’s" The Future of War." Pacifism Based on Economics." Annales. Etyka w życiu gospodarczym 19.4 (2016): 67–80. online in English

External links

  •   Media related to Jan Gotlib Bloch at Wikimedia Commons
  • The Jean de Bloch Foundation
  • Jewish Encyclopedia
  • Niall Ferguson's The Pity of War
  • Quotation, at Bartleby
  • Bloch's role in perpetuating a dud estimate of epochal war deaths
  • Report on Bloch's Nobel Peace Prize nomination, 1901
  • Pay-to-view academic commentary on the centenary of Bloch's book
  • Agnieszka, Janiak-Jasinska: Bloch, Jan Gotlib, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.

gotlib, bloch, ivan, bliokh, redirects, here, confused, with, iwan, bloch, gotlib, bogumił, bloch, russian, Иван, Станиславович, Блиох, Блох, july, 1836, january, 1902, polish, banker, railway, financier, devoted, private, life, study, modern, industrial, warf. Ivan Bliokh redirects here Not to be confused with Iwan Bloch Jan Gotlib Bogumil Bloch Russian Ivan Stanislavovich Blioh or Bloh July 24 1836 January 7 1902 was a Polish banker and railway financier who devoted his private life to the study of modern industrial warfare Born Jewish and a convert to Calvinism he spent considerable effort to opposing the prevalent antisemitic policies of the Tsarist government and was sympathetic to the fledgling Zionist movement Jan Gotlib BlochIvan Stanislavovich BliohBloch c 1902Born 1836 07 24 July 24 1836Radom PolandDiedJanuary 7 1902 1902 01 07 aged 65 Warsaw PolandSpouseEmilia Julia Kronenberg h KoroniecBloch had studied at the University of Berlin worked at a Warsaw bank and then moved to St Petersburg capital of the Russian Empire which governed much of the Polish lands at the time There he took part in the development of the Russian Railways both in financing the construction of new railways and in writing research papers on the subject He founded several banking credit and insurance companies In 1877 he was appointed a member of the Russian Finance Ministry s Scientific Committee Bloch was married to Emilia Julia Kronenberg h Koroniec 1845 1921 the granddaughter of Polish banker Samuel Eleazar Kronenberg daughter of medical doctor Henryk Andrzej Kronenberg and niece of industrialist and Polish nationalist Leopold Stanislaw Kronenberg the Kronenberg and Bloch families had often been in competition with each other in several 19th century Polish businesses Contents 1 Research and analysis of modern warfare 2 Influence 3 Role in contemporary theory 4 Confronting antisemitism 5 Sympathy to Zionism 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksResearch and analysis of modern warfare EditBorn in Radom Poland on July 24 1836 Bloch became intrigued by the victory of the North German Confederation over France in the Franco Prussian War of 1870 1871 which suggested to him that the solution of diplomatic problems by warfare had become obsolete in Europe He published his six volume master work Budushchaya voina i yeyo ekonomicheskie posledstviya Russian Budushaya vojna i eyo ekonomicheskie posledstviya Future War and its Economic Consequences popularized in English translation as Is War Now Impossible in Paris in 1898 1 His detailed analysis of modern warfare its tactical strategic and political implications was widely read in Europe Bloch argued that The new technologies of smokeless powder magazine rifles machine guns and quick firing artillery had rendered manoeuvres over open ground such as bayonet and cavalry charges obsolete Bloch concluded that a war between the great powers would be a war of entrenchment and that rapid attacks and decisive victories were a thing of the past He calculated that entrenched men would enjoy a fourfold advantage over infantry in the open Industrial societies would have to settle a stalemate by committing million man armies An enormous battlefront would develop A war of this type could not be resolved quickly Such a war would become a duel of industrial might a matter of total economic attrition Severe economic and social dislocations would result in the imminent risk of famine disease the break up of the whole social organization and revolutions from below Influence EditBloch attended the first Hague Peace Conference in 1899 possibly at the invitation of Tsar Nicholas II and distributed copies of his work to delegates from the diplomatic missions of 26 states to little avail The British publicist W T Stead also worked to spread Bloch s insights In each particular Bloch s theoretical research was rejected or ignored To the British readers of The Contemporary Review Bloch wrote in 1901 Having busied myself for over fourteen years with the study of war in all its phases and aspects I am astonished to find that the remarkable evolution which is rapidly turning the sword into a ploughshare has passed almost unnoticed even by the professional watchmen who are paid to keep a sharp look out In my work on the war of the future I endeavoured to draw a picture of this interesting process But writing for specialists I was compelled to enter largely into details the analysis of which ran into 3 084 pages The facts which are there garnered together and the consequences which flow from them run too strongly counter to the vested interests of the most powerful class of the community to admit of their being immediately embodied in measures of reform And this I foresaw from the first What I could not foresee was the stubbornness which it not only recoiled from taking action but set itself to twist and distort the facts Patriotism is highly respectable but it is dangerous to identify it with the interests of a class The steadfastness with which the military caste clings to the memory of a state of things which has already died is pathetic and honourable Unfortunately it is also costly and dangerous Therefore I venture now to appeal to the British masses whose vital interests are at stake and whose verdict must be final Europe s patriots were unmoved French cavalry and British infantry commanders only learned Bloch s lessons by a process of trial and error once Bloch s impossible war World War I had begun The Russian and German monarchies proved equally incapable of assimilating Bloch s cautionary words concerning revolution paying the price with summary execution and exile respectively Bloch s foresight is somewhat qualified by what proved an underestimation of the tactical and strategic significance of indirect e g artillery fire and his failure to foresee the development of the armoured tank and military aircraft Bloch also did not realise the potential of non rail motor transport None of these oversights was significant enough to undermine his broadest observations however for the period before about 1930 He died on January 7 1902 in Warsaw An International Museum of War and Peace was established at Lucerne Switzerland in Bloch s name in the same year 2 The museum closed in 1919 due to a lack of visitors 3 Role in contemporary theory EditBloch survived long enough after publishing his theory to turn his analytical talents to investigating the institutional barriers which prevented the theory s adoption by the military establishment He appears original research to have concluded that the military had to be sidestepped by a more direct appeal to voters Contemporary theory treats Bloch as the Clausewitz of the early 1900s A review in 2000 in the journal War in History 4 concentrates on the interaction between Bloch s theory and the military professionals of the time In short it finds that they tended to dismiss Bloch on the basis that while his mathematics might be correct his overall message ran the risk of being bad for morale Confronting antisemitism EditBloch converted to Calvinism the religion of a small minority in the Russian Empire In this way he was able to avoid the legal disabilities imposed on Jews under Tsarist rule especially the geographical limitation to the Pale of Settlement banning Jews from living in the Empire s main cites without needing to regularly attend a church and be visibly practising Christianity As became evident especially in the later part of his life he retained a strong concern for the situation of the Jews even if formally no longer one of them Following the wave of pogroms of the 1880s and the early 1890s a commission headed by the vociferously antisemitic Interior Minister Vyacheslav von Plehve recommended a further worsening of the Jews legal position In response Bloch sent to the government a series of well reasoned memoranda calling for an end to the discrimination of the Jews Bloch also embarked upon an extensive research on the social and economic conditions of the Russian Empire s Jewish subjects For that purpose he established a team of scientific researchers headed by the Russian economist A P Subotin on whose work he spent hundreds of thousands of rubles The result completed only in 1901 one year before Bloch s death was a five volume work entitled Comparison of the material and moral levels in the Western Great Russian and Polish Regions On the basis of extensive statistical data compiled mainly in the Pale of Settlement he gave a comprehensive account of the Jewish role in the Empire s economic life in crafts trade and industry The study showed that the Jews were a boon to the Russian economy rather than damaging and threatening it as was at the time regularly claimed by anti semites Bloch s great effort was however in vain The Russian Council of Ministers banned the work and nearly all copies were confiscated and burned Only a few surviving copies remained in circulation as great rarities Subotin was however later able to publish a summary entitled The Jewish Question in the Right Light Sympathy to Zionism EditSince 1897 Bloch became involved with Zionist activities in Russia and became friendly with Theodor Herzl In June 1899 Herzl arrived at the Hague Peace Conference in an effort to gain an audience with the Tsar for which purpose he met with Bloch as with other people having access to higher echelons of the Russian government Bloch supported Herzl s efforts and telegraphed a memorandum of recommendation to the Tsar via Baron de Staal 5 Bloch noted that Herzl had been active to promote the Hague Conference s aims of international peace and that among other things he had sent a letter to Frederick I Grand Duke of Baden calling for a change in Germany s position on the issue of international arbitration In June 1899 Bloch at Herzl s request lobbied the Russian government to lift a ban on the sale in its territory of shares of the Zionist Jewish Colonial Trust predecessor of the present Israeli National Bank See also EditList of Poles The Great IllusionReferences Edit Bloch I S 1899 Is War Now Impossible Being an Abridgement of The War of the Future in its Technical Economic and Political Relations with a Prefatory Conversation with the Author by W T Stead Translated from the Russian online ed London Grant Richards Retrieved 18 September 2018 via Internet Archive A Museum of Peace and War Interesting Collections Donated by M de Bloch Just opened to the Public New York Times June 29 1902 Retrieved 2008 08 06 Ein Museum gegen das Wettrusten PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 09 11 Retrieved 2014 02 06 in German The Centenary of the British Publication of Jean de Bloch s Is War Now Impossible 1899 1999 War in History Vol 7 No 3 273 294 2000 wih sagepub com WHKMLA The den Haag Peace Conference 1899 1900 as portrayed in Punch Further reading EditChristopher Clark This Is a Reality Not a Threat review of Lawrence Freedman The Future of War A History Public Affairs 2018 376 pp and Robert H Latiff Future War Preparing for the New Global Battlefield Knopf 2018 192 pp The New York Review of Books vol LXV no 18 November 22 2018 pp 53 54 Historian Clark singles out Bloch as a prophet of the trench warfare between railroad mobilized armies that eventuated as World War I Bauer Ela Jan Gottlieb Bloch Polish cosmopolitism versus Jewish universalism European Review of History Revue europeenne d histoire 17 3 2010 415 429 Murray Nicholas The Rocky Road to the Great War The Evolution of Trench Warfare to 1914 Potomac Books Inc an imprint of the University of Nebraska Press 2013 Historian Murray discusses Bloch s involvement in pre 1914 thinking about war and the problems some of his argument s faced Pieczewski Andrzej John Bloch s The Future of War Pacifism Based on Economics Annales Etyka w zyciu gospodarczym 19 4 2016 67 80 online in EnglishExternal links Edit Media related to Jan Gotlib Bloch at Wikimedia Commons The Jean de Bloch Foundation Jewish Encyclopedia Niall Ferguson s The Pity of War Quotation at Bartleby Bloch s role in perpetuating a dud estimate of epochal war deaths Bloch entry in the US Army s Combined Arms Research Library Report on Bloch s Nobel Peace Prize nomination 1901 Pay to view academic commentary on the centenary of Bloch s book Agnieszka Janiak Jasinska Bloch Jan Gotlib in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jan Gotlib Bloch amp oldid 1166933305, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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