Notes
1. See for instance, Strachan and Herberg-Rothe, Clausewitz in the Twenty-First Century.
2. The first and second ‘confessions’ are available in English in Clausewitz, Historical and Political Writings, 285ff.
3. The Paret/Howard translation uses the title ‘The People in Arms’ for this chapter; Clausewitz, On War, 479.
4. Paret, Clausewitz and the State, 302, 437ff.
5. ‘Agitation’, ‘Europe since the Polish Partitions’ and ‘On the Basic Question of Germany’s Existence’, all printed in Historical and Political Writings, 335ff.
6. Cf. Strachan, Carl von Clausewitz’s On War, 151.
7. However, for a different argument on the sequence of Clausewitz’s thought process, see Palmgren, ‘Visions of Strategy’.
8. Strachan, ‘Clausewitz en anglais’; see also Honig, ‘Clausewitz’s On War’, 57ff.
9. See pp. 31ff.; rendered correctly as ‘service arms’ on p. 41, rendered even more confusingly as ‘weapons’ on p. 134, although the paragraph following this header clearly refers to the combination of cavalry and infantry.
10. Cf. ‘Clausewitz’ Vorlesung über den kleinen Krieg’, in Hahlweg, Carl von Clausewitz, Vol. 1, 257.
11. Hahlweg, Carl von Clausewitz, Vol. 1, 746.
12. Cf. Ibid., 250ff.
13. Cf. ibid.
14. Ibid., 265.