From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For various reasons, usually pest control , military force has been utilized by humans against non-human animals. In some instances, entire campaigns of military action have been initiated. Some of these military operations have been described as "wars" by various sources. Culling of livestock performed by military forces and rogue killings performed by lone soldiers are not included.
Antiquity [ edit ]
Conflict
Date
Location
Human military
Animals
Result
Reference(s)
Capture of animals by the Roman military
c. 753 BC –523 AD
Ancient Rome
Roman Military
Venatio fights end in 523 AD, ending the need for military capture of animals.
[1] [2]
20th century [ edit ]
References [ edit ]
^ Epplett, Christopher (2001). "The Capture of Animals by the Roman Military" . Greece & Rome . 48 (2): 210–222. ISSN 0017-3835 .
^ "The Roman Gladiator" . penelope.uchicago.edu . Retrieved 2024-05-07 .
^ "Russian Wolves" . The New York Times . 1917-07-29. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2024-05-07 .
^ Shepherd, Tory (2023-10-06). "Australia's emu war: John Cleese outrun in race to shoot movie of how flightless birds thwarted army's machine guns" . The Guardian . ISSN 0261-3077 . Retrieved 2024-05-07 .
^ Banerji, Urvija (2016-03-21). "In 1932, Australia Started an 'Emu War'—And Lost" . Atlas Obscura . Retrieved 2024-05-07 .
^ Davies, Stephen J. J. F. (2003), "Emu" , The New Encyclopedia of Birds , Oxford University Press, doi :10.1093/acref/9780198525066.001.0001/acref-9780198525066-e-40 , ISBN 978-0-19-852506-6 , retrieved 2024-05-07
^ Kirkeby, Ken (2022-02-24). "Tiger Attack in Vietnam" . Sporting Classics Daily . Retrieved 2024-05-07 .