Chemical and Biological War
Introduction
Chemical weapons include arms that deploy gas, liquid, or solid substances with the intent of harming, harassing, or killing. They are commonly called poison gases, because those have been the most common kinds of chemical weapons used, although not all chemical weapons are poison gases. Biological weapons are those made from natural or synthetic diseases or substances intended to attack humans or animals and produce illness, thus injuring or killing their targets. Although, broadly defined, chemical and biological weapons have been a part of international warfare since ancient times, most histories focus on the modern, industrialized era, specifically 1915 onward. Chemical warfare was introduced and widely used in the form of poison gas during World War I. It was banned legally and morally during most of the interwar period, and, in general, belligerents were deterred from using chemical weapons during World War II and beyond. Chemical weaponry remains a threat from both state actors and now terrorists, although historians rarely focus on the contemporary period in depth. Biological warfare had been considered, but it was banned during the interwar period and has rarely been tried, and thus it has been the focus of fewer works than chemical warfare. The controversial nature of chemical and biological weapons (particularly the question of whether it is a humane or even acceptable weapon); the classification of both chemical and biological arms as weapons of mass destruction; and their limited use have inspired numerous historical works, especially ones focused on World War I, as well as works of interest to historians that are found in the scientific and policy literature.
General Overviews
There are a number of works that offer overviews of the history of chemical and biological weapons, although not all are monographs, and not are all found in works dedicated solely to historical examinations of chemical and biological weapons. Although it is useful to have sources focusing completely on biological or chemical warfare, having some that examine both topics can help explain the relationship between the two and why they are popularly, militarily, and politically perceived to be closely related. They tend to be seen as more closely related to each other than to nuclear weapons (the other key component of the main trio of weapons of mass destruction). See the Oxford Bibliographies article on Nuclear Weapons for more information on this other weapon of mass destruction.
Users without a subscription are not able to see the full content on this page. Please subscribe or login.
How to Subscribe
Oxford Bibliographies Online is available by subscription and perpetual access to institutions and individuals. For more information or to contact an Oxford Sales Representative click here.
Purchase an Ebook Version of This Article
Ebooks of the Oxford Bibliographies Online subject articles are available in North America via a number of retailers including Amazon, vitalsource, and more. Simply search on their sites for Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guides and your desired subject article.
If you would like to purchase an eBook article and live outside North America please email onlinemarketing@oup.com to express your interest.
Article
- Air Transport
- All-Volunteer Army, Post-Vietnam to Present
- American Colonial Wars
- American Indian Wars
- American War of Independence
- Animals and the Military
- Antietam, Battle of
- Arab-Israeli Wars, 1948-Present
- Arctic Warfare
- Armed Forces of the Ottoman Empire, 1683-1918
- Armored War
- Arms Control and Disarmament
- Army, Roman
- Australia from the Colonial Era to the Present
- Austrian Succession, War of the
- British Armed Forces, from the Glorious Revolution to Pres...
- British-India Armies from 1740 to 1849
- Cavalry since 1500
- Chinese Civil War, 1945-1949
- Civilians
- Clausewitz, Carl von
- Coalition and Alliance War
- Commemoration
- Communications, French Revolution to Present
- Cornwallis, Charles
- Counterinsurgency in the Modern World
- Cromwell, Oliver
- Crusades, The
- Defense Industries
- European Wars, Mid-Nineteenth-Century
- Frederick the Great
- French Armies, Early Modern
- French Military, 1919-1940
- German Air Forces
- German Army, 1871-1945
- German Unification, Wars of
- Grant, Ulysses S.
- Hundred Years War
- India 'Mutiny' and 'Revolution,' 1857-1858
- Indian Army in World War I
- Indochina Wars, 1946-1975
- Intelligence, Military
- Irish Civil War, 1922-1923
- Jomini, Antoine-Henri
- Justice, Military, the Anglo-American Tradition
- Louis XIV, Wars of
- Militarism
- Militia
- Montgomery, Bernard Law
- Napoleonic Wars, The
- Nimitz, Chester
- Nuclear Weapons
- Occupations and Military Government
- Pacifism
- Poltava, Battle of
- Prisoners
- Psychiatric Casualties
- Religio-Military Orders
- Roses, Wars of the
- Russian Campaign of 1812
- Russian Civil War, 1918-1921
- Russian Military History
- Russian and Soviet Armed Forces
- Russo-Japanese War
- Science and Technology in War
- Seven Years' War
- Spanish Civil War
- Stalingrad, Battle of
- Strategy
- Submarine Warfare
- Tactics
- US Air Power
- Verdun, Battle of
- War, Chemical and Biological
- Women in the Military
- World War I Origins
- World War I: The Western Front
- World War II and the Far East
- World War II, Russo-German War
- Zulu Wars